ref: ff6a0f490a9f7b11ec7e370dfd0a923cd0318d40
dir: /sys/man/8/gpsfs/
.TH GPSFS 8 .SH NAME gpsfs, gpsevermore \- GPS time and position service .SH SYNOPSIS .B aux/gpsfs [ .B -d .I device ] [ .B -b .I baud ] [ .B -s .I srvname ] [ .B -m .I mntpt ] .PP .B aux/gpsevermore [ .B -d .I device ] [ .B -b .I baud ] [ .B -n .I baud ] [ .B -l .I location ] .SH DESCRIPTION .B Aux/gpsfs reads an NMEA-compatible serial GPS (Global Positioning System) device and provides time and position through a file system, by default mounted on .B /mnt and implementing .BR /mnt/gps . .PP It implements four files in the .B gps directory: .BR position , .BR time , .BR satellites , and .BR raw . .PP The read-only .B position file contains one line of information in 9 tab-separated fields: .TF "\fImagnetic deviation .PD .TP .I "fix quality 0 means position data invalid, 1 means a 2D position is available, 2 means a 3D position is available. The value is 8, 9, or 10, respectively, when the fix data comes from a file rather than an actual GPS. .TP .I "zulu time universal coordinated time encoded as hhmmss followed by the character 'Z'. .TP .I "system time time and date converted to the format of .IR time (2). .TP .I longitude in degrees, east of Greenwich is positive, west negative. .TP .I latitude in degrees, positive is north, negative south of the equator. .TP .I altitude above sea level, in meters. .TP .I course degrees, clockwise from true north. .TP .I "ground speed in km/h .TP .I "magnetic deviation (not provided by all GPSs), in degrees, positive is westerly, negative easterly. .PP The read-only .B time file contains one line of information in 4 tab-separated fields: .TF "\fIsystem time .PD .TP .I "gps time in .IR time (2) format. .TP .I "gps time in .I nsec (see .IR time (2)) format (ms accuracy). .TP .I "system time in .I nsec format. This is the system time at the time of the .I "gps time sample. The difference between this and the previous field is used in clock synchronization. See .IR timesync (8). .TP .I validity the character .B A meaning sample valid and usable for clock synchronization. The other values are not usable for clock sync: .B B means valid sample from file playback, .B V means invalid sample, and .B W means invalid playback sample. .PP The read-only .B satellites file contains information about the current satellite constellation. It consists of one line of general information, followed by zero or more lines, one for each satellite in use. The first line contains two fields: .TF "\fIsatellites in view .PD .TP .I "fix quality same as in the .B position file. .TP .I "satellites in view number of satellites above the horizon .PP Subsequent lines have four fields: .TF "\fIelevation .PD .TP .I prn satellite ID .TP .I elevation above the horizon, degrees. .TP .I azimuth direction, degrees from true north .TP .I snr Signal to noise ratio, 0 - 99 dB .PP The contents of these files are refreshed once per second when reading from an actual GPS, and once per 100 ms (giving a speed up of a factor 10) when playing back from file. .PP The read-only .B raw file can be read to obtain a copy of the raw NMEA GPS output. .I Gpsfs keeps an internal buffer of 8KB, so the reader must keep up with the output (typically 500 or so bytes per second). .PP The .B \-d flag establishes the device the GPS samples are read from. If the device file is not a serial interface, .I gpsfs assumes playback from file and modifies quality parameters as such. .PP The .B \-b flag specifies the baud rate of the serial line. The standard baud rate for NMEA GPS is 4800 baud, but many device allow changing to higher speeds. .PP The .B \-s flag specifies the name under which the .I gpsfs service is posted in .BR /srv . .PP The .B \-m flag specifies a mount other than .BR /mnt . .SS Evermore .B Aux/gpsevermore is used to configure GPSs using an Evermore chipset. .PP The .B \-d flag specifies the serial device to the GPS. .PP The .B \-b flag specifies the baud rate of the serial line. The standard baud rate for NMEA GPS is 4800 baud, but many device allow changing to higher speeds. .PP The .B \-n flag specifies the speed to set the GPS to. When the command finishes, the GPS should be read (and configured) at the new speed. .PP The .B \-l flag is sued to specify the location to initialize the GPS to. The format is .B dd:mm:ssX or .B dd:mm.mmmX or .BR dd.dddX , where .B dd stands for degrees (one or more digits), .B mm for minutes and .B ss for seconds of arc. .B X is one of .BR W , .BR E , .B N or .BR S . Longitudes come with .B W or .BR E , latitudes with .B N or .BR S . The .B \-l flag is followed by two such fields, one for longitude, one for latitude. They may be given in a single argument (separated by white space), or in two arguments, in either order. Initialization time is taken from .IR time (2). .SH "SEE ALSO .IR timesync (8), .IR time (2) .SH FILES .TF /mnt/gps/satellites .TP .B /mnt/gps/position position, time, speed and heading .TP .B /mnt/gps/satellites satellites in view .TP .B /mnt/gps/time GPS time (millisecond accuracy) .TP .B /dev/eia0 default GPS device .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/cmd/aux/gps