SMSD Configuration File

Description

gammu-smsd reads configuration from a config file. It’s location can be specified on command line, otherwise default path /etc/gammu-smsdrc is used.

This file use ini file syntax, see INI file format.

Configuration file of gammu-smsd consists of at least two sections - [gammu] and [smsd]. For SQL Service you can also use [sql] and [tables].

The [gammu] section is configuration of a phone connection and is same as described in Gammu Configuration File with the only exception that LogFile is ignored and common logging for gammu library and SMS daemon is used. However the LogFormat directive still configures how much messages gammu emits.

[smsd]

The [smsd] section configures SMS daemon itself, which are described in following subsections. First general parameters of SMS daemon are listed and then specific parameters for storage backends.

[include_numbers]

List of numbers from which accept messages, see Message filtering.

[exclude_numbers]

List of numbers from which reject messages, see Message filtering.

[include_smsc]

List of SMSC numbers from which accept messages, see Message filtering.

[exclude_smsc]

List of SMSC numbers from which reject messages, see Message filtering.

[sql]

Configure SQL queries used by SQL Service, you usually don’t have to modify them.

[tables]

Configure SQL table names used by SQL Service, you usually don’t have to modify them.

See also

Tables

General parameters of SMS daemon

Service

SMSD service to use, one of following choices:

FILES

Stores messages in files, see Files backend for details.

NULL

Does not store messages at all, see Null Backend for details.

SQL

Stores messages in SQL database, see SQL Service for details, choose database type to use by Driver.

New in version 1.28.93.

MYSQL

Deprecated since version 1.28.93: Use Service = SQL and Driver = native_mysql instead.

Compatibility option for older configuration files, stores messages in MySQL database, see MySQL Backend for details.

PGSQL

Deprecated since version 1.28.93: Use Service = SQL and Driver = native_pgsql instead.

Compatibility option for older configuration files, stores messages in PostgreSQL database, see PostgreSQL Backend for details.

DBI

Deprecated since version 1.28.93: Use Service = SQL and Driver = DBI driver instead.

Compatibility option for older configuration files, stores messages in any database supported by libdbi, see DBI Backend for details.

Note

Availability of backends depends on platform and compile time configuration.

PIN

PIN for SIM card. This is optional, but you should set it if your phone after power on requires PIN.

NetworkCode

Network personalisation password. This is optional, but some phones require it after power on.

PhoneCode

Phone lock password. This is optional, but some phones require it after power on.

LogFile

File where SMSD actions are being logged. You can also use special value syslog which will send all messages to syslog daemon. On Windows another special value eventlog exists, which will send logs to Windows Event Log.

If you run SMSD as a system daemon (or service), it is recommended to use absolute path to log file as startup directory might be different than you expect.

Default is to provide no logging.

Note

For logging to Windows Event Log, it is recommended to install Event Log source by invoking gammu-smsd -e (this is automatically done during installation of Gammu).

LogFacility

Facility to use on logging backends which support it (currently only syslog). One of following chouces:

  • DAEMON (default)

  • USER

  • LOCAL0

  • LOCAL1

  • LOCAL2

  • LOCAL3

  • LOCAL4

  • LOCAL5

  • LOCAL6

  • LOCAL7

New in version 1.30.91.

DebugLevel

Debug level for SMSD. The integer value should be sum of all flags you want to enable.

1

enables basic debugging information

2

enables logging of SQL queries of service backends

4

enables logging of gammu debug information

Generally to get as much debug information as possible, use 255.

Default is 0, what should mean no extra information.

CommTimeout

How many seconds should SMSD wait after there is no message in outbox before scanning it again.

Default is 30.

SendTimeout

Shows how many seconds SMSD should wait for network answer during sending sms. If nothing happen during this time, sms will be resent.

Default is 30.

MaxRetries

How many times will SMSD try to resend message if sending fails. This is tracked per message and currently supported only with SQL backends.

Default is 1.

RetryTimeout

How long to wait before resending failed message (needs to be enabled by MaxRetries).

Is used in update_retries.

Default is 600.

ReceiveFrequency

The number of seconds between testing for received SMSes, when the phone is busy sending SMSes. Normally a test for received SMSes is done every CommTimeout seconds and after each sent SMS.

Default is 15.

StatusFrequency

The number of seconds between refreshing phone status (battery, signal) stored in shared memory and possibly in service backends. Use 0 to disable.

You might want to increase this for higher throughput.

Default is 60.

LoopSleep

The number of seconds how long will SMSD sleep before checking for some activity. Please note that setting this to higher value than 1 will have effects to other time based configurations, because they will be effectively rounded to multiply of this value.

Setting this to 0 disables sleeping. Please note this might cause Gammu to consume quite a lot of CPU power as it will effectively do busy loop.

This sleep is utilized only if the main loop (sending and receiving messages) takes less than defined time. For example if you set LoopSleep to 5 seconds and sending messages take 10 seconds, no sleep will be done in the iteration which is sending messages. Also the sleep time is lowered by the already processed time.

Default is 1.

MultipartTimeout

The number of seconds how long will SMSD wait for all parts of multipart message. If all parts won’t arrive in time, parts will be processed as separate messages.

Default is 600 (10 minutes).

CheckSecurity

Whether to check if phone wants to enter PIN.

Default is 1 (enabled).

HangupCalls

New in version 1.34.0.

Whether to automatically hangup any incoming calls.

Default is 0 (disabled).

CheckBattery

Whether to check phone battery state periodically.

Default is 1 (enabled).

CheckSignal

Whether to check signal level periodically.

Default is 1 (enabled).

CheckNetwork

New in version 1.37.90.

Whether to check network status periodically.

If phone is reported to be not on the network, SMSD tries to power it on.

Default is 1 (enabled).

ResetFrequency

The number of seconds between performing a preventive soft reset in order to minimize the cases of hanging phones e.g. Nokia 5110 will sometimes freeze to a state when only after unmounting the battery the phone will be functional again.

Default is 0 (not used).

HardResetFrequency

New in version 1.28.92.

Warning

For some phones hard reset means deleting all data in it. Use ResetFrequency instead, unless you know what you are doing.

The number of seconds between performing a preventive hard reset in order to minimize the cases of hanging phones.

Default is 0 (not used).

DeliveryReport

Whether delivery reports should be used, one of no, log, sms.

log

one line log entry,

sms

store in inbox as a received SMS

no

no delivery reports

Default is no.

DeliveryReportDelay

Delay in seconds how long is still delivery report considered valid. This depends on brokenness of your network (delivery report should have same timestamp as sent message). Increase this if delivery reports are not paired with sent messages.

Default is 600 (10 minutes).

PhoneID

String with info about phone used for sending/receiving. This can be useful if you want to run several SMS daemons (see Multiple modems).

When you set PhoneID, all messages (including injected ones) will be marked by this string (stored as SenderID in the database) and it allows more SMS daemons to share a single database.

SMSD daemon will in such case send outbox messages only with matching or empty SenderID.

This option has actually no effect with Files backend.

SMSC

New in version 1.36.2.

SMSC number to use for sending messages if not specified in the message (see options of gammu-smsd-inject).

In most cases you don’t need this settings as Gammu tries to read correct SMSC from phone, but sometimes this fails (try gammu getsmsc).

RunOnReceive

Executes a program after receiving message.

This parameter is executed through shell, so you might need to escape some special characters and you can include any number of parameters. Additionally parameters with identifiers of received messages are appended to the command line. The identifiers depend on used service backend, typically it is ID of inserted row for database backends or file name for file based backends.

Gammu SMSD waits for the script to terminate. If you make some time consuming there, it will make SMSD not receive new messages. However to limit breakage from this situation, the waiting time is limited to two minutes. After this time SMSD will continue in normal operation and might execute your script again.

The process has available lot of information about received message in environment, check RunOnReceive Directive for more details.

RunOnFailure

New in version 1.28.93.

Executes a program on failure.

This can be used to proactively react on some failures or to interactively detect failure of sending message.

The program will receive optional parameter, which can currently be either INIT (meaning failure during phone initialization) or message ID, which would indicate error while sending the message.

Note

The environment with message (as is in RunOnReceive) is not passed to the command.

RunOnSent

New in version 1.36.4.

Executes a program after sending message.

The program will receive optional parameter a message ID and environment with message details as described in RunOnReceive Directive.

RunOnIncomingCall

New in version 1.38.5.

Executes a program after cancelling incoming call.

The program will receive a parameter with a phone number of the call. This requires HangupCalls to be enabled.

IncludeNumbersFile

File with list of numbers which are accepted by SMSD. The file contains one number per line, blank lines are ignored. The file is read at startup and is reread only when configuration is being reread. See Message filtering for details.

ExcludeNumbersFile

File with list of numbers which are not accepted by SMSD. The file contains one number per line, blank lines are ignored. The file is read at startup and is reread only when configuration is being reread. See Message filtering for details.

IncludeSMSCFile

File with list of SMSC numbers which are accepted by SMSD. The file contains one number per line, blank lines are ignored. The file is read at startup and is reread only when configuration is being reread. See Message filtering for details.

ExcludeSMSCFile

File with list of SMSC numbers which are not accepted by SMSD. The file contains one number per line, blank lines are ignored. The file is read at startup and is reread only when configuration is being reread. See Message filtering for details.

BackendRetries

How many times will SMSD backend retry operation.

The implementation on different backends is different, for database backends it generally means how many times it will try to reconnect to the server.

Default is 10.

Send

New in version 1.28.91.

Whether to enable sending of messages.

Default is True.

Receive

New in version 1.28.91.

Whether to enable receiving of messages.

Default is True.

Database backends options

All DBI, ODBC, MYSQL and PGSQL backends (see MySQL Backend, ODBC Backend, PostgreSQL Backend, DBI Backend for their documentation) supports same options for configuring connection to a database:

User

User name used for connection to a database.

Password

Password used for connection to a database.

Host

Database server address. It can also contain port or socket path after semicolon, for example localhost:/path/to/socket or 192.168.1.1:8000.

For ODBC this is used as Data source name.

Note

Some database servers differentiate usage of localhost (to use local socket) and 127.0.0.1 (to use locat TCP/IP connection). Please make sure your SMSD settings match the database server ones.

New in version 1.28.92.

PC

Deprecated since version 1.28.92: Please use Host instead.

Synonym for Host, kept for backwards compatibility.

Database

Name of database (or schema) to use and where SMSD can find it’s tables.

Please note that you should create tables in this database before using gammu-smsd. SQL files for creating needed tables are included in documentation for individual database backends: MySQL Backend, ODBC Backend, PostgreSQL Backend, DBI Backend

SkipSMSCNumber

When you send sms from some SMS centers you can have delivery reports from other SMSC number. You can set here number of this SMSC used by you and Gammu will not check it’s number during assigning reports to sent SMS.

Driver

SQL driver to use, Gammu supports several native drivers and generic interface using ODBC and DBI. Availability of the backends depends on compile time options.

Available drivers:

odbc

Connects to the database using ODBC, see ODBC Backend.

native_mysql

Stores messages in MySQL database, see MySQL Backend for details.

native_pgsql

Stores messages in PostgreSQL database, see PostgreSQL Backend for details.

db2, firebird, freetds, ingres, msql, mysql, oracle, pgsql, sqlite, sqlite3

Stores messages using DBI library in given backend. You need to have installed appropriate DBI driver to make it work. See DBI Backend for details.

SQL

SQL dialect to use. This is specially useful with ODBC Backend where SMSD does not know which server it is actually talking to.

Possible values:

  • mysql - MySQL

  • pgsql - PostgreSQL

  • sqlite - SQLite

  • mssql - Microsoft SQL Server

  • sybase - Sybase

  • access - Microsoft Access

  • oracle - Oracle

  • odbc - Generic ODBC

New in version 1.28.93.

See also

You can also completely customize SQL queries used as described in SQL Queries.

DriversPath

Path, where DBI drivers are stored, this usually does not have to be set if you have properly installed drivers.

DBDir

Database directory for some (currently only sqlite) DBI drivers. Set here path where sqlite database files are stored.

Files backend options

The FILES backend accepts following configuration options. See Files backend for more detailed service backend description. Please note that all path should contain trailing path separator (/ on Unix systems):

InboxPath

Where the received SMSes are stored.

Default is current directory.

OutboxPath

Where SMSes to be sent should be placed.

Default is current directory.

SentSMSPath

Where the transmitted SMSes are placed, if same as OutboxPath transmitted messages are deleted.

Default is to delete transmitted messages.

ErrorSMSPath

Where SMSes with error in transmission is placed.

Default is same as SentSMSPath.

InboxFormat

The format in which the SMS will be stored: detail, unicode, standard.

detail

format used for message backup by Gammu Utility, see SMS Backup Format.

unicode

message text stored in unicode (UTF-16)

standard

message text stored in system charset

The standard and unicode settings do not apply for 8-bit messages, which are always written raw as they are received with extension .bin.

Default is unicode.

Note

In detail format, all message parts are stored into single file, for all others each message part is saved separately.

OutboxFormat

The format in which messages created by gammu-smsd-inject will be stored, it accepts same values as InboxFormat.

Default is detail if Gammu is compiled in with backup functions, unicode otherwise.

TransmitFormat

The format for transmitting the SMS: auto, unicode, 7bit.

This option is used only if OutboxFormat is not set to detail. In such case encoding specified in the message is used (you can specify it to gammu-smsd-inject).

Default is auto.

Message filtering

SMSD allows one to process only limited subset of incoming messages. You can define filters for sender number in [include_numbers] and [exclude_numbers] sections or using IncludeNumbersFile and ExcludeNumbersFile directives.

If [include_numbers] section exists, all values (keys are ignored) from it are used as allowed phone numbers and no other message is processed. On the other side, in [exclude_numbers] you can specify numbers which you want to skip.

Lists from both sources are merged together. If there is any number in include list, only include list is used and only messages in this list are being accepted. If include list is empty, exclude list can be used to ignore messages from some numbers. If both lists are empty, all messages are accepted.

Similar filtering rules can be used for SMSC number filtering, they just use different set of configuration options - [include_smsc] and [exclude_smsc] sections or IncludeSMSCFile and ExcludeSMSCFile directives.

Examples

There is more complete example available in Gammu documentation. Please note that for simplicity following examples do not include [gammu] section, you can look into Gammu Configuration File for some examples how it can look like.

Files service

SMSD configuration file for FILES backend could look like:

[smsd]
Service = files
PIN = 1234
LogFile = syslog
InboxPath = /var/spool/sms/inbox/
OutboxPath = /var/spool/sms/outbox/
SentSMSPath = /var/spool/sms/sent/
ErrorSMSPath = /var/spool/sms/error/

MySQL service

If you want to use MYSQL backend, you will need something like this:

[smsd]
Service = sql
Driver = native_mysql
PIN = 1234
LogFile = syslog
User = smsd
Password = smsd
PC = localhost
Database = smsd

DBI service using SQLite

For DBI Backend backend, in this particular case SQLite:

[smsd]
Service = sql
Driver = sqlite3
DBDir = /var/lib/sqlite3
Database = smsd.db

ODBC service using MySQL

For ODBC Backend backend, in this particular case using DSN smsd server:

[smsd]
Service = sql
Driver = odbc
Host = smsd

The DSN definition (in ~/.odbc.ini on UNIX) for using MySQL server would look like:

[smsd]
Description         = MySQL
Driver              = MySQL
Server              = 127.0.0.1
Database            = smsd
Port                =
Socket              =
Option              =
Stmt                =

[smsdsuse]
Driver              = MySQL ODBC 3.51.27r695 Driver
DATABASE            = smsd
SERVER              = 127.0.0.1

Numbers filtering

Process only messages from 123456 number:

[include_numbers]
number1 = 123456

Do not process messages from evil number 666:

[exclude_numbers]
number1 = 666

Debugging

Enabling debugging:

[smsd]
debuglevel = 255
logfile = smsd.log

Multiple modems

You can run any number of SMSD instances and they can even share same backend database. For routing the messages, you need to set different PhoneID for each instance and set SenderID column in outbox table.

Following example shows configuration for two modems, but you can have any number of SMSD instances. The only limitation is performance of your hardware, especially if all modems are connected using USB.

Configuration for first SMSD:

[gammu]
device = /dev/ttyACM0
connection = at

[smsd]
Service = sql
Driver = native_mysql
PIN = 1234
LogFile = syslog
User = smsd
Password = smsd
PC = localhost
Database = smsd
PhoneID = first

Configuration for second SMSD:

[gammu]
device = /dev/ttyACM1
connection = at

[smsd]
Service = sql
Driver = native_mysql
PIN = 1234
LogFile = syslog
User = smsd
Password = smsd
PC = localhost
Database = smsd
PhoneID = second

You can then start two separate instances of SMSD:

gammu-smsd -c /path/to/first-smsdrc
gammu-smsd -c /path/to/second-smsdrc