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QRZ Ham Radio Callsign Database - Volume 7.iso
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qrztech.txt
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1995-07-08
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The QRZ! Ham Radio CDROM
Callsign Database Technical Specification Rev B May 1995
Note: the following information is provided for those who wish to
access the callsign database information without the use of the QRZ!
software. Users of the QRZ! Ham Radio CDROM who wish to write their
own callsign database search and retrieval software are encouraged to
do so. We welcome user contributed shareware programs for future
versions of the QRZ! Ham Radio CDROM.
PC VERSIONS
For the PC, there are two versions of the QRZ! software, one for DOS
and one for Windows 3.1. Both versions use the same copy of the
database and the same primary search and retrieval methods.
The QRZ callsign database indexing and retrieval method was designed
and optimized for CDROM use. The primary goal was to provide fast
access for searches in light of the fact that typical CDROM seek times
are somewhat slow compared to hard disk. The algorithm described below
implements a methodology which requires only one CDROM disc seek per
lookup.
The QRZ callsign database is composed of four copies of the data, each
sorted by a different criteria. One copy is sorted by callsign, one by
last name, one by city-state and one by zip code. Note that only the
callsign database contains the foreign (DX) records. We would have
liked to sort the DX callsigns by name and by city, etc., but could not
since there is no universal address format. Therefore, DX callsigns
can be fetched by callsign only.
Each datafile has its own corresponding index file. An index file
contains selected keys from the corresponding database sampled at
regular intervals. The key sampling interval is stored in the index
header as bytesperkey, as shown in the structure definition below.
/*
** Index Header Block Definition (Version 2)
** (applies to all QRZ CDROMS from Version 2 onward)
**
** This block is located at the start of each index
*/
typedef struct {
char dataname[16]; /* Name of the data file */
char bytesperkey[8]; /* Data Bytes per Index Item */
char numkeys[8]; /* Number of items in this index */
char keylen[8]; /* Length of each key item in bytes */
char version[8]; /* Database Version ID */
} index_header;
Index Usage
The name index is set to a maximum of 16 characters with longer names
being truncated. Names are stored in last-first format with a space
between the names. The city/state index uses 12 characters per entry,
the callsign index 6 characters and the zip code index 5 characters.
The data which follows the header is simply a long list of single field
records. The records are tightly packed on 'bytesperkey' boundaries
without separators. There is no guarantee of a null terminator on any
index record entry.
When the program qrz.exe is run it first searches for a drive
containing the base directory \CALLBK . Next, it loads all four index
files (callbkc.idx, callbkn.idx, callbks.idx and callbkz.idx) into
tables in memory. These tables were kept small so as not to place an
undue RAM requirement on the user's system.
Next, when a user specifies a field and key to search, the program
searches the relevant index table and returns the closest match lower
(or equal to) the supplied key. The table position of this key is then
taken and multiplied by the 'bytesperkey' value to arrive at a database
file offset. This offset is then used to perform the first and only
seek into the database. Once on position within the file, a sequential
search is performed to return the match. The search terminates at the
next index key value if the field is not found.
The database files all have the same format. The records each consist
of comma separated fields which end with a single newline '\n' (ASCII
0xa) character. Blank fields are simply stored as a comma. Every
record has the same number of commas in it. Actual comma's in the data
field are stored as a semi-colon ';' which should be replaced by a
comma in the user's output formatting routine.
Example:
AA7BQ ,LLOYD,,FRED L,,53340,90009,00009,8215 E WOOD DR,SCOTTSDALE,AZ,
85260,E,KJ6RK,A
/*
** Standard Record Field Offsets
*/
#define CALL 0 AA7BQ
#define LNAME 1 LLOYD
#define JR 2 (not used) ***
#define FNAME 3 FRED L
#define MI 4 (not used) ***
#define DOB 5 53340
#define EFDATE 6 90009
#define EXPDATE 7 00009
#define MAIL_STR 8 8215 E. Wood DR
#define MAIL_CITY 9 SCOTTSDALE
#define MAIL_ST 10 AZ
#define MAIL_ZIP 11 85260
#define CLASS 12 E
#define P_CALL 13 KJ6RK
#define P_CLASS 14 A
*** The fields JR and MI were obsoleted by the FCC in July 1994.
The callsign fields are arranged in a strict "ccdccc" columnar format
where 'c' represents a letter and 'd' a digit. Callsigns which do not
conform to the "ccdccc" format are space filled in the relevant
positions. This field is rearranged to the proper layout by the user
program's output formatting routines.
All dates are stored in 5 character Julian format, e.g. 93003 equals
January 3, 1993. Dates before 1900 or after year 2000 must be
determined by their context usage. In other words, if the resultant
age does not make sense, then it's wrong. For example, all licenses
expire in the future so 02 is 2002. Birthdays are more difficult
but most can be determined to be greater than 10 years old. This is
not a perfect method, but it does yield satisfactory results.
Some folks may notice that the database no longer contains station
location information. This information is no longer supplied nor
available from the FCC since it is no longer a part of their record
keeping (See the May 1993 QST for more info).
Cross Reference Information
Callsigns in the database are now cross-referenced to both the current
and the previous call sign for each entry in which they are available.
A cross reference record takes the form of 'old,new' with no other
information in the record. A record can be identified as a cross
reference either one of two ways:
First, if the record length is less than 15 characters, then
it is a cross reference record.
Secondly, if the record contains only one comma "," , then
it is a cross reference record.
It is not necessary to test for both cases, either will do.
When a cross reference record is encountered, you must fetch the second
field and restart the search to return the primary reference.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Fred Lloyd, AA7BQ 05/24/95