FreeCalypso > hg > fc-pcsc-tools
view doc/User-oriented-commands @ 105:16481db543e8
fc-uicc-tool: infrastructure for output redirection
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
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date | Fri, 19 Feb 2021 06:07:49 +0000 |
parents | 6ba14a9247d2 |
children | 49f259cdb39e |
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This document describes those commands and functions of fc-simtool which can be exercised by end users on any regular operator-issued SIM, without requiring a special programmable SIM with admin privileges. The Mother's plans for future development include a companion fc-simint utility that will operate on SIM cards inside Calypso phones; the intent is that all of the end-user-oriented commands of fc-simtool described in this document will also be replicated in fc-simint. Understanding SIM PIN1 ====================== Every standard SIM card has a secret code called PIN1; this secret code can be anywhere between 4 and 8 digits in length, with 4-digit PINs being most common. In terms of persistent non-volatile state, SIM PIN1 can be enabled or disabled. When SIM PIN1 is disabled, all regular functions of the card are enabled, as in being able to power up the phone with the SIM in it and connect to the GSM network with your subscriber identity, and being able to read and write SIM user data content like phonebooks and stored messages - all of these functions are enabled from the moment you turn on the phone with the SIM in it (or power the SIM up by itself in a smart card "reader" driven by fc-simtool), without the user ever being asked for a PIN, such that you can forget that the PIN even exists - this situation in very common nowadays. But when SIM PIN1 is enabled, the smart chip in the SIM will not allow you access to any of the data stored on the card and will not allow any GSM authentication operations until and unless you send the correct PIN to the SIM in the VERIFY CHV command. If you forgot your PIN1, the only way to reset it is to enter another secret code (always 8 digits in length) called PUK1. If the SIM is made according to standards, then its PUK1 is set to a random number during either physical manufacturing or administrative programming of the card and then remains unchangeable afterward. Therefore, in an ideal world if someone forgot their PIN1 and don't have their PUK1 either, they should be able to obtain PUK1 from the cellular operator who issued the SIM - but whether or not today's operators will actually help such hapless users (without forcing them to get a new SIM) is another question altogether. PUK1 is often printed on the big (credit-card- sized) plastic piece on which SIM cards are initially delivered - but it doesn't help if you originally got your SIM many ages ago and no longer have that souvenir plastic piece. The standard protocol for communicating with SIM cards provides 5 special commands that are dedicated to working with PIN1, and so does fc-simtool: verify-pin1 XXXX This command tells the SIM that you are attempting to prove knowledge of PIN1, presenting a string of digits. If the PIN digits you specify match the PIN1 secret code stored inside the SIM, the card unlocks access to its primary functions. If the digits you send are wrong, the SIM decrements its non-volatile attempt counter, giving you a total of 3 attempts (irrespective of card power-downs between attempts) to enter the correct PIN. If PIN1 is entered incorrectly 3 times in a row, this PIN is blocked, and the only way to unblock it is via PUK1. enable-pin1 XXXX This command changes the non-volatile state of the PIN1 enable/disable flag, such that from now on the SIM will require PIN1 to be provided on every card power-up before it will allow GSM authentication and access to user data. The enable-pin1 operation itself requires correct PIN1 digits to be provided. disable-pin1 XXXX This command changes the non-volatile state of the PIN1 enable/disable flag, such that from now on the SIM will NOT require PIN1 to be provided on every card power-up, and will instead be live immediately without needing proof of card owner's identity. The disable-pin1 operation itself requires correct PIN1 digits to be provided. change-pin1 old-PIN new-PIN This command tells the SIM that you wish to change PIN1 secret code to some new digits. Knowledge of the old PIN1 is required for this operation to succeed. unblock-pin1 PUK1-secret-code new-PIN1 This command tells the SIM that you are attempting to prove knowledge of PUK1 and to set new PIN1. If PUK1 is given correctly, the new PIN1 will be set. If you enter wrong PUK1, the SIM decrements its non-volatile attempt counter, giving you a total of 10 attempts (irrespective of card power-downs between attempts) to enter the correct code. If PUK1 is entered incorrectly 10 times in a row, it is blocked and the card should be considered bricked beyond recovery. Understanding SIM PIN2 ====================== GSM standards provide support for a very rarely used feature that works in the spirit of "parental controls": if you authenticate to the SIM with PIN2 secret code (which has to be different from PIN1 for meaningful security), you can edit a SIM-resident list of so-called Fixed Dialing Numbers (FDN), and then all standard phones that implement this feature per the spec will refuse to allow ordinary users (authenticated with PIN1 or with no PIN at all) to call any numbers other than those programmed in FDN. This whole "parental control" feature is totally silly and is not expected to be of any practical use, but the whole purpose of fc-simtool is to allow every feature of SIM cards to be exercised, hence we provide the necessary support. The following commands work just like their PIN1 counterparts: verify-pin2 XXXX change-pin2 old-PIN new-PIN unblock-pin2 PUK2-secret-code new-PIN2 Unlike PIN1, PIN2 cannot be disabled per traditional SIM card standards. Getting basic info from the SIM =============================== The following commands are available for retrieving basic info from the SIM: iccid This command retrieves the ICCID (Integrated Circuit Card ID) record from the SIM - it is a number of up to 20 digits (although 19-digit ICCIDs are most common) that identifies the SIM card as a physical artifact. If your SIM is of the traditional operator-issued kind, as opposed to a developer-oriented programmable SIM from vendors like Sysmocom who have different ideas, this ICCID will usually be the SIM card ID number printed on the physical plastic, along with a barcode representation of the same number. imsi This command retrieves the IMSI (International Mobile Subscriber Identity) from the SIM - it is the most fundamental ID token by which GSM phones present themselves to networks, and they even use the first 5 or 6 digits of the IMSI to decide which network they should try connecting to first. sst Every SIM card is required to have an essential data record (an EF in technical terms) called the SIM Service Table, or SST. This SST indicates which services are allocated and activated on the given SIM. Our sst command lists all allocated service numbers, listing just a plain number if the service is both allocated and activated (the usual case), or a number with a '^' suffix if the service is allocated but not activated. You will need to look in the 3GPP TS 51.011 spec to make sense of these service numbers. user-sum This command displays a user-friendly summary of user-oriented services present on the SIM. It reads SST to get the list of available and activated services, but it considers only user-oriented ones (as opposed to SIM services dealing with GSM network functions or serving operators' interests rather than users'), and it displays them in a user-friendly manner. For each present SIM phonebook (ADN, FDN, SDN) and for the SMS store, user-sum displays the storage capacity provided by the SIM (number of phonebook entries or messages), and for each of the various phonebooks, the allocated number of alpha tag bytes is also displayed. The number of bytes allocated for the alpha tag in SIM phonebooks determines the maximum length of the name field in each phonebook entry. These name fields can be written either in GSM7 encoding (GSM 03.38 aka 3GPP 23.038) or in UCS-2; when GSM7 encoding is used, no SMS-style septet packing is applied - instead the high bit of each byte is simply cleared. Therefore, the maximum number of characters in a phonebook entry name field usually equals the number of bytes allocated for the alpha tag on the SIM, except for names containing ASCII characters [\]^ and {|}~ which get expanded to 2-character escape sequences in GSM7 encoding. uicc-dir If your SIM card functions not only as a classic GSM 11.11 SIM, but also as a UICC with USIM/ISIM or other UICC-based applications, it will have a file named EF_DIR in its file system, listing those applications. fc-simtool uicc-dir command dumps the content of this file in a human-readable form - but please note that fc-simtool only speaks the classic GSM 11.11 protocol to the SIM, and not the UICC protocol. EF_DIR does not officially exist in the classic GSM SIM spec, hence the dir command in fc-uicc-tool (speaking the UICC protocol) is the official way to read and dump the content of EF_DIR. Manipulating SIM phonebooks =========================== GSM SIM specs allow for several different phonebooks to be present on the card: * ADN (Abbreviated Dialing Numbers) is the main SIM phonebook. Each SIM card issuer decides how much storage space they allocate to ADN (how many records); the SIM spec maximum is 254 records, and many issuers' SIMs do provide this many records or close to this limit. * FDN (Fixed Dialing Numbers) is the "parental control" phonebook. The FDN phonebook can only be written to after authenticating with PIN2, and when it is enabled (enabling FDN is done by "invalidating" ADN, an operation which also requires PIN2), spec-compliant phones allow only numbers in FDN to be called. * SDN (Service Dialing Numbers) is a service-provider-controlled phonebook: it can only be written if you have special admin privileges (ADM authentication method is card-vendor-dependent), and it is read-only to ordinary users. * MBDN (Mailbox Dialing Numbers) is a late addition to GSM SIM specs - it is a special phonebook that stores the number for Voice Mail and other related esoteric services. * MSISDN is a phonebook-like file that stores the subscriber's own phone number(s). Most classic GSM phones have a menu command for showing your own number, usually called "My number" or something like that; this menu command displays the first record stored in the MSISDN phonebook. Most network operators update this MSISDN record over the air (using special SMS-encoded commands) when you activate service or get a new phone number without changing your SIM, but this MSISDN store in the SIM also has some interesting properties: + Per the spec the MSISDN phonebook is writable by ordinary users, not just admins, and the Mother's experience with real T-Mobile SIMs is that they do indeed allow the user to write anything into MSISDN. + Most SIM card issuers allocate multiple records for MSISDN, not just one. It is not clear if ordinary end user phones would do anything useful with the extra records if one were to write something there. fc-simtool provides a unified set of commands and data formats for working with all SIM phonebooks: all pb-* commands take the name of the phonebook to be operated on as their first argument. The following commands are available: pb-dump PBNAME This command dumps the full content of the selected phonebook on the terminal. The data format for representing SIM phonebook content in UNIX-based text files and dumps is described in the SIM-data-formats document in the freecalypso-docs repository. pb-dump PBNAME outfile This form of the pb-dump command dumps the full content of the selected phonebook, but saves it in the named file instead of sending it to the terminal. This form is ideal for making backups of large SIM phonebooks. pb-dump-rec PBNAME rec This command dumps a single record from a potentially large phonebook. pb-dump-rec PBNAME start-rec end-rec This command dumps the specified range of records from a potentially large phonebook. pb-restore PBNAME filename This command reads a phonebook data file in the format described in the SIM-data-formats document and uploads it into the named SIM phonebook. Every record in the SIM phonebook is overwritten with an UPDATE RECORD command; those record indices which do not appear in the data file being restored get blank records (0xFF in every byte) written into them. pb-update PBNAME filename This command reads a phonebook data file in the format described in the SIM-data-formats document and uploads it into the named SIM phonebook, writing only those record indices which appear in the data file - each record from the data file gets written into the SIM with an UPDATE RECORD command, while all other record locations remain untouched. pb-update-imm PBNAME rec phone-number [alpha-tag] This command writes a single phonebook entry directly from the command line, without going through a data file. The specific record index to write into must always be specified (there is no built-in "find first empty record" function), and the entry format for both the phone number and the alpha tag is more relaxed compared to the very strict format required in data files: * The phone number can begin with a '+' character for international format; * The comma-separated TON/NPI byte is optional and will usually be omitted in ordinary usage - this byte will default to 0x91 if the number begins with '+' or to 0x81 otherwise; * Double-quotes around the alpha tag argument are required only if it contains spaces or other problematic characters, and can be omitted otherwise; * If the alpha tag is empty, the last argument can be omitted altogether. pb-update-imm-hex PBNAME rec phone-number alpha-tag-hex This command is like pb-update-imm, but the alpha tag argument (required for this command) is given in hex - intended for creating phonebook entries with UCS-2 alpha tags. pb-erase PBNAME This command fully erases the named phonebook. pb-erase-one PBNAME rec This command erases the specified individual record in the named phonebook. pb-erase-range PBNAME start-rec end-rec This command erases the specified range of records in the named phonebook. The starting record must be identified by number (SIM record numbers are 1-based); the ending record argument may be either a number or the "end" keyword. Last Number Dialed (LND) ======================== Traditional SIMs include a cyclic file that is intended to be updated whenever an outgoing call is dialed - but it is up to individual phone designs whether they actually update this LND cyclic store or not. This SIM LND store has the same record format as phonebooks, carrying only phone numbers and optional alpha tags - there are no fields for date & time, call duration or status as in call answered or not. Because of the limitations of this SIM LND store, most phone designs do not use it, and instead go with their own implementation of call history lists. Because this LND store is a cyclic file, not linear fixed like phonebooks, it does not allow random access writes: it allows random access reads like all regular record-based files, but the only write operation allowed by the SIM interface protocol and the SIM file system architecture is writing a new record that becomes the new #1, shifting all previous records down and losing the oldest one. Because of this write access limitation, we do not provide the same set of operations on LND as for regular phonebooks - but we still provide good tinkering ability. The following commands are available: lnd-dump This command dumps the content of the LND store on the terminal, in the same format as pb-dump for regular phonebooks. If you have had your SIM for a very long time, having used it in different phones with different firmwares, it may be interesting to look at the output of lnd-dump - you may have LND records that were generated ages ago by other phones if your current one does not write into SIM LND. lnd-dump outfile This form of the lnd-dump command produces the same dump format, but saves it in the named file instead of sending it to the terminal. lnd-restore filename This command reads the named phonebook data file (presumably written previously with lnd-dump) and writes it into EF_LND on the SIM. This command works by first constructing a full binary image of the desired EF_LND content, then writing every record in the reverse order from the last index to the first. lnd-write phone-number [alpha-tag] This command writes a new record into the LND cyclic store just like a standard phone would do when making a record of a new outgoing call. The two arguments (one required and one optional) are the same as for pb-update-imm. lnd-erase This command erases the EF_LND cyclic store, making it appear as if no outgoing calls have ever been recorded. It works by writing a blank record (0xFF in every byte) N times, where N is the size of the cyclic store in records. Manipulating stored SMS ======================= The fundamental operating model of all message stores for SMS (whether SIM or phone-based) is that received messages accumulate (and possibly sent ones too, if they are stored in this manner), the limited available memory fills up, and then the user needs to clean out the accumulated messages, preferably also archiving them by transferring to a larger computer for longer-term storage. Given this fundamental operating model, we only need to provide commands for dumping the content of the message store and for cleaning it out - there is no real need to implement commands for writing messages into the store. The extent of special support for the SIM SMS store in fc-simtool is rather minimal because it just so happened that we already have external tools that do a major part of the work. Some phone firmwares, particularly that of the Pirelli DP-L10 phone currently used by the Mother, implement their on-the-phone SMS storage by way of a file in their local flash file system whose binary format just happens to be exactly the same as the binary format of SIM-based EF_SMS if all 176-byte records are simply abutted together in the host-based binary representation. A few release cycles ago we added a new utility named pcm-sms-decode to our FreeCalypso host tools suite; this utility reads a binary file in this "EF_SMS records concat" format and performs the quite involved job of fully decoding all messages into human-readable form. Given that we have this external pcm-sms-decode utility, all we need to do in fc-simtool is save all records of EF_SMS into a single concatenated binary file, and let pcm-sms-decode do the rest. Our dedicated commands for working with the SIM SMS store are as follows: save-sms-bin host-filename This command saves the full content of EF_SMS in the named file in the host file system in binary format, suitable for further decoding with pcm-sms-decode. sms-erase-all This command erases every record entry in EF_SMS. sms-erase-one rec This command erases the specified individual record in EF_SMS. sms-erase-range start-rec end-rec This command erases the specified range of records in EF_SMS. The starting record must be identified by number (SIM record numbers are 1-based); the ending record argument may be either a number or the "end" keyword. Manipulating SMS parameters =========================== SIM cards have an SMS parameter store in the form of record-based file EF_SMSP. Its most essential function is to specify the Service Centre Address for outgoing SMS, but it can also be put to a few other uses: * The primary SMSP record that gives the SC address also typically includes PID and DCS parameters. The only sensible settings that can function as a general-purpose default are PID=0x00 and DCS=0x00, but some SIMs have been seen in the field that set bogus PID and DCS via their SMSP. It appears that most end user phones ignore these settings, and they have no effect when outgoing SMS are submitted to an AT command modem in PDU mode, but these settings do affect our TI-based AT command modem in text mode - if they are bogus on the SIM, they need to be fixed, either with fc-simtool or in the actual AT modem session with AT+CSMP. * The same primary SMSP record can also specify a default validity period in one-byte relative VP format. * Just like the situation with MSISDN, even though only the first record of EF_SMSP is used in practice, most SIM issuers allocate room for a few records. These extra SMSP records are almost always blank, fc-simtool provides the following commands for working with EF_SMSP: smsp-dump This command dumps the full content of EF_SMSP (all records) on the terminal, using a lossless text-based format similar to the one we use for phonebooks. To illustrate our smsp format by way of examples, here is the output of smsp-dump from old T-Mobile USA SIMs that have classic GSM 11.11 SIM functionality: #1: SC=12063130004,0x91 PID=0x00 DCS=0x00 "T-Mobile" #2: "" #3: "" #4: "" Here is the output from an Austrian S-Budget Mobile SIM from circa-2017: #1: SC=4365009000000,0x91 PID=0xFF DCS=0xFF VP=173 "" #2: "" As one can see from these examples, T-Mobile allocated 4 records for their EF_SMSP, whereas S-Budget Mobile allocated only 2 records for theirs. (Sysmocom webshop SIMs sysmoUSIM-SJS1 and sysmoISIM-SJA2 also have 2 records in their EF_SMSP.) Yet only the first record is actually used, and the remaining ones are blank. Note that unlike pb-dump, smsp-dump does not skip blank records: it displays every record (the design rationale is that the total number of EF_SMSP records is expected to be small), and a blank record is simply one that has no parameters present and has an empty alpha tag. The following parameters may be present in each SMSP record, appearing in the smsp-dump output in the same order in which they appear in the SIM binary record: DA= TP-Destination_Address SC= TS-Service_Centre_Address PID= TP-Protocol_Identifier DCS= TP-Data_Coding_Scheme VP= TP-Validity_Period The phone numbers in DA= and SC= parameters are emitted in the same format as in pb-dump, PID= and DCS= are emitted in hexadecimal with a 0x prefix, and VP= is emitted in decimal. The alpha tag is always emitted at the end of the ASCII line, just like in pb-dump. smsp-dump outfile This form of the smsp-dump command produces the same dump of EF_SMSP, but saves it in the named file instead of sending it to the terminal. smsp-restore filename This command reads a file written by smsp-dump and writes it back to the SIM. Both decimal and 0x-prefixed hexadecimal forms are accepted for all 3 of PID=, DCS= and VP= parameters. smsp-set rec params This command writes a single record into SMSP directly from the command line, without going through a data file. The record index to write to must be given, followed by one or more parameters as in DA=, SC=, PID=, DCS= or VP=. DA= and SC= phone numbers can be entered in the same relaxed form as in the pb-update-imm command, and the remaining 3 parameters can be either decimal or 0x-prefixed hexadecimal. This command leaves the alpha tag field blank. smsp-set-tag rec alpha-tag params This command is just like smsp-set, but adds an alpha tag argument. smsp-erase-all This command erases every record entry in EF_SMSP. smsp-erase-one rec This command erases the specified individual record in EF_SMSP. smsp-erase-range start-rec end-rec This command erases the specified range of records in EF_SMSP. The starting record must be identified by number (SIM record numbers are 1-based); the ending record argument may be either a number or the "end" keyword. Identifying MVNO SIMs ===================== Many SIMs, particularly those from MVNOs, are programmed by their issuers to cause phones to display the name of the MVNO or some other party rather than the standard PLMN name decoded from the connected network's MCC-MNC. This "personalization" programming can appear in EF_SPN (old style) or in EF_PNN and EF_OPL (newer style). fc-simtool provides commands to display the content of these SIM files in human-readable form: spn pnn-dump opl-dump These commands take no arguments, and their human-readable output is not explained in detail here. If you need to understand the meaning of various fields in detail, please refer to 3GPP TS 51.011.