On 8/13/09, RANJAN <infi...@gmail.com> wrote: > Example Telnet code: > > import getpass > import sys > import telnetlib > > HOST = "localhost" > user = raw_input("Enter your remote account: ") > password = getpass.getpass() > > tn = telnetlib.Telnet(HOST) > > tn.read_until("login: ") > tn.write(user + "\n") > if password: > tn.read_until("Password: ") > tn.write(password + "\n") > > tn.write("ls\n") > tn.write("exit\n") > > print tn.read_all() > > So any ideas on how to modify this to listen to gpsd?When I typed "telnet > localhost gpsd" I dint mention the port number. > > Sriranjan > > On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 8:56 PM, Sebastian Krzyszkowiak > <seba.d...@gmail.com >> wrote: > >> On 8/13/09, RANJAN <infi...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> >> >> >I don't think it's possible. But you could use data from Gypsy or >> >> > gpsd >> >> >protocol to translate it into NMEA sentences. >> > >> > >> > But typing *telnet localhost gpsd* displays the NMEA sentences.So is >> > it >> > possible to write a python script which reads the NMEA from telnet >> > localhost >> > gpsd? >> > >> > Sriranjan >> > >> >> If it's possible from telnet, then it's possible from python (but >> probably not from dbus). Just listen to gpsd port on 127.0.0.1. I >> wrote few years ago some python app using python-telnet, that >> shouldn't be hard and AFAIR good howtos are available on internet. >> >> -- >> Sebastian Krzyszkowiak >> dos >> >
telnet localhost gpsd = telnet 127.0.0.1 2947 -- Sebastian Krzyszkowiak dos _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@lists.openmoko.org https://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/devel