Our company wants to migrate our Shoretel phone system from ISDN to SIP trunks, our supplier is pushing us to implement an ingate siparator, of course it does because it adds £10,000 to the project cost!
From what I can see, our Fortigate 300D appliances will be perfectly capable to cover this requirement, the SIP ALG componant will manage all the NAT traversal issues and traffic inspection / IPS on the Fortigate coveres known security issues, added to the fact that in the policy I will only allow traffic to SIP providers datacentre (this is not to be used for our remote clients), I do not see where the possible risk could be. Seeing as both sides of the trunk will be using IP based registration, is there any real risk of hijacking?
From a performance point of view I have zero concerns, I have 300D units (mentioned above) that average 5% cpu and 50% memory usage, I also eliminate a SPOF with the single siparator as the Fortigate units are all active / passive HA.
Is there any real benifit to for me to spend the extra £10,000 on the ingate siparator?
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Depends so many things to over look
How much SIP traffic
Do you need encryption
How many sip endpoints
Do you have concerns over SIP registration
Are you a call center of any shape or fashion ( does your business rely and function via call in/outbound )
Do you have and dependability in the FGT300D and whatever FortiOS version
If you have a small footprint and SIP truck sizes under 30-50 simultaneous callers, used the fortigate. If your a enterprise org with 2+ SIP providers 1000s of callers, get a dedicate SBc like Sonus or others.
In fact you might get two of them ;)
Ken
PCNSE
NSE
StrongSwan
Now sure what "support srst" I guess you meant SRTP? Either way, have you consulted with a SBC vendor to discuss your needs?
A firewall is not a SBC , just want to make that clear. The SBC offers numerous things in regards to call capacity and function and other unified communications. I would consult with a vendor to have them analyze your needs. The SBC can get pricey and a lot of max limits forcing a "forklift" once you out grow it's license limits.
You can a also do a opensource SBC if your talented and wanted to experiment. SBC was my last usages they are good, but support does NOT want to help you in configurations so keep in that mine.
I would also review your call needs for NOW and for later, maybe fortinet will come out with a fortisbc product but a domain name already exist for it ;)
I would also look at edgemarc if they are still doing smaller voip solutions. They are easy to manage, cheap, have a great name, various solutions to fit the bill and then some. Just my 2cts and no I do work for them but have use them many years ago.
Ken
PCNSE
NSE
StrongSwan
I have a client who implemented a new phone system that uses an SBC. I am having trouble getting the FortiGate configured properly to work with this traffic.
Do you have an example configuration for use with a SBC?
I have tried disabling the SIP ALG and SIP Session Helper, but seem to have call quality issues. As is stands right now,
incoming and outgoing calls are working, but with extension to extension dialing the phone rings but neither party is able to hear each other.
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