Search for the optional HIDAPI library. Call the library's init and exit
routine, and print version information. Extend the common serial layer's
code paths for open, list, and find USB to also support serial over HID.
This commit prepares serial over HID, but the HIDAPI specific transport
for serial communication still is empty in this implementation.
Add a local RX buffer to the common code of libsigrok's serial layer.
Callers of the serial layer's API won't notice, this is an internal
detail of how alternative transports receive their data from the
physical line, and pass it to read() calls emitted by device drivers.
The libserialport specific code still calls into the library, and does
not use the RX buffer. Future HID and BLE support will use the buffer.
Add guards around the implementation of ES51919 chip support for LCR, as
well as modbus and SCPI over serial. To accept when the source files get
compiled in the absence of their dependencies, end up with an empty
implementation in that case.
This approach can simplify build rules when several optional external
dependencies result in differing sets of supported communication means.
Only reference the libserialport header when the library is available.
Allow to always compile the serial.c source file, but optionally end
up with an empty implementation. Make the sr_serial_dev_inst symbol
available outside of HAVE_SERIAL_COMM such that empty stub code can
compile. This prepares the introduction of alternative transports for
serial communication, while all of them remain optional.
The libsigrok serial layer internally uses parity and flow control
symbols which are provided by libserialport. Optionally locally declare
these symbols when libserialport is not available.
Introduce the HAVE_SERIAL_COMM identifier, which gets derived from, but
need not be identical to the HAVE_LIBSERIALPORT condition.
Derive the NEED_SERIAL automake condition from the general availability
of serial communication not the specific libserialport library.
Adjust source code references. Stick with HAVE_LIBSERIALPORT where the
specific library is meant, but switch to HAVE_SERIAL_COMM where the
availability of serial communication in general is meant.
Add an indirection between the common serial communication code and the
libserialport specific support code. Prepare the use of alternative
transports like USB HID in the future. Decide in the open() routine
which transport to use for subsequent operations (based on port names).
In theory only the transport specific layer depends on the libserialport
library's availability. In this implementation all support for serial
communication still depends on the HAVE_LIBSERIALPORT preprocessor
symbol. This needs to get addressed in later commits.
Eliminate a direct libserialport dependency in the OLS device driver.
Use libsigrok's internal serial layer's API instead to check for the
availability of receive data.
Add a serial_has_receive_data() routine to the serial layer's API which
returns the number of (known to be) available RX data bytes. Implement
support in the libserialport specific code.
Introduce a new serial_libsp.c source file, and move code from serial.c
there which is specific to libserialport. Keep the existing serial.c API
in place, this is a pure internal refactoring.
Adjust a little whitespace while we are here. Rearrange long lines to
keep related parameter groups adjacent (like pointer and size, or UART
frame length and flow control). Consistently reduce indentation of
continuation lines.
Store the most recent successfully applied set of parameters for serial
communication. Re-use these values as a fallback to calculate timeouts,
when the underlying transport fails to provide the current settings.
The rohde-schwarz-sme-0x device driver used to unconditionally reference
a libserialport header file. Remove that reference, it's not needed in
this specific driver.
Don't exit with an error if the FPGA is detected as unsupported.
Just issue a warning with the detected version and continue. I have such
a clone and it works with the original Saleae software and with sigrok
despite the fact that its FPGA version is 0xff.
Their commands are very similar to the U123x series, they just
add some more modes and the second channel. So use the re-functions
and just extend them where necessary.
Log reading not supported yet.
Basic testing done with a U1272A.
- fix the resolution of the CONF?-response:
the resolution is given with 6 decimal places
(instead of 8) like this:
VOLT +5.000000E+00,+1.000000E-04
- add more measurement modes that are possible with the meter:
CONT,COND,TEMP,PULS
It's important to remain aware that the serial layer's flush and drain
semantics differs from e.g. filesystem calls. The libserialport API is
said to follow the termios example.
Extend comments in the libsigrok API, to not depend on the libserialport
layer and the availability of its documentation. This raises awareness
during maintenance of sigrok device drivers, as well as the pending
addition of alternative transports for serial communication.
Adjust the doxygen comment for the read line routine while we are here.
Add "in" and "out" attributes for routine parameters.
The src/hardware/ subdirectory exclusively contains device drivers these
days, while common support code has moved to the src/dmm/, src/lcr/,
src/scale/, etc directories or src/ itself. Adjust comments in the
libsigrok-internal.h declaration blocks which reference source files.
Just allocate the memory needed to hold the very variable's size. No
need to duplicate the variable's type. Reduces redundancy and increases
robustness during maintenance.
Use g_malloc0() in sr_serial_new() to make sure all of the structure is
initialized.
src/hardware/sysclk-sla5032/protocol.c: In function ‘la_start_acquisition’:
src/hardware/sysclk-sla5032/protocol.c:244:8: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘max’ [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
pre = max(pre, 2);
^~~
Without a measured quantity in packet.meaning->mq the C++ binding function
sigrok::Analog::mq() throws an exception and there is no way to check if
there is any measured quantity set in the analog package.
Add support for the Pepino-style of accessing >256K of memory. Because
this the only known extension of accessing >256K currently, we apply it
as soon as the sample size is bigger than 256K. Let's hope other
devices (if any) will follow this style. If not, we need to add support
depending on the device name later.
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Magnus (creator of the Pipistrello) confirmed that he mixed up the
register names. The code was doing it correctly nonetheless but was
confusing to read because of this. Fix it to make it easier to
comprehend.
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
Let max_channels really carry the number of maximum channels the
hardware supports. We will handle the limitation of only half the
channels available in 200MHz mode later. Note that there won't be a
regression because we only set the variable but never check it. The
desired result of this patch is the removal of the NUM_CHANNELS macro.
The number of channels needs to be dealt with at runtime.
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
We needs this twice so put it into a seperate function, so updates to it
will automatically handled for both callers.
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
commit f51acd69 ("ols: combine demux samples") wrongly replaced the bit
pattern of 0x20 with the number of channels which just happens to be 32
as well. So, the code works but is confusing to read. Reword the
for-loop to make it more comprehensible.
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
The OLS protocol sends 16bit values to specify the sample count and
delay count. However, this 16bit value is the number of 32bit words to
be sampled, so the actual sample count is 4 times larger and does not
fit into a uint16_t. Extend it to support the full range of 256K
(LogicShrimp will need this) and to prepare support for devices with
even more memory (Pepino).
Signed-off-by: Wolfram Sang <wsa@the-dreams.de>
The previous implementation assumed that a receive data chunk ends
exactly with a sensor packet's end. Yet the buffer had 32 bytes while
the packets have 19 bytes.
Separate the data reception from the packet processing. Collect whatever
chunks the USB connection provides, and scan the resulting buffer for
packets. Cope with either incomplete or corrupt or misaligned packets as
well as with multiple packets in receive chunks. The latter might happen
upon initial synchronization, when a device already sends data or the
serial port buffered previously communicated data.
In the regular case, the computer will process so fast that each single
character will be handled individually. We don't mind. The frequency is
some 60 times per second, and the data volume is 19 bytes. The software
works for the regular case, and synchronizes fast at startup or after
comm errors.
Always print the data bytes of received buffers in the packet parser,
then check some more fixed fields to not process invalid packets, then
process the packet content as the previous implementation did.
Call the packet parser for incomplete packets and discarded input
buffers as well (initial synchronization, re-sync after comm errors).
This results in the availability of more diagnostics during development.
Pass the packet's location and size from outside. This prepares the
logic to cope with situations where the receive buffer contains multiple
(potentially incomplete) packets.
Slightly unobfuscate the UT32x packet parser. The protocol is mostly
ASCII based, checks for hex numbers may be unexpected. Use symbolic
identifiers for the packet length and some special characters.
The previous implementation of the UT32x driver expected to see a conn=
spec, without it no device is found. Default to the USB identification
of the CH9325 chip, to make the driver work out of the box. Users still
can provide conn= specs and override the default for other cables.