Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects
  • Matthew Jordan's avatar
    6258bbe7
    Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework · 6258bbe7
    Matthew Jordan authored
    This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new
    bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new
    on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge
    state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This
    fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways.
    (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges.
        This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which
        is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin
        down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous
        behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other
        properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works.
    (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not
        be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is
        predictable.
    (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major
        changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the
        options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new
        framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs.
    
    There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior,
    see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki.
    
    (closes issue ASTERISK-21196)
    
    Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/
    
    
    
    git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
    6258bbe7
    History
    Update Asterisk's CDRs for the new bridging framework
    Matthew Jordan authored
    This patch is the initial push to update Asterisk's CDR engine for the new
    bridging framework. This patch guts the existing CDR engine and builds the new
    on top of messages coming across Stasis. As changes in channel state and bridge
    state are detected, CDRs are built and dispatched accordingly. This
    fundamentally changes CDRs in a few ways.
    (1) CDRs are now *very* reflective of the actual state of channels and bridges.
        This means CDRs track well with what an actual channel is doing - which
        is useful in transfer scenarios (which were previously difficult to pin
        down). It does, however, mean that CDRs cannot be 'fooled'. Previous
        behavior in Asterisk allowed for CDR applications, channels, and other
        properties to be spoofed in parts of the code - this no longer works.
    (2) CDRs have defined behavior in multi-party scenarios. This behavior will not
        be what everyone wants, but it is a defined behavior and as such, it is
        predictable.
    (3) The CDR manipulation functions and applications have been overhauled. Major
        changes have been made to ResetCDR and ForkCDR in particular. Many of the
        options for these two applications no longer made any sense with the new
        framework and the (slightly) more immutable nature of CDRs.
    
    There are a plethora of other changes. For a full description of CDR behavior,
    see the CDR specification on the Asterisk wiki.
    
    (closes issue ASTERISK-21196)
    
    Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2486/
    
    
    
    git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@391947 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
app_authenticate.c 7.72 KiB