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Comment field jibberish in compressed Mic-E packets #67
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Scope expanded to all packet-types which use compression (position, weather, etc). comment is jibberish. |
Hi @craigerl, thanks for the report. Look to me like the packet is parsed correctly. Not sure what the https://aprs.fi/?c=raw&call=K6EYE-9&limit=5&view=decoded However, when I look at station info, the Regarding the position and weather packets, I need examples. |
Yah, I think you're right. I recall hessu wanting to know something about new radios when they're brought to market, some have these unique characters, ultimately filtered from aprsis. I could be wrong on this tho. |
Curious why this has not been acted on.. It's a documented part of the spec.. http://www.aprs.org/aprs12/mic-e-types.txt ``......_% Yaesu FTM-400DR [new in Aug 2013] (message capable)`
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Accomplishes 2 tasks.. 1. Correctly parses APRS radio information (when present) in the Mic-E data. This is per http://www.aprs.org/aprs12/mic-e-types.txt 2. After successfully parsing radio information, it is removed from the comment. This has the effect of removing extraneous characters from the comment field. (Issue rossengeorgiev#67)
I've submitted PR #85 to fix this issue by parsing and removing the Mic-E radio information from the comment. |
This causes a lot of confusion.
Sometimes you will see this form, without anything between the fixed part and the comment. In this case, we don’t know what generated the packet.
When Kenwood adopted the MIC-E format, they put a different character before the comment field to identify the equipment type.
When later models were introduced, an additional character was placed at the end of the comment.
This is known as the legacy format. For later equipment, a new format is used. • A prefix of ` indicates a system capable of messaging. At the end we now have a two character suffix for the manufacturer and model. Examples:
Any optional altitude is at the beginning of the comment, after any device identifier prefix and before any suffix. Example:
Rather than hardcoding these rules, application developers are encouraged to read a file at runtime so users can update the database without waiting for a new software release. aprs.org hasn't been updated for a couple years. https://github.com/aprsorg/aprs-deviceid is now the accepted authority for the device identifier codes. Let me know if you have any questions. 73, |
The comment field is "]=" for the following Mic-E packet, which is compressed.
You probably know this, as the comment field s gibberish in your documents.
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