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 maximum value for the progress events is based on the amount of the
flash memory available for storing the dives. But the 8 byte serial
number is not stored inside the dive data, and is added dynamically
during the data transfer. This extra data needs to be taken into account
to avoid overflowing the progress events and trigger an assert in the
code.
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.
The new Github Actions offers similar functionality as the Travis CI
integration, but with some interesting extra features:
The build action is almost equivalent to the existing Travis build
configuration. But as an extra feature, the build artifacts are now
available for download.
The release action does automatically build a distribution tarball and
create a Github release, whenever a new version is tagged and pushed.
The upper bits appear to contain some other (currently unknown)
information. The Oceanic VT Pro specifications list a maximum depth of
399 ft (120 m), which requires only 9 bits. The Oceanic application also
ignores the higher bits.
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 CBC initialization vector is passed as a const pointer, and then
cast to a non-const pointer to store it in the aes state struct. This
cast can easily be avoided by changing the struct field into a const
pointer.
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.
When an Uwatec Aladin is connected, but the transfer hasn't been started
yet, we receive a continuous stream of zero bytes. Approximately every
7-8ms a new zero byte is received. But when the dive computer is
(temporary) disconnected, the stream of zero bytes also ends.
The consequence is that due to the use of blocking read call with an
infinite timeout, the application becomes unresponsive, without any
chance to abort the communication. This can eaily be avoided by using a
timeout instead. Receiving the main 2048 byte packet takes about 1050ms.
Thus a 3000ms timeout should be long enough to not cause the main data
transfer to timeout, but still short enough to cancel reasonable fast.
The for loop construct without an increment statement is a bit unusual
and thus easy to miss. With an equivalent while loop, the intent becomes
a bit more obvious.
Currently the fingerprint feature uses the first 7 bytes of the computer
configuration data. Since this information does not uniquely identify a
dive, and is actually often identical for several dives, no new dives
are detected anymore. Fixed by using the date/time timestamp at the
start of the dive configuration data instead.
Reported-by: David Carron <david_de_carron@hotmail.com>
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.
Without the small delay, sending the first frame often fails. Trying to
read the ACK response byte just fails with a timeout, and no data is
received at all. The bootloader is probably not ready to receive data
yet.
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>
Handling the SIGPIPE signal in a library is tricky, because installing a
signal handler does affects the entire application. But we can at least
try to avoid generating the SIGPIPE signal ourselves. On Linux, that
requires the use of the MSG_NOSIGNAL flag, and on Mac and BSD setting
the SO_NOSIGPIPE socket option.
Because the dive_count variable is decremented, it doesn't contain the
total number of dives, but the index of the last dive. A negative number
indicates no dives. The same result can be obtained by using the total
number of dives directly. That's not only more intuitive, but also fixes
a -Wsign-compare compiler warning.
Windows and unix use a diferent data type for representing socket file
descriptors (SOCKET vs int). This mismatch results in a compiler warning
when comparing to S_INVALID.
Allthough the input buffer size has type 'size_t', the return value of
the function has only type 'int'. Hence the function can't support input
buffers larger than INT_MAX.
This allows to fix a -Wsign-compare compiler warning: operand of ?:
changes signedness from ‘int’ to ‘size_t’ due to unsignedness of other
operand.
The hexadecimal value 0x80000000 is too large to be represented as a
signed 32bit integer. Therefore the default type for the constant is an
unsigned 32bit integer. This is a bit annoying because the timezone
field is actually defined as a signed integer, and thus comparisions
produce -Wsign-compare compiler warnings.
Fixed by switching to INT_MIN, which is the same underlying value but
interpreted as a signed integer.
Comparing signed and unsigned integer expressions can have unexpected
results because the signed integer will get promoted to an unsigned
integer. To avoid the warning, add an explicit cast to the unsigned
type, along with a check to catch negative values.
String literals have the type 'char[N]' by default. Allthough they are
not really 'const', modifying a string literal is undefined behaviour.
Therefore, to avoid mistakes, libdivecomputer uses the -Wwrite-strings
compiler option to change the default type to 'const char[N]'.
The cast that triggers the -Wcast-qual warning can be avoided by using a
character array instead of string literal.
The name of the RBT (Remaining Bottom Time) sample was taken from the
Uwatec dive computers. The actual definition depends on the dive
computer, but it usually corresponds to the air time remaining (with or
without some additional factors taken into account).
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.
Since logbook entries with invalid ringbuffer pointers are considered a
fatal error, the download is aborted. The result is that any remaining
entries, located after the invalid entry, can't be downloaded at all.
This can be avoided by skipping the problematic entry instead of
aborting the download.
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>