Difference between revisions of "GPS daemon"
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start() { | start() { | ||
− | stty -F /dev/ttySMX4 raw -echo -echoe -echok 38400 | + | stty -F /dev/ttySMX4 raw -echo -echoe -echok 38400 <<<<<<<<<<<<-------------- |
echo -n "Starting $NAME: " | echo -n "Starting $NAME: " | ||
start-stop-daemon -S -q -p $PIDFILE --exec $DAEMON -- -P $PIDFILE $DEVICES && echo "OK" || echo "Failed" | start-stop-daemon -S -q -p $PIDFILE --exec $DAEMON -- -P $PIDFILE $DEVICES && echo "OK" || echo "Failed" |
Revision as of 19:06, 9 June 2010
Contents
About
From gpsd website: gpsd is a service daemon that monitors one or more GPSes or AIS receivers attached to a host computer through serial or USB ports, making all data on the location/course/velocity of the sensors available to be queried on TCP port 2947 of the host computer. With gpsd, multiple location-aware client applications (such as navigational and wardriving software) can share access to receivers without contention or loss of data. Also, gpsd responds to queries with a format that is substantially easier to parse than the NMEA 0183 emitted by most GPSes. The gpsd distribution includes a linkable C service library, a C++ wrapper class, and a Python module that developers of gpsd-aware applications can use to encapsulate all communication with gpsd.
Installation
$ make menuconfig
Package Selection for the target ---> Hardware handling / blockdevices and filesystem maintenance ---> [*] gpsd devices/protocol support ---> gpsd features --->
- Let default devices/features if you don't know what they mean.
$ make
- reflash your rootfs
Usage
- gpsd is automatically launched at startup by /etc/init.d/S50gpsd. At first startup you may need to add the following line in the start() method of this script:
# nano /etc/init.d/S50gpsd start() { stty -F /dev/ttySMX4 raw -echo -echoe -echok 38400 <<<<<<<<<<<<-------------- echo -n "Starting $NAME: " start-stop-daemon -S -q -p $PIDFILE --exec $DAEMON -- -P $PIDFILE $DEVICES && echo "OK" || echo "Failed" }