Codec: Difference between revisions
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== <big>Codec 8 Extended</big> == | == '''<big>Codec 8 Extended</big>''' == | ||
Revision as of 09:47, 2 November 2018
Introduction
A codec is a device or computer program for encoding or decoding a digital data stream or signal. Codec is a portmanteau of coder-decoder. A codec encodes a data stream or a signal for transmission and storage, possibly in encrypted form, and the decoder function reverses the encoding for playback or editing.
Codec ID table
Codec 8 | Codec 8 extended | Codec 12 | Codec 13 | Codec 16 |
---|---|---|---|---|
0x08 | 0x8E | 0x0C | 0x0D | 0x10 |
Codec 8
- AVL data packet
Because the smallest information amount that can be written is one bit, there can be some bits left unused when result is byte array. Any unused bits should be left blank.
Below table represents AVL data packet structure.
4 zeros | Data field length | Codec ID | Number of Data 1 | AVL Data | Number of Data 2 | CRC-16 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 bytes | 4 bytes | 1 byte | 1 byte | 30-147 bytes | 1 byte | 4 bytes |
Number of data – number of encoded data (number of records). Codec ID is constant 08.
Data field length is the length of bytes [codec id, number of data 2]. Number of data 1 should always be equal to number of data 2 byte. CRC-16 is 4 bytes, but first two are zeroes and last two are CRC-16 calculated for [codec id, number of data 2] Minimum AVL packet size is 45 bytes (all IO elements disabled). Maximum AVL packet size for one record is 783 bytes.
- AVL data
Timestamp | Priority | GPS Element | IO element |
---|---|---|---|
8 bytes | 1 byte | 15 bytes | 6-123 |
Timestamp – difference, in milliseconds, between the current time and midnight, January 1, 1970 UTC
- Priority
0 | Low |
1 | High |
2 | Panic |
- GPS Element
Longtitude | Latitude | Alitude | Angle | Stellites | Speed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 bytes | 4 bytes | 2 bytes | 2 bytes | 1 bytes | 2 bytes |
X Longitude
Y Latitude1
Altitude In meters above sea level1
Angle In degrees, 0 is north, increasing clock-wise 1
Satellites Number of visible satellites1
Speed Speed in km/h. 0x0000 if GPS data is invalid1
Longitude and latitude are integer values built from degrees, minutes, seconds and milliseconds by formula
d - Degrees
m - Minutes
s - Seconds
ms - Milliseconds
p - Precision (10000000)
If longitude is in west or latitude in south, multiply result by –1. To determine if the coordinate is negative, convert it to binary format and check the very first bit. If it is 0, coordinate is positive, if it is 1, coordinate is negative.
Example:
Received value: 20 9c ca 80 Converted to BIN: 00100000 10011100 11001010 10000000 first bit is 0, which means coordinate is positive Convered to DEC: 547146368 For more information see two‘s compliment arithmetics.
- IO Element
Event IO ID | 1 byte |
N of Total IO | 1 byte |
N1 of One Byte IO | 1 byte |
1’st IO ID | 1 byte |
1’st IO Value | 1 byte |
... | |
N1’th IO ID | 1 byte |
N1’th IO Value | 1 byte |
N2 of Two Bytes | 1 byte |
1’st IO ID | 1 byte |
1’st IO Value | 2 bytes |
... | |
N2’th IO ID | 1 byte |
N2’th IO Value | 2 bytes |
N4 of Four Bytes | 1 byte |
1’st IO ID | 1 byte |
1’st IO Value | 4 byte |
... | |
N4’th IO ID | 1 byte |
N4’th IO Value | 4 bytes |
N8 of Eight Bytes | 1 byte |
1’st IO ID | 1 byte |
1’st IO Value | 8 bytes |
... | |
N8’th IO ID | 1 byte |
N8’th IO Value | 8 bytes |
Event IO ID – if data is acquired on event – this field defines which IO property has changed and generated an event. If data cause is not event – the value is 0.
N total number of properties coming with record (N=N1+N2+N4+N8)
N1 number of properties, which length is 1 byte
N2 number of properties, which length is 2 bytes
N4 number of properties, which length is 4 bytes
N8 number of properties, which length is 8 bytes
Example
Received data:
00000000 4 zeroes, 4 bytes
0000008c data length, 4 bytes
08 – Codec ID
0- Number of Data (1 record)
1’st record data
0000013feb55ff74 – Timestamp in milliseconds (1374042849140)
GMT: Wed, 17 Jul 2013 06:34:09 GMT
00 – Priority
GPS Element
0f0ea850 – Longitude 252618832 = 25,2618832º N
209a6900 – Latitude 546990336 = 54,6990336 º E
0094 – Altitude 148 meters
0 – Angle 214º
0 – 12 Visible sattelites
0 – 0 km/h speed
IO Element
00 – IO element ID of Event generated (in this case when 00 – data generated not on event)
1e – 30 IO elements in record (total)
09 – 9 IO elements, which length is 1 Byte
0 – IO element ID = 01
0 – IO element’s value = 0
02 – IO element ID = 02
0 – IO element’s value = 0
03 – IO element ID = 03
0 – IO element’s value = 0
4 – IO element ID = 04
0 – IO element’s value = 0
16 – IO element ID = 22 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value = 1
47 – IO element ID = 71 (dec)
03 – IO element’s value = 3
F0 – IO element ID = 240 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value = 0
15 – IO element ID = 21 (dec)
04 – IO element’s value = 0
C8 – IO element ID = 200 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value = 0
0C – 12 IO elements, which value length is 2 Bytes
09 – IO element ID = 9 (dec)
0073 – IO element’s value
0a – IO element ID = 10 (dec)
0046 – IO element’s value
0b – IO element ID = 11 (dec)
0050 – IO element’s value
13 – IO element ID = 19 (dec)
0046 – IO element’s value
43 – IO element ID = 67 (dec)
06d7 – IO element’s value
1 – IO element ID = 68 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value
B5 – IO element ID = 181 (dec)
000b – IO element’s value
B6 – IO element ID = 182 (dec)
0007 – IO element’s value
42 – IO element ID = 66 (dec)
2e9f – IO element’s value
2 – IO element ID = 24 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value
cd – IO element ID = 205 (dec)
3 – IO element’s value
CE – IO element ID = 206 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value
07 – 7 IO elements, which value length is 4 Bytes
C7 – IO element ID = 199 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value
f1 – IO element ID = 241 (dec)
0000601a – IO element’s value
46 – IO element ID = 70 (dec)
00000134 – IO element’s value
48 – IO element ID = 72 (dec)
00000bb8 – IO element’s value
4 – IO element ID = 73 (dec)
00000bb8 – IO element’s value
4a – IO element ID = 74 (dec)
00000bb8 – IO element’s value
4c – IO element ID = 76 (dec)
1 – IO element’s value
02 – 2 IO elements, which value length is 8 Bytes
4e – IO element ID = 78 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value
cf – IO element ID = 207 (dec)
0 – IO element’s value
0 – Number of Data (1 record)
00003fca - CRC-16, 4 Bytes (first 2 are always zeros)
- SENDING DATA OVER TCP/IP
First when module connects to server, module sends its IMEI. First comes short identifying number of bytes written and then goes IMEI as text (bytes).
For example IMEI 356307042441013 would be sent as 000f333536333037303432343431303133
First two bytes denote IMEI length. In this case 000F means, that imei is 15 bytes long.
After receiving IMEI, server should determine if it would accept data from this module. If yes server will reply to module 01 if not 00. Note that confirmation should be sent as binary packet. I.e. 1 byte 0x01 or 0x00.
Then module starts to send first AVL data packet. After server receives packet and parses it, server must report to module number of data received as integer (four bytes).
If sent data number and reported by server doesn’t match module resends sent data.
Example:
Module connects to server and sends IMEI:
000f333536333037303432343431303133
Server accepts the module:
01
Module sends data packet:
AVL data packet header | AVL data array | CRC |
---|---|---|
Four zero bytes,
‘AVL data array’ length – 254 |
CodecId – 08,
NumberOfData – 2. (Encoded using continuous bit stream. Last byte padded to align to byte boundary) |
CRC of ‘AVL data array’ |
00000000000000FE | 0802...(data elements)...02 | 00008612 |
Server acknowledges data reception (2 data elements): 00000002
- SENDING DATA OVER UDP/IP
- UDP channel protocol
UDP channel is a transport layer protocol above UDP/IP to add reliability to plain UDP/IP using acknowledgment packets. The packet structure is as follows:
UDP datagram | |||
---|---|---|---|
UDP channel packet x N | Example | 2 bytes | Packet length (excluding this field) in big ending byte order |
Packet Id | 2 bytes | Packet id unique for this channel | |
Packet Type | 1 byte | Type of this packet | |
Packet payload | m bytes | Data payload |
Packet Type | |
---|---|
1 | Data packet requiring acknowledgment |
Acknowledgment packet should have the same packet id as acknowledged data packet and empty data payload. Acknowledgement should be sent in binary format
Acknowledgment packet | ||
---|---|---|
Packet length | 2 bytes | 0x0003 |
Packet id | 2 bytes | same as in acknowledged packet |
Packet type | 1 byte | 0x02 |
- Sending AVL data using UDP channel
AVL data are sent encapsulated in UDP channel packets (Data payload field).
AVL data encapsulated in UDP channel packet | ||
---|---|---|
AVL packet id (1 byte) | Module IMEI | AVL data array |
AVL packet id (1 byte) – id identifying this AVL packet Module IMEI – IMEI of a sending module encoded the same as with TCP AVL data array – array of encoded AVL data
Server response to AVL data packet | ||
---|---|---|
AVL packet id (1 byte) | Number of accepted AVL elements (1 byte) |
AVL packet id (1 byte) – id of received AVL data packet
AVL packet id (1 byte) – id of received AVL data packet
Number of AVL data elements accepted (1 byte) – number of AVL data array entries from the beginning of array, which were accepted by the server.
Scenario:
Module sends UDP channel packet with encapsulated AVL data packet (Packet type=1 or 0). If packet type is 0, server should respond with valid UDP channel acknowledgment packet. Since server should respond to the AVL data packet, UDP channel acknowledgment is not necessary in this scenario, so Packet type=1 is recommended.
Server sends UDP channel packet with encapsulated response (Packet type=1 – this packet should not require acknowledgment)
Module validates AVL packet id and Number of accepted AVL elements. If server response with valid AVL packet id is not received within configured timeout, module can retry sending.
Example:
Module sends the data:
UDP channel header | AVL packet header | AVL data array |
---|---|---|
Len – 253,
Id – 0xCAFE, Packet type – 01 (without ACK) |
AVL packet id – 0xDD,
IMEI – 1234567890123456 |
CodecId – 08,
NumberOfData – 2. (Encoded using continuous bit stream) |
00FDCAFE01 | DD000F3133343536373839303132333435 | 0802…(data elements)…02 |
Server must respond with acknowledgment:
UDP channel header | AVL packet acknowledgment |
---|---|
Len – 5,
Id – 0xABCD, Packet type – 01 (without ACK) |
AVL packet id – 0xDD,
NumberOfAcceptedData – 2 |
0005ABCD01 | DD02 |
Codec 8 Extended
- Protocols overview
Difference between codec8 and codec8 extended
Codec 8 | Codec 8 Extended | |
---|---|---|
Codec ID | 0x08 | 0x8E |
AVL Data IO element length | 1 Byte | 2 Bytes |
AVL Data IO element total IO count length | 1 Byte | 2 Bytes |
AVL Data IO element IO count length | 1 Byte | 2 Bytes |
AVL Data IO element AVL ID length | 1 Byte | 2 Bytes |
Variable size IO elements | Does not include | include Includes variable size elements |
Table 2. Codec 8 and 8 Extended differences
Main differences between are shown in above table. AVL data element sizes in codec 8 extended protocol was increased to 2 byte length and new variable type added. For more detailed description look in codec 8 and codec 8 extended chapters.
- Codec 8 extended protocol sending over TCP
AVL data packet
Below table represents AVL data packet structure.
4 zeros | Data field length | Codec ID | Number of
Data 1 |
AVL Data | Number of
Data 2 |
CRC-16 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 Bytes | 4 Bytes | 1 Byte | 1 Byte | 38-768
Bytes |
1 Byte | 4 Bytes |
Table 3. AVL data packet structure
Number of data – number of encoded data (number of records). Codec ID is constant 0x8E.
Data field length is the length of bytes [codec id, number of data 2]. Number of data 1 should always be equal to number of data 2 byte.
CRC-16 is 4 bytes, but first two are zeroes and last two are CRC-16 calculated for [codec id, number of data 2]
Minimum AVL packet size is 53 bytes (all IO elements disabled).
- AVL Data
Timestamp | Timestamp Priority | GPS Element | IO Element |
---|---|---|---|
8 Bytes | 1 Byte | 15 Bytes | 14 - 744 |
Table 4. AVL data structure
- Priority
0 | Low |
1 | High |
2 | Panic |
Table 5. Priority element values
- GPS Element
Longitude | Latitude | Altitude | Angle | Satellites | Speed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 Bytes | 4 Bytes | 2 Bytes | 2 Bytes | 1 Byte | 2 Bytes |
Table 6. GPS element structure
- IO Element
Event IO ID | 2 bytes |
N of Total IO | 2 bytes |
N1 of One Byte IO | 2 bytes |
1'st IO ID | 2 bytes |
1'st IO Value | 1 bytes |
N1'th IO ID | 2 bytes |
N1'st IO Value | 1 bytes |
N2 of Two Byte IO | 2 bytes |
1'st IO ID | 2 bytes |
1'st IO Value | 2 bytes |
N2'th IO ID | 2 bytes |
N2'st IO Value | 2 bytes |
N4 of Four Byte IO | 2 bytes |
1'st IO ID | 2 bytes |
1'st IO Value | 4 bytes |
N4'th IO ID | 2 bytes |
N4'st IO Value | 4 bytes |
N2 of Eight Byte IO | 2 bytes |
1'st IO ID | 2 bytes |
1'st IO Value | 8 bytes |
N8'th IO ID | 2 bytes |
N8'st IO Value | 8 bytes |
NX of X Byte IO | 2 bytes |
1'st IO ID | 2 bytes |
1'st IO Length | 2 bytes |
1'st IO Value | defined by length |
NX'st IO ID | 2 bytes |
NX'st IO Length | 2 bytes |
NX'st IO Value | defined by length |
Table 7. IO element structure
N - total number of properties coming with record (N=N1+N2+N4+N8+NX)
N1 - number of properties, which length is 1 byte
N2 - number of properties, which length is 2 bytes
N4 - number of properties, which length is 4 bytes
N8 - number of properties, which length is 8 bytes
NX - number of properties, which length is defined by length element
- Communication with server
Communication with server is the same as with codec 8 protocol, except in codec8 extended protocol codec id is 0x8E.
Example:
Module connects to server and sends IMEI:
000f333536333037303432343431303133
Server accepts the module:
01
Module sends data packet
AVL data packet header | AVL data array | CRC |
---|---|---|
Four zero bytes,
‘AVL data array’ length – 254 |
Codec Id – 8E, NumberOfData – 02.
(Encoded using continuous bit stream. Last byte padded to align to byte boundary) |
CRC of ‘AVL data array’ |
00000000000000FE | 8E02...(data elements)...02 | 00008612 |
Table 8. IO element structure
Server acknowledges data reception (2 data elements): 00000002
- Example
Received data:
00000000 4 zeros, 4 bytes
0000005F data length, 4 bytes
8E – Codec ID
01- Number of Data (1 record)
1’st record data
0000015FBA40B620– Timestamp in milliseconds (1510658324000)
GMT: Tuesday, November 14, 2017 11:18:44 AM
00 – Priority
GPS Element
0F0DCDE4 – Longitude 252562916 = 25, 2562916º N
20959D30 – Latitude 546676016 = 54,6676016 º E
008A – Altitude 138 meters
0000 – Angle 0º
06 – 6 Visible sattelites
0000 – 0 km/h speed
IO Element
0000 – IO element ID of Event generated (in this case when 0000 – data generated not on event)
0006 – 6 IO elements in record (total)
0001 – 1 IO elements, which length is 1 Byte
00EF – IO element ID = 239 (dec)
00 – IO element’s value
0001 – 1 IO elements, which length is 2 Byte
0011 – IO element ID = 17 (dec )
001E – IO element’s value
0001 – 1 IO elements, which length is 4 Byte
0010 – IO element ID = 16 (dec )
0000CBDF – IO element’s value
0002 – 2 IO elements, which length is 2 Byte
000B – IO element ID = 11 (dec )
000000003544C875 – IO element’s value
000E – IO element ID = 14 (dec )
0000000029BFE4D1 – IO element’s value
01 – Number of Data (1 record)
0000D153 – CRC-16, 4 Bytes (first 2 are always zeros
Codec 8 extended protocol sending over UDP
- AVL data packet
AVL data packet is the same as with codec 8, except codec ID is changed to 0x8E.
Example:
Module sends the data:
UDP channel header | AVL packet header | AVL data array |
---|---|---|
Len – 253,
Id – 0xCAFE, Packet type – 01 |
AVL packet id – 0xDD,
IMEI – 1234567890123456 |
Codec Id – 8E, NumberOfData – 02.
(Encoded using continuous bit stream |
00FDCAFE01 | DD000F3133343536373839303132333435 | 8E02…(data elements)…02 |
Table 9. Example packet send to server
Server must respond with acknowledgment:
UDP channel header | AVL packet acknowledgment |
---|---|
Len – 5,
Id – 0xCAFE, Packet type – 01 |
AVL packet id -0xDD
Number of Accepted Data -2 |
0005CAFE01 | DD02 |
Table 10. Example packet server response
Example
Server received data:
Data length: 00a1 or 161 Bytes (not counting the first 2 data length bytes)
Packet identification: 0xCAFE 2 bytes
Packet type: 01
Packet id: 1b
Imei length: 000f
Actual imei: 333536333037303432343431303133
Codec id: 8E
Number of data: 01
Timestamp: 0000013febdd19c8
Priority: 00
GPS data: 0f0e9ff0209a718000690000120000
Codec 12
- About Codec12
Codec12 is original Teltonika protocol for device-server communication over GPRS messages.
Codec12 GPRS commands can be used for sending configuration, debug, digital outputs control commands or other (special purpose command on special firmware versions). This protocol is also necessary for using FMB63/FM63/FM5300/FM5500/FM4200 features like: Garmin, LCD communication, COM TCP Link Mode.
Note: GPRS commands are supported only through TCP connection
- FM firmware requirements
Supported GPRS commands on each device depend on firmware version. For available GPRS commands on each device, please refer to Table1 FM firmware requirement “SMS over GPRS” means that all standard SMS commands text can be sent to device via GPRS in Codec12 format.
Device | SMS over GPRS | SMS over GPRS via UDP | Special Codec12 GPRS commands |
---|---|---|---|
FM11YX | Available since base firmware 01.11.XX | Since base firmware
1.26.00 |
Available in FM1100 and FM1110 special firmware version 12.XX.XX* |
FM12YX | Available since base firmware 01.03.XX | - | Available in FM12YX special firmware 09.XX.XX* |
FM10YX | Available since base firmware 00.03.XX | - | Available since base firmware 00.06.XX and later versions** |
FM3400 | Available since base firmware 01.01.XX | - | - |
FM36YX | Available in base firmware | Since base firmware 01.06.01 | - |
FM5300 | Available in all firmware versions | - | Available in all firmware versions** |
FM5500 | Available in all firmware versions | - | Available in all firmware versions** |
FM2200 | Not available | - | Special firmware version 07.XX.XX* |
FM4200 | Not available | - | Special firmware version 42.XX.XX* |
FM63YX | Available in all firmware versions | Since base firmware 00.02.19 | Available in all firmware versions** |
FMB9YX | Available in base firmware | Available in base firmware | - |
FMB0YX | Available in base firmware | Available in base firmware | - |
FMB1YX | Available in base firmware | Available in base firmware | - |
FMB6YX | Available in all firmware versions | Since base firmware 00.02.19 | Available in all firmware versions** |
FMA1YX | Available in base firmware | Since base firmware 1.26.00 | Available in special firmware version 12.XX.XX* |
FMA2YX | Available in base firmware | Available in base firmware | - |
Table 1. FM firmware requirement
'*' - supported special commands are listed on special firmware description. Please contact Your Teltonika sales manager for more details;
'**' - supported special commands are listed on device user manual, chapter “GPRS Commands”
- GPRS command session
Following figure shows how GRPS command session is started over TCP.
First FM opens GPRS session and sends AVL data to server (refer FM protocols). Once all records are sent and correct sent data array acknowledgment is received by FM then GPRS commands in Hex can be sent to FM.
The ACK (acknowledge of IMEI from server) is a one byte constant 0x01. The acknowledgement of each data array send from FMXXXX is four bytes integer – number of records received.
Note, that GPRS session should remain active between FM and server, while GPRS commands are sent. For this reason active datalink timeout (global parameters in FMXXXX configuration) is recommended to be set to 259200 (maximum value).
- General Codec12 message structure
The following diagram shows basic structure of Codec 12 messages.
Command message structure
0x00000000 | Data size | 0x0C | Command quantity | 0x05 | Command size | Command | Command quantity | CRC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 bytes | 4 bytes | 1 byte | 1 byte | 1 byte | 4 bytes | X bytes | 1 byte | 4 bytes |
Response message structure
0x00000000 | Data size | 0x0C | Command quantity | 0x06 | Command size | Command | Command quantity | CRC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 bytes | 4 bytes | 1 byte | 1 byte | 1 byte | 4 bytes | X bytes | 1 byte | 4 bytes |
Structure explanation:
The message starts with preamble field - four zero bytes. Then goes four bytes data size field (size is calculated from 0x0C field to the second command or response quantity field). Then follows one byte Codec ID field (in Codec 12 it is always 0x0C). Then goes command or response quantity field (it is ignored when parsing the message). After that goes one byte message type field. It can be 0x05 to denote command or 0x06 to denote response. Then follows four bytes command or response size field. After it follows the command or response field itself. After that goes the second command or response quantity field. At the end there’s four bytes CRC field.
Note that difference between commands and responses is message type field: 0x05 means command and 0x06 means response.
The algorithm to calculate CRC is CRC-16 (also known as CRC-16-IBM). All the fields from codec ID to second command/response quantity field are used to calculate CRC. The algorithm of how to calculate
CRC is shown in Figure 3 CRC calculation algorithm.
Figure 3 CRC calculation algorithm
- Command coding table
Command has to be convert from ASCII characters (char) to hexadecimal (Hex)
Table 2 ASCII conversion table
- Command parsing example
Hexadecimal stream of command and answer in this example are given in hexadecimal form. The different fields of message are highlighted in gray and yellow for better readability and command is converted in ASCII for better understanding.
Server command
Hexadecimal stream:
Parsed:
Preamble: 0x00000000
Packet Length: 0x00000018
Codec: 0x0C
Quantity of commands: 0x01
Command type: 0x05
Command size: 0x00000010
Command in ASCII after conversion: #GET DATAORDER<CR><LF>
Quantity of commands: 0x01
CRC: 0x00004990
Device answer
Hexadecimal stream:
Parsed:
Preamble: 0x00000000
Packet Length: 0x00000016
Codec: 0x0C
Quantity of commands: 0x01
Command type: 0x06
Command size: 0x0000000E
Command response is in ASCII after conversion: #DATAORDER=1<CR><LF>
Quantity of commands: 0x01
CRC: 0x00000095
- Codec12 GPRS commands examples
The example commands given in hexadecimal form separated by dollar signs are suitable to be sent from TCP server during data exchange session between FMXXXX device and server (for more details see Figure 1 Command session) The command can be sent from a terminal program such as Hercules (in TCP server mode). Simply write command as explained below into Hercules Send field and click Send button. The TCP server must be listening on specified port (see field Port and button Listen in Figure 4).
Figure 4 Hercules terminal GUI
- SMS over GPRS in Codec12 examples
In case of sending SMS commands over GPRS, do not use SMS logins set during configuration or do not leave empty spaces before command. Devices and firmware versions that support SMS over GPRS are listed in Table1.
Example 1: getinfo
Sending “getinfo” SMS command via GPRS Codec12:
Server requests:
Hexadecimal stream:
00000000000000110C010500000009676574696E666F0D0A010000DA7E
Parsed:
Zero: 0x00000000
Packet Length: 0x00000011
Codec: 0x0C
Quantity of commands: 0x01
Command type: 0x05
Command size: 0x00000009
Command: 0x676574696e666f (HEX of getinfo)
Command end symbol: 0x0D0A
Quantity of commands: 01
CRC: 0x0000DA7E
Device response:
Hexadecimal stream:
00000000000000820C01060000007A494E493A323031312F312F3120303A30205254433A323031312F312F3120373A3333205253543A33204552523A302053523A3134372042523A302043463A312046473A3020464C3A302055543A3020534D533A30204E4F4750533A303A3134204750533A32205341543A302052533A36204D443A302052463A30010000B8AA
Parsed:
Zero: 0x00000000
Packet Length: 0x00000082
Codec: 0C
Quantity of commands: 01
Command type: 06
Command size: 0x0000007A
Command response in ASCII after conversion: INI:2011/1/1 0:0 RTC:2011/1/1 7:33 RST:3 ERR:0 SR:147 BR:0 CF:1 FG:0 FL:0 UT:0 SMS:0 NOGPS:0:14 GPS:2 SAT:0
RS:6 MD:0 RF:0 (without <CR><LF>)
Quantity of commands: 01
CRC: 0x0000B8AA
- Special Codec12 commands:
Example 1: #GET VERSION
Server command - #GET VERSION<CR><LF>
Device response - #VERSION=XXXXXXXX<CR><LF>
XXXXXXXX – Device Firmware Version (up to 8 characters)
$00$00$00$00$00$00$00$16$0C$01$05$00$00$00$0E$23$47$45$54$20$56$45$52$53$49$4f$4e$0D$0A$01$00$00$D0$C8
Example 2: #GET NETWORK
Server command - #GET NETWORK<CR><LF>
Device response - #NETWORK=XXXXXX<CR><LF>
XXXXXX – GSM Operator Network [0 - 999999]
$00$00$00$00$00$00$00$16$0C$01$05$00$00$00$0E$23$47$45$54$20$4e$45$54$57$4f$52$4b$0D$0A$01$00$00$ED$61
Codec 13 Nebaigta
- About Codec13
Codec13 is original Teltonika protocol for device-server communication over GPRS messages. This protocol is necessary for using following FM features: COM TCP Link Mode (binary/ASCII/binary buffered/ASCII buffered) if message timestamp parameter is enabled in device configuration. Codec13 messages are one way only (Codec 13 is used for FM->Server sending).
- FM firmware requirements
Codec13 availability depends on device and firmware version.
Codec 16 Nebaigta
- Description and example
Records to server will be sended as shown in table bellow. The main difference between CODEC8 and CODEC16 is CODEC ID which will be 0x10 instead of 0x08, AVL ID‘s in AVL data is sent in 2 bytes, instead of 1 byte.
Also new parameter – Generation type is adeed.
By receiving 0x10 codec ID server must know that AVL data record will be parsed different.
Codec16 is supported from firmware – 00.03.xx and newer. ll AVL ID‘s which are higher then 255 will can be used only in CODEC16 protocol.