Hi Rob, The only thing I understood was to pipe the kismet file... :-/ Any examples would be great! Thanks! Sevak
1st, make sure you get gps info into kismet. Start gpsd BEFORE starting kismet. You might have to tell gpsd which port to listen too (ie: gpsd -p /dev/ttyS0). Also you need to check things like baud rate and output format of your gps receiver, adjust gpsd accordingly ("gpsd -h" will show you the different options).
2nd, start kismet and stumble away. gps coords should be showing at the bottom of the kismet gui. if you do not see lat/lon at the bottom then gpsd is not getting data from your gps receiver.
3rd, once your done close kismet --** do not use Ctrl-C or anything but the quit command ('Q' if I remember right) otherwise you will lose the .gps data file.
4th, run the "kismet.gps" file through gpsmap. Use whichever gpsmap options you want to give you the results you are looking for ("man gpsmap" should give you all the gory details).
The gpsmap command I was using most often was:
gpsmap -G -t -Y 1 -a -B 3 -k -p kismet.gps
-G : no greyscale (nice color map)
-t : draw track (shows the track that you traveled)
-Y [#] : trick width in pixels
-a : draw scatter plot (draws a point at each place data was collected)
-B [#]: : scatter point size (I use nice fat dots)
-k : draw map legend
-p : draw interpolated network power (tries to guess what the range of the AP is - works best if you
drive around the AP alot.)
I haven't done this for awhile, but I can probably help if you get stuck. Contact me off-list.
Best luck,
Rob
The PART-15.ORG smartBridges Discussion List To Join: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in the body type subscribe smartBridges <yournickname> To Remove: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] (in the body type unsubscribe smartBridges) Archives: http://archives.part-15.org
