Add mslookup client to find remote home HLRs of unknown IMSIs, and
proxy/forward GSUP for those to the right remote HLR instances.
Add remote_hlr.c to manage one GSUP client per remote HLR GSUP address.
Add proxy.c to keep state about remotely handled IMSIs (remote GSUP address,
MSISDN, and probably more in future patches). The mslookup_server that
determines whether a given MSISDN is attached locally now also needs to look in
the proxy record: it is always the osmo-hlr immediately peering for the MSC
that should respond to mslookup service address queries like SIP and SMPP.
(Only gsup.hlr service is always answered by the home HLR.)
Add dgsm.c to set up an mdns mslookup client, ask for IMSI homes, and to decide
which GSUP is handled locally and which needs to go to a remote HLR.
Add full VTY config and VTY tests.
For a detailed overview of the D-GSM and mslookup related files, please see the
elaborate comment at the top of mslookup.c (already added in an earlier patch).
Change-Id: I2fe453553c90e6ee527ed13a13089900efd488aa
Implement the mslookup server's mDNS responder, to actually service remote
mslookup requests:
- VTY mslookup/server config with service names,
- the mslookup_mdns_server listening for mslookup requests,
For a detailed overview of the D-GSM and mslookup related files, please see the
elaborate comment at the top of mslookup.c (already added in an earlier patch).
Change-Id: I5cae6459090588b4dd292be90a5e8903432669d2
Implement the mslookup server to service remote mslookup requests.
This patch merely adds the logic to answer incoming mslookup requests, an
actual method to receive requests (mDNS) follows in a subsequent patch.
- API to configure service names and addresses for the local site (per MSC).
- determine whether a subscriber is on a local MSC
(checking the local proxy will be added in subsequent patch that adds proxy
capability).
- VTY config follows in a subsequent patch.
For a detailed overview of the D-GSM and mslookup related files, please see the
elaborate comment at the top of mslookup.c (already added in an earlier patch).
Change-Id: Ife4a61d71926d08f310a1aeed9d9f1974f64178b
D-GSM will store in the HLR DB whether a locally connected MSC has attached the
subscriber (last_lu_seen[_ps]), or whether the attach happened via a GSUP proxy
from a different site.
Add columns for this separately in this patch.
Change-Id: I98c7b3870559ede84adf56e4bf111f53c7487745
For the GSUP clients in upcoming D-GSM enabled osmo-hlr, it will be necessary
to trigger an event as soon as a GSUP client connection becomes ready for
communication. Add the osmo_gsup_client->up_down_cb.
Add osmo_gsup_client_create3() to pass the up_down_cb in the arguments. Also
add a cb data argument to populate the already existing osmo_gsup_client->data
item directly from osmo_gsup_client_create3().
We need the callbacks and data pointer in the osmo_gsup_client_create()
function right before startup, because this function immediately starts up the
connection. Who knows whether callbacks might trigger right away.
Because there are so many arguments, and to prevent the need for ever new
versions of this function, pass the arguments as an extendable struct.
Change-Id: I6f181e42b678465bc9945f192559dc57d2083c6d
To be prepared for the future in public API, wrap the new osmo_ipa_name struct
in an enum-type and union called osmo_cni_peer.
During code review it was requested to insert an ability to handle different
kinds of peer id, in order to be able to add a Global Title in the future.
Use the generic osmo_cni_peer only in the publicly visible API. For osmo-hlr
internal code, I intend to postpone implementing this into the future, when a
different peer identification actually gets introduced.
This way we don't need to implement it now in all osmo-hlr code paths (save
time now), but still make all external API users aware that this type may be
extended in the future.
Change-Id: Ide9dcdca283ab989240cfc6e53e9211862a199c5
These are seemingly orthogonal changes in one patch, because they are in fact
sufficiently intertwined that we are not willing to spend the time to separate
them. They are also refactoring changes, unlikely to make sense on their own.
** lu_fsm:
Attempting to make luop.c keep state about incoming GSUP requests made me find
shortcomings in several places:
- since it predates osmo_fsm, it is a state machine that does not strictly
enforce the order of state transitions or the right sequence of incoming
events.
- several places OSMO_ASSERT() on data received from the network.
- modifies the subscriber state before a LU is accepted.
- dead code about canceling a subscriber in a previous VLR. That would be a
good thing to actually do, which should also be trivial now that we record
vlr_name and sgsn_name, but I decided to remove the dead code for now.
To both step up the LU game *and* make it easier for me to integrate
osmo_gsup_req handling, I decided to create a lu_fsm, drawing from my, by now,
ample experience of writing osmo_fsms.
** osmo_gsup_req:
Prepare for D-GSM, where osmo-hlr will do proxy routing for remote HLRs /
communicate with remote MSCs via a proxy:
a) It is important that a response that osmo-hlr generates and that is sent
back to a requesting MSC contains all IEs that are needed to route it back to
the requester. Particularly source_name must become destination_name in the
response to be able to even reach the requesting MSC. Other fields are also
necessary to match, which were so far taken care of in individual numerous code
paths.
b) For some operations, the response to a GSUP request is generated
asynchronously (like Update Location Request -> Response, or taking the
response from an EUSE, or the upcoming proxying to a remote HLR). To be able to
feed a request message's information back into the response, we must thus keep
the request data around. Since struct osmo_gsup_message references a lot of
external data, usually with pointers directly into the received msgb, it is not
so trivial to pass GSUP message data around asynchronously, on its own.
osmo_gsup_req is the combined solution for both a and b: it keeps all data for
a GSUP message by taking ownership of the incoming msgb, and it provides an
explicit API "forcing" callers to respond with osmo_gsup_req_respond(), so that
all code paths trivially are definitely responding with the correct IEs set to
match the request's routing (by using osmo_gsup_make_response() recently added
to libosmocore).
Adjust all osmo-hlr code paths to use *only* osmo_gsup_req to respond to
incoming requests received on the GSUP server (above LU code being one of
them).
In fact, the same should be done on the client side. Hence osmo_gsup_req is
implemented in a server/client agnostic way, and is placed in
libosmo-gsupclient. As soon as we see routing errors in complex GSUP setups,
using osmo_gsup_req in the related GSUP client is likely to resolve those
problems without much thinking required beyond making all code paths use it.
libosmo-gsupclient is hence added to osmo-hlr binary's own library
dependencies. It would have been added by the D-GSM proxy routing anyway, we
are just doing it a little sooner.
** cni_peer_id.c / osmo_ipa_name:
We so far handle an IPA unit name as pointer + size, or as just pointer with
implicit talloc size. To ease working with GSUP peer identification data, I
require:
- a non-allocated storage of an IPA Name. It brings the drawback of being
size limited, but our current implementation is anyway only able to handle
MSC and SGSN names of 31 characters (see struct hlr_subscriber).
- a single-argument handle for IPA Name,
- easy to use utility functions like osmo_ipa_name_to_str(), osmo_ipa_name_cmp(), and copying
by simple assignment, a = b.
Hence this patch adds a osmo_ipa_name in cni_peer_id.h and cni_peer_id.c. Heavily
used in LU and osmo_gsup_req.
Depends: libosmocore Id9692880079ea0f219f52d81b1923a76fc640566
Change-Id: I3a8dff3d4a1cbe10d6ab08257a0138d6b2a082d9
As pointed out at https://github.com/libexpat/libexpat/issues/312
libtool does not play nice with clang sanitizer builds at all.
For those builds LD shoud be set to clang too (and LDFLAGS needs the
sanitizer flags as well), because the clang compiler driver knows how
linking to the sanitizer libs works, but then at a later stage libtool
fails to actually produce the shared libraries and the build fails. This
is fixed by this patch.
Addtionally LD_LIBRARY_PATH has no effect on conftest runs during
configure time, so the rpath needs to be set to the asan library path to
ensure the configure run does not fail due to a missing asan library,
i.e.:
SANS='-fsanitize=memory -fsanitize-recover=all -shared-libsan'
export CC=clang-10
ASANPATH=$(dirname `$CC -print-file-name=libclang_rt.asan-x86_64.so`)
export LDFLAGS="-Wl,-rpath,$ASANPATH $SANS $LDFLAGS"
Change-Id: Ib98b84ac156f52ecdbb7ae49eaaea35442527b22
Exit with error code if multicast is disabled. The test is disabled by
default already, so when explicitly enabling it, we should not
automatically skip it.
Related: OS#4385
Change-Id: I82022c23fa9c40535f922b12d917efd7e229912b
Only build and run the test, if --enable-mslookup-client-mdns-test is
passed to ./configure. Enable that option in jenkins.sh.
Related: OS#4385
Change-Id: Ie0cd4b0c55a1fbb00c215aeec7dcd0c15805add3
From https://sqlite.org/c3ref/exec.html:
To avoid memory leaks, the application should invoke sqlite3_free()
on error message strings returned through the 5th parameter of
sqlite3_exec() after the error message string is no longer needed.
If the 5th parameter to sqlite3_exec() is not NULL and no errors
occur, then sqlite3_exec() sets the pointer in its 5th parameter
to NULL before returning.
Change-Id: Ic9ed9bad3165bc4a637fe963f51e923f012e19ac
Fixes: CID#208182
Add example scripts for the distributed GSM network:
esme_dgsm.py: connect to the SMPP port of OsmoMSC A and forward SMS to the SMPP
port of OsmoMSC B. The IP and port of OsmoMSC B is retrieved by the receiver's
MSISDN using osmo-mslookup-client.
contrib/dgsm/freeswitch_dialplan_dgsm.py: resolve the destination SIP servers
of calls with osmo-mslookup-client and bridge the calls accordingly.
For a detailed overview of the D-GSM and mslookup related files, please see the
elaborate comment at the top of mslookup.c (already added in an earlier patch).
Related: OS#4254
Related: OS#4255
Change-Id: I26e8dd8d9a08187fccb3e74ee91366bc24f6c608
Standalone program using libosmo-mslookup to easily integrate with programs
that want to connect services (SIP, SMS,...) to the current location of a
subscriber. Also useful for manual testing.
For a detailed overview of the D-GSM and mslookup related files, please see the
elaborate comment at the top of mslookup.c (already added in an earlier patch).
Resubmit of 637bbfcd92 after revert in
41fe362591.
Change-Id: Ie39d30e20461ab10ae3584863d8bfc6b76a12f37
Add the first actually useful lookup method to the mslookup library: multicast
DNS.
The server side is added in a subsequent commit, when the mslookup server is
implemented for the osmo-hlr program.
Use custom DNS encoding instead of libc-ares (which we use in OsmoSGSN
already), because libc-ares is only a DNS client implementation and we will
need both client and server.
Resubmit of f10463c5fc after being
reverted in 110a49f69f. This new version
skips the mslookup_client_mdns test if multicast is not supported in the
build environment. I have verified that it doesn't break the build
anymore in my own OBS namespace.
Related: OS#4237, OS#4361
Patch-by: osmith, nhofmeyr
Change-Id: I3c340627181b632dd6a0d577aa2ea2a7cd035c0c
This reverts commit f10463c5fc, as it
causes all OBS osmo-hlr builds to fail in the mslookup_client_mdns test.
Change-Id: I5aec5b59f304c7f732c4a31131beedf29c966d9d
This reverts commit 637bbfcd92, as it
is a follow-up commit to Change-Id I03a0ffa1d4dc1b24ac78a5ad0975bca90a49c728
which causes all OBS osmo-hlr builds to fail in the mslookup_client_mdns test.
Change-Id: I43084ac3b24684f17df43fefc82019e44baaa236
Standalone program using libosmo-mslookup to easily integrate with programs
that want to connect services (SIP, SMS,...) to the current location of a
subscriber. Also useful for manual testing.
For a detailed overview of the D-GSM and mslookup related files, please see the
elaborate comment at the top of mslookup.c (already added in an earlier patch).
Change-Id: Ie68a5c1db04fb4dff00dc3c774a1162f5b9fabf7
Add the first actually useful lookup method to the mslookup library: multicast
DNS.
The server side is added in a subsequent commit, when the mslookup server is
implemented for the osmo-hlr program.
Use custom DNS encoding instead of libc-ares (which we use in OsmoSGSN
already), because libc-ares is only a DNS client implementation and we will
need both client and server.
Related: OS#4237
Patch-by: osmith, nhofmeyr
Change-Id: I03a0ffa1d4dc1b24ac78a5ad0975bca90a49c728
mslookup is a key concept in Distributed GSM, which allows querying the current
location of a subscriber in a number of cooperating but independent core
network sites, by arbitrary service names and by MSISDN/IMSI.
Add the abstract mslookup client library. An actual lookup method (besides
mslookup_client_fake.c) is added in a subsequent patch.
For a detailed overview of this and upcoming patches, please see the elaborate
comment at the top of mslookup.c.
Add as separate library, libosmo-mslookup, to allow adding D-GSM capability to
arbitrary client programs.
osmo-hlr will be the only mslookup server implementation, added in a subsequent
patch.
osmo-hlr itself will also use this library and act as an mslookup client, when
requesting the home HLR for locally unknown IMSIs.
Related: OS#4237
Patch-by: osmith, nhofmeyr
Change-Id: I83487ab8aad1611eb02e997dafbcb8344da13df1
Previous the hlr always returned the maximum possible auth vectors (5)
to the client. Even when only asked for a single auth vector.
Change-Id: I20c2b648456bc7ba1fc1321a7d42852158a3523c
Change the interpreter of the python script back to python3, as it was
when the script was initially added in
Idff9d757ab956179aa41ada2a223fd9f439aafbd. In the meantime, it had been
changed to python2 to make it work with build slaves that were missing
python3, but this is not necessary anymore.
This should be merged shortly after osmo-python-tests was migrated to
python3, and the jenkins build slaves were (automatically) updated to
have the new osmo-python-tests installed.
Related: OS#2819
Depends: osmo-python-tests I3ffc3519bf6c22536a49dad7a966188ddad351a7
Change-Id: Ifbb8f8f5428657a1c2d4d6d1217f8e374be43aba
Despite LTE/EUTRAN using the same authentication procedure (UMTS AKA)
as 3G, there's one difference: The "operator defined" 16bit AMF field
is reduced to 15 bits, with the first bit now being used as 'separation
bit'. That bit should be '0' for 2G/3G (as it is right now) and '1'
for authentication vectores generated for authentication over
EUTRAN/EPS.
Depends: libosmocore I93850710ab55a605bf61b95063a69682a2899bb1 (OSMO_GSUP_RAT_TYPES_IE)
Change-Id: Ic766bc40f6126bb479bd0a05b0e96bec3e240008
Location Updating procedures from both CS and PS overwrite the same
last_lu_seen field of a subscriber. For upcoming D-GSM it will be important to
distinguish those, because only CS attaches qualify for MSISDN lookup.
Add column last_lu_seen_ps, and upon PS LU, do not overwrite last_lu_seen, so
that last_lu_seen now only reflects CS LU.
In the VTY, dump both LU dates distinctively.
Change-Id: Id7fc50567211a0870ac0524f6dee94d4513781ba
I added these "by accident" when implementing D-GSM related VTY tests, now
submitting them separately.
Change-Id: I92a4245cae806270b00330403cc114017ab7af53
The test doesn't do much: it encodes an Insert Subscriber Data request for the
sole purpose to ensure the msgb is allocated large enough. A bug like that is
easily avoided statically.
Also, the lu functions will get refactored soon, it doesn't make sense to me to
drag this test along.
Change-Id: I42e1c72bf4cce8034f968cd4392773bf2b643c1b
VTY transcript tests run all *.vty test scripts, and it is not so
trivial to figure out the test-db creation and cmdline to run only one
of them when debugging. Add VTY_TEST var, useful to pick one test on the
cmdline:
cd tests
make vty-test VTY_TEST=test_nodes.vty
Not all VTY tests leave files behind that match hlr_vty_test.db-*, so
make sure that make does not fail it they can't be deleted (rm -f).
Change-Id: I4ad7ddb31b2bfb668b3540cfef658417dd442375
Throughout osmo-hlr's code, the GSUP msgb allocation is duplicated as:
msgb_alloc_headroom(1024+16, 16, "foo");
Instead, use one common function to keep the magic numbers in one place.
Change-Id: I40e99b5bc4fd8f750da7643c03b2119ac3bfd95e
Instead of a switch() for each version number with identical switch cases
except for the function name, use an array of function pointers and loop.
Also print a success message after each individual version upgrade, instead of
only one in the end (see change in db_upgrade_test.ok).
Change-Id: I1736af3d9a3f02e29db836966ac15ce49f94737b
db_upgrade_test.sh:
- If an ~/.sqliterc file exists, it causes output of '-- Loading resources from
~/.sqliterc'. Use -batch option to omit that.
- To make sure that column headers are off when required, add -noheaders in
some places.
Change-Id: I279a39984563594a4a3914b2ce3d803ad9468fe8
Apply the same headers structure that we keep in most Osmocom source trees:
Keep noinst_HEADERS in include/osmocom/hlr and include them using
#include <osmocom/hlr/*.h>
The only header kept in src/ is db_bootstrap.h, because it is generated during
build time. If it was built in include/osmocom/hlr, we would need db.o to
depend on db_bootstrap.h in a different subdir, which automake can't do well.
Change-Id: Ic912fe27f545b85443c5fb713d8c3c8aac23c9ad
The db bootstrap as well as the upgrade code all execute a number of
statements, and have massive code dup around each statement execution. Instead
have one db_run_statements() that takes an array of strings and runs all.
Change-Id: I2721dfc0a9aadcc7f5ac81a1c0fa87452098996f
The osmo-hlr DB schema indicates a hlr_number column and references it as 3GPP
TS 23.008 chapter 2.4.6. However, chapter 2.4.6 refers to the "MSC number",
while the "HLR number" is chapter 2.4.7.
Taking a closer look, 2.4.6 says "The MSC number is [...] stored in the HLR",
while 2.4.7 says "The HLR number may be stored in the VLR". As quite obvious,
the HLR does not store the HLR number. This was a typo from the start.
The osmo-hlr code base so far does not use the hlr_number column at all, so we
get away with renaming the column without any effects on the code base.
However, let's rather make this a new schema version to be safe.
Change-Id: I527e8627b24b79f3e9eec32675c7f5a3a6d25440