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>
Overview ======== Libdivecomputer is a cross-platform and open source library for communication with dive computers from various manufacturers. The official web site is: http://www.libdivecomputer.org/ The sourceforge project page is: http://sourceforge.net/projects/libdivecomputer/ Installation ============ On UNIX-like systems (including Linux, Mac OS X, MinGW), use the autotools based build system. Run the following commands from the top directory (containing this file) to configure, build and install the library and utilities: $ ./configure $ make $ make install If you downloaded the libdivecomputer source code directly from the git source code repository, then you need to create the configure script as the first step: $ autoreconf --install To uninstall libdivecomputer again, run: $ make uninstall Support ======= Please send bug reports, feedback or questions to the mailing list: http://libdivecomputer.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/devel or contact me directly: jef@libdivecomputer.org License ======= Libdivecomputer is free software, released under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL). You can find a copy of the license in the file COPYING.
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