thanks. I am not able run in ubuntu.

Any manual to read the graph !

 

From: Mike Walters [mailto:m...@flomp.net] 
Sent: Thursday, 15 October 2015 12:25 AM
To: Srinivasan T
Cc: Dave New; hackrf-dev
Subject: Re: [Hackrf-dev] Decode the Signal

 

https://github.com/miek/inspectrum

 

On 14 October 2015 at 17:22, Srinivasan T <tsvs...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi Mike,

Thanks. Where to get the software inspectrum ?

 

From: Mike Walters [mailto:m...@flomp.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, 14 October 2015 11:02 PM
To: Srinivasan T
Cc: Dave New; hackrf-dev


Subject: Re: [Hackrf-dev] Decode the Signal

 

Wi-Fi will send sudden power to cause huge fluctuations - here's a picture of 
it doing that: http://i.imgur.com/txXyOXB.jpg

Since you're sampling at 2MHz, the Wi-Fi channel is much wider than your view, 
so you see the whole noise floor rise.

 

On 14 October 2015 at 15:14, Srinivasan T <tsvs...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi There,

 

Thanks.

 

The details that I can gather from RF that interfere :

 

1. The Wi-Fi router will not send sudden power to cause huge fluctuations. It 
is always constant power. The graph will look like sine linear waves.

2. Every Radio signal has a sound. The signal that interfere at 2.4 GHz is not 
Wi-Fi sound. ( Totally different sound )

3. The density value for 2.4 GHz really high unless you near to the source at 
10 cm distance

4. Waterfall Images for Radio Signal at 2.4 GHz is really not matched with 
available waterfall image for 2.4 GHz. ( I compare with metageek waterfall 
images )

5. AirMagnet XT is really can identify thousands of patters of interference at 
2.4 GHz but this time Air Magnet XT detected as new FFT pattern.

6. There is always RF which has power around -20 dBm to -40 dBm ( Everywhere - 
Singapore ,Malaysia and Indonesia )

7. Modulated at low frequency ( 30-100 Hz ) and it deliver small electricity

 

I have captured the signal using kismet manual to save the file to .iq but I 
dont know on how to go further.

 

Regards

 

Srinivasan T

 

From: Dave New [mailto:d...@densbe.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, 14 October 2015 10:10 PM
To: Srinivasan T; 'Mike Walters'
Cc: 'hackrf-dev'
Subject: RE: [Hackrf-dev] Decode the Signal

 

Some (all?) WiFi access points "poll", that is, if they currently have no 
active connections, they go through a sleep/wake cycle where you will see the 
signal appear and disappear in cycles.

 

I saw this on the Comcast/Xfinity Technicolor router that they started shipping 
to their customers earlier this year in certain US markets.  Their router has 
three different signals running, one of which has no SSID.  The other two are 
your locally-defined wireless network, and the much-maligned "xfinity wireless" 
which Comcast claims is to provide "free" WiFi to the world (or at least to 
your neighbors).  It's really not free in the respect that you have to be a 
Comcast customer with a valid login to use it, and it obviously is using 
someone else's (not Comcast's to be sure) electricity to host the signal (and 
your bandwidth).  But I digress.

 

The 3rd signal turns out to belong to Comcast/Xfinity's wireless home security 
system, and is there whether or not you've paid for that option.  If you use a 
simple app like WiFi Analyzer on an Android phone, you can see this signal come 
and go in a few second cycle, essentially polling for its home security 
devices.  Since there were none at my place (that belonged to Comcast) it 
instead managed to effectively interfere with my local wireless network.  
Apparently a number of wireless clients are befuddled with having a strong 
signal come and go on the channel they are trying to use.  The result was a 
number of devices kept complaining about getting disconnected, or downloads and 
other streaming would halt and start, and other annoying things.

 

It also turned out that I couldn't move either of the other two signals off of 
my chosen channel for my local network.  Whenever I changed the channel for my 
local network, the other two signals would follow it (?!), thus guaranteeing 
that anything running on the other signals would slow down access to my local 
network.  What's particularly maddening about this is that Technicolor's 
implementation of what have should have been a simple VLAN exercise is flawed.  
It should have worked, but apparently they can't program their way out of a 
paper bag.  At my workplace, we use access points that are running up to 16 
VLANS (hosting such things as a guest network, employee network, visiting 
employee network, supplier network, etc, etc), and they perform flawlessly.

 

I put up with this for about a week, and took the router back to the local 
Comcast office and told them I didn't want it.  I went out and bought an 
Arris/Motorola Surfboard 6121 cable router which does not have wireless in it, 
and a Cisco wireless firewall/router.  Everything now runs fine, and I'm no 
longer fighting with two other signals I didn't want and did not intend to use.

 

73,

 

-- Dave, N8SBE

 

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [Hackrf-dev] Decode the Signal
From: "Srinivasan T" < <mailto:tsvs...@gmail.com> tsvs...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, October 14, 2015 9:11 am
To: "'Mike Walters'" < <mailto:m...@flomp.net> m...@flomp.net>
Cc: 'hackrf-dev' < <mailto:hackrf-dev@greatscottgadgets.com> 
hackrf-dev@greatscottgadgets.com>

Thanks.

I can see that there is one signal interfere at 2.4 GHz.

 

Do you want me to capture .iq file using 20 M ?

 

From: Mike Walters [mailto:m...@flomp.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, 14 October 2015 7:14 PM
To: Srinivasan T
Cc: hackrf-dev
Subject: Re: [Hackrf-dev] Decode the Signal

 

The signal in the first and second videos is Wi-Fi - if you use a sample rate 
of 20M you can see it much clearer. 

 

On 14 October 2015 at 07:28, Srinivasan T <tsvs...@gmail.com> wrote:

 

Dear All,

 

I am managed to do some RND with unknown Signal at 2.4 GHz. This Signal works 
almost everywhere in Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia.

Here some video for reference :

 

Here is the video :

 

Ø  FFT at 2.4 GHz ( we can see sudden fluctuation and power in db is really 
high - in Singapore at home ) 

      https://sendvid.com/33f5hpkg

        Detail : On this video, we can see peak hold in green color that leave 
a trace something comes and go

 

Ø  Spectrum Density of RF at 2.4 GHz ( in Medan - Indonesia )

        http://sendvid.com/mu9m2jeg

        Details : I have taken this video at place where there was no devices 
that operate at 2.4 GHz ( near plantations ). We can see noise floor in blue 
color comes and go.

                         This external interference cause Wi-Fi at 2.4 GHz to 
fluctuate and sudden fluctuate at different power level will increase of SNR of 
Wi-Fi ( signal to noise ratio )

 

Ø  AirMagnet XT ( in Singapore at home )

      Attached video file, file name ;   https://sendvid.com/tkq3xz0s

      Details :    This software one of the best software available in the 
market for detection interference Wi-Fi at 2.4 GHz with different options. We 
can see FFT picture at real 

                        time in leave suddenly max hold around -10 dBm. ( We 
can spectrogram picture as well ).  There are 2 rules to be remembered :

·         If power level increase suddenly to 10 dBm then the source should be 
near and visible to me but on this case we dont see the source

·         Any RF Transmitter at 2.4 GHz will transmit at constant power and 
sudden increase of power at middle of transmission really no possible.

 

      Wi-Fi Fluctuations at Siloam Hospital in Medan - Indonesia

http://sendvid.com/2u2j34m7

 

I would like to request on how decode header information or others of the 
signal. I have captured .iq and .cfile using HackRF :

https://www.dropbox.com/s/wj77dm4n7fj7rcl/Signal%20Capture.7z?dl=0

 

 

Please advise on  decode the signal.

 

Regards

 

 

Srinivasan T

 


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