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gpsctl 1.19

What is gpsctl?

gpsctl is a utility program written for Raspberry Pi computers using a U-Blox GPS board. The author's rig is a Raspberry Pi 3 Model B with a Uputronix GPS board, which uses a U-Blox MAX-M8Q GPS module. Some of gpsctl's functions are generic for any GPS that streams NMEA data to a Linux serial port, and these should work on any Linux system. Most of gpsctl's functions, however, are quite specific to the U-Blox products, and use their proprietary UBX protocol (again, on a serial port).

Why does the world need gpsctl?

Well, probably the world doesn't actually need gpsctl - but if you happen to be attempting the same thing the author was, you might find it useful. Configuring and controlling a U-Blox GPS connected to a Linux host is a frustrating exercise. The author ran into this when implementing a stratum 1 NTP server using the aforementioned hardware. He needed to make some configuration changes to better support this. Those configuration changes required the use of the UBX protocol, and support for this on Linux is ... minimal. Hence gpsctl!

On the other hand, anyone trying to "talk" to a U-Blox GPS from a C program might find the code in gpsctl to be a useful building block. The code in gpsctl includes functions for sending and receiving UBX protocol messages, for interpreting them, modifying them, etc. This could easily be extended to serve other purposes; after all, not everyone lusts for a stratum 1 NTP server, and there might actually be other useful purposes for a GPS (though I can't think of one right now).

What, exactly, does gpsctl do?

Some gpsctl functions work for any GPS streaming NMEA data over a serial port:

  • Echoes NMEA data to stdout, optionally filtered by NMEA message type.
  • Infers the GPS' baud rate from the stream of NMEA data.

Other gpsctl functions are specific to U-Blox GPS hardware:

  • Configures the baud rate that the U-Blox GPS uses for communication.
  • Configures whether the U-Blox GPS transmits NMEA data.
  • Infers the GPS' baud rate using the UBX protocol only.
  • Configures the use of the European Galileo satellites (which is off by default in U-Blox 3.01 firmware) and enables NMEA version 4.1 output for Galileo
  • Queries the U-Blox GPS for position, time, GPS version, GPS configuration, and GPS satellite information. The format of query results are selectable: either plain English or JSON.
  • Tests the pulse-per-second output of the U-Blox GPS (fundamental for NTP).
  • Configures the U-Blox GPS for maximum timing pulse accuracy (useful for building a stratum 1 NTP server based on the GPS' notion of time).
  • Disables NMEA RMC, VTG, GSA, GSV, GLL, GGA messages and enables ZDA (for NTP driver 20 mode 8)
  • Saves the U-Blox GPS configuration to on-module battery-backed memory.
  • Resets the U-Blox GPS.

Dependencies

The only dependencies gpsctl has (other than the standard C library) is on the JSON library cJSON, and iniparser. The source for iniparser and cJSON (which have MIT licenses) are incorporated in this project.

Why is gpsctl's code so awful?

Mainly because this is the first C program the author has written in over 30 years, but also because the author has serious deficiencies in aptitude, intelligence, and knowledge (not to mention choices of hobbies).

How is gpsctl licensed?

gpsctl is licensed with the quite permissive MIT license:

Created: October 18, 2017 Author: Tom Dilatush [email protected]
Github:
License: MIT

Copyright 2017 Tom Dilatush

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so.

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE A AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

Usage

gpsctl  -v                        verbosity (e.g. -vv)  
        -q, --quiet               quiet mode  
        -p, --port                port to use (default is /dev/serial0) - overrides gpsctl.conf value  
        -j, --json                output in JSON format  
        -a, --autobaud            autodetect baud rate of the u-blox module  
                                    (tries 921600, 460800, 230400, 115200, 57600, 38400, 19200, 9600)  
        -b, --baud                use specified baud rate
        -M, --minbaud             minimum baud rate  
        -s, --sync                sync mode ascii, nmea, or ubx (default is ubx)  
        -B, --newbaud             set GPS device and serial port to same new baud rate  
        -n, --nmea                turn NMEA output on or off (y/n)  
        -Q, --query               config / fix / satellites / version  
        --galileo                 deprecated - same as --satellites
        --satellites              configure satellites only
                                    use NMEA version 4.1 or higher if Galileo satellites are enabled
        --configure_for_timing    set stationary mode,  
                                    configure satellites (as above),  
                                    disable NMEA RMC, VTG, GSA, GSV, GLL, GGA and enable ZDA  
        --save_config             save config to battery-backed RAM  
        -e, --echo                echo NMEA output  
        --reset                   cold-reset u-blox config to defaults  

Examples

To autodetect the current baud rate, set the pi and u-blox module to 115200 baud, configure stationary mode, Galileo satellites, and NMEA ZDA output only, and to see what it's doing

gpsctl -a -B 115200 --configure_for_timing -vv

To autodetect the current baud rate and configure satellites only

gpsctl -a --satellites

To view the current u-blox config

gpsctl -a -Q config

New in version 0.7 and later

At long last, the file /etc/gpsctl.conf is parsed for configuration options.

The [gpsctl] section is used to determine which serial port gpsctl uses.

The other sections are honoured by --galileo and --configure_for_timing, and override the defaults if present.

Without the gpsctl.conf file the program's behaviour will be the same as with version 0.6.

Note: Either BeiDou or Glonass can be configured, but not both at the same time as GPS or Galileo. If neither GPS nor Galileo are enabled, you can enable both BeiDou and Glonass. If you try with GPS or Galileo enabled, the [gpsctl] option "prefer beidou to glonass if both enabled" (default: no) will override one of them.

An example which configures for Galileo satellites:

#
# example gpsctl.conf which enables Galileo as in --galileo parameter
#
[gpsctl]
port = /dev/ttyAMA0
# sync method: ASCII = 1, NMEA = 2, UBX = 3
sync method = 3
verbosity = 0
prefer beidou to glonass if both enabled = no

[NMEA]
enabled = true
version = 4.1
GGA = off
GLL = off
GSA = off
GSV = off
RMC = on
VTG = off
GRS = off
GST = off
ZDA = on

[GPS]
enabled = yes
minimum channels=8
maximum channels=16

[SBAS]
enabled = no
minimum channels=1
maximum channels=3

[Galileo]
enabled = yes
minimum channels=4
maximum channels=8

[Beidou]
enabled = no
minimum channels=8
maximum channels=16

[IMES]
enabled = no
minimum channels=0
maximum channels=8

[QZSS]
enabled = no
minimum channels=0
maximum channels=3

[GLONASS]
enabled = yes
minimum channels=8
maximum channels=14

[Navigation Engine]
# Dynamic model: Portable = 0, Stationary = 2, Pedestrian = 3, Automotive = 4, Sea = 5, Air1G = 6, Air2G = 7, Air4G = 8, Watch = 9
Dynamic model =                2
# Fix mode: 2D only = 1, 3D only = 2, auto 2D/3D = 3
Fix mode =                     2
Fixed altitude (2D) =          0.00 meters
Fixed altitude variance (2D) = 0.0000 meters^2
Minimum elevation =            20 degrees
Position DoP mask =            10.0
Time DoP mask =                10.0
Position accuracy mask =       40 meters
Time accuracy mask =           40 meters
Static hold threshold =        0 cm/s
Dynamic GNSS timeout =         60 seconds
Threshold above C/No =         8 satellites
C/No threshold =               20 dBHz
Static hold max distance =     0 meters
# UTC Standard: AutoUTC = 0, USNO_UTC = 3, GLONASS_UTC = 6, BeiDou_UTC = 7
UTC standard =                 3

[Time Pulse]
# the nanoseconds / microseconds after the numbers are just reminders, they don't mean anything to the config parser
Antenna cable delay = 56 nanoseconds
RF group delay = 20 ns
Unlocked pulse period = 1000000 microseconds
Unlocked pulse length = 0
Locked pulse period = 1000000 microseconds
Locked pulse length = 500000 microseconds
User configurable delay = 0

Why did you fork it, Phil?

It all started when I decided to build a Raspberry Pi Stratum 1 NTP server.

I found Tom Dilatush's original gpsctl when looking for something to configure my Raspberry Pi plus u-blox GPS to receive Galileo satellite output. And then I tinkered a bit, tweaking settings, recompiling, tweaking again, and so on.

Hence the idea to use a configuration file to drive it.

Enjoy.

In Memoriam

Tom Dilatush (aka slightlyloony on here, slightlyloony1 on Twitter), sadly passed away on February 14th, 2024, from Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as motor neurone disease (MND).

If you find this program useful, please consider donating to your local ALS / MND charity.

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