All process will be forcely exited if it failed to encode the S1AP/NGAP/GTP/PFCP message. It is to make sure there was no problem with the encoding of open5gs.
Most of the time, an application wants to perform some amount of data buffering
in addition to just responding to events. When we want to write data,
for example, the usual pattern runs something like:
1. Decide that we want to write some data to a connection;
put that data in a buffer.
2. Wait for the connection to become writable
3. Write as much of the data as we can
4. Remember how much we wrote, and if we still have more data to write,
wait for the connection to become writable again.
Now, Open5GS implements the above method by default when transmitting data
in a stream type socket.
- Set the number of UEs in units of AMF/MME instead of gNB/eNB.
- See default value as shown below
Number of UEs per AMF/MME : 4,096
Number of gNB/eNB per AMF/MME : 32
* HACK: Don't retransmit InitialContextSetupReq
Related: #256
* HACK: Don't use buggy sa1p_copy() in eNBConfigTransfer
Related: #257
* mme: don't reject with 'IMSI is unknown in HLR' (permanent reject)
* MME: Implement S6a result -> EMM cause code mapping
Closes: #263
* Spencer: modification to Haralds fix because macros are now renamed
* MME: don't assert on MAC failures of uplink NAS frames
Closes: #267
* MME: Avoid ogs_assert() in many situations
We don't want to crash the entire program just because a message
received from an external entity didn't match some of our expectations.
* compiles fine, checked DIFFs and only difference is the ogs_assert -> ogs_expect