gammu-smsd

Synopsis

gammu-smsd [OPTION]...

Description

This manual page documents briefly the gammu-smsd command.

gammu-smsd is a program that periodically scans GSM modem for received messages, stores them in defined storage and also sends messages enqueued in this storage.

The daemon can reload configuration file after sending hangup signal (SIGHUP) and properly terminates itself on SIGINT and SIGTERM.

Program accepts following options (please note that long options might be not accepted on some platforms):

-h, --help

Shows help.

-v, --version

Shows version information and compiled in features.

-c, --config=file

Configuration file to use, default is /etc/gammu-smsdrc, on Windows there is no default and configuration file path has to be always specified.

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

See SMSD Configuration File for configuration file documentation.

-p, --pid=file

Lock file for storing pid, empty for no locking. Not supported on Windows.

-U, --user=user

Drop daemon privileges to chosen user after starting.

-G, --group=group

Drop daemon privileges to chosen group after starting.

-d, --daemon

Daemonize program on startup. Not supported on Windows.

-i, --install-service

Installs SMSD as a Windows service.

-u, --uninstall-service

Uninstalls SMSD as a Windows service.

-s, --start-service

Starts SMSD Windows service.

-k, --stop-service

Stops SMSD Windows service.

-f, --max-failures=count

Terminate after defined number of failures. Use 0 to not terminate (this is default).

-X, --suicide=seconds

Kills itself after number of seconds.

-S, --run-service

Runs pogram as SMSD Windows service. This should not be used manually, but only Windows Service manager should use this command.

-n, --service-name=name

Defines name of a Windows service. Each service requires an unique name, so if you want to run several SMSD instances, you have to name each service differently. Default is “GammuSMSD”.

-l, --use-log

Use logging as configured in config file (default).

-L, --no-use-log

Do not use logging as configured in config file.

-e, --install-event-log

Installs Windows EventLog description to registry.

New in version 1.31.90.

-E, --uninstall-event-log

Uninstalls Windows EventLog description to registry.

New in version 1.31.90.

Signals

SMSD can be controlled using following POSIX signals (if your platform supports this):

SIGHUP

Reload configuration and reconnect to phone.

SIGINT, SIGTERM

Gracefully shutdown the daemon.

SIGALRM

Used internally for gammu-smsd -X

SIGUSR1

Suspends SMSD operation, closing connection to phone and database.

SIGUSR2

Resumes SMSD operation (after previous suspend).

Changed in version 1.22.91: Added support for SIGHUP.

Changed in version 1.22.95: Added support for SIGALRM.

Changed in version 1.31.90: Added support for SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2.

Examples

Linux/Unix Examples

Start SMSD as a daemon on Linux:

gammu-smsd --config /etc/gammu-smsdrc --pid /var/run/gammu-smsd.pid --daemon

Start SMSD as a daemon on Linux with reduced privileges:

gammu-smsd --config /etc/gammu-smsdrc --pid /var/run/gammu-smsd.pid --daemon --user gammu --group gammu

SMSD as a system wide daemon

To use SMSD as a daemon, you might want to use init script which is shipped with Gammu in contrib/init directory. It is not installed by default, either install it manually or check INSTALL file for instructions.

Under Windows 7 you might need to disable UAC (user account control) before you will be able to install SMSD service.

Windows Service Examples

Install Gammu SMSD Windows service:

gammu-smsd.exe -c c:\Gammu\smsdrc -i

Install two instances of SMSD Windows service:

gammu-smsd.exe -c c:\Gammu\smsdrc-1 -n Gammu-first-phone -i

gammu-smsd.exe -c c:\Gammu\smsdrc-2 -n Gammu-second-phone -i

To uninstall a Windows service:

gammu-smsd.exe -u

Troubleshooting Windows Service

If Gammu fails to start as a Windows service (you will usually get “Error 1053: The service did not respond to the start or control request in a timely fashion”), first check your SMSD logs. If they do not contain any useful hint, try starting SMSD manually with exactly same parameters as you installed the service (without -i).

For example the command line can look like:

gammu-smsd.exe -c smsdrc

You now should be able to get errors from SMSD even if it fails to start as a service.

Invoking Gammu and suspending SMSD

As you can not run Gammu and Gammu SMSD at same time on single device, you can workaround this limitation by suspending SMSD temporarily using SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2 signals (see also Signals):

SMSD_PID=`pidof gammu-smsd`
if [ -z "$SMSD_PID" ] ; then
    echo "Failed to figure out SMSD PID!"
else
    kill -SIGUSR1 $SMSD_PID
    gammu identify
    kill -SIGUSR2 $SMSD_PID
fi

Or even create a gammu-safe script:

#!/bin/bash
SMSD_PID=`pidof gammu-smsd`
if [ -z "$SMSD_PID" ] ; then
  gammu $@
else
  tty=$(lsof |grep -E "gammu-sms\s+$SMSD_PID\s+.*/dev/tty*"|awk {'print $NF'})
  kill -SIGUSR1 $SMSD_PID
  while test "$(fuser $ttyfuser $tty 2> /dev/null|xargs)" = $SMSD_PID
  do
    sleep 1
  done
  sleep 1
  gammu $@
  kill -SIGUSR2 $SMSD_PID
  while test "$(fuser $ttyfuser $tty 2> /dev/null|xargs)" != $SMSD_PID
  do
    sleep 1
  done
  sleep 1
fi

Known Limitations

You can not use same phone by more programs in same time. However in case you did not enable locking in [gammu] section, it might be able to start the communication with phone from more programs. In this case neither of the programs will probably work, see Invoking Gammu and suspending SMSD for workaround.

There is no way to detect that SMS message is reply to another by looking at message headers. The only way to achieve this is to add some token to the message and let the user include it in the message on reply.