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191 lines
4.3 KiB
191 lines
4.3 KiB
---
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title: Get DMRIDs Via Command Line
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aliases: /posts/2020-02-04-get-dmrids-on-the-command-line
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summary: This is a quick workaround to retrieve a DMRID on console or terminal.
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categories: [amateur-radio]
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tags: [dmr,pistar,script]
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date: 2020-02-04T13:05:25+01:00
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---
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You want to install `w3m`. It is a text browser. Don't forget `rpi-rw` before
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installing anything if you're on Pi-Star.
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~~~console
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$ sudo apt-get -y install w3m
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~~~
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## The script
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The script itself does not verify the given callsign, so whatever you write as
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an argument, it will be passed to the website. The script returns with `0` if
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nothing is found.
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~~~bash
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# file: "~/bin/call"
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#!/bin/bash
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# Get DMR-IDs from CALLSIGN or CALLSIGN from DMR-ID or vice versa
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# Author: Dominic Reich, OE7DRT
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# File: ~/bin/call
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#
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# Last modified: 2020-04-12 13:26:36+0200
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#
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# Inspired from this beautiful article:
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# https://pretzelhands.com/posts/command-line-flags
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#
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# Good DX and vy 73 de OE7DRT
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command -v w3m > /dev/null 2>&1 || { echo >&2 "w3m not found"; exit 1; }
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print_usage () {
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echo >&2 "usage: `basename $0` [dmr_id | callsign]"
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exit 1
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}
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if [ $# -ne 1 ]
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then
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print_usage
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fi
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getID () {
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CALL=`echo $1 | tr a-z A-Z`
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FILE=/tmp/$CALL
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w3m "https://ham-digital.org/dmr-userreg.php?callsign=$CALL" > $FILE
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c=`grep $CALL $FILE | wc -l | xargs`
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while [ $c -gt 0 ]
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do
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OUT=`grep $CALL $FILE | head -n $c | tail -n 1 | awk '{ print $4,$5,$2,$3 }'`
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echo "$OUT"
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((c--))
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done
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rm $FILE
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}
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getCALLSIGN () {
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ID=$1
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FILE=/tmp/$ID
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w3m "https://ham-digital.org/dmr-userreg.php?usrid=$ID" > $FILE
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CALL=`grep $ID $FILE | awk '{ print $4 }'`
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rm $FILE
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if [ -z $CALL ]
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then
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exit 1
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fi
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getID $CALL
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}
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checkID () {
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if [[ ! $1 =~ ^[0-9]{7}$ ]]
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then
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echo >&2 "no valid dmr_id supplied"
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exit 1
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fi
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}
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if [ "$1" -eq "$1" ] 2>/dev/null
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then
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ID="$1"
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checkID $ID
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else
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CALL="$1"
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fi
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if [ ! -z $ID ]
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then
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getCALLSIGN $ID
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exit 0
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elif [ ! -z $CALL ]
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then
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getID $CALL
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exit 0
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else
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print_usage
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fi
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~~~
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{{< alert circle-info >}}
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If someone has two DMRIDS, the most recent registered callsign will appear on
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the top. Feel free to modify the script to your needs if you also want to display
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the date of registration. Or modify the url if you want to only display last
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heard ids.
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{{< /alert >}}
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## Example usage
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Simply get one DMRID (or two, depends on the callsign though):
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~~~console
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$ call OE7DRT
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~~~
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Now let's think a bit more complex. You can use the script in a loop. Let's fetch
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some austrian callsigns only.
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~~~console
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$ for i in 7one 7two 1three; do call oe$i ids >>! ids; done
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~~~
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That would fetch 3 callsigns `OE7ONE`, `OE7TWO` and `OE1ONE` and write them
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all into the file `ids`. So run `cat ids` and display them on screen. Or copy
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them into clipboard (on a mac only) with `pbcopy < ids`.
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~~~console
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OE7ONE Username1 0007001 2018-05-12
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OE7TWO Username2 0007003 2018-12-08
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OE7TWO Username2 0007002 2018-11-09
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OE1ONE Username3 0001001 2020-03-13
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~~~
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*I've been anonymizing the data a bit.*
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## Partially known callsign
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***I anonymized some DMR-IDs on this website.***
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So you know only the three last letters of an austrian callsign and want to
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know quickly what federal state it was? Run this command and you'll get a
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quick answer on the command line:
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~~~console
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$ for i in oe{1..9}drt; do call $i; done
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OE7DRT Dominic 2327180 2019-11-24
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~~~
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If you called your script `call` and if `call` is in your `$PATH`.
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This works also if you missed one letter.
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~~~console
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$ for i in oe7{a..z}rt; do call $i; done
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OE7BRT Rainer 2327XXX 20XX-XX-XX
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OE7DRT Dominic 2327180 2019-11-24
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OE7JRT Josef 2327XXX 20XX-XX-XX
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~~~
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This took ~10 seconds on my computer.
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Or even with more letters, but this will take a while, since this will start
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**676 (26x26) website lookups to ham-digital.org**---maybe they'll block
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your IP address quickly, if you hammer their server with so many request in a
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short period of time.
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~~~console
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$ for i in oe7d{a..z}{a..z}; do call $i; done
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2327XXX OE7D?? Daniel
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2327XXX OE7D?? Hermann
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2327XXX OE7D?? Josef
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2327XXX OE7D?? Dragan
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2327XXX OE7D?? Peter
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2327180 OE7D?? Dominic
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2327XXX OE7D?? Wechselberger
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2327XXX OE7D?? Gernot
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~~~
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And this ran for 3 minutes and 17 seconds on my computer.
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{{< alert circle-info >}}
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The output above was made with an older version of the script. The output now
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contains also the registration date as seen in previous examples.
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{{< /alert >}}
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