Reputation: 123
I'm receiving SMS from GSM modem in PDU format; the TP-User-Data is "C8329BFD06DDDF72363904"
and what I get is: "�2����r69", while the sent sms is "Hello World!".
Here is my java code:
private String fromPDUText(String PDUSMSText) {
String endoding = PDUSMSText.substring(0, 2);
PDUSMSText = PDUSMSText.substring(18);
byte bs[] = new byte[PDUSMSText.length() / 2];
for(int i = 0; i < PDUSMSText.length(); i += 2) {
bs[i / 2] = (byte) Integer.parseInt(PDUSMSText.substring(i, i + 2), 16);
}
try {
String out = new String(bs, "ASCII");
} catch(UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
return "";
} finally {
return out;
}
}
Upvotes: 2
Views: 5508
Reputation: 7434
Personally I find it easiest to attack this kind of problem by viewing it as having a pipe where you feed 8 bits in one end and retrieve 7 bits in the other. As long as there is at least 7 bits in the pipe you read from it. When there are less than 7 bits you need to add some more so you write 8 new bits to it. So what you need is:
The algorithm in pseudo code is as follows:
pipe = 0;
bitCount = 0;
while(hasMoreData())
{
pipe |= readByte() << bitCount;
bitCount += 8;
while(bitCount >= 7)
{
writeByte(pipe & 0x7F);
pipe >>= 7;
bitCount -= 7;
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 123
This is how 7Bit characters are packed:
Encoding-Decoding-7-bit-User-Data-for-SMS-PDU-PDU
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 111269
The input is packed in 7-bits per character, which means that every 8 bytes encode 9 characters. Constructing a parser for this format can be a fun exercise or a frustrating experience, depending on how you take it. You are probably better off using a library, and a quick Google search reveals several code examples.
Upvotes: 1