libgps(3)

NAME

   libgps - C service library for communicating with the GPS daemon

SYNOPSIS

   C:

   #include <gps.h>

   int gps_open(char *server, char * port, struct gps_data_t *gpsdata);

   int gps_send(struct gps_data_t *gpsdata, char *fmt...);

   int gps_read(struct gps_data_t *gpsdata);

   bool gps_waiting(const struct gps_data_t *gpsdata, int timeout);

   char *gps_data(const struct gps_data_t *gpsdata);

   int gps_unpack(char *buf, struct gps_data_t *gpsdata);

   void gps_close(struct gps_data_t *gpsdata);

   int gps_stream(struct gps_data_t *gpsdata, unsigned intflags,
                  void *data);

   const char *gps_errstr(int err);

                          Python:

                          import gps

                          session = gps.gps(host="localhost", port="2947")

                          session.stream(flags=gps.WATCH_JSON)

                          for report in session:
                              process(report)

                          del session

DESCRIPTION

   libgps is a service library which supports communicating with an
   instance of the gpsd(8); link it with the linker option -lgps.

       Warning
       Take care to conditionalize your code on the major and minor API
       version symbols in gps.h; ideally, force a compilation failure if
       GPSD_API_MAJOR_VERSION is not a version you recognize. See the GPSD
       project website for more information on the protocol and API
       changes.

   Calling gps_open() initializes a GPS-data structure to hold the data
   collected by the GPS, and sets up access to gpsd(1) via either the
   socket or shared-memory export. The shared-memory export is faster, but
   does not carry information about device activation and deactivation
   events and will not allow you to monitor device packet traffic.

   gps_open() returns 0 on success, -1 on errors and is re-entrant. errno
   is set depending on the error returned from the socket or shared-memory
   interface; see gps.h for values and explanations; also see
   gps_errstr(). The host address may be a DNS name, an IPv4 dotted quad,
   an IPV6 address, or the special value GPSD_SHARED_MEMORY referring to
   the shared-memory export; the library will do the right thing for any
   of these.

   gps_close() ends the session.

   gps_send() writes a command to the daemon. It does nothing when using
   the shared-memory export. The second argument must be a format string
   containing elements from the command set documented at gpsd(1). It may
   have % elements as for sprintf(3), which will be filled in from any
   following arguments. This function returns a -1 if there was a
   Unix-level write error, otherwise 0. Please read the LIMITATIONS
   section for additional information and cautions. See gps_stream() as a
   possible alternative.

   gps_read() accepts a response, or sequence of responses, from the
   daemon and interprets. This function does either a nonblocking read for
   data from the daemon or a fetch from shared memory; it returns a count
   of bytes read for success, -1 with errno set on a Unix-level read
   error, -1 with errno not set if the socket to the daemon has closed or
   if the shared-memory segment was unavailable, and 0 if no data is
   available.

   gps_waiting() can be used to check whether there is new data from the
   daemon. The second argument is the maximum amount of time to wait (in
   microseconds) on input before returning. It returns true if there is
   input waiting, false on timeout (no data waiting) or error condition.
   When using the socket export, this function is a convenience wrapper
   around a select(2) call, and zeros errno on entry; you can test errno
   after exit to get more information about error conditions. Warning:
   under the shared-memory interface there is a tiny race window between
   gps_waiting() and a following gps_read(); in that context, beause the
   latter does not block, it is probably better to write a simple read
   loop.

   gps_unpack() parses JSON from the argument buffer into the target of
   the session structure pointer argument. Included in case your
   application wishes to manage socket I/O itself.

   gps_data() returns the contents of the client data buffer (it returns
   NULL when using the shared-memory export). Use with care; this may fail
   to be a NUL-terminated string if WATCH_RAW is enabled.

   gps_stream() asks gpsd to stream the reports it has at you, to be made
   available when you poll (not available when using the shared-memory
   export). The second argument is a flag mask that sets various policy
   bits; see the list below. Calling gps_stream() more than once with
   different flag masks is allowed.

   WATCH_DISABLE
       Disable the reporting modes specified by the other WATCH_ flags.

   WATCH_ENABLE
       Disable the reporting modes specified by the other WATCH_ flags.
       This is the default.

   WATCH_JSON
       Enable JSON reporting of data. If WATCH_ENABLE is set, and no other
       WATCH flags are set, this is the default.

   WATCH_NMEA
       Enable generated pseudo-NMEA reporting on binary devices.

   WATCH_RARE
       Enable reporting of binary packets in encoded hex.

   WATCH_RAW
       Enable literal passthrough of binary packets.

   WATCH_SCALED
       When reporting AIS or Subframe data, scale integer quantities to
       floats if they have a divisor or rendering formula associated with
       them.

   WATCH_NEWSTYLE
       Force issuing a JSON initialization and getting new-style
       responses. This is the default.

   WATCH_OLDSTYLE
       Force issuing a W or R command and getting old-style responses.
       Warning: this flag (and the capability) will be removed in a future
       release.

   WATCH_DEVICE
       Restrict watching to a specified device, patch given as second
       argument.

   gps_errstr() returns an ASCII string (in English) describing the error
   indicated by a nonzero return value from gps_open().

   Consult gps.h to learn more about the data members and associated
   timestamps. Note that information will accumulate in the session
   structure over time, and the 'valid' field is not automatically zeroed
   by each gps_read(). It is up to the client to zero that field when
   appropriate and to keep an eye on the fix and sentence timestamps.

   The Python implementation supports the same facilities as the
   socket-export calls in the C library; there is no shared-memory
   interface.  gps_open() is replaced by the initialization of a gps
   session object; the other calls are methods of that object, and have
   the same names as the corresponding C functions. However, it is simpler
   just to use the session object as an iterator, as in the example given
   below. Resources within the session object will be properly released
   when it is garbage-collected.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

   By setting the environment variable GPSD_SHM_KEY, you can control the
   key value used to create shared-memory segment used for communication
   with gpsd. This will be useful mainly when isolating test instances of
   gpsd from production ones.

CODE EXAMPLE

   The following is an excerpted and simplified version of the libgps
   interface code from cgps(1).

           struct gps_data_t gps_data;

           ret = gps_open(hostName, hostPort, &gps_data);

           (void) gps_stream(&gps_data, WATCH_ENABLE | WATCH_JSON, NULL);

           /* Put this in a loop with a call to a high resolution sleep () in it. */
           if (gps_waiting (&gps_data, 500)) {
               errno = 0;
               if (gps_read (&gps_data) == -1) {
                   ...
               } else {
                   /* Display data from the GPS receiver. */
                   if (gps_data.set & ...
               }
           }

           /* When you are done... */
           (void) gps_stream(&gps_data, WATCH_DISABLE, NULL);
           (void) gps_close (&gps_data);

LIMITATIONS

   On some systems (those which do not support implicit linking in
   libraries) you may need to add -lm to your link line when you link
   libgps. It is always safe to do this.

   In the C API, incautious use of gps_send() may lead to subtle bugs. In
   order to not bloat struct gps_data_t with space used by responses that
   are not expected to be shipped in close sequence with each other, the
   storage for fields associated with certain responses are combined in a
   union.

   The risky set of responses includes VERSION, DEVICELIST, RTCM2, RTCM3,
   SUBFRAME, AIS, GST, and ERROR; it may not be limited to that set. The
   logic of the daemon's watcher mode is careful to avoid dangerous
   sequences, but you should read and understand the layout of struct
   gps_data_t before using gps_send() to request any of these responses.

COMPATIBILITY

   The gps_query() supported in major versions 1 and 2 of this library has
   been removed. With the new streaming-oriented wire protocol behind this
   library, it is extremely unwise to assume that the first transmission
   from the daemon after a command is shipped to it will be the response
   to command.

   If you must send commands to the daemon explicitly, use gps_send() but
   beware that this ties your code to the GPSD wire protocol. It is not
   recommended.

   In earlier versions of the API gps_read() was a blocking call and there
   was a POLL_NONBLOCK option to make it nonblocking.  gps_waiting() was
   added to reduce the number of wrong ways to code a polling loop.

   See the comment above the symbol GPSD_API_MAJOR_VERSION in gps.h for
   recent changes.

SEE ALSO

   gpsd(8), gps(1), libgpsd(3).  libgpsmm(3).

AUTHOR

   Eric S. Raymond <[email protected]>, C sample code Charles Curley
   <[email protected]>



Opportunity


Personal Opportunity - Free software gives you access to billions of dollars of software at no cost. Use this software for your business, personal use or to develop a profitable skill. Access to source code provides access to a level of capabilities/information that companies protect though copyrights. Open source is a core component of the Internet and it is available to you. Leverage the billions of dollars in resources and capabilities to build a career, establish a business or change the world. The potential is endless for those who understand the opportunity.

Business Opportunity - Goldman Sachs, IBM and countless large corporations are leveraging open source to reduce costs, develop products and increase their bottom lines. Learn what these companies know about open source and how open source can give you the advantage.


Free Software


Free Software provides computer programs and capabilities at no cost but more importantly, it provides the freedom to run, edit, contribute to, and share the software. The importance of free software is a matter of access, not price. Software at no cost is a benefit but ownership rights to the software and source code is far more significant.

Free Office Software - The Libre Office suite provides top desktop productivity tools for free. This includes, a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation engine, drawing and flowcharting, database and math applications. Libre Office is available for Linux or Windows.


Free Books


The Free Books Library is a collection of thousands of the most popular public domain books in an online readable format. The collection includes great classical literature and more recent works where the U.S. copyright has expired. These books are yours to read and use without restrictions.

Source Code - Want to change a program or know how it works? Open Source provides the source code for its programs so that anyone can use, modify or learn how to write those programs themselves. Visit the GNU source code repositories to download the source.


Education


Study at Harvard, Stanford or MIT - Open edX provides free online courses from Harvard, MIT, Columbia, UC Berkeley and other top Universities. Hundreds of courses for almost all major subjects and course levels. Open edx also offers some paid courses and selected certifications.

Linux Manual Pages - A man or manual page is a form of software documentation found on Linux/Unix operating systems. Topics covered include computer programs (including library and system calls), formal standards and conventions, and even abstract concepts.