Manpages

NAME

gpsdrive − displays GPS position on a map

SYNOPSIS

gpsdrive [options]

About this manual page

This manual page explains the basic functions of GpsDrive and some additional info.

In GpsDrive you find tooltips for nearly all buttons, there is also a HELP button for usage of the keys and mouse buttons.

For special purposes read the README files, i.e. README.kismet, README.SQL ...

DESCRIPTION

Gpsdrive is a car (bike, ship, plane) navigation system. Displaying your position on a map and a lot of other functions are implemented.

This manual page describes GpsDrive version 2.x

GpsDrive displays your position provided from your NMEA capable GPS receiver on a zoomable map . The maps are autoselected depending on your position. You can set the preferred scale, which the program tries to get from available maps.

GpsDrive was tested with a GARMIN GPS III, a Crux II GPS PCMCIA card and a Navilock USB receiver. All Garmin GPS reveivers with a serial output should be usable. Other GPS receivers that sends NMEA protocol over the serial output should also work with GpsDrive.

These GPS receivers are reported to work with gpsdrive:

Magellan 310, 315, 320
Garmin GPS III
Garmin etrex
GPS 45
Crux II GPS PCMCIA card
Holux GM-200 serial version
Holux GM-200 USB (needs USB to serial support in kernel)
eMap
GPSMAP 295
GNS 530
Garmin GPS 12MAP
EAGLE Expedition II
DeLorme Earthmate
Rayming TripNav, TN-200
Haicom HI-203E
GM-307 USB-Mouse
Magellan Meridian Gold (works only with NMEA V2.1 GSA setting)
NAVILock GPS Receiver (http://www.navilock.de)
Haicom GPS HI204e
Magellan Nav 6500
BendixKing KLX 100
Motorola i58sr Cellular Phone w/built-in NMEA-compatible GPS

Disclaimer: Do not use for navigation!

OPTIONS

−d

Shows some debugging information.

−D <level>

Shows a lot of debugging information. You should also combine this with -d.
See also the section BUGS.

−T

Do some internal unit tests (don’t start gpsdrive).

−e

use festival-lite (flite) for speech output.

−v

Shows program version.

−h

Displays a short help message.

−o <outputfile>

With this option, you can write the NMEA sentences to a PTY master, file or serial device. This is useful if you use GpsDrive in simulation mode to provide other GPS applications with test data.

−l <language>

Sets the language for the speech output. You have to provide the voice files in festival yourself (see below). At the moment german , spanish and english are provided.

−g <geometry>

Set the geometry of the screen, if autodetection doesn’t satisfy you, geometry is i.e. 1024x768, 800x600, 640x480

−f <friends server>

Define a friends server to exchange position information with other people. You can also set it in the Settings/Friends menu. You can start your own friends server with the program friendsd2 , which is included. More details are in section FRIENDSD server

−X

Use DBUS for communication with gpsd. This disables socket communication. Try this option if gpsdrive fails to interpret output of the gps receiver correctly.

−1

Set special mode if you only have 1 mouse button, i.e. on touchpads.

−a

Display APM stuff (battery status, temperature)

−b <nmea server>

Use a remote NMEA server. You can start gpsd on another host , which has the GPS receiver connected and display the position on your local machine.

−c <waypoint>

Initial position for simulation mode. Specify a waypoint name from your currently used waypoint list.

−M <mode>

Set GUI mode. <mode> may be ’desktop’ (default), ’pda’ or ’car’.

−i

Ignore NMEA checksum (risky, only for broken GPS receivers).

−q

Disables SQL support.

−F

Force display of position even if it is invalid.

−S

Don’t show splash screen.

−P

Start in Position Mode

−W <x>

Set to 1 to switch WAAS/EGNOS on, set to 0 to switch it off.

−H <altitude>

Correct altitude.

−C <file>

Set config file to <file>.

Use gpsdrive -h to see the actual command line help.

CONNECTING A GPS RECEIVER

First you have to choose if you want use the GARMIN or NMEA mode.

NMEA mode.
This is the most used mode. This mode is provided by most GPS receivers.
To use NMEA mode, you have to start the provided program gpsd first Start GPSD This program runs as daemon in background and provides a server, which sends the GPS data on port number 2947. The settings /dev/gps and 4800 BPS are precompiled if you start gpsd.

You can also change the gpsd settings i.e. to ttyS1 call it with:
gpsd -p /dev/ttyS1

If you are using a GPS receiver with an USB connection, your port may be /dev/ttyUSB0 for the first device.

Be sure to select NMEA protocol and a baudrate of 4800 BPS in your GPS receiver.

To see the output of you GPS do telnet localhost 2947 and after the connect hit the R key to see the NMEA sentences.

NMEA sentences used
Following NMEA sentences are used for specified informations:

GPRMC: Position, Speed, Heading
GPGSV:
Satellite signal level display
GPGGA:
Altitude (not available on all receivers) and position if no GPRMC is available. In this case, speed and heading are calculated by GpsDrive.
PGRME:
Display EPE (estimated position error), perhaps only available on GARMIN receivers

At least you need GPRMC or GPGGA for using GpsDrive. If you can turn on GPRMC, please do so.

USAGE

Start GpsDrive as normal user with: gpsdrive from your shell, if you want another language see section LOCALISATION

On some distributions you may find a "GpsDrive" entry in your Gnome or KDE menu.

It is important that you have installed GpsDrive as root, so it can find the necessary files. Don’t start GpsDrive as root!

You can use GpsDrive without a GPS device connected. If you do so, GpsDrive will automatically start in Simulator mode if no working GPS receiver is connected and no gpsd is running. This mode is shown by a rotating globe.

In simulator mode the pointer can move on the map (if enabled in settings menu). You can also stop gpsd if it is already running with the "Stop GPSD" Button.

If you have connected a GPS-Receiver, you see in the GPS Info window how many satellites are in view. You can click on this image to switch to the Satellite position view.
You must have at least 3 satellites in view. If you want to see your altitude, you need at least 4 satellites. The antenna of your GPS receiver must have free sight to the sky, so you cannot use it indoors. More satellites gives you a better accuracy.

If your receiver has not enough satellites with usable signal, the GPS Info window is red. If your signal is ok and gives a valid position, the GPS Info window is green.

There are 3 modes in which GpsDrive is operating:

Normal mode:

This mode is entered if you have a GPS receiver connected. The cursor is at the position your receiver sends.

Black and a red arrows show your position on the map. The black arrow is pointing to your selected target, the red arrow shows the direction in which you are moving.
If you have no valid position the arrows are blinking.

Simulation

If GpsDrive finds no GPS-receiver at program start, it shows the last position and the cursor will move to the targets you set. You can set your target by right-mouse click on the map or by selecting a waypoint from the FIND menu.

Position mode

This mode is activated by clicking on the "Pos. mode" button or if you "Jump" to a target in the FIND menu.

In this mode, you can temporarily change the position for looking around and jumping to other positions (i.e. for downloading maps). In this mode this is not your real position and is marked as an rectangle.

You can set the position by a simple left-mouse click on the map.

You can leave the position mode by by clicking on the "Pos. mode" button or middle-mouse click or right-mouse click (which also sets your target).

OPENSTREETMAP MAPS

GpsDrive now supports OSM maps with the help of the renderer Mapnik. To activate this mode you have to choose the mapnik option.

MAP DOWNLOAD

You can easily download maps from the internet with the Download button. GpsDrive stores an index of your maps in the file map_koord.txt in your ~/.gpsdrive directory. You can also use any directory for your maps, but you have to set this in the settings menu.

About maps

There is a file called "map_koord.txt" in your ~/.gpsdrive directory. Here is a sample:

top_WORLD.jpg 0,00000 0,00000 88226037
map_file0000.gif 53,60751 10,01145 3160000
map_file0001.gif 43,08210 12,24552 3160000
map_file0002.gif 49,81574 9,71454 7900000
map_file0003.gif 47,72837 14,46487 592500

The first row is the filename, then comes the latitude, the longitude and the scale of the map. The scale of 10000000 is good for Europe, and 100000 is for a town. To see detailed streets in a city, choose a scale like 10000 or 5000.

GpsDrive selects the map with the best scale for your position. So get a map i.e for Europe, Austria and Vienna if you want to drive in Vienna.

There is also the program gpsfetchmap.pl provided to download multiple maps for a bigger area.
Please consider the copyright information at
www.expedia.com if you want to use their maps!
Don’t misuse this service by downloading more maps as you need!
You will risk being blocked by these servers, and possibly cause trouble for the gpsdrive project.

File formats:

The decimal points in way.txt must always be a dot (’.’), in map_koord.txt ’.’ or ’,’ are possible. If you download maps from within the program, GpsDrive writes the map_koord.txt respecting your LC_NUMERIC setting.

Can I use other maps?

You can also use your own (self drawn, scanned...) maps. The maps must be gif, jpeg, png or other common file formats (the format must be recognized by the gdk-pixbuf library). The lat/long coordinates you write into the "map_koord.txt" file has to be the center of the map. The map must have a size of 1280x1024 pixels!

Important! The maps must be named "map_*" for UTM-like projections (lat:lon = 1:cos(lat)) and "top_*" for lat/lon Plate carrée projection (lat:lon = 1:1). The prefix is given so that gpsdrive knows how to scale the maps correctly. Alternatively the maps can be stored without prefix in subdirectories of $HOME/.gpsdrive/ which end in "_map" or "_top".

There is an "import assistant" built in. Use it to import your maps.

Importing waypoints:

The easiest way is to use the script "wpget" which does everything for you if you use a GARMIN receiver. You can use the program "garble" (included in the package) to read out your waypoints from the Garmin GPS (Transfer mode must be set to GARMIN here, while GpsDrive needs NMEA!).

Scripts: "wpget" is a script which calls "garble" in the proper way.

Be sure to have "wpget", "wpcvt" and "garble" in your path. This is fulfilled, if you did install the program as root and /usr/local/bin is in your path.

The manual way:

You may create a file "way.txt" in your ~/.gpsdrive directory which looks like:

DFN-Cert 53.577694 9.991263 FRITZ
Finkenwerder 53.541765 9.842541 AIRPORT
Fritz_Wohnung 53.582700 9.971390 FRITZ

The rows are: label latitude longitude waypoint-type. You may omit the waypoint type.

There is no need to create the way.txt file yourself, you can add the waypoints with GpsDrive using the "x" key. See help menu.

Route planning

There is no route planning feature at the moment. Route planning would need the use of commercial maps and a database license which costs more than EUR 10.000.

PROXY SERVER

If you must access the internet via a proxy server, you have to set the enviromental variable HTTP_PROXY or http_proxy to a value like http://proxy.provider.com:3128 where 3128 in this example is the proxy port.

MOUSE CONTROL

You can switch on the Position mode by selecting this option in the menu.

If you switched to "position mode" a rectangle is the cursor and no position is shown. If you zoom or select another map scale with the slider, this is done for the position of the rectangle-cursor in the same manner as it would be your actual position. If you click with the left button near the border, GpsDrive will scroll the map or load the next map if you are on the margin of the map.

The middle mouse button or the "Pos. mode" menu entry switches back to normal mode. The same happens if you select a target with the right mouse button. Shift-left-mouse-button and shift-right-mouse-button or using the mouse wheel changes the map scale.

Please have also a look into the Help menu in GpsDrive to be informed about the actual mouse functions and key shortcuts.

Add new waypoints

You can simply add new waypoints in two ways:

o To add a waypoint at the current (GPS) position, simply press CTRL and RIGHT-mouse-click. You can also press the x key.

o To add a waypoint at the mouse position, simply press CTRL and LEFT-mouse-click. You can also press the y key.

In the popup window add the waypoint name (spaces will be converted to underscores) and choose a waypoint type (see below for predefined waypoint types).

Icons for waypoints

At the moment there a three different icon themes available, but not everone has distinct icons for every type. Currently you can choose the themes only by editing the entry "icon_theme" in the config file "~/.gpsdrive/gpsdriverc". The possible themes are: "square.big", "square.small" and "classic".

SQL support

For managing a larger number of waypoints you should use SQL support. This needs to install a SQL server on your machine. At the moment, only MySQL is supported.

Don’t be afraid, MySQL doesn’t need much resources, is very fast, and makes the management (including selection of waypoint types) of the waypoints much easier. In SQL mode you can select the waypoints to display in the setup menu.

GpsDrive use MySQL automatically if it finds the shared library libmysqlclient.so.10 and the MySQL Server is running and a connection to the database is possible. For first use you have to run geoinfo.pl --create-db --fill-defaults once.

Please read README.SQL for information how to setup the SQL database.

Routes

A route is a list of waypoints. GpsDrive guides you from one waypoint to the next on the route. You can add waypoints to a route using the waypoint (select target) window. You can also add comments to a waypoint which will be spoken by the speech system and also be shown in the map window as scrolling text.

Comments for routes

To add comments create a file with the same name as the waypoint file, but change the suffix to .dsc, i.e way-trip.txt and way-trip.dsc, then enter the comments in the way*.dsc file in the kind of:

$waypointname Text which is displayed and spoken

$nextwaypointname another text

Example:

$Fritz_Wohnung Hier wohnt Fritz, der Autor von diesem Programm. Er freut sich auf Besuch und eine Einladung zu einem saftigen Steak.

$Hubertus Hier wohnt Hubertus, ein Freund von Fritz.

There is no limit of the length of the comment. Important is to start the line with ’$name’ and the comment in the next lines.

KISMET support

Gpsdrive supports kismet. Kismet is a 802.11b wireless network (WLAN) sniffer. If you have kismet running, gpsdrive will detect it and program starts and shows new WLAN access points in real time on the map. SQL mode is necessary to use Gpsdrive with Kismet. WLAN accesspoints which are already stored in the SQL database from prior wardrivings are ignored. If you have voice output in gpsdrive, you hear information about the newly found accesspoint.

Please see also the file README.kismet

LOCALISATION

If you have installed the program it will display messages in english, german, french, italian, dutch, dansk, hungarian, slovak, swedish, turkish or spanish if your language is set either with LANG or LANGUAGE. LANGUAGE overrides all other settings. Call "locale" to see the settings and call "set" if LANG or LANGUAGE is set. For german do:

export LANGUAGE=de

and then call gpsdrive in this shell.

You can also start it with the line LANGUAGE=de gpsdrive without setting the language for the shell.

Sometimes you have to do use LANG instead of LANGUAGE.

If your own language isn’t available, please contact me if you want to make the translations.

SPEECH OUTPUT

If you want speech output you have to install the festival speech output system. See http://fife.speech.cs.cmu.edu/festival for information.

For german output you have to get the german festival from www.ims.uni-stuttgart.de/phonetik/synthesis/index.html

If you have a functional festival software call it as server with:

festival --server

When you start GpsDrive it will detect the server on port 1314 and puts out some status information as speech. You also have an additional button (Mute) to switch off sound output.

GpsDrive tries to select the correct language for your locale. The -l option can force the languages for speech output. At the moment english, spanish, and german are supported. GpsDrive sets festival into the proper language. If the initialisation is not correct, have a look into gpsdrive.c and edit following defines do your needs:

#define FESTIVAL_ENGLISH_INIT "(voice_ked_diphone)"

#define FESTIVAL_GERMAN_INIT "(voice_german_de3_os)"

#define FESTIVAL_SPANISH_INIT "(voice_el_diphone)"

For this, you need the voices ked_diphone for english, german_de3_os for german (this is a MBROLA voice) and el_diphone for spanish.

There is now an unsupported build of festival including english, german and spanish support. Download it from GpsDrive homepage mirrors and extract the tar file in the directory /usr/local as root:

cd /usr/local
tar -xvzf festivalbuild.tar.gz

Start the server with /usr/local/festival/bin/festival --server

FRIENDSD server

There is a server program, called friendsd which acts as server for the position of your friends. If you enable it in the settings menu, then you can see the position of all gpsdrive connected with this server.

You will see the position of your friends as a car symbol on the map, including the name, time, day of week and the speed of his last connection. The blue arrow shows the last reported direction of your friend.

The time is transmitted as UTC, but shown on the display as your local time, so it is also correct if your friend lives in another time zone.

The server uses port 50123 (UDP), so be sure that you open the port in your firewall. The server needs no root privileges and should run as normal user or a special user with no privileges. The server was NOT tested for security.

There is a friends server running on friends.gpsdrive.de, you can try it if you enable it in the settings menu.

You can also send messages to other mobile targets (Misc. Menu/Messages)

MAILING LIST

The address for the mailing list is gpsdrive [AT] lists.org
You can browse the archive or subscribe at http://lists.gpsdrivers.org/mailman/listinfo/gpsdrive

BUGS

Please send bug reports to the author. Report version (gpsdrive -v), screen size and info how to reproduce the bug. It is also a big help to run gpsdrive for a minute with the -d option and send me the output.

If gpsdrive crashes with a segfault, I need a backtrace of the program in addition. To create a backtrace do following:

Extract the tar file, change to gpsdrive directory and do
./configure −−with−debug
make clean
make
cd src
gdb ./gpsdrive

Inside the debugger do:

run (if you use arguments write it after run)

When you get the segfault type in:

bt

and send me this output.

AUTHORS

Fritz Ganter,
Joerg Ostertag,
Gpsdrive Development Team
and others.

http://www.gpsdrive.de

WARRANTY

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2001-2006 by Fritz Ganter
Copyright (c) 2006-2007 The GpsDrive Development Team
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

SEE ALSO

gpsd(8), friendsd(1), gpsfetchmap(1), osm2pgsql(1), kismet(1), festival(1), flite(1)