commit | 2bee70cbac8c2fbff4c8809e125dc4833884e4a3 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Harald Welte <laforge@osmocom.org> | Thu May 25 09:14:28 2023 +0200 |
committer | Harald Welte <laforge@osmocom.org> | Thu May 25 09:58:34 2023 +0200 |
tree | a9922eb944cb38ea90423faa936eea37e7461cb6 | |
parent | 24e77a775815e90cb9f04ae9157ddc2fcee87eff [diff] |
ts_31_102: Add DF.SAIP support DF.SAIP (SIMalliance Interoperable Profile) is not part of 31.102, but something from the eSIM/eUICC universe of TCA (formerly known as SIMalliance). However, as 3GPP does not specify how/where the card stores the information required for SUCI calculation, the TCA/SIMalliance standard is the only standard there is. Some CardOS start to use this standard even for non-eSIM/eUICC use cases. Change-Id: Iffb65af335dfdbd7791fca9a0a6ad4b79814a57c
This repository contains Python programs that can be used to read, program (write) and browse 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.
Please visit the official homepage for usage instructions, manual and examples. The user manual can also be built locally from this source code by cd docs && make html latexpdf
for HTML and PDF format, respectively.
You can clone from the official Osmocom git repository using
git clone https://gitea.osmocom.org/sim-card/pysim.git
There is a web interface at https://gitea.osmocom.org/sim-card/pysim.
Please install the following dependencies:
Example for Debian:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends \ pcscd libpcsclite-dev \ python3 \ python3-setuptools \ python3-pyscard \ python3-pip pip3 install --user -r requirements.txt
After installing all dependencies, the pySim applications pySim-read.py
, pySim-prog.py
and pySim-shell.py
may be started directly from the cloned repository.
Archlinux users may install the package python-pysim-git
from the Arch User Repository (AUR). The most convenient way is the use of an AUR Helper, e.g. yay or pacaur. The following example shows the installation with
yay
.
# Install yay -Sy python-pysim-git # Uninstall sudo pacman -Rs python-pysim-git
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 using a gerrit-based patch review process explained at https://osmocom.org/projects/cellular-infrastructure/wiki/Gerrit
The pySim user manual can be built from this very source code by means of sphinx (with sphinxcontrib-napoleon and sphinx-argparse). See the Makefile in the 'docs' directory.
A pre-rendered HTML user manual of the current pySim 'git master' is available from https://downloads.osmocom.org/docs/latest/pysim/ and a downloadable PDF version is published at https://downloads.osmocom.org/docs/latest/osmopysim-usermanual.pdf.
A slightly dated video presentation about pySim-shell can be found at https://media.ccc.de/v/osmodevcall-20210409-laforge-pysim-shell.
While you will find a lot of online resources still describing the use of pySim-prog.py and pySim-read.py, those tools are considered legacy by now and have by far been superseded by the much more capable pySim-shell. We strongly encourage users to adopt pySim-shell, unless they have very specific requirements like batch programming of large quantities of cards, which is about the only remaining use case for the legacy tools.