John Todd's Onlamp article mentions an OpenBSD version as of June 2003.
Have I been sleeping while reading asterisk-users?

Is it a seperate project or is it just making Asterisk portable?

Who is working on this and is it in the main CVS yet?

Do they have device drivers ported or just the software parts of
Asterisk?  I think the software parts would be relatively simple but
time consuming.

I've been trying to work up the nerve to try a port to FreeBSD, but I
don't have a lot of time and haven't been a C coder for many years now.
Anything the OpenBSD people have done will probably make a FreeBSD port
trivial.

I have nothing against OpenBSD, and while Linux is acceptable, I have
FreeBSD boxen laying around all over the place doing other tasks with
more than enough spare ooomph to handle Asterisk.  I could roll out 4
VoIP installations tomorrow, with PSTN tie-ins to follow, if it would
run on FreeBSD.

--
Scott Lambert                    KC5MLE                       Unix SysAdmin
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Doing some searching on the mail archives will point you in the right direction. Thorsten Lockert posted quite a bit a while back (May) with his excellent patches for OpenBSD. I have successfully compiled Asterisk, but real life keeps interrupting my intended goal of testing with SIP channels.


What would make leap up and down with glee would be to see the Digium hardware supported in OpenBSD, but I don't think that's going to happen any time soon.

Why don't you try getting it running on FreeBSD? Shouldn't be _that_ hard, but I can't say for sure.

JT
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