Cool cool cool.
On Tue, Feb 15, 2022 at 3:01 AM Alex Balashov <abalashov(a)evaristesys.com>
wrote:
Certainly, but 90% of the various use-cases are
covered by the invite
scenario. Extensive compatibility with various CI tooling isn’t really
required in my mind; as long as it can return positive or negative values
depending on the outcome of the SIP request, it’s perfect.
The real value is in the fact that it’s a true CLI tool, and the ability
to formulate misshapen requests using Go templates. That’s beautiful!
Another great thing is that you appear to have exposed your ad hoc SIP
parser as a module, which means it could potentially be imported and used
in other tools.
—
Sent from mobile, with due apologies for brevity and errors.
On Feb 14, 2022, at 1:51 PM, Daniel-Constantin
Mierla <miconda(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Probably it requires some hammering to make it compatible with various
CI pipelines, I tried to make a mode for nagious plugin, but coding in
golang should make it easy to adapt/enhance.
I plan to add a few more common scenarios for session testing. Right now
can do register-wait-unregister and invite/200ok-ack-wait-bye.
One that is my to-do is to register two users and make a call between
them. Another one would be to register and wait for calls, so another
sipexer instance can be used for register and initiate calls.
Writing the sip traffic in a pcap file is something that I would like to
add as well.
Cheers,
Daniel
> On 14.02.22 19:27, Alex Balashov wrote:
> I haven’t had a chance to dig into it just yet, but this is an
incredibly
exciting development, and fills a very dire gap in open-source
testing tools.
>
> SIPp was the only real game in town and, despite some very creative
efforts
over the years, fundamentally is not composable: it doesn’t lend
itself to headless automation or embedding in CI pipelines, and isn’t
terribly useful for monitoring. The remainder is a miscellany of relatively
unsophisticated or quirky tools, none of which have the flexibility you are
providing here.
>
> Very grateful that you wrote this, and excited to try it! Thank you so
much
for this work!
>
> — Alex
>
>>> On Feb 14, 2022, at 1:23 PM, Juha Heinanen <jh(a)tutpro.com> wrote:
>>
>> Daniel-Constantin Mierla writes:
>>
>>> WebSocket (for WebRTC)
>>> * send SIP requests of any type (e.g., INFO, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, …)
>>>
>>> One usage example that could ease the testing of Kamailio is
initiating
> registrations or simulating calls over WebSocket
without the need of
> having a JavaScript soft phone application running in a web browser.
Thanks for the tool. Regarding SIP over WebSocket, baresip supports
WebSocket transport in all platforms.
-- Juha
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