X-Git-Url: http://cvs.zerfleddert.de/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi/proxmark3-svn/blobdiff_plain/770f73457afd6d799d37d81f3a96bbbfb053b3a5..cb1ba30a5ef09f5998dda9e57f6f0a69e0fae783:/README.txt?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/README.txt b/README.txt index 86fb2b15..ec921838 100644 --- a/README.txt +++ b/README.txt @@ -1,87 +1,122 @@ -INTRO: - -This file contains enough software, logic (for the FPGA), and design -documentation for the hardware that you could, at least in theory, -do something useful with a proxmark3. It has commands to: - - * read any kind of 125 kHz unidirectional tag - * simulate any kind of 125 kHz unidirectional tag - -(This is enough to perform all of the silly cloning attacks, like the -ones that I did at the Capitol in Sacramento, or anything involving -a Verichip. From a technical standpoint, these are not that exciting, -although the `software radio' architecture of the proxmark3 makes it -easy and fun to support new formats.) - -As a bonus, I include some code to use the 13.56 MHz hardware, so you can: - - * do anything that a (medium-range) ISO 15693 reader could - * read an ISO 14443 tag, if you know the higher-layer protocol - * pretend to be an ISO 14443 tag, if you know the higher-layer protocol - * snoop on an ISO 14443 transaction - -I am not actively developing any of this. I have other projects that -seem to be more useful. - -USING THE PACKAGE: - -The software tools required to build include: - - * cygwin or other unix-like tools for Windows - * devkitPro (http://wiki.devkitpro.org/index.php/Getting_Started/devkitARM) - * Xilinx's WebPack tools - * Modelsim (for test only) - * perl - -When installing devkitPro, you only need to install the compiler itself. Additional -support libraries are not required. - -Documentation is minimal, but see the doc/ directory for what exists. A -previous familiarity with the ARM, with digital signal processing, -and with embedded programming in general is assumed. - -The device is used through a specialized command line interface; for -example, to clone a Verichip, you might type: - - loread ; this reads the tag, and stores the - ; raw samples in memory on the ARM - - losamples ; then we download the samples to - ; the PC - - vchdemod clone ; demodulate the ID, and then put it - ; back in a format that we can replay - - losim ; and then replay it - -To read an ISO 15693 tag, you might type: - - hiread ; read the tag; this involves sending a - ; particular command, and then getting - ; the response (which is stored as raw - ; samples in memory on the ARM) - - hisamples ; then download those samples to the PC - - hi15demod ; and demod them to bits (and check the - ; CRC etc. at the same time) - -Notice that in both cases the signal processing mostly happened on the PC -side; that is of course not practical for a real reader, but it is easier -to initially write your code and debug on the PC side than on the ARM. As -long as you use integer math (and I do), it's trivial to port it over -when you're done. - -The USB driver and bootloader are documented (and available separately -for download, if you wish to use them in another project) at - - http://cq.cx/trivia.pl - - -OBTAINING HARDWARE: - -Most of the ultra-low-volume contract assemblers that have sprung up -(Screaming Circuits, the various cheap Asian suppliers, etc.) could put +The iceman fork +--------------- + +NOTICE: + +The official Proxmark repository is found here: https://github.com/Proxmark/proxmark3 + +NEWS: + +::THIS FORK IS HIGHLY EXPERIMENTAL:: + + +## Build Status Travis CI +[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/iceman1001/proxmark3.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/iceman1001/proxmark3) + +## Build Status Coverity Scan +[![Coverity Scan Build Status](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/5117/badge.svg)](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/proxmark3_iceman_fork) + + +Whats in this fork? I have scraped the web for different enhancements to the PM3 source code and not all of them ever found their way to the master branch. +Among the stuff is + + * Jonor's hf 14a raw timing patch + * Piwi's updates. (usually gets into the master) + * Piwi's "topaz" branch + * Piwi's "hardnested" branch + * Holiman's iclass, (usually gets into the master) + * Marshmellow's fixes (usually gets into the master) + * Midnitesnake's Ultralight, Ultralight-c enhancements + * Izsh's lf peak modification / iir-filtering + * Aspers's tips and tricks from inside the PM3-gui-tool, settings.xml and other stuff. + * My own desfire, Ultralight extras, LF T55xx enhancements, bugs fixes (filelength, hf mf commands ), TNP3xxx lua scripts, Awid26, skidata scripts (will come) + * other obscure patches like for the sammy-mode, (offline you know), tagidentifications, defaultkeys. + * Minor textual changes here and there. + * Simulation of Ultralight/Ntag. + * Marshmellow's and my "RevEng" addon for the client. Ref: http://reveng.sourceforge.net/ + * Someone's alternative bruteforce Mifare changes.. (you need the two other exe to make it work) + + * A Bruteforce for T55XX passwords against tag. + * A Bruteforce for AWID 26, starting w a facilitycode then trying all 0xFFFF cardnumbers via simulation. To be used against a AWID Reader. + * A Bruteforce for HID, starting w a facilitycode then trying all 0xFFFF cardnumbers via simulation. To be used against a HID Reader. + * Blaposts Crapto1 v3.3 + * Icsom's legic script and legic enhancements + * Aczid's bitsliced bruteforce solver in 'hf mf hardnested' + +Give me a hint, and I'll see if I can't merge in the stuff you have. + +I don't actually know how to make small pull-request to github :( and that is the number one reason for me not pushing a lot of things back to the PM3 master. + +PM3 GUI: + +I do tend to rename and move stuff around, the official PM3-GUI from Gaucho will not work so well. *sorry* + + + +DEVELOPMENT: + +This fork is adjusted to compile on windows/mingw environment with Qt5.3.1 & GCC 4.9 + +GC made updates to allow this to build easily on Ubuntu 14.04 + - See https://github.com/Proxmark/proxmark3/wiki/Ubuntu%20Linux + - Generally speaking, if you're running a "later" Proxmark, installation is very easy. + - Run "sudo apt-get install p7zip git build-essential libreadline5 libreadline-dev libusb-0.1-4 libusb-dev libqt4-dev perl pkg-config wget libncurses5-dev + - Follow these instructions + Get devkitARM release 41 from SourceForge (choose either the 64/32 bit depending on your architecture, it is assumed you know how to check and recognize your architecture): + (64-bit) http://sourceforge.net/projects/devkitpro/files/devkitARM/previous/devkitARM_r41-x86_64-linux.tar.bz2/download + (32-bit) http://sourceforge.net/projects/devkitpro/files/devkitARM/previous/devkitARM_r41-i686-linux.tar.bz2/download + Extract the contents of the .tar.bz2: + tar jxvf devkitARM_r41--linux.tar.bz2 + Create a directory for the arm dev kit: + sudo mkdir -p /opt/devkitpro/ + Move the ARM developer kit to the newly created directory: + sudo mv devkitARM /opt/devkitpro/ + Add the appropriate environment variable: + export PATH=${PATH}:/opt/devkitpro/devkitARM/bin/ + Add the environment variable to your profile: + echo 'PATH=${PATH}:/opt/devkitpro/devkitARM/bin/ ' >> ~/.bashrc + - make all + +Common errors linux/macOS finds + +Error: + * \client\makefile the parameter -lgdi32 +Solution: + * Remove parameter. + +Error: + * Using older Qt4.6 gives compilation errors. +Solution + * Upgrade to Qt5.3.1 + OR + * Change these two line in \client\makefile + CXXFLAGS = -I$(QTDIR)/include -I$(QTDIR)/include/QtCore -I$(QTDIR)/include/QtGui -I$(QTDIR)/include/QtWidgets -I/mingw/include + QTLDLIBS = -L$(QTDIR)/lib -lQt5Core -lQt5Gui -lQt5Widgets + + TO + + CXXFLAGS = -I$(QTDIR)/include -I$(QTDIR)/include/QtCore -I$(QTDIR)/include/QtGui + QTLDLIBS = -L$(QTDIR)/lib -lQtCore4 -lQtGui4 + + +An old Qt4 version makefile is found here: http://www.icesql.se/proxmark3/code/linuxmakefile.txt but this one doesn't have all new files in it. So I don't recommend it. + + +January 2015, Sweden +iceman at host iuse.se + + +The Proxmark 3 is available for purchase (assembled and tested) from the +following locations: + + * http://proxmark3.tictail.com/ (For buyers in EU, most likely in Sweden) + + * http://www.elechouse.com/ (new and revised hardware package 2015, located in China) + + + + +Most of the ultra-low-volume contract assemblers could put something like this together with a reasonable yield. A run of around a dozen units is probably cost-effective. The BOM includes (possibly- outdated) component pricing, and everything is available from Digikey @@ -99,37 +134,6 @@ The printed circuit board artwork is also available, as Gerbers and an Excellon drill file. -FUTURE PLANS, ENHANCEMENTS THAT YOU COULD MAKE: - -At some point I should write software involving a proper real-time -operating system for the ARM. I would then provide interrupt-driven -drivers for many of the peripherals that are polled now (the USB, -the data stream from the FPGA), which would make it easier to develop -complex applications. - -It would not be all that hard to implement the ISO 15693 reader properly -(with anticollision, all the commands supported, and so on)--the signal -processing is already written, so it is all straightforward applications -work. - -I have basic support for ISO 14443 as well: a sniffer, a simulated -tag, and a reader. It won't do anything useful unless you fill in the -high-layer protocol. - -Nicer (i.e., closer-to-optimal) implementations of all kinds of signal -processing would be useful as well. - -A practical implementation of the learning-the-tag's-ID-from-what-the- -reader-broadcasts-during-anticollision attacks would be relatively -straightforward. This would involve some signal processing on the FPGA, -but not much else after that. - -It would be neat to write a driver that could stream samples from the A/Ds -over USB to the PC, using the full available bandwidth of USB. I am not -yet sure what that would be good for, but surely something. This would -require a kernel-mode driver under Windows, though, which is more work. - - LICENSING: This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify @@ -151,4 +155,3 @@ Jonathan Westhues user jwesthues, at host cq.cx May 2007, Cambridge MA -