FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-tools
comparison doc/SIM-manipulation @ 798:ccaa1319740c
doc/SIM-manipulation article written
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
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date | Mon, 22 Mar 2021 00:24:34 +0000 |
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1 Using fc-simint and fc-simtool to manipulate SIM cards inside Calypso devices | |
2 ============================================================================= | |
3 | |
4 Starting with fc-host-tools-r15, our FreeCalypso host tools package includes a | |
5 new utility called fc-simint that works together with fc-simtool and other SIM | |
6 card manipulation tools maintained in the separate FC SIM tools package. | |
7 | |
8 fc-simint is not a standalone program - instead it is a front end to the | |
9 hardware-agnostic fc-simtool main program. Therefore, fc-simint cannot be used | |
10 unless you install FC SIM tools (fc-simtool and its accessories) on the same | |
11 host machine where you are going to run fc-simint. As of this writing, our FC | |
12 SIM tools package has not yet reached the stage of first tarball release, hence | |
13 you will need to get it from the Hg repository: | |
14 | |
15 https://www.freecalypso.org/hg/fc-sim-tools/ | |
16 | |
17 FC SIM tools can be used by themselves (without FC host tools) if the objective | |
18 is to operate on a SIM card using a dedicated smart card reader/programmer | |
19 device. However, if the SIM card to be operated on sits inside a Calypso phone | |
20 or development board and you would like to poke at it without physically moving | |
21 it back and forth between that Calypso device and another card reader, then | |
22 fc-simint from the present package and fc-simtool from FC SIM tools work | |
23 together to accomplish this feat. | |
24 | |
25 Once you have both FC host tools and FC SIM tools fully and properly installed, | |
26 you are ready to run fc-simint. fc-simint works in exactly the same manner as | |
27 fc-loadtool (operates on the Calypso device, in this case the SIM interface | |
28 rather than the flash, while the regular firmware is shut down), and it needs | |
29 to be invoked in exactly the same way: simply change fc-loadtool to fc-simint. | |
30 Some examples: | |
31 | |
32 SIM card in a Mot C139/140 phone: fc-simint -h compal -c 1004 /dev/ttyUSBx | |
33 SIM card in a Pirelli DP-L10 phone: fc-simint -h pirelli /dev/ttyUSBx | |
34 SIM card in a FreeCalypso board: fc-simint -h fcfam /dev/ttyUSBx | |
35 | |
36 If your USB-serial chip and the associated Linux kernel driver support | |
37 non-standard high baud rates, you can add a -B812500 option to the above command | |
38 lines to speed up the UART communication between fc-simint/fc-simtool on your | |
39 host machine and simagent on the Calypso. This speed-up option should always be | |
40 safe with Pirelli DP-L10 and with FreeCalypso hardware (official FT2232x adapter | |
41 boards), but the headset jack serial cables used with Mot C1xx phones are more | |
42 iffy. | |
43 | |
44 The phone's regular firmware needs to be shut down, and you need to execute the | |
45 Calypso device's boot path. (For very advanced users, target boot control | |
46 options work exactly the same way as in fc-loadtool.) fc-simint will feed | |
47 simagent.srec to the Calypso boot ROM, simagent will run on the Calypso device, | |
48 and then fc-simint will command simagent to bring up the SIM interface. | |
49 fc-simint will retrieve the SIM card's ATR from simagent, it will turn on speed | |
50 enhancement if the SIM supports it, and then all further control is passed to | |
51 fc-simtool. | |
52 | |
53 Once the control is passed to fc-simtool, you will see a simtool> prompt - | |
54 please refer to fc-simtool documentation in the FC SIM tools package for the | |
55 available commands such as manipulating SIM PINs and phonebooks. Once you are | |
56 done poking at the SIM card, type "exit" at the simtool> prompt - when operating | |
57 in Calypso target mode, fc-simtool will issue a poweroff command to simagent | |
58 just like fc-loadtool, causing most Calypso devices to power off cleanly, or | |
59 causing the Pirelli DP-L10 phone to boot back into its regular firmware. | |
60 | |
61 Using fc-simtool batch mode via fc-simint | |
62 ========================================= | |
63 | |
64 If your fc-simint invokation line has any additional arguments after the | |
65 /dev/ttyXXX Calypso target pathname, these arguments are passed to fc-simtool, | |
66 causing it to operate in its batch mode instead of the default interactive | |
67 shell. However, given the logistics of operating on a Calypso device with its | |
68 regular firmware shut down, this batch mode of operation is expected to be | |
69 useful only in very unusual scenarios. | |
70 | |
71 Using fc-uicc-tool | |
72 ================== | |
73 | |
74 There are two main tools in the FC SIM tools package: fc-simtool speaks the | |
75 classic GSM 11.11 SIM protocol to the card, whereas fc-uicc-tool speaks the | |
76 "enemy" UICC protocol. All currently existing Calypso phone and modem firmwares | |
77 (both our own FreeCalypso and historical proprietary ones) speak only the | |
78 classic GSM 11.11 SIM protocol, hence if you are using a given SIM in a Calypso | |
79 phone or modem board, the expectation is that the card needs to support the | |
80 classic GSM SIM application. For this reason, fc-simtool is the tool of primary | |
81 interest in this mode of usage, and it is the tool which fc-simint invokes by | |
82 default. In contrast, fc-uicc-tool is meant to be used primarily in lab | |
83 exploration settings, with the card under investigation inserted into a | |
84 dedicated smart card reader/programmer, not involving Calypso GSM devices or | |
85 fc-simint. | |
86 | |
87 However, if you have a special contrived use case where you would like to run | |
88 fc-uicc-tool on a SIM card that sits in a Calypso phone or other GSM device, you | |
89 can do so by adding a -T uicc option to your fc-simint invokation line. This | |
90 option will make fc-simint pass the control to fc-uicc-tool instead of | |
91 fc-simtool. | |
92 | |
93 Other fc-simint options | |
94 ======================= | |
95 | |
96 fc-simint supports all command line options documented in the Loadtools-usage | |
97 article that are relevant to its operation. There are just two more options | |
98 that haven't been documented already: | |
99 | |
100 -n | |
101 | |
102 This option suppresses SIM speed enhancement. By default fc-simint | |
103 looks at the ATR TA1 byte to see if the SIM supports F=512 D=8 speed | |
104 enhancement (the only speed enhancement mode endorsed by the original | |
105 GSM SIM specs and supported by Calypso hardware), and requests this | |
106 speed enhancement mode if it is supported. -n option suppresses the | |
107 latter action, forcing the default slow speed mode (F=372 D=1) | |
108 regardless of ATR-indicated SIM capabilities. | |
109 | |
110 -v volt | |
111 | |
112 The volt argument needs to be "1.8" or "3.0" ("3" is also accepted as an | |
113 alias for 3.0), selecting the voltage mode in which the SIM should be | |
114 powered up. 3.0 V mode (not 3.3 V!) is class B per the specs, 1.8 V | |
115 mode is class C. Class A is 5.0 V, but the Iota ABB chip in our Calypso | |
116 target devices (the chip responsible for SIM voltage supply and level | |
117 shifting) is new enough to not support that original class any more. | |
118 In the absence of a -v option, fc-simint currently uses 3.0 V mode by | |
119 default. |