Get me started

Hope that some one can help me set this up:

How do i setup my Asterisk
and how do i setup my PAP2T
to Work like showed on the image.

Won’t work because the World Wide Web is not a data network (it’s a mesh of data resource referneces).

Synology don’t support their Asterisk system and use a GUI that no-one else supports.

If you want a worked solution, you should use the Biz & Jobs forum. Otherwise you don’t have sufficiently specific questions for a peer support forum, so you should read the documentation at asteriskdocs.org, the Asterisk wiki, and the comments in the sample configuration files. I assume there are similar resources for PAP2T.

Come back here when you have specific questions of detail (hopefully you wan’t).

[quote=“david55”]Won’t work because the World Wide Web is not a data network (it’s a mesh of data resource referneces).

Synology don’t support their Asterisk system and use a GUI that no-one else supports.

If you want a worked solution, you should use the Biz & Jobs forum. Otherwise you don’t have sufficiently specific questions for a peer support forum, so you should read the documentation at asteriskdocs.org, the Asterisk wiki, and the comments in the sample configuration files. I assume there are similar resources for PAP2T.

Come back here when you have specific questions of detail (hopefully you wan’t).[/quote]
Synology do have Asterist installed.
How can i setup the local then?

[quote=“lineweb”]Hope that some one can help me set this up:

How do i setup my Asterisk
and how do i setup my PAP2T
to Work like showed on the image.[/quote]

Can some one help me??

Given that you showed up with a network diagram and said “tell me what to do,” I really think you’re going to discover it difficult to find someone to do the work for you.

Read up on Asterisk, try the book - www.asteriskdocs.org

Cheers

it is a pretty network diagram though :mrgreen: (I was wondering what software was used for it!)

I assume this is the Synology NAS server, although its a reasonably powerful embedded Linux box I wouldn’t run Asterisk and the NAS data on the same box, especially if you are using remote SIP extensions (which can also be a pain to set up due to firewalls etc).

Also thats a very odd extension numbering scheme, I wouldn’t use 112 for any extension number in Europe.

I would suggest the person from lineweb (who appear to be a startup company in Denmark) does some research and experimentation, and “starts small”. if you definitely need a VOIP system for remote working (and its not as trivial as it might seem!) I would personally get a server and install PIAF or another FreePBX distribution, a linecard for your analogue trunks and start off with a couple of PAP2Ts “in house” on the same network.

[quote=“alex728”]it is a pretty network diagram though :mrgreen: (I was wondering what software was used for it!)

I assume this is the Synology NAS server, although its a reasonably powerful embedded Linux box I wouldn’t run Asterisk and the NAS data on the same box, especially if you are using remote SIP extensions (which can also be a pain to set up due to firewalls etc).

Also thats a very odd extension numbering scheme, I wouldn’t use 112 for any extension number in Europe.

I would suggest the person from lineweb (who appear to be a startup company in Denmark) does some research and experimentation, and “starts small”. if you definitely need a VOIP system for remote working (and its not as trivial as it might seem!) I would personally get a server and install PIAF or another FreePBX distribution, a linecard for your analogue trunks and start off with a couple of PAP2Ts “in house” on the same network.[/quote]

The diagram is made in "Microsoft Office Visio"
The Asterisk is alreddy installed at my Synology & used as “web server” and “mail server” alsow
No i am not trying to start any compamy all stuff on my server is for private use.
I just want some help to setup my phone line.

if you want to switch all those phones to a “phone line” and that is analogue you will need a separate server and linecard anyway. Alternatively if your phone line is VOIP you could just connect them all to a hosted PBX provided you have enough bandwidth (and that could save you a lot of hassle with NAT, firewalls etc).

Coincidentally I found the Asterisk app on our Synology box we use at work for a NAS - but also noticed that with just myself and another user transferring a large amount of files that the CPU was already at 100%. So I really wouldn’t run Asterisk on this and expect it to work well.

I have a similar setup at home (though not any remote SIP extensions, there are remote IAX2 trunks so I can connect to the PBX at each site office) but that uses separate hardware (an old DELL PC which is up in the roofspace above my workshop / multimedia room)