Table of Contents
avp_db_load(source,name)
avp_db_store(source,name)
avp_db_delete(source,name)
avp_db_query(query[,dest])
avp_delete(name)
avp_pushto(destination,name)
avp_check(name,op_value)
avp_copy(old_name,new_name)
avp_printf(dest, format)
avp_subst(avps, subst)
avp_op(name,op_value)
is_avp_set(name)
avp_print()
List of Examples
db_url
parameteravp_table
parameteruse_domain
parameter
uuid_column
parameterusername_column
parameterdomain_column
parameterattribute_column
parameter
value_column
parameter
type_column
parameter
db_scheme
parameter
avp_db_load
usageavp_db_store
usageavp_db_delete
usageavp_db_query
usageavp_delete
usageavp_pushto
usageavp_check
usageavp_copy
usageavp_printf
usageavp_subst
usageavp_op
usageis_avp_set
usageavp_print
usageTable of Contents
avp_db_load(source,name)
avp_db_store(source,name)
avp_db_delete(source,name)
avp_db_query(query[,dest])
avp_delete(name)
avp_pushto(destination,name)
avp_check(name,op_value)
avp_copy(old_name,new_name)
avp_printf(dest, format)
avp_subst(avps, subst)
avp_op(name,op_value)
is_avp_set(name)
avp_print()
The AVPops (AVP-operations) module implements a set of script functions which allow access and manipulation of user attribute-value pairs (AVPs, preferences) and pseudo-variables. AVPs are a powerful tool for implementing services/preferences per user/domain. With this module, they are usable directly from configuration script.
The module implement functions for interfacing DB resources (loading/storing/removing), functions for swapping information between AVPs and SIP messages and a function for testing/checking the value of an AVP.
AVPs are persistent per SIP transaction, being available in "route", "branch_route" and "failure_route". A tutorial providing more information (detailed explanations and commented examples) can be found on the SIP-router web site.
The following modules must be loaded before this module:
Optionally a database module
The format of the parameters specifying an AVP in functions exported by this module is: $avp(avp_flags:avp_name) or $avp(avp_alias).
avp_flags = type_flags [script_flags]; type_flags = 'I' | 'i' | 'S' | 's'; script_flags = 0..255
'I' or 'i' means that the type of avp name is an integer (ID)
'S' or 's' means that the type of avp name is string
The type flag is mandatory. Please note that the type flag only indicates type of name, not type of variable. An avp with name type "i" may very well contain text strings.
script_flags must be an 8 bit unsigned number, therefore can be set up to 8 flags. If no script flag is provided, the name will match all AVPs, regardless they have or not a script flag set (preserves the compatibility with the old naming schema).
avp_name = string | integer
string - might be any alphanumeric string, wich contain following characters: [a-z] [A-Z] [0-9] '_'
integer - might be an unsigned integer, greater than zero, up to 2^16-1
avp_alias = string
string - might be any alphanumeric string, wich contain following characters: [a-z] [A-Z] [0-9] '_'
Example 1.1. AVP naming examples
... $avp(i:11) - the AVP identified by integer 11 $avp(s:foo) - the AVP identified by the string 'foo' $avp(bar) - the AVP identified by the AVP alias 'bar' $avp(i3:123) - the AVP identified by the integer 123 which has script flags 1 and 2 set ...
DB URL for database connection.
This parameter is optional, it's default value being NULL.
Example 1.2. Set db_url
parameter
... modparam("avpops","db_url","mysql://user:passwd@host/database") ...
DB table to be used.
This parameter is optional, it's default value being NULL. But if you specify a db_url, you need also setup this parameter.
If the domain part of the URI should be used for identifying an AVP in DB operations.
Default value is 0 (no).
Name of column containing the uuid (unique user id).
Default value is “uuid”.
Name of column containing the username.
Default value is “username”.
Name of column containing the domain name.
Default value is “domain”.
Name of column containing the attribute name (AVP name).
Default value is “attribute”.
Example 1.8. Set attribute_column
parameter
... modparam("avpops","attribute_column","attribute") ...
Name of column containing the AVP value.
Default value is “value”.
Name of integer column containing the AVP type.
Default value is “type”.
Possible column values are
0 - AVP with string name and string value
1 - AVP with string name and integer value
2 - AVP with integer name and string value
3 - AVP with integer name and integer value
Definition of a DB scheme to be used for non-standard access to Database information.
Definition of a DB scheme. Scheme syntax is:
db_scheme = name':'element[';'element]*
element =
'uuid_col='string
'username_col='string
'domain_col='string
'value_col='string
'value_type='('integer'|'string')
'table='string
Default value is “NULL”.
Example 1.11. Set db_scheme
parameter
... modparam("avpops","db_scheme", "scheme1:table=subscriber;uuid_col=uuid;value_col=first_name") ...
Loads from DB into memory the AVPs corresponding to the given source. If given, it sets the script flags for loaded AVPs. It returns true if it loaded some values in AVPs, false otherwise (db error, no avp loaded ...).
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
source - what info is used for identifying the AVPs. Parameter syntax:
source = (pvar|str_value) ['/'('username'|'domain'|'uri'|'uuid')])
pvar = any pseudo variable defined in Kamailio. If the pvar is $ru (request uri), $fu (from uri), $tu (to uri) or $ou (original uri), then the implicit flag is 'uri'. Otherwise, the implicit flag is 'uuid'.
name - which AVPs will be loaded from DB into memory. Parameter syntax is:
name = avp_spec['/'(table_name|'$'db_scheme)]
avp_spec = matching_flags|$avp(avp_name)|$avp(avp_alias)
matching_flags = 'a' | 'A' | 'i' | 'I' | 's' | 'S' [script_flags]
'a' or 'A' means matching any of AVP name types ('i' and 's') (NOTE: matching_flags cannot be used with $db_scheme because the name of AVP to save in cannot be specified), the rest have the meaning descriped in 'AVP naming format' chapter.
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.12. avp_db_load
usage
... avp_db_load("$fu","$(i:678)"); avp_db_load("$ru/domain","i:/domain_preferences"); avp_db_load("$uuid","$avp(s:404fwd)/fwd_table"); avp_db_load("$ru","$avp(i1:123)/$some_scheme"); ...
Stores to DB the AVPs corresponding to the given source.
The meaning and usage of the parameters are identical as for avp_db_load(source,name) function. Please refer to its description.
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.13. avp_db_store
usage
... avp_db_store("$tu","$avp(i:678)"); avp_db_store("$ru/username","$avp(email)"); ...
Deletes from DB the AVPs corresponding to the given source.
The meaning and usage of the parameters are identical as for avp_db_load(source,name) function. Please refer to its description.
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.14. avp_db_delete
usage
... avp_db_delete("$tu","$avp(i:678)"); avp_db_delete("$ru/username","$avp(email)"); avp_db_delete("$uuid","$avp(s:404fwd)/fwd_table"); ...
Make a database query and store the result in AVPs.
The meaning and usage of the parameters:
query - must be a valid SQL query. The parameter can contain pseudo-variables.
You must escape any pseudo-variables manually to prevent SQL injection attacks. You can use the existing transformations escape.common and unescape.common to escape and unescape the content of any pseudo-variable. Failing to escape the variables used in the query makes you vulnerable to SQL injection, e.g. make it possible for an outside attacker to alter your database content.
dest - a list with AVP names where to store the result. The format is “$avp(name1);$avp(name2);...”. If this parameter is ommited, the result is stored in “$avp(i:1);$avp(i:2);...”. If the result gives many rows, then multiple AVPs with corresponding name will be added. The value type of the AVP (string or integer) will be derived from the type of the columns. Please note that only this two datatypes are supported, so its not possible for example to return floating point or big integer values this way.
The function delivers the following return-codes:
-1 - An error occured while querying the database (e.g. wrong SQL or database error)
1 - Query was successful
-2 - Query was successful, but no rows where returned.
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.15. avp_db_query
usage
... avp_db_query("select password, ha1 from subscriber where username='$tu'", "$avp(i:678);$avp(i:679)"); avp_db_query("delete from subscriber"); ...
Deletes from memory the AVPs with name or, if empty, all AVPs.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
name - which AVPs will be deleted from memory. Parameter syntax is:
name = (matching_flags|avp_name|avp_alias)['/'flag]
matching_flags = please refer to avp_db_load() function
flag = 'g'|'G' = deletes not only the last value but the complete AVP.
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.16. avp_delete
usage
... avp_delete("$avp(i:678)/g"); avp_delete("$avp(email)"); avp_delete("i"); avp_delete("a3"); ...
Pushes the value of AVP(s) into the SIP message.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
destination - as what will be the AVP value pushed into SIP message. Parameter syntax:
destination = '$ru' ['/'('username'|'domain')] | '$du' | '$br'
$ru '['/'('username'|'domain')] - write the AVP in the request URI or in username/domain part of it
$du - write the AVP in 'dst_uri' field
$br - write the AVP directly as a new branch (does not affect RURI)
name - which AVP(s)/pseudo-variable should be pushed into the SIP message. Parameter syntax is:
name = ( avp_name | avp_alias | pvar_name )['/'flags]
flags = 'g' - effective only with AVPs
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.17. avp_pushto
usage
... avp_pushto("$ru/domain","$fd"); avp_pushto("$ru","$avp(i:678)"); avp_pushto("$ru/domain","$avp(s:backup_domains)/g"); avp_pushto("$du","$avp(i:679)"); avp_pushto("$br","$avp(i:680)"); ...
Checks the value of the AVP(s) against an operator and value.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
name - which AVP(s) should be checked. Parameter syntax is:
name = ( pseudo-variable )
op_value - define the operator, the value and flags for checking. Parameter syntax is:
op_value = operator '/' value ['/'flags]
operator = 'eq' | 'ne' | 'lt' | 'le' | 'gt' | 'ge' | 're' | 'fm' | 'and' | 'or' | 'xor'
value = pseudo-variable | fix_value
fix_value = 'i:'integer | 's:'string | string
flags = 'g' | 'G' | 'i' | 'I'
Operator meaning:
eq - equal
ne - not equal
lt - less than
le - less or equal
gt - greater than
ge - greater or equal
re - regexp (regular exression match)
fm - fast match (see: man fnmatch)
and - bitwise 'and'
or - bitwise 'or'
xor - bitwise 'xor'
Integer values can be given in hexadecimal using notation: 'i:0xhex_number' (e.g.,: 'i:0xabcd');
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.18. avp_check
usage
... avp_check("$avp(i:678)", "lt/i:345/g"); avp_check("$fd","eq/$td/I"); avp_check("$avp(s:foo)","gt/$avp($bar)/g"); avp_check("$avp(s:foo)","re/sip:.*@bar.net/g"); avp_check("$avp(s:foo)","fm/$avp(fm_avp)/g"); ...
Copy / move an avp under a new name.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
name1 - which AVP(s) should be copied/moved. Parameter syntax is:
name = ( avp_name | avp_alias )
name2 - the new name of the copied/moved AVP(s). Parameter syntax is:
name = ( avp_name | avp_alias ) ['/'flags]
flags = 'g' | 'G' | 'd' | 'D' | 'n' | 'N' | 's' | 'S'
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.19. avp_copy
usage
... avp_copy("$avp(i:678)", "$avp(s:345)/g"); avp_copy("$avp(old)","$avp(new)/gd"); ...
NOTE: since Kamailio 1.3.0 the function has been moved to core and it is an alias to pv_printf().
Prints the formatted string 'format' in the AVP 'dest'. The 'format' parameter can include any pseudo-variable defined in Kamailio. The list with all pseudo-variables in Kamailio can be found at: http://kamailio.org/dokuwiki/.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
dest - in which AVP should be stored the result. Parameter syntax is:
name = ( avp_name | avp_alias )
format - the formatted string to be printed in 'dest' AVP.
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.20. avp_printf
usage
... avp_printf("$avp(i:20)", "This is a $rm request with call-id $hdr(call-id)"); ...
Perl/sed-like subst applied to AVPs having string value.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
avps - source AVP, destination AVP and flags. Parameter syntax is:
avps = src_avp [ '/' dst_avp [ '/' flags ] ]
src_avp = ( avp_name | avp_alias )
dst_avp = ( avp_name | avp_alias ) - if dst_avp is missing then the value of src_avp will be replaced
flags = ( d | D | g | G ) -- (d, D - delete source avp; g, G - apply to all avps matching src_avp name)
subst - perl/sed-like reqular expression. Parameter syntax is:
subst = "/regexp/replacement/flags"
regexp - regular expression
replacement - replacement string, can include pseudo-variables and \1, ..., \9 for matching tokens, \0 for whole matching text
flags = 'g' | 'G' | 'i' | 'i' (g, G - replace all matching tokens; i, I - match ignore case)
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.21. avp_subst
usage
... # if avp i:678 has a string value in e-mail format, replace the # domain part with the value of domain part from R-URI avp_subst("$avp(i:678)", "/(.*)@(.*)/\1@$rd/"); # if any avp i:678 has a string value in e-mail format, replace the # domain part with the value of domain part from R-URI # and place the result in avp i:679 avp_subst("$avp(i:678)/$avp(i:679)/g", "/(.*)@(.*)/\1@$rd/"); ...
IMPORTANT NOTE: if the replacement string includes src_avp or dst_avp you will get something that you may not expect. In case you have many src_avp and you make the substitution to be applied to all of them, after the first src_avp is processed, it will be added in avp list and next processing will use it.
Different integer operations with avps.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
name - 'source_avp/destination_avp' - which AVP(s) should be processed and where to store the result. If 'destination_avp' is missing, same name as 'source_avp' is used to store the result.
Parameter syntax is:
name = ( source_avp[/destination_avp] )
source_avp = ( avp_name | avp_alias )
destination_avp = ( avp_name | avp_alias )
op_value - define the operation, the value and flags. Parameter syntax is:
op_value = operator '/' value ['/'flags]
operator = 'add' | 'sub' | 'mul' | 'div' | 'mod' | 'and' | 'or' | 'xor' | 'not'
value = pseudo-variable | fix_value
fix_value = 'i:'integer
flags = 'g' | 'G' | 'd' | 'D'
Integer values can be given in hexadecimal using notation 'i:0xhex_number' (e.g.,: 'i:0xabcd');
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.22. avp_op
usage
... avp_op("$avp(i:678)", "add/i:345/g"); avp_op("$avp(number)","sub/$avp(number2)/d"); ...
Check if any AVP with name is set.
Meaning of the parameters is as follows:
name - name of AVP to look for. Parameter syntax is:
name = avp_name|avp_alias [ '/' flags ])
flags = ('e'|'s'|'n') - e = empty value; s = value string; n = value number (int)
This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, LOCAL_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.
Example 1.23. is_avp_set
usage
... if(is_avp_set("$avp(i:678)")) log("AVP with integer id 678 exists\n"); ...