This change fixes a few things uncovered during SFU testing.
1. Unreal channels incorrectly forwarded video frames when
no video stream was present on them. This caused a crash when
they were read as the core requires a stream to exist for the
underlying media type. The Unreal channel will now ensure a
stream exists for the media type before forwarding the frame
and if no stream exists then the frame is dropped.
2. Mapping of frames during bridging from the stream number of
the underlying channel to the stream number of the bridge was
done in the wrong location. This resulted in the frame getting
dropped. This mapping now occurs on reading of the frame from
the channel.
3. Bridging was using the wrong ast_read function resulting in
it living in a non-multistream world.
4. In bridge_softmix when adding new streams to existing channels
the wrong stream topology was copied resulting in no streams
being added.
Change-Id: Ib7445722c3219951d6740802a0feddf2908c18c8
Setting maxfiles (maximum number of open files) has no practical
effect on a remote asterisk (rasterisk, rasterisk -x).
It has an ill effect of printing an extra message, which
may be annoying in case of -x.
ASTERISK-27105 #close
Change-Id: Iaf9eb344e4b4b517df91b736b27ec55f6a6921a2
Messages like "fwrite() failed: Connection reset by peer" are no
help whatsoever, especially since they can be caused simply by a
client disconnecting.
* Make those WARNINGs DEBUGs.
* Check the return from ast_iostream_printf of headers.
Change-Id: I17bd5f3621514152a7b2b263c801324c5e96568b
This API was not actively maintained, was not added to new modules
(such as res_pjsip), and there exist better alternatives to acquire the
same information, such as the ARI.
Change-Id: I4b2185a83aeb74798b4ad43ff8f89f971096aa83
Clear channel flag AST_FLAG_END_DTMF_ONLY in ast_waitfordigit_full when
ast_read returns NULL.
ASTERISK-27100 #close
Change-Id: Id3039e9a4e74e0cb359f636c9fd0c9740ebf7d9d
The stream topology (list of streams and order) is now stored with the
configured PJSIP endpoints and used during the negotiation process.
Media negotiation state information has been changed to be stored
in a separate object. Two of these objects exist at any one time
on a session. The active media state information is what was previously
negotiated and the pending media state information is what the
media state will become if negotiation succeeds. Streams and other
state information is stored in this object using the index (or
position) of each individual stream for easy lookup.
The ability for a media type handler to specify a callback for
writing has been added as well as the ability to add file
descriptors with a callback which is invoked when data is available
to be read on them. This allows media logic to live outside of
the chan_pjsip module.
Direct media has been changed so that only the first audio and
video stream are directly connected. In the future once the RTP
engine glue API has been updated to know about streams each individual
stream can be directly connected as appropriate.
Media negotiation itself will currently answer all the provided streams
on an offer within configured limits and on an offer will use the
topology created as a result of the disallow/allow codec lines.
If a stream has been removed or declined we will now mark it as such
within the resulting SDP.
Applications can now also request that the stream topology change.
If we are told to do so we will limit any provided formats to the ones
configured on the endpoint and send a re-invite with the new topology.
Two new configuration options have also been added to PJSIP endpoints:
max_audio_streams: determines the maximum number of audio streams to
offer/accept from an endpoint. Defaults to 1.
max_video_streams: determines the maximum number of video streams to
offer/accept from an endpoint. Defaults to 1.
ASTERISK-27076
Change-Id: I8afd8dd2eb538806a39b887af0abd046266e14c7
In an earlier version of Asterisk a local channel [un]lock all functions were
added in order to keep a crash from occurring when a channel hung up too early
during an attended transfer. Unfortunately, when a transfer failure occurs and
depending on the timing, the local channels sometime do not get properly
unlocked and deref'ed after being locked and ref'ed. This happens because the
underlying local channel structure gets NULLed out before unlocking.
This patch reworks those [un]lock functions and makes sure the values that get
locked and ref'ed later get unlocked and deref'ed.
ASTERISK-27074 #close
Change-Id: Ice96653e29bd9d6674ed5f95feb6b448ab148b09
If an attended transfer failed it was possible for some of the channels
involved to get "stuck" because Asterisk was not hanging up the transfer target.
This patch ensures Asterisk hangs up the transfer target when an attended
transfer failure occurs.
ASTERISK-27075 #close
Change-Id: I98a6ecd92d3461ab98c36f0d9451d23adaf3e5f9
* Update SDP unit tests to test negotiating with declined streams.
Generation of declined m= lines created and responded tested.
Change-Id: I5cb99f5010994ab0c7d9cf2d395eca23fab37b98
The SDP offer/answer model requires an answer to an offer before a new SDP
can be processed. This allows our local SDP creation to be deferred until
we know that we need to create an offer or an answer SDP. Once the local
SDP is created it won't change until the SDP negotiation is restarted.
An offer SDP in an initial SIP INVITE can receive more than one answer
SDP. In this case, we need to merge each answer SDP with our original
offer capabilities to get the currently negotiated capabilities. To
satisfy this requirement means that we cannot update our proposed
capabilities until the negotiations are restarted.
Local topology updates from ast_sdp_state_update_local_topology() are
merged together until the next offer SDP is created. These accumulated
updates are then merged with the current negotiated capabilities to create
the new proposed capabilities that the offer SDP is built.
Local topology updates are merged in several passes to attempt to be smart
about how streams from the system are matched with the previously
negotiated stream slots. To allow for T.38 support when merging, type
matching considers audio and image types to be equivalent. First streams
are matched by stream name and type. Then streams are matched by stream
type only. Any remaining unmatched existing streams are declined. Any
new active streams are either backfilled into pre-merge declined slots or
appended onto the end of the merged topology. Any excess new streams
above the maximum supported number of streams are simply discarded.
Remote topology negotiation merges depend if the topology is an offer or
answer. An offer remote topology negotiation dictates the stream slot
ordering and new streams can be added. A remote offer can do anything to
the previously negotiated streams except reduce the number of stream
slots. An answer remote topology negotiation is limited to what our offer
requested. The answer can only decline streams, pick codecs from the
offered list, or indicate the remote's stream hold state.
I had originally kept the RTP instance if the remote offer SDP changed a
stream type between audio and video since they both use RTP. However, I
later removed this support in favor of simply creating a new RTP instance
since the stream's purpose has to be changing anyway. Any RTP packets
from the old stream type might cause mischief for the bridged peer.
* Added ast_sdp_state_restart_negotiations() to restart the SDP
offer/answer negotiations. We will thus know to create a new local SDP
when it is time to create an offer or answer.
* Removed ast_sdp_state_reset(). Save the current topology before
starting T.38. To recover from T.38 simply update the local topology to
the saved topology and restart the SDP negotiations to get the offer SDP
renegotiating the previous configuration.
* Allow initial topology for ast_sdp_state_alloc() to be NULL so an
initial remote offer SDP can dictate the streams we start with. We can
always update the local topology later if it turns out we need to offer
SDP first because the remote chose to defer sending us a SDP.
* Made the ast_sdp_state_alloc() initial topology limit to max_streams,
limit to configured codecs, handle declined streams, and discard
unsupported types.
* Convert struct ast_sdp to ao2 object. Needed to easily save off a
remote SDP to refer to later for various reasons such as generating
declined m= lines in the local SDP.
* Improve converting remote SDP streams to a topology including stream
state. A stream state of AST_STREAM_STATE_REMOVED indicates the stream is
declined/dead.
* Improve merging streams to take into account the stream state.
* Added query for remote hold state.
* Added maximum streams allowed SDP config option.
* Added ability to create new streams as needed. New streams are created
with configured default audio, video, or image codecs depending on stream
type.
* Added global locally_held state along with a per stream local hold
state. Historically, Asterisk only has a global locally held state
because when the we put the remote on hold we do it for all active
streams.
* Added queries for a rejected offer and current SDP negotiation role.
The rejected query allows the using module to know how to respond to a
failed remote SDP set. Should the using module respond with a 488 Not
Acceptable Here or 500 Internal Error to the offer SDP?
* Moved sdp_state_capabilities.connection_address to ast_sdp_state. There
seems no reason to keep it in the sdp_state_capabilities struct since it
was only used by the ast_sdp_state.proposed_capabilities instance.
* Callbacks are now available to allow the using module some customization
of negotiated streams and to complete setting up streams for use. See the
typedef doxygen for each callback for what is allowable and when they are
called.
* Added topology answerer modify callback.
* Added topology pre and post apply callbacks.
* Added topology offerer modify callback.
* Added topology offerer configure callback.
* Had to rework the unit tests because I changed how SDP topologies are
merged. Replaced several unit tests with new negotiation tests.
Change-Id: If07fe6d79fbdce33968a9401d41d908385043a06
This change adds support for socket activation of certain SOCK_STREAM
listeners in Asterisk:
* AMI / AMI over TLS
* CLI
* HTTP / HTTPS
Example systemd units are provided. This support extends to any socket
which is initialized using ast_tcptls_server_start, so any unknown
modules using this function will support socket activation.
Asterisk continues to function as normal if socket activation is not
enabled or if systemd development headers are not available during
build.
ASTERISK-27063 #close
Change-Id: Id814ee6a892f4b80d018365c8ad8d89063474f4d
When a stasis channel is stolen by another app, the control
structure is unreffed but never unlinked from the app_controls
container. This causes the channel reference to leak.
Added OBJ_UNLINK to the callback in channel_stolen_cb.
Also added some additional channel lifecycle debug messages to
channel.c.
ASTERISK-27059 #close
Repoorted-by: George Joseph
Change-Id: Ib820936cd49453f20156971785e7f4f182c56e14
Not easy to reproduce, but we have noticed deadlocks when unloading a module
while dialplan is handling a request.
The deadlock is between :
1) Dialplan execution: pbx_extension_helper() first taking conlock,
then pbx_findapp() [when called] asking for lock on apps list.
2) Application unregistration: ast_unregister_application() first taking lock
on apps list, then unreference_cached_app() [when called] asking for conlock.
As a protection, I suggest to modify ast_unregister_application(), so that it
anticipates the need of conlock, before taking the lock on apps list.
The side effect is a longer unavailability of conlock when unregistering an
application.
ASTERISK-27041
Change-Id: I0db0f1eb320da6a5758cce3a47d765be1face8e2
* changes:
SDP: Set the remote c= line in RTP instance.
SDP: Add t= line in sdp_create_from_state()
stream: Ignore declined streams for some topology calls.
* Pulled finding the rtcp-mux attribute flag out of the ICE candidate for
loop. Also ordered the RTCP ICE candidate skip test to fail earlier.
Change-Id: I8905d9c68563027a46cd3ae14dbcc27e9c814809
* Made ast_format_cap_from_stream_topology() not include any formats from
declined streams.
* Made ast_stream_topology_get_first_stream_by_type() ignore declined
streams to return the first active stream of the type.
* Updated unit tests to check these changes have the expected effect.
Change-Id: Iabbc6a3e8edf263a25fd3056c3c614407c7897df
The ast_channel_suppress function wrongly decremented the
reference count of the underlying structure used to keep
track of what should be suppressed on a channel if the
function was called multiple times on the same channel.
This change cleans up the reference counting a bit so
this no longer occurs.
ASTERISK-27016
Change-Id: I2eed4077cb4916e6626f9f120b63b963acc5c136
This change adds a deferred queue to bridging. If a bridge
technology determines that a frame can not be written and
should be deferred it can indicate back to bridging to do so.
Bridging will then requeue any deferred frames upon a new
channel joining the bridge.
This change has been leveraged for T.38 request negotiate
control frames. Without the deferred queue there is a race
condition between the bridge receiving the T.38 request
negotiate and the second channel joining and being in the
bridge. If the channel is not yet in the bridge then the T.38
negotiation fails.
A unit test has also been added that confirms that a T.38
request negotiate control frame is deferred when no other
channel is in the bridge and that it is requeued when a new
channel joins the bridge.
ASTERISK-26923
Change-Id: Ie05b08523f399eae579130f4a5f562a344d2e415
FreeBSD does not include a crypt.h include file. Definitions for
crypt() and crypt_r() are in unistd.h
ASTERISK-27042 #close
Change-Id: Ib307ee5e384870c6af50efa89fb73722dd0c3a7e
ASTERISK-26419 introduced a bug when calling ast_audiohook_write_list in
ast_write. It would free the frame given to ast_write if the frame returned
by ast_audiohook_write_list was different than the given one. The frame give
to ast_write should never be freed within that function. It is the caller's
resposibility to free the frame after writing (or when it its done with it).
By freeing it within ast_write this of course led to some memory corruption
problems.
This patch makes it so the frame given to ast_write is no longer freed within
the function. The frame returned by ast_audiohook_write_list is now subsequently
used in ast_write and is freed later. It is freed either after translate if the
frame returned by translate is different, or near the end of ast_write prior to
function exit.
ASTERISK-26973 #close
Change-Id: Ic9085ba5f555eeed12f6e565a638c3649695988b
Before this patch, when a user hung up during a Background, we would
stuff 0xff into a char and attempt a dialplan lookup of it. This caused
problems for some realtime engines which interpreted the value as the
beginning of an invalid UTF-8 sequence.
ASTERISK-19291 #close
Reported by: Andrew Nowrot
Change-Id: I8ca6da93252d61c76ebdb46a4aa65e73ca985358
In review 4843 (ASTERISK-24858), we added a hack that forced a smoother
creation when sending signed linear so that the byte order was adjusted
during transmission. This was needed because smoother flags were lost
during the new format work that was done in Asterisk 13.
Rather than rolling that same hack into res_rtp_multicast, re-introduce
smoother flags so that formats can dictate their own options.
Change-Id: I77b835fba0e539c6ce50014a984766f63cab2c16
A previous commit added plumbing to bridge_softmix to allow for an SFU
experience with Asterisk. This commit adds an option to app_confbridge
that allows for a confbridge to actually make use of the SFU video mode.
SFU mode is implemented in a "set it and forget it" kind of way. That
is, when the bridge is created, if SFU mode is enabled, then the video
mode gets set to SFU and cannot be changed. Future improvements may
allow for a hybrid experience (e.g. forward multiple video streams,
specifically those of the most recent talkers), but for this addition,
no such capability is present.
Change-Id: I87bbcb63dec6dbbb42488f894871b86f112b2020
This sets up the "plumbing" in bridge_softmix to
be able to accommodate Asterisk asking as an SFU
(selective forwarding unit) for conferences.
The way this works is that whenever a channel enters or leaves a
conference, all participants in the bridge get sent a stream topology
change request. The topologies consist of the channels' original
topology, along with video destination streams corresponding to each
participants' source video streams. So for instance, if Alice, Bob, and
Carol are in the conference, and each supplies one video stream, then
the topologies for each would look like so:
Alice:
Audio,
Source video(Alice),
Destination Video(Bob),
Destination video (Carol)
Bob:
Audio,
Source video(Bob)
Destination Video(Alice),
Destination video (Carol)
Carol:
Audio,
Source video(Carol)
Destination Video(Alice),
Destination video (Bob)
This way, video that arrives from a source video stream can then be
copied out to the destination video streams on the other participants'
channels.
Once the bridge gets told that a topology on a channel has changed, the
bridge constructs a map in order to get the video frames routed to the
proper destination streams. This is done using the bridge channel's
stream_map.
This change is bare-bones with regards to SFU support. Some key features
are missing at this point:
* Stream limits. This commit makes no effort to limit the number of
streams on a specific channel. This means that if there were 50 video
callers in a conference, bridge_softmix will happily send out topology
change requests to every channel in the bridge, requesting 50+
streams.
* Configuration. The plumbing has been added to bridge_softmix, but
there has been nothing added as of yet to app_confbridge to enable SFU
video mode.
* Testing. Some functions included here have unit tests.
However, the functionality as a whole has only been verified by
hand-tracing the code.
* Selectivenss. For a "selective" forwarding unit, this does not
currently have any means of being selective.
* Features. Presumably, someone might wish to only receive video from
specific sources. There are no external-facing functions at the moment
that allow for users to select who they receive video from.
* Efficiency. The current scheme treats all video streams as being
unidirectional. We could be re-using a source video stream as a
desetnation, too. But to simplify things on this first round, I did it
this way.
Change-Id: I7c44a829cc63acf8b596a337b2dc3c13898a6c4d
During the channel flag audit an incorrect change was
done. The flag should be cleared on the second channel.
ASTERISK-26469
Change-Id: I770c5a389550a2fb5a6ade942fccbb2e1d9199c8
...that can only be run by explicitly calling it with
'test execute category /DO_NOT_RUN/ name RAISE_SEGV'
This allows us to more easily test CI and debugging tools that
should do certain things when asterisk coredumps.
To allow this a new member was added to the ast_test_info
structure named 'explicit_only'. If set by a test, the test
will be skipped during a 'test execute all' or
'test execute category ...'.
Change-Id: Ia3a11856aae4887df9a02b6b081cc777b36eb6ed
Added functions that convert a string to an unsigned integer or unsigned long.
A couple of unit test were also created to test the routines. The reasons for
adding these conversion utilities (and hopefully eventually more) are as
follows:
* Conversion routines are functionally contained with consistent and
better error checking
* The function names offer a better description of what is happening
* It encourages code reuse for easier bug fixing at a single source
* It's simpler to use
* It's unit testable
For instance, currently in a lot of places when converting to an integer or
similar the "sscanf" function is used. When using "sscanf" it may not be
immediately clear what's happening as it lacks semantic naming. Limited error
checking is usually done as well. For example, most of the time a check is done
to make sure the value converted, but does not check for overflows or negative
valued conversions when converting unsigned numbers.
Why use/wrap "strtoul" and not "sscanf" then? Primarily, it lacks some of the
built in error handling that "strtoul" has. For instance "strtoul" contains
overflow checks. Less so, but can still factor as reasons, "sscanf" is slightly
more complex in its use. And maybe a bit controversial, but it may be ("big if")
potentially slower than "strtoul" in some cases.
Change-Id: If7eaca4a48f8c7b89cc8b5a1f4bed2852fca82bb
When manipulating flags on a channel the channel has to be
locked to guarantee that nothing else is also manipulating
the flags. This change introduces locking where necessary to
guarantee this. It also adds helper functions that manipulate
channel flags and lock to reduce repeated code.
ASTERISK-26789
Change-Id: I489280662dba0f4c50981bfc5b5a7073fef2db10
* changes:
SDP: Make process possible multiple fmtp attributes per rtpmap.
SDP: Explicitly stop a RTP instance before destoying it.
SDP: Rework merge_capabilities().
SDP: Update ast_get_topology_from_sdp() to keep RTP map.
The sdp_state.remote_capabilities was only used inside merge_sdps() and
subsequent calls to merge_sdps() by re-INVITE's would leak them.
Change-Id: I0ceb7838ea044cc913e8ad4a255c39c9740ae0ce
When we optionally set the interface_address we are forcing the media to
go out a specific interface address. This allows us to optionally have
the media go out the interface that SIP signalling came in on or if we are
configured to have the media always go out a specific address.
Change-Id: I160d9fac322a075bd2557b430632544178196189
* Made sdp_add_m_from_rtp_stream() and sdp_add_m_from_udptl_stream()
handle generating disabled/declined streams.
* Added /main/sdp/sdp_merge_asymmetric unit test. It currently does not
check the offerer side negotiated SDP because that isn't the purpose of
this patch and there is much to be done to handle declined/dummy streams.
* Added T.38 image streams to the /main/sdp/sdp_merge_symmetric and
/main/sdp/sdp_merge_crisscross unit tests.
Change-Id: Ib4dcb3ca4f9a9133b376f4e3302f9a1f963f2b31
* Tried to give better variable names.
* Made our SDP answer use the offer's RTP payload types as the SDP RFC
says we SHOULD.
* Updating the local topology now takes the stream format caps. We are
likely preparing to send an offer.
Change-Id: I34d3be8e3036402a8575ffcae3eebc5ce348d7c0
This change uses the functions provided by OpenSSL to query
and better construct error messages for situations where
the connection encounters a problem.
ASTERISK-26606
Change-Id: I7ae40ce88c0dc4e185c4df1ceb3a6ccc198f075b
It is possible to initialize a valid config without a capath
or cafile definition. This will cause a crash on a reload.
This fix ensures capath is always allocated.
ASTERISK-26983 #close
Change-Id: I63ff715d9d9023427543a5b8a4ba7b0d82533c12
All log messages go to a queue serviced by a single thread
which does all the IO. This setting controls how big that
queue can get (and therefore how much memory is allocated)
before new messages are discarded. The default is 1000.
Should something go bezerk and log tons of messages in a tight
loop, this will prevent memory escalation.
When the limit is reached, a WARNING is logged to that effect
and messages are discarded until the queue is empty again. At
that time another WARNING will be logged with the count of
discarded messages. There's no "low water mark" for this queue
because the logger thread empties the entire queue and processes it
in 1 batch before going back and waiting on the queue again.
Implementing a low water mark would mean additional locking as
the thread processes each message and it's not worth it.
A "test" was added to test_logger.c but since the outcome is
non-deterministic, it's really just a cli command, not a unit
test.
Change-Id: Ib4520c95e1ca5325dbf584c7989ce391649836d1
ast_stream_clone() cannot copy the opaque user data stored on a stream.
We don't know how to clone the data so it isn't copied into the clone.
Change-Id: Ia51321bf38ecbfdcc53787ca77ea5fd2cabdf367
menu_template_handler wasn't properly accounting for the fact that
it might be called both during a load/reload (which isn't really
valid but not prevented) and by a dialplan function. In both cases
it was attempting to use the "pending" config which wasn't valid in
the latter case. aco_process_config is also partly to blame because
it wasn't properly cleaning "pending" up when a reload was done and
no changes were made. Both of these contributed to a crash if
CONFBRIDGE(menu,template) was called in a dialplan after a reload.
* aco_process_config now sets info->internal->pending to NULL
after it unrefs it although this isn't strictly necessary in the
context of this fix.
* menu_template_handler now uses the "current" config and silently
ignores any attempt to be called as a result of someone uses the
"template" parameter in the conf file.
Luckily there's no other place in the codebase where
aco_pending_config is used outside of aco_process_config.
ASTERISK-25506 #close
Reported-by: Frederic LE FOLL
Change-Id: Ib349a17d3d088f092480b19addd7122fcaac21a7
When using the Bridge AMI action on the same channel multiple times
it was possible for the channel to return to the wrong location in
the dialplan if the other party hung up. This happened because the
priority of the channel was not preserved across each action
invocation and it would fail to move on to the next priority in
other cases.
This change makes it so that the priority of a channel is preserved
when taking control of it from another thread and it is incremented
as appropriate such that the priority reflects where the channel
should next be executed in the dialplan, not where it may or may not
currently be.
The Bridge AMI action was also changed to ensure that it too
starts the channels at the next location in the dialplan.
ASTERISK-24529
Change-Id: I52406669cf64208aef7252a65b63ade31fbf7a5a
This patch is the first cut at adding stream support to the bridging framework.
Changes were made to the framework that allows mapping of stream topologies to
a bridge's supported media types.
The first channel to enter a bridge initially defines the media types for a
bridge (i.e. a one to one mapping is created between the bridge and the first
channel). Subsequently added channels merge their media types into the bridge's
adding to it when necessary. This allows channels with different sized
topologies to map correctly to each other according to media type. The bridge
drops any frame that does not have a matching index into a given write stream.
For now though, bridge_simple will align its two channels according to size or
first to join. Once both channels join the bridge the one with the most streams
will indicate to the other channel to update its streams to be the same as that
of the other. If both channels have the same number of streams then the first
channel to join is chosen as the stream base.
A topology change source was also added to a channel when a stream toplogy
change request is made. This allows subsystems to know whether or not they
initiated a change request. Thus avoiding potential recursive situations.
ASTERISK-26966 #close
Change-Id: I1eb5987921dd80c3cdcf52accc136393ca2d4163
The telephone_event option was used as a flag and a bit mapped value in
different places when it is a boolean. It is also inadequate to configure
the DTMF operation of the RTP instance created for the stream.
Change-Id: Ib1addeaf0ce86f07039f2f979cab29405dc5239b
RFC 5576 defines how SSRC-level attributes may be added to SDP media
descriptions. In general, this is useful for grouping related SSRCes,
indicating SSRC-level format attributes, and resolving collisions in RTP
SSRC values. These attributes are used widely by browsers during WebRTC
communications, including attributes defined by documents outside of RFC
5576.
This commit introduces the addition of SSRC-level attributes into SDPs
generated by Asterisk. Since Asterisk does not tend to use multiple
SSRCs on a media stream, the initial support is minimal. Asterisk
includes an SSRC-level CNAME attribute if configured to do so. This at
least gives browsers (and possibly others) the ability to resolve SSRC
collisions at offer-answer time.
In order to facilitate this, the RTP engine API has been enhanced to be
able to retrieve the SSRC and CNAME on a given RTP instance.
res_rtp_asterisk currently does not provide meaningful CNAME values in
its RTCP SDES items, and therefore it currently will always return an
empty string as the CNAME value. A task in the near future will result
in res_rtp_asterisk generating more meaningful CNAMEs.
Change-Id: I29e7f23e7db77524f82a3b6e8531b1195ff57789
This change extends the ast_request functionality by adding another
function and callback to create an outgoing channel with a requested
stream topology. Fallback is provided by either converting the
requested stream topology into a format capabilities structure if
the channel driver does not support streams or by converting the
requested format capabilities into a stream topology if the channel
driver does support streams.
The Dial application has also been updated to request an outgoing
channel with the stream topology of the calling channel.
ASTERISK-26959
Change-Id: Ifa9037a672ac21d42dd7125aa09816dc879a70e6
Interpolated frames are frames which contain a number of
samples but have no actual data. Audiohooks did not
handle this case when translating an incoming frame into
signed linear. It assumed that a frame would always contain
media when it may not. If this occurs audiohooks will now
immediately return and not act on the frame.
As well for users of ast_trans_frameout the function has
been changed to be a bit more sane and ensure that the data
pointer on a frame is set to NULL if no data is actually
on the frame. This allows the various spots in Asterisk that
check for an interpolated frame based on the presence of a
data pointer to work as expected.
ASTERISK-26926
Change-Id: I7fa22f631fa28d540722ed789ce28e84c7f8662b
This change adds a T.38 format which can be used in a stream
topology to specify that a UDPTL stream needs to be created.
The SDP API has been changed to understand T.38 and create
the UDPTL session, add the attributes, and parse the attributes.
This change does not change the boundary of the T.38 state
machine. It is still up to the channel driver to implement and
act on it (such as queueing control frames or reacting to them).
ASTERISK-26949
Change-Id: If28956762ccb8ead562ac6c03d162d3d6014f2c7
The gist of this work ensures that when a remote SDP is received, it is
merged properly with the local capabilities. The remote SDP is converted
into a stream topology. That topology is then merged with the current
local topology on the SDP state. That new merged topology is then used
to create an SDP. Finally, adjustments are made to RTP instances based
on knowledge gained from the remote SDP.
There are also a battery of tests in this commit that ensure that some
basic SDP merges work as expected.
While this may not sound like a big change, it has the property that it
caused lots of ancillary changes.
* The remote SDP is no longer stored on the SDP state. Biggest reason:
there's no need for it. The remote SDP is used at the time it is being
set and nowhere else.
* Some new SDP APIs were added in order to find attributes and convert
generic SDP attributes into rtpmap structures.
* Writing tests made me realize that retrieving a value from an SDP
options structure, the SDP options needs to be made const.
* The SDP state machine was essentially gutted by a previous commit.
Initially, I attempted to reinstate it, but I found that as it had
been defined, it was not all that useful. What was more useful was
knowing the role we play in SDP negotiation, so the SDP state machine
has been transformed into an indicator of role.
* Rather than storing separate local and joint stream state
capabilities, it makes more sense to keep track of current stream
state and update it as things change.
Change-Id: I5938c2be3c6f0a003aa88a39a59e0880f8b2df3d
The primary win of switching to eventfd when possible is that it only
uses a single file descriptor while pipe() will use two. This means for
each bridge channel we're reducing the number of required file
descriptors by 1, and - if you're using timerfd - we also now have 1
less file descriptor per Asterisk channel.
The API is not ideal (passing int arrays), but this is the cleanest
approach I could come up with to maintain API/ABI.
I've also removed what I believe to be an erroneous code block that
checked the non-blocking flag on the pipe ends for each read. If the
file descriptor is 'losing' its non-blocking mode, it is because of a
bug somewhere else in our code.
In my testing I haven't seen any measurable difference in performance.
Change-Id: Iff0fb1573e7f7a187d5211ddc60aa8f3da3edb1d
Both ast_pbx_outgoing_app() and ast_pbx_outgoing_exten() cause the core
to spawn a new thread to perform the dial. When AST_OUTGOING_WAIT_COMPLETE
is passed to these functions, the calling thread will be blocked until
the newly created channel has been hung up.
After this patch, we run the dial on the current thread rather than
spawning a new one. The only in-tree code that passes
AST_OUTGOING_WAIT_COMPLETE is pbx_spool, so you should see reduced
thread usage if you are using .call files.
Change-Id: I512735d243f0a9da2bcc128f7a96dece71f2d913
The struct ast_rtp_instance has historically been indirectly protected
from reentrancy issues by the channel lock because early channel drivers
held the lock for really long times. Holding the channel lock for such a
long time has caused many deadlock problems in the past. Along comes
chan_pjsip/res_pjsip which doesn't necessarily hold the channel lock
because sometimes there may not be an associated channel created yet or
the channel pointer isn't available.
In the case of ASTERISK-26835 a pjsip serializer thread was processing a
message's SDP body while another thread was reading a RTP packet from the
socket. Both threads wound up changing the rtp->rtcp->local_addr_str
string and interfering with each other. The classic reentrancy problem
resulted in a crash.
In the case of ASTERISK-26853 a pjsip serializer thread was processing a
message's SDP body while another thread was reading a RTP packet from the
socket. Both threads wound up processing ICE candidates in PJPROJECT and
interfering with each other. The classic reentrancy problem resulted in a
crash.
* rtp_engine.c: Make the ast_rtp_instance_xxx() calls lock the RTP
instance struct.
* rtp_engine.c: Make ICE and DTLS wrapper functions to lock the RTP
instance struct for the API call.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Lock the RTP instance to prevent a reentrancy
problem with rtp->rtcp->local_addr_str in the scheduler thread running
ast_rtcp_write().
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Avoid deadlock when local RTP bridging in
bridge_p2p_rtp_write() because there are two RTP instance structs
involved.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Avoid deadlock when trying to stop scheduler
callbacks. We cannot hold the instance lock when trying to stop a
scheduler callback.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Remove the lock in struct dtls_details and use the
struct ast_rtp_instance ao2 object lock instead. The lock was used to
synchronize two threads to prevent a race condition between starting and
stopping a timeout timer. The race condition is no longer present between
dtls_perform_handshake() and __rtp_recvfrom() because the instance lock
prevents these functions from overlapping each other with regards to the
timeout timer.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Remove the lock in struct ast_rtp and use the struct
ast_rtp_instance ao2 object lock instead. The lock was used to
synchronize two threads using a condition signal to know when TURN
negotiations complete.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Avoid deadlock when trying to stop the TURN
ioqueue_worker_thread(). We cannot hold the instance lock when trying to
create or shut down the worker thread without a risk of deadlock.
This patch exposed a race condition between a PJSIP serializer thread
setting up an ICE session in ice_create() and another thread reading RTP
packets.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c:ice_create(): Set the new rtp->ice pointer after we
have re-locked the RTP instance to prevent the other thread from trying to
process ICE packets on an incomplete ICE session setup.
A similar race condition is between a PJSIP serializer thread resetting up
an ICE session in ice_create() and the timer_worker_thread() processing
the completion of the previous ICE session.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c:ast_rtp_on_ice_complete(): Protect against an
uninitialized/null remote_address after calling
update_address_with_ice_candidate().
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Eliminate the chance of ice_reset_session()
destroying and setting the rtp->ice pointer to NULL while other threads
are using it by adding an ao2 wrapper around the PJPROJECT ice pointer.
Now when we have to unlock the RTP instance object to call a PJPROJECT ICE
function we will hold a ref to the wrapper. Also added some rtp->ice NULL
checks after we relock the RTP instance and have to do something with the
ICE structure.
ASTERISK-26835 #close
ASTERISK-26853 #close
Change-Id: I780b39ec935dcefcce880d50c1a7261744f1d1b4
This saves around 100 bytes when G.711, G.722, G.729, and GSM are advertised in
SDP. This reduces the chance to hit the MTU bearer of 1300 bytes for SIP over
UDP, if many codecs are allowed in Asterisk. This new feature is enabled
together with the optional feature compact_headers=yes via the file pjsip.conf.
ASTERISK-26932 #close
Change-Id: Iaa556ab4c8325cd34c334387ab2847fab07b1689
In all non-pbx modules, AST_MODULE_LOAD_FAILURE has been changed
to AST_MODULE_LOAD_DECLINE. This prevents asterisk from exiting
if a module can't be loaded. If the user wishes to retain the
FAILURE behavior for a specific module, they can use the "require"
or "preload-require" keyword in modules.conf.
A new API was added to logger: ast_is_logger_initialized(). This
allows asterisk.c/check_init() to print to the error log once the
logger subsystem is ready instead of just to stdout. If something
does fail before the logger is initialized, we now print to stderr
instead of stdout.
Change-Id: I5f4b50623d9b5a6cb7c5624a8c5c1274c13b2b25
If ast_stun_request() receives packets other than a STUN response then we
could conceivably never exit if we continue to receive packets with less
than three seconds between them.
* Fix poll timeout to keep track of the time when we sent the STUN
request. We will now send a STUN request every three seconds regardless
of how many other packets we receive while waiting for a response until we
have completed three STUN request transmission cycles.
Change-Id: Ib606cb08585e06eb50877f67b8d3bd385a85c266
Return early if ast_sorcery_retrieve_by_id() is not passed an id to find.
Also eliminated the RAII_VAR() usage in the function.
Change-Id: I871dbe162a301b5ced8b4393cec27180c7c6b218
Temporarily running out of file descriptors should not terminate the
listener thread. Otherwise, when there becomes more file descriptors
available, nothing is listening.
* Added EMFILE exception to abnormal thread exit.
* Added an abnormal TCP/TLS listener exit error message.
* Closed the TCP/TLS listener socket on abnormal exit so Asterisk does not
appear dead if something tries to connect to the socket.
ASTERISK-26903 #close
Change-Id: I10f2f784065136277f271159f0925927194581b5
ast_cdr_setuserfield wrote to a fixed length field using strcpy. This could
result in a buffer overrun when called from chan_sip or func_cdr. This patch
adds a maximum bytes written to the field by using ast_copy_string instead.
ASTERISK-26897 #close
patches:
0001-CDR-Protect-from-data-overflow-in-ast_cdr_setuserfie.patch submitted
by Corey Farrell (license #5909)
Change-Id: Ib23ca77e9b9e2803a450e1206af45df2d2fdf65c
If DESTDIR is set, don't call ldconfig. Assume that DESTDIR is used to
create a binary archive. The ldconfig call should be delegated to the
archive postinst script. This fixes the case where fakeroot wraps 'make
install' causing $EUID to be 0 even though it doesn't have permission to
call ldconfig.
The previous logic in configure.ac to detect and correct libdir
has been removed as it was not completely accurate. CentOS 64-bit
users should again specifiy --libdir=/usr/lib64 when configuring
to prevent install to /usr/lib.
Updated Makefile:check-old-libdir to check for orphans in
lib64 when installing to lib as well as orphans in lib when installing
to lib64.
Updated Makefile and main/Makefile uninstall targets to remove the
orphans using the new logic.
ASTERISK-26705
Change-Id: I51739d4a03e60bff38be719b8d2ead0007afdd51
This change cleans up state management for media streams by moving
RTP instances into their own session structure and adding additional
details that are not relevant to the core (such as connection address).
These can live either in the local capabilities or joint capabilities.
The ability to set explicit connection address information for
the purposes of direct media and NAT has also been added at the
global and stream specific level.
ASTERISK-26900
Change-Id: If7e5307239a9534420732de11c451a2705b6b681
The ao2_global_obj_release() function holds an exclusive lock on the
global object while it is being dereferenced. Any destructors that
run during this time that call ao2_global_obj_ref() will deadlock
because a read lock is required.
Instead, we make the global object inaccessible inside of the write
lock and only dereference it once we have released the lock. This
allows the affected destructors to fail gracefully.
While this doesn't completely solve the referenced issue (the error
message about not being able to create an IQ continues to be shown)
it does solve the backtrace spew that accompanied it.
ASTERISK-21009 #close
Reported by: Marcello Ceschia
Change-Id: Idf40ae136b5070dba22cb576ea8414fbc9939385
This change removes the old epoll support which has not been used or
maintained in quite some time.
The fixed number of file descriptors on a channel has also been removed.
File descriptors are now contained in a growable vector. This can be
used like before by specifying a specific position to store a file
descriptor at or using a new API call, ast_channel_fd_add, which adds
a file descriptor to the channel and returns its position.
Tests have been added which cover the growing behavior of the vector
and the new API call.
ASTERISK-26885
Change-Id: I1a754b506c009b83dfdeeb08c2d2815db30ef928
Dynamic payload types were statically defined in Asterisk. This unfortunately
limited the number of dynamic payloads that could be registered. With this patch
dynamic payload type numbers are now assigned dynamically and per RTP instance.
However, in order to limit any issues where some clients expect the old
statically defined value this patch makes it so the value Asterisk used to pre-
designate is used for the dynamic assignment if available.
An option, "rtp_use_dynamic", has also been added (can be set in asterisk.conf)
that turns the new dynamic behavior on or off. When off it reverts back to using
statically defined payload values. This option defaults to "yes" in Asterisk 15.
ASTERISK-26515 #close
patches:
ASTERISK-26515.diff submitted by jcolp (license 5000
Change-Id: I7653465c5ebeaf968f1a1cc8f3f4f5c4321da7fc
The CDR code previously did not allow the user field to be set
from the 'h' extension in the dialplan. This change removes that
limitation and allows it to be set.
ASTERISK-26818
Change-Id: I0fed8a79b5e408bac4e30542b8f33a61c5ed9aa6
We aren't validating that the URI we just parsed is a SIP/SIPS one before
trying to access the user, host, and port members of a possibly uninitialized
structure.
Also update the MessageSend documentation to indicate what 'from' formats are
accepted.
ASTERISK-26484 #close
Reported by: Vinod Dharashive
Change-Id: I476b5cc5f18a7713d0ee945374f2a1c164857d30
Fixed a bug in function "ast_audiohook_write_frame" that checked the
variable other_factory_samples and only flushed the factories, so they
would be in sync, when other_factory_samples > 0. When there is not any
rtp incoming the variable other_factory_samples will be 0, and although
the result of "our_factory_ms - other_factory_ms" may be very large,
this led to the record file not syncing.
ASTERISK-26875 #close
Reported-by: Aaron An
Tested-by: Aaron An
Change-Id: Ia4d890fb8fc1636a7188502bab35f555685aea22
POSIX does not require getprotobyname() to be thread safe and some
implementations use static memory which causes issues when multiple
threads are used.
Further, our usage of it today is just to ultimately get IPPROTO_TCP
for calls to setsockopt(). So instead we just use IPPROTO_TCP directly.
Change-Id: I2e14e58674808f7ce99b2f5e900d0f90d0d8da48
Dereferencing struct ast_autochan.chan without first calling
ast_autochan_channel_lock() is unsafe because the pointer could change at
any time due to a masquerade. Unfortunately, ast_autochan_channel_lock()
itself uses struct ast_autochan.chan unsafely and can result in a deadlock
if the original channel happens to get destroyed after a masquerade in
addition to the pointer getting changed.
The problem is more likely to happen with v11 and earlier because
masquerades are used to optimize out local channels on those versions.
However, it could still happen on newer versions if the channel is
executing a dialplan application when the channel is transferred or
redirected. In this situation a masquerade still must be used.
* Added a lock to struct ast_autochan to safely be able to use
ast_autochan.chan while trying to get the channel lock in
ast_autochan_channel_lock(). The locking order is the channel lock then
the autochan lock. Locking in the other direction requires deadlock
avoidance.
* Fix unsafe ast_autochan.chan usages in app_mixmonitor.c.
* Fix unsafe ast_autochan.chan usages in app_chanspy.c.
* app_chanspy.c: Removed unused autochan parameter from next_channel().
ASTERISK-26867
Change-Id: Id29dd22bc0f369b44e23ca423d2f3657187cc592
Forgetting to indicate an exten is a pattern can cause a crash if the
"pattern" has a character set range. e.g., "9999[3-5]" The crash is due
to a buffer overwrite because the '-' exten eye-candy wasn't removed as
expected and overran the allocated space.
The buffer overwrite is fixed two ways in this patch.
1) Fix ext_strncpy() to distinguish between pattern and non-pattern
extens. Now '-' characters are removed when they are eye-candy and not
when they are part of a pattern character set. Since the function is
private to pbx.c, the return value now returns the number of bytes written
to the destination buffer instead of the strlen() of the final buffer so
the callers that care don't need to add one.
2) Fix callers to ext_strncpy() to supply the correct available buffer
size of the destination buffer.
ASTERISK-26668
Change-Id: I555d97411140e47e0522684062d174fbe32aa84a
* Added additional fields to ast_sdp_options.
* Re-organized ast_sdp.
* Updated field names to correspond to RFC4566 terminology.
* Created allocs/frees for SDP children.
* Created getters/setters for SDP children where appropriate.
* Added ast_sdp_create_from_state.
* Refactored res_sdp_translator_pjmedia for changes.
Change-Id: Iefbd877af7f5a4d3c74deead1bff8802661b0d48
This patch demotes the ERROR message that is displayed when a
nonexistent item is removed from the Stasis cache. The genesis of this
demotion is due to chan_sip's realtime peers and their interaction with
Asterisk's core ast_endpoint code, but ostensibly it could happen from
other channel drivers as well.
Since Mark Michelson already did an excellent job of explaining on this
issue, it is quoted here for posterity:
"Internally, when a realtime peer is retrieved, Asterisk creates an
ast_endpoint structure. When that peer is destroyed, the ast_endpoint is
destroyed as well. Part of the destruction of the ast_endpoint involves
clearing the Stasis cache of all information about that endpoint. The
problem here is that the act of creating the ast_endpoint is not enough
to actually put any information in the Stasis cache. Instead, something
has to happen, such as a state change, in order for the Stasis cache to
have any information about that endpoint. When a device registers,
chan_sip creates an ast_endpoint structure, processes the REGISTER, and
then destroys the ast_endpoint. When the ast_endpoint is destroyed,
there is nothing to destroy in the Stasis cache, so an error message is
emitted. When you use rtcachefriends, ast_endpoint structures persist
for the lifetime of the module and so you do not see this error
message."
ASTERISK-25237 #close
Change-Id: I53cebc6b4a897a1ab9564182b75c177780feff70
This change adds a few things to facilitate stream topology changing:
1. Control frame types have been added for use by the channel driver
to notify the application that the channel wants to change the stream
topology or that a stream topology change has been accepted. They are
also used by the indicate interface to the channel that the application
uses to indicate it wants to do the same.
2. Legacy behavior has been adopted in ast_read() such that if a
channel requests a stream topology change it is denied automatically
and the current stream topology is preserved if the application is
not capable of handling streams.
Tests have also been written which confirm the multistream and
non-multistream behavior.
ASTERISK-26839
Change-Id: Ia68ef22bca8e8457265ca4f0f9de600cbcc10bc9
* manager.c:manager_state_cb() Fix potential use of uninitialized hint[]
if a hint does not exist for the requested extension. Ran into this when
developing a testsuite test. The AMI event ExtensionStatus came out with
the hint header value containing garbage. The AMI event PresenceStatus
also had the same issue.
* manager.c:action_extensionstate() no need to completely initialize the
hint[]. Only initialize the first element.
* pbx.c:ast_add_hint() Remove unnecessary assignment.
* chan_sip.c: Eliminate an unneeded hint[] local variable. We only care
about the return value of ast_get_hint() there.
Change-Id: Ia9a8786f01f93f1f917200f0a50bead0319af97b
* Removed the AST_CHAN_TP_MULTISTREAM tech property. We now rely
on read_stream being set to indicate a multi stream channel.
* Added ast_channel_is_multistream convenience function.
* Fixed issue where stream and default_stream weren't being set on
a frame retrieved from the queue.
* Now testing for NULL being returned from the driver's read or
read_stream callback.
* Fixed issue where the dropnondefault code was crashing on a
NULL f.
* Now enforcing that if either read_stream or write_stream are
set when ast_channel_tech_set is called that BOTH are set.
* Added the unit tests.
ASTERISK-26816
Change-Id: If7792b20d782e71e823dabd3124572cf0a4caab2
This introduces and documents the various states in the state machine.
This also introduces API functions that induce state changes, and places
TODO comments telling what needs to be done in addition to what is
already there. Those TODOs will be replaced with real code in upcoming
changes.
Change-Id: I871c0eb480b4c84d83e91ac5628e7a673e8b89ed
In the event that a cache file is removed out from under us, we should
treat the cache entry as stale and force a refresh.
ASTERISK-26774 #close
Reported by: Igor Gamayunov
Change-Id: I3b1bd0c999d59d18664ef73a29823bc5b431dc52
... and clean them both up on uninstall.
We've fixed the issue where 'make install' was installing to
/usr/lib on 64-bit systems that use /usr/lib64. Now we need
to clean up the remnants in /usr/lib.
* 'make install' now prints a warning if DESTDIR/ASTLIBDIR
contains 'lib64' and libasterisk* shared libraries or modules
are also found in DESTDIR/ASTLIBDIR with 'lib64' transformed
to 'lib'.
* 'make uninstall' ALWAYS cleans up both DESTDIR/ASTLIBDIR and
DESTDIR/ASTLIBDIR with 'lib64' transformed to 'lib'.
ASTERISK-26705
Change-Id: I6edddeb3c07a51e7c7ba7cac3c05e4bf3ec3f01f
This change introduces an ast_read_stream function and callback in
the channel technology which allows reading frames from all streams
and not just the default streams.
The stream number has also been added to frames. This is to allow the
case where frames are queued onto the channel instead of being read
directly from the driver.
This change does impose a restriction on reading though: a chain of
frames can only contain frames from the same stream.
ASTERISK-26816
Change-Id: I5d7dc35e86694df91fd025126f6cfe0453aa38ce
On some platforms a multiarch approach is used for libraries.
The build system does not take this into account and still
places libraries into the lib directory if no --libdir is
specified to configure. On initial startup this results in
libasteriskssl.so not being found, as it is not in the multiarch
lib directory. To make matters worse, options were being passed
to ldconfig on both Linux and FreeBSD that actually prevented
the rebuild of the cache.
* Fedora has a /usr/share/config.site that automatically tells
autoconf to use /usr/lib64 but CentOS does not. This logic was
copied to configure.ac and modified so systems like Ubuntu,
which still use /usr/lib for 64-bit systems, aren't affected.
Now that we have them in the correct directory...
In order for the system loader to find libasteriskssl and
libasteriskpj, one of 3 things has to happen...
- The linker cache must be rebuilt including the directory
where the libasterisk* libraries were installed. Only root
can rebuild the cache. This was busted.
- We have to link the asterisk binary with an rpath pointing
to the directrory where the libasterisk* libraries were
installed. This makes things very complicated and will happen
over the collective dead bodies of everyone who's had to
package a distribution with an rpath.
- Finally, you can start asterisk with LD_LIBRARY_PATH set to the
directrory where the libasterisk* libraries were installed.
There are no other options. So...
* The invokation of ldconfig has been moved from main/Makefile
to ASTTOPDIR/Makefile, the options have been removed, and
DESTDIR/ASTLIBDIR appended. If you aren't root, you will be
warned after the "Asterisk Installation Compete" banner that
you must re-run 'make install' as root, manually run
'ldconfig DESTDIR/ASTLIBDIR' as root, or run asterisk with
LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
ASTERISK-26705
Change-Id: I2a64b7c33a7d3e9bde20f47e3d3ab771977af982
This change adds an ast_write_stream function which allows
writing a frame to a specific media stream. It also moves
ast_write() to using this underneath by writing media
frames provided to it to the default streams of the channel.
Existing functionality (such as audiohooks, framehooks, etc)
are limited to being applied to the default stream only.
Unit tests have also been added which test the behavior of
both non-multistream and multistream channels to confirm that
the write() and write_stream() callbacks are invoked
appropriately.
ASTERISK-26793
Change-Id: I4df20d1b65bd4d787fce0b4b478e19d2dfea245c
Adds binaural synthesis to bridge_softmix (via convolution using libfftw3).
Binaural synthesis is conducted at 48kHz.
For a conference, only one spatial representation is rendered.
The default rendering is applied for mono-capable channels.
ASTERISK-26292
Change-Id: Iecdb381b6adc17c961049658678f6219adae1ddf
The "core show channel" CLI command will now output the streams
present on the channel with their details.
ASTERISK-26811
Change-Id: I9c95b57aa09415005f0677a1949a0feb07e4987a
This establishes the basic allocation/destruction of an SDP state
object, plus some of the simpler getter methods involved. Subsequent
tasks will deal with adding a state machine, creating SDPs from
capabilities and options, and merging SDPs into a joint SDP.
Change-Id: Ie3757ce186f04b65e9d1883f5aace53f24e53709
On some platforms a multiarch approach is used for libraries.
The build system does not take this into account and still
places libraries into the lib directory if no --libdir is
specified to configure. On initial startup this results in
libasteriskssl.so not being found, as it is not in the multiarch
lib directory.
This change does the minimally invasive thing and executes
ldconfig so that the libraries in the lib directory are found
and their location cached. By doing so Asterisk starts up fine.
If DESTDIR is specified, however, the old logic is executed as
the install process may not have permission to alter the ldconfig
cache.
ASTERISK-26705
Change-Id: If4eca46ac510c6fea5568256280ffdb3888d7bb4
When AMI encounters an error at the beginning of a session, it would
explicitly call ast_iostream_close() on its tcptls session's iostream.
It then would jump to a label where it would shut down the tcptls
session instance. The tcptls session instance would again attempt to
close the iostream.
Under normal circumstances, this might go by unnoticed. However, when
MALLOC_DEBUG is enabled, all fields on the iostream get set to
0xdeaddead when the iostream is freed. Thus a second call to
ast_iostream_close() after the iostream has been freed would reslt in an
attempt to call SSL_shutdown on 0xdeaddead, which would crash and burn
horribly.
The fix here is to not directly close the iostream from the dangerous
scenarios. The specific scenarios are:
* Exceeding the configured authlimit
* Failing to build a mansession on a new connection
Change-Id: I908f98d516afd5a263bd36b072221008a4731acd
This creates the following:
* Asterisk's internal representation of an SDP
* An API for translating SDPs from one format to another
* An implementation of a translator for PJMEDIA
Change-Id: Ie2ecd3cbebe76756577be9b133e84d2ee356d46b
This is step one of adding an SDP API: defining some
configurable settings for SDPs. This is based on options
that are currently supported in Asterisk.
Change-Id: I1ede91aafed403b12a9ccdfb91a88389baa7e5d7
On some platforms a multiarch approach is used for libraries.
The build system does not take this into account and still
places libraries into the lib directory if no --libdir is
specified to configure. On initial startup this results in
libasteriskssl.so not being found, as it is not in the multiarch
lib directory.
This change does the minimally invasive thing and executes
ldconfig so that the libraries in the lib directory are found
and their location cached. By doing so Asterisk starts up fine.
ASTERISK-26705
Change-Id: I6d30b6427e9d5e69470e11327c7ff203fa7da519
This change adds unit tests for the various API calls relating
to stream topologies. This includes creation, destruction,
inspection, and manipulation.
Through this a few bugs were uncovered in the implementation:
1. Creating a topology using a format capabilities would fail as
the code considered a return value of 0 from the append stream
function to indicate an error which is incorrect.
2. Not all functions which placed a stream into a topology
set the position on the stream itself.
3. Appending a stream would cause a frack if the position
provided was the last one. This occurred because the existing
stream was queried but the index was outside of what the
vector was currently at for size.
ASTERISK-26786
Change-Id: Id5590e87c8a605deea1a89e53169a9c011d66fa0
* app_minivm: Use built-in completion facilities to complete optional
arguments.
* app_voicemail: Use built-in completion facilities to complete
optional arguments.
* app_confbridge: Add missing colons after 'Usage' text.
* chan_alsa: Use built-in completion facilities to complete optional
arguments.
* chan_sip: Use built-in completion facilities to complete optional
arguments. Add completions for 'load' for 'sip show user', 'sip show
peer', and 'sip qualify peer.'
* chan_skinny: Correct and extend completions for 'skinny reset' and
'skinny show line.'
* func_odbc: Correct completions for 'odbc read' and 'odbc write'
* main/astmm: Use built-in completion facilities to complete arguments
for 'memory' commands.
* main/bridge: Correct completions for 'bridge kick.'
* main/ccss: Use built-in completion facilities to complete arguments
for 'cc cancel' command.
* main/cli: Add 'all' completion for 'channel request hangup.' Correct
completions for 'core set debug channel.' Correct completions for 'core
show calls.'
* main/pbx_app: Remove redundant completions for 'core show
applications.'
* main/pbx_hangup_handler: Remove unused completions for 'core show
hanguphandlers all.'
* res_sorcery_memory_cache: Add completion for 'reload' argument of
'sorcery memory cache stale' and properly implement.
Change-Id: Iee58c7392f6fec34ad9d596109117af87697bbca
This change adds the media stream topology definition and API for
accessing and using it.
Some refactoring of the stream was also done.
ASTERISK-26786
Change-Id: Ic930232d24d5ad66dcabc14e9b359e0ff8e7f568
The ast_waitfor_nandfds operation will manipulate the flags
of channels passed in. This was previously done without
the channel lock being held. This could result in incorrect
values existing for the flags if another thread manipulated
the flags at the same time.
This change locks the channel during flag manipulation.
ASTERISK-26788
Change-Id: I2c5c8edec17c9bdad4a93291576838cb552ca5ed
In Asterisk 11, if the 'Originate' AMI command failed to connect the provided
Channel while in extension mode, a 'failed' extension would be looked up and
run. This was, I believe, unintentionally removed in 51b6c49. This patch
restores that behavior.
This also adds an enum for the various 'synchronous' modes in an attempt to
make them meaningful.
ASTERISK-26115 #close
Reported by: Nasir Iqbal
Change-Id: I8afbd06725e99610e02adb529137d4800c05345d
We shouldn't unlock the channel after starting a snapshot staging because
another thread may interfere and do its own snapshot staging.
* app_dial.c:dial_exec_full() made hold the channel lock while setting up
the outgoing channel staging. Made hold the channel lock after the called
party answers while updating the caller channel staging.
* chan_sip.c:sip_new() completed the channel staging on off-nominal exit.
Also we need to use ast_hangup() instead of ast_channel_unref() at that
location.
* channel.c:__ast_channel_alloc_ap() added a comment about not needing to
complete the channel snapshot staging on off-nominal exit paths.
* rtp_engine.c:ast_rtp_instance_set_stats_vars() made hold the channel
locks while staging the channels for the stats channel variables.
Change-Id: Iefb6336893163f6447bad65568722ad5d5d8212a
This change adds the media stream definition and API for
accessing and using it. Unit tests have also been written
which exercise aspects of the API.
ASTERISK-26773
Change-Id: I3dbe54065b55aaa51f467e1a3bafd67fb48cac87
When performing an SRV lookup using the ast_srv_lookup function it
did not properly handle the situation where 0 records are returned.
If this happened it would wrongly assume that at least one record
was present.
This change fixes the code so it will exit early if an error occurs
or if 0 records are returned.
ASTERISK-26772
patches:
srv_lookup.patch submitted by nappsoft (license 6822)
Change-Id: I09b19081c74e0ad11c12bf54a257243b1bcb2351
In ari.conf, when setting the option channelvars, every Stasis channel
snapshot would create a list of variable/value that would not be freed
when the snapshot is freed, resulting in a often-recurring memory
leak.
ASTERISK-26767 #close
Change-Id: Ia37dd9d68063d7f879193df02ede293e5ded716d
OpenSSL 1.1 requires no explicit initialization. The hacks in the
library are not needed. They also happen to fail running Asterisk.
Change-Id: I3b3efd5d80234a4c45a8ee58dcfe25b15d9ad100
OpenSSL 1.1 introduced TLS_client_method() and deprecated the previous
version-specific methods (such as TLSv1_client_method(). Other than
being simpler to use and more correct (gain support for TLS newer that
TLS1, in our case), the older ones produce a deprecation warning that
fails the build in dev-mode.
Change-Id: I257b1c8afd09dcb0d96cda3a41cb9f7a15d0ba07
Using the timerfd timing module can cause channel freezing, lingering, or
deadlock issues. The problem is because this is the only timing module
that uses an associated alert-pipe. When the alert-pipe becomes
unbalanced with respect to the number of frames in the read queue bad
things can happen. If the alert-pipe has fewer alerts queued than the
read queue then nothing might wake up the thread to handle received frames
from the channel driver. For local channels this is the only way to wake
up the thread to handle received frames. Being unbalanced in the other
direction is less of an issue as it will cause unnecessary reads into the
channel driver.
ASTERISK-26716 is an example of this deadlock which was indirectly fixed
by the change that found the need for this patch.
* In channel.c:__ast_queue_frame(): Adding frame lists to the read queue
did not add the same number of alerts to the alert-pipe. Correspondingly,
when there is an exceptionally long queue event, any removed frames did
not also remove the corresponding number of alerts from the alert-pipe.
ASTERISK-26632 #close
Change-Id: Ia98137c5bf6e9d6d202ce0eb36441851875863f6
There are several issues with deferring frames that are caused by the
refactoring.
1) The code deferring frames mishandles adding a deferred frame to the
deferred queue. As a result the deferred queue can only be one frame
long.
2) Deferrable frames can come directly from the channel driver as well as
the read queue. These frames need to be added to the deferred queue.
3) Whoever is deferring frames is really only doing the __ast_read() to
collect deferred frames and doesn't care about the returned frames except
to detect a hangup event. When frame deferral is completed we must make
the normal frame processing see the hangup as a frame anyway. As such,
there is no need to have varying hangup frame deferral methods. We also
need to be aware of the AST_SOFTHANGUP_ASYNCGOTO hangup that isn't real.
That fake hangup is to cause the PBX thread to break out of loops to go
execute a new dialplan location.
4) To properly deal with deferrable frames from the channel driver as
pointed out by (2) above, means that it is possible to process a dialplan
interception routine while frames are deferred because of the
AST_CONTROL_READ_ACTION control frame. Deferring frames is not
implemented as a re-entrant operation so you could have the unsupported
case of two sections of code thinking they have control of the media
stream.
A worse problem is because of the bad implementation of the AMI PlayDTMF
action. It can cause two threads to be deferring frames on the same
channel at the same time. (ASTERISK_25940)
* Rather than fix all these problems simply revert the API refactoring as
there is going to be only autoservice and safe_sleep deferring frames
anyway.
ASTERISK-26343
ASTERISK-26716 #close
Change-Id: I45069c779aa3a35b6c863f65245a6df2c7865496
A dialplan intercept routine is equivalent to an interrupt routine. As
such, the routine must be done quickly and you do not have access to the
media stream. These restrictions are necessary because the media stream
is the responsibility of some other code and interfering with or delaying
that processing is bad. A possible future dialplan processing
architecture change may allow the interception routine to run in a
different thread from the main thread handling the media and remove the
execution time restriction.
* Made res_agi.c:run_agi() running an AGI in an interception routine run
in DeadAGI mode. No touchy channel frames.
ASTERISK-25951
ASTERISK-26343
ASTERISK-26716
Change-Id: I638f147ca7a7f2590d7194a8ef4090eb191e4e43
If an audiohook is placed on a channel that does not require transcoding,
muting that hook will cause the underlying frames to be muted as well.
The original patch is from David Woolley but I have modified slightly.
ASTERISK-21094 #close
Reported by: David Woolley
Patches:
ASTERISK-21094-Patch-1.8-1.txt (license #5737) patch uploaded
by David Woolley
Change-Id: Ib2b68c6283e227cbeb5fa478b2d0f625dae338ed
The escalator works by creating a set of startup commands in cli.conf
that set up logger channels and issue the debug commands for the
subsystems specified. If asterisk is running when it is executed,
the same commands will be issued to the running instance. The original
cli.conf is saved before any changes are made and can be restored by
executing '$prog --reset'.
The log output will be stored in...
$astlogdir/message.$uniqueid
$astlogdir/debug.$uniqueid
$astlogdir/dtmf.$uniqueid
$astlogdir/fax.$uniqueid
$astlogdir/security.$uniqueid
$astlogdir/pjsip_history.$uniqueid
$astlogdir/sip_history.$uniqueid
Some minor tweaks were made to chan_sip, and res_pjsip_history
so their history output could be send to a log channel as packets
are captured.
A minor tweak was also made to manager so events are output to verbose
when "manager set debug on" is issued.
Change-Id: I799f8e5013b86dc5282961b27383d134bf09e543
Issue introduced in b59956a87. In the non-darwin case libastssl/pj
should be versioned. This causes the symbol file for this lib
to not be generated.
Change-Id: Ib07ae8c40252813c488e2c1ac6204fd42816dd4c
(cherry picked from commit 54b027916a)
* channel.c:ast_sendtext(): Fix T.140 SendText memory leak.
* format_compatibility.c: T.140 RED and T.140 were swapped.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c:rtp_red_init(): Fix ast_format_t140_red ref leak.
* res_rtp_asterisk.c:rtp_red_init(): Fix data race after starting periodic
scheduled red_write().
* res_rtp_asterisk.c: Some other minor misc tweaks.
Change-Id: Ifa27a2e0f8a966b1cf628607c86fc4374b0b88cb
* make_silence() created a malloced silence slin frame without adding a
slin format ref. When the frame is destroyed it will unref the slin
format that never had a ref added. Memory corruption is expected to
follow.
* Simplified and fixed counting the number of samples in a frame list for
make_silence().
* Eliminated an unnecessary RAII_VAR associated with the make_silence()
frame.
Change-Id: I47de3f9b92635b7f8b4d72309444d6c0aee6f747
* ast_frisolate() could leak frame format refs on allocation
failures.
* Similified code in ast_frisolate() and code used by
ast_frisolate().
Change-Id: I79566d4d36b3d7801bf0c8294fcd3e9a86a2ed6d
The mechanism used for detecting the maximum log level compiled into the
linked pjproject did not work. The API call simply stores the requested
level into an integer and does no range checking. Asterisk was assuming
that there was range checking and limited the new value to the allowable
range. To get the actual maximum log level compiled into the linked
pjproject we need to get and save off the initial set log level from
pjproject. This is the maximum log level supported.
* Get and save off the initial log level setting before altering it to the
desired level on startup. This has to be done by a macro rather than
calling a core function to avoid incorrectly linking pjproject.
* Split the initial log level warning messages to warn if the linked
pjproject cannot support the requested startup level and if it is too low
to get the pjproject buildopts for "pjproject show buildopts".
* Adjust the CLI "pjproject set log level" to check the saved max log
level and to generate normal output messages instead of a warning message.
ASTERISK-26743 #close
Change-Id: I40aa76653e2a1dece66c3f8734594b4f0471cfb4
The 'ari set debug' command has been enhanced to accept 'all' as an
application name. This allows dumping of all apps even if an app
hasn't registered yet. To accomplish this, a new global_debug global
variable was added to res/stasis/app.c and new APIs were added to
set and query the value.
'ari set debug' now displays requests and responses as well as events.
This required refactoring the existing debug code.
* The implementation for 'ari set debug' was moved from stasis/cli.{c,h}
to ari/cli.{c,h}, and stasis/cli.{c,h} were deleted.
* In order to print the body of incoming requests even if a request
failed, the consumption of the body was moved from the ari stubs
to ast_ari_callback in res_ari.c and the moustache templates were
then regenerated. The body is now passed to ast_ari_invoke and then
on to the handlers. This results in code savings since that template
was inserted multiple times into all the stubs.
An additional change was made to the ao2_str_container implementation
to add partial key searching and a sort function. The existing cli
code assumed it was already there when it wasn't so the tab completion
was never working.
Change-Id: Ief936f747ce47f1fb14035fbe61152cf766406bf
(cherry picked from commit 1d890874f3)
This change adds experimental support for providing RTCP
feedback information to codec modules so they can dynamically
change themselves based on conditions.
ASTERISK-26584
Change-Id: Ifd6aa77fb4a7ff546c6025900fc2baf332c31857
It was possible for a frame to be re-inserted into a jitter buffer after it
had been removed from it. A case when this happened was if a frame was read
out of the jitterbuffer, passed to the translation core, and then multiple
frames were returned from said translation core. Upon multiple frames being
returned the first is passed on, but sebsequently "chained" frames are put
back into the read queue. Thus it was possible for a frame to go back into
the jitter buffer where this would cause problems.
This patch adds a flag to frames that are inserted into the channel's read
queue after translation. The abstract jitter buffer code then checks for this
flag and ignores any frames marked as such.
Change-Id: I276c44edc9dcff61e606242f71274265c7779587
The task processor queue reached X scheduled tasks message was originally
intended to get logged only once per task processor to prevent spamming
the log. This is no longer necessary since high and low water thresholds
can better control when the message is logged.
It is beneficial to generate the warning each time a task processor
reaches the high water level because PJSIP stops processing new requests
while any high water alert is active. Without this change you would have
to enable at least debug level 3 logging to know about a repeated alert
trigger.
* Made generate the warning message whenever a task is pushed into the
task processor that triggers the high water alert.
* Appended 'again' to the warning for a repeated high water alert trigger.
Change-Id: Iabf75a004f7edaf1e5e8c323099418e667cac999
Adds the ability for extensions to be registered to include filename and
line number so that dialplan show output can show the filename and line
number of a config file responsible for generating a given extension.
This only affects config modules that are written to use the new extension
registering functions. In this patch, that only includes pbx_config, so
extensions registered in extensions.conf and any included extension will
be shown in this manner. Extensions registered in this manner will show
the filename and line number *instead* of the registrar.
ASTERISK-26658 #close
Reported by: Jonathan R. Rose
Change-Id: Ieccc6abccdff34ed5c7da3511fd24972b8f2dd30
This is a semi-regression caused by the iostreams change. Prior to
iostreams, HTTP headers were written to a FILE handle using fprintf.
Then the body was written using a call to fwrite(). Because of internal
buffering, the result was that the HTTP headers and body would be sent
out in a single write to the socket.
With the change to iostreams, the HTTP headers are written using
ast_iostream_printf(), which under the hood calls write(). The HTTP body
calls ast_iostream_write(), which also calls write() under the hood.
This results in two separate writes to the socket.
Most HTTP client libraries out there will handle this change just fine.
However, a few of our testsuite tests started failing because of the
change. As a result, in order to reduce frustration for users, this
change alters the HTTP code to write the headers and body in a single
write operation.
ASTERISK-26629 #close
Reported by Joshua Colp
Change-Id: Idc2d2fb3d9b3db14b8631a1e302244fa18b0e518
ast_iostream_printf() attempts first to use a fixed-size buffer to
perform its printf-like operation. If the fixed-size buffer is too
small, then a heap allocation is used instead. The heap allocation in
this case was exactly the length of the string to print. The issue here
is that the ensuing call to vsnprintf() will print a NULL byte in the
final space of the string. This meant that the final character was being
chopped off the string and replaced with a NULL byte. For HTTP in
particular, this caused problems because HTTP publishes the expected
Contact-Length. This meant HTTP was publishing a length one character
larger than what was actually present in the message.
This patch corrects the issue by adding one to the allocation length.
ASTERISK-26629
Reported by Joshua Colp
Change-Id: Ib3c5f41e96833d0415cf000656ac368168add639
Added back in a -g3, and an -O3 when DONT_OPTIMIZE is not set, to
the CFLAGS. Not sure how they went missing.
Also fixed an uninstall problem where we weren't removing the
symlink from libasteriskpj.so.2 to libasteriskpj.so. While I was
there, I fixed it for libasteriskssl as well.
Change-Id: I9e00873b1e9082d05b5549d974534b48a2142556
OpenSSL 1.1.0 includes some major changes in the interface. See
https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/1.1_API_Changes .
Status: Right now there are still a few deprecation notes with OpenSSL
1.1.0. But it's a start.
Changes:
* CRYPTO_LOCK is no longer available. Replace it with its value for now.
I don't completely understand what it is used for there.
* Remove several functions from libasteriskssl that seem to no longer be
needed.
* Structures have become opaque and are accesses with accessors.
* ERR_remove_thread_state() no longer needed.
* SSLv2 code now could no longer be used in 1.1.
ASTERISK-26109 #close
Change-Id: I5e29d477d486ca29b6aae0dc2f5dff960c1cb82b
The latest Release candidate fails to create RTP streams when IPv6
is not available. Due to the changes made in September the ast_sockaddr
structure passed around to create these streams is always of AF_INET6
type, causing failure when used for IPv4. This patch adds a utility
function to check for availability of IPv6 and applies such check
at startup to determine how to create the ast_sockaddr structures.
ASTERISK-26617 #close
Change-Id: I627a4e91795e821111e1cda523f083a40d0e0c3e
Use of the new logging is as simple as issuing the new CLI command or
setting the new pjproject.conf option.
Other options that can affect the logging are how you have the pjproject
log levels mapped to Asterisk log types in pjproject.conf and if you have
configured Asterisk to log the DEBUG type messages. Altering the
pjproject.conf level mapping shouldn't be necessary for most installations
as the default mapping is sensible. Configuring Asterisk to log the DEBUG
message type is standard practice for collecting debug information.
* Added CLI "pjproject set log level" command to dynamically adjust the
maximum pjproject log message level.
* Added CLI "pjproject show log level" command to see the currently set
maximum pjproject log message level.
* Added pjproject.conf startup section "log_level" option to set the
initial maximum pjproject log message level so all messages could be
captured from initialization.
* Set PJ_LOG_MAX_LEVEL to 6 to compile in all defined logging levels into
bundled pjproject. Pjproject will use the currently set run time log
level to determine if a log message is generated just like Asterisk
verbose and debug logging levels.
* In log_forwarder(), made always log enabled and mapped pjproject log
messages. DEBUG mapped log messages are no longer gated by the current
Asterisk debug logging level.
* Removed RAII_VAR() from res_pjproject.c:get_log_level().
ASTERISK-26630 #close
Change-Id: I6dca12979f482ffb0450aaf58db0fe0f6d2e5389
The recent change that made frame deferral into an API had a behavior
change to it. When frame deferral was completed, we would take all of
the deferred frames and queue them all onto the channel in one call to
ast_queue_frame_head(). Before frame deferral was API-ized, places that
performed manual frame deferral would actually take each deferred frame
and queue them onto the channel.
This change in behavior caused the confbridge_recording test to start
failing consistently. Without going too crazily deep into the details,
a channel was getting "stuck" in an ast_safe_sleep(). An AMI redirect
was attempting to break it out of the sleep, but because there were more
frames in the channel read queue than expected, the channel ended up
being unable to break from its sleep loop.
By restoring the behavior of individual frame queuing after deferral,
the test starts passing again.
Note, this points to a potential underlying issue pointing to an
"unbalance" that can occur when queuing multiple frames at once,
and so a follow-up issue is being created to investigate that
possibility.
Change-Id: Ied5dacacda06d343dea751ed5814a03364fe5a7d
The sending codec is switched to the receiving codec and then
is switched back to the best native codec on EVERY receiving RTP packets.
This is because after call of ast_channel_set_rawwriteformat there is call
of ast_set_write_format which calls set_format which sets rawwriteformat
to the best native format.
This patch adds a new function ast_set_write_format_path which set
specific write path on channel and uses this function to switch
the sending codec.
ASTERISK-26603 #close
Change-Id: I5b7d098f8b254ce8f45546e6c36e5d324737f71d
Issue/patch ASTERISK-26587 was inspired by issue ASTERISK-22992
that requested ability to add callerid into app_originate.
Comments in that issue suggested that it was better solved by
adding an option to gosub prior to originating the call. The
attached patch implements this much like app_dial with two
options one to gosub on the originating channel and one to gosub
on the newly created channel and behaves just like app_dial.
I have tested this patch by adding callerid info to the new
channel and also SIPAddHeader (to e.g. add header to force auto
answer) and confirmed it works. Have also tested both 'exten'
and 'app' versions of app_originate.
Opened by: dkerr
Patch by: dkerr
Change-Id: I36abc39b58567ffcab4a636ea196ef48be234c57
The asterisk.h header file needs to be included first or else
some things go awry, such as:
implicit declaration of function 'vasprintf'
Change-Id: I981dc2a77a1ba791888e4f1726644d4656c0407c
If a TCP/TLS connection was pending (not accepted and not timed out) during
unload of chan_sip, Asterisk would segfault when trying to send a signal to
a thread whose thread ID hadn't been recorded yet. This commit fixes that by
recording the thread ID before calling the blocking connect() syscall.
This was a regression introduced by 776a14386a.
The above wasn't enough to fix the segfault, which was now delayed to the
point where connect() timed out. Therefore, it was necessary to also remove
the SA_RESTART flag from the SIGURG sigaction so that pthread_kill() could be
used to interruput the connect() syscall.
This was a regression introduced by 5d313f51b9.
ASTERISK-26586 #close
Change-Id: I76fd9d47d56e4264e2629bce8ec15fecba673e7b
When retrieving RTCP stats for PJSIP channels, RTT values are unreliable.
RTT calculation is correct, but the data representation isn't. RTT is
represented by a 32-bit fixed-point number with the integer part in the
first 16 bits and the fractional part in the last 16 bits. In order to
get the RTT value, the fractional part is miscalculated, there is an
unnecessary 16 bit shift that causes overflow. Besides this there is
another mistake, when transforming the integer value to the fixed point
fractional part via bitwise operation, that loses precision.
* RTT fractional part is no longer shifted, avoiding overflow.
* RTT fractional part is transformed to its fixed-point value more
precisely.
* Fixed timeval2ntp() and ntp2timeval() second fraction conversions.
* Fixed NTP timestamp report logging. The usec was inexplicably
multiplied by 4096.
ASTERISK-26566 #close
Reported by Hector Royo Concepcion
Change-Id: Ie09bdabfee75afb3f1b8ddfd963e5219ada3b96f
Previously, a TLS server socket would only be restarted upon sip reload if the
bind address had changed. This commit adds checking for changes to TLS
parameters like certificate, ciphers, etc. so they get picked up without
requiring a reload of the entire chan_sip module. This does not affect open
connections in any way, but new connections will use the new TLS parameters.
The changes also apply to HTTP and Manager.
ASTERISK-26604 #close
Change-Id: I169e86cefc6dcd627c915134015a6a1ab1aadbe6
libasteriskpj was hard coded to use -lrt but librt is linux specific
so we now use the LIB_RT variable which gets set by configure.
Change-Id: I41148884517e3031f7675a413d524c86e8614694
Fix support of OS's like openBSD that use an older nameser.h,
this change reverts the defines to the older style which on other
systems is found in nameser_compat.h
Tested on openBSD 6.0, Debian 8
ASTERISK-26608 #close
Change-Id: Iffb36caab8c5aa9dece0ce2d009041f7b56cc86a
OpenBSD's 'find' doesn't take the -delete argument so you have to pipe
through 'xargs rm -rf'.
'echo -e' doesn't like \t starting a line. It just prints 't' which
causes the libasteriskpj.exports file to be garbage. They were just
cosmetic so they were removed.
librt doesn't exist so the link of libasteriskpj.so fails. It's not
actually needed for linux anyway so -lrt was removed from the link.
res_rtp_asterisk was failing to load because of an undefined
DTLS_method. '|| defined(LIBRESSL_VERSION_NUMBER)' was added to the #if
so DTLSv1_method is used instead.
ASTERISK-26608
Change-Id: I926ec95b0b69633231e3ad1d6e803b977272c49c