* AX25 help site @ 2009-08-31 14:27 Douglas Cole 2009-08-31 22:48 ` Curt, WE7U 2009-09-01 22:06 ` w8iss 0 siblings, 2 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Douglas Cole @ 2009-08-31 14:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux HAMs For those just getting their Linux packet station going this page may help you with that, these articles have an OpenSuSE focus but should work for most distributions.... http://n7bfs.net/mediawiki/index.php/Ax25 Also I thought I saw a posting asking for an init.d script to bring up an AX0 interface, here is what my friend KD7DMP has made that works very well: http://n7bfs.net/mediawiki/index.php/AX25_init.d And of course the very useful AX25 wiki http://www.linux-ax25.org/wiki/Main_Page Hope this helps. -- Douglas Cole N7BFS ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-08-31 14:27 AX25 help site Douglas Cole @ 2009-08-31 22:48 ` Curt, WE7U 2009-09-01 1:06 ` Bob Nielsen 2009-09-01 22:06 ` w8iss 1 sibling, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Curt, WE7U @ 2009-08-31 22:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Douglas Cole; +Cc: Linux HAMs On Mon, 31 Aug 2009, Douglas Cole wrote: > For those just getting their Linux packet station going this page may > help you with that, these articles have an OpenSuSE focus but should > work for most distributions.... > > http://n7bfs.net/mediawiki/index.php/Ax25 > > Also I thought I saw a posting asking for an init.d script to bring up > an AX0 interface, here is what my friend KD7DMP has made that works > very well: > > http://n7bfs.net/mediawiki/index.php/AX25_init.d > > And of course the very useful AX25 wiki > http://www.linux-ax25.org/wiki/Main_Page Also the HowTo section at: http://www.xastir.org And the APRS wiki: http://info.aprs.net -- Curt, WE7U. <http://www.eskimo.com/~archer> APRS: Where it's at! <http://www.xastir.org> Lotto: A tax on people who are bad at math. - unknown Windows: Microsoft's tax on computer illiterates. - WE7U. The world DOES revolve around me: I picked the coordinate system!" ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-08-31 22:48 ` Curt, WE7U @ 2009-09-01 1:06 ` Bob Nielsen 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Bob Nielsen @ 2009-09-01 1:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Curt, WE7U; +Cc: Douglas Cole, Linux HAMs On Aug 31, 2009, at 3:48 PM, Curt, WE7U wrote: > On Mon, 31 Aug 2009, Douglas Cole wrote: > >> For those just getting their Linux packet station going this page may >> help you with that, these articles have an OpenSuSE focus but should >> work for most distributions.... >> >> http://n7bfs.net/mediawiki/index.php/Ax25 >> >> Also I thought I saw a posting asking for an init.d script to >> bring up >> an AX0 interface, here is what my friend KD7DMP has made that works >> very well: >> >> http://n7bfs.net/mediawiki/index.php/AX25_init.d >> >> And of course the very useful AX25 wiki >> http://www.linux-ax25.org/wiki/Main_Page > > Also the HowTo section at: http://www.xastir.org > > And the APRS wiki: http://info.aprs.net Also the DX Spider wiki: http://wiki.dxcluster.org/index.php/ Setting_up_the_AX25_Utilities Bob, N7XY ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-08-31 14:27 AX25 help site Douglas Cole 2009-08-31 22:48 ` Curt, WE7U @ 2009-09-01 22:06 ` w8iss 2009-09-01 22:59 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 1:01 ` Curt, WE7U 1 sibling, 2 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: w8iss @ 2009-09-01 22:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux-Hams Wondering if anyone has used the tnc-x either serial port or USB with their AX25 setup? James W8ISS ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-09-01 22:06 ` w8iss @ 2009-09-01 22:59 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 1:32 ` Curt, WE7U ` (2 more replies) 2009-09-05 1:01 ` Curt, WE7U 1 sibling, 3 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Dave Platt @ 2009-09-01 22:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: w8iss; +Cc: Linux-Hams w8iss wrote: > Wondering if anyone has used the tnc-x either serial port or USB > with their AX25 setup? I have used an earlier version of the TNC-X with AX.25. I bought it with the USB interface, but wasn't happy with it... unplugging the adapter tended to cause my system to go into a CPU-burning loop. I believe that this may have been due to problems in the FTDI driver in the kernel and/or in the USB stack... something didn't take well to having the endpoint device yanked out from underneath the stack. Things may have improved in the several years since then. I switched over to using one of the RS-232 serial ports in my system. This worked more reliably - the hangs went away. The TNC-X uses KISS as its basic communication protocol with the host (and it does support hardware flow control to avoid transmit-buffer overruns). Unfortunately, KISS has a fundamental design limitation - it's impossible for the host to know just when a packet has been transmitted, so that the host can start the retransmit timer for that connection. As a result, KISS-based implementations (including the TNC-X) can make a congested frequency even worse, by retransmitting packets unnecessarily (the retransmit timer runs out while the TNC-X still has the packet in its buffer and is waiting for "clear air" to send). Without a more sophisticated protocol between host AX.25 stack and TNC, I don't think this problem can be avoided. One problem I noted was a significant incompatibility between the TNC-X, and Thomas Sailer's "soundmodem", when the former was on the receiving end and the latter was sending. When the soundmodem send back-to-back AX.25 packets, the TNC-X would often lose all but the first. Investigation showed (I feel) that both the TNC-X and the soundmodem were responsible for this - they had different deficiencies, which individually weren't of great significance but which interacted quite badly. Soundmodem's deficiency: it violates a "SHOULD" clause in the AX.25 spec, which says that any idle time between packets SHOULD be filled with FLAG octets (i.e. synchronization or idle). The code in soundmodem encodes AX.25 packets one at a time, and it always starts encoding on a byte boundary in its output buffer. AX.25 packets aren't always an integral number of bytes, due to the use of bit stuffing. The soundmodem will transmit the required number of complete bytes, padding out the last encoded byte with zero bits, before it encodes and sends the FLAG which starts the next packet. As a result, a back-to-back packet transmission looks like FLAG-packet1-FLAG-zeros-FLAG-packet2-FLAG The TNC-X deficiency: in the firmware version I received, the TNC-X would "lose sync" with the packet stream as a result of the extraneous zero bits in between the FLAG at the end of the first packet and the FLAG at the start of the next. Its packet-parsing logic failed to resynchronize, and wouldn't successfully do so until it received several FLAG bytes in sequence... which usually didn't happen until the next complete transmission. Result: massive packet loss and excessive retransmissions. I reported this problem to the author of TNC-X, and also to Thomas Sailer (and, in the latter case, included a source change to the soundmodem which eliminated the mis-packing in between the packets). An alternate fix might be to give the soundmodem the ability to insert one or more additional PADs in between packets, in order to allow for a more robust re-syncing. The author of TNC-X subsequently released a new version of the firmware, which I believe has addressed this problem (enabling the firmware to re-sync on the first PAD of the next packet). One of these days I need to flash a new PIC and test it out :-) Mr. Sailer rejected my proposed fix to the soundmodem. It's his feeling that a proper HDLC receiver ought not to mind the extraneous zero bits in the packet, and that the TNC-X's failure to resynchronize was the real problem. I personally feel that both the TNC-X code, and soundmodem, were slightly in violation of good engineering practice (i.e. "be conservative in what you send, and liberal in what you're able to receive") and that modifying the soundmodem code to comply with the "SHOULD" recommendation in the AX.25 spec would be appropriate. Since it's his code, I haven't pursued the matter further... I just patch it locally any time I install a new version. I've heard some people criticize the TNC-X for being rather sensitive to RF coupled back from the transmitter and antenna - it can hang, and require a power-cycle to reset. Using a version in a robust metal case, properly grounded, and with plenty of ferrite chokes on the power and data and radio cables would probably be wise. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-09-01 22:59 ` Dave Platt @ 2009-09-05 1:32 ` Curt, WE7U 2009-09-05 16:04 ` Matti Aarnio 2009-09-05 20:40 ` AX25 help site David Ranch 2 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Curt, WE7U @ 2009-09-05 1:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dave Platt; +Cc: w8iss, Linux-Hams On Tue, 1 Sep 2009, Dave Platt wrote: > Soundmodem's deficiency: it violates a "SHOULD" clause in the > AX.25 spec, which says that any idle time between packets SHOULD be > filled with FLAG octets (i.e. synchronization or idle). > Mr. Sailer rejected my proposed fix to the soundmodem. It's > his feeling that a proper HDLC receiver ought not to mind > the extraneous zero bits in the packet, and that the TNC-X's > failure to resynchronize was the real problem. Zero bits in NRZI encoding cause a square wave to be generated at the decoding end because each zero causes a transition. It's actually EASIER to sync up to zero bits than it is flag bits for the purposes of synchronous decoding. Of course if these are happening in-between packets, the decoder is already sync'ed and doesn't need extra transistions there. You're talking about zero-bits in-between the frames. > I personally feel that both the TNC-X code, and soundmodem, > were slightly in violation of good engineering practice > (i.e. "be conservative in what you send, and liberal in what > you're able to receive") and that modifying the soundmodem > code to comply with the "SHOULD" recommendation in the AX.25 > spec would be appropriate. Some commercial TNC's stuff in extra flags, others stuff in zero bytes at the start of the transmission. I haven't investigated the back-to-back packet interface specifically (not interesting at the time) but as I recall everything years ago used either one or two flags between packets, nothing else. I don't recall any firmware-based TNC's that worried about byte boundaries and then stuffing in zero bits, which should look to the decoder like a separate all-zero packet in-between the flags. It would be better if it did NOT sync up to byte boundaries in this manner: The upper-level protocol has to figure out they are zero-byte packets and toss them. It could cause problems in some instances. -- Curt, WE7U. <http://www.eskimo.com/~archer> APRS: Where it's at! <http://www.xastir.org> Lotto: A tax on people who are bad at math. - unknown Windows: Microsoft's tax on computer illiterates. - WE7U. The world DOES revolve around me: I picked the coordinate system!" ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-09-01 22:59 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 1:32 ` Curt, WE7U @ 2009-09-05 16:04 ` Matti Aarnio 2009-09-05 18:14 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 20:40 ` AX25 help site David Ranch 2 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Matti Aarnio @ 2009-09-05 16:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dave Platt; +Cc: w8iss, Linux-Hams On Tue, Sep 01, 2009 at 03:59:15PM -0700, Dave Platt wrote: ... > The soundmodem will transmit the required > number of complete bytes, padding out the last encoded byte with > zero bits, before it encodes and sends the FLAG which starts the next > packet. As a result, a back-to-back packet transmission looks like > > FLAG-packet1-FLAG-zeros-FLAG-packet2-FLAG The modulation leader (synch-up) is best sent as all zeros, but inter-packet gaps should be subsequent FLAGs. Of course a real receiver notes that "a back to back frame, but it has bad CRC, discard it." zeros - FLAG - packet1 - FLAG (- FLAG ...) packet2 - FLAG - FLAG... And by the way, things are not at byte-boundaries after transmission, but they should be back again after HDLC de-stuffing. I do think that soundmodem as it is now is over-engineered on configuration department and very much lacking in documentation -- so much so that it is extremely hard to use without that gui-tool (like when embedding it...) My reasoning: If you need GUI to configure something, and it is not some grapics thing, then you are doing something wrong! It really calls for heavy investment on configuration simplicity of soundmodem. 73 de Matti, OH2MQK ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-09-05 16:04 ` Matti Aarnio @ 2009-09-05 18:14 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-06 1:01 ` Fldigi and RTTY decodes David A. Ranch 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Dave Platt @ 2009-09-05 18:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Matti Aarnio; +Cc: Linux-Hams Matti Aarnio wrote: > On Tue, Sep 01, 2009 at 03:59:15PM -0700, Dave Platt wrote: > ... >> The soundmodem will transmit the required >> number of complete bytes, padding out the last encoded byte with >> zero bits, before it encodes and sends the FLAG which starts the next >> packet. As a result, a back-to-back packet transmission looks like >> >> FLAG-packet1-FLAG-zeros-FLAG-packet2-FLAG > > The modulation leader (synch-up) is best sent as all zeros, > but inter-packet gaps should be subsequent FLAGs. > Of course a real receiver notes that "a back to back frame, > but it has bad CRC, discard it." Correct. The receiver is required (a "MUST" in the spec) to detect and discard any frame which is either too short, has a bad CRC, or is not an integral number of bytes (after the HDLC de-stuffing is performed). A fully-robust receiver will reject the few extra zero-bits of zero that the soundmodem may insert, for all three reasons... this "frame" is too short, an odd number of bits, and has no valid CRC. Three thumbs-down ought to be enough :-) The initial version of the TNC-X firmware was "confused" by the extra zero bits, and didn't resynchronize immediately with the second FLAG. It did reject the short "packet" as having a bad CRC, but its loss of sync meant that it didn't parse the second packet at all. I believe that this shortfall has been corrected (or at least greatly improved) in the current TNC-X firmware. > zeros - FLAG - packet1 - FLAG (- FLAG ...) packet2 - FLAG - FLAG... Agreed - that's the way it's best done, I think. > And by the way, things are not at byte-boundaries after transmission, > but they should be back again after HDLC de-stuffing. Yes - if they aren't, then the resulting packets are bad, and the spec says that they must be discarded. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Fldigi and RTTY decodes 2009-09-05 18:14 ` Dave Platt @ 2009-09-06 1:01 ` David A. Ranch 2009-09-06 2:43 ` Dave Platt 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: David A. Ranch @ 2009-09-06 1:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux-Hams Hello Everyone, I'm a new HAM but not new to Linux. I've been using Fldigi for monitoring BPSK31, etc. with good luck but I've been finding that RTTY rarely works. It maybe decodes 10% of the time even with a strong signal. It also seems the good decodes are specific to a given remote handle's QSO. I stumbled upon something today which I bet has a major impact on the RTTY decoding and I was curious about the group's thoughts. In researching HF Nets, there is the 3950 Century Club's RTTY NET: http://www.3905ccn.com/newsite/netsched.htm In that URL, it specifies LSB *regardless* of the band and they also specify specific "mark tones". In studying for my General ticket, the current ARRL "General Class License Manual" (section 2-12 & 5-5) mentions: - RTTY is usually FSK - the ARRL docs *does* mention the existence of AFSK RTTY to use LSB - Usual RTTY Mark is at 2125hz and Space at 2295 (170hz diff.) Now, looking at the Fldigi docs on RTTY, this is where things become obvious there are issues: http://www.w1hkj.com/FldigiHelp/RTTYFSK.html - FLdigi's RTTY is "AFSK is not FSK - All of the modem signals that fldigi produces are audio signals" - they mention a Pseudo FSK-RTTY support mode with a external circuit: http://www.w1hkj.com/FldigiHelp/PseudoFSK.html - "You MUST run the radio is USB to have the correct polarity." This conflicts with what the the above Century Net URL and the ARRL docs specify to use LSB. So my questions for the net are: 1. What's more common on the digital bands? FSK RTTY or AFSK RTTY? If it's FSK RTTY, are people using TNCs to do RTTY vs. soundcard-based solutions? 2. Is there a way to determine if a given RTTY transmission is FSK vs. AFSK? I have fairly good ears but maybe it's impossible to hear the difference with background noise? 3. Can FLdigi still decode FSK-based RTTY? Maybe this is only a Tx limitation? 4. Maybe Fldigi's RTTY decode (and maybe CW) isn't so hot. Any recommendations on alternative Linux packages? I'd love to hear other user's thoughts on their favorite Linux apps for HF digital modes (maybe another email thread). --David KI6ZHD ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Fldigi and RTTY decodes 2009-09-06 1:01 ` Fldigi and RTTY decodes David A. Ranch @ 2009-09-06 2:43 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-06 3:29 ` David A. Ranch 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: Dave Platt @ 2009-09-06 2:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David A. Ranch; +Cc: Linux-Hams David A. Ranch wrote: > > Hello Everyone, > > I'm a new HAM but not new to Linux. I've been using Fldigi for > monitoring BPSK31, etc. with good luck but I've been finding that RTTY > rarely works. It maybe decodes 10% of the time even with a strong > signal. It also seems the good decodes are specific to a given remote > handle's QSO. > > I stumbled upon something today which I bet has a major impact on the > RTTY decoding and I was curious about the group's thoughts. #snip# > So my questions for the net are: > > 1. What's more common on the digital bands? FSK RTTY or AFSK RTTY? > If it's FSK RTTY, are people using TNCs to do RTTY vs. soundcard-based > solutions? My guess is that direct FSK is more common among hams who have been on the air for decades and are using older radios. Most newer setups probably use TNCs (or soundcard equivalents) fed into SSB modulators, and are thus AFSK. As I understand the math: there is no actual difference in the RF waveform and content, between: (1) a "true FSK" signal - e.g. one in which a single oscillator is directly "pulled" by a certain amount (the frequency shift) by a baseband signal (the one/zero bit), and (2) a sideband-synthesized signal, in which a non-changing RF carrier is modulated (SSB) via an AFSK signal whose audio frequency shift is equal to the desired RF shift and where the shift is controlled by the one/zero-bit baseband signal. Now, this equivalence assumes that the sideband modulation process is perfect - that is, that the carrier is completely suppressed, and that the opposite sideband is completely filtered out. This isn't ever actually the case, of course... no sideband modulator is perfect. So, in that sense, a "true" or direct-FSK RTTY signal may produce a more "pure" modulated RF signal. On the other hand, it may be easier to get exactly the right frequency shift with an AFSK process - "pulling" a crystal or VCO by an exact amount isn't always easy. This equivalence also assumes that you've got your shift convention correct... i.e. is a 1-bit signified by a higher RF frequency than a 0-bit, or by a lower RF frequency? If the receiving station tries to use the incorrect shift convention for a given QSO, the signal won't decode - it'll be gibberish. You can transmit *either* shift convention with either FSK or AFSK-into-SSB. FLdigi "prefers" to use AFSK, since that's what a soundcard- into-audio-input system is naturally set up for. The auxiliary circuit is FSK is interesting, and would be primarily of use (I imagine) with special-function RTTY radios set up for baseband- controlled FSK and which don't have a mic (or which have a poor SSB modulator which doesn't handle AFSK cleanly). > 2. Is there a way to determine if a given RTTY transmission is FSK vs. > AFSK? I have fairly good ears but maybe it's impossible to hear the > difference with background noise? You could look at a wider area (say, 10 kHz) around the signal center frequency with some sort of spectrum analyzer. If you can see a residual bit of carrier a few kHz away from the RTTY tones, and perhaps even see a "ghost image" of the RTTY tones twice as far away, then it's a good bet that you're looking at an AFSK signal fed into an SSB modulator, and the modulator has imperfect carrier and opposite- sideband suppression. On the other hand, if the RF signal appears pure (no suppressed carrier or opposite-sideband residue), then it could be FSK, or it could be a really good SSB modulator transmitting an AFSK signal. > > 3. Can FLdigi still decode FSK-based RTTY? Maybe this is only a Tx > limitation? FLdigi should be able to decode either with equal clarity, as long as you get the shift direction correct, because they're essentially the same signals in the RF domain. If you fail to decode a soecific signal, try reversing the shift direction on receive. You might be able to do this within FLdigi (I imagine it has an option for this), or could do it by switching from USB to LSB (or vice versa) and re-tuning to reacquire the signal. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Fldigi and RTTY decodes 2009-09-06 2:43 ` Dave Platt @ 2009-09-06 3:29 ` David A. Ranch 2009-09-06 4:52 ` Dave Platt 0 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: David A. Ranch @ 2009-09-06 3:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dave Platt; +Cc: Linux-Hams Hello Dave, Thanks for the excellent email. I'll give the USB vs. LSB idea a try and see if that will help. Sure would be nice if Fldigi could make this an option within it's configuration. --David . . . > If you fail to decode a soecific signal, try reversing the shift > direction on receive. You might be able to do this within FLdigi > (I imagine it has an option for this), or could do it by switching > from USB to LSB (or vice versa) and re-tuning to reacquire the signal. > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: Fldigi and RTTY decodes 2009-09-06 3:29 ` David A. Ranch @ 2009-09-06 4:52 ` Dave Platt 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Dave Platt @ 2009-09-06 4:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David A. Ranch; +Cc: Linux-Hams David A. Ranch wrote: > Hello Dave, > > Thanks for the excellent email. I'll give the USB vs. LSB idea a try > and see if that will help. Sure would be nice if Fldigi could make this > an option within it's configuration. It looks as if it does. Switch to RTTY mode, and take a look at the very bottom of the window. There's a selector labeled "Rv", and hovering the cursor over it brings up an explanation of "Reverse". This may do just what you want... and if it does, you won't have to alter your rig settings and re-tune when switching between an RTTY-normal and RTTY-inverted arrangement. I assume it switches both Tx and Rx bit conventions at the same time - it would make for an unusual QSO if it didn't :-) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-09-01 22:59 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 1:32 ` Curt, WE7U 2009-09-05 16:04 ` Matti Aarnio @ 2009-09-05 20:40 ` David Ranch 2009-09-05 22:20 ` Dave Platt 2 siblings, 1 reply; 15+ messages in thread From: David Ranch @ 2009-09-05 20:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dave Platt; +Cc: linux-hams Hello Dave, . . . > I personally feel that both the TNC-X code, and soundmodem, > were slightly in violation of good engineering practice > (i.e. "be conservative in what you send, and liberal in what > you're able to receive") and that modifying the soundmodem > code to comply with the "SHOULD" recommendation in the AX.25 > spec would be appropriate. Since it's his code, I haven't > pursued the matter further... I just patch it locally any time > I install a new version. Curious, does your soundmodem patch cleanly apply against Soundmodem 0.14? http://www.baycom.org/~tom/ham/soundmodem/ I think I've been seeing some strange compatibility issues with some local TNCs and I'd like to see if this patch would help. Maybe you could post it on the web somewhere? --David ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-09-05 20:40 ` AX25 help site David Ranch @ 2009-09-05 22:20 ` Dave Platt 0 siblings, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Dave Platt @ 2009-09-05 22:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David Ranch; +Cc: linux-hams > Curious, does your soundmodem patch cleanly apply against Soundmodem 0.14? > > http://www.baycom.org/~tom/ham/soundmodem/ > > > I think I've been seeing some strange compatibility issues with some > local TNCs and I'd like to see if this patch would help. > > Maybe you could post it on the web somewhere? It does appear to apply, with an offset of a few lines but no rejected patch chunks, by using the -p1 option. The patched source compiled without error. I haven't tried to use it yet but I'd expect it'll work OK. It's available at http://www.radagast.org/~dplatt/hamradio/soundmodem-0.7b.patch I'd be very curious to know whether it addresses the compatibility problems you've been seeing (and, if so, which TNCs were affected). ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
* Re: AX25 help site 2009-09-01 22:06 ` w8iss 2009-09-01 22:59 ` Dave Platt @ 2009-09-05 1:01 ` Curt, WE7U 1 sibling, 0 replies; 15+ messages in thread From: Curt, WE7U @ 2009-09-05 1:01 UTC (permalink / raw) To: w8iss; +Cc: Linux-Hams On Tue, 1 Sep 2009, w8iss wrote: > Wondering if anyone has used the tnc-x either serial port or USB > with their AX25 setup? I've been using one for quite a while with serial port and with serial-to-USB adapter cable. Have used it with the kernel AX.25 networking and with the Serial KISS TNC code, both from within Xastir (APRS). I've also done a bit of TCP/IP using the TNC-X and the kernel AX.25 driver, but only for limited testing, making sure the Xastir Wiki instructions for installing/configuring AX.25 were correct. Same for the Soundmodem instructions. -- Curt, WE7U. <http://www.eskimo.com/~archer> APRS: Where it's at! <http://www.xastir.org> Lotto: A tax on people who are bad at math. - unknown Windows: Microsoft's tax on computer illiterates. - WE7U. The world DOES revolve around me: I picked the coordinate system!" ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 15+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2009-09-06 4:52 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 15+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2009-08-31 14:27 AX25 help site Douglas Cole 2009-08-31 22:48 ` Curt, WE7U 2009-09-01 1:06 ` Bob Nielsen 2009-09-01 22:06 ` w8iss 2009-09-01 22:59 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 1:32 ` Curt, WE7U 2009-09-05 16:04 ` Matti Aarnio 2009-09-05 18:14 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-06 1:01 ` Fldigi and RTTY decodes David A. Ranch 2009-09-06 2:43 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-06 3:29 ` David A. Ranch 2009-09-06 4:52 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 20:40 ` AX25 help site David Ranch 2009-09-05 22:20 ` Dave Platt 2009-09-05 1:01 ` Curt, WE7U
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