Provided by: aprx_2.9.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       Aprx-2 - An APRS iGate application with integrated Digipeater.

SYNOPSIS

       aprx [-d[d[d]]] [-e] [-i] [-v] [-V] [-l syslogfacilityname] [-f /etc/aprx.conf]

DESCRIPTION

       The  aprx  program  is a special purpose Ham-radio application supplying infrastructure services for APRS
       protocol use.

       A more detailed manual is available at:
       http://thelifeofkenneth.com/aprx/aprx-manual.pdf

FEATURES

       The Aprx begun  as  a  receive-only  APRS  iGate  application  with  minimum  system  support  technology
       requirements.   This  version has also multi-port digipeater support, transmit iGate, and experimental D-
       PRS-to-APRS RF/Rx-iGate.

       •  The Aprx does not require machine to have any other software in it, than things in UNIX standard libc.
          In particular no special AX.25 libraries at all, nor widgets or even C++ runtime.

       •  Important goal has been to keep R/W memory footprint as small as possible, and on general purpose i386
          Linux a single radio port iGate+digipeater is now around 250 kB of R/W memory allocations.

       •  Any UNIX (and UNIX like) platform should work for the Aprx, or be trivially ported.

       •  The Aprx can listen "TNC2 monitor" and "KISS" speaking TNCs on any serial ports.

       •  For Aprx the serial port can be ordinary host computer port, a USB serial port, or remote  port  on  a
          remote  server  behind the internet, like cisco router AUX ports (port 4001, TCP STREAM without TELNET
          escapes.)

       •  The Aprx does not require machine to have AX.25 protocol support internally!  (Thus this works also on
          e.g. Solaris and BSD machines without PF_AX25 sockets.)

       •  On Linux machine with kernel internal  AX.25  protocol  support,  the  Aprx  can  listen  on  it  with
          promiscuous mode and in order to use that, the Aprx must be started as root user, and be configured to
          list interface callsigns that APRS packets are coming in.  The AX.25 socket listening is not in itself
          configurable,  it  is always exists in Linux systems, and related configuration parameters are ignored
          in other platforms.  This socket listening does not need auxiliary "libax25" to function.

       •  The Aprx program can be run without root privileges at least against remote serial port servers.   One
          must  change  local  serial  port ownership or access-groups (if any are used) to userid that runs the
          program and possibly do several changes of  file  paths  in  configuration  file  beginning  with  its
          location  (startup  parameter).   How  that  is  done  is  up to the user or system integrator of this
          program.

       •  The Aprx connects with one callsign-ssid pair to APRS-IS core for all received radio ports.

       •  The Aprx Rx-iGate knows that messages with following tokens in AX.25 VIA fields are not to be  relayed
          into APRS-IS network:
                RFONLY, NOGATE, TCPIP, TCPXX

       •  The  Aprx  Rx-iGate knows that following source address prefixes are bogus and thus messages with them
          are to be junked:
                WIDE, RELAY, TRACE, TCPIP, TCPXX, NOCALL, N0CALL

       •  The Aprx Rx-iGate Drops all query messages ("?").

       •  The Aprx Rx-iGate opens up all 3rd party messages ("}"), and checks the internal data if it is  OK  to
          be gated out to APRS-IS.

       •  The  Aprx has built-in "Erlang monitor" mechanism that telemeters each receiving interface to APRS-IS.
          It can also syslog the interface specific channel occupancy, and optionally can output to STDOUT.

       •  The Aprx (since version 1.91) can do digipeater functions.

       •  The Aprx (since version 1.99) does have experimental D-STAR D-PRS to APRS gateway functionality.   See
          the aprx-manual.pdf for details.

       •  The  Aprx can be run on systems without writable storage, even with very little memory, like on NSLU2,
          and OpenWrt platforms.  The experiments have shown that a single radio Tx-iGate+digipeater works  with
          less  than  300  kB of writable RAM for the Aprx itself.  Additional memory is necessary for operating
          system services of TCP/IP networking, and serial port drivers.

OPTIONS

       The aprx has following runtime options:

       -i     Keep the program foreground without debugging outputs.

       -d     Turn on verbose debugging, outputs data to STDOUT.

       -dd    the "more debug" mode shows also details of network interaction with the APRS-IS network service.

       -ddd   the "even more debug" mode shows also detail classification of every kind  of  frame  received  in
              KISS variants.

       -e     Erlang  output prints 10 minute and 60 minute traffic accumulation byte counts, and guestimates on
              channel occupancy, alias "Erlang".  These outputs are sent to STDOUT, which  system  operator  may
              choose to log elsewere.  This is independent if the "-l" option below.

       -f /etc/aprx.conf
              Configuration file, given path is built-in default, and can be overridden by the program runner.

       -l syslogfacilityname
              Defines  syslog(3)  facility code used by the erlang reporter by defining its name.  Default value
              is: NONE, and accepted values are: LOG_DAEMON, LOG_FTP,  LOG_LPR,  LOG_MAIL,  LOG_NEWS,  LOG_USER,
              LOG_UUCP,  LOG_LOCAL0,  LOG_LOCAL1,  LOG_LOCAL2,  LOG_LOCAL3,  LOG_LOCAL4, LOG_LOCAL5, LOG_LOCAL6,
              LOG_LOCAL7.  That list is subject to actual facility code set in the system, and in  any  case  if
              you  specify  a  code  that  is  not known, then the program will complain during the startup, and
              report it.  This is independent of the "-e" option above.

       -v     Verbose logging of received traffic to STDOUT.  Lines begin with reception timestamp (UNIX  time_t
              seconds),  then  TAB,  and  either data as is, or with prefix byte: "*" for "discarded due to data
              content", or possibly "#" for "discarded due to APRS-IS being unreachable".

       -V     Print source version compiled to this binary, and exit.

   DEBUGGING SYSTEM
       Use parameter set -ddv (or -dddv) to test new configuration by running it synchronously to console.

   NORMAL OPERATION
       Running the aprx program without any of option flags: -d, -v, or -e reads possibly  given  configuration,
       then automatically backgrounds the process, and writes pidfile.  When the process whose number written in
       pidfile  is then sent a SIGTERM signal, it automatically shuts down itself, and removes the pidfile.  The
       pidfile can be runtime configured  with  the  -f  /etc/aprx.conf  file,  and  it  has  default  name  of:
       /var/run/aprx.pid.

CONFIGURATION FILE

       The configuration file is used to setup the program to do its job.

       You can construct following configurations:

       •  A receive-only iGate server.

       •  A digipeater with bi-directional iGate server.

       •  A single radio digipeater.  (The most common type of digipeater.)

       •  A  multi-interfaced  digipeater  relaying traffic in between multiple radios.  (On same or on separate
          frequencies.)

       •  A viscuous digipeater, which relays a packet it heard from viscuous source after the  viscuous  delay,
          unless  it  was  heard  more times than only once, or it was heard from non-viscuous source before the
          viscuous one was digipeated.  This allows of making fill-in digipeaters that  will  not  digipeat  the
          packet, if that same packet was heard twice or more before the viscuos delay expired.

       In the configuration file a line ending backslash (\) character concatenates next input line into itself.
       Combined result can be up to 8000 bytes long.  This combination can be a bit surprising:
          #beacon .... long text  \
                 continuation
       results in single long input line that begins with '#' (it is comment) and all continuations following it
       have  been folded in.  Presented line number of combined continuation is the line number of the last line
       segment in this type of multi-line input.

       In the configuration file there is special treatment for quoted strings.  They are stripped of the  outer
       quotes, and "\" character is processed within the source string to produce an output string.  The escapes
       are:

       \n     Produces newline character (Control-J) on the output string.

       \r     Produces carriage return character (Control-M) on the output string.

       \\     Places a back-slash on the output string.

       \"     Places a double-quote on the output string.

       \'     Places a single-quote on the output string.

       \xHH   Lower-case  "x"  precedes  two hex digits which ensemble is then converted to a single byte in the
              output string.

       The complex encodings are for possible initstrings  of  the  external  devices,  and  in  particular  for
       initstrings even a nul byte ( \x00 ) is supported.

       A configuration token without surrounding quotes does not understand the backslash escapes.

       #
       #  Sample configuration file for the APRX -- an Rx-only APRS iGate with
       #  Digipeater functionality.
       #
       #
       # Simple sample configuration file for the APRX-2
       #
       # This configuration is structured with Apache HTTPD style tags
       # which then contain subsystem parameters.
       #

       #
       # For simple case, you need to adjust 4 things:
       #   - Mycall parameter
       #   - Select correct type of interface (ax25-device or serial-device)
       #   - Optionally set a beacon telling where this system is
       #   - Optionally enable digipeater with or without tx-igate
       #

       #
       #
       # Define the parameters in following order:
       #   1)  <aprsis>     ** zero to many
       #   2)  <logging>    ** zero or one
       #   3)  <interface>  ** one to many
       #   4)  <beacon>     ** zero to many
       #   5)  <telemetry   ** zero to many
       #   6)  <digipeater> ** zero to many (at most one for each Tx)
       #

       #
       # Global macro for simplified callsign definition:
       # Usable for 99+% of cases.
       #

       mycall  N0CALL-1

       #
       # Global macro for simplified "my location" definition in
       # place of explicit "lat nn lon mm" at beacons. Will also
       # give "my location" reference for "filter m/100".
       #
       #myloc lat ddmm.mmN lon dddmm.mmE

       <aprsis>
       # The  login  parameter:
       # Station call-id used for relaying APRS frames into APRS-IS.
       # Use this only to define other callsign for APRS-IS login.
       #
       #login      OTHERCALL-7  # login defaults to $mycall

       #
       # The passcode parameter:
       # Unique code for your callsign to allow transmitting packets
       # into the APRS-IS.
       #
       passcode -1

       # APRS-IS server name and portnumber.
       # Every reconnect does re-resolve the name to IP address.
       # Some alternates are shown below, choose something local to you.
       #
       server    rotate.aprs2.net    14580
       #server    noam.aprs2.net     14580
       #server    soam.aprs2.net     14580
       #server    euro.aprs2.net     14580
       #server    asia.aprs2.net     14580
       #server    aunz.aprs2.net     14580

       # Some APRS-IS servers tell every about 20 seconds to all contact
       # ports that they are there and alive. Others are just silent.
       # Recommended value 3*"heartbeat" + some  -> 120 (seconds)
       #
       #heartbeat-timeout  0  # Disabler of heartbeat timeout

       # APRS-IS server may support some filter commands.
       # See:  http://www.aprs-is.net/javAPRSFilter.aspx
       #
       # You can define the filter as single long quoted string, or as
       # many short segments with explaining comments following them.
       #
       # Usability of these filters for a Tx-iGate is dubious, but
       # they exist in case you for example want to Tx-iGate packets
       # from some source callsigns in all cases even when they are
       # not in your local area.
       #
       #filter "possibly multiple filter specs in quotes"
       #
       #filter "m/100"          # My-Range filter
       #filter "f/OH2XYZ-3/50"  # Friend-Range filter
       </aprsis>

       <logging>
       # pidfile is UNIX way to tell that others that this program is
       # running with given process-id number.  This has compiled-in
       # default value of:  pidfile /var/run/aprx.pid
       #
       #pidfile /var/run/aprx.pid

       # rflog defines a rotatable file into which all RF-received packets
       # are logged.
       #
       #rflog /var/log/aprx/aprx-rf.log

       # aprxlog defines a rotatable file into which most important
       # events on APRS-IS connection are logged, namely connects and
       # disconnects.
       #
       #aprxlog /var/log/aprx/aprx.log

       # erlangfile defines a mmap():able binary file, which stores
       # running sums of interfaces upon which the channel erlang
       # estimator runs, and collects data.
       # Depending on the system, it may be running on a filesystem
       # that actually retains data over reboots, or it may not.
       # With this backing store, the system does not loose cumulating
       # erlang data over the current period, if the restart is quick,
       # and does not stradle any exact minute.
       # (Do restarts at 15 seconds over an even minute..)
       # This file is around 0.7 MB per each interface talking APRS.
       # If this file is not defined and can not be created,
       # internal non-persistent in-memory storage will be used.
       #
       # Built-in default value is: /var/run/aprx.state
       #
       #erlangfile /var/run/aprx.state

       # erlang-loglevel is config file edition of the "-l" option
       # pushing erlang data to syslog(3).
       # Valid values are (possibly) following: NONE, LOG_DAEMON,
       # LOG_FTP, LOG_LPR, LOG_MAIL, LOG_NEWS, LOG_USER, LOG_UUCP,
       # LOG_LOCAL0, LOG_LOCAL1, LOG_LOCAL2, LOG_LOCAL3, LOG_LOCAL4,
       # LOG_LOCAL5, LOG_LOCAL6, LOG_LOCAL7.  If the parameter value is
       # not acceptable, list of accepted values are printed at startup.
       #
       #erlang-loglevel NONE

       # erlanglog defines a rotatable file into which erlang data
       # is written in text form.
       #
       #erlanglog /var/log/aprx/erlang.log

       # erlang-log1min option logs to syslog/file also 1 minute
       # interval data from the program. (In addition to 10m and 60m.)
       #
       #erlang-log1min
       </logging>

       # ***********  Multiple <interface> definitions can follow   *********

       # ax25-device  Lists AX.25 ports by their callsigns that in Linux
       #              systems receive APRS packets.  If none are defined,
       #              or the system is not Linux, the AX.25 network receiver
       #              is not enabled.  Used technologies need at least
       #              Linux kernel 2.4.x
       #
       # tx-ok        Boolean telling if this device is able to transmit.
       #
       #<interface>
       #   ax25-device $mycall  # Either $mycall macro, or actual callsign
       #   #tx-ok      false  # transmitter enable defaults to false
       #   #telem-to-is true # set to false to disable
       #</interface>

       # The  TNC serial  options.  Parameters are:
       #   - /dev/ttyUSB1    -- tty device
       #   - 19200           -- baud rate, supported ones are:
       #                        1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200, 38400, ...
       #   - 8n1             -- 8-bits, no parity, one stop-bit,
       #                        no other supported modes
       #   - "KISS"                  - plain basic KISS mode
       #   - "XORSUM" alias "BPQCRC" - KISS with BPQ "CRC" byte
       #   - "SMACK"  alias "CRC16"  - KISS with real CRC
       #   - "FLEXNET"               - KISS with real CRC
       #   - "TNC2"                  - TNC2 monitor format
       #   - "DPRS"                  - DPRS (rx) Gateway
       #
       #<interface>
       #   serial-device /dev/ttyUSB0  19200 8n1    KISS
       #   #callsign     $mycall  # Either $mycall macro, or actual callsign
       #   #tx-ok        false    # transmitter enable defaults to false
       #   #telem-to-is true # set to false to disable
       #</interface>
       #
       #<interface>
       #   serial-device /dev/ttyUSB1  19200 8n1    TNC2
       #   #callsign     $mycall  # Either $mycall macro, or actual callsign
       #   #tx-ok        false    # TNC2 monitor can not have transmitter
       #   #telem-to-is true # set to false to disable
       #</interface>
       #
       #<interface>
       #   serial-device /dev/ttyUSB1  19200 8n1    DPRS
       #   callsign     dprsgwcallsign  # must define actual callsign
       #   #tx-ok        false    # DPRS monitor can not do transmit
       #   #telem-to-is true # set to false to disable
       #</interface>
       #

       # ***********  Multiple <beacon>  definitions can follow   *********
       <beacon>
       #
       #  Beacons are sent out to radio transmitters AND/OR APRSIS.
       #  Default is "both", other modes are settable.
       #
       #beaconmode { aprsis | both | radio }
       #
       #  Beacons are sent from a circullar transmission queue, total cycle time
       #  of that queue is 20 minutes by default, and beacons are "evenly"
       #  distributed along it.  Actual intervals are randomized to be anything
       #  in between 80% and 100% of the  cycle-size / number-of-beacons.
       #  First beacon is sent out 30 seconds after system start.
       #  Tune the cycle-size to be suitable to your number of defined beacons.
       #
       #cycle-size  20m
       #
       #
       # Basic beaconed thing is positional message of type "!":
       #
       #beacon symbol "R&" lat "0000.00N" lon "00000.00E" comment "Rx-only iGate"
       #beacon symbol "R&" $myloc comment "Rx-only iGate"
       #
       # Following are basic options:
       #  'symbol'    no default, must be defined!
       #  'lat'       coordinate latitude:   ddmm.mmN  (no default!)
       #  'lon'       coordinate longitude: dddmm.mmE  (no default!)
       #  '$myloc'    coordinate values taken from global 'myloc' entry,
       #              and usable in place of explicit 'lat'+'lon'.
       #  'comment'   optional tail part of the item, default is nothing
       #
       # Sample symbols:
       #   R&   is for "Rx-only iGate"
       #   I&   is for "Tx-iGate"
       #   /#   is for "Digipeater"
       #   I#   is for "Tx-iGate + Digipeater"
       #
       # Additional options are:
       # 'srccall'   parameter sets claimed origination address.
       # 'dstcall'   sets destination address, default "APRXnn"
       # 'interface' parameter picks an interface (must be "tx-ok true" type)
       # 'via'       sets radio distribution pattern, default: none.
       # 'timefix'  On APRS messages with HMS timestamp (hour:min:sec), the
       #            system fixes appropriate field with transmit time timestamp.
       #
       # Message type is by default '!', which is positional no timestamp format.
       # Other possible formats are definable with options:
       # 'type'   Single character setting type:  ! = / @
       # 'item'   Defines a name of Item (')') type beacons.
       # 'object' Defines a name of Object (';') type beacons.
       #
       # 'file' option tells a file at which a _raw_ APRS message content is
       #        expected to be found as first line of text. Line ending newline
       #        is removed, and no escapes are supported.  The timefix is
       #        available, though probably should not be used.
       #
       # 'exec' option defines program path for a program whose stdout is
       #        read up to first newline (which must be present), and then
       #        transmit as beacon content. No format helpers are supplied,
       #        although 'timefix' can be used.
       # 'timeout' option is associated with 'exec', and defines when the
       #        exec must by latest produce the output, or the subprogram
       #        execution is killed. Default value is 10 seconds.
       #
       # The parameter sets can vary:
       #  a) 'srccall nnn-n dstcall "string" symbol "R&" lat "ddmm.mmN" lon "dddmm.mmE" [comment "any text"]
       #  b) 'srccall nnn-n dstcall "string" raw "string"'
       #
       # The a) form flags on some of possible syntax errors in parameters.
       # It will also create only "!" type messages.  The dest parameter
       # defaults to "APRS", but can be used to give other destinations.
       # The via parameter can be used to add other keywords, like "NOGATE".
       #
       # Writing correct RAW format beacon message is very hard,
       # which is evidenced by the frequency of bad syntax texts
       # people so often put there...   If you can not be persuaded
       # not to do it, then at least VERIFY the beacon result on
       # web service like  findu.com,  or  aprs.fi
       #
       #beacon                 file /tmp/wxbeacon.txt
       #beacon srccall N0CALL-3 raw "!0000.00NR00000.00E&aprx - an Rx-only iGate"
       #beacon srccall N0CALL-3 raw "!0000.00NI00000.00E&aprx - an iGate"
       #beacon srccall $mycall symbol "R&" lat "0000.00N" lon "00000.00E"  \
                               comment "aprx - an Rx-only iGate"
       #beacon srccall $mycall symbol "I&" lat "0000.00N" lon "00000.00E"  \
                               comment "aprx iGate"
       </beacon>

       # ***********  <telemetry>  definition(s) follow   *********
       #
       # The system will always send telemetry for all of its interfaces
       # to APRSIS, but there is an option to define telemetry to be sent
       # to radio channel by using following sections for each transmitter
       # that is wanted to send out the telemetry.
       #
       #   transmitter   -  callsign referring to <interface>
       #   via           -  optional via-path, only 1 callsign!
       #   source        -  one or more of <interface> callsigns for which
       #                    the telemetry transmission is wanted for
       #
       #<telemetry>
       #    transmitter    $mycall
       #    via       TRACE1-1
       #    source         $mycall
       #</telemetry>

       # ***********  <digipeater>  definition(s) follow   *********
       #
       #  The digipeater definitions tell transmitters that receive
       #  AX.25 packets from possibly multiple sources, and then what
       #  to do on the AX.25 headers of those messages.
       #
       #  There is one transmitter per digipeater -- and inversely, there
       #  can be at most one digipeater for each transmitter.
       #
       #  In each digipeater there is at least one <source>, usually same
       #  as the transmitter.
       #
       #<digipeater>
       #    transmitter     $mycall
       #    #ratelimit      60 120      # default: average 60 packets/minute,
       #                                #          burst max 120 packets/minute
       #    #srcratelimit   10 20       # Example: by sourcecall:
       #                                #          average 10 packets/minute,
       #                                #          burst max 20 packets/minute
       #
       #    <source>
       #        source         $mycall
       #    #   ratelimit      60 120      # default: average 60 packets/minute,
       #    #                              #          burst max 120 packets/minute
       #    #   viscous-delay  0     # no viscous delay for RF->RF digipeat
       #    #   ratelimit      120   # default: max 120 packets/minute
       #    </source>
       #
       #    #<source>          # Adding APRSIS source makes this tx-igate
       #    #   source        APRSIS
       #    #   ratelimit      60 120      # default: average 60 packets/minute,
       #    #                              #          burst max 120 packets/minute
       #    #   relay-type    third-party  # Must define this for APRSIS source!
       #    #   viscous-delay  5 # Recommendation: 5 seconds delay to give
       #    #                    # RF delivery time make itself known.
       #    #   filter         t/m  # Tx-iGate only messages sent to me by APRSIS
       #    #</source>
       #
       #</digipeater>

GLOBAL MYCALL PARAMETER

       In  majority  of  usage models, system needs single configured callsign.  This is set by using the mycall
       configuration option, and latter  referred  to  in  configurations  as  $mycall  parameter  in  place  of
       callsigns.

GLOBAL MYLOC PARAMETER

       Usually  multiple  beacons,  and simple filter rules are wanted to be using same reference coordinate for
       this system.  This  is  set  by  using  the  myloc  configuration  option,  and  latter  referred  to  in
       configurations as $myloc parameter in place of "lat nn lon mm" coordinate pair of beacons.

APRSIS SECTION FOR APRSIS CONNECTIVITY

       Settings in the <aprsis> section define connectivity with the APRS-IS network service.

       Necessary option is server, and others are optional.

       Available options are:

       login $mycall
               The APRSIS network login.  Defaults to the mycall configuration entry.

       passcode -1
               Defining  a small integer in range of 0 to 32767 authenticating your login to APRS-IS server. Ask
               for assistance from your APRS-IS managers, or calculate it yourself with aprspass  program.  (Web
               search engines do find several of them.)

       server server-name 14850
               Define  which APRS-IS is being connected to.  Multiple definitions are used in round-robin style,
               if the connection with the previous one fails for some reason.

       filter 'filter specs in quotes' # comments
               Set filter adjunct definitions on APRS-IS server.  Multiple entries  are  catenated  together  in
               entry order, when connecting to the server.

LOGGING SECTION

       The <logging> section defines miscellaneous file names and options for state tracking and logging use.

       pidfile /var/run/aprx.pid
               The  pidfile  is  UNIX way to tell that others that this program is running with given process-id
               number.  This has compiled-in default value of: pidfile /var/run/aprx.pid

       rflog /var/log/aprx/aprx-rf.log
               The rflog defines a rotatable file into which all RF-received packets are logged.   There  is  no
               default.

       aprxlog /var/log/aprx/aprx.log
               The  aprxlog  defines a rotatable file into which most important events on APRS-IS connection are
               logged, namely connects and disconnects.  There is no default.

       erlangfile /var/run/aprx.state
               The erlangfile defines a mmap():able binary file, which stores running sums  of  interfaces  upon
               which  the  channel erlang estimator runs, and collects data.  Depending on the system, it may be
               running on a filesystem that actually retains data over  reboots,  or  it  may  not.   With  this
               backing  store,  the system does not loose cumulating erlang data over the current period, if the
               restart is quick, and does not stradle any exact minute.  This file is around  0.7  MB  per  each
               interface  talking  APRS.   If  this  file  is  not defined and can not be created, internal non-
               persistent in-memory storage will be used.  Built-in default value is: /var/run/aprx.state

       erlang-loglevel NONE
               The erlang-loglevel is config file edition of the "-l" option pushing erlang data  to  syslog(3).
               Valid  values  are  (possibly) following: NONE, LOG_DAEMON, LOG_FTP, LOG_LPR, LOG_MAIL, LOG_NEWS,
               LOG_USER, LOG_UUCP,  LOG_LOCAL0,  LOG_LOCAL1,  LOG_LOCAL2,  LOG_LOCAL3,  LOG_LOCAL4,  LOG_LOCAL5,
               LOG_LOCAL6,  LOG_LOCAL7.   If  the parameter value is not acceptable, list of accepted values are
               printed at startup.

       erlanglog /var/log/aprx/erlang.log
               The erlanglog defines a rotatable file into which erlang data is written in text form.  There  is
               no default.

       erlang-log1min
               The  erlang-log1min option logs to syslog/file also 1 minute interval data from the program.  (In
               addition to 10m and 60m.)  Default is off.

INTERFACE SECTIONS FOR RADIO PORTS

       The <interface> sections define connections to radio modems.  Several different styles are available:

       • Local serial ports in the machine (device-serial /dev/ttyS0 speed encapsulation)

       • Local USB serial ports in the machine (device-serial /dev/ttyUSB0 speed encapsulation)

       • Remote served serial ports over a TCP stream.  Implemented to talk with Cisco AUX ports on "range 4000"
         (TCP STREAM, no TELNET escapes) (tcp-device 12.34.56.78 4001 encapsulation)

       • Linux internal AX.25 network attached devices (ax25-device CALLSIGN-1) are only available when  running
         on  a  Linux system.  On a non-Linux system it connects to a null interface, never getting anything and
         can always sink everything.

       The serial port name tells what kind of port  is  in  question,  and  while  port  baud-rate  (9600)  and
       character settings (8n1) must always be set, they are ignored for the remote connection.

       Following speed modes are available:
            1200, 1800, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200, 38400, 57600,
            115200, 230400, 460800, 500000, 576000
       Likely available speeds are in bold, other supported values are listed in italics.

       Following encapsulation modes are available:

       TNC2      is  capable  only  to monitor the packets reported by TNC2 type debug output, and Rx-iGate, but
                 they are not acceptable as source for a <digipeater>.

       DPRS      is special mode for gateway from D-STAR D-PRS to  APRS.   This  must  always  have  a  callsign
                 definition for the gateway.

       KISS      Basic  KISS  encapsulation.   No  checksums.  Will autodetect (sometimes) packets with SMACK or
                 FLEXNET characteristics.

       SMACK     Stuttgart Modified Amateurradio-CRC-KISS, which runs CRC-16 checksum on KISS datastream much in
                 the same way as HDLC has CCITT-CRC checksum on it.

       FLEXNET   FLEXNET which runs a CRC checksum of its own polynomial on KISS datastream much in the same way
                 as HDLC has CCITT-CRC checksum on it.

       BPQCRC    XOR "checksum" on dataframes.  Also known as "XKISS", and "XORSUM".  This  detects  single  bit
                 failure, but weakly any multibit failures.  Extra 0x00 bytes have no effect on checksum, etc.

       On  <kiss-subif  tncid>  sub-options  the parameter is tncid, which sets up KISS multiplexer parameter so
       that subsequent options applies only on designated KISS sub-port.

       The callsign option sets port specific callsign when relaying to APRS-IS.

       The telem-to-is true option can be used to disable (by explicitly setting it to 'false') radio  interface
       telemetry  transmission  to  APRS-IS.   By default it is on.  This is separate from <telemetry> sections,
       which send telemetry to RF interfaces.

       <interface>
          serial-device /dev/ttyUSB1 19200 8n1 KISS
          tx-ok         false          # receive only (default)
          callsign      OH2XYZ-R2      # KISS subif 0
          initstring    "...."         # initstring option
          timeout       900            # 900 seconds of no Rx
       </interface>

       <interface>
          serial-device /dev/ttyUSB1 19200 8n1 SMACK
          tx-ok         false          # receive only (default)
          callsign      OH2XYZ-R2      # KISS subif 0
          initstring    "...."         # initstring option
          timeout       900            # 900 seconds of no Rx
       </interface>

       <interface>
          serial-device /dev/ttyUSB2 19200 8n1 KISS
          initstring    "...."
          timeout       900            # 900 seconds of no Rx
          <kiss-subif 0>
             callsign OH2XYZ-2
             tx-ok    true             # This is our transmitter
          </kiss-subif>
          <kiss-subif 1>
             callsign OH2XYZ-R3        # This is receiver
             tx-ok    false            # receive only (default)
          </kiss-subif>
       </interface>

       <interface>
          tcp-device   172.168.1.1 4001 KISS
          tx-ok         false          # receive only (default)
          callsign      OH2XYZ-R4      # KISS subif 0
          initstring    "...."         # initstring option
          timeout       900            # 900 seconds of no Rx
       </interface>

       <interface>
          ax25-device OH2XYZ-6         # Works only on Linux systems
          tx-ok       true             # This is also transmitter
       </interface>

       <interface> # RX-IGATE ONLY, NOT USABLE AS DIGIPEATER SOURCE
          serial-device /dev/ttyUSB1 19200 8n1 TNC2
          callsign      OH2XYZ-R6      # TNC2 has no sub-ports
          initstring    "...."         # initstring option
          timeout       900            # 900 seconds of no Rx
       </interface>

BEACON DEFINITIONS

       The beacons are defined using <beacon> configuration sections.

       Because classical beacon definitions are highly error-prone, this program has a new way to define them:

       • The new way to define beacons:
         beacon symbol "R&" lat "0000.00N" lon "00000.00E"  \
                comment "aprx - iGate"

       • Semi-clasical definition of raw APRS packet:
         beacon raw "!0000.00NR00000.00E&aprx - iGate"

       • Load beacon text from a file, path data is configurable:
         beacon file /path/to/file

       • Run a program to produce beacon data in raw format:
         beacon exec /path/to/file timeout 10

       The fields and parameters:

       interface   An optional "interface" parameter tells that this beacon shall  be  sent  only  to  interface
                   whose  callsign  is  named.   Default  is  to  send  to all interfaces that have "tx-ok true"
                   setting.

       type        An optional one character string parameter, with one of following contents:  "!",  "=",  "/",
                   "@", ";" and ")".

       srccall     An  optional  "srccall"  parameter  tells callsign which is claimed as this particular beacon
                   source.  It must be valid AX.25 callsign in text format.  When this  "srccall"  parameter  is
                   not given, value of "mycall" configuration entry is used.

       dstcall     An  optional "dstcall" parameter has built-in software version dependent value, but it can be
                   used to define another value.

       via         An optional "via" parameter defaults to nothing, but can be used to define  additional  "VIA"
                   path tokens, for example: "WIDE1-1".

       item        An optional "item" parameter is for defining a name for an item type APRS packet.

       object      An optional "object" parameter is for defining a name for an object type APRS packet.

       symbol      A mandatory "symbol" parameter is two character code, which for Rx-only iGate is pair: "R&"

       lat         This  mandatory parameter defines latitude coordinate (that is: north/south.)  It is expected
                   to be of format: "ddmm.mmN" where "dd" defines two digits of degrees of latitude, and "mm.mm"
                   defines two digits + decimal dot + two digits of minutes of latitude.  Then comes literal "N"
                   or "S" indicating hemisphere.

       lon         This mandatory parameter defines longitude coordinate (that is: east/west.)  It  is  expected
                   to  be  of  format: "dddmm.mmE" where "ddd" defines three digits of degrees of longitude, and
                   "mm.mm" defines two digits + decimal dot + two digits of minutes of  longitude.   Then  comes
                   literal "E" or "W" indicating hemisphere.

       comment     This  optional  parameter  defines  commentary  text  tail on the beacon packet.  If you need
                   characters outside US-ASCII character set, use of UTF-8  encoded  UNICODE  character  set  is
                   recommended.

       raw         This  alternate  format defines whole APRS packet content in raw text format.  Currently this
                   type of packets are not validated for syntax at all!

       file        This alternative way defines path to a file with single text line  defining  content  of  raw
                   message data.

       exec        This  alternative  mode  runs  designated  program, and waits for at most a timeout number of
                   seconds (default 10) for the program to produce the result.

       timeout     This is optional parameter for exec allowing altered timeout (number of seconds) for  waiting
                   the program to respond.  Default is 10 seconds.

       The  type/symbol/lat/lon/comment-format  supports only a few types of APRS packets.  It splits input into
       small slices that are possible to validate in detail.  (See "DEBUGGING SYSTEM" above.)

RF-TELEMETRY

       The aprx system will always send telemetry for all of its interfaces to APRSIS, but there is an option to
       define telemetry to be sent to radio channel by using following sections for  each  transmitter  that  is
       wanted to send out the telemetry.

       The parameters of <telemetry> configuration section are:

       transmitter A mandatory callsign referring to an interface.

       via         An optional via-path parameter.  Only 1 callsign!

       source      One or more of interface callsigns for which the telemetry transmission is made.

DIGIPEATER

       The aprx is possible to configure as a AX.25 digipeater with APRS twists.  This is done with <digipeater>
       configuration section and its subsections.

       There can be at most one <digipeater> definition per each transmit capable interface in the system.  On a
       system  with  multiple  transmitters,  this  means there can be multiple digipeaters, each with different
       behaviour rules.

       Minimalistic setup for a digipeater will be as follows:

       <digipeater>
           transmitter     $mycall
           <source>
               source      $mycall
           </source>
       </digipeater>

       In minimalistic approach the system does digipeating of packets heard on the $mycall  interface  back  to
       same interface.  Single requirement is that the <interface> block has tx-ok true setting on it.

       In more complicated approaches it is possible to define multiple sources for packets:

       •  Multiple device ports.

       •  APRSIS pseudoport, which creates the Tx-iGate functionality.

   <digipeater> options
       Main-level <digipeater> options are:

       •  transmitter defines which interface the digipeater will output to.

       •  <trace> and <wide> sub-options are explained below.

       •  <source> sub-option is explained below.

   <trace> and <wide> sub-options
       The  <trace>  sub-option  has priority over the <wide> sub-option, otherwise they are configured the same
       way.

       The <trace> sub-option defines which AX.25 address  contained  keywords  are  treated  with  APRS  "New-N
       paradigm"  rules  in  a  way  where  each  processing  node  always marks its transmitter callsign on the
       transmitted AX.25 packet address header.

       The <wide> sub-option defines which AX.25  address  contained  keywords  are  treated  with  APRS  "New-N
       paradigm"  rules in a way where processing node does not mark its transmitter callsign on the transmitted
       AX.25 packet address header.

       Available parameters are:

       keys     A string of comma-separated set of string tokens:
                   keys "TRACE,WIDE"
                Alternative form for this entry is:
                   keys "TRACE"
                   keys "WIDE"

       maxdone  Defines maximum number of redistribution hops  that  these  keywords  can  have  completed  when
                reaching  here.   If accounting finds more done, the system will just drop the packet instead of
                digipeating it onwards.

       maxreq   Defines maximum number of redistribution hops that these keywords  can  define.   If  accounting
                finds more requested, the system will just drop the packet instead of digipeating it onwards.

   <source> sub-options
       Primary  definer option is source which gives callsign of an <interface> from which the AX.25 packets are
       received for this <source> block.

       Available relay-type modes on <source> definitions are:

       digipeater    Normal AX.25 digipeater behaviour with APRS New-N paradigm support.  This is default mode.

       directonly    Digipeat only directly heard packets.  Useful for systems that are designated as "fill-in".
                     See also "viscous-delay".

       third-party   Special mode for Tx-iGate.

       The ratelimit defines two parameters: average and limit number  of  packets  sent  in  60  seconds.   Its
       definitions  can  be  both  in  <digipeater> and in digipeater's <source> sections, and therefore you can
       limit each individual source to a max accepted rate as well  as  define  separate  rate  limits  for  the
       transmitter.

       The  viscous-delay defines a number of seconds from 0 (default) maximum of 9 that the source will put the
       message on duplicate detector delay processing.  All occurrences of same packet  per  duplicate  detector
       during  that  time  will be accounted on duplicate detection, and if at the end of the delay period there
       are more than one hit, the packet is discarded.  Use delay of 0 seconds for normal digipeater, 5  seconds
       for a fill-in, or a Tx-iGate.

       A  javAPRSSrvr  filter-adjunct  style rules are possible with the filter options.  When you want multiple
       filters, use multiple options with associated parameters:
           filter t/m            # APRS messaging type packets
           filter a/la/lo/la/lo  # APRS positional packets within this area

       Also negative filters are possible (prefixed with minus character), which upon match cause  rejection  of
       the  packet.   Filters  are  evaluated  in  definition  order,  and first matching one will terminate the
       evaluation.  When no filters are defined, everything is passed thru.  When any filter  is  defined,  only
       those  matching  non-negative  filters  are  passed thru, and no default "pass everything else" behaviour
       exists.

       Supported "adjunct filters" are following:

       A/latN/lonW/latS/lonE
               Area filter, defined as area enclosing within latS/latN and lonW/lonE.   Latitude  and  longitude
               are entered as degrees and decimals.

       B/call1/call2...
               Budlist filter.  Supports *-wildcards.

       D/digi1/digi2...
               Not supported at APRX internal filters

       E/call1/call2/...
               Not supported at APRX internal filters

       F/call/dist_km
               Great-circle distance in kilometers from friend's coordinates.  No wildcarding.
               (TODO: check that it really works!)

       M/dist  The range around my location filter requires that you have defined also the "myloc" configuration
               entry.   It  defines  acceptance of positions and messages with senders within dist kilometers of
               the "myloc" position.

       O/object1/obj2...
               Object name filter.  Supports *-wildcards.

       P/aa/bb/cc...
               Prefix filter.

       Q/con/ana
               The Q-construct filter is not supported.

       R/lat/lon/dist
               Range filter.  Latitude and longitude are in degrees and decimals.  Distance  is  in  kilometers.
               No wildcards.

       S/pri/alt/over
               Symbol filter

       T/..../call/km
               Type filter.  Couple possible usages:

                 -t/c                Everything except CWOP

                  t/*/OH2RDY/50      Everything within 50 km of OH2RDY's last known position

               Type code characters are:

               *  An "all" wild-card.

               C  A CWOP.

               I  An ITEM.

               M  A MESSAGE.

               N  A NWS message.

               O  An OBJECT.

               Q  A QUERY.

               S  A STATUS response.

               T  A TELEMETRY packet or parameter message.

               U  A USERDEF message.

               W  A WX data packet

       U/unproto1/unproto2...
               Filters by value in destination address field, supports wildcard.

       The  <trace>  and  <wide>  sub-options  exist  also within each <source>.  Where such occur, the <source>
       specific <trace> sub-option trumps the definition on  <digipeater>  level,  and  same  with  <wide>  sub-
       options.   This  allows  things like overriding flooding control keywords on source basis, should such be
       necessary.

       A set of regex-filter rules can be used to reject packets that  are  not  of  approved  kind.   Available
       syntax is:

       regex-filter source RE
              source address field

       regex-filter destination RE
              destination address field

       regex-filter via RE
              any via path field

       regex-filter data RE
              payload content

       The regex-filter exists as ad-hoc method when all else fails.

NOTES: ERLANG

       The  Erlang  is  telecom measurement of channel occupancy, and in this application sense it does tell how
       much traffic there is on the radio channel.

       Most radio transmitters are not aware of all transmitters  on  channel,  and  thus  there  can  happen  a
       collision causing loss of both messages.  The higher the channel activity, the more likely that collision
       is.  For further details, refer to statistical mathematics books, or perhaps on Wikipedia.

       In  order  to  measure channel activity, the aprx program suite has these built-in statistics counter and
       summary estimators.

       The Erlag value that the  estimators  present  are  likely  somewhat  underestimating  the  true  channel
       occupancy  simply  because  it  calculates  estimate  of channel bit transmit rate, and thus a per-minute
       character capacity.  It does not know true frequency of bit-stuffing events of the HDLC framing, nor each
       transmitter pre- and port frame PTT times. The transmitters need to stabilize their transmit  oscillators
       in  many  cases,  which  may take up to around 500 ms!  The counters are not aware of this preamble-, nor
       postamble-times.

       The HDLC bit stuffing ratio is guessed to be 1:1.025 (1 extra bit every 5 bytes)

NOTES: PROGRAM NAME

       Initially this program had name aprsg-ng, which was too close to another (a less low-tech  C++  approach)
       program had.

BUGS/WARTS

       The  Erlang-monitor  mechanisms  are  of rudimentary quality, and can seriously underestimate the channel
       occupancy by ignoring pre- and postample transmissions, which can be  as  high  as  50  centiseconds  for
       preample,  and  20  centiseconds  for postample!  When entire packet takes 50 centiseconds, such preample
       alone doubles channel occupancy.  A 6pack protocol on serial link (instead of KISS) could inform receiver
       better on carrier presence times, however even that  underestimates  RF  power  presence  (RSSI)  signal.
       (6pack is not supported.)

       On  serial lines supports really only 8n1 mode, not at all like: 7e1.  On the other hand, there really is
       no sensible usage for anything but 8n1...

SEE ALSO

       Couple web sites:
       http://www.aprs2.net/,
       http://www.aprs-is.net/,
       http://thelifeofkenneth.com/aprx/,
       http://thelifeofkenneth.com/aprx/aprx-manual.pdf

       aprx-stat(8)

AUTHOR

       This little piece was written by Matti Aarnio, OH2MQK  during  a  dark  and  rainy  fall  and  winter  of
       2007-2008  after  a  number  of  discussions grumbling about current breed of available software for APRS
       iGate use in Linux (or of any UNIX) platforms.  Fall and winter 2009-2010 saw  appearance  of  digipeater
       functionality.

       Principal  contributors  and  test  users  include: Pentti Gronlund, OH3BK, Reijo Hakala, OH1GWK.  Debian
       packaging by Kimmo Jukarinen, OH3GNU.  Testing of SMACK variant of KISS by Patrick  Hertenstein,  DL1GHN.
       The beacon exec functionality prototype by Kamil Palkowiski SQ8KFH.

                                                    2.9.1 -                                              aprx(8)