You can execute something like asterisk -rx "dialplan show" >
some_file.conf, but unfortunately the result cannot be directly parsed
by Asterisk. Still it will give you a readable snapshot of your current
dialplan.
Le 06/04/2017 à 11:54, Nathan Anderson a écrit :
'lo,
So yesterday, one of our clients had the misfortune of having the disk that
their Asterisk config (*.conf) was stored on take a dirt nap. Of course,
Asterisk was still running at the time, and everything continued to work
(except for voicemail, which was stored on the same disk) right up until I shut
down Asterisk to investigate what was going on. Because the disk was dead,
though, I couldn't start Asterisk back up after that, and OF COURSE the backups
were not firing off correctly so now we are faced with regenerating the config
again (including dialplan) from scratch.
In the future, if I were to ever run into a similar situation, is there any way
to request or instruct Asterisk to write the current dialplan that is in memory
and other important config files (e.g., users.conf) to disk in a *different*
location than where it originally read them from when it started up? I could
have saved myself a crap-ton of work if this were possible...
Thanks,
-- Nathan
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