Sunday, November 22, 2009

Silja Europa steering & comments

Silja Europa (live position), a rather large passenger ferry (photos), has some steering issues, and is currently doing circles near Åland. News in Finnish: hs.fi, iltasanomat.fi. There are 1659 people onboard, but there is no immediate danger, since the ship can still steer using the propellers, although in a rather coarse manner.

Another small bit of news is that I've disabled anonymous commenting on this blog due to comment spam - I'm getting tired of manually deleting all the spam. From now on, you'll need a Google account to comment, or an account on one of the supported OpenID-enabled services. Sorry for the trouble.

During the last couple weeks I've been working on making the service UTF-8 clean for proper universal text messaging. It almost works in my testing installation, but there are still some quirks I need to clean up.

I've also installed a new database replica server at another physical site in downtown Helsinki, so that I'm able to bring the service alive without significant data loss in case of a complete hosting site loss (fire, flooding, extended network outage). The main servers are located in Espoo, Finland.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Ham::APRS::FAP 1.13 released

Version 1.13 of Ham::APRS::FAP was uploaded to CPAN today. The tests seem to be passing nicely, and the code has been running on aprs.fi for a long while, so the upgrade should be safe.

Ham::APRS::FAP is the APRS packet parser used by aprs.fi. If you wish to decode APRS packets in Perl, this is what you need. It's pretty fast, it's stable, and it can report it's errors in a developer-friendly way. And it's free (as in free speech).

Version 1.13 contains the following small fixes:
  • Allow anyone to update telemetry parameters, skip the source callsign check
  • Allow a PHG of 0000 for deleting PHG
  • Added new error code sym_inv_table for invalid symbol table char
  • Added local time zone parsing to object timestamps
  • Fixed comments parsing for last resort !-location packets
  • Parse APRS message rejects (negative acknowledgments)
Some of the improvements were implemented by Tapio, OH2KKU, while others were done by myself.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Embedded maps tracking fixed

The embedded map broke with the upgrade on Saturday - it stopped tracking the configured station (he_track parameter). That's fixed now. Sorry about that, I need to focus a bit more on testing before releasing...

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Statistics after the upgrade

On 31 Oct I switched from Apache to nginx. Here are some graphs from one frontend. Which would you prefer, based on these graphs?




I only added the temperature plugin yesterday (before the upgrade), but ... the CPU core temperatures did drop by 2°C. Now, does nginx reduce global warming?

Multiple targets on live map (and other small stuff)

On Saturday I did the planned upgrade. The big new user-visible feature is that you can now track multiple targets on the map. Just type in multiple callsigns separated with a comma: Rautauoma, OH2RDK, or click on 'start tracking' more than once. This code has been running on the beta site for a week now.

There are also some smaller improvements, like symbols being shown in the "other SSIDs" list, callsign links in APRS paths shown in the info balloons, fixed web search, and a JavaScript memory leak workaround for IE.

Oh yeah, referenced digipeaters and igates are now shown when you look up a day in the history. There is little bug in there, though - it shows their current positions, instead of their positions on the selected day. But hey, they rarely move.

There were also some rather large changes under the hood, causing a longer outage than usually. I replaced the Apache web server software with nginx, which allows me to run with HTTP keep-alive again (without running out of memory), and should generally handle larger amounts of users without that much trouble. It also helps with resource management - I'm now running separate web server processes for each service instead of a single Apache process pool for a large number of virtual servers. Now, if one service gets a beating, the others won't be affected so easily. Upgrades and configuration errors in one service won't break others, either. The downside is that name-based vhosts are out of the question.

Today's photo was taken on 11th of August at the summer cottage in Maaninka. EXIF says 9:39:17 PM. It's freezing and very dark in Helsinki today, so I'd rather go back a few months.

PS. I'll be in Bordeaux, France for the next 2 weeks or so.