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+++ b/Documentation/user-manual.txt
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
Subsurface 3.0 User Manual
==========================
-Jacco_van_Koll,_Dirk_Hohndel_and_Reinout_Hoornweg
-v3.0.0, February 2013
-:Author Initials: JKO & DH & RH
+:author: Jacco_van_Koll,_Dirk_Hohndel,_Reinout_Hoornweg,_Linus_Torvalds,_Miika_Turkia_and_Amit_Chaudhuri
+:revnumber: v3.0.0
+:revdate: February 2013
:toc:
:icons:
:numbered:
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ Now it is time to hook up your dive computer to your PC:
[[S_ImportUemis]]
Import New Dives from a Uemis Zurich
-------------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Things are very similar when downloading dives from a Uemis Zurich
dive computer (which certainly is one of the ones that DO recharge when
@@ -146,6 +146,57 @@ At this point Subsurface downloads most of the information that is
stored on the SDA, including information about dive spots and
equipment. Buddy information is not yet downloaded.
+
+[[S_HowFindDeviceName]]
+How to Find the Device Name
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+When you connect your dive computer by using an USB connector, usually
+Subsurface will propose a drop down list that contains the correct
+device name (or mount point for the Uemis Zurich). In the rare cases
+where this doesn't work here are some instructions on ways to find out
+what your dive name is:
+
+.On Linux:
+
+ - Disconnect your USB cable of your dive computer
+ - Open a terminal
+ - Type the command: 'dmesg' and press enter
+ - Plug in your USB cable of your dive computer
+ - Type the command: 'dmesg' and press enter
+
+Within your terminal you should see a message similar to this one:
+
+ usb 2-1.1: new full speed USB device number 14 using ehci_hcd
+ usbcore: registered new interface driver usbserial
+ USB Serial support registered for generic
+ usbcore: registered new interface driver usbserial_generic
+ usbserial: USB Serial Driver core
+ USB Serial support registered for FTDI USB Serial Device
+ ftdi_sio 2-1.1:1.0: FTDI USB Serial Device converter detected
+ usb 2-1.1: Detected FT232BM
+ usb 2-1.1: Number of endpoints 2
+ usb 2-1.1: Endpoint 1 MaxPacketSize 64
+ usb 2-1.1: Endpoint 2 MaxPacketSize 64
+ usb 2-1.1: Setting MaxPacketSize 64
+ usb 2-1.1: FTDI USB Serial Device converter now attached to ttyUSB3
+ usbcore: registered new interface driver ftdi_sio
+ ftdi_sio: v1.6.0:USB FTDI Serial Converters Driver
+
+You see that in the third line from the bottom, the USB adapter is
+detected and is connected to 'ttyUSB3'. Now you use this information in
+the import settings as '/dev/ttyUSB3'. Your dive computer interface is
+connected and you should be able to import your dives.
+
+.On Windows:
+
+Simply try COM1, COM2, etc. The drop down list should contain all connected COM devices.
+
+.On MacOS:
+
+The drop down box should find all connected dive computers.
+
+
[[S_ViewingLogs]]
Viewing and Completing Your Logs
--------------------------------
@@ -183,7 +234,7 @@ about that in <<S_SettingUpPreferences,Setting up Preferences>>.
[[S_EditDiveInfo]]
Edit the Dive Info
-------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When you double click on the divelog line, the editor window
opens. Now you can add information that is missing. Let start with
@@ -218,7 +269,7 @@ Now don't press OK yet!
[[S_EditEquipmentInfo]]
Edit Equipment Info
--------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You also want to edit your Cylinder information. And in the
<<S_EditDiveInfo, previous chapter>>, this was not edited. There is
@@ -266,7 +317,7 @@ OK in the Dive Info screen and view the results.
[[S_AddingEquipment]]
Adding Equipment Info
----------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In Area with the 3 tabs there is the tab Equipment. With this tab, you
can add Cylinders and Weight Systems (just like in the previous dialog).
@@ -399,55 +450,6 @@ I would like to see the:
Clicking OK on the dialog stores these settings.
-[[S_HowFindDeviceName]]
-How to Find the Device Name
----------------------------
-
-When you connect your dive computer by using an USB connector, usually
-Subsurface will propose a drop down list that contains the correct
-device name (or mount point for the Uemis Zurich). In the rare cases
-where this doesn't work here are some instructions on ways to find out
-what your dive name is:
-
-.On Linux:
-
- - Disconnect your USB cable of your dive computer
- - Open a terminal
- - Type the command: 'dmesg' and press enter
- - Plug in your USB cable of your dive computer
- - Type the command: 'dmesg' and press enter
-
-Within your terminal you should see a message similar to this one:
-
- usb 2-1.1: new full speed USB device number 14 using ehci_hcd
- usbcore: registered new interface driver usbserial
- USB Serial support registered for generic
- usbcore: registered new interface driver usbserial_generic
- usbserial: USB Serial Driver core
- USB Serial support registered for FTDI USB Serial Device
- ftdi_sio 2-1.1:1.0: FTDI USB Serial Device converter detected
- usb 2-1.1: Detected FT232BM
- usb 2-1.1: Number of endpoints 2
- usb 2-1.1: Endpoint 1 MaxPacketSize 64
- usb 2-1.1: Endpoint 2 MaxPacketSize 64
- usb 2-1.1: Setting MaxPacketSize 64
- usb 2-1.1: FTDI USB Serial Device converter now attached to ttyUSB3
- usbcore: registered new interface driver ftdi_sio
- ftdi_sio: v1.6.0:USB FTDI Serial Converters Driver
-
-You see that in the third line from the bottom, the USB adapter is
-detected and is connected to 'ttyUSB3'. Now you use this information in
-the import settings as '/dev/ttyUSB3'. Your dive computer interface is
-connected and you should be able to import your dives.
-
-.On Windows:
-
-Simply try COM1, COM2, etc. The drop down list should contain all connected COM devices.
-
-.On MacOS:
-
-The drop down box should find all connected dive computers.
-
[[S_ImportingAlienDiveLogs]]
Importing Divelogs from other Software
--------------------------------------
@@ -464,7 +466,7 @@ will not create duplicate entries.
[[S_ImportingDivesJDivelog]]
Importing Dives from JDivelog
------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Maybe you have been using JDivelog and you have a lot of dives logged in
this program. You don't have to type all information by hand into
@@ -508,7 +510,7 @@ divelog back as MyDives.xml.
[[S_ImportingDivesSuunto]]
Importing dives from Suunto Divemanager 3.*
--------------------------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Before you can start importing dives from Suunto Divemanager, you first
have to export the dives you want to import. Subsurface does not import
@@ -516,7 +518,7 @@ directly from the Suunto Divemanager log files. The following procedures
unpacking instructions for Linux and Windows.
Export from Suunto Divemanager
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- Start Suunto Divemanager and login with the name containing the logs
- Do not start the import wizard to import dives from your computer.
@@ -536,7 +538,7 @@ Export from Suunto Divemanager
- Your dives are now exported to the file Divelogs.SDE.
Reading Suunto Divemanager Export in Subsurface
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The file Divelogs.SDE can now be opened (or imported) in
Subsurface. Different from earlier versions of Subsurface, no manual
@@ -544,7 +546,7 @@ unpacking of the .SDE file is needed anymore.
[[S_ImportingMacDive]]
Importing Dives from MacDive
-----------------------------
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Importing logs from MacDive is as easy as it gets. Do the following
steps in Subsurface: