[asterisk-bugs] [JIRA] (ASTERISK-21872) RFC2833 DTMF Events received at a very fast interval, ~25ms, results in high CPU and when running in -p results in RTP packet sending delays
Rusty Newton (JIRA)
noreply at issues.asterisk.org
Tue Jun 25 14:02:04 CDT 2013
[ https://issues.asterisk.org/jira/browse/ASTERISK-21872?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Rusty Newton updated ASTERISK-21872:
------------------------------------
Assignee: hristo (was: Rusty Newton)
Status: Waiting for Feedback (was: Triage)
> RFC2833 DTMF Events received at a very fast interval,~25ms, results in high CPU and when running in -p results in RTP packet sending delays
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: ASTERISK-21872
> URL: https://issues.asterisk.org/jira/browse/ASTERISK-21872
> Project: Asterisk
> Issue Type: Bug
> Security Level: None
> Components: Core/General
> Affects Versions: 1.8.17.0, 1.8.19.1, 1.8.20.0, 1.8.22.0
> Environment: Debian 6.0 64-bit
> Reporter: hristo
> Assignee: hristo
> Severity: Minor
> Attachments: 2-calls-one-sending-many-dtmfs-asterisk-debug.txt, forward-stream-first-call-after-asterisk.pcap.txt, forward-stream-first-call-before-asterisk.pcap.txt, sample-config.diff, vmstat.txt
>
>
> If I send several DTMFs to Asterisk, one after the other, fast enough, it blocks other voice RTP packets for as long as several hundred milliseconds. This seems to affects *all* RTP streams on a server.
> I can say for sure, that Asterisk is not dropping the RTP packets, because after a while it sends all of them at once. It seems as if they are being held by something, while the DTMFs are being processed/forwarded.
> This only occurs in non Packet2Packet mode.
> Originally I've seen the problem when several people were connecting to a conference at about the same time and were entering the PIN numbers at about the same time, therefore producing a lot of DTMFs. The conference runs on a dedicate hardware und is unrelated. Asterisk just sits in the middle and bridges the calls. I have managed to reproduce this with only two calls with as little as 10-15 DTMFs, provided they are send fast enough.
> Attaching is a debug console log from the following call scenario. In this case both calls were genereted from a dedicated server and terminated on another dedicated server.
> Call 1:
> A (IP 1.1.1.1) dials 1000 --> Asterisk (IP 2.2.2.2) ---> B (IP 3.3.3.3)
> Call 2:
> A' (IP 1.1.1.1) dials 2000 --> Asterisk (IP 2.2.2.2) ---> B' (IP 3.3.3.3)
> Both calls are active at this point. A' on Call 2 starts sending DTMFs (in this case 40 of them). As a result RTP packets from Call *1* in both directions are delayed by 150-160 ms and are being sent in bursts.
> In the logs I often see:
> res_timing_timerfd.c:225 timerfd_timer_ack: Expected to acknowledge 1 ticks but got 5 instead
> and the CPU is close to 100% (caused by the asterisk process). As soon as all DTMFs are sent, the RTP streams return back to normal with asterisk sending one packet every 20 ms on average.
> Attached is also a filtered packet capture that shows only the forward RTP stream on Call 1 from A -> Asterisk and from Asterisk -> B. "Time" represents the delta from the previos packet. Under normal conditions this should be close to 0.020 s (or 20 ms).
> One example of the problem can be seen at line 1235 in 'forward-stream-first-call-after-asterisk.pcap.txt'. The packet there has been held for ~160 ms, then sent together with the next 7 packets all at once.
> The RTP packets from the corresponding call leg (before asterisk) start at line 1244 in 'forward-stream-first-call-before-asterisk.pcap.txt" and are all equally spaced at about 20 ms.
> There are many such examples - simply search for 0.000 (deltas which are less than 1 ms) to identify groups of packets that are sent together. The same problem is present in the backward stream too (not attached).
> How to reproduce - add the following to the dialplan:
> exten => _X.,n,Dial(SIP/B at 3.3.3.3,,t)
> The 't' option is important, because it effectively disables the Packet2Packet mode. Connect 2 calls (2 sets of telephones) and start dialing DTMFs as fast as you can on one of them (or simply generate 2 calls and send the DTMFs as I did). This will disrupt the call between the other set of phones if done fast enough.
> I have tested this on 3 servers (2 physical and one virtual). All of them were running the same OS (Debian 6), so this may end up being an OS or res_timing_timerfd problem after all, but I really cannot test it on a different distribution.
> I tested with the following versions and was able to reproduce the problem with all of them:
> 1.8.22.0
> 1.8.20.0
> 1.8.19.1
> 1.8.17.0
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