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Many uses of stasis_unsubscribe in modules can be reached through unload.
These have been switched to stasis_unsubscribe_and_join.
Some subscription callbacks do nothing, for these I've created a noop
callback function in stasis.c. This is used by some modules that monitor
MWI topics in order to enable cache, since the callback does not become
invalid after dlclose it is safe to use stasis_unsubscribe on these, even
during module unload.
ASTERISK-25121 #close
Change-Id: Ifc2549fbd8eef7d703c222978e8f452e2972189c
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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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"module show" .
ASTERISK-23919 #close
Reported by Malcolm Davenport
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3802
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@419592 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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Currently, attempting to subscribe an application to a device state
that it has already subscribed to will generate a 500 error response.
This will now be treated as a subscription refresh even though ARI
subscriptions don't currently support lifetimes and will respond with
the normal response for a successful subscription (200 OK).
(closes issue ASTERISK-23143)
Reported by: Matt Jordan
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The documentation for ARI already specifies that the device state resource when
used for subscribing for events is "deviceState", not "device_state". The code,
however, used "device_state"; although this was inconsistent as well in doxygen
comments in resource_applications.
Because the actual resource being subscribed to is /deviceStates/{device}/, it
makes sense for the resource type specifier to be deviceState.
Note that the key value in the events is still "device_state".
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git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404438 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
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Created a data model and implemented functionality for an ARI device state
resource. The following operations have been added that allow a user to
manipulate an ARI controlled device:
Create/Change the state of an ARI controlled device
PUT /deviceStates/{deviceName}&{deviceState}
Retrieve all ARI controlled devices
GET /deviceStates
Retrieve the current state of a device
GET /deviceStates/{deviceName}
Destroy a device-state controlled by ARI
DELETE /deviceStates/{deviceName}
The ARI controlled device must begin with 'Stasis:'. An example controlled
device name would be Stasis:Example. A 'DeviceStateChanged' event has also
been added so that an application can subscribe and receive device change
events. Any device state, ARI controlled or not, can be subscribed to.
While adding the event, the underlying subscription control mechanism was
refactored so that all current and future resource subscriptions would be
the same. Each event resource must now register itself in order to be able
to properly handle [un]subscribes.
(issue ASTERISK-22838)
Reported by: Matt Jordan
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3025/
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Merged revisions 403134 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12
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