# # This is an example filter for the 'isolated' node k1xx # # I give him any spots that have a spotter or a spotted in the # US. In other filters on the UK side I do the opposite see # GB7DJK.pl.issue ## # the elements of each list are # # [action, field_no, sort, possible_values, hops] # # where:- # # action is 1 or 0 # # the field list is:- # 0 = frequency # 1 = call # 2 = date in unix format # 3 = comment # 4 = spotter # 5 = spotted dxcc country # 6 = spotter's dxcc country # 7 = origin # 8 = spotted itu # 9 = spotted cq # 10 = spotter's itu # 11 = spotter's cq # 12 = callsign of the channel on which the spot has appeared # # sort is # n - numeric list of numbers e.g. [ 1,2,3 ] # r - ranges of pairs of numbers e.g. between 2 and 4 or 10 to 17 - [ 2,4, 10,17 ] # a - an alphanumeric regex # d - the default rule # # if hops is left out or zero then the existing hop count will be used as normal # # The spot data (in this case '15') is the used as the hop count # if this is missing then the normal default applies # $in = [ [ 1, 5, 'n', [ 226 ], 15 ], # dxcc country 226 is the US [ 1, 6, 'n', [ 226 ], 15 ], [ 0, 0, 'd' ], # default action (don't forward) ];