(→/etc/osmocom/osmo-e1d.cfg) |
(→/etc/osmocom/osmo-e1d.cfg) |
||
Line 44: | Line 44: | ||
usb-serial [interface serial number] | usb-serial [interface serial number] | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
+ | |||
+ | More information about logging section can be found [https://ftp.osmocom.org/docs/latest/osmomsc-vty-reference.pdf here] |
Usual E1/T1 over IP protocols use generic frames over IP transfer that makes 2 megabits constant rate with up to 8000 packets per second. That approach:
Fur such kind of integrations we prefer to have our own agent software on-site with hardware E1/T1 interfaces.
We have chosen Osmocom icE1usb as a primary interface for our projects for several reasons:
We maintained [Osmocom E1D] in our Debian repositories. It has no modifications so you can shose any source of packages you want or build from the sources.
sudo apt install osmo-e1d
log syslog logging filter all 1 logging level e1d info e1d interface 0 icE1usb usb-serial [interface serial number]
More information about logging section can be found here
Usual E1/T1 over IP protocols use generic frames over IP transfer that makes 2 megabits constant rate with up to 8000 packets per second. That approach:
Fur such kind of integrations we prefer to have our own agent software on-site with hardware E1/T1 interfaces.
We have chosen Osmocom icE1usb as a primary interface for our projects for several reasons:
We maintained [Osmocom E1D] in our Debian repositories. It has no modifications so you can shose any source of packages you want or build from the sources.
sudo apt install osmo-e1d
log syslog logging filter all 1 logging level e1d info e1d interface 0 icE1usb usb-serial [interface serial number]