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SIP software written in Erlang
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This is the YXA README file. YXA is a set of SIP servers written in Erlang. To install YXA, you need to have Erlang/OTP R13B-1 installed (up to R1501 allowed). Quick installation guide : $ tar zxvf yxa-version.tar.gz $ mkdir build $ cd build $ ../yxa-version/configure && make && make install and then start configuring your new SIP server(s). These steps are described in more detail below, so keep on reading. If you run into problems, check the archive of the yxa-devel mailing list and if the answer to your question is not to be found in the archives then subscribe to the list (necessary for posting) and ask. YXA-devel : https://lists.su.se/mailman/listinfo/yxa-devel YXA-announce : https://lists.su.se/mailman/listinfo/yxa-announce (the announce-list is moderated and only gets e-mail when there is a new snapshot or release available). ============ Applications ============ Applications included are: incomingproxy: Handles registrations and proxies requests. Implements partial ENUM and LDAP searches. Handles most everything you need to set up SIP for your domain. outgoingproxy: Special proxy for clients behind NAT. Makes it possible for clients to receive all requests to them through a persistent TCP connection the client has set up with the outgoingproxy. You still need an incomingproxy, and you need to point your outgoingproxy at it through the 'sipproxy' configuration parameter. pstnproxy: Designed as an authentication frontend to an insecure PSTN gateway. Supports the expired-draft-only header Remote-Party-Id to signal what PSTN phone number to use when sending requests to the PSTN gateway, and, if an LDAP server is configured, looks for a Display Name to use for calls from the PSTN gateway. Can route calls from the PSTN either via ENUM or to a preconfigured SIP gateway. appserver: Provides basic forking and CPL script interpretation. If a user has multiple active contacts, or a CPL script associated with it, incomingproxy will send requests for that user on to appserver which is a statefull proxy and can fork the call to all the users registered user agents or according to the users CPL script. eventserver: Framework for SIP event packages. Dialog stateful UAS. Comes with default package handlers for the following packages : presence RFC3856 dialog RFC4235 NOTE: The eventserver itself is probably working, but the event packages are still under development and EXPERIMENTAL. Read more about the packages below, under the topic "SIP Events". testserver: Not useful for anything except regression testing. Answers 404 Not Found (or some other failure response) to everything, so that one can do regression tests of the incomingproxy for example by making sure it routes requests correctly to the testserver. ============ Installation ============ 1) Unpack the source 2) Change working directory to where you unpacked the source 3) Optionally, but preferrably - create a sub-directory called 'build' or whatever you desire (this does not have to be a sub-directory to where you unpacked the source). 4) Change into the 'build' directory you created in step 3. 5) Run ../configure && make && sudo make install If you are building source retreived from CVS, you will have to generate the "configure" script by running "autoconf" in the source directory first. The autoconf version known to work with the current sources is 2.59. 6) Bootstrap your new installation. See "Bootstrapping" below. 7) Configure the YXA applications you want to use (see "Configuration" below). 8) Start the YXA applications you configured in step 7. To start an incomingproxy application, execute the incomingproxy script with the single argument 'start' : $ incomingproxy start Then check the log files for incomingproxy to see if it says 'proxy started'. If you haven't set logger_logbase or logger_logdir, the three log files incomingproxy.debug, .log and .error will end up in your current directory where you started incomingproxy from. If you run into problems, and don't see anything in the logfiles (not even in the .debug log file), start incomingproxy (or whichever application it is you are having problems with) in the debug mode by using -d. -d implies 'start' : $ incomingproxy -d You will now end up in an Erlang shell 'console', or see more error information hopefully telling you why your YXA application does not start. To exit the console, hit Ctrl+C twice, or execute the Erlang command "halt()." (without the quotes). Configure options special to YXA : --disable-erlang-version-check Ignore result of the Erlang/OTP version check. --with-erlang The path to your Erlang/OTP installation's 'bin' directory. --with-mnesiadir The path to where you want your Mnesia database files. Default is "/var/yxa/db". --with-sslcertdir The path to where you keep your SSL certificate files (cert.comb). --with-local The Erlang module to use for local customizations. This is a file containing hooks for all sorts of things, making it possible to make your own extensions to YXA. The default is 'local_default.erl', but 'local_su.erl' and 'local_kth.erl' are also included in the distribution. Copy 'local_default.erl' to 'local_your_domain.erl' and use --with-local='local_your_domain' if you want to make your own custom local.erl. === SSL === If you want to use SSL (normally enabled), either put your combined private and public X.509 key in ssl/cert.comb or edit the ssl.config in the source directory and do "make sslkey" to get a self-signed certificate. The certificate password must be "foobar" if you use "make sslkey". This SSL is only for use by the Erlang distributed operation system (see below), it has nothing to do with SIP TLS. If you get an error like "problems making Certificate Request" and ... "string too long" ... then you did not change the "req_distinguished_name" in ssl.config to your hostname. ===================== Distributed operation ===================== If you want to setup a distributed erlang system, you must have the same ~/.erlang.cookie file on all nodes. Also, if you have SSL (see SSL topic above) enabled on one node, you must have it enabled on all the other nodes as well. Distributed operation includes having the same Mnesia-tables readable on more than the local node, so you most probably should do this if you run more than one YXA node. ============= Configuration ============= The configuration file is named <application>.config and can contain these variables: common: ------- logger_logbasename (default: application name) Create log files based on this. If you specify /var/log/incomingproxy as logger_logbasename for your incomingproxy, it will log to the files /var/log/incomingproxy.debug (everything) /var/log/incomingproxy.log (informational) /var/log/incomingproxy.error (errors) logger_logdir (default: current working directory) If logger_logbasename is NOT set, a default logfile basename will be created using this parameters value, and the running applications name. sipauth_realm (default: "") HTTP Auth realm sipauth_password (default: "") HTTP Auth internal cookie sipauth_unauth_classlist (default: []) Classes that anyone can call sipauth_challenge_expiration (default: 30) How many seconds a challenge is valid. Set to 0 to disable check for stale authentication. databaseservers (required if using remote databases) Erlang node specification of the database servers ldap_server (default: "" (ie. no LDAP)) LDAP server host name ldap_username (default: "") LDAP user name ldap_password (default: "") LDAP password ldap_searchbase (default: "") LDAP search base ldap_use_ssl (default: false) Connect to LDAP server using SSL if true. ldap_connection_query_limit (default: 500) When we have made this many querys using an LDAP handle, open a new one (as soon as we are idle). listenport (default: 5060) Port that the server should listen to myhostnames (required) List of IP addresses and/or hostnames of the host you run your server on. The first entry in the list will be used to symbolize this host in SIP packets (Via headers and Record-Route headers (unless you set record_route_url)). Because of this, the first entry should really be a real hostname for this host, and not a NAPTR/SRV service name even if those NAPTR/SRV record points at the real host. It doesn't hurt if there is also NAPTR/SRV records for the real hostname though. myips (no default) For some platforms autodetection of the IP addresses of the network interfaces doesn't work. If you have that problem, list your IP addresses in this configuration parameter. record_route (default: false, except for pstnproxy and outgoing- proxy where default is true) Enable or disable adding of Record-Route header to requests. record_route_url (optional) A SIP (or SIPS) URI to use as Record- Route, if we are configured to add Record-Route headers. This makes it possible to for example specifying the name of a cluster of machines in the Record-Route headers, or to include port number or other parameters if you find that you have clients that require it. Specifying a port number and a maddr=my-ip-address is a way to get as much backwards compatibility as possible, but also makes sure noone will try to use anything besides UDP when following the Route. default_max_forwards (default: 70) The Max-Forwards value we put in requests that does not have one. Only change for debugging, RFC3261 says this should be 70. max_max_forwards (default: 255) Upper limit for Max-Forwards in requests we send out. If we receive a request with a Max-Forwards greater than this, we will use this value instead of the received minus one. detect_loops (default: true) Detect looping requests. Leave this on. request_rport (default: false) Request rport in outgoing requests. Useful if you are sending through a NAT device. stateless_challenges (default: false) Send challenges without state if this is true. RFC3261 suggests you should do this, but there are problems with doing it... See comments in transactionlayer.erl, function send_challenge2(). stateless_send_ack_with_backup_plan: (default: true) Bend the stateless proxying of request rules in RFC3261 slightly, to not fail to proxy ACK of 2xx response because the first destination resolved is not available. Caveat: This works only for TCP/TLS destinations, we currently can't detect that UDP destinations are not available (we do check for blacklisted destinations though). tcp_connection_idle_timeout (default: 300) Number of seconds of inactivity before we close a TCP connection. tcp_connect_timeout (default: 20) Number of seconds before we time out trying to establish a TCP connection to a remote host. udp_max_datagram_size (default: 1200) Max size of messages before we switch from UDP to TCP. If you have phones that only do UDP (and therefor suck), set this to for example 3000. userdb_modules (default: [sipuserdb_mnesia]) User database backend(s) to use. See "User database" section below. enable_v6 (default: false) Enables IPv6 support. Read the IPv6 paragraph below before enabling this! max_logfile_size (default: 262144000 (250 MB)) Max filesize (in bytes) before the logfiles are rotated. This option will probably go away when we invent a controlling mechanism so that things like logfile size can be checked outside of YXA instead, but this is needed for now since Erlang crashes when the logfiles reach 2 GB. We only check if the file size exceeds this limit every 60 seconds, not after every write. Set to 0 to disable rotation (at your own risk). ssl_require_client_has_cert (default: false) Reject connections from TLS clients that don't use a client certificate. ssl_server_certfile (no default) Filename of your SSL (TLS) server certificate. SIP proxys are required to support TLS. ssl_server_ssloptions (default: []) SSL server SSL options, see ssl(3erl) (the Erlang SSL documentation) for more information, but you should for example be able to for example use a separate file for your certificates key by setting this to [{keyfile, "/path/to/cert.key"}]. ssl_client_ssloptions (default: []) SSL client SSL options, see ssl(3erl) (the Erlang SSL documentation) for more information, but you should for example be able to get the SSL client to verify the certificates of servers it connects to by setting this to [{cacertfile, "/path/to/root-cert.pem"}, {verify, 2}, {depth, 2}]. ssl_check_subject_altname (default: true) Whether we should reject SSL server certificates with subjectAltName/CN not matching whatever hostname/domainname we expected. ssl_check_subject_altname_allow_servername (default: true) Treat NAPTR/SRV host- name as valid subjectAltName/CN in certificates. ssl_require_sips_registration (default: true) If you leave this at 'true', your users phones must register with SIPS URIs to be contacted for a request with a SIPS Request-URI. If you set it to 'false' then the communication between your registrar and your phones are considered safe even if it is not protected by TLS. tls_listenport (default: 5061) The port we should listen for TLS connections on. tls_disable_client (default: false) Set this to 'true' to make this proxy not connect to other proxys using TLS. tls_disable_server (default: false) Set this to 'true' to not listen for TLS connections at all. Proxys are required to support SIP over TLS, so setting this to 'true' is NOT recommended. timerT1 (default: 500) See RFC 3261. You should probably not touch this. timerT2 (default: 4000) See RFC 3261. You should probably not touch this. timerT4 (default: 5000) See RFC 3261. You should probably not touch this. sipsocket_blacklisting (default: true) Should we do blacklisting of unreachable/unresponsive destinations so that we avoid them for some time? sipsocket_blacklist_duration (default: 120) The amount of time (measured in seconds) that we should blacklist an unresponsive destination. sipsocket_blacklist_max (default: 3600) An upper limit of how long we allow entrys to reside in our blacklist. This is needed because the time could come from a Retry-After header in a 503 response. sipsocket_blacklist_probe_delay (default: 60) After how long time of blacklisting should we start a background probe to see if the destination has became reachable again? Set this to something greater than sipsocket_blacklist_duration if you want black- listing but not probes. You should probably keep this value at less than sipsocket_blacklist_duration minus 32 seconds (64*T1) to allow probes to time out before the blacklisting expires, if the destination is still unavailable/unresponsive. stun_demuxing_on_sip_ports (default: false (except for outgoingproxy)) Should we demux and process STUN requests received on our SIP ports? This is becoming a popular way for clients to keep NAT bindings alive. See draft-ietf-sip-outbound-03 for more information. include_server_info_in_responses (default: true) Add a Server: header to responses we create, to ease debugging/SIP call tracing through a number of proxies. event_handler_handlers (no default): event_handler gen_event handlers to initialize. Should be a list of modules (atoms) or a list of {Module, Args} of the event handler takes arguments. pstnproxy: ---------- e164_to_pstn (no default) Regexps for choosing PSTN gateway to use for E.164 numbers. number_to_pstn (no default) The same as e164_to_pstn, but consulted if a number could not be rewritten to an E.164 number (like an internal-only number). pstngatewaynames (required) List of IP addresses and/or hostnames of your PSTN gateway. Incoming requests will be matched against this list when checking if they are from the PSTN gateway or not. default_pstngateway (no default) Name of gateway to which we should route requests to PSTN if a lookup of the number in e164_to_pstn does not result in an address. classdefs (default: [{"", unknown}]) Regexps for classifying phone numbers. Used to determine if a call from a user (or unknown party) should be permitted or not. sipproxy (default: "") The name of the SIP proxy to route calls from the PSTN gateway to. This is something like a default SIP route. If you enable ENUM in the pstnproxy, ENUM is considered before sipproxy. If you do not enter a sipproxy, and the number being called is not found using ENUM, 503 Service Unavailable will be returned. enum_domainlist (no default) List of domains in which to look for NAPTR-records for requests _from_ the PSTN gateway. If you use this, you probably also want to configure internal_to_e164. The global E.164 root is e164.arpa, so an example would be ["e164.arpa", "e164.example.com"]. All domains will be queried and after that the answers will be sorted and the best one will be used. internal_to_e164 (default: []) Regexps for rewriting internal numbers to E.164 numbers. In pstnproxy, this is only used to query ENUM - NOT for rewriting stuff to E.164 before passing them to the PSTN gateway. remote_party_id (default: false) If you set this to true, then the pstnproxy will try to add information about the caller in a header called Remote-Party-Id. This is not a standard, but current versions of Cisco IOS (12.2.15T) supports it so it is nice to have. If you also configure LDAP for the pstnproxy, this function will try to look up a name to use in calls from the PSTN gateway, but I haven't seen a phone that displays this yet. pstnproxy_no_sip_dst_code (default: 480) SIP error code to return for requests from PSTN to SIP when the destination is not found in ENUM, and no sipproxy has been configured. This is configurable since you might want your gateway to act in a special way in this situation, for example falling back to using PSTN or something. pstnproxy_redirect_on_enum (default: false) If you set this to true, we will send a redirect (302) back to the caller when we find a destination for the request in ENUM, instead of proxying to the destination (only applys to calls from PSTN to SIP). x_yxa_peer_auth_secret (no default, not required) Shared secret for this pstnproxy to use for allowing requests forwarded to PSTN on behalf of a particular user using appserver. allowed_request_methods (default: ["INVITE", "ACK", "PRACK", "CANCEL", "BYE", "OPTIONS"]) What SIP requests we should allow to reach our PSTN gateways. pstnproxy_challenge_bye_to_pstn_dst (default: true) Should we challenge BYEs sent towards a PSTN gateway? NOTE: This does NOT work if you have 'free' classes, since we are not dialog stateful and therefor can't know that the BYE is sent to a 'free' destination. pstnproxy_allow_reinvite_to_pstn_dst (default: true) Should re-INVITEs on existing dialogs be allowed? incomingproxy: -------------- internal_to_e164 (default: []) Regexps for rewriting internal numbers to E.164 numbers. e164_to_pstn (default: []) Regexps for choosing PSTN gateway/ pstnproxy to use for E.164 numbers. number_to_pstn (default: []) The same as e164_to_pstn, but consulted if a number could not be rewritten to a E.164 number (like an internal-only number). defaultroute (default: "") SIP host name part of default route. Note that if you use e164_to_pstn, you don't have to point defaultroute at your PSTN gateway. homedomain (required) List of SIP domains this proxy should handle requests for. enum_domainlist (no default) List of domains in which to look for NAPTR-records for requests that are not to SIP-users but where the user part matches one of the regexps in internal_to_e164. The global E.164 root is e164.arpa, so an example would be ["e164.arpa", "e164.example.com"]. All domains will be queried and after that the answers will be sorted and the best one will be used. max_register_time (default: 43200) If registers have an 'expire' of more than this many seconds, use this value instead. always_verify_homedomain_user (default: true) If From: matches our definition of 'our' domains (matched by homedomain), then challenge user and make sure it is not someone impersonating the calling party. authenticate_in_dialog_requests (default: false) Should we perform the From: check above for all in-dialog requests, or only the first one that establishes the request? Default is to only verify the first one. appserver (default: "") URL to where to send requests when there are more than a single location for a request found in the location database, or when the request is destined for a user who has a CPL script. Example: "appserver.example.com" or "sip:sipserver.example.com:5090". eventserver (default: "") URL to where to send SUBSCRIBE and PUBLISH requests. Point this at your eventserver (another YXA application) or some other server that handles RFC3265 SIP events in your domain. Example: "eventserver.example.com" or "sip:sipserver.example.com:5040". eventserver_for_package (default: []) More fine grained control over which server should handle a specific type of events in your domain. Checked before the 'eventserver' configuration parameter. Example: [{"presence", "sip:presence.example.com"}, {"ua-config", "sip:prov.example.com"} ] outgoingproxy: -------------- sipproxy (required) The location of your incomingproxy. Example: "incomingproxy.example.com" or "sip:incomingproxy.example.com:5090". max_register_time (default: 43200) If registers have an 'expire' of more than this many seconds, use this value instead. homedomain (required) List of SIP domains this proxy should handle requests for. allow_foreign_registers (default: false) Set to true to have your out- goingproxy forward non-local REGISTERs to other proxys. Defaults to false since it doesn't make much sense for the clients to use the outgoing- proxy in the first place if they register with a domain that the outgoingproxy doesn't consider local (what domains are 'local' is determined by the 'homedomain' parameter). stun_demuxing_on_sip_ports (default: true) Allow clients to keep NAT bindings alive by (quite frequently) send STUN requests to the outgoingproxy on the same socket used for SIP signalling. See draft-ietf-sip-outbound-03 for more information. appserver: ---------- internal_to_e164 (default: []) Regexps for rewriting internal numbers to E.164 numbers. The appserver must have identical internal_to_e164 with the incomingproxy to be able to make the exact same routing decisions. appserver_call_timeout (default: 40) The number of seconds to ring a destination before concluding that noone answers. appserver_forward_timeout (default: 40) The same as appserver_call_timeout but for forwarded calls. x_yxa_peer_auth (default: []) List of {host, secret} shared secrets to use when sending out requests on behalf of a user with forwards or a CPL script. Example : [{"pstnproxy.example.com", "secret"}]}. See also x_yxa_peer_auth_secret to make pstnproxy at pstnproxy.example.com accept the requests. eventserver: ------------ eventserver_package_handlers (default: [{"presence", presence_package}]) presence_min_publish_time (default: 5) presence_max_publish_time (default: 3600) presence_default_publish_time (default: 600) At the moment, configuration files must be in Erlang syntax. This involves lots of brackets and curly brackets, and might be seen as an disadvantage for YXA. Please bear with this though, as steps have been taken to make it easy to add other configuration parsing backends. An ini-file format is likely to be written shortly, and it would be fairly easy to write for example an XML-format parser although you can't count on me doing it for you. It is possible to include other files from within the top-level configuration file (ie. you can't include a file from an included file). You do this by specifying {include, "filename.conf"} as a parameter where you want the contents of "filename.conf" to be included. The contents of filename.conf should not contain any sections - see the example below. "filename.conf" will be considered relative to the filename of the top-level configuration file, unless it is absolute. Brief introduction to the Erlang syntax : {} - Curly brackets define a tuple. A tuple is like a list of fixed length, for example {Key, Value} or {Key, Value1, Value2}. [] - Brackets enclose lists. If a parameter can have any number of values (like 'myhostnames' for example), the values will be in a list. Example : {homedomain, ["example.com", "example.net", "example.org"]} or, if you have just one domain {homedomain, ["example.com"]}. ================================== Application configuration examples ================================== incomingproxy.config: --------------------- [{incomingproxy, [{sipauth_realm, "example.com"}, {sipauth_password, "secret"}, {defaultroute, "other-sipserver.example.com"}, {logger_logbasename, "/var/log/incomingproxy"}, {internal_to_e164, [{"^00(.+)$", "+\\1"}, {"^0(.+)$", "+46\\1"}, {"^(.+)$", "+468\\1"} ]}, {e164_to_pstn, [{"^\\+468([1-9][0-9]+)$", "00\\1@pstnproxy.example.com"}, {"^\\+46([1-9][0-9]+)$", "000\\1@pstnproxy.example.com"}, {"^\\+44([1-9][0-9]+)$", "000\\1@pstnproxy-uk.example.com"}, {"^\\+([0-9]+)$", "0000\\1@pstnproxy.example.com"} ]}, {number_to_pstn, [{"^118$", "118@pstnproxy.example.com"}]}, {enum_domainlist, ["e164.arpa"]}, {homedomain, ["example.com", "example.net", "example.org"]}, {myhostnames, ["sipserver.example.com", "sip.example.net", "sip.example.org"]}, {appserver, "appserver.example.com:5070"}, {eventserver, "eventserver.example.com"}, {ldap_server, "ldap.example.com"} ]}]. outgoingproxy.config: --------------------- [{outgoingproxy, [{sipauth_realm, "example.com"}, {sipauth_password, "secret"}, {databaseservers, ['incomingproxy@sip-incoming.example.com']}, {myhostnames, ["outgoingproxy1.example.com", "out.example.com"]}, {homedomain, ["example.com", "example.net", "example.org"]}, {tcp_connection_idle_timeout, 1000000} ]}]. pstnproxy.config: ----------------- [{pstnproxy, [{sipauth_realm, "example.com"}, {sipauth_password, "secret"}, {sipauth_unauth_classlist, [internal]}, {logger_logbasename, "/var/log/pstnproxy"}, {pstngatewaynames, ["pstn-gw.example.com", "10.10.1.1"]}, {myhostnames, ["sip-pstn.example.com", "sip2pstn.example.com", "10.10.1.2"]}, {classdefs, [{"^[1-9]", national}, {"^0[1-9]", national}, {"^00", international}, {"", unknown} ]}, {databaseservers, ['incomingproxy@sip-incoming.example.com']}, {internal_to_e164, [{"^00(.+)$", "+\\1"}, {"^0(.+)$", "+46\\1"}, {"^(.+)$", "+468\\1"} ]}, {e164_to_pstn, [{"^\\(+44[1-9][0-9]+)$", "\\1@uk-toll-bypass.tsp.example.net"}]}, {number_to_pstn, [{"^118$"}, "sip:118@pstn-gw.example.com"]}, {enum_domainlist, ["e164.arpa"]}, ]}]. appserver.config: ----------------- [{appserver, [{sipauth_realm, "example.com"}, {sipauth_password, "secret"}, {logger_logbasename, "/var/log/appserver"}, {internal_to_e164, [{"^00(.+)$", "+\\1"}, {"^0(.+)$", "+46\\1"}, {"^(.+)$", "+468\\1"} ]}, {databaseservers, ['incomingproxy@sip-incoming.example.com']}, {myhostnames, ["appserver.example.com", "10.10.1.1"]}, {record_route, true}, {listenport, 5070} ]}]. Combined configuration file for more than one application : ----------------------------------------------------------- yxa.config : [ %% Include files %% -------------------------------------------------------------------- {include, "secrets.config"}, %% Common configuration %% -------------------------------------------------------------------- {common, [{sipauth_realm, "example.com"}, {logger_logdir, "/var/log/yxa"}, {databaseservers, ['incomingproxy@server.example.com']}, {ssl_server_certfile, "/var/yxa/ssl/cert.comb"}, {ssl_client_certfile, "/var/yxa/ssl/cert.comb"}, {ssl_server_ssloptions, [{verify, 1}, {cacertfile, "/var/yxa/ssl/ca-chain.crt"} ]}, {ssl_client_ssloptions, [{verify, 1}, {cacertfile, "/var/yxa/ssl/ca-chain.crt"} ]} ]}, %% Application specific configuration %% -------------------------------------------------------------------- {incomingproxy, [{appserver, "appserver.server.example.com"}, {myhostnames, ["incomingproxy.server.example.com", "server.example.com"]}, {homedomain, ["example.com", "example.net", "example.org"], {enum_domainlist, ["e164.arpa"]} ]}, {appserver, [{listenport, 5070}, {tls_listenport, 5071} ]} ]. secrets.config : [ {common, [{sipauth_password, "secret"} ]} ]. ====================================== User database (sipuserdb_file) example ====================================== [ {user, [ {name, "ft.sip1"}, {password, "secret"}, {classes, [internal,national,mobile]} ]}, {user, [ {name, "foo@example.org"}, {password, "secret2"}, {classes, [internal]}, {addresses, ["sip:info@example.org", "sip:all@example.org"]} ]}, {address, [ {user, "ft.sip1"}, {address, "sip:ft@example.org"} ]}, {address, [ {user, "ft.sip1"}, {address, "sip:all@example.org"} ]} ]. This is a simple user database. If I have two phones, and let one REGISTER with 'To: sip:ft@example.org' and authentication username 'ft.sip1', and the other REGISTER with 'To: sip:info@example.org' and authentication username 'foo@example.org' (NOTE: no "sip:"), calls to sip:ft@example.org will cause phone #1 to ring and calls to sip:info@example.org will cause phone #2 to ring. Calls to sip:all@example.org will cause both phones to ring, provided that I have an incomingproxy and an appserver set up and configured. Note that addresses can either be supplied as part of the 'user' declaration (user 'foo@example.org'), or separately (user 'ft.sip1'). ============= User database ============= YXA has a modular interface for user database backends. The entry point is the sipuserdb module, which looks at your configuration to determine which database backends to query, and in what order. The default is to just look in the Mnesia database (tables user and numbers), but there is also an LDAP module, MySQL module and a plain text file backend available. The schema for storing SIP user information in LDAP is not yet finished, and is currently not even included in the YXA source, but the sipuserdb_ldap module is used in production at Stockholm university. sipuserdb_ldap configuration parameters : ----------------------------------------- ldap_userattribute (deafult: sipAuthenticationUser) User attribute. ldap_addressattribute (default: sipLocalAddress) User SIP address attribute. ldap_telephonenumberattribute (default: telephoneNumber) User phone number attribute. ldap_passwordattribute (default: sipPassword) User authentication password attribute. sipuserdb_file configuration parameters : ----------------------------------------- sipuserdb_file_filename (required) Filename (including path) of your user database. See above (section Examples) for format of this file. sipuserdb_file_refresh_interval (default: 15) Interval (in seconds) between checks for updated user database file. sipuserdb_mysql configuration parameters : ------------------------------------------ sipuserdb_mysql_host (required) Server name. Example : "mysql-srv.example.org" sipuserdb_mysql_port (default: 3306) Server port. Example : 33060 sipuserdb_mysql_user (required) MySQL username to log in with. Example : "yxa" sipuserdb_mysql_password (required) MySQL password to log in with. Example : "secret" sipuserdb_mysql_database (required) MySQL database to use. Example : "yxadb" MySQL query configuration parameters : -------------------------------------- The default YXA MySQL userdb querys are simple. They can be somewhat 'personalized' by changing the templates. All querys are made for a single key (or list of keys, when for example looking for all users matching a number of addresses), and the query is constructed by inserting the quoted key value everywhere in the templates where there is a '?'. If you want to construct more advanced querys than can be done using these templates, look at creating a custom sipuserdb_mysql_make_sql_statement/2 function in your local.erl. If you have to do special processing of some return values (for example decrypting passwords after reading them from the database), override the get-function you are interested in altering using for example the sipuserdb_backend_override/3 function in your local.erl. sipuserdb_mysql_get_user (default: "select sipuser from users where sipuser = ?") Query to use when trying to validate a users existence. Can also be used to map multiple usernames to a single 'primary' username, which will be the key used when looking for a users location(s) in the location database for example. sipuserdb_mysql_get_user_for_address (default: "select sipuser from addresses where address = ?") sipuserdb_mysql_get_addresses_for_user (default: "select address from addresses where sipuser = ?") sipuserdb_mysql_get_classes_for_user (default: "select class from classes where sipuser = ?") sipuserdb_mysql_get_password_for_user (default: "select password from users where sipuser = ?") sipuserdb_mysql_get_telephonenumber_for_user (default: "select address from addresses where sipuser = ? and is_telnr = 'Y'") Table definitions matching the default querys : CREATE TABLE users ( sipuser VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, password VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL ); CREATE TABLE addresses ( address VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, sipuser VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, is_telnr ENUM('Y', 'N') DEFAULT 'N' ); CREATE TABLE classes ( sipuser VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, class VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL ); ============= Bootstrapping ============= In your build directory, or in the directory you chosed to have the executable files installed in (default: /usr/local/XXX) you should have a file called yxa-bootstrap. Execute this script, and it will create a Mnesia schema and all the needed Mnesia tables for you. By default, the incomingproxy application will be Mnesia database master. If you do not wish to have some other node be the Mnesia database master, you should execute yxa-bootstrap on the server that you will be running incomingproxy on. Example : $ /path/to/yxa-bootstrap You should now have the necessary Mnesia database and tables. All of the YXA application can run just fine without root permissions. If you want to have more than one incomingproxy node (and thus more than one database master node), do the following on incomingproxy server #1 : $ /path/to/yxa-bootstrap and then, on incomingproxy server #2 : $ /path/to/yxa-bootstrap -replica incomingproxy@server1.example.org You should then set the configuration parameter databaseservers like this on all your non-incomingproxy nodes : {databaseservers, ['incomingproxy@server1.example.org', 'incomingproxy@server2.example.org']} If you want some other YXA application node than incomingproxy to be your Mnesia database master, supply the -name argument to yxa-bootstrap. For example, if you are only using the pstnproxy, invoke yxa-bootstrap like this : $ /path/to/yxa-bootstrap -name pstnproxy ============= Web interface ============= To use the web interface, you first need to install the Erlang web-server Yaws version 1.56 or higher (available from http://yaws.hyber.org/). When you have configured a working Yaws web-server, you need to point your docroot at the yxa/yaws/docroot directory, and configure Yaws with module and include search paths to the YXA include and ebin-directorys. Example parts of yaws.conf configuration file : ebin_dir = /path/to/lib/yxa/ebin include_dir = /path/to/lib/yxa/include <server example.org> docroot = /path/to/yxa-source/yaws/docroot </server> NOTE: All access control must be performed using Yaws methods of access control. Currently, the YXA Yaws SSIs will not perform any kind of authentication or authorization, so you must restrict access to the web interface using Yaws. NOTE 2: The files inside yaws/docroot will probably be installed somewhere under /path/to/lib/yxa in the future, I just need to figure out where they belong. Then you need to start Yaws with "-name yaws" (or some other node name) in order to enable communication between the Yaws node and your YXA node(s). You also need to start the Yaws node as the same user as you start your YXA nodes as, or by other means make sure the Yaws node has the same shared secret in it's ~/.erlang.cookie file as the YXA nodes has, or they will be unable to communicate. See the section "Distributed operation" above for more information about Erlang distribution. If you use SSL for Erlang distribution (see sections "SSL" and "Distributed operation" above for more information), you must get Yaws to use SSL for Erlang distribution too, or the nodes won't be able to talk to each other. This is a sample Yaws startup command for doing this (only works with Yaws 1.56 or later) : yaws -i -name yaws \ -erlarg "-boot /path/to/lib/yxa/ebin/start_ssl" \ -erlarg "-proto_dist inet_ssl" \ -erlarg "-ssl_dist_opt client_certfile /path/to/cert.comb" \ -erlarg "-ssl_dist_opt server_certfile /path/to/cert.comb" \ -erlarg "-ssl_dist_opt verify 2" ============ IPv6 support ============ If you enable IPv6 support, you need to add your v6 addresses to the myhostnames configuration variable, because siphost:myip_list() is currently not capable of detecting your IPv6 address (Erlang OTP R9C-0). If you don't do this, then lookup:homedomain() will not work properly and you might get problems with requests sent with a URI containing your IPv6 address. IPv6 support is disabled by default, because you need to know what you are doing before turning it on. If you enable it to make proxy-to-proxy communication use v6 and a v6-only proxy adds Record-Route headers, then v4-only clients won't be able to reach the v6-only proxy. This could be fixed by making YXA always Record-Route when receiving a request over v4/v6 and sending it out using the other but then there is still the problem with v6-only phones responding to INVITE with a SDP offer containing a v6 address. How will a v4-only phone be able to send audio to that phone, and receive audio from that phone? v6 is disabled by default. If you are using Linux, then you will need to # echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv6/bindv6only since YXA wants to use separate sockets for v6 and v4. IPv6 support has only been tested on Linux 2.4.x where x >= 20, and Linux 2.6.x where x >= 14. Note on Erlang OTP R10B-0 through R10B-6 : The resolver order was changed in R10B, so now Erlang primarily tries to use the 'native' resolver (meaning a C port driver) for DNS resolution. Unfortunately, this C port driver only handles getipnodebyname() and not getaddrinfo(). The latter is a POSIX standard, and the one that should be used. This means that you might not get IPv6 addresses back from dnsutil:get_ip_port(), which in turn means YXA won't make outgoing connections to IPv6 addresses. This is a problem with some versions of Linux (for example, RH7.3 to RH9 based systems). ==================== SIP Events (RFC3265) ==================== The YXA application 'eventserver' handles subscriptions for SIP events in a modular fashion. The goal is to separate subscription handling, with all the issues regarding expiration and renewing of subscriptions, from the event packages. Event packages are Erlang modules implementing the behaviour 'event_package'. There following event packages exist, and are enabled per default : presence : This is a presence state agent (presence server), that stores presence that clients send using PUBLISH in a Mnesia database. It is possible to have a distributed presence server with more than one eventserver, running on more than one Erlang node. Currently, all users in your domain are allowed to subscribe to all other users in your domains presence. Users outside your domain is not allowed to subscribe to your users presence at all. The presence status of your users can also be obtained through a bidirectional subscription (the eventserver subscri- bes to your user when it subscribes to someone else), but this is done on a per-User-Agent basis and probably requires you to patch the code slightly. Anyone interested in implementing XCAP for access control lists etc. should let me know, that would be great. I won't do it. dialog : A dialog state agent. The goal was to get 'shared line' working on my Snom phones. Can't say I'm there just yet. NOTE that ALL these event packages are currently to be considered experimental.
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SIP software written in Erlang
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