On 5/12/2011 7:08 AM, Jason KG4WSV wrote:

Sorry Lynn, but that's wrong.  Without any filters, APRS-IS sends you
the full unfiltered global feed.

Only if you connect to a full feed port, typically 10152, which completely ignores filters anyway. If you connect to a filtered port, typically 14580, it will stay completely silent until you give it a filter. Try it with Telnet sometime with a manually entered USER XXXXX PASS nnnn authentication.

From the third paragraph at http://www.aprs-is.net/Connecting.aspx

All core servers and most javAPRSSrvr servers (see the APRS Server page 
elsewhere on this site) support port 14580 as a user-defined filter port. This 
port begins by only sending message packets addressed to the client or 
addressed to stations gated to APRS-IS by the client. As with ALL bidirectional 
ports, ALL packets passed from the client are passed to APRS-IS on a verified 
connection (more on that later). Most javAPRSSrvr servers use javAPRSFilter to 
provide the server-side filtering capability. javAPRSFilter is an additive 
filter. In other words, you start by receiving almost nothing. When you add a 
filter, you now receive the original few packets plus the packets that meet 
your filter definition. See the Filter Definition page for more information.

You DO have to authenticate before any of the above applies, of course.

Lynn (D) - KJ4ERJ - Author of APRSISCE for Windows Mobile and Win32

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