TEMS Investigation 17.2 provides new features for spectrum scanning with the Rohde & Schwarz TSMW scanner to support LTE, WCDMA, and GSM technologies. It also allows decrypting of IPsec encrypted traffic by inputting retrieved IPsec keys to access SIP and RTP messages. Additionally, the Android Phone Monitor interface allows remote control and interaction with an Android phone's user interface through tapping and swiping on the monitor view. VoLTE and POLQA testing was added for the Apple iPhone 6 and 6 Plus as well.
TEMS Investigation 17.2 provides new features for spectrum scanning with the Rohde & Schwarz TSMW scanner to support LTE, WCDMA, and GSM technologies. It also allows decrypting of IPsec encrypted traffic by inputting retrieved IPsec keys to access SIP and RTP messages. Additionally, the Android Phone Monitor interface allows remote control and interaction with an Android phone's user interface through tapping and swiping on the monitor view. VoLTE and POLQA testing was added for the Apple iPhone 6 and 6 Plus as well.
TEMS Investigation 17.2 provides new features for spectrum scanning with the Rohde & Schwarz TSMW scanner to support LTE, WCDMA, and GSM technologies. It also allows decrypting of IPsec encrypted traffic by inputting retrieved IPsec keys to access SIP and RTP messages. Additionally, the Android Phone Monitor interface allows remote control and interaction with an Android phone's user interface through tapping and swiping on the monitor view. VoLTE and POLQA testing was added for the Apple iPhone 6 and 6 Plus as well.
TSMW TEMS Investigation 16.3 added support for spectrum scans with the R&S TSMW scanner on multiple technologies: LTE, WCDMA, and GSM.
2.4.7. IPsec Decryption
IPsec is a protocol suite for authentication and encryption of IP packets. When IPsec is in use, it blocks SIP and RTP messages, which are crucial to both scripted data collection and presentation in TEMS Investigation, as well as to user actions during drive testing. However, if an IPsec key can be retrieved in some way, that key can be input to TEMS Investigation in runtime from version 16.3 onward, enabling the application to decrypt SIP and RTP and thus execute data testing services. It also enables real-time presentation of SIP and RTP messages as well as the calculation of metrics dependent on this signaling. When a logfile is being recorded, the IPsec key is stored in the logfile; the key is used again when you replay the file. Alternatively, if you have run IPsec-encrypted services manually, you can input the key when replaying the logfile, so that SIP and RTP messages can be decoded and dependent metrics calculated and presented. It is possible to input multiple IPsec keys, in which case TEMS Investigation will try them one by one.
2.4.8. Android Phone Monitor
The regular user interface of an Android phone can be accessed and interacted with through a view called Android Phone Monitor, added in TEMS Investigation 16.3 (it is opened from the context menu of a connected device in the Navigator). Tapping and swiping can be directly imitated with the mouse, whereas additional controls are provided corresponding to the device’s physical buttons. The monitor is useful especially for controlling a device connected to a PC in a remote location, or a device mounted in an equipment case or backpack.
2.4.9. VoLTE and POLQA with Apple iPhone 6
TEMS Investigation 16.3 became the first drive test tool to support VoLTE testing with Apple iPhone 6 and 6 Plus. VoLTE calls can be scripted, and their
Echo on a Chip - Secure Embedded Systems in Cryptography: A New Perception for the Next Generation of Micro-Controllers handling Encryption for Mobile Messaging