Installation
The Installation section is intended to get you up and running quickly with a simple SMS sending scenario through HTTP API or SMPP Server API.
Jasmin installation is provided as rpm & deb Linux packages, docker image and pypi package.
Important
Jasmin needs a working RabbitMQ and Redis servers, more info in Prerequisites & Dependencies below.
Prerequisites & Dependencies
Jasmin requires Python 3 (Python 2 is no more supported) with a functioning pip module.
Hint
Latest pip module installation: # curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py | python
Depending on the Linux distribution you are using, you may need to install the following dependencies:
- RabbitMQ Server, Ubuntu package name: rabbitmq-server. RabbitMQ is used heavily by Jasmin as its core AMQP.
- Redis Server, Ubuntu package name: redis-server. Redis is used mainly for mapping message ID’s when receiving delivery receipts.
- header files and a static library for Python, Ubuntu package name: python-dev
- Foreign Function Interface library (development files), Ubuntu package name: libffi-dev
- Secure Sockets Layer toolkit - development files, Ubuntu package name: libssl-dev
- Twisted Matrix, Python Event-driven networking engine, Ubuntu package name: python-twisted
Ubuntu
Jasmin can be installed through DEB packages hosted on Packagecloud:
curl -s https://setup.jasminsms.com/deb | sudo bash
sudo apt-get install jasmin-sms-gateway
Note
Ubuntu 20.04 and newer versions are supported.
You have to install and setup RabbitMQ or Redis servers on same machine (Default configuration) or on separate ones (Requires Jasmin configuration: /etc/jasmin/jasmin.cfg).
Note
redis and rabbitmq must be installed and already running.
Once Jasmin installed, you may simply start the jasmind service:
sudo systemctl enable jasmind
sudo systemctl start jasmind
Note
redis and rabbitmq must be installed and already running.
RHEL & CentOS
Jasmin can be installed through RPM packages hosted on Packagecloud:
curl -s https://setup.jasminsms.com/rpm | sudo bash
sudo yum install epel-release
sudo yum install jasmin-sms-gateway
Note
Many dependencies are installed from the Epel repository, please pay attention to activating this repository before installing jasmin-sms-gateway package.
Note
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 & CentOS 8 and newer versions are supported.
You have to install and setup RabbitMQ or Redis servers on same machine (Default configuration) or on separate ones (Requires Jasmin configuration: /etc/jasmin/jasmin.cfg).
Note
redis and rabbitmq must be installed and already running.
Once Jasmin installed, you may simply start the jasmind service:
sudo systemctl enable jasmind
sudo systemctl start jasmind
Pypi
Having another OS not covered by package installations described above ? using the Python package installer will be possible, you may have to follow these instructions:
System user
Jasmin system service is running under the jasmin system user, you will have to create this user under jasmin group:
sudo useradd jasmin
System folders
In order to run as a POSIX system service, Jasmin requires the creation of the following folders before installation:
/etc/jasmin
/etc/jasmin/resource
/etc/jasmin/store #> Must be owned by jasmin user
/var/log/jasmin #> Must be owned by jasmin user
Installation
The last step is to install jasmin through pip:
sudo pip install jasmin
systemd scripts must be downloaded from here <https://github.com/jookies/jasmin/tree/master/misc/config/systemd> and manually installed into your system, once placed in /lib/systemd/system jasmind shall be enabled and started:
sudo systemctl enable jasmind
sudo systemctl start jasmind
Note
redis and rabbitmq must be started with jasmin.
Docker
Containers are ideal for microservice architectures and for environments that scale rapidly or release often, Here’s more from Docker’s website.
Installing Docker
Before we get into containers, we’ll need to get Docker running locally. You can do this by installing the package for your system (tip: you can find yours here).
Once that’s set up, you’re ready to start using Jasmin container !
Using docker-compose
Create a file named “docker-compose.yml” and paste the following:
version: "3"
services:
redis:
image: redis:alpine
restart: unless-stopped
rabbit-mq:
image: rabbitmq:alpine
restart: unless-stopped
jasmin:
image: jookies/jasmin:0.10
restart: unless-stopped
container_name: jasmin
volumes:
- /var/log/jasmin:/var/log/jasmin
ports:
- 2775:2775
- 8990:8990
- 1401:1401
depends_on:
- redis
- rabbit-mq
environment:
REDIS_CLIENT_HOST: redis
AMQP_BROKER_HOST: rabbit-mq
Then spin it:
docker-compose up -d
This command will pull latest jasmin v0.10, latest redis and latest rabbitmq images to your computer:
# docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED VIRTUAL SIZE
jasmin latest 0e4cf8879899 36 minutes ago 478.6 MB
Jasmin is now up and running:
# docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
1a9016d298bf jookies/jasmin:0.10 "/docker-entrypoint.…" 3 seconds ago Up 2 seconds 0.0.0.0:1401->1401/tcp, 0.0.0.0:2775->2775/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8990->8990/tcp jasmin
af450de4fb95 rabbitmq:alpine "docker-entrypoint.s…" 5 seconds ago Up 3 seconds 4369/tcp, 5671-5672/tcp, 15691-15692/tcp, 25672/tcp rabbitmq
c8feb6c07d94 redis:alpine "docker-entrypoint.s…" 5 seconds ago Up 3 seconds 6379/tcp redis
Note
You can play around with the docker-compose.yml to choose different versions, mounting the configs outside the container, etc …
Sending your first SMS
For the really impatient, if you want to give Jasmin a whirl right now and send your first SMS, you’ll have to connect to Management CLI overview and setup a connection to your SMS-C, let’s assume you have the following SMPP connection parameters as provided from your partner:
Paramater | Description | Value |
---|---|---|
Host | Host of remote SMS-C | 172.16.10.67 |
Port | SMPP port on remote SMS-C | 2775 |
Username | Authentication username | smppclient1 |
Password | Authentication password | password |
Throughput | Maximum sent SMS/second | 110 |
Note
In the next sections we’ll be heavily using jCli console, if you feel lost, please refer to Management CLI overview for detailed information.
1. Adding SMPP connection
Connect to jCli console through telnet (telnet 127.0.0.1 8990) using jcliadmin/jclipwd default authentication parameters and add a new connector with an CID=DEMO_CONNECTOR:
Authentication required.
Username: jcliadmin
Password:
Welcome to Jasmin console
Type help or ? to list commands.
Session ref: 2
jcli : smppccm -a
> cid DEMO_CONNECTOR
> host 172.16.10.67
> port 2775
> username smppclient1
> password password
> submit_throughput 110
> ok
Successfully added connector [DEMO_CONNECTOR]
2. Starting the connector
Let’s start the newly added connector:
jcli : smppccm -1 DEMO_CONNECTOR
Successfully started connector id:DEMO_CONNECTOR
You can check if the connector is bound to your provider by checking its log file (default to /var/log/jasmin/default-DEMO_CONNECTOR.log) or through jCli console:
jcli : smppccm --list
#Connector id Service Session Starts Stops
#DEMO_CONNECTOR started BOUND_TRX 1 0
Total connectors: 1
3. Configure simple route
We’ll configure a default route to send all SMS through our newly created DEMO_CONNECTOR:
jcli : mtrouter -a
Adding a new MT Route: (ok: save, ko: exit)
> type defaultroute
jasmin.routing.Routes.DefaultRoute arguments:
connector
> connector smppc(DEMO_CONNECTOR)
> rate 0.00
> ok
Successfully added MTRoute [DefaultRoute] with order:0
4. Create a user
In order to use Jasmin’s HTTP API to send SMS messages, you have to get a valid user account, that’s what we’re going to do below.
First we have to create a group to put the new user in:
jcli : group -a
Adding a new Group: (ok: save, ko: exit)
> gid foogroup
> ok
Successfully added Group [foogroup]
And then create the new user:
jcli : user -a
Adding a new User: (ok: save, ko: exit)
> username foo
> password bar
> gid foogroup
> uid foo
> ok
Successfully added User [foo] to Group [foogroup]
5. Send SMS
Sending outbound SMS (MT) is simply done through Jasmin’s HTTP API (refer to HTTP API for detailed information about sending and receiving SMS and receipts):
http://127.0.0.1:1401/send?username=foo&password=bar&to=06222172&content=hello
Calling the above url from any brower will send an SMS to 06222172 with hello content, if you receive a response like the below example it means your SMS is accepted for delivery:
Success "9ab2867c-96ce-4405-b890-8d35d52c8e01"
For more troubleshooting about message delivery, you can check details in related log files in /var/log/jasmin:
Log filename | Description |
---|---|
messages.log | Information about queued, rejected, received and sent messages |
default-DEMO_CONNECTOR.log | The SMPP connector log file |