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2012-10-21Fix the way we handle translated event namesGravatar Dirk Hohndel
Here is what Linus reported: I think you have made a mistake in trying to translate some of libdivecomputer.c Translating some of those things based on locale is *wrong*, because they are saved in the XML file. That covers at least the warnings: they'll get translated when you import them, and then saved to the XML file as that translation, but now if you start subsurface in another locale, they will not get translated back. So translating XML file contents is fundamentally buggy. It just shouldn't be done. So all the "translations" for the event handling are buggy, and generate crap. Please don't do that. Leave them as English. And of course he is absolutely right. However, instead of not translating them at all, this commit fixes things a better way - we now mark the strings for translation but store the original English strings everywhere (in the in-memory data structure as well as in the XML file). Only when we actually display something on the screen (in a tooltip or in the filter dialog) do we actually translate the strings into the native language. This should address both Linus' issue and the desire to have localized event texts. Reported-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-10-20Added missing localization macros to libdivecomputer.cGravatar Dirk Hohndel
Somehow no one noticed that this file had been skipped in the localization effort. Fixes #6 Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-10-11Conversion to gettext to allow localizationGravatar Dirk Hohndel
This is just the first step - convert the string literals, try to catch all the places where this isn't possible and the program needs to convert string constants at runtime (those are the N_ macros). Add a very rough first German localization so I can at least test what I have done. Seriously, I have never used a localized OS, so I am certain that I have many of the 'standard' translations wrong. Someone please take over :-) Major issues with this: - right now it hardcodes the search path for the message catalog to be ./locale - that's of course bogus, but it works well while doing initial testing. Once the tooling support is there we just should use the OS default. - even though de_DE defaults to ISO-8859-15 (or ISO-8859-1 - the internets can't seem to agree) I went with UTF-8 as that is what Gtk appears to want to use internally. ISO-8859-15 encoded .mo files create funny looking artefacts instead of Umlaute. - no support at all in the Makefile - I was hoping someone with more experience in how to best set this up would contribute a good set of Makefile rules - likely this will help fix the first issue in that it will also install the .mo file(s) in the correct place(s) For now simply run msgfmt -c -o subsurface.mo deutsch.po to create the subsurface.mo file and then move it to ./locale/de_DE.UTF-8/LC_MESSAGES/subsurface.mo If you make changes to the sources and need to add new strings to be translated, this is what seems to work (again, should be tooled through the Makefile): xgettext -o subsurface-new.pot -s -k_ -kN_ --add-comments="++GETTEXT" *.c msgmerge -s -U po/deutsch.po subsurface-new.pot If you do this PLEASE do one commit that just has the new msgid as changes in line numbers create a TON of diff-noise. Do changes to translations in a SEPARATE commit. - no testing at all on Windows or Mac It builds on Windows :-) Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-09-20Don't update the progress bar from the dive computer import threadGravatar Linus Torvalds
There's no guarantee that gtk is thread-safe (apparently it can be broken at least on Windows, even though it should be fine on top of X). So don't update the progress bar directly from the dive computer import code, instead just update the progress information in static variables, and let the GUI thread update it while it does the idle loop polling anyway. Reported-by: Jef Driesen <jefdriesen@telenet.be> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-08-27Update for new libdivecomputer interfacesGravatar Linus Torvalds
For this you need to get the current libdivecomputer tree, reconfigure, build and install it first. But this cleans up some of the silly error handling too, and has just a single "dc_device_close()" call etc, rather than duplicating that (and the new dc_context_free()). Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-06-22Update to new sane libdivecomputer interfacesGravatar Linus Torvalds
This does mean that you have to build subsurface against a new version of libdivecomputer, and that version is likely going to have various slightly incompatible changes. But the new interfaces allow for easily adding new supported dive computers without subsurface having to be updated for each new vendor and model, so some slight pain is definitely worth it this time. I'm not even going to try to have some backwards-compatible version here, the libdivecomputer interface changes are so extensive. Native enumeration of devices is just the smallest part of it: the constants and types that libdivecomputer uses now have much nicer names that all start with DC_ or dc_, so you don't get the kinds of name clashes we had with "gasmix_t" etc. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-05-03divecomputer importing: show the date of the currently importing diveGravatar Linus Torvalds
I'm hoping most other dive computers are quicker to import from than the Suunto I have, but mine can take minutes to import all the dives. Sure, we have that nice progress bar, so it shows that it's doing something, but it's not really showing *what* it is doing. So instead of showing just "Parsing dive X", let's show the date of the dive. That way, when it takes two minutes to import all the dives, at least you can see "oh, it's going back to the dives of last year" and it then feels like you have some good reason for the delay. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-05-02Show dive import text updates in the progress barGravatar Linus Torvalds
Instead of using printf() to print the string updates ("Parsing sample data" etc), introduce a function to show those strings in the graphical progress bar itself. Subsurface hasn't been a text-mode application in a long time ;) This partially fixes the second todo entry from commit b0ba22a06879 ("Show dive import error messages in the import dialog") and generally makes for a more helpful import - at least for the largely error-free cases. Sadly, the messages that really come from within libdivecomputer itself (like "suunto_vyper2.c:193: Failed to receive the answer.") when things go really wrong are not caught. libdivecomputer does have a notion of a logfile (set with "message_set_logfile()"), but that ends up being really inconvenient. Maybe we could use some pipe setup or something. Oh well. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-05-02Show dive import error messages in the import dialogGravatar Linus Torvalds
.. not in the main window. And leave the import dialog open, so that you can either try doing it again, or cancel. This makes it much easier to re-try a failed dive import, and actually makes the failure more obvious too. Todo: - make the "Ok" button change to "Retry" when an error happens - try to see if we can catch the actual status update messages from libdivecomputer and show them too in the import dialog. Right now they are printed out to stderr by the library. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-05-02Make subsurface compile with current libdivecomputer git treeGravatar Linus Torvalds
libdivecomputer has the absolute worst interfaces to any library *ever*, and randomly changes those crappy interfaces when it adds support for new dive computers. It would have been much better if the interface was just a "open this device" with a device descriptor structure pointer, so that when Jef adds support for new devices, the old descriptors still stay around and work the same way - there's just a new descriptor structure that you *can* use if you want. Along with a data structure to name the devices and their descriptors, this would actually mean that users could just support pretty much any random device that LD supports. But no, that's not how libdivecomputer works. It has random enums and crazy different ad-hoc interfaces for different dive computers. Or, like in this case, crazy different ad-hoc interfaces for the *same*old* dive computer. Right now, for example, the support for the new Heinrichs Weikamp "Frog" computer added a flag to the interface for the old OSTC_2 support. Breaking any libdivecomputer users even if you didn't need Frog support. And is there a version number in the header files to check for? Yes, there's a version number. But no, it's not useful, since it doesn't actually change with the interface changes. This time, Jef actually did change the version number (from 0.1.0 to 0.2.0) as part of new development version, but there's no reason to believe that it will change in the future as the interfaces change - it never has before. So it's actually safer - and easier to understand - to check for the existence of the new header file inclusion mechanism. A new version of libdivecomputer that supports the HW Frog computer will include the "ostc_frog.h" header file when you include the libdivecomputer device.h file, and that will result in HW_FROG_H being defined. So we can check whether libdivecomputer has the new interface and supports the Frog by doing an "#ifdef HW_FROG_H" hack. Ugh. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2012-03-25Added support for Mares Darwin, M1, M2, ... from latest libdivecomputer.Gravatar Björn Spruck
Only M1 has been tested. Darwin Air will most likely not work as an additional model flag seems to be needed. This is not foreseen in current GUI.
2012-01-05Oddly, finishing a sample doesn't require a sampleGravatar Dirk Hohndel
So let's not pass it around Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-12-31Define O2 permille for air in one spotGravatar Henrik Brautaset Aronsen
Having the O2 permille defined once is more readable. Signed-off-by: Henrik Brautaset Aronsen <subsurface@henrik.synth.no>
2011-11-27fix mingw-win32 specific warnings in libdivecomputer.cGravatar Dirk Hohndel
1) since %lld is not defined in the MSVC runtime, use the portable PRId64 macro from inttypes.h for 64bit integers notice in inttypes.h from mingw-win32: /* 7.8.1 Macros for format specifiers * * MS runtime does not yet understand C9x standard "ll" * length specifier. It appears to treat "ll" as "l". * The non-standard I64 length specifier causes warning in GCC, * but understood by MS runtime functions. */ 2) include unistd.h to disable warning: warning: implicit declaration of function 'usleep' Lubomir's code then caused a warning building natively under Linux, which I fixed as well. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org> Signed-off-by: Lubomir I. Ivanov <neolit123@gmail.com>
2011-10-06Remove some useless casts from and to void pointersGravatar Julian Andres Klode
Remove casts from/to void*. They are unneeded in C, can hide problems in the future, and are far too C++ish. Furthermore, they were inconsistent with the rest of the code and even with regards to themselves (at least in terms of whether or not to have space after the cast). In this case, we temporarily lose const specifiers in libdivecomputer.c due to the unneeded cast, so it seems better to avoid the cast at all, so you get warned about a const->non-const cast if you ever change it to do something like this. The casts in gtk-gui.c are just useless semantically, although they might be useful as a hint to the reader that the void pointers are char arrays. Signed-off-by: Julian Andres Klode <jak@jak-linux.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-10-05Automatically renumber new dives when they are "obvious".Gravatar Linus Torvalds
When importing (or reading xml from files) new dives, we now renumber them based on preexisting dive data, *if* such re-numbering is obvious. NOTE! In order to be "obvious", there can be no overlap between old and new dives: all the new dives have to come at the end. That's what happens with a normal libdivecomputer import, since we cut the import short when we find a preexisting dive. But if any of the new dives overlap the old dives in any way, or already have been numbered separately, the automatic renumbering is not done, and you need to do a manual renumber. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-10-03Remove the ability to 'Import' .SDA filesGravatar Dirk Hohndel
We can instead 'Open' these files as they are just bastardized XML files. This gets us back to a more consistent point where 'Import' gets data directly from the dive computer (and hopefully soon we will add the ability to load a dive directly from a uemis SDA to libdivecomputer), and 'Open' loads a file from the filesystem of the computer we are running on (this last sentence phrased so awkwardly as the uemis Zurich SDA is a computer and presents a file system when connected via USB - it just doesn't have the dive data in an accessible format in that file system). As a bonus we get to throw away quite a bit of code (the uemis specific file handling, mini-XML parser with helper functions, the file open dialog in the importer). Yay! Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-09-26Update Mares IconHd parsing to current libdivecomputer interfaceGravatar Linus Torvalds
The libdivecomputer interfaces are pure crap. There are no generic "open the dive computer" or "create a parser for the dive computer" interfaces, instead each dive computer you support has its own open and parser generator interface. And they change. Happily fairly seldom, but they change. And two days ago, Jef changed the interface for the Mares Icon HD computer in order to support the newer HD Net Ready variant. I've asked Jef to make a sane interface for "open the dive computer" and "just create the parser" for libdivecomputer, but he claims that he cannot just track the device model details internally. Which is obviously a completely bogus claim, since the way *we* track the model details is to just feed it back from the silly event. libdivecomputer should just do that internally and not bother us with its crazy internal model numbers. But whatever. In the meantime, work around this braindamage, and hope that libdivecomputer comes to its senses some day. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-26Stop libdivecomputer import when we start seeing old divesGravatar Linus Torvalds
I don't know about other dive computers, but the Suunto Vyper Air is slow as hell to import all the dives from. And libdivecomputer seems to be importing dives "most recent first", so this just makes it stop importing dives when it finds a dive that we've already seen. Caveat: libdivecomputer has this fancy notion of "dive fingerprints", and claims that's the way to do things. That seems to be overly complicated, and not worth the bother. If you worry about the import finishing early due to already having some dives with the same date in your dive list, just import starting from an empty state, and thus get a pure "dive computer only" state with no early out. Then you can just load the old dives afterwards, and depend on subsurface merging any duplicates. But for normal operation, when you just want to import a couple of new dives from your dive computer, the "exit import early when you see a duplicate" is the right thing to do. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-22Start handling dive eventsGravatar Linus Torvalds
Parse them, save them, take them from libdivecomputer. This doesn't merge them or show them in the profile yet, though. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-22Improve libdivecomputer event printoutGravatar Linus Torvalds
Ignore surface events - they are meaningless anyway and just add noise. Print out other events properly, including correct time offset etc. We still don't actually *save* the events, but now it might be worth doign so. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-22Clean up event handling from libdivecomputerGravatar Linus Torvalds
This just moves the event handling out into its own helper function. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-22Fix progress bar during libdivecomputer importsGravatar Linus Torvalds
As reported by Mauro Dreissig, the progress bar doesn't work and causes a SIGSEGV due to a missing allocation. The code broke when Dirk separated out the GUI from the core code, and I hadn't tried divecomputer downloads since. Reported-by: Mauro Dreissig <mukadr@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-20Separate out the UI from the program logicGravatar Dirk Hohndel
The following are UI toolkit specific: gtk-gui.c - overall layout, main window of the UI divelist.c - list of dives subsurface maintains equipment.c - equipment / tank information for each dive info.c - detailed dive info print.c - printing The rest is independent of the UI: main.c i - program frame dive.c i - creates and maintaines the internal dive list structure libdivecomputer.c uemis.c parse-xml.c save-xml.c - interface with dive computers and the XML files profile.c - creates the data for the profile and draws it using cairo This commit should contain NO functional changes, just moving code around and a couple of minor abstractions. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-09-20Make 'struct DiveList' entirely internal to divelist.cGravatar Linus Torvalds
Passing it around is just annoying, and we only ever have one. Let's not burden all the users with the silly thing. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-15Do libdivecomputer imports in a separate threadGravatar Linus Torvalds
This is the hackiest thing ever, unless you count the previous code that was even hackier (and just called the gtk main routine at random places). The libdivecomputer library is not really set up to be part of the gtk main loop, and cannot afford (for example) to have lots of mainloop events while it's parsing. Some dive computers are very timing sensitive for the communication. So just start a thread for doing the libdivecomputer stuff, and just continually call the gtk main loop while that thread is running. I'm sure we could actually use some gtk signalling thing to make the thread exit do the right thing, but instead we just poll the status every 100ms. I did say it was hacky. It does seem to work, though. No more temporary graying out of the windows when they don't react in a timely manner because libdivecomputer does some blocking operation. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-15Rename the project 'subsurface'Gravatar Linus Torvalds
I never really liked 'diveclog' as a name - it's not like the C part is all that important. And while I could try to just make up another slang word for despicable person (in the tradition of naming all my projects after myself), I just can't see it. So let's just call it "subsurface". Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-15First pass to parse uemis Zurich '.SDA' filesGravatar Dirk Hohndel
This is missing a ton of the information in the .SDA files It only parses the divelog.SDA file, not the dive.SDA file It ignores the information on the gas(es) used and all the data on the tanks. It still draws some strange artefacts at the end of the dive But it correctly hooks into the import dialogue, it gives you a file select box (somewhere, I'm sure, a gtk developer cries quietly) and then parses enough of this file to serve as a proof of concept. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-14Quick fix to hardcode device name only onceGravatar Dirk Hohndel
Linus clearly wanted to make SURE that we use /dev/ttyUSB0 Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12Do some basic sanity testing on the libdivecomputer gasmix dataGravatar Linus Torvalds
It's quite often obvious crap for the "doesn't exist" or "plain air" case. So if it's reporting 100% O2, we just ignore it. Sure, it could be right, but for the dives I have I know it's just libdivecomputer being wrong. Same goes for obvious crap like 255% Helium. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12Libdivecomputer: start actually importing the dive dataGravatar Linus Torvalds
So this actually reports the dive data that libdivecomputer generates. It doesn't import special events etc, but neither do we for the xml importer. It is also slow as heck, since it doesn't try to do the "hey, I already have this dive" logic and always imports everything, but the basics are definitely there. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12libdivecomputer integration: add a progress barGravatar Linus Torvalds
Instead of writing out the progress events, use them to update a real progress bar. Also, we need to handle gtk events while busy with the dive computer reading. That should *probably* be done with a threading model, because libdivecomputer does seem to have some timing sensitivity - I'm getting "failure to read memory block" if I make that loop do the standard while (gtk_events_pending()) gtk_main_iteration(); thing. Besides, even if we did do that loop, it would still cause problems when the libdivecomputer code is stuck reading a serial line that doesn't respond or whatever. But for now this ugly hack is "good enough" to get further. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12Libdivecomputer integration, part n+1Gravatar Linus Torvalds
This actually gets me far enough that it prints out all the dives on my dive computer. It doesn't actually turn them into real dives yet, though - only a series of ugly 'printf's so far. And it hangs after printing the last dive. So I'm doing something wrong. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12More libdivecomputer boilerplate stuffGravatar Linus Torvalds
.. fill in the event parsing. This doesn't generate the fingerprint like the example does, I just don't care about that yet. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12Further work on libdivecomputer integrationGravatar Linus Torvalds
.. this now registers the dive parsing callback, and starts to parse the data. So I can see the last divetime on my Suunto Vyper Air now. Still a lot more boilerplate stuff to go, though. The libdivecomputer interfaces really are pretty insane: why should the caller set up the dive parsing for each computer type, when libdivecomputer knows what types it has? IOW, much of that boilerplate should be hidden inside of libdivecomputer, rather than exposed to the user. But whatever. I'm taking pieces from "examples/universal.c" as I go along (it's under LGPL 2.1). I want to do it in small chunks just to feel that I understand what's going on, rather than just blindly copying it all. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12Flesh out the libdivecomputer interfaces some moreGravatar Linus Torvalds
.. start some error reporting, and register some early (empty) callbacks. This still doesn't actually do anything. But commit early, commit often: when I start seriously breaking things, I want to have a "hey, this still at least compiled" state. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2011-09-12Start some very initial libdivecomputer integrationGravatar Linus Torvalds
Ok, so this is quite broken right now: it doesn't actually really *do* anything, and it now requires that you have libdivecomputer all set up and installed. That is fairly easy: mkdir ../src cd ../src git clone git://libdivecomputer.git.sourceforge.net/gitroot/libdivecomputer/libdivecomputer cd libdivecomputer autoreconf --install ./configure make sudo make install but you may feel that this is not exactly useful considering that nothing actually *works* yet. Some day. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>