Thus, people which have not installed any DB module can use the lookup?
regards
klaus
Bogdan-Andrei Iancu wrote:
well... :)....even if it is a operation bouncing to
cache (with no DB
implication), you need to know the name of location table, to be able to
search through cache....Like: search in "location" array for the
"xxx"
AOR...
and the name of the location table is defined in the SQL section of
openserctl .....as it is related to DB...
in this case, it is not possible to do a strict separation between DB
and cache as the cache follows the structure and naming of the DB...
regards,
bogdan
Klaus Darilion wrote:
Bogdan-Andrei Iancu wrote:
Klaus,
it looks like the openserctl is not sending both parameter for the MI
call - the table name and the AOR. It should be like:
0(5292) DEBUG:mi_fifo:mi_parse_tree: adding node <> ; val <location>
0(5292) DEBUG:mi_fifo:mi_parse_tree: adding node <> ; val
<user3(a)192.168.2.7>
0(5292) DEBUG:mi_fifo:mi_parse_tree: end of input tree
0(5292) DEBUG:mi_fifo:mi_fifo_server: done parsing the mi tree
export DBENGINE="MYSQL" before running openserctl....if I'm not
wrong, the name of the location table is defined in the DB section of
openserctl.....so you need to use a DB engine ....
Although the communication between openserctl and openser is via FIFO
I have to define the DBENGINE? Why? I would the dumping the location
table should be done from cache thus not needing and DB operation.