Introduction

The Asterisk configuration parser in the 1.2 version and beyond series has been improved in a number of ways. In addition to the realtime architecture, we now have the ability to create templates in configuration files, and use these as templates when we configure phones, voicemail accounts and queues.
These changes are general to the configuration parser, and works in all configuration files.

General syntax

Asterisk configuration files are defined as follows:

[section]
label = value
label2 = value

In some files, (e.g. mgcp.conf, dahdi.conf and agents.conf), the syntax is a bit different. In these files the syntax is as follows:

[section]
label1 = value1
label2 = value2
object => name
label3 = value3
label2 = value4
object2 => name2

In this syntax, we create objects with the settings defined above the object creation. Note that settings are inherited from the top, so in the example above object2 has inherited the setting for "label1" from the first object.
For template configurations, the syntax for defining a section is changed to:

[section](options)
label = value

The options field is used to define templates, refer to templates and hide templates. Any object can be used as a template.
No whitespace is allowed between the closing "]" and the parenthesis "(".

Comments

All lines that starts with semi-colon ";" is treated as comments and is not parsed.
The ";" is a marker for a multi-line comment. Everything after that marker will be treated as a comment until the end-marker ";" is found. Parsing begins directly after the end-marker.

;This is a comment
label = value
;-- This is
a comment -;
;- Comment --; exten=> 1000,1,dial(SIP/lisa)
Including other files

In all of the configuration files, you may include the content of another file with the #include statement. The content of the other file will be included at the row that the #include statement occurred.

#include myusers.conf

You may also include the output of a program with the #exec directive, if you enable it in asterisk.conf

In asterisk.conf, add the execincludes = yes statement in the options section:

[options] 
execincludes=yes

The exec directive is used like this:

#exec /usr/local/bin/myasteriskconfigurator.sh
Adding to an existing section
[section]
label = value

[section](+)
label2 = value2

In this case, the plus sign indicates that the second section (with the same name) is an addition to the first section. The second section can be in another file (by using the #include statement). If the section name referred to before the plus is missing, the configuration will fail to load.

Defining a template-only section
[section](!)
label = value

The exclamation mark indicates to the config parser that this is a only a template and should not itself be used by the Asterisk module for configuration. The section can be inherited by other sections (see section "Using templates" below) but is not used by itself.

Using templates (or other configuration sections)
[section](name[,name])
label = value

The name within the parenthesis refers to other sections, either templates or standard sections. The referred sections are included before the configuration engine parses the local settings within the section as though their entire contents (and anything they were previously based upon) were included in the new section. For example consider the following:

[foo]
disallow=all
allow=ulaw
allow=alaw

[bar]
allow=gsm
allow=g729
permit=192.168.2.1

[baz](foo,bar)
type=friend
permit=192.168.3.1
context=incoming host=bnm

The [baz] section will be processed as though it had been written in the following way:

[baz]
disallow=all
allow=ulaw
allow=alaw
allow=gsm
allow=g729
permit=192.168.2.1
type=friend
permit=192.168.3.1
context=incoming host=bnm

It should also be noted that there are no guaranteed overriding semantics, meaning that if you define something in one template, you should not expect to be able to override it by defining it again in another template.

Additional Examples
(in top-level sip.conf)

[defaults]
type=friend
nat=yes
qualify=on
dtmfmode=rfc2833
disallow=all
allow=alaw
#include accounts/*/sip.conf

(in accounts/customer1/sip.conf)

[def-customer1](!,defaults)
secret=this_is_not_secret
context=from-customer1
callerid=Customer 1 <300>
accountcode=0001

[phone1](def-customer1)
mailbox=phone1@customer1

[phone2](def-customer1)
mailbox=phone2@customer1

This example defines two phones - phone1 and phone2 with settings inherited from "def-customer1". The "def-customer1" is a template that inherits from "defaults", which also is a template.