For the BSC we will have the gsm48_hdr and don't need to
find data within SCCP. For legacy reasons we need to
initialize con_type, imsi, reject causes early on and
need to do the same in the filter method.
Move the filter methods to the filter module. This is
still only usable for the NAT and the _dt/_cr filter
routines need to move back to the bsc_nat in the long
run.
The talloc_free on the nat lead to the freeing of the bsc_config
which lead to freeing of the rate_ctr_group. The rate_ctr_group
remained in a global list and the next creation of a bsc_config
would access dead memory. Fix it.
The free routine is only meant to be used by the test, for the
real nat we would need to make sure that all connections and
other state that refers to the cfg is removed/closed first.
Fix various memleaks in the test while we are at it. There are
still some to fix.
==7195== Invalid write of size 4
==7195== at 0x4043171: rate_ctr_group_alloc (linuxlist.h:65)
==7195== by 0x804D893: bsc_config_alloc (bsc_nat_utils.c:174)
==7195== by 0x804B5D2: main (bsc_nat_test.c:954)
==7195== Address 0x4311cbc is 52 bytes inside a block of size 208 free'd
==7195== at 0x4029D28: free (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-x86-linux.so)
==7195== by 0x4048D98: _talloc_free (talloc.c:609)
==7195== by 0x4052806: talloc_free (talloc.c:578)
==7195== by 0x804B58A: main (bsc_nat_test.c:940)
This patch adds the voice muxer. You can use this to batch RTP
traffic to reduce bandwidth comsuption. Basically, osmux transforms
RTP flows to a compact batch format, that is later on decompacted
to its original form. Port UDP/1984 is used for the muxer traffic
between osmo-bsc_nat and osmo-bsc_mgcp (in the BSC side). This
feature depends on libosmo-netif, which contains the osmux core
support.
Osmux is requested on-demand via the MGCP CRCX/MDCX messages (using
the vendor-specific extension X-Osmux: on) coming from the BSC-NAT,
so you can selectively enable osmux per BSC from one the bsc-nat.cfg
file, so we have a centralized point to enable/disable osmux.
First thing you need to do is to accept requests to use Osmux,
this can be done from VTY interface of osmo-bsc_nat and
osmo-bsc_mgcp by adding the following line:
mgcp
...
osmux on
osmux batch-factor 4
This just initializes the osmux engine. You still have to specify
what BSC uses osmux from osmo-bsc_nat configuration file:
...
bsc 1
osmux on
bsc 2
...
bsc 3
osmux on
In this case, bsc 1 and 3 should use osmux if possible, bsc 2 does
not have osmux enabled.
Thus, you can selectively enable osmux depending on the BSC, and
we have a centralized point for configuration from the bsc-nat to
enable osmux on demand, as suggested by Holger.
At this moment, this patch contains heavy debug logging for each
RTP packet that can be removed later to save cycles.
The RTP ssrc/seqnum/timestamp is randomly allocated for each MDCX that
is received to configure an endpoint.
The old ipa_msg_recv() implementation didn't support partial receive,
so IPA connections got disconnected when this happened.
This patch adds the handling of the temporary message buffers and uses
ipa_msg_recv_buffered().
It has been successfully tested by jerlbeck with osmo-nitb and
osmo-bsc.
Ticket: OW#768
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
The filtering architecture already allowed to specify a reject
reason but this has not been used for the access-lists. Extend
the access-list to include a reject reason and extend the test
case to honor it.
So far the payload type used in RTP streams has been taken from the
trunk configuration in NAT mode.
This patch changes the implementation to use the payload type
announced in the SDP part of MGCP messages and responses. SDP
descriptions more than one m=audio line are not yet supported
properly (always the last one is taken).
Ticket: OW#466
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
* The post-routing is applied after the first re-writing. To do this
the new number is copied back into the called data structure.
* Add a testcase that goes from 0172 to 0049 and then back to 0049
using the post rule with a table lookup.
* Increase the rewritten rule to five digits (this is the easiest
for the unit test). This will add another 40kb to the runtime size.
* Create a unit test that tests adding and removing the prefix rules.
* Use the regexp match to replace from one package
The bsc_nat.h is included by common_vty.c so we may not used
sccp_types.h in the bsc_nat.h header file. Move the callstats
to a new file and include it where it is needed.
Find the Cell Identifier from the Complete Layer3 Information and
store it for future reference. We could begin to verify that the
LAC/CI used really belongs to the BSC.
The name sccp_connection is used in the osmo-sccp code, sccp_connections
was used in the NAT for tracking a sccp_connection. Rename it so it is
obvious that the struct belongs to the nat.
The rename was done with sed:
$ sed -i s,"struct sccp_connections","struct nat_sccp_connection",g \
include/openbsc/*.h src/osmo-bsc_nat/* tests/*/*
We want to send a TRAP with the MGCP statistics from the NAT and
the connected BSC. The BSC endpoint can be either released because
of a DLCX from the MGCP CallAgent or the SCCP Connection release on
the A-link.
This is why we need to queue the statistics when the deleting the
endpoint on the BSC. The processing is continued once the response
arrives. This code assumes that the response of the DLCX will be sent
by the remote side. The current amount of outstanding responses can be
seen on the VTY. This assumption is based on the fact that the BSC has
already responded to the CRCX and maybe to the MDCX.
The MGCP RFC is bended to prefix the transaction identifier with "nat-"
to easily detect the response and hand it to the handler. This will
then parse the response and generate the TRAP. The current version is
v1. We assume that the transaction space is big enough and we will
not re-assign the transaction identifier too early.
In preparation for another kind of black-list allow the filter code
to decide how the connection should be rejected. Introduce a new struct
that will carry the reject causes for certain operations.
Move to the control command handling out of the main file into
a dedicated module. There are still some calls embedded into the
main code but it will be moved soon.
nat: Catch up with controlif_setup API change
We now save a control handle reference in the nat
osmo-bsc: Catch up with controlif_setup API change
We now save a control handle reference in the gsm network
Introduce number rewriting of SMS-SUBMIT. Introduce a new list,
move code around to help with finding a new number, somehow the
number encoding for TP-DA is borked, 03.40 references 04.11 but
the length appears to be strlen(number) without taken the type
field into account.
Match IMSI and destination address against a set of entries, if it
is matching the header will be modified and no sender report will be
requested. Change the test case to request the sender report and then
verify that this bit is reset to 0.
Move the regexp parsing code from the NAT to libcommon as it will
be used by the NAT and BSC code. This also adds the #include <regex.h>
include to gsm_data. This header should be split up.
The idea that MCC and MNC is enough to classify a subscriber
turns out to be wrong. Certain operatos license a number range
of IMSIs to others. When we see a '^' in the MCC field we treat
it as a regexp. The code now turns the MCC/MNC into a regexp
for the IMSI. It is not using extended POSIX regexp to match
the behavior of the access list.
Introduce a paging group that a BSC can refer to and is used
during the LAC lookup. This way paging can be flooded through
the network and just filtered at the last element in the core.
The current code tries to find _one_ bsc for a paging message
and then continues. The new code will try to find multiple BSCs
for each LAC. This is done in preparation of having two BSCs
handle the same LAC. This code right now is O(m*n) but it will
be worse once paging groups are landed.
The code to test the function was reduced to just test the lac
lookup code as the other part can not be tested in a standalone
setup anymore.
Be able to configure a list of destinations (duplicates allowed)
that will be tried in a round robin fashion. The change is in
the bsc_msc_connection to operate on a list. We achieve the
round robin nature with the same trick used in the paging code
to delete and append the current entry. The nat code was updated
to compile but one can only configure one destination.
For restarting the NAT we can now block it, it will not accept
new connections and for existing connections it will attempt
to drop them over time. A blocked NAT will end up with no BSC
connections left and then can be safely restarted.
libosmogsm is a new library that is distributed in the libosmocore.
Now, openbsc depends on it. This patch gets openbsc with this
change.
This patch also rewrites all include path to the new
osmocom/[gsm|core]
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@gnumonks.org>