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
The purpose of this patch is to eliminate struct ast_callerid since it has
turned into a miscellaneous collection of various party information.
Eliminate struct ast_callerid and replace it with the following struct
organization:
struct ast_party_name {
char *str;
int char_set;
int presentation;
unsigned char valid;
};
struct ast_party_number {
char *str;
int plan;
int presentation;
unsigned char valid;
};
struct ast_party_subaddress {
char *str;
int type;
unsigned char odd_even_indicator;
unsigned char valid;
};
struct ast_party_id {
struct ast_party_name name;
struct ast_party_number number;
struct ast_party_subaddress subaddress;
char *tag;
};
struct ast_party_dialed {
struct {
char *str;
int plan;
} number;
struct ast_party_subaddress subaddress;
int transit_network_select;
};
struct ast_party_caller {
struct ast_party_id id;
char *ani;
int ani2;
};
The new organization adds some new information as well.
* The party name and number now have their own presentation value that can
be manipulated independently. ISDN supplies the presentation value for
the name and number at different times with the possibility that they
could be different.
* The party name and number now have a valid flag. Before this change the
name or number string could be empty if the presentation were restricted.
Most channel drivers assume that the name or number is then simply not
available instead of indicating that the name or number was restricted.
* The party name now has a character set value. SIP and Q.SIG have the
ability to indicate what character set a name string is using so it could
be presented properly.
* The dialed party now has a numbering plan value that could be useful to
have available.
The various channel drivers will need to be updated to support the new
core features as needed. They have simply been converted to supply
current functionality at this time.
The following items of note were either corrected or enhanced:
* The CONNECTEDLINE() and REDIRECTING() dialplan functions were
consolidated into func_callerid.c to share party id handling code.
* CALLERPRES() is now deprecated because the name and number have their
own presentation values.
* Fixed app_alarmreceiver.c write_metadata(). The workstring[] could
contain garbage. It also can only contain the caller id number so using
ast_callerid_parse() on it is silly. There was also a typo in the
CALLERNAME if test.
* Fixed app_rpt.c using ast_callerid_parse() on the channel's caller id
number string. ast_callerid_parse() alters the given buffer which in this
case is the channel's caller id number string. Then using
ast_shrink_phone_number() could alter it even more.
* Fixed caller ID name and number memory leak in chan_usbradio.c.
* Fixed uninitialized char arrays cid_num[] and cid_name[] in
sig_analog.c.
* Protected access to a caller channel with lock in chan_sip.c.
* Clarified intent of code in app_meetme.c sla_ring_station() and
dial_trunk(). Also made save all caller ID data instead of just the name
and number strings.
* Simplified cdr.c set_one_cid(). It hand coded the ast_callerid_merge()
function.
* Corrected some weirdness with app_privacy.c's use of caller
presentation.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/702/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@276347 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
This patch adds 'const' tags to a number of Asterisk APIs where they are appropriate (where the API already demanded that the function argument not be modified, but the compiler was not informed of that fact). The list includes:
- CLI command handlers
- CLI command handler arguments
- AGI command handlers
- AGI command handler arguments
- Dialplan application handler arguments
- Speech engine API function arguments
In addition, various file-scope and function-scope constant arrays got 'const' and/or 'static' qualifiers where they were missing.
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/251/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@196072 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
along the way, change tags used in configure script, menuselect-deps and code for various dependencies to be consistently named
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@154151 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
when a file is invalid from when a file is missing. This is most important when
we have two configuration files. Consider the following example:
Old system:
sip.conf users.conf Old result New result
======== ========== ========== ==========
Missing Missing SIP doesn't load SIP doesn't load
Missing OK SIP doesn't load SIP doesn't load
Missing Invalid SIP doesn't load SIP doesn't load
OK Missing SIP loads SIP loads
OK OK SIP loads SIP loads
OK Invalid SIP loads incompletely SIP doesn't load
Invalid Missing SIP doesn't load SIP doesn't load
Invalid OK SIP doesn't load SIP doesn't load
Invalid Invalid SIP doesn't load SIP doesn't load
So in the case when users.conf doesn't load because there's a typo that
disrupts the syntax, we may only partially load users, instead of failing with
an error, which may cause some calls not to get processed. Worse yet, the old
system would do this with no indication that anything was even wrong.
(closes issue #10690)
Reported by: dtyoo
Patches:
20080716__bug10690.diff.txt uploaded by Corydon76 (license 14)
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@142992 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
build times - tested, there is no measureable difference before and
after this commit.
In this change:
use asterisk/compat.h to include a small set of system headers:
inttypes.h, unistd.h, stddef.h, stddint.h, sys/types.h, stdarg.h,
stdlib.h, alloca.h, stdio.h
Where available, the inclusion is conditional on HAVE_FOO_H as determined
by autoconf.
Normally, source files should not include any of the above system headers,
and instead use either "asterisk.h" or "asterisk/compat.h" which does it
better.
For the time being I have left alone second-level directories
(main/db1-ast, etc.).
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@89333 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3