Let me ask this question... Does the RURI get consumed when a message is sucessfully
delivered, or when a message is attempted to be delivered, but fails?
-----Original Message-----
From: Klaus Darilion [mailto:klaus.mailinglists@pernau.at]
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 9:48 AM
To: Douglas Garstang
Cc: users(a)openser.org
Subject: Re: [Users] More Routing....
I do not know if it also works this way. I always used the version I
sent in the previous email and it always worked. Thus I never had the
need to change it.
klaus
Douglas Garstang wrote:
Ok...so... why not just call
append_branch("192.168.10.8:5060") without first calling
rewritehostport("192.168.10.8")? It seems like redundant information.
-----Original Message-----
From: Klaus Darilion [mailto:klaus.mailinglists@pernau.at]
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 9:01 AM
To: Douglas Garstang
Cc: users(a)openser.org
Subject: Re: [Users] More Routing....
Where's the problem? in route[1] or in the failure route?
You need append branch in failure route
klaus
Douglas Garstang wrote:
Can someone please tell me why the following
extremely simple example doesn't first attempt to relay to 192.168.10.7, and then if
that fails, try 192.168.10.8? What am I missing here? The documentation says that
t_relay() simple sends statefully to the current URI.... seems to be what I am doing. What
am I missing? Please help!
route(1);
route[1] {
rewritehostport("192.168.10.7:5060");
t_on_failure("2");
t_relay();
}
failure_route[2] {
rewritehostport('192.168.10.8:5060");
t_relay();
}
Doug.
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