The existing gsm_04_08.c implementation is mixing BSC and MSC
behavior. Move some simple parsing and generation functions over
to gsm_04_08_utils.c to allow a different MSC to define the policy.
Currently we have circular dependencies from libbsc to libmsc
and this requires to play some linker tricks. The problem will
be solved in two ways, first we will get rid of the circular
dependencies and second we can start using --start-group and
--end-group of the linker to play the tricks for us.
For the BSC part we still assign a gsm_subscriber to lchan but it
might only contain the TMSI of this subscriber.
For the MSC part we will need the HLR/VLR feature of the gsm_subscriber,
specially the lookup's by number...
So if libbsc.a/libmsc.a are compiled in one app and used the
subscribers will be shared, and if only libbsc.a gets used we will
have more empty gsm_subscriber.c..
Attempt to split up bsc/msc functionality according to the specs. The
libbsc.a will be responsible for communicating with the BTS, configuring
it, paging, channel allocation and passing layer3 messages in both
ways. libmsc.a will implement the policy and such.
the various constructors get called in a non-obvious, linker determined
order, which makes certain objects disappear from the talloc report.
This change moves the talloc context creation into a new talloc_ctx.c file
A caller can call rll_establish(lchan, link_id) and a callback to the GSM RLL
code. He will get called back if the RLL link is established or receives some
error message, or the establishment times out.
We need this for proper SMS implementation, where we need to restablish a SAPI3
RLL link before transmitting the actual CP-DATA messages.
Up until now, we only supported direct RTP streams between ip.access BTS.
With this commit, the user can specify '-P' to the command line to enable
a RTP/RTCP proxy inside OpenBSC. The nanoBTS will then send all their voice
data to OpenBSC, which will relay it to the respective destination BTS (which
can be the same BTS).
The default behaviour remains unchanged. Without '-P' on the command line,
RTP/RTCP is exchanged directly.
This changeset factors out gsm_transaction as something independent
of call control in preparation to re-use the code from SMS. A
transaction is uniquely identified by either its callref, or by
a tuple of (transaction_id, protocol, subscriber).
This is Harald's reworked MNCC base, slowly heading towards integration
into master. The key changes are:
* provide much more structure to the data in gsm_mncc
* encode_* and decode_* functions now take a structure rather than tons
of individual arguments (whose order nobody can remember)
* make sure we don't have copies of the same code everywhere by introducing
mncc_set_cause() and mncc_release_ind()
* save horizontal screen space if possible
* make sure we break lines > 80 characters