Fix support of OS's like openBSD that use an older nameser.h,
this change reverts the defines to the older style which on other
systems is found in nameser_compat.h
Tested on openBSD 6.0, Debian 8
ASTERISK-26608 #close
Change-Id: Iffb36caab8c5aa9dece0ce2d009041f7b56cc86a
OpenBSD's 'find' doesn't take the -delete argument so you have to pipe
through 'xargs rm -rf'.
'echo -e' doesn't like \t starting a line. It just prints 't' which
causes the libasteriskpj.exports file to be garbage. They were just
cosmetic so they were removed.
librt doesn't exist so the link of libasteriskpj.so fails. It's not
actually needed for linux anyway so -lrt was removed from the link.
res_rtp_asterisk was failing to load because of an undefined
DTLS_method. '|| defined(LIBRESSL_VERSION_NUMBER)' was added to the #if
so DTLSv1_method is used instead.
ASTERISK-26608
Change-Id: I926ec95b0b69633231e3ad1d6e803b977272c49c
When Opus is negotiated but not loaded, the log is spammed with messages
because the system does not know how to calculate the number of samples in
a frame.
* Suppress the warning by supplying a function that assumes 20ms of
samples in the frame. For pass through support it doesn't really seem to
matter what number of samples is returned anyway.
ASTERISK-26605 #close
Change-Id: Icf2273692f040dc2c45b01e72a790d11092f9e0f
One of the code paths in __ast_file_read_dirs will only get executed if
the OS doesn't support dirent->d_type OR if the filesystem the
particular file is on doesn't support it. So, while standard Linux
systems support the field, some filesystems like XFS do not. In this
case, we need to call stat() to determine whether the directory entry
is a file or directory so we append the filename to the supplied
directory path and call stat. We forgot to truncate path back to just
the directory afterwards though so we were passing a complete file name
to the callback in the dir_name parameter instead of just the directory
name.
The logic has been re-written to only create a full_path if we need to
call stat() or if we need to descend into another directory.
Change-Id: I54e4228bd8355fad65200c6df3ec4c9c8a98dfba
fopencookie/funclose is a non-standard API and should not be used
in portable software. Additionally, the way FILE's fd is used in
non-blocking mode is undefined behaviour and cannot be relied on.
This introduces internal abstraction for io streams, that allows
implementing the desired virtualization of read/write operations
with necessary timeout handling.
ASTERISK-24515 #close
ASTERISK-24517 #close
Change-Id: Id916aef418b665ced6a7489aef74908b6e376e85
In multi-party bridges, Asterisk currently supports two video modes:
* Follow the talker, in which the speaker with the most energy is shown
to all participants but the speaker, and the speaker sees the
previous video source
* Explicitly set video sources, in which all participants see a locked
video source
Prior to this patch, ARI had no ability to manipulate the video source.
This isn't important for two-party bridges, in which Asterisk merely
relays the video between the participants. However, in a multi-party
bridge, it can be advantageous to allow an external application to
manipulate the video source.
This patch provides two new routes to accomplish this:
(1) setVideoSource: POST /bridges/{bridgeId}/videoSource/{channelId}
Sets a video source to an explicit channel
(2) clearVideoSource: DELETE /bridges/{bridgeId}/videoSource
Removes any explicit video source, and sets the video mode to talk
detection
ASTERISK-26595 #close
Change-Id: I98e455d5bffc08ea5e8d6b84ccaf063c714e6621
This works the same as for AMI manager variables. Set
"channelvars=foo,bar" in your ari.conf general section, and then the
channel variables "foo" and "bar" (along with their values), will
appear in every Stasis websocket channel event.
ASTERISK-26492 #close
patches:
ari_vars.diff submitted by Mark Michelson
Change-Id: I5609ba239259577c0948645df776d7f3bc864229
Libedit 3.1 is not build with unicode on as a default and so the
prototype for the el_gets callback changed from expecting a char buffer
to accepting a wchar buffer. If ast_el_read_char isn't changed,
the cli reads garbage from teh terminal.
Added a configure test for (*el_rfunc_t)(EditLine *, wchar_t *) and
updated ast_el_read_char to use the HAVE_ define to detemrine whether
to use char or wchar.
ASTERISK-26592 #close
Change-Id: I9099b46f68e06d0202ff80e53022a2b68b08871a
There are several places in Asterisk that have duplicated logic
for deferring important frames until later.
This commit adds a couple of API calls to facilitate this automatically.
ast_channel_start_defer_frames(): Future reads of deferrable frames on
this channel will be deferred until later.
ast_channel_stop_defer_frames(): Any frames that have been deferred get
requeued onto the channel.
ASTERISK-26343
Change-Id: I3e1b87bc6796f222442fa6f7d1b6a4706fb33641
Adds an identifier (with a getter and setter) to detect channels with
interleaved audio.
This is needed by the binaural bridge_softmix patch (ASTERISK-26292) and
was already discussed here:
http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-dev/2016-October/075900.html
The identifier can be set during fmtp parsing (to be seen in the
res_format_attr_opus.c change).
ASTERISK-26292
Change-Id: I359801cc5f98c35671c48dabc81a7f4ee1183d63
When a channel is made the video source, the bridge holds a reference to
it. Whenever the video source changes, that reference is released.
However, a ref leak does occur if the channel leaves the bridge (such as
being hung up) while it is the video source, as the bridge never
releases the ref in such a case.
This patch adds a line to the bridge_channel_internal_join routine such
that, when a channel finishes its time in the bridge, it notifies the
bridge via ast_bridge_remove_video_src that if it is a video source its
reference should be released.
ASTERISK-26555 #close
Change-Id: I3a2f5238a9d2fc49c591f0e65199d782ab0be76a
It's actually quite useful to see the source of a video stream change.
This doesn't happen terribly often, even with talk detection - but when
it does, it's nice to know which channel is now providing your video
stream.
As a verbose 5 level message, it shouldn't be terribly spammy or costly
to have, and is 'lower level' then most other verbose messages that the
bridge system emits.
ASTERISK-26555
Change-Id: Ia1c20ecafa9670171fd38bddcf3beccae47fb15c
The readdir_r function has been deprecated and should no longer be used. This
patch removes the readdir_r dependency (replaced it with readdir) and also moves
the directory search code to a more centralized spot (file.c)
Also removed a strict dependency on the dirent structure's d_type field as it
is not portable. The code now checks to see if the value is available. If so,
it tries to use it, but defaults back to using the stats function if necessary.
Lastly, for most implementations of readdir it *should* be thread-safe to make
concurrent calls to it as long as different directory streams are specified.
glibc falls into this category. However, since it is possible that there exist
some implementations that are not safe, locking has been added for those other
than glibc.
ASTERISK-26412
ASTERISK-26509 #close
Change-Id: Id8f54689b1e2873e82a09d0d0d2faf41964e80ba
Since adding all remaining rates of Signed Linear (ASTERISK-24274), SILK
(Gerrit 3136) and Codec 2 (ASTERISK-26217), no RTP Payload Type is left in the
dynamic range (96-127). RFC 3551 section 3 allows to reassign other ranges.
Consequently, when the dynamic range is exhausted, this change utilizes payload
types in the range between 35 and 63 giving room for another 29 payload types.
ASTERISK-26311 #close
Change-Id: I7bc96ab764bc30098a178b841cbf7146f9d64964
The NewConnectedLine event has been added by commit fe7671f, but the
documentation was missing.
ASTERISK-26537 #close
Change-Id: I7fc331f18caa28492da9303e576f70884ca8c9e6
Every ao2 object contains storage for a private variable data_size,
though the value is never read if AO2_DEBUG is disabled. This change
makes the variable conditional, reducing memory usage.
ASTERISK-26524 #close
Change-Id: If859929e507676ebc58b0f84247a4231e11da07f
main/Makefile includes third-party/pjproject/build.mak but
doesn't set PJDIR beforehand so "include $(PJDIR)/version.mak"
evaluates to "/version.mak". Fix is to set PJDIR in main/Makefile
before the include.
Change-Id: I0f7c67d60209049056fe9c4b041bf0463aa95604
It is only safe to run ast_register_cleanup callbacks when all modules
have been unloaded. Previously these callbacks were run during graceful
shutdown, making it possible to crash during shutdown.
ASTERISK-26513 #close
Change-Id: Ibfa635bb688d1227ec54aa211d90d6bd45052e21
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
ARI and AMI allow for an explicit channel ID to be specified
when originating channels. Unfortunately, there is nothing in
place to prevent someone from using the same ID for multiple
channels. Further complicating things, adding ID validation to channel
allocation makes it impossible for ARI to discern why channel allocation
failed, resulting in a vague error code being returned.
The fix for this is to institute a new method for channel errors to be
discerned. The method mirrors errno, in that when an error occurs, the
caller can consult the channel errno value to determine what the error
was. This initial iteration of the feature only introduces "unknown" and
"channel ID exists" errors. However, it's possible to add more errors as
needed.
ARI uses this feature to determine why channel allocation failed and can
return a 409 error during origination to show that a channel with the
given ID already exists.
ASTERISK-26421
Change-Id: Ibba7ae68842dab6df0c2e9c45559208bc89d3d06
CDRs form chains. When the root of the chain is destroyed, it then
unreferences the next CDR in the chain. That CDR is destroyed, and it
then unreferences the next CDR in the chain. This repeats until the end
of the chain is reached. While this typically does not cause any sort of
problems, it is possible in strange scenarios for the CDR chain to grow
way longer than expected. In such a scenario, the destruction pattern
can result in a stack overflow.
This patch fixes the problem by switching from a recursive pattern to an
iterative pattern for destruction. When the root CDR is destroyed, it is
responsible for iterating over the rest of the CDRs and unreferencing
each one. Other CDRs in the chain, since they are not the root, will
simply destroy themselves and be done. This causes the stack depth not
to increase.
ASTERISK-26421 #close
Reported by Andrew Nagy
Change-Id: I3ca90c2b8051f3b7ead2e0e43f60d2c18fb204b8