STRATUX ADS-B Receiver – open ports inventory

While working on a service to read data published by the STRATUX open source ADS-B receiver, it became a big of a guessing game regarding which ports where open and what protocol they might support.

In the event others are interested, there is the the port inventory from a STRATUX v1.6r1 device built on 03-MAR-2021

PortProtocolServiceAnalysis
80tcphttp Golang net/http server AngularJS web interfae
8080tcphttp-proxy says Dump1090 but always returns 404 error
9977tcphttpJson Pi System Info – temp, memory, etc.
30001tcppago-services ?-TBD-
30002tcppago-services ?appears to be a string of hashstrings (e.g.: *8DAB1D28990C37BB78042B8E5676; )
30003tcpbasestationannounced as “ADS-B flight data”
30004tcplistenerThis is a binary “Beast” input port
30005tcpunknown-TBD- possibly some binary data stream (e.g.: ‘JXf#<' )
30006tcpADS JsonJson of partial ADS-B data – always seems to be missing loation and speed info
example:
{
  "Icao_addr": 11403422,
  "DF": 17,
  "CA": 5,
  "TypeCode": 4,
  "SubtypeCode": 6,
  "SBS_MsgType": 1,
  "SignalLevel": 0.000344,
  "Tail": "LEXUS05 ",
  "Squawk": null,
  "Emitter_category": 6,
  "OnGround": false,
  "Lat": null,
  "Lng": null,
  "Position_valid": false,
  "NACp": null,
  "Alt": null,
  "AltIsGNSS": false,
  "GnssDiffFromBaroAlt": null,
  "Vvel": null,
  "Speed_valid": false,
  "Speed": null,
  "Track": null,
  "Timestamp": "2021-03-05T17:16:47.203Z"
}
30104tcpunknown -TBD- possibly raw dump1090 data stream

Diving into the Port Data


Port 30002

Text stream of data, available via a tcp connection. Each message is a hash of some sort, value of which is undetermined at this point.

Here is an example of the message stream

*5DA8C3EA379B4F;
*02E195B70936B4;
*5DA21603EB2A06;
*02C60BB129C2D0;
*02C60BB129C2D0;
*8DAD21C1592DD7EF9896504E8E50;
*02E19718EEFD09;
*8DA1B52B596233C53D9901456D9D;
*8DA216035913378FE2327C198F8A;
*8DA2160399104987B8340BFCE929;
*8DA9942E585F100DBA20C5712D44;
*8DA9942E9908212C509814A6DF7A;

Port 30003

Text stream of data, available via a tcp connection. Each message is comma delimited, and appears to the the ICAO integer converted to Base16 hex.

Here is an example of the message stream

MSG,3,111,11111,A4AB64,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.554,2021/03/06,17:16:35.573,,8900,,,30.41666,-98.63536,,,,,,0 MSG,4,111,11111,A4AB64,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.554,2021/03/06,17:16:35.574,,,159,93,,,-448,,,,,0 MSG,3,111,11111,A313BF,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.587,2021/03/06,17:16:35.626,,36000,,,29.68039,-98.32875,,,,,,0 MSG,7,111,11111,A8DB58,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.602,2021/03/06,17:16:35.627,,5900,,,,,,,,,,0 MSG,3,111,11111,A2A18A,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.607,2021/03/06,17:16:35.627,,5625,,,29.66141,-98.47789,,,,,,0 MSG,4,111,11111,A2A18A,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.607,2021/03/06,17:16:35.628,,,221,248,,,128,,,,,0 MSG,7,111,11111,A8DB58,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.608,2021/03/06,17:16:35.628,,5900,,,,,,,,,,0 MSG,3,111,11111,A417D6,111111,2021/03/06,17:16:35.609,2021/03/06,17:16:35.628,,24000,,,30.09300,-97.62418,,,,,,0

Port 30005

Binary stream of data, available via a tcp connection.

Here is an example of the message stream

y# ??2??)k?????3]?Sx?l3??.?@?????B?xf~3??.??yRX??L?ma??3??/?8 q?!I????3??1Q???? Z?O??3??69???+(X??????-N2??6??”ᕸ?eP3??7??#??o???,???3??;W#??o#?t?l??Zg3??>?&???Y}?o? ???I3??C k??+(???P,2N?3??D????yR? ??-3?3??F,???Y??x?_??2??F6? ?8\`3??Hg???+?ȱ?/?2??I????p2??Ke`#ᕸ?eP2??P?]?+(??A2??U^ ?8\`2??Un<ᕸ???3??XWW???.X?????_?3??X????Y???{?+3??X?h%??o?B?`_?_b?2??Z?f???~?2??Z?j??p2??]- ??|+?3??_e? ??SxX??56S?J?3??_?????.@ ???2??`????2??e?F%]?o7C?3??jt??Sx?y%?`2??l/???? 3??n??????? ??-??3??q?U q? ?-0?Jc3??q?)???Y??)? T??2????7?8?}?2???γ 8إ?2????H ?FU3????|????Y??1??2???L?]?\g??2????E]??.???3??|?{??????>?0 2????]?\g??3????????!;

Port 30006

High volume text stream, available via tcp connection. Messages are in a Json format. Observation is that these always seem to lack geo-location, speed and altitude data.

Here is an example of the message stream

{“Icao_addr”:10627880,”DF”:11,”CA”:5,”TypeCode”:0,”SubtypeCode”:0,”SBS_MsgType”:8,”SignalLevel”:0.000816,”Tail”:null,”Squawk”:null,”Emitter_category”:null,”OnGround”:false,”Lat”:null,”Lng”:null,”Position_valid”:false,”NACp”:null,”Alt”:null,”AltIsGNSS”:false,”GnssDiffFromBaroAlt”:null,”Vvel”:null,”Speed_valid”:false,”Speed”:null,”Track”:null,”Timestamp”:”2021-03-06T17:34:12.129Z”} {“Icao_addr”:10645249,”DF”:11,”CA”:5,”TypeCode”:0,”SubtypeCode”:0,”SBS_MsgType”:8,”SignalLevel”:0.000846,”Tail”:null,”Squawk”:null,”Emitter_category”:null,”OnGround”:false,”Lat”:null,”Lng”:null,”Position_valid”:false,”NACp”:null,”Alt”:null,”AltIsGNSS”:false,”GnssDiffFromBaroAlt”:null,”Vvel”:null,”Speed_valid”:false,”Speed”:null,”Track”:null,”Timestamp”:”2021-03-06T17:34:12.139Z”} {“Icao_addr”:11402414,”DF”:4,”CA”:0,”TypeCode”:0,”SubtypeCode”:0,”SBS_MsgType”:5,”SignalLevel”:0.001636,”Tail”:null,”Squawk”:null,”Emitter_category”:null,”OnGround”:false,”Lat”:null,”Lng”:null,”Position_valid”:false,”NACp”:null,”Alt”:6075,”AltIsGNSS”:false,”GnssDiffFromBaroAlt”:null,”Vvel”:null,”Speed_valid”:false,”Speed”:null,”Track”:null,”Timestamp”:”2021-03-06T17:34:12.142Z”} {“Icao_addr”:10645249,”DF”:11,”CA”:5,”TypeCode”:28,”SubtypeCode”:1,”SBS_MsgType”:8,”SignalLevel”:0.000837,”Tail”:null,”Squawk”:null,”Emitter_category”:null,”OnGround”:false,”Lat”:null,”Lng”:null,”Position_valid”:false,”NACp”:null,”Alt”:null,”AltIsGNSS”:false,”GnssDiffFromBaroAlt”:null,”Vvel”:null,”Speed_valid”:false,”Speed”:null,”Track”:null,”Timestamp”:”2021-03-06T17:34:12.158Z”}

Some Favorite Moments in Pictures Years Past

Looking back at 12 years of blog posts, photographs and tech articles, today I’m pulling up some of my favorite photos from years past.

Photo descriptions include a link to the story where it originally appeared.


May 2009 – Turn 2 crash at the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona
McLaren Test Drive Day during Car Week in Monterey CA. 570 Series cars (mine is on the right).
Alan DeMartini preparing for his First Solo – October 2018 in San Marcos Texas
Fleet Week 2016 in San Francisco CA. – NAVY Blue Angels demonstrate opposing pass low over the spectator boats.
Rare Porsche 917 Le Mans cars at Rensport Reunion 2016 in Monterey, CA.
F22 Raptor at the California Air Show in Salinas.
Rafting the American River’s South Fork (class 2-4+).
Lamborghini and Ducati in my garage. What an amazing day taking in the roads of the Santa Cruz Mountains.
An evening at Los Gatos Lamborghini with Lambo’s Chief Test Driver, Valentino Balboni.
First winter in Santa Cruz CA. Attended the O’Neil Classic pro surf competition in 80 degree weather; amazing!