direwolf/man/direwolf.1

177 lines
3.6 KiB
Groff

.TH DIREWOLF 1
.SH NAME
direwolf \- Soundcard TNC for packet radio.
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B direwolf
[ \fIoptions\fR ]
[ \- | \fBudp:\fR9999 ]
.P
The first audio channel can be streamed thru stdin or a UDP port. This is typically used with an SDR receiver.
.SH DESCRIPTION
\fBdirewolf\fR is a software "soundcard" modem/TNC and APRS encoder/decoder.
It can be used stand-alone to receive APRS messages, as a digipeater,
APRStt gateway, or Internet Gateway (IGate).
It can also be used as a virtual TNC for other applications such as
APRSIS32, UI-View32, Xastir, APRS-TW, YAAC, UISS, Linux AX25, SARTrack,
RMS Express, and many others.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
.BI "-c " "file"
Read configuration file from specified location rather than the default locations.
.TP
.BI "-l " "logdir"
Generate daily log files in specified directory. Use "." for current directory.
.TP
.BI "-L " "logfile"
Generate single log file with fixed name.
.TP
.BI "-r " "n"
Audio sample rate per second for first channel. Default 44100.
.TP
.BI "-n " "n"
Number of audio channels for first device. 1 or 2. Default 1.
.TP
.BI "-b " "n"
Audio sample size for first channel. 8 or 16. Default 16.
.TP
.BI "-B " "n"
Data rate in bits/sec for first channel. Standard values are 300, 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600.
.PD 0
.RS
.RS
300 bps defaults to AFSK tones of 1600 & 1800.
.P
1200 bps uses AFSK tones of 1200 & 2200.
.P
2400 bps uses QPSK based on V.26 standard.
.P
4800 bps uses 8PSK based on V.27 standard.
.P
9600 bps and up uses K9NG/G3RUH standard.
.RE
.RE
.PD
.TP
.BI "-g "
Force G3RUH modem regardless of data rate.
.TP
.BI "-j "
2400 bps QPSK compatible with Dire Wolf <= 1.5.
.TP
.BI "-J "
2400 bps QPSK compatible with MFJ-2400.
.TP
.BI "-D " "n"
Divide audio sample by n for first channel.
.TP
.BI "-d " "x"
Debug options. Specify one or more of the following in place of x.
.PD 0
.RS
.RS
a = AGWPE network protocol client.
.P
k = KISS serial port client.
.P
n = Network KISS client.
.P
u = Display non-ASCII text in hexadecimal.
.P
p = Packet dump in hexadecimal.
.P
g = GPS interface.
.P
W = Waypoints for position or object reports.
.P
t = Tracker beacon.
.P
o = Output controls such as PTT and DCD.
.P
i = IGate
.P
h = Hamlib verbose level. Repeat for more.
.P
m = Monitor heard station list.
.P
f = Packet filtering.
.RE
.RE
.PD
.TP
.BI "-q " "x"
Quiet (suppress output). Specify one or more of the following in place of x.
.PD 0
.RS
.RS
h = Heard line with the audio level.
.P
d = Decoding of APRS packets.
.RE
.RE
.PD
.TP
.BI "-t " "n"
Text colors. 1=normal, 0=disabled.
.TP
.B "-p "
Enable pseudo terminal for KISS protocol.
.TP
.B "-x "
Send Xmit level calibration tones.
.TP
.B "-U "
Print UTF-8 test string and exit.
.TP
.B "-S "
Print Symbol tables and exit.
.TP
.BI "-a " "n"
Report audio device statistics each n seconds.
.SH EXAMPLES
gqrx (2.3 and later) has the ability to send streaming audio through a UDP socket to another application for further processing.
direwolf can listen over a UDP port with options like this:
.RS
.P
direwolf \-n 1 \-r 48000 \-b 16 udp:7355
.RE
.P
Other SDR applications might produce audio on stdout so it is convenient to pipe into the next application. In this example, the final "-" means read from stdin.
.RS
.P
rtl_fm \-f 144.39M \-o 4 \- | direwolf \-n 1 \-r 24000 \-b 16 \-
.RE
.SH SEE ALSO
More detailed information is in the pdf files in /usr/local/share/doc/direwolf, or possibly /usr/share/doc/direwolf, depending on installation location.
Applications in this package: aclients, atest, cm108, decode_aprs, direwolf, gen_packets, kissutil, ll2utm, log2gpx, text2tt, tt2text, utm2ll