Dialplan variables
Adapted from
Asterisk
variables - voip-info.org
Using Variables in Asterisk
Dialplans
Variables are referenced in the dialplan (extensions.conf)
using the syntax
${foo:offset:length}
where foo is the name of the variable, offset is an optional
field indicating which characters should be excluded, and length
is an optional field indicating the number of characters from the offset
to be returned (see "Substrings" below for details and examples). A variable
name may be any alphanumeric string beginning with a letter.
User-defined
variable names are not case sensitive ${FOO} and ${Foo} refer to the same
variable but Asterisk system variables are case-sensitive
${EXTEN} works, but ${exten} doesn't.
There are four types of variables:
- Global variables can be set either in the [globals]
category of
extensions.conf or by using the
SetGlobalVar command. Once defined, they can be referenced by any
channel at any time.
- Shared variables were introduced in version 1.6 (however
a
backport is available for 1.4): Two (or more?) channels can gain
full access with the help of
Asterisk func SHARED to what otherwise would be a channel variable.
- Channel-specific variables. Channel variables are set using the
Set command (previously "setvar"). Each
channel gets its own variable space, so there is no chance of collisions
between different calls, and the variable is automatically trashed when
the channel is hungup.
- Environment variables. Environment variables
provide a means to access unix environment variables from within
Asterisk.
If you define a channel variable with the same name as a global variable
(and remember: user-defined variable names are not case sensitive), references
to that variable name will return the value of the channel variable. For
example, let us say that you define a context "FooTest" with a single extension,
100, with the following definition:(:smile:)
[FooTest]
exten => 100,1,SetGlobalVar(FOO=5)
exten => 100,2,NoOp(${FOO})
exten => 100,3,NoOp(${foo})
exten => 100,4,SetVar(foo=8)
exten => 100,5,NoOp(${FOO})
exten => 100,6,NoOp(${foo})
(Note the use of the
NoOp command to assist in debugging.) If you dial extension 100 in context FooTest, and you have Asterisk running with a verbose console, you will
see output similar to the following:
Executing SetGlobalVar("Zap/1-1",
"FOO=5") in new stack
Setting global variable
'FOO' to '5'
Executing NoOp("Zap/1-1",
"5") in new stack
Executing NoOp("Zap/1-1",
"5") in new stack
Executing SetVar("Zap/1-1",
"foo=8") in new stack
Executing NoOp("Zap/1-1",
"8") in new stack
Executing NoOp("Zap/1-1",
"8") in new stack
We discover that after the call to SetGlobalVar, ${FOO} and ${foo} returned
the value of the global variable, giving the value 5. After the call to
SetVar, the global variable "foo" was obscured by the channel variable "foo";
${FOO} and ${foo} both gave the value 8. The value of the global variable
remains unchanged at 5, however, and any other channels that refer to the
global variable ${foo} would still get the value 5.
Inheritance of Channel Variables
Prepending a single _ character to a variables name in SetVar will cause
that variable to be inherited by channels created by the main channel. eg.
when using Dial(Local/...); once inherited these variables will not be further
inherited. Prepending two _ characters will cause them to be inherited indefinitely.
Note: for retrieval purposes these variable names do not include the
underscores.
[TestInherit]
exten => 100,1,SetVar(__FOO=5)
exten => 100,2,Dial(Local/test@TestInherit)
exten => test,1,NoOp(${FOO})
will result in FOO being inherited. Without the underscores, the new local
channel would start with a clean slate.
Example
exten => 104,1,SetVar(FEE=fee)
exten => 104,2,SetVar(_FIE=fie)
exten => 104,3,SetVar(__FUM=fum)
exten => 104,4,Dial(Local/105)
exten => 105,1,NoOp(${FEE})
exten => 105,2,NoOp(${FIE})
exten => 105,3,NoOp(${FUM})
exten => 105,4,Dial(Local/106)
exten => 106,1,NoOp(${FEE})
exten => 106,2,NoOp(${FIE})
exten => 106,3,NoOp(${FUM})
results in
Executing SetVar("SIP/oberon-365e",
"FEE=fee") in new stack
Executing SetVar("SIP/oberon-365e",
"_FIE=fie") in new stack
Executing SetVar("SIP/oberon-365e",
"__FUM=fum") in new stack
Executing Dial("SIP/oberon-365e",
"Local/105") in new stack
Called 105
Executing NoOp("Local/105@default-7263,2",
"") in new stack
Executing NoOp("Local/105@default-7263,2",
"fie") in new stack
Executing NoOp("Local/105@default-7263,2",
"fum") in new stack
Executing Dial("Local/105@default-7263,2",
"Local/106") in new stack
Called 106
Executing NoOp("Local/106@default-49be,2",
"") in new stack
Executing NoOp("Local/106@default-49be,2",
"") in new stack
Executing NoOp("Local/106@default-49be,2",
"fum") in new stack
(This did not work correctly prior to the 1.2 release.)
Using $
If you want to set a global variable containing the another variable name
in the [globals] category of
extensions.conf you have to do something like this:
[globals]
SS=$
MY_VAR=${SS}{EPOCH}-${SS}{EXTEN}.gsm
This way the MY_VAR value is ${EPOCH}-${EXTEN}.gsm
Using it with the EVAL() function is very useful. I.e. if you want to record
you can do this:
exten => 104,1,SetVar(file=${EVAL(${MY_VAR})})
exten => 104,2,MixMonitor($The
attachment id given is not valid.)
Predefined Channel Variables
There are some channel variables set by Asterisk that you can refer to in
your dialplan definitions. Asterisk-defined variables, in contrast to user-defined
variables, are case sensitive. Note: Several of these builtin
variables have been converted to functions in 1.2, to allow setting their
values.
- ${ANSWEREDTIME}: This is the amount of time(in
seconds) for actual call.
- ${BLINDTRANSFER}: The active SIP channel that dialed
the number. This will return the SIP Channel that dialed the number
when doing blind transfers - see
BLINDTRANSFER
- ${CALLERID(all)}: The current Caller ID name and
number - See
Setting Callerid for usage in Asterisk 1.4
(Note: this is not necessarily numeric as the
name would indicate and can legitimately contain the space character. Commands
acting on this variable (such as 'GotoIf', for example) should be aware
of this).
- ${CALLINGPRES}: PRI Call ID Presentation variable
for incoming calls (See
callingpres )
- ${CHANNEL}: Current channel name
- ${CONTEXT}: The name of the current context
- ${DATETIME}: Current date time in the format: DDMMYYYY-HH:MM:SS
This is deprecated in Asterisk 1.2, instead use :${STRFTIME(${EPOCH},,%d%mNaVH:NaVS)})
- ${DIALEDPEERNAME}: Name of the called party. Broken
for now, see
DIALEDPEERNAME
- ${DIALEDPEERNUMBER}: Number of the called party.
Broken for now, see
DIALEDPEERNUMBER
- ${DIALEDTIME}: Time since the number was dialed
(only works when dialed party answers the line?!)
- ${DIALSTATUS}: Status of the call. See
DIALSTATUS (note: In the current SVN release,
DIALSTATUS seems to have been removed. Now you should use the DEVSTATE
function. Try in astersisk console "core show function DEVSTATE" for
more informations)
- ${DNID}: Dialed Number Identifier. Limitations
apply, see
DNID
- ${EPOCH}: The current UNIX-style epoch (number
of seconds since 1 Jan 1970)
- ${EXTEN}: The current extension
- ${HANGUPCAUSE}:
The last hangup return code on a Zap channel connected to a PRI interface
- ${INVALID_EXTEN}: The extension asked for when
redirected to the
i (invalid) extension
- ${LANGUAGE}: The current language setting. See
Asterisk multi-language
- ${MEETMESECS}: Number of seconds a user participated
in a MeetMe conference
- ${PRIORITY}: The current priority
- ${RDNIS}: The current redirecting
DNIS, Caller ID that redirected the call. Limitations apply, see
RDNIS
- ${SIPDOMAIN}: SIP destination domain of an inbound
call (if appropriate)
- ${SIP_CODEC}: Used to set the SIP codec for a call
(apparently
broken in Ver 1.0.1, ok in Ver. 1.0.3 & 1.0.4, not sure about 1.0.2)
- ${SIPCALLID}: The SIP dialog Call-ID: header
- ${SIPUSERAGENT}: The SIP user agent header
- ${TIMESTAMP}: Current date time in the format:
YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS This is deprecated as of Asterisk 1.4,
instead use :${STRFTIME(${EPOCH},,%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)})
- ${TRANSFERCAPABILITY}: Type of Channel
- ${TXTCIDNAME}: Result of application TXTCIDName
(see below)
- ${UNIQUEID}: Current call unique identifier
- ${TOUCH_MONITOR}: used for "one touch record" (see
features.conf, and wW dial flags). If is set on either side of the call
then that var contains the app_args for app_monitor otherwise the default
of WAV||m is used.
Application-specific variables
Some applications take extra input or provide output using channel variables.
-
AgentCallbackLogin returns ${AGENTBYCALLERID_${CALLERID}}:
The ID of the agent successfully logged on.
-
ChanIsAvail returns ${AVAILCHAN}: The first available
channel
-
Dial takes input from ${VXML_URL}: Send XML Url
to Cisco 7960 or to i6net VoiceXML browser
-
Dial takes input from ${ALERT_INFO}: Set ring cadence
or allow intercom on for various SIP phones
-
Dial returns ${CAUSECODE}: If the dial failed,
this is the errormessage
-
Dial returns ${DIALSTATUS}:
Text code returning status of last dial attempt.
-
Dial takes input from ${TRANSFER_CONTEXT}: If this
variable exists, when a #transfer is executed it goes to the selected
extension on this context.
-
EnumLookup returns ${ENUM}: The result of the lookup
-
Hangup reads the ${PRI_CAUSE}
variable for setting PRI return codes
-
MeetMe takes input from {MEETME_AGI_BACKGROUND}:
An AGI script to run
-
MeetMe returns ${MEETMESECS}: The number of seconds
the user was in a conference
-
Playback returns ${PLAYBACKSTATUS}: The status
of the command (FAILED|SUCCESS)
-
Queue returns ${QUEUESTATUS}: The reason for popping
the call out of the queue
-
TXTCIDName returns ${TXTCIDNAME}: The result of
the DNS lookup
-
VoiceMail returns ${VMSTATUS}: indicates the status
of the execution of the VoiceMail application. Possible values are:
SUCCESS | USEREXIT | FAILED .
Macro-specific variables
When in a
macro context, extra channel variables are available.
- ${ARG1}, ${ARG2} ... The first argument passed to the macro. The second argument passed to the macro (and so on)
- ${MACRO_CONTEXT}: The context of the extension that triggered this
macro
- ${MACRO_EXTEN}: The extension that triggered this macro
- ${MACRO_OFFSET}: Set by a macro to influence the priority where
execution will continue after exiting the macro
- ${MACRO_PRIORITY}: The priority in the extension where this macro
was triggered
Environment Variables
You may access unix environment variables using the syntax:
${ENV(foo)}
- ${ENV(ASTERISK_PROMPT)}: the current Asterisk
CLI prompt.
- ${ENV(RECORDED_FILE)}: the filename of the last
file saved by the
Record command (available in CVS > 2004-03-21)
String Handling Functions
String Length
${LEN(foo)}
returns the length of the string foo. For example,
exten => 100,1,SetVar(Fruit=pear)
exten => 100,2,NoOp(${LEN(Fruit)})
exten => 100,3,NoOp(${LEN(${Fruit})})
The first NoOp would show a value of 5 (the length of the string "fruit").
The second NoOp would show a value of 4 (the length of the string "pear").
This is an excellent way to check for a NULL or empty string.
Substrings
${foo:offset:length}
returns a substring of the string foo, beginning at offset offset and returning the next
length characters. The first
character is at offset 0.
- If offset is negative, it is taken leftwards from the right
hand end of the string.
- If length is omitted or is negative, then all the rest
of the string beginning at offset is returned.
Examples:
${123456789:1}
- returns the string 23456789
${123456789:-4}
- returns the string 6789
${123456789:0:3}
- returns the string 123
${123456789:2:3}
- returns the string 345
${123456789:-4:3}
- returns the string 678
Examples of use:
exten => _NXX.,1,SetVar(areacode=${EXTEN:0:3})
- get the first 3 digits of ${EXTEN}
exten => _516XXXXXXX,1,Dial(${EXTEN:3})
- get all but the first 3 digits of ${EXTEN}
exten => 100,1,SetVar(whichVowel=4)
exten => 100,2,SetVar(foo=AEIOU:${whichVowel}:1)
- sets ${foo} to the single letter 'U'
String Concatenation
To concatenate two strings, simply write them together:
${foo}${bar}
555${theNumber}
${longDistancePrefix}555${theNumber}
Variable math
To perform math on variables e.g. increment, multiplication, addition simply
write:
exten => s,1,SetVar(SOMEVAR=$[${SOMEVAR} + 1]) ; increment
exten => s,2,SetVar(SOMEVAR=$[2 * ${SOMEVAR}]) ; multiplication etc...
In times past, a single space was required between items in the
$[...] expressions. This is no longer the case!
In late model Asterisks (1.2?), the MATH function is also available...
exten => s,1,Set(SOMEVAR=${MATH(${SOMEVAR}+1)}) ; increment
exten => s,2,Set(SOMEVAR=${MATH(2*${SOMEVAR})}) ; multiplication etc...
Version notes
- CALLINGPRES was added to CVS HEAD 2004-09-10, included in Asterisk
1.2 release
- TOUCH_MONITOR was added to CVS HEAD 2005-01-05, included in Asterisk
1.2 release
-
Asterisk Functions Besides the ENV(), and LEN() functions, there
are many more very useful functions. Some form the only method by which
you can access or set certain facilities in Asterisk.
-
Asterisk Expressions Asterisk has a powerful expression evaluator!
It is called upon by wrapping an expression with $[ ... ] . Besides
arithmetic expressions, there are some nice string manipulation capabilities.
-
Cut: Extract a substring based on a field delimiter
-
Asterisk Detailed Variable List Full List of Application Variables
-
DBRewrite: Execute perl compatible regular expression and substitution
out of a MySQL Database.
-
Configuration
-
The Dialplan - extensions.conf
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