Disable drivers that need serial port support if libserialport is not found.
Also, disable building various other serial port related code in that case.
Most Metex DMMs use e.g. " mV" as unit field, others use "mV ",
though. Support these (and other) whitespace variants by stripping all
spaces and only comparing non-space characters.
g_usleep(XX) sleeps for *at least* XX microseconds but may sleep for
longers (on older kernels the sleep will typically be 10000us). Thus
byte receive loops containing an unconditional sleep will perform
very poorly (for example it causes the scan in agilent-dmm to timeout
prematurely).
Even on modern kernels serial_readline() has a 2ms sleep per byte which
means it will read at a maximum rate of half a character per millisecond
(~4800baud).
This is fixed by only sleeping when read() returns no data.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Thompson <daniel@redfelineninja.org.uk>
This DMM is not using the standard bits in the FS9922 protocol/structure
to indicate the "volt" and "diode mode" flags. Instead, it only sets the
user-defined bit "z1" to indicate both "diode mode" and "volt".
This fixes#142.
This is no longer used, and also it is not available on Android and thus
breaks cross-compilation for Android.
Thanks Marcus Comstedt <marcus@mc.pp.se> for reporting.
Use the same functions and structs as the other DMM protocol parsers
in hardware/common/dmm. Among other things, this allows the functions
to be used from drivers in a generic way, e.g. in serial-dmm, uni-t-dmm,
and possibly other drivers.
- If libusb-1.0 is not found, do not compile in ezusb.c and usb.c since
they require libusb.h. The respective hardware drivers that use
libusb-1.0, and usb.c and/or ezusb.c will be excluded from the build
elsewhere in configure.ac. Rename NEED_EZUSB to NEED_USB.
- Drop the NEED_SERIAL check and always compile in serial.c. This is a
very small chunk of code, it does not depend on any external
libraries that might be missing, and it compiles on all architectures.
Thus there's no need to conditionally include or exclude it.
Some unusual modes required re-parsing the value. Instead of assigning the
re-parsed value to *floatval, it was reassigned directly to *analog->data;
however, analog->data is not initialized at this point, causing a segfault.
This situation was created when moving the radioshack-dmm code to serial-dmm,
with the segfault not being observed at that time.
Do not write directly to analog->data, but instead use the intermediate
variable rawval.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
Convert bit masks from hardcoded hex values to bit shifts. For example 0x80
becomes (1 << 7). This also fixes a typo error in the definition of INFO_DIODE.
Add comments explaining that some case values in sr_rs9lcd_parse() are meant to
fall through without a 'break;', and explain some of the unusual modes.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
Use the infrastructure of serial-dmm to handle the RadioShack 22-812,
and completely remove radioshack-dmm.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
Move the parsing part of radioshack-dmm into a separate protocol
parser, following the model from hardware/common/dmm.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
strcmp(buf + 9, " mA") does not work because buf is CR-terminated,
while " mA" is NUL-terminated.
Drop ambiguities arising from the termination of the strings, and
only compare the characters we care about, using strncmp().
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
When the parser found a space, it treated it as an invalid digit
and discarded the whole packet. This behavior was incorrect on
2000 count devices, where the first digit can be sent as a space
rather than a '0'.
Convert spaces to '0' and parse them as usual.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
Options in addition to the usual "9600/8n1" syntax start with a
slash, and take the form of key=value, where different options are
also separated by slashes. For example:
"9600/8n1/rts=0/dtr=1"
This sets RTS low and DTR high.
ols driver used to probe a series of available serial ports obtained
by regexp matching of common serial port names.
There are a number of problems with this approach:
1. It will probe all serial devices, including devices that do not
like to be probed, potentially causing them to act up.
2. It will try to probe serial ports which may already be opened in
other applications for other purposes.
3. It assumes the naming of the serial ports is set in stone, and
creates an unnecessary OS-specific list.
4. It produces unnecessary debug output even when an OLS device is
not connected.
5. etc...
Do not implicitly probe serial ports. Only probe the port specified
by the frontend, if any; otherwise, just quit.
Also get rid of all functionality in serial.c which was designed
specifically for random probing.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gagniuc <mr.nuke.me@gmail.com>
Move sr_usb_connect() and sr_usb_open() to hardware/common/usb.c in a
slightly more generic form and add more error checks and logging.
Let genericdmm use the new/moved functions.
Merge parts of the tekpower-dmm code (the chip of the TekPower
TP4000ZC seems to be an FS9721_LP3 too) and rework parts of the functions.
Adapt the tekpower-dmm and uni-t-dmm code accordingly.
The Fortune Semiconductor FS9721_LP3 and FS9721B/Q100 DMM chips are very
similar and the protocol looks identical.
Tested on a Voltcraft VC-820 (FS9721_LP3) with the uni-t-dmm driver
(needs some small changes, tbd).
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.
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
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 enables support for devices that have a different VID/PID
than the Saleae Logic, and yet another after firmware upload.
After firmware upload is checked every 100ms whether it came back,
instead of always waiting for 2 seconds.
If the kernel attaches a driver to a device we know, detact it first.
They're not too useful as they mostly consist of a list of function names,
and that list is already available in the respective struct. The wiki
API docs and the code in the various hardware/output drivers serve as
useful examples already, no need for additional files.
We should use these (internal) functions in libsigrok exclusively from
now on, i.e. no more use of glib's g_debug() etc.
These functions are only for libsigrok, the frontends use whatever
logging mechanism is suitable there.
Until now the build would break if the user doesn't enable at least one
of the libusb1.0-based LAs. I.e., you could not compile only OLS, or
only the demo driver.
Use libtool "noinst" local helper libs and use one Makefile.am per
subdir, which is the usual/preferred method. These helper libraries are
purely local and will not be installed.
This also fixes out-of-tree builds of sigrok, i.e. building in a
directory other than the sigrok source directory, e.g.
$ cd /home/user
$ git clone ...sigrok
$ cd sigrok
$ ./autogen.sh
$ mkdir /tmp/foo
$ cd /tmp/foo
$ /home/user/sigrok/configure
$ make
$ make install
This will place all build results (.o files, .la files, etc) in the
local build directory (/tmp/foo) instead of the source directory
(/home/user/sigrok in this example). The installation directory is
selected via the --prefix configure option (/usr/local per default).