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2013-01-09Assemble the actual Suunto serial numberGravatar Linus Torvalds
It turns out that the serial number returned by libdivecomputer isn't really the serial number as interpreted by the vendor. Those tend to be strings, but libdivecomputer gives us a 32bit number. Some experimenting showed that for the Suunto devies tested the serial number is encoded in that 32bit number: It so happens that the Suunto serial number strings are strings that have all numbers, but they aren't *one* number. They are four bytes representing two numbers each, and the "23500027" string is actually the four bytes 23 50 00 27 (0x17 0x32 0x00 0x1b). And libdivecomputer has incorrectly parsed those four bytes as one number, not as the encoded serial number string it is. So the value 389152795 is actually hex 0x1732001b, which is 0x17 0x32 0x00 0x1b, which is - 23 50 00 27. This should be done by libdivecomputer, but hey, in the meantime this at least shows the concept. And helps test the XML save/restore code. It depends on the two patches that create the whole "device.c" infrastructure, of course. With this, my dive file ends up having the settings section look like this: <divecomputerid model='Suunto Vyper Air' deviceid='d4629110' serial='01201094' firmware='1.1.22'/> <divecomputerid model='Suunto HelO2' deviceid='995dd566' serial='23500027' firmware='1.0.4'/> where the format of the firmware version is something I guessed at, but it was the obvious choice (again, it's byte-based, I'm ignoring the high byte that is zero for both of my Suuntos). Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-11-25Improve on divecomputer data handlingGravatar Linus Torvalds
This simplifies the vendor/product fields into just a single "model" string for the dive computer, since we can't really validly ever use it any other way anyway. Also, add 'deviceid' and 'diveid' fields: they are just 32-bit hex values that are unique for that particular dive computer model. For libdivecomputer, they are basically the first word of the SHA1 of the data that libdivecomputer gives us. (Trying to expose it in some other way is insane - different dive computers use different models for the ID, so don't try to do some kind of serial number or something like that) For the Uemis Zurich, which doesn't use the libdivecomputer import, we currently only set the model name. The computer does have some kind of device ID string, and we could/should just do the same "SHA1 over the ID" to give it a unique ID, but the pseudo-xml parsing confuses me, so I'll let Dirk fix that up. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-11-20Allow the user to cancel a dive computer downloadGravatar Dirk Hohndel
The code pretended to support this for libdivecomputer based downloads, but it had never been hooked up when the native Uemis downloader was implemented. When I finally decided to close that feature gap I realized that the original code was, shall we say, "aspirational" or "completely bogus" and therefore never worked. So instead of just hooking up the code for the Uemis downloader I instead implemented this correctly for the first time for both libdivecomputer and the native Uemis downloader. In order not to have to mess with multithreaded Gtk development I simply opted for a helper function that fires on a 100ms timeout and have it end the dialog without a response. This way we can run the dialog while waiting for the download to finish, still update the progress bar and respond in a useful manner to the user clicking cancel. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-11-11Add special download modes to force updates from the divecomputerGravatar Dirk Hohndel
This will hopefully not be something we need often, but if we improve support for a divecomputer (either in libdivecomputer or in our native Uemis code or even in the way we handle (and potentially discard) events), then it is extremely useful to be able to say "re-download things from the divecomputer and for things that were not edited in Subsurface, don't try to merge the data (which gives BAD results if for example you fixed a bug in the depth calculation in libdivecomputer) but instead simply take the samples, the events and some of the other unedited data straight from the download". This commit implements just that - a "force download" checkbox in the download dialog that makes us reimport all dives from the dive computer, even the ones we already have, and an "always prefer downloaded dive" checkbox that then tells Subsurface not to merge but simply to take the data from the downloaded dive - without overwriting the things we have already edited in Subsurface (like location, buddy, equipment, etc). This, as a precaution, refuses to merge dives that don't have identical start times. So if you have edited the date / time of a dive or if you have previously merged your dive with a different dive computer (and therefore modified samples and events) you are out of luck. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-08-28Remove include not present in new libdivecomputer.Gravatar Pierre-Yves Chibon
The include of libdivecomputer/utils.h breaks the compilation of subsurface as it is no longer present in the latest version of libdivecomputer. Signed-off-by: Pierre-Yves Chibon <pingou@pingoured.fr>
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>
2012-07-10Update for libdivecomputer pkg-config include file changesGravatar Linus Torvalds
Subsurface doesn't compile on OS X any more, because libdivecomputer changed the way the header inclusion works: the include path from pkg-config no longer includes the final "libdivecomputer" component, and instead of doing #include <header.h> for libdivecomputer headers, we're now supposed to do #include <libdivecomputer/header.h> instead. Which is cleaner anyway. The reason this only bit us on OS X is that I never trusted pkg-config that much for non-system libraries on Linux (maybe it works, maybe it doesn't, I've seen it go both ways), so on Linux we just used our own version of the include path, and thus weren't affected by the libdivecomputer config change. Clean up the includes while at it - we no longer need (or want) the device-specific header files, since we just use the generic functions. Reported-by: Grischa Toedt <toedt@embl.de> 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>
2012-05-02Show 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>
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>
2011-09-22Fix 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>