There are a range of companies offering Internet-based services for sending and receiving SMS messages using SMPP.
SMPP is currently the only vendor-neutral standard on the Internet that gives application developers a close approximation of the wire format of real SMS messages.
In most organizations there is often more than one team or application requiring connectivity to the SMS / SMPP network.
The SMS Router project provides a convenient solution. Multiple users on the corporate network can send SMS over message queues, using protocols like JMS (from Java) or STOMP (from Python and Perl).
SMS Router aggregates all the SMS traffic and sends it to the provider. Incoming SMS messages can be routed to individual applications by customizing the Camel routes.
SMS, SMPP and the mobile/cellular telephone network are not designed or warranted for the secure transmission of login credentials, token codes or passwords.
Telecommunications industry experts and the engineers who have developed the SMS Router, Camel SMPP and jSMPP discourage the use of SMS for user login authentication or two-factor authentication purposes and accept no liability for any problems that arise.
We wish to draw your attention to two specific risks with SMS authentication:
- interception of messages: messages are not protected from interception by employees of the SMPP gateway, the mobile telephone network, third parties with access to the SS7 network, the vendor of the mobile handset and any of the other apps that a user has installed on their phone. There are potentially hundreds of thousands of people who can access SMS messages through one of the weaknesses in this list.
- non-delivery: there are many situations where a user may not be able to receive messages and login to your service. Consider the situations when users are roaming (SMS delivery can be delayed by hours), when a user replaces their SIM card during an extended period of travel, when network outages occur, when they attempt to port the number to a different network and it fails, when their mobile device has a flat battery or is being repaired. In these cases users may experience inconvenience and potentially financial losses if unable to complete transactions.
It is suggested that public key solutions based on smartcards or purpose-built security tokens, compliant with industry standards are able to address both of these issues comprehensively.
The Initiative for Open Authentication provides leadership in this area, including the vendor-neutral and cost-effective HOTP and TOTP tokens that are becoming increasingly common.
- Vendor-neutral: don't waste time developing for a vendor's proprietary REST API as every REST API is different and your code has to be changed every time the vendor makes a substantial update to their API.
- Works behind firewalls and NAT: many REST APIs expect to make callbacks to your web server, increasing the complexity for organizations with strict firewall management policies. SMPP doesn't have this limitation.
- Converts locally formatted phone numbers to E.164 for international delivery.
- Throttles delivery of messages to the gateway to adhere to network policies and minimize the risk of excessive expenditure.
- Blacklist delivery to countries with high SMS charges.
- Override sending numbers on a per-country basis where required for corporate or network policies.
- Configured with a simple properties file.
- Places undeliverable messages on a dead letter queue.
- Incoming messages delivered to an inbox queue.
- Requests and logs delivery receipts.
- Automatically handles message splitting.
- Automatic selection of appropriate SMPP character encoding.
- Logging with log4j2 supports SysLog and many other logging mechanisms.
- Works with a range of JMS providers.
- Sample Perl script for submitting SMS messages over STOMP with ActiveMQ.
- Some of the properties from the properties file are ignored and hardcoded into the RouteBuilder.java class due to Camel bug CAMEL-8125. The bug has been fixed in more recent versions of Camel and the use of property injection should be tested again.
- The logging code needs to be reviewed to distinguish system-wide errors (such as a failure to bind to the SMPP gateway) from message-specific errors (such as a missing destination). System-wide errors are those that should be reported to the sysadmin, while message-specific errors should be reported to the owner of the application who is sending the messages.
- The SMPP component doesn't currently support transactions. It would be desirable to investigate the interaction of JMS transactions with the successful transfer of a message to the SMPP gateway.
- Adapting the code to work with arbitrary camel-jms queue URIs, it is currently hard-coded for the "activemq:" URI.
- Passing the SMPP tracking ID and delivery receipt messages back to the sending application through the queue.
- Routing inbound messages to different queues based on the destination number in the message header.
- Exceptions are not currently classified or logged, messages are simply sent to the dead letter queue.
- In many cases, nested exceptions need to be examined.
- Messages and delivery receipts should be logged to a CSV file or table for audit purposes.
- SMS alphabet can't be specified on a per-message basis, the default alphabet-selection logic in the camel-smpp component is used. It would be desirable to allow the alphabet to be specified with a header or provide a more advanced method for automatically selecting a compatible SMS alphabet for any given UTF-8 String. For best results, it is recommended to only send message strings that contain symbols from the GSM 03.38 alphabet / character set.
- The type of number and numbering plan indicator values are hard-coded to use numbers in international (E.164) format. Customization is required to support alphanumeric sender names, short codes and destination numbers in local / national format. Such customization would need to be careful to ensure that alphabetic sender names are only used when sending to countries where they are permitted.
- Detect when the message is going to a country / network that doesn't support message splitting and throw an exception if the message would be split.
- Enforce maximum hourly and/or daily message limits for individual destination numbers to ensure users are not accidentally spammed. Accidentally spamming an individual destination number can result in immediate suspension or termination by the SMPP provider.
- SMS was not developed as a secure communications system. While messages are encrypted during the transmission from a mobile base station to a mobile handset, they are not encrypted or authenticated in any other part of the network. SMS should not be relied upon for secure authentication.
- SMS can be intercepted and monitored by any app the user has on their smart phone.
- SMS is not real-time, when messages are sent internationally or to users who are roaming there are often delays of minutes and even hours.
- Some networks / countries never send delivery receipts.
- Some networks / countries send fake delivery receipts for all messages, even when the destination number is invalid or the phone is off.
- Some networks / countries silently drop all messages from automated systems unless the user has opted-in to receive automated messages from all possible senders. Many users are either not aware of this or they are reluctant to opt-in due to the increasing burden of SMS marketing. India is one example of a country with an opt-in system.
- Some countries have a policy of not accepting split messages, only the first part of such messages may be delivered or sometimes nothing is delivered at all.
- Review the documentation in the sms-router.properties file.
- Set up a message broker. Apache ActiveMQ is suggested but any message broker with JMS support should work.
- Set up an SMPP account (see details below for provider-specific notes)
- Configure the properties file with the necessary values for your chose SMPP gateway.
- Run it from the command line or with the Java Service Wrapper or another script of your choosing.
Please ask questions on the Apache Camel Users mailing list
Commercial support is available by contacting the developers at [email protected]
- After creating a free Nexmo account, you need to contact Nexmo support and ask them to enable SMPP access on your new account. You can then use the free trial credit for SMPP.
- Make sure you check the default character set in the Nexmo portal.
- Read about how Nexmo uses the SMPP System Type parameter in the properties file and configure it for inbound numbers in the SMPP portal.
- Review the number of concurrent transmitter and receiver binds supported on your Nexmo account.
Copyright (C) 2012-2016, Daniel Pocock http://danielpocock.com
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