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Installing FreePBX without IPv4 connectivity

09 January 2023 — ~ideclon

My VPS provider of choice is Hetzner Cloud. I’ve been with them for about three years now. I run all of my self-hosted infrastructure there, including my PBXs, client PBXs, my gateway servers (a post for another time), and more.

Hetzner Cloud recently stopped including IPv4 addresses with all of their VPSs. This means that if I don’t want to pay an extra €3.60/month per VPS, I’ve got no IPv4 connectivity.

I recently had a new client request a FreePBX instance. They have no IPv4 requirements, so I went ahead and attempted to set up on a new Hetzner Cloud VPS.

This turned out not to be as simple as I’d expected. As it turns out, asterisk.org, freepbx.org and diguim.com (yes, the Digium domain still hosts some required resources!) have no IPv6 connectivity, which turned out to be a bit of an issue, as the installation wants to download some resources itself. Besides for that, FreePBX has its own update procedure for modules and FreePBX itself.

Here’s everything I ran into, and how I dealt with it.

I am installing FreePBX from source. This will likely still be helpful if you’re using the FreePBX Distro, but there will be very big differences.

Downloading Asterisk and FreePBX

This was the easiest part. I just downloaded the Asterisk and FreePBX tarballs locally, then scped them to the server.

This would be the same for libpri and DAHDi, but I’m installing this on a VPS, so I didn’t bother with these.

get_mp3_source

In the “Compile and install Asterisk” stage, after extracting the tarball, the installation guide has you run contrib/scripts/get_mp3_source.sh. This script does an svn export from the asterisk.org Gerrit, which is IPv4 only.

(Side note - my understanding is that this can’t be included in the tarball due to patent issues.)

Surprisingly, this repo is not mirrored to Asterisk’s Github. You’ve got two options here:

  • Download the repo (https://gerrit.asterisk.org/admin/repos/mp3,general) elsewhere and save it to addons/mp3, then run the script, or

  • Mirror the repo to Github/any other Git remote (or even another SVN remote, if you really want!) with IPv6 support yourself, and replace the svn export line in the script with git clone [YOUR_GIT_REMOTE]. (This is what I did. Option one is probably quicker.)

make install

The make install (depending on what’s been selected at menuselect) will attempt to download from downloads.digium.com and downloads.asterisk.org. I dealt with this by setting up a proxy and replacing

  • downloads.digium.com” on line 112 in ./build_tools/download_externals and
  • downloads.asterisk.org” on line 25 in ./sounds/Makefile

I did this with Traefik on one of my gateway servers:

http:
  routers:
    digium-downloads:
      rule: "Host(`digium.[DOMAIN]`)"
      entryPoints:
        - "web"
      service: digium-downloads

    asterisk-downloads:
      rule: "Host(`asterisk.[DOMAIN]`)"
      entryPoints:
        - "web"
      service: asterisk-downloads

  services:
    digium-downloads:
      loadBalancer:
        passHostHeader: false
        servers:
          - url: "http://downloads.digium.com:80"

    asterisk-downloads:
      loadBalancer:
        passHostHeader: false
        servers:
          - url: "http://downloads.asterisk.org:80"

You could also set up a transparent proxy and redirect downloads.digium.com in /etc/hosts. Note that the Makefile does use HTTPS for downloads.digium.com, but the site will happily respond on HTTP.

NPM

The installer uses NPM to install some components for the web interface. NPM (pre v17 - FreePBX uses v14, which is an LTS supported until April 2023) does support IPv6, but it always attempts to use a v4 address to talk to registry.npmjs.org.

You’ll need to force NPM to use IPv6 by overriding DNS in /etc/hosts. Ping registry.npmjs.org from the server to get the best address (NPM is behind Cloudflare CDN), and add that to your /etc/hosts.

Modules

FreePBX Modules are hosted at mirror.freepbx.org, which again, has no IPv6 connectivity.

You can change the remote FreePBX uses after installation, with # fwconsole setting MODULE_REPO [REPO_HOST]. Again, I used my Traefik proxy server for this:

http:
  routers:
    fpbx-modules:
      rule: "Host(`freepbx.[DOMAIN]`)"
      entryPoints:
        - "web"
      service: fpbx-modules

  services:
    fpbx-modules:
      loadBalancer:
        passHostHeader: false
        servers:
          - url: "http://mirror.freepbx.org:80"

Dashboard not loading

At this point, when you attempt to load the FreePBX dashboard, it may sit at ~80% for about a minute before displaying.

You can solve this by adding the following line to /etc/hosts: ::1 localhost.localdomain [YOUR_HOSTNAME].

This is because of sendmail (which runs on every pageload of the dashboard) complaining that your hostname is not an FQDN.

IPv6 Transport

FreePBX does not currently support IPv6 transports, so you’ll need to create them manually.

/etc/asterisk/pjsip.transports_custom.conf

[ipv6-udp]
type=transport
protocol=udp
bind=[2a01:4f8:1c1b:1788::1]:5060
verify_client=no
verify_server=no
allow_reload=yes
tos=cs3
cos=3

/etc/asterisk/pjsip.endpoint_custom_post.conf

You’ll need this for every endpoint on the system (trunk/extension):

[ENDPOINT_NAME](+type=endpoint)
transport=ipv6-udp

You can get a list of endpoints with pjsip show endpoints from the Asterisk CLI.

/etc/asterisk/pjsip.registration_custom_post.conf

You’ll need this for every registration on the system:

[ENDPOINT_NAME](+type=registration)
transport=ipv6-udp

You can get a list of endpoints with pjsip show registrations from the Asterisk CLI.

Trunking

While not really to do with the installation, this is something you’ll need to think about.

Very few trunking providers seem to support IPv6 (shout-out to SIPGate - the only provider I was using who does). I’ve got the trunks coming in to my main PBX (dual-stack, IPv6 preferred), and out to this new one.

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