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There is no FreeChanCnf and this leads to not knowing when the resource
can be allocated again. This is an issue for making it reliable. Stop
here and wait for progress.
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Back in the day we worked around a field proven jitter buffer by
transcoding AMR to AMR with the MTN4200 and by this fixing RTP
timing as this device had:
a.) A working and stable time (generating RTP every N ms)
b.) A working jitter buffer
The code has probably rotted, it never retried MGCP commands sent
to the transcoder and it is not deployed either. Simplify the code
by removing it. If we ever need it back we can use the new transcoding
API to keep the state there. I think this code will not be missed
but the PerformanceTechnology Hard- and Firmware was rather nice.
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Now they are included in a struct we can just call them setup, process
and get_net_downlink_format to manage the lifetime.
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We will have the NOOP implementation (e.g. used by the NAT), the
SW implementation (using software codecs), a HW assisted one that
will use a DSP to do transcoding and in theory the RTP based one
(but I will remove that code).
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Make the SMPP bind address configurable (used to be harcoded as "0.0.0.0").
Add VTY command
smpp
local-tcp A.B.C.D <1-65535>
while keeping the old command 'local-tcp-port <1-65535>'. Both the old and the
new command immediately change the SMPP listening address and port.
Add a LOGL_NOTICE log when the SMPP listening address and/or port change.
However, to be useful, this patch has to go somewhat further: refactor the
initialization procedure, because it was impossible to run the VTY commands
without an already established connection.
The SMPP initialization procedure was weird. It would first open a connection
on the default port, and a subsequent VTY port reconfiguration while reading
the config file would try to re-establish a connection on a different port. If
that failed, smpp would switch back to the default port instead of failing the
program launch as the user would expect. If anything else ran on port 2775,
SMPP would thus refuse to launch despite the config file having a different
port: the first bind would always happen on 0.0.0.0:2775. Change that.
In the VTY commands, merely store address and port if no fd is established yet.
Introduce several SMPP initialization stages:
* allocate struct and initialize pointers,
* then read config file without immediately starting to listen,
* and once the main program is ready, start listening.
After that, the VTY command behaves as before: try to re-establish the old
connection if the newly supplied address and port don't work out. I'm not
actually sure why this switch-back behavior is needed, but fair enough.
In detail, replace the function
smpp_smsc_init()
with the various steps
smpp_smsc_alloc_init() -- prepare struct for VTY commands
smpp_smsc_conf() -- set addr an port only, for reading the config file
smpp_smsc_start() -- establish a first connection, for main()
smpp_smsc_restart() -- switch running connection, for telnet VTY
smpp_smsc_stop() -- tear down connection, used by _start() twice
And replace
smpp_openbsc_init()
smpp_openbsc_set_net()
with
smpp_openbsc_alloc_init()
smpp_openbsc_start()
I'd have picked function names like "_bind"/"_unbind", but in the SMPP protocol
there is also a bind/unbind process, so instead I chose the names "_start",
"_restart" and "_stop".
The smsc struct used to be talloc'd outside of smpp_smsc_init(). Since the smsc
code internally uses talloc anyway and employs the smsc struct as talloc
context, I decided to enforce talloc allocation within smpp_smsc_alloc_init().
Be stricter about osmo_signal_register_handler() return codes.
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Add ctrl_vty_init() calls and feed the ctrl_vty_get_bind_addr() return value to
ctrl_interface_setup() in the following programs:
osmo-bsc
osmo-bsc_nat
osmo-nitb
osmo-sgsn
For osmo-sgsn, move the control interface setup invocation below the config
parsing, so that the ctrl_vty_get_bind_addr() can return the configured
address.
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The old -m option without argument is still available and marked deprecated,
to not make users' lives more difficult than necessary.
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If an MM context cannot be found based on BBSGP info and a RA UPDATE
REQUEST is received, try to find an MM context with an P-TMSI from
which the TLLI could have been derived. This also checks, whether the
routing area matches.
This is similar to the old behaviour removed by the commits
"sgsn: Only look at TLLIs in sgsn_mm_ctx_by_tlli" and
"sgsn: Remove tlli_foreign2local", except that this will only
be done for RA UPDATE REQUESTs now.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
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The function is moved to gprs_utils.c, renamed, and made non-static
to be usable in other modules, too.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
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At Rhizomatica we see that some GSM 04.08 messages are leaked and
have no other indication if that is Call Control, SMS or something
else.
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When a MNCC handler wants to issue the MNCC_BRIDGE primitive
overt the MNCC interface, this was not possible so far via the
MNCC socket. This primitive was so far only available from the
internal MNCC handler, more or less by accident I suppose. The reason
for this is in the way the array of two call references had been passed
into mncc_tx_to_cc().
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Because the sender is known, one unique TEI per tunnel suffices to map the TEIs
that the peers are sending to gtphub, instead of previously 4 (SGSN<->GGSN
interaction on User and Ctrl plane, where each had an own unique TEI).
Also, previously, a tunnel's endpoints should also have been checked against
each other for TEI reuse, not only against the endpoints of other tunnels. This
simplification fixes that problem for free.
Thus simplify TEI reuse detection and improve VTY show readability and
debugging.
Adjust log and VTY output for tunnels.
Adjust tests accordingly.
Suggested-by: Holger Hans Peter Freyther <holger@moiji-mobile.com>
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Count bytes and packets per peer port, as well es per tunnel enpoint, which
adds two more levels of detail.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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We now store the pre-printed lchan name in lchan->name to avoid having
to call sprintf every time there is a debug statement somewhere,
particularly as most of those debug statements are going to be inactive
most of the time.
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If an SGSN is behind NAT, we cannot rely on the default ports. Specifically,
if a GGSN sends a message, the forwarding to the SGSN should go to whichever
port the SGSN last sent from (whether sequence nr is known or not).
Add sgsn_use_sender config and VTY command, and store the sender instead
of the GSN Address IE and default port if set.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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If a GSN indicates that it has reset, tear down each known tunnel for that GSN
individually (don't send the GSNs on the other side a different restart
counter, because they represent more than just this GSN).
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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During resolution of the header TEI, also return the tunnel struct that
resolved the TEI, so the Delete PDP Ctx code does not need to look it up
again.
Upon Delete PDP Ctx Request, remember the IEs and that a request was made.
Upon Delete PDP Ctx Response, find the pending delete and remove the
corresponding tunnel, iff the response indicates success.
Add a context deletion to regression tests, rename the test appropriately.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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This is a mostly cosmetic change. Instead of separate buffer handling
functions, reduce some code duplication by using a side_idx just like the
plane_idx, with arrays.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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There's no need to keep two separate number pools when both can be fed
from the same pool. User and Ctrl plane TEIs can technically overlap without
colliding, but it doesn't hurt if they don't overlap, either.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Simplify looping over sides and planes. I'm tired of typing the same for
loops all the time.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Force passing a restart counter, by adding such arg to gtphub_start() (test
suite is not affected by this).
In gtphub_main.c, add -r,--restart-file <path> and next_restart_count() to
maintain the counter file. While at it, tweak the cmdline help to unify the
formatting (mostly commas and a missing line break).
Send gtphub's own restart counter. So far, the sender's restart counter was
copied through, which would break as soon as more than one GSN would talk to
the same peer with differing restart counters.
Also fix the in-mem restart counter data type (one octet, not two).
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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So far, gtphub worked perfectly by only tracking single TEIs ... for probably
most uses. But a Ctrl plane tunnel may have expired despite a still active
corresponding User plane tunnel. The User plane would continue to work
indefinitely, but if any Ctrl messages followed after more than six hours of
Ctrl silence, they would have been dropped due to an expired TEI mapping.
We want to
- combine expiry of a user TEI with its ctrl TEI. (done in this patch)
- upon delete PDP context, remove both user and ctrl TEI mappings. (future)
- when a peer indicates a restart counter bump, invalidate its tunnels.
(future)
To facilitate these, track tunnels, complete with both SGSN's and GGSN's
address, original and replaced TEIs, all for both user and ctrl plane, in a
single struct. A single expiry entry handles the entire tunnel, instead of
previously four separate expiries for each endpoint identifier.
Add the concept of a "side", being either GGSN or SGSN, to index tunnel
endpoint structs, and so on.
Track the originating side in the gtp_packet_desc.
Add header_tei_rx: set_tei() overwrites header_tei, but the originally received
header TEI is still needed to match a Create PDP Context Response up with its
Request (and for logging).
Adjust the test suite to expect tunnel listing strings instead of TEI mappings,
with a bonus of making it a lot easier to grok, and including the IP addresses.
Add regression test for refreshing tunnel expiry upon use.
Note: the current implementation is as slow as can possibly be, iterating all
the tunnels all the time. Optimizations are kept for a future commit, on
purpose.
BTW, the sequence number mapping/unmapping structures remain unchanged.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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The expiry queues are already used for resolved GGSN addresses, and will
soon enlist tunnel structs. Hence the naming should be more general.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Start adding VTY commands to show rate counters / statistics / cache dumps.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Clean up functionality is added for the test suite only, to be able to clean
out all allocations and test against memory leaks.
So far, it was sufficient to expire everything to free a gtphub. In preparation
for the upcoming rate counters, which will need to be freed explicitly, add
gtphub functions to clean up everything.
As added bonus, also close the sockets explicitly -- not really needed upon
program exit, neither by the test suite, but *if* we have a cleanup function,
it should clean up everything properly.
Closing the sockets is however kept separate, for the test suite.
gtphub_start() and gtphub_stop() are for normal use (published in gtphub.h),
and gtphub_init() and gtphub_free() are for the test suite, without sockets.
(gtphub_stop() will probably never be called by anyone, but its existence
completes the picture.)
In gtphub_test.c, have a function to clean up the testing gtphub struct. First,
expire everything by timeout, assert emptiness, then call the cleanup function.
Call from each test in the end.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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gtphub_ext.c's initial purpose was to wrap a specific function. The file
then turned into everything related to DNS, which fits pretty well. Rename
to gtphub_ares.c.
Tweak the header comment to reflect the new file name.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Implement min/max bounds for nr_pool, adjust nr_pool_init() and current tests,
and create unit tests for nr_map wrapping.
Sequence numbers range from 0 to 65535, while TEIs range from 1 to 0xffffffff.
Both cause problems when the nr_pool surpasses the range: seq exit their valid
range, causing unmappings to fail, and a TEI would be mapped as zero (invalid).
Add a comment about TEI wrapping, and lose the comment about random TEIs (not
really important).
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Use unsigned int for nr_map, just large enough to fit the TEI space.
Adjust log output formats and casts accordingly.
Fixes: TEIs are uint32_t, but the nr_map so far used int. This would cause TEIs
from 0x80000000 on to be handled and printed as a negative value.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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The del_cb is now also used for ares (GGSN resolution) timeouts, and expiry is
anyway separated from nr_map, so this comment is void.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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This fixes a bug in the following circumstances:
* BSIC is set to 0 in the config file
* No TSC is explicitly specified at the BST level in the config file
In this case, we ended up using BSIC=0 and TSC=7, as TSC=7 is our
default initialization value.
The TSC of the CCCH/BCCH must always be the BCC, which is the lower 3
bits of the BSIC. Having configuration options for both the BSIC _and_
the TSC at the BTS level therefore makes no sense, as it only adds ways
in which users can configure non-oprational configurations. So we
remove the bts->tsc member, and keep only the ts->tsc members that allow
us to configure a timeslot-specific TSC that's different from the BTS
TSC (= BCC).
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Fit most of the code in 80 chars width. Some instances still leak past 80
characters because of long function names, inline comments or the like, "the
exception proves the rule."
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Allow logging the plane (Ctrl/User) and side (SGSN/GGSN) in functions that only
have a gtphub_bind* to work with, by adding a constant label to each bind.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Initialize llist_heads to empty (2 were missing). Move those for struct gtphub
instances to gtphub_zero() (one moved, one added).
In from_[gs]gsns_read_cb(), use a return type that can actually reflect
negative return values.
resolved_addr.buf: no need to take the address of a byte array var
(cosmetic).
Pass the proper user data address to sgsn_ares_query(), not the address of
the pointer holding the user data address.
Initialize ggsn_lookup->expiry_entry (was missing). Publish the function for that
in gtphub.h so gtphub_ext.c can use it.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Generalize to make the PDP ctx message definitions and "sending" of messages
from SGSN->gtphub->GGSN and back reusable in future tests.
Publish gsn_addr_from_sockaddr() in gtphub.h for use in gtphub_test.c.
Use an osmo_sockaddr for resolved_ggsn_addr, because one is needed for
comparison in probably every future test.
Add LVL2_ASSERT() to print assertion message and return instead of abort,
so that functions can be called from several tests without losing the
info of which test caused it from which line.
Use globals for struct gtphub and time_t now, to reduce nr of args that need to
be passed around when writing tests. Add a default test setup function.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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Up to now I used the Echo as a test for sequence nr mappings. But Echos
should be handled differently: they are scoped on the link and an Echo
response should be sent right back to the requester.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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For the resolving function, change the function signature to return a
gtphub_peer_port. In consequence, publish two functions concerned with
gtphub_peer_port instances for use in test and gtphub_ext.c.
Add GGSN resolution queue, callback and cache. Simple implementation: if an
SGSN asks for a GGSN, it will first get no answer, and I hope it will ask again
once the GGSN is in the cache.
Within gtphub_ext.c, have a dummy sgsn struct, as the sgsn_ares code currently
depends on it (half the functions pass an sgsn instance pointer around, but the
other half use the global one).
In the unit tests, wrap away the ares initialization so that they can work
without a DNS server around. The netcat test breaks because of this, will
remove it.
Using sgsn_ares, implement the gtphub_resolve_ggsn_addr() function, I hope:
untested.
Minor cosmetics just to see if you're paying attention... ;)
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehi
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First steps towards a new GTP hub. The aim is to mux GTP connections, so that
multiple SGSN <--> GGSN links can pass through a single point. Background:
allow having more than one SGSN, possibly in various remote locations.
The recent addition of OAP to GSUP is related to the same background idea.
(This is a collapsed patch of various changes that do not make sense to review
in chronological order anymore, since a lot of it has thorougly transmorphed
after it was first committed.)
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
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Extend the ul/dl counting to count the usual messages on the
Gb interface. Add counters for the attach, routing area update,
pdp context activation and deactivation procedures. Update the
test result with the new counters.
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Trigger an OAP registration upon IPA connect. Feed incoming OAP messages to
oap_handle() and send replies returned by it.
Add oap_config to sgsn_config (todo: vty).
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
[hfreyther: Fix coding style]
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Add oap.[hc] and oap_messages.[hc].
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
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Add new kitchen sink openbsc/utils.h and libcommon/utils.c to make three so far
static functions public (so I can use them in the upcoming OAP code).
A place to put them could have been the gprs_utils.h, but all general functions
in there have a gprs_ prefix, and todo markings to move them away. All other
libcommon headers are too specific, so I opened up this kitchen sink header.
Replace the implementation of encode_big_endian() with a call to
osmo_store64be_ext(). See comments.
Apply the change in Makefiles and C files.
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This change has some implications for the test case. It manipulated
bss_ptmsi_state and sgsn_tlli_state variables to make the output of
rand_r() and thus the TLLI/TMSI used predictable.
This possibility is gone when using RAND_bytes() so instead it is
overridden by a function that returns a deterministic sequence of values
(0x00dead00, 0x00dead01, ...). The test cases are adapted to expect
these values instead of the pseudo random values before.
The gbproxy_test stdout file changes as well, but only where the
TLLI/TMSI is displayed (in the hex dumps as well as the TLLI cache
entries). All other output is the same.
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For a setup with multiple network interfaces be able to pick
the one that osmux should be used/visible.
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