This is the tower side (RAN) not the phone side (UE). It's not clear who the audience is. I assume it's equipment vendors since running a real carrier on USRPs seems janky.
srsRAN is both. It includes the source for user equipment in its "srsue" directory.
Use cases are partly captured by the list of customers across the bottom of the srsRAN home page (https://www.srsran.com/). It's great for any company/research group smaller than a multinational base station manufacturer, at which size the big players don't want to talk to you.
- Testing of various kinds. You can get deep inside an OSS base station, inspect and debug things, but likely may not even look at the proprietary innards of a commercial BS.
- Emergency connectivity when the backbone is broken, or did not exist. Most people would bring mobile phones anyway.
- Study / teaching, like MINIX OS or trainer aircraft which you can take apart and inspect.
- Maybe very small local cells to improve connectivity in difficult landscapes (mountains, skyscrapers, underground).
> Maybe very small local cells to improve connectivity in difficult landscapes (mountains, skyscrapers, underground)
Something like this would've been useful in a couple remote networks that I worked on. Internet was easy to get with some ubiquiti wifi routers and antennae. Getting cell reception was a pain in the ass that involved setting up a repeater in the one spot of the valley where reception was kinda okay. I haven't looked into the project too much, but I imagine I could set it up to connect to a telcom tower and handle the wireless backhaul similarly to how I did the wifi.
Edit: An open implementation like this could lead to cheaper cells for large, concrete/metal buildings that typically have terrible reception.
Use cases are partly captured by the list of customers across the bottom of the srsRAN home page (https://www.srsran.com/). It's great for any company/research group smaller than a multinational base station manufacturer, at which size the big players don't want to talk to you.