A git mirror of http://svn.asterisk.org/svn/asterisk . May lag a few hours behind. Mirrors /branches (and /trunk ). Includes tags for /tags . Does not include /team . See also it's web interface: http://svnview.digium.com/svn/asterisk . http://asterisk.org/

Asterisk Autobuilder b4ff8eb517 Importing release summary for 12.3.2 release. il y a 11 ans
addons 49757ef91f chan_ooh323: fix h323_log full path name il y a 11 ans
agi 800a7d7a52 Title update il y a 12 ans
apps 938a5c69d1 Merge changes for AST-2014-005, AST-2014-006, AST-2014-007, AST-2014-008 il y a 11 ans
autoconf f24c49fc43 Fix whitespace in AST_EXT_LIB_CHECK macro. il y a 12 ans
bridges f606aace05 Undo r414122 il y a 11 ans
build_tools 9f587a375b main/astobj2: Make REF_DEBUG a menuselect item; improve REF_DEBUG output il y a 11 ans
cdr e58ea0fea9 Allow Asterisk to compile under GCC 4.10 il y a 11 ans
cel e58ea0fea9 Allow Asterisk to compile under GCC 4.10 il y a 11 ans
channels c37e6dc569 Merge fix for regression caused by fix for AST-2014-007 il y a 11 ans
codecs 1c0ed88c1a memory leaks: Memory leak cleanup patch by Corey Farrell (second set) il y a 11 ans
configs 938a5c69d1 Merge changes for AST-2014-005, AST-2014-006, AST-2014-007, AST-2014-008 il y a 11 ans
contrib c0fe808ba9 Importing release summary for 12.3.0-rc2 release. il y a 11 ans
doc d38c638ea8 Documentation: doc fixes across various parts of the code for ASTERISK issues 23061,23028,23046,23027 il y a 11 ans
formats e58ea0fea9 Allow Asterisk to compile under GCC 4.10 il y a 11 ans
funcs 68e7c845c8 pbx.c: prevent potential crash from recursive replace() il y a 11 ans
images e1298a8b96 even uglier gui with more buttons il y a 17 ans
include c37e6dc569 Merge fix for regression caused by fix for AST-2014-007 il y a 11 ans
main c37e6dc569 Merge fix for regression caused by fix for AST-2014-007 il y a 11 ans
pbx e58ea0fea9 Allow Asterisk to compile under GCC 4.10 il y a 11 ans
phoneprov b3116a5888 res_phoneprov add snom 300, 320, 360, 370, 820, 821, 870 support il y a 14 ans
res 938a5c69d1 Merge changes for AST-2014-005, AST-2014-006, AST-2014-007, AST-2014-008 il y a 11 ans
rest-api 98aff65abd Merge r414528, r414749, r414763, r414765 for 12.3.0-rc2 il y a 11 ans
rest-api-templates 821d76f9a5 ARI: Remove unnecessary \briefs from automatically generated documentation il y a 11 ans
sounds 86af3518cb sounds: Fix Sounds Makefile and XML that didn't support new sound prompt sets il y a 11 ans
static-http 32b2da6e1b Add licens/copyright header il y a 12 ans
tests 98aff65abd Merge r414528, r414749, r414763, r414765 for 12.3.0-rc2 il y a 11 ans
utils bf1cc4180b Fix memory stomping bug in astman. il y a 11 ans
.cleancount dcbb781867 Remove obsolete struct ast_channel note. il y a 13 ans
.lastclean ec3eb98fee Importing files for 12.3.0-rc1 release. il y a 11 ans
.version 74ebf55561 Update .version, remove summaries il y a 11 ans
BSDmakefile e998fb2c63 Merged revisions 285090 via svnmerge from il y a 14 ans
BUGS e53ea0e259 Add UPGRADE-1.10.txt file from UPGRADE.txt. il y a 13 ans
CHANGES a0868d4308 ARI: Add ability to raise arbitrary User Events il y a 11 ans
COPYING 70a40d92e3 il y a 19 ans
CREDITS 69987724d6 res_pjsip: Add PJSIP CLI commands il y a 11 ans
ChangeLog 518a3f0208 Update ChangeLog il y a 11 ans
LICENSE 6ace6974e5 LICENSE: Update language to include ARI il y a 11 ans
Makefile a23d2f115e buildsystem: Unbreak the build (infloop) on Asterisk 11+ il y a 11 ans
Makefile.moddir_rules 3b5ae179ab Doxygen Updates - Title update il y a 12 ans
Makefile.rules 4d7a38f045 Makefile: replace -O6 with -O3 il y a 11 ans
README 409e0bfece Start work on documentation janitor project with a little commit. This adds a link to the Asterisk wiki at https://wiki.asterisk.org to the README file. il y a 12 ans
README-SERIOUSLY.bestpractices.txt 7f652881da security: Inhibit execution of privilege escalating functions il y a 11 ans
README-addons.txt 358628a848 Move Asterisk-addons modules into the main Asterisk source tree. il y a 16 ans
UPGRADE-1.2.txt 1224d7ea74 as suggested by jtodd, document the purposes of the CHANGES and UPGRADE files il y a 16 ans
UPGRADE-1.4.txt 041d524be0 Convert this branch to Opsound music-on-hold. il y a 15 ans
UPGRADE-1.6.txt b791cd73a4 Update UPGRADE-1.6.txt stating insecure=very has been removed. il y a 15 ans
UPGRADE-1.8.txt 6d1c84e3db chan_sip: Note change in behavior to how directmediapermit/deny ACL works il y a 12 ans
UPGRADE-10.txt 4166b565ba Add comments about the BUILD_NATIVE change il y a 12 ans
UPGRADE-11.txt 637e219551 Fix UPGRADE.txt Due To Merging From Branch 11 il y a 11 ans
UPGRADE.txt 938a5c69d1 Merge changes for AST-2014-005, AST-2014-006, AST-2014-007, AST-2014-008 il y a 11 ans
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asterisk-12.3.2-summary.html b4ff8eb517 Importing release summary for 12.3.2 release. il y a 11 ans
asterisk-12.3.2-summary.txt b4ff8eb517 Importing release summary for 12.3.2 release. il y a 11 ans
bootstrap.sh 926291b6c3 Make sure asterisk builds on OpenBSD il y a 13 ans
config.guess 107969a5f4 Update config.guess and config.sub: 2012-10-10 il y a 12 ans
config.sub 107969a5f4 Update config.guess and config.sub: 2012-10-10 il y a 12 ans
configure f6022835a5 chan_dahdi/sig_pri: Prevent unnecessary PROGRESS events when overlap dialing is enabled. il y a 11 ans
configure.ac f6022835a5 chan_dahdi/sig_pri: Prevent unnecessary PROGRESS events when overlap dialing is enabled. il y a 11 ans
default.exports 9cd50e4a5b Add _IO_stdin_used in version-script to fix SIGBUSes on Sparc. il y a 11 ans
install-sh a13e072bec silly people that don't want to install/run autoconf :-) il y a 19 ans
makeopts.in f51f75ee6e Add the bucket API. il y a 11 ans
missing a13e072bec silly people that don't want to install/run autoconf :-) il y a 19 ans
mkinstalldirs a13e072bec silly people that don't want to install/run autoconf :-) il y a 19 ans
sample.call 4739d48ca4 Merged revisions 299138 via svnmerge from il y a 14 ans

README

===============================================================================
=== The Asterisk(R) Open Source PBX
===
=== by Mark Spencer
=== and the Asterisk.org developer community
===
=== Copyright (C) 2001-2009 Digium, Inc.
=== and other copyright holders.
===============================================================================

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- SECURITY ------------------------------------------------------------------

It is imperative that you read and fully understand the contents of
the security information document before you attempt to configure and run
an Asterisk server.

If you downloaded Asterisk as a tarball, see the security section in the PDF
version of the documentation in doc/tex/asterisk.pdf. Alternatively, pull up
the HTML version of the documentation in doc/tex/asterisk/index.html. The
source for the security document is available in doc/tex/security.tex.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- WHAT IS ASTERISK ? --------------------------------------------------------

Asterisk is an Open Source PBX and telephony toolkit. It is, in a
sense, middleware between Internet and telephony channels on the bottom,
and Internet and telephony applications at the top. However, Asterisk supports
more telephony interfaces than just Internet telephony. Asterisk also has a
vast amount of support for traditional PSTN telephony, as well. For more
information on the project itself, please visit the Asterisk home page at:

http://www.asterisk.org

The official Asterisk wiki can be found at:

https://wiki.asterisk.org

In addition you'll find lots of information compiled by the Asterisk
community on this Wiki:

http://www.voip-info.org/wiki-Asterisk

There is a book on Asterisk published by O'Reilly under the Creative Commons
License. It is available in book stores as well as in a downloadable version on
the http://www.asteriskdocs.org web site.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- SUPPORTED OPERATING SYSTEMS -----------------------------------------------

--- Linux
The Asterisk Open Source PBX is developed and tested primarily on the
GNU/Linux operating system, and is supported on every major GNU/Linux
distribution.

--- Others
Asterisk has also been 'ported' and reportedly runs properly on other
operating systems as well, including Sun Solaris, Apple's Mac OS X, Cygwin,
and the BSD variants.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- GETTING STARTED -----------------------------------------------------------

First, be sure you've got supported hardware (but note that you don't need
ANY special hardware, not even a sound card) to install and run Asterisk.

Supported telephony hardware includes:

* All Analog and Digital Interface cards from Digium (www.digium.com)
* QuickNet Internet PhoneJack and LineJack (http://www.quicknet.net)
* any full duplex sound card supported by ALSA, OSS, or PortAudio
* any ISDN card supported by mISDN on Linux
* The Xorcom Astribank channel bank
* VoiceTronix OpenLine products

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- UPGRADING FROM AN EARLIER VERSION -----------------------------------------

If you are updating from a previous version of Asterisk, make sure you
read the UPGRADE.txt file in the source directory. There are some files
and configuration options that you will have to change, even though we
made every effort possible to maintain backwards compatibility.

In order to discover new features to use, please check the configuration
examples in the /configs directory of the source code distribution. For a
list of new features in this version of Asterisk, see the CHANGES file.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- NEW INSTALLATIONS ---------------------------------------------------------

Ensure that your system contains a compatible compiler and development
libraries. Asterisk requires either the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) version
3.0 or higher, or a compiler that supports the C99 specification and some of
the gcc language extensions. In addition, your system needs to have the C
library headers available, and the headers and libraries for ncurses.

There are many modules that have additional dependencies. To see what
libraries are being looked for, see ./configure --help, or run
"make menuselect" to view the dependencies for specific modules.

On many distributions, these dependencies are installed by packages with names
like 'glibc-devel', 'ncurses-devel', 'openssl-devel' and 'zlib-devel'
or similar.

So, let's proceed:

1) Read this README file.

There are more documents than this one in the doc/ directory. You may also
want to check the configuration files that contain examples and reference
guides. They are all in the configs/ directory.

2) Run "./configure"

Execute the configure script to guess values for system-dependent
variables used during compilation.

3) Run "make menuselect" [optional]

This is needed if you want to select the modules that will be compiled and to
check dependencies for various optional modules.

4) Run "make"

Assuming the build completes successfully:

5) Run "make install"

If this is your first time working with Asterisk, you may wish to install
the sample PBX, with demonstration extensions, etc. If so, run:

6) "make samples"

Doing so will overwrite any existing configuration files you have installed.

Finally, you can launch Asterisk in the foreground mode (not a daemon) with:

# asterisk -vvvc

You'll see a bunch of verbose messages fly by your screen as Asterisk
initializes (that's the "very very verbose" mode). When it's ready, if
you specified the "c" then you'll get a command line console, that looks
like this:

*CLI>

You can type "core show help" at any time to get help with the system. For help
with a specific command, type "core show help ". To start the PBX using
your sound card, you can type "console dial" to dial the PBX. Then you can use
"console answer", "console hangup", and "console dial" to simulate the actions
of a telephone. Remember that if you don't have a full duplex sound card
(and Asterisk will tell you somewhere in its verbose messages if you do/don't)
then it won't work right (not yet).

"man asterisk" at the Unix/Linux command prompt will give you detailed
information on how to start and stop Asterisk, as well as all the command
line options for starting Asterisk.

Feel free to look over the configuration files in /etc/asterisk, where you
will find a lot of information about what you can do with Asterisk.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- ABOUT CONFIGURATION FILES -------------------------------------------------

All Asterisk configuration files share a common format. Comments are
delimited by ';' (since '#' of course, being a DTMF digit, may occur in
many places). A configuration file is divided into sections whose names
appear in []'s. Each section typically contains two types of statements,
those of the form 'variable = value', and those of the form 'object =>
parameters'. Internally the use of '=' and '=>' is exactly the same, so
they're used only to help make the configuration file easier to
understand, and do not affect how it is actually parsed.

Entries of the form 'variable=value' set the value of some parameter in
asterisk. For example, in dahdi.conf, one might specify:

switchtype=national

In order to indicate to Asterisk that the switch they are connecting to is
of the type "national". In general, the parameter will apply to
instantiations which occur below its specification. For example, if the
configuration file read:

switchtype = national
channel => 1-4
channel => 10-12
switchtype = dms100
channel => 25-47

The "national" switchtype would be applied to channels one through
four and channels 10 through 12, whereas the "dms100" switchtype would
apply to channels 25 through 47.

The "object => parameters" instantiates an object with the given
parameters. For example, the line "channel => 25-47" creates objects for
the channels 25 through 47 of the card, obtaining the settings
from the variables specified above.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- SPECIAL NOTE ON TIME ------------------------------------------------------

Those using SIP phones should be aware that Asterisk is sensitive to
large jumps in time. Manually changing the system time using date(1)
(or other similar commands) may cause SIP registrations and other
internal processes to fail. If your system cannot keep accurate time
by itself use NTP (http://www.ntp.org/) to keep the system clock
synchronized to "real time". NTP is designed to keep the system clock
synchronized by speeding up or slowing down the system clock until it
is synchronized to "real time" rather than by jumping the time and
causing discontinuities. Most Linux distributions include precompiled
versions of NTP. Beware of some time synchronization methods that get
the correct real time periodically and then manually set the system
clock.

Apparent time changes due to daylight savings time are just that,
apparent. The use of daylight savings time in a Linux system is
purely a user interface issue and does not affect the operation of the
Linux kernel or Asterisk. The system clock on Linux kernels operates
on UTC. UTC does not use daylight savings time.

Also note that this issue is separate from the clocking of TDM
channels, and is known to at least affect SIP registrations.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- FILE DESCRIPTORS ----------------------------------------------------------

Depending on the size of your system and your configuration,
Asterisk can consume a large number of file descriptors. In UNIX,
file descriptors are used for more than just files on disk. File
descriptors are also used for handling network communication
(e.g. SIP, IAX2, or H.323 calls) and hardware access (e.g. analog and
digital trunk hardware). Asterisk accesses many on-disk files for
everything from configuration information to voicemail storage.

Most systems limit the number of file descriptors that Asterisk can
have open at one time. This can limit the number of simultaneous
calls that your system can handle. For example, if the limit is set
at 1024 (a common default value) Asterisk can handle approximately 150
SIP calls simultaneously. To change the number of file descriptors
follow the instructions for your system below:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- PAM-based Linux System ----------------------------------------------------

If your system uses PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) edit
/etc/security/limits.conf. Add these lines to the bottom of the file:

root soft nofile 4096
root hard nofile 8196
asterisk soft nofile 4096
asterisk hard nofile 8196

(adjust the numbers to taste). You may need to reboot the system for
these changes to take effect.

== Generic UNIX System ==

If there are no instructions specifically adapted to your system
above you can try adding the command "ulimit -n 8192" to the script
that starts Asterisk.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- MORE INFORMATION ----------------------------------------------------------

See the doc directory for more documentation on various features. Again,
please read all the configuration samples that include documentation on
the configuration options.

If this release of Asterisk was downloaded from a tarball, then some
additional documentation should have been included.
* doc/tex/asterisk.pdf --- PDF version of the documentation
* doc/tex/asterisk/index.html --- HTML version of the documentation

Finally, you may wish to visit the web site and join the mailing list if
you're interested in getting more information.

http://www.asterisk.org/support

Welcome to the growing worldwide community of Asterisk users!
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--- Mark Spencer, and the Asterisk.org development community

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Asterisk is a trademark of Digium, Inc.