The BLE GATT transport ends up using HDLC for the stream encoding,
unlike the USB HID side. The EON Steel BLE GATT protocol actually does
that for both the commands and for the replies, but this converts only
the command side, because that's the simpler one.
The reply side code will need to be re-architected a bit, because right
now it is very much oriented towards beign able to do everything one
single packet at a time (which is true for USB HID) rather than treating
the packets as a stream of data (as is necessary for the CRC32
verification and to handle the escaping of the 0x7e/0x7d bytes in the
stream).
So with this change, you can't actually do a download over BLE, but I
was able to verify that the first command transfers correctly, and the
EON Steel replies to it over Bluetooth LE GATT.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Not that anybody should ever use that old-style family/model thing
anyway, so I considered just removing the g2 entry instead. But dctool
still uses this deprecated interfsce to pick a dive computer.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
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*.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Merge upstream libdivecomputer changes from Jef Driesen.
The most noticeable part is Jen Mulder's OSTC3 initial setpoint
addition, which fixes the OSTC3 data in CCR3 mode.
But also various cleanups and fixups from Jef.
* 'master' of git://git.libdivecomputer.org/libdivecomputer:
OSTC3: set initial setpoint in profile data
Remove unused parameters
Cleanup the extract dives functions
Remove unnecessary helper functions
Remove deprecated functions from the public api
Remove unnecessary include statements
Fix the firmware version and serial number
Add support for the Uwatec Aladin Tec 3G
This is a rough merge of the upstream libdivecomputer changes.
I say "rough", because this disables the custom serial code as it
clashes very badly with Jef's new dc_serial_t abstraction.
Anton Lundin has patches on top of this to re-introduce the custom code
in a way that integrates better with the upstream libdivecomputer state.
* git://git.libdivecomputer.org/libdivecomputer: (42 commits)
Add support for the Sherwood Vision.
Fix the decoding of the maximum depth.
Improve the default layout detection.
Add a warning for unsupported devices.
Fix the temperature for the Tusa Zen Air.
Add support for the Aqualung i550T.
Use the new settings field for the salinity.
Fix the parsing of freedives.
Detect the gauge and freedive mode correctly.
Add the salinity field for the Aladin Tec.
Add support for the Scubapro Mantis 2.
Fix the decoding of the dive time.
Add support for the Scubapro Mantis.
Fix the Aeris 500AI serial number.
Add the serial number encoding to the layout.
Add salinity and timezone fields to Aladin Tec 2G
Add NDL and RBT for the ATOM31 and I450T
Add support for the new extended hardware descriptor.
Update the OSTC device descriptors.
Add a workaround for an OSTC4 firmware bug.
...
This teaches the dctool about the subsurface special field strings, and
saves them in the xml output in a way which is compatible with
subsurface.
Signed-off-by: Anton Lundin <glance@acc.umu.se>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
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.
When the device family is provided without an explicit model number, we
simply choose the first available model. But since new models are being
added all the time, this default model is not guaranteed to remain the
same. That's not desirable because it can alter the behaviour of the
application.
The introduction of the Aeris 500AI is an example of this problem. The
default model in the vtpro family used to be the Oceanic Versa Pro. But
because the Aeris 500AI has a lower model number, it automatically
became the new default model. Since both use a different protocol
variant (MOD vs INTR) they are not interchangable.
The default model is now hardcoded. The best option is of course to
provide the model number explicitly!
After adding support for serial number on dc parsers on
libdivecomputer's Subsurface branch, we need to add the serial parameter
to parser calls as well. Just using 0...
Signed-off-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
Libdivecomputer always uses metric units internally. But when reverse
engineering a device that stores everything using imperial units, it's
very convenient to be able to switch the output to imperial units too.
The existing output code is removed and replaced with the new XML and
RAW output formats. The desired output format can be selected with a new
command-line option. The XML format remains the default output format.
The RAW output format exports each dive to a raw (binary) file. To
output multiple files, the filename is interpreted as a template and
should contain one or more placeholders.
The new output interface provides the necessary infrastructure to add
support for multiple output formats. Due to the abstract interface, each
new format will require only minimal changes in the application itself.
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 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.
Basic Suunto EON Steel downloading copied from my test application.
This parses all the core dive data, including sample data (time, depth,
cylinder pressure, deco information etc).
The deco information returns ceiling and TTS rather than ceiling and
"time at ceiling", because that's what the dive computer has, and I
don't see any other way to return the information.
We don't report any events yet, though.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Devices that only reports a single temperature in the header
will now be able to report it as well when they implement this.
Signed-off-by: Calle Gunnarsson <calle.gunnarsson@gmail.com>