To prevent one subsystem's taskprocessors from causing others to stall, new capabilities have been added to taskprocessors. * Any taskprocessor name that has a '/' will have the part before the '/' saved as its "subsystem". Examples: "sorcery/acl-0000006a" and "sorcery/aor-00000019" will be grouped to subsystem "sorcery". "pjsip/distributor-00000025" and "pjsip/distributor-00000026" will bn grouped to subsystem "pjsip". Taskprocessors with no '/' have an empty subsystem. * When a taskprocessor enters high-water alert status and it has a non-empty subsystem, the subsystem alert count will be incremented. * When a taskprocessor leaves high-water alert status and it has a non-empty subsystem, the subsystem alert count will be decremented. * A new api ast_taskprocessor_get_subsystem_alert() has been added that returns the number of taskprocessors in alert for the subsystem. * A new CLI command "core show taskprocessor alerted subsystems" has been added. * A new unit test was addded. REMINDER: The taskprocessor code itself doesn't take any action based on high-water alerts or overloading. It's up to taskprocessor users to check and take action themselves. Currently only the pjsip distributor does this. * A new pjsip/global option "taskprocessor_overload_trigger" has been added that allows the user to select the trigger mechanism the distributor uses to pause accepting new requests. "none": Don't pause on any overload condition. "global": Pause on ANY taskprocessor overload (the default and current behavior) "pjsip_only": Pause only on pjsip taskprocessor overloads. * The core pjsip pool was renamed from "SIP" to "pjsip" so it can be properly grouped into the "pjsip" subsystem. * stasis taskprocessor names were changed to "stasis" as the subsystem. * Sorcery core taskprocessor names were changed to "sorcery" to match the object taskprocessors. Change-Id: I8c19068bb2fc26610a9f0b8624bdf577a04fcd56 |
6 years ago | |
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.. | ||
cdr | Remove as much trailing whitespace as possible. | 8 years ago |
config | taskprocessor: Enable subsystems and overload by subsystem | 6 years ago |
voicemail | Remove as much trailing whitespace as possible. | 8 years ago |
README.md | Add text of cdr directory into README.md for ast-db-manage | 9 years ago |
cdr.ini.sample | alembic: Adjust sippeers, queue_members, and voicemail_messages tables. | 11 years ago |
config.ini.sample | alembic: Adjust sippeers, queue_members, and voicemail_messages tables. | 11 years ago |
env.py | Remove as much trailing whitespace as possible. | 8 years ago |
voicemail.ini.sample | alembic: Adjust sippeers, queue_members, and voicemail_messages tables. | 11 years ago |
README.md
Asterisk Database Manager
Asterisk includes optional database integration for a variety of features. The purpose of this effort is to assist in managing the database schema for Asterisk database integration.
This is implemented as a set of repositories that contain database schema migrations, using Alembic. The existing repositories include:
cdr
- Table used for Asterisk to store CDR recordsconfig
- Tables used for Asterisk realtime configurationvoicemail
- Tables used forODBC_STOARGE
of voicemail messages
Alembic uses SQLAlchemy, which has support for many databases.
IMPORTANT NOTE: This is brand new and the initial migrations are still subject to change. Only use this for testing purposes for now.
Example Usage
First, create an ini file that contains database connection details. For help with connection string details, see the SQLAlchemy docs.
$ cp config.ini.sample config.ini
... edit config.ini and change sqlalchemy.url ...
Next, bring the database up to date with the current schema.
$ alembic -c config.ini upgrade head
In the future, as additional database migrations are added, you can run alembic again to migrate the existing tables to the latest schema.
$ alembic -c config.ini upgrade head
The migrations support both upgrading and downgrading. You could go all the way back to where you started with no tables by downgrading back to the base revision.
$ alembic -c config.ini downgrade base
base
and head
are special revisions. You can refer to specific revisions
to upgrade or downgrade to, as well.
$ alembic -c config.ini upgrade 4da0c5f79a9c
Offline Mode
If you would like to just generate the SQL statements that would have been executed, you can use alembic's offline mode.
$ alembic -c config.ini upgrade head --sql
Adding Database Migrations
The best way to learn about how to add additional database migrations is to refer to the Alembic documentation.