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About

mod_event_socket is a TCP based interface to control FreeSWITCH. The default values are to bind to 127.0.0.1 port 8021 and the default password is ClueCon. See the Configuration section below for a note on when to use 0.0.0.0 instead of 127.0.0.1.

The module operates in two modes, inbound and outbound.

 

 Click here to expand Table of Contents

 

Inbound

Inbound mode means you run your applications (in whatever languages) as clients and connect to the FreeSWITCH server to invoke commands and control FreeSWITCH.

    ********************************************

    *                     |                    *

    *  FreeSWITCH™        |  mod_event_socket  *

    *                     |  127.0.0.1:8021    *

    *                     |                    *

    ********************************************

              /\                 /\             

              /                   \             

       ******************       ******************

       * Client A       *       * Client B       *

       * 127.0.0.1:9988 *       * 127.0.0.1:9999 *

       ******************       ******************

In inbound mode, your application (Client A, Client B: Python, Perl, etc) connects to the FreeSWITCH™ server on the given port and sends commands, as shown in the above diagram. The rest of this document is biased toward this inbound mode, though there is a lot of overlap with outbound mode. Using inbound socket connections you can check status, make outbound calls, etc.

If you would like to handle incoming calls using inbound mode, you should add the park command to your dialplan. Otherwise the dialplan might complete executing before your client can send commands to the event socket.

Outbound

Outbound mode means you make a daemon (with whatever language) and then have FS connect to it. You add an extension to the dialplan and put <action application="socket" data="ip:port sync full"/> and create a script that runs on that ip:port and answer, playback and everything else you need on the script. Since revision git-8c794ac on 14/03/2012 you can connect to IPv6 addresses. When using IPv6 addresses the port parameter is required: <action application="socket" data="::1:8021"/> connects to ::1 on port 8021. Since this revision hostnames resolving to IPv6 addresses can be used.

In outbound mode, also known as the "socket application" (or socket client), FreeSWITCH™ makes outbound connections to another process (similar to Asterisk's FAGI model). Using outbound connections you can have FreeSWITCH™ call your own application(s) when particular events occur. See Event Socket Outbound for more details regarding things specific to outbound mode.

Configuration

First enable the mod_event_socket module in modules.conf.xml (in a default configuration this is located in /usr/local/freeswitch/conf/autoload_configs/modules.conf.xml)

By default the module is enabled but restricted to localhost by the settings specified below.

The module settings can be changed in the event_socket.conf.xml file (in a default configuration this is located in /usr/local/freeswitch/conf/autoload_configs/event_socket.conf.xml):

<configuration name="event_socket.conf" description="Socket Client">

  <settings>

    <param name="listen-ip" value="127.0.0.1"/>

    <param name="listen-port" value="8021"/>

    <param name="password" value="ClueCon"/>

  </settings>

</configuration>

The default settings allow socket connections only from the local host. To allow connections from any host on the network, use 0.0.0.0 instead of the default 127.0.0.1:

<configuration name="event_socket.conf" description="Socket Client">

  <settings>

    <!-- Allow socket connections from any host -->

    <param name="listen-ip" value="0.0.0.0"/>

    <param name="listen-port" value="8021"/>

    <param name="password" value="ClueCon"/>

  </settings>

</configuration>

IPv6

Since revision git-8c794ac on 14/03/2012 you can listen on IPv6 addresses. On dual stack hosts you can listen on both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses using:

<configuration name="event_socket.conf" description="Socket Client">

  <settings>

    <!-- Allow socket connections from any host -->

    <param name="listen-ip" value="::"/>

    <param name="listen-port" value="8021"/>

    <param name="password" value="ClueCon"/>

  </settings>

</configuration>

ACL

Access lists can be created in acl.conf.xml and enabled in event_socket.conf.xml or allow ip ranges directly in event_socket.conf.xml

<param name="apply-inbound-acl" value="<acl_list|cidr>"/>

Example:

<param name="apply-inbound-acl" value="10.20.0.0/16"/>

Note that multiple apply-inbound-acl params will not work.

Example Clients

The idea is that you would write your own client, but here are some examples.

Liverpie

Liverpie (language independent IVR proxy) is a free little piece of software, written in Ruby, that talks to FreeSWITCH on one side, and to any web application on the other, regardless of language, platform etc. It translates FreeSWITCH mod_socket dialogue into HTTP talk (embedding various parameters in HTTP headers), so you can write your own http-speaking finite state machine and hook it to FreeSWITCH via Liverpie. Note also that Liverpie expects the response in YAML so you can save yourself the pain of providing XML if you are comfortable with Liverpie doing the translation.

Find Liverpie here: www.liverpie.com

Telnet Client

telnet to port 8021 and enter "auth ClueCon" as password to authenticate. From here you can send any of the commands listed in this document. Note that you need to provide a double empty line after the command so it processed.

Perl Command Client

There is a Perl client in scripts/socket called fs.pl.

With the module up and loaded:

cd scripts/socket

perl fs.pl <optional log level>

You can enter a few api commands like "show" or "status".

Ruby Libraries

Python Client Library

In the scripts/python/freepy directory, there is a python client library based on the Twisted asynchronous socket library. An example is included.

There's also an alternative twisted protocol class for FreeSWITCH's event socket. It currently supports inbound and outbound methods, and examples are included.

PySWITCH is one more library for Python and Twisted programmers. It has extensive support for FreeSWITCH API, bgapi and Dialplan Tools.

PHP Client

Website based PHP example PHP Event Socket

Another example in PHP : freeswitcheventsocketlistener

Java Client Libraries

Java_ESL describes several options for using Java to communicate with the ESL.

Javascript / Node.js library

  • Node-esl module available on GitHub and on npm. Provides support for both Inbound and Outbound connections, a Server helper for multiple Outbound connections, and implements the Event Socket Libraryinterface. Examples can be found in the examples directory of the source.

.NET Client library

Support is included in tree for building under Windows. See libs/esl/managed managed_esl.201x.

There is a sample application included named ManagedEslTest. This will demonstrate how the start a simple inbound example as provided but also shows the other modes as well.

The managed portions are platform neutral but the esl swig wrapper (the ESL project in the managed solution) is platform dependent and must be built for the intended platform. You must also have previously built the main FreeSWITCH project as the native esl library is included from there otherwise you will receive a esl.lib not found error.

[1] AgbaraVOIP .NET Client

 

Go Client library (golang)

The go-eventsocket client library supports both inbound and outbound event socket connections.

 

Command Documentation

The following section aims at documenting all commands that can be sent. This section is work in progress.

api

Send an api command (blocking mode)

api <command> <arg>

Api commands are documented in the mod_commands section.

Examples:

api originate sofia/mydomain.com/[email protected] 1000   # connect sip:[email protected] to extension 1000

api sleep 5000

bgapi

Send an api command (non-blocking mode) this will let you execute a job in the background and the result will be sent as an event with an indicated uuid to match the reply to the command)

bgapi <command> <arg> 

The same API commands available as with the api command, however the server returns immediately and is available for processing more commands.

Example return value:

Content-Type: command/reply

Reply-Text: +OK Job-UUID: c7709e9c-1517-11dc-842a-d3a3942d3d63

When the command is done executing, freeswitch fires an event with the result and you can compare that to the Job-UUID to see what the result was. In order to receive this event, you will need to subscribe toBACKGROUND_JOB events.


If you want to set your own custom Job-UUID over plain socket:

bgapi status

Job-UUID: d8c7f660-37a6-4e73-9170-1a731c442148

Reply:

Content-Type: command/reply

Reply-Text: +OK Job-UUID: d8c7f660-37a6-4e73-9170-1a731c442148

Job-UUID: d8c7f660-37a6-4e73-9170-1a731c442148

linger

Tells FreeSWITCH not to close the socket connect when a channel hangs up. Instead, it keeps the socket connection open until the last event related to the channel has been received by the socket client.

linger

nolinger

Disable socket lingering. See linger above.

nolinger

event

Enable or disable events by class or all (plain or xml or json output format)

event plain <list of events to log or all for all> 

The event command are used to subscribe on events from FreeSWITCH. You may specify any number events on the same line, they should be separated with space.

The events are listed in the Event List page.

Examples:

  event plain ALL

  event plain CHANNEL_CREATE CHANNEL_DESTROY CUSTOM conference::maintenance sofia::register sofia::expire

  event xml ALL

  event json CHANNEL_ANSWER

Subsequent calls to 'event' won't override the previous event sets. Supposing, you've first registered for DTMF

  event plain DTMF 

then you may want to register for CHANNEL_ANSWER also, it is enough to give

  event plain CHANNEL_ANSWER

and you will continue to receive DTMF along with CHANNEL_ANSWER, later one doesn't override the previous.

Special Case - 'myevents'

The 'myevents' subscription allows your inbound socket connection to behave like an outbound socket connect. It will "lock on" to the events for a particular uuid and will ignore all other events, closing the socket when the channel goes away or closing the channel when the socket disconnects and all applications have finished executing.

Usage:

  myevents <uuid>

Once the socket connection has locked on to the events for this particular uuid it will NEVER see any events that are not related to the channel, even if subsequent event commands are sent. If you need to monitor a specific channel/uuid and you need watch for other events as well then it is best to use a filter.

You can also set the event format (plain, xml or json):

Usage:

  myevents plain <uuid>

  myevents json <uuid>

  myevents xml <uuid>

The default format is plain.

divert_events

The divert_events switch is available to allow events that an embedded script would expect to get in the inputcallback to be diverted to the event socket.

Examples:

  divert_events on

  divert_events off

An inputcallback can be registered in an embedded script using setInputCallback(). Setting divert_events to "on" can be used for chat messages like gtalk channel, ASR events and others.

Read more

filter

Specify event types to listen for. Note, this is not a filter out but rather a "filter in," that is, when a filter is applied only the filtered values are received. Multiple filters on a socket connection are allowed.

Usage:

  filter <EventHeader> <ValueToFilter>

Example:

The following example will subscribe to all events and then create two filters, one to listen for HEARTBEATS and one to listen for CHANNEL_EXECUTE events.

  events plain all



  Content-Type: command/reply

  Reply-Text: +OK event listener enabled plain





  filter Event-Name CHANNEL_EXECUTE



  Content-Type: command/reply

  Reply-Text: +OK filter added. [filter]=[Event-Name CHANNEL_EXECUTE]





  filter Event-Name HEARTBEAT



  Content-Type: command/reply

  Reply-Text: +OK filter added. [Event-Name]=[HEARTBEAT]

Now only HEARTBEAT and CHANNEL_EXECUTE events will be received. You can filter on any of the event headers. To filter for a specific channel you will need to use the uuid:

  filter Unique-ID d29a070f-40ff-43d8-8b9d-d369b2389dfe

This method is an alternative to the myevents event type. If you need only the events for a specific channel then use myevents, otherwise use a combination of filters to narrow down the events you wish to receive on the socket.

To filter multiple unique IDs, you can just add another filter for events for each UUID. This can be useful for example if you want to receive start/stop-talking events for multiple users on a particular conference.

  filter plain all

  filter plain CUSTOM conference::maintenance

  filter Unique-ID $participantB

  filter Unique-ID $participantA

  filter Unique-ID $participantC

 

This will give you events for Participant A,B and C on any conference. To receive events for all users on a conference you can use something like:

filter Conference-Unique-ID $ConfUUID

You can filter on any of the parameters you get in a freeSWITCH event:

 

  filter plain all

  filter call-direction Inbound

  filter Event-Calling-File mod_conference.c

  filter Conference-Unique-ID $ConfUUID

 

You can use them individually or compound them depending on whatever end result you desire for the type of events you want to receive

filter delete

Specify the events which you want to revoke the filter. filter delete can be used when some filters are applied wrongly or when there is no use of the filter.

Usage:

  filter delete <EventHeader> <ValueToFilter>

Example:

  filter delete Event-Name HEARTBEAT

Now, you will no longer receive HEARTBEAT events. You can delete any filter that is applied by this way.

  filter delete Unique-ID d29a070f-40ff-43d8-8b9d-d369b2389dfe

This is to delete the filter which is applied for the given unique-id. After this, you won't receive any events for this unique-id.

  filter delete Unique-ID

This deletes all the filters which are applied based on the unique-id.

sendevent

Send an event into the event system (multi line input for headers)

sendevent <event-name>  

Informational Tip

The event generated by sendevent has the correct event type in the internal event structure, so nodes which have subscribed to this event type will get the event, but unfortunately the "Event-Name" header field is always "COMMAND". In fact, the received event is simply a clone of the original COMMAND event for "sendevent" itself.

NOTE: This apparently is a bug that is being addressed. As a work-around, you can send sendevent without specifying an event type, and include a Event-Name header with the desired event name. For example:

 sendevent SOME_NAME

 Event-Name: CUSTOM

 Event-Subclass: albs::Section-Alarm

 Section: 33

 Alarm-Type: PIR

 State: ACTIVE


 

For MWI you make the FreeSWITCH event SWITCH_EVENT_MESSAGE_WAITING with headers:

MWI-Messages-Waiting (yes/no)

MWI-Message-Account <any sip url you want>

MWI-Voice-Message x/y (a/b)

read/unread (urgent read/urgent unread)

Example of sendevent to switch phone MWI led (tested on yealink)

No Message

sendevent  message_waiting

MWI-Messages-Waiting: no

MWI-Message-Account: sip:[email protected]

Some Message

sendevent  message_waiting

MWI-Messages-Waiting: yes

MWI-Message-Account: sip:[email protected]

MWI-Voice-Message: 0/1 (0/0)

 

To have Snom phones reread their settings from the settings server you can use:

sendevent NOTIFY

profile: internal

event-string: check-sync;reboot=false

user: 1000

host: 192.168.10.4

content-type: application/simple-message-summary

Example of sendevent with a message body, the length of the body is specified by content-length:

sendevent NOTIFY

profile: internal

content-type: application/simple-message-summary

event-string: check-sync

user: 1005

host: 192.168.10.4

content-length: 2



OK

Another example with a notify:

sendevent NOTIFY

profile: internal

content-type: application/simple-message-summary

event-string: check-sync

user: 1005

host: 99.157.44.194

content-length: 2



OK

Results in a packet like this:

NOTIFY sip:[email protected] SIP/2.0

Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 99.157.44.194;rport;branch=z9hG4bKpH2DtBDcDtg0N

Max-Forwards: 70

From: <sip:[email protected]>;tag=Dy3c6Q1y15v5S

To: <sip:[email protected]>

Call-ID: 129d1446-0063-122c-15aa-001a923f6a0f

CSeq: 104766492 NOTIFY

Contact: <sip:[email protected]:5060>

User-Agent: FreeSWITCH-mod_sofia/1.0.trunk-9578:9586

Allow: INVITE, ACK, BYE, CANCEL, OPTIONS, PRACK, MESSAGE, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, REFER, UPDATE, REGISTER, INFO, PUBLISH

Supported: 100rel, timer, precondition, path, replaces

Event: check-sync

Allow-Events: talk, presence, dialog, call-info, sla, include-session-description, presence.winfo, message-summary

Subscription-State: terminated;timeout

Content-Type: application/simple-message-summary

Content-Length: 2



OK

Example for Sipura/Linksys/Cisco phone or ATA to resync config with a specified profile URL:

sendevent NOTIFY

profile: internal

event-string: resync;profile=http://10.20.30.40/profile.xml

user: 1000

host: 10.20.30.40

content-type: application/simple-message-summary

to-uri: sip:[email protected]

from-uri: sip:[email protected]



Results in a packet like this:

NOTIFY sip:[email protected]:5060 SIP/2.0

Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 10.20.30.40:5060;rport;branch=z9hG4bKyK4gHN28Hpyaa

Max-Forwards: 70

From: <sip:[email protected]>;tag=FDXet6B470F6B

To: <sip:[email protected]>

Call-ID: 19ff59fb-2cfc-1230-66b7-00199988ac0c

CSeq: 29295547 NOTIFY

Contact: <sip:[email protected]:5060>

User-Agent: FreeSWITCH-mod_sofia/1.0.head-git-12f2bdf 2011-11-28 16-45-59 -0600

Allow: INVITE, ACK, BYE, CANCEL, OPTIONS, MESSAGE, UPDATE, INFO, REGISTER, REFER, NOTIFY, PUBLISH, SUBSCRIBE

Supported: timer, precondition, path, replaces

Event: resync;profile=http://10.20.30.40/profile.xml

Allow-Events: talk, hold, presence, dialog, line-seize, call-info, sla, include-session-description, presence.winfo, message-summary, refer

Subscription-State: terminated;reason=timeout

Content-Type: application/simple-message-summary

Content-Length: 0

  • If 'Auth Resync-Reboot' is set to yes (default) in the phone than you have to specify the reverse-auth-user and reverse-auth-pass fields
  • If you only put 'event-string: resync' in the body than the unit will use there stored profile url

Example usage for CSTA event:

sendevent SWITCH_EVENT_PHONE_FEATURE

profile: internal

user: ex1004

host: 3.local

device: ex1004

Feature-Event: DoNotDisturbEvent

doNotDisturbOn: on

Example of send event with a MESSAGE and a message body, the length of the body is specified by content-length:

sendevent SEND_MESSAGE

profile: internal

content-length: 2

content-type: text/plain

user: 1005

host: 99.157.44.194



OK

Results in a packet like this:

MESSAGE sip:[email protected] SIP/2.0

Via: SIP/2.0/UDP 99.157.44.194;rport;branch=z9hG4bK0apcKrtycp64p

Max-Forwards: 70

From: <sip:[email protected]>;tag=4c0Dp49yUNmXH

To: <sip:[email protected]>

Call-ID: 29916da5-0062-122c-15aa-001a923f6a0f

CSeq: 104766296 MESSAGE

Contact: <sip:[email protected]:5060>

User-Agent: FreeSWITCH-mod_sofia/1.0.trunk-9578:9586

Allow: INVITE, ACK, BYE, CANCEL, OPTIONS, PRACK, MESSAGE, SUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, REFER, UPDATE, REGISTER, INFO, PUBLISH

Supported: 100rel, timer, precondition, path, replaces

Content-Type: text/plain

Content-Length: 2



OK

To display a text message on a Snom 370 or Snom 820 the message must be of type "text/plain".


Authentication: Some phones require authentication for NOTIFY requests. FS can respond to a digest challenge if reverse authentication credentials are supplied for the user. See:XML_User_Directory_Guide#reverse_authentication


I've not found any documentation of any additional event headers, hopefully someone else with add that information. The events themselves can be found here: Event List

sendevent CHANNEL_HANGUP

Something that was undocumented but is supported; SIP INFO messages can be send to every IP you need.

sendevent SEND_INFO
profile: external
content-type: text/plain
to-uri: sip:[email protected]
from-uri: sip:[email protected]
content-length: 15
 

test

sendmsg

sendmsg <uuid>

Send a message to the call of given uuid (call-command execute or hangup), see examples below.

Send message are used to send messages that controls the behavior of FreeSWITCH. You need to provide a uid (the unique id for each call/session).

originate a call directly to park by making an ext the ext part of the originate command &park()

IMPORTANT! All sendmsg commands must be followed by 2 returns.

Since messaging format is similar to RFC2882. If you are using any libraries that following line wrapping recommendation of RFC 2822 make sure that you disable line wrapping as FreeSWITCH will ignore wrapped line.


Example:

sendmsg <uuid>

call-command: execute

execute-app-name: playback

execute-app-arg: /tmp/test.wav

call-command

The first command is Call-Command, it can do one of the following subcommands:

execute

Execute are used to execute applications, check the Dialplan XML section for more information about all commands.

The format should be:

sendmsg <uuid>

call-command: execute

execute-app-name: <one of the applications>

execute-app-arg: <application data>

loops: <number of times to invoke the command, default: 1>


This alternate format can be used for app args that are truncated by the module's 2048 octet limit:

sendmsg <uuid>

call-command: execute

execute-app-name: <one of the applications>

loops: <number of times to invoke the command, default: 1>

content-type: text/plain

content-length: <content length>

 

<application data>

 

If you would like to correlate the CHANNEL_EXECUTE and CHANNEL_EXECUTE_COMPLETE events that are generated when the command you send using sendmsg is executed you can add an Event-UUID header with a UUID you specify. In the corresponding events, the UUID will be in the Application-UUID header. If you do not specify and Event-UUID, Freeswitch will generate a UUID for the Application-UUID.

Example:

Event-UUID: 22075ce5-b67b-4f04-a6dd-1726ec14c8bf

hangup

Hangup the call.

Format:

sendmsg <uuid>

call-command: hangup

hangup-cause: <one of the causes listed below>

Additional information

unicast

Unicast is used to hook up spandsp for in and outbound faxing over a socket.

Additional information from Brian:

that is a nice way someone writing a script/app that uses the socket interface can get at the media

it's good because then spandsp isn't living inside of FreeSWITCH

it can run on a box sitting next to it

scales better

sendmsg <uuid>

call-command: unicast

local-ip: <default is 127.0.0.1>

local-port: <default is 8025>

remote-ip: <default is 127.0.0.1>

remote-port: <default is 8026>

transport: <either "tcp" or "udp", without the quotes>

and optionally

flags: native - don't transcode audio to/from L16

nomedia

No description.

sendmsg <uuid>

call-command: nomedia

nomedia-uuid: <noinfo>

exit

exit

Close the socket connection.

auth

auth <password>

log

log <level>

Enable log output. Levels same as the console.conf values

nolog

nolog

Disable log output previously enabled by the log command

nixevent

nixevent <event types | ALL  | CUSTOM custom event sub-class>

Command to allow 'events all' followed by 'nixevent <some_event>' to do all but 1 type scenario.

noevents

noevents

Disable all events that were previously enabled with event.

Sample Event Socket Applications

  • Email2callback - Email to callback application with Python and freepy.

See Also

 

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