3. Initial Installation

3.1. Prerequisites

For an initial installation of Sipwise C5 , it is mandatory that your production environment meets the following criteria:

Hardware Requirements

  • Recommended: Dual-core, x86_64 compatible, 3GHz, 4GB RAM, 128GB HDD
  • Minimum: Single-core, x86_64 compatible, 1GHz, 2GB RAM, 16GB HDD

Supported Operating Systems

  • Debian 9 (stretch) 64-bit

Internet Connection

  • Hardware needs connection to the Internet
important

Only Debian 9 (stretch) 64-bit is currently supported as a host system for Sipwise C5 .

important

It is HIGHLY recommended that you use a dedicated server (either a physical or a virtual one) for Sipwise C5, because the installation process will wipe out existing MySQL databases and modify several system configurations.

3.2. Using Sipwise C5 install CD (recommended)

The install CD provides the ability to easily install Sipwise C5 CE/PRO/Carrier, including automatic partitioning and installation of the underlying Debian system.

important

PRO/Carrier can be installed only with a commercial license. Otherwise a warning about lack of access to Debian repository will be displayed.

You can install the current Sipwise C5 CE version mr6.5.3 using install CD image (checksums: sha1, md5).

important

The Sipwise C5 install CD automatically takes care of partitioning, any present data will be overwritten! While the installer prompts for the disk that should be used for installation before its actual execution, it’s strongly recommended to boot the ISO in an environment with empty disks or disks that you don’t plan to use for anything else than the newly installed Sipwise C5 system.

tip

When DHCP is available in your infrastructure then you shouldn’t have to configure anything, just choose DHCP and press enter. If network configuration still doesn’t work as needed a console based network configuration system will assist you in setting up your network configuration. VLANs are also supported at this stage.

Also, you can use Sipwise C5 install CD to boot the Grml (Debian based live system) rescue system, check RAM using a memory testing tool or install plain Debian system for manual installation using Sipwise C5 installer.

3.3. Using the Sipwise C5 installer

3.3.1. Installing the Operating System

You need to install Debian 9 (stretch) 64-bit on the server. A basic installation without any additional task selection (like Desktop System, Web Server etc.) is sufficient.

tip

Sipwise recommends using the latest Netinstall ISO as installation medium.

important

If you use other kinds of installation media (e.g. provided by your hosting provider), prepare for some issues that might come up during installation. For example, you might be forced to manually resolve package dependencies in order to install Sipwise C5 . Therefore, it is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED to use a clean Debian installation to simplify the installation process.

info

If you installed your system using the Debian CDs/DVDs (so neither using Sipwise C5 install CD nor the Debian Netinstall ISO) apt-get might prompt to insert disk to proceed during Sipwise C5 installation. The prompt won’t be visible for you and installation hangs. Please disable the cdrom entries in /etc/apt/sources.list and enable a Debian mirror (e.g. https://deb.debian.org/debian/) instead.

3.3.1.1. Using special Debian setups

If you plan to install Sipwise C5 on Virtual Hosting Providers like Dreamhost with their provided Debian installer, you might need to manually prepare the system for Sipwise C5 installation, otherwise the installer will fail installing certain package versions required to function properly.

Using Dreamhost Virtual Private Server

A Dreamhost virtual server uses apt-pinning and installs specific versions of MySQL and apache, so you need to clean this up beforehand.

info

Apache is not used by default since mr3.6.1, still better to remove pinned Apache version.

apt-get remove --purge mysql-common ndn-apache22
mv /etc/apt/preferences /etc/apt/preferences.bak
apt-get update
apt-get dist-upgrade
warning

Be aware that this step will break your web-based system administration provided by Dreamhost. Only do it if you are certain that you won’t need it.

3.3.2. Installing the Sipwise C5

Download and install the latest Sipwise C5 installer package:

PKG=ngcp-installer-mr6.5.3.deb
wget http://deb.sipwise.com/spce/${PKG}
dpkg -i ${PKG}

Run the installer as root user:

ngcp-installer
info

You can find the previous versions of Sipwise C5 installer package here.

The installer will ask you to confirm that you want to start the installation. Read the given information carefully, and if you agree, proceed with y.

The installation process will take several minutes, depending on your network connection and server performance. If everything goes well, the installer will (depending on the language you use), show something like this:

Installation finished. Thanks for choosing Sipwise C5 Community Edition.
Please reboot the server to continue with the configuration.
warning

Be aware that all services will be disabled. If you need a specific service - re-enable it when the initial configuration is done.

During the installation, you can watch the background processing by executing the following command on a separate console:

tail -f /var/log/ngcp-installer.log

3.4. Using a pre-installed virtual machine

For quick test deployments, pre-installed virtualization images are provided. These images are intended to be used for quick test, not recommended for production use.

3.4.1. Vagrant box for VirtualBox

Vagrant is an open-source software for creating and configuring virtual development environments. Sipwise provides a so called Vagrant base box for your service, to easily get direct access to your own Sipwise C5 Virtual Machine without any hassles.

info

The following software must be installed to use Vagrant boxes:

Get your copy of Sipwise C5 by running:

vagrant init spce-mr6.5.3 https://deb.sipwise.com/spce/images/mr6.5.3/sip_provider_CE_mr6.5.3_vagrant.box
vagrant up

As soon as the machine is up and ready you should have your local copy of Sipwise C5 with the following benefits:

  • all the software and database are automatically updated to the latest available version
  • the system is configured to use your LAN IP address (received over DHCP)
  • basic SIP credentials to make SIP-2-SIP calls out of the box are available

Use the following command to access the terminal:

vagrant ssh

or login to Administrator web-interface at https://127.0.0.1:1443/login/admin (with default user administrator and password administrator).

There are two ways to access VM resources, through NAT or Bridge interface:

info

a.b.c.d is IP address of VM machine received from DHCP; x.y.z.p is IP address of your host machine

Table 1. Vagrant based VirtualBox VM interfaces:

DescriptionHost-only addressLAN addressNotes

SSH

ssh://127.0.0.1:2222

ssh://a.b.c.d:22 or ssh://x.y.z.p:2222

Also available via "vagrant ssh"

Administrator interface

https://127.0.0.1:1443/login/admin

https://a.b.c.d:1443/login/admin or https://x.y.z.p:1443/login/admin

New Customer self care interface

https://127.0.0.1:1443

https://a.b.c.d:1443 or https://x.y.z.p:1443

new self-care interface based on powerful ngcp-panel framework

Old Customer self care interface

https://127.0.0.1:22443

https://a.b.c.d:443 or https://x.y.z.p:22443

will be removed in upcoming releases

Provisioning interfaces

https://127.0.0.1:2443

https://a.b.c.d:2443 or https://x.y.z.p:2443

SIP interface

not available

sip://a.b.c.d:5060

Both TCP and UDP are available.


info

VM ports smaller then 1024 mapped to ports 22<vm_port> through NAT, otherwise root on host machine requires to map them. It means SSH port 22 mapped to port 2222, WEB port 443 → 22443.

VM IP address (a.b.c.d), as well as SIP credentials will be printed to terminal during "vagrant up" stage, e.g.:

[20_add_sip_account] Adding SIP credentials...
[20_add_sip_account]   - removing domain 192.168.1.103 with subscribers
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding domain 192.168.1.103
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991002@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991002)
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991003@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991003)
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991004@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991004)
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991005@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991005)
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991006@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991006)
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991007@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991007)
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991008@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991008)
[20_add_sip_account]   - adding subscriber 43991009@192.168.1.103 (pass: 43991009)
[20_add_sip_account] You can USE your VM right NOW:  https://192.168.1.103:1443/login/admin

To turn off your Sipwise C5 virtual machine, just type:

vagrant halt

To completely remove Sipwise C5 virtual machine, use:

vagrant destroy
vagrant box remove spce-mr6.5.3

Further documentation for Vagrant is available at the official Vagrant website.

Vagrant usage tips:

  • Default SSH login is root and password is sipwise. SSH connection details can be displayed via:
  vagrant ssh-config
  • You can download a Vagrant box for VirtualBox from here manually (checksums: sha1, md5).

3.4.2. VirtualBox image

You can download a VirtualBox image from here (checksums: sha1, md5). Once you have downloaded the file you can import it to VirtualBox via its import utility.

The format of the image is ova. If you have VirtualBox 3.x running, which is not compatible with ova format, you need to extract the file with any tar compatible software and import the ovf file which is inside the archive.

On Linux, you can do it like this:

tar xvf sip_provider_CE_mr6.5.3_virtualbox.ova

On Windows, right-click on the ova file, choose Open with and select WinZIP or WinRAR or any other application able to extract tar archives. Extract the files to any place and import the resulting ovf file in VirtualBox.

Considerations when using this virtual machine:

  • You will need a 64bit guest capable VirtualBox setup.
  • The root password is sipwise
  • You should use bridge mode networking (adjust your bridging interface in the virtual machine configuration) to avoid having Sipwise C5 behind NAT.
  • You’ll need to adjust your timezone and keyboard layout.
  • The network configuration is set to DHCP. You’ll need to change it to the appropriate static configuration.
  • As the virtual image is a static file, it won’t contain the most updated versions of our software. Please upgrade the system via apt as soon as you boot it for the first time.

3.4.3. VMware image

You can download a VMware image from here (checksums: sha1, md5). Once you have downloaded the file just extract the zip file and copy its content to your virtual machines folder.

Considerations when using this virtual machine:

  • You will need a 64bit guest capable vmware setup.
  • The root password is sipwise
  • You’ll need to adjust your timezone and keyboard layout.
  • The network configuration is set to DHCP. You’ll need to change it to the appropriate static configuration.
  • As the virtual image is a static file, it won’t contain the most updated versions of our software. Please upgrade the system via apt as soon as you boot it for the first time.

3.4.4. Amazon EC2 image

Sipwise provides AMI (Amazon Machine Images) images in all Amazon EC2 regions for the latest and LTS Sipwise C5 releases. Please find the appropriate AMI ID for your region in release announcement.

info

The following documentation will use Amazon region eu-west-1 with AMI ID ami-8bef6cfc as an example. Please find the appropriate AMI ID for your region in the latest release announcement.

As a next step please visit https://console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/v2/home?region=eu-west-1 with your EC2 account.

Choose "Launch Instance":

Launch Amazon EC2 Instance for your region

Figure 3. Launch Amazon EC2 Instance for your region


Select "Community AMIs" option, enter "ami-8bef6cfc" inside the search field and press "Select" button:

Choose an installation image (different for each region)

Figure 4. Choose an image (different for each region)


Select the Instance Type you want to use for running Sipwise C5 (recommended: >=2GB RAM):

Choose Amazon EC2 instance

Figure 5. Choose Amazon EC2 instance


tip

Do not forget to tune necessary Sipwise C5 performance parameters depending on Amazon EC2 instance type and performance you are looking for. Sipwise image is tuned for minimum performance to fit Micro instances. Feel free to read more about Sipwise C5 performance tuning in Section 16.7, “System Requirements and Performance”.

Run through next configuration options

  • Configure Instance: optional (no special configuration required from Sipwise C5)
  • Add Storage: choose >=8GB disk size (no further special configuration required from Sipwise C5)
  • Tag Instance: optional (no special configuration required from Sipwise C5)
  • Configure Security Group: create a new security group (SSH on port 22, HTTPS on port 443, TCP on ports 1443, 2443, 1080 and 5060 as well as UDP on port 5060 are suggested)
info

Please feel free to restrict the Source options in your Security Group to your own (range of) IP addresses.

Configure Security Group

Figure 6. Configure Security Group


Finally Review instance launch and press "Launch" button:

Launch Amazon EC2 instance with Sipwise C5

Figure 7. Launch Amazon EC2 instance with Sipwise C5


Choose an existing key pair which you want to use for logging in, or create a new one if you don’t have one.

Choose a key pair to access the system

Figure 8. Choose a key pair to access the system


You should have a running instance after a few seconds/minutes now (check DNS name/IP address).

Running Amazon EC2 instance

Figure 9. Running Amazon EC2 Sipwise C5 instance


First step should be logging in to the Admin panel (username administrator, password administrator) and changing the default password: https://$DNS:1443/login/admin and then follow Section 16, “Platform Security, Performance and Troubleshooting” to secure your installation.

Logging in via SSH should work now, using the key pair name (being sip-provider-ce.pem as $keypair in our example) and the DNS name/IP address the system got assigned.

ssh -i $keypair.pem admin@$DNS

Now you can increase your privileges to user root for further system configuration:

sudo -s

Don’t forget to add the Advertised IP for kamailio lb instance, since it’s required by the Amazon EC2 network infrastructure:

ngcp-network --set-interface=eth0 --advertised-ip=<your_public_amazon_ip>

and apply your changes:

ngcpcfg apply 'add advertised-ip on interface eth0'

Now feel free to use your newly started Amazon EC2 Sipwise C5 instance!

warning

Do not forget to stop unnecessary instance(s) to avoid unexpected costs (see https://aws.amazon.com/ec2/pricing/).