Hello,

false is 0 and it was actually designed for setting global parameters, not for use as comparison with functions return code or as parameter for return from route blocks. Like:

log_stderror = false

The grammar of the language defines a coupe of token variants for same purpose:


   YES         "yes"|"true"|"on"|"enable"
   NO          "no"|"false"|"off"|"disable"

Where YES is replaced by 1 and NO is replaced by 0:

   <INITIAL>{YES}          { count(); yylval.intval=1;
                               yy_number_str=yytext; return NUMBER; }
   <INITIAL>{NO}           { count(); yylval.intval=0;
                               yy_number_str=yytext; return NUMBER; }

In the devel version (upcoming 5.7.0), the evaluation of return mode can be controlled by core parameter return_mode, allowing to switch to a more "standard" mode, similar to other scripting languages -- see:

  - https://www.kamailio.org/wikidocs/cookbooks/devel/core/#return_mode

Cheers,
Daniel

On 28.04.23 08:14, Patrick Wakano wrote:
Hi list,
Hope you are all well!

I'm using Kamailio version 5.6.4 (installed from the repo rpm.kamailio.org/centos/7) and noticed that every route that uses "return false" is exiting the script, instead of returning.... This was not the case on version 5.4.6 as the same script is running fine..... 
From this page https://www.kamailio.org/wikidocs/tutorials/faq/main/#how-is-the-function-return-code-evaluated, I would think that when a route returns false, it would return -1 and not stop execution, since negative is equal to false, but it is actually stopping (same as return 0)...
So, as an example, this test code doesn't work as expected. In case the source is a public IP, the script doesn't print the "SRC public" it just exits and then of course every other logic meant to be done is not executed....

route[is_src_private]
{
        if (is_ip_rfc1918("$si")) {
                return true;
        }
        return false;
        #return is_ip_rfc1918("$si"); # this doesn't work too in case the $si is a public IP
}
request_route
{
...
        if (route(is_src_private)) {
                xlog("L_NOTICE", "SRC private\n");
        } else {
                xlog("L_NOTICE", "SRC public\n");
        }
...
}
If is_src_private is changed to return -1 instead of false, then it all works fine.

Also, I noticed that the following code will print "TEST: 0" in case the $si is public and then stop execution. So looks like false is really being converted to 0, but I guess that's unexpected... anyway apologies if I'm missing something obvious....
route[is_src_private]
{
        $var(t) = false;
        if (is_ip_rfc1918("$si")) {
                $var(t) = true;
        }
        xlog("L_ERR", "TEST: $var(t)\n");
        return $var(t);
}


I could not find a recent ticket or email related to this situation and I've already spent hours trying to understand what is the logic/problem here, so would anyone have been across a similar case that could provide some insight and clarify what is the expected behaviour of the false usage (and boolean in general if possible)?

Thank you,
Kind regards,
Patrick Wakano

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