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drachtio app that handles REGISTER requests

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This application provides a part of the SBC (Session Border Controller) functionality of jambonz. It handles incoming REGISTER requests from clients, including both sip softphones and WebRTC client applications. Authentication is delegated to customer-side logic via a web callback configured for the account in the jambonz database. Information about active registrations is stored in a redis database.

registrar database

A redis database is used to hold active registrations. When a register request arrives and is authenticated, the following values are parsed from the request:

  • the address of record, or "aor" (e.g, daveh@drachtio.org),
  • the sip uri, or "contact" that this user is advertising (e.g. sip:daveh@3.44.3.12:5060)
  • the source address and port that sent the REGISTER request to the server
  • the transport protocol that should be used to contact the user (e.g. udp, tcp, wss etc)
  • the sip address of the drachtio server that received the REGISTER request, and
  • the expiration of the registration, in seconds.
  • the application callback that should be invoked when a call is placed from this registered device
  • the application status callback that should invoked for call events on calls placed from this registered device

A hash value is created from these values and stored with an expiry value equal to the number of seconds granted to the registration (note that when a sip client is detected as being behind a firewall, the application will reduce the granted expires value to 30 seconds, in order to force the client to re-register frequently, however the expiry in redis is set to the longer, originally requested expires value).

The hash value is inserted with a key being the aor:

aor => {contact, source, protocol, sbcAddress, call_hook, call_status_hook}, expiry = registration expires value

configuration

Configuration is provided via the npmjs config package. The following elements make up the configuration for the application:

drachtio server location
{
  "drachtio": {
    "port": 3001,
    "secret": "cymru"
  },

the drachtio object specifies the port to listen on for tcp connections from drachtio servers as well as the shared secret that is used to authenticate to the server.

Note: outbound connections are used for all drachtio applications in jambonz, to allow for easier centralization and clustering of application logic.

redis server location
  "redis": {
    "port": 6379,
    "host": "127.0.0.1"
  },

the redis object specifies the location of the redis database. Any of the options defined here may be supplied, but host and port are minimally required.

Note that in a fully-scaled out environment with multiple SBCs there will be one centralized redis database (or cluster) that stores registrations for all SBCs.

application log level
  "logging": {
    "level": "info"
  }

http callback

Authenticating users is the responsibility of the client by exposing an http callback. A POST request will be sent to the configured callback (i.e. the value in the accounts.registration_hook column in the associated sip realm value in the REGISTER request). The body of the POST will be a json payload including the following information:

{
	"method": "REGISTER",
	"expires": 3600,
	"scheme": "digest",
	"username": "john",
	"realm": "jambonz.org",
	"nonce": "157590482938000",
	"uri": "sip:172.37.0.10:5060",
	"response": "be641cf7951ff23ab04c57907d59f37d",
	"qop": "auth",
	"nc": "00000001",
	"cnonce": "6b8b4567",
	"algorithm": "MD5"
}

It is the responsibility of the customer-side logic to retrieve the associated password for the given username and to then authenticate the request by calculating a response hash value (per the algorithm described in RFC 2617) and comparing it to the response property in the http body.

For example code showing how to calculate the response hash given the above inputs, see here.

For a simple, full-fledged example server doing the same, see here.

The customer server SHOULD return a 200 OK response to the http request in all cases with a json body indicating whether the request was successfully authenticated.

The body MUST include a status field with a value of either ok or fail, indicating whether the request was authenticated or not.

{"status": "ok"}

Additionally, in the case of failure, the body MAY include a msg field with a human-readable description of why the authentication failed.

{"status": "fail", "msg": "invalid username"}

In the case of success, the body MAY include an expires value which specifies the duration of time, in seconds, to grant for this registration. If not provided, the expires value in the REGISTER request is used; if provided, however, the value provided must be less than or equal to the duration requested.

{"status": "ok", "expires": 300}

Additionally in the case of success, the body SHOULD include call_hook and call_status_hook properties that reference the application URLs to use when calls are placed from this device. If these values are not provided, outbound calling from the device will not be allowed.

Running the test suite

To run the included test suite, you will need to have a mysql server installed on your laptop/server. You will need to set the MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD env variable to the mysql root password before running the tests. The test suite creates a database named 'jambones_test' in your mysql server to run the tests against, and removes it when done.

MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=foobar npm test