Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

freeswitch: add patch moving package to PCRE2 #841

Merged
merged 1 commit into from
Oct 28, 2024

Conversation

Ansuel
Copy link
Member

@Ansuel Ansuel commented Nov 3, 2023

Add paending patch moving package to PCRE2 as PCRE is EOL and won't receive any updates anymore.

These patch were run uder the freeswitch CI and were validated with their unit tests.

Maintainer: Sebastian Kemper [email protected]


@BKPepe probably will take a bit for this to be actually merged upstream but just for reference also here...

@Ansuel
Copy link
Member Author

Ansuel commented Nov 3, 2023

Also I think I'm reaching a whole new level on persuading this project of remove PCRE from OpenWRT LOL

@micmac1
Copy link
Contributor

micmac1 commented Nov 5, 2023

This is definitely another level. Thanks Christian.

@BKPepe
Copy link
Member

BKPepe commented Apr 27, 2024

Okay guys, I see that @Ansuel created PR in upstream - signalwire/freeswitch#2299

Since we are not getting any attention from devs there. Could we merge this, please and as well backport it to the stable branches as well? We need to move on with PCRE removal. 🙏

@micmac1
Copy link
Contributor

micmac1 commented Apr 27, 2024 via email

@BKPepe
Copy link
Member

BKPepe commented Apr 27, 2024

Upstream devs are occupied, @Ansuel did so amazing work while submitting PRs to upstream for other packages, which was migrated to PCRE2, but this one is the last package.

It is a pity that we can not say that PCRE2 migration is done until someone merge this thing. :-(

Maybe someone can reach them to look into it with higher priority.

@robimarko
Copy link
Contributor

I am tempted to merge this since upstream isn't budging and I dont see a point in having this package that depends on library that was removed so its not usable.

@Ansuel
Copy link
Member Author

Ansuel commented Aug 26, 2024 via email

@BKPepe
Copy link
Member

BKPepe commented Aug 26, 2024

Guys, I am thinking maybe a little bit loud and sorry for that, but if upstream does not care, why we should? There was a plenty of time to look at it or at least they could say that they are busy and they will look at it, but that does not happen.

Currently as said, freeswitch is not compiled. What about removing it from the repository? If users would like to have it back, they could argue and convince upstream to look at it.

@BKPepe BKPepe mentioned this pull request Aug 26, 2024
@micmac1
Copy link
Contributor

micmac1 commented Aug 26, 2024 via email

@robimarko
Copy link
Contributor

libpcre was dropped after everything else got migrated over to libcpre2 since libpcre is EOL and not maintained anymore.
It was a lengthy process and it definitively was not dropped overnight.

@BKPepe I am not a fan of dropping packages, but it's been like 9 months since this was posted and nobody even bothered to test it and report back.
I thought that removing libpcre would make its users surface but it doesn't seem so.

@BKPepe
Copy link
Member

BKPepe commented Aug 27, 2024

Yeah, I agree with what @robimarko said. Basically, the same is what I wanted to say. 💯 We need to be a little bit more progressive. Otherwise, we would have libpcre in our repository for ages. However, 9 months it is quite a long time to look at it.

I thought that removing libpcre would make its users surface but it doesn't seem so.

It is also possible that many users are waiting until it is missing in the stable release.

@BKPepe
Copy link
Member

BKPepe commented Sep 23, 2024

As there seems to be radio silence, I think we really need to drop this package.

@micmac1
Copy link
Contributor

micmac1 commented Sep 23, 2024 via email

@BKPepe
Copy link
Member

BKPepe commented Sep 23, 2024

It is not marked as broken, because buildbots are still trying to compile this package. It can be seen here:
https://downloads.openwrt.org/snapshots/faillogs/arm_cortex-a9_vfpv3-d16/telephony/freeswitch/compile.txt

Its failing, because of missing libpcre.

@micmac1
Copy link
Contributor

micmac1 commented Sep 23, 2024 via email

@Ansuel
Copy link
Member Author

Ansuel commented Sep 23, 2024

Instead of keeping broken and all this war... Is it possible to find a community of user that makes use of the regex feature of this package and just push to have this feature in?

I feel we are just wasting time with this talk instead of putting effort in testing the proposed code...

It's sad honestly putting all these effort in migrating big project to a whole new library and then receive random "NO" without reason. It's like hearing "nobody asked that you just wasted your time"

@jslachta
Copy link
Contributor

For these cases, I would welcome an analogy to the Debian-Experimental repository with applied workarounds to make this functional. It wouldn't break the consistency of the package builds, and at the same time, we wouldn’t have to push FreeSwitch users toward another distribution. I would prefer to keep such a large package with a long history and a fairly wide user base. Not everyone has the time or resources to prepare the entire distribution or the packages themselves.

@Ansuel
Copy link
Member Author

Ansuel commented Sep 24, 2024

fairly wide user base

so wide in almost a year not a single user came to test the changes :(

@jslachta
Copy link
Contributor

fairly wide user base

so wide in almost a year not a single user came to test the changes :(

Most of the FreeSwitch users I know do not build OpenWrt themselves; they simply use what they get. Some of them stick with older OpenWrt versions, while others have migrated to Asterisk.

@Ansuel
Copy link
Member Author

Ansuel commented Sep 24, 2024

Most of the FreeSwitch users I know do not build OpenWrt themselves

that is really not a problem. Given the situation we can totally build the package or the binary and ask them to test

@BKPepe
Copy link
Member

BKPepe commented Oct 7, 2024

Because branch-off is coming. What we should do with this PR?

  • Merge this
    Con: Testing on users. 🤔
  • Close this and remove this package

There would be third option, but upstream developers are not interested in this.

Add pending patch moving package to PCRE2 as PCRE is EOL and won't
receive any updates anymore.

These patch were run uder the freeswitch CI and were validated with
their unit tests.

Signed-off-by: Christian Marangi <[email protected]>
[fix conflict, fix typo in commit message, remove @broken dep, refresh
patches]
Signed-off-by: Stijn Tintel <[email protected]>
@stintel
Copy link
Member

stintel commented Oct 28, 2024

fairly wide user base

so wide in almost a year not a single user came to test the changes :(

Too bad I didn't notice this earlier. Found this PR utterly annoyed by freeswitch having disappeared from my image without any warning whatsoever. PR updated, build -and runtime tested on x86/64. Was able to make a phone call to my mobile phone, with a C7941 running SIP firmware, connected to FreeSWITCH running on OpenWrt, using a 3rd-party SIP gateway. Not sure why CI is shitting itself at least for powerpc_464fp, but since this appears to happen all the time, please just merge and get this over with.

@robimarko robimarko merged commit 75acd1c into openwrt:master Oct 28, 2024
6 of 11 checks passed
@stintel
Copy link
Member

stintel commented Oct 28, 2024

@Ansuel maybe you can join https://signalwire.com/blogs/community/what-to-expect-from-office-hours and ask about the PR

@Ansuel
Copy link
Member Author

Ansuel commented Oct 28, 2024

FreeSWITCH Office Hours are on the first and third Tuesday of every month at 9am Pacific / Noon Eastern, with occasional additional hours scheduled for special topics.

Interesting :D

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

6 participants