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author David Spencer <baildon.research@googlemail.com>2011-09-07 23:21:01 -0400
committer Niels Horn <niels.horn@slackbuilds.org>2011-09-21 19:48:31 -0300
commite6f17288e3d02ddfe3eeb063b637d0986c7bce5f (patch)
tree02765da686bdf6831a4e3dfb22e518835e509d02 /system/gpsd/README
parent9080a47e3d7349cc58bf15b944af817a25cf39b2 (diff)
downloadslackbuilds-e6f17288e3d02ddfe3eeb063b637d0986c7bce5f.tar.gz
slackbuilds-e6f17288e3d02ddfe3eeb063b637d0986c7bce5f.tar.xz
system/gpsd: Downgraded to version 2.95 due to API breakage.
Added rc.* files and *.desktop files. Added udev rules and scripts. Signed-off-by: dsomero <xgizzmo@slackbuilds.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'system/gpsd/README')
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1 files changed, 29 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/system/gpsd/README b/system/gpsd/README
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-gpsd is a service daemon that monitors one or more GPSes attached to a
-host computer through serial or USB ports, making all data on the location,
-course, and velocity available to be queried on TCP port 2947 of the host
-computer. With gpsd, multiple GPS client applications (such as navigational
-and wardriving software) can share access to GPSes without contention or
-loss of data. Applications that presently use gpsd include Viking and Kismet.
+gpsd is a service daemon that monitors one or more GPSes attached to
+a host computer through serial or USB ports, making all data on the
+location, course, and velocity available to be queried on TCP port
+2947 of the host computer. With gpsd, multiple GPS client applications
+(such as navigational and wardriving software) can share access to GPSes
+without contention or loss of data. Applications that presently use
+gpsd include Viking and Kismet.
See README.build for some additional build options that might be useful.
+
+To enable automatic startup of gpsd at boot time, or when a GPS device is
+connected via USB, you need to do the following three steps:
+
+1. Edit the file /lib/udev/rules.d/97-gpsd.rules and uncomment the line
+(or lines) beginning '#ATTRS' that corresponds to your GPS hardware and
+save it in /etc/udev/rules.d/. To avoid confusion with other USB serial
+devices that you might have, do not uncomment lines that do not
+correspond to your GPS hardware.
+
+2. Make the file /etc/rc.d/rc.gpsd executable.
+ chmod +x /etc/rc.d/rc.gpsd
+
+3. Add the following lines to /etc/rc.d/rc.local
+ if [ -x /etc/rc.d/rc.gpsd ]; then
+ /etc/rc.d/rc.gpsd start
+ fi
+
+Configuration options may be set in the file /etc/rc.d/rc.gpsd.conf. The
+defaults will usually be adequate. However, if your GPS is on a real (non-USB)
+serial port -- for example, /dev/ttyS0 -- you should add /dev/ttyS0 to
+GPS_DEVICES in /etc/rc.d/rc.gpsd.conf.