This is a minimal OCaml project to parse FIT files as they are produced by personal fitness devices. FIT is a binary format invented by Garmin that groups basic values in records, which typically include a timestamp.
{
"msg": "20",
"13": 11,
"2": 1900,
"5": 1732414,
"6": 0,
"1": 1669620,
"0": 622905943,
"253": 971857351
}Each record has a global message number (like 20) which defines the purpose of the record and a number of values in position slots. The meaning of these is defined in the FIT Protocol but this library (so far) only implements the parsing. For example, message 20 is called record in the FIT protocol and slots have these meanings:
Values are further scaled and shifted, which is also defined in the protocol, and this transformation is only implemented for a few fields of the "record" message:
{
"msg": "record",
"timestamp": "2020-10-17T06:25:19",
"0": 622927716,
"1": 1703145,
"speed": 2.745,
"distance": 277.23,
"altitude": -118.8,
"temperature": inf
}This code is primarily intended as a library but it also provides a small binary. The fit command emits the data to stdout in JSON format. I am using this currently for inspecting FIT files. The FIT file in data/ is from a bike computer.
$ fit data/xpress-4x-2020-10-17.fit | head -25
[
{
"msg": "0",
"3": 5122,
"4": 971850094,
"1": 267,
"2": 1803,
"5": 0,
"0": 4
},
{
"msg": "68",
"0": 17,
"1": 1,
"2": 0,
"3": 10,
"4": 255,
"5": 0,
"6": 0,
"7": 0,
"8": 232,
"9": 0,
"10": 60,
"11": 19693
},
...Version 1.0.1 has been published as an Opam package such that it can be installed from Opam:
opam install fitYou can also pin it directly for access to unpublished changes:
opam pin add -y git+https://github.com/lindig/fitOnce installed, you can use it:
$ utop -require fit -require rresult
utop # open Rresult;;
utop # Fit.read "data/xpress-4x-2020-10-17.fit" >>= fun fit ->
Fit.to_json |> R.return;;The fit binary takes a FIT file as argument:
$ fit data/xpress-4x-2020-10-17.fit | tail -15
"58": 11,
"20": null,
"21": null
},
{
"msg": "activity",
"timestamp": "2020-10-17T08:22:35",
"0": 7263000,
"5": 971860957,
"1": 1,
"2": 0,
"3": 26,
"4": 1
}
$ fit --helpIf you find this useful, please contribute back by raising pull requests for improvements you made.