The Problem
I'm setting up a script in python to communicate with my USB GSM Modem through AT commands.
So to test the communication is working correctly I first try to send a simple AT
expecting to receive an OK
, but instead with every read
request I still receive only empty strings.
I'm following the AT standard as explained here: AT Commands
So far
Working on Linux Mint 18.
I found more information about my GSM with mmcli.
Launching mmcli -L
result in:
$ mmcli -L
/org/freedesktop/ModemManager1/Modem/0 [D-Link,Inc ] D-Link DWM-157
and then the informations:
$ mmcli -m /org/freedesktop/ModemManager1/Modem/0
--------------------------
General | dbus path: /org/freedesktop/ModemManager1/Modem/0
| device id: 741cce5b5eb40d9ac1c9a1dc0dfa2356f0abe3e7
--------------------------
Hardware | manufacturer: D-Link,Inc
| model: D-Link DWM-157
| revision: MOLY.WR8.W1231.DC.WG.MP.V3
| h/w revision: MTK2
| supported: gsm-umts
| current: gsm-umts
| equipment id: 355620059754511
--------------------------
System | device: /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.7/usb1/1-5
| drivers: cdc_mbim, option1
| plugin: Generic
| primary port: cdc-wdm2
| ports: ttyUSB0 (at), wwp0s29f7u5 (net), ttyUSB1 (at),
| cdc-wdm2 (mbim)
--------------------------
Numbers | own: 393515383117
--------------------------
Status | unlock retries: unknown (0)
| state: registered
| power state: on
| access tech: hsdpa, hsupa
| signal quality: 0% (cached)
--------------------------
Modes | supported: allowed: 2g, 3g; preferred: none
| current: allowed: 2g, 3g; preferred: none
--------------------------
IP | supported: ipv4, ipv6, ipv4v6
--------------------------
3GPP | imei: 355620059754511
| enabled locks: net-pers, net-sub-pers, provider-pers, corp-pers
| operator id: 22250
| operator name: 22250
| registration: home
--------------------------
SIM | dbus path: /org/freedesktop/ModemManager1/SIM/0
So to check my GSM is able to respond to AT
i used socat:
$ sudo socat - /dev/ttyUSB0
AT
OK
Final Goal
I'm aiming to create a script that allows me to send multiple SMS to a list of numbers.
Complete Script
import serial, time
def initSerial() :
print ('initialize...', end='')
ser = serial.Serial()
ser.port = "/dev/ttyUSB0"
ser.baudrate = 115200
ser.timeout = 5 #timeout block read
ser.writeTimeout = 2
ser.bytesize = serial.EIGHTBITS #number of bits per bytes
ser.parity = serial.PARITY_NONE #set parity check: no parity
ser.stopbits = serial.STOPBITS_ONE #number of stop bits
ser.xonxoff = False #disable software flow control
ser.rtscts = False #disable hardware (RTS/CTS) flow control
ser.dsrdtr = False #disable hardware (DSR/DTR) flow control
ser.open()
print('done')
return ser
def write_cmd(ser,cmd) :
if ser.isOpen() :
print('writing: " {} " in {}'.format(cmd, ser.name))
ser.write(cmd.encode('utf-8')) # Write the 'cmd' encoded with utf-8
def read_until(ser,terminator='\n'):
print ('reading {}...'.format(ser.name))
resp = ''
while not ( resp.endswith(terminator) or resp.endswith('\r') ) : # If the string is not terminated
tmp = ser.read(1) # Read and store in a temp variable
if not tmp : return resp # timeout occured
resp += tmp
return resp
if __name__ == '__main__' :
ser = initSerial() # Setup initial variables and configurations
write_cmd(ser,'AT\r\n') # Write a command to the serial pipe
print(read_until(ser)) # Read from the serial pipe until
ser.close()
This is the output:
$ sudo python3 main.py
initialize...done
writing: " AT " in /dev/ttyUSB0
reading /dev/ttyUSB0...
There is a blank line there.