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/ usr/ bin/

//usr/bin/autoreconf

#! /usr/bin/perl -w
# -*- perl -*-
# Generated from autoreconf.in; do not edit by hand.

eval 'case $# in 0) exec /usr/bin/perl -S "$0";; *) exec /usr/bin/perl -S "$0" "$@";; esac'
    if 0;

# autoreconf - install the GNU Build System in a directory tree
# Copyright (C) 1994, 1999-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.

# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.

# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

# Written by David J. MacKenzie.
# Extended and rewritten in Perl by Akim Demaille.

BEGIN
{
  my $pkgdatadir = $ENV{'autom4te_perllibdir'} || '/usr/share/autoconf';
  unshift @INC, $pkgdatadir;

  # Override SHELL.  On DJGPP SHELL may not be set to a shell
  # that can handle redirection and quote arguments correctly,
  # e.g.: COMMAND.COM.  For DJGPP always use the shell that configure
  # has detected.
  $ENV{'SHELL'} = '/bin/sh' if ($^O eq 'dos');
}

use Autom4te::ChannelDefs;
use Autom4te::Channels;
use Autom4te::Configure_ac;
use Autom4te::FileUtils;
use Autom4te::General;
use Autom4te::XFile;
# Do not use Cwd::chdir, since it might hang.
use Cwd 'cwd';
use strict;

## ----------- ##
## Variables.  ##
## ----------- ##

# $HELP
# -----
$help = "Usage: $0 [OPTION]... [DIRECTORY]...

Run `autoconf' (and `autoheader', `aclocal', `automake', `autopoint'
(formerly `gettextize'), and `libtoolize' where appropriate)
repeatedly to remake the GNU Build System files in specified
DIRECTORIES and their subdirectories (defaulting to `.').

By default, it only remakes those files that are older than their
sources.  If you install new versions of the GNU Build System,
you can make `autoreconf' remake all of the files by giving it the
`--force' option.

Operation modes:
  -h, --help               print this help, then exit
  -V, --version            print version number, then exit
  -v, --verbose            verbosely report processing
  -d, --debug              don't remove temporary files
  -f, --force              consider all files obsolete
  -i, --install            copy missing auxiliary files
      --no-recursive       don't rebuild sub-packages
  -s, --symlink            with -i, install symbolic links instead of copies
  -m, --make               when applicable, re-run ./configure && make
  -W, --warnings=CATEGORY  report the warnings falling in CATEGORY [syntax]

" . Autom4te::ChannelDefs::usage . "

The environment variable \`WARNINGS\' is honored.  Some subtools might
support other warning types, using \`all' is encouraged.

Library directories:
  -B, --prepend-include=DIR  prepend directory DIR to search path
  -I, --include=DIR          append directory DIR to search path

The environment variables AUTOM4TE, AUTOCONF, AUTOHEADER, AUTOMAKE,
ACLOCAL, AUTOPOINT, LIBTOOLIZE, M4, and MAKE are honored.

Report bugs to <bug-autoconf\@gnu.org>.
GNU Autoconf home page: <http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/>.
General help using GNU software: <http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>.
";

# $VERSION
# --------
$version = "autoreconf (GNU Autoconf) 2.69
Copyright (C) 2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
License GPLv3+/Autoconf: GNU GPL version 3 or later
<http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>, <http://gnu.org/licenses/exceptions.html>
This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.
There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

Written by David J. MacKenzie and Akim Demaille.
";

# Lib files.
my $autoconf   = $ENV{'AUTOCONF'}   || '/usr/bin/autoconf';
my $autoheader = $ENV{'AUTOHEADER'} || '/usr/bin/autoheader';
my $autom4te   = $ENV{'AUTOM4TE'}   || '/usr/bin/autom4te';
my $automake   = $ENV{'AUTOMAKE'}   || 'automake';
my $aclocal    = $ENV{'ACLOCAL'}    || 'aclocal';
my $libtoolize = $ENV{'LIBTOOLIZE'} || 'libtoolize';
my $autopoint  = $ENV{'AUTOPOINT'}  || 'autopoint';
my $make       = $ENV{'MAKE'}       || 'make';

# --install -- as --add-missing in other tools.
my $install = 0;
# symlink -- when --install, use symlinks instead.
my $symlink = 0;
# Does aclocal support --force?
my $aclocal_supports_force = 0;
# Does aclocal support -Wfoo?
my $aclocal_supports_warnings = 0;
# Does automake support --force-missing?
my $automake_supports_force_missing = 0;
# Does automake support -Wfoo?
my $automake_supports_warnings = 0;

my @prepend_include;
my @include;

# List of command line warning requests.
my @warning;

# Rerun `./configure && make'?
my $run_make = 0;

# Recurse into subpackages
my $recursive = 1;

## ---------- ##
## Routines.  ##
## ---------- ##


# parse_args ()
# -------------
# Process any command line arguments.
sub parse_args ()
{
  my $srcdir;

  getopt ("W|warnings=s"         => \@warning,
	  'I|include=s'          => \@include,
	  'B|prepend-include=s'	 => \@prepend_include,
	  'i|install'            => \$install,
	  's|symlink'            => \$symlink,
	  'm|make'               => \$run_make,
	  'recursive!'           => \$recursive);

  # Split the warnings as a list of elements instead of a list of
  # lists.
  @warning = map { split /,/ } @warning;
  parse_WARNINGS;
  parse_warnings '--warnings', @warning;

  # Even if the user specified a configure.ac, trim to get the
  # directory, and look for configure.ac again.  Because (i) the code
  # is simpler, and (ii) we are still able to diagnose simultaneous
  # presence of configure.ac and configure.in.
  @ARGV = map { /configure\.(ac|in)$/ ? dirname ($_) : $_ } @ARGV;
  push @ARGV, '.' unless @ARGV;

  if ($verbose && $debug)
    {
      for my $prog ($autoconf, $autoheader,
		    $automake, $aclocal,
		    $autopoint,
		    $libtoolize)
	{
	  xsystem ("$prog --version | sed 1q >&2");
	  print STDERR "\n";
	}
    }

  my $aclocal_help = `$aclocal --help 2>/dev/null`;
  my $automake_help = `$automake --help 2>/dev/null`;
  $aclocal_supports_force = $aclocal_help =~ /--force/;
  $aclocal_supports_warnings = $aclocal_help =~ /--warnings/;
  $automake_supports_force_missing = $automake_help =~ /--force-missing/;
  $automake_supports_warnings = $automake_help =~ /--warnings/;

  # Dispatch autoreconf's option to the tools.
  # --include;
  $aclocal    .= join (' -I ', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @include);
  $autoconf   .= join (' --include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @include);
  $autoconf   .= join (' --prepend-include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @prepend_include);
  $autoheader .= join (' --include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @include);
  $autoheader .= join (' --prepend-include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @prepend_include);

  # --install and --symlink;
  if ($install)
    {
      $automake   .= ' --add-missing';
      $automake   .= ' --copy' unless $symlink;
      $libtoolize .= ' --copy' unless $symlink;
    }
  # --force;
  if ($force)
    {
      $aclocal    .= ' --force'
	if $aclocal_supports_force;
      $autoconf   .= ' --force';
      $autoheader .= ' --force';
      $automake   .= ' --force-missing'
	if $automake_supports_force_missing;
      $autopoint  .= ' --force';
      $libtoolize .= ' --force';
    }
  else
    {
      # The implementation of --no-force is bogus in all implementations
      # of Automake up to 1.8, so we avoid it in these cases.  (Automake
      # 1.8 is the first version where aclocal supports force, hence
      # the condition.)
      $automake .= ' --no-force'
	if $aclocal_supports_force;
    }
  # --verbose --verbose or --debug;
  if ($verbose > 1 || $debug)
    {
      $autoconf   .= ' --verbose';
      $autoheader .= ' --verbose';
      $automake   .= ' --verbose';
      $aclocal    .= ' --verbose';
    }
  if ($debug)
    {
      $autoconf   .= ' --debug';
      $autoheader .= ' --debug';
      $libtoolize .= ' --debug';
    }
  # --warnings;
  if (@warning)
    {
      my $warn = ' --warnings=' . join (',', @warning);
      $autoconf   .= $warn;
      $autoheader .= $warn;
      $automake   .= $warn
	if $automake_supports_warnings;
      $aclocal    .= $warn
        if $aclocal_supports_warnings;
    }
}


# &run_aclocal ($ACLOCAL, $FLAGS)
# -------------------------------
# Update aclocal.m4 as lazily as possible, as aclocal pre-1.8 always
# overwrites aclocal.m4, hence triggers autoconf, autoheader, automake
# etc. uselessly.  aclocal 1.8+ does not need this.
sub run_aclocal ($$)
{
  my ($aclocal, $flags) = @_;

  # aclocal 1.8+ does all this for free.  It can be recognized by its
  # --force support.
  if ($aclocal_supports_force)
    {
      xsystem ("$aclocal $flags");
    }
  else
    {
      xsystem ("$aclocal $flags --output=aclocal.m4t");
      # aclocal may produce no output.
      if (-f 'aclocal.m4t')
	{
	  update_file ('aclocal.m4t', 'aclocal.m4');
	  # Make sure that the local m4 files are older than
	  # aclocal.m4.
	  #
	  # Why is not always the case?  Because we already run
	  # aclocal at first (before tracing), which, for instance,
	  # can find Gettext's macros in .../share/aclocal, so we may
	  # have had the right aclocal.m4 already.  Then autopoint is
	  # run, and installs locally these M4 files.  Then
	  # autoreconf, via update_file, sees it is the _same_
	  # aclocal.m4, and doesn't change its timestamp.  But later,
	  # Automake's Makefile expresses that aclocal.m4 depends on
	  # these local files, which are newer, so it triggers aclocal
	  # again.
	  #
	  # To make sure aclocal.m4 is no older, we change the
	  # modification times of the local M4 files to be not newer
	  # than it.
	  #
	  # First, where are the local files?
	  my $aclocal_local_dir = '.';
	  if ($flags =~ /-I\s+(\S+)/)
	    {
	      $aclocal_local_dir = $1;
	    }
	  # All the local files newer than aclocal.m4 are to be
	  # made not newer than it.
	  my $aclocal_m4_mtime = mtime ('aclocal.m4');
	  for my $file (glob ("$aclocal_local_dir/*.m4"), 'acinclude.m4')
	    {
	      if ($aclocal_m4_mtime < mtime ($file))
		{
		  debug "aging $file to be not newer than aclocal.m4";
		  utime $aclocal_m4_mtime, $aclocal_m4_mtime, $file;
		}
	    }
	}
    }
}

# &autoreconf_current_directory
# -----------------------------
sub autoreconf_current_directory ()
{
  my $configure_ac = find_configure_ac;

  # ---------------------- #
  # Is it using Autoconf?  #
  # ---------------------- #

  my $uses_autoconf;
  my $uses_gettext;
  if (-f $configure_ac)
    {
      my $configure_ac_file = new Autom4te::XFile "< $configure_ac";
      while ($_ = $configure_ac_file->getline)
	{
	  s/#.*//;
	  s/dnl.*//;
	  $uses_autoconf = 1 if /AC_INIT/;
	  # See below for why we look for gettext here.
	  $uses_gettext = 1  if /^AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION/;
	}
    }
  if (!$uses_autoconf)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not using Autoconf";
      return;
    }


  # ------------------- #
  # Running autopoint.  #
  # ------------------- #

  # Gettext is a bit of a problem: its macros are not necessarily
  # visible to aclocal, so if we start with a completely striped down
  # package (think of a fresh CVS checkout), running `aclocal' first
  # will fail: the Gettext macros are missing.
  #
  # Therefore, we can't use the traces to decide if we use Gettext or
  # not.  I guess that once Gettext move to 2.5x we will be able to,
  # but in the meanwhile forget it.
  #
  # We can only grep for AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION in configure.ac.  You
  # might think this approach is naive, and indeed it is, as it
  # prevents one to embed AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION in another *.m4, but
  # anyway we don't limit the generality, since... that's what
  # autopoint does.  Actually, it is even more restrictive, as it
  # greps for `^AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION('.  We did this above, while
  # scanning configure.ac.
  if (!$uses_gettext)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not using Gettext";
    }
  elsif (!$install)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not running autopoint: --install not given";
    }
  else
    {
      xsystem_hint ("autopoint is needed because this package uses Gettext", "$autopoint");
    }


  # ----------------- #
  # Running aclocal.  #
  # ----------------- #

  # Run it first: it might discover new macros to add, e.g.,
  # AC_PROG_LIBTOOL, which we will trace later to see if Libtool is
  # used.
  #
  # Always run it.  Tracking its sources for up-to-dateness is too
  # complex and too error prone.  The best we can do is avoiding
  # nuking the time stamp.
  my $uses_aclocal = 1;

  # Nevertheless, if aclocal.m4 exists and is not made by aclocal,
  # don't run aclocal.

  if (-f 'aclocal.m4')
    {
      my $aclocal_m4 = new Autom4te::XFile 'aclocal.m4';
      $_ = $aclocal_m4->getline;
      $uses_aclocal = 0
	unless defined ($_) && /generated.*by aclocal/;
    }

  # If there are flags for aclocal in Makefile.am, use them.
  my $aclocal_flags = '';
  if ($uses_aclocal && -f 'Makefile.am')
    {
      my $makefile = new Autom4te::XFile 'Makefile.am';
      while ($_ = $makefile->getline)
	{
	  if (/^ACLOCAL_[A-Z_]*FLAGS\s*=\s*(.*)/)
	    {
	      $aclocal_flags = $1;
	      last;
	    }
	}
    }

  if (!$uses_aclocal)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not using aclocal";
    }
  else
    {
      # Some file systems have sub-second time stamps, and if so we may
      # run into trouble later, after we rerun autoconf and set the
      # time stamps of input files to be no greater than aclocal.m4,
      # because the time-stamp-setting operation (utime) has a
      # resolution of only 1 second.  Work around the problem by
      # ensuring that there is at least a one-second window before the
      # time stamp of aclocal.m4t in which no file time stamps can
      # fall.
      sleep 1;

      run_aclocal ($aclocal, $aclocal_flags);
    }

  # We might have to rerun aclocal if Libtool (or others) imports new
  # macros.
  my $rerun_aclocal = 0;



  # ------------------------------- #
  # See what tools will be needed.  #
  # ------------------------------- #

  # Perform a single trace reading to avoid --force forcing a rerun
  # between two --trace, that's useless.  If there is no AC_INIT, then
  # we are not interested: it looks like a Cygnus thingy.
  my $aux_dir;
  my $uses_gettext_via_traces;
  my $uses_libtool;
  my $uses_libltdl;
  my $uses_autoheader;
  my $uses_automake;
  my @subdir;
  verb "$configure_ac: tracing";
  my $traces = new Autom4te::XFile
    ("$autoconf"
     . join (' ',
	     map { ' --trace=' . $_ . ':\$n::\${::}%' }
	     # If you change this list, update the
	     # `Autoreconf-preselections' section of autom4te.in.
	     'AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR',
	     'AC_CONFIG_HEADERS',
	     'AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS',
	     'AC_INIT',
	     'AC_PROG_LIBTOOL',
	     'LT_INIT',
	     'LT_CONFIG_LTDL_DIR',
	     'AM_GNU_GETTEXT',
	     'AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE',
	    )
     . ' |');
  while ($_ = $traces->getline)
    {
      chomp;
      my ($macro, @args) = split (/::/);
      $aux_dir = $args[0]           if $macro eq "AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR";
      $uses_autoconf = 1            if $macro eq "AC_INIT";
      $uses_gettext_via_traces = 1  if $macro eq "AM_GNU_GETTEXT";
      $uses_libtool = 1             if $macro eq "AC_PROG_LIBTOOL"
                                       || $macro eq "LT_INIT";
      $uses_libltdl = 1             if $macro eq "LT_CONFIG_LTDL_DIR";
      $uses_autoheader = 1          if $macro eq "AC_CONFIG_HEADERS";
      $uses_automake = 1            if $macro eq "AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE";
      push @subdir, split (' ', $args[0])
                                    if $macro eq "AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS" && $recursive;
    }

  # The subdirs are *optional*, they may not exist.
  foreach (@subdir)
    {
      if (-d)
	{
	  verb "$configure_ac: adding subdirectory $_ to autoreconf";
	  autoreconf ($_);
	}
      else
	{
	  verb "$configure_ac: subdirectory $_ not present";
	}
    }

  # Gettext consistency checks...
  error "$configure_ac: AM_GNU_GETTEXT is used, but not AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION"
    if $uses_gettext_via_traces && ! $uses_gettext;
  error "$configure_ac: AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION is used, but not AM_GNU_GETTEXT"
    if $uses_gettext && ! $uses_gettext_via_traces;


  # ---------------------------- #
  # Setting up the source tree.  #
  # ---------------------------- #

  # libtoolize, automake --add-missing etc. will drop files in the
  # $AUX_DIR.  But these tools fail to install these files if the
  # directory itself does not exist, which valid: just imagine a CVS
  # repository with hand written code only (there is not even a need
  # for a Makefile.am!).

  if (defined $aux_dir && ! -d $aux_dir)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: creating directory $aux_dir";
      mkdir $aux_dir, 0755
	or error "cannot create $aux_dir: $!";
    }


  # -------------------- #
  # Running libtoolize.  #
  # -------------------- #

  if (!$uses_libtool)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not using Libtool";
    }
  elsif ($install)
    {
      if ($uses_libltdl)
	{
	  $libtoolize .= " --ltdl";
	}
      xsystem_hint ("libtoolize is needed because this package uses Libtool", $libtoolize);
      $rerun_aclocal = 1;
    }
  else
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not running libtoolize: --install not given";
    }



  # ------------------- #
  # Rerunning aclocal.  #
  # ------------------- #

  # If we re-installed Libtool or Gettext, the macros might have changed.
  # Automake also needs an up-to-date aclocal.m4.
  if ($rerun_aclocal)
    {
      if (!$uses_aclocal)
	{
	  verb "$configure_ac: not using aclocal";
	}
      else
	{
	  run_aclocal ($aclocal, $aclocal_flags);
	}
    }


  # ------------------ #
  # Running autoconf.  #
  # ------------------ #

  # Don't try to be smarter than `autoconf', which does its own up to
  # date checks.
  #
  # We prefer running autoconf before autoheader, because (i) the
  # latter runs the former, and (ii) autoconf is stricter than
  # autoheader.  So all in all, autoconf should give better error
  # messages.
  xsystem ($autoconf);


  # -------------------- #
  # Running autoheader.  #
  # -------------------- #

  # We now consider that if AC_CONFIG_HEADERS is used, then autoheader
  # is used too.
  #
  # Just as for autoconf, up to date ness is performed by the tool
  # itself.
  #
  # Run it before automake, since the latter checks the presence of
  # config.h.in when it sees an AC_CONFIG_HEADERS.
  if (!$uses_autoheader)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not using Autoheader";
    }
  else
    {
      xsystem ($autoheader);
    }


  # ------------------ #
  # Running automake.  #
  # ------------------ #

  if (!$uses_automake)
    {
      verb "$configure_ac: not using Automake";
    }
  else
    {
      # We should always run automake, and let it decide whether it shall
      # update the file or not.  In fact, the effect of `$force' is already
      # included in `$automake' via `--no-force'.
      xsystem ($automake);
    }


  # -------------- #
  # Running make.  #
  # -------------- #

  if ($run_make)
    {
      if (!-f "config.status")
	{
	  verb "no config.status: cannot re-make";
	}
      else
	{
	  xsystem ("./config.status --recheck");
	  xsystem ("./config.status");
	  if (!-f "Makefile")
	    {
	      verb "no Makefile: cannot re-make";
	    }
	  else
	    {
	      xsystem ("$make");
	    }
	}
    }
}


# &autoreconf ($DIRECTORY)
# ------------------------
# Reconf the $DIRECTORY.
sub autoreconf ($)
{
  my ($directory) = @_;
  my $cwd = cwd;

  # The format for this message is not free: taken from Emacs, itself
  # using GNU Make's format.
  verb "Entering directory `$directory'";
  chdir $directory
    or error "cannot chdir to $directory: $!";

  autoreconf_current_directory;

  # The format is not free: taken from Emacs, itself using GNU Make's
  # format.
  verb "Leaving directory `$directory'";
  chdir $cwd
    or error "cannot chdir to $cwd: $!";
}


## ------ ##
## Main.  ##
## ------ ##

# When debugging, it is convenient that all the related temporary
# files be at the same place.
mktmpdir ('ar');
$ENV{'TMPDIR'} = $tmp;
parse_args;

# Autoreconf all the given configure.ac.  Unless `--no-recursive' is passed,
# AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS will be traversed in &autoreconf_current_directory.
$ENV{'AUTOM4TE'} = $autom4te;
for my $directory (@ARGV)
  {
    require_configure_ac ($directory);
    autoreconf ($directory);
  }

### Setup "GNU" style for perl-mode and cperl-mode.
## Local Variables:
## perl-indent-level: 2
## perl-continued-statement-offset: 2
## perl-continued-brace-offset: 0
## perl-brace-offset: 0
## perl-brace-imaginary-offset: 0
## perl-label-offset: -2
## cperl-indent-level: 2
## cperl-brace-offset: 0
## cperl-continued-brace-offset: 0
## cperl-label-offset: -2
## cperl-extra-newline-before-brace: t
## cperl-merge-trailing-else: nil
## cperl-continued-statement-offset: 2
## End:
			
			


Thanks For 0xGh05T - DSRF14 - Mr.Dan07 - Leri01 - FxshX7 - AlkaExploiter - xLoveSyndrome'z - Acep Gans'z

JMDS TRACK – Just Another Diagnostics Lab Site

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Fleet management

  1. Reduce the operting cost and the unavailability of your vehicles
  2. reduce the fuel consumption of your fleet
  3. Improve the driving dehavior and safety of your drivers
  4. optimize the utilization rate of your equipment 
  5. protect your vehicle against theft
  6. Improve the quality of your customer service


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Assets management

  1. Track the roaming of your equipment
  2. Optimise the management of your assets on site and during transport
  3. Secure the transport of your goods
  4. Make your team responsible for preventing the loss of tools, equipment
  5. Take a real-time inventory of your equipment on site
  6. Easily find your mobile objects or equipment



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Antitheft solutions

  1. Secure your vehicles and machinery and increase your chances of recovering them in the event of theft
  2. Protect your assets and reduce the costs associated with their loss
  3. Combine immobiliser and driver identification and limit the risk of theft
  4. Identify fuel theft and reduce costs
  5. Protect your goods and take no more risks
  6. Be alerted to abnormal events

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682230363/ 677481892

What makes us different from others

  • young and dynamic team
  • call center 24/24 7/7
  • roaming throughout Africa
  • team of developers who can develop customer-specific solutions
  • diversity of services
  • reactive and prompt after-sales service when soliciting a customer or a malfunction
  • Free Maintenance and installation in the cities of Douala and Yaounde

https://youtu.be/xI1cz_Jh2x8

15+
years of experience in GPS system development, production and deployment.

15 Collaborators

More than 15 employees dedicated to the research and development of new applications and to customer care

5 000 Vehicles and mobile assets

5 000 vehicles and mobile assets under management, in Africa

Our Partners










Latest Case Studies

Our current projects 

5/5
Bon SAV , SATISFAIT DU TRAITEMENT DES REQUETES

M DIPITA CHRISTIAN
Logistic Safety Manager Road Safety Manager
5/5
La réactivité de JMDS est excellente
Nous restons satisfait dans l’ensemble des prestations relatives a la couverture de notre parc automobile

Hervé Frédéric NDENGUE
Chef Service Adjoint de la Sécurité Générale (CNPS)
5/5
L’APPLICATION EMIXIS est convivial A L’utilisation
BEIG-3 SARL
DIRECTOR GENERAL
5/5
Nevertheless I am delighted with the service
MR. BISSE BENJAMIN
CUSTOMER

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Address JMDS TRACK

Douala bp cité



and

YAOUNDE Total Essos

Call Us

+237682230363



Email Us


info@jmdstrack.cm