Previously both AMI and ARI used a default route on
their stasis message router to handle some of the
messages for publishing out their respective
connection. This caused messages to be given to
their subscription that could not be formatted
into AMI or JSON.
This change adds an API call to the stasis message
router which allows a default route to be set as well
as formatters that the default route is expecting.
This allows both AMI and ARI to specify that their
default route only wants messages of their given
formatter. By doing so stasis can more intelligently
filter at publishing time so that they do not receive
messages which will not be turned into AMI or JSON.
ASTERISK-28244
Change-Id: I65272819a53ce99f869181d1d370da559a7d1703
This change adds statistics gathering to Stasis topics,
subscriptions, and message types. These can be viewed using
CLI commands and provide insight into how Stasis is used
and how long certain operations take to execute.
These are only available when Asterisk is compiled in
developer mode and do not have any impact under normal
operation.
ASTERISK-28117
Change-Id: I94411b53767f89ee01714daaecf0c2f1666e863f
A subscriber can now indicate that it only wants messages
that have formatters of a specific type. For instance,
manager can indicate that it only wants messages that have a
"to_ami" formatter. You can combine this with the existing
filter for message type to get only messages with specific
formatters or messages of specific types.
ASTERISK-28186
Change-Id: Ifdb7a222a73b6b56c6bb9e4ee93dc8a394a5494c
This change adds the ability for subscriptions to indicate
which message types they are interested in accepting. By
doing so the filtering is done before being dispatched
to the subscriber, reducing the amount of work that has
to be done.
This is optional and if a subscriber does not add
message types they wish to accept and set the subscription
to selective filtering the previous behavior is preserved
and they receive all messages.
There is also the ability to explicitly force the reception
of all messages for cases such as AMI or ARI where a large
number of messages are expected that are then generically
converted into a different format.
ASTERISK-28103
Change-Id: I99bee23895baa0a117985d51683f7963b77aa190
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
Stasis subscriptions and message routers create taskprocessors to process
the event messages. API calls are needed to be able to set the congestion
levels of these taskprocessors for selected subscriptions and message
routers.
* Updated CDR, CEL, and manager's stasis subscription congestion levels
based upon stress testing. Increased the congestion levels to reduce the
potential for bursty call setup/teardown activity from triggering the
taskprocessor overload alert. CDRs in particular need an extra high
congestion level because they can take awhile to process the stasis
messages.
ASTERISK-26088
Reported by: Richard Mudgett
Change-Id: Id0a716394b4eee746dd158acc63d703902450244
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
Due to the original patch causing memory corruptions it was removed until the
problem could be resolved. This patch is the original patch plus some added
locking around stasis router subcription that was needed to avoid the memory
corruption.
Description of the original problem and patch (still applicable):
The res_pjsip module was previously unloadable. With this patch it can now
be unloaded.
This patch is based off the original patch on the issue (listed below) by Corey
Farrell with a few modifications. Namely, removed a few changes not required to
make the module unloadable and also fixed a bug that would cause asterisk to
crash on unloading.
This patch is the first step (should hopefully be followed by another/others at
some point) in allowing res_pjsip and the modules that depend on it to be
unloadable. At this time, res_pjsip and some of the modules that depend on
res_pjsip cannot be unloaded without causing problems of some sort.
The goal of this patch is to get res_pjsip and only res_pjsip to be able to
unload successfully and/or shutdown without incident (crashes, leaks, etc...).
Other dependent modules may still cause problems on unload.
Basically made sure, with the patch applied, that res_pjsip (with no other
dependent modules loaded) could be succesfully unloaded and Asterisk could
shutdown without any leaks or crashes that pertained directly to res_pjsip.
ASTERISK-24485 #close
Reported by: Corey Farrell
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4363/
patches:
pjsip_unload-broken-r1.patch submitted by Corey Farrell (license 5909)
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The res_pjsip module was previously unloadable. With this patch it can now
be unloaded.
This patch is based off the original patch on the issue (listed below) by Corey
Farrell with a few modifications. Namely, removed a few changes not required to
make the module unloadable and also fixed a bug that would cause asterisk to
crash on unloading.
This patch is the first step (should hopefully be followed by another/others at
some point) in allowing res_pjsip and the modules that depend on it to be
unloadable. At this time, res_pjsip and some of the modules that depend on
res_pjsip cannot be unloaded without causing problems of some sort.
The goal of this patch is to get res_pjsip and only res_pjsip to be able to
unload successfully and/or shutdown without incident (crashes, leaks, etc...).
Other dependent modules may still cause problems on unload.
Basically made sure, with the patch applied, that res_pjsip (with no other
dependent modules loaded) could be succesfully unloaded and Asterisk could
shutdown without any leaks or crashes that pertained directly to res_pjsip.
ASTERISK-24485 #close
Reported by: Corey Farrell
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4311/
patches:
pjsip_unload-broken-r1.patch submitted by Corey Farrell (license 5909)
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Prior to this patch, all Stasis subscriptions would receive a dedicated
thread for servicing published messages. In contrast, prior to r400178
(see review https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2881/), the subscriptions
shared a thread pool. It was discovered during some initial work on Stasis
that, for a low subscription count with high message throughput, the
threadpool was not as performant as simply having a dedicated thread per
subscriber.
For situations where a subscriber receives a substantial number of messages
and is always present, the model of having a dedicated thread per subscriber
makes sense. While we still have plenty of subscriptions that would follow
this model, e.g., AMI, CDRs, CEL, etc., there are plenty that also fall into
the following two categories:
* Large number of subscriptions, specifically those tied to endpoints/peers.
* Low number of messages. Some subscriptions exist specifically to coordinate
a single message - the subscription is created, a message is published, the
delivery is synchronized, and the subscription is destroyed.
In both of the latter two cases, creating a dedicated thread is wasteful (and
in the case of a large number of peers/endpoints, harmful). In those cases,
having shared delivery threads is far more performant.
This patch adds the ability of a subscriber to Stasis to choose whether or not
their messages are dispatched on a dedicated thread or on a threadpool. The
threadpool is configurable through stasis.conf.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/4193
ASTERISK-24533 #close
Reported by: xrobau
Tested by: xrobau
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This patch adds an API call to Stasis that allows a publisher to publish a
stasis message that will not return until a specific subscriber handles the
message. Since a subscriber can have their own forwarding topic which orders
messages from many topics, this allows a publisher who knows of that subscriber
to synchronize to that subscriber regardless of the forwarding relationships
between topics.
This is of particular use for dialplan applications that need to synchronize
on a particular subscriber's handling of a message.
(issue ASTERISK-22884)
Reported by: Matt Jordan
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/3099/
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git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@405313 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
Made the vector macro API be more like linked lists.
1) Added a name parameter to ast_vector() to name the vector struct.
2) Made the API take a pointer to the vector struct instead of the struct
itself.
3) Added an element cleanup macro/function parameter when removing an
element from the vector for ast_vector_remove_cmp_unordered() and
ast_vector_remove_elem_unordered().
4) Added ast_vector_get_addr() in case the vector element is not a simple
pointer.
* Converted an inline vector usage in stasis_message_router to use the
vector API. It needed the API improvements so it could be converted.
* Fixed topic reference leak in router_dtor() when the
stasis_message_router is destroyed.
* Fixed deadlock potential in stasis_forward_all() and
stasis_forward_cancel(). Locking two topics at the same time requires
deadlock avoidance.
* Made internal_stasis_subscribe() tolerant of a NULL topic.
* Made stasis_message_router_add(),
stasis_message_router_add_cache_update(), stasis_message_router_remove(),
and stasis_message_router_remove_cache_update() tolerant of a NULL
message_type.
* Promoted a LOG_DEBUG message to LOG_ERROR as intended in
dispatch_message().
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2903/
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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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The stasis_cache_update messages are somewhat cumbersome to handle
with the stasis_message_router. Since all updates have the same
message type, they are normally handled with the same route.
Since caching itself is a first class component of stasis-core, it
makes sense for the router to handle the cache update messages itself.
This patch adds stasis_message_router_add_cache_update() and
stasis_message_router_remove_cache_update() to handle the routing of
stasis_cache_update messages.
This patch also corrects an issue with manager_{bridging,channels}.c,
where events might be reordered. The reordering occurs because the
components use different message routers, which they needed because
they both needed to route cache update messages. They now both use
manager's router, and add cache routes for just the cache updates they
are interested in.
(closes issue ASTERISK-22038)
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2677/
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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
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When using scoped locks, the unref of an AO2 object should happen after
the unlock occurs which requires usage of scoped refs.
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@383377 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
Often times, when subscribing to a topic, one wants to handle
different message types differently. While one could cascade if/else
statements through the subscription handler, it is much cleaner to
specify a different callback for each message type. The
stasis_message_router is here to help!
A stasis_message_router is constructed for a particular stasis_topic,
which is subscribes to. Call stasis_message_router_unsubscribe() to
cancel that subscription.
Once constructed, routes can be added using
stasis_message_router_add() (or stasis_message_router_set_default()
for any messages not handled by other routes). There may be only one
route per stasis_message_type. The route's callback is invoked just as
if it were a callback for a subscription; but it only gets called for
messages of the specified type.
(issue ASTERISK-20887)
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2390/
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