Change Sd Card Serial Number

SD cards, along with their “counterparts” mini and microSD cards, all contain manufacturer defined information in a set of registers. One is known as the CID, short for Card Identification Register. Internal SD Card Information. Information about an SD card is encoded in its internal card registries. One of these is the Card Identification (CID) Register, a 16 byte code that contains information that uniquely identifies the SD card, including the card serial number (PSN), manufacturer ID number (MID) and manufacture date (MDT).

Active1 year, 2 months ago

How can I programatically read the SD Card's CID register, which contains a Serial Number and other information? Can I do it through Android Java, or Native code?

Thanks in advance,Eric

Eric HamiltonEric Hamilton

11 Answers

Jared Rummler
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Dinesh PrajapatiDinesh Prajapati
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I managed to find my SD card CID by plugging my phone to my computer via usb and using the adb tool (Android SDK)

My phone is rooted so I'm not sure if this is accessible on non-rooted phones.

Also try

These are explained in the kernel documentation http://www.mjmwired.net/kernel/Documentation/mmc/mmc-dev-attrs.txt

delcypherdelcypher

The only code I've found thus far to provide the id is C++ or C#http://jo0ls-dotnet-stuff.blogspot.com/2008/12/read-secure-digital-sd-card-serial.html
http://jo0ls-dotnet-stuff.blogspot.com/2008/12/read-cid-and-csd-c-implementation.html
If you are a C++ developer you may be able to take this and make it work on Android.

Paul GregoirePaul Gregoire
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I made this one... it worked for me... hope it makes u clear!

Aditya NikhadeAditya Nikhade

As BMB wrote, you cannot know the real path of the SD card in the /sys filesystem. However, /sys implements aliases as well, and you may be able to retrieve the CID through /sys/block/mmcblk0/device/cid.

For example, on a Tattoo running 2.2, /sys/block/mmcblk0 is a soft link (established automatically by the system) to /sys/devices/platform/msm_sdcc.2/mmc_host/mmc1/mmc1:aaaa/block/mmcblk0.

Samuel TardieuSamuel Tardieu
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There is api in android for getting sd card serial id. The method is called getFatVolumeId(String mountPoint), where 'mountPoint' is sd card name (you can get this name by calling Environment.getExternalStorageDirectory()). But getFatVolumeId is kindof hidden function (or forgotten), so you want to create package in your project named android.os and the class in it to reference the native method, to be able to call it:

And the code is:

Also see the links

http://groups.google.com/group/android-framework/browse_thread/thread/1abd18435ba20a67?pli=1http://markmail.org/message/rdl4bhwywywhhiau#query:+page:1+mid:rdl4bhwywywhhiau+state:results

southertonsoutherton

There is no Android API that can do this that I am aware of and for a general solution that is needed. To provide some background the SD card is connected to a hw-controller that is specific to the device platform. It is possible to read out the cid value from the linux /sys file system if you know your platform. The following snippet works on my droid (TI omap based platform) but not on Qualcomm MSM based platforms.

On a another platform the sys file we are looking for is different. It may even differ between different cards on the same platform since I was not able to test that. On MSM based devices the path would be something like /sys/devices/platform/msm_sdcc.1/mmc_host/...

Since we have this hardware dependence on reading out the SD-card CID there would have to be an update to the Android API:s that provides general access. This API would then have to be implemented by each device manufacturer to map to the correct sd card controller driver.

BMBBMBSim
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Modify Sd Card Serial Number

I was looking for this function too but could never get a home brewed solution. I ended up finding a company that makes an SID reader. Go to nexcopy.com and look in their SD or microSD duplicator section. It can read up to 20 cards at a time.

Card
JesusJesus

for mmcblk0, just write in shell as:

you can implement it in java easily.

ref:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/mmc/mmc-dev-attrs.txt
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/sysfs-rules.txt
http://www.cameramemoryspeed.com/sd-memory-card-faq/reading-sd-card-cid-serial-psn-internal-numbers/

yurenchenyurenchen

Even though the relatively ancient Palm OS and Windows Mobile OS devices are able to read the SD card ID, AFAIK Android devices aren't capable of doing that yet. This is particularly troubling given the problems with the Settings.Secure.ANDROID_ID discussed here.

How To Change Sd Card Serial Number

gregSgregS

Smart Card Serial Number

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Building on Dinesh's answer...

Dinesh suggested looking in the directory/sys/class/mmc_host/mmc1/mmc1:*/ (where * is a number) for the file named cid, which gives us the contents of the card's CID register. This is does work in many cases, and is a very helpful start.

But mmc1 is not always the removable SD card. Sometimes, e.g. on a Motorola Droid Pro with Android API level 10, mmc0 is the removable SD card, and mmc1 is something else. I'm guessing that mmc1, when present, points to internal storage of some sort (possibly a non-removable microSD card). On a cheap Android tablet we tested, mmc0 is the SD card and there is no mmc1.

So you can't just assume that mmc1 is the SD card.

A glimmer of hope: It seems (so far) that by looking at the type file in the same directory as the cid file (e.g. /sys/class/mmc_host/mmc1/mmc1:0007/type), we can determine which is which: a type value of SD indicates a removable SD card, while MMC is not.

However, that's just from testing on a few Android devices. I can't find any specifications about the contents of the type file, so if somebody else knows of relevant documentation, please let me know.

Number

Of course, MMC and SD are just two different storage technology standards, and SD is backward-compatible with MMC. So it's not necessarily the case that type SD always corresponds to an external microSD card. It doesn't seem likely that MMC could indicate a microSD card at all (if the type field is populated accurately); but on the other hand, it's conceivable that a non-removable SD card could have type SD.

For further research: Does this approach work when an microSD card is connected via a USB adapter? My one test on this, with a tablet, had the USB-connected microSD card show up as mmc1, with type SD.

LarsHLarsH

Sd Card Formatter

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