Hi,
actually the problem is in the openserctl script - it checks via FIFO if the user is or not an alias (that;s because internally same function is used for both adding aliases and users).
I will post a bug in order to have this fixed.
regards, Bogdan
Klaus Darilion wrote:
Hi Mike!
I do not know why, but you need a lookup("aliases") somewhere in your config, e.g.:
route[5] { # dummy route for aliases lookup # this route will never be used, # but we need it to enable # openserctl ul add .... lookup("aliases"); }
regards klaus
Mike Williams wrote:
On Monday 02 January 2006 11:11, Juha Heinanen wrote:
Mike Williams writes:
I created the account 11112223333@mydomain.net to test with, and
then I
attempted to use:
openserctl ul add 11112223333@etcvoip.net sip:18122228203@etcvoip.net
but it returned:
error: 400; check if you use aliases in OpenSER
I added the alias_db module to my config, but I still get errors. Any advice? Should I add them manually to the location database?
i have never used openserctl. my management application writes permanent contacts directly to location table. remember to tell via flags field that registration is permanent.
-- juha
I modified the openserctl script to give more output:
400 table (aliases) not found error: 400; check if you use aliases in OpenSER
on `openserctl ul add 11112223333@etcvoip.net sip:18122228203@etcvoip.net`
I traced this message back to the ul_show_contact function in ul_fifo.c. Everything is fine until it gets to line 573, where it calls fifo_find_domain, which sets d=0. Then, in line 575, the error message given above is returned because d if now false.
static inline void fifo_find_domain(str* _name, udomain_t** _d) { dlist_t* ptr;
ptr = root; while(ptr) { if ((ptr->name.len == _name->len) && !memcmp(ptr->name.s, _name->s, _name->len)) { break; } ptr = ptr->next; } if (ptr) { *_d = ptr->d; } else { *_d = 0; }
}
I'm not a C programmer, so I don't really understand what's happening here, but it appears to be looping through a list to find a domain, checking to be sure their lengths and values match. It keeps looping until it finds one, and then quits on the first one. It appears that ptr doesn't point to anything in my case; it fails the next if, setting the passed-by-reference d to 0, leading me to think that it hasn't found any domains, or couldn't get a domain list in the beginning. What does this "ptr = root;" mean?
I then tried running `openserctl domain show`, only to get:
500 command 'domain_dump' not available
Now, I checked the actual database openser.domain table, and my domain appeared correctly. I am also loading the domain module on openser startup.
Any ideas? I realize this is getting awfully deep into code, but I hope someone can help. It's probably a simple error on my part. Thanks in advance.
Mike Williams
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