.TH dot-obdgpslogger 5 .SH NAME dot-obdgpslogger \- configuration file for obdgpslogger .SH DESCRIPTION .IX Header "DESCRIPTION" Configuration file for obdgpslogger .B Comments Any line whose first non-whitespace character is a # is a comment .B obddevice= Full path to obd device entry [typically /dev/something] .B gpsdevice= Full path to gps device entry [typically /dev/something] .B log_columns= Command-separated list of db_column entries to log. These are probably things you want to draw from "obdgpslogger \-p" .B log_file= Write to this logfile. Can be relative or absolute path .B samplerate= Number of samples to take per second. 0 for "as fast as you can" .B baudrate= Set serial port baudrate to this. \-1 disables attempt to change, or 0 to let the software try to guess. .B baudrate_upgrade= Upgrade the baudrate to this after successful setup. \-1 disables attempt to change, or 0 to let the software try to figure out the best choice. .B optimisations= Set to 1 to enable ELM optimisations .SH FILES TO PARSE .IX Header "FILES TO PARSE" The system loads these files, in order. Each one overwrites any settings from the file before it: .P 1) /etc/obdgpslogger .P 2) $HOME/.obdgpslogger .P 3) /var/run/obdftdipty.device .P 4) getenv("OBD_CONFIGFILE") .SH ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES .IX Header "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" .TP 5 OBD_CONFIGFILE .br Full path to the obd config file you wish to read .TP 5 HOME .br If set, read .obdgpslogger from this dir .TP 5 APPDATA .br If HOME isn't set, will attempt to read .obdgpslogger from here instead .SH SEE ALSO .IX Header "SEE ALSO" .BR "obdgpslogger(1), obdgui(1)" .SH AUTHORS Gary "Chunky Ks" Briggs