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Change-Id: I74688038e7afe3a279359cce53aadb28ade51ead
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Change-Id: I076c7bd207c7989a23005395ce1735392657be65
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ASTERISK-27306
Change-Id: I3bed0edf3f55b1d4adcbabb25ec14f11dc766c72
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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
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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
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ASTERISK_REGISTER_FILE no longer has any purpose so this commit removes
all traces of it.
Previously exported symbols removed:
* __ast_register_file
* __ast_unregister_file
* ast_complete_source_filename
This also removes the mtx_prof static variable that was declared when
MTX_PROFILE was enabled. This variable was only used in lock.c so it
is now initialized in that file only.
ASTERISK-26480 #close
Change-Id: I1074af07d71f9e159c48ef36631aa432c86f9966
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Change-Id: I8799fb0a347ad76e747dafd0eacf1ea1086b9a8c
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Warnings and errors in the pjproject libraries are generally handled by
Asterisk. In many cases, Asterisk wouldn't even consider them to be warnings
or errors so the messages emitted by pjproject directly are either superfluous
or misleading. A good exampe of this are the level-0 errors pjproject emits
when it can't open a TCP/TLS socket to a client to send an OPTIONS. We don't
consider a failure to qualify a UDP client an "ERROR", why should a TCP/TLS
client be treated any differently?
A config file for res_pjproject has bene added (pjproject.conf) and a new
log_mappings object allows mapping pjproject levels to Asterisk levels
(or nothing). The defaults if no pjproject.conf file is found are the same
as those that were hard-coded into res_pjproject initially: 0,1 = LOG_ERROR,
2 = LOG_WARNING, 3,4,5 = LOG_DEBUG<level>
Change-Id: Iba7bb349c70397586889b8f45b8c3d6c6c8c3898
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Fix some warnings found with clang.
Change-Id: I5195b6189b148c2ee3ed4a19d015a6d4ef3e77bd
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Dump the res_pjsip endpt internals.
In non-developer mode we will not document or make easily accessible the
"details" option even though it is still available. The user has to know
it exists to use it. Presumably they would also be aware of the potential
crash warning below.
Warning: PJPROJECT documents that the function used by this CLI command
may cause a crash when asking for details because it tries to access all
active memory pools.
Change-Id: If2d98a3641c9873364d1daaad971376311aef3cb
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res_pjsip_log_forwarder has been renamed to res_pjproject
and enhanced as follows:
As a follow-on to the recent 'Add CLI "pjsip show buildopts"' patch,
a new ast_pjproject_get_buildopt function has been added. It
allows the caller to get the value of one of the buildopts.
The initial use case is retrieving the runtime value of
PJ_MAX_HOSTNAME to insure we don't send a hostname greater
than pjproject can handle. Since it can differ between
the version of pjproject that Asterisk was compiled against
and the version of pjproject that Asterisk is running against,
we can't use the PJ_MAX_HOSTNAME macro directly in Asterisk
source code.
Change-Id: Iab6e82fec3d7cf00c1cf6185c42be3e7569dee1e
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Change-Id: I5387821f29e5caa0cba0b7d62b0fc0d341e7e20b
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