There are two types of amateur radio logging programs: general-purpose loggers and contest loggers. A good general purpose logger has lots of features for lots of different activities within the hobby: chasing DX, keeping track of ragchewing buddies, managing incoming and outgoing QSLs, monitoring progress toward various awards, and managing a lifetime worth of amateur radio contacts. Ham Radio Deluxe on Windows, MacLoggerDX and RUMLogNG on Mac, and CQRLog on Linux are excellent examples of general-purpose loggers.
Contest loggers, in contrast, are laser-focused on making rapid-fire competitive radiosport contacts, either in a radio contest or on a DXpedition. A good contest logger maximizes operator efficiency and ergonomics for hams who want to make hundreds of QSOs per hour for hours on end. It will typically display just a minimal logging window for the essential contest exchange, the operator's current score, DX spots for Assisted or Multi-Operator competitors, and a few other tactically important bits of data. N1MM+ on Windows and Skookum Logger on Mac are excellent examples of contest loggers.
TLF is a contest logger for Linux.
- Background
- TLF?
- Getting started
- The TLF interface
- CW operation
- SSB operation
- RTTY operation
- QTC handling
- QTCs on RTTY
- Cabrillo file handling
- Bandmap
- FAQ
The earliest contest loggers were built for DOS-based computers, and one of the best was TR log by Larry "Tree" Tyree, N6TR. Larry's interface is so elegant that most modern contest loggers operate more or less the same way. Indeed, TLF can be considered a descendant of TR log, but rebuilt with modern code architecture. A separate group has made a more or less direct Linux port of TR log that some users may prefer. Fans of Perl might also want to look at YFKtest.
While contest loggers on other platforms have adopted the standard windowed interface modern users expect, Linux contest loggers have all gravitated to console-based designs that operate in a terminal window. There are a couple of reasons for that.
First, Linux users tend to be relatively comfortable using the terminal. Second, if we take a step back and look at the design of a contest logger objectively, a windowed interface is actually a handicap. Ideally, a contester's hands never have to leave the keyboard - and what better way to ensure that than to put the whole logger in a console?
Console-based loggers are also fast, computationally lightweight, and easy to configure for remote operation with limited bandwidth. TLF can run on anything from a high-end desktop with triple monitors to a headless Raspberry Pi Zero.
The chief disadvantage of this design is that there's a steep learning curve
for new users. TLF is a powerful and efficient tool for contest logging, but
you can't just click through the menus and figure things out on your own. You
need to read some documentation. This manual, plus the built-in man page
(accessed in the terminal with man tlf
) is that documentation. Once you've
gotten familiar with TLF's operation, you may begin to wonder why anyone would
design a contest logger any other way.
Why "TLF?" It's an old joke about someone sending bad CW (Morse code) over the radio, as if stomping on the key with their foot. TLF is "try left foot instead."
This manual assumes you've read the main README.md
file and gotten through
basic installation of TLF. Two important concepts from that document are:
- TLF configuration happens entirely in the
logcfg.dat
and rules files, and local copies of those files will override the defaults. - Creating a new directory for each contest, with its own
logcfg.dat
and rules files, will help keep things organized.
Note that the rules file has to be in a subdirectory called rules
in order
for TLF to recognize it. The rules file itself will be named for the contest,
with no extension, e.g. arrldx_usa
is the rules file for a USA-based station
operating in the ARRL DX contest (either CW or SSB). In the image below, the
arrltest.log and tlfmarkers files were created by TLF on its initial launch
from this directory. The former is the working log file, and the latter is for
plotting DX spots on a grayline map displayed in a separate window (optional).
In general, logcfg.dat
is for station-specific settings, while the rules
file is for contest-specific settings. That means once you've gotten TLF set
up to work with your particular setup, you can simply copy the same
logcfg.dat
into a new directory for the next contest, and add a new rules
file. Both files have comments explaining what the settings do, and as always
man tlf
can provide further information.
Also take a look at doc/station-sample.cbr
for Cabrillo export settings and
how to use them. If you don't use a Cabrillo export settings file, TLF will
just prompt you for the information when you use the :write
command, so this
is optional.
The normal way to start TLF is to open a terminal console, navigate to the
directory from which you want to run the contest (where you put your local
logcfg.dat
and rules/contestname
files), and type:
tlf
If you've enabled DX spots, you'll see the output as TLF tries to log into the cluster you've chosen. The first time it's started in a new directory (i.e. with no log file already there), TLF will then ask you some questions before opening the main screen.
As long as the window is set to 80 columns x 25 lines, TLF should launch and look okay in your default terminal window. Here is the main screen on the default terminal (GNOME Terminal) in Ubuntu 20.04:
Note: The terminal emulator programs provided with the various desktop environments, i.e. GNOME Terminal (GNOME), Konsole (KDE), QTerminal (LXQt), Xfce Terminal (Xfce), and so on, provide for configuration through their Graphical User Interface (GUI). Through their GUI configuration dialogues such things as the text font, text size, and foreground and background color palette may be modified. The one setting that's definitely worth playing with is the text size, which in the Ubuntu terminal can be changed from the "hamburger" menu in the top right of the window.
In contrast, the older terminal emulators XTerm and rxvt-unicode are configured through the classic X Window System resource database. The
doc
directory contains a sampleXresources
file to change the colors to those resembling the VGA palette and the text font and its size from the defaults of each emulator. Comments in this file explain how to use it in X and Wayland sessions. These emulators are useful since they do not reserve many of the key combinations available in TLF such as F11 or Ctrl-PgUp/Ctrl-PgDown as most desktop emulators do. As usual, the Arch Linux Wiki provides good information for both XTerm and rxvt-unicode.Console customization is a deep rabbit hole that goes beyond the scope of this manual.
On the top line of the console, you'll see the mode indicator ("Log" in the image). This is based on the TR logging standard that has since been adopted by virtually every other contest logger, which has a "Run" mode and a "Search and Pounce" mode. In "Run" mode (indicated by "Log" in TLF), you stay on one frequency, calling CQ and answering whoever responds. "Search and Pounce" ("Log" changes to "S&P" in the TLF interface) means tuning up and down the band answering the stations who are running. Switch between modes by hitting "+". The mode determines things like what the "Enter" key does.
After the mode is the current CW speed if that's set ("S=26" above), the auto-CQ delay time in 500ms units, and short labels for the F1-F9 keys to remind you what macro each one will send ("F1=CQ" and so forth).
The upper left section will list possible call completions if partial call checking is on, the top right is the scoreboard and a highlight indicating what band the radio is currently on, and the full-width section below that shows the last few contacts logged.
The line across the middle of the console (starting with "40CW" above) has the current UTC time, QSO number, call entry field, RST (599 599), and the exchange entry field. Under the right-hand end of that line is the current frequency the transceiver is tuned to, if rig control is active.
The bottom section of the screen has DXcluster spots, the band map, and related information.
The spacebar moves between fields, the "Enter" key sends the appropriate
message for the current stage of the QSO, and the "ESC" key backs out of
whatever you just did. With the cursor in the callsign entry field, "Alt-h"
brings up a help screen, while typing :help
and hitting "Enter" will bring
up a full list of commands. From that list, typing q
will return you to the
main logging screen. Typing :cfg
and hitting "Enter" will let you edit
logcfg.dat in the text editor, and exiting that editor will return you to the
main logging screen.
The log is saved continuously in TLF's text-based native format. After the
contest ends, typing :write
in the call entry field will export the log in
Cabrillo format as <Yourcall>.cbr
, which is how most contest sponsors want
it. If you haven't set the Cabrillo configuration in a file as described
above, you'll be asked a series of questions for the file header, such as your
category, power level, and so forth. You can also export an ADIF file by
typing :adif
in the callsign field. That's handy for importing your contest
contacts into your general logging program, or uploading them to sites such as
Clublog or Logbook of the World.
CW contest setup is straightforward. Assuming you've installed either
cwdaemon
or one of the Winkeyer servers (winkeydaemon
or
winkeyer_server
) as described in the installation guide, just start that
before starting TLF. For example, in my current setup I make sure my rig is on
and ready to go, navigate to the current contest directory (with my
logcfg.dat
and rules/contestname
files in it), and type:
winkeydaemon -m -d /dev/ttyUSB1
tlf
The -m
flag mutes the sidetone on my Winkeyer, as I prefer it off, and -d /dev/ttyUSB1
sets the correct device name to access. If you're unsure where
your Winkeyer connects, use
ls -l /dev/serial/by-id
which should list serial devices by somewhat readable names, and which ports they're on.
You can stop the CW server with killall winkeydaemon
, which is handy for
stopping and restarting it while trying different port configurations.
TLF will start in CW mode by default.
TLF provides a voice keyer facility using the PC's sound card. This section provides additional information to help the user configure SSB operation.
Often, the biggest challenge in getting voice keying to work, whether with TLF or any other logging program, is connecting the computer audio to the radio in a way that triggers PTT correctly. We can't cover all possible configurations in this manual, but will offer some general pointers. If you've used sound card-based HF digital modes, you must already have a workable computer-to-rig connection, which should serve as a starting point for routing the voice keyer audio. A West Mountain Rigblaster interface or homebrew equivalent makes the process even more straightforward, and the manual for that device will cover the appropriate settings. Those with newer radios that offer direct USB, Bluetooth, or Wi-Fi connections may need to explore the menu settings.
If you decide you need TLF to trigger the PTT line and the hamlib PTT isn't
working, you can try a workaround with cwdaemon
, which can be invoked for a
serial port or a parallel port. The most likely modern scenario is to use a
USB<->serial adapter, in which case an example of starting cwdaemon (as root)
might be:
cwdaemon -d ttyUSB0
You can figure out which tty
port the adapter is on by running dmesg
before and after plugging in the USB. Check man cwdaemon
for circuit
suggestions on interfacing DTR/RTS to CW/PTT ports on your radio.
One option for mic interfacing is to use PTT to control a relay that connects the radio's mic input either to the mic or to the soundcard. An alternative solution, recommended by many other contest loggers, is instead to connect the mic to the soundcard's mic input and the soundcard's output to the radio's mic input. Most soundcards will loop the mic audio back to the output, which is easily checked. The only issue here is that the mic is also live when playing voice keyer messages, but this can be avoided (see the next section).
Note that some radios (e.g. TenTec Orion) have only one port that becomes PTT
in SSB mode and Key in CW mode. Wire OR-ing the CW and PTT outputs from
cwdaemon
is not ideal, because in CW mode PTT is still asserted, resulting
in key-down for the duration of the message. There is currently no
satisfactory solution to this problem, so we don't recommend that approach.
The normal practice with TLF is to create a new directory for each contest, so
a logcfg.dat
file in that directory overrides the default. If you are using
SSB only in a contest you can force TLF to start in SSB mode by uncommenting
the SSBMODE keyword in logcfg.dat
.
If you have adopted the method that loops back the mic audio and you want to
automatically mute the mic when voice keyer messages are played, copy the
play_vk
shell script found in the scripts
directory of your TLF release to
the same directory. This will then be used in preference to the default.
Uncomment the lines beginning with amixer
.
Since TLF version 1.1.0, (un)muting and playing voice messages has been
devolved to this external script file, because not all soundcards offer the
same interface. 'Mic' could be called something else. One way of finding this
out is to run amixer
from a terminal, which returns its capabilities. An
alternative method is to install your distribution's version of the
alsamixergui
package and simply see what's available on the faders. This is
probably a good idea anyway because it's likely sound won't work well without
some manual intervention.
If you have something other than a 'Mic' source, you could try replacing 'Mic'
with what you think it should be in the local play_vk
file. The process of
muting and unmuting the mic is displayed in alsamixergui
, which is useful
for debug purposes. Please share any information you discover with the TLF
community.
A rules
sub-directory within the local contest folder should contain a
contest-specific rule file. As with logcfg.dat
, this local copy will
override the defaults, which you will want to do. This rule file must contain
the paths to the audio files corresponding to each F-key to be used. An
example might be:
VKM1=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f1.wav
VKM2=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f2.wav
VKM3=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f3.wav
VKM4=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f4.wav
VKM5=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f5.wav
VKM6=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f6.wav
VKM7=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f7.wav
VKM8=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f8.wav
VKM9=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f9.wav
VKM10=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f10.wav
VKM11=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f11.wav
VKM12=/home/aham/tlf/audio/f12.wav
VKSPM=/home/aham/tlf/audio/vkspm.wav
VKCQM=/home/aham/tlf/audio/vkcqm.wav
Thus a common set of voice messages can be pointed to from different rule files. The F12 message is the auto-repeated CQ message for when the rate is low. The VKSPM and VKCQM messages are sent after a contact is logged, in S&P and CQ modes respectively.
Paths that are not defined cannot be recorded to from within TLF.
TLF uses sox
to record and play audio, so you must have it installed. You
can use the sox commands rec
and play
on the command line in case you need
to debug any TLF issues.
Modern distros often use the pulseaudio
sound server, but this can cause
unacceptably long delays at the beginning and end of recordings, and at the
beginning and end of voice message playback. If you experience these problems,
try uninstalling just the pulseaudio
ALSA plugin. You lose the ability for
ALSA applications to play and record across a network, but for most TLF users
this isn't a problem.
For the best sound quality, record voice messages with an external audio editor such as Audacity, which will also allow you to trim leading and trailing silence. Export each message in .wav format and add their paths to the rules file as described above.
TLF also has a built-in sound recording feature for changing messages on the
fly, or for those who don't want to use an external editor. To record messages
from within TLF, enter :sou
in the call entry field to take you to the TLF
Sound Recorder Utility page. Recording starts by hitting the relevant F-key
for that message ('s' or 'c' for the VKSPM and VKCQM messages). Terminate
recording by hitting the ESC key.
Currently, recording messages does not key PTT. If you want to hear yourself via the radio's monitor function while recording, you will need to manually assert PTT, e.g. press your footswitch throughout. Obviously, this means your recording also goes out on-air, so you might want to minimise your transmitted power and use a dummy load while doing this.
It takes a bit of practice to time your speech within the starting and ending
key presses. It's also quite easy to set the ALSA mic gain too high and end up
with clipped audio. This will show up during playback as some black and white
writing appearing over the top of the display colours. It's actually sox
reporting warnings. You can fix this by adjusting the mic level using the ALSA
mixer.
Pasted from the original README.RTTY file; some information may be out of date.
2016-2018, Ervin Hegedus, HA2OS
This is a guide for TLF, how to use it with Fldigi in RTTY mode, especially in FSK, LSB or USB modulations. TLF got a new Fldigi interface, here is what you need to know.
To work in RTTY, you need to solve two problems: read and demodulate RTTY signals (RX), and send your messages (TX). To demodulate the signals, we use the Fldigi, the most popular software for digital modes. Fldigi also can modulate, but there are several solutions, eg. MFJ 1278, or any other modems, which can be work through serial port.
Let's see, how works the TX direction with Fldigi.
Important: if you set up your Fldigi instance, don't set up your RIG! TLF needs to handle the RIG, because it needs to tune the VFO, to use the bandmap. After the version 1.3, TLF can control Fldigi, then it can show the QRG (frequency of RIG - see later), and mode of RIG (eg: LSB, USB, FSK).
Starting with TLF-1.3 there are two ways to communicate with Fldigi - the old GMFSK interface and the actual XMLRPC one. Note, that after version 1.3 the GMFSK works as standalone interface, but can't work with Fldigi.
Note: Using the new interface is recommended. The old GMFSK interface will be no longer maintained and will go away soon.
The only thing to do is to set the following keyword into your logcfg.dat
FLDIGI
That will work as long as your Fldigi is compiled with the XMLRPC interface and you do use the standard port for it.
If you run fldigis XMLRPC on a different port (or machine) use
FLDIGI=http://*host*:*portnumber*/RPC2
That's it. TLF will realizes that you have Fldigi, and will communicate through XMLRPC.
You can still read of Fldigi RX window (top) in TLF own terminal, just use ":miniterm" command in callsign field.
There is a new command: ":fldigi", which helps to you to turn on and off Fldigi communication. Then you don't need to modify the logcfg.dat to change your mode.
Note: in old versions of TLF, you couldn't use NETKEYER and FLDIGI in same time. Now this restriction is gone, you can use them in same time.
The RX mode is a slightly difficult. I don't want to expose that here, I suppose that anybody knows that, if works in RTTY. I had a "big" problem with TLF: when I've worked in AFSK, and I moved the Fldigi carrier, I couldn't know exactly, what is the correct QRG of my RIG. And it was the problem, because I couldn't use the cluster info, moreover the grabbed spots! So, when I grabbed a station, TLF stored it to the currently QRG, but it didn't store the Fldigi carrier shift! So, now the TLF follows this philosophy below.
The "native" mode is FSK. If you turn on your RIG, and switch to FSK mode, tune the VFO to an RTTY station. If you want to see its signals in Fldigi, you have to move the Fldigi carrier to 2210Hz. Note, that 2210Hz calculated from the space and mark frequency. The space is 2125Hz, the mark is 2295Hz. 2295-2125 = 170, 170/2 = 85, and 2125+85 = 2210. This value is indicated at bottom-middle of Fldigi window.
Note, that you have to switch the Fldigi to reverse mode, so you need to click the Rv button.
From now on if you find a station on the bandmap, and press the CTRL-G (grab the spot), TLF will tune to VFO that frequency, and you can hear the station. That's it. Almost :). In FSK mode, it isn't too easy to tune the VFO to the correct QRG. But if TLF can detect, that your RIG is in FSK mode (through CAT system), then if you move the Fldigi carrier to an another station (which exists eg. on 1000Hz), then TLF calculates the new VFO frequency, tune the RIG to there, and tune Fldigi's carrier to back, 2210Hz.
If you're working in AFSK, then the used modulation is LSB (or USB). In this case, you can move the Fldigi's carrier anywhere you want (from 85Hz to 2915Hz), TLF only catch's the Fldigi carrier's value, and calculates the accurate QRG, which indicated on left-middle part in TLF window. If you want to grab a spot (with CTRL-G), then leave the Fldigi carrier's as it exists, and grab the next spot. TLF will calculate the requested QRG from the different of the spot and Fldigi carrier's frequency, and tune the RIG. That's it.
Error handling: if you forgot to start the Fldigi, or you close that till TLF runs and wants to communicate with it, TLF tries to connect. After ten (10) continuous unsuccessful attempts TLF will show you the error message (at bottom left corner): "Fldigi: lost connection", and turns it off. If you want to turn on again, just type ":fldigi" command in CALLSIGN field. If Fldigi comes back after less than ten attempts, the error counter is cleared.
More new feature in Fldigi interface: - when TLF sends a message through Fldigi, it switches Fldigi to TX mode. - similar to CW mode, if you press ESC while Fldigi sends the message, TLF will stop it. - if the connection between TLF and Fldigi breaks (eg. you close Fldigi, or you start TLF before Fldigi), then TLF realizes it, and handles as correctly. You will lose the Fldigi functions (no TX/RX, QRG align), but TLF runs away. If you start Fldigi again, after a few seconds, TLF will work with it again
New features after 1.3: - Fldigi supports nanoIO software, which is a small Arduino project Homepage: https://github.com/w1hkj/nanoIO whit this, you can work in real FSK mode - Fldigi can catch the different strings as field values, eg: CALLSIGN, EXCHANGE. If you click in RX window to a callsign, Fldigi fills its CALL field, and TLF will grab it. EXCHANGE field is similar.
73, Ervin HA2OS
Pasted from README_QTC.txt; some information may be out of date.
This is a short intro for TLF QTC handling. Ervin Hegedus HA2OS, 2014. airween@gmail.com
QTC handling was made for WAEDC contest for TLF. It doesn't need any external tool, TLF supports it out of box. To enable that, you only needs to put a "QTC=" option to logcfg.dat. This parameter needs a value, which could be one of these: "RECV", "SEND", or "BOTH". These values means you only want to receive or send QTCs, or you want to send AND receive QTCs (for example, in RTTY mode). Note, that currently only RECV and SEND mode are implemented. BOTH will used for RTTY mode.
When you enabled the QTC handling in logcfg.dat, you can open the QTC window from either field: callsign or exchange, it doesn't matter. To open it, just press CTRL+Q. If you want to close it, just simply press ESC. The window is divided to 2 sides: the left side contains the QTCs data, the right side contains the help information.
The data side contains the following QTCs fields:
- QTC callsign - 14 characters, allowed: alphanums, digits, /
- QTC serial - 4 characters, allowed: digits,
- number of QSO in current QTC block - 2 characters, allowed: digits
- 10 QSO lines in RECV mode:
- time - 4 characters, allowed: digits, ?
- callsign - 14 characters, allowed: alphanums, digits, /, ?
- serial - 4 characters, allowed: digits, ?
- 10 QSO lines in SEND mode:
- every line generated by the QSOs, all of them are formatted for three fields: time, callsign and serial
Note, that if you set up the QTC_RECV_LAZY option in RECV mode (EU station in CW/SSB contest), then TLF will skip to check the restrictions above.
This side contains many "meta" information:
- at right of the QTC callsign field, TLF shows the QTC info of current station: how many QTC has it; if the callsign field in main window is empty, the last callsign will be picked up. When the station has not send or received any QTC yet, there will be: "Received 0 QTC", or "Sent 0 QTC". If you had exchanged any QTC with the station, the message will read "Received 3 QTC" or "Sent 5 QTC".
- if you type the number of QSO in the QTC block in RECV mode, TLF will show its number at the beginning of every line; if the station indicates that it will send to you 6 QSO, and you type it in that field, TLF will put a digit to the begin of first 6 lines
- if you type the number of QSO in the QTC block in SEND mode, TLF will find the next number QSO, which doesn't contain the current callsign (see contest rules 7.2). Note, that if you don't have eonugh QSOs, you can't send the maximum (10), eg. you have only 9 QSO. If you type greater number than available QTC number, the field value will be aligned to maximum number!
- in RECV mode, every QSO line has a status, which could be: "invalid", "valid", "confirmed". This status is indicated by a sign at the end of the line. When a line is invalid, you can see a "?", if the line is valid, then there isn't any character, and finally, if the QSO line had been confirmed, you can see a "" sign * in SEND mode, if you've sent a QTC line (with ENTER), at the end of the line you will see a "" character, which means, you've sent that QTC.
You can move to any field as you want and when you want. There isn't a mandatory order, but the navigation keys don't work in all cases. Normally, with TAB you can move to the next field, and Shift+TAB goes back. There is an exception: TAB will not leave the current QSO line, until you confirm the line. Instead it takes you to the time field, if you are in the exchange field, and Shift+TAB does it in reverse order. With UP and DOWN cursor keys you can go to up or down.
In RECV mode with SPACE, you can navigate between the fields in one line, for faster move, so that means the SPACE and TAB are equals in this mode, in QTC line.
If you press an allowed character in a field, that will be displayed, and the cursor will go right to the next place. If you press a not allowed character, then nothing happens. The BACKSPACE key deletes the next characters to left, and move the right part to left. DELETE key deletes the current character as you're staying, and shifts the characters to left at the next to right. As I described above, the SPACE move the cursor to the next field (or first, if you are in last field) inside of QTC line, in RECV mode.
TLF stores QTCs in two files. The received QTCs are stored in QTC_recv.log, sent QTCs are stored in QTC_sent.log. These logfiles will created automatically, when TLF starts.
If the station asks you, if are you QRV for QTC, you can press CTRL+Q, it doesn't matter in which field are you: callsign or exchange. As another way, you an open the QTC window (CTRL+Q), and press F1 to ask for QTC - it is configured in rule file to send "QTC?".
If the callsign fields isn't empty, the content of that field will be copied. Otherwise the callsign of the last QSO will be copied. If the station sent you some QTC previously, you can see the number of QTC QSOs, eg. "Received 3 QTC". You can receive at maximum 10 QTC from every station. If you have 3 QTC from a station, then you can receive 7 QTC more. If you type more than 7, TLF will replace the number to 7.
Afterwards you can fill the QTC serial, and number of QSOs. What you type in as number of QSOs will be used by TLF to number that many lines, to show you, how many lines remains.
If you filled the callsign, serial and number fields (all three fields are required), and then press ENTER, TLF will send the F2 message, which is "QRV" normally, so you don't need to send it manually.
If you start to receive the QTCs, you need to fill 3 fields: time (HHMM, as hour and minutes), callsign and serial. If you only enter parts of a line, that line will be marked as "incomplete", which you can see by the "?" at the end of the line.
If you fill the time field (4 digits), the cursor will go to the callsign field. Fill that field, and press TAB to move the next one. If you put there at least 1 digit, TLF recognizes that line is complete and the "?" will disappear at the end of the line.
If you press SPACE in any field, the cursor will go to the next field (or first, if the current is the exchange number).
Important: in any fields you can type "?", eg: "111?" in time field, or "W?" in callsign field. That mean, you couldn't receive that letter. Then you fill all fields vainly, the line remain as incomplete. Otherwise TLF assumes the line is complete.
This is important, because when you press the ENTER, TLF will send the answer to the station based the status of the line. If the line is incomplete, TLF sends "AGN" message, but if it's complete, it sends "R".
If you could receive the line, and pressed ENTER, and TLF sent the "R" signal, then you will see a "*" at the end of the line. That means, you received the QTC line from the station.
If you want to ask only one field (eg. only callsign), then you need just press F5 (TIME?), F6 (CALL?), or F7 (NR?). If you want to ask the complete QTC line, you can press F8 (AGN).
When you received a QTC, the cursor goes to the start of the next line, and you can continue to receive QTC.
If you received the last line, and all lines are complete, after the last ENTER TLF will close the QTC window, and send "QSL ALL" message to the station.
At this time the QTC data will be written to the logfile on disk, fields will be flushed, and if there is configured any other node in logcfg.dat, the QTC lines will be sent to them.
On other nodes, TLF will also write the QTCs to its own logfiles.
If you press ESC before you receive the QTC block, the data isn't lost. TLF flushes the fields only in these cases:
- you received all QSOs, and saved to disc
- pressed ESC, and changed regular callsign field
Note, that TLF send the "QRV" message only in case the fields are empty. Keep in mind, if you've pressed ESC, and CTRL+Q again, all data remains, and "QRV" message will NOT be sent.
If the other station asks you for QTCs, you can press CTRL+Q, it doesn't matter in which field are you: callsign or exchange. When the QTC window opens, you can press F2 and TLF will send the message: "QTC sr/nr" with "sr" and "nr" replaced with the i serial and number of lines in QTC, example: "QTC 3/8".
If the callsign fields isn't empty, the contents of that field will be copied. Otherwise, the callsign of the last QSO will be used. If the station received QTCs previously, you can see the number of QTCs on the current band, eg. "Sent 3 QTC". You can send maximum 10 QTC to every station. If you sent 3 QTC to a station, you can send maximum 7 QTC in next block. If you type more, than 7, TLF will replace the number to 7, and of course, only 7 QSO will be shown. If you don't have enough QSO, TLF also will replace this value to the number of the available QSO.
The QTC serial field will be filled automatically, you just need to set up, how many QTCs you want to send. Note, that TLF looks for the current callsign, and that will be excluded from the QTC list! If you modify the callsign field, TLF will hide some lines, which match the actual callsign, but don't afraid: if you finish the modification of field, you can see the available list.
If you don't want to send the maximum available QTC lines, just edit the number field, and TLF will gives only that many QTC lines.
Now, you can move to the 1st QTC line with DOWN cursor. If you press ENTER, TLF will send the current QTC, and will put a "*" char to the end of the line. It shows you, that QTC line had been sent.
Now just press DOWN and ENTER, if the station gives "R" sign. If it asks to send the last QTC again, just simple press UP and ENTER again. With the DEL key you can delete the "SENT" flag from the end of the line.
If you sent all lines, and if the station confirms them, you can press the CTRL+S (like in most software), and TLF will save the block. After 2 seconds the window will be closed, and you can go away.
At this time the QTC data will be written to the logfile on the disk, callsign and number fields will be flushed, and if there is any other node configured in logcfg.dat, the QTC lines will be sent to them.
On the other nodes, TLF will also write the QTCs to its own logfiles.
If you press ESC before you receive the QTC block, the data isn't lost. TLF flushes the fields only in the following case:
- you sent all QTCs, and saved them to disk
After you sent or received a QTC block from or to a station, TLF writes it to the log, but stores it in memory too. If you meet that station on another bands, and use "Worked window", then you can see, how many QTCs had been exchanged with the station on each band.
There is a "Q" letter on the upper border of "Worked window", and in that column there are the number of QTCs. If there is a "0" in a line, that means you sent to or received no QTC from that station. If there is a "Q", that means you sent to or received from the station the maximum number of QTC (10).
This information also is visible in the cluster info, if you use that. At the end of the callsign in bandmap, you can see a "0", "Q" or any digit, which means same as above, eg "DL1A Q", or "HA5A 3".
When you finished the contest, just use the ":wri" command to save your log in Cabrillo format. (It's a good idea to exit from TLF, and start it again - this is only need to recalc correct points, nothing else.)
Now leave TLF, and run the "qtcmerge.py" script, which is part of TLF, and has been installed to your INSTALLDIR/share/tlf, eg. /usr/local/share/tlf. The normal way to run this script from the TLF contest directory is:
/usr/local/share/tlf/qtcmerge.py YOURCALL.cbr
The script reads your saved Cabrillo file and your QTCs and saves them to a new file, in Cabrillo format. The new file name will be YOURCALL_QTC.cbr. Make a backup of the original file, rename the new one to YOURCALL.cbr and send it to the contest organizers.
Note: You can find more info about the QTC cabrillo format here: http://dl0tud.tu-dresden.de/~dj1yfk/qtcs/ http://www.kkn.net/~trey/cabrillo/qso-template.html
- CTRL+Q - open QTC window
- ESC - close QTC window
- TAB - move to the next field
- SPACE - move to the next field in QTC line, in RECV mode
- Shift+TAB - move to the previous field
- UP, DOWN - move up or down
- BACKSPACE - delete the next char left
- DELETE - delete the current position, shift left the rest of line
- ENTER - send "R" or "AGN" to station
If you have any question, just send an e-mail to me or the TLF develop list.
73,
Ervin HA2OS
Pasted from the original README_QTC_RTTY.txt; some information may be out of date.
This is a short intro for TLF QTC handling in RTTY mode. Ervin Hegedus HA2OS, 2014. airween@gmail.com
The QTC base instructions described in README_QTC.txt, please read it CAREFULLY, before you start to read this readme. There you will find detailed information about how TLF handles the QTC in CW and SSB mode. In this readme, I just write the differences.
The QTC window(s), fields, navigation is almost the same, like in CW and SSB modes. In CW/SSB modes every QTC line int the full QTC block exchanged by individually (every QTC line sent or received separately), but that method would be too slow in RTTY mode. In this mode, a complete QTC block exchanged in whole. That's the main different, but this divergence involves a few necessary modifications. Another important thing, that in RTTY mode everyone can send or receive QTCs, there isn't any limit (except the number of total QTCs between two stations). So, it happens that you sent 5 QTCs in a block, but to complete to 10, the second 5 QTCs you will receive from same station. That's why there is the third possible value of "QTC" option in logcfg.dat/rule file, which is "BOTH".
Even if you choose the two-way QTC handling, or you just want to receive QTCs, the CTRL-Q combination remaining to receive the QTC block. If you open the QTC receive window with CTRL-Q, apparently nothing has changed. The point is same than in another modes: fill the lines. Yes, the speed of RTTY is a little bit fast, and you have to know type as very quickly, if you want to copy from the terminal of your modem software. To help the copy operation, there is a new feature in TLF: capturing the output of modem. Currently, only the gMFSK modem could be captured.
If you want to start the capture, just press CTRL+S, that means "Start capture". To finish the capture process, just press CTRL+E, that means "End capture".
If you've started the capture process, the new window will open, which is a "terminal" window - there you can see the gMFSK modem lines. At the top of the double-window, you can see a small HELP window, which contains all shortkeys these windows. If you press ESC (Escape), then terminal window will be hidden, but - this is very important! - the capture process doesn't finish! Now, if you press CTRL+S again, the terminal window will open again, and you can see the characters in the meantime.
You can recognize two types of lines for QTC block: the serial/number line, or a single QTC line. The formula of serial/number line is NNN/NN. This works only if you didn't fill the serial and number fields in QTC window. So, if those lines are empty, and in your terminal window the line is like this:
"QTC 32/8 QTC 32/8"
and you scroll there, and pressing ENTER, TLF recognizes this as the serial and number of the QTC block, and will fill those fields.
The QTC line formula could be:
1111/W1AW/234 1111-PX2A-345
The "separator" character could be the "/" (slash) or "-" hyphen.
If you scroll to a line like one of these, and pressing ENTER, TLF will fill the next empty QTC line in QTC block. Note, that the line starts with 4 number, and at the end is also a numeric character, and the length of leftover is less than 14, then TLF also recognizes the QTC line.
IMPORTANT!
Only the complete received lines can be captured from right side to left side, and only once. You can't move that line, which increments horizontally - that's the current line. If the line has an NL (new-line) character, then you can capture that. If you've pressed the ENTER on a line, then it will be marked with an "*" (asterisk) sign. That means, you couldn't capture that anymore.
STILL IMPORTANT!
If you fill the serial and number fields in main QTC window, the first pattern WILL NOT be recognized (SERIAL/NR). If you didn't fill the serial AND number fields (with or without the capture process), you CAN'T capture the QTC lines! That means, you press ENTER on a QTC line at right side vainly, the line will not copied to right side!
So, if you can copy one or more lines from right side to left with capture process, the result could be two types: TLF thinks the line is a good, fail-safe QTC line, or isn't it: the line contains wrong character, eg. the time filed contains non-numeric character. In this case, the end of the line you can see a "?" (question mark) character. If the line doesn't contain wrong character, you can see a "+" (plus) character.
IMPORTANT!
You NEED to review ALL lines at the left side by press an ENTER. If the line has "+" character, then that will changed to "*" (asterisk), which means "line marked as confirmed". If line has "?" at the end, then TLF will send an "AGN N AGN N" message, where the N is the number of the line. Then you can change the wrong character, till the status will goes to "+".
If all lines have "*" sign, and you press the ENTER at last line, TLF will send the message "QSL ALL", or what you've configures for QR_F10 macro.
You can send the last message manually, if you press F10 - then TLF also sends that message, and it will save the received QTC block too.
If the all QTC lines are right, and TLF sent "QTC ALL", then the QTC block will be saved automatically.
As you can read the QTC=BOTH description above, TLF can send AND receive QTCs in same contest. To avoid the shortkey collisions, in this case the only one combination can be used: CTRL+S.
If you fill the callsign field (or that's filled when you open the QTC send window), then the QTC serial field is fixed - you can't change that, like CW/SSB modes. Only you can change the number of QTCs field, which could be maximum 10, or if you have QTC (received or sent) with the station, then TLF calculates the possible number.
Then if you press the ENTER, TLF sends the complete QTC block to your modem (eg. gmfsk_autofile), and you can see the characters in the window of your modem (eg. Fldigi).
If station asks you to resend one or more QTC line again, just move the asked line, and press ENTER again.
If station confirms the QTC block, you have to save that with CTRL+S.
Pasted from the README.Cabrillo file.
Recently Cabrillo format became the de facto standard to submit contest results. TLF's approach to handle QSO and QTC lines is based on a textual description and can be easily extended by the user to support newer contests. Header fields can be specified either in config file or using an existing Cabrillo file as a template.
The QSO/QTC format descriptions are contained in 'cabrillo.fmt' file in the /usr(/local)/share/tlf directory. It provides format descriptions for common contests. All descriptions are named and you have to specify which one has to be used with a statement in logcfg.dat or (better) in the contest rule file with the following syntax:
CABRILLO-QSO-FORMAT=formatname (or simply CABRILLO=formatname )
You can put your own format file 'cabrillo.fmt' in your actual working directory which gets precedence over the central one.
The format of cabrillo.fmt entries is as follows:
- The file contains groups of lines which are interpreted as key-value pairs.
- Each group describes a possible Cabrillo format and starts by a line containing the in square brackets.
- At the moment the following keywords are supported: QSO=... QTC=... EXCHANGE-SEPARATOR=...
- Lines beginning with a '#' are interpreted as comments.
- The 'QSO=' key has to be followed by a list of string, number pairs separated by semicolons. Each pair specifies one item to put into the QSO: line. The name of the item has to be followed by a comma ',' and a number specifying the character width of that field in the QSO: line. Values which are too wide will be truncated to that width.
The following items names are supported:
FREQ The working frequency.
MODE Mode of operation ('CW', 'PH',...)
DATE Date of the QSO
TIME Logged time of the QSO
MYCALL Own call
HISCALL Other sides call
RST_S RST sent
RST_R RST received
EXC_S Exchange sent (May contain a '#' character, which gets replaced by the
QSO number formatted to 4 digits).
EXCH The complete received exchange line
EXC1 First word of the received exchange, see Exchange Separator below
EXC2 Second word of the received exchange
EXC3 Third word of the received exchange
EXC4 Fourth word of the received exchange
TX Number of the TX (for cqww or other contests).
All items represent one column in the resulting Cabrillo log file. All entries are separated by an additional space character.
EXC1..EXC4 allow writing parts of the received exchange in separate columns. The exchange is split by default on white space (space or tab). Another separator(s) can be specified with the EXCHANGE-SEPARATOR keyword. If '/' (slash) is used to separate parts of the exchange (e.g. 002/1234) then this line has to be added to the format:
EXCHANGE-SEPARATOR=/
In the provided cabrillo.fmt file the formats for AGCW use this construct.
The following entry
[cwo] QSO=FREQ,5;MODE,2;DATE,10;TIME,4;MYCALL,13;EXC_S,14;HISCALL,13;EXC1,4;EXC2,9
will be selected if
CABRILLO=cwo
is in the rules file for the CW Open contest. All QSOs will then be formatted as in the following example:
QSO: 28000 CW 2012-09-23 0815 DL1JBE 0001 Tom HB9XXX 0023
An existing Cabrillo file can be imported by starting TLF with the "-i" option. The Cabrillo file must be called YOURCALL.cbr, which is the standard naming convention for TLF. In this case, TLF reads the configuration and rule files, so the scoring and multipliers will be used as your config describes. Your config also describes the CABRILLO format, that TLF uses to parse the log to handle the fields correctly.
The output file(s) will IMPORT_contest.log, where the contest is the name of contest in your rule/config file. Eg. my Cabrillo is HA2OS.cbr, which must be in the current directory. After the import, the result is IMPORT_cqww.log (if the contest name is cqww), so the TLF doesn't write over the existing logfile.
If you want to use the new, imported file, you have to move the old one, and rename the imported file.
When the contest is WAE, and the rule file contains a valid QTC setup, and Cabrillo contains lines with begin of "QTC:", then you will have the IMPORT_QTC_sent.log and IMPORT_QTC_recv.log. In this case, the original files also kept, and you have to archive and rename the files.
Pasted from the original doc/README file; some information may be out of date.
TLF can also run packet spots in a separate terminal. To link this to the TLF program start a telnet session from the working directory with:
telnet | tee -a clfile
In case your packet program is on your own machine, use
telnet localhost | tee -a clfile
Now you have a separate packet terminal where you can e.g. start "call", telnet or or "minicom" and connect to your favorite dx cluster, or telnet to a cluster on the internet.
Activate "FIFOINTERFACE".
Activate the cluster display in TLF with :cluster, :spot, or :map You can toggle the announcements filter with :filter
Pasted from the original New_Bandmap.txt file; some information may be out of date.
One main problem in old TLF versions is the very narrow space for cluster messages (only 8 entries plus some room in scrolling). Furthermore the code for looking up the messages was very inefficient and does not allow good filtering of the information we need.
The new bandmap tries to fix some of the problems. The following principles were applied:
- Use the space below the QSO entry line for displaying the spots in the background.
- For each spot display the frequency (with one decimal) and the call of the spotted station. That allows 3 columns with 10 spots each.
- There are 3 sources of spots:
- dx cluster messages
- spots in local LAN (maybe from other stations scanning the band)
- finished QSOs while in S&P
- The frequency is remembered with a resolution of 1 Hz if available
- You can filter the displayed spots by
- band (all bands or only own (momentarily active) band)
- mode (all or own)
- dupe (show dupes or not)
- Each spot may have a letter or star between frequency and call denoting the
source of the spot
- blank - from cluster
- '*' - self spotted or worked in S&P
- 'a'..'z' -spotted from station 'a' to 'z' in local network
- Color of spots signal the age of the spot
- bright blue - new spot
- blue - older than 45s (at the moment)
- brown - older than 5 min
- Dupes (already worked stations) are show in lower case and grey
Turn on rig control and connect to a cluster (experiment what happens if one or both conditions are not met). Wait some moments until some spots shows up.
- Press '.' to show the filter menu. Next letter switches filtering:
- b - toggle band filter
- m - toggle mode filter
- d - toggle display of dupes
- o - only shows the multipliers (CQWW only)
- Tune in to any interesting station, insert its call into the input field and press 'Ctrl-A'. The heard station gets added to the bandmap and broadcasted to other stations in the local net. See that it gets marked with a '*' as self spotted.
- Tune in to any contest station in S&P and work it as normal. After the QSO is finished the station is added to the bandmap and shown as dupe.
- Press 'Ctrl-G' to grab the next displayed spot (starting at your frequency upwards). Each further press of 'Ctrl-G' jumps to the next spot. So you can scan the spotted stations, see if you can work them or jump to the next one. If you reach the last station (highest frequency) the scan switches direction and following key presses goes downward (on lower boundary it switches to upwards again...). At the moment Ctrl-G requires a connected transceiver to work correctly as it reads the actual starting frequency from the rig
- If you type some letters of a call in the map you are interested in and then 'Alt-G' afterwards the first call with that letters gets grabbed.
- You can narrow the spots to grab by the above mentioned filters.
- If you grab a spot while in 'Run' mode, TLF switches to S&P and remembers your 'run' frequency in the memory. You can switch back to your old running frequency by '+' (back to Run mode) and '#' (back to old frequency).
You can also configure bandmap filtering and spot lifetime from logcfg.dat.
BANDMAP
-> use default values (no filtering, lifetime = 900 s)
BANDMAP=
xyz,number
xyz string parsed for:
- 'B' - only own band
- 'M' - only own mode
- 'D' - do not show dupes
- 'S' - skip dupes during grab_next (ctrl-g)
- 'O' - only shows the multipliers (CQWW only)
- number lifetime for new spots in second (number >=300)
Pasted from the original FAQ file
Q: Where can I download the latest callmaster call sign data file?
A: You can use the master.scp file from http://www.supercheckpartial.com. Save
it as callmaster
and copy it in the actual contest directory or in TLF's
global data directory (/usr/local/share/tlf
). The file in the actual contest
directory takes precedence.
Q: Can I add my own list of call signs to the callmaster file.
A: Sure. Just add it to the end of the file - each call (in uppercase) on a line by itself. Be aware that at the moment the file is limited to 50000 entries.
Q: Where can I find an actual CTY.DAT file for TLF?
A: Try https://www.country-files.com/ Make sure to save it as 'cty.dat' in lower case letters. Be aware that there a two different file formats:
- For version before TLF-1.3.1 you have to use the old style CTY.DAT file with no embedded '=' character.
- For newer versions you can also use the newer file format also used by
=CT9.91. It allows to give information not only for call areas but for single stations with a call sign preceded by a '=' character. (See the site for details).
Q: TLF thinks that I am in cq zone 5 but in fact I am in another one. How can I fix that?
A: At the moment you have to modify your cty.dat file. Look for the entry for your country, e.g. for Canada look for:
Canada: 05: 09: NA: 44.35: 78.75: 5.0: VE:0
Below that entry there may be lines with special prefixes and call signs which counts also for Canada. Add yourself (VE3XYZ in the following example) to the list with the correct CQ zone appended in parentheses, e.g.:
=VE2IM(2)[4],=VY0PW(4)[3],=VE3XYZ(3);
That would override the default setting for the CQ zone (5 for VE) with your one (3). Also see this page for a detailed description.
Q: How can I use a K1EL series of Winkeyers or similar devices (e.g. the K3NG arduino based ones)?
A: Yes. You can use one of the UDP related keying daemons out there for it. At the moment there are at least three different versions:
- The Perl based winkeydaemon.
- OK2CQR, creator of CQRlog, has winkeyer_server.
- The Python based pywinkeyerdaemon.
Q: The generated ADIF file misses some entries, e.g. the CONTEST_ID which is used by my log program during import. Any idea to work around it?
A: You can use 'adifmerg' from OH7BF for it. It allows to post process the ADIF file. For instance you can add the missing CONTEST_ID with:
adifmerg -f qso.adi -A CONTEST_ID=<my contest name> -o > file.adi
Have a look at www.adif.org for the already standardized contest IDs.
Q: I am using TLF in an XTerm. How can I configure used colors, fonts and window size?
A: You can can use a .Xresources file in your home directory. See the Xresources example file in the doc directory. Follow the instructions given there to install it. You can use it also for URxvt terminals.