70

I've just lost my phone. I know it's here in my house cause I used it last night and my bluetooth speakers will connect to it this morning.

How can I text my phone using bash? Then the phone notification will sound and I can find my phone.

Note: I asked for a bash solution because it's simpler than installing and configuring a GUI. Also I am more comfortable working in bash than python, HTML, or java, etc. Finally a bash solution works in Windows 10 when you use the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).

Note 2: Reply to comments:

  • I don't have a landline so I can't simply call my smartphone.
  • It was 6 am on Sunday morning when I lost my phone. People I could email to call my phone were sleeping. I was unsure of the battery charge level and if it died, I could never text it.
  • A few weeks previously I had turned off email sound notifications on my smartphone so I couldn't email myself.
  • I don't have skype or any VOIP service providers

After 30 minutes I did find the smartphone by texting it using the answer I posted below. It was hidden underneath 4" high-from-floor furniture shelf in the living-room...

  • 1
    If I read this correctly, you are asking for the equivalent of the Find My Phone service that will ring your phone regardless of volume, vibrate mode, bluetooth headphone, etc connected that make the phone silent. I know that Google has the one for android that you can do, but I am not aware of command line form of it. If I can figure it out it is unlimited for use. Same thing for Apple. – Terrance Dec 23 '18 at 16:23
  • 3
    There is no software to install on the Android one. You just go to https://www.google.com/android/find – Terrance Dec 23 '18 at 16:27
  • 3
    "Okay Google!" listening intensifies.... – Michael Frank Dec 23 '18 at 20:09
  • this must be the worst case of upvoting a terrible question that i ever seen on sen! just because you can send an SMS using such complex means that barely work in the USA, doesn't mean you are doing it in the linux way at all... then again, i must be extra grumpy today for some reason. in any case, i do need a good solution for this question! one that only uses bash and a cellphone with linux, and no 3rd parties or internet. please let me know if you, dear kind reader, do find a solution before i come back here. cheers! – cregox Oct 22 '21 at 18:50

3 Answers3

63

SMS Texting from Terminal / Shell / Bash

For the following steps open a terminal prompt aka "Command Line Interface" or "CLI". In most Linux distributions do this using Ctrl+Alt+T

textbelt.com to send text from bash

I found a reddit article: Send an SMS Text Message from the Command Line with this Bash / Terminal command you can use:

curl -X POST https://textbelt.com/text \
   --data-urlencode phone='7801234567' \
   --data-urlencode message='Find Your Phone!' \
   -d key=textbelt

Replace 7801234567 with your phone number. If you are texting an international phone number (outside Canada / USA) follow these instructions.

Note: The software replaces "Find Your Phone!" with a message that you need to purchase a key to use a custom message. But the software still insists you must provide a message that gets overwritten.


Other reasons for sending SMS Text Message from Bash

Finding my smartphone was an unusual need to send an SMS text message from Bash. You might have a few people that should be texted when:

  • Disks are about to fail (or other hardware errors occurred)
  • Disk space utilization exceeds threshold, for example 90%
  • RAM is full and swap is being used heavily
  • Web server is experiencing external attacks
  • A user had too many invalid sign-ons and account is deactivated
  • A specific job has been run which effects key processes
  • A door badge reader monitors a certain door being unlocked

textbelt.com is Free for one text per day

Only one free SMS message a day can be sent by a given sender. Here is an example of the first and second attempts on one day:

$ find-phone # bash script with above command
{"success":true,"textId":"168141545572031481","quotaRemaining":0}

$ find-phone {"success":false,"error":"Only one test text message is allowed per day.","quotaRemaining":0}

Note: You maybe able to reset your router's IP address for more than one text per day but I haven't tested this yet.

You can use prepaid unlimited texts. There are many SMS gateway services available. Pricing at above vendor link varies from $0.03 to $0.15 per text. This is for reference and not an endorsement nor recommendation. Please do your homework and search for reputable pay-for-service vendors at best prices.


Create Bash Script

You could create a bash script called sms containing:

#!/bin/bash
curl -X POST https://textbelt.com/text --data-urlencode phone='$1' --data-urlencode message='$2' -d key=textbelt
  • Send SMS message using sms 7801234567 "Hello World"
  • Thank you Fabby for testing this from the EU and confirming it works there.

Send Email to carrier of the smartphone with SMS Text Message

For the following all you need is a web browser like FireFox, Internet Explorer or Chrome. No need to dive into the "bowels of bash" or limit yourself to one free text per day.

Many carriers allow you to send SMS Text Message to a smartphone by addressing an email to phone_number@mobile_provider_name.com.

Phone Number look up to get carrier's website address

To get the provider's website address using the phone number go to: https://freecarrierlookup.com/. Imagine we entered the phone number: 7801234567:

Fee Carrier Lookup.png

We are told the email address to use is 7801234567@pcs.rogers.com. Now send an email to this address and your phone will sound with a notification.

Of course if you have your smartphone configured to sound with a notification when email arrives you can simply email your phone in the first place!

CLI interface for sending email address

In Ask Ubuntu there are many questions and answers on how to send email using bash. I'm using ssmtp (Secure Simple Mail Transport Protocol) for my cron daily backups: Backup Linux configuration, scripts and documents to Gmail

Although this setup is for one user, you can create a file with multiple users to text messages to:

Name         Email Address
Tiny Tim     5551234567@att.com
Mrs. Clause  5552223333@sprint.com
Bad Elf      5551114444@telus.net

Then in your bash code something like this:

ssmtp 5551234567@att.com < mail.txt

Where mail.txt looks like this:

Cc: admin@our_company.com
Subject: Nightly Database Update FAILED
From: root@our_company.com
Content-Type: text/html; charset="utf8"

<html> <body> <div style=" background-color: #abcdef; width: 300px; height: 300px; "> </div> Nightly database update failed at procedure: AP005. </body> </html>

There are many ways of sending email from bash. This is just one example. The important thing is the email address contains the smartphone number followed by the smartphone provider's web address

  • 16
    There are also email addresses you can send to that the phone company will forward to your phone as a text. – Kevin Dec 23 '18 at 14:55
  • I won’t be at a computer to test for 12+ hours, but I’ve definitely sent emails from the command line before. It may take some configuration (username/password) to get it working for gmail specifically though. – Kevin Dec 23 '18 at 15:58
  • @Kevin, It is also a good idea to send an SMS from gmail in order to find a phone, even if it is via a graphical user interface (and a graphical desktop environment). – sudodus Dec 23 '18 at 16:04
  • 1
    Skype can send an SMS or a regular voice phone-call (which will make the phone make sounds for a longer time). It costs money, but not too much. Maybe they won't charge for a phone-call, it you don't answer (after finding the phone) ;-) – sudodus Dec 23 '18 at 16:07
  • 2
    Sending TEXT via email works. However, you need to know the carrier your text message recipient uses. Currently, you can determine that via https://freecarrierlookup.com/ You will also get an email address to use for sending an SMS or MMS message. i.e.: 8771234567@txt.att.net... after getting the email address for sending text, then use whatever email methodology you like, from command line mail, to gmail, to thunderbird, etc. to format the text message and send it. – TonyB Dec 24 '18 at 01:48
  • 2
    I know it's beyond the scope of this Q&A but for sending alerts for full disks/RAM or any other failures to dedicated users I would not rely on a service that sends SMS once a day but attach a modem with a SIM card instead. In Germany (Europe?) the CEP CT63 is quite popular. – PerlDuck Dec 25 '18 at 12:01
  • It works internationally as well, but the only message you get is "to customize this message, get a key" – Fabby Dec 25 '18 at 12:12
  • 1
    "Most if not all carriers" That's quite localized information. Around here (Netherlands), it doesn't appear to work. – Mast Dec 26 '18 at 13:59
  • 1
    If the limitation is one SMS per day per IP address, then that's not much of a limitation. I have 313 trillion IP addresses on my LAN. – kasperd Dec 26 '18 at 16:45
  • @Mast I've changed "Most if not all carriers" to "Many carriers". It may have been better to say "Most USA/Canada providers". If the carrier name lookup doesn't work, most people know their smartphone provider and could google search the website address. – WinEunuuchs2Unix Dec 26 '18 at 16:51
  • What's that HTML doing in an email? – mike3996 Dec 26 '18 at 18:34
  • @progo That's from the article I linked. The way I send email from bash is linked above that link. The method I use is: echo -e "to: $EmailAddr\nsubject: $FileName\n" | (cat - && uuencode "$FileName" "$FileName") | ssmtp "$EmailAddr". – WinEunuuchs2Unix Dec 26 '18 at 18:59
  • 1
    @PerlDuck Though to be fair depending on how you set it up it could work well. I’m part of a MUD and years ago when the server owner (and founder - I helped him in programming and various other things and still do though not nearly as much as I used to) was on holiday and a OOM problem caused a panic. What could be done though? Well he set up a script that probes the server every so often (probably regularly), did not get a response and so sent a message to the person watching the house. They did a hard reboot and all was okay :) But I see your point of course too just not the only way. :) – Pryftan Jul 25 '19 at 15:08
  • 1
    @PerlDuck This solution works for home user like myself sending text message daily for free. For a business you can purchase text messages for 40 cents each and send unlimited times per day which is cheaper than new hardware and cell number. – WinEunuuchs2Unix Jul 25 '19 at 15:28
  • @WinEunuuchs2Unix Of course you are right. Recently I started to use Pushover for such notifications. The account is free and sending notifications is easy (e.g. curl). The App to receive them has a 7-day-free-trial period and then costs 5 $ once. – PerlDuck Jul 25 '19 at 15:35
  • @PerlDuck I took a quick peek at your link. Do you think that's worth posting as an answer here? – WinEunuuchs2Unix Jul 25 '19 at 16:00
  • @WinEunuuchs2Unix I don't think so. Pushover is a great tool, but it is not a classic text messaging tool. You need a dedicated client on the receiving end. – PerlDuck Jul 25 '19 at 16:20
24

This answer is not for command line as I can't find a command line solution for Google.

If you have an Android phone and don't want to use the command line, you can go to https://www.google.com/android/find in a web browser and ring your phone from there regardless of mute, vibrate or being connected to a Bluetooth headset. There is no extra software required on your phone either. This can also be done as many times as you want in a day.

Terrance
  • 41,612
  • 7
  • 124
  • 183
5

Phone call from the browser, using Google Hangouts

You can also locate your phone by calling it, even if you don't have a landline.

Prerequisite: a Google account

Note: Only most calls to the US and Canada are free. See https://www.google.com/voice/b/0/rates?p=hangout for rates.

  1. Go to hangouts.google.com
  2. Click the "Phone call" button:
    button screenshot
  3. Click "New conversation":
    button screenshot
  4. Enter your phone number:
    number entry box screenshot
  5. Click "Call":
    call button screenshot
Nonny Moose
  • 2,255