Using a pointer array instead of a linked lists allows us to directly
reference a media section by index number, without having to spool into
the linked list.
No functional changes.
Change-Id: I8b0e93f0c2e9addbcb4c938894118ed4a6aec768
Just fixing of some typos introduced before by this commits list:
- 3444febebc
- 21562866ce
- c024b54dc3
Change-Id: I9b7f6ed5c67f1a5f31bb37ef776cf943096f1d2f
We have to stop using objects of `struct port_pool` (media_socket.h),
becasue a newer approach introduced for ports allocations deprecates
usage of them.
Deprecated objects:
`port_pool.last_used`
`port_pool.ports_used`
`port_pool.free_list`
`port_pool.free_list_used`
Change-Id: I70e166753da7a43cb3b6b188c83d978b7dbce046
Introduce a reworked port allocation in RTPEngine.
The goal of this rework is to:
- simplify the logic of handling free/engaged ports
- eliminate a bottle neck begotten by overcomplicated logic
- potentially resolve the issue with "ran out of ports"
under heavy loading, when still there must be ports left
in the ports pool
Change-Id: Ifd2b1565611dd3b86c474a1ea5507fc6152fc212
There's a mixture of RTPengine and RTPEngine, though we lowercase it
entirely most of the time, so let's stick to this and unify its style.
While at it remove the "the" article for rtpengine as well,
where applicable.
Change-Id: Idbad9313499942ad12ade2c9ce76fe3ec4cd2762
The SRTP decryption context is associated with the local socket. Use the
socket that a packet was actually received on for the decryption context
instead of using the one that it was expected to be received on.
Change-Id: Iddf400a440fc51b4afb370ec827f75e9626b2cfd
(cherry picked from commit 8c3452e50b)
When a receiving socket doesn't match the socket we were expecting, make
sure that the receiving socket is actually one of the sockets we want to
use at this point before blindly switching the socket.
This fixes a race condition after a re-invite: A new set of sockets has
been opened, but an old/delayed RTP packet still arrives on one of the
old ports. In this case we don't want to switch the local socket.
Change-Id: I4e2b87ad608b1a9c6a0bb2eae5c305fd79be70d5
(cherry picked from commit 304a1b11ef)
In some cases it's possible that some packets still arrive in userspace
immediately after a stream has been pushed to the kernel, for example if
some packets are already in the queue or if there is some processing
delay (e.g. writing to Redis). Allow for a short delay before counting a
stream as userspace if it has been pushed to the kernel.
Change-Id: I55a6e255868c8c2a9e93355a4aa2287f07b3748d
Based on the information gotten from Richard Fuchs
document the main objects in the code, to let the code be more
understandable for other code readers.
Mainly documented:
- call
- call_monologue
- call_subscription
- call_media
- packet_stream
- stream_fd
- sink_handler
- rtpe_callhash / rtpe_callhash_lock
Change-Id: I0cf122bea2d9c3f198b48da134a70301564ff1f9
Only skip forwarding unknown payload types in the kernel module if
there's reason to skip them, i.e. when we know that certain payload
types must be handled in userspace. Use an explicit flag to signal this
to the kernel module instead of implicitly doing it for anything that is
RTP.
Change-Id: I655317afe64a27252bf7b8be6c78418db2e1ccef
Instead of just leaving the transport protocol unset when we know we're
not supposed to be aware of the protocol, add a special entry to
suppress the pointless warning message.
Change-Id: I228c2f1652320627f974d9d7bcb0b1345adce2be
The packet must be decrypted first before RTP padding can be considered,
as the padding count is part of the encrypted payload as well.
Change-Id: I6aecff636efd420401856bb8110b3d784f989179
This makes it possible to have different media silencing options for
different outputs. Functionally this commit alone is a no-op.
Change-Id: I967c3e07ea4645bb49ccb76db12d51ded2d72f06
Make kernelize_one eturn the list of sorted payload types back to the
calling function instead of only keeping it temporarily. This makes it
possible to re-use the list in repeated invocations of the same
function.
Change-Id: I696b4d033715bb60c80c8b932b80d558f364a5c5
Don't keep the flag for "no kernel support" set indefinitely as
conditions might change, re-enabling kernel support at a later time.
Change-Id: Id8f456b653f1ea3d6a9db1ff3a0800d3cca8fcc5
Create a dedicated struct to hold certain attributes shared by both sink
handlers and media subscriptions, as a preparation to simplify handling
these attributs.
Change-Id: I866159c33ed6d6a2873d2cf68c4906ea705d253e
Zero SSRC are technically invalid, but the code accepts them as valid
and therefore sets up things like crypto contexts for zero SSRCs.
Consequently it's possible to have a zero SSRC first in the list of
SSRCs and other valid SSRCs later in the list, which means we can't use
the presence of a non-zero SSRC first in the list as a flag to determine
whether SSRC tracking is in use or not. Use an explicit flag instead.
Change-Id: I88736e5d6b0f66c58f8d675137231760951e7610
Don't increase the index pointer before using it. This fixes slots 1 and
2 being filled before slot 0, which ends up filling slots 0 and 2 first
(due to swapping with slot 0), leaving slot 1 empty.
Change-Id: If34cf561fcb153edde6408252c3286c8c80991bc
When ports are closed early (while the call is still running), we must
first update a slave rtpengine with this new information (that these
ports are now closed) before actually releasing the ports ourselves. Not
doing so leads to a race condition where the master instance re-uses a
port that was just closed before the slave instance knows about the port
being closed.
We implement this using a thread-local list to keep track of ports that
were released while processing a control message, and process this list
to actually close the ports only after Redis has been updated.
Additional calls to the function to close the ports are placed in
strategic locations to make sure this is triggered in every code path.
closes#1495
Change-Id: I803f4594f30ca315da0b84c6e76893f54ca3a7c9