gpsmon117 Feb 2009gpsmonreal-time GPS packet monitor and control utilitygpsmon-h -V -F control-socketserver:port:devicedevice-l -D debuglevelDESCRIPTIONgpsmon is a monitor that watches
packets coming from a GPS and displays them along with diagnostic
information. It supports commands that can be used to tweak GPS
settings in various ways; some are device-independent, some vary
with the GPS chipset type.This tool used to be called 'sirfmon', and worked only on SiRF
devices (and the command set has changed to resemble the command
switches of gpsctl). It now has support for a range
of NMEA devices as well; support for other (binary-protocol) device
types is planned. It will behave sanely, just dumping packets, when
connected to a GPS type it knows nothing about.gpsmon differs from a navigation
client in that it mostly dumps raw data from the GPS, with only enough
data-massaging to allow checks against expected output. In
particular, this tool does not do any interpolation or modeling
to derive climb/sink or error estimates. Nor does it discard
altitude reports when the fix quality is too low.gpsmon is a designed to run in a
terminal emulator with a minimum 25x80 size; the non-GUI interface is
a design choice made to accomodate users operating in constrained
environments and over telnet or ssh connections. If run in a larger
window, the size of the packet-log window will be increased to
fit.gpsmon accepts an -h option that
displays a usage message, or a -V option to dump the package
version and exit.This program may be run in either of two modes, as a client for
the gpsd daemon (and its associated control
socket) or directly connected to a specified serial device. When run
with no argument, it attempts to connect to the daemon. If the
argument looks like a server:port specification it will also attempt
to connect to the daemon. If the argument looks like a bare server
name it will attempt to connect to a daemon running on the default
gpsd port on that server. Only if the device argument contains
slashes but no colons will it be treated as a serial device for direct
connection. In direct-connect mode gpsmon
will hunt for a correct baud rate and lock on to it
automatically.The -F option is only valid in client mode; it specifies a
control socket to which the program should send device control
strings. You must specify a valid pathname of a Unix-domain socket on
your local filesystem.The -D option enables packet-getter debugging output and is
probably only useful to developers of the GPSD code. Consult the
packet-getter source code for relevant values.The -l option lists a table showing which GPS device types
gpsmon has built-in support for, and which
generic commands can be applied to which GPS types, and then
exits. Note that this does not list type-specific commands associated
with individual GPS types.After startup, the top part of the screen reports the contents
of several especially interesting packet types. The bottom half of
the screen is a scrolling hex dump of all packets the GPS is issuing.
Dump lines beginning >>> represent control packets sent to the
GPS.COMMANDSThe following device-independent comands are available while
gpsmon is running:iEnable/disable subtype probing and reinitialize the driver. In
normal operation, gpsmon does not send
configuration strings to the device (except for wakeup strings needed
to get it to send data, if any). The command 'i1' causes it to send
the same sequence of subtype probes that
gpsd would. The command 'i0' turns off
probing; 'i' alone toggles the bit. In either case, the current driver
is re-selected; if the probe bit is enabled, probes will begin to be
issued immediately.Note that enabling probing might flip the device into another
mode; in particular, it will flip a SiRF chip into binary mode as if
you had used the n command. This is due to a
limitation in the SiRF firmware that we can't fix.cChange cycle time. Follow it with a number interpreted as a
cycle time in seconds. Most devices have a fixed cycle time of 1
second, so this command may fail with a message.lToggle packet logging. If packet logging is on, it will be
turned off and the log closed. If it is off, logging to the filename
following the l will be enabled. Differs from simply capturing the
data from the GPS device in that only whole packets are logged.
The logfile is opened for append, so you can log more than one
portion of the packet stream and they will be stitched together
correctly.nWith an argument of 0, switch device to NMEA mode at current
speed; with an argument of 1, change to binary (native) mode. With no
argument, toggle the setting. Will show an error if the device doesn't
have such modes.qQuit gpsmon. Control-C, or whatever
your current interrupt chracter is, works as well.sChange baud rate. Follow it with a number interpreted as bits
per second, for example "s9600". The speed number may optionally be
followed by a colon and a wordlength-parity-stopbits specification in
the traditional style, e.g 8N1 (the default), 7E1, etc. Some
devices don't support serial modes other than their default, so
this command may fail with a message.Use this command with caution. On USB and Bluetooth GPSes it is
also possible for serial mode setting to fail either because the
serial adaptor chip does not support non-8N1 modes or because the
device firmware does not properly synchronize the serrial adaptor chip
with the UART on the GPS chipset whjen the speed changes. These
failures can hang your device, possibly requiring a GPS power cycle or (in
extreme cases) physically disconnecting the NVRAM backup battery.tForce a switch of monitoring type. Follow it with a string that
is unique to the name of a gpsd driver with
gpsmon support;
gpsmon will switch to using that driver and
display code. Will show an error message if there is no matching gpsd
driver, or multiple matches, or the unique match has no display
support in gpsmon.xSend hex payload to device. Following the command letter you may
type hex digit pairs; end with a newline. These will become the
payload of a control packet shipped to the device. The packet will be
wrapped with headers, trailers, and checksum appropriate for the
current driver type. The first one or two bytes of the payload may be
specially interpreted, see the description of the
of
gpsctl1.XSend raw hex bytes to device. Following the command letter you
may type hex digit pairs; end with a newline. These will be shipped
to the device.Ctrl-SFreeze display, suspend scrolling in debug window.Ctrl-QUnfreeze display, resume normal operation.NMEA support(These remarks apply to not just generic NMEA devices
but all extended NMEA devices for which
gpsmon presently has support.)All fields are raw data from the GPS except the "Cooked PVT"
window near top of screen, provided as a sheck.There are no device-specific commands. Which generic
commands are available may vary by type: examine the output
of gpsmon -l to learn more.SiRF supportMost information is raw from the GPS. Underlined fields are
derived by translation from ECEF coordinates or application of
leap-second and local time-zone offsets.The following commands are supported for SiRF GPSes only:AToggle reporting of 50BPS subframe data.MSet (M1) or clear (M0) static navigation. The SiRF documentation
says Static navigation is a position filter designed to be used
with motor vehicles. When the vehicle's velocity falls below a
threshold, the position and heading are frozen, and velocity is set to
zero. This condition will continue until the computed velocity rises
above 1.2 times the threshold or until the computed position is at
least a set distance from the frozen place. The threshold velocity and
set distance may vary with software versions.Non-static mode is designed for use with road navigation
software, which often snaps the reported position to the nearest road
within some uncertainty radius. You probably want to turn static
navigation off for pedestrian use, as it is likely to report speed
zero and position changing in large jumps.PToggle navigation-parameter display mode. Toggles between
normal display and one that shows selected navigation parameters from
MID 19, including the Static Navigation bit toggled by the 'M' command.To interpret what you see, you will need a copy of the
SiRF Binary Protocol Reference Manual.FILES/var/run/gpsd.sockThe default location of the control socket.BUGS AND LIMITATIONSIf you run gpsmon in client mode,
and kill the daemon while gpsmon is
still running, gpsmon will hang.
Don't do that...SEE ALSOgpsd8,
gps1,
libgps3,
libgpsd3,
gpsprof1,
gpsfake1,
gpsctl1,
gpscat1.
gpspipe1.
AUTHOREric S. Raymond esr@thyrsus.com. This code is
part of the gpsd toolset; there is a project page for
gpsdhere.