diff doc/IMEI @ 17:4644799cb515

doc/IMEI written
author Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org>
date Wed, 19 Oct 2016 01:26:12 +0000
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+IMEI vs. IMEISV
+===============
+
+There is a subtle distinction between an IMEI and an IMEISV.  The first 14
+digits are the same between the two: the supposedly-world-unique number of a
+given piece of hardware.  In a traditional IMEI 15-digit number the significant
+14 digits are followed by a Luhn check digit, whereas an IMEISV has 16 digits:
+the 14 significant digits of the IMEI, *no* Luhn check digit, and two digits of
+"software version".
+
+It is up to device manufacturers and firmware designers to decide whether or
+not to store the Luhn check digit in the GSM device's flash or EEPROM or
+whatever, but it is not sent over the air: instead the IMEISV is sent.  It
+appears that the GSM standard authors' intent was that the IMEI part is stored
+immutably in each manufactured device whereas the SV digits are added by the
+running firmware to indicate its version, but the IMEI handling scheme
+implemented in TI's reference firmware and retained by many of the TI-based GSM
+device manufacturers (at least FIC/Openmoko and Foxconn/Pirelli) dispenses away
+with the IMEI vs. IMEISV distinction.
+
+IMEI storage and retrieval in TI's reference firmware
+=====================================================
+
+When running on the plain Calypso as opposed to Calypso+, TI's TCS211 reference
+firmware supports two ways of storing and retrieving the IMEI: obfuscated and
+unobfuscated.  In both schemes the IMEI datum is stored as a file in the
+device's flash file system (FFS), and even though the FFS filename calls it the
+IMEI, the content of this file is really treated as the IMEISV: 16 digits are
+stored, the firmware function responsible for reading the IMEI datum out of FFS
+and passing it on to the rest of the fw is called cl_get_imeisv(), the code in
+this function does not transform the 16 digits in any way, and the downstream
+recipients of these digits treat them as the IMEISV.
+
+The two specific schemes offered by TCS211 fw are as follows:
+
+In the unobfuscated scheme (FF_PROTECTED_IMEI not defined), the so-called IMEI
+but really IMEISV is stored in an FFS file named /pcm/IMEI.  The file is 8 bytes
+long, each byte stores two IMEISV digits, and the order of the digits within
+each byte is reversed relative to the natural order: first the least significant
+nibble is used, then the most significant nibble.
+
+In the obfuscated scheme (FF_PROTECTED_IMEI is defined), the so-called IMEI but
+really IMEISV is stored in an FFS file named /gsm/imei.enc.  The file is 16
+bytes long: the first 8 bytes store the 16-digit IMEISV encrypted with DES,
+using the Calypso die ID as the key, and the last 8 bytes store that Calypso die
+ID DES-encrypted with itself.  Underneath the obfuscation, the 16 IMEISV digits
+are stored in the 8 bytes in the natural order: first the most significant
+nibble is used, then the least significant nibble.
+
+IMEI storage and retrieval schemes implemented by device manufacturers
+======================================================================
+
+Openmoko devices use the unobfuscated IMEI storage method unchanged from TI's
+reference fw: the factory-assigned IMEI is stored in an FFS file named
+/pcm/IMEI, and that is where the original mokoN firmwares look for it.  Further
+blurring the distinction between the IMEI and the IMEISV, the 16 digits stored
+in /pcm/IMEI (which the fw treats as the IMEISV) were factory-programmed as the
+15-digit IMEI (with the Luhn check digit) with an appended 0, i.e., the SV
+digits get set to x0 where x is the Luhn check digit.
+
+Foxconn, the makers of the Pirelli DP-L10, have used the obfuscated version of
+TI's IMEI handling mechanism instead, with an additional twist: instead of
+storing the 16-byte encrypted datum in /gsm/imei.enc in FFS, they have moved it
+into their own factory data record stored in a non-FFS sector of the flash.
+The content of the 16 digits treated as the IMEISV by the G23M component of the
+fw is the same as Openmoko's: 15-digit IMEI with the Luhn check digit followed
+by a 0 digit.
+
+Compal, the makers of Motorola C1xx phones, have similarly moved their IMEI out
+of FFS into their own proprietary flash data structures, and we have never
+decoded the latter, hence we don't know exactly where and how their IMEI is
+stored.  If you wish to run FreeCalypso firmware on these phones, you have to
+set your own IMEISV for our fw even if you are not seeking to make it different
+from the factory-assigned one, as we don't know how to retrieve the latter.
+
+Changing the IMEI
+=================
+
+When someone says that they wish to change the IMEI on their phone, they need
+to be a little clearer as to what they really mean, as there are two possible
+interpretations of the just-stated wish:
+
+1. Transmitting a different IMEISV toward the network by running your own
+   firmware on the device,
+
+or
+
+2. Changing the IMEI seen by the device's original proprietary firmware.
+
+Interpretation 1 is much easier than interpretation 2: when you are writing your
+own firmware for an "alien" GSM device (hardware designed and made by someone
+other than you), it is much easier to just set your own IMEISV and be done with
+it than to figure out how to retrieve the factory-assigned one.  Thus those
+device manufacturers who try to make it more difficult to change their IMEIs
+are actually creating the opposite effect: people will just set their own IMEISV
+when running their own fw on their hw.
+
+Openmoko devices are a rare exception in that if you write your own IMEISV into
+/pcm/IMEI in FFS, your new IMEISV will take effect not only with FreeCalypso
+firmware, but also with the legacy mokoN fw versions, because they all look in
+/pcm/IMEI.  The same does NOT hold with Compal/Motorola or Foxconn/Pirelli
+phones, however: if you wish to change their IMEI to be seen by their original
+proprietary firmwares, you are on your own, as we do not currently have any
+tools for accomplishing such a feat.
+
+IMEI handling in FreeCalypso
+============================
+
+The FreeCalypso family of projects has adopted the following IMEI storage and
+retrieval scheme both for our own FreeCalypso-made hardware and for FreeCalypso
+firmwares running on alien hardware: all of our firmware versions regardless of
+target will look first in /etc/IMEISV, then in /pcm/IMEI when needing to obtain
+the IMEISV for GSM operation.  This is the new unified convention; previously
+we used varying IMEISV retrieval schemes depending on the target and in
+different FC firmware projects.  The new unified convention is backward-
+compatible with our previous schemes on every target.
+
+The /etc/IMEISV file is a FreeCalypso invention.  The file is 8 bytes long, and
+stores the 16 digits of the IMEISV in the natural order: first the most
+significant nibble is used, then the least significant nibble.  This nibble
+order makes the IMEISV number directly readable in a hex dump of the file, and
+the filename /etc/IMEISV makes it clear that the last two digits are the SV and
+are not required to be equal to the Luhn check digit and 0.
+
+Both /etc/IMEISV and /pcm/IMEI can be written with the fc-fsio utility's
+set-imeisv command:
+
+set-imeisv fc  XXXXXXXX-YYYYYY-ZZ	# write /etc/IMEISV
+set-imeisv pcm XXXXXXXX-YYYYYY-ZZ	# write /pcm/IMEI
+
+When working on Openmoko devices, we recommend writing your IMEISV into
+/pcm/IMEI (set-imeisv pcm command) and not creating an /etc/IMEISV file: newer
+FC firmware versions will look in both locations, but older FC fw versions and
+the legacy mokoN ones look only in /pcm/IMEI.  On all other targets we recommend
+using the new /etc/IMEISV storage format, i.e., you should use the set-imeisv fc
+variant.