forked from rapidsms/pygsm
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
README
124 lines (123 loc) · 4.75 KB
/
README
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
Help on class GsmModem in module pygsm.gsmmodem:
class GsmModem(__builtin__.object)
|
| pyGSM is a Python module which uses pySerial to provide a nifty
| interface to send and receive SMS via a GSM Modem. It was ported
| from RubyGSM, and provides (almost) all of the same features. It's
| easy to get started:
|
| # create a GsmModem object:
| >>> import pygsm
| >>> modem = pygsm.GsmModem(port="/dev/ttyUSB0")
|
| # harass Evan over SMS:
| # (try to do this before 11AM)
| >>> modem.send_sms("+13364130840", "Hey, wake up!")
|
| # check for incoming SMS:
| >>> print modem.next_message()
| <pygsm.IncomingMessage from +13364130840: "Leave me alone!">
|
|
| There are various ways of polling for incoming messages -- a choice
| which has been deliberately left to the application author (unlike
| RubyGSM). Execute `python -m pygsm.gsmmodem` to run this example:
|
| # connect to the modem
| modem = pygsm.GsmModem(port=sys.argv[1])
|
| # check for new messages every two
| # seconds for the rest of forever
| while True:
| msg = modem.next_message()
|
| # we got a message! respond with
| # something useless, as an example
| if msg is not None:
| msg.respond("Thanks for those %d characters!" %
| len(msg.text))
|
| # no messages? wait a couple
| # of seconds and try again
| else: time.sleep(2)
|
|
| pyGSM is distributed via GitHub:
| http://github.com/adammck/pygsm
|
| Bugs reports (especially for
| unsupported devices) are welcome:
| http://github.com/adammck/pygsm/issues
|
|
|
|
| Methods defined here:
|
| __init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
| Creates, connects to, and boots a GSM Modem. All of the arguments
| are optional (although "port=" should almost always be provided),
| and passed along to serial.Serial.__init__ verbatim. For all of
| the possible configration options, see:
|
| http://pyserial.wiki.sourceforge.net/pySerial#tocpySerial10
|
| boot(self, reboot=False)
| Initializes the modem. Must be called after init and connect,
| but before doing anything that expects the modem to be ready.
|
| command(self, cmd, read_term=None, read_timeout=None, write_term='\r')
| Issue a single AT command to the modem, and return the sanitized
| response. Sanitization removes status notifications, command echo,
| and incoming messages, (hopefully) leaving only the actual response
| from the command.
|
| connect(self, reconnect=False)
| Creates the connection to the modem via pySerial, optionally
| killing and re-creating any existing connection.
|
| disconnect(self)
| Disconnects from the modem.
|
| hardware(self)
| Returns a dict of containing information about the physical
| modem. The contents of each value are entirely manufacturer
| dependant, and vary wildly between devices.
|
| next_message(self, fetch=True)
| Returns the next waiting IncomingMessage object, or None if
| the queue is empty. The optional _fetch_ parameter controls
| whether the modem is polled before checking, which can be
| disabled in case you're polling in a separate thread.
|
| ping(self)
| Sends the "AT" command to the device, and returns true
| if it is acknowledged. Since incoming notifications and
| messages are intercepted automatically, this is a good
| way to poll for new messages without using a worker
| thread like RubyGSM.
|
| query(self, cmd)
| Issues a single AT command to the modem, and returns the relevant
| part of the response. This only works for commands that return a
| single line followed by "OK", but conveniently, this covers almost
| all AT commands that I've ever needed to use.
|
| For all other commands, returns None.
|
| send_sms(self, recipient, text)
| Sends an SMS to _recipient_ containing _text_. Some networks
| will automatically chunk long messages into multiple parts,
| and reassembled them upon delivery, but some will silently
| drop them. At the moment, pyGSM does nothing to avoid this,
| so try to keep _text_ under 160 characters.
|
| signal_strength(self)
| Returns an integer between 1 and 99, representing the current
| signal strength of the GSM network, False if we don't know, or
| None if the modem can't report it.
|
| wait_for_network(self)
| Blocks until the signal strength indicates that the
| device is active on the GSM network. It's a good idea
| to call this before trying to send or receive anything.