Scripting informations are stored in table grb_script. Here is sample output:
stars= SELECT * FROM grb_script; camera_name | grb_script_end | grb_script_script -------------+----------------+------------------- C5 | 600 | F 2 E 20 C5 | | F 2 E 60 F 4 E 60 C4 | 600 | E 30 C4 | | E 60 C6 | 600 | F 2 E 20 C6 | | F 2 E 60 F 4 E 60 C7 | 600 | F 2 E 20 C7 | | F 2 E 60 F 4 E 60
If you would like to modify this table, the easiest approach is to use pg-dump
user@host:~$ pg_dump -t grb_script stars > grb_script user@host:~$ editor grb_script
edit grb_script so it contains only lines similar to the example bellow:
COPY grb_script (camera_name, grb_script_end, grb_script_script) FROM stdin; C5 600 F 2 E 20 C5 \N F 2 E 60 F 4 E 60 C4 600 E 30 C4 \N E 60 C6 600 F 2 E 20 C6 \N F 2 E 60 F 4 E 60 C7 600 F 2 E 20 C7 \N F 2 E 60 F 4 E 60 \.
Please bear in mid that there MUST be tabulator between entries (after C5 and 600 in the example above). Edit those lines, particularly scripts, add new lines, and send the file back to psql
user@host:~$ psql stars < grb_script
The following is added by someone learning the system and is not official:
Since the grb_script table in the stars database is properly set to have the constrain of being UNIQUE, if the method described above is attempted for updating the script psql will refuse to add it again and will output among other things:
ERROR: relation "grb_script" already exists
This can be circumvented by simply using psql to edit the table.
user@host:~$ psql stars stars=> UPDATE grb_script SET grb_script_script = 'filter=0 E 30' WHERE grb_script_end = '600' and camera_name="C5"; stars=> INSERT INTO grb_script VALUES ('C5', '300', 'filter=0 EMON=off filter=C E 30'); stars=> UPDATE grb_script SET grb_script_script = 'filter=0 E 180' WHERE grb_script_end IS NULL and camera_name="C5";
Note that: