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view doc/ADM-PIN-numbering @ 67:1b905e730abd
GSM7 encoding: accept \E for Euro currency symbol
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
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date | Wed, 24 Mar 2021 23:30:14 +0000 |
parents | c9c2a8d954ba |
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ADM access conditions ===================== The response to SELECT of any EF in the classic GSM 11.11 SIM protocol carries 3 bytes that indicate access conditions for the selected file - or more precisely, 5 nibbles that indicate access conditions plus one reserved nibble. Each access condition nibble has the following encoding per standard specs (GSM TS 11.11 and 3GPP TS 51.011): Code Meaning --------------- 0 ALW 1 CHV1 2 CHV2 3 RFU 4-14 ADM 15 NEV Access condition codes 4 through 14 (0x4 through 0xE) are defined merely as ADM by the standard specs, without further distinction. However, those of us who work with SIM cards on a tinkering or reverse engineering level and thus need to fully decode SIM SELECT responses for intelligent analysis need to somehow distinguish between these 11 possible ADM access levels, thus we had to make up some scheme of our own for naming different ADMn access levels. Unfortunately it just so happened that FC SIM tools and Grcard have come up with two different ADMn naming conventions. I (Mother Mychaela) feel that it is too late now to change our FC SIM tools ADMn naming convention, and of course it is not our place to tell Grcard company to change theirs. Therefore, the only remaining solution is to clearly document both naming conventions and just live with there being two different ones. In the FC SIM tools convention, the 11 possible ADM access levels for EFs are named ADM4 through ADM14 - the 'n' in ADMn directly matches the nibble value carried in the SIM protocol. This convention is used by fc-simtool select and readef commands when they display the access conditions returned by the SIM. The convention used by Grcard names these 11 possible ADM access levels ADM1 through ADM11 instead. As a result of this number shift, what Grcard call ADM1 is ADM4 to us, what Grcard call ADM2 is ADM5 to us, and so forth. ADM key IDs in VERIFY CHV commands ================================== Standard specs are silent on the question of exactly how administrative entities authenticate themselves to the card to gain various ADM access levels, but most card vendors implement an extended form of the standard VERIFY CHV command in which the key ID in P2 is not 1 or 2 (standard CHV1 and CHV2), but some other code identifying ADM keys and corresponding access levels. There is no requirement that P2 key IDs in the extended VERIFY CHV command used for ADM authentication have to correspond to the codes used to denote EF access conditions. However, on the traditional SIM (not UICC/USIM/ISIM) cards made by Grcard, these two separate places in the binary protocol do use the same codes: for example, if a given EF has an access condition indicated as code 5 in the protocol (called ADM5 by us or ADM2 by Grcard), then the corresponding ADM authentication has to be done with a VERIFY CHV command with P2=05. ADM PIN numbers on Grcard SIM cards =================================== We are aware of two different card models from Grcard that are specifically GSM SIM, rather than UICC/USIM/ISIM. (The latter kind also exist of course, but we have no interest in them.) The first such model is what we call GrcardSIM1 (previously sold by Sysmocom as sysmoSIM-GR1), and the other model is what we call GrcardSIM2 - previously sold by Sysmocom as sysmoSIM-GR2, and now being reintroduced as FreeCalypso Community SIM model FCSIM1. GrcardSIM1 cards are currently understood very poorly because they are extremely difficult to obtain in the present time (2021). However, they seem to have two different ADM access levels which Grcard officially call ADM1 and ADM2. In our FC SIM tools naming convention these ADM access levels become ADM4 and ADM5, respectively. GrcardSIM2 cards are understood much better because unlike GrcardSIM1, they are readily available from Grcard in the present time. They have two different ADM access levels that are fully explained in the GrcardSIM2-security-model article, and these two ADM levels are known by different names: * Osmocom wiki page for GrcardSIM2 calls them ADM and SUPER ADM; * For our FCSIM1 version of this card, we've named them ADM5 and ADM11, going by the numbers that appear in the actual binary protocol; * Looking at Grcard's own documentation (see doc/vendor/grcard2-person-script), one can see that Grcard engineers refer to them as ADM2 and ADM8, following the numbering shift explained earlier in this article. Sysmocom USIM/ISIM cards ======================== All UICC/USIM/ISIM cards we know of (made by Sysmocom and others) have just one administrative PIN which they call ADM1, and in the UICC protocol this ADM1 PIN is entered with a VERIFY PIN command with P2=0x0A. If a UICC-native card also allows ADM1 authentication in a GSM 11.11 SIM protocol session, then the corresponding extended VERIFY CHV command will also use P2=0x0A. Because these cards implement the classic GSM 11.11 SIM protocol only as a backward compatibility mode, rather than native, there is no universal agreement regarding ADM access level codes returned in SELECT responses for EFs in the classic SIM protocol: sysmoUSIM-SJS1 cards return ADM5, whereas sysmoISIM-SJA2 cards return ADM10 - both numbers are per FC SIM tools numbering convention of ADM4 through ADM14.