Post on 11-Jun-2015
description
Building a SIP softswitch with
Asterisk and Asterisk-Java
Monica McArthur
Adapted from my presentation at AstriCon 2007
The task at hand
Build a pure SIP softswitch that can perform the following functions:
• Answer an inbound call and redirect it to a specified target phone
number– Rules for determining target number can be complex
• Record both legs of the call
• Play prerecorded prompts separately to inbound and outbound legs
• Provide call routing through IVR trees, overflow on busy/no answer,
and voicemail
• Save the call detail record to a database for access by applications to
do reporting and further data processing
• All features can be provisioned in real-time
• System must be highly-available and scalable– Initial capacity 1250 simultaneous calls
– 99.99% availability requirement
– Scheduled maintenance can be performed with no downtime
General solution
• Write a routing application in Java to handle routing rules,
provisioning changes, and interface with the database and other
applications
• Have the Java application direct a third-party host media processing
system that provides the actual SIP signaling, RTP media handling,
prompt playing, call recording, and DTMF input
• The application servers running the Java routing application are load-
balanced by hardware and can be scaled as needed
• The host media processing servers are load-balanced by a SIP proxy
server and can be scaled as needed
Particular issues
• Inbound leg must be able to continue even if outbound leg fails – To provide voicemail and overflow routing
• Outbound leg must be able to continue after inbound leg hangs up on
a connected call– To provide post-call input and play “index number” for recorded calls
• Outbound calls may play a “whisper” heard only by the target while
the inbound still hears ringback
• If there is no “whisper”, the call must support early media– Media begins streaming (initially ringback) before outbound connect and must be
played to inbound
– If early media is not streamed to inbound leg, the initial few syllables of the outbound
call may be lost (“media clipping”)
– Ringback must not be included in call recordings
Overview of early media issue
• In many standard SIP signaling exchanges, the answering user agent
may start generating media before the first agent is ready for it
(“media clipping”)
• To avoid media clipping, the answering user agent may send a 183
(“session progress”) and then initiate a one-way media stream at that
point
• If the initial user agent ignores the media stream sent with the 183
and only accesses it after receiving a 200, media clipping will still
occur
• This issue is discussed in RFC 3960: Early Media and Ringing Tone
Generation in the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP)
http://www.rfc-archive.org/getrfc.php?rfc=3960
Diagram of SIP signaling with early media
Media path established
Inbound leg Media gateway Outbound leg
INVITE
100 TRYING
183 SESSION PROGRESS
Early media
200 OK
Normal media
Media that can be lost
to clipping
Problems with existing solution
• Ports are expensive!
• Chosen host media platform did not support early media
• Dependent on vendor to implement fixes– Could take years
– Often broke workarounds in place to support other features
New solution: Asterisk
• Port cost now zero
• More port density per server (can easily achieve 150 vs. 125)
• Open source allows us to either find bug fixes in the Asterisk
community or write our own
• FastAGI and AMI provide means for existing Java software to
communicate with Asterisk in ways similar to the previous HMP– Only need to replace the vendor-specific code
Software architecture with Asterisk
How to interface with Asterisk
• Could write our own software to interface with FastAGI and AMI
• Or… could select from a wide variety of existing open source libraries
• After review, selected Asterisk-Java
http://asterisk-java.org
Asterisk-Java
• Open source, free library for Asterisk integration
• Hosted in SourceForge
• Current version is 0.3
• Handles the low-level details of FastAGI and AMI communication
• Java code for accessing AGI using Asterisk-Java is structured
similarly to servlets
• AMI communication is handled through ManagerActions (to send AMI
actions) and ManagerEvents (to receive AMI events)
Accessing AGI in Asterisk-Java
• AGI applications are implemented as subclasses of BaseAgiScript
• BaseAgiScript provides convenience methods to send all AGI
commands
• AGI scripts are mapped to correct classes in setup code
• service() method of BaseAgiScript has two arguments, AgiRequest
and AgiChannel
• AgiRequest contains information about the call (caller ID, dialed
digits, etc.)
• AgiChannel handles the details of the convenience methods
Accessing AGI in Asterisk-Java
(examples)
public class AGIInbound extends BaseAgiScript {
public void service(AgiRequest request, AgiChannel channel)
throws AgiException {
callID = new Long(getVariable(“APP_CALLID"));
this.streamFile(greetingFile);
this.streamFile("routing/tone");
this.exec("Record", recordingFilename + ".wav" + "|" + silence
+ "|" + maxduration + "|q");
this.hangup();
Agi script to begin handling call
Code for voicemail
agiMap.put("AGIInbound.agi", new AGIInbound());
SimpleMappingStrategy agiMapping = new SimpleMappingStrategy();
agiMapping.setMappings(agiMap);
agiServer.setMappingStrategy(agiMapping);
Setting up the mapping for AGIInbound
Accessing AMI in Asterisk-Java
• Subclasses of ManagerAction are provided for each AMI action– e.g., OriginateAction, HangupAction, SetVarAction
• Instances of actions are sent by using an instance of
ManagerConnection
• Subclasses of ManagerEvent are provided for each AMI event– e.g., DialEvent, HangupEvent, NewChannelEvent
• Subclasses of ManagerEventListener are registered to listen on a
ManagerConnection
• Can also create custom events that are subclasses of ManagerEvent
and register them with the ManagerConnection
Accessing AMI in Asterisk-Java
(examples)
managerConnection.addEventListener(new
ManagerEventListenerProxy(amiDispatchers.get(routingNode)));
managerConnection.registerUserEventClass(Class.forName(
"astrouting.control.ami.events.ConnectedEvent"));
public class ConnectedEvent extends ManagerEvent {
private String channelName;
private String channelID;
private String userData;
Configure event listener and custom event
Custom ManagerEvent
OriginateAction originateAction = new OriginateAction();
originateAction.setChannel(channel);
originateAction.setVariable(“APP_CALLID", "" + astCall.getCallID());
originateAction.setAsync(true);
originateAction.setTimeout(1000L*astCall.getCall().getRNATime()+5000L);
managerResponse = managerConnection.sendAction(originateAction);
Create and send OriginateAction
Software architecture (detailed)
Remaining issues
With this architecture and a plain version of Asterisk, we can provide all
of the required features of the softswitch EXCEPT
• Having the outbound leg survive after the inbound disconnects– Need legs in separate threads
• Early media– app_dial does provide support for early media, but only with the channel it is running
on
Problem 1: having the outbound leg
survive after the inbound disconnects
• The straightforward way to handle connecting an inbound leg to
another number is to dial the number using app_dial
• Unfortunately, in that case the outbound leg does not survive the
hangup of the inbound leg
• Need to have each leg living independently (in its own channel) but
still joined together
Solution
• To get the outbound leg in its own channel: use AMI Originate to get a
local channel, connect to AGI, then use app_dial to make the
outbound call
• To join the two channels together: use a patch for bridging
independent legs– Was bug 5841; in trunk for 1.6
Originate on a local channel
• First, use AMI OriginateAction to request a local channel that will start
in a particular context and go to another context when connected– Syntax is “local/s@<context_name>”
• Then, launch AGI script from context
• In AGI script, use app_dial to make actual call for outbound leg
• Check result of app_dial in start context to handle busy/no answer
• Perform additional functions on connected leg in context specified for
connection
• This is a well-known pattern; see
http://blogs.reucon.com/asterisk-
java/2007/04/18/originate_using_asterisk_local_channels.html
Example code for origination
int dialExecResult = exec(“Dial”, "SIP/" + target + "@nextone|" +
dialTimeout);
String DIALSTATUS = this.getVariable("DIALSTATUS");
if (dialExecResult == 0) {
if ("NOANSWER".equals(DIALSTATUS)) {
astCall.noAnswer();
} else if ("BUSY".equals(DIALSTATUS)) {
astCall.busy();
}
// etc. for “CONGESTION”, “CHANUNAVAIL”, “CANCEL”, “HANGUP”, default
}
Configure and send OriginateAction
OriginateAction originateAction = new OriginateAction();
originateAction.setChannel("Local/s@ob-agi-dial");
originateAction.setApplication("Agi");
originateAction.setData("agi://" + agiServer+
":4573/AGIOutboundConnect.agi");
managerResponse = managerConnection.sendAction(originateAction);
Launch app_dial and check result
Bridge patch
• Bridge patch was originally submitted with bug 5841: “Bridge two
channels via a Dialplan App or an AMI event”
• Provides a Bridge() application for dialplan/AGI and an AMI Bridge
action that will bridge the current channel with another specified
channel that already exists
• Used to bridge the inbound leg with the connected outbound leg
obtained by app_dial
• Patch we used was bridge-trunk-rev48286.patch
• Code is now included in 1.6 trunk– See http://bugs.digium.com/view.php?id=5841 for details
Problem 2: early media
• app_dial provides support for early media, but only to its inbound leg
• In this architecture, the inbound leg is a local channel and the actual
inbound leg does not receive media from the outbound leg until they
are joined using Bridge()
• In order to provide early media to the inbound leg, app_dial needs to
return if SIP 183 (session progress) is received
• Since calls with whisper cannot use early media, whether app_dial
returns on SIP 183 needs to be configurable
• In order to avoid recording the ringback when early media is used, the
Java application needs to know when the SIP 200 (OK) is received
after app_dial connects on SIP 183
Example code to use bridge patch
public void onManagerEvent(ManagerEvent event) {
…
else if (event instanceof DialEvent) {
astCall = AstRoutingController.getController().
getAstCallByChannel(event.getSrc());
astCall.setObAstChannel(event.getDestination());
}
Get outbound channel ID from DialEvent
exec("Bridge", astCall.getObAstChannel());
Execute bridge
Solution: app_dial and channel patch
• This required an original patch– Not yet submitted to Asterisk; will consider based on demand
• app_dial.c changed to have new argument which specifies whether to
connect on SIP 183 if received
• app_dial.c also stores which signal (PROGRESS/183 or ANSWER/200)
it actually connected on– SIP spec does not require answering user agent to send 183
• channel.c changed to send custom AMI event on receipt of answer– Used to determine time to start recording if app_dial connected on 183
Example code to use the new patch
String dialExecString = "SIP/" + target + "@nextone|" + dialTimeout;
if(astCall.earlyMedia())
dialExecString += “||1";
int dialExecResult = exec(“Dial”, dialExecString);
public void onManagerEvent(ManagerEvent event) {
…
else if (event instanceof ConnectedEvent) {
astCall = AstRoutingController.getController().
getAstCallByChannel(event.getChannelName());
astCall.connectSignaled();
}
Call app_dial with new argument
Receive notice of connect
String connectedSignal = getVariable("CONNECTED_SIGNAL");
if("PROGRESS".equals(connectedSignal)) {
// handle early media
} else {
// handle normal flow
}
Check channel variable
Summary of changes
• Asterisk– Include bridge patch bridge-trunk-rev48286.patch (already included in 1.6 trunk)
– Patch app_dial to optionally consider a progress as answer and to set a channel
variable with which signal resulted in connect; patch channel.c to send an AMI event
when a connect is received
• Asterisk-Java: no changes
• Custom Java code:– New Java code for AGI scripts and explicit state machine handling
– One new subclass of Asterisk-Java’s ManagerEvent to handle channel.c’s new event
Summary of best practices learned
• Go into an AGI script in a context immediately
• Use AMI events (hangup events, dial events, new events as needed)
to keep track of call state and handle graceful hangups
• To get an outbound leg in its own thread, originate on a local channel
and then use app_dial (called from an AGI script) to make the actual
outbound call