[aprssig] Modification to AE5PL's routing idea
Jason Winningham
jdw at eng.uah.edu
Tue Feb 15 12:29:10 EST 2005
On Feb 15, 2005, at 10:54 AM, AE5PL Lists wrote:
> True, that is part of the point. Right now, we are trying to tell
> users
> to do this which is even worse.
Absolutely. That's one of the underlying problems, relying on end
users to configure correctly.
> In fact, a SAR operation could be
> improved because they would be their own "private" LAN and multiple
> digipeaters could be easily preconfigured.
I'd think it would be advantageous to use portable digis to augment an
existing network; if you want a "private" LAN, QSY. Not really
pertinent to the discussion at hand, though.
> You can't do that today with any of the digipeaters. You have to
> configure them all. This is actually a simpler configuration be cause
> you are simply saying "digipeat all directly heards and all directly
> digipeated by X".
I didn't state that very well. I didn't mean take them out of the box
new and turn 'em on, I meant take them out of the "go-box" and turn
them on. A generic config, be it RELAY, hopcount or whatever, is not
dependent on physical location. Once you add the "directly digipeated
by X" requirement, this is a configuration parameter that must be
entered on the digi before it is operational in a particular geographic
location.
I'd think our hypothetical SAR team would not have time to mess with
this, and would not want to give up any access to the existing APRS
network.
> No, not necessary. At most we would be looking at maybe 3 or 4
> digipeaters on the "ok to digipeat" list. In most cases, probably only
> zero, one, or two. This is not difficult and in fact, very powerful.
This would make it work for an area supported by the specific digis
listed. I don't guess it's too likely to operate outside a particular
area.
I guess my unease with this method boils down to "less configuration is
better than more configuration". It seems that it could result in the
most effective bandwidth utilization of any method I've seen proposed,
but it also requires the most extensive digi configuration, and could
result in easily isolated LAN segments if a particular digi faults.
-Jason
kg4wsv
More information about the aprssig
mailing list