DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
GAMMURC(5) Gammu GAMMURC(5)
NAME
gammurc - gammu(1) configuration file
SYNOPSIS
On Linux, MacOS X, BSD and other Unix-like systems, the config file is
searched in following order:
1. $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/gammu/config
2. ~/.config/gammu/config
3. ~/.gammurc
4. /etc/gammurc
On Microsoft Windows:
1. $PROFILE\Application Data\gammurc
2. .\gammurc
DESCRIPTION
Gammu requires configuration to be able to properly talk to your phone.
gammu reads configuration from a config file. It's location is
determined on runtime, see above for search paths.
You can use gammu-config or gammu-detect to generate configuration file
or start from Fully documented example.
For hints about configuring your phone, you can check Gammu Phone
Database <http://wammu.eu/phones/> to see what user users experienced.
This file use ini file syntax, see ini.
Configuration file for gammu can contain several sections - [gammu],
[gammu1], [gammuN], ... Each section configures one connection setup
and in default mode gammu tries all of them in numerical order. You can
also specify which configuration section to use by giving it's number
([gammu] has number 0) as a parameter to gammu and it will then use
only this section.
[gammu]
This section is read by default unless you specify other on command
line.
Device connection parameters
Connection
Protocol which will be used to talk to your phone.
For Nokia cables you want to use one of following:
fbus serial FBUS connection
dlr3 DLR-3 and compatible cables
dku2 DKU-2 and compatible cables
dku5 DKU-5 and compatible cables
mbus serial MBUS connection
If you use some non original cable, you might need to append
-nodtr (eg. for ARK3116 based cables) or -nopower, but Gammu
should be able to detect this automatically.
For non-Nokia phones connected using cable you generally want:
at generic AT commands based connection
You can optionally specify speed of the connection, eg. at19200,
but it is not needed for modern USB cables.
For IrDA connections use one of following:
irdaphonet
Phonet connection for Nokia phones.
irdaat AT commands connection for most of phones (this is not
supported on Linux).
irdaobex
OBEX (IrMC or file transfer) connection for most of
phones.
irdagnapbus
GNapplet based connection for Symbian phones, see
gnapplet.
For Bluetooth connection use one of following:
bluephonet
Phonet connection for Nokia phones.
bluefbus
FBUS connection for Nokia phones.
blueat AT commands connection for most of phones.
blueobex
OBEX (IrMC or file transfer) connection for most of
phones.
bluerfgnapbus
GNapplet based connection for Symbian phones, see
gnapplet.
blues60
Connection to Series60 applet in S60 phones, see s60.
New in version 1.29.90.
New in version 1.36.7: Gammu now supports connecting using proxy
command.
You can also proxy the connection using shell command, for
example to different host. This can be done using proxy
connections:
proxyphonet
Phonet connection for Nokia phones.
proxyfbus
FBUS connection for Nokia phones.
proxyat
AT commands connection for most of phones.
proxyobex
OBEX (IrMC or file transfer) connection for most of
phones.
proxygnapbus
GNapplet based connection for Symbian phones, see
gnapplet.
proxys60
Connection to Series60 applet in S60 phones, see s60.
SEE ALSO:
faq-config
Device New in version 1.27.95.
Device node or address of phone. It depends on used connection.
For cables or emulated serial ports, you enter device name (for
example /dev/ttyS0, /dev/ttyACM0, /dev/ircomm0, /dev/rfcomm0 on
Linux, /dev/cuad0 on FreeBSD or COM1: on Windows). The special
exception are DKU-2 and DKU-5 cables on Windows, where the
device is automatically detected from driver information and
this parameters is ignored.
NOTE:
Some USB modems expose several interfaces, in such cases
Gammu works best with "User" one, you can find more
information on
<http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Mobile_Broadband>.
For USB connections (currently only fbususb and dku2 on Linux),
you can specify to which USB device Gammu should connect. You
can either provide vendor/product IDs or device address on USB:
Device = 0x1234:0x5678 # Match device by vendor and product id
Device = 0x1234:-1 # Match device by vendor id
Device = 1.10 # Match device by usb bus and device address
Device = 10 # Match device by usb device address
Device = serial:123456 # Match device by serial string
NOTE:
On Linux systems, you might lack permissions for some device
nodes. You might need to be member of some group (eg.
plugdev or dialout) or or add special udev rules to enable
you access these devices as non-root.
For Nokia phones you can put follofing file (also available
in sources as contrib/udev/69-gammu-acl.rules) as
/etc/udev/rules.d/69-gammu-acl.rules:
#
# udev rule to give users access to USB device to be used by Gammu
#
ACTION!="add|change", GOTO="gammu_acl_rules_end"
KERNEL!="ttyACM[0-9]*", GOTO="gammu_acl_rules_end"
SUBSYSTEM!="tty", GOTO="gammu_acl_rules_end"
# Nokia devices
ATTRS{manufacturer}=="Nokia", TAG+="uaccess"
# Example for Sony Ericsson J108i Cedar
# ATTRS{idVendor}=="0fce", ATTRS{idProduct}=="d14e", TAG+="uaccess"
LABEL="gammu_acl_rules_end"
In case your USB device appears as the serial port in the system
(eg. /dev/ttyACM0 on Linux or COM5: on Windows), just use same
setup as with serial port.
For Bluetooth connection you have to enter Bluetooth address of
your phone (you can list Bluetooth devices in range on Linux
using hcitool scan command). Optionally you can also force Gammu
to use specified channel by including channel number after
slash.
Before using Gammu, your device should be paired with computer
or you should have set up automatic pairing.
For Proxy connections, you need to specify command which should
be executed. It is supposed to pass bidirectional communication
from Gammu to the device. This can happen for example over
network.
For IrDA connections, this parameters is not used at all.
If IrDA does not work on Linux, you might need to bring up the
interface and enable discovery (you need to run these commands
as root):
ip l s dev irda0 up # Enables irda0 device
sysctl net.irda.discovery=1 # Enables device discovery on IrDA
NOTE:
Native IrDA is not supported on Linux, you need to setup
virtual serial port for it (eg. /dev/ircomm0) and use it same
way as cable. This can be usually achieved by loading
modules ircomm-tty and irtty-sir:
modprobe ircomm-tty
modprobe irtty-sir
SEE ALSO:
faq-config
Port Deprecated since version 1.27.95: Please use Device instead.
Alias for Device, kept for backward compatibility.
Model Do not use this parameter unless really needed! The only use
case for this is when Gammu does not know your phone and
misdetects it's features.
The only special case for using model is to force special type
of OBEX connection instead of letting Gammu try the best suited
for selected operation:
obexfs force using of file browsing service (file system
support)
obexirmc
force using of IrMC service (contacts, calendar and notes
support)
obexnone
none service chosen, this has only limited use for
sending file (gammu sendfile command)
mobex m-obex service for Samsung phones
Use_Locking
On Posix systems, you might want to lock serial device when it
is being used using UUCP-style lock files. Enabling this option
(setting to yes) will make Gammu honor these locks and create it
on startup. On most distributions you need additional privileges
to use locking (eg. you need to be member of uucp group).
This option has no meaning on Windows.
Connection options
SynchronizeTime
If you want to set time from computer to phone during starting
connection.
StartInfo
This option allows one to set, that you want (setting yes) to
see message on the phone screen or phone should enable light for
a moment during starting connection. Phone will not beep during
starting connection with this option. This works only with some
Nokia phones.
Debugging options
LogFile
Path to file where information about communication will be
stored.
NOTE:
For most debug levels (excluding errors) the log file is
overwritten on each execution.
LogFormat
Determines what all will be logged to LogFile. Possible values
are:
nothing
no debug level
text transmission dump in text format
textall
all possible info in text format
textalldate
all possible info in text format, with time stamp
errors errors in text format
errorsdate
errors in text format, with time stamp
binary transmission dump in binary format
For debugging use either textalldate or textall, it contains all
needed information to diagnose problems.
Features
Custom features for phone. This can be used as override when
values coded in common/gsmphones.c are bad or missing. Consult
include/gammu-info.h for possible values (all GSM_Feature values
without leading F_ prefix). Please report correct values to
Gammu authors.
Locales and character set options
GammuCoding
Forces using specified codepage (for example 1250 will force
CP-1250 or utf8 for UTF-8). This should not be needed, Gammu
detects it according to your locales.
GammuLoc
Path to directory with localisation files (the directory should
contain LANG/LC_MESSAGES/gammu.mo). If gammu is properly
installed it should find these files automatically.
Other options
DataPath
Additional path where to search for data files. The default path
is configured on build time (and defaults to
/usr/share/data/gammu on Unix systems). Currently it is used
only for searching files to upload to phone using gammu install.
EXAMPLES
There is more complete example available in Gammu documentation, see
gammu.
Connection examples
Gammu configuration for Nokia phone using DLR-3 cable:
[gammu]
device = /dev/ttyACM0
connection = dlr3
Gammu configuration for Sony-Ericsson phone (or any other AT compatible
phone) connected using USB cable:
[gammu]
device = /dev/ttyACM0
connection = at
Gammu configuration for Sony-Ericsson (or any other AT compatible
phone) connected using bluetooth:
[gammu]
device = B0:0B:00:00:FA:CE
connection = blueat
Gammu configuration for phone which needs to manually adjust Bluetooth
channel to use channel 42:
[gammu]
device = B0:0B:00:00:FA:CE/42
connection = blueat
Working with multiple phones
Gammu can be configured for multiple phones (however only one
connection is used at one time, you can choose which one to use with
gammu -s parameter). Configuration for phones on three serial ports
would look like following:
[gammu]
device = /dev/ttyS0
connection = at
[gammmu1]
device = /dev/ttyS1
connection = at
[gammmu2]
device = /dev/ttyS2
connection = at
Connecting to remote phone
New in version 1.36.7.
You can connect using Gammu to phone running on different host. This
can be achieved using proxy connection, which executes command to
forward bi-directional communication with the phone.
[gammu]
device = ssh root@my.router /usr/local/bin/myscript /dev/ttyUSB0
connection = proxyat
Fully documented example
You can find this sample file as docs/config/gammurc in Gammu sources.
; This is a sample ~/.gammurc file.
; In Unix/Linux copy it into your home directory and name it .gammurc
; or into /etc and name it gammurc
; In Win32 copy it into directory with Gammu.exe and name gammurc
; More about parameters later
; Anything behind ; or # is comment.
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
[gammu]
device = com8:
connection = irdaphonet
; Do not use model configuration unless you really need it
;model = 6110
;synchronizetime = yes
;logfile = gammulog
;logformat = textall
;use_locking = yes
;gammuloc = locfile
;startinfo = yes
;gammucoding = utf8
;usephonedb = yes
[gammu1]
device = com8:
;model = 6110
connection = fbusblue
;synchronizetime = yes
;logfile = gammulog
;logformat = textall
;use_locking = yes
;gammuloc = locfile
;startinfo = yes
;gammucoding = utf8
; Step 1. Please find required Connection parameter and look into assigned
; with it device type. With some Connection you must set concrete model
; ================================================================ cables =====
; New Nokia protocol for FBUS/DAU9P
; Connection "fbus", device type serial
; New Nokia protocol for DLR3/DLR3P
; Connection "fbusdlr3"/"dlr3", device type serial
; New Nokia protocol for DKU2 (and phone with USB converter on phone mainboard
; like 6230)
; Connection "dku2phonet"/"dku2", device type dku2 on Windows
; Connection "fbususb" on Linux
; New Nokia protocol for DKU5 (and phone without USB converter on phone
; mainboard like 5100)
; Connection "dku5fbus"/"dku5", device type dku5
; New Nokia protocol for PL2303 USB cable (and phone without USB converter
; on phone mainboard like 5100)
; Connection "fbuspl2303", device type usb
; Old Nokia protocol for MBUS/DAU9P
; Connection "mbus", device type serial
; Variants:
; You can modify a bit behaviour of connection using additional flags
; specified just after connection name like connection-variant.
; If you're using ARK3116 cable (or any other which does not like dtr
; handling), you might need -nodtr variant of connection, eg. dlr3-nodtr.
; If cable you use is not powered over DTR/RTS, try using -nopower variant of
; connection, eg. fbus-nopower.
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; AT commands for DLR3, DKU5 or other AT compatible cable (8 bits, None
; parity, no flow control, 1 stop bit). Used with Nokia, Alcatel, Siemens, etc.
; Connection "at19200"/"at115200"/.., device type serial
; AT commands for DKU2 cable
; Connection "dku2at", device type dku2
; ============================================================== infrared =====
; Nokia protocol for infrared with Nokia 6110/6130/6150
; Connection "fbusirda"/"infrared", device type serial
; Nokia protocol for infrared with other Nokia models
; Connection "irdaphonet"/"irda", device type irda
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; AT commands for infrared. Used with Nokia, Alcatel, Siemens, etc.
; Connection "irdaat", device type irda
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; OBEX for infrared
; Connection "irdaobex", device type irda.
; ============================================================= Bluetooth =====
; Nokia protocol with serial device set in BT stack (WidComm, other) from
; adequate service and Nokia 6210
; Connection "fbusblue", device type serial
; Nokia protocol with serial device set in BT stack (WidComm, other) from
; adequate service and other Nokia models
; Connection "phonetblue", device type serial
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Nokia protocol for Bluetooth stack with Nokia 6210
; Connection "bluerffbus", device type BT
; Nokia protocol for Bluetooth stack with DCT4 Nokia models, which don't inform
; about services correctly (6310, 6310i with firmware lower than 5.50, 8910,..)
; Connection "bluerfphonet", device type BT
; Nokia protocol for Bluetooth stack with other DCT4 Nokia models
; Connection "bluephonet", device type BT
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; AT commands for Bluetooth stack and 6210 / DCT4 Nokia models, which don't
; inform about BT services correctly (6310, 6310i with firmware lower
; than 5.50, 8910,..)
; Connection "bluerfat", device type BT
; AT commands for Bluetooth stack with other phones (Siemens, other Nokia,etc.)
; Connection "blueat", device type BT
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; OBEX for Bluetooth stack with DCT4 Nokia models, which don't inform about
; BT services correctly (6310, 6310i with firmware lower than 5.50, 8910,...)
; Connection "bluerfobex", device type BT
; OBEX for Bluetooth stack with other phones (Siemens, other Nokia, etc.)
; Connection "blueobex", device type BT.
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Connection "bluerfgnapbus", device type BT, model "gnap"
; Connection "irdagnapbus", device type irda, model "gnap"
; Step2. According to device type from Step1 and used OS set Port parameter
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Port type | "Port" parameter in Windows/DOS | "Port" parameter in Linux/Unix
; ----------|---------------------------------|--------------------------------
; serial | "com*:" | "/dev/ttyS*"
; | (example "com1:") | (example "/dev/ttyS1")
; | | or "/dev/tts/**" (with DevFS)
; | | virtual serial ports like
; | | "/dev/ircomm*" or "/dev/rfcomm*"
; ----------|---------------------------------|--------------------------------
; irda | ignored (can be empty) | ignored (can be empty)
; ----------|---------------------------------|--------------------------------
; BT | Bluetooth device address (example "00:11:22:33:44:55").
; | Optionally you can also include channel after slash
; | (example "00:11:22:33:44:55/12"). Can be also empty.
; ----------|---------------------------------|--------------------------------
; dku2 | ignored (can be empty) | /dev/ttyUSB* or /dev/ttyACM*
; ----------|---------------------------------|--------------------------------
; dku5 | ignored (can be empty) | connection with it not possible
; ----------|---------------------------------|--------------------------------
; usb | connection with it not possible | "/dev/ttyUSB*"
; Step3. Set other config parameters
; -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
; Parameter name | Description
; ----------------|------------------------------------------------------------
; Model | Should not be used unless you have a good reason to do so.
; | If Gammu doesn't recognize your phone model, put it here.
; | Example values: "6110", "6150", "6210", "8210"
; SynchronizeTime | if you want to set time from computer to phone during
; | starting connection. Do not rather use this option when
; | when to reset phone during connection (in some phones need
; | to set time again after restart)
; GammuLoc | name of localisation file
; StartInfo | this option allows one to set, that you want (setting "yes")
; | to see message on the phone screen or phone should enable
; | light for a moment during starting connection. Phone
; | WON'T beep during starting connection with this option.
; GammuCoding | forces using specified codepage (in win32 - for example
; | "1250" will force CP1250) or UTF8 (in Linux - "utf8")
; ----------------|------------------------------------------------------------
; Logfile | Use, when want to have logfile from communication.
; Logformat | What debug info and format should be used:
; | "nothing" - no debug level (default)
; | "text" - transmission dump in text format
; | "textall" - all possible info in text format
; | "errors" - errors in text format
; | "binary" - transmission dump in binary format
; ----------------|------------------------------------------------------------
; Features | Custom features for phone. This can be used as override
; | when values coded in common/gsmphones.c are bad or
; | missing. Consult include/gammu-info.h for possible values
; | (all Feature values without leading F_ prefix).
; | Please report correct values to Gammu authors.
; ----------------|------------------------------------------------------------
; Use_Locking | under Unix/Linux use "yes", if want to lock used device
; | to prevent using it by other applications. In win32 ignored
; vim: et ts=4 sw=4 sts=4 tw=78 spell spelllang=en_us
AUTHOR
Michal Cihar <michal@cihar.com>
COPYRIGHT
2009-2015, Michal Cihar <michal@cihar.com>
1.36.8 December 8, 2015 GAMMURC(5)