asterisk/funcs/func_cdr.c

624 lines
19 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/*
* Asterisk -- An open source telephony toolkit.
*
* Copyright (C) 1999-2006, Digium, Inc.
*
* Portions Copyright (C) 2005, Anthony Minessale II
*
* See http://www.asterisk.org for more information about
* the Asterisk project. Please do not directly contact
* any of the maintainers of this project for assistance;
* the project provides a web site, mailing lists and IRC
* channels for your use.
*
* This program is free software, distributed under the terms of
* the GNU General Public License Version 2. See the LICENSE file
* at the top of the source tree.
*/
/*! \file
*
* \brief Call Detail Record related dialplan functions
*
* \author Anthony Minessale II
*
* \ingroup functions
*/
/*** MODULEINFO
<support_level>core</support_level>
***/
#include "asterisk.h"
ASTERISK_FILE_VERSION(__FILE__, "$Revision$")
#include "asterisk/module.h"
#include "asterisk/channel.h"
#include "asterisk/pbx.h"
#include "asterisk/utils.h"
#include "asterisk/app.h"
#include "asterisk/cdr.h"
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
#include "asterisk/stasis.h"
#include "asterisk/stasis_message_router.h"
/*** DOCUMENTATION
<function name="CDR" language="en_US">
<synopsis>
Gets or sets a CDR variable.
</synopsis>
<syntax>
<parameter name="name" required="true">
<para>CDR field name:</para>
<enumlist>
<enum name="clid">
<para>Caller ID.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="lastdata">
<para>Last application arguments.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="disposition">
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
<para>The final state of the CDR.</para>
<enumlist>
<enum name="0">
<para><literal>NO ANSWER</literal></para>
</enum>
<enum name="1">
<para><literal>NO ANSWER</literal> (NULL record)</para>
</enum>
<enum name="2">
<para><literal>FAILED</literal></para>
</enum>
<enum name="4">
<para><literal>BUSY</literal></para>
</enum>
<enum name="8">
<para><literal>ANSWERED</literal></para>
</enum>
<enum name="16">
<para><literal>CONGESTION</literal></para>
</enum>
</enumlist>
</enum>
<enum name="src">
<para>Source.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="start">
<para>Time the call started.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="amaflags">
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
<para>R/W the Automatic Message Accounting (AMA) flags on the channel.
When read from a channel, the integer value will always be returned.
When written to a channel, both the string format or integer value
is accepted.</para>
<enumlist>
<enum name="1"><para><literal>OMIT</literal></para></enum>
<enum name="2"><para><literal>BILLING</literal></para></enum>
<enum name="3"><para><literal>DOCUMENTATION</literal></para></enum>
</enumlist>
<warning><para>Accessing this setting is deprecated in CDR. Please use the CHANNEL function instead.</para></warning>
</enum>
<enum name="dst">
<para>Destination.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="answer">
<para>Time the call was answered.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="accountcode">
<para>The channel's account code.</para>
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
<warning><para>Accessing this setting is deprecated in CDR. Please use the CHANNEL function instead.</para></warning>
</enum>
<enum name="dcontext">
<para>Destination context.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="end">
<para>Time the call ended.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="uniqueid">
<para>The channel's unique id.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="dstchannel">
<para>Destination channel.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="duration">
<para>Duration of the call.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="userfield">
<para>The channel's user specified field.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="lastapp">
<para>Last application.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="billsec">
<para>Duration of the call once it was answered.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="channel">
<para>Channel name.</para>
</enum>
<enum name="sequence">
<para>CDR sequence number.</para>
</enum>
</enumlist>
</parameter>
<parameter name="options" required="false">
<optionlist>
<option name="f">
<para>Returns billsec or duration fields as floating point values.</para>
</option>
<option name="u">
<para>Retrieves the raw, unprocessed value.</para>
<para>For example, 'start', 'answer', and 'end' will be retrieved as epoch
values, when the <literal>u</literal> option is passed, but formatted as YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
otherwise. Similarly, disposition and amaflags will return their raw
integral values.</para>
</option>
</optionlist>
</parameter>
</syntax>
<description>
<para>All of the CDR field names are read-only, except for <literal>accountcode</literal>,
<literal>userfield</literal>, and <literal>amaflags</literal>. You may, however, supply
a name not on the above list, and create your own variable, whose value can be changed
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
with this function, and this variable will be stored on the CDR.</para>
<note><para>CDRs can only be modified before the bridge between two channels is
torn down. For example, CDRs may not be modified after the <literal>Dial</literal>
application has returned.</para></note>
<para>Example: exten => 1,1,Set(CDR(userfield)=test)</para>
</description>
</function>
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
<function name="CDR_PROP" language="en_US">
<synopsis>
Set a property on a channel's CDR.
</synopsis>
<syntax>
<parameter name="name" required="true">
<para>The property to set on the CDR.</para>
<enumlist>
<enum name="party_a">
<para>Set this channel as the preferred Party A when
channels are associated together.</para>
<para>Write-Only</para>
</enum>
<enum name="disable">
<para>Disable CDRs for this channel.</para>
<para>Write-Only</para>
</enum>
</enumlist>
</parameter>
</syntax>
<description>
<para>This function sets a property on a channel's CDR. Properties
alter the behavior of how the CDR operates for that channel.</para>
</description>
</function>
***/
enum cdr_option_flags {
OPT_UNPARSED = (1 << 1),
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
OPT_FLOAT = (1 << 2),
};
AST_APP_OPTIONS(cdr_func_options, {
AST_APP_OPTION('f', OPT_FLOAT),
AST_APP_OPTION('u', OPT_UNPARSED),
});
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
struct cdr_func_payload {
struct ast_channel *chan;
const char *cmd;
const char *arguments;
const char *value;
void *data;
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
};
struct cdr_func_data {
char *buf;
size_t len;
};
STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_DEFN_LOCAL(cdr_read_message_type);
STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_DEFN_LOCAL(cdr_write_message_type);
STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_DEFN_LOCAL(cdr_prop_write_message_type);
static void cdr_read_callback(void *data, struct stasis_subscription *sub, struct stasis_message *message)
{
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
struct cdr_func_payload *payload = stasis_message_data(message);
struct cdr_func_data *output;
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
char *info;
char *value = NULL;
struct ast_flags flags = { 0 };
char tempbuf[512];
AST_DECLARE_APP_ARGS(args,
AST_APP_ARG(variable);
AST_APP_ARG(options);
);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (cdr_read_message_type() != stasis_message_type(message)) {
return;
}
ast_assert(payload != NULL);
output = payload->data;
ast_assert(output != NULL);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (ast_strlen_zero(payload->arguments)) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "%s requires a variable (%s(variable[,option]))\n)",
payload->cmd, payload->cmd);
return;
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
info = ast_strdupa(payload->arguments);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
AST_STANDARD_APP_ARGS(args, info);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
if (!ast_strlen_zero(args.options)) {
ast_app_parse_options(cdr_func_options, &flags, NULL, args.options);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (ast_strlen_zero(ast_channel_name(payload->chan))) {
/* Format request on a dummy channel */
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_cdr_format_var(ast_channel_cdr(payload->chan), args.variable, &value, tempbuf, sizeof(tempbuf), 0);
if (ast_strlen_zero(value)) {
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
return;
}
ast_copy_string(tempbuf, value, sizeof(tempbuf));
ast_set_flag(&flags, OPT_UNPARSED);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
} else if (ast_cdr_getvar(ast_channel_name(payload->chan), args.variable, tempbuf, sizeof(tempbuf))) {
return;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
if (ast_test_flag(&flags, OPT_FLOAT)
&& (!strcasecmp("billsec", args.variable) || !strcasecmp("duration", args.variable))) {
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
long ms;
double dtime;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
if (sscanf(tempbuf, "%30ld", &ms) != 1) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Unable to parse %s (%s) from the CDR for channel %s\n",
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
args.variable, tempbuf, ast_channel_name(payload->chan));
return;
}
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
dtime = (double)(ms / 1000.0);
snprintf(tempbuf, sizeof(tempbuf), "%lf", dtime);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
} else if (!ast_test_flag(&flags, OPT_UNPARSED)) {
if (!strcasecmp("start", args.variable)
|| !strcasecmp("end", args.variable)
|| !strcasecmp("answer", args.variable)) {
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
struct timeval fmt_time;
struct ast_tm tm;
/* tv_usec is suseconds_t, which could be int or long */
long int tv_usec;
if (sscanf(tempbuf, "%ld.%ld", &fmt_time.tv_sec, &tv_usec) != 2) {
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Unable to parse %s (%s) from the CDR for channel %s\n",
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
args.variable, tempbuf, ast_channel_name(payload->chan));
return;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
if (fmt_time.tv_sec) {
fmt_time.tv_usec = tv_usec;
ast_localtime(&fmt_time, &tm, NULL);
ast_strftime(tempbuf, sizeof(tempbuf), "%Y-%m-%d %T", &tm);
} else {
tempbuf[0] = '\0';
}
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
} else if (!strcasecmp("disposition", args.variable)) {
int disposition;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
if (sscanf(tempbuf, "%8d", &disposition) != 1) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Unable to parse %s (%s) from the CDR for channel %s\n",
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
args.variable, tempbuf, ast_channel_name(payload->chan));
return;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
snprintf(tempbuf, sizeof(tempbuf), "%s", ast_cdr_disp2str(disposition));
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
} else if (!strcasecmp("amaflags", args.variable)) {
int amaflags;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
if (sscanf(tempbuf, "%8d", &amaflags) != 1) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Unable to parse %s (%s) from the CDR for channel %s\n",
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
args.variable, tempbuf, ast_channel_name(payload->chan));
return;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
snprintf(tempbuf, sizeof(tempbuf), "%s", ast_channel_amaflags2string(amaflags));
}
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_copy_string(output->buf, tempbuf, output->len);
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
static void cdr_write_callback(void *data, struct stasis_subscription *sub, struct stasis_message *message)
{
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
struct cdr_func_payload *payload = stasis_message_data(message);
struct ast_flags flags = { 0 };
AST_DECLARE_APP_ARGS(args,
AST_APP_ARG(variable);
AST_APP_ARG(options);
);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
char *parse;
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (cdr_write_message_type() != stasis_message_type(message)) {
return;
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (!payload) {
return;
}
if (ast_strlen_zero(payload->arguments)) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "%s requires a variable (%s(variable)=value)\n)",
payload->cmd, payload->cmd);
return;
}
if (ast_strlen_zero(payload->value)) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "%s requires a value (%s(variable)=value)\n)",
payload->cmd, payload->cmd);
return;
}
parse = ast_strdupa(payload->arguments);
AST_STANDARD_APP_ARGS(args, parse);
if (!ast_strlen_zero(args.options)) {
ast_app_parse_options(cdr_func_options, &flags, NULL, args.options);
}
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
if (!strcasecmp(args.variable, "accountcode")) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Using the CDR function to set 'accountcode' is deprecated. Please use the CHANNEL function instead.\n");
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_channel_lock(payload->chan);
ast_channel_accountcode_set(payload->chan, payload->value);
ast_channel_unlock(payload->chan);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
} else if (!strcasecmp(args.variable, "peeraccount")) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "The 'peeraccount' setting is not supported. Please set the 'accountcode' on the appropriate channel using the CHANNEL function.\n");
} else if (!strcasecmp(args.variable, "userfield")) {
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_cdr_setuserfield(ast_channel_name(payload->chan), payload->value);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
} else if (!strcasecmp(args.variable, "amaflags")) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Using the CDR function to set 'amaflags' is deprecated. Please use the CHANNEL function instead.\n");
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (isdigit(*payload->value)) {
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
int amaflags;
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
sscanf(payload->value, "%30d", &amaflags);
ast_channel_lock(payload->chan);
ast_channel_amaflags_set(payload->chan, amaflags);
ast_channel_unlock(payload->chan);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
} else {
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_channel_lock(payload->chan);
ast_channel_amaflags_set(payload->chan, ast_channel_string2amaflag(payload->value));
ast_channel_unlock(payload->chan);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
} else {
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_cdr_setvar(ast_channel_name(payload->chan), args.variable, payload->value);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
return;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
static void cdr_prop_write_callback(void *data, struct stasis_subscription *sub, struct stasis_message *message)
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
{
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
struct cdr_func_payload *payload = stasis_message_data(message);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
enum ast_cdr_options option;
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
char *parse;
AST_DECLARE_APP_ARGS(args,
AST_APP_ARG(variable);
AST_APP_ARG(options);
);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (cdr_prop_write_message_type() != stasis_message_type(message)) {
return;
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (!payload) {
return;
}
if (ast_strlen_zero(payload->arguments)) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "%s requires a variable (%s(variable)=value)\n)",
payload->cmd, payload->cmd);
return;
}
if (ast_strlen_zero(payload->value)) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "%s requires a value (%s(variable)=value)\n)",
payload->cmd, payload->cmd);
return;
}
parse = ast_strdupa(payload->arguments);
AST_STANDARD_APP_ARGS(args, parse);
if (!strcasecmp("party_a", args.variable)) {
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
option = AST_CDR_FLAG_PARTY_A;
} else if (!strcasecmp("disable", args.variable)) {
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
option = AST_CDR_FLAG_DISABLE_ALL;
} else {
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Unknown option %s used with %s\n", args.variable, payload->cmd);
return;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (ast_true(payload->value)) {
ast_cdr_set_property(ast_channel_name(payload->chan), option);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
} else {
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_cdr_clear_property(ast_channel_name(payload->chan), option);
}
}
static int cdr_read(struct ast_channel *chan, const char *cmd, char *parse,
char *buf, size_t len)
{
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message *, message, NULL, ao2_cleanup);
RAII_VAR(struct cdr_func_payload *, payload,
ao2_alloc(sizeof(*payload), NULL), ao2_cleanup);
struct cdr_func_data output = { 0, };
if (!chan) {
ast_log(LOG_WARNING, "No channel was provided to %s function.\n", cmd);
return -1;
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (!payload) {
return -1;
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
payload->chan = chan;
payload->cmd = cmd;
payload->arguments = parse;
payload->data = &output;
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
buf[0] = '\0';/* Ensure the buffer is initialized. */
output.buf = buf;
output.len = len;
message = stasis_message_create(cdr_read_message_type(), payload);
if (!message) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Failed to manipulate CDR for channel %s: unable to create message\n",
ast_channel_name(chan));
return -1;
}
/* If this is a request on a dummy channel, we're doing post-processing on an
* already dispatched CDR. Simply call the callback to calculate the value and
* return, instead of posting to Stasis as we would for a running channel.
*/
if (ast_strlen_zero(ast_channel_name(chan))) {
cdr_read_callback(NULL, NULL, message);
} else {
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message_router *, router, ast_cdr_message_router(), ao2_cleanup);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (!router) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Failed to manipulate CDR for channel %s: no message router\n",
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
ast_channel_name(chan));
return -1;
}
stasis_message_router_publish_sync(router, message);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
}
return 0;
}
static int cdr_write(struct ast_channel *chan, const char *cmd, char *parse,
const char *value)
{
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message *, message, NULL, ao2_cleanup);
RAII_VAR(struct cdr_func_payload *, payload,
ao2_alloc(sizeof(*payload), NULL), ao2_cleanup);
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message_router *, router,
ast_cdr_message_router(), ao2_cleanup);
if (!chan) {
ast_log(LOG_WARNING, "No channel was provided to %s function.\n", cmd);
return -1;
}
if (!router) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Failed to manipulate CDR for channel %s: no message router\n",
ast_channel_name(chan));
return -1;
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (!payload) {
return -1;
}
payload->chan = chan;
payload->cmd = cmd;
payload->arguments = parse;
payload->value = value;
message = stasis_message_create(cdr_write_message_type(), payload);
if (!message) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Failed to manipulate CDR for channel %s: unable to create message\n",
ast_channel_name(chan));
return -1;
}
stasis_message_router_publish_sync(router, message);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
return 0;
}
static int cdr_prop_write(struct ast_channel *chan, const char *cmd, char *parse,
const char *value)
{
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message *, message, NULL, ao2_cleanup);
RAII_VAR(struct cdr_func_payload *, payload,
ao2_alloc(sizeof(*payload), NULL), ao2_cleanup);
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message_router *, router, ast_cdr_message_router(), ao2_cleanup);
if (!chan) {
ast_log(LOG_WARNING, "No channel was provided to %s function.\n", cmd);
return -1;
}
if (!router) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Failed to manipulate CDR for channel %s: no message router\n",
ast_channel_name(chan));
return -1;
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
if (!payload) {
return -1;
}
payload->chan = chan;
payload->cmd = cmd;
payload->arguments = parse;
payload->value = value;
message = stasis_message_create(cdr_prop_write_message_type(), payload);
if (!message) {
ast_log(AST_LOG_WARNING, "Failed to manipulate CDR for channel %s: unable to create message\n",
ast_channel_name(chan));
return -1;
}
stasis_message_router_publish_sync(router, message);
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
return 0;
}
static struct ast_custom_function cdr_function = {
.name = "CDR",
.read = cdr_read,
.write = cdr_write,
};
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
static struct ast_custom_function cdr_prop_function = {
.name = "CDR_PROP",
.read = NULL,
.write = cdr_prop_write,
};
static int unload_module(void)
{
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message_router *, router, ast_cdr_message_router(), ao2_cleanup);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
int res = 0;
if (router) {
stasis_message_router_remove(router, cdr_prop_write_message_type());
stasis_message_router_remove(router, cdr_write_message_type());
stasis_message_router_remove(router, cdr_read_message_type());
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_CLEANUP(cdr_read_message_type);
STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_CLEANUP(cdr_write_message_type);
STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_CLEANUP(cdr_prop_write_message_type);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
res |= ast_custom_function_unregister(&cdr_function);
res |= ast_custom_function_unregister(&cdr_prop_function);
return res;
}
static int load_module(void)
{
RAII_VAR(struct stasis_message_router *, router, ast_cdr_message_router(), ao2_cleanup);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
int res = 0;
if (!router) {
return AST_MODULE_LOAD_FAILURE;
}
app_cdr,app_forkcdr,func_cdr: Synchronize with engine when manipulating state When doing the rework of the CDR engine that pushed all of the logic into cdr.c and made it respond to changes in channel state over Stasis, we knew that accessing the CDR engine from the dialplan would be "slightly" non-deterministic. Dialplan threads would be accessing CDRs while Stasis threads would be updating the state of said CDRs - whereas in the past, everything happened on the dialplan threads. Tests have shown that "slightly" is in reality "very". This patch synchronizes things by making the dialplan applications/functions that manipulate CDRs do so over Stasis. ForkCDR, NoCDR, ResetCDR, CDR, and CDR_PROP now all use Stasis to send their requests over to the CDR engine, and synchronize on the channel Stasis topic via a subscription so that they return their values/control to the dialplan at the appropriate time. While going through this, the following changes were also made: * DISA, which can reset the CDR when a user successfully authenticates, now just uses the ResetCDR app to do this. This prevents having to duplicate the same Stasis synchronization logic in that application. * Answer no longer disables CDRs. It actually didn't work anyway - calling DISABLE on the channel's CDR doesn't stop the CDR from getting the Answer time - it just kills all CDRs on that channel, which isn't what the caller would intend. (closes issue ASTERISK-22884) (closes issue ASTERISK-22886) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3057/ ........ Merged revisions 404294 from http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk/branches/12 git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@404295 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-12-19 00:50:01 +00:00
res |= STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INIT(cdr_read_message_type);
res |= STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INIT(cdr_write_message_type);
res |= STASIS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INIT(cdr_prop_write_message_type);
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
res |= ast_custom_function_register(&cdr_function);
res |= ast_custom_function_register(&cdr_prop_function);
res |= stasis_message_router_add(router, cdr_prop_write_message_type(),
cdr_prop_write_callback, NULL);
res |= stasis_message_router_add(router, cdr_write_message_type(),
cdr_write_callback, NULL);
res |= stasis_message_router_add(router, cdr_read_message_type(),
cdr_read_callback, NULL);
if (res) {
return AST_MODULE_LOAD_FAILURE;
}
return AST_MODULE_LOAD_SUCCESS;
}
Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways. (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges. This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works. (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is predictable. (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs. There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior, see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki. (closes issue ASTERISK-21196) Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/ git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
2013-06-17 03:00:38 +00:00
AST_MODULE_INFO_STANDARD(ASTERISK_GPL_KEY, "Call Detail Record (CDR) dialplan functions");