The xferfailsound was read from the channel at the beginning of the transfer,
and that value is "cached" for the duration of the transfer. Therefore, changing
the xferfailsound on the channel using the FEATURE() dialplan function does
nothing once the transfer is under way.
This makes it so the transfer code instead gets the xferfailsound configuration
options from the channel when it is actually going to be used.
This patch also fixes a potential memory leak of the props object as well as
making sure the condition variable gets initialized before being destroyed.
ASTERISK-25696 #close
Change-Id: Ic726b0f54ef588bd9c9c67f4b0e4d787934f85e4
Added new global option (regcontext) to pjsip. When set, Asterisk will
dynamically create and destroy a NoOp priority 1 extension
for a given endpoint who registers or unregisters with us.
ASTERISK-25670 #close
Reported-by: Daniel Journo
Change-Id: Ib1530c5b45340625805c057f8ff1fb240a43ea62
* changes:
Sorcery: Create human friendly serializer names.
Stasis: Create human friendly taskprocessor/serializer names.
taskprocessor.c: New API for human friendly taskprocessor names.
taskprocessor.c: Sort CLI "core show taskprocessors" output.
On a system with multiple ip addresses in the same subnet, if a
transport is bound to a specific ip address and endpoint/media_address
is set, the SIP/SDP will have the correct address in all fields but
the rtp stream MAY still originate from one of the other ip addresses,
most probably the "primary" ip address. This happens because
res_pjsip_sdp_rtp/create_rtp always calls ast_instance_new with
the "all" ip address (0.0.0.0 or ::).
The new option causes res_pjsip_sdp_rtp/create_rtp to call
ast_rtp_instance_new with the endpoint's media_address (if specified)
instead of the "all" address. This causes the packets to originate from
the specified address.
ASTERISK-25632
ASTERISK-25637
Reported-by: Olivier Krief
Reported-by: Dan Journo
Change-Id: I3dfaa079e54ba7fb7c4fd1f5f7bd9509bbf8bd88
* Add new API call to get a sequence number for use in human friendly
taskprocessor names.
* Add new API call to create a taskprocessor name in a given buffer and
append a sequence number.
Change-Id: Iac458f05b45232315ed64aa31b1df05b875537a9
Renamed global declaration:tv to dummy_tv_var_for_types,
which would oltherwise cause 'shadow' warnings when 'tv'
was declared as a local variable elsewhere.
Added comment to note that dummy_tv_var_for_types is never
really exported and only used as a place holder.
ASTERISK-25627 #close
Change-Id: I9a6e17995006584f3627efe8988e3f8aa0f5dc28
This is the sixth patch in a series meant to reduce the bulk of pbx.c.
This moves hangup handler management functions to their own source.
Change-Id: Ib25a75aa57fc7d5c4294479e5cc46775912fb104
This is the sixth patch in a series meant to reduce the bulk of pbx.c.
This moves dialplan application management functions to their own source.
Change-Id: I444c10fb90a3cdf9f3047605d6a8aad49c22c44c
This is the fifth patch in a series meant to reduce the bulk of pbx.c.
This moves ast_switch functions to their own source.
Change-Id: Ic2592a18a5c4d8a3c2dcf9786c9a6f650a8c628e
The menuselect conflict between app_voicemail and res_mwi_external
makes it hard to package 1 version of Asterisk. There no actual
build dependencies between the 2 so moving this check to runtime
seems like a better solution.
The ast_vm_register and ast_vm_greeter_register functions in app.c
were modified to return AST_MODULE_LOAD_DECLINE instead of -1 if there
is already a voicemail module registered. The modules' load_module
functions were then modified to return DECLINE instead of -1 to the
loader. Since -1 is interpreted by the loader as AST_MODULE_LOAD_FAILURE,
the modules were incorrectly causing Asterisk to stop so this needed
to be cleaned up anyway.
Now you can build both and use modules.conf to decide which voicemail
implementation to load.
The default menuselect options still build app_voicemail and not
res_mwi_external but if both ARE built, res_mwi_external will load
first and become the voicemail provider unless modules.conf rules
prevent it. This is noted in CHANGES.
Change-Id: I7d98d4e8a3b87b8df9e51c2608f0da6ddfb89247
This is the third patch in a series meant to reduce the bulk of pbx.c.
This moves channel and global variable routines to their own source.
Change-Id: Ibe8fb4647db11598591d443a99e3f99200a56bc6
This is the second patch in a series meant to reduce the bulk of pbx.c.
This moves custom function management routines to their own source.
Change-Id: I34a6190282f781cdbbd3ce9d3adeac3c3805e177
We joked about splitting pbx.c into multiple files but this first step was
fairly easy. All of the pbx_builtin dialplan applications have been moved
into pbx_builtins.c and a new pbx_private.h file was added. load_pbx_builtins()
is called by asterisk.c just after load_pbx().
A few functions were renamed and are cross-exposed between the 2 source files.
Change-Id: I87066be3dbf7f5822942ac1449d98cc43fc7561a
Updated ast_websocket_write to encode the entire frame in to one
write operation, to ensure that we don't end up with a situation
where the websocket header has been sent, while the body can not
be written.
Previous to August's patch in commit b9bd3c14, certain network
conditions could cause the header to be written, and then the
sub-sequent body to fail - which would cause the next successful
write to contain a new header, and a new body (resulting in
the peer receiving two headers - the second of which would be
read as part of the body for the first header).
This was patched to have both write operations individually fail
by closing the websocket.
In a case available to the submitter of this patch, the same
body which would consistently fail to write, would succeed
if written at the same time as the header.
This update merges the two operations in to one, adds debug messages
indicating the reason for a websocket connection being closed during
a write operation, and clarifies some variable names for code legibility.
Change-Id: I4db7a586af1c7a57184c31d3d55bf146f1a40598
When an endpoint is created, its messages are forwarded to both the tech
endpoint topic and the all endpoints topic. This is done so that various
parties interested in endpoint messages can subscribe to just the tech
endpoint and receive all messages associated with that particular technology,
as opposed to subscribing to the all endpoints topic. Unfortunately, when the
tech endpoint is created, it also forwards all of its messages to the all
topic. This results in duplicate messages whenever an endpoint publishes its
messages.
This patch resolves the duplicate message issue by creating a new function
for Stasis caching topics, stasis_cp_sink_create. In most respects, this acts
as a normal caching topic, save that it no longer forwards messages it receives
to the all endpoints topic. This allows it to act as an aggregation "sink",
while preserving the necessary caching behaviour.
ASTERISK-25137 #close
Reported-by: Vitezslav Novy
ASTERISK-25116 #close
Reported-by: George Joseph <george.joseph@fairview5.com>
Tested-by: George Joseph <george.joseph@fairview5.com>
Change-Id: Ie47784adfb973ab0063e59fc18f390d7dd26d17b
pjproject < 2.5.0 will segfault on a tls transport if async_operations
is greater than 1. A runtime version check has been added to throw
an error if the version is < 2.5.0 and async_operations > 1.
To assist in the check, a new api "ast_compare_versions" was added
to utils which compares 2 major.minor.patch.extra version strings.
ASTERISK-25615 #close
Change-Id: I8e88bb49cbcfbca88d9de705496d6f6a8c938a98
Reported-by: George Joseph
Tested-by: George Joseph
Both transport and endpoint now check for the existence and readability
of tls certificate and key files before passing them on to pjproject.
This will cause the object to not load rather than waiting for pjproject
to discover that there's a problem when a session is attempted.
NOTE: chan_sip also uses ast_rtp_dtls_cfg_parse but it's located
in build_peer which is gigantic and I didn't want to disturb it.
Error messages will emit but it won't interrupt chan_sip loading.
ASTERISK-25618 #close
Change-Id: Ie43f2c1d653ac1fda6a6f6faecb7c2ebadaf47c9
Reported-by: George Joseph
Tested-by: George Joseph
An earlier commit changed the id of dynamic contacts to contain
a hash instead of the uri. This patch updates status change
logging to show the aor/uri instead of the id. This required
adding the aor id to contact and contact_status and adding
uri to contact_status. The aor id gets added to contact and
contact_status in their allocators and the uri gets added to
contact_status in pjsip_options when the contact_status is
created or updated.
ASTERISK-25598 #close
Reported-by: George Joseph
Tested-by: George Joseph
Change-Id: I56cbec1d2ddbe8461367dd8b6da8a6f47f6fe511
Currently if a channel is transferred out of a bridge, the BRIDGEPEER
variable (also BRIDGEPVTCALLID) remain set even once the channel is
out of the bridge. This patch removes these variables when leaving
the bridge.
ASTERISK-25600 #close
Reported by: Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I753ead2fffbfc65427ed4e9244c7066610e546da
Several issues are addressed here:
- main() is large, and half of it is only used if we're not rasterisk;
fixed by spliting up the daemon part into a separate function.
- Call ast_term_init from rasterisk as well.
- Remove duplicate code reading/writing asterisk history file.
- Attempt to tackle background color issues and color changes that
occur. Tested by starting asterisk -c until the colors stopped
changing at odd locations.
- Remove unused term_prep() and term_prompt() functions.
ASTERISK-25585 #close
Change-Id: Ib641a0964c59ef9fe6f59efa8ccb481a9580c52f
Often, the metric names of statistics we are generating for StatsD have some
dynamic component to them. This can be the name of a particular resource, or
some internal status label in Asterisk. With the current set of functions,
callers of the statsd API must first build the metric name themselves, then
pass this to the API functions. This results in a large amount of boilerplate
code and usage of either fixed length static buffers or dynamic memory
allocation, neither of which is desireable.
This patch adds two new functions to the StatsD API that support a printf
style format specifier for constructing the metric name. A dynamic string,
allocated in threadstorage, is used to build the metric name. This eases
the burden on users of the StatsD API.
Change-Id: If533c72d1afa26d807508ea48b4d8c7b32f414ea
Previously, a trancoding module did not have access to the joint but cached
format. Therefore, the module did not have access to the attributes negotiated
via SDP (line fmtp). Now, a translation module receives the joint format.
ASTERISK-25545 #close
Change-Id: Id6878a989b50573298dab115d3371ea369e1a718
In practical tests, we have seen certain taskprocessors, specifically
Stasis subscription taskprocessors, cross the recently-added high-water
mark and emit a warning. This high-water mark warning is only intended
to be emitted when things have tanked on the system and things are
heading south quickly. In the practical tests, the Stasis taskprocessors
sometimes had a max depth of 180 tasks in them, and Asterisk wasn't in
any danger at all.
As such, this ups the high-water mark to 500 tasks instead. It also
redefines the SIP threadpool request denial number to be a multiple of
the taskprocessor high-water mark.
Change-Id: Ic8d3e9497452fecd768ac427bb6f58aa616eebce
We have observed situations where the SIP threadpool may become
deadlocked. However, because incoming traffic is still arriving, the SIP
threadpool's queue can continue to grow, eventually running the system
out of memory.
This change makes it so that incoming traffic gets rejected with a 503
response if the queue is backed up too much.
Change-Id: I4e736d48a2ba79fd1f8056c0dcd330e38e6a3816
This increases the maximum length of account code's to match
extensions. This ensures it is always possible to set an
accountcode to ${EXTEN} without truncation.
ASTERISK-23904
Reported by: Ben Merrills
Change-Id: If122602304ce03362722eb213a3111b32da5eeb9
Added a new api to res_statsd.c to allow it to receive a
character pointer for the value argument. This allows for a
'+' and a '-' to easily be sent with the value.
ASTERISK-25419
Reported By: Ashley Sanders
Change-Id: Id6bb53600943d27347d2bcae26c0bd5643567611
A previous commit reduced the AST_BUILDOPTS compiler define to
only include options that affected ABI. This included some options
that were previously displayed by cli "core show settings". This
change corrects the CLI display while still restricting buildopts.h
to ABI effecting options only.
ASTERISK-25434 #close
Reported by: Rusty Newton
Change-Id: Id07af6bedd1d7d325878023e403fbd9d3607e325
Add the ability to filter output from pjsip list and show commands
using the "like" predicate like chan_sip.
For endpoints, aors, auths, registrations, identifyies and transports,
the modification was a simple change of an ast_sorcery_retrieve_by_fields
call to ast_sorcery_retrieve_by_regex. For channels and contacts a
little more work had to be done because neither of those objects are
true sorcery objects. That was just removing the non-matching object
from the final container. Of course, a little extra plumbing in the
common pjsip_cli code was needed to parse the "like" and pass the regex
to the get_container callbacks.
Some of the get_container code in res_pjsip_endpoint_identifier was also
refactored for simplicity.
ASTERISK-25477 #close
Reported by: Bryant Zimmerman
Tested by: George Joseph
Change-Id: I646d9326b778aac26bb3e2bcd7fa1346d24434f1
There have been crashes and general instability seen in the pubsub code,
so this patch introduces three changes to increase the stability.
First, the ownership model for subscriptions has been modified. Due to
RLS, subscriptions are stored in memory as a tree structure. Prior to my
patch, the PJSIP subscription was the owner of the subscription tree.
When the PJSIP subscription told us that it was terminating, we started
destroying the subscription tree along with all of the individual leaf
subscriptions that belong to the tree. The problem with this model is
that the two actors in play here, the PJSIP subscription and the
individual leaf subscriptions, need to have joint ownership of the
subscription tree. So now, the PJSIP subscription and the individual
leaf subscriptions each have a reference to the subscription tree. This
way, we will not actually free memory until no players are left that
care. The PJSIP subscription is a bigger stakeholder, in that if the
PJSIP subscription's reference to the subscription tree is removed, the
subscription tree instructs the leaf subscriptions to shut down and drop
their references to the subscription tree when possible. The individual
leaf subscriptions, upon being told to shut down, can drop their stasis
subscriptions or whatever they use to learn of new state, and then drop
their reference to the subscription tree once they are ready to die.
Second, the lifetime of a PJSIP subscription's reference to our
subscription tree has been altered. As I learned from doing a deep dive,
the PJSIP evsub code can tell Asterisk multiple times that the
subscription has been terminated, and not all of these times
are especially helpful. I have altered the message flow that we use for
SIP subscriptions such that we will always drop the PJSIP subscription's
reference to the subscription tree when we send the NOTIFY that
terminates a SIP subscription. This also means that we will now queue
NOTIFY requests to be sent after responding to incoming SUBSCRIBEs so
that we can have predictable state changes from the PJSIP evsub code.
Third, the synchronization of operations has been improved. PJSIP can
call into our code from a serializer thread (e.g. upon receiving an
incoming request) or from the monitor thread (e.g. when a subscription
times out). Because of this, there is the possibility of competing
threads stepping on each other. PJSIP attempts to do some
synchronization on its own by always keeping the dialog lock held when
it calls into us. However, since we end up pushing tasks into the
serializer, the result was that serialized operations were not grabbing
the dialog lock and could, as a result, step on something that was being
attempted by a different thread. Now we ensure that serialized
operations grab the dialog lock, then check for extenuating
circumstances, then proceed with their operation if they can.
Change-Id: Iff2990c40178dad9cc5f6a5c7f76932ec644b2e5
In a realtime based system with a limited number of threadpool threads
it is possible for a deadlock to occur. This happens when permanent
endpoint state is updated, which will cause database queries to be done.
These queries may result in URI validation being done which is done
synchronously using a PJSIP thread. If all PJSIP threads are in use
processing traffic they themselves may be blocked waiting to get the
permanent endpoint container lock when identifying an endpoint.
This change moves URI validation to occur at use time instead of
configuration time. While this comes at a cost of not seeing a problem
until you use it it does solve the underlying deadlock problem.
ASTERISK-25486 #close
Change-Id: I2d7d167af987d23b3e8199e4a68f3359eba4c76a
This patch adds the functions
ast_cdr_modifier_register()
ast_cdr_modifier_unregister()
That work much like ast_cdr_register() and ast_cdr_unregister().
Modules registered will be given a chance to modify (or to do whatever
they want) CDR fields just before they are passed to registered engines.
Thus, for instance, if a module change the "userfield" field of a CDR,
the modified value will be passed to every registered CDR backend for
logging.
ASTERISK-25479 #close
Change-Id: If11d8fd19ef89b1a66ecacf1201e10fcf86ccd56
This patch adds the ability to subscribe to all events. There are two possible
ways to accomplish this:
(1) On initial WebSocket connection. This patch adds a new query parameter,
'subscribeAll'. If present and True, Asterisk will subscribe the
applications to all ARI events.
(2) Via the applications resource. When subscribing in this manner, an ARI
client should merely specify a blank resource name, i.e., 'channels:'
instead of 'channels:12354'. This will subscribe the application to all
resources of the 'channels' type.
ASTERISK-24870 #close
Change-Id: I4a943b4db24442cf28bc64b24bfd541249790ad6
The default_from_user retrieval function was pulling the
default_from_user from the global configuration struct in an unsafe way.
If using a database as a backend configuration store, the global
configuration struct is short-lived, so grabbing a pointer from it
results in referencing freed memory.
The fix here is to copy the default_from_user value out of the global
configuration struct.
Thanks go to John Hardin for discovering this problem and proposing the
patch on which this fix is based.
ASTERISK-25390 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I6b96067a495c1259da768f4012d44e03e7c6148c
When Asterisk sends an outbound SIP request, if there is no direct
reason to place a specific value for the username in the From header,
Asterisk would generate a UUID. For example, this would happen when
sending outbound OPTIONS requests when qualifying or when sending
outbound INVITE requests when originating (if no explicit caller ID were
provided). The issue is that some SIP providers reject these sorts of
requests with a "Name too long" error response.
This patch aims to fix this by changing the default outbound username in
From headers to "asterisk". This value can be overridden by changing the
default_from_user option in the global options if desired.
ASTERISK-25377 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I6a4d34a56ff73ff4f661b0075aeba5461b7f3190
The keepalive support in res_pjsip_sdp_rtp currently assumes
that a stream will only be negotiated once. This is false.
If the stream is replaced and later added back it can be
negotiated again causing multiple keepalive scheduled items
to exist. This change explicitly deletes the existing
keepalive scheduled item before adding the new one.
The res_pjsip_sdp_rtp module also does not stop RTP
keepalives or timeout timer if the stream has been
replaced. This change adds a callback to the session media
interface to allow a media stream to be stopped without
the resources being destroyed. This allows the scheduled
items and RTP to be stopped when the stream no longer
exists.
ASTERISK-25356 #close
Change-Id: Ibe6a7cc0927c87326fd5f1c0d4ad889dbfbea1de
Modules commonly used the pj_gethostip function for retrieving the
IP address of the host. This function does not cache the result and may
result in a DNS lookup occurring, or additional work. If the DNS
server is unreachable or network issues arise this can cause the
pj_gethostip function to block for a period of time.
This change adds an ast_sip_get_host_ip and ast_sip_get_host_ip_string
function which does the same thing but caches the host IP address at
module load time. This results in no additional work being done each
time the local host IP address is needed.
ASTERISK-25342 #close
Change-Id: I3205deb679b01fa5ac05a94b623bfd620a2abe1e
* Make ast_rtp_codecs_payload_code() get the current mapping or create a
rx payload type mapping.
ASTERISK-25166
Reported by: Kevin Harwell
ASTERISK-17410
Reported by: Boris Fox
Change-Id: Ia4b2d45877a8f004f6ce3840e3d8afe533384e56
There are numerous problems with the current implementation of the RTP
payload type mapping in Asterisk. It uses only one mapping structure to
associate payload types to codecs. The single mapping is overkill if all
of the payload type values are well known values. Dynamic payload type
mappings do not work as well with the single mapping because RFC3264
allows each side of the link to negotiate different dynamic mappings for
what they want to receive. Not only could you have the same codec mapped
for sending and receiving on different payload types you could wind up
with the same payload type mapped to different codecs for each direction.
1) An independent payload type mapping is needed for sending and
receiving.
2) The receive mapping needs to keep track of previous mappings because of
the slack to when negotiation happens and current packets in flight using
the old mapping arrive.
3) The transmit mapping only needs to keep track of the current negotiated
values since we are sending the packets and know when the switchover takes
place.
* Needed to create ast_rtp_codecs_payload_code_tx() and make some callers
use the new function because ast_rtp_codecs_payload_code() was used for
mappings in both directions.
* Needed to create ast_rtp_codecs_payloads_xover() for cases where we need
to pass preferred codec mappings to the peer channel for early media
bridging or when we need to prefer the offered mapping that RFC3264 says
we SHOULD use.
* ast_rtp_codecs_payloads_xover() and ast_rtp_codecs_payload_code_tx() are
the only new public functions created. All the others were only used for
the tx or rx mapping direction so the function doxygen now reflects which
direction the function operates.
* chan_mgcp.c: Removed call to ast_rtp_codecs_payloads_clear() as doing
that makes no sense when processing an incoming SDP. We would be wiping
out any mappings that we set for the possible outgoing SDP we sent
earlier.
ASTERISK-25166
Reported by: Kevin Harwell
ASTERISK-17410
Reported by: Boris Fox
Change-Id: Iaf6c227bca68cb7c414cf2fd4108a8ac98bd45ac
Some codecs that may be a third party library to Asterisk need to have
knowledge of the format attributes that were negotiated. Unfortunately,
when the great format migration of Asterisk 13 occurred, that ability
was lost.
This patch adds an API call, ast_format_attribute_get, to the core
format API, along with updates to the unit test to check the new API
call. A new callback is also now available for format attribute modules,
such that they can provide the format attribute values they manage.
Note that the API returns a void *. This is done as the format attribute
modules themselves may store format attributes in any particular manner
they like. Care should be taken by consumers of the API to check the
return value before casting and dereferencing. Consumers will obviously
need to have a priori knowledge of the type of the format attribute as
well.
Change-Id: Ieec76883dfb46ecd7aff3dc81a52c81f4dc1b9e3
clock_gettime() is, unfortunately, not portable. But I did like that
over our usual `ts.tv_nsec = tv.tv_usec * 1000` copy/paste code we
usually do when we want a timespec and all we have is ast_tvnow().
This patch adds ast_tsnow(), which mimics ast_tvnow(), but returns a
timespec. If clock_gettime() is available, it will use that. Otherwise
ast_tsnow() falls back to using ast_tvnow().
Change-Id: Ibb1ee67ccf4826b9b76d5a5eb62e90b29b6c456e
An http request can be sent to get the existing Asterisk logs.
The command "curl -v -u user:pass -X GET 'http://localhost:8088
/ari/asterisk/logging'" can be run in the terminal to access the
newly implemented functionality.
* Retrieve all existing log channels
ASTERISK-25252
Change-Id: I7bb08b93e3b938c991f3f56cc5d188654768a808
An http request can be sent to create a log channel
in Asterisk.
The command "curl -v -u user:pass -X POST
'http://localhost:088/ari/asterisk/logging/mylog?
configuration=notice,warning'" can be run in the terminal
to access the newly implemented functionality for ARI.
* Ability to create log channels using ARI
ASTERISK-25252
Change-Id: I9a20e5c75716dfbb6b62fd3474faf55be20bd782
An http request can be sent to delete a log channel
in Asterisk.
The command "curl -v -u user:pass -X DELETE 'http://localhost:8088
/ari/asterisk/logging/mylog'" can be run in the terminal
to access the newly implemented functionally for ARI.
* Able to delete log channels using ARI
ASTERISK-25252
Change-Id: Id6eeb54ebcc511595f0418d586ff55914bc3aae6
An http request can be sent to rotate a specified log channel.
If the channel does not exist, an error response will be
returned.
The command "curl -v -u user:pass -X PUT 'http://localhost:8088
/ari/asterisk/logging/logChannelName/rotate'" can be run in the
terminal to access this new functionality.
* Added the ability to rotate log files through ARI
ASTERISK-25252
Change-Id: Iaefa21cbbc1b29effb33004ee3d89c977e76ab01
Prior to ASTERISK-24988, the WebSocket handshake was resolved before Stasis
applications were registered. This was done such that the WebSocket would be
ready when an application is registered. However, by creating the WebSocket
first, the client had the ability to make requests for the Stasis application
it thought had been created with the initial handshake request. The inevitable
conclusion of this scenario was the cart being put before the horse.
ASTERISK-24988 resolved half of the problem by ensuring that the applications
were created and registered with Stasis prior to completing the handshake
with the client. While this meant that Stasis was ready when the client
received the green-light from Asterisk, it also meant that the WebSocket was
not yet ready for Stasis to dispatch messages.
This patch introduces a message queuing mechanism for delaying messages from
Stasis applications while the WebSocket is being constructed. When the ARI
event processor receives the message from the WebSocket that it is being
created, the event processor instantiates an event session which contains a
message queue. It then tries to create and register the requested applications
with Stasis. Messages that are dispatched from Stasis between this point and
the point at which the event processor is notified the WebSocket is ready, are
stashed in the queue. Once the WebSocket has been built, the queue's messages
are dispatched in the order in which they were originally received and the
queue is concurrently cleared.
ASTERISK-25181 #close
Reported By: Matt Jordan
Change-Id: Iafef7b85a2e0bf78c114db4c87ffc3d16d671a17
A testsuite test recently failed due to a crash that occurred in the DNS
core. The problem was that the test could not resolve an address, did
not set a result on the DNS query, and then indicated the query was
completed. The DNS core does not handle the case of a query with no
result gracefully, and so there is a crash.
This changeset makes the DNS system resolver set a result with a
zero-length answer in the case that a DNS resolution failure occurs
early. The DNS core now also will accept such a response without
treating it as invalid input. A unit test was updated to no longer treat
setting a zero-length response as off-nominal.
Change-Id: Ie56641e22debdaa61459e1c9a042e23b78affbf6
This will add ECDH support to Asterisk. It will
detect auto ECDH support in OpenSSL
(1.0.2b and above) during ./configure. If this is
available, it will use it,
otherwise it will fall back to prime256v1 (this
behavior is consistent with
other projects such as Apache and nginx).
This fixes WebRTC being broken in Firefox 38+ due
to Firefox now only supporting
ciphers with perfect forward secrecy.
ASTERISK-25265 #close
Change-Id: I8c13b33a2a79c0bde2e69e4ba6afa5ab9351465b
This change adds support for the 'rtp_timeout' and 'rtp_timeout_hold'
endpoint options. These allow the channel to be hung up if RTP
is not received from the remote endpoint for a specified number of
seconds.
ASTERISK-25259 #close
Change-Id: I3f39daaa7da2596b5022737b77799d16204175b9
This adds an "rtp_keepalive" option for PJSIP endpoints. Similar to the
chan_sip option, this specifies an interval, in seconds, at which we
will send RTP comfort noise frames. This can be useful for keeping RTP
sessions alive as well as keeping NAT associations alive during lulls.
ASTERISK-25242 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I3b9903d99e35fe5d0b53ecc46df82c750776bc8d
Fixes for issues with the ASTERISK-24934 patch.
* Fixed ast_escape_alloc() and ast_escape_c_alloc() if the s parameter is
an empty string. If it were an empty string the functions returned NULL
as if there were a memory allocation failure. This failure caused the AMI
VarSet event to not get posted if the new value was an empty string.
* Fixed dest buffer overwrite potential in ast_escape() and
ast_escape_c(). If the dest buffer size is smaller than the space needed
by the escaped s parameter string then the dest buffer would be written
beyond the end by the nul string terminator. The num parameter was really
the dest buffer size parameter so I renamed it to size.
* Made nul terminate the dest buffer if the source string parameter s was
an empty string in ast_escape() and ast_escape_c().
* Updated ast_escape() and ast_escape_c() doxygen function description
comments to reflect reality.
* Added some more unit test cases to /main/strings/escape to cover the
empty source string issues.
ASTERISK-25255 #close
Reported by: Richard Mudgett
Change-Id: Id77fc704600ebcce81615c1200296f74de254104
An http request can be sent to reload an Asterisk module. If the
module can not be reloaded or is not already loaded, an error
response will be returned.
The command "curl -v -u user:pass -X PUT 'http://localhost:8088
/ari/asterisk/modules/{moduleName}'" (or something similar, based
on configuration) can be run in the terminal to access this new
functionality.
For more information, see:
https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki.display/~bford/Asterisk+ARI+Resource
* Added new ARI functionality
* Asterisk modules can be reloaded through http requests
ASTERISK-25173
Change-Id: I289188bcae182b2083bdbd9ebfffd50b62f58ae1
An http request can be sent to retrieve information on a single
module, including the resource name, description, use count, status,
and support level.
The command "curl -v -u user:pass -X GET 'http://localhost:8088/ari
/asterisk/modules/{moduleName}'" (or something similar, depending on
configuration) can be run in the terminal to access this new
functionality.
For more information, see:
https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki.display/~bford/Asterisk+ARI+Resource
* Added new ARI functionality
* Information on a single module can now be retrieved
ASTERISK-25173
Change-Id: Ibce5a94e70ecdf4e90329cf0ba66c33a62d37463
During an attended transfer a thread is started that handles imparting the
bridge channel. From the start of the thread to when the bridge channel is
ready exists a gap that can potentially cause problems (for instance, the
channel being swapped is hung up before the replacement channel enters the
bridge thus stopping the transfer). This patch adds a condition that waits
for the impart thread to get to a point of acceptable readiness before
allowing the initiating thread to continue.
ASTERISK-24782
Reported by: John Bigelow
Change-Id: I08fe33a2560da924e676df55b181e46fca604577
This patch adds a new API to the Asterisk core that acts as a media
cache. The core API itself is mostly a thin wrapper around some bucket
API provided implementation that itself acts as the mechanism of
retrieval for media. The media cache API in the core provides the
following:
* A very thin in-memory cache of the active bucket_file items. Unlike a
more traditional cache, it provides no expiration mechanisms. Most
queries that hit the in-memory cache will also call into the bucket
implementations as well. The bucket implementations are responsible
for determining whether or not the active record is active and valid.
This makes sense for the most likely implementation of a media cache
backend, i.e., HTTP. The HTTP layer itself is the actual arbiter of
whether or not a record is truly active; as such, the in-memory cache
in the core has to defer to it.
* The ability to create new items in the media cache from local
resources. This allows for re-creation of items in the cache on
restart.
* Synchronization of items in the media cache to the AstDB. This
also includes various pieces of important metadata.
The API provides sufficient access that higher level APIs, such as the
file or app APIs, do not have to worry about the semantics of the bucket
APIs when needing to playback a resource.
In addition, this patch provides unit tests for the media cache API. The
unit tests use a fake bucket backend to verify correctness.
Change-Id: I11227abbf14d8929eeb140ddd101dd5c3820391e
This patch adds a new function to the bucket API for ast_bucket_file
objects, ast_bucket_file_metadata_callback. It will call ao2_callback on
the ast_bucket_file's ao2_container of metadata, calling the provided
ao2_callback_fn callback on each piece of metadata associated with the
file.
This is particularly useful when a bucket backend has added metadata,
and a higher level API wants to be aware of/access said metadata,
without knowing for sure what the key is.
Change-Id: I96f6757717f47b650df91a437f7df16406227466
An http request can be sent to retrieve a list of all existing modules,
including the resource name, description, use count, status, and
support level.
The command "curl -v -u user:pass -X GET 'http://localhost:8088/ari/
asterisk/modules" (or something similar, depending on configuration)
can be run in the terminal to access this new functionality.
For more information, see:
https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki.display/~bford/Asterisk+ARI+Resource
* Added new ARI functionality
* Information on modules can now be retrieved
Change-Id: I63cbbf0ec0c3544cc45ed2a588dceabe91c5e0b0
Prior to this patch, the DNS core present in master had no default system-level
resolver implementation. Therefore, it was not possible for the DNS core to
perform resolutions unless the libunbound library was installed and the
res_resolver_unbound module was loaded.
This patch introduces a system-level DNS resolver implementation that will
register itself with the lowest consideration priority available (to ensure
that it is to be used only as a last resort). The resolver relies on low-level
DNS search functions to perform a rudimentary DNS search based on a provided
query and then supplies the search results to the DNS core.
ASTERISK-25146 #close
Reported By: Joshua Colp
Change-Id: I3b36ea17b889a98df4f8d80d50bb7ee175afa077
When res_pjsip body generator modules were generating XML or XPIDF
response bodies, there was a chance that the generated body would be the
exact size of the supplied buffer. Adding the nul string terminator would
then write beyond the end of the buffer and potentially corrupt memory.
* Fix MALLOC_DEBUG high fence violations caused by adding a nul string
terminator on the end of a buffer for XML or XPIDF response bodies.
* Made calls to pj_xml_print() safer if the XML prolog is requested. Due
to a bug in pjproject, the return value could be -1 _or_
AST_PJSIP_XML_PROLOG_LEN if the supplied buffer is not large enough.
* Updated the doxygen comment of AST_PJSIP_XML_PROLOG_LEN to describe the
return value of pj_xml_print() when the supplied buffer is not large
enough.
ASTERISK-25168
Reported by: Carl Fortin
Change-Id: Id70e1d373a6a2b2bd9e678b5cbc5e55b308981de
Previously Asterisk did not properly failover to the next resolved DNS
address when a endpoint could not be reached. With this patch, and while
using res_pjsip, SIP requests (both in/out of dialog) now attempt to use
the next address in the list of resolved addresses until a proper response
is received or no more addresses are left.
ASTERISK-25076 #close
Reported by: Joshua Colp
Change-Id: Ief14f4ebd82474881f72f4538f4577f30af2a764
This patch enhances the bucket API in two ways.
First, since ast_bucket and ast_bucket_file instances are immutable, a 'clone'
operation has been added that provides a 'clone' of an existing
ast_bucket/ast_bucket_file object. Note that this makes use of the
ast_sorcery_copy operation, along with the copy callback handler on the
"bucket" and "file" object types for the bucket sorcery instance.
Second, there is a need for the bucket API to ask a wizard if an object
is stale. This is particularly useful with the upcoming media cache
enhancements, where we want to ask the backing data storage if the
object we are currently operating on has known updates. This patch adds
API calls for ast_bucket and ast_bucket_file objects, which callback
into their respective sorcery wizards via the sorcery API.
Unit tests have also been added to cover the respective
ast_bucket/ast_bucket_file clone and staleness operations.
Change-Id: Ib0240ba915ece313f1678a085a716021d75d6b4a
This patch enhances the sorcery API to allow for sorcery wizards to
determine if an object is stale. This includes the following:
* Sorcery objects now have a timestamp that is set on creation. Since
sorcery objects are immutable, this can be used by sorcery wizards to
determine if an object is stale.
* A new API call has been added, ast_sorcery_is_stale. This API call
queries the wizards associated with the object, calling a new callback
function 'is_stale'. Note that if a wizard does not support the new
callback, objects are always assumed to not be stale.
* Unit tests have been added that cover the new API call.
Change-Id: Ica93c6a4e8a06c0376ea43e00cf702920b806064
A module trying to unload needs to wait for all serializers it creates and
uses to complete processing before unloading.
ASTERISK-24907
Reported by: Kevin Harwell
Change-Id: I8c80b90f2f82754e8dbb02ddf3c9121e5e966059
Find and unlink the specified sorcery object type to complement
ast_sorcery_object_register(). Without this function you cannot
completely unload individual modules that use sorcery for configuration.
ASTERISK-24907
Reported by: Kevin Harwell
Change-Id: I1c04634fe9a90921bf676725c7d6bb2aeaab1c88
Added checks when a unit test is registered to see that the summary and
description strings do not end with a new-line '\n' for consistency.
The check generates a warning message and will cause the
/main/test/registrations unit test to fail.
* Updated struct ast_test_info member doxygen comments.
Change-Id: I295909b6bc013ed9b6882e85c05287082497534d
The res_pjsip_mwi previously required a reload to set up the proper
subscriptions to allow unsolicited MWI to work. This change
makes it so the act of registering will also cause this to occur.
This is particularly useful if realtime is involved as no reload
needs to occur within Asterisk to cause the MWI information
to get sent.
ASTERISK-25180 #close
Change-Id: Id847b47de4b8b3ab8858455ccc2f07b0f915f252