To give a better visual perspective, practically if you do:

$sht(a=>$ci::srcip) = $si;

for and INVITE request that comes from 1.2.3.4 and has the header:

Call-Id: abcd

Then in the the hash table a is added the pair ('abcd::srcip', '1.2.3.4').

So, the pseudo variables (the $xy... tokens are evaluated).

Cheers,
Daniel

On 28/08/14 17:35, Alex Balashov wrote:
It's not an operator, actually. :-) It's just a convention. You can call your keys anything you like (that's grammatically valid).

On 08/28/2014 09:37 AM, aft wrote:

Hi,

 From kamailio documentation, the usage of hashtable is given as :

modparam("htable", "htable", "a=>size=4;")
...
$sht(a=>test) = 1;
$sht(a=>$ci::srcip) = $si;

I get it that in the first statement, a is the hashtable, a new
key-value pair is added to one of its empty bucket (test,1).

What is happening in the second statement?






--
Daniel-Constantin Mierla
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