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OpsLog/wiki/Multi-Operator-Live-Status.md
2026-07-09 16:51:57 +02:00

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Multi-Operator Live Status

For a multi-op special-event call on a shared MySQL logbook (e.g. TM74TFR), OpsLog can publish who is on the air, on which band/mode/frequency, as a live page you embed on the station's QRZ.com bio.

Enable it

  1. Point the profile's logbook at a shared MySQL database (Profiles and Databases).
  2. Settings → General → Publish live operator status.

Each OpsLog instance then heartbeats its current activity (operator call, band, frequency, mode) into a live_status table every ~15 s. OpsLog only writes to the database — it is not a web server.

The web page

A small PHP renderer, docs/livestatus/tm74-status.php, reads that table and produces a live page/image. Put it on your own web server (the one reachable from the internet):

  1. Edit the credentials at the top: $DB_HOST, $DB_PORT, $DB_NAME, $DB_USER, $DB_PASS — pointing at the same MySQL as OpsLog's logbook.

  2. Embed it on QRZ (QRZ strips <script>/<iframe>, so use an image):

    <img src="https://your-server/tm74-status.php?img=1">
    

    or link the real-time page: https://your-server/tm74-status.php.

Troubleshooting the PHP page

  • Connection refused — MySQL is refusing the connection. Most common cause: the server's bind-address is 127.0.0.1 (localhost only). Set it to the LAN IP / 0.0.0.0, grant the opslog user for the web server's IP, and open the firewall.
  • Runs on a non-standard MySQL port — set $DB_PORT and pass it as the 5th mysqli argument (the shipped script already does).
  • Redeploy the current tm74-status.php if you edited an old copy — the shipped version fails gracefully instead of throwing a PHP fatal error.