tm Module

Bogdan-Andrei Iancu

Jiri Kuthan

FhG FOKUS

Edited by

Jiri Kuthan

Edited by

Bogdan-Andrei Iancu

Revision History
Revision $Revision: 4594 $$Date: 2008-08-06 12:08:33 +0200 (Wed, 06 Aug 2008) $

Table of Contents

1. Admin Guide
1.1. Overview
1.1.1. Per-Branch flags
1.1.2. Timer-Based Failover
1.1.3. DNS Failover
1.2. Dependencies
1.2.1. Kamailio Modules
1.2.2. External Libraries or Applications
1.3. Exported Parameters
1.3.1. fr_timer (integer)
1.3.2. fr_inv_timer (integer)
1.3.3. wt_timer (integer)
1.3.4. delete_timer (integer)
1.3.5. T1_timer (integer)
1.3.6. T2_timer (integer)
1.3.7. ruri_matching (integer)
1.3.8. via1_matching (integer)
1.3.9. unix_tx_timeout (integer)
1.3.10. restart_fr_on_each_reply (integer)
1.3.11. fr_timer_avp (string)
1.3.12. fr_inv_timer_avp (string)
1.3.13. tw_append (string)
1.3.14. enable_stats (integer)
1.3.15. pass_provisional_replies (integer)
1.3.16. syn_branch (integer)
1.3.17. onreply_avp_mode (integer)
1.3.18. disable_6xx_block (integer)
1.4. Exported Functions
1.4.1. t_newtran()
1.4.2. t_relay([flags])
1.4.3. t_relay(proto:host:port,[flags])
1.4.4. t_reply(code, reason_phrase)
1.4.5. t_replicate(URI,[flags])
1.4.6. t_release()
1.4.7. t_check_status(re)
1.4.8. t_flush_flags()
1.4.9. t_local_replied(reply)
1.4.10. t_write_req(info,fifo) t_write_unix(info,sock)
1.4.11. t_check_trans()
1.4.12. t_was_cancelled()
1.4.13. t_on_failure(failure_route)
1.4.14. t_on_reply(reply_route)
1.4.15. t_on_branch(branch_route)
1.5. Exported pseudo-variables
1.5.1. $T_branch_idx
1.5.2. $T_reply_code
1.6. Exported MI Functions
1.6.1. t_uac_dlg
1.6.2. t_uac_cancel
1.6.3. t_hash
1.6.4. t_reply
1.7. Exported statistics
1.7.1. received_replies
1.7.2. relayed_replies
1.7.3. local_replies
1.7.4. UAS_transactions
1.7.5. UAC_transactions
1.7.6. 2xx_transactions
1.7.7. 3xx_transactions
1.7.8. 4xx_transactions
1.7.9. 5xx_transactions
1.7.10. 6xx_transactions
1.7.11. inuse_transactions
2. Developer Guide
2.1. Functions
2.1.1. load_tm(*import_structure)

List of Examples

1.1. Set fr_timer parameter
1.2. Set fr_inv_timer parameter
1.3. Set wt_timer parameter
1.4. Set delete_timer parameter
1.5. Set T1_timer parameter
1.6. Set T2_timer parameter
1.7. Set ruri_matching parameter
1.8. Set via1_matching parameter
1.9. Set unix_tx_timeout parameter
1.10. Set restart_fr_on_each_reply parameter
1.11. Set fr_timer_avp parameter
1.12. Set fr_inv_timer_avp parameter
1.13. Set tw_append parameter
1.14. enable_stats example
1.15. Set pass_provisional_replies parameter
1.16. Set syn_branch parameter
1.17. Set onreply_avp_mode parameter
1.18. Set disable_6xx_block parameter
1.19. t_newtran usage
1.20. t_relay usage
1.21. t_relay usage
1.22. t_reply usage
1.23. t_replicate usage
1.24. t_release usage
1.25. t_check_status usage
1.26. t_flush_flags usage
1.27. t_local_replied usage
1.28. t_write_req/unix usage
1.29. t_check_trans usage
1.30. t_was_cancelled usage
1.31. t_on_failure usage
1.32. t_on_reply usage
1.33. t_on_branch usage

Chapter 1. Admin Guide

1.1. Overview

TM module enables stateful processing of SIP transactions. The main use of stateful logic, which is costly in terms of memory and CPU, is some services inherently need state. For example, transaction-based accounting (module acc) needs to process transaction state as opposed to individual messages, and any kinds of forking must be implemented statefully. Other use of stateful processing is it trading CPU caused by retransmission processing for memory. That makes however only sense if CPU consumption per request is huge. For example, if you want to avoid costly DNS resolution for every retransmission of a request to an unresolvable destination, use stateful mode. Then, only the initial message burdens server by DNS queries, subsequent retransmissions will be dropped and will not result in more processes blocked by DNS resolution. The price is more memory consumption and higher processing latency.

From user's perspective, the major function is t_relay(). It setup transaction state, absorb retransmissions from upstream, generate downstream retransmissions and correlate replies to requests.

In general, if TM is used, it copies clones of received SIP messages in shared memory. That costs the memory and also CPU time (memcpys, lookups, shmem locks, etc.) Note that non-TM functions operate over the received message in private memory, that means that any core operations will have no effect on statefully processed messages after creating the transactional state. For example, calling record_route after t_relay is pretty useless, as the RR is added to privately held message whereas its TM clone is being forwarded.

TM is quite big and uneasy to program--lot of mutexes, shared memory access, malloc and free, timers--you really need to be careful when you do anything. To simplify TM programming, there is the instrument of callbacks. The callback mechanisms allow programmers to register their functions to specific event. See t_hooks.h for a list of possible events.

Other things programmers may want to know is UAC--it is a very simplistic code which allows you to generate your own transactions. Particularly useful for things like NOTIFYs or IM gateways. The UAC takes care of all the transaction machinery: retransmissions , FR timeouts, forking, etc. See t_uac prototype in uac.h for more details. Who wants to see the transaction result may register for a callback.

1.1.1. Per-Branch flags

First what is the idea with the branch concept: branch route is a route to be execute separately for each branch before being sent out - changes in that route should reflect only on that branch.

There are several types of flags in Kamailio :

  • message/transaction flags - they are visible everywhere in the transaction (in all routes and in all sequential replies/request).

  • branch flags - flags that are visible only from a specific branch - in all replies and routes connected to this branch.

    script flags - flags that exist only during script execution. They are not store anywhere and are lost once the top level route was left.

For example: I have a call parallel forking to GW and to a user. And I would like to know from which branch I will get the final negative reply (if so). I will set a branch route before relaying the calls (with the 2 branches). The branch route will be separately executed for each branch; in the branch going to GW (I can identified it by looking to RURI), I will set a branch flag. This flag will appear only in the onreply route run for replied from GW. It will be also be visible in failure route if the final elected reply belongs to the GW branch. This flags will not be visible in the other branch (in routes executing replies from the other branch).

For how to define branch flags and use via script, see Section 1.4.15, “ t_on_branch(branch_route) and the setbflag(), resetbflag() and isbflagset() script functions.

Also, modules may set branch flags before transaction creation. The REGISTRAR module was the first to use this type of flags. The NAT flag is pushed in branch flags instead in message flags.

1.1.2. Timer-Based Failover

Timers can be used to trigger failover behavior. E.g. if we send a call a gateway and the gateway does not send a provisional response within 3 seconds, we want to cancel this call and send the call to another gateway. Another example is to ring a SIP client only for 30 seconds and then redirect the call to the voicemail.

There are two timers in Kamailio :

  • fr_timer - this timer is used when no response was received yet. If there is no response after fr_timer seconds the timer triggers (and failure route will be executed if t_on_failure() was called). If a provisional response was received, the timer is set to fr_inv_timer for INVITE transactions, and RT_T2 for all other transactions. If a final reponse is received, the transaction has finished.

  • fr_inv_timer - this timer is used when a provisional reponse was received for an INVITE transaction.

For example: You want to have failover if there is no provisional response after 3 seconds, but you want to ring for 60 seconds. Thuse, set the fr_timer to 3 and fr_inv_timer to 60.

1.1.3. DNS Failover

DNS based failover can be use when relaying stateful requests. According to RFC 3263, DNS failover should be done on transport level or transaction level. TM module supports them both.

Failover at transport level may be triggered by a failure of sending out the request message. A failure occurs if the corresponding interface was found for sending the request, if the TCP connection was refused or if a generic internal error happened during send. There is no ICMP error report support.

Failover at transaction level may be triggered when the transaction completed either with a 503 reply, either with a timeout without any received reply. In such a case, automatically, a new branch will be forked if any other destination IPs can be used to deliver the requests. The new branch will be a clone of the winning branch.

The set of destinations IPs is step-by-step build (on demand) based on the NAPTR, SRV and A records available for the destination domain.

DNS-based failover is by default applied excepting when this failover is globally disabled (see the core parameter disable_dns_failover) or when the relay flag (per transaction) is set (see the t_relay() function).

1.2. Dependencies

1.2.1. Kamailio Modules

The following modules must be loaded before this module:

  • No dependencies on other Kamailio modules.

1.2.2. External Libraries or Applications

The following libraries or applications must be installed before running Kamailio with this module loaded:

  • None.

1.3. Exported Parameters

1.3.1. fr_timer (integer)

Timer which hits if no final reply for a request or ACK for a negative INVITE reply arrives (in seconds).

Default value is 30 seconds.

Example 1.1. Set fr_timer parameter

...
modparam("tm", "fr_timer", 10)
...

1.3.2. fr_inv_timer (integer)

Timer which hits if no final reply for an INVITE arrives after a provisional message was received (in seconds). This timer is started after the first provisional response. Thus, fast failover (no 100 trying from gateway) can be achieved by setting fr_timer to low values. See example below

Default value is 120 seconds.

Example 1.2. Set fr_inv_timer parameter

...
modparam("tm", "fr_inv_timer", 200)
...

1.3.3. wt_timer (integer)

Time for which a transaction stays in memory to absorb delayed messages after it completed; also, when this timer hits, retransmission of local cancels is stopped (a puristic but complex behavior would be not to enter wait state until local branches are finished by a final reply or FR timer--we simplified).

For non-INVITE transaction this timer relates to timer J of RFC 3261 section 17.2.2. According to the RFC this timer should be 64*T1 (= 32 seconds). But this would increase memory usage as the transactions are kept in memory very long.

Default value is 5 seconds.

Example 1.3. Set wt_timer parameter

...
modparam("tm", "wt_timer", 10)
...

1.3.4. delete_timer (integer)

Time after which a to-be-deleted transaction currently ref-ed by a process will be tried to be deleted again.

Default value is 2 seconds.

Example 1.4. Set delete_timer parameter

...
modparam("tm", "delete_timer", 5)
...

1.3.5. T1_timer (integer)

Retransmission T1 period, in milliseconds.

Default value is 500 milliseconds.

Example 1.5. Set T1_timer parameter

...
modparam("tm", "T1_timer", 700)
...

1.3.6. T2_timer (integer)

Maximum retransmission period, in milliseconds.

Default value is 4000 milliseconds.

Example 1.6. Set T2_timer parameter

...
modparam("tm", "T2_timer", 8000)
...

1.3.7. ruri_matching (integer)

Should be request-uri matching used as a part of pre-3261 transaction matching as the standard wants us to do so? Turn only off for better interaction with devices that are broken and send different r-uri in CANCEL/ACK than in original INVITE.

Default value is 1 (true).

Example 1.7. Set ruri_matching parameter

...
modparam("tm", "ruri_matching", 0)
...

1.3.8. via1_matching (integer)

Should be top most VIA matching used as a part of pre-3261 transaction matching as the standard wants us to do so? Turn only off for better interaction with devices that are broken and send different top most VIA in CANCEL/ACK than in original INVITE.

Default value is 1 (true).

Example 1.8. Set via1_matching parameter

...
modparam("tm", "via1_matching", 0)
...

1.3.9. unix_tx_timeout (integer)

Send timeout to be used by function which use UNIX sockets (as t_write_unix).

Default value is 2 seconds.

Example 1.9. Set unix_tx_timeout parameter

...
modparam("tm", "unix_tx_timeout", 5)
...

1.3.10. restart_fr_on_each_reply (integer)

If true (non null value), the final response timer will be re-triggered for each received provisional reply. In this case, final response timeout may occure after a time longer than fr_inv_timer (if UAS keeps sending provisional replies).

Default value is 1 (true).

Example 1.10. Set restart_fr_on_each_reply parameter

...
modparam("tm", "restart_fr_on_each_reply", 0)
...

1.3.11. fr_timer_avp (string)

Full specification (NAME, ID, Alias) of an AVP which contains a final response timeout value. If present, this value will override the static fr_timer parameter.

If you set the AVP to an empty string, the whole mechanism for variable timeout will be disabled, falling back to the static value. Note that if you set this parameter to an empty string, a value of zero will be used.

Default value is "NULL" (feature disabled).

Example 1.11. Set fr_timer_avp parameter

...
modparam("tm", "fr_timer_avp", "$avp(i:24)")
...

1.3.12. fr_inv_timer_avp (string)

Full specification (NAME, ID, Alias) of an AVP which contains a final INVITE response timeout value. If present, this value will override the static fr_inv_timer parameter.

If set the AVP to an to empty string, the whole mechanism for variable timeout will be disabled, falling back to the static value. Note that if you set this parameter to an empty string, a value of zero will be used.

Default value is "NULL" (feature disabled).

Example 1.12. Set fr_inv_timer_avp parameter

...
modparam("tm", "fr_inv_timer_avp", "$avp(i:25)")
...

1.3.13. tw_append (string)

List of additional information to be appended by t_write_req and t_write_unix functions.

Default value is null string.

Syntax of the parameter is:

  • tw_append = append_name':' element (';'element)*

  • element = ( [name '='] pseudo_variable)

The full list of supported pseudo-variables in Kamailio is available at: http://kamailio.org/docs/pseudo-variables-1.1.x.html

Each element will be appended per line in “name: value” format. Element “$rb (message body)” is the only one which does not accept name; the body it will be printed all the time at the end, disregarding its position in the definition string.

Example 1.13. Set tw_append parameter

...
modparam("tm", "tw_append",
   "test: ua=$hdr(User-Agent) ;avp=$avp(i:10);$rb;time=$Ts")
...

1.3.14. enable_stats (integer)

If the module should generate and export statistics to the core manager. A zero value means disabled.

The TM module provides statistics about how many transaction were created (splitted per code classes), how many transaction are currently in use and some other values.

Default value is 1 (enabled).

Example 1.14. enable_stats example

modparam("tm", "enable_stats", 0)

1.3.15. pass_provisional_replies (integer)

Enable/disable passing of provisional replies to FIFO applications.

Default value is 0.

Example 1.15. Set pass_provisional_replies parameter

...
modparam("tm", "pass_provisional_replies", 1)
...

1.3.16. syn_branch (integer)

Enable/disable the usage of stateful synonym branch IDs in the generated Via headers. They are faster but not reboot-safe.

Default value is 1 (use synonym branches).

Example 1.16. Set syn_branch parameter

...
modparam("tm", "syn_branch", 0)
...

1.3.17. onreply_avp_mode (integer)

Describes how the AVPs should be handled in reply route:

  • 0 - the AVPs will be per message only; they will not interfere with the AVPS stored in transaction; initially there will be an empty list and at the end of the route, all AVPs that were created will be discarded.

  • 1 - the AVPs will be the transaction AVPs; initially the transaction AVPs will be visible; at the end of the route, the list will attached back to transaction (with all the changes)

In mode 1, you can see the AVPs you set in request route, branch route or failure route. The side efect is performance as more locking is required in order to keep the AVP's list integrity.

Default value is 0.

Example 1.17. Set onreply_avp_mode parameter

...
modparam("tm", "onreply_avp_mode", 1)
...

1.3.18. disable_6xx_block (integer)

Tells how the 6xx replies should be internally handled:

  • 0 - the 6xx replies will block any further serial forking (adding new branches). This is the RFC3261 behaviour.

  • 1 - the 6xx replies will be handled as any other negative reply - serial forking will be allowed. Logically, you need to break RFC3261 if you want to do redirects to announcement and voicemail services.

Default value is 0.

Example 1.18. Set disable_6xx_block parameter

...
modparam("tm", "disable_6xx_block", 1)
...

1.4. Exported Functions

1.4.1.  t_newtran()

Creates a new transaction, returns a negative value on error. This is the only way a script can add a new transaction in an atomic way. Typically, it is used to deploy a UAS.

Warning

NOTE that the changes on the request that are made after this function call will not be saved into transaction!!!

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE.

Example 1.19. t_newtran usage

...
if (t_newtran()) { 
	log("UAS logic"); 
	t_reply("999","hello"); 
} else sl_reply_error();
...

1.4.2.  t_relay([flags])

Relay a message statefully to destination indicated in current URI. (If the original URI was rewritten by UsrLoc, RR, strip/prefix, etc., the new URI will be taken). Returns a negative value on failure--you may still want to send a negative reply upstream statelessly not to leave upstream UAC in lurch.

The coresponding transaction may or may not be already created. If not yet created, the function will automatically create it.

The function may take as parameter an optional set of flags for controlling the internal behaviour. The flags may be given in decimal or hexa format; supported flags are:

  • 0x01 - do not generate an 100 trying provisional reply when building the transaction. By default one is generated. Useful if you already pushed an stateless 100 reply from script.

  • 0x02 - do not internally send a negative reply in case of forward failure (due internal error, bad RURI, bad message, etc). When a forward failure occurs, no SIP request is relayed and therefore no negative reply or timeout will show up on the failure_route (if one is set). It applies only when the transaction is created. By default one negative reply is sent. Useful if you want to implement a serial forking in case of failure.

  • 0x04 - disable the DNS failover for the transaction. Only first IP will be used. It disable the failover both at transaport and transaction level.

In case of error, the function returns the following codes:

  • -1 - generic internal error

  • -2 - bad message (parsing errors)

  • -3 - no destination available (no branches were added or request already cancelled)

  • -4 - bad destination (unresolvable address)

  • -5 - destination filtered (black listed)

  • -6 - generic send failed

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE.

Example 1.20. t_relay usage

...
if (!t_relay()) {
    sl_reply_error();
    exit;
}
...

1.4.3.  t_relay(proto:host:port,[flags])

Relay a message statefully to a fixed destination. The destination is specified as “[proto:]host[:port]”. If a destination URI “$du” for this message was set before the function is called then this value will be used as destination instead of the function parameter.

The function may take as parameter an optional set of flags for controlling the internal behaviour - for details see the above “t_relay([flags])” function.

This functions can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE.

Example 1.21. t_relay usage

...
t_relay("tcp:192.168.1.10:5060");
t_relay("mydomain.com:5070","0x1");
t_relay("udp:mydomain.com");
...

1.4.4.  t_reply(code, reason_phrase)

Sends a stateful reply after a transaction has been established. See t_newtran for usage.

Meaning of the parameters is as follows:

  • code - Reply code number.

  • reason_phrase - Reason string.

Both parameters accept any kind of pseudo-variables.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE.

Example 1.22. t_reply usage

...
t_reply("404", "Use $rU not found");
...

1.4.5.  t_replicate(URI,[flags])

Replicates a request to another destination. No information due the replicated request (like reply code) will be forwarded to the original SIP UAC.

The destination is specified by a SIP URI. If multiple destinations are to be used, the additional SIP URIs have to be set as branches.

The function may take as parameter an optional set of flags for controlling the internal behaviour - for description see the above “t_relay([flags])” function. Note that only 0x4 is applicable here.

This functions can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE.

Example 1.23. t_replicate usage

...
t_replicate("sip:1.2.3.4:5060");
t_replicate("sip:1.2.3.4:5060;transport=tcp");
t_replicate("sip:1.2.3.4","0x4");
...

1.4.6.  t_release()

Remove transaction from memory (it will be first put on a wait timer to absorb delayed messages).

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE.

Example 1.24. t_release usage

...
t_release();
...

1.4.7.  t_check_status(re)

Returns true if the regualr expresion “re” match the reply code of the response message as follows:

  • in routing block - the code of the last sent reply.

  • in on_reply block - the code of the current received reply.

  • in on_failure block - the code of the selected negative final reply.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, ONREPLY_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE and BRANCH_ROUTE .

Example 1.25. t_check_status usage

...
if (t_check_status("(487)|(408)")) {
    log("487 or 408 negative reply\n");
}
...

1.4.8.  t_flush_flags()

Flush the flags from current request into the already created transaction. It make sense only in routing block if the transaction was created via t_newtran() and the flags have been altered since.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE and BRANCH_ROUTE .

Example 1.26. t_flush_flags usage

...
t_flush_flags();
...

1.4.9.  t_local_replied(reply)

Returns true if all or last (depending of the parameter) reply(es) were local generated (and not received).

Parameter may be “all” or “last”.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE and ONREPLY_ROUTE.

Example 1.27. t_local_replied usage

...
if (t_local_replied("all")) {
	log ("no reply received\n");
}
...

1.4.10.  t_write_req(info,fifo) t_write_unix(info,sock)

Write via FIFO interface or UNIX socket a lot of information regarding the request. Which information should be written may be control via the “tw_append” parameter.

This functions can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE and BRANCH_ROUTE.

Example 1.28. t_write_req/unix usage

...
modparam("tm","tw_append","append1:Email=avp[i:12];UA=hdr[User-Agent]")
modparam("tm","tw_append","append2:body=msg[body]")
...
t_write_req("voicemail/append1","/tmp/appx_fifo");
...
t_write_unix("logger/append2","/var/run/logger.sock");
...

1.4.11.  t_check_trans()

Returns true if the current request is associated to a transaction. The relationship between the request and transaction is defined as follow:

  • non-CANCEL/non-ACK requests - if the request belongs to a transaction (it's a retransmision), the function will do a standard processing of the retransmission and will break/stop the script. The function return false if the request is not a retransmission.

  • CANCEL request - true if the cancelled INVITE transaction exists.

  • ACK request - true if the ACK is a local end-to-end ACK corresponding to an previous INVITE transaction.

Note: To detect retransmissions using this function you have to make sure that the initial request has already created a transaction, e.g. by using t_relay(). If the processing of requests may take long time (e.g. DB lookups) and the retransmission arrives before t_relay() is called, you can use the t_newtran() function to manually create a transaction.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE and BRANCH_ROUTE.

Example 1.29. t_check_trans usage

...
if ( is_method("CANCEL") ) {
	if ( t_check_trans() )
		t_relay();
	exit;
}
...

1.4.12.  t_was_cancelled()

Retuns true if called for an INVITE transaction that was explicitly cancelled by UAC side via a CANCEL request.

This function can be used from ONREPLY_ROUTE, FAILURE_ROUTE.

Example 1.30. t_was_cancelled usage

...
if (t_was_cancelled()) {
    log("transaction was cancelled by UAC\n");
}
...

1.4.13.  t_on_failure(failure_route)

Sets reply routing block, to which control is passed after a transaction completed with a negative result but before sending a final reply. In the referred block, you can either start a new branch (good for services such as forward_on_no_reply) or send a final reply on your own (good for example for message silo, which received a negative reply from upstream and wants to tell upstream “202 I will take care of it”).

As not all functions are available from failure route, please check the documentation for each function to see the permissions. Any other commands may result in unpredictable behavior and possible server failure.

Only one failure_route can be armed for a request. If you use many times t_on_failure(), only the last one has effect.

Note that whenever failure_route is entered, RURI is set to value of the winning branch.

Meaning of the parameters is as follows:

  • failure_route - Reply route block to be called.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, ONREPLY_ROUTE and FAILURE_ROUTE.

Example 1.31. t_on_failure usage

...
route { 
	t_on_failure("1"); 
	t_relay();
} 

failure_route[1] {
	seturi("sip:user@voicemail");
	append_branch();
	t_relay();
}
...

1.4.14.  t_on_reply(reply_route)

Sets reply routing block, to which control is passed each time a reply (provisional or final) for the transaction is received. The route is not called for local generated replies! In the referred block, you can inspect the reply and perform text operations on it.

As not all functions are available from this type of route, please check the documentation for each function to see the permissions. Any other commands may result in unpredictable behavior and possible server failure.

Only one onreply_route can be armed for a request. If you use many times t_on_reply(), only the last one has effect.

If the processed reply is a provisional reply (1xx code), by calling the drop() function (exported by core), the execution of the route will end and the reply will not be forwarded further.

Meaning of the parameters is as follows:

  • reply_route - Reply route block to be called.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, ONREPLY_ROUTE and FAILURE_ROUTE.

Example 1.32. t_on_reply usage

...
route { 
	t_on_reply("1"); 
	t_relay();
} 

onreply_route[1] {
	if (t_check_status("1[0-9][0-9]")) {
		setflag(1);
		log("provisional reply received\n");
		if (t_check_status("183"))
			drop;
	}
}
...

1.4.15.  t_on_branch(branch_route)

Sets a branch route to be execute separately for each branch of the transaction before being sent out - changes in that route should reflect only on that branch.

As not all functions are available from this type of route, please check the documentation for each function to see the permissions. Any other commands may result in unpredictable behavior and possible server failure.

Only one branch_route can be armed for a request. If you use many time t_on_branch(), only the last one has effect.

By calling the drop() function (exported by core), the execution of the branch route will end and the branch will not be forwarded further.

Meaning of the parameters is as follows:

  • branch_route - Branch route block to be called.

This function can be used from REQUEST_ROUTE, BRANCH_ROUTE, ONREPLY_ROUTE and FAILURE_ROUTE.

Example 1.33. t_on_branch usage

...
route { 
	t_on_branch("1"); 
	t_relay();
} 

branch_route[1] {
	if (uri=~"bad_uri") {
		xlog("dropping branch $ru \n");
		drop;
	}
	if (uri=~"GW_uri") {
		append_rpid();
	}
}
...

1.5. Exported pseudo-variables

Exported pseudo-variables are listed in the next sections.

1.5.1. $T_branch_idx

$T_branch_idx - the index (starting with 1 for the first branch) of the branch for which is executed the branch_route[]. If used outside of branch_route[] block, the value is '0'.

1.5.2. $T_reply_code

$T_reply_code - the code of the reply, as follows: in request_route will be the last stateful sent reply; in reply_route will be the current processed reply; in failure_route will be the negative winning reply. In case of no-reply or error, '0' value is returned.

1.6. Exported MI Functions

1.6.1.  t_uac_dlg

Generates and sends a local SIP request.

Parameters:

  • method - request method

  • RURI - request SIP URI

  • NEXT HOP - next hop SIP URI (OBP); use “.” if no value.

  • socket - local socket to be used for sending the request; use “.” if no value.

  • headers - set of additional headers to be added to the request; at least “From” and “To” headers must be specify)

  • body - (optional, may not be present) request body (if present, requires the “Content-Type” and “Content-length” headers)

1.6.2.  t_uac_cancel

Generates and sends a CANCEL for an existing local SIP request.

Parameters:

  • callid - callid of the INVITE request to be cancelled.

  • cseq - cseq of the INVITE request to be cancelled.

1.6.3.  t_hash

Gets information about the load of TM internal hash table.

Parameters:

  • none

1.6.4.  t_reply

Generates and sends a reply for an existing inbound SIP transaction.

Parameters:

  • code - reply code

  • reason - reason phrase.

  • trans_id - transaction identifier (has the hash_entry:label format)

  • to_tag - To tag to be added to TO header

  • new_headers - extra headers to be appended to the reply; use a dot (“.”) char only if there are no headers;

  • body - (optional, may not be present) reply body (if present, requires the “Content-Type” and “Content-length” headers)

1.7. Exported statistics

Exported statistics are listed in the next sections. All statistics except “inuse_transactions” can be reset.

1.7.1. received_replies

Total number of total replies received by TM module.

1.7.2. relayed_replies

Total number of replies received and relayed by TM module.

1.7.3. local_replies

Total number of replies local generated by TM module.

1.7.4. UAS_transactions

Total number of transactions created by received requests.

1.7.5. UAC_transactions

Total number of transactions created by local generated requests.

1.7.6. 2xx_transactions

Total number of transactions completed with 2xx replies.

1.7.7. 3xx_transactions

Total number of transactions completed with 3xx replies.

1.7.8. 4xx_transactions

Total number of transactions completed with 4xx replies.

1.7.9. 5xx_transactions

Total number of transactions completed with 5xx replies.

1.7.10. 6xx_transactions

Total number of transactions completed with 6xx replies.

1.7.11. inuse_transactions

Number of transactions existing in memory at current time.

Chapter 2. Developer Guide

2.1. Functions

2.1.1.  load_tm(*import_structure)

For programmatic use only--import the TM API. See the cpl-c, acc or jabber modules to see how it works.

Meaning of the parameters is as follows:

  • import_structure - Pointer to the import structure - see “struct tm_binds” in modules/tm/tm_load.h