Hi John,<br><br>Your last comment may be the most important... validating the source of messages going from IM->APRS. I have totally abandoned the Microsoft IM service because of the constant barage of spam, virus-laden links, unsolicited buddy requests, etc. that appear when I connect. Some of the other services are not much better, and in my opinion, with the exception of Google's (which is integrated in with their email service and so far spam-free), nearly all are practically worthless to me these days. <br>
<br>I've used the various APRS->Email gateways a number of times, mostly successfully. With phone text messaging commonly used and often more reliable and accessible than a phone call, and email->text message gateways provided by all of the major carriers, APRS->Phone Text Messaging can be an effective means of communicating when I'm out of cellular range. <br>
<br>The only trick to interoperating with a cell phone is to pick the right ARPS email gateway so that the message comes across formatted well for the phone. Some add additional information to guide the person on the other end, and this isn't tolerated well by some phones. (I crashed my daughter's Moto Razr once by doing this...) Others end up with the message text as the subject, etc. It can be quite confusing to the participants.<br>
<br>So, if I might suggest, a better gateway to write would be for a APRS->Phone Text Messge service. You'd need to use the carrier's email-text gateways, but both are inherently short-message based, so this should be quite effective if done right. <br>
<br>The biggest issue for both my preference and yours is the scarcity of bi-directional iGates. Still useful for the "arrived safely" messages, but not what I would like. Unfortunately, this is not a software problem...<br>
<br>Greg KO6TH<br><br><br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Sun, Apr 8, 2012 at 10:24 AM, John Goerzen <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:jgoerzen@complete.org">jgoerzen@complete.org</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);margin:0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex;padding-left:1ex">
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Hi folks,<br>
<br>
I am looking to write some APRS software, and I'm hoping to avoid
re-inventing the wheel. I am particularly interested in libraries
in any cross-platform language (C, Perl, Python, Java, etc.) that
can be used to receive and generate APRS messages.<br>
<br>
In my research, there are quite a few libraries that receive APRS
messages, but I have found none that are helpful with generating
them. This seems to be something with some complexity; such as:<br>
<ul>
<li>Splitting data up into packets of the appropriate size
(APRSLink for Winlink appears to somehow detect the type of
device in use and generates shorter messages for TH-D7A. Anyone
know how to do this, and what are the appropriate sizes for the
D7A, D72A, 710, and VX-8GR?)</li>
<li>Processing/generating ACKs, REJs, etc.</li>
<li>Proper timing for retransmit of packets that weren't ACKed.</li>
</ul>
None of this is hugely complicated, and the APRS spec is fairly
clear on the ACK, REJ, etc. process. The maximum message sizes
appear to be undocumented and I'm hoping someone can help me out
there.<br>
<br>
My project, incidentally, is to build a bidirectional APRS-XMPP
bridge. XMPP is the protocol behind the instant messaging tools
such as Jabber and Google Talk, and is available for free on every
modern platform. In the spirit of both amateur radio and the Free
Software communities I'm a part of, full source code to this project
will be available. I actually already wrote a much simpler piece of
related software, letting someone take a connected AX.25 session and
bridge it to XMPP, [1] so I do have some experience under my belt.
This is obviously a more complex project, but XMPP looks like an
excellent way to bridge APRS to other systems. I think it is a
better fit than the email gateways out there, and in fact, XMPP
already has fields for carrying presence information and location
information with presence packets.<br>
<br>
Are there any particular notes available to those implementing
gateways between APRS and non-APRS sources? I have taken note of
what sites such as OpenAPRS or Winlink do to validate people for
access, and plan to do something similar here.<br>
<br>
Thanks,<br>
<br>
-- John<br>
KR0L<br>
<br>
[1] source code at <a href="https://github.com/jgoerzen/ax25xmpp" target="_blank">https://github.com/jgoerzen/ax25xmpp</a><br>
<br>
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