On Dec 19, 2024, at 4:55 PM, Alex Balashov via
sr-users <sr-users(a)lists.kamailio.org> wrote:
Oh, that's exciting, and may breathe fresh life into the relatively high-performing
HTTP routing API idea.
On Dec 19, 2024, at 2:51 pm, Henning Westerholt
<hw(a)gilawa.com> wrote:
Hello,
according to this discussion:
https://kamailio.org/mailman3/hyperkitty/list/sr-users@lists.kamailio.org/t…
and the linked PR in it, HTTP/2 should be available. Its probably something to tested, as
certain features (e.g. HTTP/2 multiplexing) are deactivated in the http_async_client for
example.
Cheers,
Henning
--
Henning Westerholt –
https://skalatan.de/blog/
Kamailio services –
https://gilawa.com
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Alex Balashov via sr-users <sr-users(a)lists.kamailio.org>
> Sent: Donnerstag, 19. Dezember 2024 20:16
> To: sr-users(a)lists.kamailio.org
> Cc: Alex Balashov <abalashov(a)evaristesys.com>
> Subject: [SR-Users] Re: Kamailio not receiving packets on high CPS
>
> BTW: Not sure what the state of HTTP/2 support is in http_async_client.
>
> If existent, and the server is HTTP/2, you can make multiple sequential and
> parallel requests over the same connection. Given Kamailio's concurrency and
> isolation model, this would probably mean sequential requests over multiple
> persistent connections attached to each process.
>
> While HTTP backends are still characteristically sluggish from the perspective of
> the tight timing tolerances of traditional real-time communications, this would
> be a real game-changer and probably vacate much of what I'm saying, and the
> basis of my opposition to HTTP as an integration path out of Kamailio.
>
> HTTP/1.1 is for these kinds of systems, though. If high throughput is your
> goal, I'd go a different route. Whatever you do to squeeze a few hundred
> requests/sec out of it will most likely amount to a Pyrrhic victory.
>
> -- Alex
>
>> On Dec 19, 2024, at 2:06 pm, Alex Balashov <abalashov(a)evaristesys.com>
> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> On Dec 19, 2024, at 1:54 pm, Ben Kaufman <bkaufman(a)bcmone.com>
> wrote:
>>>
>>> Alex,
>>>
>>> I read the OP's requirements like this. They want to implement a
redirect
> server that will:
>>> • Receive a SIP INVITE
>>> • Make a single http request that has a RTT of 200ms
>>> • Copy a header from the HTTP reply to a SIP 300 reply
>>> • Handle the ACK for the reply
>>>
>>> Is it your opinion this cannot be implemented reliably with Kamailio on a
> 4vCPUs and 4GB RAM host at a rate of 750 INVITE requests per second?
>>
>> I have no idea. That's an empirical question. In my experience, that's
an
> ambitious ask given the stochastic variation in HTTP API response time (i.e.
it's
> not exactly and literally 200 ms), but it's probably possible with enough
> processes.
>>
>> My only argument--from first principles-- is that you'll get a lot more
> throughput if you ditch HTTP, and I joined the conversation at the point at
> which Alexis Fidalgo expressed that async isn't a cure-all. I wanted to sign
onto
> this sentiment.
>>
>> -- Alex
>>
>> --
>> Alex Balashov
>> Principal Consultant
>> Evariste Systems LLC
>> Web:
https://evaristesys.com
>> Tel: +1-706-510-6800
>>
>
> --
> Alex Balashov
> Principal Consultant
> Evariste Systems LLC
> Web:
https://evaristesys.com
> Tel: +1-706-510-6800
>
> __________________________________________________________
> Kamailio - Users Mailing List - Non Commercial Discussions -- sr-
> users(a)lists.kamailio.org
> To unsubscribe send an email to sr-users-leave(a)lists.kamailio.org
> Important: keep the mailing list in the recipients, do not reply only to the
> sender!
Tel: +1-706-510-6800
__________________________________________________________
Kamailio - Users Mailing List - Non Commercial Discussions --
sr-users(a)lists.kamailio.org
To unsubscribe send an email to sr-users-leave(a)lists.kamailio.org
Important: keep the mailing list in the recipients, do not reply only to the sender!