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doc/Sniffing-hw-setup: mv-sniffer is here
author Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org>
date Wed, 04 Oct 2023 05:55:09 +0000
parents 510bef2b2000
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Q: What is the principal idea behind SIMtrace, as distinct from the specific
implementation realized by "standard" Osmocom SIMtrace?

A: The two principal objectives of SIMtrace are:

1) Passive sniffing of communication between a phone-type device and a SIM,
   ideally as transparent and non-invasive as possible.

2) Card emulation: the SIMtrace apparatus presents itself to the phone (or
   modem or other phone-type device) as a SIM, either emulating the entire
   SIM CardOS functionality in software or communicating with a real SIM
   located somewhere remotely, across the Internet.

Q: What are the shortcomings of the existing Osmocom SIMtrace implementation of
   the above goals?

A: In the opinion of Mother Mychaela of FreeCalypso, the electrical aspects of
   Osmocom SIMtrace implementation are its biggest shortcoming.  The following
   problems are most acute currently:

* Current SIMtrace v2 hardware is not 5V-tolerant: connecting this apparatus to
  an old phone that puts out 5V (class A) on its SIM socket can damage the
  hardware, as class A SIM voltages exceed the absolute maximum rating spec of
  the AT91SAM3S4B microcontroller on the SIMtrace v2 board, which is connected
  directly to the SIM bus.

* One option would be to revive the previous hardware generation as in SIMtrace
  v1, replacing the AT91SAM3S with AT91SAM7S.  However, all firmware maintained
  by Osmocom is written for SAM3S only, thus a backport to SAM7S would involve
  significant work.  Given that the resulting solution would still be far from
  my idea of perfection, I find it difficult to justify investing in that
  software effort - instead I would rather work on a more philosophically-proper
  solution.

* AT91SAMx-based SIMtrace, both v1 and v2, works (most of the time, but not 100%
  reliably) with 1.8V phone-SIM combination (a phone that prefers class C and a
  SIM that supports it) only by accident.  The Vih spec (the minimum required
  voltage on a signal line for it to register reliably as a 1) is 2.0 V for
  AT91SAM7S or 2.31 V (0.7 * Vddio, Vddio = 3.3 V) for AT91SAM3S, but the actual
  voltage on SIM interface lines in class C operation will never rise above
  1.8 V.  The electrical interface on this hw operates severely out of spec,
  and I find it rather miraculous that it works at all.  Not surprisingly,
  reports are starting to trickle in with user experiences of it actually NOT
  working sometimes.

* Even if the SIM interface is restricted (by the phone, by the SIM, or by
  SIMtrace MITM function tampering with ATR or file characteristics bytes) to
  operating in class B (3.0 V nominal) only, the existing AT91SAMx SIMtrace
  boards are still electrically unclean.  Looking at the schematics, one can see
  that both CLK and I/O lines are pulled up (with resistors) to the SIMtrace
  board's 3.3V rail, which is a higher voltage than what the phone will put out
  (3.0 V or 1.8 V), and in the case of SIMtrace v1 with a 5V phone, that pull-up
  will turn into a pull-midway-down instead.

* My philosophy is that the tracing apparatus should be making only a high-
  impedance connection to the SIM bus and nothing more, while the SIM bus itself
  is galvanically connected from the phone to the physical SIM without passing
  through any switches or other potential Heisenbug-inducing artifacts.

My first thought was to gently modify the existing AT91SAMx-based SIMtrace
design for electrically clean multivolt operation:

* Replace the electrical switches for SIM VCC (FPF2109) and SIM RST/CLK/IO
  (CB3Q3244) with either a relay (my initial thought, but way too power-hungry)
  or a manually operated 5PDT slide switch;

* Insert a Nexperia 74LVC4T3144 dual-supply buffer between the SIM bus and the
  MCU, providing a sniffing path that not only supports all 3 voltage classes,
  but is electrically clean, making only a high-impedance connection to the SIM
  bus as I desire;

* Connect a 74LVC1G07 open drain driver (fed with TxD from the MCU) to the SIM
  bus I/O line, providing a signal path for card emulation mode.  (In trace mode
  the firmware would be responsible for never turning on this OD driver, keeping
  the tracing apparatus High-Z.)

However, as I was reading AT91SAMx datasheets more carefully in preparation for
embarking on a project to turn the above idea into reality, I saw a big problem:
when the USART is put into ISO 7816-3 mode, it uses the chip's TxD pin (switched
to open drain operation) for both Rx and Tx, and there is no option to keep
separate RxD and TxD pins with an external receiving buffer and an external OD
driver.

It would probably be possible to build an all-voltage SIM interface with
AT91SAMx, perhaps by using one of those bidirectional level shifter ICs that
somehow automagically handle driving direction reversals.  But I personally am
not too inclined to trust those automagical bidirectional translators, they
just don't align with my design philosophy - I would much much rather have
unidirectional buffers, one for sniffing and another for OD-driving the I/O
line in card emulation mode.  Seeing that AT91SAMx is incompatible with such
electrical design, I decided to screw AT91SAMx and go for a radically different
approach.