In trans_free(), call subscr_conn_release_when_unused(), so that we are sure to
clean up after the last transaction is done.
This fixes an error where a conn lingered after a CC failure, because that code
path forgot to trigger cleanup.
Rationale: so far we were triggering the release check after each DTAP dispatch
(compl_l3 and "normal" DTAP), which is sufficient for properly closed
transactions. We also need a check for when a timeout clears an erratic trans.
Adjust test expectation of test_call_mo_to_unknown_timeout to show that the
error is now fixed.
msc_vlr_test_reject_concurrency now sees an additional release checking event
when the SMS transaction is done, which is expected and does not affect the
test otherwise.
Related: OS#2779
Change-Id: I46ff2e9b09b67e4e0d79cccf8c04936f17281fcb
The naming of "bump" was short and made sense to me at the time of writing, but
it is keeping pretty much everyone else at a distance, no-one intuitively gets
what it is supposed to mean.
Clarify by renaming to "release_when_unused".
Adjust test expectations.
Change-Id: I4dcc55f536f63b13a3da29fff1df5fe16751f83a
The ID will include the type of connection (GERAN_A, UTRAN_IU) followed
by the SCCP conn_id.
This can be used for the fsm instance ID before we know the IMSI.
Change-Id: I4b875772e3994ad3458ee60dbf880604486d9afd
When hunting a conn use count bug, it was very hard to figure out who's (not)
using the conn. To ease tracking down this bug and future bugs, explicitly name
what a conn is being reserved for, and track in a bit mask.
Show in the DREF logs what uses and un-uses a conn. See the test expectation
updates, which nicely show how that clarifies the state of the conn in the
logs.
On errors, log them, but don't fail hard: if one conn use/un-use fails, we
don't want to crash the entire MSC before we have to.
Change-Id: I259aa0eec41efebb4c8221275219433eafaa549b