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In ASTERISK-20904, the focus was around the changes to NAT that took place in
Asterisk 11. Since the report stated that 1.8 was fine, we didn't take a look
at 1.8 at the time.
While working on ASTERISK-21225, I could see that 1.8 would benefit from having
some of those changes applied to it.
This patch does the following:
* The important part of this patch is that it sets the peer's flags earlier in
build_peer so that the code properly uses the peer's flags based on the peer's
configuration.
* constify req parameter in check_via()
* update realtime schemas under the contrib directory to handle properly the NAT
settings available in 1.8 as well as to handle the changes made in 11 to make
upgrading easier when installing newer versions of Asterisk
(closes issue ASTERISK-21243)
Reported by: Michael L. Young
Patches:
asterisk-20904-changes_for_1.8.diff Michael L. Young (license 5026)
Review: https://reviewboard.asterisk.org/r/2422/
git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/branches/1.8@384779 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
app_festival is an application that allows one to send text-to-speech commands
to a background festival server, and to obtain the resulting waveform which
gets sent down to the respective channel. app_festival also employs a waveform
cache, so invariant text-to-speech strings ("Please press 1 for instructions")
do not need to be dynamically generated all the time.
You need :
1) festival, patched to produce 8khz waveforms on output. Patch for Festival
1.4.2 RELEASE are included. The patch adds a new command to festival
(asterisk_tts).
It is possible to run Festival without patches in the source-code. Just
add this to your /etc/festival.scm or /usr/share/festival/festival/scm:
(define (tts_textasterisk string mode)
"(tts_textasterisk STRING MODE)
Apply tts to STRING. This function is specifically designed for
use in server mode so a single function call may synthesize the string.
This function name may be added to the server safe functions."
(let ((wholeutt (utt.synth (eval (list 'Utterance 'Text string)))))
(utt.wave.resample wholeutt 8000)
(utt.wave.rescale wholeutt 5)
(utt.send.wave.client wholeutt)))
[See the comment with subject "Using Debian
festival >= 1.4.3-15 (no recompiling needed!)" on
http://www.voip-info.org/wiki-Asterisk+festival+installation for the
original mentioning of it]
2) You may wish to obtain and install the asterisk-perl
module by James Golovich <james@gnuinter.net>, from
either CPAN, or his site: http://asterisk.gnuinter.net,
as this contains a good example of how variable text
can be tts'd via asterisk, namely the examples/tts-*.agi
files there. It has been noted that the current expression
evaluation capabilities of asterisk are not best suited
for the generation and manipulation of text. AGI scripting
can be ideal for these sorts of needs. For simpler usage,
fixed, pre-recorded messages may be more amenable for your
purposes.
3) Before running asterisk, you have to run festival-server with a command
like :
/usr/local/festival/bin/festival --server > /dev/null 2>&1 &