adlee-was-taken 27fb64aad5 lock: pin transitive rcgen/time deps for rust 1.85
str0m 0.21's default crypto backend pulls rcgen 0.14.8 and time
0.3.51, both of which require rustc 1.88+. The workspace toolchain
is pinned to 1.85 (edition 2024 floor, the str0m MSRV). Pin rcgen
to 0.14.7 and time to 0.3.41 in Cargo.lock so the str0m tree
builds on the pinned toolchain. No source changes; this only
restricts transitive versions.
2026-06-28 12:39:44 -04:00
2026-06-28 09:34:04 -04:00

Rutster

The open-source engine for building the AI-era contact center — self-hostable, AI-native, memory-safe Rust. A spiritual successor to Asterisk's place in the world, not its protocols or its architecture.

Not a port of Asterisk. rutster inherits the role Asterisk held — the self-hostable engine a technical builder uses to stand up a contact center — and re-aims it at a category AI is actively disrupting, instead of a PBX category UCaaS already ate.

Why it exists

Asterisk won because contact centers were built on it (Vicidial, GOautodial, a thousand integrator builds) — it never tried to be Five9. rutster inherits that position: it is a framework / engine, not a turnkey product.

The white space no incumbent fills:

Competitor What they are rutster's edge
LiveKit Horizontal real-time media infra (Go) rutster owns the contact-center domain (ACD, IVR, queues, recording, CDR, dialer, supervisor) LiveKit will never ship
Cloud CCaaS (Five9, Genesys, NICE, Amazon Connect, Twilio Flex) Proprietary, AI bolted on Self-hostable, AI-native, no per-seat/minute lock-in
Cloud AI-voice (Vapi, Retell, Bland) Cheap managed voice bots You own your calls and training data; it's a contact center (escalation, queues), not a single bot
Dated OSS (Vicidial, FreePBX) Self-hostable, Asterisk-era Modern, AI-native, memory-safe Rust

The wedge is a coherent combination, not a silver bullet:

  1. No-GC real-time determinism — tight turn-taking / barge-in / jitter in a no-GC loop.
  2. One secure auditable boundary — trunk termination + media + spend/abuse control + audit in a single memory-safe trust domain. One thing to certify (strongest for PCI / HIPAA / TCPA).
  3. Operational simplicity — one binary, one bill, one deploy.

Honest caveat: the agent brain (STT/LLM/TTS) is necessarily external — audio leaves the box to reach it, same as LiveKit. The real-time edge therefore lives in the local reflexes that don't need the brain (VAD killing TTS the instant the caller speaks, barge-in, jitter, pacing, DTMF), not the brain round-trip. The moat is the whole.

Who it's for

The modern equivalent of the 2006 Linux-nerd-who-stood-up-Asterisk-for-an-SMB: the CLI/IDE/AI-comfortable self-hosting technical builder — runs Claude Code in a terminal, lives in an editor with an AI pair, versions everything in git, self-hosts on principle. Not the no-code admin clicking a flow-designer canvas. The builder serves the non-technical operator downstream, exactly as integrators did on top of Asterisk.

What it is / isn't

  • Is: a Rust media core owning the per-call vertical (trunk SIP termination + RTP/SRTP media
    • local real-time reflexes + a clean audio tap to an external brain + in-boundary spend/abuse control); a programmable call model exposed as a REST/gRPC API + event stream; WebRTC-first human ingress; a library of contact-center capabilities (ACD, IVR, queues, recording, CDR, dialer, supervisor) delivered as services around the core.
  • Isn't: a TDM/PSTN-hardware PBX. No DAHDI, no Sangoma/Digium cards, no ISDN/SS7, no IAX2/H.323/SCCP/MGCP/Unistim. PSTN reach is via SIP trunks only. Inbound SIP endpoint registration (desk phones) is deferred to an out-of-tree edge adapter — not the browser/SSO UX rutster targets.

Core design pillars

  1. Memory-safe by construction — Rust everywhere on the hot path; fuzzed sans-IO protocol parsers. Hostile bytes hit a fuzzed Rust parser first. Eliminates the buffer-overflow/RCE CVE class — and, with the C SBC edge dropped, this is literally true at the wire.
  2. Security-as-product — the single auditable boundary is the moat. TLS/SRTP mandatory, deny-by-default routing, built-in toll-fraud controls, mTLS gRPC admin (no plaintext AMI), hard multi-tenancy. Compliance is a buying criterion, not a row.
  3. In-boundary spend / abuse control — spend caps and abuse/pacing control live inside the trust boundary, co-located with trunk termination. A runaway brain can't exceed pacing or spend because it doesn't hold the wire — structurally impossible for a 3-vendor stack.
  4. Data ownership — calls and training data never leave the operator's infra. The self-host wedge and the fuel for the ML self-improvement loop.
  5. Degradation, deterministic, observable — no-GC real-time loop; OpenTelemetry traces that follow a single call across the boundary; config-as-data, not .conf files edited on a box.
  6. Operational simplicity — one binary, one bus, one deploy (compose up).

Layout

  • docs/ARCHITECTURE.md — the fused per-call vertical + composable horizontal platform; the agent tap as the central interface.
  • docs/PORT_PLAN.md — the capability checklist (what a telephony system must handle), not an architecture template. Every Asterisk subsystem mapped to a disposition with rationale.
  • docs/adr/ — decisions. Highlights:
    • 0002 — north star + fused vertical
    • 0003 — Rust-native trunk SIP (no SBC shield)
    • 0004 — GPL-3.0-or-later
    • 0005 — Valkey (bus + state store)
    • 0006 — WebRTC-first ingress; SIP endpoint deferred

Status

Scoping. No code yet — the vision revision and ADRs define the architecture; the workspace will be scaffolded from the capability ladder and the thin-slice first proof.

First proof (the spearhead)

The full thin slice, sequenced so each step is its own proof — never a big bang:

  1. WebRTC media loopback (terminate RTP/SRTP, echo audio to a browser) — proves the media core
  2. Add the tap (route audio to an external echo process and back) — proves the tap interface
  3. Swap echo for the brain (ideally a single speech-to-speech API, e.g. OpenAI Realtime, to collapse STT+LLM+TTS into one integration) — proves agent integration
  4. Add barge-in (VAD-driven playout kill) — proves the reflex
  5. Replace WebRTC ingress with a real PSTN trunk call — proves the trunk client
  6. Add the spend cap (hard-stop at threshold) — proves the boundary

Steps 14 are the reflex loop — the hard, most-differentiating part proves itself before trunk integration piles on. "I called my Rust box and an AI answered the phone" is the momentum fuel a solo multi-year build needs.

Capability ladder (the grand vision, incrementally)

Rung Capability Reuses
1 Self-serve — AI answers, contains the call the thin-slice first proof
2 Escalation — human agent barges in / takes over when AI breaks down the audiohook/barge primitive
3 Measurement — containment rate, where/why AI failed CDR + analytics on calls you own
4 Self-improvement — every takeover → auto-labeled training data → loop rungs 13 compounding

License

GPL-3.0-or-later (ADR-0004). Strong copyleft in the Asterisk lineage, modernized one notch. The license is the floor, not the moat — the wedge is.

Description
Terribly-named "spiritual" ancestor to the niche Asterisk PBX filled in 2005, but for AI-first call centers in 2026
Readme 5.1 MiB
Languages
Rust 94%
Python 3.4%
Dockerfile 1.4%
Shell 0.8%
HTML 0.4%