Hal Murray <hmur...@megapathdsl.net>: > The Austron driver uses Loran. It was unplugged in the US several years > ago. I think it's still used in Northern Europe. It may come back in the US > as a backup for GPS.
According to Wikipedia LORAN is dead. The principal station chains shut down in 1979-1980. Last live use was in China in the 1990s. What you are probably thinking of is DECCA, which was a hyperbolic radio navigation system (very similar operating principle to LORAN but better accuracy) deployed out of Great Britain with several station groups elsewhere in Northern Europe. It shut down in 2000. A Japanese station group continued operation until 2001. There has been talk of reviving Loran-C, but I doubt it will happen as the economics don't make any sense - ground-station chains just don't give enough bang for the buck relative to a sat-nav system, especially with launch costs dropping. > Is this a good time to setup a procedure for second class refclocks? Or > think about how to do it? Easy stuff. You write a little daemon that camps on the device's serial port and delivers via SHM. This isn't just theory. I learned earlier today from Matt Selsky on IRC that GPSDO vendors are *already doing this*. I guess they noticed GPSD and caught the lesson! > Plan B is to not waste time on any of that and save our energy for the great > SHM cleanup, or whatever. I like that plan. Clock device drivers should be somebody else's problem. BTW, I now think we should leave SHM as it is and write the next IPC access to use POSIX shared memory. While the SHM facility is widely supported on Unix-like systems it's not really standardized enough for me to be happy with building forward on it. -- <a href="http://www.catb.org/~esr/">Eric S. Raymond</a> _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@ntpsec.org http://lists.ntpsec.org/mailman/listinfo/devel