/python-smpplib

SMPP library for Python

Primary LanguagePythonGNU Lesser General Public License v3.0LGPL-3.0

python-smpplib

Version Python versions PyPI downloads License CircleCI

SMPP library for Python. Forked from Google Code.

Example:

import logging
import sys

import smpplib.gsm
import smpplib.client
import smpplib.consts

# if you want to know what's happening
logging.basicConfig(level='DEBUG')

# Two parts, UCS2, SMS with UDH
parts, encoding_flag, msg_type_flag = smpplib.gsm.make_parts(u'Привет мир!\n'*10)

client = smpplib.client.Client('example.com', SOMEPORTNUMBER, allow_unknown_opt_params=True)

# Print when obtain message_id
client.set_message_sent_handler(
    lambda pdu: sys.stdout.write('sent {} {}\n'.format(pdu.sequence, pdu.message_id)))
client.set_message_received_handler(
    lambda pdu: sys.stdout.write('delivered {}\n'.format(pdu.receipted_message_id)))

client.connect()
client.bind_transceiver(system_id='login', password='secret')

for part in parts:
    pdu = client.send_message(
        source_addr_ton=smpplib.consts.SMPP_TON_INTL,
        #source_addr_npi=smpplib.consts.SMPP_NPI_ISDN,
        # Make sure it is a byte string, not unicode:
        source_addr='SENDERPHONENUM',

        dest_addr_ton=smpplib.consts.SMPP_TON_INTL,
        #dest_addr_npi=smpplib.consts.SMPP_NPI_ISDN,
        # Make sure thease two params are byte strings, not unicode:
        destination_addr='PHONENUMBER',
        short_message=part,

        data_coding=encoding_flag,
        esm_class=msg_type_flag,
        registered_delivery=True,
    )
    print(pdu.sequence)
    
# Enters a loop, waiting for incoming PDUs
client.listen()

You also may want to listen in a thread:

from threading import Thread
t = Thread(target=client.listen)
t.start()

Note: When listening, the client will automatically send an enquire_link command when the socket timeouts. You may override that behavior by passing auto_send_enquire_link=False as an argument to listen(). In that case, socket.timeout exceptions will bubble up.

The client supports setting a custom generator that produces sequence numbers for the PDU packages. Per default a simple in memory generator is used which in conclusion is reset on (re)instantiation of the client, e.g. by an application restart. If you want to keep the sequence number to be persisted across restarts you can implement your own storage backed generator.

Example:

import smpplib.client

import mymodule

generator = mymodule.PersistentSequenceGenerator()
client = smpplib.client.Client('example.com', SOMEPORTNUMBER, sequence_generator=generator)
...