Twilio
Fun with Twilio
Post Signal 2017
Implementing a Dispatch system for first responders using Twilio. Start of an idea.
Stuff I want to try.
Twilio Client
Voice transcription
Functions
Using Twilio services
Programmable Voice
Geo-CEG - TwimlBin directs Geo-CEG calls to a SIP URI that goes into my Asterisk PBX via Elastic Trunk. Asterisk rings the phones.
I tried to get my Grandstream GXV3240 to register directly to Twilio and failed. It's too much of a pain to debug the SIP session between the phone and Twilio through a Mikrotik firewall/router to be worth the work.
Programmable SMS
This is a very simple way to allow you to receive SMS messages on any Twilio number. You just set it up to forward them to a mobile phone.
Put this in a TwiML bin and connect messaging to it to forward SMS.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <Response> <Message to="+1707yournumberhere">Template:From: Template:Body</Message> </Response>
Elastic Trunk + Asterisk
Twilio Elastic Trunk supports a number by directing calls between PSTN (conventional phones) and your own SIP phone system. It's "elastic" because it means there are no limits on the number of simultaneous calls you can send or receive. Normally you buy "channels" akin to traditional phone lines and can only make as many connections as you have channels. With Elastic you just pay a per minute charge for all combined usage.
Asterisk is VOIP PBX software that supports SIP connections (as well as everything else you can think of.) The learning curve on Asterisk can be tough but it's also something you can set up quickly if your demands are simple. In my case I have it ring some phones, and then after a time delay it picks up and sends the call to the builtin Asterisk voicemail app. Then when it has a completed recording, it emails the recording to me so that I can listen to the voicemail from anywhere.
Refer to https://www.twilio.com/docs/api/sip-trunking/sample-configuration and https://www.twilio.com/resources/images/docs/Asterisk-Twilio.pdf
The price for a single Twilio phone number is $1/month and another $1/month if you want 911 support. The rate for calls (inbound or outbound) is less than a penny a minute.
Call forwarding with Asterisk
Objective: Make a call go to Asterisk and to my cellphone at the same time.
The Asterisk way: Put a rule into the dialplan for outside calls that rings both inside (SIP) phones and also sends the call to my cellphone by calling out via Twilio. This works surprisingly well because Twilio bridges the two lines internally. The media stream does not have to go from Twilio to my PBX and back to Twilio.
The problem is that if my cellphone is working and my PBX is down then I will miss calls.
The Twilio way: Send the call to both places (PBX and phone) from the Twilio side. I think I can do this with Programmable Voice.
Set up notes
Products -> Phone numbers You need one. Set it up. Products -> Elastic SIP Trunking -> Trunks First time through, "Create Sip Trunk" Termination - set it up so you can make calls. You need something like "bellman.pstn.twilio.com" where you choose "bellman". Origination - set it up so you can receive calls and attach a phone number to it. Try using your server like sip:bellman.wildsong.biz
You need to set up authentication on the termination settings for the trunk. The first time through you get prompted but you can edit it later
Products -> Elastic SIP Trunking -> Authentication IP Access Control Lists - Should have the IP addresses that your server uses for outbound traffic. 67.180.204.170 Credential lists - should have a username and password that you will put into your Asterisk set up.
You can have multiple IP addresses in one ACL, more than one ACL, and more than one credential set. That way you can use one Twilio account from more than one site if you want to.
Set up on Twilio account
- Go to http://twilio.com/
- Create an account if you don't have one
- Buy a phone number
- Attach the number to a trunk, the account comes with one trunk.
Access is controlled via IP address. You have to create an access control list for your Asterisk server and put its IP address into it.
You have to set up URLs for both termination and origination.
You have to set up a credential with a username and password.
Modifications to Asterisk
extensions.conf
pjsip.conf
Twilio Client
You insert some Javascript into a web page, and then you can use that page to establish calls. I need to look at this, it looks interesting.
Twilio for Geo-CEG
Geo-CEG is a small non-profit. The board members live all over the place.
I got a Twilio account through their program to support non-profits.
Currently I have a little IVR that just offers to send your call to either me or Christian (press '1' or '2')
I want the number to be able to forward calls to whoever is "on call", and to store voice mails when no one is available.
Programmable SMS
You can use the same number to send and receive SMS calls. I tested it using the sample code by putting the PHP on my own server and then pointing the SMS URL at my server. It works. That's how I can receive SMS messages. I have not tried sending an SMS yet, except that the PHP code sends a reply back.
I set up a script in my dev SSL server, sms.php.
I have written a Python Flask app to play with SMS more, see http://github.com/brian32768/twilio-weatherman It uses both Programmable SMS and Programmable Voice.
Programmable Voice
See the same app mentioned above, http://github.com/brian32768/twilio-weatherman
Take aways from Signal Conference 2015
Move stuff into Asterisk
Lots of stuff in Twilio space could be implemented in Asterisk space. But here at the end of 2016 I am now working on going the other direction. I have Asterisk working just fine but am thinking of dumping it in favor of OpenVBX.
My thought back then was that TWIML could be used to design IVR / autoattendant systems in Asterisk. Doing this could make it easy to implement a failover, primary would be Asterisk but if * is down then the same code would fire up and run in Twilio.
What Twilio is doing
What Twilio is doing is building a big company by (1) doing only the back end, no applications. They provide only APIs and you write your own applications. (2) Using cloud. Everything they do lives in Amazon. Based on that there must be some backend to connect to carriers that does not require anything but IP. :-) That is, they don't have big server rooms full of HT503's
They have that big giant corporation mentality. But they do make their services available to little fleas like us. I can buy one phone line for $1 a month.
Resources
Online resources
Twilio docs is of course the ultimate resource.
Twilio on Github
Books
Twilio Best Practices, Tim Rogers, Packt Pubs 2014 Good book, but it's more than 10 minutes old. ;-) Twilio is changing fast. Everything I looked at still applies, but Twilio adds new features all the time.