Unfortunately we have mixed up the concept of TPDUs and APDUs in earlier versions of pySim-shell. This lead to problems with detecteding the APDU case properly (see also ISO/IEC 7816-3) and also prevented us from adding support for T=1. This problem has been fixed long time ago and all APDUs sent from the pySim-shell code should be well formed and valid according to ISO/IEC 7816-3. To ensure that we continue to format APDUs correctly as APDUs (and not TPDUs) we have added a mechanism to the LinkBase class that would either raise an exception or print a warning if someone mistakenly tries to send an APDU that is really a TPDU. Whether a warning is printed or an exception is raised is controlled via the apdu_strict member in the LinkBase class, which is false (print warning only) by default. The reason why we have implemneted the mechanism this way was because we wanted to ensure that existing APDU scripts (pySim-shell apdu command) keep working, even though when those scripts uses APDUs which are formally invalid. Sending a TPDU instead of an APDU via a T=0 link will still work in almost all cases. This is also the reason why this problem slipped through unnoticed for long time. However, there may still be subtile problems araising from this practice. The root of the problem is that it is impossible to distinguish between APDU case 3 and 4 when a TPDU instead of an APDU is sent. However in order to handle a case 4 APDU correctly we must be able to distinguish the APDU case correctly to handle the case correctly. ETSI TS 102 221, section 7.3.1.1.4, clause 4 is very clear about the fact that not (only) the status word (e.g. 61xx) but the APDU case is what matters. To complete the logic in LinkBaseTpdu and to maintain compatibility (older APDU scripts), we must still be able to switch between the 'apdu_strict' mode and the non-strict mode. However, since pySim-shell, pySim-prog and pySim-read internally use proper APDUs, we may enable the 'apdu_strict' mode by default. At the same time we will limit the effect of pySim-shell's apdu_strict setable to the apdu command only. By doing so, the bahviour of the apdu command is not altered. Users will still have to enable the 'strict' mode explicitly. At the same time all the internal functionality of pySim-shell will always use the 'strict' mode. Related: OS#6970 Change-Id: I9a531a825def318b28bf58291d811cf119003fab
pySim - Tools for reading, decoding, browsing SIM/USIM/ISIM/HPSIM/eUICC Cards
This repository contains a number of Python programs related to working with subscriber identity modules of cellular networks, including but not limited to SIM, UICC, USIM, ISIM, HPSIMs and eUICCs.
pySim-shell.pycan be used to interactively explore, read and decode contents of any of the supported card models / card applications. Furthermore, if you have the credentials to your card (ADM PIN), you can also write to the card, i.e. edit its contents.pySim-read.pyandpySim-prog.pyare legacy tools for batch programming some very common parameters to an entire batch of programmable cardspySim-trace.pyis a tool to do an in-depth decode of SIM card protocol traces such as those obtained by Osmocom SIMtrace2 or osmo-qcdiag.osmo-smdpp.pyis a proof-of-concept GSMA SGP.22 Consumer eSIM SM-DP+ for lab/research- there are more related tools, particularly in the
contribdirectory.
Note that the access control configuration of normal production cards issue by operators will restrict significantly which files a normal user can read, and particularly write to.
The full functionality of pySim hence can only be used with on so-called programmable SIM/USIM/ISIM/HPSIM cards, such as the various sysmocom programmable card products.
Such SIM/USIM/ISIM/HPSIM 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 configure your own SIM/USIM/ISIM/HPSIM cards for that network.
Homepage
Please visit the official homepage for usage instructions, manual and examples.
Documentation
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.
pySim-shell vs. legacy tools
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.py. 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.
Git Repository
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.
Installation
Please install the following dependencies:
- bidict
- cmd2 >= 1.5.0
- colorlog
- construct >= 2.9.51
- pyosmocom
- jsonpath-ng
- packaging
- pycryptodomex
- pyscard
- pyserial
- pytlv
- pyyaml >= 5.1
- smpp.pdu (from
github.com/hologram-io/smpp.pdu) - termcolor
Example for Debian:
sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends \
pcscd libpcsclite-dev \
python3 \
python3-setuptools \
python3-pycryptodome \
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.
In addition to the dependencies above pySim-trace.py requires tshark and the python package pyshark to be installed. It is known that the tshark package
in Debian versions before 11 may not work with pyshark.
Archlinux Package
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
Forum
We welcome any pySim related discussions in the SIM Card Technology section of the osmocom discourse (web based Forum).
Mailing List
There is no separate mailing list for this project. However, discussions related to pySim are happening on the simtrace simtrace@lists.osmocom.org mailing list, please see https://lists.osmocom.org/mailman/listinfo/simtrace for subscription options and the list archive.
Please observe the Osmocom Mailing List Rules when posting.
Issue Tracker
We use the issue tracker of the pysim project on osmocom.org for tracking the state of bug reports and feature requests. Feel free to submit any issues you may find, or help us out by resolving existing issues.
Contributing
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