# Config file example. # Rename this to "config.yml" before running the software. # Your callsign. Used to log into DX clusters and included in User-Agent when querying HTTP servers. Useful so if your # server goes crazy and causes other people problems, they know who to contact :) If you don't have one, you can leave # this as "N0CALL" and it shouldn't do any harm, as we're not sending anything to the various networks, only receiving. server-owner-callsign: "N0CALL" # Spot providers to use. This is an example set, tailor it to your liking by commenting and uncommenting. # RBN and APRS-IS are supported but have such a high data rate, you probably don't want them enabled. # Each provider needs a class, a name, and an enabled/disabled state. Some require more config such as hostnames/IP # addresses and ports. You can duplicate them if you like, e.g. to support several DX clusters. RBN uses two ports, 7000 # for CW/RTTY and 7001 for FT8, so if you want both, you need two entries, as shown below. # Feel free to write your own provider classes! There are details in the README. spot-providers: - class: "POTA" name: "POTA" enabled: true - class: "SOTA" name: "SOTA" enabled: true - class: "WWFF" name: "WWFF" enabled: true - class: "WWBOTA" name: "WWBOTA" enabled: true - class: "GMA" name: "GMA" enabled: true - class: "HEMA" name: "HEMA" enabled: true - class: "ParksNPeaks" name: "ParksNPeaks" enabled: true - class: "ZLOTA" name: "ZLOTA" enabled: true - class: "WOTA" name: "WOTA" enabled: true - class: "LLOTA" name: "LLOTA" enabled: true - class: "WWTOTA" name: "WWTOTA" enabled: true - class: "APRSIS" name: "APRS-IS" enabled: false - class: "DXCluster" name: "HRD Cluster" enabled: true host: "hrd.wa9pie.net" port: 8000 # Prompt the cluster node gives when asking for a callsign to log in. Varies between cluster node software. login_prompt: "login:" # Callsign Spothole will use to log into this cluster. Ensure the SSID (e.g. -99) is different to any personal # connection you might make to this cluster node. login_callsign: "N0CALL-99" # Whether to allow RBN spots that come via this cluster. If you don't want RBN spots or you are making a separate # connection to RBN directly, leave this as False. If you want RBN spots from this cluster, set this to True. (Make # sure you aren't also separately connecting to RBN directly, otherwise you may get duplicate spots.) Note that not # all clusters sent RBN spots anyway. allow_rbn_spots: false - class: "DXCluster" name: "W3LPL Cluster" enabled: false host: "w3lpl.net" port: 7373 # Prompt the cluster node gives when asking for a callsign to log in. Varies between cluster node software. login_prompt: "Please enter your call:" # Callsign Spothole will use to log into this cluster. Ensure the SSID (e.g. -99) is different to any personal # connection you might make to this cluster node. login_callsign: "N0CALL-99" # Whether to allow RBN spots that come via this cluster. If you don't want RBN spots or you are making a separate # connection to RBN directly, leave this as False. If you want RBN spots from this cluster, set this to True. (Make # sure you aren't also separately connecting to RBN directly, otherwise you may get duplicate spots.) Note that not # all clusters sent RBN spots anyway. allow_rbn_spots: false - class: "RBN" name: "RBN CW/RTTY" enabled: false port: 7000 # This setting doesn't affect the spot provider itself, or anything in the back-end of Spothole, just the web UI. # By default spots from all enabled providers will be shown in the web UI. However, you might want RBN data to be # received by Spothole but not shown on the web UI unless the user explicitly turns it on. For that behaviour, # set enabled to true, but enabled-by-default-in-web-ui to false. enabled-by-default-in-web-ui: false - class: "RBN" name: "RBN FT8" enabled: false port: 7001 enabled-by-default-in-web-ui: false - class: "UKPacketNet" name: "UK Packet Radio Net" enabled: false enabled-by-default-in-web-ui: false - class: "XOTA" name: "39C3 TOTA" enabled: false url: "wss://dev.39c3.totawatch.de/api/spot/live" # Fixed SIG for all spots from a provider & location CSV are currently only a feature for the "XOTA" provider, # the software found at https://github.com/nischu/xOTA/. This is because this is a generic backend for xOTA # programmes and so different URLs provide different programmes. sig: "TOTA" locations-csv: "datafiles/39c3-tota.csv" # Alert providers to use. Same setup as the spot providers list above. alert-providers: - class: "POTA" name: "POTA" enabled: true - class: "SOTA" name: "SOTA" enabled: true - class: "WWFF" name: "WWFF" enabled: true - class: "ParksNPeaks" name: "ParksNPeaks" enabled: true - class: "WOTA" name: "WOTA" enabled: true - class: "BOTA" name: "BOTA" enabled: true - class: "NG3K" name: "NG3K" enabled: true # Port to open the local web server on web-server-port: 8080 # Maximum time to keep spots and alerts in the system before deleting them. By default, one hour for spots and one week # for alerts. max-spot-age-sec: 3600 max-alert-age-sec: 604800 # Login for QRZ.com to look up information. Optional. You will need an "XML Subscriber" (paid) package to retrieve all # the data for a callsign via their system. qrz-username: "" qrz-password: "" # Login for HamQTH to look up information. Optional. hamqth-username: "" hamqth-password: "" # API key for Clublog to look up information. Optional. You sill need to request one via their helpdesk portal if you # want to use callsign lookups from Clublog. clublog-api-key: "" # Allow submitting spots to the Spothole API? allow-spotting: true # Options for the web UI. web-ui-options: spot-count: [10, 25, 50, 100] spot-count-default: 50 max-spot-age: [5, 10, 30, 60] max-spot-age-default: 30 alert-count: [25, 50, 100, 200, 500] alert-count-default: 100