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SVXLINK.CONF(5)			 File Formats		       SVXLINK.CONF(5)

NAME
       svxlink.conf - Configuration file for the SvxLink server

DESCRIPTION
       svxlink	is  a  general purpose voice service system for	ham radio use.
       This man-page describe the SvxLink server configuration file format.

       SvxLink look for	configuration files in a number	of  places.  First  it
       try to find a user specific configuration file. SvxLink will look for a
       user  specific  configuration file in: $HOME/.svxlink/svxlink.conf.  If
       no user specific	configuration file can be found, SvxLink will look for
       the system  wide	 configuration	file  /etc/svxlink/svxlink.conf.   The
       --config	 command  line option may also be used to specify an arbitrary
       configuration file.

FILE FORMAT
       The configuration file is in the	famous INI-file	format.	A generic  ex-
       ample of	how such a file	might look like	is shown below.

	 [SECTION1]
	 VALUE1=1
	 VALUE2="TWO "
	 VAULE3="Multi "
		"line"

	 [SECTION2]
	 VALUE1=2

       This  is	a simple format	that contain name=value	pairs that belong to a
       section.	In written text, a specific configuration variable can be  re-
       ferred  to as SECTION1/VALUE2 meaning "configuration variable VALUE2 in
       section SECTION1".

       The same	variable name can exist	in two different sections. For example
       VALUE1 in section SECTION1 have the value 1 and VALUE1 in section  SEC-
       TION2  have  the	 value 2. Values containing spaces at the beginning or
       end of the line must be surrounded by  citation	characters  (see  SEC-
       TION1/VALUE2). Likewise with a multi line value (see SECTION1/VALUE3).

CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
       Here is the description of all configuration variables that SvxLink un-
       derstands.  The	configuration variables	are described section for sec-
       tion.

   GLOBAL
       The GLOBAL section contains application global configuration data.

       MODULE_PATH
	      Specify where the	SvxLink	modules	can be found.  If  MODULE_PATH
	      is  not  specified,  the standard	search paths for library files
	      will be used. If that also fails a hard-coded  default  will  be
	      used.  What that default is depend on the	architecture but typi-
	      cally on a x86_64	system it is /usr/local/lib64/svxlink.	 Leav-
	      ing this variable	unset should work in most cases.

       LOGICS Specify  a  comma	 separated  list of logic cores	that should be
	      created. The logic core is the thing that	ties  the  transceiver
	      and the voice services (modules) together. It contains the rules
	      for  how	the  radio  interface should be	handled. The specified
	      name of a	logic core must	have a corresponding section specified
	      in the config file. This is where	the behavior of	the logic core
	      is specified.

       CFG_DIR
	      Specify the path to a directory that contain additional configu-
	      ration files.  If	a relative path	is specified, the path will be
	      relative to the directory	where the main configuration  file  is
	      at.  All	files in the specified directory will be read as addi-
	      tional configuration. Filenames  starting	 with  a  dot  (hidden
	      files) or	not ending in .conf are	ignored.

       TIMESTAMP_FORMAT
	      This  variable  specifies	 the  format of	the time-stamp that is
	      written in front of each row in the log file. The	format	string
	      is  in  the  same	 format	as specified in	the strftime(3)	manual
	      page. The	default	is "%c"	which is described as: "the  preferred
	      date  and	time representation for	the current locale". The envi-
	      ronment variables	LC_TIME, LC_ALL	and LANG will affect how  this
	      time format will look. For example, setting LC_TIME="sv_SE.UTF8"
	      will  give you Swedish time-stamp	representation.	Other examples
	      of format	specifiers are:

	      	  %d - The day of the month as a decimal number	(range	01  to
		  31)

	      	  %b - The abbreviated month name according to the current lo-
		  cale

	      	  %Y - The year	as a decimal number including the century

	      	  %H  -	 The  hour  as	a decimal number using a 24-hour clock
		  (range 00 to 23)

	      	  %M - The minute as a decimal number (range 00	to 59)

	      	  %S - The second as a decimal number (range 00	to 60)

	      	  %f - Fractional seconds in millisecond resolution (000-999)

	      The last one (%f)	is a SvxLink specific formatting specifier.

	      Example: TIMESTAMP_FORMAT="%d %b %Y %H:%M:%S.%f"	would  give  a
	      time-stamp looking something like: "29 Nov 2005 22:31:59.875".

       CARD_SAMPLE_RATE
	      This  configuration  variable  determines	the sampling rate used
	      for audio	input/output. SvxLink always work with a sampling rate
	      of 16kHz internally but there still are some benefits from using
	      a	higher sampling	rate. On some sound  cards  the	 filters  look
	      pretty  bad at 16kHz and the amplitude response will not be uni-
	      form which among other things can	cause problems for  the	 soft-
	      ware DTMF	decoder.

	      Some  sound  cards  also sound very bad at 16kHz due to insuffi-
	      cient anti-alias filtering or resampling effects.	 These,	 often
	      cheaper, sound cards sound OK at 48kHz.

	      The  downside of choosing	a higher sampling rate is that it puts
	      a	little bit more	load on	the CPU	so if you have a very slow ma-
	      chine (<300MHz), it might	not have the  computational  power  to
	      handle it.

	      Supported	sampling rates are: 16000 and 48000.

       CARD_CHANNELS
	      Use  this	configuration variable to specify how many channels to
	      use when opening a sound card. For normal	sound cards  the  only
	      practical	 values	 to  use  are 1	for mono and 2 for stereo. The
	      latter is	the default.

	      When using the sound card	in stereo mode it is possible  to  use
	      the  left	 and  right channels independently to drive two	trans-
	      ceivers. When using the sound card in mono mode, both  left  and
	      right channels transmit/receive the same audio.

       LOCATION_INFO
	      Enter  the  section  name	that contains information required for
	      transferring positioning data to location	servers. Setting  this
	      item  makes  the system visible on the EchoLink link status page
	      and the APRS network.

       LINKS  Enter here a comma separated list	of section names that contains
	      the configuration	information for	linking	logics	together  (see
	      Logic Linking).

   Common Logic	configuration variables
       A  logic	 core is what define how SvxLink should	behave on the RF chan-
       nel. The	SvxLink	server can handle more than one	logic core and so  can
       be  connected to	more than one transceiver. The configuration variables
       below are common	to all logic types. Configuration variables  that  are
       specific	 to a certain logic core type are described below in a section
       of its own.

       TYPE   The type of logic	core this is. The documentation	for  the  spe-
	      cific  logic  core  type	you want to use	describe what to write
	      here.

       RX     Specify the configuration	section	name of	the receiver  to  use.
	      All configuration	for the	receiver is done in the	specified con-
	      figuration section.

       TX     Specify  the  configuration  section  name of the	transmitter to
	      use. All configuration for the transmitter is done in the	speci-
	      fied configuration section.

       MODULES
	      Specify a	comma separated	list of	configuration sections for the
	      modules to load. This tells SvxLink which	 modules  to  actually
	      load on startup.

       CALLSIGN
	      Specify  the  callsign that should be announced on the radio in-
	      terface.

       SHORT_VOICE_ID_ENABLE
	      A	basic toggle to	enable the voice ID  announcement  during  the
	      short  ID	 announcements.	  Set value to "1" to enable the voice
	      option, and "0" to disable.

       SHORT_CW_ID_ENABLE
	      A	basic toggle to	enable the CW ID announcement during the short
	      ID announcements.	 Set value to "1" to enable the	CW option, and
	      "0" to disable.

       SHORT_ANNOUNCE_ENABLE
	      A	basic toggle to	enable	the  custom  announcement  during  the
	      short  ID	 announcements.	  Set  value  to "1" to	enable the an-
	      nouncement option, and "0" to disable.

       SHORT_ANNOUNCE_FILE
	      The full path to a file to use for custom	 announcements	broad-
	      casted during a routine short ID.

       LONG_VOICE_ID_ENABLE
	      A	 basic	toggle	to enable the voice ID announcement during the
	      long ID announcements.  Set value	to "1" to enable the voice op-
	      tion, and	"0" to disable.

       LONG_CW_ID_ENABLE
	      A	basic toggle to	enable the CW ID announcement during the  long
	      ID announcements.	 Set value to "1" to enable the	CW option, and
	      "0" to disable.

       LONG_ANNOUNCE_ENABLE
	      A	basic toggle to	enable the custom announcement during the long
	      ID  announcements.   Set value to	"1" to enable the announcement
	      option, and "0" to disable.

       LONG_ANNOUNCE_FILE
	      The full path to a file to use for custom	 announcements	broad-
	      casted during a routine short ID.

       CW_AMP Specify  the  amplitude of the CW	that should be used during any
	      cw traffic, typically announcements. The amplitude is  specified
	      in dB. Default: -6.

       CW_PITCH
	      Specify  the  pitch  (frequency  in Hz) of the CW	that should be
	      used during any CW traffic,  typically  announcements.  Default:
	      800.

       CW_CPM Specify  the Characters Per Minute of the	CW that	should be used
	      during any CW traffic, typically announcements. If  both	CW_WPM
	      and CW_CPM is set, CW_CPM	will be	used. Default: 100.

       CW_WPM Specify  the Words Per Minute of the CW that should be used dur-
	      ing any CW traffic, typically announcements. If both CW_WPM  and
	      CW_CPM is	set, CW_CPM will be used. Default: 20.

       PHONETIC_SPELLING
	      Specify  if  the	spelling of callsign and other words should be
	      announced	on the radio interface using phonetic or  non-phonetic
	      spelling.	  "1"  to use phonetic sounds (legacy default),	or "0"
	      to use non-phonetic sounds.  Note	that this option  may  not  be
	      available	for all	language packs.

       TIME_FORMAT
	      Specify	what format the	time should be announced as, valid op-
	      tions are	"12"/"24".  NOTE: may not work for all language	packs

       SHORT_IDENT_INTERVAL
	      The number of minutes between short identifications. The purpose
	      of the short identification is to	just announce that the station
	      is on the	air. Typically just the	callsign is transmitted. For a
	      repeater a good value is ten minutes and for a simplex node  one
	      time  every 60 minutes is	probably enough. The LONG_IDENT_INTER-
	      VAL must be an even multiple of the SHORT_IDENT_INTERVAL	so  if
	      LONG_IDENT_INTERVAL   is	 60   then   the   legal   values  for
	      SHORT_IDENT_INTERVAL are:	1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20,  30,
	      60.  If unset or set to 0, disable short identifications.

       LONG_IDENT_INTERVAL
	      The  number of minutes between long identifications. The purpose
	      of the long identification is to transmit	some more  information
	      about  the station status	(new voice mails etc). The time	of day
	      is also transmitted. A good value	here is	60 minutes.  If	 unset
	      or set to	0, disable long	identifications.

       IDENT_ONLY_AFTER_TX
	      This  feature controls when identification is done.  By default,
	      identification is	done every time	the  SHORT_IDENT_INTERVAL  ex-
	      pires.  If  this feature is enabled, identification will be done
	      only if there has	been a recent transmission.  This  feature  is
	      good  for	 nodes	using  an RF link to provide echolink to a re-
	      peater. Often, in	this situation,	it is not  desirable  for  the
	      link   to	  identify   unless   legally	necessary.  Note  that
	      SHORT_IDENT_INTERVAL still have to be set	for  this  feature  to
	      work. That config	variable will then be interpreted as the mini-
	      mum    number    of   seconds   between	identifications.   The
	      LONG_IDENT_INTERVAL will not be affected by this parameter.

       EXEC_CMD_ON_SQL_CLOSE
	      Specify a	time, in milliseconds, after squelch close after which
	      entered DTMF digits will be executed as a	 command  without  the
	      need  to	send the # character.  To disable this feature,	either
	      comment out the configuration row	or set it to a value  less  or
	      equal to zero.

       EVENT_HANDLER
	      Point  out  the  TCL  event handler script to use. The TCL event
	      handler script is	responsible  for  playing  the	correct	 audio
	      clips  when  an  event  occur.  The default location is /usr/lo-
	      cal/share/doc/svxlink/events.tcl.

       DEFAULT_LANG
	      Set the default language to use for announcements. It should  be
	      set  to an ISO code (e.g.	sv_SE for Swedish). If not set,	it de-
	      faults to	en_US which is US English.

       RGR_SOUND_DELAY
	      The number of milliseconds to wait after the  squelch  has  been
	      closed  before  a	roger beep is played. The beep can be disabled
	      by specifying a value of -1 or commenting	out this  line.	 Often
	      it  is best to use the SQL_HANGTIME receiver configuration vari-
	      able to specify a	delay instead of specifying a delay here. This
	      configuration variable should then be set	to 0.

       REPORT_CTCSS
	      If set, will report the specified	CTCSS  frequency  upon	manual
	      identification (*	pressed).  It is possible to specify fractions
	      using  "."  as decimal comma. Disable this feature by commenting
	      out (#) this configuration variable.

       TX_CTCSS
	      This configuration variable controls if a	CTCSS tone  should  be
	      transmitted.  Use	a comma	separated list (no spaces!) to specify
	      when  to	transmit  a CTCSS tone.	These are the possible values:
	      SQL_OPEN,	LOGIC, MODULE, ANNOUNCEMENT or ALWAYS.	Commenting out
	      this configuration variable will disable	CTCSS  transmit.   The
	      tone  frequency  and level is configured in the transmitter con-
	      figuration section.

	      	  SQL_OPEN will	transmit CTCSS tone when the squelch is	 open.
		  This	is  only  useful  on  a	repeater. On a simplex node it
		  doesn't make much sense.

	      	  LOGIC	will transmit CTCSS tone when there is incoming	 traf-
		  fic from another logic core.

	      	  MODULE will transmit CTCSS tone when there is	incoming traf-
		  fic from a module.

	      	  ANNOUNCEMENT	will  transmit CTCSS tone when an announcement
		  is being played. Repeater idle sounds	and roger  beeps  will
		  not have tone	sent with them though.

	      	  ALWAYS  will	always	transmit  a  CTCSS tone	as soon	as the
		  transmitter is turned	on.

       MACROS Point out	a section that contains	the macros that	should be used
	      by this logic core. See the section description for macros below
	      for more information.

       FX_GAIN_NORMAL
	      The gain (dB) to use for audio effects  and  announcements  when
	      there  is	 no  other  traffic.  This gain	is normally set	to 0dB
	      which means no gain or attenuation.

       FX_GAIN_LOW
	      The gain (dB) to use for audio effects  and  announcements  when
	      there  is	other traffic.	This gain is normally set to something
	      like -12dB so that announcements and audio effects  are  attenu-
	      ated when	there is other traffic present.

       QSO_RECORDER
	      The QSO recorder is used to write	all received audio to files on
	      disk.  The  format  for  this  configuration  variable  is <com-
	      mand>:<config section>. The specified command is used  to	 acti-
	      vate  or deactivate the QSO recorder. If the command for example
	      is set to	8, 81 will activate the	recorder and 80	 will  deacti-
	      vate  it.	 The command may also be left out. It will then	not be
	      possible to control the QSO recorder using DTMF  commands.  Even
	      if  the  command is left out the colon must always be specified.
	      The config section point out a section in	the configuration file
	      that holds configuration for the QSO recorder.  Have a  look  at
	      the QSO Recorder Section documentation for more information.

	      Example: QSO_RECORDER=8:QsoRecorder

       SEL5_MACRO_RANGE
	      Define two comma separated values	here to	map the	Sel5 tone call
	      to    your    macro    area.   E.g.   if	 you   have   defined:
	      SEL5_MACRO_RANGE=03400,03499 then	all  incoming  Sel5  tone  se-
	      quences  from  03400  to	03499 are mapped to the	macros section
	      (refer to	Macros Section,	next chapter). Other sequences but the
	      one defined under	OPEN_ON_SEL5 are ignored so it can be used  to
	      call  other  stations  via the repeater without a	repeater reac-
	      tion.

       ONLINE_CMD
	      Define a DTMF command that is used to switch  the	 node  between
	      online  and offline mode.	When in	the off-state, the transmitter
	      will not be turned on by any event. If a module is  active  when
	      the  node	is brought offline, it will be deactivated and no mod-
	      ule activation will be allowed in	offline	mode.  No  other  com-
	      mands  than  the	online command will be accepted	in the offline
	      state.

	      If the command for example is set	to 998877  then	 9988771  will
	      set the node online and 9988770 will set it offline. If a	module
	      is  active  or  if  the ACTIVATE_MODULE_ON_LONG_CMD is used, the
	      command must be prefixed with a star to work  as	expected.  The
	      star means "force	core command".

       STATE_PTY
	      Using  this  configuration  variable it is possible to specify a
	      path to a	UNIX 98	PTY that SvxLink state events is published to.
	      The published events is in a simple text format  using  a	 space
	      separated	 list of values. SvxLink will create a softlink	to the
	      actual slave PTY.	For that reason, SvxLink must have write  per-
	      missions	in the directory where the softlink should be created.
	      Monitoring  the  PTY  output  is	as  simple  as	doing  a   cat
	      /path/to/pty  after  starting  SvxLink. See STATE	PTY FORMAT for
	      more information on the format of	the state messages.

	      Example: STATE_PTY=/tmp/state_pty

       DTMF_CTRL_PTY
	      Using this configuration variable	it is possible	to  specify  a
	      path  to a UNIX 98 PTY that allows a dtmf	control	of each	single
	      SvxLink logic. SvxLink will create  a  softlink  to  the	actual
	      slave  PTY. For that reason, SvxLink must	have write permissions
	      in the directory where the softlink should be  created.  Sending
	      commands	to  the	 PTY  is  as  simple  as  doing	a echo '*1#' >
	      /path/to/pty after starting SvxLink. The device  works  bidirec-
	      tional,  received	 dtmf characters (from Rf) are output via this
	      interface.

	      Example: DTMF_CTRL_PTY=/dev/shm/dtmf_ctrl

   Simplex Logic Section
       The Simplex Logic section contains configuration	 data  for  a  simplex
       logic  core.   The name of the section, which in	the example configura-
       tion file is SimplexLogic, must have a corresponding list item  in  the
       GLOBAL/LOGICS  config variable for this logic core to be	activated. The
       name "SimplexLogic" is not magic. It could be called what ever you like
       but it must match the namespace name in	the  SimplexLogic.tcl  script.
       The  configuration  variables  below  are those that are	specific for a
       simplex logic core.

       TYPE   The type for a simplex logic core	is always Simplex.

       MUTE_RX_ON_TX
	      Set to 1 to mute the receiver when the transmitter is  transmit-
	      ting  (default)  or  set	it  to	0 to make the RX active	during
	      transmissions.  One might	want to	set this to 0 if the  link  is
	      operating	 on  a split frequency.	 Then the link can accept com-
	      mands even when it's transmitting.  The normal setting is	1,  to
	      mute the RX when transmitting.

       MUTE_TX_ON_RX
	      Set  to  1 to mute the transmitter when the squelch is open (de-
	      fault) or	set it to 0 to make the	TX active during squelch open.
	      One might	want to	set this to 0 if the link is  operating	 on  a
	      split frequency or if it's connected to some full	duplex device.
	      The  normal  setting  is	1,  to mute the	TX when	the squelch is
	      open.

       RGR_SOUND_ALWAYS
	      Set to 1 to always send roger sound after	 squelch  close,  even
	      when no module is	active.

   Repeater Logic Section
       A  Repeater  Logic  section  contains configuration data	for a repeater
       logic core.  The	name of	the section, which in the  example  configura-
       tion  file is RepeaterLogic, must have a	corresponding list item	in the
       GLOBAL/LOGICS config variable for this logic core to be activated.  The
       name  "RepeaterLogic"  is  not magic.  It could be called what ever you
       like but	it must	match the  namespace  name  in	the  RepeaterLogic.tcl
       script.	The  configuration variables below are those that are specific
       for a repeater logic core.

       TYPE   The type for a repeater logic core is always Repeater.

       NO_REPEAT
	      Set this to 1 if you do NOT want SvxLink to play back the	incom-
	      ing audio. This can be used when the received audio is  directly
	      coupled  by  hardware wiring to the transmitter. What you	win by
	      doing this is that there is zero delay on	 the  repeated	audio.
	      When  the	 audio	is  routed  through SvxLink there is always an
	      amount of	delay. What you	loose by doing this is the audio  pro-
	      cessing  done  by	 SvxLink (e.g. filtering, DTMF muting, squelch
	      tail elimination)	and the	ability	to use remote receivers.

       IDLE_TIMEOUT
	      The number of seconds the	repeater should	have been idle	before
	      turning the transmitter off.

       OPEN_ON_1750
	      Use this configuration variable if it should be possible to open
	      the  repeater  with  a  1750Hz tone burst. Specify the number of
	      milliseconds the tone must be asserted before  the  repeater  is
	      opened. Make sure	that the time specified	is long	enough for the
	      squelch  to  have	time to	open. Otherwise	the repeater will open
	      "too soon" and you will hear an ugly 1750Hz beep	as  the	 first
	      thing.  A	value of 0 will	disable	1750 Hz	repeater opening.

       OPEN_ON_CTCSS
	      Use this configuration variable if it should be possible to open
	      the  repeater with a CTCSS tone (PL). The	syntax of the value is
	      tone_fq:min_length. The tone frequency is	specified in whole  Hz
	      and  the	minimum	 tone length is	specified in milliseconds. For
	      examples if a 136.5 Hz tone must be asserted for two seconds for
	      the repeater to open, the	value 136:2000 should be specified.

       OPEN_ON_DTMF
	      Use this configuration variable if it should be possible to open
	      the repeater with	a DTMF digit. Only one digit can be specified.
	      DTMF digits pressed when the repeater is down will be ignored.

       OPEN_ON_SEL5
	      Use this configuration variable if you want  to  open  your  re-
	      peater by	using a	selective tone call that is often used in com-
	      mercial  radio networks.	Example: OPEN_ON_SEL5=03345 opens your
	      repeater only if that sequence has been received.	 You  can  use
	      sequence lengths from 4 to 25.

       CLOSE_ON_SEL5
	      Use  this	 configuration	variable if you	want to	close your re-
	      peater by	using a	selective tone call that is often used in com-
	      mercial radio  networks.	 Example:  CLOSE_ON_SEL5=03345	closes
	      your  repeater  if  that sequence	has been received. You can use
	      sequence lengths from 4 to 25.

       OPEN_ON_SQL
	      Use this configuration variable if it should be possible to open
	      the repeater just	by keeping the squelch open for	a  while.  The
	      value  to	 set is	the minimum number of milliseconds the squelch
	      must be open for the repeater to open.

       OPEN_ON_SQL_AFTER_RPT_CLOSE
	      Activate the repeater on just a squelch opening  if  there  have
	      been  no more than the specified number of seconds since the re-
	      peater closed.

       OPEN_SQL_FLANK
	      Determines if OPEN_ON_SQL	and OPEN_ON_CTCSS should activate  the
	      repeater when the	squelch	open or	close. If set to OPEN, the re-
	      peater will activate and start retransmitting audio immediately.
	      No  identification  will	be sent. If set	to CLOSE, the repeater
	      will not activate	until the  squelch  close.  An	identification
	      will be sent in this case.

       IDLE_SOUND_INTERVAL
	      When the repeater	is idle, a sound is played. Specify the	inter-
	      val  in milliseconds between playing the idle sound. An interval
	      of 0 disables the	idle sound.

       SQL_FLAP_SUP_MIN_TIME
	      Flapping squelch suppression is used to close the	repeater  down
	      if  there	is interference	on the frequency that open the squelch
	      by short bursts.	This configuration variable is used to specify
	      the minimum time,	in milliseconds, that a	transmission must last
	      to be classified as a real transmission. A good value is in  be-
	      tween 500-2000ms.

       SQL_FLAP_SUP_MAX_COUNT
	      Flapping	squelch	suppression is used to close the repeater down
	      if there is interference on the frequency	that open the  squelch
	      by short bursts.	This configuration variable is used to specify
	      the maximum number of consecutive	short squelch openings allowed
	      before  shutting	the  repeater down. A good value is in between
	      5-10.

       ACTIVATE_MODULE_ON_LONG_CMD
	      This configuration variable activate a feature that  might  help
	      users not	aware of the SvxLink command structure.	The idea is to
	      activate	the  specified	module	when a long enough command has
	      been received. The typical example is an EchoLink	user  that  is
	      used  to	just  typing  in  the  node ID and then	the connection
	      should be	established right away.	Using this configuration vari-
	      able, specify a minimum length and a module name.	If  no	module
	      is  active  and at least the specified number of digits has been
	      entered, the given module	is activated and the command  is  sent
	      to  it. To be really useful this feature should be used in coop-
	      eration with EXEC_CMD_ON_SQL_CLOSE.

	      For  example,  if	 this  configuration  variable	 is   set   to
	      "4:EchoLink"  and	the user types in 9999,	the EchoLink module is
	      first activated and then the command 9999	is sent	to  it,	 which
	      will connect to the ECHOTEST server.

       IDENT_NAG_TIMEOUT
	      Tell  repeater  users that are not identifying to	identify them-
	      selves.  The number of seconds to	wait  for  an  identification,
	      after the	repeater has been activated, is	set using this config-
	      uration  variable.  A valid identification is considered to be a
	      transmission longer than the time	set by the  IDENT_NAG_MIN_TIME
	      configuration  variable. We don't	know if	it's really an identi-
	      fication but it's	the best we can	do.  Setting it	to 0  or  com-
	      menting it out disables the feature.

       IDENT_NAG_MIN_TIME
	      This  is	the minimum time, in milliseconds, that	a transmission
	      must last	to be considered as an identification. This is used as
	      described	in the IDENT_NAG_TIMEOUT configuration variable.

   ReflectorLogic
       The ReflectorLogic is used to connect to	an  SvxReflector  server.  The
       SvxReflector will distribute all	audio to all connected nodes. To actu-
       ally  send  audio to the	reflector from a logic core, set up a link be-
       tween the two logics using LogicLinking.	More than one logic  core  can
       be connected.

       TYPE   The type for a reflector logic core is always Reflector.

       HOST   The hostname or IP address of the	reflector server.

       PORT   The  TCP/UDP  port  number used by the server. The client	do not
	      need to open any ports in	the firewall. Default: 5300.

       CALLSIGN
	      The callsign of this node. The callsign also serves as the user-
	      name when	authenticating to the SvxReflector server.

       AUTH_KEY
	      The authentication key, or password, used	when authenticating to
	      the SvxReflector server.

       JITTER_BUFFER_DELAY
	      A	jitter buffer is used to prevent gaps in the  audio  when  the
	      network  connection  do  not  provide a steady flow of data. Set
	      this configuration variable to the  number  of  milliseconds  to
	      buffer before starting to	process	the audio. Default: 0.

       It  is  also possible to	set audio codec	parameters using the same con-
       figuration variables as documented for networked	receivers  and	trans-
       mitters.	 For example, to lighten the encoder CPU load for the Opus en-
       coder, set OPUS_ENC_COMPLEXITY to something lower than 9.

   QSO Recorder	Section
       The QSO recorder	is used	to record all received audio to	files on disk.
       All audio from receivers, modules and logic  links  are	recorded.  An-
       nouncements are not recorded.

       REC_DIR
	      Use this configuration variable to specify in which directory to
	      write	the	audio	  files.     A	   good	   place    is
	      /var/spool/svxlink/qso_recorder.

       MIN_TIME
	      If the duration of the recorded content for a file is less  then
	      MIN_TIME milliseconds, the file will be deleted when the file is
	      closed. Default: 0 (empty	files will be deleted).

       MAX_TIME
	      Setting  this configuration variable will	set an upper limit for
	      the file size of a recording. No more than MAX_TIME  seconds  of
	      content will be recorded to a single file. When the maximum time
	      have  been  reached, the file is closed and another file is cre-
	      ated. Note that it is not	the maximum time  that	the  recording
	      has  been	 active	that we	are setting a limit for	but rather how
	      much content that	have been recorded to the file.	If nothing  is
	      recorded,	 the  file  can	stay open indefinitely.	Default: 0 (no
	      limit)

       SOFT_TIME
	      To not get abrupt	breaks in recordings it	is possible to	set  a
	      soft break time.	Let's say that MAX_TIME	is set to 3600 seconds
	      (one  hour).  If	we set SOFT_TIME to 300	seconds	(five minutes)
	      the QSO recorder try to close the	file on	a squelch close	 some-
	      where  between  55 and 60	minutes. In this way we	may avoid get-
	      ting transmissions split up between files. Default: 0 (no	limit)

       MAX_DIRSIZE
	      Specify the maximum total	size in	megabytes of the files in  the
	      recording	 directory. If the limit is exceeded, the oldest files
	      are deleted. The directory size is checked upon  file  close  so
	      the  size	 may  grow temporarily past the	limit with at most the
	      size of one recorded file. Only  files  which  have  a  filename
	      starting	with "qsorec_" will be considered for deletion.	If us-
	      ing an ENCODING_CMD, make	sure that the "qsorec_"	prefix is  not
	      removed  from  the  target  filename  unless you really want the
	      MAX_DIRSIZE feature to skip them.	 Default: 0 (no	limit)

       DEFAULT_ACTIVE
	      If this configuration variable is	set to	1,  the	 QSO  recorder
	      will be activated	by default when	SvxLink	start. Default:	0 (de-
	      fault inactive)

       TIMEOUT
	      If  a  timeout  is  specified,  the  activation state of the QSO
	      recorder will return to the value	specified in  the  DEFAULT_AC-
	      TIVE  configuration variable when	the node has been idle for the
	      specified	number of seconds. When	DEFAULT_ACTIVE is unset	or  0,
	      if  the  QSO recorder is manually	activated it will be automati-
	      cally deactivated	after the specified amount of time of inactiv-
	      ity.  When DEFAULT_ACTIVE	is set to 1, if	the  QSO  recorder  is
	      manually	deactivated  it	 will be automatically activated after
	      the specified amount of time  of	inactivity.   Default:	0  (no
	      timeout)

       QSO_TIMEOUT
	      Set  this	 configuration	variable if you	want to	close the cur-
	      rently opened file and open a new	one after each QSO. The	number
	      of seconds the node should  be  idle  before  closing  the  file
	      should be	specified. Default: 0 (no QSO timeout)

       ENCODER_CMD
	      Specify  a command to be executed	after a	new wav	file have been
	      written to disk. This makes it possible to use an	 external  en-
	      coder  utility  to  encode  the wav file to another format. Even
	      though this configuration	variable was added to run an  external
	      encoder  it  could  do  more complicated things with the file if
	      needed. A	couple of examples would be to transfer	 the  file  to
	      another  computer	 or to send a notification e-mail. If the com-
	      mand line	get too	complicated it may be a	good idea to  write  a
	      script instead.

	      The  encoder  command  will be run under a shell so normal shell
	      operators	like redirects and pipes may be	used. The shell	speci-
	      fied in the SHELL	environment variable will be used and  if  not
	      set,  /bin/sh will be used. The "-c" command line	option will be
	      added so the complete command will look something	 like:	$SHELL
	      -c  "$ENCODER_CMD".  A  number of	%-codes	can be included	in the
	      command.	They have the following	meaning:

	      	  %f - The full	filename with full path

	      	  %d - The directory part (what	REC_DIR	is set to)

	      	  %b - The basename, that is, the filename  without  path  and
		  extension

	      	  %n - The filename without path but with extension

	      The encoder will be started in the background and	it will	not be
	      stopped even if SvxLink exits. It	will run in the	background un-
	      til  it's	 done.	As long	as SvxLink is running it is monitoring
	      the encoding processes. If a process run	for  longer  than  one
	      hour it will be killed.

	      Note  that  SvxLink  will	never remove the original recording so
	      that have	to be done in the encoder command. Here	are  a	couple
	      of examples:

	       ENCODER_CMD=/usr/local/bin/oggenc -Q \"%f\" && rm \"%f\"
	       ENCODER_CMD=/usr/local/bin/lame --quiet \"%f\" \"%d/%b.mp3\" &&
	      rm \"%f\"
	       ENCODER_CMD=/usr/local/bin/speexenc     \"%f\"	 \"%d/%b.spx\"
	      2>/dev/null && rm	\"%f\"
	       ENCODER_CMD=/usr/local/bin/opusenc    \"%f\"	\"%d/%b.opus\"
	      2>/dev/null && rm	\"%f\"

   Macros Section
       A  macros section is used to declare macros that	can be used by a logic
       core. The logic core points out the macros section to use by using  the
       MACROS  configuration  variable.	 The name of the MACROS	section	can be
       chosen arbitrarily as long as it	match the MACROS  configuration	 vari-
       able  in	 the logic core	configuration section. There could for example
       exist both a [RepeaterLogicMacros] and a	[SimplexLogicMacros] section.

       A macro is a kind of shortcut that can be used to decrease  the	amount
       of  key presses that have to be done to connect to common EchoLink sta-
       tions for example.  On the radio	side, macros are activated by pressing
       "D" "macro number" "#". A macros	section	can look  something  like  the
       example below. Note that	the module name	is case	sensitive.

	 [Macros]
	 1=EchoLink:9999#
	 2=EchoLink:1234567#
	 9=Parrot:0123456789#

       For  example,  pressing	DTMF sequence "D1#" will activate the EchoLink
       module and connect to the EchoTest conference node.

   Logic Linking
       A logic linking configuration section is	used  to  specify  information
       for a link between two or more SvxLink logic cores. Such	a link can for
       example	be used	to connect a local repeater to a remote	repeater using
       a separate link transceiver.  The link is  activated/deactivated	 using
       DTMF  commands  and/or  automatically  depending	on your	configuration.
       When the	link is	active,	all audio received by one logic	will be	trans-
       mitted by the other logic(s).

       The name	of the logic linking section can be chosen freely. In the  ex-
       ample configuration file, there is a section [LinkToR4].	To use a logic
       linking	section	 in  a	logic core it must be pointed out by the LINKS
       configuration   variable	  in	the    GLOBAL	 section.     Example:
       GLOBAL/LINKS=LinkToR4

       CONNECT_LOGICS
	      A	 comma	separated  list	 of logic specifications for the logic
	      cores to connect together. Each logic  specification  has	 three
	      parts  separated by colons: <logic name>:<command>:<announcement
	      name>. The "logic	name" is the name of the logic to  include  in
	      the  link.  To manually activate or deactivate the link from the
	      just specified logic, "command" is used. The "announcement name"
	      is used when announcing link related activities like  activation
	      or  deactivation.	 Both "command"	and "announcement name"	may be
	      left empty if no manual control is wanted.   An  example	config
	      line may look like this:

	      RepeaterLogic_2m:99:SK3GW,RepeaterLogic_70cm:94:SK3GK

	      It will include two logics in the	link, RepeaterLogic_2m and Re-
	      peaterLogic_70cm.	 From  the 2m side, the	link will be activated
	      when the user send command 991 and  deactivated  when  the  user
	      send  command  990. Upon activation, an announcement like	"acti-
	      vating link to SK3GW" will be played back. From  the  70cm  side
	      the  command  will be 941	and 940	respectively. The announcement
	      when activating the link from the	70cm side  will	 be  something
	      like "activating link to SK3GK".

       DEFAULT_ACTIVE
	      The  link	 will  be  connected  automatically  during startup of
	      SvxLink if this configuration variable is	set to 1. Also,	 if  a
	      link is manually disconnected by a user it will be automatically
	      reconnected after	some time of inactivity. The time is specified
	      by  setting  the	TIMEOUT	configuration variable.	If the TIMEOUT
	      variable is not set, no automatic	reactivation will be done.

       TIMEOUT
	      The number of seconds after which	the link will be automatically
	      deactivated if there have	been no	activity. If 1 have been spec-
	      ified for	DEFAULT_ACTIVE,	this configuration variable will spec-
	      ify after	how many seconds the link will	be  reactivated	 after
	      being manually deactivated.

       AUTOACTIVATE_ON_SQL
	      Enter  a	comma separated	list of	logics,	which should automati-
	      cally activate the link if there is activity (e.g. squelch open)
	      in it. One possible application for this is for example to  make
	      the connection of	a microphone/speaker combination (without DTMF
	      encoder)	for  brief  announcements  but	without	having to con-
	      stantly listen in.  Example: AUTOACTIVATE_ON_SQL=MicSpkrLogic

   Local Receiver Section
       A local receiver	section	is used	to specify the configuration for a re-
       ceiver connected	to the sound card. In the default  configuration  file
       there  is  a  Local configuration section called	Rx1.  The section name
       could be	anything. It should match the RX configuration variable	in the
       logic core where	the receiver is	to be used. The	 available  configura-
       tion variables are described below.

       TYPE   Always "Local" for a local receiver.

       RX_ID  A	 single	 char uniquely identifying this	receiver. The RX iden-
	      tity can for example be used in the TCL  event  scripts  to  get
	      different	rogers sounds for different receivers when using a re-
	      ceiver voter.

       AUDIO_DEV
	      Specify  the  audio device to use. Normally oss:/dev/dsp.	Have a
	      look at the AUDIO	DEVICE SPECIFICATIONS chapter for more	infor-
	      mation.

       AUDIO_CHANNEL
	      Specify the audio	channel	to use.	SvxLink	can use	the left/right
	      stereo channels as two mono channels. Legal values are 0 or 1.

       AUDIO_DEV_KEEP_OPEN
	      The normal behaviour for SvxLink is to open an audio device when
	      needed  and  close  it when it does not have to be open anymore.
	      This may cause problems in some applications or with some	 sound
	      hardware.	 Set  this  variable to	1 to force SvxLink to keep the
	      audio device open	from application start to exit.

       SQL_DET
	      Specify the type of squelch detector  to	use.  Possible	values
	      are: VOX,	CTCSS, SERIAL, EVDEV, SIGLEV, PTY, GPIO	or HIDRAW.

	      The VOX squelch detector determines if there is a	signal present
	      by  calculating  a  mean	value  of  the	sound samples. The VOX
	      squelch detector behavior	is adjusted with VOX_FILTER_DEPTH  and
	      VOX_THRESH.  VOX	is  actually  a	bit of a misnomer since	it's a
	      "Voice Operated Squelch" and VOX actually	means "Voice  Operated
	      Transmitter". However, the term VOX is widely understood by hams
	      all over the world so we'll stick	with it.

	      The  CTCSS  squelch  detector  checks for	the presence of	a tone
	      with the specified frequency. The	tone  frequency	 is  specified
	      using  the  CTCSS_FQ config variable.  The thresholds are	speci-
	      fied using the CTCSS_OPEN_THRESH and  CTCSS_CLOSE_THRESH	config
	      variables.  Other	config variables that effect the CTCSS squelch
	      is: CTCSS_MODE, CTCSS_SNR_OFFSET,	CTCSS_BPF_LOW, CTCSS_BPF_HIGH.

	      The SERIAL squelch detector use a	pin in a serial	port to	detect
	      if the squelch is	open. This squelch detector can	be used	if the
	      receiver have an external	hardware indicator of when the squelch
	      is open. Specify which serial port/pin to	use  with  SERIAL_PORT
	      and SERIAL_PIN.

	      The  EVDEV  squelch detector read	squelch	events from a /dev/in-
	      put/eventX device.  An example where this	could be useful	is  if
	      you  have	 a  USB	 audio device with some	buttons	on it. Some of
	      these devices generate key press events, much like  a  keyboard.
	      Specify which /dev/input device node to use using	the EVDEV_DEV-
	      NAME  config  variable.  Set  which  events that should open and
	      close the	squelch	using the EVDEV_OPEN  and  EVDEV_CLOSE	config
	      variables.

	      The GPIO squelch detector	read a pin on the GPIO Port. Depending
	      on  the level of the pin,	the squelch is switched. A HIGH	(3.3V)
	      at the pin set the squelch to open and a LOW  (GND)  level  will
	      set  the	squelch	 to  closed.  Specify which squelch pin	to use
	      with the GPIO_SQL_PIN configuration variable.  On	some  devices,
	      like  the	Orange Pi, you also need to set	the GPIO_PATH configu-
	      ration variable.

	      The SIGLEV squelch detector use signal level measurements	to de-
	      termine if the squelch is	open or	not. Which signal level	detec-
	      tor to use is determined by the setting of the  SIGLEV_DET  con-
	      figuration variable. The open and	close thresholds are set using
	      the  SIGLEV_OPEN_THRESH  and  SIGLEV_CLOSE_THRESH	 configuration
	      variables.  If using the NOISE signal level  detector  note  the
	      following. The detector is not perfect (it's affected by speech)
	      so  you  will also want to setup SQL_HANGTIME to prevent it from
	      closing in  the  middle  of  a  transmission.  A	value  between
	      100-300ms	 is probably what you need. If using this squelch type
	      in cooperation with a voter, you'll also probably	need to	 setup
	      SQL_DELAY	 to  get correct signal	level measurements. A value of
	      about 40ms seem to be OK.	 Also, when  using  the	 NOISE	signal
	      level detector the input audio must be unsquelched since silence
	      will be interpreted as a high signal strength.

	      The PTY squelch expects a	very simple protocol over a pseudo-tty
	      device, created by SvxLink at runtime.  An 'O' over this pty de-
	      vice  indicate  an open squelch, a 'Z' is	a closed squelch.  De-
	      fine the slave pty using PTY_PATH	(e.g.  PTY_PATH=/tmp/sql)  and
	      SvxLink  will  create  a	link  to  the specified	path from it's
	      pseudotty	slave device (/dev/pts/X).  This  can  be  used	 by  a
	      script  to interface custom devices, modems or other hardware to
	      SvxLink. Look for	nhrcx.pl or trx_pty_ctrl.py  for  an  example.
	      It  is  possible	to specify the same PTY	for multiple functions
	      (e.g. DTMF, ptt etc) in both TX and RX configurations. This  may
	      be good if there is one script handling all functions.

	      The  HIDRAW  squelch supports human interface devices (HID), USB
	      devices like CM108 soundcard  e.g.  used	in  the	 URI  Echolink
	      adapter made by DMK.

       SQL_START_DELAY
	      The  squelch  start delay	is of most use when using VOX squelch.
	      For example, if the transceiver makes a noise when the transmit-
	      ter is turned off, that might trigger the	VOX and	cause an infi-
	      nite loop	of squelch open/close transmitter on/off.  Specify the
	      number of	milliseconds that the squelch should be	 "deaf"	 after
	      the transmitter has been turned off.

       SQL_DELAY
	      Specify  a  delay	in milliseconds	that a squelch open indication
	      will be delayed.	This odd feature can be	of use	when  using  a
	      fast  squelch  detector in combination with the signal level de-
	      tector. A	squelch	delay will allow the signal level detector  to
	      do  its work before an indication	of squelch open	is sent	to the
	      logic core. A delay might	be needed  when	 using	the  voter  to
	      choose  among  multiple receivers. A normal value	could be some-
	      where in between 20-100ms.

       SQL_HANGTIME
	      How long,	in milliseconds, the squelch will stay open after  the
	      detector	has  indicated	that  it is closed. This configuration
	      variable will affect all squelch detector	types.

       SQL_EXTENDED_HANGTIME
	      At low signal strengths it can be	beneficial  to	use  a	longer
	      squelch  hangtime	 so  that it is	less likely for	the squelch to
	      close. This configuration	variable is unset by default. A	 value
	      of  1000	milliseconds may be a good value to start out with. To
	      enable the extended squelch hangtime feature, set	up the SQL_EX-
	      TENDED_HANGTIME_THRESH variable.

       SQL_EXTENDED_HANGTIME_THRESH
	      At low signal strengths it can be	beneficial  to	use  a	longer
	      squelch  hangtime	 so  that it is	less likely for	the squelch to
	      close. This configuration	variable is unset by default. When set
	      to a signal level	it will	activate the extended squelch hangtime
	      feature. When the	signal strength	during a transmission fall be-
	      low the set threshold, the extended hangtime will	be used. Start
	      out with a value between 10  to  15.  The	 SQL_EXTENDED_HANGTIME
	      variable	is  used to set	how long the extended squelch hangtime
	      should be. Make sure that	you have calibrated the	 signal	 level
	      detector	before	turning	this feature on. Otherwise it will not
	      work as expected.

       SQL_TIMEOUT
	      Use this configuration variable to set an	upper limit,  in  sec-
	      onds,  for  how  long  the squelch is allowed to be open.	If the
	      timeout value is exceeded	the squelch is forced  to  closed.  If
	      the  squelch  close for real, everything is back to normal. When
	      it opens the next	time a squelch open will be signaled.  For ex-
	      ample, use this feature to make sure that	a faulty receiver can-
	      not block	the system indefinitely.

       VOX_FILTER_DEPTH
	      The number of milliseconds to create  the	 mean  value  over.  A
	      small  value  will  make the vox react quicker (<200) and	larger
	      values will make it a little bit more sluggish. A	small value is
	      often better.

       VOX_THRESH
	      The threshold that the mean value	of the samples must exceed for
	      the squelch to be	considered open. It's hard to say  what	 is  a
	      good  value. Something around 1000 is probably a good value. Set
	      it as low	as possible without getting the	vox to false trigger.

       CTCSS_MODE
	      This configuration variable set the CTCSS	detection method used.
	      These are	the ones to choose from:

	      	  0 (Default) Will choose the detection	mode that is  the  de-
		  fault	 in the	software. At the moment	this is	the "Estimated
		  SNR" mode.

	      	  1 (Neighbor bins) This detection mode	will use three	narrow
		  frequency bands (~8Hz) to do the detection. One band is cen-
		  tered	 around	the tone to be detected	and then there are one
		  band above and one below the tone. These bands are  used  to
		  estimate  the	 noise	floor.	This is	the detector that have
		  been used in SvxLink for a long time.	It is  however	rather
		  slow	with  its  detection time of about 450ms.  There is no
		  good reason to use this detector anymore but it is  kept  in
		  case the new detector	does not work for some hardware	setup.

	      	  2  (Estimated	 SNR)  This is a newer detector	implementation
		  which	have some improvements.	The most notable difference is
		  that it is faster. The mean detection	time  will  be	around
		  200ms.  This is the default detection	mode if	not specified.
		  This detector	will use a larger  passband  to	 estimate  the
		  noise	 floor	which  make it more stable. The	default	config
		  use the whole	CTCSS passband but this	can be customized  us-
		  ing the CTCSS_BPF_LOW	and CTCSS_BPF_HIGH config variables.

	      	  3 (Estimated SNR+Phase) This detector	is a bit experimental.
		  It  is  even faster and more narrow than the other detection
		  modes. The mean detection time will be something like	150ms.
		  The detection	bandwidth is very narrow  and  very  sharp  so
		  that	no adjacent tones will trigger the detector. The price
		  to pay for these improvements	is that	is it a	bit less  sen-
		  sitive.

       CTCSS_FQ
	      If CTCSS (PL,subtone) squelch is used (SQL_DET is	set to CTCSS),
	      this  config variable sets the frequency of the tone to use. The
	      tone frequency ranges from 67.0 to 254.1 Hz. There  actually  is
	      nothing  that  will stop you from	setting	the frequency to some-
	      thing outside this range but there is no guarantee that it  will
	      work.

       CTCSS_OPEN_THRESH
	      If  CTCSS	 (PL,  subtone)	 squelch  is  used  (SQL_DET is	set to
	      CTCSS), this config variable sets	the required tone level	to in-
	      dicate squelch open. The value is	some kind of estimated	signal
	      to  noise	 dB value. If using CTCSS mode 2 or 3 it is helpful to
	      set up the CTCSS_SNR_OFFSET config variable. This	will make  the
	      SNR estimation pretty good. Default threshold is 15dB.

       CTCSS_CLOSE_THRESH
	      If  CTCSS	 (PL,  subtone)	 squelch  is  used  (SQL_DET is	set to
	      CTCSS), this config variable sets	the required tone level	to in-
	      dicate squelch close. The	value is some kind of estimated	signal
	      to noise dB value. If using CTCSS	mode 2 or 3 it is  helpful  to
	      set  up the CTCSS_SNR_OFFSET config variable. This will make the
	      SNR estimation pretty good. Default threshold is 9dB.

       CTCSS_SNR_OFFSET
	      This config variable is used when	CTCSS_MODE is set to 0,	 2  or
	      3.  It  will  adjust  the	estimated SNR value so that it becomes
	      very close to a real SNR value. This value will have to  be  ad-
	      justed  if CTCSS_FQ, CTCSS_MODE, CTCSS_BPF_LOW or	CTCSS_BPF_HIGH
	      changes.	Use the	siglevdetcal utility to	find out what  to  set
	      this  config  variable  to.  There is no requirement to set this
	      config variable up. The downside is that you will	then  need  to
	      experiment     more     with     the    CTCSS_OPEN_THRESH	   and
	      CTCSS_CLOSE_THRESH config	variables to find the correct  squelch
	      level.

       CTCSS_BPF_LOW
	      When  CTCSS_MODE	is set to 0, 2 or 3, this config variable will
	      set the low cutoff frequency for the passband  filter.  It  nor-
	      mally  should  not have to be adjusted but could improve the de-
	      tector if	some interference  falls  within  the  passband	 (e.g.
	      mains hum). Note however that the	more narrow you	make the pass-
	      band, the	less stable the	detector will be. You may need to com-
	      pensate by increasing the	open/close thresholds or by setting up
	      SQL_DELAY	and SQL_HANGTIME. Default is 60Hz.

       CTCSS_BPF_HIGH
	      When  CTCSS_MODE	is set to 0, 2 or 3, this config variable will
	      set the high cutoff frequency for	the passband filter.  It  nor-
	      mally  should  not have to be adjusted but could improve the de-
	      tector if	some interference falls	within the passband. Note how-
	      ever that	the more narrow	you make the passband, the less	stable
	      the detector will	be. You	may need to compensate	by  increasing
	      the  open/close  thresholds  or  by  setting  up	SQL_DELAY  and
	      SQL_HANGTIME. Default is 270Hz.

       SERIAL_PORT
	      If SQL_DET is set	to SERIAL,  this  config  variable  determines
	      which serial port	should be used for hardware squelch input (COS
	      -	 Carrier  Operated Squelch).  Note: If the same	serial port is
	      used for the PTT,	make sure you specify exactly the same	device
	      name.  Otherwise	the  RX	 and  TX will not be able to share the
	      port.  Example: SQL_PORT=/dev/ttyu0

       SERIAL_PIN
	      If SQL_DET is set	to SERIAL,  this  config  variable  determines
	      which  pin  in  the serial port that should be used for hardware
	      squelch input (COS - Carrier Operated Squelch). It  is  possible
	      to use the DCD, CTS, DSR or RI pin. If inverted operation	is de-
	      sired, prefix the	pin name with an exclamation mark (!).

	      Example: SQL_PIN=!CTS

       SERIAL_SET_PINS
	      Set  the	specified serial port pins to a	static state. This can
	      be good if using a pin for reference voltage or if a pin have to
	      be in a certain state to not interfere  with  the	 operation  of
	      some equipment. There are	two pins that are possible to use, RTS
	      and  DTR.	If prefixed with an exclamation	mark (!), the pin will
	      be cleared and if	not it will be set.

	      Example: SERIAL_SET_PINS=RTS!DTR will set	RTS and	clear DTR.

       EVDEV_DEVNAME
	      Specify which /dev/input	device	node  to  use  for  the	 EVDEV
	      squelch detector.	 To find out which device node and event codes
	      to use, install the evtest utility. Find a candidate device node
	      under  /dev/input/ or /dev/input/by-id/ and try the evtest util-
	      ity on it. Press some keys on the	device you want	to read	events
	      from. If you're in luck, events will be printed on the screen.

       EVDEV_OPEN
	      Use the evtest utility, as described above, to  find  out	 type,
	      code  and	 value	for  the  event	 you  want  to use to open the
	      squelch. For example if type is 1, code is 163 and value	is  1,
	      set this config variable to 1,163,1.

       EVDEV_CLOSE
	      Use  the	evtest	utility, as described above, to	find out type,
	      code and value for the event  you	 want  to  use	to  close  the
	      squelch.	For  example if	type is	1, code	is 163 and value is 0,
	      set this config  variable	 to  1,163,0.  If  you	set  the  same
	      type,code,value combination for both EVDEV_OPEN and EVDEV_CLOSE,
	      that event will toggle the squelch.

       GPIO_PATH
	      Use  this	configuration variable to set the path to the sys con-
	      trol devices for GPIO.  This normally is /sys/class/gpio but  on
	      some    hardware,	   like	  the	Orange	 Pi,   the   path   is
	      /sys/class/gpio_sw.

       GPIO_SQL_PIN
	      If SQL_DET is set	to GPIO	this configuration variable is used to
	      choose which GPIO	pin to use for squelch input. The most	common
	      name  is	gpio<number>,  like  gpio4. Some GPIO drivers use more
	      complex names, like gpio33_pe11. If inverted  operation  is  de-
	      sired, prefix the	pin name with an exclamation mark (!).

	      Example: GPIO_SQL_PIN=!gpio4

       SIGLEV_DET
	      Choose which type	of signal level	detector to use. The available
	      choices are: "NONE", "NOISE", "TONE", "AFSK" or "SIM". Depending
	      on  other	configuration there may	be more	choices	available. For
	      example, if a Ddr	receiver is used there will also be a DDR sig-
	      nal level	detector available.  The   signal  level  detector  is
	      only  needed when	using multiple receivers in a voter configura-
	      tion or when using the SIGLEV squelch type.

	      Type NONE	disable	the signal level detector. This	may be used if
	      no signal	level detector is needed.

	      Type NOISE use a bandpass	filter in the  range  of  5  -	5.5kHz
	      (CARD_SAMPLE_RATE	 >=  16000)  or	 a  high-pass filter at	3.5kHz
	      (CARD_SAMPLE_RATE	=  8000)  to  estimate	the  amount  of	 noise
	      present on the signal. If	the passband contain a small amount of
	      energy, a	strong signal is assumed. If the passband contain more
	      energy,  a weaker	signal is assumed.  The	noise detector must be
	      calibrated for the receiver and audio levels you	use.  This  is
	      done  using  the	SIGLEV_SLOPE  and  SIGLEV_OFFSET configuration
	      variables. See chapter CALIBRATING THE SIGNAL LEVEL DETECTOR be-
	      low for more information.

	      Type TONE	is not really a	signal level  detector	but  rather  a
	      transport	mechanism for getting signal level measurements	from a
	      remote  receiver	site,  linked  in  via RF, to the main SvxLink
	      site.  It	is using ten tones, one	for each signal	level step, in
	      the high audio frequency spectrum	(5.5 - 6.4kHz, 100Hz step)  to
	      indicate one of ten signal levels.  Only the receiving part have
	      been  implemented	 in  SvxLink  at the moment. On	the remote re-
	      ceiver side an Atmel AVR ATmega8 is used to map the signal level
	      voltage to tone frequencies.  Use	the TONE_SIGLEV_MAP configura-
	      tion variable to map each	tone to	a corresponding	 signal	 level
	      value in between 0 - 100.

	      Type  AFSK  is  like the TONE detector really a transport	mecha-
	      nism. Signal level values	are transmitted	using Audio  Frequency
	      Shift  Keying, AFSK, over	the receiver uplink channel from a re-
	      mote receiver site. AFSK reception must  have  been  enebled  by
	      setting OB_AFSK_ENABLE=1 and also	optionally IB_AFSK_ENABLE=1.

	      Type  SIM	 is a simulated	signal level detector that can be used
	      to debug problems	in the SvxLink software. Use  the  SIGLEV_MIN,
	      SIGLEV_MAX,     SIGLEV_DEFAULT,	 SIGLEV_TOGGLE_INTERVAL	   and
	      SIGLEV_RAND_INTERVAL configuration variables  to	configure  the
	      simulator.

       HID_DEVICE
	      This  parameter  defines	the device your	hidraw adapter is con-
	      nected to. This port is  created	by  the	 linux/hidraw  driver.
	      e.g. HID_DEVICE=/dev/hidraw3

       HID_SQL_PIN
	      Define  the pin your hardware squelch (from RX) is connected to.
	      Valid values are VOL_UP, VOL_DN, MUTE_PLAY or MUTE_REC.

	      Example: HID_SQL_PIN=VOL_UP

       SIGLEV_SLOPE
	      The slope	(or gain) of the signal	level  detector.  See  chapter
	      CALIBRATING  THE	SIGNAL	LEVEL DETECTOR below for more informa-
	      tion.

       SIGLEV_OFFSET
	      The offset of the	signal level detector. See chapter CALIBRATING
	      THE SIGNAL LEVEL DETECTOR	below for more information.

       SIGLEV_BOGUS_THRESH
	      This configuration variable set an upper threshold for the esti-
	      mated signal level when using the	noise signal  level  detector.
	      If  the estimation goes over the given threshold,	a signal level
	      of 0 will	be reported. This can be used as a workaround when us-
	      ing a receiver with squelched audio output. When the squelch  is
	      closed, the receiver audio is silent. The	signal level estimator
	      will  interpret this as a	very strong signal. Setting up the bo-
	      gus signal level threshold will counteract this behavior	but  a
	      better solution is to use	unsquelched audio if possible.

	      By  default this feature is disabled. If enabling	it, start with
	      a	value somewhere	around 120.

       TONE_SIGLEV_MAP
	      This configuration variable is used to map tones to signal level
	      values when SIGLEV_DET=TONE. It is a comma separated list	of ten
	      values in	the 0 -	100 range. The first value map to  the	5500Hz
	      tone,  the  second  to the 5600Hz	tone and so on.	The last value
	      map to the 6400Hz	tone.  What levels the tones should be	mapped
	      to  depends  on the tone sender implementation. The default tone
	      map is 10,20,30...,100.

	      The Atmel	AVR processor used by the author have a	 reverse  map-
	      ping so that the first tone (5500Hz) indicate the	highest	signal
	      strength	and  the last tone (6400Hz) indicate the lowest	signal
	      strength.	It is also not linear since  it's  more	 important  to
	      have  fine  measurement granularity in the lower signal strength
	      range.  This  is	 how   the   mapping   look   for   the	  AVR:
	      100,84,60,50,37,32,28,23,19,8.

       SIGLEV_OPEN_THRESH
	      This is the squelch open threshold for the SIGLEV	squelch	detec-
	      tor.   If	 using	the  NOISE signal level	detector, make sure to
	      first calibrate the signal level detector	using the SIGLEV_SLOPE
	      and SIGLEV_OFFSET	configuration variables. The signal level  de-
	      tector  should  normally	be  calibrated	so  that  full	signal
	      strength is 100 and no signal is 0. Depending on your background
	      noise level a good value for this	configuration variable is  be-
	      tween 5 and 20.

       SIGLEV_CLOSE_THRESH
	      This  is	the squelch close threshold for	the SIGLEV squelch de-
	      tector.  If using	the NOISE signal level detector, make sure  to
	      first calibrate the signal level detector	using the SIGLEV_SLOPE
	      and  SIGLEV_OFFSET configuration variables. The signal level de-
	      tector  should  normally	be  calibrated	so  that  full	signal
	      strength is 100 and no signal is 0. Depending on your background
	      noise  level a good value	for this configuration variable	is be-
	      tween 1 and 10.

       SIGLEV_MIN
	      The minimum signal level used by SIM signal level	detector.

       SIGLEV_MAX
	      The maximum signal level used by SIM signal level	detector.

       SIGLEV_DEFAULT
	      The default signal level set on startup by the SIM signal	 level
	      detector.

       SIGLEV_TOGGLE_INTERVAL
	      The  interval, in	milliseconds, that the SIM signal level	detec-
	      tor will use to toggle between the maximum and the minimum  sig-
	      nal levels.

       SIGLEV_RAND_INTERVAL
	      The  interval, in	milliseconds, that the SIM signal level	detec-
	      tor will use between randomizing a new signal  level  value.  At
	      each  interval,  the  simulator will randomly either increase or
	      decrease the signal level	with one step.

       DEEMPHASIS
	      Apply a deemphasis filter	on received audio. The deemphasis fil-
	      ter is used when taking audio directly from the detector in  the
	      receiver,	 like  when using a 9k6	packet radio connector.	If not
	      using a deemphasis filter	the high frequencies will be amplified
	      resulting	in a very bright (tinny) sound.

       SQL_TAIL_ELIM
	      Squelch tail elimination is used to remove noise from the	end of
	      a	received transmission. This is of most use when	using CTCSS or
	      SIGLEV squelch with unsquelched input audio. A normal value is a
	      couple of	hundred	milliseconds.  Note that the audio will	be de-
	      layed by the same	amount of milliseconds.	This does  not	matter
	      much  for	 a  simplex link but for a repeater the	delay might be
	      annoying since you risk hearing the end of  your	own  transmis-
	      sion.

       PREAMP The incoming signal will be amplified by the specified number of
	      dB.  This	can be used as a last measure if the input audio level
	      can't be set high	enough on the analogue side. A	value  of  6dB
	      will double the signal level. Note that this is a	digital	ampli-
	      fication.	 Hence	it will	reduce the dynamic range of the	signal
	      so usage should be avoided if possible. It's  always  better  to
	      correct the audio	level before sampling it.

       PEAK_METER
	      This is a	help to	adjust the incoming audio level. If enabled it
	      will  output a message when distortion occurs. To	adjust the au-
	      dio level, first open the	squelch. Then increase the audio level
	      until warning messages are printed.  Decrease  the  audio	 level
	      until  no	warning	messages are printed. After the	adjustment has
	      been done, the peak meter	can  be	 disabled.  0=disabled,	 1=en-
	      abled.

       DTMF_DEC_TYPE
	      Specify the DTMF decoder type. Set it to INTERNAL	to use the in-
	      ternal  software DTMF decoder. To	use the	S54S interface featur-
	      ing a hardware DTMF decoder, set it to S54S.  To control it over
	      a	pseudo tty device set it to PTY.  Setting it to	PTY  will  in-
	      stall  the PTY dtmf decoder. SvxLink creates a symlink linked to
	      a	slave pty device on runtime. The name has to be	 defined  with
	      DTMF_PTY.	  If  AFSK  reception  is  enabled  using  OB_AFSK_EN-
	      ABLE/IB_AFSK_ENABLE, remotely decoded DTMF  digits  may  be  re-
	      ceived  by setting this configuration variable to	AFSK.  NONE or
	      commenting it out	will disable DTMF detection.

       DTMF_MUTING
	      Mute the audio during the	time when a DTMF digit	is  being  re-
	      ceived.  Note  that  the	audio will be delayed 75ms to give the
	      DTMF detector time to do its work.  This does not	matter much on
	      a	simplex	link but on a repeater it could	be annoying since  you
	      will hear	the last 75 milliseconds of your own transmission.  To
	      counteract the added delay one can set up	the SQL_TAIL_ELIM con-
	      figuration  variable  to at least	75 milliseconds.  Legal	values
	      for DTMF_MUTING are 0=disabled, 1=enabled.

       DTMF_HANGTIME
	      This configuration variable can be used if the DTMF  decoder  is
	      too  quick  to indicate digit idle. That does not	matter at high
	      signal strengths but for weaker signals and mobile flutter  it's
	      not  good	 at  all.  Each	 DTMF  digit will be detected multiple
	      times.  Using this configuration variable, the time (ms) a  tone
	      must  be missing to be indicated as off can be extended. Setting
	      this value too high will cause the decoder to be a bit  sluggish
	      and it might consider two	digits as one.	The hang time only af-
	      fect  consecutive	digits of the same value (e.g. 1 1).  If a de-
	      tected digit differs from	the previously detected	digit  (e.g  1
	      2), the hang time	is immediately canceled	and the	detected digit
	      is considered as a new one. A good default value is 50-100ms.

       DTMF_SERIAL
	      When  using  an external hardware	DTMF decoder this config vari-
	      able is used to specify a	serial port (e.g. /dev/ttyu0).

       DTMF_PTY
	      When using the PTY DTMF "decoder"	 this  configuration  variable
	      will  set	 the  path to the PTY slave softlink that the external
	      interface	script use to communicate to SvxLink. Over this	 soft-
	      link  a  very  simple  communication  protocol is	used to	notify
	      SvxLink about received DTMF digits: 0-9, A-F, *, #. "E"  is  the
	      same  as	"*"  and  "F" is the same as "#". Sending a digit tell
	      SvxLink when it starts. To  tell	SvxLink	 that  the  digit  has
	      ended, send a space character.

	      The  PTY DTMF "decoder" can be used by an	external script	to in-
	      terface custom devices, modems or	 other	hardware  to  SvxLink.
	      Look for nhrcx.pl	or trx_pty_ctrl.py for an example.

	      It  is  possible	to specify the same PTY	for multiple functions
	      (e.g. squelch, ptt etc) in both TX and RX	 configurations.  This
	      may be good if there is one script handling all functions.

	      Example: /tmp/rx1_dtmf.

       DTMF_MAX_FWD_TWIST
	      DTMF  use	 two  tones to encode digits 0-9, A-F. These two tones
	      should normally have the sample amplitude. The difference	in am-
	      plitude is called	twist. Forward twist is	when the  higher  fre-
	      quency tone is lower in amplitude	than the lower frequency tone.
	      According	to the standards, 8dB forward twist should be allowed.
	      Some  transmitters  do  not correctly modulate the DTMF tones to
	      get zero twist.  The most	common situation is that  the  forward
	      twist is too large. Increasing this configuration	variable above
	      8dB  might  allow	 DTMF  from these transmitters to be detected.
	      When doing this, the DTMF	detector will  be  more	 sensitive  to
	      noise and	might cause more false triggers.

       DTMF_MAX_REV_TWIST
	      DTMF  use	 two  tones to encode digits 0-9, A-F. These two tones
	      should normally have the sample amplitude. The difference	in am-
	      plitude is called	twist. Reverse twist is	when  the  lower  fre-
	      quency  tone  is	lower  in  amplitude than the higher frequency
	      tone. According to the standards,	4dB reverse  twist  should  be
	      allowed  but SvxLink will	allow 6dB by default.  The most	common
	      reason for getting reverse twist is a bad	de-emphasis filter  or
	      that  none  at all is used, like when taking audio directly from
	      the FM discriminator. Have a look	at the	DEEMPHASIS  configura-
	      tion variable before starting to modify this configuration vari-
	      able.

       DTMF_DEBUG
	      Set  to  1  to continuously print	software DTMF decoder decision
	      parameters. This should only be used for a short while  to  pin-
	      point  problems  with  the DTMF decoding since it	will print one
	      row of analysis parameters 100 times per second.	The  following
	      parameters are printed.

	      	  pwr  -  The  power  in  the audio signal. Must be over about
		  -50dB.

	      	  q - Quality. Should be close to 1.00 for a  good  detection.
		  If  the  signal  is  strong but the value is low anyway, the
		  signal probably is distorted for some	reason.	The input  au-
		  dio level may	be too high for	example.

	      	  twist	 -  The	 amplitude  difference	between	the two	tones.
		  Should be around 0dB,	which means the	tones  should  ideally
		  be  of the same strength. By default,	values between -6dB to
		  +8dB are accepted but	the thresholds can be  set  using  the
		  DTMF_MAX_FWD_TWIST   and   DTMF_MAX_REV_TWIST	 configuration
		  variables.

	      	  rowq - Quality of the	row (low group)	tone. Should be	 close
		  to one.

	      	  colq	-  Quality  of the column (high	group) tone. Should be
		  close	to one.

	      	  digit	- The digit mapped to the two detected tones.

	      	  row3rd - The	row  tone  relation  to	 its  third  overtone.
		  Should be close to zero. If it's not,	the signal is probably
		  distorted.

	      	  col3rd  -  The  column  tone relation	to its third overtone.
		  Should be close to zero. If it's not,	the signal is probably
		  distorted.

	      	  im - The relation of the two tones to	their  intermodulation
		  product.   Should  be	close to zero. If it's not, the	signal
		  is probably distorted.

       1750_MUTING
	      Mute the audio during a call tone	of 1750Hz  is  received.  Note
	      that  the	 audio	will be	delayed	75ms to	give the tone detector
	      time to do its work.  This does not matter  much	on  a  simplex
	      link  but	on a repeater it could be annoying since you will hear
	      the last 75 milliseconds of your own transmission.  To  counter-
	      act  the added delay one can set up the SQL_TAIL_ELIM configura-
	      tion variable to at least	75  milliseconds.   Legal  values  for
	      1750_MUTING are 0=disabled, 1=enabled.

       SEL5_TYPE
	      Define here your selective tone call system. You have the	choice
	      of  the  following  types:  ZVEI1,  ZVEI2, ZVEI3,	PZVEI, PDZVEI,
	      DZVEI, CCITT, EEA, CCIR1,	CCIR2, NATEL, EURO, VDEW, AUTO-A,  MO-
	      DAT,  PCCIR  and	EIA.  Only  one	system can be used at the same
	      time. Please take	into consideration that	 some  Sel5  standards
	      are using	the same or similar tones so it	may have some unwanted
	      effects  if  you define ZVEI1 for	SvxLink	and a (e.g.) ZVEI3 se-
	      quence is	received.

       SEL5_DEC_TYPE
	      At the moment only SEL5_DEC_TYPE=INTERNAL	 is  valid.  Maybe  we
	      have  support for	some external tone detectors later. To disable
	      SEL5 tone	decoding, specify NONE or just comment the  configura-
	      tion variable out.

       RAW_AUDIO_UDP_DEST
	      Setting  this configuration variable makes it possible to	stream
	      the raw audio from the sound device to an	UDP socket. The	sample
	      format is	the one	used internally	in SvxLink, that is each  sam-
	      ple  is  represented  by a 32 bit	float.	The sample rate	is the
	      same as the one chosen for the audio device.  The	destination is
	      specified	as ip-address:port.

	      Example: RAW_AUDIO_UDP_DEST=127.0.0.1:10000

       OB_AFSK_ENABLE
	      Set to 1 to enable reception of metadata like signal level  mea-
	      surements,  DTMF digits and tone detections via out-of-band (OB)
	      AFSK. The	out-of-band AFSK is transmitted	above the  voice  band
	      so  that it is possible to transmit AFSK bursts at the same time
	      as someone is speaking. The AFSK bursts are filtered out	before
	      the  audio is handed on to the next stage	so normal users	should
	      never hear the AFSK bursts. The AFSK feature is  typically  used
	      on  a  remote receiver uplink. The protocol used is SvxLink spe-
	      cific. Data is transmitted in 300Bd with a shift of 170Hz	and  a
	      center  frequency	 of 5500Hz. The	RemoteTrx application have the
	      capability to transmit this protocol.

       OB_AFSK_VOICE_GAIN
	      To be able to send both voice and	AFSK at	the same time  it  may
	      be  necessary  to	 lower	the level of the voice audio as	to not
	      overdrive	the transmitter. This is compensated in	the  link  re-
	      ceiver by	amplifying the voice audio back	to its original	level.
	      This  configuration  variable  should thus be set	to the negated
	      value of the same	configuration variable in the transmitter sec-
	      tion of the transmitting RemoteTrx. If it's set to -6dB  in  the
	      transmitter configuration	it should be set to 6dB	here.

       IB_AFSK_ENABLE
	      Set to 1 to enable reception of an initial signal	level measure-
	      ment via in-band (IB) AFSK. This is used in cooperation with the
	      out-of-band AFSK feature to quickly transfer a signal level mea-
	      surement	to  get	the squelch opened. The	in-band	AFSK is	trans-
	      mitted in	the voice band and can thus use	the higher baudrate of
	      1200Bd. Since it's only transmitted when the squelch  is	closed
	      the  end	user will not hear the AFSK burst. The AFSK feature is
	      typically	used on	a remote receiver uplink. The protocol used is
	      SvxLink specific.	Data is	transmitted in 1200Bd with a shift  of
	      1000Hz and a center frequency of 1700Hz.	The RemoteTrx applica-
	      tion have	the capability to transmit this	protocol.

       CTRL_PTY
	      Set  this	configuration variable to the path of a	PTY to use for
	      controlling a receivers frequency	and modulation.	 This  can  be
	      used  to	interface  a  receiver	to SvxLink using a translation
	      script, like trx_pty_ctrl.py.  To	 set  the  receive  frequency,
	      SvxLink  will  send  the sequence	"f<frequency>;". The frequency
	      will be in Hz, e.g. f145550000; will be sent to set the receiver
	      to 145.550MHz.

	      To set the modulation the	command	is "m<modulation>;".  Look  at
	      the  documentation  of  the MODULATION configuration variable to
	      see which	modulations that are available.	To set "normal"	 25kHz
	      channel spaced FM	the command would be mFM;.

	      It  is  possible	to specify the same PTY	for multiple functions
	      (e.g. squelch, ptt etc) in both TX and RX	 configurations.  This
	      may be good if there is one script handling all functions.

   Ddr Receiver	Section
       A special kind of local receiver	is the Digital Drop Receiver (DDR). It
       will  use  either the rtl_tcp utility or	a direct USB connection	to in-
       terface to a RTL2832U based DVB-T USB dongle and	use that  as  a	 wide-
       band receiver. These USB	dongles	can be bought cheaply from an Internet
       shop (~$10). The	radio performance may not be great but better than one
       might  think. Usage as a	cheap local coverage receiver or as a link re-
       ceiver may work very well.

       One big advantage of using a wide-band receiver is that it is  possible
       to  monitor more	than one narrow	band channel at	a time.	The only limit
       is the CPU power	and the	bandwidth of the wide-band tuner. You probably
       need a Pentium4 or better to fulfill the	CPU demands.

       Getting the DVB-T dongle	running	is out of scope	for this document  but
       what  you  absolutely  need to do is to find out	the frequency error on
       your specific dongle. When you have figured out what the	frequency  er-
       ror  is,	set up the FQ_CORR configuration variable in the wide-band re-
       ceiver configuration section.

       The rtl_tcp utility is in a package named  similar  to  something  like
       rtl-sdr.	  When	you  have  the	rtl-sdr	 stuff	installed,  just start
       rtl_tcp.	No command line	arguments are needed. Then configure a Ddr re-
       ceiver in SvxLink. All configuration variables that are	available  for
       an ordinary local receiver is also available for	a Ddr receiver,	except
       the  audio  device  related  ones which are just	ignored. The following
       configuration variables are available in	addition to the	ordinary ones.

       FQ     The narrow-band channel frequency	to tune	to.

       MODULATION
	      The modulation used on the channel. Legal	values are: "FM" (two-
	      way radio	frequency modulation), "NBFM"  (two-way	 radio	narrow
	      frequency	 modulation),  "WBFM"  (broadcast  wide-band frequency
	      modulation), "AM"	(two-way radio amplitude  modulation),	"NBAM"
	      (two-way	radio  narrow band amplitude modulation), "USB"	(Upper
	      Sideband), "LSB" (Lower Sideband), "CW" (Continuous  Wave,  e.g.
	      Morse), "WBCW" (CW wide).

       WBRX   The  configuration section for the wide-band receiver to connect
	      this DDR to.  See	"wide-band Receiver Section" below.

       SIGLEV_DET
	      For a Ddr	there also is a	special	signal level  detector	avail-
	      able,  DDR,  that	will measure the RF power before demodulation.
	      This is much more	reliable  than	estimating  the	 signal	 power
	      through  the audio which is normally done	in SvxLink.  The draw-
	      back is that the Ddr signal level	is not	completely  comparable
	      to  the ordinary SvxLink signal level measurements since it have
	      a	larger dynamic range. Set SIGLEV_DET=DDR to activate  the  Ddr
	      signal level detector.

   Wide-band Receiver Section
       A wide-band receiver section is used to configure access	to a wide-band
       receiver	 which can be used by a	Digital	Drop Receiver (DDR), described
       above, to handle	multiple narrow-band channels using the	same hardware.
       The only	hardware supported at the moment is RTL2832U based  DVB-T  USB
       dongles.	 SvxLink  access  the  dongle  directly	via USB	or through the
       rtl_tcp utility,	which make the dongle available	on a TCP network port.
       The following configuration variables are available:

       TYPE   The type of wide-band receiver used. The only  supported	values
	      right now	are "RtlTcp" and "RtlUsb".

       DEV_MATCH
	      When using RtlUsb, this configuration variable is	used to	select
	      the dongle to use	if there are multiple dongles connected	to the
	      computer.	 When  looking	for dongles, SvxLink will try to match
	      the string given in this	configuration  variable	 in  different
	      ways.  First,  if	it's a digit, a	match against the device index
	      is tried.	The device index is just a number, zero	and  up,  that
	      is given to a dongle when	it's inserted.

	      If  the  device index does not match, a match against the	begin-
	      ning, end	or the whole serial number will	be tried.

	      Default: 0 (first	device found)

       HOST   The name of the host that	the rtl_tcp utility is running on (De-
	      fault: localhost).

       PORT   The TCP port that	rtl_tcp	is listening on	(Default: 1234).

       SAMPLE_RATE
	      The sample rate used by the dongle. Legal	values are 960000  and
	      2400000 (Default:	960000).

       FQ_CORR
	      This is probably the most	important configuration	variable. Most
	      dongles  are far off in frequency	so they	need to	be calibrated.
	      Calibrating the dongle can be done in multiple ways. The	recom-
	      mended  way  is  to  use	the devcal utility that	is distributed
	      along with SvxLink. The calibration procedure  is	 described  in
	      the devcal (1) manual page.

	      The  end result should be	a correction value for how far off the
	      dongle is	in frequency counted in	parts per million (PPM).  That
	      is,  how many Hz per MHz is the tuner off	by. Typical values are
	      in the range -100	to 100.

       CENTER_FQ
	      The frequency, in	Hz, that the wide-band tuner should be	placed
	      at.  This	 configuration	variable should	normally be left unset
	      since SvxLink will try to	place the wide-band tuner to cover all
	      set up Ddr frequencies. SvxLink will also	try to avoid placing a
	      Ddr on the center	frequency  of  the  wide-band  spectrum	 since
	      there  is	 usually some noise there. Only	use this configuration
	      variable if you need to override	the  automatic	placement  for
	      some reason.

       XVRTR_OFFSET
	      If a transverter is used,	this configuration variable can	be set
	      to the frequency offset that the transverter introduce. The fre-
	      quency  set  here	 will  be added	to the center frequency	of the
	      wide-band	receiver.

       GAIN   If unset,	automatic gain is used.	Do not use automatic gain con-
	      trol if using the	DDR signal level detector. That	 may  mess  up
	      the  measurements.  Finding a good gain setting may be hard. Too
	      little and you will not hear the signals you want	to  hear.  Too
	      much  and	 the  tuner will be driven into	distortion. One	way to
	      decide the maximum usable	gain is	 to  use  the  PEAK_METER  ex-
	      plained  below.	When  there are	no distortion warning messages
	      printed or just a	single one now and then	you have found the max
	      gain. You	should probably	back at	least one step down from  this
	      value.  If  the signals you want to receive are very strong, set
	      the gain as low as possible.

	      What gain	values that are	available is tuner dependent.  SvxLink
	      will  print  the	available  gain	values when it establishes the
	      connection to the	tuner. Typical values are in the range -10  to
	      50dB.

       PEAK_METER
	      If  PEAK_METER is	set to 1, a warning will be printed every time
	      the tuner	is driven into distortion. If it happens too often the
	      gain should be lowered.  At most,	one warning per	second will be
	      printed.

   LocalSim Receiver Section
       A simulated local receiver can be used to debug problems	in the SvxLink
       software.  The only thing that this very	simple simulator  does	is  to
       play a tone. The	generated tone can be controlled using some configura-
       tion variables.

       SIM_WAVEFORM
	      Set the waveform to use; SIN=sine	wave, SQUARE=square wave.

       SIM_TONE_FQ
	      Set the frequency	of the tone in Hz.

       SIM_TONE_PWR
	      Set  the	tone  power  in	 dB. 0dB corresponds to	the power in a
	      full-scale sine wave.

   Voter Section
       Receiver	type "Voter" is	a "receiver" that combines multiple  receivers
       and  selects  one  of  them  to take audio from when the	squelch	opens.
       Which receiver to use is	selected directly after	squelch	 open.	It  is
       possible	 to  set  up  a	 voting	delay which will make the voter	wait a
       while before choosing which RX to use.  This will  give	all  receivers
       some  time  to report their signal strengths.  After the	initial	choice
       have been made a	periodic check is done to see if any of	the other  re-
       ceivers	receive	 a stronger signal.  In	the default configuration file
       there is	a voter	section	called Voter.

       TYPE   Always "Voter" for a voter.

       RECEIVERS
	      Specify a	comma separated	 list  of  receivers  that  the	 voter
	      should  use.   Optionally	the receiver name may be followed by a
	      colon and	a squelch delay	value. This can	be used	to adjust  the
	      voting  delay  for  receivers that always	are slower to open for
	      some reason. The delay value given will be subtracted  from  the
	      voting delay if the receiver is the first	one to open.

	      The  usage  of the delay value is	best illustrated with an exam-
	      ple.  Let's say we have three receivers where  two  of  the  re-
	      ceivers  take  at	 most 100ms to report signal level and one re-
	      ceiver requires 300ms. We	then need to set the  VOTING_DELAY  to
	      something	 like  350ms so	as to be sure that all receivers get a
	      chance to	report their signal level  measurement.	 If  only  the
	      slow   receiver	opens	there	will   be  a  total  delay  of
	      300+350=650ms. This is unnecessarily long	since  the  other  two
	      receivers	 should	 have  reported	their signal strength way ear-
	      lier. It's thus safe to shorten the voting delay	for  the  slow
	      receiver,	 so  we	do this: RECEIVERS=FastRx1,FastRx2,SlowRx:200.
	      The total	squelch	open delay will	now be 100+350=450ms  for  the
	      fast receivers and 300+350-200=450ms for the slow	receiver. That
	      is, all receivers	are now	equally	fast.

	      Example: RECEIVERS=Rx1,Rx2:200,Rx3

       VOTING_DELAY
	      Specify the delay	in milliseconds	that the voter will wait after
	      the first	squelch	open detection until the decision of which re-
	      ceiver  to  use is made. This time must be set sufficiently high
	      to allow all receivers to	calculate and report the signal	level.
	      Incoming audio and DTMF digits will  be  buffered	 for  all  re-
	      ceivers  during  the  delay time so nothing will be lost,	but of
	      course the audio will be delayed the specified amount  of	 time.
	      This  is	most  noticeable  when using a repeater	logic. Use the
	      BUFFER_LENGTH  configuration  variable  to  adjust  the	buffer
	      length.  The default voting delay	is 0.

       BUFFER_LENGTH
	      Use this configuration variable to adjust	the length of the vot-
	      ing  delay  buffer.  If not specified, the buffer	length will be
	      the same as the voting delay. When using the voter  with	a  re-
	      peater  logic,  try to keep this variable	at 0 to	reduce the la-
	      tency. Only increase it if you feel audio	is lost	in the	begin-
	      ning of transmissions.

       REVOTE_INTERVAL
	      This  is	the interval time in milliseconds with which the voter
	      will check if another receiver is	receiving a  stronger  signal.
	      If  that	is the case, a receiver	switch will be initiated.  De-
	      fault is 1000 milliseconds.

       HYSTERESIS
	      The hysteresis setting will prevent  the	voter  from  switching
	      back  and	 forth	between	two receivers that are equal in	signal
	      strength.	For a switch to	 occur,	 the  other  receivers	signal
	      strength	must  exceed  the current receivers signal strength by
	      the percent specified in this configuration variable. So if  the
	      hysteresis is set	to 50% and the received	signal strength	on the
	      current  receiver	 is  40, a signal strength of 40*1.5=60	is re-
	      quired on	another	receiver to  initiate  a  switch.  At  squelch
	      open,  if	the received signal strength plus hysteresis is	larger
	      than 100,	the voting delay will be skipped.   The	 default  hys-
	      teresis is 50 percent.

       RX_SWITCH_DELAY
	      When  a  receiver	switch is initiated by the voter, it will wait
	      the number of milliseconds specified in this configuration vari-
	      able before actually performing the switch. The switch will only
	      occur if the other receivers signal strength  is	still  higher.
	      Default is 500 milliseconds.

       SQL_CLOSE_REVOTE_DELAY
	      The voter	will wait the number of	milliseconds specified in this
	      config  variable	after a	squelch	close before voting in another
	      receiver.	There are two reasons for using	this delay. The	 first
	      is  to  prevent the voter	from going into	idle state immediately
	      when the squelch close for a fluttery  signal.  If  it  goes  to
	      idle,  the procedure with	voting delay may cause longer dropouts
	      than necessary.  The second reason to use	this  config  variable
	      is  if different receivers have different	hang times (explicitly
	      or implicitly). If both a	slow and fast  receiver	 is  receiving
	      the same signal and the faster is	currently chosen, when the PTT
	      is  released  the	 slower	receiver will be voted before closing.
	      This will	cause a	double squelch tail  and  double  roger	 beep.
	      Default is 500 milliseconds.

       COMMAND_PTY
	      Specify  the path	to a PTY that can be used to control the voter
	      from the operating system. Available commands:

	      	  ENABLE rx_name - Enable the given receiver

	      	  DISABLE rx_name - Disable the	given receiver

	      Commands can be issued using a  simple  echo  command  from  the
	      shell. Example: echo "DISABLE Rx1" >/dev/shm/voter_ctrl

   Networked Receiver Section
       A networked receiver section is used to specify the configuration for a
       receiver	 connected through a TCP/IP network. In	the default configura-
       tion file there is a networked receiver	configuration  section	called
       NetRx.  The section name	could be anything. It should match the RX con-
       figuration variable in the logic	core where the receiver	is to be used.
       The available configuration variables are described below. How to use a
       networked  receiver  is	further	 described  in the remotetrx(1)	manual
       page.

       TYPE   Always "Net" for a networked receiver.

       HOST   The hostname or IP address of the	remote receiver	host.

       TCP_PORT
	      The TCP port that	RemoteTrx listen on. The default is 5210.

       LOG_DISCONNECTS_ONCE
	      Set this configuration variable to 1 to suppress logging of mul-
	      tiple disconnect messages	in a row, like when there  is  no  Re-
	      moteTrx  running	on the other side.  Thus, failed reconnect at-
	      tempts will not be logged	at all.	This may be of use  if	a  Re-
	      moteTrx  is  missing  for	 a long	time or	if it's	only used from
	      time to time. The	default	is 0 which means  that	all  reconnect
	      attempts will be logged.

       AUTH_KEY
	      This  is	the authentication key (password) to use to connect to
	      the RemoteTrx server. The	same key have to be specified  in  the
	      RemoteTrx	 configuration.	  If  no  key  is specified in the Re-
	      moteTrx config, the login	will be	unauthenticated.  A  good  au-
	      thentication  key	should be 20 characters	long.  If the same Re-
	      moteTrx is used for both RX and TX, the same key must be	speci-
	      fied  in the RX as well as in the	TX configuration section.  The
	      key will never be	transmitted  over  the	network.  A  HMAC-SHA1
	      challenge-response procedure will	be used	for authentication.

       CODEC  The  audio codec to use when transferring	audio from this	remote
	      receiver.	 Available codecs are: RAW (512kbps),  S16  (256kbps),
	      GSM (13.2kbps), SPEEX (8-25kbps),	OPUS (8-64kbps). These are raw
	      bit-rate	values.	 There	will be	some overhead added to this so
	      the real bit-rates on the	wire are a little bit higher. The OPUS
	      codec is the most	modern one and it also have the	 best  quality
	      for a given bit-rate.

       SPEEX_ENC_FRAMES_PER_PACKET
	      Speex  encoder setting. Each Speex frame contains	20ms audio. If
	      using a low bit-rate configuration, the network overhead will be
	      quite noticeable if sending each frame in	its  own  packet.  One
	      way  to  lower  the  overhead is to send multiple	frames in each
	      network packet. The drawback with	doing this  is	that  you  get
	      more  delay.  If	setting	 this  option to something like	4 (de-
	      fault), the delay	will be	about 4x20=80ms.

       SPEEX_ENC_QUALITY
	      Speex encoder setting. Specify the encoder quality using a  num-
	      ber  between  0-10.   Lower values give poorer quality and lower
	      bit-rates.

       SPEEX_ENC_BITRATE
	      Speex encoder setting. Specify the bit-rate to use.  Speex  will
	      snap  to	the  nearest  lower possible bit-rate. Possible	values
	      range from 2150 to 24600 bps.  You should	probably  not  specify
	      quality at the same time as bit-rate. Not	sure though...

       SPEEX_ENC_COMPLEXITY
	      Speex  encoder  setting. The complexity setting (0-10) tells the
	      encoder how much CPU time	it should spend	on doing a  good  job.
	      The  difference  in  SNR between the lowest and highest value is
	      about 2dB. Set it	as high	as possible  without  overloading  the
	      CPU  on  the  encoding  computer	(check CPU usage using command
	      "top").

       SPEEX_ENC_VBR
	      Speex encoder setting. Enable (1)	or disable (0)	variable  bit-
	      rate  encoding.  If enabled, the encoder will try	to keep	a con-
	      stant quality by increasing the bit-rate when needed.

       SPEEX_ENC_VBR_QUALITY
	      Speex encoder setting. The quality (0-10)	 to  use  in  variable
	      bit-rate mode.

       SPEEX_ENC_ABR
	      Speex encoder setting. The average bit-rate encoding will	try to
	      keep  a  target  bit-rate	by continuously	adjusting the quality.
	      This configuration variable specify the target bit-rate and  en-
	      able  ABR. It also need to have VBR enabled so don't force it to
	      off.

       SPEEX_DEC_ENHANCER
	      Speex decoder setting. Enable (1)	or disable (0) the  perceptual
	      enhancer	in  the	 decoder.  Perceptual enhancement is a part of
	      the decoder which, when turned on, attempts to reduce  the  per-
	      ception  of the noise/distortion produced	by the encoding/decod-
	      ing process. In most cases, perceptual  enhancement  brings  the
	      sound  further  from  the	original objectively (e.g. considering
	      only SNR), but in	the end	it still sounds	better (subjective im-
	      provement).

       OPUS_ENC_FRAME_SIZE
	      Opus encoder setting. Specify how	large, in  milliseconds,  each
	      audio packet should be. Default: 20ms.

       OPUS_ENC_COMPLEXITY
	      Opus  encoder  setting.  The complexity setting (0-10) tells the
	      encoder how much CPU time	it should spend	on doing a  good  job.
	      Set  it  as  high	as possible without overloading	the CPU	on the
	      encoding computer	(check CPU usage  using	 command  "top").  De-
	      fault: 10.

       OPUS_ENC_BITRATE
	      Opus encoder setting. This is the	bit-rate that the encoder will
	      encode  for.  Rates from about 8000 to 64000 bits	per second are
	      meaningful but the codec can handle from	like  2500  to	512000
	      bps. Default: 20000bps.

       OPUS_ENC_VBR
	      Opus  encoder  setting.  Enable (1) or disable (0) variable bit-
	      rate encoding. If	enabled, the encoder will try to keep  a  con-
	      stant  quality  by  increasing  the bit-rate when	needed and de-
	      crease it	when the quality can be	assured	with a lower bit-rate.
	      The target average bit-rate is the one set by  OPUS_ENC_BITRATE.
	      Default: 1.

   Local Transmitter Section
       A  local	transmitter section is used to specify the configuration for a
       local transmitter. In the default configuration file there is a config-
       uration section called Tx1.  The	section	name  could  be	 anything.  It
       should  match the TX configuration variable in the logic	core where the
       transmitter is to be used. The available	 configuration	variables  are
       described below.

       TYPE   Always "Local" for a local transmitter.

       AUDIO_DEV
	      Specify  the  audio device to use. Normally oss:/dev/dsp.	Have a
	      look at the AUDIO	DEVICE SPECIFICATIONS chapter for more	infor-
	      mation.

       AUDIO_CHANNEL
	      Specify the audio	channel	to use.	SvxLink	can use	the left/right
	      stereo channels as two mono channels. Legal values are 0 or 1.

       AUDIO_DEV_KEEP_OPEN
	      The normal behaviour for SvxLink is to open an audio device when
	      needed  and  close  it when it does not have to be open anymore.
	      This may cause problems in some applications or with some	 sound
	      hardware.	 Set  this  variable to	1 to force SvxLink to keep the
	      audio device open	from application start to exit.

       PTT_TYPE
	      Use this configuration variable to specify which type  of	 hard-
	      ware to use to control the PTT.  Specify "SerialPin" for using a
	      pin  in  the  serial  port,  "GPIO" to use a pin in a GPIO port,
	      "PTY" if you want	to use an  external  interface	script	via  a
	      pseudo  tty  port	 or "Hidraw" to	use the	linux/hidraw driver to
	      support hidraw devices like CM108	sound card,  e.g.  URI	device
	      from DMK.

	      Set PTT_TYPE to "Dummy" or "NONE"	to not use any PTT hardware at
	      all. It is an error to not specify PTT_TYPE.

	      Use PTT_PIN to specify the pin to	use for	"SerialPin" or "GPIO".

       PTT_PORT
	      Specify  the  serial  port  that	the  PTT is connected to. E.g.
	      /dev/ttyu0 for COM1.

       PTT_PIN
	      If PTT_TYPE is set to "SerialPin", specify the pin(s) in the se-
	      rial port	that the PTT is	connected to. It is possible to	 spec-
	      ify  one or two serial port pins.	 Some interface	boards require
	      that you specify two pins	since one pin does not provide	enough
	      drive power to the circuit. A "!"	in front of the	pin name indi-
	      cates  inverted  operation. Some of the possible values are RTS,
	      DTRRTS, !DTR!RTS or even DTR!RTS.

	      If GPIO was specified in PTT_TYPE, set the PTT_PIN config	 vari-
	      able  to	the  pin  name of the GPIO-pin to use. The most	common
	      name is gpio<number>, like gpio3.	 Some GPIO  drivers  use  more
	      complex  pin  names  like	gpio33_pe11.  Have a look at the USING
	      GPIO section for information on how to set up the	operating sys-
	      tem.  Normally, the pin will be active high but if the pin  name
	      is  prefixed  with an exclamation	mark it	will be	active low in-
	      stead. For some hardware platforms you may need to also set  the
	      GPIO_PATH	configuration variable.

       GPIO_PATH
	      Use  this	configuration variable to set the path to the sys con-
	      trol devices for GPIO.  This normally is /sys/class/gpio but  on
	      some    hardware,	   like	  the	Orange	 Pi,   the   path   is
	      /sys/class/gpio_sw.

       PTT_PTY
	      If PTT_TYPE is set to "PTY" this configuration variable will set
	      the path for the PTY slave softlink that is used by the external
	      script to	communicate to SvxLink.

	      SvxLink sends a 'T' to start transmitting	and a 'R' to turn  the
	      transmitter  off.	 This can be used by an	external script	to in-
	      terface custom devices, modems or	 other	hardware  to  SvxLink.
	      Look for nhrcx.pl	to see an example.

	      It  is  possible	to specify the same PTY	for multiple functions
	      (e.g. squelch, DTMF etc) in both TX and RX configurations.  This
	      may be good if there is one script handling all functions.

       HID_DEVICE
	      Define  the  device  node	where your hidraw device is accessible
	      at.

	      Example: HID_DEVICE=/dev/hidraw3

       HID_PTT_PIN
	      Define the pin your ptt control is connected to.	Valid  parame-
	      ters are are GPIO1,GPIO2,GPIO3,GPIO4. Note that some sound cards
	      like SSS1621 may not support GPIO3 and GPIO4! You	can invert the
	      behavior with a "!" in front of the name.	Only one value is sup-
	      ported.

       SERIAL_SET_PINS
	      Set  the	specified serial port pins to a	static state. This can
	      be good if using a pin for reference voltage or if a pin have to
	      be in a certain state to not interfere  with  the	 operation  of
	      some equipment. There are	two pins that are possible to use, RTS
	      and  DTR.	If prefixed with an exclamation	mark (!), the pin will
	      be cleared and if	not it will be set. This  configuration	 vari-
	      able can only be used when PTT_TYPE is set to "SerialPin".

	      Example: SERIAL_SET_PINS=RTS!DTR will set	RTS and	clear DTR.

       PTT_HANGTIME
	      Use  this	configuration variable to set a	PTT hangtime. This can
	      be good to have on a transmitter in  combination	with  using  a
	      tone  squelch. When the transmitter is ordered to	stop transmit-
	      ting, the	tone is	immediately turned off,	causing	the squelch to
	      close on the other side. Since the transmitter  keeps  transmit-
	      ting for a while,	no squelch tail	will be	heard.

	      Another  use  is on a remote receiver link transmitter where you
	      don't want the transmitter to turn on and	off between  transmis-
	      sions  or	if the squelch close and open quickly due to for exam-
	      ple mobile flutter.

       TIMEOUT
	      This is a	feature	that will prevent the transmitter from getting
	      stuck transmitting.  Specify the number of  seconds  before  the
	      transmitter  is  turned off. Note	that this is a low level secu-
	      rity mechanism that is meant to only kick	in if there is a soft-
	      ware bug in SvxLink. Just	 so  that  the	transmitter  will  not
	      transmit indefinitely. It	is not meant to	be used	to keep	people
	      from talking too long.

       TX_DELAY
	      The  number of milliseconds (0-1000) to wait after the transmit-
	      ter has been turned on until audio is starting to	 be  transmit-
	      ted.  This can be	used to	compensate for slow TX reaction	or re-
	      mote stations with slow reacting squelches.

       CTCSS_FQ
	      The frequency in Hz of the CTCSS tone to transmit. It is	possi-
	      ble  to  specify	fractions  using  "."  as  decimal comma (e.g.
	      136.5). For the tone to be transmitted the CTCSS_LEVEL  variable
	      must  also  be setup and also the	TX_CTCSS variable in the logic
	      core configuration section.

       CTCSS_LEVEL
	      The level	in percent (0-100) of the CTCSS	tone to	transmit. What
	      level to set is hard to say. The FM modulation swing of the tone
	      should be	in between 500-800 Hz. That is a bit hard  to  measure
	      if  you don't have the right equipment. A	normal FM station have
	      a	maximum	swing of 5kHz so if you	manage to calibrate everything
	      so that you get maximum swing when the sound card	 audio	is  at
	      peak level, the tone level should	be in between 10-16%. However,
	      most  often  the audio settings are configured a bit higher than
	      max since	the audio seldom reaches maximum level.	Then the level
	      of the CTCSS tone	should be reduced. The default in the configu-
	      ration file is 9%. For the tone to be transmitted	 the  CTCSS_FQ
	      variable	must  also  be setup and also the TX_CTCSS variable in
	      the logic	core configuration section.

       PREEMPHASIS
	      Enable this feature if you are modulating	the FM	modulator  di-
	      rectly, like through a 9k6 packet	radio input. If	no preemphasis
	      filter is	applied	to the audio, it will sound very dark when re-
	      ceived.  If  you modulate	the transmitter	through	the microphone
	      input the	radio will apply a preemphasis filter so this  feature
	      should be	disabled. 0=disabled, 1=enabled.

       DTMF_TONE_LENGTH
	      The  duration,  in  milliseconds,	 of DTMF digits	transmitted on
	      this transmitter.	 100ms is the default.

       DTMF_TONE_SPACING
	      The spacing, in milliseconds, between DTMF digits	transmitted on
	      this transmitter.	50ms is	the default.

       DTMF_DIGIT_PWR
	      The power, in dB,	of DTMF	digits transmitted on  this  transmit-
	      ter. Zero	dB will	give the same power in the generated signal as
	      there is in a maximum amplitude (full scale) sine	wave. -15dB is
	      the default.

       TONE_SIGLEV_MAP
	      It  is possible to transmit one of ten tones along with the nor-
	      mal transmission to indicate a signal strength value to the  re-
	      ceiver.  This is of most use when	using a	local transmitter as a
	      link transmitter in a RemoteTrx.	It  is	not  implemented,  and
	      probably	not  useful, in	SvxLink	Server.	Another	requirement is
	      that SvxLink has been compiled in	 16kHz	mode.  Otherwise  this
	      feature is disabled.

	      The  TONE_SIGLEV_MAP configuration variable is used to map tones
	      to signal	level values. It is a comma separated list of  exactly
	      ten  values  in  the  0  - 100 range. The	first value map	to the
	      5500Hz tone, the second to the 5600Hz tone and so	on.  The  last
	      value  map  to the 6400Hz	tone.  What levels the tones should be
	      mapped to	depends	on the	tone  receiver	implementation.	 Typi-
	      cally,  if  using	 a  SvxLink  application  as  a	 receiver, the
	      TONE_SIGLEV_MAP should be	the same in the	RX  configuration  for
	      that node.

       TONE_SIGLEV_LEVEL
	      It  is possible to transmit one of ten tones along with the nor-
	      mal transmission to indicate a signal strength value to the  re-
	      ceiver.  This is of most use when	using a	local transmitter as a
	      link transmitter in a RemoteTrx.	It  is	not  implemented,  and
	      probably	not  useful, in	SvxLink	Server.	Another	requirement is
	      that SvxLink has been compiled in	 16kHz	mode.  Otherwise  this
	      feature is disabled.

	      The  TONE_SIGLEV_LEVEL configuration variable is used to set the
	      tone level.  It is a value in the	1-100 range which indicate the
	      output level in percent of the maximum possible level.  The  de-
	      fault is 10.

       MASTER_GAIN
	      This configuration variable can be used to fine tune or increase
	      the audio	gain for all transmitted sound if it's not possible to
	      do  using	the normal sound card hardware gain controls. The gain
	      should be	given in dB and	can be both positive and negative.

       OB_AFSK_ENABLE
	      Set to 1 to enable transmission of metadata  like	 signal	 level
	      measurements,  DTMF  digits  and tone detections via out-of-band
	      (OB) AFSK. The out-of-band AFSK is transmitted above  the	 voice
	      band  so that it is possible to transmit AFSK bursts at the same
	      time as someone is speaking. The AFSK bursts  are	 filtered  out
	      before  the audio	is handed on to	the next stage so normal users
	      should never hear	the AFSK bursts. The AFSK feature is typically
	      used on a	remote receiver	uplink.	The protocol used  is  SvxLink
	      specific.	Data is	transmitted in 300Bd with a shift of 170Hz and
	      a	center frequency of 5500Hz. The	RemoteTrx application have the
	      capability to transmit this protocol.

       OB_AFSK_VOICE_GAIN
	      To  be  able to send both	voice and AFSK at the same time	it may
	      be necessary to lower the	level of the voice  audio  as  to  not
	      overdrive	 the  transmitter. This	is compensated in the link re-
	      ceiver by	amplifying the voice audio back	to its original	level.
	      This configuration variable should thus be set  to  the  negated
	      value of the same	configuration variable in the receiver section
	      of  the  receiving node. If it's set to 6dB in the receiver con-
	      figuration it should be set to -6dB here.

       OB_AFSK_LEVEL
	      The out-of-band AFSK modulation level in dBFS (dB	 full  scale).
	      Default is -6dB.

       OB_AFSK_TX_DELAY
	      The  number of milliseconds to send AFSK flag bytes before send-
	      ing the actual data when transmitting an out-of-band packet.

       IB_AFSK_ENABLE
	      Set to 1 to enable transmission of an initial signal level  mea-
	      surement via in-band (IB)	AFSK. This is used in cooperation with
	      the  out-of-band AFSK feature to quickly transfer	a signal level
	      measurement to get the  squelch  opened.	The  in-band  AFSK  is
	      transmitted  in  the voice band and can thus use the higher bau-
	      drate of 1200Bd. Since it's only transmitted when	the squelch is
	      closed the end user will not hear	the AFSK burst.	The AFSK  fea-
	      ture is typically	used on	a remote receiver uplink. The protocol
	      used  is	SvxLink	specific. Data is transmitted in 1200Bd	with a
	      shift of 1000Hz and a center frequency of	1700Hz.	 The RemoteTrx
	      application have the capability to transmit this protocol.

       IB_AFSK_LEVEL
	      The in-band AFSK modulation level	in dBFS	(dB full  scale).  De-
	      fault is -6dB.

       IB_AFSK_TX_DELAY
	      The  number of milliseconds to send AFSK flag bytes before send-
	      ing the actual data when transmitting an in-band packet.

       CTRL_PTY
	      Set this configuration variable to the path of a PTY to use  for
	      controlling a transmitters frequency and modulation. This	can be
	      used  to	interface a transmitter	to SvxLink using a translation
	      script, like trx_pty_ctrl.py. To	set  the  transmit  frequency,
	      SvxLink  will  send  the sequence	"F<frequency>;". The frequency
	      will be in Hz, e.g. F145550000; will be sent to set the receiver
	      to 145.550MHz.

	      To set the modulation the	command	is "M<modulation>;".  Look  at
	      the  documentation  of  the MODULATION configuration variable to
	      see which	modulations are	available. To set "normal" 25kHz chan-
	      nel spaced FM the	command	would be MFM;.

	      It is possible to	specify	the same PTY  for  multiple  functions
	      (e.g.  squelch,  ptt etc)	in both	TX and RX configurations. This
	      may be good if there is one script handling all functions.

   Networked Transmitter Section
       A networked transmitter section is used to  specify  the	 configuration
       for  a  transmitter  connected through a	TCP/IP network.	In the default
       configuration file there	is a networked transceiver configuration  sec-
       tion called NetTx.  The section name could be anything. It should match
       the  TX	configuration variable in the logic core where the transmitter
       is to be	used. The available configuration variables are	described  be-
       low. How	to use a networked transmitter is further described in the re-
       motetrx(1) manual page.

       TYPE   Always "Net" for a networked transmitter.

       HOST   The hostname or IP address of the	remote transmitter host.

       TCP_PORT
	      The TCP port that	RemoteTrx listen on. The default is 5210.

       LOG_DISCONNECTS_ONCE
	      Set this configuration variable to 1 to suppress logging of mul-
	      tiple  disconnect	 messages  in a	row, like when there is	no Re-
	      moteTrx running on the other side.  Thus,	failed	reconnect  at-
	      tempts  will  not	 be logged at all. This	may be of use if a Re-
	      moteTrx is missing for a long time or if	it's  only  used  from
	      time  to	time.  The default is 0	which means that all reconnect
	      attempts will be logged.

       AUTH_KEY
	      This is the authentication key (password)	to use to  connect  to
	      the  RemoteTrx  server. The same key have	to be specified	in the
	      RemoteTrx	configuration.	If no key  is  specified  in  the  Re-
	      moteTrx  config,	the  login will	be unauthenticated. A good au-
	      thentication key should be 20 characters long.  If the same  Re-
	      moteTrx  is used for both	RX and TX, the same key	must be	speci-
	      fied in the RX as	well as	in the TX configuration	section.   The
	      key  will	 never	be  transmitted	 over the network. A HMAC-SHA1
	      challenge-response procedure will	be used	for authentication.

       CODEC  The audio	codec to use when transferring audio  to  this	remote
	      transmitter.    Available	  codecs   are:	  RAW  (512kbps),  S16
	      (256kbps), GSM (13.2kbps), SPEEX	(8-25kbps),  OPUS  (8-64kbps).
	      These are	raw bit-rate values. There will	be some	overhead added
	      to  this	so  the	 real  bit-rates  on the wire are a little bit
	      higher. The OPUS codec is	the most modern	one and	it  also  have
	      the  best	 quality  for  a  given	bit-rate. There	also is	a NULL
	      codec that will just throw away samples which  can  be  used  in
	      special  situations when the audio is sent through another audio
	      path.

       SPEEX_ENC_FRAMES_PER_PACKET
	      Speex encoder setting. Each Speex	frame contains 20ms audio.  If
	      using a low bit-rate configuration, the network overhead will be
	      quite  noticeable	 if  sending each frame	in its own packet. One
	      way to lower the overhead	is to send  multiple  frames  in  each
	      network  packet.	The  drawback  with doing this is that you get
	      more delay. If setting this option  to  something	 like  4  (de-
	      fault), the delay	will be	about 4x20=80ms.

       SPEEX_ENC_QUALITY
	      Speex  encoder setting. Specify the encoder quality using	a num-
	      ber between 0-10.	 Lower values give poorer  quality  and	 lower
	      bit-rates.

       SPEEX_ENC_BITRATE
	      Speex  encoder  setting. Specify the bit-rate to use. Speex will
	      snap to the nearest lower	 possible  bit-rate.  Possible	values
	      range  from  2150	to 24600 bps.  You should probably not specify
	      quality at the same time as bit-rate. Not	sure though...

       SPEEX_ENC_COMPLEXITY
	      Speex encoder setting. The complexity setting (0-10)  tells  the
	      encoder  how  much CPU time it should spend on doing a good job.
	      The difference in	SNR between the	lowest and  highest  value  is
	      about  2dB.  Set	it as high as possible without overloading the
	      CPU on the encoding computer  (check  CPU	 usage	using  command
	      "top").

       SPEEX_ENC_VBR
	      Speex  encoder  setting. Enable (1) or disable (0) variable bit-
	      rate encoding. If	enabled, the encoder will try to keep  a  con-
	      stant quality by increasing the bit-rate when needed.

       SPEEX_ENC_VBR_QUALITY
	      Speex  encoder  setting.	The  quality (0-10) to use in variable
	      bit-rate mode.

       SPEEX_ENC_ABR
	      Speex encoder setting. The average bit-rate encoding will	try to
	      keep a target bit-rate by	continuously  adjusting	 the  quality.
	      This  configuration variable specify the target bit-rate and en-
	      able ABR.	It also	need to	have VBR enabled so don't force	it  to
	      off.

       SPEEX_DEC_ENHANCER
	      Speex  decoder setting. Enable (1) or disable (0)	the perceptual
	      enhancer in the decoder.	Perceptual enhancement is  a  part  of
	      the  decoder  which, when	turned on, attempts to reduce the per-
	      ception of the noise/distortion produced by the  encoding/decod-
	      ing  process.  In	 most cases, perceptual	enhancement brings the
	      sound further from the original  objectively  (e.g.  considering
	      only SNR), but in	the end	it still sounds	better (subjective im-
	      provement).

       OPUS_ENC_FRAME_SIZE
	      Opus  encoder  setting. Specify how large, in milliseconds, each
	      audio packet should be. Default: 20ms.

       OPUS_ENC_COMPLEXITY
	      Opus encoder setting. The	complexity setting  (0-10)  tells  the
	      encoder  how  much CPU time it should spend on doing a good job.
	      Set it as	high as	possible without overloading the  CPU  on  the
	      encoding	computer  (check  CPU  usage using command "top"). De-
	      fault: 10.

       OPUS_ENC_BITRATE
	      Opus encoder setting. This is the	bit-rate that the encoder will
	      encode for.  Rates from about 8000 to 64000 bits per second  are
	      meaningful  but  the  codec  can handle from like	2500 to	512000
	      bps. Default: 20000bps.

       OPUS_ENC_VBR
	      Opus encoder setting. Enable (1) or disable  (0)	variable  bit-
	      rate  encoding.  If enabled, the encoder will try	to keep	a con-
	      stant quality by increasing the bit-rate	when  needed  and  de-
	      crease it	when the quality can be	assured	with a lower bit-rate.
	      The  target average bit-rate is the one set by OPUS_ENC_BITRATE.
	      Default: 1.

   Multi Transmitter Section
       A multi transmitter section is used if one wants	to transmit on	multi-
       ple  transmitters  simultaneously.  The name of the section can be any-
       thing. Just point it out	from another  transmitter  specification  like
       the TX variable in a Logic core configuration.

       TYPE   Always "Multi" for a multi transmitter section.

       TRANSMITTERS
	      A	comma separated	list of	transmitters.

   Module Section
       A  module  section  contain the configuration for a specific module. It
       have some general configuration variables and some module specific con-
       figuration variables. The general configuration	variables  are	listed
       below.

       NAME   The  name	of the module. This name must match the	namespace used
	      in the TCL event handling	script.	If not set, NAME will  be  set
	      to the section name.

       PLUGIN_NAME
	      The  base	 name of the plugin. For example if this configuration
	      variable is set to Foo, the core will look for a	plugin	called
	      ModuleFoo.so.  If	 not  set, PLUGIN_NAME will be set to the same
	      value as NAME.

       ID     Specify the module identification	number.	 This  is  the	number
	      used to access the module	from the radio interface.

       TIMEOUT
	      Specify  the timeout time, in seconds, after which a module will
	      be automatically deactivated if there has	been no	activity.

       Module specific configuration variables are described in	the  man  page
       for  that module. The documentation for the Parrot module can for exam-
       ple be found in the ModuleParrot.conf(5)	manual page.

   LocationInfo
       STATUS_SERVER_LIST
	      Enter a space separated list of  EchoLink	 status	 servers  that
	      should  be  used to send node status beacons. Your node informa-
	      tion can be  found  on  http://www.echolink.org/links.jsp.   The
	      format  is  host:port. Host - hostname or	IP address, port - UDP
	      port.  Don't change the default unless you know what you are do-
	      ing. If you don't	want to	update	the  EchoLink  status  server,
	      comment out this configuration variable.

	      Example:
	      STATUS_SERVER_LIST=aprs.echolink.org:5199

       APRS_SERVER_LIST
	      This  configuration variable specifies connection	parameters for
	      connecting to an APRS server network using the TCP protocol.  In
	      this  case,  the	positioning  information  is  forwarded	to the
	      worldwide	APRS network. Have a look at http://aprs.fi/.

	      To choose	a suitable APRS	server from the	so called tier 2  net-
	      work, have a look	at http://www.aprs2.net/. Either choose	a spe-
	      cific  server or one of the regional addresses. The regional ad-
	      dresses bundle all APRS servers within a region so that a	random
	      tier 2 server is chosen within the region. There	are  five  re-
	      gions  defined: noam.aprs2.net - North America, euro.aprs2.net -
	      Europe, asia.aprs2.net - Asia, soam.aprs2.net  -	South  America
	      and  Africa,  aunz.aprs2.net  -  Australia and New Zealand.  The
	      format is	a space	separated list of host:port  entries.  Host  -
	      hostname or IP address, port - TCP port.

	      Example:
	      APRS_SERVER_LIST=euro.aprs2.net:14580

       LON_POSITION
	      The  longitude  of the station position, entered as "degrees.ar-
	      cminutes.arcseconds"

	      Example:
	      LON_POSITION=09.02.20E

       LAT_POSITION
	      The latitude of the station position,  entered  as  "degrees.ar-
	      cminutes.arcseconds"

	      Example:
	      LAT_POSITION=51.02.22N

       CALLSIGN
	      Enter  your callsign for the APRS	network	with a prefix that in-
	      dicates the type of station, (ER-	for repeaters, EL- for links).

	      Examples:
	      CALLSIGN=EL-DL1ABC    # callsign for a link
	      CALLSIGN=ER-DB0ABC    # callsign for a repeater

       FREQUENCY
	      The tx-frequency of the link/repeater in MHz. For	repeaters, in-
	      formation	about the RX/TX	shift  in  the	COMMENT	 configuration
	      variable may be useful.

	      Example:
	      FREQUENCY=430.050	    # tx-frequency is 430.050 MHz

       TX_POWER
	      The power	of your	transmitter in watts.

	      Example:
	      TX_POWER=10	    # tx output	is 10 watts

       ANTENNA_GAIN
	      The gain of your antenna in dBd.

	      Example:
	      ANTENNA_GAIN=5	    # antenna gain is 5	dBd

       ANTENNA_HEIGHT
	      The height of the	link-/repeater antenna in meters or feet above
	      the terrain, not sealevel.

	      Example:
	      ANTENNA_HEIGHT=10m    # 10 meters	above the ground
	      ANTENNA_HEIGHT=90	    # 90 feet

       ANTENNA_DIR
	      Main beam	direction of the antenna in degrees. If	an omni	direc-
	      tion antenna is used, specify -1 as the direction.

	      Example:
	      ANTENNA_DIR=-1	    # an omni directional antenna is used
	      ANTENNA_DIR=128	    # main beam	direction is 128 degrees

       PATH   The PATH variable	controls the way of forwarding your beacon in-
	      side the APRS network if it is gated by a	local APRS digipeater.
	      In  some	cases it has to	be changed according to	local require-
	      ments. Please contact your local APRS sysop for further informa-
	      tion. Changes should be made only	according to the NEWn-N	 para-
	      digm.  Leave  this  variable  untouched if you are unsure	of its
	      setting.	No spaces or control characters	are allowed. PATH  has
	      no influence on the propagation on non-RF	networks.

	      Examples:
	      PATH=WIDE1-1
	      PATH=WIDE1-1,WIDE2-2

       BEACON_INTERVAL
	      The interval, in minutes,	with which beacons will	be sent	to the
	      APRS  network.   A  good	value is 10 minutes. If	your beacon is
	      gated via	RF, please increase the	interval a  bit	 to  keep  the
	      APRS traffic on RF produced by the APRS RF gate as low as	possi-
	      ble. Intervals shorter than 10 minutes will be changed to	10.

	      Example:
	      BEACON_INTERVAL=30     # APRS-beacons will be sent every 30 min-
	      utes.

       TONE   The CTCSS	sub-audible tone that is to be used for	operation over
	      your link	or repeater. If	you don't use tone control set	it  to
	      0.

	      Examples:
	      TONE=136	    # we are using a CTCSS-tone	of 136.5 Hz
	      TONE=0	    # we don't use CTCSS sub-audible or	call tones
	      TONE=1750	    # the link/repeater	use a tone burst of 1750 Hz

       STATISTICS_INTERVAL
	      Defines  the  interval  in  minutes in that an aprs statistic is
	      sent into	the aprs network. Range: 5-60, default is 10 minutes

       COMMENT
	      Specify a	short comment here, maybe a link to  your  website  or
	      information  that	 could	be  interesting	for others. The	length
	      should not exceed	255 characters and may not have	control	 char-
	      acters  like  "Carriage Return" (\r) or "Line Feed" (\n) inside.
	      Make your	comment	as short as you	can to give users with a small
	      display (TH-D7) the chance to display the	full comment text.

	      Example:
	      COMMENT=[svx] Running SvxLink by SM0SVX

       PTY_PATH
	      Specify a	path to	a communications PTY that can be used  by  ex-
	      ternal applications to inject APRS packets into the APRS-IS net-
	      work.

AUDIO DEVICE SPECIFICATIONS
       The AUDIO_DEV configuration variables specify which audio device	to use
       for  a  receiver	 or transmitter. SvxLink support a number of different
       audio input and output devices. The format of the  configuration	 vari-
       able  is	 "type:dev_spec". There	are three different types of audio de-
       vices supported,	"alsa",	"oss" and "udp".

       The  "alsa"  type  will	use  the  specified  Alsa   device.   Example:
       "oss:/dev/dsp".	Describing  the	format of Alsa device names is outside
       the scope for this document.

       The "oss" type  will  use  the  specified  OSS  audio  device.  Example
       "oss:/dev/dsp".	OSS is the old sound system used by Linux. Alsa	should
       be used when possible.

       The  "udp" type is not really an	audio device but instead will read and
       write audio from/to a UDP socket. This can be used to interface SvxLink
       to all sorts of audio sources/sinks  capable  of	 streaming  raw	 audio
       through	UDP. One example usage is to interface SvxLink with GNU	Radio.
       Example:	"udp:127.0.0.1:10000". Note however that  the  only  supported
       format  is raw 16 bit signed samples, two interleved channels. Sampling
       frequency can be	chosen using the CARD_SAMPLE_RATE config  variable  as
       usual.

USING GPIO
       GPIO (General Purpose IO) is used to access hardware pins that are made
       available  for  example on an embedded system. Before starting to use a
       pin in SvxLink some setup need to be done in the	operating system. With
       the standard distribution of SvxLink there is a pair  of	 scripts  that
       help  with  setting  up	and taking down	the GPIO pins. The scripts are
       named svxlink_gpio_up and svxlink_gpio_down.  The  configuration	 file,
       which  can  be found among the other SvxLink configuration files	(typi-
       cally in	/etc/svxlink), is called gpio.conf.

CALIBRATING THE	SIGNAL LEVEL DETECTOR
       The signal level	detector is used when using multiple receivers or when
       using the SIGLEV	squelch. The signal level is used by a voter to	choose
       the receiver with the highest signal strength. The choice is  made  di-
       rectly  after squelch open. For the voter to make a correct choice, the
       signal level detector must be calibrated	on each	receiver.

       To use the noise	signal level  detector,	 first	set  SIGLEV_DET=NOISE.
       There are two configuration variables that is used to calibrate the de-
       tector.	 They  are  SIGLEV_SLOPE and SIGLEV_OFFSET in a	local receiver
       section.	The slope is the gain of the detector and the offset  is  used
       to  adjust  the detector	so that	when there is no input signal, the de-
       tector will return 0. The goal is to adjust the detector	so  that  when
       no  signal  is  received, a value of 0 is produced and when full	signal
       strength	is received, a value of	100 is produced. It will never be  ex-
       akt but that does not matter.

       The  calibration	is normally done by using the siglevdetcal(1) applica-
       tion. To	be able	to do a	correct	calibration, it	must  be  possible  to
       open  the  squelch  so  that  only noise	is received. The antenna cable
       should be disconnected or a dummy load should be	used.  WARNING:	Before
       starting	the siglevdetcal application, pull the PTT cable since the PTT
       might get triggered during the calibration procedure.

       The siglevdetcal	utility	will also measure the CTCSS tone SNR offset so
       that the	CTCSS_SNR_OFFSET config	variable can be	set  up	 to  a	proper
       value.

       If  the	siglevdetcal  application  cannot be used for some reason, the
       manual procedure	below might be used. This procedure will only work for
       a receiver with unsquelched audio.  Note: To  calibrate	a  remote  re-
       ceiver  it  must	 be  connected	to  the	SvxLink	server.	 Otherwise the
       squelch will not	open.

	      1	  Connect a dummy load or  disconnect  the  antenna  from  the
		  transceiver.	If  you	 disconnect  the antenna, make sure to
		  also disconnect the PTT.

	      2	  Set SIGLEV_SLOPE=1 and SIGLEV_OFFSET=0 and restart SvxLink.

	      3	  Open the squelch so that there is  only  noise  coming  into
		  SvxLink.

	      4	  Use a	second transceiver to make a short, unmodulated	trans-
		  mission.  Release the	PTT when the "Squelch OPEN" message is
		  printed. Repeat this for about five times.

	      5	  Calculate the	mean diff (open	level -	close level)  and  the
		  mean	lower (squelch close) value. Make sure to use at least
		  four significant digits in your calculations.

	      6	  SIGLEV_SLOPE = 100 / (mean diff)

	      7	  SIGLEV_OFFSET	= - (mean lower) * SIGLEV_SLOPE

	      8	  After	 changing  SIGLEV_SLOPE	 and  SIGLEV_OFFSET,   restart
		  SvxLink  and check to	see that the squelch open value	is now
		  around 100 and the squelch close value is around 0.

STATE PTY FORMAT
       The format of the output	from the state PTY is:

	   <timestamp> <context>:<event	name> <event data>

       where the different parts mean:

	   timestamp = <seconds	since 1	jan 1970>.<milliseconds>
	   context = Name of context
	   event_name =	Name of	event
	   event data =	Event specific data

       The following specific events exist.

       Voter:sql_state
	      Report the state of all squelches	for all	receivers. The	format
	      of the event specific data is:

		  <rx name><state><siglev> [<rx_name><state><siglev> ...]

	      where the	different parts	mean:

		  rx_name = Configuration file section name for	receiver
		  state	= _ (sql closed), : (sql open),	* (sql open and	rx se-
		  lected)
		  siglev = The measured	signal level

FILES
       /etc/svxlink/svxlink.conf (or deprecated	/etc/svxlink.conf)
	      The system wide configuration file.

       ~/.svxlink/svxlink.conf
	      Per user configuration file.

       /etc/svxlink/svxlink.d/*
	      Additional configuration files. Typically	one configuration file
	      per module.

AUTHOR
       Tobias Blomberg (SM0SVX)	<sm0svx	at users dot sourceforge dot net>

SEE ALSO
       svxlink(1), remotetrx(1), siglevdetcal(1), devcal(1)

Linux				 JANUARI 2018		       SVXLINK.CONF(5)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=svxlink.conf&sektion=5&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

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