Research Article
CorteXlab: A Facility for Testing Cognitive Radio Networks in a Reproducible Environment
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.crowncom.2014.255812, author={Leonardo Cardoso and Abdelbassat Massouri and Benjamin Guillon and Paul Ferrand and Florin Hutu and Guillaume Villemaud and Tanguy Risset and Jean-Marie Gorce}, title={CorteXlab: A Facility for Testing Cognitive Radio Networks in a Reproducible Environment}, proceedings={TRIAL Workshop on Cognitive Radio Testbeds}, publisher={IEEE}, proceedings_a={TRIAL WORKSHOP}, year={2014}, month={7}, keywords={testbed cognitive radio software defined radio usrp picosdr}, doi={10.4108/icst.crowncom.2014.255812} }
- Leonardo Cardoso
Abdelbassat Massouri
Benjamin Guillon
Paul Ferrand
Florin Hutu
Guillaume Villemaud
Tanguy Risset
Jean-Marie Gorce
Year: 2014
CorteXlab: A Facility for Testing Cognitive Radio Networks in a Reproducible Environment
TRIAL WORKSHOP
ICST
DOI: 10.4108/icst.crowncom.2014.255812
Abstract
While many theoretical and simulation works have highlighted the potential gains of cognitive radio, several technical issues still need to be evaluated from an experimental point of view. Deploying complex heterogeneous system scenarios is tedious, time consuming and hardly reproducible. To address this problem, we have developed a new experimental facility, called CorteXlab, that allows complex multi-node cognitive radio scenarios to be easily deployed and tested by anyone in the world. Our objective is not to design new software defined radio (SDR) nodes, but rather to provide a comprehensive access to a large set of high performance SDR nodes. The CorteXlab facility offers a 167 m2 electromagnetically (EM) shielded room and integrates a set of 24 universal software radio peripherals (USRPs) from National Instruments, 18 PicoSDR nodes from Nutaq and 42 IoT- Lab wireless sensor nodes from Hikob. CorteXlab is built upon the foundations of the SensLAB testbed and is based the free and open-source toolkit GNU Radio. Automation in scenario deployment, experiment start, stop and results collection is performed by an experiment controller, called Minus. CorteXlab is in its final stages of development and is already capable of running test scenarios. In this contribution, we show that CorteXlab is able to easily cope with the usual issues faced by other testbeds providing a reproducible experiment environment for CR experimentation.