Intercepting GSM Communication

Using Open Source and Open Hardware Technologies

Free Domain

 

This page presents current achievements of open source community developers in the area of building GSM enabled communication hardware and software. Open source GPL licensed software makes constant and very significant contribution to IT industry. Together with so called open hardware, it enables the cost of some expensive GSM devices, for example bugging devices used by intelligence to be lowered to the cost of raw electronic components and this can have potentially enormous influence on other branches of mobile telecommunication industry, similar to the impact open source exerted on software development in recent years. Bugging devices can eavesdrop mobile communication based on A5/1 cryptanalysis achievements and a flaw found in GSM protocol stack.

1. Introduction

In 2003, when a team of researchers from Technion published their achievements in A5/1 cryptanalysis and GSM cryptographic protocol flaw [Elad Barkan, Eli Biham, Nathan Keller, Instant Ciphertext Only Cryptanalysis of GSM Encrypted Communication, 2003], it became clear that mobile communication can no longer be considered secure. Although GSM bugging devices used by law enforcement agencies are still very expensive and only governments and big companies can afford them, very interesting question arises : for how long ?
Because most of these devices employs proprietary software developed by manufacturers, their cost remains relatively high. By applying free open standards to software and hardware development, many contributors worldwide can share their common work and make it free for others who want to join a project, and also free for those who simply want to use it for their own purposes, both private and commercial. This is the same approach which resulted in emergence of Linux operating system and many more free professional software products. Apart from lowering the cost, there is also one more advantage of building intelligence devices using open standards – along with the fact that the production can be easily   moved to Poland, this can significantly reduce security concern of trapdoors installed in these devices by foreign intelligence  cooperating with big manufacturers abroad or secretly inserting  malicious  code – a phenomenon which occasionally  happens. For example in 2006 a scandal broke out when Greek government admitted that mobile operator Vodafone found spying code installed in their software [BBC News, Greek boss at phone tapping probe, 2006], and this enabled many government VIPs including Prime Minister to be bugged [BBC News, Greek government's phones tapped, 2006]. The availability of source code and the fact that random people worldwide can learn it and contribute, in obvious way reduce such risk.
Further from this paper you can learn the approach open source community has chosen to develop GSM enabled devices, i.e. hardware and software solutions used to build it. This will help you better understand the process of transforming GSM radio waves into readable data with the use of free and open standards only. Finally this will demonstrate the importance of these achievements for our domestic industry and law enforcement agencies.

2. Hardware platform

The project is based on a hardware platform which consists of usual PC (or laptop) and USRP board Universal Software Radio Peripheral, which is low-cost software defined radio equipment. It was developed by Ettus Research LLC as an open hardware solution, and is currently well supported by open source community developers, user mailing lists and a producer. USRP consists of a motherboard and pluggable daughter boards which cover wide range of frequencies from 0 Hz to almost 3 GHz and are constantly developed.


Figure 1 : USRP motherboard and four daughter boards plugged in.

  • Wide range of frequencies are covered with the following daughter boards, which are pluggable into motherboard's four slots (two RX and two TX slots) :

    DC to 30 MHz receiver
    DC to 30 MHz transmitter
    1 MHz to 250 MHz receiver
    1 MHz to 250 MHz transmitter
    50 to 860 MHz receiver
    800 MHz to 2.4 GHz receiver
    400500 MHz transceiver
    7501050 MHz transceiver (including cell and ISM bands)
    11501450 MHz transceiver
    1.52.1 GHz transceiver (including PCS bands)
    2.32.9 GHz transceiver (including ISM band)

Figure 2: DBSRX daughterboard

For receiving GSM signals it is advisable to choose DBSRX daughterboard (see figure 2 above) and plug it into one of the RX slots. It is a receiver only board but it covers 800 MHz – 2.4 GHz band which is enough to receive most GSM signals used worldwide. This daughterboard along with for example 900 MHz to 2.6 GHz PCB (Printed Circuit Board) antenna can be chosen by developers as a set of tools for further research and experiments. To learn more about USRP, see Dawei Shen's tutorial.

3. Software environment

Software environment consists of Linux operating system along with Gnu Radio package installed. Gnu Radio is a powerful signal processing software fully compatible with USRP boards. It consists of many high level signal processing blocks which perform certain operations for example signal generation, filtering, demodulation etc.


Figure 3: Gnu Radio blocks sample connections

From the example above, you can learn how the blocks are tied together in order to develop applications. As you can see, USRP source block can be used to read samples of radio waves from USRP receiver, then the data stream can be processed by any configuration of gnu radio blocks, and finally it is thrown into spectrum viewer, audio output (sound card) or any other gnu radio sink block.
These signal processing blocks are implemented in C++ and are accessible from high level Python language as objects. In order to create an application, gnu radio blocks have to be tied together and properly configured if necessary. This simplifies   application development process because programmers don't have to bother with implementation of some commonly used signal processing operations needed for their applications. However, they are still able to develop their own gnu radio signal processing blocks in C++. New blocks simply get input stream of data (usually type of complex, float, unsigned char, etc.) make any appropriate computations and return processed stream of output data. More on writing your own gnu radio blocks you can learn from Eric Blossom's documentation: How to Write a Signal Processing Block.
Gnu Radio comes with many example applications which can be used along with USRP hardware, for example oscilloscope, spectrum browser, FM radio receiver. For our purposes you can find very comfortable to use nuradio/gnuradioexamples/python/usrp/usrp_fft.py program (spectrum viewer) to explore the spectrum of GSM bands and   to find GSM Base Transceiver Stations (BTS) transmitting in your area (more on that in the next chapter).

4. Preparation to receive GSM signals.

After software and hardware is properly configured, developers can test their receiver using standard gnu radio spectrum browser application. From the following table you can learn the range of frequencies GSM operates.


Figure 4 : GSM frequency bands

Since, we want to receive signals sent down from BTS to MS (Mobile Station), we focus on downlink range of frequencies. In most countries trying 935 MHz – 960 MHz and 1805 MHz – 1880 MHz is the most appropriate to start with.

Using the following example command:
gnuradio/gnuradioexamples/python/usrp/usrp_fft.py R A d 8 g 32 f 949M
we observe 8 MHz wide band of spectrum centered at 949 MHz, in which we find several BTSs, each one transmitting in a 200 kHz wide channel.


Figure 5: GSM spectrum view

Not all of the channels are used in every area, some of them are reserved to be used in neighboring cells (we see them as lower strength signals), or simply there is no need for more BTSs to operate in a specific population area.
On every active channel, a BTS transmits GMSK modulated signal within eight consecutive timeslots numbered 0..7, each one lasts for 577 microseconds. In GMSK modulation, frequency changes +/ 67.708 kHz from a specified center frequency and because of differential modulation employed in GSM, consecutive stream of identical bits (for example 0000000 or 1111111) will result in constant frequency +67.708 kHz above center frequency, and similarly consecutive stream of differing bits (for example 01010101010101) will result in constant frequency 67.708 kHz below center frequency. This is used  in Frequency Correction Channel (FCH) packets, which consist of all zeros (142 consecutive zeros), resulting in constant frequency signal being transmitted for 577 microseconds and enabling Mobile Stations to use it in order to correct their frequency offset during this period.

Using Gnu Radio blocks we can build an application which tunes USRP to specified frequency, filter the signal and demodulate it into a stream of bits, but before we do so, let’s look closer to the signal using FM demodulation block and oscilloscope which enables us to see frequency changes in time domain

Figure 6: Frequency changes in time domain

In the figure above, we clearly see one FCH packet with constant frequency +67.708 above center frequencies, which lasts for 577 microseconds. This confirms that we receive and process accurate data from USRP.


Figure 7: Radio spectrum of one single GSM channel

Let’s focus on the strongest available signal we receive 2MHz below the center frequency (949 MHz), so we tune our USRP to 947 MHz and change decimation rate to 112 in order to decrease the spectrum width, so it represents only one single GSM channel, see figure 7 above.
The result was obtained with the command:
gnuradio/gnuradioexamples/python/usrp/usrp_fft.py R A d 112 g 32 f 947M
and clearly shows a single pick located approximately +67 kHz above the center frequency (note: “Peak Hold” option is helpful to catch the peak). This represents FCCH packet being sent periodically once every 10 packets in timeslot 0. For mobile phones, FCCH packets are used to precisely adjust to a carrier frequency, compensating for unavoidable frequency offset which depends on a specific piece of hardware. Also for USRP decoding is far better if the frequency offset, which ranges from several kHz to 32 kHz, is compensated. USRP offset can be estimated from a spectrum view but only with limited accuracy. Better estimation can be calculated in dedicated software which gives far more precise results.

5. Processing GSM signals

The easiest way to obtain GSM data is to get source signal from USRP tuned to a frequency on which a BTS operates, then filter the signal and demodulate it using existing gnu radio blocks.


Figure 8: Basic approach in GSM signal processing

This method is very simple and outputs a stream of bits from chosen GSM channel. Despite this approach doesn't use any correction methods and frequency offset isn't compensated during signal reception, the results are good enough to decode many interesting packets from the air.


Figure 9: GMSK demodulated data

In the figure 9 you can see raw GMSKdemodulated data from single GSM channel, in which FCCH packet can be recognised because of its characteristic 142 
consecutive 1's. Although FCCH packet consists of consecutive 0's (not 1's), data is seen as consecutive 1's because of differential encoding which should be dealt with 
(i.e. properly decoded) further in software.
This approach became a basis for first experiments and resulted in Joshua Lackey's software called GSSM in which USRP board is seen in operating system as GSM 
network interface. The idea enabled network analysing tools with appropriate patches (definition of GSM packets) to present intercepted GSM packets sent from BTS


Figure 10 : Network analyzer sniffing on virtual GSM interface

The figure above illustrates Wire shark (network analyzing tool) with properly decoded System Information Type #3 packet. This includes Mobile Network Code (MNC) – unique value 04 was configured for experimental BTS in a laboratory at the Warsaw University of Technology. Among other fields we can see Mobile Country Code (MCC), Location Area Code (LAC) and Cell Identity (CI) values.

6. Summary

Current developments are focused on creating GPLlicensed version of software which will not only be able to apply error correction techniques thus limiting the number of invalid packets received, but will also interactively follow GSM traffic (frequencies, timeslots) based on information from received packets. Experiments, research and opinions suggest that the performance of USRP board is fast enough, so it can tune to different frequencies in short and adequate time, enabling interception of GSM packets also in communication where FH technique (frequency hopping) is used.
After this is confirmed, further work can include the areas of A5/1 cryptanalysis implementation and experiments with active attacks on GSM infrastructure with the use of USRP transmit daughterboard.

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