I had received a small Pharos360 GPS unit from a friend of mine who received it free with a software mapping program, and he didn't need it.
It turns out that it is native 3.3V serial output, with a 3-5VDC input, which means you can wire it directly to COM2 of a mesh node, and it fits right in the case (the clear plastic doo-hickey is the GPS unit, wired with regular CAT5 conductors).
So I wired it in and made that my Mobile node (K5KTF-Mobile). Luckily for me, my 2001 Dodge Ram had very brittle plastic in the dash and a large chunk cracked and fell in, so I have a nice place to set my node and have the longer rubber duckie antenna without hitting the windshield.
So now, what to do software-wise?
First thing is set the serial port to 4800 baud, the output of the GPS.
/etc/init.d/gps:
#!/bin/sh /etc/rc.common # Copyright (C) 2006 OpenWrt.org START=51
start() { stty -F /dev/tts/1 4800 }
stop() { killall gps }
That does it every time the unit boots.
Then I made a script to poll the GPGLL line of the GPS output and write that line to a file called "latlon":
/etc/init.d/read-gps:
head /dev/tts/1|grep GPGLL >/www/cgi-bin/latlon
I then did 'crontab -e' and added a line to run 'read-gps' every minute (the first line is the ID'er, per Part 97):
*/5 * * * * /usr/local/bin/fccid */1 * * * * /etc/init.d/read-gps
So that updates the 'latlon' file every minute with my current coordinates.
Then I added a chunk to /www/cgi-bin/status (the main status page for a mesh node) that would read 'latlon', scrape out the latitude and longitude, divide the numbers by 100 to get the standard XX.XXXX format, and then print it to the status screen.
# page header print "<h1><big>$node"; print " / $tactical" if $tactical; print "</big></h1>"; print "<hr>\n";
#lets play with GPS! open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $!; $latmunge = substr(<FILE>,7,9); close FILE; open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $!; $longmunge = substr(<FILE>,20,9); close FILE; $latitude = ($latmunge / 100); $longitude = ($longmunge / 100);
print "Im currently at $latitude / -$longitude \n"; print "<hr>\n";
# nav buttons
For some reason I had to close and reopen the file again to get the second parameter, as running through it once would not return any value for Longitude. --Im open to suggestions how to fix it.
For those looking at it, this would only work for those between Greenwich U.K, and American Samoa. I cheated, and dont expect to ever drive my truck any further east than the Carolinas or west of California.....
And it looks like this:
This may help when your out working on setting up links and need GPS coordinates (and dont have your cell phone handy...).
I will eventually take the data and craft an ax.25 packet to send over the network to an APRS server for inclusion onto the APRS network.
UPDATE 12-23-2012 I have played with the GPS data and the formatting of the page a bit more. I changed from using the GPGLL stream to the GPGGA, which outputs more info. To implement, here are the changes: ============================================================ /etc/init.d/read-gps :
head /dev/tts/1|grep GPGGA >/www/cgi-bin/latlon ============================================================ AND (note that I included parts of the original code before and after so you can see the placement of the new code between)
============================================================ /www/cgi-bin/status
# page header print "<h1><big>$node"; print " / $tactical" if $tactical; print "</big></h1>"; print "<hr>\n";
#lets play with GPS!
#$GPGGA,031914.046,3031.1526,N,09752.7339,W,1,04,5.8,336.5,M,-22.5,M,0.0,0000*48
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $!; $latdeg = substr(<FILE>,18,2); close FILE;
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $!; $latminsec =substr(<FILE>,20,7); close FILE;
$latdec = ($latdeg + ($latminsec / 60));
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $!; $longdeg = substr(<FILE>,30,3); close FILE;
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $!; $longminsec = substr(<FILE>,33,7); close FILE;
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die$!; $sats = substr(<FILE>,45,2); close FILE;
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $!; $altit = substr(<FILE>,52,5); close FILE;
$altitude = ($altit * 3.280839895);
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $1; $utchh = substr(<FILE>,7,2); close FILE;
open FILE, "</www/cgi-bin/latlon" or die $1; $utcmm = substr(<FILE>,9,2); close FILE;
$csthh = $utchh - 6; if ($csthh <0){ $csthh = $utchh + 18; $ampm = "AM"; }; if ($csthh >12){ $csthh = $csthh -12; $ampm = "PM"; };
$longdec = ($longdeg + ($longminsec / 60));
print "At $csthh:$utcmm $ampm, Im at \<a href\=\"https\:\/\/maps\.google\.com\/maps\?q\=$latdec\+\%2F\+\-$longdec\+\&z\=15\" target\=\"\_blank\"\>$latdec / -$longdec \<\/a\>\, ALT=$altit M \/ $altitude\', using $sats satelites. \n"; print "<hr>\n";
# GPS CODE DONE
# nav buttons print "<nobr>\n"; ============================================================ I found that the GPGGA may not be as "accurate" or as reliable as GPGLL, but it does give extra data, as far as how many sats used, approx elevation, etc. One reason is that the lat/lon output for GPGGA has a changing decimal point, and since this code counts characters, sometimes it gets weird. If there is anyone out there who plays in this sandbox more and wants to improve the code and send it back to me, Ill be glad to test/use it, as well as post it here with full credit.
This new code in /www/cgi-bin/status also makes the LAT/LON on the page a link, so that if you have internet access, it will open a new tab/window to a Google map, like so:
73! Jim K5KTF
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