man xgps (Commandes) - test clients for gpsd

NAME

xgps, xgpsspeed, cgps - test clients for gpsd

SYNOPSIS

xgps [X-options] [-h] [-v] [-speedunits {mph | kph | knots}] [-altunits {feet | meters}] [-l [d | m | s]] [server [:port [:device]]] xgpsspeed [-rv] [X-options] [-h] [-v] [-nc X-color] [-speedunits {mph | kph | knots}] [server [:port [:device]]] cgps [-h] [-v] [-speedunits {mph | kph | knots}] [-altunits {feet | meters}] [-l [d | m | s]] [server [:port [:device]]]

DESCRIPTION

xgps

xgps is a simple test client for gpsd with an X interface. It displays current GPS position/time/velocity information and (for GPSes that support the feature) the locations of accessible satellites.

xgps accepts an -h option as for gpsd, or a -v option to dump the package version and exit.

An optional argument may specify a server to get data from; a colon-separated suffix is taken as a port number. If there is a second colon-separated suffix, that is taken as a device name to be handed to the daemon in an F= command.

The -speedunits option can be used to set the speed units for display; follow the keyword with knots for nautical miles per hour, kph for kilometres per hour, or mph for miles per hour. The default is miles per hour. This option can also be set as the X resource 'speedunits'.

The -altunits option can be used to set the altitude units for display; follow the keyword with 'meters' or 'feet'. The default is feet. This option can also be set as the X resource 'altunits'.

The -l option sets the format of latitude and longitude reports. The value 'd' produces decimal degrees and is the default. The value 'm' produces degrees and decimal minutes. The value 's' produces degrees, minutes, and decimal seconds.

There is a known bug in xgps; it assumes the default font size is no more than 18 pixels. If this is not the case, the satellite data display will show fewer than 12 satellites.

xgpsspeed

xgpsspeed is a speedometer that uses position information from the GPS. It accepts an -h option and optional argument as for gps, or a -v option to dump the package version and exit. Additionally, it accepts -rv (reverse video) and -nc (needle color) options.

The -speedunits option can be used to set the speed units for display; follow the keyword with knots for nautical miles per hour, kph for kilometres per hour, or mph for miles per hour. The default is miles per hour. This option can also be set as the X resource 'speedunits'.

cgps

cgps is a client resembling xgps, but without the pictorial satellite display and able to run on a serial terminal or terminal emulator.

Rather than use X resources to detemine which units to use, cgps looks at variables in its environment. Here are the variables and values it checks:

GPSD_UNITS one of: imperial = miles/feet nautical = knots/feet metric = km/meters LC_MEASUREMENT en_US = miles/feet C = miles/feet POSIX = miles/feet [other] = km/meters LANG en_US = miles/feet C = miles/feet POSIX = miles/feet [other] = km/meters

cgps terminates when you send it a SIGHUP or SIGINT; given default terminal settings this will happen when you type Ctl-C at it. It will also terminate on 'q'

SEE ALSO

AUTHORS

Remco Treffcorn, Derrick Brashear, Russ Nelson, Eric S. Raymond. This manual page by Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>. There is a project page, with xgps screenshots, here: http://gpsd.berlios.de/.

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