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I have a GSM modem connected to my computer, i want to receive text messages sent to it using a python program i have written, am just wondering what is the best technique to poll for data.

Should i write a program that has a infinite loop that continuously checks for incoming sms's i.e within the loop the program sends the AT commands and reads the input data. or do modems have a way of signaling an application of an incoming data(sms).

Am trying to imagine a cellphone is just a GSM modem, and when an sms is received, the phone alerts you of the event, or does the phone software have an infinite loop that polls for incoming data.

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  • Great question! Just curious, which GSM modem do you have? Sep 14, 2009 at 19:26
  • Huawei, Model E220 HSDPA USB Modem
    – gath
    Sep 15, 2009 at 5:15

2 Answers 2

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I have written something similar before. There is a way using AT commands to tell the modem to signal you each time an SMS is received.

For reference, I was using a Maestro 100 GSM Modem in an embedded application.

First you have to initialize the modem properly. I was using text mode for the SMS, but you might be using something different. Pick from these what you want. AT+CNMI is the most important.

AT&F0 # Restore factory defaults
ATE0  # Disable command echo
AT+CMGF=1 # Set message format to text mode
AT+CNMI=1,1,0,1,0 # Set new message indicator
AT+CPMS="SM","SM","SM" # Set preferred message storage to SIM

You would then wait for a message notification, that will look like this. (Don't match on the index number, that might differ between notifications)

+CMTI: "SM",0 # Message notification with index

When you get that notification, retrieve the unread SMS's:

AT+CMGL="REC UNREAD"  # Retrieve unread messages

I would recommend you also add a poll, maybe every 5 minutes or so, just in case you miss a notification. With serial comms you can never be sure!

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  • Ok, edited. Hope this helps. I used those commands in an embedded application with an external GSM modem. Sep 14, 2009 at 19:24
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    Andre, this never worked for me, i wonder if its my modem or what, i resulted in polling the modem for the messages... any ideas.
    – gath
    Sep 17, 2009 at 9:07
  • Perhaps your modem uses a different AT command to enable the notification. Do you have a link to a reference manual for it? Sep 18, 2009 at 7:09
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I find I can't remember much of the AT command set related to SMS. Andre Miller's answer seems to ring a few bells. Anyway you should read the documentation very carefully, I'm sure there were a few gotchas.

My recommentation for polling is at least every 5 seconds - this is just for robustness and responsiveness in the face of disconnection.

I used a state machine to navigate between initialisation, reading and deleting messages.

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