Project

General

Profile

Osmocom Network In The Box » History » Version 62

neels, 11/11/2017 03:50 AM

1 23 neels
{{>toc}}
2
3 29 neels
h1. WIP
4
5 31 neels
*This wiki page is still new and in an alpha state. We're still checking whether it is consistent and contains all the important information.*
6 29 neels
7 1 neels
h1. Osmocom Network In The Box
8
9 22 neels
This is a brief guide to the most basic and minimal setup of an Osmocom 2G and/or 3G network for voice and data services. It is a good starting point for newcomers to familiarize with the software, and to expand upon by the [[Osmocom Manuals]] and other wiki pages.
10 21 neels
11 2 neels
h2. OsmoNITB R.I.P., long live the Network In The Box
12 1 neels
13 2 neels
Historically, Osmocom offered the [[OsmoNITB:]] "Network-In-The-Box" as an actual single program. It was a useful simplification at the time, but in 2017, Osmocom have decided to split OsmoNITB into programs more closely resembling traditional network architecture. It is recommended to use the new separate components instead of the OsmoNITB, since active development focus has moved there.
14 1 neels
15 4 neels
It is still very much possible to run a complete Osmocom core network in one "box". For example, a sysmoBTS can run the entire core network on the same hardware that drives the TRX, making it a complete network in actually one single box. At the same time, having separate components also allows scaling to large deployments, with properly distributed load and a central subscriber database.
16 1 neels
17 2 neels
To migrate from OsmoNITB to the new separate programs, see the [[OsmoNITB Migration Guide]].
18
19
h2. Part of this Complete Network
20
21 32 neels
Assuming that you have your radio hardware ready (a BTS, a femto cell or an SDR driven by osmo-trx), the core network consists of separate programs providing voice/SMS/USSD ("circuit-switched" or CS) and data ("packet-switched" or PS) services.
22 2 neels
23 32 neels
Here is a table of the components you need:
24 1 neels
25 32 neels
|\4. *Required for*  |/3. *Program* |/3. *Description* |
26
|\2. *2G*  |\2. *3G* |
27
| *CS* | *PS* | *CS* | *PS* |
28
| ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | [[OsmoHLR:]] | Home Location Register, stores subscriber IMSI, phone number and auth tokens. |
29
| ✔ | (1) | ✔ | (1) | [[OsmoMSC:]] | Mobile Switching Center, handles signalling, i.e. attach/detach of subscribers, call establishment, messaging (SMS and USSD). |
30
| ✔ |   | ✔ |   | [[OsmoMGW:]] | Media Gateway, is instructed by the MSC and/or the BSC to direct RTP streams for active voice calls. |
31
| ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ | [[OsmoSTP:]] | Signal Transfer Point, routes SCCP messages between MSC, BSC, HNBGW and for 3G also the SGSN. |
32
| ✔ | (1) |   |   | [[OsmoBSC:]] | 2G Base Station Controller, manages logical channels and other lower level aspects for one or more 2G BTS; it is technically part of the BSS and not the "core network". |
33
|   |   | ✔ | ✔ | [[OsmoHNBGW:]] | 3G HomeNodeB Gateway, receives the Iuh protocol from a 3G femto cell and forwards to MSC and SGSN by SCCP/M3UA via OsmoSTP. |
34
|   | ✔ (2) |   | ✔ (2) | [[OpenGGSN:|OsmoGGSN]] | Gateway GPRS Support Node, "opens" GTP tunnels received from SGSNs to internet uplink. |
35
|   | ✔ |   | ✔ | [[OsmoSGSN:]] | Serving GPRS Support Node, handles signalling, i.e. attach/detach of subscribers and PDP contexts. |
36
| ✔ | (1) |   |   | [[OsmoBTS:]] | for 2G networks, drives the TRX and ties to the BSC via Abis-interface. |
37
|   | ✔ |   |   | [[OsmoPCU:]] | for 2G networks, a component closely tied to the BTS, drives the TRX for PS timeslots and ties to the SGSN via Gb-interface. |
38 37 neels
|   |   | ✔ | ✔ | hNodeb | 3rd party 3G femto cell hardware to connect to OsmoHNBGW via Iuh |
39 5 neels
40 32 neels
1: PS is always an _addition_ to CS: even though these components do not handle PS requests, you need to have these to be able to setup and register with a network, which is a prerequisite for data services.
41 28 neels
42 32 neels
2: For the GGSN to successfully route packets to an internet uplink, the system needs to have
43 28 neels
* IP-forwarding enabled,
44
* IP-masquerading set up,
45
* a usable tunnel device set up.
46
47
<pre>
48
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
49 33 neels
iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
50 34 neels
# Replace 'eth0' with your ethernet device name, or use '*' for all.
51
</pre>
52 18 neels
53 55 neels
h2. Topology
54
55
{{graphviz_link()
56
digraph G {
57
  rankdir = LR;
58 56 neels
  
59
  MS [label="MS\n(2G phone)"]
60
  UE [label="UE\n(3G phone)"]
61 1 neels
62 56 neels
  subgraph cluster_bts {
63
    BTS [rank="min"]
64
    PCU [rank="min"]
65
  }
66
67
  subgraph cluster_msc_mgw {
68 59 neels
    label=MGCP;style=dotted
69 56 neels
    MSC
70 57 neels
    MGW1 [label="MGW"]
71 56 neels
  }
72
73
  subgraph cluster_bsc_mgw {
74 59 neels
    label=MGCP;style=dotted
75 56 neels
    BSC
76 57 neels
    MGW2 [label="MGW"]
77 1 neels
  }
78
79 59 neels
  hNodeB [shape="box",label="hNodeB\n(3G femto cell)"]
80
81 61 neels
  MS -> BTS [label="Um"]
82 60 neels
 
83 56 neels
  BTS -> BSC [label="Abis/IP"]
84
  STP [label="STP\n(SCCP/M3UA)"]
85
  BSC -> STP -> MSC [label="A"]
86
  {MSC, SGSN} -> HLR [label="GSUP"]
87 62 neels
  UE -> hNodeB [label="Uu"]
88 56 neels
  hNodeB -> HNBGW [label="Iuh"]
89
  HNBGW -> STP -> MSC [label="IuCS"]
90 58 neels
  HNBGW -> STP -> SGSN [label="IuPS",style="dashed"]
91 61 neels
  PCU -> SGSN [label="Gb",style="dashed"]
92 58 neels
  SGSN -> GGSN [label="GTP-C",style="dashed"]
93
  SGSN -> GGSN [label="GTP-U(2G)",style="dashed"]
94
  hNodeB -> GGSN [label="GTP-U(3G)",style="dashed"]
95
  GGSN -> internet [label="tun",style="dashed"]
96 56 neels
97 1 neels
  rMGW [label="remote MGW"]
98 56 neels
  BTS -> MGW2 -> MGW1 -> rMGW [label="RTP"]
99 59 neels
  MGW1 -> MGW1 [label="RTP"]
100 1 neels
  hNodeB -> MGW1 [label="IuUP/RTP"]
101 59 neels
102
  A, B, C, D [style="invisible"]
103
  C -> D [label="data (PS)",style="dashed"]
104
  A -> B [label="voice (CS)"]
105 56 neels
106 55 neels
}
107
}}
108
109 5 neels
h1. Have to Know
110 10 neels
111
Each program features a detailed [[Osmocom Manuals|user manual]], your primary source of information to expand on the setup described here.
112 24 laforge
113 5 neels
Osmocom offers [[Binary_Packages|compiled packages for various distributions]]. If you're up to it, you may also [[Build from Source]].
114
115
Each Osmocom program typically has
116
117 1 neels
* a distinct configuration file;
118 25 neels
* a VTY telnet console for live interaction;
119 1 neels
* a CTRL interface for live interaction from 3rd party programs.
120 18 neels
121
See [[Port Numbers]] to find out which program runs VTY on which port.
122
123
h1. Configuration Examples
124 5 neels
125 6 neels
h2. OsmoHLR
126
127 50 neels
osmo-hlr will automatically bootstrap an empty subscriber database. See the [[Osmocom Manuals|manual]] on how to add one or more subscribers -- if you don't know your IMSI, it can be useful to attempt a connection and watch the OsmoHLR log for a rejected IMSI.
128 6 neels
129 50 neels
While you do need one, your configuration file may actually remain empty. This will serve GSUP on localhost (127.0.0.1), sufficient for a Network In The Box with MSC and SGSN on the same machine as the HLR.
130 6 neels
131 48 neels
*osmo-hlr.cfg*
132
<pre>
133
# empty
134
</pre>
135
136 6 neels
h2. OsmoMSC
137
138
The VLR component of OsmoMSC needs to connect to the OsmoHLR's GSUP server to know which subscribers are authorized. By default, it will connect to OsmoHLR on localhost, no explicit config needed.
139 26 neels
140 6 neels
To be reachable by OsmoBSC and OsmoHNBGW, OsmoMSC needs an SCCP point code, and it needs to connect to OsmoSTP to make itself known to SCCP routing.
141 7 neels
142 6 neels
* There is a default point code, currently 0.23.1 (in 8.8.3 point code format).
143
* OsmoMSC will by default look for OsmoSTP on localhost's M3UA port, 2905.
144 7 neels
145 51 neels
To direct RTP streams, OsmoMSC needs an OsmoMGW instance (see OsmoMGW below).
146 38 neels
147 51 neels
You only need to set up your MCC, MNC, and how to reach/use the MGW.
148 43 neels
149 49 neels
*osmo-msc.cfg*
150 38 neels
<pre>
151
network
152 53 neels
 network country code 901
153
 mobile network code 70
154 43 neels
msc
155 48 neels
 mgw remote-ip 192.168.0.5
156 45 neels
 mgw endpoint-range 1 32
157 38 neels
</pre>
158 9 neels
159 47 neels
h2. OsmoMGW
160 1 neels
161 52 neels
The Media Gateway receives instructions in the form of MGCP messages from OsmoMSC. It forwards RTP streams directly between BTS, femto cells and remote endpoints, e.g. other MGW instances.
162
163 47 neels
You need an OsmoMGW to serve OsmoMSC's MGCP requests, and an OsmoMGW to serve OsmoBSC's MGCP requests. In fact, these two can be served by one single OsmoMGW instance. If you would like to keep two separate OsmoMGW instances, you need to take care that they don't attempt to bind to identical ports on the same IP address (for MGCP, but also for VTY and CTRL interfaces).
164
165
Consider that you have a 2G network with an external BTS (say a sysmoBTS), which means that you need your OsmoBSC's MGW instance to be reachable on a public interface. So far the MSC's MGW can be on a local loopback interface, it only needs to be reachable by the BSC's MGW and by the MSC.
166
167
If you also have a 3G femto cell, then the MSC's MGW instance also needs to be on a public interface. At this point you either need two public interface addresses, or you need to put one of the MGWs on a different MGCP port.
168
169
If you use one OsmoMGW for both BSC and MSC, there are no port conflicts, but you need to take care that MSC and BSC use differing endpoint identifiers, or they will interfere with each others' RTP stream configurations.
170
171
To increase the likelihood that your first setup will work out, below examples pick distinct endpoint ranges so that MSC and BSC could use the same MGW instance, while at the same time provide config files that allow running two MGWs on the same public IP address.
172
173
h3. OsmoMGW for OsmoMSC
174 1 neels
175 9 neels
*NOTE: Currently, OsmoMSC still requires the legacy osmo-bsc_mgcp program, which will move to the new osmo-mgw soon. osmo-bsc_mgcp is still available from osmo-mgw.git. For osmo-bsc_mgcp, you can use the identical config as shown for the MSC's MGW here.*
176 47 neels
177 9 neels
* In a setup that truly runs in one box (e.g. sysmoBTS or osmo-trx with co-located core network), this may be localhost (127.0.0.1), which is the default, and your config file may omit the 'bind ip'.
178
* With a separate BTS and/or RNC (e.g. 3G femto cell or nanoBTS), make sure to configure an IP address that is reachable by the hNodeB and BTS:
179 1 neels
180 48 neels
*osmo-mgw-for-msc.cfg*
181 1 neels
<pre>
182 40 neels
mgcp
183 47 neels
 bind ip 192.168.0.5
184
 number endpoints 64
185 1 neels
</pre>
186
187 47 neels
h3. OsmoMGW for OsmoBSC
188 1 neels
189 47 neels
OsmoBSC also requires an OsmoMGW instance to run alongside it. In a setup where OsmoBSC and OsmoMGW run on the same box, they may in fact share the same OsmoMGW instance, as long as BSC and MSC use different endpoint identifiers.
190 1 neels
191 47 neels
It is semantically more clear to run a separate OsmoMGW instance for the OsmoBSC, which then needs to not interfere with the other MGW's ports, for example:
192 1 neels
193
*osmo-mgw-for-bsc.cfg*
194 41 neels
<pre>
195 40 neels
mgcp
196 47 neels
 bind ip 192.168.0.5
197
 # default port, used for MSC's MGW, is 2427
198
 bind port 12427
199
 number endpoints 64
200 41 neels
line vty
201 47 neels
 # default VTY interface, used for MSC's MGW, is 127.0.0.1
202 41 neels
 bind 127.0.0.2
203 40 neels
</pre>
204
205 54 neels
Note that osmo-bsc.cfg below sets the 'mgw remote-port' to the 'bind port' configured here (the method to run two MGW on the same public IP address), and picks a different 'mgw endpoint' range than the OsmoMSC (the method to use the same MGW for both BSC and MSC) -- these are two separate, redundant measures, and you usually would pick only one of them.
206 9 neels
207
h2. OsmoSTP
208
209
OsmoSTP acts as a server for routing messages. OsmoMSC, OsmoBSC, OsmoHNBGW and OsmoSGSN contact OsmoSTP and announce their own point code, after which they may instruct OsmoSTP to route SCCP messages to each other by these point codes.
210
211
The basic configuration that permits dynamic routing is:
212
213
*osmo-stp.cfg*
214
<pre>
215
cs7 instance 0
216
 xua rkm routing-key-allocation dynamic-permitted
217
 listen m3ua 2905
218 11 neels
  accept-asp-connections dynamic-permitted
219
</pre>
220
221
h2. OsmoBSC
222
223 1 neels
OsmoBSC needs to register with OsmoSTP, and contact the MSC by its point code.
224 11 neels
225 48 neels
OsmoBSC needs to contact an OsmoMGW to direct RTP streams between BTS and the MSC's MGW, as discussed above under "OsmoMGW".
226 42 neels
227 11 neels
OsmoBSC also needs complete configuration of all connected BTS. This example shows configuration for a sysmoBTS.
228 15 neels
229
Furthermore, some network properties need to be set.
230
231 11 neels
The 'gprs mode' determines whether packet switched access will be enabled. 'gprs mode none' switches off data services, as osmo-bts will not contact osmo-pcu to establish data service. This is a configuration without packet switched service:
232 1 neels
233
*osmo-bsc.cfg* for voice only
234
<pre>
235
network
236 48 neels
 network country code 901
237
 mobile network code 70
238 43 neels
 mm info 1
239 11 neels
 short name OsmoBSC
240
 long name OsmoBSC
241
 bts 0
242
  type sysmobts
243
  band GSM-1800
244 1 neels
  location_area_code 23
245 11 neels
  ip.access unit_id 1800 0
246
  trx 0
247
   rf_locked 0
248
   arfcn 868
249
   nominal power 23
250 48 neels
   max_power_red 20
251 11 neels
   timeslot 0
252
    phys_chan_config CCCH+SDCCH4
253
   timeslot 1
254
    phys_chan_config SDCCH8
255
   timeslot 2
256
    phys_chan_config TCH/H
257
   timeslot 3
258
    phys_chan_config TCH/H
259
   timeslot 4
260
    phys_chan_config TCH/H
261 1 neels
   timeslot 5
262
    phys_chan_config TCH/H
263
   timeslot 6
264
    phys_chan_config TCH/H
265
   timeslot 7
266
    phys_chan_config TCH/H
267 48 neels
e1_input
268
 e1_line 0 driver ipa
269 15 neels
msc 0
270 48 neels
 mgw remote-ip 192.168.0.5
271
 mgw remote-port 12427
272
 mgw endpoint-range 33 64
273
 allow-emergency deny
274
 codec-list hr3
275 15 neels
</pre>
276
277
To allow data service, set a 'gprs mode gprs' or 'gprs mode egprs', and configure PDCH timeslots. Traditionally, a fixed amount of TCH timeslots for voice and PDCH timeslots for data service are configured. OsmoBTS also supports two types of dynamic timeslots, as described in the "Abis manual":http://ftp.osmocom.org/docs/latest/osmobts-abis.pdf, chapter "Dynamic Channel Combinations". The following is a configuration with data service based on Osmocom style dynamic timeslots:
278
279
280
*osmo-bsc.cfg* for voice and data service
281 43 neels
<pre>
282 48 neels
# todo
283 15 neels
</pre>
284 12 neels
285 1 neels
h2. OsmoHNBGW
286
287 16 neels
For connecting a 3G hNodeB (femto cell), OsmoHNBGW is needed to receive Iuh and forward IuCS and IuPS. (For a pure 2G setup, no HNBGW is needed.)
288
289
OsmoHNBGW needs to connect to OsmoSTP for routing, and needs to know the MSC and SGSN point codes.
290 12 neels
291
It must also be reachable by the hNodeB, hence its Iuh must typically run on a public IP, not a loopback address like 127.0.0.1.
292
293
*osmo-hnbgw.cfg*
294
<pre>
295
cs7 instance 0
296
 ! OsmoHNBGW's own local point code
297
 point-code 0.3.0
298
 ! Address book entries, used below
299
 sccp-address msc
300
  point-code 0.23.1
301
 sccp-address sgsn
302
  point-code 0.23.2
303
hnbgw
304
 iuh
305 48 neels
  local-ip 192.168.0.5
306 12 neels
 iucs
307
  remote-addr msc
308
 iups
309 13 neels
  remote-addr sgsn
310
</pre>
311
312 14 neels
h2. OsmoGGSN
313 13 neels
314
To provide packet switched service, OsmoGGSN must offer GTP service to the OsmoSGSN. Notably, both OsmoGGSN and OsmoSGSN must use identical port numbers, which an intrinsic requirement of the GTP protocol. Hence they must not run on the same IP address. It is sufficient to, for example, run OsmoGGSN on 127.0.0.2, and OsmoSGSN's GTP on 127.0.0.1.
315
316
OsmoGGSN maintains a gsn_restart counter, to be able to reliably communicate to the SGSN that it has restarted. This is kept in the 'state-dir', by default in /tmp.
317
318
It also needs access to a tun device. This may be configured ahead of time, so that OsmoGGSN does not need root privileges. If run with 'sudo', OsmoGGSN may also create its own tun device. In below example, the 'tun4' device has been created ahead of time. IPv4 operation is enabled by default, but for future compatibility, it is good to indicate that explicitly.
319 1 neels
320 14 neels
OsmoGGSN furthermore indicates DNS servers, as well as an IPv4 address range to assign to subscribers' PDP contexts.
321 13 neels
322
*osmo-ggsn.cfg*
323
<pre>
324
ggsn ggsn0
325
 gtp bind-ip 127.0.0.2
326
 apn internet
327
  tun-device tun4
328
  type-support v4
329
  ip dns 0 192.168.100.1
330 1 neels
  ip dns 1 8.8.8.8
331 14 neels
  ip ifconfig 176.16.222.0/24
332
  ip prefix dynamic 176.16.222.0/24
333
</pre>
334
335
h2. OsmoSGSN
336
337
OsmoSGSN needs to reach the GGSN to establish GTP tunnels for subscribers. It must have a separate GTP IP address from OsmoGGSN, as mentioned before.
338
339
For 2G, OsmoSGSN needs to be reachable by the PCU, and needs a public IP for the Gb interface if it is not running directly on the BTS hardware (e.g. on sysmoBTS or when using osmo-trx). For 2G operation, SGSN and GGSN may both use a local IP address for GTP, as long as they differ (e.g. 127.0.0.1 and 127.0.0.2).
340
341
For 3G, OsmoSGSN needs to be reachable by both the HNBGW for IuPS as well as by the hNodeB for GTP, i.e. it definitely needs to have a public IP address for the GTP port. IuPS may remain local if both HNBGW and SGSN are on the same box.
342
343
Finally, OsmoSGSN needs access to OsmoHLR to access subscriber data. Set 'auth-policy remote' to use the HLR for subscriber authorization. The default 
344
345 1 neels
*osmo-sgsn.cfg*
346
<pre>
347 14 neels
sgsn
348
 gtp local-ip 192.168.0.3
349
 ggsn 0 remote-ip 192.168.0.142
350 1 neels
 auth-policy remote
351 14 neels
 gsup remote-ip 127.0.0.1
352 13 neels
</pre>
353 17 neels
354 18 neels
h1. Running Examples
355 17 neels
356
Each Osmocom program comes with a systemd service file. It is recommended to place config files in /etc/osmocom/ and launch the individual components using systemd.
357
358
When installed from debian or opkg feeds, you will find the systemd service files in /lib/systemd/system/.
359
360
Re/starting and stopping then works like this:
361
362
<pre>
363
systemctl restart osmo-hlr
364
systemctl stop osmo-hlr
365 1 neels
</pre>
366
367
It can be useful to have an @osmo-all@ script to re/start or stop all components at once, edit to pick yours:
368 36 neels
369
*osmo-all* script
370
<pre>
371
#!/bin/sh
372
cmd="${1:-start}"
373
set -ex
374
systemctl $cmd osmo-hlr osmo-msc osmo-mgw osmo-ggsn osmo-sgsn osmo-stp osmo-bsc osmo-hnbgw osmo-bts-sysmo osmo-pcu 
375
</pre>
376
377
which allows
378
379
<pre>
380
./osmo-all restart
381
./osmo-all status
382
./osmo-all stop
383
</pre>
384
385 1 neels
For illustration, the manual command invocations for the components would look like this:
386
387
<pre>
388
osmo-hlr -l hlr.db -c osmo-hlr.cfg
389
osmo-msc -c osmo-msc.cfg
390 48 neels
osmo-mgw -c osmo-mgw-for-msc.cfg
391
osmo-mgw -c osmo-mgw-for-bsc.cfg
392 36 neels
osmo-ggsn -c osmo-ggsn.cfg
393 1 neels
osmo-sgsn -c osmo-sgsn.cfg
394
osmo-stp -c osmo-stp.cfg
395
osmo-bsc -c osmo-bsc.cfg
396 36 neels
osmo-hnbgw -c osmo-hnbgw.cfg
397
# on a 2G sysmoBTS:
398
osmo-bts-sysmo -c osmo-bts.cfg -s -M
399 18 neels
osmo-pcu -c osmo-pcu.cfg
400
</pre>
401
402
h1. Logging Examples
403
404
Osmocom programs have a common logging mechanism, configurable by the config files as well as the telnet VTY.
405
406
Depending on the system's logging configuration, logs may by default be visible in /var/log/daemon.log, or by using journalctl:
407
408
<pre>
409
journalctl -f -u osmo-hlr
410
</pre>
411 35 neels
412 19 neels
When journalctl is used, it may be necessary to enable it first, e.g. by setting "Storage=volatile" in /etc/systemd/journald.conf followed by a 'systemctl restart systemd-journald'; you may also need to 'systemctl unmask systemd-journald.service systemd-jounald.socket'. Logging will only start appearing for components that were restarted after these changes.
413
414
A sure way to see the logs is to connect to the program's telnet VTY and enable logging on the VTY session -- this way you do not modify the application's default logging, but create a separate logging target for your telnet VTY session:
415
416
<pre>
417
$ telnet localhost 4254
418
OsmoMSC> logging enable 
419
OsmoMSC> logging level ?
420
  all      Global setting for all subsystems
421
  rll      A-bis Radio Link Layer (RLL)
422
  cc       Layer3 Call Control (CC)
423 35 neels
  mm       Layer3 Mobility Management (MM)
424
  [...]
425 19 neels
OsmoMSC> logging level all ?
426 35 neels
everything debug      info       notice     error      fatal      
427 19 neels
OsmoMSC> logging level all debug 
428 20 neels
OsmoMSC> logging filter all 1
429
</pre>
430 1 neels
431
You will see logging output on your telnet console immediately. Note that the VTY prompt is still listening, so you may at any time issue 'logging filter all 0' to switch off logging, and be able to type commands without being cluttered by ongoing log output.
Add picture from clipboard (Maximum size: 48.8 MB)