Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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into 13
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into 13
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reloads/realtime fetches" into 13
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into 13
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into 13
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into 13
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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
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When chan_sip does a re-INVITE to refresh a session and authentication
is required, the INVITE with the Authorization header containes a
second Session-Expires header without the ";refersher=" parameter.
This is causing some proxies to return a 400. Also, when Asterisk is
the uas and the refresher, it is including the Session-Expires and
Min-SE headers in OPTIONS messages which is not allowed per RFC4028.
This patch (based on the reporter's) Checks to see if a Session-Expires
header is already in the message before adding another one. It also
checks that the method is INVITE or UPDATE.
ASTERISK-26030 #close
Change-Id: I58a7b07bab5a3177748d8a7034fb8ad8e11ce1d9
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Nothing was cleaning up the registration state object when ast_sorcery_delete
was called on a registration. So, the registration was deleted from sorcery
but the state object went right on refreshing the registration (or failing
to refresh the registration) with the peer.
* Added a 'deleted' observer on registration that removes the state object.
ASTERISK-25964 #close
Reported-by Matt Jordan
Change-Id: I2db792145cdb1f72ebbf57dd9099596dbbf12c23
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Although it's perfectly legal to place multiple SIP messages in the same packet,
it can cause problems because the Linux default is to enable Path MTU Discovery
which sets the Don't Fragment bit on the packets. If adding a second message to
the packet causes the MTU to be exceeded, and the destination isn't equipped to
send a FRAGMENTATION NEEDED response to a large packet, the packet will just be
dropped.
We can't specifically tell the stack to send only 1 message per packet, but we
can turn on TCP_NODELAY when we create the transport. This will at least tell
the stack to send packets as soon as possible.
ASTERISK-26005 #close
Reported-by: Ross Beer
Change-Id: I820f23227183f2416ca5e393bec510e8fe1c8fbd
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A ':' is not a valid token for starting a comment.
Change-Id: I123592d93a83d1bdde3e352822881eb9da85e5ad
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When bound to an 'any' address, e.g., 0.0.0.0, PJSIP reports as its
local address the 'any' address, as opposed to the IP address we
actually received the packet on. This can cause some confusion in Homer,
as it will dutifully report what we send it.
This patch uses the PJSIP inspection routines to determine which IP
address we probably received the packet on based on the remote party's
IP address. In the event that this fails, it falls back to the IP
address natively reported by the transport.
Change-Id: I076f835d2aef489e1ee1d01595b211eb2ce62da3
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The Location headers returned by:
* /bridges/{bridgeId}/play
* /bridges/{bridgeId}/record
* /channels/{channelId}/play
* /channels/{channelId}/record
Did not have the '/ari' prefix, and in the case of the 'play' resources, were
using 'playback' instead of 'playbacks.'
Change-Id: I957c58a3a1471bf477dae7c67faa1b74fcd9241c
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At one point in time, it seemed like a good idea to use the Asterisk
channel name as the HEP correlation UUID. In particular, it felt like
this would be a useful identifier to tie PJSIP messages and RTCP
messages together, along with whatever other data we may eventually send
to Homer. This also had the benefit of keeping the correlation UUID
channel technology agnostic.
In practice, it isn't as useful as hoped, for two reasons:
1) The first INVITE request received doesn't have a channel. As a
result, there is always an 'odd message out', leading it to be
potentially uncorrelated in Homer.
2) Other systems sending capture packets (Kamailio) use the SIP Call-ID.
This causes RTCP information to be uncorrelated to the SIP message
traffic seen by those capture nodes.
In order to support both (in case someone is trying to use res_hep_rtcp
with a non-PJSIP channel), this patch adds a new option, uuid_type, with
two valid values - 'call-id' and 'channel'. The uuid_type option is used
by a module to determine the preferred UUID type. When available, that
source of a correlation UUID is used; when not, the more readily available
source is used.
For res_hep_pjsip:
- uuid_type = call-id: the module uses the SIP Call-ID header value
- uuid_type = channel: the module uses the channel name if available,
falling back to SIP Call-ID if not
For res_hep_rtcp:
- uuid_type = call-id: the module uses the SIP Call-ID header if the
channel type is PJSIP and we have a channel,
falling back to the Stasis event provided
channel name if not
- uuid_type = channel: the module uses the channel name
ASTERISK-25352 #close
Change-Id: Ide67e59a52d9c806e3cc0a797ea1a4b88a00122c
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strings." into 13
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A minimal configuration does not need to explicitly spell out the
directories. The built-in defaults will do just fine. In many cases
they are wrong.
Change-Id: Id1a671e5c5e9923765a4156b57f9f7e263fdd26c
Signed-off-by: Tzafrir Cohen <tzafrir.cohen@xorcom.com>
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Note the default of remmed-out options. To clarify that those values are
not the defaults.
Change-Id: I849c29b7a710f0abc37355fcb5bfee335ae30738
Signed-off-by: Tzafrir Cohen <tzafrir.cohen@xorcom.com>
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Don't suggest users to use debug level 5, which spews (usually
non-useful) debug information. Reduce the suggestion to (an
arbitrarily-selected) level 2.
Change-Id: Ib53195f78945970956ff59ef13fa89b90e0fcd60
Signed-off-by: Tzafrir Cohen <tzafrir.cohen@xorcom.com>
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* No need to set language in a miniml configuration. 'en' will do just
fine.
* It would be useful to have an example of setting it to a different
language.
* Setting the documentation language explicitly is likewise not
required. Setting it to a different value is not common. At least
until there is a set of translated documentation.
Change-Id: I94d91ea34e129925f25af81ef8dc0906fb568cb7
Signed-off-by: Tzafrir Cohen <tzafrir.cohen@xorcom.com>
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FollowMe with the option a records the name of the caller and plays it
to the callee. However it has failed to clean up that recorded file
as it tried to delete the file name without the '.sln' extension.
ASTERISK-26008 #close
Change-Id: I79d7b1be7d5cde57bf076d9389e2a8a4422776ec
Signed-off-by: Tzafrir Cohen <tzafrir.cohen@xorcom.com>
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TLS" into 13
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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
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There was a newline missing from the end of the "no matching endpoint" notice.
Change-Id: Idc11fe5bc0354072291663dbffe648c471e39181
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There are two types of SIP URIs indicating a secure transport:
* sips:user@example.org
* sip:user@example.org;transport=tls
When using a sips URI, Asterisk checks incoming INVITEs and answers from
the other side for sips URIs, and rejects the packet if there are only
sip URIs. So Asterisk should only generate a sips Contact URI if the
other side supports it.
This patch makes Asterisk generate either a sip or sips Contact URI
depending on the format of the server URI.
If you want a sip URI, use:
server_uri=sip:example.org\;transport=tls
If you want a sips URI, use:
server_uri=sips:example.org
ASTERISK-25990 #close
Reported-by: Sebastian Damm
Change-Id: I5ae57d6531ce940b5fc64d5cd2673e60db0f9ba2
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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
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When running on a system that does not support or use AST_UNDEFINED_SANITIZER
or AST_LEAK_SANITIZER, the configure script would incorrectly set those
constants to a blank value, e.g., 'AST_UNDEFINED_SANITIZER='. This would
cause menuselect to error out, complaining that a blank value is not a
valid option. This patch corrects the issue by setting the value to 0 if
the options that those constants enable/disable is not found.
Change-Id: Ib39814aaf940f308d500c1e026edb3d70de47fba
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When reloading, or fetching realtime data, if the "apply" failed for any
numerous reasons the current state object would not be maintained. This
potentially resulted in publishes being stopped for some states/clients when
they should not have been.
This patch makes it so the current state object is kept upon any type of reload/
fetch failures.
Change-Id: Iab6020c116d628ed2ae81183e987e2eaa3c90b30
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It was possible for the explicit publish destroy function to be called without
the pjsip client ever being initialized. This fix checks to make sure there is
a client to destroy before attempting.
Change-Id: I8eea1bfa3bd472149bfc255310be2a6248688f5c
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There were a few spots where the client object's reference was being leaked in
sip_outbound_publish_callback. This patch cleans up those leaks.
Change-Id: I485d0bc9335090f373026f77c548042e258461df
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When res_pjsip_outbound_publish unloads it has to wait for all current
publishing objects to get done. However if the wait condition times out
then it does not fail the unload. This sometimes results in an infinite
loop check while unloading. This patch now fails the unload operation if
the condition times out.
Change-Id: Id57b8cbed9d61222690fcba1e4f18e259df4c7ec
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into 13
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profiles." into 13
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verification" into 13
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From the issue reporter:
"res_pjsip_outbound_authenticator_digest builds a nonce that is a hash of
the timestamp, the source address, the source port, a server UUID that is
calculated at startup, and the authentication realm.
Rather than caching nonces that we create, we instead attempt to re-calculate
the nonce when receiving an incoming request with authentication. We then
compare the re-calculated nonce to the incoming nonce, and if they don't match,
then authentication has failed early.
The problem is that it is possible, especially when using TCP, to receive two
requests from the same endpoint but have differing source ports for those
requests. Asterisk itself commonly will use different source ports for
outbound TCP requests."
This patch removes the source port dependency when building the nonce.
ASTERISK-25978 #close
Change-Id: I871b5f4adce102df1c4988066283095ec509dffe
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The default tls settings for pjproject only allow TLS 1, TLS 1.1 and TLS 1.2.
SSL is not allowed. So, even if you specify "sslv3" for a transport method,
it's silently ignored and one of the TLS protocols is used. This was a new
behavior of pjsip_tls_setting_default() in 2.4 (when tls.proto was added) that
we never caught.
Now we need to set tls.proto = 0 after we call pjsip_tls_setting_default().
This tells pjproject to set the socket protocol to match the method.
ASTERISK-26004 #close
Change-Id: Icfb55c1ebe921298dedb4b1a1d3bdc3ca41dd078
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