A non-existent constraint was being referenced in the upgrade script.
This patch corrects the problem by removing the reference.
In addition, the head of the alembic branch referred to a non-existent
revision. This has been fixed by referring to the proper revision.
This patch fixes another realtime problem as well. Our Alembic scripts
store booleans as yes or no values. However, Sorcery tries to insert
"true" or "false" instead. This patch introduces a new boolean type that
translates to "yes" or "no" instead.
ASTERISK-26128 #close
Change-Id: I51574736a881189de695a824883a18d66a52dcef
With CLI "core show settings", simply the parameter maxfiles of the file
asterisk.conf was shown. If that parameter was not set, nothing was displayed
although the environment might have set a default number itself. Or if maxfiles
were not granted (completely), still maxfiles was shown. Now, the maximum number
of possible file descriptors in the environment is shown.
ASTERISK-26097
Change-Id: I2df5c58863b5007b34b77adbe28b885dfcdf7e0b
With menuselect "DEBUG_FD_LEAKS" and CLI "core show fd", both the maximum max
and current max of possible file descriptors were shown. Both show the same
value always. Not to confuse users, just the current maximum is shown now.
ASTERISK-26097
Change-Id: I49cf7952d73aec9e3f6a88942842c39be18380fa
CEL wrongly assumed that a channel would only have a single dial
event on it. This is incorrect. Particularly in a queue each
call attempt to a member will result in a dial event, adding
a new dial status in CEL without removing the old one. This
would cause the container to grow with only one dial status
being removed when the channel went away. The other dial status
entries would remain leaking memory.
This change fixes the memory leak by ensuring that only one dial
status will only ever exist for each channel.
The behavior during the scenario where multiple events are received
has also been improved. For failure cases the first failure will
be the dial status. If an answer dial status is received, though,
it will take priority and the dial status for the channel will be
answer.
Memory usage has also been decreased by storing the minimal
amount of information and the code has been cleaned up slightly.
ASTERISK-25262 #close
Change-Id: I5944eb923db17b6a0faa7317ff6abc9307c009fe
Scenario: Caller blonde transfer
Bob calls Charlie who answers.
Bob puts Charlie on hold and calls Alice.
Before Alice answers, Bob transfers Charlie to Alice.
Charlie's channel triggers an assert because he gets an "ANSWERED"
event even though he never dialed anything. With recent changes to dial
events, this is now a valid scenario so the assert needed to be removed.
ASTERISK-26103 #close
Change-Id: I2679b517b696e7952ab7fb29403df9140e7d1de2
Stasis subscriptions and message routers create taskprocessors to process
the event messages. API calls are needed to be able to set the congestion
levels of these taskprocessors for selected subscriptions and message
routers.
* Updated CDR, CEL, and manager's stasis subscription congestion levels
based upon stress testing. Increased the congestion levels to reduce the
potential for bursty call setup/teardown activity from triggering the
taskprocessor overload alert. CDRs in particular need an extra high
congestion level because they can take awhile to process the stasis
messages.
ASTERISK-26088
Reported by: Richard Mudgett
Change-Id: Id0a716394b4eee746dd158acc63d703902450244
Sorcery creates taskprocessors for object types to process object observer
callbacks. An API call is needed to be able to set the congestion levels
of these taskprocessors for selected object types.
* Updated PJSIP's contact and contact_status sorcery object type observer
default congestion levels based upon stress testing. Increased the
congestion levels to reduce the potential for bursty register/unregister
and subscribe/unsubscribe activity from triggering the taskprocessor
overload alert.
ASTERISK-26088
Reported by: Richard Mudgett
Change-Id: I4542e83b556f0714009bfeff89505c801f1218c6
When taskprocessors get backed up, there is a good chance that we are
being overloaded and need to defer adding new work to the system.
* Implemented a high/low water alert mechanism for modules to check if the
system is being overloaded and take appropriate action. When a
taskprocessor is created it has default congestion levels set. A
taskprocessor can later have those congestion levels altered for specific
needs if stress testing shows that the taskprocessor is a symptom of
overloading or needs to handle bursty activity without triggering an
overload alert.
* Add CLI "core show taskprocessor" low/high water columns.
* Fixed __allocate_taskprocessor() to not use RAII_VAR(). RAII_VAR() was
never a good thing to use when creating a taskprocessor because of the
nature of how its references needed to be cleaned up on a partial
creation.
* Made res_pjsip's distributor check if the taskprocessor overload alert
is active before placing a message representing brand new work onto a
distributor serializer.
ASTERISK-26088
Reported by: Richard Mudgett
Change-Id: I182f1be603529cd665958661c4c05ff9901825fa
POSIX defines signal.h. sys/signal.h should not be used as it is
c-library internal header which may or may not exist. Notably with
musl it generates warning of being incorrect.
Change-Id: Ia56b0aa1d84b5c590114867b1b384a624f39a6fc
Icelandic has some weird grammar rules when dealing with dates and
numbers. There are different genders used depending on which number
you're dealing with, and only a handful of numbers do change depending
on the gender. There is also an implied gender in several cases.
This patch was originally written for asterisk 1.6, and has been in use
for several years without crashes. I cleaned it up a bit and rewrote
what was necessary for Asterisk 13.
The functions were copied from other similar languages and modified
where appropriate. If i recall correctly, the German and Danish
functions were used as a base.
ASTERISK-26087
Reported by: Örn Arnarson
Tested by: Örn Arnarson
Change-Id: Ib7d8bd7b0fede5767921ed821315b5b508c0e665
In several internal library projects, the files are archived with the help of
'ar cr'. Only the projects editline and the Objective Open H.323 stack
implementation in C (ooh323c) use 'ar cru' instead. Recently, some platforms
changed the default parameters of AR which creates "/usr/bin/ar: `u' modifier
ignored since `D' is the default (see `U')". For consistency and to avoid this
message all projects use 'ar cr' now.
ASTERISK-26091 #close
Change-Id: I710a9b1c01c1b5a1931a646098c044c8161ead40
Added a new channel variable FORWARDERNAME which indicates which
channel was responsible for a forwarding requests received on dial attempt.
Fixed a bug in the app_queue: FORWARD_CONTEXT is not used.
ASTERISK-26059 #close
Change-Id: I34e93e8c1b5e17776a77b319703c48c8ca48e7b2
If you create a local channel and don't specify an originator channel
to take capabilities from, we automatically add all audio formats to
the new channel's capabilities. When we try to make the channel
compatible with another, the "best format" functions pick the best
format available, which in this case will be slin192. While this is
great for preserving quality, it's the worst for performance and
overkill for the vast majority of applications.
In the absense of any other information, adding all formats is the
correct thing to do and it's not always possible to supply an
originator so a new parameter 'formats' has been added to the channel
create/originate functions. It's just a comma separated list of formats
to make availalble for the channel. Example: "ulaw,slin,slin16".
'formats' and 'originator' are mutually exclusive.
To facilitate determination of format names, the format name has been
added to "core show codecs".
ASTERISK-26070 #close
Change-Id: I091b23ecd41c1b4128d85028209772ee139f604b
Resolver state is not part of res_search API. This fixes
compilation error:
dns.c:261:8: error: too many arguments to function 'res_search'
ret = res_search(&dns_state,
Change-Id: Ia600a58557040df83f744da3dde23225293845a5
POSIX defines poll.h, sys/poll.h should not be used at is c-library
internal header which may or may not exist. Notable in musl it
generates warning of being incorrect. And add explict include of
sys/cdefs.h where needed.
Change-Id: I142930df53fe7585a06b854b6faddc5301e024be
The stringfields refactor to allow adding stringfields to the end of a
structure (f6f4cf459f) exposed some
incomplete cleanup code by some stringfield users.
The most noticeable leaker is the logging system where there is a leak for
every log message generated.
ASTERISK-26078 #close
Reported by: Etienne Lessard
Patches:
jira_asterisk_26078_v13.patch (license #5621) patch uploaded
by Richard Mudgett
Change-Id: If6a08b31336b492c3de6f9dfd07c447f8d5a8782
Dial events up to this point have come in two flavors
* A Dial event with no status to indicate that dialing has begun
* A Dial event with a status to indicate that dialing has ended
With this change, Dial events have been expanded to also give
intermediate events, such as "RINGING", "PROCEEDING", and "PROGRESS".
This is especially useful for ARI dialing, as it gives the application
writer the opportunity to place a channel into an early bridge when
early media is detected.
AMI handles these in-progress dial events by sending a new event called
"DialState" that simply indicates that dial state has changed but has
not ended. ARI never distinguished between DialBegin and DialEnd, so no
change was made to the event itself.
Another change here relates to dial forwards. A forward-related event
was previously only sent when a channel was successfully able to forward
a call to a new channel. With this set of changes, if forwarding is
blocked, we send a Dial event with a forwarding destination but no
forwarding channel, since we were prevented from creating one. This is
again useful for ARI since application writers can now handle call
forward attempts from within their own application.
ASTERISK-25925 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I42cbec7730d84640a434d143a0d172a740995543
As res_pjsip_nat rewrites contact's address, only the last Via header
can contain the source address of registered endpoint.
Also Call-Id header may contain the source address of registered
endpoint.
Added "via_addr", "via_port", "call_id" to contact.
Added new fields ViaAddress, CallID to AMI event ContactStatus.
ASTERISK-26011
Change-Id: I36bcc0bf422b3e0623680152d80486aeafe4c576
worker_start checked for ZOMBIE status without holding a lock. All
other read/write of worker status are performed with a lock, so this
check should do the same.
ASTERISK-25777 #close
Change-Id: I5e33685a5c26fdb300851989a3b82be8c4e03781
Invisible bridges function the same as normal bridges, but they have the
following restrictions:
* They never show up in CLI, AMI, or ARI queries.
* They do not have Stasis messages published about them.
Invisible bridges' main use is for when use of the bridging system is
desired, but the bridge should not be known to users of the Asterisk
system.
ASTERISK-25925
Change-Id: I804a209d3181d7c54e3d61a60eb462e7ce0e3670
Scenario:
Local fax -> Asterisk w/ firewall -> Provider -> Remote fax
* Local fax starts rtp call to remote fax
* Remote fax starts t38 call back to local fax.
* Local fax sends t38 no-signal to Asterisk before sending an OK.
* udptl processes the frame and increments the expected sequence number.
* chan_sip drops the frame because the call isn't up so nothing goes out
the external interface to open the port for incoming packets.
* Local fax sends OK and Asterisk sends OK to the remote fax.
* Remote fax sends t38 packets which are dropped by the firewall.
* Local fax re-sends t38 no-signal with the same sequence number.
* udptl drops the frame because it thinks it's a dup.
* Still no outgoing packets to open the firewall.
* t38 negotiation fails.
The patch drops frames t38 received before udptl sequence processing
when the call hasn't been answered yet. The second no-signal frame
is then seen as new and is relayed out the external interface which
opens the port and allows negotiation to continue.
ASTERISK-26034 #close
Change-Id: I11744b39748bd2ecbbe8ea84cdb4f3c5943c5af9
When 2d7a4a3357 was merged, it missed the fact that Verbose log messages
are formatted and handled by 'verbosers'. Verbosers are registered
functions that handle verbose messages only; they exist as a separate
class of callbacks. This was done to handle the 'magic' that must be
inserted into Verbose messages sent to remote consoles, so that the
consoles can format the messages correctly, i.e., the leading
tabs/characters.
In reality, verbosers are a weird appendage: they're a separate class of
formatters/message handlers outside of what handles all other log
messages in Asterisk. After some code inspection, it became clear that
simply passing a Verbose message along with its 'sublevel' importance
through the normal logging mechanisms removes the need for verbosers
altogether.
This patch removes the verbosers, and makes the default log formatter
aware that, if the log channel is a console log, it should simply insert
the 'verbose magic' into the log messages itself. This allows the
console handlers to interpret and format the verbose message
themselves.
This simplifies the code quite a lot, and should improve the performance
of printing verbose messages by a reasonable factor:
(1) It removes a number of memory allocations that were done on each
verobse message
(2) It removes the need to strip the verbose magic out of the verbose
log messages before passing them to non-console log channels
(3) It now performs fewer iterations over lists when handling verbose
messages
Since verbose messages are now handled like other log messages (for the
most part), the JSON formatting of the messages works as well.
ASTERISK-25425
Change-Id: I21bf23f0a1e489b5102f8a035fe8871552ce4f96
In 13.9.0, there was an issue where PJSIP contacts added to an AOR would
be deleted at seemingly random times.
One reason this was happening was because of an operation to retrieve
the contacts whose expiration time was less than or equal to the current
time. When retrieving existing contacts, the contact's expiration time
and the current time were converted from a string to a float, and those
two floats were compared.
On some systems, including mine, this conversion was horribly off. For
instance, I could regularly see the string "1463079214" get converted
into 1463079168.000000. When switching from using a float to using a
double, the conversion was as expected.
Why was the conversion to float off? My best guess is that the
conversion to float was attempting to store the entire value in the 23
bit significand of the IEEE-754 floating point number. In particular, if
you take only the 23 most significant bits of 1463079214, you get the
messed up 1463079168 that we were seeing in the conversion. It likely
was possible to get a more precise value by composing the number using
an exponent, but the conversion did not work that way. With a double,
you have a 52 bit significand, allowing the entire value to fit there,
and thereby allowing an accurate conversion.
ASTERISK-26007 #close
Reported by Greg Siemon
Change-Id: I83ca7944aae8b7cd994b254c78ec02411d321070
During refactoring of this support the addition of
the PID to messages was removed. This change adds it
back in.
ASTERISK-25538 #close
Change-Id: Ie2d43b0652e59b7ac319a7dba94501540d70ba36
This change introduces a common container based datastores
management API. This has been done in a few places across
the tree but this consolidates all of the logic into one
place in a generic fashion.
ASTERISK-25999
Change-Id: I72eb15941dcdbc2a37bb00a33ce00f8755bd336a