Provided by: gpsd-clients_3.22-4ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       xgps, xgpsspeed - sample clients for gpsd

SYNOPSIS

       xgps [-?] [--help] [--debug DEBUG-LEVEL] [--device DEVICE] [--host HOST]
            [--llfmt [[d] | [m] | [s]]] [--port PORT] [--rotate DEGREES] [--sats NSATS]
            [--units [[i] | [n] | [m]]] [--version] [-D LVL] [-h] [-l [[d] | [m] | [s]]]
            [-r DEGREES] [-s NSATS] [-u [[i] | [n] | [m]]] [-V] [server [:port [:device]]]

       xgpsspeed [-?] [--debug DEBUG-LEVEL] [--device DEVICE] [--help] [--host HOST]
                 [--landspeed] [--maxspeed MAXSPEED] [--nautical] [--port PORT]
                 [--rotate DEGREES] [--speedunits {[mph] | [kmh] | [knots]}] [--version] [-D LVL]
                 [-h] [-r DEGREES] [-V] [server [:port [:device]]]

DESCRIPTION

       These are two sample clients shipped with gpsd. They have some common options:

       -?, -h, --help
           Causes the client to emit a summary of its options and then exit.

       -device DEVICE
           The device on the host to connect to. The default is empty (any).

       -D LVL, --debug LVL
           Sets the debug level; it is primarily for use by GPSD developers. It enables various
           progress messages to standard error.

       --host HOST
           The host (server) to connect to. The default is localhost.

       -p PORT, --port PORT
           The port to connect to. The default is 2947.

       -V, --version
           The -V, --version option causes each client to dump the package version and exit.

       By default, clients collect data from all compatible devices on localhost, using the
       default GPSD port 2947. An optional argument to any client 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 specific device name to be watched. However, if
       the server specification contains square brackets, the part inside them is taken as an
       IPv6 address and port/device suffixes are only parsed after the trailing bracket. Possible
       cases look like this:

       The options for xgps can be placed in the XGPSOPTS environment variable. XGPSOPTS is
       processed before the CLI options.

       localhost:/dev/ttyS1
           Look at the default port of localhost, trying both IPv4 and IPv6 and watching output
           from serial device 1.

       example.com:2317
           Look at port 2317 on example.com, trying both IPv4 and IPv6.

       71.162.241.5:2317:/dev/ttyS3
           Look at port 2317 at the specified IPv4 address, collecting data from attached serial
           device 3.

       [FEDC:BA98:7654:3210:FEDC:BA98:7654:3210]:2317:/dev/ttyS5
           Look at port 2317 at the specified IPv6 address, collecting data from attached serial
           device 5.

   xgps
       xgps is a simple sample 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.

       In the sky view, satellites are color-coded to indicate quality of signal; consult the
       data display to the left for exact figures in dB. Diamond-shaped icons indicate GLONASS
       satellites, squares are used for SBAS (e.g. WAAS, EGNOS), circles indicate GPS, and down-,
       up-, right-, and left-pointing triangles, respectively, indicate Galileo, BeiDou, QZSS,
       and other systems' satellites (e.g. IMES, IRNSS, as well as unknown systems). Filled icons
       were used in the current fix, outline icons were not. Hovering over a symbol with the
       mouse pointer will temporarily display a small popup window with the satellite details
       from the Satellite List pane.

       -l FMT, --llfmt FMT
           Set 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.

       -r DEG, --rotate DEG
           Accepts an argument in degrees, to rotate the skyview counterclockwise.

       xgps looks at variables in the environment to figure out the units for display — imperial,
       nautical, or metric. Here are the variables and values checked:

               GPSD_UNITS one of:
                         i          = miles/feet
                         imperial   = miles/feet
                         n          = knots/feet
                         nautical   = knots/feet
                         m          = km/meters
                         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

       These preferences may be overridden by the -u, --units option.

       The -u option can be used to set the system units for display; follow the keyword with 'i'
       for 'imperial' for American units (International Feet in altitude and error estimates,
       miles per hour in speeds), 'n' for 'nautical' (feet in altitude and error estimates, knots
       in speed) or 'm' for 'metric' (meters in altitude and error estimates, kilometers per hour
       in speeds).

       Note: The USA Survey Foot is not supported.

   xgpsspeed
       xgpsspeed is a speedometer that uses position information from the GPS.

       The default display mode is a speed and track presentation modeled after a marine
       navigation display; for backward compatibility the --nautical option forces this mode. The
       --landspeed option produces a simple speedometer.

       The --speedunits option can be used to set the speed units for display; follow the keyword
       with "knots" for nautical miles per hour, "kmh" for kilometers per hour, or "mph" for
       miles per hour. The default is miles per hour.

       In the nautical mode only, --maxspeed sets the maximum on the speedometer.

ENVIRONMENT

       The environment variable GPSD_UNITS is checked if no unit system is specified on the
       command line or in XPGSOPTS it may be set to 'i'. 'imperial', 'm', 'metric', or 'n',
       'nautical'.

       LC_MEASUREMENT and then LANG are checked if no unit system has been specified on the
       command line, in XPGSOPTS or in GPSD_UNITS. If the value is 'C', 'POSIX', or begins with
       'en_US' the unit system is set to imperial. The default if no system has been selected
       defaults to metric.

       The XGPSOPTS> environment variable may be set to pass commonly used command line options
       to xgps and xgpsspeed. This is often used to set the -u option for locale specific units.
       XGPSOPTS is processed before the CLI options.

SEE ALSO

       gpsd(8), libgps(3), libgpsmm(3), gpsfake(1), gpsctl(1), gpscat(1), gpsprof(1).
       gpspipe(1).  gpsmon(1).  gpxlogger(1).

AUTHORS

       Remco Treffcorn, Derrick Brashear, Russ Nelson & Eric S. Raymond, Chen Wei
       <weichen302@aol.com> (xgpsspeed), Robin Wittler <real@the-real.org> (xgpsspeed).

       This manual page by Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>