DMRlink/known_bridges_SAMPLE.py
Cort Buffington 59224df788 MANY CHANGES
Bridging works well. Backup and standard are consolidated to one
application, better documentation, bridging rules file greatly
simplified.
2014-08-31 11:27:00 -05:00

26 lines
919 B
Python

'''
The following is an example for your "known_bridges" file. This is a
simple list (in python syntax) of integer DMR radios IDs of bridges
that we expect to encounter.
You should only add bridges that will be encountered - adding a bunch
of bridges just because will really slow things down, so don't do it.
Please note each line but the last must end in a comma. This is about
the only thing you can mess up... but I manage to bork that one every
3rd time or so I make updates, so watch out.
A bridge that is "encountered" means another bridge that might be in
the same IPSC network we're going to try to bridge for. This is useful
only in the case where we want to provide backup bridging service.
There are cases when you do NOT want to use this feature -- say for
example if one IPSC has two bridges but they're bridging different
talkgroups.
'''
BRIDGES = [
123456,
234567,
345678
]