-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 3
/
gpsd.xml
930 lines (824 loc) · 39.9 KB
/
gpsd.xml
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<!--
This file is Copyright (c) 2010 by the GPSD project
BSD terms apply: see the file COPYING in the distribution root for details.
-->
<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC
"-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd" [
<!ENTITY gpsdsock "/var/run/gpsd.sock">
]>
<refentry id='gpsd.8'>
<refentryinfo><date>9 Aug 2004</date></refentryinfo>
<refmeta>
<refentrytitle>gpsd</refentrytitle>
<manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
<refmiscinfo class="source">The GPSD Project</refmiscinfo>
<refmiscinfo class="manual">GPSD Documentation</refmiscinfo>
</refmeta>
<refnamediv id='name'>
<refname>gpsd</refname>
<refpurpose>interface daemon for GPS receivers</refpurpose>
</refnamediv>
<refsynopsisdiv id='synopsis'>
<cmdsynopsis>
<command>gpsd</command>
<arg choice='opt'>-F <replaceable>control-socket</replaceable></arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-S <replaceable>listener-port</replaceable></arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-b </arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-l </arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-G </arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-n </arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-N </arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-h </arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-P <replaceable>pidfile</replaceable></arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-D <replaceable>debuglevel</replaceable></arg>
<arg choice='opt'>-V </arg>
<arg rep='repeat'>
<group><replaceable>source-name</replaceable></group>
</arg>
</cmdsynopsis>
</refsynopsisdiv>
<refsect1 id='quickstart'><title>QUICK START</title>
<para>If you have a GPS attached on the lowest-numbered USB port of a
Linux system, and want to read reports from it on TCP/IP port 2947, it
will normally suffice to do this:</para>
<programlisting>
gpsd /dev/ttyUSB0
</programlisting>
<para>For the lowest-numbered serial port:</para>
<programlisting>
gpsd /dev/ttyS0
</programlisting>
<para>Change the device number as appropriate if you need to use a
different port. Command-line flags enable verbose logging, a control
port, and other optional extras but should not be needed for basic
operation; the one exception, on very badly designed hardware, might
be <option>-b</option> (which see).</para>
<para>On Linux systems supporting udev, <application>gpsd</application>
is normally started automatically when a USB plugin event fires (if it
is not already running) and is handed the name of the newly active
device. In that case no invocation is required at all.</para>
<para>For your initial tests set your GPS hardware to speak NMEA, as
<application>gpsd</application> is guaranteed to be able to process
that. If your GPS has a native or binary mode with better performance
that <application>gpsd</application> knows how to speak,
<application>gpsd</application> will autoconfigure that mode.</para>
<para>You can verify correct operation by first starting
<application>gpsd</application> and then
<application>xgps</application>, the X windows test client.</para>
<para>If you have problems, the GPSD project maintains a >FAQ to
assist troubleshooting.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='description'><title>DESCRIPTION</title>
<para><application>gpsd</application> is a monitor daemon that collects
information from GPSes, differential-GPS radios, or AIS receivers
attached to the host machine. Each GPS, DGPS radio, or AIS receiver
is expected to be direct-connected to the host via a USB or RS232C
serial device. The serial device may be specified to
<application>gpsd</application> at startup, or it may be set via a
command shipped down a local control socket (e.g. by a USB hotplug
script). Given a GPS device by either means,
<application>gpsd</application> discovers the correct port speed and
protocol for it.</para>
<para><application>gpsd</application> should be able to query any GPS
that speaks either the standard textual NMEA 0183 protocol, or the
(differing) extended NMEA dialects used by MKT-3301, iTrax, Motorola
OnCore, Sony CXD2951, and Ashtech/Thales devices. It can also
interpret the binary protocols used by EverMore, Garmin, Navcom,
Rockwell/Zodiac, SiRF, Trimble, and uBlox ANTARIS devices. It can read
heading and attitude information from the Oceanserver 5000 orv TNT
Revolution digital compasses.</para>
<para>The GPS reporting formats supported by your instance of
<application>gpsd</application> may differ depending on how it was
compiled; general-purpose versions support many, but it can be built
with protocol subsets down to a singleton for use in constrained
environments. For a list of the GPS protocols supported by your
instance, see the output of <command>gpsd -l</command></para>
<para><application>gpsd</application> effectively hides the
differences among the GPS types it supports. It also knows about and
uses commands that tune these GPSes for lower latency. By using
<application>gpsd</application> as an intermediary applications
avoid contention for serial devices.</para>
<para><application>gpsd</application> can use differential-GPS
corrections from a DGPS radio or over the net, from a ground station
running a DGPSIP server or a Ntrip broadcaster that reports RTCM-104
data; this will shrink position errors by roughly a factor of four.
When <application>gpsd</application> opens a serial device emitting
RTCM-104, it automatically recognizes this and uses the device as a
correction source for all connected GPSes that accept RTCM corrections
(this is dependent on the type of the GPS; not all GPSes have the
firmware capability to accept RTCM correction packets). See
<xref linkend='accuracy'/> and <xref linkend='files'/> for discussion.</para>
<para>Client applications will communicate with <application>gpsd</application>
via a TCP/IP port, 2947 by default). Both IPv4 and IPv6 connections
are supported and a client may connect via either.</para>
<para>The program accepts the following options:</para>
<variablelist remap='TP'>
<varlistentry>
<term>-F</term>
<listitem>
<para>Create a control socket for device addition and removal
commands. You must specify a valid pathname on your local filesystem;
this will be created as a Unix-domain socket to which you can write
commands that edit the daemon's internal device list.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-S</term>
<listitem><para>Set TCP/IP port on which to listen for GPSD clients
(default is 2947).</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-b</term>
<listitem><para>Broken-device-safety mode, otherwise known as read-only
mode. Some popular bluetooth and USB receivers lock up or become
totally inaccessible when probed or reconfigured. This switch prevents
gpsd from writing to a receiver. This means that
<application>gpsd</application> cannot configure the receiver for
optimal performance, but it also means that
<application>gpsd</application> cannot break the receiver. A better
solution would be for Bluetooth to not be so fragile. A platform
independent method to identify serial-over-Bluetooth devices would
also be nice.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-G</term>
<listitem><para>This flag causes <application>gpsd</application> to
listen on all addresses (INADDR_ANY) rather than just the loop back
(INADDR_LOOPBACK) address. For the sake of privacy and security, TPV
information is now private to the local machine until the user makes
an effort to expose this to the world.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-l</term>
<listitem><para>List all drivers compiled into this
<application>gpsd</application> instance. The letters to the left of
each driver name are the <application>gpsd</application>
control commands supported by that driver.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-n</term>
<listitem>
<para>Don't wait for a client to connect before polling whatever GPS
is associated with it. Some RS232 GPSes wait in a standby mode
(drawing less power) when the host machine is not asserting DTR, and
some cellphone and handheld embedded GPSes have similar behaviors.
Accordingly, waiting for a watch request to open the device may save
battery power. (This capability is rare in consumer-grade devices and
nonexistent in USB GPSes which lack a DTR line.)</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-N</term>
<listitem><para>Don't daemonize; run in foreground.
This switch is mainly useful for debugging.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-h</term>
<listitem><para>Display help message and terminate.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-P</term>
<listitem>
<para>Specify the name and path to record the daemon's process ID.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-D</term>
<listitem>
<para>Set debug level. At debug levels 2 and above,
<application>gpsd</application> reports incoming sentence and actions
to standard error if <application>gpsd</application> is in the foreground
(-N) or to syslog if in the background.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>-V</term>
<listitem>
<para>Dump version and exit.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para>Arguments are interpreted as the names of data sources.
Normally, a data source is the device pathname of a local device from
which the daemon may expect GPS data. But there are three other
special source types recognized, for a total of four:</para>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>Local serial or USB device</term>
<listitem>
<para>A normal Unix device name of a serial or USB device to which a
sensor is attached. Example:
<filename>/dev/ttyUSB0</filename>.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>TCP feed</term>
<listitem>
<para>A URI with the prefix "tcp://", followed by a hostname, a
colon, and a port number. The daemon will open a socket to the
indicated address and port and read data packets from it, which will
be interpreted as though they had been issued by a serial device. Example:
<filename>tcp://data.aishub.net:4006</filename>.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>UDP feed</term>
<listitem>
<para>A URI with the prefix "udp://", followed by a hostname, a
colon, and a port number. The daemon will open a socket listening for
UDP datagrams arriving on the indicated address and port, which will
be interpreted as though they had been issued by a serial device. Example:
<filename>udp://127.0.0.1:5000</filename>.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>Ntrip caster</term>
<listitem>
<para>A URI with the prefix "ntrip://" followed by the name of an
Ntrip caster (Ntrip is a protocol for broadcasting differential-GPS
fixes over the net). For Ntrip services that require authentication, a
prefix of the form "username:password@" can be added before the name
of the Ntrip broadcaster. For Ntrip service, you must specify which
stream to use; the stream is given in the form "/streamname". An
example DGPSIP URI could be "dgpsip://dgpsip.example.com" and a Ntrip
URI could be
"ntrip://foo:[email protected]:80/example-stream". Corrections
from the caster will be send to each attached GPS with the capability
to accept them.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>DGPSIP server</term>
<listitem>
<para>A URI with the prefix "dgpsip://" followed by a hostname, a
colon, and an optional colon-separated port number (defaulting to
2101). The daemon will handshake with the DGPSIP server and
read RTCM2 correction data from it. Corrections
from the server will be set to each attached GPS with the capability
to accept them. Example:
<filename>dgpsip://dgps.wsrcc.com:2101</filename>.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>Remote gpsd feed</term>
<listitem>
<para>A URI with the prefix "gpsd://", followed by a hostname and
optionally a colony and a port number (if the port is absent the
default <application>gpsd</application> port will be used). The daemon
will open a socket to the indicated address and port and emulate a
<application>gpsd</application> client, collecting JSON reports from
the remote <application>gpsd</application> instance that will be
passed to local clients.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para>(The "ais:://" source type supported in some older versions of
the daemon has been retired in favor of the more general
"tcp://".)</para>
<para>Internally, the daemon maintains a device pool holding the
pathnames of devices and remote servers known to the
daemon. Initially, this list is the list of device-name arguments
specified on the command line. That list may be empty, in which case
the daemon will have no devices on its search list until they are
added by a control-socket command (see <xref linkend='devices'/> for
details on this). Daemon startup will abort with an error if neither
any devices nor a control socket are specified.</para>
<para>When a device is activated (i.e. a client requests data from it),
gpsd attempts to execute a hook from
<filename>/etc/gpsd/device-hook</filename> with first command line argument
set to the pathname of the device and the second to
<option>ACTIVATE</option>. On deactivation it does the same passing
<option>DEACTIVATE</option> for the second argument.</para>
<para><application>gpsd</application> can export data to client applications
in three ways: via a sockets interface, via a shared-memory segment, and
via D-Bus. The next three major sections describe these interfaces.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='sockets'><title>THE SOCKET INTERFACE</title>
<para>Clients may communicate with the daemon via textual request and
responses over a socket. It is a bad idea for applications to speak the protocol
directly: rather, they should use the
<application>libgps</application> client library and take appropriate
care to conditionalize their code on the major and minor protocol
version symbols.</para>
<para>The request-response protocol for the socket interface is fully
documented in
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gpsd_json</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='shm'><title>SHARED-MEMORY AND DBUS INTERFACES</title>
<para><application>gpsd</application> has two other (read-only)
interfaces.</para>
<para>Whenever the daemon recognizes a packet from any attached
device, it writes the accumulated state from that device to a shared
memory segment. The C and C++ client libraries shipped with GPSD can
read this segment. Client methods, and various restrictions associated
with the read-only nature of this interface, are documented at
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>libgps</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>. The
shared-memory interface is intended primarily for embedded deployments
in which <application>gpsd</application> monitors a single device, and
its principal advantage is that a daemon instance configured with
shared memory but without the soickets interface loses a significant
amount of runtime weight.</para>
<para>The daemon may be configured to emit a D-Bus signal each time an
attached device delivers a fix. The signal path is <filename>path
/org/gpsd</filename>, the signal interface is "org.gpsd", and the
signal name is "fix". The signal payload layout is as follows:</para>
<table frame="all" pgwide="0"><title>Satellite object</title>
<tgroup cols="2" align="left" colsep="1" rowsep="1">
<thead>
<row>
<entry>Type</entry>
<entry><para>Description</para></entry>
</row>
</thead>
<tbody>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Time (seconds since Unix epoch)</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_INT32</entry>
<entry><para>mode</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Time uncertainty (seconds).</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Latitude in degrees.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Longitude in degrees.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Horizontal uncertainty in meters, 95% confidence.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Altitude in meters.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Altitude uncertainty in meters, 95% confidence.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Course in degrees from true north.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Course uncertainty in meters, 95% confidence.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Speed, meters per second.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Speed uncertainty in meters per second,
95% confidence.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Climb, meters per second.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_DOUBLE</entry>
<entry><para>Climb uncertainty in meters per second,
95% confidence.</para></entry>
</row>
<row>
<entry>DBUS_TYPE_STRING</entry>
<entry><para>Device name</para></entry>
</row>
</tbody>
</tgroup>
</table>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='devices'><title>GPS DEVICE MANAGEMENT</title>
<para><application>gpsd</application> maintains an internal list of
GPS devices (the "device pool"). If you specify devices on the
command line, the list is initialized with those pathnames; otherwise
the list starts empty. Commands to add and remove GPS device paths
from the daemon's device list must be written to a local Unix-domain
socket which will be accessible only to programs running as root.
This control socket will be located wherever the -F option specifies
it.</para>
<para>A device may will also be dropped from the pool if GPSD gets a zero
length read from it. This end-of-file condition indicates that the'
device has been disconnected.</para>
<para>When <application>gpsd</application> is properly installed along
with hotplug notifier scripts feeding it device-add commands over the
control socket, <application>gpsd</application> should require no
configuration or user action to find devices.</para>
<para>Sending SIGHUP to a running <application>gpsd</application>
forces it to close all GPSes and all client connections. It will then
attempt to reconnect to any GPSes on its device list and resume
listening for client connections. This may be useful if your GPS
enters a wedged or confused state but can be soft-reset by pulling
down DTR.</para>
<para>To point <application>gpsd</application> at a device that may be
a GPS, write to the control socket a plus sign ('+') followed by the
device name followed by LF or CR-LF. Thus, to point the daemon at
<filename>/dev/foo</filename>. send "+/dev/foo\n". To tell the daemon
that a device has been disconnected and is no longer available, send a
minus sign ('-') followed by the device name followed by LF or
CR-LF. Thus, to remove <filename>/dev/foo</filename> from the search
list. send "-/dev/foo\n".</para>
<para>To send a control string to a specified device, write to the
control socket a '!', followed by the device name, followed by '=',
followed by the control string.</para>
<para>To send a binary control string to a specified device, write to the
control socket a '&', followed by the device name, followed by '=',
followed by the control string in paired hex digits.</para>
<para>Your client may await a response, which will be a line beginning
with either "OK" or "ERROR". An ERROR response to an add command means
the device did not emit data recognizable as GPS packets; an ERROR
response to a remove command means the specified device was not in
<application>gpsd</application>'s device pool. An ERROR response to a
! command means the daemon did not recognize the devicename
specified.</para>
<para>The control socket is intended for use by hotplug scripts and
other device-discovery services. This control channel is separate
from the public <application>gpsd</application> service port, and only
locally accessible, in order to prevent remote denial-of-service and
spoofing attacks.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='accuracy'><title>ACCURACY</title>
<para>The base User Estimated Range Error (UERE) of GPSes is 8 meters
or less at 66% confidence, 15 meters or less at 95% confidence. Actual
horizontal error will be UERE times a dilution factor dependent on current
satellite position. Altitude determination is more sensitive to
variability in ionospheric signal lag than latitude/longitude is, and is
also subject to errors in the estimation of local mean sea level; base
error is 12 meters at 66% confidence, 23 meters at 95% confidence.
Again, this will be multiplied by a vertical dilution of precision
(VDOP) dependent on satellite geometry, and VDOP is typically larger
than HDOP. Users should <emphasis>not</emphasis> rely on GPS altitude for
life-critical tasks such as landing an airplane.</para>
<para>These errors are intrinsic to the design and physics of the GPS
system. <application>gpsd</application> does its internal
computations at sufficient accuracy that it will add no measurable
position error of its own.</para>
<para>DGPS correction will reduce UERE by a factor of 4, provided you
are within about 100mi (160km) of a DGPS ground station from which you
are receiving corrections.</para>
<para>On a 4800bps connection, the time latency of fixes provided by
<application>gpsd</application> will be one second or less 95% of the
time. Most of this lag is due to the fact that GPSes normally emit
fixes once per second, thus expected latency is 0.5sec. On the
personal-computer hardware available in 2005 and later, computation
lag induced by <application>gpsd</application> will be negligible, on
the order of a millisecond. Nevertheless, latency can introduce
significant errors for vehicles in motion; at 50km/h (31mi/h) of speed
over ground, 1 second of lag corresponds to 13.8 meters change in
position between updates.</para>
<para>The time reporting of the GPS system itself has an intrinsic
accuracy limit of 14 nanoseconds, but this can only be approximated by
specialized receivers using that send the high-accuracy PPS
(Pulse-Per-Second) over RS232 to cue a clock crystal. Most GPS
receivers only report time to a precision of 0.01s or 0.001s,
and with no accuracy guarantees below 1sec.</para>
<para>If your GPS uses a SiRF chipset at firmware level 231, reported
UTC time may be off by the difference between whatever default
leap-second offset has been compiled in and whatever leap-second
correction is currently applicable, from startup until complete
subframe information is received. Firmware levels 232 and up don't
have this problem. You may run <application>gpsd</application> at
debug level 4 to see the chipset type and firmware revision
level.</para>
<para>There are exactly two circumstances under which
<application>gpsd</application> relies on the host-system
clock:</para>
<para>In the GPS broadcast signal, GPS time is represented using a
week number that rolls over after 2^10 or 2^13 weeks (about 19.6
years, or 157 years), depending on the spacecraft. Receivers are
required to disambiguate this to the correct date, but may have
difficulty due to not knowing time to within half this interval, or
may have bugs. Users have reported incorrect dates which appear to be
due to this issue. <application>gpsd</application> uses the startup
time of the daemon detect and compensate for rollovers while it is
running, but otherwise reports the date as it is reported by the
receiver without attempting to correct it.</para>
<para>If you are using an NMEA-only GPS (that is, not using SiRF or
Garmin or Zodiac binary mode), <application>gpsd</application> relies
on the system clock to tell it the current century. If the system clock
returns an invalid value near zero, and the GPS does not emit GPZDA at
the start of its update cycle (which most consumer-grade NMEA GPSes do
not) then the century part of the dates
<application>gpsd</application> delivers may be wrong. Additionally,
near the century turnover, a range of dates as wide in seconds as the
accuracy of your system clock may be referred to the wrong
century.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='ntp'><title>USE WITH NTP</title>
<para>gpsd can provide reference clock information to
<application>ntpd</application>, to keep the system clock synchronized
to the time provided by the GPS receiver. If you're going to
use <application>gpsd</application> you probably want to run it
<option>-n</option> mode so the clock will be updated even when no
clients are active.</para>
<para>Note that deriving time from messages received from the GPS is
not as accurate as you might expect. Messages are often delayed in
the receiver and on the link by several hundred milliseconds, and this
delay is not constant. On Linux, <application>gpsd</application>
includes support for interpreting the PPS pulses emitted at the start
of every clock second on the carrier-detect lines of some serial
GPSes; this pulse can be used to update NTP at much higher accuracy
than message time provides. You can determine whether your GPS emits
this pulse by running at -D 5 and watching for carrier-detect state
change messages in the logfile. In addition, if your kernel provides
the RFC 2783 kernel PPS API then <application>gpsd</application> will
use that for extra accuracy.</para>
<para>When <application>gpsd</application> receives a sentence with a
timestamp, it packages the received timestamp with current local time
and sends it to a shared-memory segment with an ID known to
<application>ntpd</application>, the network time synchronization
daemon. If <application>ntpd</application> has been properly
configured to receive this message, it will be used to correct the
system clock.</para>
<para>Here is a sample <filename>ntp.conf</filename> configuration
stanza telling <application>ntpd</application> how to read the GPS
notifications:</para>
<programlisting>
server 127.127.28.0
fudge 127.127.28.0 time1 0.420 refid GPS
server 127.127.28.1 prefer
fudge 127.127.28.1 refid GPS1
</programlisting>
<para>Users of <application>ntpd</application> older than revision
ntp-4.2.5p138 should instead use this <filename>ntp.conf</filename>
snippet:</para>
<programlisting>
server 127.127.28.0 minpoll 4 maxpoll 4
fudge 127.127.28.0 time1 0.420 refid GPS
server 127.127.28.1 minpoll 4 maxpoll 4 prefer
fudge 127.127.28.1 refid GPS1
</programlisting>
<para>The magic pseudo-IP address 127.127.28.0 identifies unit 0 of
the <application>ntpd</application> shared-memory driver; 127.127.28.1
identifies unit 1. Unit 0 is used for message-decoded time and unit 1
for the (more accurate, when available) time derived from the PPS
synchronization pulse. Splitting these notifications allows
<application>ntpd</application> to use its normal heuristics to weight
them.</para>
<para>With this configuration, <application>ntpd</application> will
read the timestamp posted by <application>gpsd</application> every 16
seconds and send it to unit 0. The number after the parameter time1
is an offset in seconds. You can use it to adjust out some of the
fixed delays in the system. 0.035 is a good starting value for the
Garmin GPS-18/USB, 0.420 for the Garmin GPS-18/LVC.</para>
<para>After restarting ntpd, a line similar to the one below should
appear in the output of the command "ntpq -p" (after allowing a couple
of minutes):</para>
<screen>
remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
=========================================================================
+SHM(0) .GPS. 0 l 13 16 377 0.000 0.885 0.882
</screen>
<para>If you are running PPS then it will look like this:</para>
<screen>
remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
=========================================================================
-SHM(0) .GPS. 0 l 13 16 377 0.000 0.885 0.882
*SHM(1) .GPS1. 0 l 11 16 377 0.000 -0.059 0.006
</screen>
<para>When the value under "reach" remains zero, check that gpsd is
running; and some application is connected to it or the '-n' option was
used. Make sure the receiver is locked on to at least one satellite,
and the receiver is in SiRF binary, Garmin binary or NMEA/PPS mode. Plain
NMEA will also drive ntpd, but the accuracy as bad as one second. When
the SHM(0) line does not appear at all, check the system logs for error
messages from ntpd.</para>
<para>When no other reference clocks appear in the NTP configuration,
the system clock will lock onto the GPS clock. When you have previously
used <application>ntpd</application>, and other reference clocks appear
in your configuration, there may be a fixed offset between the GPS clock
and other clocks. The <application>gpsd</application> developers would
like to receive information about the offsets observed by users for each
type of receiver. Please send us the output of the "ntpq -p" command
and the make and type of receiver.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='chrony'><title>USE WITH CHRONY</title>
<para>gpsd can provide reference clock information to
<application>chronyd</application> similar to the way it talks to
<application>ntpd</application>. The advantage to using chrony is
that the PPS time resolution is in nSec. This is 1,000 times more
precision than the time resolution provided to ntpd.
</para>
<para>gpsd talks to <application>chronyd</application> using a socket
named /tmp/chrony.ttyXX.sock (where ttyXX is replaced by the GPS
device name. This allows multiple GPS to feed one <application>chronyd
</application>.
</para>
<para>No gpsd configuration is required to talk to chronyd. To get
chronyd to connect to gpsd using the SHM method add this to your
/etc/chrony/chonry.conf file.
</para>
<screen>
# delay 0.0 is right, but use 0.2 to avoid NMEA
# time fighting with PPS time
refclock SHM 0 offset 0.0 delay 0.2
refclock SHM 1 offset 0.0 delay 0.0
</screen>
<para>To get chronyd to connect to gpsd using the more precise socket
method add this to your /etc/chrony/chrony.conf file (replacing ttyXX
with your device name): </para>
<screen>
#refclock PPS
/dev/pps0 refclock SOCK /tmp/chrony.ttyXX.sock
</screen>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='dbus'><title>USE WITH D-BUS</title>
<para>On operating systems that support D-BUS,
<application>gpsd</application> can be built to broadcast GPS fixes to
D-BUS-aware applications. As D-BUS is still at a pre-1.0 stage, we
will not attempt to document this interface here. Read the
<application>gpsd</application> source code to learn more.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='security'><title>SECURITY AND PERMISSIONS ISSUES</title>
<para><application>gpsd</application>, if given the -G flag, will
listen for connections from any reachable host, and then disclose the
current position. Before using the -G flag, consider whether you
consider your computer's location to be sensitive data to be kept
private or something that you wish to publish.</para>
<para><application>gpsd</application> must start up as root in order
to open the NTPD shared-memory segment, open its logfile, and create
its local control socket. Before doing any processing of GPS data, it
tries to drop root privileges by setting its UID to "nobody" (or another
userid as set by configure) and its group ID to the group of the initial
GPS passed on the command line — or, if that device doesn't exist,
to the group of <filename>/dev/ttyS0</filename>.</para>
<para>Privilege-dropping is a hedge against the possibility that
carefully crafted data, either presented from a client socket or from
a subverted serial device posing as a GPS, could be used to induce
misbehavior in the internals of <application>gpsd</application>.
It ensures that any such compromises cannot be used for privilege
elevation to root.</para>
<para>The assumption behind <application>gpsd</application>'s
particular behavior is that all the tty devices to which a GPS might
be connected are owned by the same non-root group and allow group
read/write, though the group may vary because of distribution-specific
or local administrative practice. If this assumption is false,
<application>gpsd</application> may not be able to open GPS devices in
order to read them (such failures will be logged).</para>
<para>In order to fend off inadvertent denial-of-service attacks by
port scanners (not to mention deliberate ones),
<application>gpsd</application> will time out inactive client
connections. Before the client has issued a command that requests a
channel assignment, a short timeout (60 seconds) applies. There is no
timeout for clients in watcher or raw modes; rather,
<application>gpsd</application> drops these clients if they fail to
read data long enough for the outbound socket write buffer to fill.
Clients with an assigned device in polling mode are subject to a
longer timeout (15 minutes).</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='limitations'><title>LIMITATIONS</title>
<para>If multiple NMEA talkers are feeding RMC, GLL, and GGA sentences
to the same serial device (possible with an RS422 adapter hooked up to
some marine-navigation systems), a 'TPV' response may mix an altitude
from one device's GGA with latitude/longitude from another's RMC/GLL
after the second sentence has arrived.</para>
<para><application>gpsd</application> may change control settings on
your GPS (such as the emission frequency of various sentences or
packets) and not restore the original settings on exit. This is a
result of inadequacies in NMEA and the vendor binary GPS protocols,
which often do not give clients any way to query the values of control
settings in order to be able to restore them later.</para>
<para>When using SiRF chips, the VDOP/TDOP/GDOP figures and associated
error estimates are computed by <application>gpsd</application> rather
than reported by the chip. The computation does not exactly match
what SiRF chips do internally, which includes some satellite weighting
using parameters <application>gpsd</application> cannot see.</para>
<para>Autobauding on the Trimble GPSes can take as long as 5 seconds
if the device speed is not matched to the GPS speed.</para>
<para>Generation of position error estimates (eph, epv, epd, eps, epc)
from the incomplete data handed back by GPS reporting protocols
involves both a lot of mathematical black art and fragile
device-dependent assumptions. This code has been bug-prone in tbe
past and problems may still lurk there.</para>
<para>AIDVM decoding of types 16-17, 22-23, and 25-26 is unverified.</para>
<para>GPSD presently fully recognizes only the 2.1 level of RTCM2
(message types 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 16). The 2.3 message types 13, 14,
and 31 are recognized and reported. Message types 8, 10-12, 15-27,
28-30 (undefined), 31-37, 38-58 (undefined), and 60-63 are not yet
supported.</para>
<para>The ISGPS used for RTCM2 and subframes decoder logic is
sufficiently convoluted to confuse some compiler optimizers, notably
in GCC 3.x at -O2, into generating bad code.</para>
<para>Devices meant to to use PPS for high-precision timekeeping may
fail if they are specified after startup by a control-socket command,
as opposed to on the daemon's original command line. (Root privileges
are dropped early, and some Unix varients require them in order to set
the PPS line discipline.)</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='files'><title>FILES</title>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term><filename>/dev/ttyS0</filename></term>
<listitem>
<para>Prototype TTY device. After startup,
<application>gpsd</application> sets its group ID to the owning group of this
device if no GPS device was specified on the command line does not
exist.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term><filename>/etc/gpsd/device-hook</filename></term>
<listitem>
<para>Optional file containing the device activation/deactivation script.
Note that while <filename>/etc/gpsd</filename> is the default system
configuration directory, it is possible to build the GPSD source code
with different assumptions.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<!--
<varlistentry>
<term><filename>/usr/share/gpsd/dgpsip-servers</filename></term>
<listitem>
<para>A text file listing DGPSIP servers worldwide. If no DGPSIP
server is specified at startup (via the -d option)
<application>gpsd</application> will look here to find the
nearest one. Each line has three space-separated fields:
latitude (decimal degrees), longitude (decimal degrees) and
a server name (optionally followed by a colon and a port number).
Text following # on a line is ignored. Blank lines are ignored.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
-->
</variablelist>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='standards'><title>APPLICABLE STANDARDS</title>
<para>The official NMEA protocol standard is available on paper from
the National Marine Electronics Association, but is proprietary and
expensive; the maintainers of <application>gpsd</application> have
made a point of not looking at it. The GPSD project website links to
several documents that collect publicly disclosed information about
the protocol.</para>
<para><application>gpsd</application> parses the following NMEA
sentences: RMC, GGA, GLL, GSA, GSV, VTG, ZDA. It recognizes these
with either the normal GP talker-ID prefix, or with the GN prefix used
by GLONASS, or with the II prefix emitted by Seahawk Autohelm marine
navigation systems, or with the IN prefix emitted by some Garmin
units, or with the EC prefix emitted by ECDIS units. It recognizes
some vendor extensions: the PGRME emitted by some Garmin GPS models,
the OHPR emitted by Oceanserver digital compasses, the PTNTHTM emitted
by True North digital compasses, and the PASHR sentences emitted by
some Ashtech GPSes.</para>
<para>Note that <application>gpsd</application> JSON returns pure decimal
degrees, not the hybrid degree/minute format described in the NMEA
standard.</para>
<para>Differential-GPS corrections are conveyed by the RTCM-104
protocol. The applicable standard for RTCM-104 V2 is <citetitle>RTCM
Recommended Standards for Differential GNSS (Global Navigation
Satellite) Service</citetitle> RTCM Paper 136-2001/SC 104-STD. The
applicable standard for RTCM-104 V3 is <citetitle>RTCM Standard
10403.1 for Differential GNSS Services - Version 3</citetitle> RTCM
Paper 177-2006-SC104-STD. Ordering instructions for the RTCM standards
are accessible from the website of the Radio Technical Commission for Maritime
Services under "Publications".</para>
<para>AIS is defined by ITU Recommendation M.1371,
<citetitle>Technical Characteristics for a Universal Shipborne
Automatic Identification System Using Time Division Multiple
Access</citetitle>. The AIVDM/AIVDO format understood by this program
is defined by IEC-PAS 61162-100, <citetitle>Maritime navigation and
radiocommunication equipment and systems</citetitle>.A more accessible
description of both can be found at <citetitle>AIVDM/AIVDO Protocol
Decoding</citetitle>, on the references page of the GPSD project
website.</para>
<para>Subframe data is defined by IS-GPS-200E, <citetitle>GLOBAL
POSITIONING SYSTEM WING (GPSW) SYSTEMS ENGINEERING & INTEGRATION,
INTERFACE SPECIFICATION IS-GPS-200 Revision E</citetitle>. The format
understood by this program is defined in Section 20 (Appendix II) of
the IS-GPS-200E, <citetitle>GPS NAVIGATION DATA STRUCTURE FOR DATA,
D(t)</citetitle></para>
<para>The API for PPS time service is speciied by RFC 2783,
<citetitle>Pulse-Per-Second API for UNIX-like Operating Systems,
Version 1.0</citetitle></para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='see_also'><title>SEE ALSO</title>
<para>
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gpsdctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gps</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>libgps</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gpsd_json</refentrytitle><manvolnum>5</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>libgpsd</refentrytitle><manvolnum>3</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gpsprof</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gpsfake</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gpsctl</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
<citerefentry><refentrytitle>gpscat</refentrytitle><manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 id='maintainer'><title>AUTHORS</title>
<para>Authors: Eric S. Raymond, Chris Kuethe, Gary Miller. Former
authors whose bits have been plowed under by code turnover: Remco
Treffcorn, Derrick Brashear, Russ Nelson. This manual page by Eric S. Raymond
<email>[email protected]</email>.</para>
</refsect1>
</refentry>