snd_pcm_hw_params_set_rate_near() will try to use the samplerate closest to the
given value, potentially starting the acquisition with a different samplerate
than the one specified.
Instead, use snd_pcm_hw_params_set_rate(). It will return an error if the
samplerate is not supported by the hardware, which is arguably better than
collecting data with a different samplerate than the one specified.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
Check whether a sample limit was actually set (> 0) before checking if
that sample limit is reached. This also fixes continuous acquisition mode
for drivers which have that.
This is the driver model agreed upon for all drivers.
As a result of the split, a devc->num_probes field had to be added in order to
reduce the interdependence between api.c and protocol.c .
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
The alsa driver was out of date wrt APIs and libsigrok conventions in
general, and wasn't compiling.
This fixes the compile and updates it to _basically_ work with the current
state of analog support in libsigrok.
This is not finished/full support for ALSA analog sampling yet, though,
various TODOs remain that will be addressed later.
All frontends will have to include <libsigrok/libsigrok.h> from now on.
This header includes proto.h and version.h, both installed from the
distribution into $INCLUDE/libsigrok/ as well.
The only dynamically changed header is now version.h, which has both
libsigrok and libtool compile-time versions in it.
Start/stop acquisition callbacks: Consistently name the 'void *' parameter
cb_data for now. The per-device-instance device pointer is called
'session_dev_id' everywhere for now, but this should be renamed to
something more clear.
Avoid plain malloc()/free() in sr/srd, especially in the API calls.
Also avoid g_malloc*() in favor of g_try_malloc*().
Use g_strdup() instead of strdup() so that we can use g_free()
consistently everywhere.
Exceptions: Stuff that is allocated via other libs (not using glib),
should also be properly free'd using the respective free-ing function
(instead of g_free()). Examples: Stuff allocated by libusb, libftdi, etc.
Also, use sr_err() instead of sr_warn() for actual errors. sr_warn() is
meant for non-fatal/uncritical warnings.
Use SR_API to mark public API symbols, and SR_PRIV for private symbols.
Variables and functions marked 'static' are private already and don't
need SR_PRIV. However, functions which are not static (because they need
to be used in other libsigrok-internal files) but are also not meant to
be part of the public libsigrok API, must use SR_PRIV.
This uses the 'visibility' feature of gcc (requires gcc >= 4.0).
Details: http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Visibility
For now, there's no analog/scope support in sigrok yet (will be added
later), so remove any such items from the public API (sigrok.h).
Having '#if defined(HAVE_LA_ALSA)' in sigrok.h is a bug anyway, the API
must not have anything device-dependent in general, and sigrok.h
specifically must not have any #ifdefs for specific hardware.
In the lib, we should only #include "sigrok.h" or "sigrok-internal.h",
but not the (possibly installed and thus different/older versions) via
<sigrok.h> or <sigrok-internal.h>.
Frontends should of course use <sigrok.h> and <sigrok-internal.h>.
This is useful to allow frontends to react upon close failures in a
way they see fit (e.g. a popup in the GUI, or error message in the CLI).
They can also still ignore the error if they want, of course.