George Joseph
authored
To prevent one subsystem's taskprocessors from causing others to stall, new capabilities have been added to taskprocessors. * Any taskprocessor name that has a '/' will have the part before the '/' saved as its "subsystem". Examples: "sorcery/acl-0000006a" and "sorcery/aor-00000019" will be grouped to subsystem "sorcery". "pjsip/distributor-00000025" and "pjsip/distributor-00000026" will bn grouped to subsystem "pjsip". Taskprocessors with no '/' have an empty subsystem. * When a taskprocessor enters high-water alert status and it has a non-empty subsystem, the subsystem alert count will be incremented. * When a taskprocessor leaves high-water alert status and it has a non-empty subsystem, the subsystem alert count will be decremented. * A new api ast_taskprocessor_get_subsystem_alert() has been added that returns the number of taskprocessors in alert for the subsystem. * A new CLI command "core show taskprocessor alerted subsystems" has been added. * A new unit test was addded. REMINDER: The taskprocessor code itself doesn't take any action based on high-water alerts or overloading. It's up to taskprocessor users to check and take action themselves. Currently only the pjsip distributor does this. * A new pjsip/global option "taskprocessor_overload_trigger" has been added that allows the user to select the trigger mechanism the distributor uses to pause accepting new requests. "none": Don't pause on any overload condition. "global": Pause on ANY taskprocessor overload (the default and current behavior) "pjsip_only": Pause only on pjsip taskprocessor overloads. * The core pjsip pool was renamed from "SIP" to "pjsip" so it can be properly grouped into the "pjsip" subsystem. * stasis taskprocessor names were changed to "stasis" as the subsystem. * Sorcery core taskprocessor names were changed to "sorcery" to match the object taskprocessors. Change-Id: I8c19068bb2fc26610a9f0b8624bdf577a04fcd56