On 11/24/05 01:37, Douglas Garstang wrote:
After many many fruitless hours spent on trying to get
OpenSER to work with DNS SRV records (I made a post to the group earlier today on this), I
stumbled across the dispatcher module, and have been trying to get it to work instead.
The module was designed to load balance, right? It doesn't seem to have been designed
very well, unless I am missing something.
If you read carefully the documentation of the module, you will see the
scope and limitations of the module:
http://openser.org/docs/modules/1.0.x/dispatcher.html
If something is not according to the documentation, then it is a bug.
Stateless means that the module does not keep any state, so it cannot
select the same destination using algorithm 4 (round robin) after a
authentication request, choose another algorithm (hashing r-uri,
callid). Also, being stateless, it cannot try the next address if the
selected destination fails.
The module was not designed to be load balancer, but a request
dispatcher. Load balancing is something more complex.
In the last weeks I added destination failover support in dispatcher
(serial forking within the destination set, with auto-detection of
failed destinations). It will be on cvs very soon, I have to update the
documentation and do some testing.
Cheers,
Daniel
If you set the algorithm with ds_select_dst() to 4, round robin, it doesn't work!
Here's what happens.
1. UA sends INVITE to OpenSER
2. OpenSER forwards INVITE to the first proxy in the dispatcher list.
3. Proxy sends back a digest challenge for authorisation credentials to OpenSER.
4. OpenSER forwards the challenge back to the UA.
5. The UA sends the INVITE again to OpenSER, this time with the requested credentials.
6. OpenSER forwards the new INVITE to the _OTHER_ proxy in the dispatcher list.
This is where things start to fall over. This proxy has not issued a challenge request
yet so it _again_ sends a digest challenge back to the UA through OpenSER. The UA does not
like to receive a second challenge to what it's already sent and gives up.
If you set the algorithm to something else besides 4, say 0, to hash to the callid, then
OpenSER tries to use an arbitrary proxy from the list. Given that it's hashed against
the callid it doesn't switch proxies like it does above in mid call. However, if that
proxy is down, it _NEVER_ tries another proxy, thus rending the dispatcher module as a
load balancer completely useless.
If this module was designed to be a load balancer, how have people gotten it to work? I
find it incredibly hard to believe that the dispatcher module was not designed with the
above scenarios in mind. I'm so frustrated because what I am trying to do is so simple
(had issues with SRV behaving in a similar way). Send requests from OpenSER to another
proxy/pbx in a redundant and load balanced fashion. If a system is down, simply go to the
next! It's that simple!
Btw, the 'proxy' that OpenSER is forwarding too is Asterisk (yeah ok so it
isn't a proxy) and the UA's are Polycom 301/501/601 phones.
Help very much appreciated!
Thanks.
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