The Oceans S1 uses a plaintext and line based communication protocol
over BLE. The larger payloads, which also contain plaintext data, are
transferred using the XMODEM-CRC protocol.
Based-on-code-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
The Deepblu Cosmiq+ uses a plaintext and line based communication
protocol over BLE, where the binary payload data is encoded as
hexadecimal characters.
Based-on-code-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
The Mares Puck Pro + is compatible with the previous Puck Pro. Both
models can't even be distinguished because they share the same model
number and use the same product name in the version packet.
The Sporasub SP2 uses a very simple communication protocol and memory
layout, but with some unusual aspects:
Dives are artifically limited to a maximum of 6000 samples.
Unlike all other dive computers, the dives are not stored in some kind
of ringbuffer structure. Once the memory is full, no new dives can be
recorded. The existing dives need to be erased first, and the dive
computer will start recording again at te start of the memory area. The
Sporasub application has an "Auto-clear watch memory after data
transfer" feature for this purpose.
I didn't implement a more efficient download algorithm because
downloading a full memory dumps takes less than 10 seconds.
The McLean Extreme uses a dual stack Bluetooth module from Microchip
which supports both Bluetooth Classic and Low Energy.
Reported-by: David Carron <david_de_carron@hotmail.com>
The new iX3M 2021 models with bluetooth do support BLE communication.
Bluetooth Classic (rfcomm), which was the only supported bluetooth
variant in the previous models, is not available.
The previous commit added a check for a NULL key inside the filter
functions, but it's more efficient to handle it early on, before even
calling the filter function.
An example where the filter functions can be called with a NULL key is
when a bluetooth discovery fails to retrieve the name of the remote
device. In such case, we have no information to detect whether the
bluetooth device matches a known dive computer or not, and thus it
shouldn't be filtered out.
The matching functions expect a pointer to the value as argument, and
not the value itself. Since a C string is already a pointer (to a NULL
terminated character array), an extra pointer indirection is required.
The new iX3M 2021 models (refered to as 'iX3M with Sequared Buttons' in
the Ratio support section) identify as iX5M in the Bluetooth name.
Reported-by: Damian Zaremba <damian@damianzaremba.co.uk>
The Mares Horizon is a variant of the Mares Genius, with a few changes
to support SCR dives:
The dive header is slightly modified. There is an extra 8 byte field at
offset 0x18, which causes all later fields to have moved up with the
same amount. This difference is indicated in both the object minor
version (with a change from v0.0 to v0.1), and the logformat.
For the profile data, there is a new SDPT sample type which contains a
bit more information compared to the existing DPRS sample type. This
difference is indicated with a change in the object type (from 0 to 1).
The current implementation assumes a fixed order for the record types (a
DSTR record, a TISS record, zero or more DPRS/SDPT records with an AIRS
record every 4 sample, and finally a DEND record), and either only DPRS
or SDPT records but never a mixture of the two. If these assumptions
turns out to be incorrect, the implementation will need to be changed
significantly. Note that the assumption of the fixed order was already
present for the Genius.
Bluetooth support is currently disabled in the Horizon firmware, but
might be re-enabled in the future.
The Sherwood Sage appears to be very similar to the Aeris A300CS. For
the BLE communication the handshake fails and is disabled.
Reported-By: Nick Shore <support@mac-dive.com>
Replace the hardcoded libusb based code with the new USB I/O transport.
This enables the use of a custom I/O on platforms where libusb is not
available.
Replace the small helper function to retrieve the function pointer and
then call the function, with another helper function to call the filter
function directly. This way the function pointer doesn't need to be
exposed at all.
The bluetooth device filtering is based on the fact that the format of
the bluetooth device name is something like 'FQ001124', where the two
first letters are the ASCII representation of the model number (e.g.
'FQ' or 0x4651 for the i770R), and the six digits are the serial number.
Add the Shearwater Nerd 2 bluetooth device name.
The change to uppercase is purely cosmetic. The string comparisions are
not case-sensitive. But for documentation purposes it's good practice to
list the exact name as reported by the device.
It's exactly the same as the regular i200, but has a new version number
and string.
Tested-by: Tiago Thedim Dias <tiagotsoc@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>