Some photos of the Cambium cnPilot e430w 802.11ac wave 2 dual-band wi-fi wall plate access point.
Some Features
-802.11AC Wave 2
-2×2 MU-MIMO streams.
-Max Data Rates 1.3 Gbps. 867 Mbps (5 GHz), 400 Mbps (2.4 MHz)
-16 SSIDs across 2 radios
Some photos of the Cambium cnPilot e430w 802.11ac wave 2 dual-band wi-fi wall plate access point.
Some Features
-802.11AC Wave 2
-2×2 MU-MIMO streams.
-Max Data Rates 1.3 Gbps. 867 Mbps (5 GHz), 400 Mbps (2.4 MHz)
-16 SSIDs across 2 radios
This post is a huge shout out to Tasos Alexiou from RF Elements. This story started out at WISPAPALOOZA Vegas this year. I had a few clients who have been fighting noise issues. While working the Cambium booth we would go over the benefits of ePMP for noise mitigation. This would naturally lead to an antenna discussion. You can’t have an antenna discussion without mentioning RF Elements and their horn design. As with anything, clients are skeptical to things outside the conventional way of doing things. It’s not that the client is closed minded, but change becomes a little harder when revenue and cash outlay are involved. I am a very visual guy so I walked several of these clients over to the RF Elements booth so they could see the product and have it explained by the folks themselves.
These clients were getting it, but I could tell they were a little hesitant to make the leap. This is where the teamwork of the story really comes into play. Tasos could sense the same thing I was seeing, and came up with a plan. In the shipment of their gear to Vegas, they had some extra gear. After some negotiation, he told us to stop by after the show and he would see what he could do to get some gear in the hands of both of these clients. After the show, I was able to send both of these clients home with some 30 and 45-degree horns. Not only that, but these clients were able to talk about their specific situations, draw diagrams, and get a great understanding of how to get the best fit out of the equipment.
I am happy to say we have the first results from these horns. Mohave Broadband was able to put up a 30-degree horn in an area where they were having clients with signal and interference issues. By adjusting their 90/120 sectors, which even have beamforming, they were able to have the horn fit in their most troublesome area. Some of the troubles were customers who could not connect on a certain frequency very well, but others could. If the frequencies were changed the good customers became bad and vice versa. Once the horn was in place we noticed a couple of things.
The first was customers in the 30-degree beam of the horn were able to connect at good signals and data rates. These were customers who were pointed right at the sectors before, not ones on the fringes.
Secondly, due to the nature of the horn we were able to select from more channels due to the lack of sidelobes from the horns.
We could go on and on how the ePMP 2000 APs with their noise filtering, and the “clean” pattern of the horn make the difference but that is not the focus of the article. The focus is how many separate pieces of the WISP community came together to help. From WISPA putting on the show to the willingness of Tasos and RF elements to help these customers, and the ability to sit down and draw out diagrams and antenna placement to get the best place to place antennas. For those of you who don’t attend tradeshows, this is one of the success stories with a few more to come on this blog.
MTIN Family of Sites
https://j2sw.com
https://indycolo.net
https://mtin.net
https://startawisp.info
Recently we installed a PTP 550 link for a client. This is a connectorized version with 2-foot dishes on it for a four-mile link. Overkill you say, but the idea is the dishes make up the gain and not transmitter power. A much cleaner signal can be achieved which falls within the FCC guidelines for total EIRP.
So let’s get to it. Our first image is out path. This link had clear line of sight from a 150-foot foot water tower to a 240-foot tower.
After getting out of the cold we let things burn in for a few days. This is what an initial spectrum analysis looked like.
As you can see the RSSI was within 2 DB, which isn’t terrible. However, due to interference, the MCS rates are markedly different, which is what results in the big differences in speed. Please note this is only with one radio enabled and on a 20mhz channel. We fully expect bigger speeds once we up channel sizes and enable the second radio.
Some ePMP 550 and sectors.
Some stat screens from a cambium 550. This is a short hop. Less than a mile.
Just a quick diagram on how to separate Management traffic on an ePMP network. The aps and CPE are in bridge mode in this setup. The Cambium CPE are in bridge mode with CNPilot routers doing PPPoE, which the ISP has control over as a managed router.
Our netonix has a tagged vlan for the management interface and an untagged vlan for the customer (PPPoE traffic).
The mikrotik router is trunked to the netonix on port 12 to complete this setup.
Cambium goes through alignment of the 450b SM unit.
The Recently, it was announced that Ubiquiti Networks Inc (UBNT) is suing Cambium over the Cambium Elevate. This will be a long post, so sit back with your favorite beverage and read away.
Disclaimers. I have been in the ISP world since 1991. I cut my teeth on BBS systems and moved onto dial-up. I am also an independent Cambium certified consultant. Read about the consultant program here... I also have clients who run a wide variety of UBNT products, and the last ISP we sold was 90 percent UBNT. We run some UBNT routers in MidWest-IX as well. My father was an attorney for over 40 years. I grew up around attorneys, have regular conversations with friends who are attorneys, and was learning about the law from the time I was 10. Having said that, I am not an attorney. Nothing in here should be construed as an official legal opinion.
So let’s get some background on what has transpired with Cambium and their elevate software. Cambium came up with a way to load their software onto select UBNT wireless units and, after a reboot, had the cambium EPMP software active on them.
Why did this work?
UBNT Airmax radios use U-Boot loader. If you want to read all about it you can read the references at the bottom of this article under References. The thing to know is it is released under the GNU General Public License.
UBNT and Cambium EPMP both use “commodity” wifi chipsets. This keeps the cost down and the software becomes the majority of the “special sauce” that makes them different. This is in contrast to the UBNT Airfiber and Cambium 450 lines. These use custom made chipsets. This is is one reason those lines are more expensive.
By using an open source bootloader and commodity hardware Cambium was able to figure out how to load their own software onto the UBNT devices. UBNT countered with modifying the bootloader to accept only signed software images. The only images that were recognized were ones signed by UBNT. If you are interested in learning more about signed software go here: https://www.quora.com/What-does-signed-firmware-means
Cambium came up with instructions on how to downgrade and by-pass the ability to only load signed firmware onto the device. The method I am aware of is downgrading the installed UBNT firmware to a certain version.
All in all the Elevate process turned the UBNT hardware into a device running Cambium’s software.
The gray areas aka this is why we have attorneys
There are several arguable points in this lawsuit. If you want to read articles on the Lawsuit
https://www.law360.com/articles/1071813/wireless-co-ubiquiti-says-rival-sells-hacking-firmware
Debate #1 – The Hardware
The term Software Defined Radio (SDR) has been around for quite some time now. Basically, this is a radio with very little RF elements to it. Ham radio has been using SDRs for quite some time now. The idea is the manufacturer uses off the shelf components to build a single radio which can do various functions depending on what software is loaded. It also allows features in the chipset to be activated and licensed should the programmer want to support them. It’s interesting to note Wireless is not the only place this is happening. Software Defined Networking (SDN) is a growing thing, as well as a plethora of devices. A PC could be considered a software-defined device. More on that later.
So an argument could be made the UBNT devices are a software defined radio. they did not use custom chips. They most certainly have a proprietary board layout, but that is not a criterion in an SDR. So if a customer buys a piece of hardware, should they be able to load whatever software they want on it?
An argument saying yes they should can be pulled from many areas. This Verge Article (more in the reference at the bottom) says the Government ended the debate in 2015 giving consumers the ability to Jailbreak their phones and devices without legal penalties. Before that is was briefly illegal to “Jailbreak” your phone. This was mainly lead by Apple. The government said it was fair use to Jailbreak, but not carrier unlock your phone without permission.
Apple also went through this briefly when they switched to Intel processor chips. People were figuring out ways to load Apple OSX onto Dells, HP, and other “PCs”. The debate was whether this was legal or not. The following article sums up why these “hackintosh” computers were shut down. By clicking on the “Agree” of the End User License Agreement (EULA) before installing OSX you agree to a great number of things. The short of it was the user license of OSX says you can not install this on non-apple hardware. However, it says nothing about installing non-Apple Operating systems on the hardware. Apple knows it is commodity hardware. If you want to buy a 2000 mac and put windows 10 on it, go ahead. They even help you with an option called Bootcamp.
Our last example is the Linksys WRT54G and DD-WRT and its variants. A quick history of the DD-WRT Controversy doesn’t revolve much around the loading of the software onto Linksys hardware, it involves the use of the GPL license by DD-WRT. There were some FCC concerns, but we will talk about those later.
So the questions to be argued for this point:
Q1.Is the UBNT device a software-defined Radio?
2. Does the user have the legal ability to load whatever software they want to on hardware they own?
Debate #2 – Was the UBNT firmware “hacked” as they allege?
There are lots of unknowns here. Attorneys try to prove intent in arguments like this.
Did Cambium somehow reverse engineer the UBNT software, thus violating copyright laws? At what point is the line crossed? Since UBNT used a bootloader free to everyone, was the simple act of loading new software onto the units a hack? From what I know, and I am not a programmer, is Cambium used the bootloader to overwrite the UBNT software and install their own. How is this any different than installing Linux on a Dell PC? Computers have a bootloader called a BIOS. On a Wireless radio, where does the bootloader stop and the software start? To me, these are clearly defined. Bootloader and Image file.
If you boot up the UBNT unit out of the box without agreeing to the EULA have you violated the EULA? Can you be penalized for loading software onto a device you never had the opportunity to see and agree to anything? Did the simple act of taking it out of a box and booting it up via TFTP cause you to agree to something?
In a Brothers Wisp video on this topic, Justin Miller mentions some arguments on why this can be allowed.
Debate 3 – Did Cambium violate FCC rules?
If we believe the user has the ability to load software onto units they own it is the user, as well who developed the software to go on the device, to follow all laws then it is not up to UBNT to police this. This is the job of the FCC, provided it is agreed that once the user buys the hardware it is theirs. For this specific case, UBNT claims Cambium is violated allowed power limits by loading their software onto the UBNT device. Also, is the new device an FCC certified system? Most likely not unless it is resubmitted to the FCC for testing, and any labels removed and new ones added. However, this is not up to UBNT to enforce this. This is the job of the FCC.
Is UBNT being a steward of the community to bring this to the attention of the FCC, thus saving UBNT from possible issues with the FCC? Maybe, but why not bring suit against any of these others?
Bitlomat
DD-WRT
HamNet
It’s interesting to note this page on HamNet
I am not a telecom attorney and I do not know the ins and outs. From what little I know of being in the industry you have to have an FCC certified system with proper identification stickers. I remember when UBNT had to send out stickers for units several years ago for DFS certification. You were supposed to put them on all your upgraded radios to be compliant. By changing the software did Cambium no longer make it a certified system? Or, because they use the same chipset is it still legal in the eyes of the FCC?
Debate 4 – Collusion and the end user
This is the biggest bombshell out of this whole ordeal and actually makes my blood boil. UBNT is suing Cambium of course. They are also suing a distributor and an end-user ISP. Cambium I can understand. UBNT is trying to protect their intellectual property and believe it was violated. They have every right to do so.
The distributor I can understand the argument. The distributor allegedly participated in distributing the “hacked” software. Not saying it’s right or wrong, but I can see why there would be the argument.
The most disturbing part of this an end-user ISP is named in the lawsuit. UBNT is suing a customer who was using the UBNT product and then decided to switch to a competitors product. In the case of elevate, the end-user ISP loaded the software onto their existing hardware. If we go along with the idea of you own the hardware, UBNT is suing a customer who bought their hardware and loaded the elevate software on it. This would be like Dell suing a school corporation for loading Linux onto new PCs they bought.
Many of the arguments you read are about you don’t own the software. If you buy the hardware, and it has a GPL licensed bootloader and load your own software onto the device, what laws have you violated?
Imagine this scenario. A user opens up a UBNT radio they bought. They see it uses an Atheros chipset, like many other radios. They write some code to talk to the hardware, all without ever looking at the software that came on the radio, boot up the unit via TFTP and load their own compiled image onto the hardware. All the while they never have seen the UBNT software. Did they violate any laws or user agreements?
This case and some others will help define who owns the hardware. We know the company, in this case, UBNT, owns the software. You have no legal standing to de-compile their intellectual property. That is cut and dry. What isn’t, is if they are using the same hardware everyone else, the same bootloader, is that considered proprietary? If not, and you overwrite their software were you allowed to because you own the hardware. Is the GPL bootloader considered proprietary? If we apply the analogy the bootloader is the same as the BIOS in the PC, no it is not proprietary. The BIOS debate has already been solved in court. Many of the PC debates have been loading a company’s software onto other hardware, such as Apple Hackintosh Computers and not the other way around, such as this case. As we talked in point 1, in the PC world, Apple even gives you the tools to install other Operating systems.
If UBNT sticks code in that says the bootloader only recognizes signed images is that “hacking” to put your own software on? Is this any different than Jailbreaking an Iphone?
So what does this all mean?
Going forward I believe we will see EULA and licensing agreements change. The hardware from a manufacturer will still be the property of the manufacturer, much like John Deere software.
The definition of what you own and have access to will change.
Proprietary bootloaders will take the place of Open Source bootloaders.
There will be a rise in manufacturers who make white box radios. Will there be a long-term solution? Only time will tell. We are seeing this trend in software-defined networking.
We will see more NDAs to end users about products. I believe we will see fewer case studies on newer products. End users will definitely be more tight-lipped about what they are doing.
So it will be interesting to see how this all plays out. Will there be enough precedent in the hardware world to squash some of this? Or does UBNT have a case? Obviously, UBNT has a responsibility to their shareholders to vigorously defend their Intellectual property. This case will help define where the commodity/open source items stop and where the intellectual property starts.
Where does this leave distributors? Do they want to continue carrying the Elevate product? Do they want to cut relationships with a manufacturer who has sued one of their own? The same goes for the end-user community. Do WISPs want to do business with a company that could potentially sue them for using and talking about a competitor’s product? Do the end users own the hardware they buy? If so, how much freedom do they have? If you don’t own the product, imagine the accounting ramifications.
https://wiki.openwrt.org/toh/ubiquiti/airmaxm
https://www.wired.com/2015/04/dmca-ownership-john-deere/
https://www.wired.com/2010/07/feds-ok-iphone-jailbreaking/
Feds okay iPhone Jailbreaking
https://superuser.com/questions/424892/is-bios-considered-an-os
Is the Bios an Operating System?
https://www.chromium.org/chromium-os
Google Chromium OS
-450M is the 3GHZ platform of today.
-LTE will be a split architecture system
-LTE standards-based
-Working on the ability to swap out an existing AP from another manufacturer and still keep the subscribers.
-Named “cnRanger”
-450 is still going to outperform LTE in many ways
Technical
-8×8 Baseband unit (BBU) and Remote Radio Heads (RRH)
-BBU can drive 4 2×2 radios to provide 350 degree coverage
-One radio for a single Sector MU-MIMO support
-Fiber optic connection between BBU and RRH
-Release of 3.xGHZ in Q2 2019 is the goal
-64 SMs per sector initial
-2x Gige ports in the BBU
-Possibility and possibility is stressed, that 450 3ghz subscribers might be able to connect to the new platform.
-Sim cards are aiming to be built in.
Full site approximate price for a complete build for $15,000.
Things could change
MTIN Family of web-sites
mtin.net
j2sw.com
startawisp.info
indycolo.net
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