Merge upstream version 0.8.0 into our libdc fork.
Since we tracked the development branch, we already had merged all the
main changes, but it's been a couple of months since the last upstream
merge, and there were a few new changes upstream:
- Divesoft Freedom and Liberty support
- A couple of iostream abstraction layers: a new 'packet layer' and a
HDLC layer, moving code from low-level dive computer downloaders to
generic iostream layers.
- misc minor updates
* tag 'v0.8.0': (25 commits)
Release version 0.8.0
Fix the date of the v0.7.0 release
Add a missing filter for the Aqualung i750TC
Reduce the BLE output packet size to 20 bytes again
Integrate the new packet I/O in the backends
Add a generic packet I/O implementation
Fix a typo in the documentation
Add support for the Divesoft Freedom and Liberty
Integrate the HDLC stream in the eonsteel backend
Add a generic HDLC I/O implementation
Remove the local endianess functions
Use the correct function to free resources
Add the udev rules to the distribution tarball
Add a README file to the contrib directory
Include the revision in the Visual Studio and Android builds
Don't generate the Windows version resource
Move the Visual Studio project to the contrib directory
Add a basic Android build system
Disable the getopt argument permutation on Android
Move the sign extension function to a common place
...
The Windows version resource is compiled and can include the (generated)
version.h header file for the definition of the version macros. There is
no need to have it generated by autotools. Less generated files makes it
easier to use other build systems, like Visual Studio.
Merge upstream updates from Jef Driesen:
- Deepblu Cosmiq+ support has been merged upstream
- Oceans S1 support has been merged upstream
- Various new models supported: Cressi Donatello, Scubapro G2 TEK, new
Excursion v6+ firmware.
- misc core changes, most notably supporting a new annoying specialized
binary format for "decomode", because Jef still can't deal with
strings.
- lots of small details
* https://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer: (58 commits)
Keep open-circuit and diluent gas mixes separately
Parse some extra gas mix information
Limit the index to the fixed gas mixes
Handle dives without a valid gas mix more explicit
Ignore all gas mixes for freedives
Always include all gas mixes defined in the header
Add support for the new Excursion v6+ firmware
Add support for the HP CCR tank pressure
Use the correct field for the setpoint sample
Add support for the Oceans S1
Add support for the Deepblu Cosmiq+
Add missing functions for accessing big/little endian values
Move the snprintf functions to the platform module
Repeat the handshake every few packets
Enable big page support
Remove the model number from the vtpro struct
Add the model number to the version table
Move all model numbers to the common header
Remove a duplicated include statement
Add support for the 300bar pressure sensor
...
The getopt function is defined in the unistd.h header file. This header
file is only available on posix compatible systems. For example, on
Windows it's not available when building without mingw.
On Linux, the hidapi library is usually available in two variants:
hidapi-libusb and hidapi-hidraw. By default, the autotools build system
won't be able to detect those variants (due to the difference in the
name) and will automatically fallback to the libusb implementation
instead.
If for some reason the hidapi library should be used, the preferred
hidapi variant can now be specified during configuation with a
parameter:
./configure --with-hidapi=hidapi-libusb|hidapi-hidraw
The default value for the parameter remains 'hidapi'.
Merge upstream libdivecomputer updates by Jef Driesen:
- fix HW Sport and Mares Genius firmware update
- Windows Visual Studio build updates
- Various parser updates:
- sporasub depth, salinity and sample rate parsing
- Atomics Cobalt atmospheric pressure parsing
- unit cleanups (Uwatec, McLean Extreme)
* git://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer:
Some more fixes for the new Mares Genius firmware
Implement the salinity field
Fix the sample rate parsing
Add support for the new Mares Genius firmware
Use the correct standard gravity factor
Use SI units internally
Fix negative depth values
Move the unit conversion to the last moment
Implement the atmospheric pressure field
Always use the stored atmospheric pressure
Add a CI job to build with Visual Studio
Migrate to Visual Studio 2013 (or newer)
Emit events when downloading a memory dump
Fix the depth decoding
Add library dependencies in windows build
Fix the hwOS Sport firmware upgrade
Post release version bump to 0.8.0
Update to the v0.7.0 release.
Only a couple of trivial changes from the last development version we merged with:
- add new product ID for the Sherwood Amphos 2.0
- make the example app use the product name and not vendor name for the
McLean Extrme
* tag 'v0.7.0':
Release version 0.7.0
Use the product name as the family name
Add support for the Sherwood Amphos 2.0
Merge upstream updates from Jef:
- add suppoort for various new variants of existing dive computers:
+ Suunto Eon Steel Black, and new variant of Zoop Novo
+ Sherwood Beacon
+ new Shearwater Perdix AI model number
- add new Sporasub SP2 support
- various minor fixes and updates
* 'master' of git://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer: (22 commits)
Add support for a new Suunto Zoop Novo variant
Add support for the EON Steel Black
Add support for the Sporasub SP2
Fix an overflow in the progress events
Use a common sleep implementation
Fix the clang compiler flag detection
Add Github Actions CI builds and releases
Show a summary after configuration
Extend the OS detection to non Windows platforms
Implement the ndl/deco sample
Fix the maximum depth
Mark the McLean Extreme as supporting BLE
Fix -Wcast-qual compiler warning
Mark the new iX3M 2021 models as supporting BLE
Add support for the Sherwood Beacon
Remove the infinite timeout
Simplify the loop for reading the packet header
Add a new Perdix AI hardware type
Fix the McLean Extreme fingerprint feature
Perform the check for the NULL key earlier
...
The clang compiler accepts *any* compiler flags, and just reports
an annoying warning instead:
warning: unknown warning option '-Wsomething' [-Wunknown-warning-option]
Use -Werror=unknown-warning-option to change this warning into an error,
and detect the unsupported flag. Since this is a clang specific option,
it can't be used unconditionally with other compilers. The option is
also only used for checking the compiler flags, and not for compiling
the code.
Create parallel helper functions that use libmtp to walk the file tree on the
device and to then read a specific file from the device into our dc_buffer.
MTP is not a file system, it's an object storage, that just happens to allow
object names and parent/child relationships between objects. As a result we
need to remember those file ids for MTP downloads.
The mtp_get_file_list function is rather complex as it includes both the
initial communication with the device and the code to walk the object tree and
then create the list of file.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
We have a slightly different set of flags for mthe subsurface build, and
we want the version to also say that this is our Subsurface-specific
branch of libdc, not the upstream one.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
The new timer module provides an cross-platform interface for a high
resolution monotonic clock. The timestamps are always relative to the
creation of the timer and their unit is one microseconds.
The timers can be used for logging, measuring elapsed time and
implementing timeouts.
The -Wno-pedantic-ms-format option is only needed for the MinGW target.
But for some reason, the AX_APPEND_COMPILE_FLAGS macro enables the
option for all other GCC targets too. But during compilation GCC outputs
the warning "unrecognized command line option".
Because some of those compiler warnings are GCC specific, they should
only be enabled if the compiler actually supports them. This is take
care of with some macros from the autoconf-archive.
To avoid breaking the build on systems that don't have those macros
installed (e.g. Mac OS X), they are included in the project.
Perform the initialization inside a critical section.
Unfortunately Windows critical sections, which are the simplest
synchronization mechanism available on Windows, do not support static
initialization. A call to InitializeCriticalSection is required.
Therefore a simple spinlock, with an implementation based on atomic
operations, is used as a workaround.
Allthough most dive computers always use local time and don't support
timezones at all, there are a few exceptions. There are two different
sources of timezone information:
- Some of the newer Uwatec/Scubapro devices use UTC internally and also
support a timezone setting. This UTC offset is currently taken into
account to obtain the dive date/time, but the UTC offset itself is
lost.
- Uwatec/Scubapro and Reefnet devices rely on the clock of the host
system to synchronize the internal device clock and calculate the
dive date/time. The consequence is that the resulting date/time is
always in the timezone of the host system.
In order to preserve this timezone information, the dc_datetime_t
structure is extended with a new "timezone" field, containing the UTC
offset in seconds. Devices without timezone support will set the field
to the special value DC_TIMEZONE_NONE.
The dc_datetime_localtime() and dc_datetime_gmtime() functions will
automatically populate the new field with respectively the local
timezone offset and zero. The dc_datetime_mktime() function will take
into account the new timezone field for the conversion to UTC. The
special value DC_TIMEZONE_NONE is interpreted as zero.
For the time being, the bluetooth communication code is of very limited
use. It's not used anywhere in the library, and as an internal api it's
also not available to applications. It serves mainly as a reference
implementation for future use.
The implementation supports Windows and Linux.
The dummy IrDA implementation is integrated in the main file. The
appropriate implementation is selected using conditional compilation
based on the features detect by the autotools build system.
On Mac OS X, libusb doesn't work for USB HID devices. We can use the
hidapi library instead. Although the hidapi library supports Linux and
Windows too, we keep using libusb there to avoid the extra dependency.
On BSD based operating systems (which includes Mac OS X), the getopt()
function is posix compliant and thus the option processing stops when
the first non-option is found. But the getopt_long() function permutes
the argument vector, just like the GNU implementation.
Using a leading '+' character in the option string disables the
permutation again.
The universal application works well, but is quite difficult to extend
with more functionality. Therefore a new and more modular application is
needed. The new dctool application will support multiple sub-commands,
to carry out specific actions. Extending the application will be as easy
as adding new commands.
The example applications may not always be needed. An option to disable
them might be useful.
Signed-off-by: Venkatesh Shukla <venkatesh.shukla.eee11@iitbhu.ac.in>
Currently all device descriptors are included, regardless of whether
the device is actually supported by the library. If IrDA or USB support
is unavailable, a dummy backend is build which will always fail with
DC_STATUS_UNSUPPORTED. Thus there is no point in listing those devices
as being supported. Doing so will only confuse end-users.
For bug reports it's very convenient to know the exact version. For
release builds, the standard version triplet (major.minor.micro) is
more than sufficient, but that's not the case for development builds.
Due to the post-release version increment, development builds already
have a version number that is distinct from previous releases, but
including the git commit SHA1 is even more accurate.
On Windows, the git commit SHA1 is also embedded in the version
resource.
Pseudo terminals are very convenient for testing purposes, but they are
not fully compatible with real serial (or even usb-serial) hardware.
With the new option, some workarounds can be enabled to hide the
differences and increase compatibility. Although these workarounds
shouldn't cause any problems in production builds, the advise is to
disable this feature.
A few ioctl's are not supported for pseudo terminals. They fail with
EINVAL (Linux) or ENOTTY (Mac OS X). Since these specific error codes
should not occur under normal conditions, they are simply ignored when
pseudo terminal support is enabled.
The TIOCEXCL ioctl (exclusive access) is also problematic. The TIOCEXCL
setting is shared between the master and slave side of the pty. When the
setting is applied on the slave side, it persists for as long as the
master side remains open. The result is that re-opening the slave side
will fail with EBUSY, unless the process has root priviliges. Since this
is very inconvenient, the TIOCEXCL setting is not used when pseudo
terminal support is enabled.