Minmea is a minimalistic GPS parser library written in pure C intended for resource-constrained platforms, especially microcontrollers and other embedded systems.
- Written in ISO C99.
- No dynamic memory allocation.
- No floating point usage in the core library.
- Supports both fixed and floating point values.
- One source file and one header - can't get any simpler.
- Easily extendable to support new sentences.
- Complete with a test suite and static analysis.
$GPRMC
$GPGGA
Adding support for more sentences is trivial; see minmea.c
source.
Internally, minmea stores fractional numbers as pairs of two integers: (value, scale)
.
For example, a value of "-123.456"
would be parsed as (-123456, 1000)
. As this
format is quite unwieldy, minmea provides the following convenience macros for converting
to either fixed-point or floating-point format:
minmea_rescale(-123456, 1000, 10) => -1235
minmea_float(-123456, 1000) => -123.456
NMEA uses the clunky DDMM.MMMM
format which, honestly, is not good in the internet era.
Internally, minmea stores it as a fractional number (see above); for practical uses,
the value should be probably converted to the DD.DDDDD floating point format using the
following macro:
minmea_coord(-375165, 100) => -37.860832
The library doesn't perform this conversion automatically for the following reasons:
- The conversion is not reversible.
- It requires floating point hardware.
- The user might want to perform this conversion later on or retain the original values.
char line[MINMEA_MAX_LENGTH];
while (fgets(line, sizeof(line), stdin) != NULL) {
printf("%s", line);
switch (minmea_type(line)) {
case MINMEA_GPRMC: {
struct minmea_gprmc frame;
if (minmea_parse_gprmc(&frame, line)) {
printf("+++ raw coordinates and speed: (%d/%d,%d/%d) %d/%d\n",
frame.latitude, frame.latitude_scale,
frame.longitude, frame.longitude_scale,
frame.speed, frame.speed_scale);
printf("+++ fixed-point coordinates and speed scaled to three decimal places: (%d,%d) %d\n",
minmea_rescale(frame.latitude, frame.latitude_scale, 1000),
minmea_rescale(frame.longitude, frame.longitude_scale, 1000),
minmea_rescale(frame.speed, frame.speed_scale, 1000));
printf("+++ floating point degree coordinates and speed: (%f,%f) %f\n",
minmea_coord(frame.latitude, frame.latitude_scale),
minmea_coord(frame.longitude, frame.longitude_scale),
minmea_float(frame.speed, frame.speed_scale));
}
} break;
case MINMEA_GPGGA: {
struct minmea_gpgga frame;
if (minmea_parse_gpgga(&frame, line)) {
printf("$GPGGA: fix quality: %d\n", frame.fix_quality);
}
} break;
default: {
} break;
}
}
Simply add minmea.[ch]
to your project, #include "minmea.h"
and you're
good to go.
Building and running the tests requires the following:
- Check Framework (http://check.sourceforge.net/).
- Clang Static Analyzer (http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/).
If you have both in your $PATH
, running the tests should be as simple as
typing make
.
There are plenty. Report them on GitHub, or - even better - open a pull request. Please write unit tests for any new functions you add - it's fun!
Minmea is open source software; see COPYING
for amusement. Email me if the
license bothers you and I'll happily re-license under anything else under the sun.
Minmea was written by Kosma Moczek [email protected] at Cloud Your Car.