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path: root/res/res_pjsip_pubsub.exports.in
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2014-01-31Decouple subscription handling from NOTIFY/PUBLISH body generation.Mark Michelson
When the PJSIP pubsub framework was created, subscription handlers were required to state what event they handled along with what body types they knew how to generate. While this serves well when implementing a base RFC, it has problems when trying to extend the body to support non-standard or proprietary body elements. The code also was NOTIFY-specific, meaning that when the time comes that we start writing code to send out PUBLISH requests with MWI or presence bodies, we would likely find ourselves duplicating code that had previously been written. This changeset introduces the concept of body generators and body supplements. A body generator is responsible for allocating a native structure for a given body type, providing the primary body content, converting the native structure to a string, and deallocating resources. A body supplement takes the primary body content (the native structure, not a string) generated by the body generator and adds nonstandard elements to the body. With these elements living in their own module, it becomes easy to extend our support for body types and to re-use resources when sending a PUBLISH request. Body generators and body supplements register themselves with the pubsub core, similar to how subscription and publish handlers had done. Now, subscription handlers do not need to know what type of body content they generate, but they still need to inform the pubsub core about what the default body type for a given event package is. The pubsub core keeps track of what body generators and body supplements have been registered. When a SUBSCRIBE arrives, the pubsub core will check that there is a subscription handler for the event in the SUBSCRIBE, then it will check that there is a body generator that can provide the content specified in the Accept header(s). Because of the nature of body generators and supplements, it means res_pjsip_exten_state and res_pjsip_mwi have been completely gutted. They no longer worry about body types, instead calling ast_sip_pubsub_generate_body_content() when they need to generate a NOTIFY body. Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3150 ........ Merged revisions 407016 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@407030 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-07-30The large GULP->PJSIP renaming effort.Mark Michelson
The general gist is to have a clear boundary between old SIP stuff and new SIP stuff by having the word "SIP" for old stuff and "PJSIP" for new stuff. Here's a brief rundown of the changes: * The word "Gulp" in dialstrings, functions, and CLI commands is now "PJSIP" * chan_gulp.c is now chan_pjsip.c * Function names in chan_gulp.c that were "gulp_*" are now "chan_pjsip_*" * All files that were "res_sip*" are now "res_pjsip*" * The "res_sip" directory is now "res_pjsip" * Files in the "res_pjsip" directory that began with "sip_*" are now "pjsip_*" * The configuration file is now "pjsip.conf" instead of "res_sip.conf" * The module info for all PJSIP-related files now uses "PJSIP" instead of "SIP" * CLI and AMI commands created by Asterisk's PJSIP modules now have "pjsip" as the starting word instead of "sip" git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@395764 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3