VOIP and Remote Operating Applications and Ham Radio

a loose (messy) collection of notes

Remote| Allstar | IRLP 

I have separated my VOIP and digital voice pages.   Therefore some things have moved.

Misc. Ideas and Interrelated Things of Interest

Overview

Most present day government communication centers that use analog systems happen to have a VOIP based dispatch console.  Many remote sites are tied together using over fiber.  This analog to VOIP patching is something that we are presently also embracing in ham radio with IRLP, EchoLink, Yeasu WIRES II, and the like.  (See VoIP and Amateur Radio overview By Steve Ford, WB8IMY from QST Feb 2003)

A different hardware board for each of these proprietary VOIP systems that you want to support is required.  You also need a need a multi-port repeater controller, to support each hardware boards analog breakout. This seems redundant to me, and is something that slows the advancement.  IRLP seems to be the system of choice because it runs on the Linux operating system.  This is because Linux is much more stable that Windows, and is an open source development.

Imagine how smoothly and fast things would have unfolded if everything was open source, and no one had to waste time reverse engineering other peoples secrets.

The ARRL made a Interoperability statement in October 2007.  This is a pretty serious issue as there a number of proprietary digital voice radio systems out there.  None of them natively talk to each other.... Interoperability is one of Amateur Radio's distinguishing features; losing it would be a giant step backward.

There are some keys to consider when it comes to interoperability.  The lowest common denominator (aside from frequency) would seem to be the modulation type. D-Star is GMSK, APCO-25 and pretty much everything else is 4FSK modulation.  Upon that you have a MAC layer level access protocol, then the actual codec converting the voice to digital.  Electronics is so PIC/chip based, modulation changes can be changed without necessarily changing components.

As long as there is a hardware common ground modulation type or ability to speak/receive multiple types (like they did with 802.11b & g - DSSS/OFDM), firmware should be able to be written to take care of any MAC layer differences.  Transcoding can take care of the differences between the various codecs.   This is where a platform like Asterisk shines.


Remote Operating

In 2010, Mikael Styrefors, SM2O unveiled (Remote Rig) perhaps the most elegant ways to operate remotely.  It involves no computer, just two Remote Rig Control (1258MkII) units.  The front panel resides with the client while the rest of the rig remains at the host. Both devices connect to Internet routers via Ethernet cables.

RRC boxes are built around reliable ARM microprocessor, and are an intuitive way of utilizing existing VolP technology.   Control and remote RRC units utilize three communication channels; a simple text-based SIP protocol is utilized for radio-to-radio communication, while a UDP datagram protocol is used for control and audio streams. The RRC unit also provides two additional serial ports for connecting devices such as an amplifier and a rotator control.

Advances in Remote Site Control without Computers -  Remote Rig - OH2BH

Remote station operation in recent years has increased in popularity.  In enables Amateurs in apartments and other similar situations flexibility. 

Hamlib - The Ham Radio Control Libraries, Hamlib for short, is an independent development effort to provide a consistent interface for programmers wanting to incorporate radio control in their programs. Hamlib is not a complete user application, rather, it is a software layer intended to make controlling various radios and other shack hardware much easier. Hamlib will allow authors of such software as logging programs, digital communications programs, or those wanting to develop the ultimate radio control software to concentrate on the user interface and the basic function of the program rather than radio control.

Raspberry Pi web based rig control - darkice, icecast, hamlib, and PHP to create a web receiver - KB9MWR

Webrig - a formal web application layer for hamlib - OK1ZIA

Remote Ham Radio Station Control - using Hamradio Deluxe and Skype 

Authenticating over the Internet using Log of the World certificates - Notes on setting up the server and client side VPN - based on OH7LZB's 2013 DCC talk.


Allstar / app_rpt

Asterisk is an Open Source PBX & Telephony Platform. It's often labeled as the future of telephony.

PBX stands for private branch exchange. It is a machine that handles many businesses telephones calls for you. Its main functions are to transfer calls to different individual phones; play music when somebody is put on hold; to play automated voice responses when a call is received; to provide an options menu for the caller etc.

Asterisk allows one to build their own phone systems. It adds features, functionality and reduces deployment costs in ways which; at first are a little difficult to understand.

Most people don't know that Asterisk was designed from the beginning with radio applications in mind.  AllStar, came to life in 2008.

Jim Dixon (WB6NIL) developed pioneering hardware and software and collaborated with Mark Spencer of Digium to make Asterisk a reality. Jim says that compatibility with Amateur Radio applications was always a design requirement for his Asterisk work.

Steve Rodgers (WA6ZFT) is a longtime friend of Jim's and they co-developed the app_rpt module and the Quad Radio PCI card to interface radio equipment to Asterisk. Steve's company QRVC Communications originally offered the Quad Radio PCI cards for sale.  They have much been replaced by USB devices.

Steve Henke (W9SH) wanted to use hardware that would provide baseband (receiver discriminator and transmitter modulation) signal processing. This allows noise squelch detect, RSSI, CTCSS and other signaling protocols to be done in software and provide additional features. The answer to this need was found in a low cost USB Sound Adapter. Steve and Jim collaborated on the chan_usbradio driver and Steve's company Xelatec contributed the xpmr radio signal processing routines under the GPL to the project.

Sadly, Jim Dixon, WB6NIL passed away Dec 2016.  AllstarLink Inc  has taken over most of what Jim did since then.

Asterisk with app_rpt provides the following for Amateur Radio stations and systems: A Full Function Repeater Controller, Touch Tone Command and Control, Autopatch - Reverse and VOX Operation, CTCSS Decode/Encode Functions, A SIP Telephone Exchange, Voice Mail and Announcements, Contact Closure Telemetry, Non-Proprietary Software and Hardware, PC/Linux Operating System Based, Remote Base Client, Fully Configurable and Programmable Communications Solution

Several different radio makes and models are well supported by vendors who provide ready made interfaces and cables.  For frequency agile remote applications, app_rpt can control a multi-band, frequency programmable radio transceiver such as the Icom IC-706. 

Flavors of Allstar / app_rpt

The official version today (2018) is DIAL.  It's Debian Linux, Asterisk with the app_rpt module.  It supports the Raspberry Pi.  Prior we had ACID, which was CentOS based.  And if you wanted an embedded system at that time you'd use the Pickle Linux for the BeagleBoardxM with the LOX board.

allstarlink.org (official main version)

Steven, W9SH's version at: http://www.xelatec.com/xipar/

WA3DSP/KB4FXC Hamvoip version: https://hamvoip.org - Note this version is Not Open Source 

Interfaces:

DMK URI 

Repeaterbuilder RIM - RB-USB-RIM - This is an enhanced universal radio interface (URI).  Jumper settable COR / CTCSS input logic w/LED indicators.  

Mastercommucations Model RA-35 - Features a heartbeat monitor

Homebrew Interfaces:

Simple FXS to simplex radio interface - from F6HQZ - Quad PCI style

Cheap Asterisk radio interface - consists of a modified USB sound device.  A channel driver exists in Asterisk that enables certain Cmedia CM108 based USB sound devices to provide the hardware interface between both commercial and amateur private land mobile radio equipment.   A pre-fab version is available from DMK Engineering.

A Simplified USB Sound FOB Modification - WA3DSP

Modification of USB Sound Card for Asterisk app_rpt Use - KA6OIJ

Misc Asterisk Related:

asterisk-and-app_rpt.pdf - VoIP Linking for Radio Amateur Chapter 9 excerpt for reference

The Asterisk PBX as a Linked Repeater Controller - By Steve Rodgers, WA6ZFT 10/21/05

ACID System Administrators Guide - Allstar Centos Installation Disk (depreciated info)

A Long Day And Many A Nights Journey With Allstar - by K2DLS CQ Magazine Jan 2016


Asterisk Allstar on the BeagleBone Black and The Raspberry Pi 2 - WA3DSP/Crompton  - He was the first guy to get Allstar to work on first the Beaglebone (2014), and then Pi (2016). Since then the mainstream DIAL install supports it. Doug's image is based on Arch Linux.



Alert Interface - This device connects a receiver, such as an "All Hazards" warning receiver, to an Asterisk PBX. The intended purpose is to allow the warning messages to be broadcast over the Asterisk paging system.

Raytheon ARA-1 Analog Radio Adaptor  A radio to SIP interface.  See this review by Doug Hall titled SIP & Mobility - Bringing Radio to the 21st Century

 

In this video, VK5ZEA shows D-Star, IRLP and AllStar/Asterisk linking: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWkFp7S2pXY


IRLP & Other VOIP Overview/Background:

Parts of the IRLP system (the binaries that talk to his hardware board) are not open source.  IRLP system designer (David Cameron, VE3LTD developed a similar system to IRLP that is being used commercially, and this to may be part of his proprietary design reasoning.  Another reason the board design is unpublished is that the board is the IRLP designers only source of funding to keep things alive.  Also to cut down on the number of questions/problems from the non-technical savvy.  While neither of these are bad, it still doesn't let technical savvy people do much more than talk over the network.  I & others could be developing and contributing ideas though experimentation. 

IRLP started in 1997 with Windows and VocalTec's iPhone and a WB2REM interface.  David, VE3LTD realized in 6 months time that iPhone was not very stable nor is it controllable.  He also ran into a road black when source code for iPhone was not available.  David looked for an alternative, and he started getting into using Linux as an operating system and Speak Freely as a client/server.  SpeakFreely was open source and he was able modify the source code to his liking to create what we now have today for IRLP.  He then designed his own hardware board for PTT & COR logic.

EchoLink natively runs on the Windows operating system and was developed by Johnathan, K1RFD, released in 2002..    He approached this whole concept initially with a view to improving a system then running called "iLINK" (The iLINK system, first appeared around May 2001, was developed by Graeme Barnes, M0CSH, in Kent England), which was an enhanced development from a voip system called IPhone, as was IRLP. But read on.

Initially "Echolink" was un-named, but Johnathan K1RFD, and David, G3VFP started development  to provide an alternative graphical user front end to what was then the "iLINK" voip ham system,  sometime in late 2001, or early 2002.  Unfortunately through no fault of Jonathans, as he tried hard over quite a few months to communicate, with the owner of iLINK. It proved a near  impossibility, and reputedly it was stated by the author of iLINK that no third party software would be allowed on iLINK.  So Jonathan decided to form another peer to peer voip system completely, using his graphical interface. Which by the way was years ahead of the iLINK  GUI.

Open source versions of the EchoLink software are available for Macintosh (EchoMac) and Linux (echoLinux aka CQiNet or SvxLink/Qtel), but they may have limited features compared to the Windows version. At least when comparing the desktop applications.

CQiNet provides "theBridge", which is code that allows one to talk to EchoLink network from Linux or a Mac platform by Skip WB6YMH started in mid-2002.  CQiNet is a family of programs that combine Ham Radio with the Internet using Voice over IP (VoIP) technology. Two programs are currently in the family, "theBridge" and echoLinux.  Thebridge is a iLink/EchoLink compatable conference bridge that runs under various versions of Unix as well as Windows EchoLinux is a EchoLink client program for the Linux operating system.  Compatibility with EchoLink and IRLP is a goal.  

TheLinkBox - is program Skip WB6YMH started in 2007.  Its based off CQiNET and "theBridge" to support serial & parallel-port interfaces as well as USB dongles. A full featured multiport hub or repeater controller as well as a VoIP application.

Johnathan, K1RFD tolerates thebridge and EchoIRLP partly because he does not sell EchoLink or any boards that are needed to make it work. Since Dave, VE3LTD derives income from IRLP it should not be surprising that he's less tolerant.

While IRLP is not 100% open, some clever people working with David Cameron, the IRLP system designer have managed to adapt theBridge so that one can have the inter-operability of EchoLink and IRLP using the IRLP hardware.  This is called EchoIRLP a project by Tony, VK3JED.   Both networks are capable of GSM audio compression (standard for EchoLink and is an option for IRLP as it normally uses ADPCM), and the transport protocols are quite similar. 

In this case, those who worked with David, worked out the details where the IRLP binaries are talking to The Bridge which is in turn talks to the Echolink network.  

The iLink protocols (the basis of EchoIRLP) were reverse engineered by Tom, WD4NMQ and Skip, WB6YMH without the author of iLINK Graeme, M0CSH (G7BHM) blessing. Without reverse engineering there would be no EchoIRLP.

Taking this one step forward, Svxlink is another step in the right direction.  The Svxlink project allows configuration a variety of existing  economical radio to PC interfaces, such as the VA3TO interface.  What's notable about Svxlink is they have a schematic also released under the GPL so one can homebrew their own radio to PC interface.

IRLP Related:

IRLP Tutorial - ports explained - K1BDX

Repeater activity graph - Use IRLP hardware to create an automatic daily graph of system activity.

IRLP Node Administration via Web - Simple web admin php script for your IRLP node.

IRLP-Repeater script - More info on using IRLP as a repeater.  Includes configurable repeater hang time,  courtesy tones, timeout timer. SCCW for morse IDs, DTMF muting provisions, and anything else you can script.  

IRLP board interface schematic Kyle, K0KN's reverse engineered schematic

IRLP: The Internet Radio Linking Project - By Paul, VE3SY CQ-VHF 2002

http://www.irlp.net/ 

https://irlp.groups.io

https://groups.io/g/echoirlp/

Misc:

Weather Alert Interfacing and Scripts - Hardware and Software approaches to warn of bad weather and provide reports.