In IPv6 GPRS, we actually don't want to allocate an individual v6
address (like in IPv4), but we want to allocate a prefix. The
standard prefix lengh is 8 bytes, i.e. a /64 prefix. This patch
extends the pool to be able to work with such v6 prefixes.
Change-Id: I0cf700b6baf195a2e5fbea000531f801acaaa443
When we receive PDP context requests for unknown PDP types or if
we run out of dynamic addresses, we need to inform the SGSN that
PDP context creation failed.
Change-Id: Ibf199c1726130d27c8f80230b30ee51101c93b06
This patch enables the use of IPv6 PDP contexts. The phone will
have to request an IPv6 End-user-Address, and the GGSN will have
to be configured for an IPv6 pool.
The outer transport-layer IP between SGSN and GGSN must still be
IPv4, it is not modified by this patch
Change-Id: I22c3bf32a98e5daf99d6eaeac8c9f95cc7574774
Extend the IP pool implementation to be able to manage both pools
of 32bit addresses (IPv4) as well as pools of 128bit addresses (IPv6)
Change-Id: Ib98cc4bf634d6be9a7bf8c03a24e629455fcafc8
An EUA length of *2* octets indicates dynamic IP address, while
an EUA length of 0 is invalid. Let's fix this hack (which needs
to finally be removed anyway).
Change-Id: Ib1b57eb0654327882044d6862d955f4b32aa6bcd
Do not attempt to send TRAP message on PDP context deletion if peer is
unknown.
Change-Id: I5e02c1d42bb7aaf1ef81a9824aab7b12047cdd3e
Fixes: Coverity CID 150135
Only generation of TRAP messages over Control Interface is supported so
far.
Note: requires corresponding version of libosmoctrl.
Change-Id: Ia76f841d2c9cd14394e9316fcd39f4060e23c898
Related: OS#1646
--gtpnl is now gone, instead you have --gtpkernel that behaves as an on/off
toggle. We full rely on the kernel routing base to select the real device to
transmit.
I have updated ggsn/cmdline.ggo and then run 'gengetopt' to refresh the
automatic code generation for command line options that openggsn uses.
This patch adds the -g, --gtpnl=device option that allows you to
enable the GTP kernel tunneling mode in openggsn. You have to specify
the real downlink device that will be used to tunnel traffic, eg.
-g=eth0
This means that the gtp0 device will be created and it will use eth0
as the real device to encapsulate packet coming from the Internet that
are addressed to the MS (so the tunnel devuce encapsulates these IP
packets in GTP packets when traveling to the SGSN).
Alternatively, you can also add this to the ggsn.conf configuration file:
gtpnl eth0
The device has to be the real device that can route packets to the SGSN,
if you select the wrong device, the kernel routing code may not find a
way to reach the SSGN, you've been warned.
Therefore, if this option is set, the operational becomes the following:
1) A gtp0 device is created via rtnetlink and configure the socket
encapsulation infrastructure in the kernel.
2) Whenever a PDP context is created, this adds the necessary tunnel
configuration via genetlink GTP interface.
3) Whenever a PDP context is destroyed, this deletes the tunnel via
genetlink GTP interface.
4) Destroy the gtp0 device if ggsn is stopped, including all of the
existing tunnels.
You require the osmo-ggsn.git tree, which contains the kernel module
gtp.ko and the libgtpnl library that you have to compile and install.
Make sure you have loaded the gtp.ko kernel module before launching
the ggsn daemon using the kernel driver mode, otherwise you will get
a nice "operation not supported" error message ;-).
This patch also adds supports for "ipup" configuration option to invoke
an external script after the gtp0 device has been brought up. Typical
command to add the route to reach the MS behind the GGSN is required,
eg. ip route add 10.0.0.0/8 dev gtp0.
The (horrible) ggsn parser has been manually extended to support the
new configuration option. That code doesn't look nice, but it just
mimics what we already have there for consistency, please don't blame
me for that.
If you want to run in debugging mode, I suggest you to use:
sudo ggsn -c ggsn.conf -f -d
Note that you do have to run openggsn as root to bring up the gtp0
device. You have to see this message that announce that the GTP kernel
mode is enabled.
openggsn[1106]: ggsn.c: 656: Using the GTP kernel mode (genl ID is 25)
This patch also automagically sets up route to reach MS from Internet
just like tun mode does. This is fundamental to get this working,
better don't leave to the admin, he may forget to add this route.
In this patch, I tried to encapsulate this new feature as much as
possible as Harald initially suggested.
To compile this feature, you have to pass --enable-gtp-kernel, ie.
./configire --enable-gtp-kernel
Otherwise, the code to interact with the gtp kernel part is not compiled.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Schultz <aschultz@tpip.net>
The specific log statements are not great yet but at least they
will end up in the log file. In the future everything should be
related to the IMSI or at least the tunnel id.
The evolution would be to introduce libosmocore and start using
the logging framework. But even then we can map this option to
the file target.
Fixes: SYS#263
After so many years of silence, we don't expect the original author to
return to the project. To make things a bit simpler for us, we convert
the coding style to what we are used to (Linux style).
The conversion was made using the 'Lindent' script which is part of the
Linux kernel.
Some files like in sgsnemu and ggsn directory where exactly the same.
They are now moved to the same directory for easier maintenance
Signed-off-by: Emmanuel Bretelle <chantra@debuntu.org>
Relevant output of make:
ggsn.c: In function ‘main’:
ggsn.c:436: warning: ignoring return value of ‘freopen’, declared with
attribute warn_unused_result
ggsn.c:437: warning: ignoring return value of ‘freopen’, declared with
attribute warn_unused_result
ggsn.c:438: warning: ignoring return value of ‘freopen’, declared with
attribute warn_unused_result
ggsn.c:439: warning: ignoring return value of ‘daemon’, declared with
attribute warn_unused_result
Signed-off-by: Emmanuel Bretelle <chantra@debuntu.org>