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TestingInfrastructure » History » Revision 40

Revision 39 (Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli, 03/18/2022 09:38 AM) → Revision 40/55 (Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli, 03/18/2022 09:39 AM)

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 h1. TestingInfrastructure 

 h2. Applications that can be used to do some testing on the device 

 * https://f-droid.org/wiki/page/org.zeroxlab.zeroxbenchmark 

 h2. Projects and/or hardware that can be used to do functional testing 

 h3. Lava 

 "Lava":https://www.linaro.org/engineering/projects/lava/ can be used to do functional tests on real hardware. It can be easily installed on PureOS, an FSDG compliant GNU/Linux distribution. 

 h3. Labgrid 

 "Labgrid":https://labgrid.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ has features similar to Lava but it is probably easier to learn because it's probably way easier to get started with it. 

 h3. OsmoGSMTester 

 The "OsmoGSMTester project":https://osmocom.org/projects/osmo-gsm-tester is able to be interfaced with the Android RIL through ofono and can emulate a GSM network with the help of a compatible GSM base station or SDR. 


 This "presentation from 2019":https://media.ccc.de/v/osmodevcon2019-119-osmo-gsm-tester-e-gprs-test-setup has many insights on what kind of issue we might expect in interfacing it with smartphones. 

 h3. Simtrace2 

 The "Simtrace 2 project":https://osmocom.org/projects/simtrace2/wiki can be used, along with SIM card readers to programmatically feed a SIM card to a smartphone. This can be used to run test on real networks. 

 h2. Replicant supported devices and testing 

 h3. Requirements 

 * Antenna connector for the modem 
 * The ability to control the device buttons in order to be able to programmatically power on and off the device, and trigger boots into the bootloader and recovery 
 * Optionally a way to connect to the serial port, programmatically 

 h3. Galaxy SII (GT-I9100) 

 * The Galaxy SII (GT-I9100) has: 
 ** An antenna connector. According to the "External Antenna Socket - WARNING forum thread on XDA":https://forum.xda-developers.com/t/external-antenna-socket-warning.1273292/page-6 , it's an MS-162 
 ** The SOC serial port that is accessible behind the USB connector at a low voltage 
 ** A full size mini-sim (easier to interface with) 

 Holding the smartphone in place: 
 * The smartphone could either be screwed on a metallic surface or an external case could be screwed on a metallic surface enabling the smartphone not to move. 

 SIM cards: 
 * Simtrace and Simtrace 2 both "lacks screw holes":https://osmocom.org/issues/3711 so a way must be found to make sure that it doesn't move as it uses flex cables to interface with the SIM socket of the smartphone. That may be fixed in a subsequent hardware revision. 

 Serial port and USB: 

 Buttons: 

 Battery: 

 Antenna connector and GSM tower or SDR: 
 The Galaxy SII (GT-I9100) has two antenna connectors: 
 * One internal connector, TODO: find the connector type 
 * One external connector, TODO: Find the connector type 

 h4. Example setup 

 See also the links inside the [[Serial_port]] article for more background on how to get serial port access on devices like the Galaxy SIII (GT-I9300) or the Galaxy SII (GT-I9100). 

 !i9100.jpg! 

 See https://git.replicant.us/contrib/GNUtoo/test-infrastructure.git for the source of the file. 

 h4. Using a device without a battery. 

 * "How to use a Galaxy SIII without a battery":https://techblog.jeppson.org/2017/12/revive-old-samsung-galaxy-s3/ : It doesn't look very safe to do that as the phone is probably not expecting 5V on the battery connector but it gives some idea of the peak tolerances. 

 * The Galaxy SIII 4G (GT-I9305) could probably work at lower voltages like 3.3V through the battery connector, but it would require testing it. In that case it might also be a good idea to test it in all configurations (all hardware features being used, cpuburn etc). 

 * The 4 pin 'FPC' style battery connector available from amazon, marketed as being for the 'S4 value edition i9515' (https://amazon.de/gp/product/B0813JBW8S) is capable of contacting the Galaxy SIII (GT-I9300)'s battery. 

 h4. Sumarry  

 | Device                    | Modem antenna connector | Compatible software         | Comments                                                                                                    |                          
 | Motorolla C155            | MS-147                    | * OsmocomBB 
                                                       * Old Nuttx revisions       | Could be used as reference phone as it's probably already supported by the Osmocom testing infrastructure | 
 | Galaxy SII (GT-I9100)     | MS-162                    | * Replicant 4.0, 4.2, 6.0 
                                                      * Upstream Linux (partial) | 
 | Galaxy Nexus (GT-I9250) | ?                         | * Replicant 4.0, 4.2, 6.0 | We can get some GSM traces in wireshark with xgoldmon                                                       | 
 | Galaxy SIII (GT-I9300)    | ?                         | * Replicant 4.0, 4.2, 6.0 
                                                      * Upstream Linux (partial) | 

 h2. USB modems 

 When [[XMMProtocolInterfaces|trying to enable protocol tracing in modems]] we can connect the device modem (somewhat directly) to a laptop 

 Questions: 
 * Do we have samsung-ipc on top of the virtual UARTs? 
 * The cbd daemon mentioned "in the blog post about booting the Galaxy S7 modem":https://eighty-twenty.org/2020/09/10/booting-samsung-galaxy-s7-modem    doesn't list UART as main link though. 
 * Adding the modem USB id when in debug mode (1519:0020) in a search engine shows various usb keys 
 * Do phones like the Galaxy SII have smasung-ipc on top of the USB link or UART links when in debug mode? 

 

 h2. Pure software setup 

 h3. lightweight test infrastructure for libsamsung-ipc 

 It might be possible to have a pure software test infrastructure with libsamsung-ipc. 

 It could be done more or less like that: 

 test script <-> ipc-modem or other programs <-> libsamsung-ipc <-> Linux kernel <-> VHCI <-> software sending USB packets 

 We have several choices for the Linux kernel: 

 | Kernels                     | Comments | 
 | User mode Linux (ARCH=um) | (+) Very lightweight, runs completely in userspace  
                               (-) Requires patches for USB / VHCI                                 | 
 | Linux + libvirt + kvm       | (-) Require some virtualization setup that requires dedicated RAM  
                               (+) Probably works unpatched                                        | 

 And there is already some projects emulating usb devices: 
 | Project       | Description                 |     comments                           | 
 | gnuk          | USB token software                                      | can build for gnulinux               | 
 | choptix       | Library used by gnuk        | More simple examples                 | 
 | simtrace2 ? | SIM tracing and MITM tool | Probably uses vusb for testing too | 

 So it might be possible to modify them to send some simple USB packets captured with wireshark / tshark / tcpdump.