Hello,
$shv(...) is referred as shared memory variable because it stores
the value in shared memory. That means if you set $shv(x) in one
process, you can read its value from another process. You have to be
sure you don't have races in setting the variable, that could be
achieved with locks from cfgutils.
$var(...) is referred as private memory variable because it stores
the value in private memory. That means its value is valid in the
context of the same process (e.g., use it while processing the same
sip message on a single routing block type, like running the main
request route block, or reply route block, etc). It is not safe to
use it for transactions, like setting it in request route block and
reading it in failure route block (use avps for that case).
$var(...) is faster to use and does not need locking at all. These
are usually referred as script variable, but this term can be
confused with all the config file variables.
Cheers,
Daniel
On 2/12/13 3:13 PM, Mino Haluz wrote:
Hi,
what is
the difference between shared and script variable ? Thanks
Mino
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