top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

Python knowledge required for telecommunication testers

+1 vote
365 views

Can anyone provide how much knowledge/contents are required for telecommunication industry. I tried a lot of python learning stuffs but I have a doubt that the contents are way too unnecessary for testers atleast. My work in company will be to modify the script and automate it.
I have a basic level of understanding about python.

posted Mar 2, 2017 by anonymous

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button

1 Answer

0 votes

Python is a scripting language and a tester require the learning of python for the scripting of testcases so that process can be automated and engineering effort can be saved.

In the past I need to do some automation of FGW testing, though was never a tester but sometime you need to do and we used roboframe which is python based framework for testing automation.

I hope I understood your question correctly...

answer Mar 2, 2017 by Salil Agrawal
Similar Questions
+1 vote

Asked this on SIP forum also but no response so asking here. Please help

I've been reading about Voice Over IP and it's still not clear to me which protocols (i.e. RFCs) you have to implement to support audio calls between two IP-endpoints where the two endpoints might not reside on the same network.

So far I understand that:
- RTP (RFC 3550) is used for audio payload transport
- SIP (RFC 3261) is used for signaling
- SDP (RFC 4566) is used for media negotiation (i.e. which codec to use)
- RTCP (RFC 3550) is used for transmission stats

So if I'm not mistaken it should be possible to establish a SIP audio call between two devices with an implementation of the 3 above mentioned protocols (?)

But what I'm not totally sure about is :
- Which RFCs do you need to implement to ensure that a SIP audio call can be established between two devices which reside on different (firewalled) networks ?
- How do SIP phones typically get around network issues where two SIP clients are on two totally different networks and each client is behind a firewall? I assume that traffic to certain ports on a public IP address MUST be broadcasted to local listeners on those ports? But is that enough?

What if port forwarding isn't allowed on the network where a SIP client is residing?

+2 votes

In the next few weeks, my company will be engaging multiple vendors to establish a choice for a common global ETL tool - not necessarily one that can't be broken from, but just where our license investment will go to consolidate those costs. Two of the major players are Talend and Informatica, with others that are unimportant for the sake of this question.

My experience is in Talend's Enterprise ETL tool, Talend Integration Suite, which also has many standard integration capabilities. Aside from all of the obvious pros and cons between the two such as cost, availability of knowledgeable resources, etc. my question is specific to the development language knowledge required.

I'd like some feedback on the Informatica option. I can state from experience that to use Talend effectively, and reach beyond it's pre-programmed bounds (which happens pretty often), you need to have a decent background in Java. And in this case, I mean Java directly - you can literally use Java if you need to add-on functionality, not a "special" version of Java. What is the situation with Informatica? Is there a particular extension language you can use? Is it proprietary, but perhaps closely related to a mainstream language? What is the likelihood of needing to use it for any jobs of consequence?

This is only one factor I'm going to use in evaluating the space, but I need to get a little more up to speed on this aspect of Informatica before I feel fully informed. Thanks for your answers!

+2 votes

I just know CUPS stands for control and user plane separation but what is the advantage of it ? Has any network operator ever deployed CUPS solution in their network ?

...