Scott Yagel wrote:
Klaus,

Is this syntax documented anywhere?

For instance, I want to catch all 1xx (exactly 3 digits, starting with 1)
and send them to the SEMS conference application.  So would I use something
like:

if(uri =~"^sip:1[0-9]{3}@")

you need: if(uri =~"^sip:1[0-9]{2}@")

you have to learn "regular expressions". Just google for it. openser uses POSIX regular expressions.

regards
klaus

etc,etc

Thanks,
Scott Yagel
PacketCall, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-----Original Message-----
From: Klaus Darilion [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 10:43 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'users openser.org'
Subject: Re: [Users] config file syntax



Scott Yagel wrote:
I'm still looking for some help in understanding the syntax used in the
cfg
files, such as what the following statement fragment really is doing:

if(uri =~"^sip:[0-9]{10}@")

uri is the request URI of the request, e.g:
INVITE sip:[EMAIL PROTECTED] SIP/2.0
then uri would be "sip:[EMAIL PROTECTED]"

=~ means regular expression comparison, thus the following regular expression will be applied and if it matches the if condition returns TRUE, otherwise false.

^sip:[0-9]{10}@
this is the regular expression. The uri must start (^) with "sip:". Then there must be 10 digits followed by an "@". In short: the username must be a 10 digit phone number.

regards
klaus



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