<html>
<body>
<div style="font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, Sans-Serif;">
<table bgcolor="#f9f3c9" width="100%" cellpadding="8" style="border: 1px #c9c399 solid;">
<tr>
<td>
This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit:
<a href="https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/1235/">https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/1235/</a>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<br />
<table bgcolor="#fefadf" width="100%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="8" style="background-image: url('https://reviewboard.asterisk.orgrb/images/review_request_box_top_bg.png'); background-position: left top; background-repeat: repeat-x; border: 1px black solid;">
<tr>
<td>
<div>Review request for Asterisk Developers, Russell Bryant and David Vossel.</div>
<div>By jrose.</div>
<h1 style="color: #575012; font-size: 10pt; margin-top: 1.5em;">Description </h1>
<table width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffff" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="10" style="border: 1px solid #b8b5a0">
<tr>
<td>
<pre style="margin: 0; padding: 0; white-space: pre-wrap; white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; white-space: -pre-wrap; white-space: -o-pre-wrap; word-wrap: break-word;">Under SIP pedantic mode, this function was encoding strings meant for the display name into into a URI safe format when this was not specified in the SIP RFCs. I also took the liberty of adding a little commentary.
pedantic mode was the default in Asterisk 1.8+</pre>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<h1 style="color: #575012; font-size: 10pt; margin-top: 1.5em;">Testing </h1>
<table width="100%" bgcolor="#ffffff" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="10" style="border: 1px solid #b8b5a0">
<tr>
<td>
<pre style="margin: 0; padding: 0; white-space: pre-wrap; white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; white-space: -pre-wrap; white-space: -o-pre-wrap; word-wrap: break-word;">A number of different calls with user names including more interesting UTF-8 characters from a variety of characters from a variety of sources including trema (like German umlaut characters), Kanji (Japanese pictographic characters), Sanskrit (phonetic characters for one of India's languages), and Cyrillic (Russian). Whether or not they'll display properly depends on the receiving phone... My Grandstream phone doesn't like the higher end UTF-8 characters, but all of my soft phones read them fine.
Testing involved a manually set DAHDI channel to have odd caller ID and an incoming call from another Asterisk Box sending SIP from a phone set to also have a display name with high UTF-8 chars.</pre>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<div style="margin-top: 1.5em;">
<b style="color: #575012; font-size: 10pt; margin-top: 1.5em;">Bugs: </b>
<a href="https://issues.asterisk.org/view.php?id=18298">18298</a>
</div>
<h1 style="color: #575012; font-size: 10pt; margin-top: 1.5em;">Diffs</b> </h1>
<ul style="margin-left: 3em; padding-left: 0;">
<li>/branches/1.8/channels/chan_sip.c <span style="color: grey">(321272)</span></li>
</ul>
<p><a href="https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/1235/diff/" style="margin-left: 3em;">View Diff</a></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</div>
</body>
</html>