commit | 1f8acd988430369662079295caf08c092d6416ed | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Vadim Yanitskiy <axilirator@gmail.com> | Thu Feb 27 02:42:56 2020 +0700 |
committer | fixeria <vyanitskiy@sysmocom.de> | Sun Mar 07 19:26:08 2021 +0000 |
tree | e60ab1d533a641a566c9150a8d5ba5a72b9d1aaf | |
parent | ab34fa895effb209ae737fe3edffe1b430d4116f [diff] |
transport/pcsc: work around Python 3.5 bug: guard disconnect() Unfortunately, Debian ships old Python (3.5 vs 3.8) and old pyscard (1.9.4 vs 1.9.9). Calling PCSCCardConnection.disconnect() from a destructor causes warnings about ignored exceptions: AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'disconnect' AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'setChanged' AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'SCardDisconnect' TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not callable All these exceptions happen in pyscard's own destructors. Change-Id: I9c644bc5fe9791b141a30bfc13647d77937a82ee
This repository contains a Python-language program that can be used to program (write) certain fields/parameters on so-called programmable SIM/USIM cards.
Such SIM/USIM cards are special cards, which - unlike those issued by regular commercial operators - come with the kind of keys that allow you to write the files/fields that normally only an operator can program.
This is useful particularly if you are running your own cellular network, and want to issue your own SIM/USIM cards for that network.
The official homepage of the project is http://osmocom.org/projects/pysim/wiki
You can clone from the official libosmocore.git repository using
git clone git://git.osmocom.org/pysim.git
There is a cgit interface at http://git.osmocom.org/pysim/
pysim requires:
Example for Debian:
apt-get install python3-pyscard python3-serial python3-pip python3-yaml pip3 install pytlv
There is no separate mailing list for this project. However, discussions related to pysim-prog are happening on the openbsc@lists.osmocom.org mailing list, please see https://lists.osmocom.org/mailman/listinfo/openbsc for subscription options and the list archive.
Please observe the Osmocom Mailing List Rules when posting.
Our coding standards are described at https://osmocom.org/projects/cellular-infrastructure/wiki/Coding_standards
We are currently accepting patches by e-mail to the above-mentioned mailing list.
./pySim-prog.py -n 26C3 -c 49 -x 262 -y 42 -i -s
./pySim-prog.py -n 26C3 -c 49 -x 262 -y 42 -z <random_string_of_choice> -j <card_num>
With <random_string_of_choice> and <card_num>, the soft will generate 'predictable' IMSI and ICCID, so make sure you choose them so as not to conflict with anyone. (for eg. your name as <random_string_of_choice> and 0 1 2 ... for <card num>).
You also need to enter some parameters to select the device : -t TYPE : type of card (supersim, magicsim, fakemagicsim or try 'auto') -d DEV : Serial port device (default /dev/ttyUSB0) -b BAUD : Baudrate (default 9600)
from pySim.transport.serial import SerialSimLink from pySim.commands import SimCardCommands
sl = SerialSimLink(device='/dev/ttyUSB0', baudrate=9600) sc = SimCardCommands(sl)
sl.wait_for_card()
# Print IMSI
print(sc.read_binary(['3f00', '7f20', '6f07']))
# Run A3/A8
print(sc.run_gsm('00112233445566778899aabbccddeeff'))