The TomTom Multi-Sport and Runner are nice GPS watches and quite affordable, but they suffer from subpar official software. There is no official desktop app for interfacing wirelessly with the TomTom GPS watches, (only for Android and iPhone).
Now you can use ttblue
to download your activites wirelessly and
keep the QuickFix GPS ephemeris data up-to-date.
You need to be running a recent Linux kernel, with a Bluetooth 4.0 adapter
supporting Bluetooth Low Energy.
Many newer PCs include built in Bluetooth 4.0 adapters; if you need one, I've had
good success with this $6
dongle,
which works out-of-the-box with the btusb
driver from recent Linux
kernels.
The libbluetooth
(BlueZ),
libcurl
, and
popt
libraries are required.
On Debian/Ubuntu-based systems, these can be installed with:
$ sudo apt-get install libbluetooth-dev libcurl4-gnutls-dev libpopt-dev
Compilation with gcc
should be straightforward:
$ make
$ make setcap # requires sudo/root access
To fix the issue with very slow file transfers, the
most secure solution I've been able to come up with so far is to give
the binary elevated capabilities as discussed
on StackExchange:
make setcap
will do this automatically or you can do it manually as
follows:
sudo setcap 'cap_net_raw,cap_net_admin+eip' ttblue
(Note that this is more secure than giving the binary setuid root permissions, because it only allows root-like privileges for these specific capabilities.)
For initial pairing, you'll need to go to the Phone|Pair New menu on the watch.
For subsequent reconnection, ensure that Phone|Sync is enabled, and you may need to "wake up" the device's BLE radio by pressing a few buttons.
Try the following command line:
./ttblue -a [-d <bluetooth-address>] [-c <pairing-code>] [-s <activity-store>]
-
bluetooth-address
is the MAC address of your TomTom GPS watch, for exampleE4:04:39:17:62:B1
. If not specified,ttblue
will attempt to scan for BLE devices, and try to connect to the first one matching TomTom's vendor ID (E4:04:39
). -
The
pairing-code
is a previously-used pairing code (can be from one of the "official" TomTom mobile apps). If left blank,ttblue
will try to create a new pairing. -
The
-a
/--auto
option tellsttblue
to download all activities and update QuickFixGPS. -
The
-s
/--activity-store
option specifies a location for.ttbin
activity files to be output (current directory is the default).
As invoked above, ttblue
will download your activity files (saved as
0091000n_YYYYMMDD_HHmmSS.ttbin
), and attempt to download the
QuickGPSFix update and send it to the watch. (You can then use
ttbincnv
to convert the TTBIN files to GPX/TCX format.)
$ ./ttblue -a -d E4:04:39:17:62:B1 -c 123456
Opening L2CAP LE connection on ATT channel:
src: 00:00:00:00:00:00
dest: E4:04:39:17:62:B1
Connected to HC4354G00150.
maker : TomTom Fitness
serial : HC4354G00150
user_name : Lenski
model_name: Runner
model_num : 1001
firmware : 1.8.42
rssi : -90 dB
Setting PHONE menu to 'dlenski-ultra-0'.
Found 1 activity files on watch.
Reading activity file 00910000 ...
11: read 55000 bytes from watch (1807/sec)
Saved 55000 bytes to ./00910000_20150801_123616.ttbin
Deleting activity file 00910000 ...
Updating QuickFixGPS...
Last update was at at Sat Aug 1 04:11:03 2015.
Downloading http://gpsquickfix.services.tomtom.com/fitness/sifgps.f2p3enc.ee?timestamp=1439172006
Sending update to watch (32150 bytes)...
7: wrote 32150 bytes to watch (1891/sec)
There's also a fairly rudimentary "daemon" mode wherein ttblue
just
loops over and over (by default it waits an hour to retry after a
successful connection, but only 10 seconds after a failed one), and a
-p
/--post
option to specify a command to be run on each
successfully downloaded .ttbin
file (see ttbin2strava.sh
)
for an example):
$ ./ttblue -a --daemon -d e4:04:39:17:62:b1 -c 123456 -s ~/ttbin -p ttbin2strava.sh
By default, Linux (as of 3.19.0) specifies a very intermittent connection interval for BLE devices. This makes sense for things like beacons and thermometers, but it is bad for devices that use BLE to transfer large files because the transfer rate is directly limited by the BLE connection interval.
If you run as root
or if you
give the ttblue
binary elevated capabilities, it will attempt to set the minimum connection interval (7.5 ms) and activity file downloads will proceed much faster (about 1800 B/s
vs. 500 B/s for me).
Unfortunately, elevated permissions are required to configure this feature of a BLE connection. For gory details, see this thread on the BlueZ mailing list.
- More command line options?
- Real config file?
- Better daemon mode that actually puts itself in the background and writes output to a log file?
- Integrate with
ttwatch
which already does all these things, but over USB?
See tt_bluetooth.md
for reverse-engineered protocol documentation.
@ryanbinns did a lot of the heavy
lifting by writing his excellent
ttwatch
utility to sync with
TomTom GPS watches over USB, and in the process documenting the
ttbin
binary format of the activity files, as well as many of the
internal data structures of the units.
@Grimler91 for adding support for TomTom GPS watches using the "v2" protocol. (Spark, Runner v2, etc.)
I'd like to license it as GPLv3 or later, but it uses snippets from the BlueZ source which are GPLv2 so... let's call it GPLv2 or later?
By Dan Lenski <[email protected]> © 2015