octothorpe is an Asterisk Manager Interface (AMI) library for the Twisted engine.
At the moment, octothorpe is still in development. Because of this, I cannot at this time offer API stability, but I intend to do this as it shapes up further.
octothorpe's primary design goal is to disentangle the myriad
multiplexed event streams that all come over the AMI, making it
easier to focus on them individually. For example, when a new channel
comes up, the newChannel
method is called, giving a Channel
object you will thereafter receive channel-associated events on as
well as be able to issue actions against. (Of course, you can
subclass Channel
.)
octothorpe depends only on Twisted, and is developed against the
latest release version. Twisted is declared as a dependency in
setup.py
.
requirements.txt
specifies development dependencies, including
those for running tests.
As mentioned above, you should start by installing all development requirements (you're using a virtualenv, right?):
$ . bin/activate $ pip install -e $ pip install `cat requirements.txt`
octothorpe is fully developed with a test-first methodology. All
functionality is covered by the unit tests (which you can run with
trial octothorpe
.) You can verify coverage with coverage.py:
$ coverage run --source=octothorpe `which trial` octothorpe $ coverage report -m
If you're interested in a virtual environment for hacking on octothorpe, I've supplied here my Vagrant and Ansible configurations for building and doing the initial configuration for a box with Asterisk running and ready to accept a SIP phone connection.
Pay close attention to Vagrantfile
—it contains a directive for
setting up a host-only network. I've randomly selected an RFC1918
address for this purpose; you'll want to connect your SIP softphone
and your octothorpe applications to this address. If you're happy
with this, run vagrant up
.
Important Note: Don't even think of using the config files
in etc/asterisk
in production! They are wildly insecure.