When publishing a device state the change can be marked as being
cachable or not. If it is not cached the change is just published
to all interested and not stored away for later query. This was not
fully taken into account when publishing in stasis. The act of
publishing would create a topic for the device even if it may be
ephemeral.
This change makes it so messages which are not cached won't create
a topic for the device. If a topic does already exist it will be
published to but otherwise the change will only be published to
the device state all topic.
ASTERISK-27591
Change-Id: I18da0e8cbb18e79602e731020c46ba4101e59f0a
When built-in components of Asterisk fail to start they cause the
Asterisk startup to abort. In these cases only the most critical
cleanup should be performed - closing databases and terminating
proceses. These cleanups are registered using ast_register_atexit, all
other cleanups should not be run during startup abort.
The main reason for this change is that these cleanup procedures are
untestable from the partially initialized states, if they fail it could
prevent us from ever running the critical cleanup with ast_run_atexits.
Create separate initialization for dns_core.c to be run unconditionally
during startup instead of being initialized by the first dns resolver to
be registered. This ensures that 'sched' is initialized before it can be
potentially used.
Replace ast_register_atexit with ast_register_cleanup in media_cache.c.
There is no reason for this cleanup to happen unconditionally.
Change-Id: Iecc2df98008b21509925ff16740bd5fa29527db3
ASTERISK_REGISTER_FILE no longer has any purpose so this commit removes
all traces of it.
Previously exported symbols removed:
* __ast_register_file
* __ast_unregister_file
* ast_complete_source_filename
This also removes the mtx_prof static variable that was declared when
MTX_PROFILE was enabled. This variable was only used in lock.c so it
is now initialized in that file only.
ASTERISK-26480 #close
Change-Id: I1074af07d71f9e159c48ef36631aa432c86f9966
Currently, the device state provider API will allow you to register a
device state provider with the same case insensitive name more than
once. This could cause strange issues, as the duplicate device state
providers will not be queried when a device's state has to be polled.
This patch updates the API such that a device state provider with the
same name as one that has already registered will be rejected.
Change-Id: I4a418a12280b7b6e4960bd44f302e27cd036ceb2
Git does not support the ability to replace a token with a version
string during check-in. While it does have support for replacing a
token on clone, this is somewhat sub-optimal: the token is replaced
with the object hash, which is not particularly easy for human
consumption. What's more, in practice, the source file version was often
not terribly useful. Generally, when triaging bugs, the overall version
of Asterisk is far more useful than an individual SVN version of a file. As a
result, this patch removes Asterisk's support for showing source file
versions.
Specifically, it does the following:
* Rename ASTERISK_FILE_VERSION macro to ASTERISK_REGISTER_FILE, and
remove passing the version in with the macro. Other facilities
than 'core show file version' make use of the file names, such as
setting a debug level only on a specific file. As such, the act of
registering source files with the Asterisk core still has use. The
macro rename now reflects the new macro purpose.
* main/asterisk:
- Refactor the file_version structure to reflect that it no longer
tracks a version field.
- Remove the "core show file version" CLI command. Without the file
version, it is no longer useful.
- Remove the ast_file_version_find function. The file version is no
longer tracked.
- Rename ast_register_file_version/ast_unregister_file_version to
ast_register_file/ast_unregister_file, respectively.
* main/manager: Remove value from the Version key of the ModuleCheck
Action. The actual key itself has not been removed, as doing so would
absolutely constitute a backwards incompatible change. However, since
the file version is no longer tracked, there is no need to attempt to
include it in the Version key.
* UPGRADE: Add notes for:
- Modification to the ModuleCheck AMI Action
- Removal of the "core show file version" CLI command
Change-Id: I6cf0ff280e1668bf4957dc21f32a5ff43444a40e
This introduces stasis.conf and a mechanism to prevent certain message
types from being published. Internally, this works by preventing the
chosen message types from being created which ensures that those
message types can never be published. This patch also adjusts message
publishers such that message payloads are not created if the related
message type is not available.
ASTERISK-23943 #close
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3823/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@420124 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
In Asterisk, it is possible for a device to have a status of ONHOLD. This is
not typically an easy thing to determine, as a channel being on hold is not
a direct channel state. Typically, this has to be calculated outside of the
core independently in channel drivers, notably, chan_sip and chan_pjsip. Both
of these channel drivers already have to calculate device state in a fashion
more complex than the core can handle, as they aggregate all state of all
channels associated with a peer/endpoint; they also independently track
whether or not one of those channels is currently on hold and mark the device
state appropriately.
In 12+, we now have the ability to report an AST_DEVICE_ONHOLD state for all
channels that defer their device state to the core. This is due to channel hold
state actually now being tracked on the channel itself. If a channel driver
defers its device state to the core (which many, such as DAHDI, IAX2, and
others do in most situations), the device state core already goes out to get a
channel associated with the device. As such, it can now also factor the channel
hold state in its calculation.
This patch adds this logic to the device state core. It also uses an existing
mapping between device state and channel state to handle more channel states.
chan_pjsip has been updated slightly as well to make use of this (as it was,
for some reason, reporting a channel state of BUSY as a device state of INUSE,
which feels slightly wrong).
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3771/
ASTERISK-24038 #close
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@419358 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
This patch fixes res_corosync such that it works with Asterisk 12. This
restores the functionality that was present in previous versions of
Asterisk, and ensures compatibility with those versions by restoring the
binary message format needed to pass information from/to them.
The following changes were made in the core to support this:
* The event system has been partially restored. All event definition and
event types in this patch were pulled from Asterisk 11. Previously, we had
hoped that this information would live in res_corosync; however, the
approach in this patch seems to be better for a few reasons:
(1) Theoretically, ast_events can be used by any module as a binary
representation of a Stasis message. Given the structure of an ast_event
object, that information has to live in the core to be used universally.
For example, defining the payload of a device state ast_event in
res_corosync could result in an incompatible device state representation
in another module.
(2) Much of this representation already lived in the core, and was not
easily extensible.
(3) The code already existed. :-)
* Stasis message types now have a message formatter that converts their
payload to an ast_event object.
* Stasis message forwarders now handle forwarding to themselves. Previously
this would result in an infinite recursive call. Now, this simply creates a
new forwarding object with no forwards set up (as it is the thing it is
forwarding to). This is advantageous for res_corosync, as returning NULL
would also imply an unrecoverable error. Returning a subscription in this
case allows for easier handling of message types that are published directly
to an aggregate topic that has forwarders.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3486/
ASTERISK-22912 #close
ASTERISK-22372 #close
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A stasis cache entry now contains more than a single message/snapshot. It
contains messages/snapshots for the local entity as well as any remote
entities that post to the cached item. In addition callbacks can be
supplied when the cache is created to compute and post the aggregate
message/snapshot representing all entities stored in the cache entry.
* All stasis messages now have an eid to indicate what entity posted it.
* The stasis cache enhancements allow device state to cache and aggregate
the device states from local and remote entities in a single operation.
The cached aggregate device state is available immediately after it is
posted to the stasis bus. This improves performance by eliminating a
cache dump and associated ao2 container traversals to calculate the
aggregate state.
(closes issue ASTERISK-23204)
Reported by: Mark Michelson
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3281/
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Created a data model and implemented functionality for an ARI device state
resource. The following operations have been added that allow a user to
manipulate an ARI controlled device:
Create/Change the state of an ARI controlled device
PUT /deviceStates/{deviceName}&{deviceState}
Retrieve all ARI controlled devices
GET /deviceStates
Retrieve the current state of a device
GET /deviceStates/{deviceName}
Destroy a device-state controlled by ARI
DELETE /deviceStates/{deviceName}
The ARI controlled device must begin with 'Stasis:'. An example controlled
device name would be Stasis:Example. A 'DeviceStateChanged' event has also
been added so that an application can subscribe and receive device change
events. Any device state, ARI controlled or not, can be subscribed to.
While adding the event, the underlying subscription control mechanism was
refactored so that all current and future resource subscriptions would be
the same. Each event resource must now register itself in order to be able
to properly handle [un]subscribes.
(issue ASTERISK-22838)
Reported by: Matt Jordan
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3025/
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r399887 | dlee | 2013-09-26 10:41:47 -0500 (Thu, 26 Sep 2013) | 1 line
Minor performance bump by not allocate manager variable struct if we don't need it
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r400138 | dlee | 2013-09-30 10:24:00 -0500 (Mon, 30 Sep 2013) | 23 lines
Stasis performance improvements
This patch addresses several performance problems that were found in
the initial performance testing of Asterisk 12.
The Stasis dispatch object was allocated as an AO2 object, even though
it has a very confined lifecycle. This was replaced with a straight
ast_malloc().
The Stasis message router was spending an inordinate amount of time
searching hash tables. In this case, most of our routers had 6 or
fewer routes in them to begin with. This was replaced with an array
that's searched linearly for the route.
We more heavily rely on AO2 objects in Asterisk 12, and the memset()
in ao2_ref() actually became noticeable on the profile. This was
#ifdef'ed to only run when AO2_DEBUG was enabled.
After being misled by an erroneous comment in taskprocessor.c during
profiling, the wrong comment was removed.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2873/
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r400178 | dlee | 2013-09-30 13:26:27 -0500 (Mon, 30 Sep 2013) | 24 lines
Taskprocessor optimization; switch Stasis to use taskprocessors
This patch optimizes taskprocessor to use a semaphore for signaling,
which the OS can do a better job at managing contention and waiting
that we can with a mutex and condition.
The taskprocessor execution was also slightly optimized to reduce the
number of locks taken.
The only observable difference in the taskprocessor implementation is
that when the final reference to the taskprocessor goes away, it will
execute all tasks to completion instead of discarding the unexecuted
tasks.
For systems where unnamed semaphores are not supported, a really
simple semaphore implementation is provided. (Which gives identical
performance as the original taskprocessor implementation).
The way we ended up implementing Stasis caused the threadpool to be a
burden instead of a boost to performance. This was switched to just
use taskprocessors directly for subscriptions.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2881/
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r400180 | dlee | 2013-09-30 13:39:34 -0500 (Mon, 30 Sep 2013) | 28 lines
Optimize how Stasis forwards are dispatched
This patch optimizes how forwards are dispatched in Stasis.
Originally, forwards were dispatched as subscriptions that are invoked
on the publishing thread. This did not account for the vast number of
forwards we would end up having in the system, and the amount of work it
would take to walk though the forward subscriptions.
This patch modifies Stasis so that rather than walking the tree of
forwards on every dispatch, when forwards and subscriptions are changed,
the subscriber list for every topic in the tree is changed.
This has a couple of benefits. First, this reduces the workload of
dispatching messages. It also reduces contention when dispatching to
different topics that happen to forward to the same aggregation topic
(as happens with all of the channel, bridge and endpoint topics).
Since forwards are no longer subscriptions, the bulk of this patch is
simply changing stasis_subscription objects to stasis_forward objects
(which, admittedly, I should have done in the first place.)
Since this required me to yet again put in a growing array, I finally
abstracted that out into a set of ast_vector macros in
asterisk/vector.h.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2883/
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r400181 | dlee | 2013-09-30 13:48:57 -0500 (Mon, 30 Sep 2013) | 28 lines
Remove dispatch object allocation from Stasis publishing
While looking for areas for performance improvement, I realized that an
unused feature in Stasis was negatively impacting performance.
When a message is sent to a subscriber, a dispatch object is allocated
for the dispatch, containing the topic the message was published to, the
subscriber the message is being sent to, and the message itself.
The topic is actually unused by any subscriber in Asterisk today. And
the subscriber is associated with the taskprocessor the message is being
dispatched to.
First, this patch removes the unused topic parameter from Stasis
subscription callbacks.
Second, this patch introduces the concept of taskprocessor local data,
data that may be set on a taskprocessor and provided along with the data
pointer when a task is pushed using the ast_taskprocessor_push_local()
call. This allows the task to have both data specific to that
taskprocessor, in addition to data specific to that invocation.
With those two changes, the dispatch object can be removed completely,
and the message is simply refcounted and sent directly to the
taskprocessor.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2884/
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This removes unused code, event types, IE pltypes, and event IE types
where possible and makes several functions private that were once
public. This includes a renumbering of the remaining event and IE types
which breaks binary compatibility with previous versions. The last
remaining consumers of the old event system (or parts thereof) are
main/security_events.c, res/res_security_log.c, tests/test_cel.c,
tests/test_event.c, main/cel.c, and the CEL backends.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2703/
(closes issue ASTERISK-22139)
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@396887 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
In working with res_stasis, I discovered a significant limitation to
the current structure of stasis_caching_topics: you cannot subscribe
to cache updates for a single channel/bridge/endpoint/etc.
To address this, this patch splits the cache away from the
stasis_caching_topic, making it a first class object. The stasis_cache
object is shared amongst individual stasis_caching_topics that are
created per channel/endpoint/etc. These are still forwarded to global
whatever_all_cached topics, so their use from most of the code does
not change.
In making these changes, I noticed that we frequently used a similar
pattern for bridges, endpoints and channels:
single_topic ----------------> all_topic
^
|
single_topic_cached ----+----> all_topic_cached
|
+----> cache
This pattern was extracted as the 'Stasis Caching Pattern', defined in
stasis_caching_pattern.h. This avoids a lot of duplicate code between
the different domain objects.
Since the cache is now disassociated from its upstream caching topics,
this also necessitated a change to how the 'guaranteed' flag worked
for retrieving from a cache. The code for handling the caching
guarantee was extracted into a 'stasis_topic_wait' function, which
works for any stasis_topic.
(closes issue ASTERISK-22002)
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2672/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@395954 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
This patch addresses the following memory/ref counting leaks:
* main/devicestate.c - unsubscribe and join our devicestate message
subscription
* main/cel.c - clean up the datastore and config objects on exist
* main/parking.c - cleanup memory leak of retriever snapshot on message
payload destruction
* res/parking/parking_bridge.c - cleanup memory leak of retrieve snapshot
on message payload destruction
* main/presencestate.c - unsubscribe and join the caching topic on exit
* manager.c - properly unregister the manager action "BlindTransfer"
* sorcery.c - shutdown the threadpool on exit and dispose of any wizards
(issue ASTERISK-21906)
Reported by: John Hardin
patches:
cel.patch uploaded by jhardin (license #6512)
devicestate.patch uploaded by jhardin (license #6512)
manager.patch uploaded by jardin (license #6512)
presencestate.patch uploaded by jhardin (license #6512)
retriever-channel-snapshot.patch uploaded by jhardin (license #6512)
sorcery.patch uploaded by jhardin (license #6512)
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@392797 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
This patch addresses issues during immediate shutdowns, where modules
are not unloaded, but Asterisk atexit handlers are run.
In the typical case, this usually isn't a big deal. But the
introduction of the Stasis message bus makes it much more likely for
asynchronous activity to be happening off in some thread during
shutdown.
During an immediate shutdown, Asterisk skips unloading modules. But
while it is processing the atexit handlers, there is a window of time
where some of the core message types have been cleaned up, but the
message bus is still running. Specifically, it's still running
module subscriptions that might be using the core message types. If a
message is received by that subscription in that window, it will
attempt to use a message type that has been cleaned up.
To solve this problem, this patch introduces ast_register_cleanup().
This function operates identically to ast_register_atexit(), except
that cleanup calls are not invoked on an immediate shutdown. All of
the core message type and topic cleanup was moved from atexit handlers
to cleanup handlers.
This ensures that core type and topic cleanup only happens if the
modules that used them are first unloaded.
This patch also changes the ast_assert() when accessing a cleaned up
or uninitialized message type to an error log message. Message type
functions are actually NULL safe across the board, so the assert was a
bit heavy handed. Especially for anyone with DO_CRASH enabled.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2562/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@390122 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
* Initialize a Stasis-Core message type prior to initializing a caching topic.
The caching topic will attempt to use the message type.
* Don't attempt to publish Stasis-Core messages from remote console connections.
They aren't the main process; they shouldn't attempt to behave as it (they also
don't have the infrastructure to do so)
* Don't treat a JSON object as an ao2 object (whoops)
* In asterisk.c, ref bump the JSON even package that is distributed with the
event meta data. The callers assume that they own the reference, and the packing
routine steals references.
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@389785 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
In r388005, macros were introduced to consistently define message
types. This added an assert if a message type was used either before
it was initialized or after it had been cleaned up. It turns out that
this assertion fires during shutdown.
This actually exposed a hidden shutdown ordering problem. Since
unsubscribing is asynchronous, it's possible that the message types
used by the subscription could be freed before the final message of
the subscription was processed.
This patch adds stasis_subscription_join(), which blocks until the
last message has been processed by the subscription. Since joining was
most commonly done right after an unsubscribe, a
stasis_unsubscribe_and_join() convenience function was also added.
Similar functions were also added to the stasis_caching_topic and
stasis_message_router, since they wrap subscriptions and have similar
problems.
Other code in trunk was refactored to join() where appropriate, or at
least verify that the subscription was complete before being
destroyed.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2540
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@389011 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
In the move from Asterisk's event system to Stasis, this makes
distributed device state aggregation always-on, removes unnecessary
task processors where possible, and collapses aggregate and
non-aggregate states into a single cache for ease of retrieval. This
also removes an intermediary step in device state aggregation.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2389/
(closes issue ASTERISK-21101)
Patch-by: Kinsey Moore <kmoore@digium.com>
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@385860 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
Asterisk maintains an internal cache for devices in the event subsystem. The
device state cache holds the state of each device known to Asterisk, such that
consumers of device state information can query for the last known state for
a particular device, even if it is not part of an active call. The concept of
a device in Asterisk can include entities that do not have a physical
representation. One way that this occurred was when anonymous calls are allowed
in Asterisk. A device was automatically created and stored in the cache for
each anonymous call that occurred; this was possible in the SIP and IAX2
channel drivers and through channel drivers that utilized the
res_jabber/res_xmpp resource modules (Gtalk, Jingle, and Motif). These devices
are never removed from the system, allowing anonymous calls to potentially
exhaust a system's resources.
This patch changes the event cache subsystem and device state management to
no longer cache devices that are not associated with a physical entity.
(issue ASTERISK-20175)
Reported by: Russell Bryant, Leif Madsen, Joshua Colp
Tested by: kmoore
patches:
event-cachability-3.diff uploaded by jcolp (license 5000)
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r369001 | kpfleming | 2012-06-15 10:56:08 -0500 (Fri, 15 Jun 2012) | 11 lines
Add support-level indications to many more source files.
Since we now have tools that scan through the source tree looking for files
with specific support levels, we need to ensure that every file that is
a component of a 'core' or 'extended' module (or the main Asterisk binary)
is explicitly marked with its support level. This patch adds support-level
indications to many more source files in tree, but avoids adding them to
third-party libraries that are included in the tree and to source files
that don't end up involved in Asterisk itself.
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r369002 | kpfleming | 2012-06-15 10:57:14 -0500 (Fri, 15 Jun 2012) | 3 lines
Add a script to enable finding source files without support-levels defined.
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git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@369013 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
This resolves core findings from ASTERISK-19650 numbers 0-2, 6, 7, 9-11, 14-20,
22-24, 28, 30-32, 34-36, 42-56, 82-84, 87, 89-90, 93-102, 104, 105, 109-111,
and 115. Finding numbers 26, 33, and 29 were already resolved. Those skipped
were either extended/deprecated or in areas of code that shouldn't be
disturbed.
(Closes issue ASTERISK-19650)
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Everything still compiled after making these changes, so I assume these
whitespace-only changes didn't break anything (and shouldn't have).
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@360190 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/1.4
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r263639 | mmichelson | 2010-05-17 17:00:28 -0500 (Mon, 17 May 2010) | 10 lines
Fix logic error when checking for a devstate provider.
When using strsep, if one of the list of specified separators is not found,
it is the first parameter to strsep which is now NULL, not the pointer returned
by strsep.
This issue isn't especially severe in that the worst it is likely to do is waste
some cycles when a device with no '/' and no ':' is passed to ast_device_state.
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https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/1.4
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r204681 | dvossel | 2009-07-02 10:05:57 -0500 (Thu, 02 Jul 2009) | 14 lines
Improved mapping of extension states from combined device states.
This fixes a few issues with incorrect extension states and adds
a cli command, core show device2extenstate, to display all possible
state mappings.
(closes issue #15413)
Reported by: legart
Patches:
exten_helper.diff uploaded by dvossel (license 671)
Tested by: dvossel, legart, amilcar
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/301/
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git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@204710 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
CEL is the new system for logging channel events. This was inspired after
facing many problems trying to represent what is possible to happen to a call
in Asterisk using CDR records. For more information on CEL, see the built in
HTML or PDF documentation generated from the files in doc/tex/.
Many thanks to Steve Murphy (murf) and Brian Degenhardt (bmd) for their hard
work developing this code. Also, thanks to Matt Nicholson (mnicholson) and
Sean Bright (seanbright) for their assistance in the final push to get this
code ready for Asterisk trunk.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/239/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@203638 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/1.4
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r199297 | dvossel | 2009-06-05 16:19:56 -0500 (Fri, 05 Jun 2009) | 14 lines
Fixes issue with hints giving unexpected results.
Hints with two or more devices that include ONHOLD gave unexpected results.
(closes issue #15057)
Reported by: p_lindheimer
Patches:
onhold_trunk.diff uploaded by dvossel (license 671)
pbx.c.1.4.patch uploaded by p (license 558)
devicestate.c.trunk.patch uploaded by p (license 671)
Tested by: p_lindheimer, dvossel
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/254/
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There is a lot that could be said about this, but the patch is a big
improvement for performance, stability, code maintainability,
and ease of future code development.
The channel list is no longer an unsorted linked list. The main container
for channels is an astobj2 hash table. All of the code related to searching
for channels or iterating active channels has been rewritten. Let n be
the number of active channels. Iterating the channel list has gone from
O(n^2) to O(n). Searching for a channel by name went from O(n) to O(1).
Searching for a channel by extension is still O(n), but uses a new method
for doing so, which is more efficient.
The ast_channel object is now a reference counted object. The benefits
here are plentiful. Some benefits directly related to issues in the
previous code include:
1) When threads other than the channel thread owning a channel wanted
access to a channel, it had to hold the lock on it to ensure that it didn't
go away. This is no longer a requirement. Holding a reference is
sufficient.
2) There are places that now require less dealing with channel locks.
3) There are places where channel locks are held for much shorter periods
of time.
4) There are places where dealing with more than one channel at a time becomes
_MUCH_ easier. ChanSpy is a great example of this. Writing code in the
future that deals with multiple channels will be much easier.
Some additional information regarding channel locking and reference count
handling can be found in channel.h, where a new section has been added that
discusses some of the rules associated with it.
Mark Michelson also assisted with the development of this patch. He did the
conversion of ChanSpy and introduced a new API, ast_autochan, which makes it
much easier to deal with holding on to a channel pointer for an extended period
of time and having it get automatically updated if the channel gets masqueraded.
Mark was also a huge help in the code review process.
Thanks to David Vossel for his assistance with this branch, as well. David
did the conversion of the DAHDIScan application by making it become a wrapper
for ChanSpy internally.
The changes come from the svn/asterisk/team/russell/ast_channel_ao2 branch.
Review: http://reviewboard.digium.com/r/203/
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This code comes from svn/asterisk/team/russell/event_performance/.
Here is a summary of the changes that have been made, in order of both
invasiveness and performance impact, from smallest to largest.
1) Asterisk 1.6.1 introduces some additional logic to be able to handle
distributed device state. This functionality comes at a cost.
One relatively minor change in this patch is that the extra processing
required for distributed device state is now completely bypassed if
it's not needed.
2) One of the things that I noticed when profiling this code was that a
_lot_ of time was spent doing string comparisons. I changed the way
strings are represented in an event to include a hash value at the front.
So, before doing a string comparison, we do an integer comparison on the
hash.
3) Finally, the code that handles the event cache has been re-written.
I tried to do this in a such a way that it had minimal impact on the API.
I did have to change one API call, though - ast_event_queue_and_cache().
However, the way it works now is nicer, IMO. Each type of event that
can be cached (MWI, device state) has its own hash table and rules for
hashing and comparing objects. This by far made the biggest impact on
performance.
For additional details regarding this code and how it was tested, please see the
review request.
(closes issue #14738)
Reported by: russell
Review: http://reviewboard.digium.com/r/205/
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Copied from my review board description:
This is a continuation of the API changes documentation started for describing
changes between releases. Most of the API changes were pretty simple needing
only to be brought to attention via the new "Asterisk API Changes" list.
However, if you see anything that needs further explanation feel free to
supplement what is there. The current method of documenting is to add (in the
header file): \version <ver number> <description of changes> and then to add
the function to the change list in doxyref.h on the AstAPIChanges page. I also
made sure all the functions that were newly added were tagged with \since
1.6.1. I think this is a good habit to start both for the historical aspect as
well as for the future ability to easily add a "New Asterisk API" page.
Review: http://reviewboard.digium.com/r/190/
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called from elsewhere in Asterisk to find the current state of a device. In
that case, we want to use the cached value if it exists. The other way is when
processing a device state change. In that case, we do not want to check the
cache because returning the last known state is counter productive.
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