|
123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536 |
- ![Raspberry NOAA](header_1600.png)
-
- # Reception
- First thing we need to test is reception. It's the way to be sure the antenna, reception line, reception hardware and software are working properly. There is a [test_reception.sh](test_reception.sh) script that makes testing easy, just tune a broadcast FM near you and listen to the audio, then make the proper adjustments to improve reception.
-
- Open a SSH connection to your Raspberry PI and execute `test_reception.sh <tune frequency>`.
-
- ```bash
- cd raspberry-noaa/
- ./test_reception.sh 90.3
- ```
-
- Now open a terminal on your Linux/Mac/(And maybe windows?) computer and run
-
- ```bash
- ncat your.raspberry.pi.ip 8073 | play -t mp3 -
- ```
- where `your.raspberry.pi.ip` is your Raspberry PI IP address. Now you should listen to the frequency tuned before
-
- # Schedule
- This project uses [crontab](https://crontab.guru/) to schedule the scheduler (funny huh?). Running
-
- ```bash
- crontab -l
- ```
-
- This will show the schedule entry for `schedule.sh`, the script that downloads the kepler elements from Internet and creates [at](https://linux.die.net/man/1/at) jobs for each pass.
-
- ```bash
- atq
- ```
-
- Will show the scheduled jobs for today, each job can be described using `at -c <job_id>`.
-
- # Images
- Images are saved in the web server's directory, so you can access your received images at http://your.raspberry.pi.ip/, where `your.raspberry.pi.ip` is your Raspberry PI IP address.
|