Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Jan 1, 2019. It is now read-only.
/ SiriServer Public archive
forked from janrueth/SiriServer

This goals at recreating a siriServer using python

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

edsonaj/SiriServer

 
 

Repository files navigation

Siri Server

IMPORTANT

There are currently only 3 plugins here, you can chat a little bit with siri. You can ask it for the current time and the current time at a certain point in the world. And you can ask it for the meaning of life.

You can contribute by making more plugins!

What is this?

This is a very early version of a Siri Server (not a proxy).

Apple's Siri is an voice controlled assistant on iPhone 4S.

With jailbreaking you can install it on other iDevices. However, Siri needs a server to communicate to do the speech processing. Apple only allows 4S devices on their servers.

This project tries to recreate the Apple Siri Server to use it with other iDevices.

You don't need any 4S keys to make it work, as it is independent from Apple.

It uses Google Speech-To-Text API. And therefore we are currently limited to commands that are shorter than 10 seconds (maybe we can overcome this).

What's new?

We have a new plugin system: Check out the plugins folder and the example plugin for more infos. It supports multi-language inputs.

You should also checkout the plugin.py to see a plugin's predefined methods. You can also look at the time plugin, it sends more complexe objects and does meaningful localized output. And does more complex processing of different inputs

What else is here?

The file SiriProtocol documents everything I (and others) found out about the protocol by now

Setup, Notes and Instructions

Install audio libraries

For the audio handling you need libspeex and libflac

On Linux simply install it via you packet manager e.g. (or see instructions and note for OS X):

sudo apt-get install libspeex1 libflac8

On OS X download libspeex and libflac from the websites above (the sources, not the binaries) and compile and install them, or simply follow the following steps:

wget http://downloads.xiph.org/releases/speex/speex-1.2rc1.tar.gz
tar -xf speex-1.2rc1.tar.gz
cd speex-1.2rc1
./configure
make
sudo make install
cd ..

wget http://sourceforge.net/projects/flac/files/flac-src/flac-1.2.1-src/flac-1.2.1.tar.gz/download -O flac-1.2.1.tar.gz
tar -xf flac-1.2.1.tar.gz
./configure --disable-asm-optimizations
make
sudo make install

Note: you can also install libspeex via MacPorts, but libflac is not available in 64bit through MacPorts, to make it build with 64bit support you need to supply --disable-asm-optimizations in configure of libflac to make it compile

Python requirements

As this project is coded with python you need a python interpreter (this is usually already installed). I work with python 2.6.6 and 2.7.2 and both work.

You also need some python packages to make it work:

biplist
M2Crypto

You can install both via easy_install, easy_install is available at http://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools, on Linux you can also get it via your packet manager:

sudo apt-get install python-setuptools

After you installed it, run:

easy_install biplist
easy_install M2Crypto

Certificate Generation

We also need to generate certificates forguzzoni.apple.com or any other domain

cd gen_certs

then

./gen_certs.sh

or

./gen_certs.sh 192.168.1.1

or

./gen_certs.sh domain.com

this will generate a certifcaite for guzzoni.apple.com, 192.168.1.1 or domain.com

When you use Spire, just enter as address what ever parameter you supplied to gen_certs.sh e.g.:

https://guzzoni.apple.com

or

https://domain.com

or

https://192.168.1.1

In case you don't have Spire or want to use guzzoni.apple.com you need to setup a DNS spoofing or manipulate you hosts file

Please make sure to install the CA certificate on your iDevice (you can simply mail it to yourself). It is the CA.pem file that was copied by gen_certs.sh to the servers root. In your mail, just click on the certificate and install it.

Running the server

Now you are ready to go, start the server with:

sudo python siriServer.py

Note: You need to run it as root, as we use https port 443 (non root can only use ports > 1024) for incomming connections.

Common Errors

If we had the mid 90s this section would glow and sparkle to get your attention. There are some errors that might occur even though you did everything that was written above...

The server just crashes after a SpeechPacket

You are running Linux right? Probably debian? There is probably already a libspeex on your machine which is optimized for SSE2 which does not work with python (reason???) Check if there is a /usr/lib/sse2/libspeex.so.1.

Option A: delete it (there should also be a version in /usr/lib if you installed via apt, or in /usr/local/lib if you compiled by hand)

Option B: ToDo

This M2Crypto thing is not working

Did you install all dependencies of M2Crypto?

I cannot get a connection from device to server

Do you access your server over the internet? You need to setup your firewall and NAT to allow traffic for tcp port 443 directed to your server Do you have a local firewall on the machine running the server? Also check if tcp port 443 is allowed for incomming connections

There is an exception with something around a database lock

error: uncaptured python exception, closing channel <main.HandleConnection connected xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:XXXX at 0xa65c368> (:database is locked

Solution: delete the .sqlite3 file and restart server

There is something with SSL in the error

Have you installed the ca.pem file on your phone? Do you have more than one CA certificate installed for the same domain?

=> Try deleting all certificates on the device and install the one created by gen_certs

Can I somehow verify the correct certificate? YES!

start siriServer.py, then take your ca.pem you think belongs to your servers certificate and run:

 echo | openssl s_client -connect [DOMAIN]:443 2>&1 | sed -ne '/-BEGIN CERTIFICATE-/,/-END CERTIFICATE-/p' | openssl verify -CAfile ca.pem 

Make sure to replace [DOMAIN] with the actual domain of the machine running siriServer.py (e.g. an IP address) If your ca.pem matches your server certificate you should see stdin: OK as output!

OK, what else? We can also setup a small test server using openssl to check if SSL is working (and to check if the iPhone correctly validates the server certificate):

sudo openssl s_server -cert server.passless.crt -key server.passless.key -accept 443 -state

When you run this (siriServer should NOT run) it opens a basis server on port 443 using your servers certificate.

Now you can connect with your iPhone as if you would use Siri (of course Siri won't work, we are just testing the SSL layer) It should output something like this, note the Ace http request near the end:

 Using default temp DH parameters
 Using default temp ECDH parameters  
 ACCEPT
 SSL_accept:before/accept initialization
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 read client hello A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 write server hello A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 write certificate A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 write server done A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 flush data
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 read client key exchange A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 read finished A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 write change cipher spec A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 write finished A
 SSL_accept:SSLv3 flush data
 -----BEGIN SSL SESSION PARAMETERS-----
 MIGKAgEBAgIDAQQCAC8EIJ3DOw2nTgOAjdCNMqiFi+OmYU1fszwfH3jDk4q1P/mq
 BDB7vM4nKFiGjLHpExNf4F1HZQ7ekRPaG/2X9EI/mqtpeWPp8vU1a/Em5JWomauK
 jDShBgIETyr5oaIEAgIBLKQGBAQBAAAAphMEEWVob2VybmNoZW4uYXRoLmN4
 -----END SSL SESSION PARAMETERS-----
 Shared ciphers:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-SHA:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-SHA:ECDHE-ECDSA-RC4-SHA:ECDHE-      ECDSA-DES-CBC3-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-RC4-SHA:ECDHE-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA:ECDH-ECDSA-AES128-SHA:ECDH-ECDSA-AES256-SHA:ECDH-ECDSA-RC4-SHA:ECDH-ECDSA-DES-CBC3-SHA:ECDH-RSA-AES128-SHA:ECDH-RSA-AES256-SHA:ECDH-RSA-RC4-SHA:ECDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-   SHA:AES128-SHA:RC4-SHA:RC4-MD5:AES256-SHA:DES-CBC3-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES128-SHA:DHE-RSA-AES256-  SHA:EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA
 CIPHER is AES128-SHA
 Secure Renegotiation IS supported
 ACE /ace HTTP/1.0
 Host: DOMAIN REMOVED
 User-Agent: Assistant(iPhone/iPhone3,1; iPhone OS/5.0.1/9A405) Ace/1.0
 Content-Length: 2000000000

Thanks

A big thanks to Applidium and also plamoni for his SiriProxy which inspired me Thanks to everyone that contributed code or ideas.

Licensing

This is free software. You can reuse it under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 license. So you can do what ever you want with it. But you are not allowed to sell it. If you like to do more than the license allows, please contact me and ask for a special commercial license.

Disclaimer

Apple owns all the rights on Siri. I do not give any warranties or guaranteed support for this software. Use it as it is.

About

This goals at recreating a siriServer using python

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 97.2%
  • Shell 2.8%