We already do this check when scoring a message for the demodulator,
but there are other paths that can feed us a message so also do the
check in the main decode path.
This is possible now that the SBS output doesn't rely on the global block timestamp;
the output will look like this:
MSG,8,111,11111,4AC954,111111,2015/02/08,17:57:53.917,2015/02/08,17:57:53.936,,,,,,,,,,,,0
MSG,7,111,11111,392AEB,111111,2015/02/08,17:57:53.744,2015/02/08,17:57:53.936,,15375,,,,,,,,,,0
MSG,8,111,11111,392AEB,111111,2015/02/08,17:57:53.917,2015/02/08,17:57:53.936,,,,,,,,,,,,0
MSG,6,111,11111,800387,111111,2015/02/08,17:57:53.919,2015/02/08,17:57:53.936,,,,,,,,4745,0,0,0,0
where the "receive timestamp" (first time column) goes backwards to reflect the original reception
time of the delayed message, but the "forwarded timestamp" (second time column) reflects the actual
forwarding time.
(except in --net-verbatim mode, where we emit them all)
Move aircraft tracking into track.[ch].
Clean up references to "interactive mode" when tracking
aircraft - we always track aircraft, even in non-interactive
mode.
could confuse the partial correction used in DF11.
That code shows that yes, there are ambiguous syndromes in the
2-bit correction case only, so disable corrections of more than
1 bit in DF11.
since we have 8 bits spare, so there's no chance of confusing it
with an ICAO address, and we can safely use the filter table to match
future messages without also matching equivalent ICAO addresses.
Switch signalLevel back to a power measurement, don't put SNR in there.
But make it a 0.0 - 1.0 double so we're not scaling everywhere.
Adjust for the amplitude offset when calculating power.
Adapt everything else to the new scheme.
location (which may not be the aircraft location).
I suspect this sanity check is, in fact, redundant now that the
rest of the algorithm has had some bugs fixed; it should only
produce results within half a cell by definition.
Mostly refactoring the common code that was duplicated
between the different output types so that there aren't
many copies floating around.
This introduces "struct net_writer" to store the state of a
particular type of output service - buffers, time of last write,
connection count etc. prepareWrite() / completeWrite() give access
to the buffer and handle the actual writes and flushing when needed.
Heartbeat and time-based flushing move into a generic periodic-work
function.
Update the SBS output code to use the new infrastructure. This makes
a big different to CPU use when under load.