Getting Started with 3G » History » Revision 15
Revision 14 (neels, 03/04/2017 03:37 AM) → Revision 15/52 (neels, 03/04/2017 04:03 AM)
{{>toc}} h1. Getting Started with 3G _This reflects the state of Osmocom 3G development on 2017-03-04_ If you have your 3G femto cell[1], this is how to get started: The physical setup is: <pre> _____________ _____________ | | | | | femto |<--Ethernet-->| Laptop/PC | |___________| |___________| </pre> On the protocol layer, the femto cell is the hNodeB and talks to various core network elements over the ethernet cable, typically all located on your computer, and talks to the phone (UE) over the air: <pre> +--------+ ,-->| Osmo | / | MGCPGW | | | |<--MGCP | +--------+ \ / | +------------+<--RTP +--------+ `->+----------+ UE <-->| hNodeB | | Osmo | | OsmoMSC | +------+ UE <-->| |<--Iuh---->| HNB-GW |<--IuCS-->| | | Osmo | | | | | | (VLR)|<-GSUP->| HLR | | | | | +----------+ GSUP->+------+ +------------+<--GTP-U | | / \ | | +------+<---' +------+ | | |<--IuPS-->| Osmo |<--GTP-C--->| Open | | +--------+ | SGSN | GTP-U--->| GGSN | | +------+ / +------+ \_______________________________/ </pre> h1. Core Network To get your 3G core network up and running, you need to manually build specific branches from various Osmocom projects: * libosmocore: master * libosmo-abis: master * libosmo-netif: sysmocom/sctp * libosmo-sccp: sysmocom/iu * libsmpp34: master * asn1c: aper-prefix-onto-upstream * libasn1c: master * osmo-iuh: master * openggsn: master * openbsc: sysmocom/iu -- *Be aware that this branch may still be rebased frequently until things have settled.* * osmo-hlr: master The git command to get onto a branch other than 'master' is: <pre> git checkout the_branch_name </pre> See [[Build from Source]] on build instructions (remember to pass _--enable-iu_ for openbsc's _./configure_ step). Once the CN stack is built, set up the configuration and launch the core network components. Find further below example configuration files and a run script that may help to get you started. Here are some details explained: Tell the osmo-hnbgw which local IP address to use to listen for Iuh connections. This needs to be on an interface reachable by the hNodeB. The IuCS and IuPS links towards the osmo-msc and osmo-sgsn default to 127.0.0.1 and 127.0.0.2, respectively, i.e. it's easiest to run osmo-msc and osmo-sgsn on the same machine as the osmo-hnbgw. These will listen on the proper port (14001) without further configuration. Also tell the MGCPGW (osmo-bsc_mgcp) which local IP address to bind to, which has to be reachable both by the hNodeB as well as the osmo-msc process. The osmo-msc.cfg is then told where to reach the MGCPGW. A notable detail for 3G data is that the GGSN has to be reachable by the hNodeB. Since the GTP standard defines fixed port numbers which both SGSN and GGSN have to to use, the SGSN may not bind on the same IP address as the GGSN! Typically this requires to add another IP address to your ethernet interface. On linux this is achieved, for example, by: <pre> sudo ip addr add 10.9.1.13/32 dev eth0 </pre> The above adds the address 10.9.1.13 to eth0, which works e.g. when your machine is in a 10.9.1.0/24 net and the address 10.9.1.13 is not yet taken by anyone else. (You probably want to use something like 192.168.0.222 instead.) Also, IP forwarding and masquerading must be enabled for your GGSN to be able to connect to your mobile phones to the internet uplink. On linux, that can be done for eth0 by: <pre> sudo sh -c "echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward" sudo iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE </pre> You may need a different interface, possibly a wildcard like 'eth*'. The GGSN needs permissions to create a @tun@ device, which @sudo@ will allow. It may be safer though to allow your user to create tunnels instead of running the GGSN as root. If programs complain about missing library @.so@ files, you will probably need to @export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib@. With sudo that would be @sudo LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib ggsn ...@, and you may need to add "SETENV" to your sudoers config -- see the sudo documentation. Once you have configured the IP addresses, start up your core network: launch osmo-msc, osmo-bsc_mgcp, osmo-sgsn, ggsn and osmo-hnbgw. You should see log messages indicating established IuCS and IuPS links (HNBGW, MSC and SGSN). h2. Core Network Configuration Example Here is a specific 3G core network configuration example, including a highly specialized launcher script that configures the network (on a linux system) and runs all the programs needed for a 3G core network -- but be aware: *config:* * This was run in a 192.168.0.1/24 subnet, yours may vary. * Your femto cell will get itself an IP address from your DHCP server, which will almost certainly differ from this example. You (so far still) need to set this address in the mgcp.cfg. * The ggsn.conf 'listen' address here is the additional interface (ala 'ip addr add' above) and needs to match whichever address you picked there. * Make sure all the other IP addresses in the config files match yours. * Make sure the MCC and MNC match the ones configured in the femto cell. *run.sh*: * It assumes the Osmocom libs and programs to be installed in /usr/local/*. * It launches each component in a separate X terminal. * It uses rxvt-unicode, you may want to change the @urxvt@ call to your favorite xterm instead. * Make sure the ethernet interface makes sense. * Make sure the IP address makes sense. * Run it in a directory where it will find the various configuration files. * It runs most of the processes in a gdb for easier debugging. * Once you hit Enter in the original terminal where you started, all the other terminals will be torn down in one fell swoop (hopefully). * *TODO* it doesn't launch osmo-hlr *TODO* (add once the 3G branch is rebased onto the VLR branch) Now that you've taken notice of the points above, here are the config and script: attachment:3G-config-example-v3.tar attachment:3G-config-example.tar h1. Femto Config With your CN up and running, configure the hNodeB to contact osmo-hnbgw via Iuh. Also make sure the PLMN ID matches the MCC and MNC in the osmo-msc.cfg -- otherwise the hNodeB may reject all attach requests. Depending on your femto cell, the steps to configure it will be radically different: * [[Configuring the ip.access nano3G]] * ... h1. Subscriber Configuration For your phone loaded with your USIM to be able to subscribe to your network, the IMSI needs to be authorized to enter and the authentication keys need to be added to the HLR. *NOTE*: a stock sysmoUSIM may need to be reconfigured to authenticate with your 3G network -- see #1965 h1. APN for Data Service For the 3G data service to work, phones generally need an APN added to their configuration, or they will not even attempt to establish a data connection. For the Osmocom 3G CN, any arbitrary APN name will do. The APN configuration steps are usually similar to: * Navigate to APN settings: ** 'Settings' ** 'Wireless & Networks' ** 'Mobile networks' ** 'Access Point Names' * You should see the list of APNs (possibly empty) * Press the Menu button * Choose 'New APN' * Enter values for 'Name' as well as 'APN' ** For both, any nonempty value is sufficient, e.g. "test". * Again press the Menu button * Choose 'Save' * The APN should now appear in the list of APNs. * Possibly tap the bullet icon to select the APN as default. h1. Further Links The "3G Voice Works" blog post from 2016 has some explanations: https://osmocom.org/news/59 With almost any question, you can go back to the 3GPP specs. Here is a list of which is for what: * [[GSMStandards]] * and [[Interesting3GPPSpecsForDevelopers]] h1. Tips and Facts h3. Analyzing RTP streams in wireshark IuCS actually uses UP over RTP. See 3GPP TS 25.414, and 25.415 6.6.2. (an interesting insight is https://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/avt/current/msg05907.html ) In the wireshark preferences, go to protocol IuUP, enable it and enter the dynamic protocol number that you see in the RTP frames (e.g. 96). h1. Help If you experience problems you may ask for assistance on our "mailing list":https://lists.osmocom.org/mailman/listinfo/openbsc. ------ fn1. For details on obtaining suitable 3G hardware, you can ask at info@sysmocom.de or on our "mailing list":https://lists.osmocom.org/mailman/listinfo/openbsc.