I'm trying to simulate a ble beacon, and I'm successfully able to broadcast advertisements but I have not found a way to force the advertisements to use a public address. I'm working with a device that will only listen for beacons with a static and public MAC address (I cannot control this, as annoying as it is). Is there any platform or library that would allow me to set/spoof the MAC so that the listening device believes it is a static public MAC? I have access to linux, android, and windows machines and can develop in pretty much whatever language I need to to achieve this.
You can definitely do this on Linux through the following sequence:-
#sudo btmgmt power off
#sudo btmgmt privacy off
#sudo btmgmt power on
Then launch bluetoothctl and start advertising:-
#bluetoothctl
[bluetoothctl] advertise on
You can scan for your device using any app on Android (e.g. nRF Connect) and double check that it is the static/public address through Linux using the command:-
[bluetoothctl] show
I hope this helps.
Related
I seem to only be able to access physical ports. I do want to access virtual ones like ones created with virtual null modem or virtual serial port driver.
Does anyone know if this is possible.
Chrome enumerates serial ports by calling SetupDiGetClassDevs with GUID_DEVINTERFACE_SERENUM_BUS_ENUMERATOR. As I discovered when implementing this enumeration logic there are a surprisingly large number of ways to ask Windows for a list of all available COM ports. The advantage of this approach being that it provides device information which can be used to get the human-readable name of the device and USB product identifiers if it is a USB device. It is likely that a virtual COM port driver may be creating the device in a way which prevents it from being discovered this way.
I've created https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1238369 to track this as a Chrome bug. Please comment on whether you are using a different virtual serial port driver than the one mentioned there.
I managed to get Chrome to see the virtual serial ports using com0com on Windows 10 21H1 (OS Build 19043.1110). Chrome connects to the port successfully and it works as expected:
Hi! Asked this question on many forums and nobody could answer me so PLEASE help!
I have Android device connected to Linux device via USB tethering.
On Android device I have front-end(html, js, css) browser app and on Linux device I have back-end(node.js).
There is a socket connection between front-end and back-end with defined IP:PORT.
Androids gateway is Linux device. Linux device is connected to local network.
When Android device is connected to Linux device, Linux device initializes new network interface called usb0 with static IP address.
Sockets are based on that network IP that is same on every instance of front-end+back-end devices.
I have more than 5 instances of same front-end+back-end devices connected to local network.
Is there a way to somehow find the back-end device IP address without setting it static?
My problem starts when starting all devices at the same time. Sometimes Android device in instance 1 connects to Linux device from other instance and I want to prevent that by not connection to usb0 with Android but to eth0 DHCP of Linux device. I can never know which IP address will be on Linux device but front-end app needs a IP:PORT to connect.
PORT is defined so the string for connecting is {IP + ":3000"}
I know I can see all the IP addresses on network with arp or similar but I need to do that automatic in front-end app on app start up.
I want to find first device IP address that android device is connected to. That is always a front-ends pair Linux device.
Or if it is not possible to prevent Android device to be able to connect another instance with IP tables on Linux device.
P.S I know that Android is also Linux but someone who wants to answer will know what I'm talking about.
Here is a solution describing how to listen for tethering state changes:
First you need to be familiar with BroadcastReceiver. You can find a lot of tutorials describing in great detail how this works (try googling how to listen for connectivity changes in Android).
In order to get the Tethering state update, you need to use a hidden filter action of Android (see ConnectivityManager) and in your BroadcastReceiver class:
IntentFilter filter = new IntentFilter("android.net.conn.TETHER_STATE_CHANGED");
then register the filter to your BroadcastReceiver:
myApplicationContext.registerReceiver(this, filter);
In your onReceive(final Context context, final Intent intent) method, the Intent.extras information contains 3 arrays filled with the corresponding tethered network interface:
erroredArray / availableArray / activeArray
It's a little bit tricky but you can get the tethering status information.
In addition, you can do some reflexion on a hidden function of Android code:
Search for getTetherableIfaces() in the Connectivity Manager.
Here is a link: https://github.com/android/platform_frameworks_base/blob/master/core/java/android/net/ConnectivityManager.java#L1604
Hope this is the right place to ask - assuming so as it is related to programming.
I am looking for some hardware (say a dongle) that would open up an API for my computer to a SIM card. Does that exist anywhere?
The idea would be that I can then use my existing SIM card on its existing network/contract and with a bit of code, send/receive calls and texts. I figured that if a phone can be programmed to do it why can't a computer? I just need the hardware.
Any suggestions if this kind of thing is possible? Even by maybe integrating a phone?
You can use AT commands with any modem or phone, whose driver exposes a modem port when you connect it to a computer. Plug in the phone or modem, and go to Windows Device Manager, and look under "Modems" and see what you've got. From "properties" of the Modem, you can see which COM port it is on.
AT commands are an older method of communicating with a modem. There is a standard set of commands for GSM/GPRS/3G/4G devices available from 3GPP.org, here. Manufacturers add their own proprietary commands for more obscure functions. Many but not all of these are in the public domain.
Some newer plug-in modems may appear as a network adapter (you can see this in Windows), due to their drivers. In this case, you can use the following interfaces:
on Vista: NDIS, proprietary interfaces
on Windows 7 and 8.x Desktop apps: Windows Mobile Broadband API
on Windows 8.x, in the Metro/app area: Windows.Networking and MobileBroadband APIs.
on Windows 10, UWP, there are UWP APIs here. But they do not give as much functionality as the Desktop APIs.
On Windows 8.1 and Windows 10, if the appropriate drives are present it is possible to use the new MBIM interface via the desktop Mobile Broadband DeviceServices API. Mobile Broadband Interface Model spec available here.
On Linux, use AT commands via the serial port.
I'm a bit puzzled by your requirement to make (voice?) calls via a phone connected to a computer. Do you mean Skype? In this case, of course, you wouldn't need any interface for making calls, you would just open an IP connection over a data session - which can be done via any of the above interfaces.
(added this comment as an answer, as there was more information)
I use this GSM device: http://www.mikroe.com/click/gsm2/ connected to a basic UART like: https://www.sparkfun.com/products/718?gclid=CIj1xOzbur4CFUVbfgodCpQASQ
Then use AT COMMANDS.
I also use a piece of software called QNavigator to inspect the modem/gsm: http://www.soselectronic.com/?str=1329
I'm writing a mini OS just for fun. I want to save some key information to one securiry server on the Internet and ever fetch it BEFORE booting my OS.
So my problem is: How to access the Internet only via BIOS? i.e. How to use the TCP protocol in BIOS environment?
PS.
It is obvious that diskless workstations use such a technique. So it is technically possible.
Diskless workstations use PXE which is part of NIC (network card) ROM or a BIOS extension, it's a simple environment that implements TCP/IP stack that can get a executable over TFTP and run it.
There is an open source one that you could modify iPXE to your needs and replace your existing PXE ROM.
I don't think that this is possible. You need to implement a network driver into the BIOS to achiving that. So I would say this is not possible. By the way I never read that someone wrote his/her own BIOS.
If you have an ethernet port on your pc/router buy a Gil.Net router and connect it wirelessly to your home router and then plug in the router
com0com is a great program to have virtual serial ports.
My question: is there any library which I can use for simulating serial ports (COM, USB and so on) programmatically in my application without install extra software for such virtual devices?
something like making virtual device in user space?
OS: Windows
Free Virtual Serial Ports by HHD Software Ltd is good for you (License Freeware).
Excerpt:
This device driver implements the functionality of the virtual serial
port device. It operates in user mode space, unlike most other device
drivers, making the system more stable and secure.
Read more.
All similar software use a special kernel mode driver. It is not possible create a virtual COM port from user space.