Wardriving con Nokia N95 usando Barbelo

por Ken Murray en 3 de noviembre de 2008

Symbian

He estado buscando un uso wardriving para mi N95 desde entonces lo consiguiera. ¿Significo hey, tiene WiFi y un GPS incorporado, no es tan wardriving el hardware portable perfecto? Parecí afortunadamente hoy el uso que he estado buscando. Ha llamado Barbelo.

Las primeras cosas primero, usted puede asir una copia de Barbelo y es necesaria de antemano, GPSd, de http://darkircop.org/barbelo o utilice el práctico Códigos móviles Incluí abajo. Observe que a la hora de escribir la versión más última de GPSd está v0.2 y la versión más última de Barbelo es v0.3.

  1. Ahora que usted tiene GPSd y Barbelo instalado, usted tiene que funcionar GPSd primero. Selecto Menú -> Usos -> GPSd.
  2. Le incitarán permitir que GPSd utilice Colocación de datos. Selecto .
  3. Le incitan después permitir que GPSd utilice la red y que envíe o que reciba datos. También selecto .
  4. Puede tomar un rato para que GPSd consiga un arreglo. Intente ir afuera en alguna parte con una vista clara, sin obstáculo del cielo. Una vez que usted tenga un arreglo del GPS según lo indicado por números con excepción de 0 demostraciones para arriba debajo Latitud y longitud, prensa Piel para dejar GPSd que funciona en el fondo. Esto es importante porque si GPSd no está funcionando, Barbelo no podrá registrar ningunos datos de la localización.
  5. Ahora funcione Barbelo seleccionando Menú -> Usos -> Barbelo.
  6. Como usted puede ver, Barbelo ha encontrado ya una red. La fila de los x debajo del nombre de la red corresponde a la fuerza de la señal. Eso es grande pero deseamos cerciorarnos de que registremos esta información. Por defecto Barbelo no registra cualquier cosa. Usted debe seleccionar específicamente Opciones -> Comience el registro.
  7. En la pantalla principal de Barbelo, usted puede utilizar Izquierdo y La derecha palancas a moverse en medio Exploración, Mapa, y Elimine errores pantallas.
  8. Estoy esperando que el revelador de Barbelo pudo preponerse incluir una manera de upload mapas de su área en un lanzamiento futuro como mapa con nada pero un fondo blanco no es mucho de un mapa. Por lo menos le demuestra donde están las redes en lo referente a uno a y a su posición actual.

    Si usted va de nuevo a Exploración pantalla, usted puede enrollar a través de las redes detectadas y presionar Centro accione la palanca para ver más información sobre esa red particular.

  9. Also of interest, if you leave Barbelo running in the background and switch back to GPSd, you can see that GPSd has now detected the fact that Barbelo is running, as indicated by the 1 under Clients.
  10. Next, I went for a short drive to gather some data. When you’re finished gathering data, stop Barbelo from logging by selecting Options -> Stop Log.
  11. You can now stop Barbelo by selecting Options -> Exit.
  12. Don’t forget to stop GPSd as well. Switch back to GPSd and close it using the Right Soft Key to exit.
  13. Ok, now that we’ve gathered some data, let’s do something interesting with it. Barbelo stores its logs in your phones mass memory at E:\barbelo\logs
  14. Transfer the logs to your computer via Bluetooth or USB data cable. Luckily Barbelo saves its logs in the same XML format as Kismet so we can, for example, convert this data into a format suitable for Google Earth.

    I found a handy perl script called kisgearth that does the job for us.

    If you don’t have access to a Linux box, don’t worry. perl is also available for Windows. Watch for my future tutorial about running perl on Windows.

    Converting the Barbelo log was as easy as running:

    ./kisgearth.pl -oN Barbelo-Oct-20-2008-1.kml -n 1 — Barbelo-Oct-20-2008-1.xml

    kisgearth has a large number of options and filters. For a list, simply run kisgearth.pl without any parameters.

  15. The output file from the above command is a Google Earth kml file. Open Google Earth and choose File -> Open, then browse to your recently converted kml file and open it. Here’s what it looked like for me:

  16. click to enlarge

  17. Once you have your wardriving data saved in a standard format, the possibilities of what you can do with it are virtually endless. I’ve included a copy of my Barbelo log if you would like something to play with. If you discover something interesting, please let us know in the comments below.
Related Posts:
  • How to read and create “barcodes” (Mobile Codes) on the Nokia N95
  • How to turn your Nokia N95 into a pedometer
  • How to take Screenshots with the Nokia N95
  • How to share the GPS in your N95 with your laptop via Bluetooth in Linux
  • How to install additional fonts for PuTTY on the N95
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    { 1 trackback }

    5800 Compatible Apps - Page 6
    03.06.09 at 4:07 am

    { 7 comments… read them below or add one }

    1 Spamwell 11.04.08 at 4:47 am

    Its really quite surreal to search for something this specific and find -exactly- what you want on a page that was only put together one day ago. Lovely guide man.
    I’ve been using extgps with an external bluetooth stick and walking around my neighborhood with my laptop (with netstumbler) under my arm, which with all the elderly people living in this quiet suburb has earned me the kind of evil stares one might merit, were they wearing swastikas when they started going out of fashion.

    Thankyou. I feel I should note that the two barcodes you have posted are in fact identical though.

    2 Kallemania 11.19.08 at 3:47 pm

    Hi there … I’d really would like to know how you got this working … first I have to say that I installed Perl under Windows XP and made me a batch-file for starting kisgearth.pl … so, everytime I try to translate the kismet-data to GE-kml I get the an error message in my dosbox like this:

    Argument "\x{38}\x{2c}..." isn't numeric in subtraction (-) at kisgearth.pl line 1330.

    The number of the error-messages is equal to the number of found accesspoints .
    The translated and written kml-file now contains all the collected informations about the access-points but not the GPS-coordinates.

    What went wrong? Anyone out there with an idea what to do?

    Oh, I was using the latest versions from Barbelo and GPSd with a Nokia E66.

    Thank you and excuse my bad englisch writing…

    Kallemania

    3 Luis 12.25.08 at 6:16 pm

    Hola… disculpen pero soy algo novato en esto.. por fa si me pueden ayudar a convertir de xml a kml… porque con kisgearth me resulta imposible.. desde ya muchas gracias… saludos..

    4 Sebbe 01.16.09 at 7:37 am

    Kan man komma åt och logga in på skyddade nätverk genom att använda dessa steg ? Helst med mobilen så slipper man använda 3G.

    tacksam för svar

    5 betabug 01.23.09 at 12:14 am

    Small mistake: The barcode / Mobile Code images are the same, both point to the GPSd download link.

    6 Eric 04.28.09 at 9:10 am

    the switch for the colors is “-n 1″ not “-n1″. youve got it ignoring that option and doing random colors.
    also the barbelo seems to save errors in the xml file every time ive tried it. opening the file in notepad (not editing anything) and doing a save fixes the file.

    7 Ross McKillop 04.28.09 at 7:15 pm

    Eric -

    Thanks! I did check w/ Ken, my N95/Symbian expert. It was a typo, but thanks very much for catching it!

    Ross

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