In 2020 and 2022, we used CloudLog to capture our data.
While that eventually worked, it required a lot of SQL finagling to get the data into Cabrillo file format that the ARRL site understood. Most other field day loggers we could find seemed hard to work with and incomplete, or written for Windows users. As we are strictly a unix shop, that wouldn't do.
For the record: In 2021, I had some brain wrong that made field day kinda hard.
Notably: I hate the name of this repo, and I just think of it as "logger." I should come up with a better name.
It's basically a response to things I realized while I was logging FD in 2022. I would often type my notes in a text editor, and then copy what I copied into the logger. Based on that, this logger gives the user an open text field. The parser attempts to figure out the call and exchange from what you type in. If you add some notes in between square brackets it will include those notes in the log.
It's pretty slick once you get it. As long as it doesn't have horrible parser bugs.
The server needs:
- PHP >8 with functional webserver, developed on 8.3, but doesn't use anything that new.
- MariaDB, developed with 11.3.
- Notably, we use views and triggers. SQLite was considered, but concurrency is good.
curl
for downloading logbook data (optional)
The clients need:
- A web browser. Currently only tested with Firefox
- hamlib for rigctl
- PHP CLI >8 for reporting rigctl data to the logger.
- Create a database
- Import
extra/logger.sql
into the database - Generate the callbook sql
- Create a work directory for the callbook generator.
- Run
extra/callbookgen -o /your/work/dir
- Wait a minute.
- import /your/work/dir/callbook.sql into the database
- run
make
,make install
will put things into system places - use the resultant logger.phar with your webserver
php -S 0.0.0.0:8888 logger.phar
works- There is an example config for lighttpd in
extra/
- Configure
extra/logger.ini
appropriately. Copy it either to/etc
or a location specified in the webserver's environment variableLOGGERINI
.
To use loggerlink
see the readme in loggerlink
.
I've created PKGBUILDs for all of this in my personal PKBUILD repo.
Nope.
This is designed for local use only. In our use case, we have a single wifi router that only the computers that are working Field Day are allowed to join.
If you put this on the internet, you will be sad.
This code is AGPL3. I'll get to adding appropriate headers later.
The font I'm using is RedHat Mono, which is distributed via the OFL.