SIPp - a SIP protocol test tool Copyright (C) 2003-2019 - The Authors
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
See the docs/
directory. Hopefully it is also available in html format at:
https://sipp.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
This is the SIPp package. Please refer to the webpage for details and documentation.
Normally, you should be able to build SIPp by using CMake:
cmake .
make
There are several optional flags to enable features (SIP-over-TLS, SIP-over-SCTP, media playback from PCAP files and the GNU Statistical libbraries for random distributions):
cmake . -DUSE_SSL=1 -DUSE_SCTP=1 -DUSE_PCAP=1 -DUSE_GSL=1
SIPp can be built into a single static binary, removing the need for libraries to exist on the target system and maximising portability.
This is a fairly complicated process, and for now, it only works on Alpine Linux.
To build a static binary, pass -DBUILD_STATIC=1
to cmake.
I try and be responsive to issues raised on Github, and there's a reasonably active mailing list.
- Update CHANGES.md. Tag release.
- Download zip,
autoreconf -vif
, copy sipp.1, copy include/version.h. - Create tgz. Upload to github as "binary".
- Run
sudo docker build -t sipp-build docker && sudo docker run -it -v $PWD:/src sipp-build
to create a static binary. Upload this to Github as well.
SIPp is free software, under the terms of the GPL licence (see the LICENCE.txt file for details). You can contribute to the development of SIPp and use the standard Github fork/pull request method to integrate your changes integrate your changes. If you make changes in SIPp, PLEASE follow a few coding rules:
- Please stay conformant with the current indentation style (4 spaces indent, standard Emacs-like indentation). Examples:
if (condition) { /* "{" even if only one instruction */
f(); /* 4 space indents */
} else {
char* p = ptr; /* C++-style pointer declaration placement */
g(p);
}
- If possible, check your changes can be compiled on:
- Linux,
- Cygwin,
- Mac OS X,
- FreeBSD.
Thanks,
Rob Day [email protected]