Dear Marcus and all, Many thanks for the advice regarding the Hydra and ORBIT project.
Actually I'm looking for the open-source 802.11 PHY&MAC packages which are compatible with Recent GNU Radio and USRP N210/X310. I've searched from internet and got some findings listed below: 1) Hydra PHY & MAC from University of Texas at Austin [1] 2) FTW IEEE802.11a/g/p OFDM Frame Encoder [2] 3) UWICORE m-HOP 802.11 MAC for USRP based on the FTW PHY [3] http://www.uwicore.umh.es/mhop-software.html *** All (1-3) only compatible with gnuradio-3.2.2 which was too many years ago. 4) WIME IEEE 802.11a/g/p Transceiver for GNU Radio v3.7 [3] http://www.ccs-labs.org/software/gr-ieee802-11/ *** This is a most recent package for gnuradio 3.7, but is PHY only. Are there any MAC package which compatible with this WIME PHY? 5) ORBIT Project [5] *** This is a huge project which can be studied. Are there any project provide both 802.11 MAC & PHY like Hydrd did before? Best regards, Jiayi [1] K. Mandke, Soon-Hyeok Choi, Gibeom Kim, R. Grant, R. Daniels, Wonsoo Kim, R. W. Heath, Jr., and S. Nettles, “Early Results on Hydra: A Flexible MAC/PHY Multihop Testbed,” Proc. of IEEE Vehicular Tech. Conf. , pp. 1896-1900, Dublin, Ireland, April 23 – 25, 2007. [2] http://www.cgran.org/wiki/ftw80211ofdmtx [3] J.R. Gutierrez-Agullo, B. Coll-Perales and J. Gozalvez, "An IEEE 802.11 MAC Software Defined Radio Implementation for Experimental Wireless Communications and Networking Research", Proceedings of the 2010 IFIP/IEEE Wireless Days (WD'10), 20-22 October 2010, Venice (Italy). [4] Bastian Bloessl, Michele Segata, Christoph Sommer and Falko Dressler, "An IEEE 802.11a/g/p OFDM Receiver for GNU Radio," Proceedings of ACM SIGCOMM 2013, 2nd ACM SIGCOMM Workshop of Software Radio Implementation Forum (SRIF 2013), Hong Kong, China, August 2013, pp. 9-16. [5] http://www.orbit-lab.org/ On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 1:02 PM, Marcus Müller <marcus.muel...@ettus.com> wrote: > Yes. Nothing in GNU Radio or UHD (the USRP driver framework) is > distribution-specific, so transition from Ubuntu to Fedora should not be > a problem > > Good luck with finding a "new version" of Hydra; I didn't find any > publication after 2009 on a quick first glance on google scholar[1]. And > I couldn't find the source code anywhere. Honestly: If you don't find > anything that proves otherwise, I'd presume that Hydra is kind of dead > [2]. Please prove me wrong on this! > > There is the ORBIT lab that has come up with a rather comprehensive > infrastructure for wireless testbeds, so you might want to look at that[3]. > > Greetings, > Marcus > > [1] > > http://scholar.google.de/scholar?q=%22Robert+W.+Heath%22+hydra&hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&as_ylo=2010&as_yhi= > [2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0yXqU-w9U0 > [3] http://www.orbit-lab.org/ > On 09.10.2014 16:41, Zhang, Jiayi wrote: > > Hi Marcus, > > > > Another question is that, if we development the software with GNU Radio > and > > USRP in Ubuntu, is it easy to transfer to Fedora? > > Thanks for your reply. I think the best way to us is to find the new > version of Hydra package which is based on the recent GNU Radio version > working with current USRP produces. > > > Many thanks! > > > > Regards, > > Jiayi > > > > On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 11:11 AM, Marcus Müller <marcus.muel...@ettus.com > > > > wrote: > > > >> Hello Jiayi, > >> > >> 3.2.2 is *very* ancient. In fact, it's older than my involvement with > GNU > >> Radio, and I think it will be very hard to find someone how's still > using > >> it, so asking for experience, I'm afraid, is not going to yield a lot of > >> responses in 2014. > >> Therefore, it will be nearly impossible to recreate an environment with > >> all the GNU Radio dependencies that match the needs of GNU Radio 3.2.2. > >> > >> I'm not familiar with Hydra itself; but if it uses GR 3.2.2 you won't be > >> able to use it with modern USRPs, you won't have much fun developing new > >> applications for it, and in total it might be wise to look if you can > >> either find a suitable substitute or port it to a modern GNU Radio. > >> > >> However, I'm optimistic that someone else here has used Hydra, and maybe > >> he has some more specific hints than I do. > >> > >> Greetings, > >> Marcus > >> > >> > >> On 08.10.2014 16:50, Zhang, Jiayi wrote: > >> > >> Dear all, > >> > >> I'm a beginner of GNURadio but I'm familiar with some basis of Linux > when I > >> use C++ & IT++. Currently I'm trying to test the Hydra-0.4 package for > >> evaluation under the last ubuntu ver 14.04.1 32bit. During the > installation > >> of gnuradio-3.2.2, there is an error which I cannot find the solution on > >> internet. > >> > >> gnuradio-3.2.2$ ./bootstrap && ./configure --prefix=$GR > >> … > >> checking for boost >= 1.35... yes > >> checking whether the boost::thread includes are available... yes > >> configure: error: Could not link against libboost_thread! > >> > >> ‘libboost-all-dev’ has already installed, including > ‘libboost-thread-dev’, > >> I tried both version 1.54 and 1.55 of libboost. I've also searched the > >> error message in Google, even after I installed the 'build-essential' > >> package, the error remains the same. > >> > >> I will be much appreciated if any of you have such an experience and > would > >> feedback some solutions. > >> > >> Regards, > >> Jiayi (Vincent) > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> Discuss-gnuradio mailing listDiscuss-gnuradio@gnu.orghttps:// > lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio > >> > >> > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> Discuss-gnuradio mailing list > >> Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org > >> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio > >> > >> > >
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