100 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Linus Torvalds
9812bf0828 Deepblu Cosmiq+: Add skeleton code
This does nothing at all, but it adds all the core skeleton
infrastructure for the Deepblu Cosmiq+ dive computer.

Let's see if I can make sense of things and make it download anything.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2019-08-15 14:46:38 -07:00
Dirk Hohndel
e4698c4844 Shearwater Teric: add support for the TAG INFO_EVENT
This logs every INFO_EVENT record and provides a SAMPLE_EVENT_BOOKMARK event for
the only INFO_EVENT we can parse so far, the TAG event. Three bits in the flag
value in that event structure are now used to hold the tag type, and if a
non-zero type has been set, then the value is the heading in degress.

Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2019-03-16 12:23:28 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
1d09635a58 Merge git://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer into Subsurface-NG
Update with Jef's upstream:

 - add support for Cressi Goa and Cartesio

 - update the Shearwater PNF parser to Jef's version

 - misc minor fixes

* git://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer:
  Use the timezone setting of the dive computer
  Add support for the Cressi Goa and Cartesio
  Add an extra parameter for the initial CRC value
  Add support for the Ratio iDive Color series
  Shearwater Petrel Native Format parsing
  Shearwater: detect which logbook format is support
  Shearwater: add Teric to list of supported dive computers
  Shearwater: skip deleted dives
  Fix a potential buffer overflow
2019-01-22 12:15:37 +13:00
Jef Driesen
e363e5b1fd Add support for the Cressi Goa and Cartesio 2019-01-14 21:14:30 +01:00
Linus Torvalds
54ba49b1b3 iostream: add 'get_name()' function
Some of the transport types have meaningful names.

The BLE transport has a device name that was exposed during device
discovery, for example, and some back-ends (ok, right now only the
Aqualung i300C and i770R) need to know what that device name was in
order to handshake with the device properly.

Other transports, like the USBSTORAGE one, could usefully use this to
get the basename of the path to the storage, although right now that
transport makes do with simply doing a "dc_iostream_read()" on the
transport instead.

For now, this is just the infrastructure, ready to get hooked into.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2018-10-05 15:04:37 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
86540206db Add support for DC_SAMPLE_TTS - time to surface in seconds
Several dive computers support this, so why not have the proper
interface for it in libdivecomputer?

Triggered by the fact that the Python scripts to generate XML files from
the Garmin FIT files can import this information, but the native
libdivecomputer model couldn't.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2018-09-02 13:16:02 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
f6ea5f514a Merge branch 'garmin-descent' into Subsurface-NG
Merge the initial Garmin Descent Mk1 support.

This actually works well enough to be useful, even though there are a
few ugly details yet to be sorted out.

The download itself is fairly complete, but all event handling is
currently missing (warnings, gas changes, things like that).

Also, because of how libdivecomputer works, the "downloading" of dives
is entirely separate from the "parsing" of dives in the libdivecomputer
world.  And that is actually problematic for the Garmin Descent
downloader, because you actually need to parse the data to even figure
out whether it's actually a dive at all!

The Garmin Descent is also a fitness and general excercise tracker, so
people can (and do) use it for other sports than just diving, and so the
activities we download may end up not being dives at all, but other
events.

But before we parse them, we don't know, and we aren't really supposed
to parse them until after we've passed the data to the application and
it passes it back for parsing.  Nasty chicken-and-egg problem there..

So right now non-diving activities will just show up as very short
and/or shallow dives.

This is fixable by just parsing things an extra time, but I really wish
libdivecomputer would just stop thinking that downloading and parsing
are separate events.

* garmin-descent:
  Add dc_usb_storage_open to the symbols list
  garmin: only record gasmixes for cylinders that aren't enabled
  garmin: don't emit fake device info and vendor event
  garmin: add support for downloading gas mixes
  garmin: add GPS coordinate data and improve parser_get_field() reports
  garmin: actually start using the parsed data
  garmin: turn all the remaining unrecognized fields into DEBUG messages
  garmin: add a lot of new field definitions
  garmin: teach the parser to show undefined values for unknown fields too
  garmin: fix file length header parsing
  garmin: teach the parser about invalid values and more dates
  garmin: some fields are defined in all message types
  Garmin: start parsing definition records
  Garmin Descent Mk1: flesh out the actual downloading part
  Add Garmin Descent Mk1 skeleton
  Add 'USB storage' transport enumeration
2018-08-31 13:24:03 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
63cd80c560 Merge https://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer into Subsurface-NG
Merge upstream libdivecomputer changes from Jef Driesen.

* https://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer:
  Add Travis CI integration
  Fix the transport command-line parameter
  Document dc_descriptor_get_model
  Include stddef.h in iostream.h
  Add support for the Mares Smart Air
  Fix the average depth for older OSTC dives
  Add support for the Oceanic Pro Plus X
2018-08-31 12:52:50 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
8f790b52e4 Add Garmin Descent Mk1 skeleton
This does absolutely nothing, but it adds the basic skeleton for a new
dive computer support.

Not only don't I have any real code for any of this yet, but I actually
think it might be useful to have a "this is how to add a new dive
computer" example commit.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2018-08-27 13:19:29 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
8735156e89 Add 'USB storage' transport enumeration
We now have at least two dive computers that enumerate as USB storage
devices: the Uemis Zurich and the Garmin Descent Mk1.

The Uemis is handled purely inside of subsurface, with no
libdivecomputer support.  That was likely a mistake, but it was not
practical to do a libdivecomputer backend for it at the time.

The Garmin Descent Mk1 support would be much nicer to have natively in
libdivecomputer, and looks much more relevant and practical than the
Uemis situation was.

So start off with defining a new transport type.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2018-08-27 13:17:05 -07:00
Calle Gunnarsson
4da94a7285 Include stddef.h in iostream.h
This header need to be included to successfully generate Go-bindings.
2018-08-20 07:55:54 +02:00
Linus Torvalds
02560a7e7f Merge git://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer into Subsurface-NG
Merge with upstream libdivecomputer from Jef.

This fixes some sleeping functions, and also implements support for the
Tecdiving DiveComputer.eu dive computers.

There's also various minor cleanups.  Most notable is perhaps the
unification of the Uwatec dive computer backends.

* git://github.com/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer:
  Initialize the socket library for the bluetooth discovery
  Fix the length of the Suunto D6i gas change event
  Add support for the Tecdiving DiveComputer.eu
  Fix the Mac OS X timer implementation
  Add the average depth to the xml output
  Skip the handshake for BLE communication
  Unify the Uwatec Smart, Meridian and G2 backends
  Re-organize the packet send/receive code
  Use symbolic constants for the commands
  Implement an rfcomm filter function
  Remove the filter for HW OSTC's without bluetooth
  Implement the sleep function for IrDA and bluetooth
2018-06-27 08:05:00 -07:00
Jef Driesen
472e9e984c Add support for the Tecdiving DiveComputer.eu 2018-06-22 23:24:30 +02:00
Jef Driesen
8aef4a49a0 Unify the Uwatec Smart, Meridian and G2 backends
The Uwatec Smart, Meridian and G2 backends are almost identical, except
for the low-level packet sending and receiving code. With the new I/O
layer, those three backends can easily be unified in a single backend.

The Meridian and G2 are completely removed, only the family types are
kept for backwards compatibility.
2018-06-22 23:13:44 +02:00
Linus Torvalds
167848aa59 Add subsurface-specific cylinder descriptor extension
This extends the libdivecomputer notion of "dc_tankvolume_t" to not just
have the tank volume type (imperial or metric), but be a "dc_tankinfo_t"
that shows other information about the cylinder.

The imperial-vs-metric data remains the same two values:

 1 - metric
 2 - imperial

but instead of being an enumeration of volume types, it is extended to a
bitmap of tank information, and the other bits currently are

 4 - CC diluent cylinder
 8 - CC O2 cylinder

with possible future extensions (bailout gas, perhaps).

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2018-04-24 17:32:21 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
362fe3f936 Add subsurface-specific DC field extension: descriptor/value strings
The default libdivecomputer fields are good for structured data that has
a well-defined format, like the cylinder information, or the temperature
data.

But it is entirely useless for miscellaneous divecomputer-specific
information, where there is no standard way of representing the data
across different kinds of dive computers.

Examples of this include simple things like deco calculation algorithm
(what kind of Buehlmann, gradient factor information or is it some
vendor-specific mode?) and even something as trivial as a serial number.

No, serial numbers aren't numbers. They are strings. Really.

But this also includes much more complex data that is really specific to
a particular dive computer or family: what the battery status is for the
dive computer or the wireless transmitters it is connected to (sometimes
it's a voltage, sometimes it's a percentage, sometimes it's just "good"
or "marginal").

It also includes random incidental information like firmware version
numbers (again, these are strings, not numbers, despite the name) or
dive mode and personal adjustment information.

So allow the dive computer to just give "extra information" in the form
of an array of { key, value } string pairs.  For my Perdix AI the
information could be

  { "Serial", "370d1f24" }
  { "FW Version", "44" }
  { "Deco model", "GF 40/85" }
  { "Battery type", "3.6V Saft" }
  { "Battery at end", "3.4 V" }

and for my EON Steel with three wireless transmitters connected it can
look like this:

  { "Serial", "1742104730" }
  { "FW Version", "1.6.5" }
  { "HW Version", "70.3.0" }
  { "Battery at start", "Charge: 83%, Voltage: 4.012V" }
  { "Deco algorithm", "Suunto Fused RGBM" }
  { "Personal Adjustment", "P-2" }
  { "Battery at end", "Charge: 79%, Voltage: 3.977V" }
  { "Dive Mode", "Trimix" }
  { "Desaturation Time", "7:53" }
  { "Transmitter ID", "1519107801" }
  { "Transmitter Battery at start", "87 %" }
  { "Transmitter Battery at end", "87 %" }
  { "Transmitter ID", "1550110028" }
  { "Transmitter Battery at start", "100 %" }
  { "Transmitter Battery at end", "100 %" }
  { "Transmitter ID", "1719102387" }
  { "Transmitter Battery at start", "100 %" }
  { "Transmitter Battery at end", "100 %" }

so this data is inherently unstructured and dependent on the dive
computer, but quite relevant to the diver.  Subsurface shows this in the
"Extra Info" panel for each dive computer.

Also teach the example output-xml code about the new string field
extension.  That example output-xml code was written by Anton Lundin in
the old Subsurface branch, and signed-off-by Dirk.  The sign-offs here
are taken from that original work.

Signed-off-by: Anton Lundin <glance@acc.umu.se>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2018-04-24 17:32:21 -07:00
Linus Torvalds
49f89d2205 Add subsurface-specific event extension: event strings and severity
We _really_ find the standard libdivecomputer event enumeration much too
inflexible and not giving us enough useful information.  This is
particularly noticeable with the Suunto EON Steel/Core, where there are
no fixed event enumerations, but instead the dive computer literally
gives you event strings.

Do the same thing in the libdivecomputer interface: allow an event of
type SAMPLE_EVENT_STRING which instead of the useless "value" gives an
actual string describing the event.

Also, extend the "flags" field to have not just a NONE/BEGIN/END marker,
but a severity level. The severity level is 3 bits, so 0-7, with the meaning being

 0 - 'no severity info'
 1 - state change (so 'surface' event or similar - don't even show it by default)
 2 - notification (informational, eg "safety stop", "tank change")
 3 - warning ("ascent speed")
 4 - alarm (some actual dive violation).
 5-7: future expansion?

Think of 0 as "legacy - missing information", 1 as "internal DC thing",
and 2-4 as (green-yellow-red).

This makes it possible for the dive computer back-end to give the user
actual useful information for events.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2018-04-24 17:32:21 -07:00
Jef Driesen
3d394c9262 Don't use the USB VID/PID for opening the device
When two or more identical (or very similar) dive computers are
connected, the USB VID/PID can be ambiguous. That's because the VID/PID
identifies the type of the USB device, and not the individual device.
But each USB HID device descriptor returned by the device discovery
represents a single connected device, and thus guarantees to open the
correct USB device.

To obtain the same behaviour as before, an application can simply open
the first discovered device.
2018-04-03 22:02:15 +02:00
Jef Driesen
a7d0033bae Add a Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) transport type
Libdivecomputer doesn't have built-in support for BLE communication yet,
so this is mainly for future use and custom I/O implementations.
2018-04-03 21:52:20 +02:00
Jef Driesen
44eba5515c Move the I/O implementations to the public api
The I/O implementations need to be exposed in the public api, otherwise
applications won't be able to use them!
2018-04-03 21:44:08 +02:00
Jef Driesen
ef2402eff5 Integrate the new I/O interface in the public api
Currently the dive computer backends are responsible for opening (and
closing) the underlying I/O stream internally. The consequence is that
each backend is hardwired to a specific transport type (e.g. serial,
irda or usbhid). In order to remove this dependency and support more
than one transport type in the same backend, the opening (and closing)
of the I/O stream is moved to the application.

The dc_device_open() function is modified to accept a pointer to the I/O
stream, instead of a string with the device node (which only makes sense
for serial communication). The dive computer backends only depend on the
common I/O interface.
2018-04-03 21:11:06 +02:00
Jef Driesen
30ea13b36b Remove the obsolete transport function
With the support for multiple transports per device, the
dc_descriptor_get_transport() function became obsolete because it does
support only a single transport type. Applications should use the new
dc_descriptor_get_transports() function instead.
2018-04-03 21:11:06 +02:00
Jef Driesen
aee59a33be Add support for querying the available built-in transports
Because the list of supported built-in transports depends on the
availability of external libraries (libusb, hidapi) and the operating
system, the application needs some mechanism to retrieve this
information at runtime. Therefore, a new dc_context_get_transports()
function is added, which returns a bitmask with all the available
built-in transports.
2018-04-03 21:11:06 +02:00
Jef Driesen
eed993fd16 Add support for multiple transports per device
Several dive computers support multiple transports. For example the
Suunto Eon Steel supports both USB HID and BLE. All devices using
bluetooth classic communication support both the native bluetooth
transport and the legacy serial port emulation.

To support this feature, the values of the dc_transport_t type are
changed into bitmasks, and the dc_descriptor_t struct is extended with a
bitfield with all the supported transports.
2018-04-03 21:11:06 +02:00
Jef Driesen
3230387fff Add the transport type to the I/O stream
Add a function to query the underlying transport type. This allows the
dive computer backends to implement transport specific behaviour where
necessary.

For the built-in I/O implementations, the transport type is obviously
always hardcoded, but for a custom I/O implementation the application
needs to provide the correct type. Hence the transport type can't be
hardcoded in the vtable and needs to be passed as a parameter.
2018-04-03 21:11:06 +02:00
Jef Driesen
38ff1f75dd Remove the half-duplex emulation from the I/O api
Now that the half-duplex emulation code isn't used anymore, it can be
removed from the I/O stream api.
2018-03-05 09:08:21 +01:00
Jef Driesen
f87720dff9 Add support for semi-closed circuit diving
Add a new type to distinguish between closed circuit (CCR) and
semi-closed circuit (SCR) diving. Some dive computers from HW and
DiveSystem/Ratio support this.

Because the CCR/SCR abbreviations are more commonly used, let's take the
opportunity to also rename the existing DC_DIVEMODE_CC. To preserve
backwards compatibility, a macro is added to map the old name to the new
one.

Reported-by: Jan Mulder <jlmulder@xs4all.nl>
2017-11-30 09:03:46 +01:00
Jef Driesen
3ca27995e1 Add a new abstract I/O interface
The purpose of the new I/O interface is to provide a common interface
for all existing I/O implementations (serial, IrDA, bluetooth and USB
HID). With a common interface the dive computer backends can more easily
use different I/O implementations at runtime, without needing
significant code changes. For example bluetooth enabled devices can
easily switch between native bluetooth communication and serial port
emulation mode.

The new interface is modelled after the existing serial communication
api. Implementations where some of those functions are meaningless (e.g.
IrDA, bluetooth and USB), can just leave those functions unimplemented
(causing the call to fail with DC_STATUS_UNSUPPORTED), or implement it
as a no-op (always return DC_STATUS_SUCCESS).
2017-11-25 10:26:49 +01:00
Jef Driesen
156f54302d Add basic timezone support
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.
2017-08-18 23:26:45 +02:00
Jef Driesen
22e0ab3d2b Implement the new api for the HW devices
The Heinrichs-Weikamp devices already supported clock synchronization by
means of a device specific function. This is now replaced with the new
api.
2017-08-18 23:17:33 +02:00
Jef Driesen
acb4a187fb Add support for synchronizing the device clock
Being able to synchronize the dive computer clock with the host system
is a very useful feature. Add the infrastructure to support this feature
through the public api.
2017-08-18 23:17:33 +02:00
Jef Driesen
4e0c2e4650 Remove non-existing function from header
The dc_device_version() function has been removed from the public api
long time ago.
2017-08-11 08:22:53 +02:00
Linus Torvalds
f107d7c0d8 Add initial Scubapro G2 frontend
The back-end parser seems to be the same as for the Uwatec Smart (aka
Galileo Sol).  At least that's the assumption right now.

The downloader just uses USB HID (very similar to EON Steel) rather than
the horrible IrDA thing.

There's also eventually a BLE thing, but that's for the future.

This is an unholy mixture of the Uwatec Smart downloader logic and the
EON Steel usbhid transfer code.  The back-end is pure Uwatec Smart
(model 0x11, same as Galileo Sol).

I'm not at all sure this gets everything right, but it downloads
*something*.

[Jef Driesen: Renamed the backend to uwatec, and made some smaller
              cosmetic changes to match the existing coding style.]

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2017-06-28 15:32:39 +02:00
Jef Driesen
37392a03f2 Add a separate transport type for USB HID 2017-06-02 12:11:39 +02:00
Jef Driesen
58eebf4ece Add a bluetooth transport type 2017-06-02 12:11:39 +02:00
Jef Driesen
d1a06e784c Remove deprecated functions from the public api
The vendor_product_parser_create() and vendor_product_device_open()
functions should be called indirectly, through the generic
dc_device_open() and dc_parser_new() functions. And the
vendor_product_extract_dives() functions are internal functions that
should never have been part of the public api in the first place.
2017-04-18 08:41:10 +02:00
Jef Driesen
8735071fac Use a more efficient download algorithm
The current algorithm always downloads a full memory dump, and extracts
the dives afterwards. For the typical scenario where only a few dives
are being downloaded, this is inefficient because most of the data isn't
needed. This can easily be avoided by downloading the data on the fly.
2017-02-27 08:20:49 +01:00
Jef Driesen
07dcc8998b Add support for the Cressi Drake
The Cressi Drake is a mainly a freedive computer. The data format is
almost identical to the Leonardo. The main difference is that a single
dive now contains an entire freedive session. Each freedive in the
session is delimited with a 4 byte header containing the surface
interval and a special marker.
2016-12-30 22:25:14 +01:00
Jef Driesen
7714a57c44 Add missing header files to the Makefiles.
To be able to generate a distribution tarball, all files need to be
listed explicitely.
2016-09-28 14:49:52 +02:00
Jef Driesen
2829f7ebf9 Add an ostc3 specific function with the model number.
To be able to pass the OSTC 3 model number to the parser, and preserve
backwards compatibility, we need a new function. The new function should
also be used for the Frog, by passing zero as the model number.

Using the hw_ostc_parser_create() function with the hwos parameter set
to one, is now deprecated but will remain supported for backwards
compatibility.
2016-07-23 23:14:13 +02:00
Jef Driesen
29caab0673 Rename the frog parameter and field to hwos.
The frog parameter and field are not only used for the Frog, but also
for all hwOS based models. Therefore, using the more generic hwos as the
name is more meaningful.
2016-07-23 23:11:30 +02:00
Jef Driesen
ad2257569c Add a new dc_parser_new2 convenience function.
For applications supporting offline parsing (like libdivecomputer's own
dctool application), some device specific knowledge is still required in
order to map a particular model to the corresponding backend. The new
convenience function will take care of that internally.

The already existing dc_parser_new() function does the same, but
requires an open device handle, which makes it unsuitable for offline
parsing.
2016-07-22 21:14:33 +02:00
Jef Driesen
b41ecd0c15 Add a parameter with the model number. 2016-07-11 21:47:29 +02:00
John Van Ostrand
9a4e2b75a5 Add support for the Cochran Commander and EMC. 2016-03-22 20:09:45 +01:00
Jef Driesen
06e0de6712 Add a new sample with the active gas mix.
The new gasmix sample contains the index of the active gas mix.

This new sample is intended as a replacement for the existing gas change
events (SAMPLE_EVENT_GASCHANGE and SAMPLE_EVENT_GASCHANGE2). To maintain
backwards compatibility, the legacy events are marked as deprecated but
not removed yet.
2015-12-21 14:03:39 +01:00
Jef Driesen
5c6c4cccc7 Add support for the DiveSystem iX3M series.
The protocol of the iX3M series is almost identical to the protocol of
the iDive series. The main difference is that the command bytes and the
size of the response packets have been changed. In order to be able to
communicate with the correct set of commands, the user needs to supply
the correct number now. To maintain backwards compatibility, a new
variant of the open function is added.
2015-12-14 12:23:31 +01:00
Anton Lundin
ab92043dc3 Remove removed function from public header
reefnet_sensusultra_device_set_maxretries was killed off back in v0.3,
but was still lying around in the public header.

Signed-off-by: Anton Lundin <glance@acc.umu.se>
2015-06-26 09:59:24 +02:00
Jef Driesen
3b264d9cfd Add support for the new hardware descriptor.
The latest firmware v1.75 introduced a new hardware descriptor byte to
identify the different models based on their hardware features. This new
hardware descriptor is now used as the libdivecomputer model number. For
older firmware versions, which do not support the descriptor yet, there
is an automatic fallback to the previous method based on the serial
number.
2015-03-06 21:45:02 +01:00
Jef Driesen
4dfca21a2b Pass the model number to the open function.
This change will be necessary for the Oceanic VTX, because it uses a
higher baudrate.

To maintain backwards compatibility, the existing function remains
unchanged and a new function is introduced instead.
2015-02-19 13:47:25 +01:00
Jef Driesen
87e6940572 Add support for the DiveSystem iDive and Orca. 2014-12-29 10:09:34 +01:00