Make --net-verbatim just control the default setting. 0x1A '1' 'v' disables verbatim mode (send "cooked" output); 0x1A '1' 'V' enables verbatim mode Support clients with different settings by switching them between output writers depending on what setting they want, so clients with different settings can co-exist (unlike the Mode A/C setting) In cooked mode, FEC corrections are applied to messages before they are send and only trustworthy messages are forwarded; this is the default case for downstream clients that don't want to apply their own rules and are happy with the decisions that dump1090 makes. In verbatim mode, all messages are forwarded, but no FEC corrections are applied; the downstream client needs to make its own FEC / noise filtering decisions. Usually the default for new connections is cooked mode. --net-verbatim changes the default to be verbatim mode. |
||
|---|---|---|
| bladerf | ||
| compat | ||
| debian | ||
| debian-wheezy | ||
| oneoff | ||
| public_html | ||
| testfiles | ||
| tools | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .travis.yml | ||
| COPYING | ||
| Jenkinsfile | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| README-json.md | ||
| README.md | ||
| ais_charset.c | ||
| ais_charset.h | ||
| anet.c | ||
| anet.h | ||
| comm_b.c | ||
| comm_b.h | ||
| convert.c | ||
| convert.h | ||
| cpr.c | ||
| cpr.h | ||
| cprtests.c | ||
| crc.c | ||
| crc.h | ||
| demod_2400.c | ||
| demod_2400.h | ||
| dump1090.c | ||
| dump1090.h | ||
| faup1090.c | ||
| icao_filter.c | ||
| icao_filter.h | ||
| interactive.c | ||
| mode_ac.c | ||
| mode_s.c | ||
| mode_s.h | ||
| net_io.c | ||
| net_io.h | ||
| prepare-build.sh | ||
| sdr.c | ||
| sdr.h | ||
| sdr_bladerf.c | ||
| sdr_bladerf.h | ||
| sdr_ifile.c | ||
| sdr_ifile.h | ||
| sdr_rtlsdr.c | ||
| sdr_rtlsdr.h | ||
| stats.c | ||
| stats.h | ||
| track.c | ||
| track.h | ||
| util.c | ||
| util.h | ||
| view1090.c | ||
README.md
dump1090-fa Debian/Raspbian packages
This is a fork of dump1090-mutability customized for use within FlightAware's PiAware software.
It is designed to build as a Debian package.
Building under stretch
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential debhelper librtlsdr-dev pkg-config dh-systemd libncurses5-dev libbladerf-dev
$ dpkg-buildpackage -b
Building under jessie
Dependencies - bladeRF
You will need a build of libbladeRF. You can build packages from source:
$ git clone https://github.com/Nuand/bladeRF.git
$ cd bladeRF
$ git checkout 2017.12-rc1
$ dpkg-buildpackage -b
Or Nuand has some build/install instructions including an Ubuntu PPA at https://github.com/Nuand/bladeRF/wiki/Getting-Started:-Linux
Or FlightAware provides armhf packages as part of the piaware repository; see https://flightaware.com/adsb/piaware/install
Dependencies - rtlsdr
This is packaged with jessie. sudo apt-get install librtlsdr-dev
Actually building it
Nothing special, just build it (dpkg-buildpackage -b)
Building under wheezy
First run prepare-wheezy-tree.sh. This will create a package tree in
package-wheezy/. Build in there (dpkg-buildpackage -b)
The wheezy build does not include bladeRF support.
Building manually
You can probably just run "make" after installing the required dependencies. Binaries are built in the source directory; you will need to arrange to install them (and a method for starting them) yourself.
make BLADERF=no will disable bladeRF support and remove the dependency on
libbladeRF.
make RTLSDR=no will disable rtl-sdr support and remove the dependency on
librtlsdr.