Also, consistently use 'ch' for channel variables. This matches how we
consistently use sdi, devc, and so on all over the code-base.
This fixes parts of bug #259.
The name 'probe' (and thus 'probe group') is a relic from the times when
sigrok was mostly about logic analyzers. Nowadays we support a lot more
device types where 'probe' is not really a good term and 'channel' is
much better suited.
This fixes parts of bug #259.
Instead of >= 44 Makefile.am's we now only have one top-level
Makefile.am, and use the 'subdir-objects' automake option to
handle the build via non-recursive (auto)make.
This has the advantage of fewer (boilerplate or other) files and less
clutter in general, as well as performance advantages since the new
setup can build many files in parallel (with 'make -j'), not only 2 or 3
files within the same (e.g. hardware/xxxx/* subdirectory) and also since
we no longer need to build intermediate libtool helper libs per subdirectory.
A quick, non-scientific test build on a quad-core laptop with 'make -j 4'
yields a build time reduction from 35s to 19s.
All autotools features that worked before are still intact without any
regressions, including the Make targets 'install', 'uninstall', 'check',
'dist', 'clean', 'distclean' and so on, as well as all the usual portability
handling (build works on any OS, with any Make implementation such as
GNU Make or BSD Make, with any shell such as sh/ksh/zsh/bash/dash, etc. etc.)
and features such as out-of-tree build support, cross-compile support,
testsuite support (also with colored output), "silent make rules", etc. etc.
The per-driver API calls no longer have a hw_ prefix (e.g. hw_init()
became init() and so on), so drop the 'hw_' from the std versions
for those API callbacks too.
This is a small helper function which sends the SR_DF_HEADER packet that
drivers usually emit in their hw_dev_acquisition_start() API callback.
It simplifies and shortens the hw_dev_acquisition_start() functions
quite a bit.
It also simplifies the input modules which send an SR_DF_HEADER packet, too.
This patch also automatically removes some unneeded malloc/free in some
drivers for the 'packet' and 'header' structs used for SR_DF_HEADER.
Check the relevant arguments for != NULL before calling the actual
driver-specific function, so that the driver can safely assume those
arguments are non-NULL. This removes the need to duplicate these
checks in every driver.
Sending an SR_DF_META packet at the start of every stream is not
mandatory; the frontend should ask for what it needs, and any extra
information the driver wants to send will come in due time.
Currently hw_info_get() can receive requests for entries (info_id) that
the specific driver doesn't support. That is (right now) a valid
use-case and not an error (might change later, though).
Thus, for now, don't output messages for such requests at all (certainly
not as sr_err() where they show up in e.g. sigrok-cli output per default).
Errors while opening or configuring ALSA devices during scan for devices
should not be shown by default (i.e., no sr_err() usage). Non-working
or non-accessible devices (due to permissions or other reasons) will
simply not show up in frontends. Use sr_dbg() instead of sr_err().
Since we are using the 'hw' interface of ALSA, we don't have the luxury of
samplerate conversion, given by the 'plughw' interface. If we try to set a
samplerate that is not supported, ALSA will just throw an error.
We can test for the supported samplerates, and create a list of supported
samplerates, then limit the selection to only those values. The frontend can
query the list of supported samplerates.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
The alsa driver requested signed 16-bit integers from ALSA, but casted them to
to an unsigned 16bit before finally casting them to a float. The end result was
that half of the wave would be clipped off.
We also requested data in little endian format. ALSA can be instructed to send
data with the correct endianness for the platform, without needing to worry
about what that is.
This patch attempts three points, which, together, fix the acquisition:
1) Request data from ALSA without specifying endianness; ALSA will handle the
endianness.
2) Simplify the int16_t to float loop by using straightforward indexes.
3) Normalize every value before sending it on the session bus.
NOTE: If testing with PulseView, it will appear as if sigrok is sending all
zeroes. sigrok is sending correct data, but since the data is normalized,
PulseView will incorrectly plot it as a straight line.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
The alsa driver only works with device "default". This limits the driver's
scope to whatever device ALSA deems to be "default". It is desirable to have
access to all ALSA devices from sigrok.
Change the alsa device scan so that:
Each alsa device (not alsa card) gets its own sigrok device
For example,
hw:1,0 == sigrok device 0
hw:1,1 == sigrok device 1
hw:2,0 == sigrok device 2
hw:2,1 == sigrok device 3
hw:2,2 == sigrok device 4
[...]
We don't currently look at alsa subdevices. We only use subdevice 0.
Every input device will have its own channels (left, right, etc). Each of
those channels gets mapped to a different sigrok probe. A device with 4
channels will have 4 probes from sigrok's perspective.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
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.