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Because SQLite doesn't support full ALTER capabilities, alembic scripts
require batch operations. However, that capability wasn't available until
0.7.0 which some distributions haven't reached yet. Therefore, the batch
operations introduced in commit 86d6e44cc (review 2319) have been reverted
and SQLite is unsupported again, for now anyway.
Tested the full upgrade and downgrade on MySQL/Mariadb and Postgresql.
ASTERISK-25890 #close
Reported-by: Harley Peters
Change-Id: I82eba5456736320256f6775f5b0b40133f4d1c80
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Downgrade had a few issues. First there was an errant 'update' statement in
add_auto_dtmf_mode that looks like it was a copy/paste error. Second, we
weren't cleaning up the ENUMs so subsequent upgrades on postgres failed
because the types already existed.
For sqlite... sqlite doesn't support ALTER or DROP COLUMN directly.
Fortunately alembic batch_operations takes care of this for us if we
use it so the alter and drops were converted to use batch operations.
Here's an example downgrade:
with op.batch_alter_table('ps_endpoints') as batch_op:
batch_op.drop_column('tos_audio')
batch_op.drop_column('tos_video')
batch_op.add_column(sa.Column('tos_audio', yesno_values))
batch_op.add_column(sa.Column('tos_video', yesno_values))
batch_op.drop_column('cos_audio')
batch_op.drop_column('cos_video')
batch_op.add_column(sa.Column('cos_audio', yesno_values))
batch_op.add_column(sa.Column('cos_video', yesno_values))
with op.batch_alter_table('ps_transports') as batch_op:
batch_op.drop_column('tos')
batch_op.add_column(sa.Column('tos', yesno_values))
# Can't cast integers to YESNO_VALUES, so dropping and adding is required
batch_op.drop_column('cos')
batch_op.add_column(sa.Column('cos', yesno_values))
Upgrades from base to head and downgrades from head to base were tested
repeatedly for postgresql, mysql/mariadb, and sqlite3.
Change-Id: I862b0739eb3fd45ec3412dcc13c2340e1b7baef8
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Currently when Asterisk starts initial qualifies of contacts are spread out
randomly between 0 and qualify_timeout to prevent network and system overload.
If a contact's qualify_frequency is 5 minutes however, that contact may be
unavailable to accept calls for the entire 5 minutes after startup. So while
staggering the initial qualifies is a good idea, basing the time on
qualify_timeout could leave contacts unavailable for too long.
This patch adds a new global parameter "max_initial_qualify_time" that sets the
maximum time for the initial qualifies. This way you could make sure that all
your contacts are initialy, randomly qualified within say 30 seconds but still
have the contact's ongoing qualifies at a 5 minute interval.
If max_initial_qualify_time is > 0, the formula is initial_interval =
min(max_initial_interval, qualify_timeout * random(). If not set,
qualify_timeout is used.
The default is "0" (disabled).
ASTERISK-24863 #close
Change-Id: Ib80498aa1ea9923277bef51d6a9015c9c79740f4
Tested-by: George Joseph <george.joseph@fairview5.com>
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