GPS

Rhiot gateway comes with a dedicated GPS support. It makes it easier to collect, store and forward the GPS data to a data center (to the Rhiot Cloud in particular). Under the hood gateway GPS support uses the GPSD component.

Enabling GPS receiver

In order to start collecting GPS data on the gateway device, just add gps=true property to the gateway configuration. Gateway with the GPS support enabled will poll the GPS receiver every 5 seconds and store the GPS coordinates in the /var/rhiot/gps directory (or the other directory indicated using gps_store_directory configuration property). The data collected from the GPS receiver will be serialized to the JSON format. Each GPS read is saved to in a dedicated file.

The JSON schema of the collected coordinates is similar to teh following example:

{"timestamp": 1445356703704,
  "lat": 20.0, "lng": 30.0}

Enriching GPS data

Sometimes you would like to collect not only the GPS coordinates, but some other sensor data associated with the given location. For example to track the temperature or WiFi networks available in various locations. If you would like to enrich collected GPS data with value read from some other endpoint, set the gps_enrich property to the Camel endpoint URI value. For example setting gps_enrich=kura-wifi:*/* can be used to poll for available WiFi networks using Camel Kura WiFi component and adding the results to collected GPS payloads.

The enriched JSON schema of the collected coordinates is similar to teh following example:

{"timestamp": 1445356703704,
  "lat": 20.0, "lng": 30.0,
  "enriched": {
    "foo": "bar"
  }
}      

Sending collected GPS data with a data center

If you would like to synchronize the collected GPS data with a data center, consider using the out-of-the-box functionality that Rhiot gateway offers. In order to enable an automatic synchronization of the GPS coordinates, set the gps_cloudlet_sync configuration property to true.

The gateway synchronization route reads GPS messages saved in the gateway store (see the section above) and sends those to the destination endpoint. The target Camel endpoint can be specified using the gps_cloudlet_endpoint configuration property. For example the following property tells a gateway to send the GPS data to a MQTT broker:

gps_cloudlet_endpoint=paho:topic?brokerUrl=tcp://broker.com:1234

The default data center endpoint is Netty REST call (using POST method) - netty4-http:http://${cloudletAddress}/api/document/save/GpsCoordinates, where gps_cloudlet_address configuration property has to be configured to match your HTTP API address (for example gps_cloudlet_address=myapi.com:8080).

The default data format used by the gateway is JSON, where the message schema is similar to the folowwing example:

 {"client": "my-device",
   "clientId": "local-id-generated-on-client",
   "timestamp": 1445356703704,
   "latitude": 20.0,
   "longitude": 30.0,
   "enriched": {
     "foo": "bar"
   }
 }

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