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Configurations like "aors = a, b, c" were either ignoring everything after "a"
or trying to look up " b". Same for mailboxes, ciphers, contacts and a few
others.
To fix, all the strsep(©, ",") calls have been wrapped in ast_strip. To
facilitate this, ast_strip, ast_skip_blanks and ast_skip_nonblanks were
updated to handle null pointers.
In some cases, an ast_strlen_zero() test was added to skip consecutive commas.
There was also an attempt to ast_free an ast_strdupa'd string in
ast_sip_for_each_aor which was causing a SEGV. I removed it.
Although this issue was reported for realtime, the issue was in the res_pjsip
modules so all config mechanisms were affected.
ASTERISK-25829 #close
Reported-by: Mateusz Kowalski
Change-Id: I0b22a2cf22a7c1c50d4ecacbfa540155bec0e7a2
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The 'reload' mechanism actually involves closing the underlying
socket and calling the appropriate udp, tcp or tls start functions
again. Only outbound_registration, pubsub and session needed work
to reset the transport before sending requests to insure that the
pjsip transport didn't get pulled out from under them.
In my testing, no calls were dropped when a transport was changed
for any of the 3 transport types even if ip addresses or ports were
changed. To be on the safe side however, a new transport option was
added (allow_reload) which defaults to 'no'. Unless it's explicitly
set to 'yes' for a transport, changes to that transport will be ignored
on a reload of res_pjsip. This should preserve the current behavior.
Change-Id: I5e759850e25958117d4c02f62ceb7244d7ec9edf
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A problem arose when testing the AMI subscription listing actions where it
was possible for a subscription that had not been fully initialized to be
listed. This was problematic as the underlying listing code would crash.
This change makes it so the subscription tree is fully set up before it is
added to the list of subscriptions. This ensures that when the listing actions
get the subscription it is valid.
ASTERISK-25738 #close
Change-Id: Iace2b13641c31bbcc0d43a39f99aba1f340c0f48
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A test recently uncovered that running an ill-timed AMI command to show
inbound subscriptions could cause a crash since Asterisk will try to
operate on a freed subscription.
The fix for this is to remove the subscription tree from the list of
subscriptions at the time that we are sending our final NOTIFY request
out. This way, as the subscription is in the process of dying, it is
inaccessible from AMI.
Change-Id: Ic0239003d8d73e04c47c12dd2a7e23867e5b5b23
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PJSIP name formats:
pjsip/aor/<aor>-<seq> -- registrar thread pool serializer
pjsip/default-<seq> -- default thread pool serializer
pjsip/messaging -- messaging thread pool serializer
pjsip/outreg/<registration>-<seq> -- outbound registration thread pool
serializer
pjsip/pubsub/<endpoint>-<seq> -- pubsub thread pool serializer
pjsip/refer/<endpoint>-<seq> -- REFER thread pool serializer
pjsip/session/<endpoint>-<seq> -- session thread pool serializer
pjsip/websocket-<seq> -- websocket thread pool serializer
Change-Id: Iff9df8da3ddae1132cb2ef65f64df0c465c5e084
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When compiled with assertions enabled one will occur when destroying
the subscription tree when UAS dialog creation fails. This is because
the code assumes that a dialog will always exist on a subscription
tree when in reality during this specific scenario it won't.
This change makes it so a dialog is not removed from the subscription
tree if it is not present.
ASTERISK-25505 #close
Change-Id: Id5c182b055aacc5e66c80546c64804ce19218dee
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A certain situation can result in our attempting to send a NOTIFY on a
destroyed dialog. Say we attempt to send a NOTIFY to a subscriber, but
that subscriber has dropped off the network. We end up retransmitting
that NOTIFY until the appropriate SIP timer says to destroy the NOTIFY
transaction. When the pjsip evsub code is told that the transaction has
been terminated, it responds in kind by alerting us that the
subscription has been terminated, destroying the subscription, and then
removing its reference to the dialog, thus destroying the dialog.
The problem is that when we get told that the subscription is being
terminated, we detect that we have not sent a terminating NOTIFY
request, so we queue up such a NOTIFY to be sent out. By the time that
queued NOTIFY gets sent, the dialog has been destroyed, so attempting to
send that NOTIFY can result in a crash.
The fix being introduced here is actually a reintroduction of something
the pubsub code used to employ. We hold a reference to the dialog and
wait to decrement our reference to the dialog until our subscription
tree object is destroyed. This way, we can send messages on the dialog
even if the PJSIP evsub code wants to terminate earlier than we would
like.
In doing this, some NULL checks for subscription tree dialogs have been
removed since NULL dialogs are no longer actually possible.
Change-Id: I013f43cddd9408bb2a31b77f5db87a7972bfe1e5
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When sending a NOTIFY, we lock the dialog and then unlock the dialog
when finished. A recent change made it so that the subscription tree's
dialog pointer will be set NULL when sending the final NOTIFY request
out. This means that when we attempt to unlock the dialog, we pass a
NULL pointer to pjsip_dlg_dec_lock(). The result is that the dialog
remains locked after we think we have unlocked it. When a response to
the NOTIFY arrives, the monitor thread attempts to lock the dialog, but
it cannot because we never released the dialog lock. This results in
Asterisk being unable to process incoming SIP traffic any longer.
The fix in this patch is to use a local pointer to save off the pointer
value of the subscription tree's dialog when locking and unlocking the
dialog. This way, if the subscription tree's dialog pointer is NULLed
out, the local pointer will still have point to the proper place and the
dialog lock will be unlocked as we expect.
Change-Id: I7ddb3eaed7276cceb9a65daca701c3d5e728e63a
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The SIP dialog is removed from the subscription tree when the final
NOTIFY is sent. However, after the final NOTIFY is sent, the persistence
update function still attempts to access the cseq from the dialog,
resulting in a crash.
This fix removes the subscription persistence at the same time that the
dialog is removed from the subscription tree. This way, there is no
attempt to update persistence when the subscription is being destroyed.
Change-Id: Ibb46977a6cef9c51dc95f40f43446e3d11eed5bb
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There have been crashes seen where a taskprocessor's listener is NULL
unexpectedly.
Looking at backtraces, the problem was specifically seen in PJSIP
serializers.
Subscriptions make the mistake of removing a serializer from a dialog
during subscription tree destruction. Since subscription trees are
reference-counted, guaranteeing the circumstances behind the destruction
are not possible. This makes it so that the dialog serializer can be
removed while not holding the dialog lock. This makes it possible for
the distributor to get a pointer to the dialog serializer and have that
serializer get freed out from under it.
The fix for this is to remove the serializer from a subscription dialog
when sending the final NOTIFY. This guarantees that the serializer is
removed with the dialog lock held. By doing this, we guarantee that if
the distributor gains access to the dialog's serializer, it will not be
possible for the serializer to get freed by another thread.
Change-Id: I21f5dac33529f65cec45679bdace60670800ff66
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If an old persistent subscription is recreated but then immediately
destroyed because it is out of date, the subscription tree will have no
leaf subscriptions on it. This was resulting in a crash when attempting
to destroy the subscription tree.
A simple NULL check fixes this problem.
Change-Id: I85570b9e2bcc7260a3fe0ad85904b2a9bf36d2ac
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There have been crashes and general instability seen in the pubsub code,
so this patch introduces three changes to increase the stability.
First, the ownership model for subscriptions has been modified. Due to
RLS, subscriptions are stored in memory as a tree structure. Prior to my
patch, the PJSIP subscription was the owner of the subscription tree.
When the PJSIP subscription told us that it was terminating, we started
destroying the subscription tree along with all of the individual leaf
subscriptions that belong to the tree. The problem with this model is
that the two actors in play here, the PJSIP subscription and the
individual leaf subscriptions, need to have joint ownership of the
subscription tree. So now, the PJSIP subscription and the individual
leaf subscriptions each have a reference to the subscription tree. This
way, we will not actually free memory until no players are left that
care. The PJSIP subscription is a bigger stakeholder, in that if the
PJSIP subscription's reference to the subscription tree is removed, the
subscription tree instructs the leaf subscriptions to shut down and drop
their references to the subscription tree when possible. The individual
leaf subscriptions, upon being told to shut down, can drop their stasis
subscriptions or whatever they use to learn of new state, and then drop
their reference to the subscription tree once they are ready to die.
Second, the lifetime of a PJSIP subscription's reference to our
subscription tree has been altered. As I learned from doing a deep dive,
the PJSIP evsub code can tell Asterisk multiple times that the
subscription has been terminated, and not all of these times
are especially helpful. I have altered the message flow that we use for
SIP subscriptions such that we will always drop the PJSIP subscription's
reference to the subscription tree when we send the NOTIFY that
terminates a SIP subscription. This also means that we will now queue
NOTIFY requests to be sent after responding to incoming SUBSCRIBEs so
that we can have predictable state changes from the PJSIP evsub code.
Third, the synchronization of operations has been improved. PJSIP can
call into our code from a serializer thread (e.g. upon receiving an
incoming request) or from the monitor thread (e.g. when a subscription
times out). Because of this, there is the possibility of competing
threads stepping on each other. PJSIP attempts to do some
synchronization on its own by always keeping the dialog lock held when
it calls into us. However, since we end up pushing tasks into the
serializer, the result was that serialized operations were not grabbing
the dialog lock and could, as a result, step on something that was being
attempted by a different thread. Now we ensure that serialized
operations grab the dialog lock, then check for extenuating
circumstances, then proceed with their operation if they can.
Change-Id: Iff2990c40178dad9cc5f6a5c7f76932ec644b2e5
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There is a slim chance of a race condition occurring where two threads
can both attempt to manipulate the same area.
Thread A can be handling an incoming initial SUBSCRIBE request. Thread A
lets the specific subscription handler know that the subscription has
been established.
At this point, Thread B may detect a state change on the subscribed
resource and queue up a notification task on Thread C, the subscription
serializer thread.
Now Thread A attempts to generate the initial NOTIFY request to send to
the subscriber at the same time that Thread C attempts to generate a
state change NOTIFY request to send to the subscriber.
The result is that Threads A and C can step on the same memory area,
resulting in a crash. The crash has been observed as happening when
attempting to allocate more space to hold the body for the NOTIFY.
The solution presented here is to queue the subscription establishment
and initial NOTIFY generation onto the subscription serializer thread
(Thread C in the above scenario). This way, there is no way that a state
change notification can occur before the initial NOTIFY is sent, and if
there is a quick succession of NOTIFYs, we can guarantee that the two
NOTIFY requests will be sent in succession.
Change-Id: I5a89a77b5f2717928c54d6efb9955e5f6f5cf815
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Change-Id: I2b8db18eac36c01a5c7eb9467699124e203fd093
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Change-Id: Ie62ff1f4b7adc1a12fa0303f53926af249b25e20
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We should not try to send a SIP response message because we may be
restoring a persistent subscription where we are not responding to a SIP
request.
Change-Id: Id89167ef90320c5563f37e632db0dda6cb9e7dec
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Fix off-nominal visited vector leak in build_resource_tree().
Change-Id: If0399c7941c9c0b1038bcfb7b9a371760977831c
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ast_sip_pubsub_register_body_generator() did not account for the null
terminator set by sprintf() in the allocated output buffer.
Change-Id: I388688a132e479bca6ad1c19275eae0070969ae2
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Change-Id: Ia396096b4fedc2874649ca11137612c3f55e83e3
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Change-Id: I15debd0f717f16ee2f78e7f56151c3b3b97b72fc
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A recent change to res_pjsip_pubsub switched to using pjsip_msg_print as
a means of writing an appropriate packet to persistent storage. While
this partially solved the issue, it had its own problems.
pjsip_msg_print will always add a Content-Length header to the message
it prints. Frequent restarts of Asterisk can result in persistent
subscriptions being written with five or more Content-Length headers. In
addition, sometimes some apparent corruption of individual headers could
be seen.
This aims to fix the problem by not running a parsed message through an
interpreter but rather by taking the raw message and saving it. The
logic for what to save is going to be different depending on whether a
SUBSCRIBE was received from the wire or if it was pulled from
persistence. When receiving a packet from the wire, when using a
streaming transport, the rdata->pkt_info.packet may contain multiple SIP
messages or fragments. However, the rdata->msg_info.msg_buf will always
contain the current SIP message to be processed. When pulling from
persistence, though, the rdata->msg_info.msg_buf will be NULL since no
transport actually handled the packet. However, since we know that we
will always ever pull one SIP message from persistence, we are free to
save directly from rdata->pkt_info.packet instead.
ASTERISK-25365 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I33153b10d0b4dc8e3801aaaee2f48173b867855b
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When recreating a subscription it is possible for a freed sub_tree
to be referenced when the initial NOTIFY fails to be created.
Change-Id: I681c215309aad01b21d611c2de47b3b0a6022788
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The pjsip_rx_data structure has a pkt_info.packet field on it that is
the packet that was read from the transport. For datagram transports,
the packet read from the transport will correspond to the SIP message
that arrived. For streamed transports, however, it is possible to read
multiple SIP messages in one packet.
In a recent case, Asterisk crashed on a system where TCP was being used.
This is because at some point, a read from the TCP socket resulted in a
200 OK response as well as an incoming SUBSCRIBE request being stored in
rdata->pkt_info.packet. When the SUBSCRIBE was processed, the
combination 200 OK and SUBSCRIBE was saved in persistent storage. Later,
a restart of Asterisk resulted in the crash because the persistent
subscription recreation code ended up building the 200 OK response
instead of a SUBSCRIBE request, and we attempted to access
request-specific data.
The fix here is to use the pjsip_msg_print() function in order to
persist SUBSCRIBE requests. This way, rather than using the raw socket
data, we use the parsed SIP message that PJSIP has given us. If we
receive multiple SIP messages from a single read, we will be sure only
to save off the relevant SIP message. There also is a safeguard put in
place to make sure that if we do end up reconstructing a SIP response,
it will not cause a crash.
ASTERISK-25306 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I4bf16f7b76a2541d10b55de82bcd14c6e542afb2
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When res_pjsip body generator modules were generating XML or XPIDF
response bodies, there was a chance that the generated body would be the
exact size of the supplied buffer. Adding the nul string terminator would
then write beyond the end of the buffer and potentially corrupt memory.
* Fix MALLOC_DEBUG high fence violations caused by adding a nul string
terminator on the end of a buffer for XML or XPIDF response bodies.
* Made calls to pj_xml_print() safer if the XML prolog is requested. Due
to a bug in pjproject, the return value could be -1 _or_
AST_PJSIP_XML_PROLOG_LEN if the supplied buffer is not large enough.
* Updated the doxygen comment of AST_PJSIP_XML_PROLOG_LEN to describe the
return value of pj_xml_print() when the supplied buffer is not large
enough.
ASTERISK-25168
Reported by: Carl Fortin
Change-Id: Id70e1d373a6a2b2bd9e678b5cbc5e55b308981de
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In addition to specifying lists of 'presence' and 'message-summary',
users can also create lists of type 'dialog'. These should be treated in
the same fashion as 'presence'.
Change-Id: I583bb69cd9f88b0b29bf09ddaddeac4e84189f6e
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The res_pjsip_exten_state module currently has a race condition between
processing the extension state callback from the PBX core and processing
the subscription shutdown callback from res_pjsip_pubsub. There is currently
no synchronization between the two. This can present a problem as while
the SIP subscription will remain valid the tree it points to may not.
This is in particular a problem as a task to send a NOTIFY may get queued
which will try to use the tree that may no longer be valid.
This change does the following to fix this problem:
1. All access to the subscription tree is done within the task that
sends the NOTIFY to ensure that no other thread is modifying or
destroying the tree. This task executes on the serializer for the
subscriptions.
2. A reference to the subscription serializer is kept to ensure it
remains valid for the lifetime of the extension state subscription.
3. The NOTIFY task has been changed so it will no longer attempt
to send a NOTIFY if the subscription has already been terminated.
ASTERISK-25057 #close
Reported by: Matt Jordan
Change-Id: I0b3cd2fac5be8d9b3dc5e693aaa79846eeaf5643
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When SUBSCRIBE dialogs were established, we never associated
the endpoint that created the subscription with the dialog
we end up creating. In most cases, this ended up not causing
any problems.
The actual bug that was observed was that when a device that
was behind NAT established a subscription with Asterisk, Asterisk
would end up sending in-dialog NOTIFY requests to the device's
private IP addres instead of the public address of the NAT router.
When Asterisk receives the initial SUBSCRIBE from the device,
res_pjsip_nat rewrites the contact to the public address on which the
SUBSCRIBE was received. This allows for the dialog to have its target
address set to the proper public address. Asterisk then would send a 200
OK response to the SUBSCRIBE, then a NOTIFY with the initial
subscription state. The device would then send a 200 OK response to
Asterisk's NOTIFY.
Here's where things went wrong. When the 200 OK arrived, res_pjsip_nat
did not rewrite the address in the Contact header. Then, when the PJSIP
dialog layer processed the 200 OK, PJSIP would perform a comparison
between the IP address in the Contact header and its saved target
address for the dialog. Since they differed, PJSIP would update the
target dialog address to be the address in the Contact header. From this
point, if Asterisk needed to send a NOTIFY to the device, the result was
that the NOTIFY would be sent to the private address that the device
placed in the Contact header.
The reason why res_pjsip_nat did not rewrite the address when it
received the 200 OK response was that it could not associate the
incoming response with a configured endpoint. This is because on a
response, the only way to associate the response to an endpoint is by
finding the dialog that the response is associated with and then finding
the endpoint that is associated with that dialog. We do not perform
endpoint lookups on responses. res_pjsip_pubsub skipped the step of
associating the endpoint with the dialog we created, so res_pjsip_nat
could not find the associated endpoint and therefore couldn't rewrite
the contact.
This commit message is like 50x longer than the actual fix.
ASTERISK 24981 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I2b963c58c063bae293e038406f7d044a8a5377cd
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This change makes the send_notify of the sub_tree
not happen when the sub_tree has been deleted due
to the notify call failing, which avoids a crash.
ASTERISK-24970 #close
Change-Id: I1f20ffc08b192f59c457293b218025a693992cbf
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* Move most of res_pjsip:module_unload to unload_pjsip to resolve crashes
caused by running PJSIP functions from non-PJSIP threads.
* Remove call to pjsip_endpt_destroy(ast_pjsip_endpoint), it was causing
crashes in some cases. In theory pj_shutdown() should take care of this.
* Mark res_pjsip_keepalive and res_pjsip_session as allowed to unload at
shutdown.
* Resolve leaked config global in res_pjsip_notify.
* Unregister pubsub pjsip service module.
* Implement cleanup for res_pjsip_session.
ASTERISK-24731 #close
Reported by: Corey Farrell
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4498/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@433469 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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There are three CLI commands to stop and restart Asterisk each.
1) core stop/restart now - Hangup all calls and stop or restart Asterisk.
New channels are prevented while the shutdown request is pending.
2) core stop/restart gracefully - Stop or restart Asterisk when there are
no calls remaining in the system. New channels are prevented while the
shutdown request is pending.
3) core stop/restart when convenient - Stop or restart Asterisk when there
are no calls in the system. New calls are not prevented while the
shutdown request is pending.
ARI has made stopping/restarting Asterisk more problematic. While a
shutdown request is pending it is desirable to continue to process ARI
HTTP requests for current calls. To handle the current calls while a
shutdown request is pending, a new committed to shutdown phase is needed
so ARI applications can deal with the calls until the system is fully
committed to shutdown.
* Added a new shutdown committed phase so ARI applications can deal with
calls until the final committed to shutdown phase is reached.
* Made refuse new HTTP requests when the system has reached the final
system shutdown phase. Starting anything while the system is actively
releasing resources and unloading modules is not a good thing.
* Split the bridging framework shutdown to not cleanup the global bridging
containers when shutting down in a hurry. This is similar to how other
modules prevent crashes on rapid system shutdown.
* Moved ast_begin_shutdown(), ast_cancel_shutdown(), and
ast_shutting_down(). You should not have to include channel.h just to
access these system functions.
ASTERISK-24752 #close
Reported by: Matthew Jordan
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4399/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@431692 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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Fixed memory leaks that were found in Asterisk.
ASTERISK-24693 #close
Reported by: Kevin Harwell
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4347/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@430999 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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* Made the following AMI actions use list API calls for consistency:
Agents
BridgeInfo
BridgeList
BridgeTechnologyList
ConfbridgeLIst
ConfbridgeLIstRooms
CoreShowChannels
DAHDIShowChannels
DBGet
DeviceStateList
ExtensionStateList
FAXSessions
Hangup
IAXpeerlist
IAXpeers
IAXregistry
MeetmeList
MeetmeListRooms
MWIGet
ParkedCalls
Parkinglots
PJSIPShowEndpoint
PJSIPShowEndpoints
PJSIPShowRegistrationsInbound
PJSIPShowRegistrationsOutbound
PJSIPShowResourceLists
PJSIPShowSubscriptionsInbound
PJSIPShowSubscriptionsOutbound
PresenceStateList
PRIShowSpans
QueueStatus
QueueSummary
ShowDialPlan
SIPpeers
SIPpeerstatus
SIPshowregistry
SKINNYdevices
SKINNYlines
Status
VoicemailUsersList
* Incremented the AMI version to 2.7.0.
* Changed astman_send_listack() to not use the listflag parameter and
always set the value to "Start" so the start capitalization is consistent.
i.e., The FAXSessions used "Start" while the rest of the system used
"start". The corresponding complete event always used "Complete".
* Fixed ami_show_resource_lists() "PJSIPShowResourceLists" to output the
AMI ActionID for all of its list events.
* Fixed off-nominal AMI protocol error in manager_bridge_info(),
manager_parking_status_single_lot(), and
manager_parking_status_all_lots(). Use of astman_send_error() after
responding to the original AMI action request violates the action response
pattern by sending two responses.
* Fixed minor protocol error in action_getconfig() when no requested
categories are found. Each line needs to be formatted as "Header: text".
* Fixed off-nominal memory leak in manager_build_parked_call_string().
* Eliminated unnecessary use of RAII_VAR() in ami_subscription_detail().
ASTERISK-24049 #close
Reported by: Jonathan Rose
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4315/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@430434 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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If you do a 'core (shutdown|restart) graceful' persistent subscriptions won't
survive. If you do a 'core (shutdown|restart) now' or asterisk terminates for
some reason, they do. Here's why...
When asterisk shuts down gracefully, it sends a 'NOTIFY/terminated' to
subscribers for each subscription. This not only tells the subscribers that the
dialog/state machine is done, it also frees the last reference to the
subscription tree which causes the persistent subscription to get deleted from
astdb. When asterisk restarts, nothing's left. Just preventing the delete from
astdb doesn't work because we already told the subscriber to terminate the
dialog so we can't restart it even if it was still in astdb. Everything works
OK if asterisk terminates unexpectedly because we never send the 'terminated'
message so on restart, the subscription is still in astdb and the subscriber is
none the wiser.
This patch suppresses the sending of 'NOTIFY/terminated' on shutdown for
persistent connections.
Tested-by: George Joseph
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4318/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@430397 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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Prior to this change, recreating persistent subscriptions would
create the subscription but would not activate it. This led to subscriptions
being listed in the "NULL" state by diagnostics and not sending NOTIFYs
when expected.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4261
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@429571 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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Prior to this patch, all Stasis subscriptions would receive a dedicated
thread for servicing published messages. In contrast, prior to r400178
(see review https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2881/), the subscriptions
shared a thread pool. It was discovered during some initial work on Stasis
that, for a low subscription count with high message throughput, the
threadpool was not as performant as simply having a dedicated thread per
subscriber.
For situations where a subscriber receives a substantial number of messages
and is always present, the model of having a dedicated thread per subscriber
makes sense. While we still have plenty of subscriptions that would follow
this model, e.g., AMI, CDRs, CEL, etc., there are plenty that also fall into
the following two categories:
* Large number of subscriptions, specifically those tied to endpoints/peers.
* Low number of messages. Some subscriptions exist specifically to coordinate
a single message - the subscription is created, a message is published, the
delivery is synchronized, and the subscription is destroyed.
In both of the latter two cases, creating a dedicated thread is wasteful (and
in the case of a large number of peers/endpoints, harmful). In those cases,
having shared delivery threads is far more performant.
This patch adds the ability of a subscriber to Stasis to choose whether or not
their messages are dispatched on a dedicated thread or on a threadpool. The
threadpool is configurable through stasis.conf.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4193
ASTERISK-24533 #close
Reported by: xrobau
Tested by: xrobau
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This is the Asterisk 13 version of the patch. The main difference is in the pubsub
code since it was completely refactored between Asterisk 12 and 13.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4175
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@427841 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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This enforces that res_pjsip, res_pjsip_session, and res_pjsip_pubsub
have loaded properly before attempting to load any modules that depend
on them since the module loader system is not currently capable of
resolving module dependencies on its own.
ASTERISK-24312 #close
Reported by: Dafi Ni
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4062/
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git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@424713 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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A subscription that has been persisted can - for various reasons - fail to be
re-created on startup. This patch resolves a number of crashes that occurred
when a subscription cannot be re-created on several off-nominal paths.
#SIPit31
ASTERISK-24368 #close
Reported by: Matt Jordan
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@424601 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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Replace code using ast_uuid_generate() with simpler and faster code using
ast_uuid_generate_str(). The new code avoids a malloc(), free(), and
copy.
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These are needed for a set of batched notification RLS tests that are
about to be committed to the testsuite.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3967
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@423462 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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res_pjsip_pubsub has two separate checks that it makes when a SUBSCRIBE
arrives.
* It checks that there is a subscription handler for the Event
* It checks that there are body generators for the types in the Accept header
The problem is, there's nothing that ensures that these two things will
actually mesh with each other. For instance, Asterisk will accept a subscription
to MWI that accepts pidf+xml bodies. That doesn't make sense.
With this commit, we add some type information to the mix. Subscription
handlers state they generate data of type X, and body generators state
that they consume data of type X. This way, Asterisk doesn't end up in
some hilariously mismatched situation like the one in the previous paragraph.
ASTERISK-24136 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3877
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3878
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PJSIP, unless a constant is modified at compilation time, limits
SIP requests to 4000 bytes. Full-state RLS notifications can easily
exceed this limit with moderately small lists.
This changeset allows for Asterisk to work around this size limit by
performing its own allocation of the transmission data buffer. This
way, Asterisk can allocate a buffer that exceeds the built-in maximum.
We still impose our own limit of 64000 bytes, mainly because making
allocations larger than that is a bit absurd.
ASTERISK-24181 #close
Reported by Mark Michelson
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3977
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@422851 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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resource list
https://wiki.asterisk.org/wiki/display/AST/Resource+List+Subscription+Test+Plan
According to the off-nominal plan, if evenlist support is not specified in a
SUBSCRIBE's supported header(s), that subscription should be rejected with an
error.
ASTERISK-23871
Reported by: Mark Michelson
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3960/diff/#index_header
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@422836 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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A misunderstanding of how the scheduler worked caused further batched notifications
beyond the first not to get scheduled. Now we reset our scheduler ID to -1 after
the batched notification is sent. This way, further notifications can be scheduled
when they arise.
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@422239 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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This was causing the AMI show_subscriptions test in
the testsuite to fail since all subscriptions were being
seen as subscribers instead of notifiers.
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@421585 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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This patch addresses a few issues:
1) The order of Dial events have been changed when performing a call forward.
The order has now been altered to
1) Dial begins dialing channel A.
2) When A forwards the call to B, we issue the dial end event to channel
A, indicating the dial is being canceled due to a forward to B.
3) When the call to channel B occurs, we then issue a new dial begin to
channel B.
2) Call forwards are now reported on the calling channel, not the peer channel.
3) AMI DialEnd events have been altered to display the extension the call is
being forwarded to when relevant.
4) You can now get the values of channel variables for channels that are not
currently in the Stasis application. This brings the retrieval of channel
variables more in line with the rest of channel read operations since they
may be performed on channels not in Stasis.
ASTERISK-24134 #close
Reported by Matt Jordan
ASTERISK-24138 #close
Reported by Matt Jordan
Patches:
forward-shenanigans.diff uploaded by Matt Jordan (License #6283)
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3899
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@420794 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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The unit tests require a sorcery.conf file that has been
set up to store resource lists in memory rather than retrieving
from configuration.
With a setup that is not conducive to running the tests, a fault
in sorcery currently causes Asterisk to crash when attempting to
run any of the tests.
To get around the crash, this adds a function that verifies the
current environment and marks the tests as "not run" if the setup
is not correct.
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@420779 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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Running testsuite tests locally produced no errors, but when
run using the continuous integration framework, crashes occurred.
The crashes occurred due to a refcounting error that had been fixed
for a similar situation.
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/13@420758 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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