I’ve been sending weather reports via APRS-IS and RF for some years and have recently re-architected the way it works. My APRS station uses aprx software running on a Raspberry Pi Model B.
My weather station is a Davis Vantage Vue with WeatherLinkIP module. The module allows the weather station to plug directly into my ethernet network. I formerly used WeatherLinkIP to feed the data to CWOP which would in turn show up on APRS-IS. I would then gateway my reports back to RF using an aprx filter. This seemed convoluted to me, so I wanted to improve things.
I now use a program called Weather Display, a very capable weather program, which has the capability to generate an APRS WXNOW.TXT file. Weather Display can directly poll the Davis station via IP. Through the steps documented below, I now send my weather reports via RF and APRS-IS in the same step.
Every 10 minutes, via crond, I perform some preprocessing on the WXNOW.TXT file to embed the weather report in the APRS “Complete Weather Report Format — with Lat/Long position and Timestamp” and then secure copy the file over to my Raspberry Pi APRS system:
#!/bin/bash # if [ ! -f ~/tmp/WXNOW.TXT ]; then exit 1 fi # Change to the Lat/Long of your weather station LATLONG="4023.75N/07412.53W" line=0 while read FILE; do if [ $line = 0 ]; then # Change America/New_York to your timezone TIME=`TZ=UTC date --date="TZ=\"America/New_York\" $FILE" +%d%H%M` line=$((line+1)) fi WX=$FILE done < ~/tmp/WXNOW.TXT # echo /$TIME\z$LATLONG\_$WX > ~/tmp/wxnow.tmp # echo `cat ~/tmp/wxnow.tmp | tr -d '\r'`XDsIP > ~/tmp/wxnow.txt # You must setup ssh key based authentication for this to work # Another method could be a file copy via NFS or CIFS scp ~/tmp/wxnow.txt pi@aprs:/dev/shm/wxnow.txt # rm ~/tmp/wxnow.txt ~/tmp/wxnow.tmp
On the APRS host, I defined the following beacon section in /etc/aprx.conf:
beaconmode both cycle-size 10m beacon via WIDE2-1 \ srccall N0CALL-13 \ exec /usr/local/bin/aprx-wxnow.sh
Finally, the beacon exec script, is installed in /usr/local/bin/aprx-wxow.sh:
#!/bin/bash # TIME=$(printf `date -u "+%d%H%M"`) if [ -f /dev/shm/wxnow.txt ]; then if [ -f /dev/shm/wxold.txt ]; then FULLWXOLD=`cat /dev/shm/wxold.txt` else FULLWXOLD="" fi FULLWXNOW=`cat /dev/shm/wxnow.txt` if [ "$FULLWXOLD" == "$FULLWXNOW" ]; then # Convert date/times to minutes for date arithmetic CURDAY=`echo $TIME | cut -b 1-2` OLDDAY=`echo $FULLWXOLD | cut -b 2-3` CURHR=`echo $TIME | cut -b 3-4` OLDHR=`echo $FULLWXOLD | cut -b 4-5` CURMIN=`echo $TIME | cut -b 5-6` OLDMIN=`echo $FULLWXOLD | cut -b 6-7` CURTIME=$((10#$CURDAY * 1440 + 10#$CURHR * 60 + 10#$CURMIN)) OLDTIME=$((10#$OLDDAY * 1440 + 10#$OLDHR * 60 + 10#$OLDMIN)) # If report older than 20 minutes then not updating if (( $(($CURTIME-$OLDTIME)) > 20 )) ; then echo -n \>$TIME\z echo " WX rpt not updating" exit 0 fi # Unchanged report but <= 20 min old then don't transmit echo exit 0 else OLDRPT=`echo $FULLWXOLD | cut -b 9-` NEWRPT=`echo $FULLWXNOW | cut -b 9-` #if new and old report are same then don't transmit if [ "$OLDRPT" == "$NEWRPT" ]; then echo exit 0 fi # Transmit report and copy wxnow.txt to wxold.txt echo $FULLWXNOW cp /dev/shm/wxnow.txt /dev/shm/wxold.txt fi else echo -n \>$TIME\z echo " WX rpt not found" fi
While debugging, I noticed that the wxnow.txt file would sometimes disapper from /dev/shm. This turned out to be systemd cleaning up interprocess communication whenever the pi user logged out. I fixed this by adding the following line to /etc/systemd/logind.conf:
RemoveIPC=no
Following this change, you must restart systemd-logind.service:
sudo systemctl restart systemd-logind.service
If you implement this on your aprx system, please leave a comment.