Hello,
an workaround would be to add a custom parameter to the destination value, like sip:1.2.3.4:5060;sid=1. Unknown parameters should be ignored by the receiving party. Or if you have only two records with same address, add to one ";transport=udp".
Of course, coding in C to make it easier in config would be the elegant solution.
Cheers,
Daniel
GeorgeBR,Thanks!If only $ru is available in these event routes, I can't query the database because $ru matches both records. If I can't access the socket used with a PV, is there any way to have access to either the id or the setid for the destination for which the event was generated?In this case, how can I tell which destination went down? The URI is the same, but the sockets differ for each id.Hello Daniel,Thanks for the reply. Unfortunately I can't really use the database records to achieve what I want. The example in my previous message didn't show this, but I would like to be able to differentiate between the following:
+----+-------+-------------------------+-------+----------+- ----------------------------+
| id | setid | destination | flags | priority | attrs |
+----+-------+-------------------------+-------+----------+- ----------------------------+
| 1 | 1 | sip:111.111.11.1:5060 | 8 | 0 | socket=udp:44.44.44.1:5060 |
| 2 | 10 | sip:111.111.11.1:5060 | 8 | 0 | socket=udp:55.55.55.1:5060 |
+----+-------+-------------------------+-------+----------+- ----------------------------+
On 20 December 2017 at 10:57, Daniel-Constantin Mierla <miconda@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello,
those event routes are executed with a so called faked request (a request generated internally, unrelated to the OPTIONS request sent to the wire), apart of request uri, the rest of values are not related to the dispatcher records.
To get access to other attributes of dispatcher records in a straight way in the config, it would require C coding, Anyhow, even now using scripting, you can try with sql queries to database or rpc commands execution via jsonrpcs module and then parse the result using jansson module.
Cheers,
Daniel
On 18.12.17 13:33, George Diamantopoulos wrote:
Now say destination with id = '2' goes down. This is what I get in the logs for the event_route above:What I need to do is to be able to "capture" the sending socket used for this probing when a destination becomes unavailable or available in the event-routes. The $fs variable is set, but unfortunately its value does not make sense. Here's an example route and the results that are printed:Hello all,I use the dispatcher module extensively for load balancing and fail-over. My kamailio instance is multihomed, and I use the "socket" attribute to determine which socket SIP messages should use for each dispatcher destination, as such:
+----+-------+-------------------------+-------+----------+- ----------------------------+
| id | setid | destination | flags | priority | attrs |
+----+-------+-------------------------+-------+----------+- ----------------------------+
| 1 | 0 | sip:192.168.0.1:5060 | 8 | 0 | socket=udp:10.10.10.1:5060 || 2 | 1 | sip:111.111.11.1:5060 | 8 | 0 | socket=udp:44.44.44.1:5060 |The dispatcher module uses OPTIONS to probe each destination for availability. When a destination goes down or up, the respective event-route is executed.
| 3 | 1 | sip:222.222.22.2:5060 | 8 | 0 | socket=udp:55.55.55.1:5060 |
+----+-------+-------------------------+-------+----------+- ----------------------------+
event_route[dispatcher:dst-down] {
xlog("L_ERR", "Destination down: $rm $ru ($du) $ds $fs $Ru $T_req($fs) $T_req($Ru)\n");
}
ERROR: <script>: Destination down: OPTIONS sip:111.111.11.1:5060 (sip:192.168.0.1:5060) Contact: <sip:111.111.11.1:5060> udp:10.10.10.1:5060 <null> <null> <null>
The xlog PV/log mapping for the above line is the following:
$rm: OPTIONS$ru: sip:111.111.11.1:5060$du: sip:192.168.0.1:5060$ds: Contact: <sip:111.111.11.1:5060>$Ru: udp:10.10.10.1:5060The rest are $null. $ru and $ds are consistent with the actual destination being probed, $du and $fs are not (the are set to values corresponding to id = '1', for some reason).
This log line is, of course, inaccurate. Not only does it not make sense, but also this is not consistent with messages captured on network interfaces using sngrep: Kamailio does indeed behave as it should, the OPTIONS is sent out to 111.111.11.1 from socket
udp:44.44.44.1:5060. But this is not reflected in the log entry above when the event_route is executed.
Now the weird part is that this OPTIONS "transaction" (which is locally generated by kamailio) has the $du PV set to the value of another destination (namely the that of id = '1'). As a result, the $fs PV is consistent with that choice for $du. I can verify with sngrep that this is not the case in reality, as the request was sent to destination id = '2' from the correct socket as indicated above.
What I would like to ask is whether these "OPTIONS" used by dispatcher for probing go through the request_route processing at some point. This is the only way that would explain the $du PV being set to a false value. If yes, is there any way to prevent this from happening? I need to be able to access the $fs PV when a destination goes up or down, and I can't have any other configuration file routes interfering with that. Thanks!
Best regards,George
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-- Daniel-Constantin Mierla www.twitter.com/miconda -- www.linkedin.com/in/miconda Kamailio Advanced Training - www.asipto.com Kamailio World Conference - May 14-16, 2018 - www.kamailioworld.com
-- Daniel-Constantin Mierla www.twitter.com/miconda -- www.linkedin.com/in/miconda Kamailio Advanced Training - www.asipto.com Kamailio World Conference - May 14-16, 2018 - www.kamailioworld.com