gprs_bssgp.c:461:9: runtime error: load of misaligned address
0x62100001a66b for type 'uint32_t', which requires 4 byte alignment
gprs_ns.c:937:16: runtime error: load of misaligned address
0x61d00002a97f for type 'uint16_t', which requires 2 byte alignment
To integrate with an external event loop (in this case glib) we
need to allow an application to get a filled out fd_set and then
dispatch it. osmo_fds and maxfds are static and I decided to keep
it that way and instead create two routines to fill the fdset and
then one to dispatch the result.
The public header file does not include sys/select.h and we can
compile the library without select, so I didn't want to require
having to include this file, and used void * for the parameter.
Mark the routines as inline to avoid a call from the select
function. I have confirmed that inlining has an effect on x86
using Debian's gcc-4.9.2-10 compiler
This function can be used to obtain the osmo_fd corresponding to a given
fd. The latter can be useful when integrating libosmocore main loop
with other libraries.
Add function which adds specified number of bits from each element of
array to the bit vector prefixing each addition with one and finishing
entire sequence with adding 0. This is very common patter for various
repetitive data structures described with CSN.1 in 3GPP standards.
Corresponding test vectors and doxygen headers are added too.
For 3G, I need a BCD composer/parser similar to gsm48_generate_lai()/
gsm48_decode_lai(). Those functions also handle a trivial extra
member (lac) which I don't need in this way for 3G.
So create new functions to take on the MCC+MNC BCD handling and call those
from gsm48_generate_lai() and gsm48_decode_lai(). In this way, the 3G code
in openbsc can use only the BCD functionality without code duplication.
Add inline functions for both release <= 98 and release >= 99 as well as a
default define. Use the release 98 by default since the current code base uses
the r98 bitmasks.
These inline functions relieve callers of the decision on masking bits of the
protocol discriminator and message type octets.
Also add a define for the protocol discriminator extension to one octet length
(GSM48_PDISC_EXTEND).
Apply new pdisc function in gsm0480.c.
[hfreyther: Make the hdr param const]
There doesn't seem to be a reason not to check the filter. Update
and extend the test. Currently the filter function will be called
once for the log check and once for the output of it.
This commit adds this predicate function which can be used to
avoid the execution of code if a certain log level is not enabled.
The function will only return 0 (false), if it is sure that a logging
call for the same facility and level will not produce any output.
This safety criterion shall ensure, that no logging output is lost
due to the use of this predicate as a guard. On the other hand, even
if the predicate returns != 0 (true), no logging output might get
generated by a similar logging command.
Note that the current implementation is not focussed on performance,
which could be improved by using a lookup table instead of iterating
through every target.
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
This may seem like overkill for a mere const char * config item, but it makes
the Control interface VTY commands reusable in any main() scope (inspired by
libosmo-abis' VTY config).
Add API functions ctrl_vty_init() and ctrl_vty_get_bind_addr(), in new files
src/ctrl/control_vty.c and include/osmocom/ctrl/control_vty.h, compiled and/or
installed dependent on ENABLE_VTY.
Using these functions allows configuring a static const char* with the VTY
commands
ctrl
bind A.B.C.D
which callers shall subsequently use to bind the Control interface to a
specific local interface address, by passing the return value of
ctrl_vty_get_bind_addr() to control_interface_setup().
Add CTRL_NODE to enum node_type, "eating" RESERVED4_NODE to heed that comment
on avoiding ABI changes.
Make the ctrl interface bind address configurable, so that it may be made
available on other addresses than 127.0.0.1. The specific aim is to allow
running multiple osmo-nitbs alongside each other (commits in openbsc follow).
Add VTY command
line vty
bind A.B.C.D
The command merely stores the configured IP-address, which can then be used by
the calling main program to set the telnet port of the VTY line. (Commits in
openbsc and osmo-iuh will follow up on this.)
Add function vty_get_bind_addr() to publish the address in the vty.h API.
Add static vty_bind_addr to store.
For allocation/freeing reasons, a NULL address defaults to 127.0.0.1.
BTW, I decided against allowing keywords 'any' and 'localhost' in place of an
actual IP address to make sure a written config is always identical to the
parsed config.
This function originates from openbsc/src/gprs but is just specific
to BSSGP/Gb on the same level like bssgp_msgb_alloc.
This commit puts the former gprs_msgb_copy function beside
bssgp_msgb_alloc.
Renamed function:
gprs_msgb_copy -> bssgp_msgb_copy
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
int << 31 does not seem to be defined, let's try to make it an
unsigned variable and see if that is pleasing the system.
Fixes:
bitvec.c:219:15: runtime error: left shift of 1 by 31 places cannot be represented in type 'int'
Add bit map encoder and decoder functions: decoder is fully functional
while encoder is good enough for testing - no backtracking to find
the best possible compression is implemented. If somebody is willing to
implement MS side of EDGE than this has to be expanded.
Add corresponding tests.
N. B: the encoding is implemented according to ETSI TS 44.060 which is
slightly different from T4 used for fax according to CCITT G31D (RFC 804).
Ticket: OW#2407
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
Signed-off-by: Max <msuraev@sysmocom.de>
bitvec_read_field/bitvec_write_field in the PCU used a C++ reference
and when porting to C it was decided to pass the parameter by value
and this lost the "back propagation" of the new index. Change the
parameter to be an in/out parameter and this way do not have a silent
semantic break in the osmo-pcu (where we copy the reference in csn.1
by value) and have a true compile failure.
Add Max's simple test for bitvec_unhex function leaving the checking
of bitvec_read_field and the side effect in the datastructure about
the number of bits still open.
bitvec.c: In function 'bitvec_unhex':
bitvec.c:389: error: 'for' loop initial declarations are only allowed in C99 mode
bitvec.c:389: note: use option -std=c99 or -std=gnu99 to compile your code
Allocation, pack/unpack, field access and helper routines used
extensively by Osmo-PCU. Whenever memory allocation happens, alocator
context is passed explicitly by caller.
Include the headers mentioned by the manpage
ipa.c:346:9: warning: implicit declaration of function 'recv' is invalid in C99
[-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
ret = recv(fd, msg->tail, needed, 0);
'\0' gets translated to zero but the argument to vector_set is
a pointer and it gets converted to a pointer.
vty.c:985:21: warning: expression which evaluates to zero treated as a null pointer constant of type
'void *' [-Wnon-literal-null-conversion]
vector_set(vline, '\0');
^~~~
vty.c:1095:21: warning: expression which evaluates to zero treated as a null pointer constant of type
'void *' [-Wnon-literal-null-conversion]
vector_set(vline, '\0');
^~~~
vty.c:1097:21: warning: expression which evaluates to zero treated as a null pointer constant of type
'void *' [-Wnon-literal-null-conversion]
vector_set(vline, '\0');
^~~~
The undefined behavior sanitizer found the 32bit load from an
unaligned memory address. This will cause an exception on ARMv5te
and a manual fix-up.
[hfreyther: On armv6, x86 the usage of memcpy leads to shorter
amount of instructions but on armv5te the memcpy is not expanded
leading to a branch. Use the version of max until we have the time
to benchmark it]
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
This code dealing with bit shifting sometimes gets 1 byte beyond array
boundary while calculating index. This is now explicitly checked and prevented.
Ticket: OW#1198
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf
The new functions bitvec_get_bytes and bitvec_set_bytes copy
byte sequences from bitvecs to uint8_t arrays and vice versa.
While the bytes in the bitvecs do not need to be aligned, the uint8_t
arrays always are. In case the bytes in the bitvec are aligned, the
implementation uses memcpy.
Note that the implementation like the other existing functions assume
MSB first encoding.
[hfreyther: Squash the comment fix into this commit as well]
Sponsored-by: On-Waves ehf