chore(exec/temp):Fix CSV fields in stdout output
[EVA-2020-02.git] / doc / location / README.org
1 * Location Logging
2 #+TITLE: Ninfacyzga-01 Manual
3 #+AUTHOR: Steven Baltakatei Sandoval
4 #+EMAIL: baltakatei@gmail.com
5 ** About
6 This document was created by Steven Baltakatei Sandoval on
7 ~2020-06-29T12:14Z~ under a [[https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/][Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 license]]. It was
8 updated by Steven Baltakatei Sandoval on ~2020-10-18T00:13Z~
9
10 ** Narrative
11 Ninfacyzga-01 records (logs) its position in time and space using a
12 [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_navigation_device][GPS receiver]]. The NMEA location data produced by the receiver is
13 converted into the more commonly used GPS data storage formats of GPX
14 and KML. All three types of data are then compressed and encrypted
15 against a set of public keys. The encrypted data is then written to
16 disk. Data produced by the receiver is segmented into 60-second chunks
17 before being processed and written to disk.
18 ** Description
19 *** Hardware
20 **** Raspberry Pi Zero W
21 See the [[https://www.raspberrypi.org/pi-zero-w/][OEM]] webpage for this product.
22 **** PiZ UpTime 2.0
23 See the [[https://alchemy-power.com/piz-uptime-2-0/][OEM]] webpage for this product.
24 *** Software
25 ~bklog~ : A bash script that saves its stdin stream to a tar file. The
26 file may be compressed by ~gzip~ and encrypted by ~age~. It is an
27 executable file contained within this repository at ~exec/bklog~. It
28 should be copied to ~$HOME/.local/bin~.
29
30 [[https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/gpsd][~gpsd~]] : A background daemon app capable of interfacing with the
31 [[https://ozzmaker.com/berrygps-berrygps-imu-quick-start-guide/][Ozzmaker BerryGPS-IMU]]'s GPS submodule. Installed and initialized by
32 ~apt~. Should be installed along with the ~gpsd-clients~ package.
33
34 ~gpspipe~ : A command line app that polls ~gpsd~ and produces a stream
35 stdout consisting of GPS data lines in NMEA format. Installed via
36 ~apt~.
37
38 ~gpsbabel~ : A command line app that converts GPS data from one format
39 into another. ~bklog~ may be used to convert NMEA data into GPX and
40 KML. Installed via ~apt~.
41
42 ~gzip~ : A simple command line app that compresses stdin into a
43 smaller stdout stream.
44
45 ~age~ : A simple command line app that encrypts stdin against public
46 keys specified in its options. Produces encrypted stdout. Is an
47 executable file contained within this repository at ~exec/age~. It
48 should be copied to ~$HOME/.local/bin~.
49
50 **** Narrative
51 ~bklog~ may be used to log location data by receiving stdout produced
52 by ~gpspipe~. ~bklog~ contains options that allow file writes to be
53 performed at adjustable time intervals (default: 300 seconds),
54 compressed (with ~gzip~), and encrypted (with ~age~). Files are
55 written in the form of appendages to a ~tar~ archive saved to a
56 specified location. The NMEA data produced by ~gpspipe~ may be
57 processed via a ~gpsbabel~ command string specified as an option to
58 ~bklog~, assuming ~gpsbabel~ is installed.
59
60 *** Output
61
62 Several output file formats have been tested with ~bklog~.
63
64 **** File Formats
65 ***** NMEA
66 ~NMEA~ is an acronym for National marine Electronics Association. The
67 NMEA format described in this document follows the NMEA 0183
68 standard. It is a newline-delimited streaming text format that encodes
69 global positioning system (GPS) data such as WGS84 location, time and
70 date information, satellite count, accuracy, and other
71 information. Each line is an "NMEA sentence". Descriptions of various
72 NMEA sentences can be found on [[http://aprs.gids.nl/nmea/][this]] webpage.
73
74 See the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NMEA_0183][Wikipedia page for NMEA 0183]] for this. This file format is the
75 default output of the ~gpspipe -r~ command.
76 ***** GPX
77 See the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPS_Exchange_Format][Wikipedia page]] for this. [[http://wiki.gis.com/wiki/index.php/WGS84][WGS84]] is the datum used. An NMEA file
78 may be converted to this format using ~gpsbabel~.
79 ***** KML
80 See the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyhole_Markup_Language][Wikipedia page]] for this. [[http://wiki.gis.com/wiki/index.php/WGS84][WGS84]] is the datum used. An NMEA file
81 may be converted to this format using ~gpsbabel~.
82
83 **** Encryption Method
84 See [[file:../setup/README.org][Main Setup]] procedures.
85
86 ** Operating Procedures
87 *** Initial Startup
88 See OEM (Ozzmaker) [[https://ozzmaker.com/berrygps-berrygps-imu-quick-start-guide/][quickstart guide for the BerryGPS-IMU]].
89 **** Physical Setup
90
91 BerryGPS-IMU must be electrically connected to the correct pins on the
92 GPIO header of a Raspberry Pi Zero W.
93
94 *Optional*: stack together with PiZ Uptime 2.0 module. No GPIO pins
95 conflict so a simple stacking and soldering with long header pins is
96 possible.
97
98 **** Software Setup
99 ***** Install Executables
100 Follow the [[file:../setup/README.org][Main Setup]] procedures to obtain required files from this
101 repository.
102
103 Install ~gpsd~, ~gpsd-clients~, and ~gpsbabel~.
104
105 : $ sudo apt install gpsd gpsd-clients gpsbabel
106
107 ***** Setup Serial for BerryGPS
108 The Ozzmaker BerryGPS-IMU unit requires that the serial console be
109 disabled and the serial port enabled. (see [[https://ozzmaker.com/berrygps-setup-guide-raspberry-pi/][ref]]).
110
111 : $ sudo raspi-config
112
113 Navigate to ~5 Interfacing Options~, then ~P6 Serial~.
114
115 When prompted "Would you like a login shell to be accessible over
116 serial?", answer ~No~.
117
118 When prompted "Would you like the serial port hardware to be
119 enabled?", answer ~Yes~.
120
121 ***** Setup ~gpsd~
122 ~gpsd~ needs to know which serial port to look at for NMEA location
123 data generated by the GPS unit. This can be done by modifying the
124 ~gpsd~ configuration file at ~/etc/default/gpsd~.
125
126 : sudo nano /etc/default/gpsd
127
128 Make sure the following lines are present:
129
130 #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
131 START_DAEMON="true"
132 USBAUTO="false"
133 DEVICES="/dev/ttyAMA0"
134 GPSD_OPTIONS="-n"
135 #+END_EXAMPLE
136
137 NOTE: The ~DEVICES=~ line must be adjusted if the the ~ninfacyzga~
138 device is configured to also track time. (See [[file:../time/README.org::*Setup%20~gpsd~][ref]]).
139
140 NOTE: The ~-n~ option causes ~gpsd~ to begin polling GPS devices
141 without waiting for a client to connect. This is important if ~gpsd~
142 provides data to other applications (ex: ~gpspipe~, ~chrony~).
143
144 Enable ~gpsd~ to run automatically via:
145
146 : $ sudo systemctl enable gpsd
147
148 Restart ~gpsd~ via:
149
150 : $ sudo systemctl restart gpsd
151
152 Run ~gpsmon~ to verify that location data is being recorded.
153
154 : $ gpsmon
155
156 ***** Automatic Start Configuration
157 It is recommended to create a daily ~cron~ job that executes a bash
158 script that starts ~bklog~ jobs to record location along with other
159 types of data recording. An example of such a script is below:
160
161 #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
162 #!/bin/bash
163
164 # Log location
165 gpspipe -r | /bin/bash "$HOME/.local/bin/bklog" -c -e -z "UTC" -t "/dev/shm" \
166 -r age1kza7pfshy7xwygf9349zgmk7x53mquvedgw9r98qwyyqhssh830qqjzlsw \
167 -r age1ce3pvzrqfcn2pc6zqzglc8ac8yjk3fzukpy08cesqjjwns53xywqmaq7xw \
168 -R "$HOME/.config/bklog/recipients" -w ".nmea" -b "300" -B "day" \
169 -o "$HOME/Sync/Evanescent_Location" -l "location" \
170 -p "gpsbabel -i nmea -f - -o gpx -F - " ".gpx" \
171 -p "gpsbabel -i nmea -f - -o kml -F - " ".kml" &
172 # Log pressure
173 python ~/.local/bin/bmp388.py | /bin/bash "$HOME/git-OC/ninfacyzga-01/exec/bklog" \
174 -c -e -z "UTC" -t "/dev/shm" \
175 -r age1kza7pfshy7xwygf9349zgmk7x53mquvedgw9r98qwyyqhssh830qqjzlsw \
176 -r age1ce3pvzrqfcn2pc6zqzglc8ac8yjk3fzukpy08cesqjjwns53xywqmaq7xw \
177 -R "$HOME/.config/bklog/recipients" -w ".txt" -b "300" -B "day" \
178 -o "$HOME/Sync/Evanescent_Location" -l "pressure" &
179 #+END_EXAMPLE
180
181 This script, if it were saved at
182 ~"$HOME/.local/bin/cron/dailylog.sh"~ would then be added as a
183 line in the ~crontab~ file as shown below:
184
185 #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
186 $ crontab -e
187 0 0 * * * /bin/bash ~/.local/bin/cron/dailylog.sh
188 @reboot /bin/bash ~/.local/bin/cron/dailylog.sh
189 #+END_EXAMPLE
190
191 In the example script, the options are:
192
193 : -c : tells bklog to compress output
194 : -e : tells bklog log to encrypt output
195 : -r : tells bklog to interpret the next argument as a pubkey string
196 : -R : tells bklog to interpret the next argument as a directory
197 : where public keys may be found (first line of each file is
198 : read).
199 : -o : tells bklog to write output files to the directory represented
200 : -t : tells bklog to interpret the next argument as a directory
201 : for storing temporary files
202 : by the next argument
203 : -p : tells bklog a command string through which output is piped
204 : before being compressed and encrypted. Also expected is a
205 : file extension to be appended before the compression and
206 : encryption file extensions.
207 : -w : tells bklog to save the unprocessed stdin with a specified
208 : file extension (instead of the default '.stdin').
209 : -b : tells bklog how long each buffer round (time between file
210 : writes) lasts in seconds.
211 : -B : specifies the time-to-live for the bklog script. A valid value may
212 : one of the time elements such as "day" or "hour".
213 : -l : specfies a custom string to be used in output file names to
214 : help differentiate tar files produced via bklog from different
215 : sources of data.
216 : -z : specifies a time zone to be used to determine the script time-to-live.
217 : By default, bklog uses whatever time is specified by the TZ
218 : environment variable.
219
220 ***** Log Transfer Configuration
221 See [[file:../setup/README.org][Main Setup]] procedures.
222
223 Log files may be shared to other machines via ~syncthing~. See [[https://docs.syncthing.net/][this]]
224 manual for how to set up a shared folder and add Ninfacyzga-01 as a
225 device. Syncthing's directory synchronization capability allows a
226 remote machine to delete files from Ninfacyzga-01 by deleting from the
227 shared folder that they both share.
228
229 When log files are removed from Ninfacyzga-01 is not within the scope
230 of this document.
231
232 ***** Key Generation
233 See [[file:../setup/README.org][Main Setup]] procedures.
234
235 *** Normal Startup
236 Turn on Ninfacyzga-01 by supplying 5VDC power to the Raspberry Pi. No
237 further interaction should be required.
238 *** Normal Operation
239 No interaction beyond continually supplying approximately 100mA of
240 5VDC power and occasionally removing log files to conserve disk space
241 is required.
242 **** Log Transfer
243 Log files may be transferred by use of ~syncthing~ shared folders.
244 **** Automatic Updates
245 The ~automatic-upgrades~ package, if installed, should automatically
246 install security patches to packages installed via ~apt~.
247 *** Normal Shutdown
248 The system may be shutdown via SSH by running:
249
250 : $ sudo shutdown -r 0
251
252 *** Unscheduled Shutdown
253 Ninfacyzga-01 as described and setup should tolerate unscheduled power
254 loss. Log files being written every 60 seconds means, at most, 60
255 seconds worth of location data may be lost.
256 *** End of Life Disposal
257 See [[file:../setup/README.org][Main Setup]] procedures.