It's associated with the full transaction. From start of the routing script
to finish.
Each time you make a call through the server, it hits the beginning of the
route and goes through to the end (perhaps making hops around to secondary
route blocks or failure routes or some such). The flag is global for that
duration -- throughout all the route blocks and failure routes.
N.
On Thu, 20 Apr 2006 06:54:56 -0700 (PDT), Dave wrote
Thanks. But what is it associated with. When I do a
register and determine that it is NAT'd client, I do a
setflag. When I do this, what is this setflag
associated with? With the location entry of the
registered client? And when I us setflag when I
receive an INVITE, is it associated with that INVITE
pdu?
--- Steve Blair <blairs(a)isc.upenn.edu> wrote:
It is a memory resident flag.
Dave wrote:
Hello, I do no understand where the FLAG is set
when
using setflag. Is the SIP packet itself flagged
(by
inserting a header?) or is it something that is
done
in the database? Thank you for any pointers
Dave
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