64e7c688d3
Signed-off-by: Tzafrir Cohen <tzafrir.cohen@xorcom.com> |
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build_tools | ||
doc | ||
hotplug | ||
ppp | ||
xpp | ||
.gitignore | ||
acinclude.m4 | ||
assigned-spans.conf.sample | ||
autoconfig.h.in | ||
bittest.h | ||
blacklist.sample | ||
bootstrap.sh | ||
config.guess | ||
config.sub | ||
configure | ||
configure.ac | ||
dahdi_cfg.c | ||
dahdi_diag.c | ||
dahdi_maint.c | ||
dahdi_monitor.c | ||
dahdi_pcap.c | ||
dahdi_scan.c | ||
dahdi_span_assignments | ||
dahdi_span_types | ||
dahdi_speed.c | ||
dahdi_test.c | ||
dahdi_tool.c | ||
dahdi_tools_version.h | ||
dahdi_waitfor_span_assignments | ||
dahdi-bash-completion | ||
dahdi.init | ||
dahdi.rules | ||
dahdi.xml | ||
fxotune.c | ||
fxotune.h | ||
fxstest.c | ||
hdlcgen.c | ||
hdlcstress.c | ||
hdlctest.c | ||
hdlcverify.c | ||
ifup-hdlc | ||
init.conf.sample | ||
install-sh | ||
LICENSE | ||
LICENSE.LGPL | ||
Makefile | ||
makeopts.in | ||
modprobe.conf.sample | ||
modules.sample | ||
patgen.c | ||
patlooptest.c | ||
pattest.c | ||
README | ||
sethdlc.c | ||
span-types.conf.sample | ||
system.conf.sample | ||
timertest.c | ||
tonezone.c | ||
tonezone.h | ||
UPGRADE.txt | ||
wavformat.h | ||
zonedata.c |
DAHDI Telephony Interface Driver ================================= Asterisk Development Team <asteriskteam@digium.com> $Revision$, $Date$ DAHDI stands for Digium Asterisk Hardware Device Interface. This package contains the user-space tools to configure the kernel modules included in the package dahdi-linux. Build Requirements ------------------ This package needs the headers from dahdi-linux. Thus you should install dahdi-linux before building dahdi-tools. Build System ~~~~~~~~~~~~ GCC and friends. Generally you will need to install the package gcc. There may be cases where you will need a specific version of gcc to build kernel modules. Extra Libraries ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Some libraries are needed for extra utilities that are provided with DAHDI. - libusb is needed for building fpga_load, needed for firmware loading of the Xorcom Astribank. - libnewt is needed to build the optional but useful utility dahdi_tool. Installation ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Note: If using `sudo` to build/install, you may need to add /sbin to your PATH. ---------------------------------- ./configure make make install # To install init scripts and config files: #make config ---------------------------------- Build Tweaks ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Partial Build/Install ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There are some make targets that are provided to build or install just parts of DAHDI: . Build targets: - make: Build DAHDI user-space programs and libraries. partial targets of it: * make 'utilname': builds 'utilname' alone (e.g: `make dahdi_diag`) * make utils: Build just the programs. * make libs: Build libtonezone. * make tests: Build testing binaries. . Install targets: - make install: Install everything. Sub-targets of it: * make install-utils: Installs most things. * make install-libs: Installs libtonezone. - make config: install configuration files (overriding existing ones). - make install-test: Install testing binaries. Installation to a Subtree ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The following may be useful when testing the package or when preparing a package for a binary distribution (such as an rpm package) installing onto a subtree rather than on the real system. make install DESTDIR=targetdir This can be useful for any partial install target from the list above. Options For ./configure ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The configure script executes various tests and based on them generates makeopts. You can pass it --with options and variable settings, for instance: ./configure --without-ncurses CC="gcc-4.10" If you just want to recreate the same files without a full detection run, use: ./config.status To re-run ./configure with the same parameters it was run with last time, use: ./config.status --recheck Configuration ------------- Configuration for DAHDI resides under /etc/dahdi . /etc/dahdi/system.conf ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The main method to configure DAHDI devices is using the utility *dahdi_cfg*. dahdi_cfg reads data from the configuration file /etc/dahdi/system.conf , figures out what configuration to send to channels, and send it to the kernel. A sample annotated system.conf is included in this directory and installed by default. Edit it to suit your configuration. Alternatively use the script dahdi_genconf to generate one that should work with your system. Note that while dahdi_genconf will generate a working configuration, it will not automatically detect hardware echo cancellation modules. These will have to be enabled manually in system.conf. /etc/dahdi/init.conf ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The configuration file of the dahdi init.d script is /etc/dahdi/init.conf . That file is used to override defaults that are set at the beginning of the init.d script. Reference Configuration ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sample system.conf ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ include::system.conf.asciidoc[] Sample init.conf ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ include::init.conf.asciidoc[] Sample genconf_parameters ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ FIXME: still not properly formatted. include::genconf_parameters.asciidoc[] Sample assigned-spans.conf ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ include::assigned-spans.conf.asciidoc[] Sample span-types.conf ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ include::span-types.conf.asciidoc[] Tonezones ~~~~~~~~~ The file zonedata.c contains the information about the tone zones used in libtonezone (and hence also in dahdi_cfg). Here is a list of those zones: include::tonezones.txt[] DAHDI PERL modules ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The directory xpp has, in addition to helper utilities for the Xorcom Astribank, a collection of PERL modules to provide information related to DAHDI. The PERL modules themselves are under xpp/perl_modules/ . In xpp/ there are several utilities that use those modules: - xpp-specific: dahdi_registration, xpp_sync, xpp_blink . - General: lsdahdi, dahdi_genconf, dahdi_hardware, dahdi_drivers The DAHDI PERL modules will currently only be automatically installed if you happen to install the xpp directory. Those utilities require the PERL modules to be installed, however they will also look for them in the directory perl_modules, and thus can be run directly from the DAHDI source tree. For example: ./xpp/dahdi_hardware -v To get usage information on a program, you can also use perldoc (sometimes provided in a package separate from perl itself). For instance: perldoc ./xpp/lsdahdi Some of them are specific for the Xorcom Astribank and described in its documentation. the others are: lsdahdi:: A somewhat glorified `cat /proc/dahdi/*`. dahdi_genconf:: Generates configuration based on the existing DAHDI channels and on /etc/dahdi/genconf_parameters (replaces genzaptelconf as well). dahdi_drivers:: A two-liner script (not installed by default) that simply returns the modules that should be modprobe-d on this system. dahdi_hardware:: Uses the information from SysFS and its own knowledge to show what PCI/USB DAHDI hardware is connected and if it is currently used by a driver. Shows also some more information for Astribanks from /proc/xpp . PPP Support ~~~~~~~~~~~ DAHDI digital cards can provide data channels through PPP as point-to-point connections. This requires a plug-in to the PPP daemon that is included in the ppp/ subdirectory. To install it: 1. Make sure you have the PPP source / headers installed. On Debian: apt-get install ppp-dev 2. Run 'make' on the ppp subdirectory: make -C ppp make -C ppp install 3. Make sure your kernel has support for both PPP (which is common is distribution kernels and for HDLC (much less common) - CONFIG_PPP and CONFIG_HDLC . Initialization -------------- This section documents the start up sequence of the DAHDI modules. There are generally two options: explicit (using an init script) and implicit (run from UDEV hook scripts). Explicit ~~~~~~~~ The dahdi init scripts does the following tasks: * Loading the module dahdi and any other module listed in /etc/dahdi/modules. * For xpp (Astribanks) - some specific initializations. See README.Astribank. * Runs link:doc/dahdi_cfg.8.html[dahdi_cfg] after all modules were loaded. * A number of other tools may need to be run: ** link:doc/fxotune.8.html[fxotune] ** dahdihpec_enable Only at this point Asterisk (or any other user of DAHDI) can be run. Implicit ~~~~~~~~ (Also known as "hot-plug" or "pinned-spans". This requires: * dahdi >= 2.8.0 * Setting the module parameter auto_assign_spans of dahdi to 0 * (Recommended) Asterisk >= 12 - which supports "dahdi create channels". When a device driver of a DAHDI device finishes initialization, it creates a dahdi_device kernel object. A dahdi_device represents a single DAHDI device (such as a PCI card) and may have several spans. If the value of auto_assign_spans is 1 when dahdi_device is created, spans are assigned automatically - each new span gets the first available span number and range of channels. However if it is set to 0, spans will not get assigned, and user space programs need to assign them. The low-level interface for doing so is explained in the section "Span Assignment" in the README of DAHDI-Linux. New Devices ^^^^^^^^^^^ When a kernel object is created or destroyed, the kernel sends an event to user space. Those events are normally handled by udevd. Configurations for udevd ("udev rules") may be placed in /etc/udev/rules.d or /lib/udev/rules.d. This package installs rules that instruct udevd to run the script `/usr/share/dahdi/dahdi_handle_device` on each new device, which runs all the scripts in `/usr/share/dahdi/handle_device.d`. Those scripts will: * If `/etc/dahdi/span-types.conf` exists, apply it to the device. It is used for E1/T1/J1 settings. See <<_sample_span_types_conf,sample span-types.conf>>. * If `/etc/dahdi/assigned-spans.conf` exists, assign the span according to it (if it is not specified there: don't assign it). used for E1/T1/J1 settings. See <<_sample_assigned_spans_conf,sample assigned-spans.conf>>. * But if that file does not exist, assign the span to the first available place. This script mainly uses the commands link:doc/dahdi_span_types.8.html[dahdi_span_types] and link:doc/dahdi_span_assignments.8.html[dahdi_span_assignments]. DAHDI devices are listed under `/sys/bus/dahdi_devices/devices`. If you want to disable running this script, add the following line to `/etc/dahdi/init.conf`: ............................. DAHDI_UDEV_DISABLE_DEVICES=yes ............................. New Spans ^^^^^^^^^ Once a span is assigned, a kernel object will appear for it. It will be listed under its device. As a new kernel object was created, an event is sent to udev. The standard DAHDI udev rules instruct udevd to run the script `/usr/share/dahdi/dahdi_span_config` which runs all the scripts in `/usr/share/dahdi/span_config.d`. Those script configures the new span: * If system.conf does not exist, generates a temporary configuration for the span using link:doc/dahdi_genconf.8.html[dahdi_genconf system]. * Runs link:doc/dahdi_cfg.8.html[dahdi_cfg] on the new span (using `-S` and -C`). * Runs `asterisk -rx 'dahdi create channels'` to add the new channels and spans to Asterisk (if they were configured in advance). If you want to disable running this script, add the following line to `/etc/dahdi/init.conf`: ............................. DAHDI_UDEV_DISABLE_SPANS=yes ............................. New Channels ^^^^^^^^^^^^ DAHDI channels have their own representation in the kernel. The standard udev rules that dahdi-tools includes for them, however, don't run a script for each device. Each DAHDI channel creates a block device file at /dev/dahdi/chan/'span'/'rel-chan', where 'span' and 'rel-chan' are each three-digit numbers (e.g: 035). 'span' is the span number and 'rel-chan' is the channel number relative to the span. The udev rules generate the following extra symlinks under /dev/dahdi: * /dev/dahdi/'num' - the channel number. As it was originally (but continues beyond 250). * /dev/dahdi/devices/'hardware_id'/'rel-span'/'rel-chan' - if the DAHDI device has a hardware ID field, provide listing of the device's span and channels. * /dev/dahdi/devices/@'hardware_id'/'rel-span'/'rel-chan' - likewise for the connector field. It has a "@" prefix. include::UPGRADE.txt[] License ------- This package is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License Version 2, except for some components which are distributed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1. Both licenses are included in this directory, and each file is clearly marked as to which license applies. If you wish to use the DAHDI drivers in an application for which the license terms are not appropriate (e.g. a proprietary embedded system), licenses under more flexible terms can be readily obtained through Digium, Inc. at reasonable cost. Reporting Bugs -------------- Please report bug and patches to the Asterisk bug tracker at http://bugs.digium.com/[] in the "DAHDI" category. Links ----- - http://asterisk.org/[] - The Asterisk PBX - http://voip-info.org/[] - http://voip-info.org/wiki/view/DAHDI[] - http://docs.tzafrir.org.il/dahdi-tools/README.html[Up-to-date HTML version of this file]