By Tessel Renzenbrink at techthefuture.com
http://www.techthefuture.com/technology/infecting-air-gapped-computers-with-malware-using-sound
By Tessel Renzenbrink at techthefuture.com
http://www.techthefuture.com/technology/infecting-air-gapped-computers-with-malware-using-sound
These patches are works in progress. Please contact me if you have questions about how they work.
Gnuradio companion.
By Brad Antoniewicz at Open Security Research
http://blog.opensecurityresearch.com/2012/06/getting-started-with-gnu-radio-and-rtl.html
Signal processing on the Beaglebone.
by Alex Csete
http://www.oz9aec.net/index.php/beaglebone/480-rtlizer
I did a quick read of source code (rtl-fm.c) today.
Basically it opens an input stream of IQ samples from the rtl-sdr device, demodulates filters, and outputs audio.
Other than usual madness with threads and locking – the code is fairly straightforward. Not well commented – but clear enough that we could extract the input streaming and frequency (device) control to make a Max external. One question would be whether or not to do the downsampling in the external, or in Max?
Rough estimate would be this project would involve about 1-2 weeks of analysis and hacking. Possibly less – but there is a learning curve – and a heuristic stuff which is required to work with the hardware.
Fortunately it actually works in MacOS and Windows – and there are plenty of other examples to compare it to. But this is not a casual evening project.
Just compiled rtl-sdr using instructions below, from: http://sdr.osmocom.org/trac/wiki/rtl-sdr –
!! but did not run: sudo make install – or sudo ldconfig !!
so the programs are just running locally in: tkzic/rtl-sdr/build/src
I didn’t want to overwrite the macports versions which are running in the exec path.
after compiling I was able to successfully test by running this from rtl-sdr/build/src:
./rtl_fm -f 94900000 -W -s 200000 -r 48000 - | play -r48000 -t s16 -L -c 1 -
which caused annoying pre-christmas music from WHOM to ruin this peaceful morning.
—————————————————————
You have to install development packages for libusb1.0 and can either use cmake or autotools to build the software.
Please note: prior pulling a new version from git and compiling it, please do a “make uninstall” first to properly remove the previous version.
Building with cmake:
cd rtl-sdr/ mkdir build cd build cmake ../ make sudo make install sudo ldconfig
In order to be able to use the dongle as a non-root user, you may install the appropriate udev rules file by calling cmake with -DINSTALL_UDEV_RULES=ON argument in the above build steps.
cmake ../ -DINSTALL_UDEV_RULES=ON
Update 5/2014
May want to try these instructions from gnuradio.org: http://gnuradio.org/redmine/projects/gnuradio/wiki/MacInstall
Original post
I used these instructions today (12/3/2013) (mac os 10.8)
http://penturalabs.wordpress.com/2013/09/14/gnuradio-osx-installation-guide/
gnuradio-companion
# gnuradio-companion
also take a look at this post: – at the very bottom – is the simple list of instructions for installing gnu-radio and rtl-sdr
https://sites.google.com/site/alalbiolupv/tips-howtos/rtl-sdr-osx
Here is an example of rtl-sdr command, which now works from macports install:
/opt/local/bin/rtl_fm -f 94900000 -W -s 200000 -r 48000 - | play -r48000 -t s16 -L -c 1 -
It could solve the issue of getting IQ samples into Max – until I can write a Max external which reads the device directly.
http://www.reddit.com/r/RTLSDR/comments/1fl62j/hdsdr_for_linux_woborip/
I have saved the pipeiq.c local file to: tkzic/radio-sdr-experiments
Here are links to information about borIP – a program that streams radio IQ data over UDP to a simulated USB port – at least i think thats what it does.
http://wiki.spench.net/wiki/BorIP_Server
There are also instructions here for installing GR (gnu radio) on mac os