This snap provides the dump1090 ADS-B, Mode S, and Mode 3A/3C demodulator and
decoder to receive and decode aircraft transponder messages received via an SDR
(software defined radio) USB dongle.
It uses the dump1090-fa fork from FlightAware.
It also includes the tar1090 web interface to display received aircrafts information and positions on map.
The web interface is available by default on port 8080 (see below for config
options).
Furthermore, information for received ADB-S messages can be displayed on the
console with the adb-s.view too.
The snap can be installed from the store via:
sudo snap install ads-bServices provided by the snap are disabled by default. After connecting interfaces and the the SDR USB device, they can be started with
sudo snap start --enable ads-bIt's possible to feed collected data to ADS-B Exchange.
To enable sharing run
sudo snap start --enable ads-b.adsbxfeedOptionally, MLAT data can be reported too. This requires setting the receiver altitude and a MLAT username too.
sudo snap set ads-b mlat.user=<USERNAME> coord.alt=<ALTITUDE>
sudo snap start --enable ads-b.adsbxfeed-mlatBy default, this will show the username with the GPS location on the ADS-B Exchange map. To disable this, private mode can be set:
sudo snap set ads-b mlat.privacy=trueIt's possible to feed collected data to Flightradar24. This requires specifying the sharing key (which can be obtained from the account page).
To enable sharing run
sudo snap set ads-b fr24.key=<KEY>
sudo snap start --enable ads-b.fr24feedThe snap has a few configuration options:
coord.alt,coord.lat,coord.lon: GPS coordinates of the receiver (altitude must be in meters)fr24.key: account key for the Flightradar24 feedermlat.privacy: whether to set private mode for MLAT reporting (true/false)mlat.user: user for MLAT reporting with ADS-B Exchangeweb.port: TCP port for the web interface (default:8080)
Services are automatically restarted on configuration changes.