Difference between revisions of "Guerrilla VoIP"
 (project revamped: cleaned a bit)  | 
				m (added calculations (scenarios, solar, battery))  | 
				||
| Line 95: | Line 95: | ||
=== some power tests ===  | === some power tests ===  | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== hardware ====  | ||
{| class="wikitable"  | {| class="wikitable"  | ||
! hardware || power source || U || I || P<sub>approximated</sub>  | ! hardware || power source || U || I || P<sub>approximated</sub>  | ||
| Line 116: | Line 118: | ||
| cellphone charging || lab power supply |||||| 5W<sup>[2]</sup>  | | cellphone charging || lab power supply |||||| 5W<sup>[2]</sup>  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
| − | |   | + | |-  | 
| + | | A) Netgear, Pi, 7940, Gl.inet || SLA battery || 12V ||  || 12W<sup>[3]</sup>  | ||
| + | |-  | ||
| + | | B) Netgear, Pi, 7940, Gl.inet, Gigaset || SLA battery || 12V ||  || 13.3W<sup>[3]</sup>  | ||
| + | |-  | ||
| + | | C) Netgear, Pi, 7940, FritzBox || SLA battery || 12V ||  || 16.3W<sup>[3]</sup>  | ||
|}  | |}  | ||
:<sup>[1]</sup> Approximated by calculating deviation from the lab power supply combined values, which was about 5% off 12V  | :<sup>[1]</sup> Approximated by calculating deviation from the lab power supply combined values, which was about 5% off 12V  | ||
:<sup>[2]</sup> Approximated by subtracting all calculated items from the complete setup  | :<sup>[2]</sup> Approximated by subtracting all calculated items from the complete setup  | ||
| − | :<sup>[3]</sup> Approximated by just adding up individual items  | + | :<sup>[3]</sup> Approximated by just adding up individual items, using Netgear GS110TP PoE, Raspberry Pi, Gl.inet, Siemens Gigaset N510 and/or Fritz!box  | 
| + | |||
| + | ==== solar panel and battery ====  | ||
| + | Did some rough estimations with a 15 Watt solar panel (using a [https://github.com/apollo-ng/UCSSPM/blob/master/ucsspm.py Unified Clear-Sky Solar Prediction Model script]): on a good summer day it will yield 240W in 17 hours (slightly below 15 megajoule), and on a clear winter day it will yield 25W in 7 hours (630 kilojoule).  | ||
| + | |||
| + | A 12v SLA battery is full with >12.85V, empty with 12.00V (at 25% capacity) and fully depleted at 11.80V. I came to the conclusion that the effective energy is about 9.5*Ah; given a 7Ah battery, this will yield about 66.5Wh.  | ||
| + | |||
| + | Hiven the hardware setups described in the previous paragraph (note that these values are theoretical maximums):  | ||
| + | {| class="wikitable"  | ||
| + | ! scenario || battery run time || solar+battery run time (winter/summer)  | ||
| + | |-  | ||
| + | | A || 5:30h || 7:35h/25:30h  | ||
| + | |-  | ||
| + | | B || 5:00h || 6:55h/23:00h  | ||
| + | |-  | ||
| + | | C || 4:00h || 5:35h/18:45h  | ||
| + | |}  | ||
<gallery>  | <gallery>  | ||
Revision as of 10:05, 23 October 2018
| Project: Guerrilla VoIP | |
|---|---|
| Featured: | No | 
| State | Active | 
| Members | xopr | 
| GitHub | No GitHub project defined. Add your project here. | 
| Description | low cost communication node | 
| Picture | |
 
 | |
synopsis
Create a low cost communication node (with VoIP as a base), trying to connect as many as possible types of links, for example:
- copper/fibre/WiFi network
 - DECT/POTS/GSM telephony
 - SIP/SCCP
 - HAM radio (or preferrably, CB radio: 27MC/PMR)
 - copper/WiFi/USB uplink
 
It also could need some of the following functionality:
- PoE service (to drive phones, remote switches/accesspoints)
 - battery supported/powered (in case of power failures/lack of power)
 - Efficient power converter(s) when running on battery
 - sturdy compact waterproof casing
 
implementation
The current version has:
- ammo box
 - 7Ah SLA battery
 - banana/screw terminal
 - weatherproof ethernet outlet
 - 12-volt cigarette lighter receptacle
 - 3D printed insert
 - fuse box
 - switches for device targeting power and power state preview
 - Netgear GS110TP (8xPoE + 2xSFP)
 - a couple Telephone system:Cisco PoE hack cable
 
todo
- upload models and schematics
 - 3D print inlay for Switch/PI holder
 - install fuses and crowbar circuit
 - install state leds
 - install step-down converter 12->5V
 - install step-up converter 12v->48V
 - Raspberry PI or Orange PI
 - NL dialplan (FS/Cisco)
 
prototyping
hardware
connectivity/infra
| HW | price range | voltage | power consumption | copper/Gbit | PoE | fibre | VLAN | 2.4GHz | 5GHz | DSL | ISDN | POTS | DECT | USB | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fritz!Box 7270 | € 50-213 | 5.5-15v | 4.3W - 5.3W | 4/0 | ? | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | 2×FXS / 1×FXO | 5 (6?)hs | 1×2.0 | ||
| GL-Inet | €22-30 | 5v | 1W | 2/0 | ✓ | ✓ | 1×2.0 | |||||||
| TP WR-703n | €17-25 | 5v | 1W | 1/0 | ✓ | ✓ | 1×2.0 | |||||||
| Netgear GS110TP | €126-140 (€99.64) | 48v | 4W | 8/8 | 8 | 2 | ✓ | |||||||
| TP Link TL-SG108PE | €65 | 48v | 5.2w | 8/8 | 4 | ✓ | ||||||||
| Siemens Gigaset N510 IP PRO | £53.94 (€65.39) | 6.5v | 1.2-1.3W | 1/? | ✓ | ✓ | 6hs,4sc | 
hard phones / ATAs
| HW | price range | voltage | power consumption | copper/Gbit | PoE | VLAN | SIP | lines | extensible | tested on FreeSWITCH | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cisco 7905 | € 10-50 | 48v | 1/0 | ✓ | ✓ | 1(?) | ✓ | |||
| Cisco 7910 | 48v | 1/0 | ✓ | ✓ | 6(?) | ✓ | ||||
| Cisco 7940/7960 | € 10-50 | 48v | 5W | 2/0 | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | 2/6 | ✓ | ✓ | 
| Cisco 7941/7961 | 48v | 2/2(?) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓(?) | 2/6 | ✓ | |||
| Avaya 4620SW | 48v | 2/0? | ✓ | ✓(?) | ✓(?) | ? | ✓ | |||
| Linksys PAP2T | 5v | 10W | 1/0 | ✓ | ✓ | 2×FXS | ✓ | |||
| Sipura SPA3000 | 5v | 7.5W | 1/0 | ✓ | ✓ | 1×FXS 1×FXO | ✓ | 
some power tests
hardware
| hardware | power source | U | I | Papproximated | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| two Raspberry Pis, step down | drill battery pack | 12.6V[1] | 330mA | 2×2W | 
| Cisco CP7940, step up | drill battery pack | 12.6V[1] | 360mA - 450mA | 5W | 
| Fritz!box (wifi off), direct | lab power supply | 12V | 360mA (idle) - 440mA (42% - 52%, top ~880mA)  | 
4.3W - 5.3W | 
| 15V | 250mA (idle) | 3.8W | ||
| Netgear GS110TP PoE, step up | lab power supply | 12V | 330mA | 4W | 
| Netgear GS110TP PoE + Cisco CP7940, step up  | 
lab power supply | 12V | 740mA | 9W | 
| Complete set: 2 RasPis, Fritz!box, switch, phone + cellphone charging  | 
lab power supply | 12V | 2000mA | 24W | 
| 13.8V | 1600mA | 22W | ||
| cellphone charging | lab power supply | 5W[2] | ||
| A) Netgear, Pi, 7940, Gl.inet | SLA battery | 12V | 12W[3] | |
| B) Netgear, Pi, 7940, Gl.inet, Gigaset | SLA battery | 12V | 13.3W[3] | |
| C) Netgear, Pi, 7940, FritzBox | SLA battery | 12V | 16.3W[3] | 
- [1] Approximated by calculating deviation from the lab power supply combined values, which was about 5% off 12V
 - [2] Approximated by subtracting all calculated items from the complete setup
 - [3] Approximated by just adding up individual items, using Netgear GS110TP PoE, Raspberry Pi, Gl.inet, Siemens Gigaset N510 and/or Fritz!box
 
solar panel and battery
Did some rough estimations with a 15 Watt solar panel (using a Unified Clear-Sky Solar Prediction Model script): on a good summer day it will yield 240W in 17 hours (slightly below 15 megajoule), and on a clear winter day it will yield 25W in 7 hours (630 kilojoule).
A 12v SLA battery is full with >12.85V, empty with 12.00V (at 25% capacity) and fully depleted at 11.80V. I came to the conclusion that the effective energy is about 9.5*Ah; given a 7Ah battery, this will yield about 66.5Wh.
Hiven the hardware setups described in the previous paragraph (note that these values are theoretical maximums):
| scenario | battery run time | solar+battery run time (winter/summer) | 
|---|---|---|
| A | 5:30h | 7:35h/25:30h | 
| B | 5:00h | 6:55h/23:00h | 
| C | 4:00h | 5:35h/18:45h | 
interesting facts
- Fritz!box has a switching regulator to 5V tested between 5.5V and 15V (drops off at 5.3V idle and elco at power supply segment is rated 16V)
 - PoE hack adapter connected pin 1 (white-orange) and pin 3 (white-green) with 22K resistor.
 - if the pre-standard CP-79x0 is connected using the PoE adapter hack, the Netgear GS110TP doesn't power, when you unplug it, it will enable power within 5 seconds; plug in, and the phone boots.
 - if you configure the administrative VLAN, the phone will fetch a DHCP lease on that VLAN, allowing you to seperately set up dnsmasq on a Raspberry Pi
 
inventory
- Fritz!Boxes
 
- 7270 (ADSL2+, 1×USB 2.0, a/b, S0 [FXO], 2×FXS, S0-bus, n×DECT, 4×100Mbit, 2.4GHz or 5GHz, 64MB RAM)
 - 7340 (ADSL2+, VDSL, 2×USB 2.0, a/b, S0 [FXO], 2×FXS, n×DECT, 2×Gbit, 2.4GHz or 5GHz, 128MB RAM)
 - 7340 (ADSL2+, VDSL, 2×USB 2.0, a/b, S0 [FXO], 2×FXS, S0-bus, n×DECT, 4×100Mbit, 2.4GHz and 5GHz, 512MB RAM)
 
- DECT phones
 
- 2×Siemens AL28H
 - 2×Siemens A420 (PsychiC has one)
 - 2×Philips CD6552B
 - 2×Philips CD1302S
 - 1×Philips DECT1221S
 - 1×Profoon PDX2900
 - + what's not yet inventoried at the space
 
log and ideas
A list of ideas to consider:
- modular 3D insert for different single board computers
 - extra network outlet (since a single one is more or less useless)
 - float or CC/CV charger, MPPT solar charger
 - external antenna mount
 - temperature monitor
 
Here is a log/some steps to reproduce:
get the basics
apt-get install vlan dnsmasq make curl
create and install FreeSWITCH
see https://freeswitch.org/confluence/display/FREESWITCH/Debian#Debian-BuildingFromSource
cd /usr/src curl https://freeswitch.org/stash/projects/FS/repos/freeswitch/browse/build/Makefile.centos6?raw > Makefile
If you want to compile and install STABLE branch, edit the above Makefile and add " -b v1.4 " just after the word "clone".
make && make install
- (you can kill time by doing the other chapters)
 
create user 'freeswitch', add it to group 'daemon' and change owner and group of the freeswitch installation
cd /usr/local adduser --disabled-password --quiet --system --home /usr/local/freeswitch --gecos "FreeSWITCH Voice Platform" --ingroup daemon freeswitch chown -R freeswitch:daemon /usr/local/freeswitch/ chmod -R ug=rwX,o= /usr/local/freeswitch/ chmod -R u=rwx,g=rx /usr/local/freeswitch/bin/*
prepare VLAN
modprobe 8021q lsmod | grep 8021q echo 8021q >> /etc/modules vconfig set_name_type DEV_PLUS_VID_NO_PAD
set-up network and VLAN
vi /etc/network/interfaces
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
auto eth0
# dhcp configuration, used in normal operation (this connects to your internet)
iface eth0 inet dhcp
# static ip configuration, used for stand-alone preconfiguring factory-reset phones
#iface eth0 inet static
#	address 192.168.6.1
#	netmask 255.255.255.0
#	gateway 192.168.6.1
# operational VLAN 11 (pick any), for usage with VoIP
auto eth0.11
iface eth0.11 inet static
    address 192.168.11.1
    netmask 255.255.255.0
    vlan-raw-device eth0
dnsmasq
vi /etc/dnsmasq.conf
# uncomment to enable dhcp server on eth0, used for stand-alone preconfiguring factory-reset phones #interface=eth0 # operational VLAN 11 (pick any), for usage with VoIP interface=eth0.11 # Choose different ranges for each (V)LAN dhcp-range=eth0,192.168.6.50,192.168.6.150,12h dhcp-range=eth0.11,192.168.11.50,192.168.11.150,12h # Most likeley not needed #option:tftp-server #dhcp-option=66,192.168.6.1 #option: #dhcp-option=150,192.168.178.16 # Enable dnsmasq's built-in TFTP server to serve config files enable-tftp # Set the root directory for files available via FTP. tftp-root=/srv/tftp
Create the /srv/tftp directory and put the configs and firmwares in it. Here is a config generator you can put in there (sorry, can't provide the firmwares since "I don't have them").
service dnsmasq restart
or
/etc/init.d/dnsmasq restart
toggleconfig script
#!/bin/bash
restart_services()
{
  trap -- SIGHUP SIGINT SIGTERM
  service dnsmasq stop > /dev/null
  #nohup sh -c "invoke-rc.d networking stop; sleep 2; invoke-rc.d networking start"
  invoke-rc.d networking stop > /dev/null
  sleep 2
  invoke-rc.d networking start > /dev/null
  service dnsmasq start > /dev/null
  trap clean_up SIGHUP SIGINT SIGTERM
}
clean_up()
{
  # reset gpio pin and led
  echo "11" > /sys/class/gpio/unexport
  echo 0 > /sys/class/leds/led0/brightness
  echo none > /sys/class/leds/led0/trigger
  echo done
  exit
}
if [ ! -f /etc/dnsmasq.conf.regular ]; then echo "/etc/dnsmasq.conf.regular does not exist"; exit; fi
if [ ! -f /etc/dnsmasq.conf.config ]; then echo "/etc/dnsmasq.conf.config does not exist"; exit; fi
if [ ! -f /etc/network/interfaces.regular ]; then echo "/etc/network/interfaces.regular does not exist"; exit; fi
if [ ! -f /etc/network/interfaces.config ]; then echo "/etc/network/interfaces.config does not exist"; exit; fi
trap clean_up SIGHUP SIGINT SIGTERM
echo "11" > /sys/class/gpio/export
echo "in" > /sys/class/gpio/gpio11/direction
while true; do
  echo "regular mode"
  echo none > /sys/class/leds/led0/trigger
  # regular config files
  cp /etc/dnsmasq.conf.regular /etc/dnsmasq.conf
  cp /etc/network/interfaces.regular /etc/network/interfaces
  restart_services
  while [ `cat /sys/class/gpio/gpio11/value` -gt 0 ]; do
    echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/led0/brightness
    sleep 0.05
    echo 0 > /sys/class/leds/led0/brightness
    sleep 3
  done
  echo "config mode"
  echo "heartbeat" > /sys/class/leds/led0/trigger
  # regular config files
  cp /etc/dnsmasq.conf.config /etc/dnsmasq.conf
  cp /etc/network/interfaces.config /etc/network/interfaces
  restart_services
  while [ `cat /sys/class/gpio/gpio11/value` -le 0 ]; do sleep 3; done
done
preconfigure phone
- Connect the phone directly using a (optionally crosslink) ethernet cable.
 - Power the phone, and hold # until the red (mute) light is off and the phone states: "Reset sequence detected"
 - type 123456789*0#, and when asked to keep network config, choose 2=no
 - once the new firmware is loaded (Freeswitch is not running, so it won't connect), press 'settings' (checkbox button at the bottom right)
 - go to Admin. VLAN ID
 - type **# to unlock the setting, and press 'edit'
 - type in your voice VLAN (11 like the configs say)
 - press validate, and save
 - dnsmasq and interfaces configs can now be restored (no dhcp on eth0, only eth0.11)
 - nohup sh -c "invoke-rc.d networking stop; sleep 2; invoke-rc.d networking start"
 
todo
- work out 'modus operandi': multiple config files switchable by phone
 - work on dual linux config with GPIO hardware switch
 - test the fibre ports
 - add homeplug as a proof of concept
 - design and create (or buy) small-sized float charger (13.8V 2A) with overcurrent protection, if needed
 
links
Some random links:



