DMRlink/bridge_rules_SAMPLE.py

51 lines
1.9 KiB
Python
Raw Normal View History

'''
The following is an example for your bridge_rules file. Note, all bridging is ONE-WAY!
Rules for an IPSC network indicate destination IPSC network for the Group ID specified
(allowing transcoding of the Group ID to a different value). Group IDs used to be
hex strings, then a function was added to convert them, now that function has been
moved into the bridge.py (program file) to make this file as simple and easy as
possible
The IPSC name must match an IPSC name from dmrlink.cfg, and any IPSC network defined
as "active" in the dmrlink.cfg *MUST* have an entry here. It may be an empty entry,
but there must be one so that the data structure can be parsed.
2014-09-18 21:08:54 -04:00
The example below cross-patches TS 1/TGID 1 on an IPSC network named "IPSC_FOO" with
TS 2/TGID 2 on an IPSC network named "IPSC_BAR". Note, one entry must be made on EACH
IPSC network (IPSC_FOO and IPSC_BAR in this example) for bridging to occur in both
directions.
THIS EXAMPLE WILL NOT WORK AS IT IS - YOU MUST SPECIFY NAMES AND GROUP IDS!!!
2013-12-15 14:17:14 -05:00
NOTES:
* Only GROUP_VOICE is currently used by the bridge.py appication, the other
types are placeholders for when it does more.
'''
RULES = {
'IPSC_FOO': {
'GROUP_VOICE': [
2014-09-18 21:08:54 -04:00
{'SRC_GROUP': 1, 'SRC_TS': 1, 'DST_NET': 'IPSC_BAR', 'DST_GROUP': 2, 'DST_TS': 2},
# Repeat the above line for as many rules for this IPSC network as you want.
],
'PRIVATE_VOICE': [
],
'GROUP_DATA': [
],
'PRIVATE_DATA': [
]
},
'IPSC_BAR': {
'GROUP_VOICE': [
2014-09-18 21:08:54 -04:00
{'SRC_GROUP': 2, 'SRC_TS': 2, 'DST_NET': 'IPSC_FOO', 'DST_GROUP': 1, 'DST_TS': 1},
# Repeat the above line for as many rules for this IPSC network as you want.
],
'PRIVATE_VOICE': [
],
'GROUP_DATA': [
],
'PRIVATE_DATA': [
]
}
}