George Joseph wrote:
I'm VERY frustrated with pjproject right now.  Not the software itself
(well maybe a little) but the fact that troubleshooting is a nightmare
because we can't control what version of pjproject was installed along
with Asterisk and we can't control what options it was compiled with.
This leads to issue where we're getting great debugging from Asterisk
but nothing at all from pjproject because the user installed from their
distro and it has no debugging info.  So now we have to walk them though
getting pjproject from source, etc, etc.  This can also cause issues
should Teluu change an API or some behavior that we're not prepared for
and the user just does a 'yum update pjproject' and Asterisk dies.  Then
there's the issue where even though the verison is the same, the
compiled-in options differ, some of them quite fatally.  That unleashes
a whole other mess.

There is the middle ground which is keep the ability to link against a shared system library if present but also bundle a pjproject and use it if the system library is not present (or you force the bundled version).

pjproject was deeply embedded in 11 and I don't think that was right but
I think we went too far in 13 by taking the hands-off approach.  Maybe
at the start of 13 it was ok, but we've since put chan_sip into
"extended" support so we're pushing chan_pjsip as the supported stack,
instead of it just being optional.  Not to mention that chan_sip needs
res_rtp_asterisk which is also dependent on pjproject.  Can you see
where I'm going? :)

In the current shared library method it is not a hard dependency.


I propose that we bring pjproject into a new 'third-party' directory and
statically link our res_pjsip* modules to it.  We should NOT check it
into the Asterisk repository however.  Instead we should use scripts
like get_mp3_source to get a specific pjproject version and a 'patches'
directory that IS checked in that has things we've discovered we need.
The patches should always be proposed upstream.

It's a lot of work but I'm willing to dig in and I'll bet I could get a
few volunteers to help.

From a technical perspective you can not statically link each module to PJSIP, each module will end up with its own isolated running copy. You need to statically link it into one module (res_pjsip, or res_pjproject for example) and have it export all of the symbols to everything else. Additionally because all the symbols aren't actually being used the linker also likes to remove them unless you do magic to force them to be present regardless. This is how the PJSIP support was originally developed before shared library support was added to pjproject. If you go back in time almost everything needed to make it work in a bundled configuration is there already.

--
Joshua Colp
Digium, Inc. | Senior Software Developer
445 Jan Davis Drive NW - Huntsville, AL 35806 - US
Check us out at: www.digium.com & www.asterisk.org


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