From dc7397b06e9a555aac707ede1aea699ca3dad230 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Guillaume GARDET Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2015 16:25:59 +0100 Subject: Documentation: Add initial support for French translation Add initial support to French (fr) translation of user-manual. Note that it is not perfect, since the po4a tool loose some list item indexes during PO to ASCIIDOC conversion (see asciidoc warning messages during user manual generation). Signed-off-by: Guillaume GARDET Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel --- Documentation/user-manual_fr.html.git | 4593 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 4593 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/user-manual_fr.html.git (limited to 'Documentation/user-manual_fr.html.git') diff --git a/Documentation/user-manual_fr.html.git b/Documentation/user-manual_fr.html.git new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ff321c27a --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/user-manual_fr.html.git @@ -0,0 +1,4593 @@ + + + + + + + + + + + +
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+

MANUEL UTILISATEUR

+

Auteurs du manuel : Willem Ferguson, Jacco van Koll, Dirk Hohndel, Reinout Hoornweg, +Linus Torvalds, Miika Turkia, Amit Chaudhuri, Jan Schubert, Salvador Cuñat, Pedro Neves

+

Version 4.3, Décembre 2014

+

Bienvenue en tant qu’utilisateur de Subsurface, un programme avancé +d’enregistrement de plongées (carnet de plongées) avec une bonne +infrastructure pour décrire, organiser, interpréter et imprimer des plongées +en scaphandre et en apnée. Subsurface offre de nombreux avantages par +rapport à d’autres solutions logicielles similaires :

+
    +
  • +

    +Do you need a flexible way of logging dives using recreational equipment, + even not using a dive computer? +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Do you use two different dive computer brands, each with its own proprietary + software for downloading dive logs? Do you dive with rebreathers as well as + open circuit or recreational equipment? Do you use a Reefnet Sensus + time-depth recorder in conjunction with a dive computer? Subsurface offers + a standard interface for downloading dive logs from all these different + pieces of equipment and to store and analyse the dive logs within a unified + system. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Do you use more than one operating system? Subsurface is fully compatible + with Mac, Linux and Windows, allowing you to access your dive log on each of + your operating systems using a single application. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Do you use Linux or Mac and your dive computer has only Windows-based + software for downloading dive information (e.g. Mares)? Subsurface + provides a way of downloading and analysing your dive logs on other + operating systems. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Do you need an intuitive graphical dive planner that integrates with and + takes into account the dives that have already been logged? +

    +
  • +
+

Subsurface binaries are available for Windows PCs (Win XP or later), Intel +based Macs (OS/X) and many Linux distributions. Subsurface can be built +for many more hardware platforms and software environments where Qt and +libdivecomputer are available.

+

The scope of this document is the use of the Subsurface program. To +install the software, consult the Downloads page on the +Subsurface web site. Please discuss +issues with this program by sending an email to +our mailing list and report bugs +at our bugtracker. For instructions on how to +build the software and (if needed) its dependencies please consult the +INSTALL file included with the source code.

+

Audience: Recreational Scuba Divers, Free Divers, Tec Divers, Professional +Divers

+
+
Table of Contents
+ +
+
+

1. Le sondage utilisateur

+
+

In order to develop Subsurface in a way that serves its users in the best +possible way, it is important to have some user information. Upon launching +Subsurface after using this software for a week or so, a one-box user +survey pops up. It is entirely optional and the user controls what, if any, +data are sent to the Subsurface development team. Any data that the user +chooses to send is extremely useful, and will only be used to steer future +development and to customise the software to fit the needs of the +Subsurface users. If one completes the survey, or clicks the option not to +be asked again, that should be the last communication of this nature one +receives. However, if one’s diving and/or subsurface habits change and one +wishes to provide another survey, this can be done by launching Subsurface +with the --survey option on the command line.

+
+
+
+

2. Start Using the Program

+
+

The Subsurface window is usually divided into four panels with a Main +Menu (File Import Log View Filter Help) at the top of the window (for +Windows and Linux) or the top of the screen (for Mac and Ubuntu Unity). The +four panels are:

+

The Dive List to the bottom left containing a list of all the dives in the +user’s dive log. A dive can be selected and highlighted on the dive list by +clicking on it. In most situations the up/down keys can be used to switch +between dives. The Dive List is an important tool for manipulating a dive +log.

+

The Dive Map to the bottom right, showing the user’s dive sites on a world +map and centred on the site of the last dive selected in the Dive List.

+

The Dive Info to the top left, giving more detailed information on the +dive selected in the Dive List, including some statistics for the selected +dive or for all highlighted dive(s).

+

The Dive Profile to the top right, showing a graphical dive profile of the +selected dive in the Dive List.

+

The dividers between panels can be dragged in order to change the size of +any of the panels. Subsurface remembers the position of the dividers, so +the next time Subsurface starts it uses the positions of the dividers from +when the program was last used.

+

If a dive is selected in the Dive List, the dive location, detailed +information and profile of the selected dive are shown in the respective +panels. On the other hand, if one highlights more than one dive the last +highlighted dive is the selected dive, but summary data of all +highlighted dives are shown in the Stats tab of the Dive Info panel +(maximum, minimum and average depths, durations, water temperatures and SAC; +total time and number of dives selected).

+
+
+The Main Window +
+
+

The user can determine which of the four panels are displayed by selecting +the View option on the main menu. This feature gives the user several +choices of display:

+

All: show all four of the panels as in the screenshot above.

+

Divelist: Show only the Dive List.

+

Profile: Show only the Dive Profile of the selected dive.

+

Info: Show only the Dive Notes about the last selected dive and statistics for +all highlighted dives.

+

Globe: Show only the world map, centred on the last selected dive.

+

Like many other functions that can be accessed via the Main Menu, these +options can be triggered using keyboard shortcuts. The shortcuts for a +particular system are shown with an underline in the main menu +entries. Since different Operating Systems and the user chosen language may +cause Subsurface to use different shortcut keys they are not listed here +in the user manual.

+

When the program is started for the first time, it shows no information at +all. This is because the program doesn’t have any dive information +available. In the following sections, the procedures to create a new logbook +will be described.

+
+
+
+

3. Creating a new logbook

+
+

Select File → New Logbook from the main menu. All existing dive data are +cleared so that new information can be added. If there are unsaved data in +an open logbook, the user is asked whether the open logbook should be saved +before a new logbook is created.

+
+
+
+

4. Storing dive information in the logbook

+
+

Now that a new logbook was created, it is simple to add dive data to it. +Subsurface allows several ways of adding dive data to a logbook, detailed +in the following sections.

+

If the user has a handwritten divelog, a spreadsheet or another form of +manually maintained divelog, dive data can be added to the logbook using one +of these approaches:

+

Enter dive information by hand. This is useful if the diver did not use a +dive computer and dives were recorded in a written logbook. See: +Entering dive information by hand

+

Import dive log information that has been maintained either as a spreadsheet +or as a CSV file. Refer to: APPENDIX D: Exporting a +spreadsheet to CSV format and the text about +Importing dives from manually created CSV files +and

+

If one has dives recorded using a dive computer, the depth profile of the +dive and a large amount of additional information can be accessed. These +dives can be imported from:

+
+

Proprietary software distributed by manufacturers of dive computers. Refer +to: Importing dive information from other +digital data sources or other data formats.

+

Import from spreadsheet or CSV files containing dive profiles. See: +Importing dives in CSV format from dive computers +or other dive log software

+
+

4.1. Entering dive information by hand

+

This is usually the approach for dives without a dive computer. The basic +record of information within Subsurface is a dive. The most important +information in a simple dive logbook usually includes dive type, date, time, +duration, depth, the names of your dive buddy and of the dive master or dive +guide, and some remarks about the dive. Subsurface can store much more +information than this for each dive. In order to add a dive to a dive log, +select Log → Add Dive from the Main Menu. The program then shows three +panels to enter information for a dive: two tabs in the Dive Info panel +(Dive Notes and Equipment), as well as the Dive Profile panel that +displays a graphical profile of each dive. These panels are respectively +marked A, B and C in the figure below. Each of these +tabs will now be explained for data entry.

+
+
+FIGURE: Add dive +
+
+

When one edits a field in Dive notes or Equipment panels, Subsurface +enters Editing Mode, indicated by the message in the blue box at the top +of the Dive Notes panel (see the image below). This message is displayed +in all the panels under Dive notes and Equipment when in Editing Mode.

+
+
+Blue edit bar +
+
+

The Save button should only be selected after all the parts of a dive have +been entered. When entering dives by hand, the Info, Equipment and +Profile tabs should be completed before saving the information. By +selecting the Save button, a local copy of the information for this +specific dive is saved in memory. When one closes Subsurface, the program +will ask again, this time whether the complete dive log should be saved on +disk or not.

+
+

4.1.1. Dive Notes

+

This panel contains the date, time and place information for a particular +dive, environmental conditions, co-divers and buddies, as well as some +descriptive information. If one clicks on the Dive Notes tab, the +following fields are visible:

+
+
+FIGURE: The Dive Notes tab +
+
+

The Time field reflects the date and the time of the dive. By clicking the +date, a calendar is displayed from which one can choose the correct +date. Press ESC to escape from the calendar. The time values (hour and +minutes) can also be edited directly by clicking on each of them in the text +box and by overtyping the information displayed. The default date is the +present date and the default time is an hour in advance of the present time.

+

Air and water temperatures: the air and water temperatures during the +dive can be typed directly on the fields to the right of the Start time. +Temperature units are not needed, as they will be automatically supplied by +Subsurface. Only the numerical value must be +typed by the user (the units selected in the Preferences +will determine whether metric or imperial units are used).

+

Location: Here the name of the dive site can be entered, e.g. "Tihany, Lake +Balaton, +Hungary". Auto completion of location names will make this easier if one +frequently dives at the same sites.

+

Coordinates: The geographic coordinates of the dive site should be entered +here. These can come from three sources:

+

One can find the coordinates on the world map in the bottom right hand part +of the Subsurface window. The map displays a green bar indicating "No +location data - Move the map and double-click to set the dive +location". Upon a double-click at the appropriate place, the green bar +disappears and the coordinates are stored.

+

The coordinates can be obtained from the Subsurface Companion app if the +user has an Android device with GPS and if the coordinates of the dive site +were stored using that device. Click here for more +information

+

The coordinates can be entered by hand if they are known, using one of four +formats with latitude followed by longitude:

+
+
+
ISO 6709 Annex D format e.g. 30°13'28.9"N 30°49'1.5"E
+Degrees and decimal minutes, e.g. N30° 13.49760' , E30° 49.30788'
+Degrees minutes seconds, e.g. N30° 13' 29.8" , E30° 49' 1.5"
+Decimal degrees, e.g. 30.22496 , 30.821798
+
+

Southern hemisphere latitudes are given with a S, e.g. S30°, or with a +negative value, e.g. -30.22496. Similarly western longitudes are given with +a W, e.g. W07°, or with a negative value, e.g. -7.34323.

+

Please note that GPS coordinates of a dive site are linked to the Location +name - so adding coordinates to dives that do not have a location +description will cause unexpected behaviour (Subsurface will think that all +of these dives have the same location and try to keep their GPS coordinates +the same).

+

Divemaster: The name of the dive master or dive guide for this dive can be +entered here. +Again, this field offers auto completion based on the list of dive masters in +the current logbook.

+

Buddy: In this field one can enter the name(s) of the buddy / buddies +(separated by commas) who accompanied the user on the dive. Auto completion +is offered based on the list of buddies in the current logbook.

+

Suit: The type of diving suit used for the dive can be entered here. +As with the other items, auto completion of the suit description is available. +Some dry-suit users may choose to use this field to record what combination of +suit and thermal protection undersuit was used.

+

Rating: One can provide a subjective overall rating of the dive on a +5-point scale by clicking the appropriate star on the rating scale.

+

Visibility: Similarly, one can provide a rating of visibility during the +dive on a +5-point scale by clicking the appropriate star.

+

Tags: Tags that describe the type of dive performed may +be entered here (separated by commas). Examples of common tags are boat, drift, +training, cave etc. Subsurface has many built-in tags. Auto completion is once again offered. +For instance, if cav was typed, then the tags cave and cavern are +shown for the user to choose from.

+

Notes: Any additional information can be typed here.

+

The Save and Cancel buttons are used to save all the information for +tabs in the info panel and in the dive profile panel, so there’s no need to +use them until ALL other information has been added. Here is an example of a +completed Dive Notes panel:

+
+
+FIGURE: A completed Dive Notes tab +
+
+
+
+

4.1.2. Equipment

+

The Equipment tab allows the user to enter information about the type of +cylinder and gas used, as well as the weights used for a dive. This is a +highly interactive part of Subsurface and the information on cylinders and +gases (entered here) affects the behaviour of the dive profile (top +right-hand panel).

+

Cylinders: The cylinder information is entered through a dialogue that looks +like this:

+
+
+FIGURE:Initial cylinder dialogue +
+
+

The + button at the top right allows the user to add more cylinders for this +dive. The dark dustbin icon on the left allows one to delete information +for a particular cylinder. Note that it is not possible to delete a cylinder +if it is used during the dive. One cylinder is implicitly used in the dive, +even without a gas change event. Thus the first cylinder cannot be deleted +until another cylinder is created.

+

Start by selecting a cylinder type on the left-hand side of the table. To +select a cylinder, click in the Type box. This brings up a button that +can be used to display a dropdown list of cylinders:

+
+
+FIGURE:The cylinder drop-down list button +
+
+

The drop-down list can be used to select the cylinder type used for the dive +or the user may start typing in the box which shows the available options +for the entered characters. The Size of the cylinder as well as its +working pressure (WorkPress) will automatically be shown in the +dialogue. If a cylinder is not shown in the dropdown list, type the name and +description of that cylinder into the Type field.

+

Next, indicate the starting pressure and the ending pressure of the gas used +during the dive. The unit of pressure (metric/imperial) corresponds to the +setting in the Preferences.

+

Finally, type in the gas mixture used in the O2% field. If air was used, a +value of 21% can be entered on this field, or it might be left blank. If +nitrox or trimix were used, their percentages of oxygen and/or helium must +be specified. Any inappropriate fields should be left empty. After typing +the information for the cylinder, press ENTER on the keyboard or click +outside the cell that contains the cursor. Information for any additional +cylinders can be added by using the + button at the top right +hand. Following is an example of a complete description for a dive made +using two cylinders (air and EAN50):

+
+
+FIGURE: a completed cylinder dive information table +
+
+

Weights: Information about the weight system used during a dive can be entered +using a dialogue very similar to that for the cylinder information. If the user +clicks the + button on the top right of the weights dialogue, the table looks +like this:

+
+
+FIGURE: The Weights dialogue +
+
+

If one then clicks on the Type field, a drop-down list becomes accessible +through a down-arrow:

+
+
+FIGURE: Weights type drop-down list button +
+
+

The drop-down list can then be used to select the type of weight system or +the user may start typing in the box which shows the available options for +the entered characters. In the Weight field, the weight used during the +dive must be typed. After typing the information for the weight system the +user must either press ENTER on the keyboard or click outside the cell +that contains the cursor. It is possible to enter information for more than +one weight system by adding an additional system using the + button on the +top right hand. Weight systems can be deleted using the dustbin icon on the +left hand. Here is an example of information for a dive with two types of +weights: integrated and a weight belt:

+
+
+FIGURE: A completed weights information table +
+
+

There’s NO need to click the Save button before the dive profile has been +completed.

+
+
+

4.1.3. Creating a Dive Profile

+

The Dive Profile (a graphical representation of the depth of the dive as a +function of time) is indicated in the panel on the top right hand of the +Subsurface window. When a dive is manually added to a logbook, +Subsurface presents a default dive profile that needs to be modified to +best represent the dive being described:

+
+
+FIGURE: Initial dive profile +
+
+

Modifying the dive profile: When the cursor is moved around the dive +profile, its position is indicated by two coloured lines (red and green) as +shown below. The depth and time that the cursor represents are indicated at +the top of the black information box (@ and D). The units (metric/imperial) +on the axes are determined by the Preference settings. The dive profile +itself comprises several line segments demarcated by waypoints (white dots +on the profile, as shown above). The default dive depth is 15 m. If the +dive depth was 20 m then the user needs to drag the appropriate waypoints +downwards to represent 20 m. To add a waypoint, double-click on any line +segment. To move an additional waypoint, drag it. To remove this waypoint, +right-click on it and choose "Remove this point" from the context menu. The +user needs to drag the waypoints to represent an accurate time duration for +the dive. Below is a dive profile that represents a dive to 20 m for 30 min, +followed by a 5 minute safety stop at 5 m.

+
+
+FIGURE: Edited dive profile +
+
+

Specifying the gas composition: The gas composition used is clearly +indicated along the line segments of the dive profile. This defaults to the +first gas mixture specified in the Equipment tab, which was air in the +case of the profile illustrated above. The gas mixtures of segments of the +dive profile can be edited. This is done by right-clicking on the particular +waypoint and selecting the appropriate gas from the context menu. Changing +the gas for a waypoint affects the gas shown in the segment to the left of +that waypoint. Note that only the gases defined in the Equipment tab +appear in the context menu.

+
+
+FIGURE: Gas composition context menu +
+
+

Below is the profile of a dive to 25 m for 30 min and with a switch from air +to EAN50 at the end of the duration at 20m. In this case the first cylinder +in the Equipment tab contained air and the second cylinder contained +EAN50.

+
+
+FIGURE: Completed dive profile +
+
+
+
+

4.1.4. Saving the hand-entered dive information

+

The information entered in the Dive Notes tab, the Equipment tab as well +as the Dive Profile can now be saved in the user’s logbook by using the +two buttons on the top right hand of the Dive Notes tab. If the Save +button is clicked, the dive data are saved in the current logbook. If the +Cancel button is clicked, the newly entered dive data are discarded. When +exiting Subsurface, the user will be prompted once more to save the +logbook with the new dive(s).

+
+
+
+

4.2. Importing new dive information from a Dive Computer

+
+

4.2.1. Connecting and importing data from a dive computer.

+

The use of dive computers allows the collection of a large amount of +information about each dive, e.g. a detailed record of depth, duration, +rates of ascent/descent and of gas partial pressures. Subsurface can +capture this information and present it as part of the dive information, +using dive information from a wide range of dive computers. The latest list +of supported dive computers can be found at: + +Supported dive computers.

+
+ + + +
+Warning +Several dive computers consume more power when they are in their +PC-Communication mode. This could drain the dive computer’s battery. We +therefore recommend that the user checks if the dive computer is charged +when connected to the USB port of a PC. For example, several Suunto and +Mares dive computers do not recharge through the USB connection. Users +should refer to the dive computer’s manual if they are unsure whether the +dive computer recharges its batteries while connected to the USB port.
+
+

To import dive information from a dive computer to a computer with +Subsurface, it is necessary that the two pieces of equipment communicate +with one another. This involves setting up the communications port (or +mount point) of the computer with Subsurface that communicates with the +dive computer. In order to set up this communication, one needs to find the +appropriate information to instruct Subsurface where and how to import the +dive information. +Appendix +A provides the technical information to help the user achieving this for +different operating systems and +Appendix +B has dive computer specific information.

+

After this, the dive computer can be hooked up to the user’s PC, which can +be achieved by following these steps:

+
    +
  1. +

    +The interface cable should be connected to a free USB port (or the Infra-red + or Bluetooth connection set up as described later in this manual) +

    +
  2. +
  3. +

    +The dive computer should be placed into PC Communication mode. + (Users should refer to the manual of their specific dive computer) +

    +
  4. +
+

In Subsurface, from the Main Menu, the user must select Import → Import +From Dive Computer. Dialogue A in the figure below appears:

+
+
+FIGURE: Download dialogue 1 +
+
+

Dive computers tend to keep a certain number of dives in their memory, even +though these dives have already been imported to Subsurface. For that +reason Subsurface only imports dives that have not been uploaded +before. This makes the download process faster on most dive computers and +also saves battery power of the dive computer (at least for those not +charging while connected via USB). If, for some reason, the user wishes to +import ALL dives from the dive computer, even though some may already be in +the logbook, then check the check box labelled Force download of all +dives.

+

The dialogue has two drop-down lists, Vendor and Dive Computer. On the +vendor drop-down list select the make of the computer, e.g. Suunto, +Oceanic, Uwatec, Mares. On the Dive Computer drop-down list, the model +name of the dive computer must be selected, e.g. D4 (Suunto), Veo200 +(Oceanic), or Puck (Mares).

+

The Device or Mount Point drop-down list contains the USB or Bluetooth +port name that Subsurface needs in order to communicate with the dive +computer. The appropriate port name must be selected. Consult +Appendix +A and +Appendix +B for technical details on how to find the appropriate port information for +a particular dive computer and, in some cases, how to do the correct +settings to the operating system of the computer on which Subsurface is +running.

+
    +
  • +

    +If all the dives on the dive computer need to be downloaded, check the + checkbox Force download of all dives. Normally, Subsurface only + downloads dives after the date-time of the last dive in the Dive List + panel. If one or more of your dives in Subsurface have been accidentally + deleted or if there are older dives that still need to be downloaded from + the dive computer, this checkbox needs to be activated. Some dive computers + (e.g. Mares Puck) do not provide a contents list to Subsurface before the + download in order to select only new dives. Consequently, for these dive + computers, all dives are downloaded irrespective of the status of this check + box. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +If the checkbox Always prefer downloaded dives has been checked and, + during download, dives with identical date-times exist on the dive computer + and on the Subsurface Dive List panel, the record in the Subsurface + divelog will be overwritten by the record from the dive computer +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Do not check the checkboxes labelled Save libdivecomputer logfile and + Save libdivecomputer dumpfile. These are only used as diagnostic tools + when problems with downloads are experienced (see below). +

    +
  • +
+

The OK button must then be clicked. Dialogue B in the figure above +appears.

+

With communication established, one can see how the data are retrieved from +the dive computer. Depending on the make of the dive computer and/or number +of recorded dives, this could take some time. The user should be +patient. The Download dialogue shows a progress bar at the bottom of the +dialogue (for some dive computers the progress information could be +inaccurate as we cannot determine how much downloadable data there is until +all data have been downloaded). When the download of the dive information is +complete, all the imported dives appear in the Dive List, sorted by date +and time. Disconnect and switch off the dive computer to conserve its +battery power. If a particular dive is selected, the Dive Profile panel +shows an informative graph of dive depth against time for that particular +dive.

+

If there is a problem in communicating with the dive computer, an error +message will be shown, similar to this text: "Unable to open /dev/ttyUSB0 +Mares (Puck Pro)". Refer to the text in the box below.

+
+
+

PROBLEMS WITH DATA DOWNLOAD FROM A DIVE COMPUTER?

+
+ + + +
+Important +Check the following:
+
+

Is the dive computer still in PC-communication or Upload mode?

+

Is the battery of the dive computer fully charged? If not then the battery +must be charged or replaced.

+

Is the connecting cable faulty? Does the cable work perfectly using other +software? Has it worked before, or is this the first time the cable is being +used? Are the contacts on the dive computer and the cable clean?

+

Consult +Appendix +A and make sure that the correct Mount Point was specified (see above).

+

On Unix-like operating systems, does the user have write permission to the +USB port? If not, consult +Appendix +A

+

If the Subsurface computer does not recognise the USB adaptor by showing +an appropriate device name next to the Mount Point, then there is a +possibility that the cable or USB adaptor is faulty. A faulty cable is the +most common cause of communication failure between dive computer and +Subsurface computer. It is also possible that the Subsurface computer +cannot interpret the data. Perform a download for diagnostic purposes with +the following two check boxes checked in the download dialogue discussed +above:

+
+
+
Save libdivecomputer logfile
+Save libdivecomputer dumpfile
+
+

Important: These check boxes are only used when problems are encountered +during the download process: under normal circumstances they should not be checked. +When checking these boxes, the user is prompted to select a folder to +save the information to. The default folder is the one in which the Subsurface +dive log is kept.

+

Important: After downloading with the above checkboxes +checked, no dives are added to the +Dive List but two files are created in the folder selected above:

+
+
+
subsurface.log
+subsurface.bin
+
+

These files should be send to the Subsurface mail list: +subsurface@subsurface-divelog.org with a request for the files to be +analysed. Provide the dive computer make and model as well as contextual +information about the dives recorded on the dive computer.

+
+
+
+

4.2.2. Changing the name of a dive computer

+

It may be necessary to distinguish between different dive computers used to +upload dive logs to Subsurface. For instance if one’s partner’s dive +computer is the same make and model as one’s own and dive logs are uploaded +from both dive computers to the same Subsurface computer, then one would +perhaps like to call one dc "Alice’s Suunto D4" and the other one "Bob’s +Suunto D4". Alternatively, perhaps a technical diver dives with two or more +dive computers of the same model, the logs of both (or all) being uploaded. +In this case it might be prudent to call one of them "Suunto D4 (1)" and +another one "Suunto D4 (2)". This is easily done in Subsurface. On the +Main Menu, select Log → Edit device names. A dialog opens, indicating +the current Model, ID and Nickname of the dive computers used for +upload. Edit the Nickname field for the appropriate dive computer. After +saving the Nickname, the dive logs show the nickname for that particular +device instead of the model name, allowing easy identification of devices.

+
+
+

4.2.3. Updating the dive information imported from the dive computer.

+

The information from the dive computer is not complete and more details must +be added in order to have a fuller record of the dives. To do this, the +Dive Notes and the Equipment tabs on the top left hand of the +Subsurface window should be used.

+
+
+

4.2.4. Dive Notes

+

The date and time of the dive, gas mixture and (often) water temperature is +shown as obtained from the dive computer, but the user needs to add +additional information by hand in order to have a more complete dive +record. If the contents of this tab is changed or edited in any way, the +message in a blue box at the top of the panel indicates that the dive is +being edited. If one clicks on the Dive Notes tab, the following fields +are visible:

+
+
+FIGURE: The Dive Notes tab +
+
+

The Time field reflects the date and time of the dive. By clicking the +date, a calendar is displayed from which one can choose the correct +date. Press ESC to close the calendar. The time values (hour and minutes) +can also be edited directly by clicking on each of them in the text box and +by overtyping the information displayed.

+

Air/water temperatures: Air and water temperatures during the dive are shown +in these fields to the right of the Start time. Many dive computers supply water +temperature information and this field may therefore contain information obtained from the dive computer. +If air temperature is not provided by the dive computer, the first temperature reading +might be used for the air temperature. Generally this is close enough to the real air temperature as +the change in the temperature sensor reading is quite slow to follow the changes in the environment. +If editing is required, only a value is required, the units of temperature will be +automatically supplied by +Subsurface (according to the Preferences, metric or imperial units will +be used).

+

Location: In this field one should type in text that describes the site +where the dive was performed, e.g. "Tihany, Lake Balaton, Hungary". +Auto completion of location names will +make this easier if one frequently dives at the same sites.

+

Coordinates: The geographic coordinates of the dive site should be entered +here. These can come from three sources:

+

The user can find the coordinates on the world map in the bottom right hand +part of the Subsurface window. The map displays a green bar indicating "Move +the map and double-click to set the dive location". Double-click at the +appropriate place, the green bar disappears and the coordinates are stored.

+

The user can obtain the coordinates from the Subsurface Companion app if +an Android device with GPS was used and if the coordinates of the dive site +were stored using that device. Click here for more +information

+

The coordinates can be entered by hand if they are known, using one of four +formats with latitude followed by longitude:

+
+
+
ISO 6709 Annex D format e.g. 30°13'28.9"N 30°49'1.5"E
+Degrees and decimal minutes, e.g. N30° 13.49760' , E30° 49.30788'
+Degrees minutes seconds, e.g. N30° 13' 29.8" , E30° 49' 1.5"
+Decimal degrees, e.g. 30.22496 , 30.821798
+
+

Southern hemisphere latitudes are given with a S, e.g. S30°, or with a +negative value, e.g. -30.22496. Similarly, western longitudes are given with +a W, e.g. W07°, or with a negative value, e.g. -7.34323.

+

Please note that GPS coordinates of a dive site are linked to the Location +name - so adding coordinates to dives that do not have a location +description will cause unexpected behaviour (Subsurface will think that all +of these dives have the same location and try to keep their GPS coordinates +the same).

+

Divemaster: The name of the dive master or dive guide for this dive should be +entered in this field +which offers auto completion based on the list of dive masters in +the current logbook.

+

Buddy: In this field, one enters the name(s) of the buddy / buddies +(separated with commas) who accompanied him/her on the +dive. Auto completion based on the list of buddies in the current logbook is +offered.

+

Suit: Here the type of diving suit used for the dive can be entered. +Auto completion of the suit description is available. +Some dry-suit users may choose to use this field to record what combination of +suit and thermal protection undersuit was used.

+

Rating: One can provide a subjective overall rating of the dive on a +5-point scale by clicking the appropriate star on the rating scale.

+

Visibility: Similarly, one can provide a rating of visibility during the +dive on a +5-point scale by clicking the appropriate star.

+

Tags: Tags that describe the type of dive performed can be entered +here (separated by commas). Examples of common tags are boat, drift, training, +cave, etc. +Subsurface has many built-in tags. If the user starts typing a tag, the +program +will list the tags that correspond to the typing. For instance, if the user +typed +cav, then the tags cave and cavern are shown for the user to choose from.

+

Notes: Any additional information for the dive can be entered here.

+

The Save and Cancel buttons are used to save all the information for +tabs in the info panel and in the dive profile panel, so there’s no need to +use them until ALL other information has been added. Here is an example of a +completed Dive Notes panel:

+
+
+FIGURE: A completed Dive Notes tab +
+
+
+
+

4.2.5. Equipment

+

The Equipment tab allows one to enter information about the type of cylinder +and gas used as well as the weights used for the dive. The message in a blue +box at the top of the panel:

+
+
+FIGURE: Blue edit bar +
+
+

indicates that the dive is being edited. This is a highly interactive part +of Subsurface and the information on cylinders and gases (entered here) +determines the behaviour of the dive profile (top right-hand panel).

+

Cylinders: The cylinder information is entered through a dialogue that looks +like this:

+
+
+FIGURE: Initial cylinder dialogue +
+
+

In most cases Subsurface obtains the gas used from the dive computer and +automatically inserts the gas composition(% oxygen) in the table. The
+button at the top right allows the user to add more cylinders for this +dive. The dark dustbin icon on the left allows the deletion of information +for a cylinder. Note that it is not possible to delete a cylinder if it is +used during the dive. A cylinder might be implicitly used in the dive, even +without a gas change event.

+

The user should start by selecting a cylinder type on the left-hand side of +the table. To select a cylinder, the cylinder type box should be +clicked. This brings up a list button that can be used to display a dropdown +list of cylinders:

+
+
+FIGURE: The cylinder drop-down list button +
+
+

The drop-down list can then be used to select the cylinder type that was +used for this dive or the user may start typing in the box which shows the +available options for the entered characters. The Size of the cylinder as +well as its working pressure (WorkPress) will automatically be shown in +the dialogue.

+

Next one must indicate the starting pressure and the ending pressure of the +specified gas during the dive. The unit of pressure (metric/imperial) +corresponds to the settings chosen in the Preferences.

+

Finally, provide the gas mixture used. If air was used, the value of 21% can +be entered or this field can be left blank. If nitrox or trimix were used, +their percentages of oxygen and/or helium should be entered. Any +inappropriate fields should be left empty. After typing the information for +the cylinder, either press ENTER on the keyboard or click outside the cell +that contains the cursor. Information for any additional cylinders can be +added by using the + button at the top right hand. Following is an example +of a complete description for a dive using two cylinders (air and EAN50):

+
+
+FIGURE: a completed cylinder dive information table +
+
+

Weights: Information about the weight system used can be entered +using a dialogue very similar to that of the cylinder information. If one +clicks +the + button on the top right of the weights dialogue, the table looks like +this:

+
+
+FIGURE:The Weights dialogue +
+
+

By clicking on the Type field, a drop-down list becomes accessible through +a down-arrow:

+
+
+FIGURE:Weights type drop-down list button +
+
+

The drop-down list can then be used to select the type of weight system used +during the dive or the user may start typing in the box which shows the +available options for the entered characters. In the Weight field, type +in the amount of weight used during the dive. After specifying the weight +system, the user can either press ENTER on the keyboard or click outside +the cell with the cursor. It is possible to enter information for more than +one weight system by adding an additional system using the + button on the +top right hand. Weight systems can be deleted using the dustbin icon on the +left hand. Here is an example of information for a dive with two types of +weights: integrated as well as a weight belt:

+
+
+FIGURE: A completed weights information table +
+
+
+
+

4.2.6. Editing several selected dives simultaneously

+

METHOD 1: After uploading dives from a dive computer, the dive profiles of +the uploaded dives are shown in the Dive profile tab, as well as a few +items of information in the Dive Notes tab (e.g. water temperature) and in +the Equipment tab (e.g. gas pressures and gas composition). However the +other fields remain empty. It may be useful to simultaneously edit some of +the fields in the Dive Notes and Equipment tabs. For instance, it is +possible that a diver performed several dives during a single day, using +identical equipment while diving at the same dive site or with the same dive +master and/or buddy or tags. Instead of completing the information for each +of these dives separately, one can select all the dives for that day in the +Dive List and insert the same information in the Dive Notes and +Equipment fields that need identical information. This is achieved by +editing the dive notes or the equipment for any one of the selected dives.

+

The simultaneous editing only works with fields that do not already contain +information. This means that, if some fields have been edited for a +particular dive among the selected dives, these are not changed while +editing the dives simultaneously. Technically, the rule for editing several +dives simultaneously is: if the data field being edited contains exactly +the same information for all the dives that have been selected, the new, +edited information is substituted for all the selected dives, otherwise only +the edited dive is changed, even though several dives have been selected in +the Dive List. This greatly speeds up the completion of the dive log after +several similar dives.

+

METHOD 2:There is a different way of achieving the same goal. Select a +dive with all the appropriate information typed into the Dive Notes and +Equipment tabs. Then, from the main menu, select Log → Copy dive +components. A box is presented with a selection of check boxes for most of +the fields in the Dive Notes and Equipment tabs. Select the fields to +be copied from the currently selected dive, then select OK. Now, in the +Dive List, select the dives into which this information is to be +pasted. Then, from the main menu, select Log → Paste dive components. +All the selected dives now contain the data initially selected in the +original source dive log.

+
+
+

4.2.7. Adding Bookmarks to a dive

+

Many divers wish to annotate their dives with text that indicate particular +events during the dive, e.g. "Saw dolphins", or "Released surface +buoy". This is easily done:

+

Right-click at the appropriate point on the dive profile. This brings up +the dive profile context menu. Select Add bookmark. A red flag is placed +on the dive profile at the point that was initially selected (see A +below).

+
    +
  • +

    +Right-click on the red flag. This brings up the context menu (see B + below). Select Edit name. +

    +
  • +
+

A text box is shown. Type the explanatory text for the bookmark (see C +below). Select OK. This saves the text associated with the bookmark.

+

If one hovers using the mouse over the red bookmark, the appropriate text is +shown at the bottom of the information box (see D below).

+
+
+FIGURE: Bookmark dialog +
+
+
+
+

4.2.8. Saving the updated dive information

+

The information entered in the Dive Notes tab and the Equipment tab can +be saved by using the two buttons on the top right hand of the Dive Notes +tab. If the Save button is clicked, the dive data are saved. If the +Cancel button is clicked, then the newly entered dive data are deleted, +although the dive profile obtained from the dive computer will be +retained. When the user exits Subsurface there is a final prompt to +confirm that the new data should be saved.

+
+
+
+

4.3. Importing dive information from other digital data sources or other data formats

+

If a user has been diving for some time, it is possible that several dives +were logged using other dive log software. This information does not need +retyping because these dive logs can probably be imported into +Subsurface. Subsurface will import dive logs from a range of other dive +log software. While some software is supported natively, for others the user +has to export the logbook(s) to an intermediate format so that they can then +be imported by Subsurface. Currently, Subsurface supports importing CSV +log files from several sources. APD LogViewer, XP5, Sensus and Seabear +files are preconfigured, but because the import is flexible, users can +configure their own imports. Manually kept log files (e.g. in spreadsheet) +can also be imported by configuring the CSV import. Subsurface can also +import UDDF and UDCF files used by some divelog software and some dive +computers, like the Heinrichs & Weikamp DR5. Finally, for some divelog +software like Mares Dive Organiser it is currently suggested to import the +logbooks first into a webservice like divelogs.de and then import them +from there with Subsurface, as divelogs.de supports a few additional +logbook formats that Subsurface currently cannot parse.

+

If the format of other software is supported natively on Subsurface, it +should be sufficient to select either Import→Import log files or +File→Open log file. Subsurface supports the data formats of many dive +computers, including Suunto and Shearwater. When importing dives, +Subsurface tries to detect multiple records for the same dive and merges +the information as best as it can. If there are no time zone issues (or +other reasons that would cause the beginning time of the dives to be +significantly different) Subsurface will not create duplicate entries.

+
+

4.3.1. Using the universal import dialogue

+

Importing dives from other software is performed through a universal +interface that is activated by selecting Import from the Main Menu, then +clicking on Import Log Files. This brings up the dialogue A below.

+
+
+FIGURE: Import dialogue: step 1 +
+
+

Towards the bottom right is a dropdown selector with a default label of +Dive Log Files which gives access to the different types of direct imports +available, as in dialogue B, above. Currently these are:

+
    +
  • +

    +XML-formatted dive logs (DivingLog 5.0, MacDive and several other dive log + systems) +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +UDDF-formatted dive logs (e.g. Kenozoooid) +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +UDCF-formatted dive logs +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Poseidon MkVI CCR logs +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +JDiveLog +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Suunto Dive Manager (DM3 and DM4) +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +CSV (text-based and spreadsheet-based) dive logs, including APD CCR logs +

    +
  • +
+

Selecting the appropriate file in the file list of the dialogue opens the +imported dive log in the Subsurface Dive List. Some other formats, not +accessible through the Import dialogue are also supported, as explained +below.

+
+
+

4.3.2. Importing dive logs from closed circuit rebreather (CCR) systems

+
+ + + +
+Note +Closed system rebreathers use advanced technology to recirculate gas that +has been breathed while doing two things to maintain a breathable oxygen +concentration: +a) remove carbon dioxide from the gas that has been exhaled +regulate the oxygen concentration to remain within safe diving limits. +Currently, within Subsurface, the Poseidon MkVI Discovery is the best +supported CCR dive computer. The CCR interface of Subsurface is currently +experimental and under active development. In contrast to a conventional +open circuit dive computer, a CCR system computer does not allow the +download of a log containing multiple dives. Rather, each dive is stored +independently. This means that Subsurface cannot download a dive log +directly from a CCR dive computer, but that it imports CCR dive logs in the +same way that it imports dive log data from other databases.
+
+
+
Import a CCR dive
+

See the section dealing with Importing dive +information from other digital sources. From the main menu of Subsurface, +select Import→Import log files to bring up the +universal import dialogue. As explained in the previous +section, the bottom right hand of the import dialogue contains a dropdown +list of appropriate devices that currently includes an option for MkVI +files. Having selected the appropriate CCR format and the directory where +the original dive logs have been stored from the CCR dive computer, one can +select a particular dive log file (in the case of the MkVI it is a file with +a .txt extension). After selecting the appropriate dive log, activate the +Open button at the bottom right hand of the universal import dialogue.

+
+
+
Displayed information for a dive
+

Partial pressures of gases: The graph of oxygen partial pressure shows the +information from the oxygen sensors of the CCR equipment. In the case of the +Poseidon MKVI, the mean value of the two oxygen sensors are shown. In the +case of the APD equipment, the mean of the three oxygen sensors are +shown. If one sensor shows a very different oxygen PO2 reading compared to +the others, the divergent sensor is ignored. For CCR dives the graph for +oxygen partial pressure should be fairly flat, reflecting the setpoint +settings during the dive. Partial pressures for nitrogen (and helium, if +applicable) are shown in the usual way as for other dives.

+

Cylinder pressures: CCR dive computers like the Poseidon MkVI record the +pressures of the oxygen and diluent cylinders. The pressure of the oxygen +cylinder is shown on the dive profile. In addition, start and end pressures +for both oxygen and diluent cylinders are shown in the Equipment Tab.

+

Equipment-specific information: Equipment-specific information gathered by +Subsurface is shown in the Extra data tab. This may include setup +information or metadata about the dive.

+

More equipment-specific information for downloading CCR dive logs can be +found in Appendix B.

+
+
+
+

4.3.3. Importing from Mares Dive Organiser V2.1

+

Since Mares utilise proprietary Windows software not compatible with +multi-platform applications, these dive logs cannot be directly imported +into Subsurface. Mares dive logs need to be imported using a three-step +process, using www.divelogs.de as a mechanism to extract the dive log +information.

+

The dive log data from Mares Dive Organiser need to be exported to the user’s +desktop, using + a .sdf file name extension. Refer to Appendix C for more +information. +Data should then be imported into www.divelogs.de. One needs to create a user +account in +www.divelogs.de, log into that web site, then +select Import Logbook → Dive Organiser from the menu on the left hand side. +The instructions must be carefully followed to transfer the dive information +(in .sdf format) from the Dive Organiser database to www.divelogs.de. +Finally, import the dives +from divelogs.de to Subsurface, using the instructions below.

+
+
+

4.3.4. Importing dives from divelogs.de

+

The import of dive information from divelogs.de is simple, using a single +dialogue box. The Import→Import form Divelogs.de option should be +selected from the Main Menu. This brings up a dialogue box (see figure on +left [A] below). Enter a user-ID and password for divelogs.de into the +appropriate fields and then select the Download button. Download from +divelogs.de starts immediately, displaying a progress bar in the dialogue +box. At the end of the download, the success status is indicated (see figure +on the right [B], below). The Apply button should then be selected, +after which the imported dives appear in the Subsurface Dive List panel.

+
+
+FIGURE:Download from Divelogs.de +
+
+
+
+

4.3.5. Importing data in CSV format

+

A comma-separated file (.csv) can be used to import dive information either +as dive profiles (as in the case of the APD Inspiration and Evolution closed +circuit rebreathers) or as dive metadata (in case the user keeps dive data +in a spreadsheet). For an introduction to CSV-formatted files see +A Diver’s Introduction To CSV Files.

+
+ + + +
+Important +The CSV import has a couple of caveats. You should avoid some special +characters like ampersand (&), less than (<), greater than (>) and double +quotes ("), the latter if quoting text cells. The file should use UTF-8 +character set, if having non-ASCII characters. Also the size of the CSV file +might cause problems. Importing 100 dives at a time (without dive profile) +has worked previously, but larger files might exceed limits of the parser +used. When having problems with CSV imports, try first with a smaller sample +to make sure everything works.
+
+
+
Importing dives in CSV format from dive computers or other dive log software
+

CSV files are normally organised into a single line that provides the +headers (or field names) of the data columns, followed by the data, one +record per line. CSV files can be opened with a normal text editor. For +information of how to export a spreadsheet in CSV format see +APPENDIX D: Exporting a spreadsheet to CSV format.

+

Before being able to import the data to Subsurface one needs to know:

+

Which character separates the different columns within a single line of +data? This field separator should be either a comma (,) or a TAB character. +This can be determined by opening the file with a text editor. If it is +comma-delimited, then the comma characters between the values are clearly +visible. If no commas are evident and the numbers are aligned in columns, +the file is probably TAB-delimited (i.e. it uses a TAB as a field separator, +as in the above example).

+

Which data columns need to be imported into Subsurface? The Dive Time and +Depth columns are always required. Open the file using a text editor and +note the titles of the columns to be imported and their column positions.

+
    +
  1. +

    +Is the numeric information (e.g. dive depth) in metric or in imperial unis? +

    +
  2. +
+

Armed with this information, importing the data into Subsurface is +straightforward. Select Import→Import Log Files from the main menu. In +the resulting file selection menu, select CSV files, after which a common +configuration dialog appears for all the files with a CSV extension:

+
+
+FIGURE: CSV download dialogue +
+
+

There are pre-configured definitions for some dive computers, e.g. the APD +rebreathers. If the user’s dive computer is on this list, it should be +selected using the dropdown box labeled Pre-configured imports.

+

If the dive computer is not on the pre-configured list, the user must select +the Field Separator (TAB or comma) for the particular CSV file, using the +appropriate dropdown list. For each data column used for import, the user +must check the appropriate check box and indicate in which column these data +are found.

+

Finally OK should be clicked and the dive(s) are imported and listed in +the Dive List tab of Subsurface.

+
+
+
+

4.3.6. Importing dives from a manually kept CSV file or a spreadsheet

+
+
+

A Diver’s Introduction To CSV Files

+
+ + + +
+Important +CSV is an abbreviation for a data file format: Comma-Separated +Variables. It is a file format allowing someone to view or edit the +information using a text editor such as Notebook (Windows), gedit (Linux) or +TextWrangler (OS/X). The two main advantages of the CSV format is that the +data are easily editable as text without any proprietary software and +ensuring all information is human-readable, not being obscured by the any +custom or proprietary attributes that proprietary software insert into +files. Because of its simplicity the CSV format is used as an interchange +format between many software packages, e.g. between spreadsheet, +statistical, graphics, database and diving software. Within Subsurface, +CSV files can also be used to import information from other sources such as +spreadsheet-based dive logs and even from some dive computers.
+
+

CSV files can be created or edited with a normal text editor. The most +important attribute of a CSV file is the field separator, the character +used to separate fields within a single line. The field separator is +frequently a comma, a colon, a SPACE character or a TAB character. When +exporting data from spreadsheet software, the field separator needs to be +specified in order to create the CSV file. CSV files are normally organised +into a single line that provides the headers (or field names) of the data +columns, followed by the data, one record per line. Note that each field +name may comprise more than one word separated by spaces; for instance Dive +site, below. Here is an example of dive information for four dives using a +comma as a field separator:

+
+
+
Dive site,Dive date,Time,Dive_duration, Dive_depth,Dive buddy
+Illovo Beach,2012-11-23,10:45,46:15,18.4,John Smith
+Key Largo,2012-11-24,09:12,34:15,20.4,Jason McDonald
+Wismar Baltic,2012-12-01,10:13,35:27,15.4,Dieter Albrecht
+Pulau Weh,2012-12-20,09:46,55:56,38.6,Karaeng Bontonompo
+
+

In this format the data are not easily read by a human. Here is the same +information in TAB-delimited format:

+
+
+
Dive site       Dive date       Time    Dive_duration   Dive_depth      Dive buddy
+Illovo Beach    2012-11-23      10:45   46:15   18.4    John Smith
+Key Largo       2012-11-24      09:12   34:15   20.4    Jason McDonald
+Wismar Baltic   2012-12-01      10:13   35:27   15.4    Dieter Albrecht
+Pulau Weh       2012-12-20      09:46   55:56   38.6    Karaeng Bontonompo
+
+

It is clear why many people prefer the TAB-delimited format to the +comma-delimited format. The disadvantage is that one cannot see the TAB +characters. For instance, the space between Dive and date in the top +line may be a SPACE character or a TAB character (in this case it is a SPACE +character: the tabs are before and after Dive date). If the field names in +the first line are long, the alignment with data in the other lines cannot +be maintained. Here is a highly simplified and shortened TAB-delimited +example of a CSV dive log from an APD closed-circuit rebreather (CCR) dive +computer:

+
+
+
Dive Time (s)   Depth (m)       pO₂ - Setpoint (Bar)  pO₂ - C1 Cell 1 (Bar) Ambient temp. (Celsius)
+0       0.0     0.70    0.81    13.1
+0       1.2     0.70    0.71    13.1
+0       0.0     0.70    0.71    13.1
+0       1.2     0.70    0.71    13.2
+0       1.2     0.70    0.71    13.1
+10      1.6     0.70    0.72    12.7
+20      1.6     0.70    0.71    12.6
+30      1.7     0.70    0.71    12.6
+40      1.8     0.70    0.68    12.5
+
+

CSV files can therefore be used in many contexts for importing data into a +Subsurface dive log.

+

An important aspect of the CSV format required by Subsurface is the +Column Mapping. In the example from different dive sites above, each line +of data is organised as follows:

+
+
+
Column 1:       Dive site (location)
+Column 2:       Dive date
+Column 3:       Dive time
+Column 4:       Dive duration
+Column 5:       Maximum dive depth (m)
+Column 6:       Name of dive buddy
+
+

Subsurface requires the column number of each of these data items. For +these data the column specification may look like this:

+
+
+FIGURE: CSV column definition +
+
+

Knowledge of a few basic things about he content of the CSV file allows a +smooth import of the dives into Subsurface.

+
+

If one keeps dive logs in a spreadsheet, there is an option to import those +dives, exported as a CSV file. See APPENDIX D: Exporting a +spreadsheet to CSV format for information of how to export a spreadsheet in +CSV format. When importing manually kept log files into Subsurface, the +information needed is quite different from that accessible using a dive +computer, as we are importing only summary data, not depth profile samples.

+

When importing dives in CSV format (see above), one needs to know the +internal format of the CSV data to import.

+

Which character separates the different columns within a single line of +data? A recommended field separator for the export is TAB, as commas might +be part of the decimal data values themselves. Therefore the use of an +appropriate field separator is very important. When exporting data from a +spreadsheet it is likely to request the user to supply an appropriate field +separator character.

+

Which columns need to be imported into Subsurface? Currently there are not +any mandatory input fields, but some, e.g. dive duration are crucial for the +log file to make any sense. Possible options can be seen in the image below +and one should include as many as possible of the fields available in the +original log file.

+

Units used for depth, weight and temperature. We consider depth to be either +feet or meters, weight kilograms or pounds and temperature either Celsius or +Fahrenheit. However, the users can select Metric or Imperial in the +Preferences tab of Subsurface. No mixture of unit systems is allowed for +the different fields.

+

Importing manually kept CSV log files is quite straight forward, but there +might be many fields and counting the field numbers is error +prone. Therefore validation of the data to be imported is critical.

+

To import the dives, select Import→Import Log Files from the menu bar. If +the CSV option in the dropdown list is selected and the file list includes +file names ending with .CSV, one can select the Manual dives tab that will +bring up the following configuration dialog:

+
+
+FIGURE: Download dialog for Manual CSV logs +
+
+

Check the check boxes corresponding to the data in the original import +file. For each of the checked data items, a corresponding column number +needs to be entered. For instance in the image above, the name of the dive +site (i.e. location) is located as the 11th item (or column) on each line +of the CSV import file. The input fields can be configured as appropriate, +and when everything is done the OK button should be selected to perform +the import. New dives should appear in the Dive List area of Subsurface.

+
+
+
+

4.4. Importing GPS coordinates with the Subsurface Companion App for mobile phones

+

Using the Subsurface Companion App on an Android device with a GPS, the +coordinates for the diving location can be automatically passed to the +Subsurface dive log. The Companion App stores the dive locations on a +dedicated Internet-based file server. Subsurface, in turn, can collect the +localities from the file server.

+

To do this:

+
+

4.4.1. Create a Companion App account

+

Register on the Subsurface companion web +page. A confirmation email with instructions and a personal DIVERID +will be sent, a long number that gives access to the file server and +Companion App capabilities.

+

Download the app from +Google Play +Store or from +F-Droid.

+
+
+

4.4.2. Using the Subsurface companion app on a smartphone

+

On first use the app has three options:

+

Create a new account. Equivalent to registering in Subsurface companion +page using an Internet browser. One can request a DIVERID using this +option, but this is supplied via email and followed up by interaction with +the Subsurface companion web page in order +to activate the account.

+

Retrieve an account. If users forgot their DIVERID they will receive an +email to recover the number.

+

Use an existing account. Users are prompted for their DIVERID. The app +saves this DIVERID and does not ask for it again unless one uses the +Disconnect menu option (see below).

+
+ + + +
+Important +In the Subsurface main program, the DIVERID should also be entered on +the Default Preferences panel, obtained by selecting +File→Preferences→Defaults from the main menu in Subsurface itself. +This facilitates synchronisation between Subsurface and the Companion App.
+
+
+
Creating new dive locations
+

Now one is ready to get a dive position and send it to the server. The +Android display will look like the left hand image (A) below, but without +any dives.

+

Touch the "+" icon on the top right to add a new dive site, a menu will be +showed with 3 options:

+

Current: A prompt for a place name (or a request to activate the GPS if it +is turned off) will be displayed, after which the current location is saved.

+

Use Map: This option allows the user to fix a position by searching a world +map. A world map is shown (see B below) on which one should indicate the +desired position with a long press on the touch sensitive screen (if the +marked location is erroneous, simply indicate a new location) and select +the check symbol in the upper right. A dialog is shown allowing to enter the +name of the dive location and the date-time of the dive (see C below). In +order to import this dive location in Subsurface it’s advisable to set the +time to agree with the time of that dive on the dive computer.

+
+
+FIGURE: Companion App, add location using map +
+
+

Import local GPX file: The android device searches for .gpx files and +located archives will be shown. The selected .gpx file is opened and the +stored locations shown. Now one needs to select the appropriate locations, +then select the tab in the upper right, after which the locations will be +sent to the web service and added to the list on the Android device.

+
+
+
Dive lists of dive locations
+

The main screen shows a list of dive locations, each with a name, date and +time (see A below). Some locations may have an arrow-up icon over the +selection box to the left indicating that they require upload to the +server. One can select individual dive locations from the list. A selected +location has a check mark in the selection box on the left. Group operations +(such as Delete or Send) are performed on several locations that are +selected.

+

Dive locations in this list can be viewed in two ways: a list of locations +or a map indicating the dive locations. The display mode (List or Map) is +changed by selecting Dives at the top left of the screen (see A below) +and then selecting the display mode. The display mode can be changed either +from the list of locations or from the map (see B below). If one selects a +location (on the list or on the map), an editing panel opens (see C below) +where the dive description or other details may be changed.

+
+
+FIGURE: Companion App, add location using map +
+
+

When one clicks on a dive (not selecting the check box), the name given to +it, date/time and GPS coordinates will be shown, with two options at the top +of the screen:

+
    +
  • +

    +Edit (pencil): Change the text name or other characteristics of the dive + location. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Maps: Display a map showing the dive location. +

    +
  • +
+

After editing and saving a dive location (see C above), one needs to +upload it to the web service, as explained below.

+
+
+
Uploading dive locations
+

There are several ways to send locations to the server. The easiest is by +simply selecting the locations (See A below) and then touching the right +arrow at the top right of the screen.

+
+ + + +
+Important +Users must be careful, as the trash icon on the right means exactly what it +should; it deletes the selected dive location(s).
+
+
+
+FIGURE: Screen shots (A-B) of companion app +
+
+

After a dive trip using the Companion App, all dive locations are ready to +be downloaded to a Subsurface dive log (see below).

+
+
+
Settings on the Companion app
+

Selecting the Settings menu option results in the right hand image above +(B).

+
+
+
Server and account
+
+

User ID. The DIVERID obtained by registering as described above. The +easiest way to obtain it is simply to copy and paste from the confirmation +email but, of course, users can also type this information.

+
+
+
Synchronisation
+

Synchronize on startup. If selected, dive locations in the Android device +and those on the web service synchronise each time the app is started.

+

Upload new dives. If selected, each time the user adds a dive location it +is automatically sent to the server.

+
+
+
Background service
+

Instead of entering a unique dive location, users can leave the service +running in the background of their Android device, allowing the continuous +collection of GPS locations.

+

The settings below define the behaviour of the service:

+

Min duration. In minutes. The app will try to get a location every X +minutes until stopped by the user.

+
    +
  • +

    +Min distance. In meters. Minimum distance between two locations. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Name template. The name the app will use when saving the locations. +

    +
  • +
+
+ + + +
+Tip +How does the background service work? Assuming the user sets 5 minutes and +50 meters in the settings above, the app will start by recording a location +at the current location, followed by another one at every 5 minutes or +every time one moves 50m from previous location. If subsequent locations +are within a radius of 50 meters from the previous one, a new location is +not saved. If the user is not moving, only one location is saved, but if the +user is moving, a trace of the route is obtained by saving a location every +50 meters.
+
+
+
+
Other
+

Mailing List. The mail box for Subsurface. Users can send an email to +the Subsurface mailing list.

+
    +
  • +

    +Subsurface website. A link to the URL of Subsurface web +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Version. Displays the current version of the Companion App. +

    +
  • +
+
+
+ +

Search the saved dive locations by name or by date and time.

+
+
+
Start service
+

Initiates the background service following the previously defined +settings.

+
+
+
Disconnect
+

This is a badly named option that disconnects the app from the server by +resetting the user ID in the app, showing the first screen where an account +can be created, retrieve the ID for an existing account or use the users own +ID. The disconnect option is useful if a user’s Android device was used to +download the dive locations of another registered diver.

+
+
+
Send all locations
+

This option sends all locations stored in the Android device to the server.

+
+
+
+

4.4.3. Downloading dive locations to the Subsurface divelog

+

Download dive(s) from a dive computer or enter them manually into +Subsurface before obtaining the GPS coordinates from the server. The +download dialog can be reached via Ctrl+G or from the Subsurface Main +Menu Import → Import GPS data from Subsurface Service, resulting in the +image on the left (A), below. On first use the DIVERID text box is +blank. Provide a DIVERID, then select the Download button to initiate the +download process, after which the screen on the right (B) below appears:

+
+
+FIGURE: Downloading Companion app GPS data +
+
+

Note that the Apply button is now active. By clicking on it, users can +update the locations of the newly entered or uploaded dives in Subsurface +which applies the coordinates and names entered on the app for all the new +dives that match the date-times of the uploaded GPS localities. If one has +entered the name of the dive location in Subsurface before downloading the +GPS coordinates, this name will take precedence over downloaded one.

+

Since Subsurface matches GPS locations from the Android device and dive +information from the dive computer based on date-time data, automatic +assignment of GPS data to dives is dependent on agreement of the date-time +information between these two devices. Although Subsurface has a wide +range tolerance, it may be unable to identify the appropriate dive if there +is a large difference between the time in the dive computer and that of the +Android device, resulting in no updates.

+

Similar date-times may not always be possible and there may be many reasons +for this (e.g. time zones), or Subsurface may be unable to decide which is +the correct position for a dive (e.g. on repetitive dives while running +background service there may be several locations that would be included +in the time range that fit not only the first dive, but one or more +subsequent dives as well). A workaround for this situation to manually edit +the date-time of a dive in the Subsurface Dive List before downloading +the GPS data and then to change the date-time back again after downloading +GPS data.

+
+ + + +
+Note +TIPS:
+
+

Background service, being a very powerful tool, may fill the location list +with many unnecessary locations not corresponding to the exact dive point +but reflecting the boat’s route. Currently these locations are difficult to +delete from the server. In some situations it is therefore prudent to clean +up the list on the Android device before sending the dive points to the web +server by simply deleting the inappropriate locations. This might be +necessary, for instance, if one wants to keep the location list clear to see +dives in the web service map display (see above).

+

It may also make sense to give informative names to the locations sent to +the web server, or at least to use an informative name in the Name +Template setting while running the background service, especially on a +dive trip with many dives and dive locations.

+
+
+
+

4.5. Adding photographs to dives

+

Many (if not most) divers take a camera with them and take photographs +during a dive. One would like to associate each photograph with a specific +dive. Subsurface allows one to load photos into a dive. Photos are +superimposed on the dive profile, from where they can be viewed.

+
+

4.5.1. Loading photos and getting synchronisation between dive computer and camera

+

Left-lick on a dive or on a group of dives on the dive list. Then +right-click on this dive or group of dives and choose the option Load +Images:

+
+
+FIGURE: Load images option +
+
+

The system file browser appears. Select the folder and photographs that need +to be loaded into Subsurface and click the Open button.

+
+
+FIGURE: Load images option +
+
+

This brings one to the time synchronisation dialog, shown below. The +critical problem is that the time synchronisation is not perfect between the +dive computer used during a dive, and the camera used during that same +dive. These two devices often differ by several minutes. If Subsurface can +achieve synchronisation, then the exact times of photographs can be used to +position photographs on the dive profile.

+

Subsurface achieves this synchronisation in two ways:

+

Manually: If the user wrote down the exact camera time at the start of a dive, the +difference in time between the two devices can be determined. Actually, as long as the device +settings for time has not been changed in either device, one could write down the times of +both devices after the dive or even at the end of the day. One can then manually set the time +difference in the Time shift dialog. Towards the top of the dialog is a time setting tool +immediately under the heading Shift times of image(s) by, evident in figure A below. +If the camera time is 7 minutes later than that of the dive computer, set the time setting +tool to a value of 00:07. Select either the earlier or later radio button. +In the above example, the earlier option is appropriate, since the photos need to be shifted +7 minutes earlier (camera is 7 minutes ahead of dive computer). Ignore any "AM" or "PM" suffix +in that tool. Click the OK button and synchronisation is achieved.

+
+
+FIGURE: Synchronisation dialog +
+
+

By photograph: There is a very slick way of achieving synchronisation. If one takes a +photograph of the face of the dive computer showing the time, then Subsurface can obtain +the exact time the photograph was taken, using the metadata that the camera stores within +each photo. In order to do this, use the bottom half of the Time shift_ dialog. If one uses +the bottom part, the top part of the dialog is ignored. Click on +the horizontal bar entitled "Select image of divecomputer showing time. This brings up +a file browser with which one can select the photograph of the dive computer. Select the +photograph using the file browser and click on OK. This photograph of the dive computer +appears in the bottom panel of the Shift times dialog. Now Subsurface knows exactly +when the photograph has been taken. Now set the date-time dialog to the left of the photo +so that this tool reflects the date and time of the dive computer in the photo. When the +date-time tool has been set, Subsurface knows exactly what the time difference between +camera and dive computer is, and synchronisation is achieved. There is a +photograph with the face of the dive computer and with the date-time tool set to the +date-time on image B above.

+

If the timestamp of a photograph is long before or after the dive, it is not +placed on the dive profile. If the timestamp of the photo is within 30 +minutes of the dive, it is shown.

+
+
+

4.5.2. Viewing the photos

+

In order to view the photos added to a dive, activate the show-photos +button in the tool bar to the left of the dive profile:

+
+
+FIGURE:Show photos toolbar button +
+
+

After the images have been loaded, they appear in two places:

+
    +
  • +

    +the Photos tab of the Dive Notes panel. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +as tiny icons (stubs) on the dive profile at the appropriate positions + reflecting the time each photograph was taken. See below: +

    +
  • +
+
+
+FIGURE: Photos on dive profile +
+
+

If one hovers with the mouse over any of the photo icons, then a thumbnail +photo is shown of the appropriate photo. See the image below:

+
+
+FIGURE:Thumbnail photo on dive profile +
+
+

Clicking on the thumbnail brings up a full size photo overlaid on the +Subsurface window. This allows good viewing of the photographs that have +been added (see the image below). Note that the thumbnail has a small +dustbin icon in the bottom right hand corner (see image above). If one +selects the dustbin, the image is removed from the dive. Therefore some care +is required when clicking on a thumbnail. Images can also be deleted using +the Photos tab (see text below).

+
+
+FIGURE: Full-screen photo on dive profile +
+
+
+
+

4.5.3. The Photos tab

+

Photographs associated with a dive are shown as thumbnails in the Photos +tab of the Dive Notes panel. Photos taken in rapid succession during a +dive (therefore sometimes with large overlap on the dive profile) can easily +be accessed in the Photos tab. This tab serves as a tool for individually +accessing the photos of a dive, while the stubs on the dive profile give an +indication of when during a dive a photo was taken. By single-clicking on a +thumbnail in the Photos panel, a photo is selected. By double-clicking a +thumbnail, the full-sized image is shown, overlaying the Subsurface +window. A photo can be deleted from the Photos panel by selecting it +(single-click) and then by pressing the Del key on the keyboard. This +removes the photo both from the Photos tab as well as the dive profile.

+
+
+

4.5.4. Photos on an external hard disk

+

Most underwater photographers store their photos on an external drive. If +such a drive can be mapped (almost always the case) the photos can be +directly accessed by Subsurface. This facilitates the interaction between +Subsurface and an external repository of photos. When associating a dive +profile with photos from an external drive, the normal procedure of +selection and synchronisation (see text above) is used. However, after the +external drive has been disconnected, Subsurface cannot access these +photos any more. If the display of photos is activated (using the toolbox +to the left of the Dive Profile), the program only shows a small white dot +where each photo should be on the dive profile. In addition the Photos +tab only shows the file names of the photos. This is normal behaviour. If, +later, the external drive with the photos is connected again, the photos can +be seen in the normal way.

+
+
+
+

4.6. Logging special types of dives

+
+

4.6.1. Sidemount dives

+

Subsurface easily handles dives involving more than one +cylinder. Sidemount dive logging involves three steps:

+

During the dive, recording cylinder switch events. Since sidemount diving normally involves two +cylinders with air or with the same gas mixture, Subsurface distinguishes among these different +cylinders. In contrast, most dive computers that allow gas switching only distinguish among different +gases used, not among different cylinders used. This means that when sidemount dives are downloaded +from these dive computers, the events of switching between cylinders with the same gas are not downloaded. This may mean +that one may have to keep a written log of cylinder switch times using a slate, or (if the dive computer +has this facility) marking each cylinder switch with a bookmark that can be retrieved later. Returning +from a dive with the information about cylinder changes is the only tricky part of logging sidemount dives. +Within Subsurface describe the cylinders used during the dive. The diver needs to provide the +specifications of the different cylinders, using the Equipment tab of the Dive Info Panel (see +image below where two 12 litre cylinder were used). +Indicate cylinder change events on the Subsurface dive profile. Once the dive log has been imported +from a dive computer into Subsurface, the cylinder switch events need to be indicated on the dive profile. +Cylinder changes are recorded by right-clicking at the appropriate point on the dive profile and then +selecting Add gas change. A list of the appropriate cylinders is shown with the +currently used cylinder greyed out. In the image below Tank 1 is greyed out, leaving only Tank 2 +to be selected. Select the appropriate cylinder. The cylinder change is then indicated on the dive +profile with a cylinder symbol. If the Tank Bar is activated using the toolbar to the left of the +profile, then the cylinder change is also indicated on the Tank Bar (see image below). After all +the cylinder change events have been recorded on the dive profile, the correct cylinder pressures +for both cylinders are shown on the dive profile, as inthe image below.

+
+
+FIGURE: Sidemount profile +
+
+
+
+
+
+
+

5. Obtaining more information about dives entered into the logbook

+
+
+

5.1. The Dive Info tab (for individual dives)

+

The Dive Info tab gives some summary information about a particular dive +that has been selected in the Dive List. Useful information here includes +the surface interval before the dive, the maximum and mean depths of the +dive, the gas volume consumed, the surface air consumption (SAC) and the +number of oxygen toxicity units (OTU) incurred.

+
+ + + +
+Note +Gas consumption and SAC calculations: Subsurface calculates SAC and Gas +consumption taking in account gas incompressibility, particularly at tank +pressures above 200 bar, making them more accurate. Users should refer to +Appendix D for more information.
+
+
+
+

5.2. The Extra Data tab (usually for individual dives)

+

When using a dive computer, it often reports several data items that cannot +easily be presented in a standardised way because the nature of the +information differs from one dive computer to another. These data often +comprise setup information, metadata about a dive, battery levels, no fly +times, or gradient factors used during the dive. When possible, this +information is presented in the Extra Data tab. Below is an image showing +extra data for a dive using a Poseidon rebreather.

+
+
+FIGURE: Extra Data tab +
+
+
+
+

5.3. The Stats tab (for groups of dives)

+

The Stats tab gives summary statistics for more than one dive, assuming that +more than one dive has been selected in the Dive List using the standard +Ctrl-click or Shift-click of the mouse. If only one dive has been selected, +figures pertaining to only that dive are given. This tab shows the number of +dives selected, the total amount of dive time in these dives, as well as the +minimum, maximum and mean for the dive duration, water temperature and +surface air consumption (SAC). It also shows the depth of the shallowest and +deepest dives of those selected.

+
+
+

5.4. The Dive Profile

+
+
+Typical dive profile +
+
+

Of all the panels in Subsurface, the Dive Profile contains the most +detailed information about each dive. The Dive Profile has a button bar on +the left hand side that allows control over several display options. The +functions of these buttons are described below. The main item in the Dive +Profile is the graph of dive depth as a function of time. In addition to the +obvious information of the depth it also shows the ascent and descent rates +compared to the recommended speed of going up or down in the water +column. This information is given using different colours:

+
+ ++++ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +

Colour

Descent speed (m/min)

Ascent speed (m/min)

Red

> 30

> 18

Orange

18 - 30

9 - 18

Yellow

9 - 18

4 - 9

Light green

1.5 - 9

1.5 - 4

Dark green

< 1.5

< 1.5

+
+

The profile also includes depth readings for the peaks and troughs in the +graph. Thus, users should see the depth of the deepest point and other +peaks. Mean depth is marked with a horizontal red line.

+
+ + + +
+Note +In some cases the dive profile does not fill the whole area of the Dive +Profile panel. Clicking the Scale button in the toolbar on the left of +the dive profile frequently increases the size of the dive profile to fill +the area of the panel efficiently.
+
+

Water temperature is displayed with its own blue line with temperature values +placed adjacent to significant changes.

+

The dive profile can include graphs of the partial pressures of O2, N2, +and He during the dive (see figure above) as well as a calculated and dive +computer reported deco ceilings (only visible for deep, long, or repetitive +dives). Partial pressures of oxygen are indicated in green, those of +nitrogen in black, and those of helium in dark red. These partial pressure +graphs are shown below the profile data.

+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking this button allows display of the partial pressure of oxygen +during the dive. This is depicted below the dive depth and water temperature +graphs.
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking this button allows display of the partial pressure of nitrogen +during the dive.
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking this button allows display of the partial pressure of helium +during the dive. This is only of importance to divers using Trimix, +Helitrox or similar breathing gasses.
+
+

The air consumption graph displays the tank pressure and its change during +the dive. The air consumption takes depth into account so that even when +manually entering the start and end pressures the graph is not a straight +line. Similarly to the depth graph the slope of the tank pressure gives the +user information about the momentary SAC rate (Surface Air Consumption) when +using an air integrated dive computer. Here the colour coding is not +relative to some absolute values but relative to the average normalised air +consumption during the dive. So areas that are red or orange indicate times +of increased normalized air consumption while dark green reflects times when +the diver was using less gas than average.

+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking on the heart rate button will allow the display of heart rate +information during the dive if the dive computer was attached to a heart +rate sensor.
+
+

It is possible to zoom into the profile graph. This is done either by using +the scroll wheel / scroll gesture of your mouse or trackpad. By default +Subsurface always shows a profile area large enough for at least 30 minutes +and 30m + (100ft) – this way short or shallow dives are intuitively recognizable; +something +that free divers clearly won’t care about.

+
+
+FIGURE: Measuring Bar +
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Measurements of depth or time differences can be achieved by using the +ruler button on the left of the dive profile panel. The measurement is +done by dragging the red dots to the two points on the dive profile that the +user wishes to measure. Information is then given in the horizontal white +area underneath the two red dots.
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Photographs that have been added to a dive can be shown on the profile by +selecting the Show-photo button. The position of a photo on the profile +indicates the exact time when this photo was taken. If this button is not +active, the photos are hidden.
+
+

The profile can also include the dive computer reported ceiling (more +precisely, the deepest deco stop that the dive computer calculated for each +particular moment in time) as a red overlay on the dive profile. Ascent +ceilings arise when a direct ascent to the surface increases the risk of a +diver suffering from decompression sickness (DCS) and it is necessary to +either ascend slower or to perform decompression stop(s) before ascending to +the surface. Not all dive computers record this information and make it +available for download; for example all of the Suunto dive computers fail to +make this very useful data available to divelog software. Subsurface also +calculates ceilings independently, shown as a green overlay on the dive +profile. Because of the differences in algorithms used and amount of data +available (and other factors taken into consideration at the time of the +calculation) it is unlikely that ceilings from dive computers and from +Subsurface are the same, even if the same algorithm and gradient factors +(see below) are used. It is also quite common that Subsurface calculates +a ceiling for non-decompression dives when the dive computer stayed in +non-deco mode during the whole dive (represented by the dark green +section in the profile at the beginning of this section). This is caused by +the fact that Subsurface’s calculations describe the deco obligation at +each moment during a dive, while dive computers usually take the upcoming +ascent into account. During the ascent some excess nitrogen (and possibly +helium) are already breathed off so even though the diver technically +encountered a ceiling at depth, the dive still does not require an explicit +deco stop. This feature allows dive computers to offer longer non-stop +bottom times.

+
+ + + +
+Note +If the dive computer itself calculates a ceiling and makes it available to +Subsurface during upload of dives, this can be shown as a red area by +checking Dive computer reported ceiling button on the Profile Panel.
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +If the Calculated ceiling button on the Profile Panel is clicked, then a +ceiling, calculated by Subsurface, is shown in green if it exists for a +particular dive (A in figure below). This setting can be modified in two +ways:
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +If, in addition, the show all tissues button on the Profile Panel is +clicked, the ceiling is shown for the tissue compartments following the +Bühlmann model (B in figure below).
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +If, in addition, the 3m increments button on the Profile Panel is clicked, +then the ceiling is indicated in 3 m increments (C in figure below).
+
+
+
+Figure: Ceiling with 3m resolution +
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +By selecting this icon, the different cylinders used during a dive can be +represented as a coloured bar at the bottom of the Dive Profile. In +general oxygen is represented by a green bar, nitrogen with a yellow bar and +helium with a red bar. The image below shows a dive which first uses a +trimix cylinder (red and green), followed by a switch to a nitrox cylinder +(yellow and green) after 23 minutes. Cylinders with air are shown as a light +blue bar.
+
+
+
+Figure: Cylinder use graph +
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Display inert gas tissue pressures relative to ambient inert gas pressure +(horizontal grey line). Tissue pressures are calculated using the Bühlmann +ZH-L16 algorithm and are displayed as lines ranging from green (faster +tissues) to blue (slower tissues). The black line, graphed above the +ambient pressure, is the maximum allowable tissue supersaturation (pressure +limit) derived from the gradient factors specified in the Preferences. For +divers involved in planned decompression diving, efficient rates of +offgasing are obtained with tissue pressures between the ambient inert gas +pressure (grey line) and the pressure limit (black line). This display is a +representation of the tissue pressures during the whole dive. In contast, +the Gas Pressure Graph in the Information Box +on the Dive Profile is an instantaneous reflection of tissue pressures at +the moment in time reflected by the position of the cursor on the dive +profile.
+
+
+
+Figure: Inert gas tissue pressure graph +
+
+

Gradient Factor settings strongly affect the calculated ceilings and their +depths. For more information about Gradient factors, see the section on +Gradient Factor Preference settings. The currently +used gradient factors (e.g. GF 35/75) are shown above the depth profile if +the appropriate toolbar buttons are activated. N.B.: The indicated +gradient factors are NOT the gradient factors in use by the dive computer, +but those used by Subsurface to calculate deco obligations during the +dive. For more information external to this manual see:

+ +
+
+

5.5. The Dive Profile context menu

+

The context menu for the Dive Profile is accessed by right-clicking while +the mouse cursor is over the Dive Profile panel. The menu allows the +creation of Bookmarks or Gas Change Event markers or manual CCR set-point +changes other than the ones that might have been imported from a Dive +Computer. Markers are placed against the depth profile line and with the +time of the event set by where the mouse cursor was when the right mouse +button was initially clicked to bring up the menu. Gas Change events involve +a selection of which gas is being switched to, the list of choices being +based on the available gases defined in the Equipment Tab. Set-point change +events open a dialog allowing to choose the next set-point value. As in the +planner, a set-point value of zero indicates the diver is breathing from an +open circuit system while any non-zero value indicates the use of a closed +circuit rebreather (CCR). By right-clicking while over an existing marker a +menu appears, adding options to allow deletion of the marker or to allow all +markers of that type to be hidden. Hidden events can be restored to view by +selecting Unhide all events from the context menu.

+
+
+

5.6. The Information Box

+

The Information box displays a large range of information pertaining to the +dive profile. Normally the Information Box is located to the top left of the +Dive Profile panel. If the mouse points outside of the Dive Profile +panel, then only the top line of the Information Box is visible (see +left-hand part of figure (A) below). The Information Box can be moved +around in the Dive Profile panel by click-dragging it with the mouse so +that it is not obstructing important detail. The position of the Information +Box is saved and used again during subsequent dive analyses.

+
+
+Figure: Information Box +
+
+

The moment the mouse points inside the Dive Profile panel, the information +box expands and shows many data items. In this situation, the data reflect +the time point along the dive profile indicated by the mouse cursor (see +right-hand part of figure (B) above where the Information Box reflects the +situation at the position of the cursor [arrow] in that image). Therefore, +moving the cursor in the horizontal direction allows the Information Box to +show information for any point along the dive profile. In this mode, the +Information Box gives extensive statistics about depth, gas and ceiling +characteristics of the particular dive. These include: Time period into the +dive (indicated by a @), depth, cylinder pressure (P), temperature, +ascent/descent rate, surface air consumption (SAC), oxygen partial pressure, +maximum operating depth, equivalent air depth (EAD), equivalent narcotic +depth (END), equivalent air density depth (EADD), decompression requirements +at that instant in time (Deco), time to surface (TTS), the calculated +ceiling, as well as the calculated ceiling for several Bühlmann tissue +compartments.

+

The user has control over the display of several statistics, represented as +four buttons on the left of the profile panel. These are:

+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking this button causes the Information Box to display the Maximum +Operating Depth (MOD) of the dive, given the gas mixture used. MOD is +dependent on the oxygen concentration in the breathing gas. For air (21% +oxygen) it is around 57 m. Below the MOD there is a markedly increased risk +of exposure to the dangers associated with oxygen toxicity.
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking this button causes the Information Box to display the No-deco +Limit (NDL) or the Total Time to Surface (TTS). NDL is the time duration +that a diver can continue with a dive, given the present depth, that does +not require decompression (that is, before an ascent ceiling appears). Once +one has exceeded the NDL and decompression is required (that is, there is an +ascent ceiling above the diver, then TTS gives the number of minutes +required before the diver can surface. TTS includes ascent time as well as +decompression time.
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking this button causes the Information Box to display the Surface Air +Consumption (SAC). SAC is an indication of the surface-normalised +respiration rate of a diver. The value of SAC is less than the real +respiration rate because a diver at 10m uses breathing gas at a rate roughly +double that of the equivalent rate at the surface. SAC gives an indication +of breathing gas consumption rate independent of the depth of the dive so +that the respiratory rates of different dives can be compared. The units for +SAC is litres/min or cub ft/min.
+
+
+ + + +
+Note +Clicking this button displays the Equivalent Air Depth (EAD) for nitrox +dives as well as the Equivalent Narcotic Depth (END) for trimix +dives. These are numbers of importance to divers who use breathing gases +other than air. Their values are dependent on the composition of the +breathing gas. The EAD is the depth of a hypothetical air dive that has the +same partial pressure of nitrogen as the current depth of the nitrox dive at +hand. A nitrox dive leads to the same decompression obligation as an air +dive to the depth equalling the EAD. The END is the depth of a hypothetical +air dive that has the same sum of partial pressures of the narcotic gases +nitrogen and oxygen as the current trimix dive. A trimix diver can expect +the same narcotic effect as a diver breathing air diving at a depth +equalling the END.
+
+

Figure (B) above shows an information box with a nearly complete set of +data.

+
+

5.6.1. The Gas Pressure Bar Graph

+

On the left of the Information Box is a vertical bar graph indicating the +pressures of the nitrogen (and other inert gases, e.g. helium, if +applicable) that the diver was inhaling at a particular instant during the +dive, indicated by the position of the cursor on the Dive Profile. The +drawing on the left below indicates the meaning of the different parts of +the Gas Pressure Bar Graph.

+
+
+FIGURE:Gas Pressure bar Graph +
+
+

The light green area indicates the total gas, with the top margin of the +light green area indicating the total gas pressure inhaled by the diver and +measured from the bottom of the graph to the top of the light green +area. This pressure has a relative value in the graph and does not +indicate absolute pressure.

+

The horizontal black line underneath the light green margin indicates the +equilibrium pressure of the inert gases inhaled by the diver, usually +nitrogen. In the case of trimix, it is the pressures of nitrogen and helium +combined. In this example, the user is diving with EAN32, so the inert gas +pressure is 68% of the distance from the bottom of the graph to the total +gas pressure value.

+

The dark green area at the bottom of the graph represents the pressures of +inert gas in each of the 16 tissue compartments, following the Bühlmann +algorithm, the fast tissues being on the left hand side.

+

The top black horizontal line indicates the gradient factor that applies to +the depth of the diver at the particular point on the Dive Profile. The +appropriate gradient factor is an interpolation between the FGLow and GFHigh +values specified in the Graph tab of the Preferences Panel of +Subsurface.

+

The bottom margin of the red area in the graph indicates the Bühlman-derived +M-value, that is the pressure value of inert gases at which bubble formation +is expected to be severe, resulting in decompression sickness.

+

These five values are indicated on the left in the graph above. The way the +Gas Pressure Bar Graph changes during a dive is indicated on the right hand +side of the above figure for a diver using EAN32.

+

Graph A indicates the situation at the start of a dive with diver at the +surface. The pressures in all the tissue compartments are still at the +equilibrium pressure because no diving has taken place.

+

Graph B indicates the situation after a descent to 30 meters. Few of the +tissue compartments have had time to respond to the descent, their gas +pressures being far below the equilibrium gas pressure.

+

Graph C represents the pressures after 30 minutes at 30 m. The fast +compartments have attained equilibrium (i.e. they have reached the hight of +the black line indicating the equilibrium pressure). The slower compartments +(towards the right) have not reached equilibrium and are in the process of +slowly increasing in pressure.

+

Graph D shows the pressures after ascent to a depth of 4.5 meters. Since, +during ascent, the total inhaled gas pressure has decreased strongly from 4 +bar to 1.45 bar, the pressures in the different tissue compartments now +exceed that of the total gas pressure and approaches the gradient factor +value (i.e. the top black horizontal line). Further ascent will result in +exceeding the gradient factor value (GFHigh), endangering the diver.

+

Graph E indicates the situation after remaining at 4.5 meters for 10 +minutes. The fast compartments have decreased in pressure. As expected, the +pressures in the slow compartments have not changed much. The pressures in +the fast compartments do not approach the GFHigh value any more and the +diver is safer than in the situation indicated in graph D.

+
+
+
+
+
+

6. Organising the logbook (Manipulating groups of dives)

+
+
+

6.1. The Dive List context menu

+

Many actions within Subsurface are dependent on a context menu used mostly +to manipulate groups of dives. The context menu is found by selecting a dive +or a group of dives and then right-clicking.

+
+
+Figure: Context Menu +
+
+

The context menu is used in many manipulations described below.

+
+

6.1.1. Customising the information showed in the Dive List panel

+
+
+Example: Dive list info options +
+
+

The default information in the Dive List includes, for each dive, +Dive_number, Date, Rating, Dive_depth, Dive_duration and Dive_location. This +information can be controlled and changed by right-clicking on the header +bar of the Dive List. For instance, a right-click on the Date header +brings up a list of items that can be shown in the dive list (see +above). Select an item to be shown in the Dive List or to be deleted from +the dive list, and the list is immediately updated accordingly. Preferences +for information shown in the Dive List is saved and used when Subsurface +is re-opened.

+
+
+

6.1.2. Selecting dives from a particular dive site

+

Many divers have long dive lists and it may be difficult to locate all the +dives at a particular site. By pressing Ctl-F on the keyboard, a text box +is opened at the top left hand of the Dive List. Type the name of a dive +site in this text box and the Dive List is immediately filtered to show +only the dives for that site.

+
+
+
+

6.2. Renumbering the dives

+

Dives are normally numbered incrementally from non-recent dives (low +sequence numbers) to recent dives (having the highest sequence numbers). The +numbering of the dives is not always consistent. For instance, when +non-recent dives are added to the dive list the numbering does not +automatically follow on because of the dives that are more recent in +date/time than the newly-added dive with an older date/time. Therefore, one +may sometimes need to renumber the dives. This is performed by selecting +(from the Main Menu) Log → Renumber. Users are given a choice with +respect to the lowest sequence number to be used. Completing this operation +results in new sequence numbers (based on date/time) for the dives in the +Dive List panel.

+
+
+

6.3. Grouping dives into trips and manipulating trips

+

For regular divers, the dive list can rapidly become very long. Subsurface +can group dives into trips. It performs this by grouping dives that have +date/times that are not separated in time by more than two days, thus +creating a single heading for each diving trip represented in the dive +log. Below is an ungrouped dive list (A, on the left) as well as the +corresponding grouped dive list comprising five dive trips (B, on the +right):

+
+
+Figure: Grouping dives +
+
+

Grouping into trips allows a rapid way of accessing individual dives without +having to scan a long lists of dives. In order to group the dives in a dive +list, (from the Main Menu) users must select Log → Autogroup. The Dive +List panel now shows only the titles for the trips.

+
+

6.3.1. Editing the title and associated information for a particular trip

+

Normally, in the dive list, minimal information is included in the trip +title. More information about a trip can be added by selecting its trip +title from the Dive List. This shows a Trip Notes tab in the Dive +Notes panel. Here users can add or edit information about the date/time, +the trip location and any other general comments about the trip as a whole +(e.g. the dive company that was dived with, the general weather and surface +conditions during the trip, etc.). After entering this information, users +should select Save from the buttons at the top right of the Trip Notes +tab. The trip title in the Dive List panel should now reflect some of the +edited information.

+
+
+

6.3.2. Viewing the dives during a particular trip

+

Once the dives have been grouped into trips, users can expand one or more +trips by clicking the arrow-head on the left of each trip title. This +expands the selected trip, revealing the individual dives performed during +the trip.

+
+
+

6.3.3. Collapsing or expanding dive information for different trips

+

If a user right-clicks after selecting a particular trip in the dive list, +the resulting context menu allows several possibilities to expand or +collapse dives within trips. This includes expanding all trips, collapsing +all trips and collapsing all trips except the selected one.

+
+
+

6.3.4. Merging dives from more than one trip into a single trip

+

By right-clicking on a selected trip title in the Dive List panel, a +context menu shows up that allows the merging of trips by either merging of +the selected trip with the trip below or with the trip above.

+
+
+

6.3.5. Splitting a single trip into more than one trip

+

If a trip includes five dives, the user can split this trip into two trips +(trip 1: top 3 dives; trip 2: bottom 2 dives) by selecting and +right-clicking the top three dives. The resulting context menu allows the +user to create a new trip by choosing the option Create new trip +above. The top three dives are then grouped into a separate trip. The +figures below shows the selection and context menu on the left (A) and the +completed action on the right (B):

+
+
+FIGURE: Split a trip into 2 trips +
+
+
+
+
+

6.4. Manipulating single dives

+
+

6.4.1. Delete a dive from the dive log

+

Dives can be permanently deleted from the dive log by selecting and +right-clicking them to bring up the context menu, and then selecting Delete +dive(s). Typically this would apply to a case where a user wishes to delete +workshop calibration dives of the dive computer or dives of extremely short +duration.

+
+
+ +

Users can unlink dives from the trip to which they belong. In order to do +this, select and right-click the relevant dives to bring up the context +menu. Then select the option Remove dive(s) from trip. The dive(s) now +appear immediately above the trip to which they belonged.

+
+
+

6.4.3. Add a dive to the trip immediately above

+

Selected dives can be moved from the trip to which they belong and placed +within the trip immediately above the currently active trip. To do this, +select and right-click the dive(s) to bring up the context menu, and then +select Add dive(s) to trip immediately above.

+
+
+

6.4.4. Shift the start time of dive(s)

+

Sometimes it is necessary to adjust the start time of a dive. This may apply +to situations where dives are performed in different time zones or when the +dive computer has an erroneous time. In order to do this, user must select +and right-click the dive(s) to be adjusted. This action brings up the +context menu on which the Shift times option should be selected. User must +then specify the time (in hours and minutes) by which the dives should be +adjusted and click on the option indicating whether the time adjustment +should be forwards or backwards.

+
+
+

6.4.5. Merge dives into a single dive

+

Sometimes a dive is briefly interrupted, e.g. if a diver returns to the +surface for a few minutes, resulting in two or more dives being recorded by +the dive computer and appearing as different dives in the Dive List +panel. Users can merge these dives onto a single dive by selecting the +appropriate dives, right-clicking them to bring up the context menu and then +selecting Merge selected dives. It may be necessary to edit the dive +information in the Dive Notes panel to reflect events or conditions that +apply to the merged dive. The figure below shows the depth profile of two +such dives that were merged:

+
+
+Example: Merged dive +
+
+
+
+
+

6.5. Filtering the dive list

+

The dives in the Dive List panel can be filtered, that is, one can select +only some of the dives based on their attributes, e.g. dive tags, dive site, +dive master, buddy or protective clothing. For instance, filtering allows +one to list the deep dives at a particular dive site, or otherwise the cave +dives with a particular buddy.

+

To open the filter, select Log → Filter divelist from the main menu. This +opens the Filter Panel at the top of the Subsurface window. Three icons +are located at the top right hand of the filter panel. The Filter Panel +can be reset (i.e. all current filters cleared) by selecting the +. The +Filter Panel may also be minimised by selecting the middle icon. When +minimised, only these three icons are shown. The panel can be maximised by +clicking the icon that minimised the panel. The filter may also be reset and +closed by selecting the button with the flag. An example of the Filter +Panel is shown in the figure below.

+
+
+Figure: Filter panel +
+
+

Four filter criteria may be used to filter the dive list: dive tags, person +(buddy / dive master), dive site and dive suit, each of which is represented +by a check list with check boxes. Above each check list is a second-level +filter tool, allowing the listing of only some of the attributes within that +check list. For instance, typing "ca" in the filter textbox above the tags +check list results in the tags check list being reduced to "cave" and +"cavern". Filtering of the check list enables the rapid finding of search +terms for filtering the dive list.

+

To activate filtering of the dive list, the check box of at least one item +in one of the four check lists needs to be checked. The dive list is then +shortened to include only the dives that pertain to the selection criteria +specified in the check lists. The four check lists work as a filter with +AND operators, Subsurface filters therefore for cave as a tag AND Joe +Smith as a buddy; but the filters within a category are inclusive - +filtering for cave and boat shows those dives that have either one or +both of these tags.

+
+
+
+
+

7. Exporting the dive log or parts of the dive log

+
+

The export function can be reached by selecting File → Export, which +brings up the Export dialog. This dialog always gives two options: save ALL +dives, or save only the dives selected in Dive List panel of +Subsurface. Click the appropriate radio button (see images below).

+
+
+Figure: Export dialog +
+
+

A dive log or part of it can be saved in three formats:

+
    +
  • +

    +Subsurface XML format. This is the native format used by Subsurface. +

    +
  • +
+

Universal Dive Data Format (UDDF). Refer to http://uddf.org for more +information. UDDF is a generic format that enables communication among many +dive computers and computer programs.

+

Divelogs.de, an Internet-based dive log repository. In order to upload to +Divelogs.de, one needs a user-ID as well as a password for +Divelogs.de. Log into http://en.divelogs.de and subscribe to this +service in order to upload dive log data from Subsurface.

+

CSV format, that includes the most critical information of the dive +profile. Included information of a dive is: dive number, date, time, +duration, depth, temperature and pressure.

+

Worldmap format, an HTML file with a world map upon which each dive and +some information about it are indicated. This map is not editable.

+

HTML format, in which the dive(s) are stored in HTML files, readable with +an Internet browser. Most modern web browsers are supported, but JavaScript +must be enabled. This generated HTML file is not intended to be edited by +the users. The HTML dive log contains most of the information and also +contains a search option to search the dive log. HTML export is specified on +the second tab of the Export dialog (image B above).

+
    +
  • +

    +General Settings, under the HTML tab, provides the following options: +

    +
      +
    • +

      +Subsurface Numbers: if this option is checked, the dive(s) are exported with the +numbers associated with them in Subsurface, Otherwise the dive(s) will be numbered +starting from 1. +

      +
    • +
    • +

      +Export Yearly Statistics: if this option is checked, a yearly statistics table will +be attached with the HTML exports. +

      +
    • +
    • +

      +Export List only: a list of dives will only be exported and the detailed dive +information will not be available. +

      +
    • +
    +
  • +
+

Under Style Options some style-related options are available like font +size and theme.

+

Export to other formats can be achieved through third party facilities, for +instance www.divelogs.de.

+
+
+
+

8. Keeping a Subsurface dive log in the Cloud

+
+

For each diver, dive log information is highly important. Not only is it a +record of diving activities for one’s own pleasure, but it is important +information required for admission to further training courses or +(sometimes) even diving sites. The security of the dive log is therefore +critical. In order to have a dive log that is resistant to failure of a home +computer hard drive, loss or theft of equipment, the Cloud is an obvious +solution. This also has the added benefit that one can access one’s dive log +from anywhere in the world without having to carry it with oneself. For this +reason, facilities such as divelogs.de and Diving Log offer facilities +to store dive log information on the Internet. Although Subsurface does +not offer integrated Cloud storage of dive logs, it is simple to achieve +this using several of the existing facilities on the Internet.

+

For instance Dropbox offers a free application +that allows files on the Dropbox servers to be seen as a local folder on +one’s desktop computer.

+
+
+FIGURE: Dropbox folder +
+
+

The Dropbox program creates a copy of the Dropbox Internet Cloud content +on one’s desktop computer. When the computer is connected to the Internet, +the Internet content is automatically updated. Therefore both the Open and +Save of dive logs are done using the local copy of the dive log in the +local Dropbox folder, so there’s no need for a direct internet +connection. If the local copy is modified, e.g. by adding a dive, the remote +copy in the Dropbox server in the Cloud will be automatically updated +whenever Internet access is available.

+

In this way a dive log in one’s Dropbox folder can be accessed seamlessly +from the Internet and can be accessed from any place with Internet +access. Currently there are no costs involved for this service. Dropbox +(Windows, Mac and Linux) can be installed by accessing the +Install Page on the Dropbox website +Alternatively one can use Dropbox as a mechanism to backup one’s dive +log. To Store a dive log in the Cloud, select File→Save as from the +Subsurface main menu, navigate to the Dropbox folder and select the +Save button. To access the dive log in the Cloud, select File→Open +Logbook from the Subsurface main menu and navigate to the dive log file +in the Dropbox folder and select the Open button.

+

Several paid services exist on the Internet (e.g. Google, Amazon) where the +same process could be used for the Cloud-based storage of dive logs.

+
+
+
+

9. Printing a dive log

+
+

Subsurface provides a simple interface to print a whole dive log or only a +few selected dives, including dive profiles and other contextual +information.

+

Before printing, two decisions are required:

+

Should the whole dive log be printed or only part of it? If only part of the +dive log is required, then the user must select the required dives from the +Dive List panel. +What gas partial pressure information is required on the dive profile? Users +should select the appropriate toggle-buttons on the button bar to the left +of the Dive Profile panel.

+

Now the print options should be selected to match the user’s needs. To do +this, user should select File→Print from the Main menu. The following +dialogue appears (see the image on the left [A], below).

+
+
+FIGURE: Print dialogue +
+
+

Under Print type users need to select one of three options:

+
    +
  • +

    +Print the complete Dive List: to do this, Table Print should be selected. +Print the selected dives (dive profiles and all other information) at 6 +dives per printed page: to do this, users should select 6 dives per page. +Print the selected dives (dive profiles and all other information) at 2 +dives per printed page: to do this, users should select 2 dives per page. +Print the selected dives (dive profiles and all other information) at 1 dive +per printed page: to do this, users should select 1 dive per page. +

    +
  • +
+

Under Print options users need to select:

+

Printing only the dives that have been selected from the dive list prior to +activating the print dialogue, achieved by checking the box Print only +selected dives. +- Printing in colour, achieved by checking the box with Print in colour.

+

The Ordering affects the layout of the page (or part of it) for each +dive. The dive profile could be printed at the top of each dive, with the +textual information underneath, or it could be printed with the textual +information at the top with the dive profile underneath. Users should select +the appropriate option in the print dialogue. See the image below which has +a layout with text below the dive profile.

+

Users can Preview the printed page by selecting the Preview button on +the dialogue. After preview, changes to the options in the print dialogue +can be made, resulting in a layout that fits personal taste.

+

Next, select the Print button in the dialogue. This activates the regular +print dialogue used by the user operating system (image [B] in the middle, +above), allowing them to choose a printer and to set its properties (image +[C] on the right, above). It is important to set the print resolution of +the printer to an appropriate value by changing the printer +properties. Finally, one can print the dives. Below is a (rather small) +example of the output for one particular page.

+
+
+FIGURE: Print preview page +
+
+
+
+
+

10. Setting user Preferences for Subsurface

+
+

There are several settings within Subsurface that the user can +specify. These are found when selecting File→Preferences. The settings +are performed in five groups: Defaults, Units, Graph, Language and +Network. All five sections operate on the same principles: the user must +specify the settings that are to be changed, then these changes are saved +using the Apply button. After applying all the new settings users can then +leave the settings panel by selecting OK.

+
+

10.1. Defaults

+

There are several settings in the Defaults panel:

+
+
+FIGURE: Preferences defaults page +
+
+
    +
  • +

    +Lists and tables: Here one can specify the font type and font size of the +Dive Table panel. By decreasing the font size of the Dive Table, users can see more dives on a screen. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Dives: For the Default Dive File one need to specify the directory and +file name of one’s +electronic dive log book. This is a file with filename extension .xml. When +launched, Subsurface will automatically load the specified dive log book. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Display invalid: Dives can be marked as invalid (when a user wishes to hide +dives that he/she don’t consider valid dives, e.g. pool dives, but still want to +keep them in the dive log). This controls whether those dives are displayed in +the dive list. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Default cylinder: Here users can specify the default cylinder listed in +the Equipment tab of the Dive Notes panel. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Animations: Some actions in showing the dive profile are performed using +animations. For instance, the axis values for depth and time change from dive to +dive. When viewing a different dive, these changes in axis characteristics do not +happen instantaneously, but are animated. The Speed of animations can be controlled +by setting this slider +with faster animation speed to the left, with a 0 value representing no animation +at all. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Subsurface web service: When one subscribes to the Subsurface web service, a very +long and hard-to-remember userID is issued. This is the place to save that userID. By +checking the option Save User ID locally?, one ensures that a local copy of that userID +is saved. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Clear all settings: As indicated in the button below this heading, all settings are +cleared and set to default values. +

    +
  • +
+
+
+

10.2. Units

+
+
+FIGURE: Preferences Units page +
+
+

Here user can choose between metric and imperial units of depth, pressure, +volume, temperature and mass. By selecting the Metric or Imperial radio +button at the top, users can specify that all units are in the chosen +measurement system. Alternatively, if one selects the Personalise radio +button, units can be selected independently, with some units in the metric +system and others in imperial.

+
+
+

10.3. Graph

+
+
+FIGURE: Preferences Graph page +
+
+

This panel allows two type of selections:

+

Show: Here users can specify the amount of information shown as part of +the dive profile: +* Thresholds: Subsurface can display the nitrogen, oxygen and the helium partial pressures during +the dive. These are enabled using the toolbar on the left hand side of the *Dive Profile +panel. For each of these graphs users can specify a threshold value on the right-hand side of the +Preferences panel. If any of the graphs go above this threshold level, the graph is +highlighted in red, indicating that the threshold has been exceeded.

+
    +
  • +

    +Draw dive computer reported ceiling red: This checkbox allows exactly what it says. +Not all dive computers report ceiling values. If the dive computer does report it, it may differ +from the ceilings calculated by Subsurface. This is because of the different algorithms and gradient factors available for calculating ceilings, as well as the dynamic way that a +dive computer can calculate ceilings during a dive. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Show unused cylinders in Equipment Tab: This checkbox allows display of information about unused cylinders when viewing the Equipment Tab. Conversely, if this box is not checked, and any cylinders entered using the Equipment Tab are not used (e.g. there was no gas switch to such a cylinder), then these cylinders are omitted from that list. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Show average depth: Activating this checkbox causes Subsurface to draw a red line across +the dive profile, indicating the mean depth of the dive. +

    +
      +
    • +

      +Misc: +

      +
    • +
    +
  • +
  • +

    +Gradient Factors:* Here users can set the gradient factors used while diving. GF_Low is +the gradient factor at depth and GF_High is used just below the surface. +At intermediate depths gradient factors between GF_Low and GF_High are used. +Gradient factors add conservatism to the nitrogen exposure during a dive, in a +similar way that many dive computers have a conservatism setting. The lower +the value of a gradient factor, the more conservative the calculations are with +respect to nitrogen loading and the deeper the ascent ceilings are. Gradient +factors of 20/60 are considered conservative and values of 60/90 are considered +harsh. Checking GFLow at max depth box causes GF_Low to be used at the +deepest depth of a dive. If this box is not checked, GF_Low is applied at +all depths deeper than the first deco stop. For more information see: +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Understanding M-values by Erik Baker, Immersed Vol. 3, No. 3. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Gradient factors for dummies, by Kevin Watts +

    +
  • +
+
+
+

10.4. Language

+

Choose a language that Subsurface will use.

+
+
+FIGURE: Preferences Language page +
+
+

A checkbox allows one to use the System Default language which in most +cases will be the correct setting; with this Subsurface simply runs in the +same language / country settings as the underlying OS. If this is for some +reason undesirable users can uncheck this checkbox and pick a language / +country combination from the list of included localizations. The Filter +text box allows one to list similar languages. For instance there are +several system variants of English or French. This particular preference +requires a restart of Subsurface to take effect.

+
+
+

10.5. Network

+

This panel facilitates communication between Subsurface and data sources +on the Internet.

+
+
+FIGURE: Preferences Network page +
+
+

This is important, for instance, when Subsurface needs to communicate with +Internet services such as the Subsurface Companion app or +data export/import from Divelogs.de. These Internet requirements are +determined by one’s type of connection to the Internet and by the Internet +Service Provider (ISP) used. One’s ISP should provide the appropriate +information. If a proxy server is used for Internet access, the appropriate +information needs to be provided here. The type of proxy needs to be +selected from the dropdown list. after which the IP address of the host and +the appropriate port number should be provided. If the proxy server uses +authentication, the appropriate userID and password also needs to be +provided so that Subsurface can automatically pass through the proxy +server to access the Internet.

+
+
+
+
+

11. The Subsurface dive planner

+
+

Dive planning is an advanced feature of Subsurface, accessible by +selecting Log → Plan Dive from the main menu. It allows calculation of +nitrogen load during a dive by using the Bühlmann ZH-L16 algorithm with the +addition of gradient factors as implemented by Erik Baker.

+
+
+
+ + + +
+Warning +The Subsurface dive planner IS CURRENTLY EXPERIMENTAL and assumes the user +is already familiar with the Subsurface user interface. It is explicitly +used under the following conditions:
+
+

The user is conversant with dive planning and has the necessary training to +perform dive planning. +- The user plans dives within his/her certification limits. +Dive planning makes large assumptions about the characteristics of the +average person and cannot compensate for individual physiology or health +or personal history or life style characteristics. +- The safety of a dive plan depends heavily on the way in which the planner is + used. +- The user is familiar with the user interface of Subsurface. +A user who is not absolutely sure about any of the above requirements should +not use this feature.

+
+
+

11.1. The Subsurface dive planner screen

+

Like the Subsurface dive log, the planner screen is divided into several +sections (see image below). The setup parameters for a dive are entered +into the several sections on the left hand side of the screen. The setup is +divided into several sections: Available Gases, Rates, Planning, Gas Options +and Dive Notes.

+

At the top right hand is a green design panel upon which the profile of +the dive can be manipulated directly by dragging and clicking as explained +below. This feature makes the Subsurface dive planner unique in ease of +use.

+

At the bottom right is a text panel with a heading of Dive Plan +Details. This is where the details of the dive plan are provided in a way +that can easily be copied to other software. This is also where any warning +messages about the dive plan are printed.

+
+
+FIGURE: Dive planner startup window +
+
+
+
+

11.2. Initiating dive planning

+

The dive planner comprises two parts: constructing a dive plan and +evaluating that dive plan. To perform dive planning, perform these steps:

+

Clear the existing dive log by creating a new planning log. This is achieved +by selecting File → New logbook from the main menu. This way, dive plans +are kept separate from the existing dive log of completed dives.

+

In the top left-hand area of the screen, ensure that the constant dive +parameters are appropriate. These are: Start date and time of the dive, +Atmospheric Pressure and Altitude above sea level of the dive site. The +atmospheric pressure can also be entered as an altitude in metres, assuming +an atmospheric pressure of 1.013 bar.

+

In the table labelled Available Gases, add the information of the +cylinders to be used as well as the gas composition within that +cylinder. This is done in a similar way as for providing cylinder data for dive logs. Choose the cylinder type by double clicking +the cylinder type and using the dropdown list, then specify the work +pressure of this cylinder. By leaving the oxygen concentration (O2%) filed +empty, the dive gas is assumed to be air. Otherwise enter the oxygen and/or +helium concentration in the boxes provided in this dialogue. Add additional +cylinders by using the "+" icon to the top righthand of the dialogue.

+

The dialogue indicating Dive Planner Points is usually not used at this +stage of the dive planning.

+
+
+

11.3. Managing nitrogen, oxygen and gas consumption

+

The planning is performed in three stages:

+

a) Nitrogen management: This is performed by specifying the rates for descent and ascent, +as well as the gradient factors (GFLow and GFHigh) under the headings Rates and Planning +to the bottom left of the planning screen. Initially, the GFHigh and GFLow values in the Preferences +panel of Subsurface is used. If these are changed within the planner (see Gas Options within +the planner), the new values are +used without changing the original specifications in the Preferences. Gradient Factor settings strongly affect the calculated ceilings and their depths. +A very low GFLow value brings about decompression stops early on during the dive. + ** For more information about Gradient factors, see the section on Gradient Factor Preference settings. +For more information external to this manual see:

+
    +
  • +

    +Understanding M-values by Erik Baker, Immersed Vol. 3, No. 3. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Gradient factors for dummies, by Kevin Watts +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Deco for Divers, by Mark Powell (2008). Aquapress Southend-on-Sea, UK. ISBN 10: 1-905492-07-3. +An excellent non-technical review. +

    +
      +
    • +

      +The ascent rate is critical for nitrogen off-gassing at the end of the dive and is specified +for several depth ranges, utilising the average (or mean) depth as a yardstick. The mean depth +of the dive plan is indicated on the dive profile in the green panel of the dive planner. Ascent rates +at deeper levels are often in the range of 8-12 m/min, while ascent rates near the surface are +often in the range of 4-9 m/min. The descent rate is also specified. If the option Drop to first depth +is activated, then the descent phase of the planned dive will be at the maximal descent rate specified +in the Rates section of the dive setup. +

      +
    • +
    +
  • +
+

b) Oxygen management: In the Gas Options part of the dive specification, the maximum partial +pressure for oxygen needs to be specified for the +bottom part of the dive (bottom po2) as well as for the decompression part of the dive (deco po2). +The most commonly +used values are 1.4 bar for the bottom part of the dive and 1.6 bar for any decompression +stages. Normally, a partial pressure of 1.6 bar is not exceeded. PO2 settings and the depth at which switching to a gas takes place can also be edited in the +Available Gases dialog. Normally the planner decides on switching to a new gas when, during +ascent, the partial pressure of the new gas has decreased to 1.6 bar.

+

c) Gas management: One needs keep within the limits of the amount of gas contained in the dive +cylinder(s), allowing for an appropriate margin for safe return to the surface, possibly +sharing with a buddy. Under the Gas Options heading, specify the best (but conservative) estimate +of your surface-equivalent air consumption (SAC, also termed RMV) in +litres/min (for the time being, only SI units are supported). Specify the SAC during the +bottom part of the dive (bottom SAC) as well as during the decompression or safety stops of the +dive (deco SAC). Values of 20-30 l/min are common. For good gas management, a thumbsuck guess +is not sufficient and one needs to +monitor one’s gas consumption on a regular basis, dependent on different dive conditions and/or equipment. +The planner will calculate the total volume of gas used during the dive and will issue a warning +if one exceeds the total amount of gas available. Good practice demands that one does not dive to +the limit of the gas supply but that an appropriate reserve is kept for unforeseen circumstances. +For technical diving, this reserve can be up to 66% of the total available gas.

+

Now (at last) one can start the detailed time-depth planning of the +dive. Subsurface offers a unique graphical interface for performing this +part of the planning. The mechanics of doing this is similar to +hand-entering a dive profile in the dive log part of Subsurface. Upon +activating the planner, a default dive of depth 15 m for 40 min is offered +in the green design surface to the top right hand of the screen. The white +dots (waypoints) on the profile can be dragged with a mouse. Create more +waypoints by double-clicking on the profile line and ensuring that the +profile reflects the intended dive. Drag the waypoints to represent the +depth and duration of the dive. If any of the management limits (for +nitrogen, oxygen or gas) is exceeded, the surface above the dive profile +changes from BLUE to RED.

+

Each waypoint on the dive profile creates a Dive Planner Point in the +table on the left of the dive planner panel. Ensure that the Used Gas +value in each row of that table corresponds to one of the gas mixtures +specified in the table with Available Gases immediately above the Dive +Planner Points. Add new waypoints until the main features of the dive have +been completed, e.g. the bottom time segment and deep stops (if these are +implemented). Leave the remaining waypoints on the ascent to +Subsurface. In most cases Subsurface computes additional way points in +order to fulfil decompression requirements for that dive. A waypoint can be +moved by selecting that waypoint and by using the arrow keys. The waypoints +listed in the Dive Planner Points dialogue can be edited by hand in order +to obtain a precise presentation of the dive plan. In fact, one can create +the whole dive profile by editing the Dive Planner Points dialog.

+

Indicate any changes in gas cylinder used by indicating gas changes as +explained in the section hand-creating a dive profile. These changes should reflect the cylinders and gas compositions +defined in the table with Available Gases. If two or more gases are used, +automatic gas switches will be suggested during the ascent to the +surface. However, these changes can be deleted by right-clicking the gas +change and by manually creating a gas change by right-clicking on the +appropriate waypoint.

+

A non-zero value in the "CC set point" column of the table of dive planner +points indicates a valid setpoint for oxygen partial pressure and that the +segment is dived using a closed circuit rebreather (CCR). If the last +manually entered segment is a CCR segment, the decompression phase is +computed assuming the diver uses a CCR with the specified set-point. If the +last segment (however short) is on open circuit (OC, indicated by a zero +set-point) the decompression is computed in OC mode. The planner only +considers gas changes in OC mode.

+

Below is an example of a dive plan to 45m using EAN26, followed by an ascent +using EAN50 and using the settings as described above.

+
+
+FIGURE: Planning a dive: setup +
+
+

Once the above has been completed, one can save it by clicking the Save +button towards the bottom left of the green design panel. The saved dive +plan will appear in the Dive List panel of Subsurface.

+
+
+

11.4. The dive plan details

+

On the bottom right of the dive planner, under Dive Plan Details, the +exact details of the dive plan are provided. These details may be modified +by checking any of the options under the Dive Notes section of the dive +planner, immediately to the left of the Dive Plan Details. If a Verbatim +diveplan is requested, a detailed sentence-level explanation of the dive +plan is given. If any of the management specifications have been exceeded +during the planning, a warning message is printed underneath the dive plan +information.

+

If the option Display segment duration is checked, then the duration of +each depth level is indicated in the Dive Plan Details. This duration +INCLUDES the transition time to get to that level. However, if the Display +transition in deco option is checked, the transitions are shown separately +from the segment durations at a particular level.

+
+
+

11.5. Modifying an existing dive plan

+

Normally, when a dive plan has been saved, it is accessible from the Dive +List, like any other dive log. Within the Dive List there is not a way to +change a saved dive plan. To perform changes to a dive plan, select it on +the Dive List. Then, in the main menu, select Log → Re-plan dive. This +will open the selected dive plan within the dive planner, allowing changes +to be made and saved as usual.

+

In addition there is the option "Save new". This keeps the original planned +dive and adds a (possibly modified) copy to the dive list. If that copy is +saved with the same start time as the original, the two dives are considered +two versions of the same dive and do not influence other each during +decompression calculation (see next section).

+
+
+

11.6. Planning for repetitive dives

+

Repetitive dives can easily be planned if the dates and start times of the +repetitive dive set is specified appropriately in the top left-hand Start +Time field. Subsurface calculates the gas loading figures correctly and +the effect of the first dive is evaluated on later dives.

+

If one has just completed a long/deep dive and is planning another dive, +then highlight, in the Dive List, the dive that has just been completed +and then activate the planner. Depending on the start time of the planned +dive, the planner takes into account the gas loading incurred during the +completed dive and allows planning within these limitations.

+

If only a few standard configurations are used (e.g. in GUE), then a +template dive can be created conforming to one of the configurations. If one +now wishes to plan a dive using this configuration, just highlight the +template dive in the Dive List and activate the planner: the planner takes +into account the configuration in the highlighted dive.

+
+
+

11.7. Printing the dive plan

+

Selecting the Print button in the planner allows printing of the Dive +Plan Details for wet notes. Alternatively one can cut and paste the Dive +Plan Details for inclusion in a text file or word processing document.

+

Dive plans have many characteristics in common with dive logs (dive profile, +dive notes, etc). After a dive plan has been saved, the dive details and +gas calculations are saved in the Dive Notes tab. While a dive plan is +being designed, it can be printed using the Print button in the dive +planner. This prints the dive details and gas calculations in the Dive Plan +Details panel of the dive planner. However, after the plan has been saved, +it is represented in a way very similar to a dive log and the gas +calculations cannot be accessed in the same way as during the planning +process. The only way to print the dive plan is to use the File→Print +facility on the main menu in the same way as for dive logs or by copy and +paste to a word processor.

+
+
+
+
+

12. Configuring a dive computer

+
+

Subsurface enables one to configure a dive computer. Currently the +Heinrichs-Weikamp (OSTC 2, OSTC 3) and Suunto Vyper (Stinger, Mosquito, D3, +Vyper, Vytec, Cobra, Gekko and Zoop) family of dive computers are +supported. A large number of settings of these dive computers can be read +and changed to different values. As a first step, ensure that the +appropriate hardware driver is installed for the dive computer and that the +device name of the dive computer is known. See +APPENDIX A for information on how to do this.

+

Once the dive computer is connected to the Subsurface computer, select +File→Configure dive computer from the Main Menu. Provide the +appropriate device name in the text box at the top of the configuration +panel that opens and select the appropriate dive computer model from the +panel on the lefthand (see image below).

+
+
+FIGURE: Configure dive computer +
+
+

Using the appropriate buttons on the configuration panel, the following +actions can be performed:

+
    +
  • +

    +Retrieve available details. This loads the existing configuration from the dive computer + to Subsurface, showing this in the configuration panel. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Save changes to device. This changes the configuration of the + dive computer to correspond to the information shown in the configuration panel. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Backup. This saves the configuration data to a file. Subsurface asks for + a file location and file name for the saved information. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Restore backup. This loads the information from a backup file and displays it + in the configuration panel. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Update firmware. If new firmware is available for the dive computer, this is + loaded into the dive computer. +

    +
  • +
+
+
+
+

13. Description of the Subsurface Main Menu items

+
+

This section describes the functions and operation of the items in the Main +Menu of Subsurface. Several of the items below are links to sections of this +manual dealing with the appropriate operations.

+
+

13.1. File

+

New Logbook - Close the currently open dive logbook and +clear all dive information. +Open logbook - This opens the file manager in order to select a dive +logbook to open. +- Save - Save the dive logbook that is currently open. +- Save as - Save the current logbook under a different file name. +- Close - Close the dive logbook that is currently open. +Export - Export the currently open dive logbook (or the +selected dives in the logbook) to one of several formats. +- Print - Print the currently open logbook. +- Preferences - Set the Subsurface preferences. +- Configure dive computer - Edit the configuration of a dive + computer. +- Quit - Quit Subsurface.

+
+
+

13.2. Import

+

Import from dive computer - Import dive +information from a dive computer. +Import Log Files - Import dive information from a file +in in a Subsurface-compatible format. +Import GPS data from Subsurface web service - Load GPS +coordinates from the Subsurface mobile phone app. +Import from Divelogs.de - Import dive +information from www.Divelogs.de.

+
+
+

13.3. Log

+
    +
  • +

    +Add Dive - Manually add a new dive to the Dive List + panel. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Plan Dive - This feature allows the planning of dives. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Re-plan dive - Edit a dive plan that has been saved into the + Dive List. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Copy dive components - By selecting this option, one + can copy information from several fields of a dive log onto the clipboard. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Paste dive components - Paste, into the selected dives in the Dive List, + the information copied using the Copy dive components option. +Renumber - Renumber the dives listed in the Dive List +panel. +Auto Group - Group the dives in the Dive List panel into +dive trips. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Edit Device Names - Edit the names of dive computers to + facilitate your logs. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Filter divelist - Select only some dives, based on specific + tags or dive criteria. +

    +
  • +
+
+
+

13.4. View

+

All - View the four main Subsurface panels +simmultaneously. +- Dive List - View only the Dive List panel. +- Profile - View only the Dive Profile panel. +- Info - View only the Dive Notes panel. +- Globe - View only the World Map panel. +Yearly Statistics - Display summary statistics about dives during this and +past years. +- Prev DC - Switch to previous dive computer. +- Next DC - Switch to next dive computer. +- Full Screen - Toggles Full Screen mode.

+
+
+

13.5. Help

+

About Subsurface - Show a panel with the version number of Subsurface as +well as licensing information. +Check for updates - Find out whether a newer version of Subsurface is +available on the Subsurface web site. +- User Manual - Open a window showing this user manual.

+
+
+
+
+

14. APPENDIX A: Operating system specific information for importing dive information from a dive computer.

+
+
+

14.1. Make sure that the OS has the required drivers installed

+
+ + + +
+Note +The operating system of the desktop computer needs the appropriate drivers +in order to communicate with the dive computer in whichever way the dive +computer prefers (e.g. bluetooth, USB, infra-red).
+
+
    +
  • +

    +On Linux users need to have the correct kernel module loaded. Most + distributions will do this automatically, so the user does not need to load + kernel modules. However, some communication protocols require an additional + driver, especially for rarely used technology such as infra-red. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +On Windows, the OS should offer to download the correct driver once the user + connects the dive computer to the USB port and operating system sees the + equipment for the first time. +

    +
  • +
+

On a Mac users sometimes have to manually hunt for the correct driver. For +example the correct driver for the Mares Puck devices or any other dive +computer using a USB-to-serial interface based on the Silicon Labs CP2101 or +similar chip can be found as Mac_OSX_VCP_Driver.zip at the +Silicon +Labs document and software repository.

+
+
+

14.2. How to Find the Device Name for USB devices and set its write permission

+
+ + + +
+Note +When a user connects the dive computer by using a USB connector, usually +Subsurface will either propose a drop down list that contains the correct +device name (or mount point for the Uemis Zurich), or it will disable the +device select drop down if no device name is needed at all. In the rare +cases where this doesn’t work, here are some suggestions of ways to find out +what the device name is:
+
+
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.

+
On Linux:

There is a definitive way to find the port:

+
    +
  • +

    +Disconnect the USB cable from the dive computer +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Open a terminal +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Type the command: dmesg and press enter +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Plug in the USB cable of the dive computer +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Type the command: dmesg and press enter +

    +
  • +
+

A message similar to this one should appear:

+
+
+
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
+
+

The third line from the bottom shows that the FTDI USB adapter is detected +and connected to ttyUSB3. This information can now be used in the import +settings as /dev/ttyUSB3 which directs Subsurface to the correct USB port.

+

Ensuring that the user has write permission to the USB serial port:

+

On Unix-like operating systems the USB ports can only be accessed by users +who are members of the dialout group. If one is not root, one may not be a +member of that group and will not be able to use the USB port. Let us assume +one’s username is johnB.

+

As root, type: usermod -a -G dialout johnB (Ubuntu users: sudo usermod -a +-G dialout johnB) This makes johnB a member of the dialout group. +Type: id johnB This lists all the groups that johnB belongs to and +verifies that +the appropriate group membership has been created. The dialout group should +be listed +among the different IDs. +Under some circumstances this change takes only effect (eg. on Ubuntu) after +one logs out and then logs in again.

+

With the appropriate device name (e.g. dev/ttyUSB3) and with write +permission to the USB port, the dive computer interface can connect and one +should be able to import dives.

+
+
+

14.3. Setting up bluetooth enabled devices

+
+ + + +
+Note +For dive computers communicating through bluetooth like the Heinrichs +Weikamp Frog or the Shearwater Predator and Petrel there is a different +procedure to get the devices name to communicate with Subsurface. Follow +these steps:
+
+
    +
  • +

    +For the dive computer, after enabling Bluetooth, ensure it is in Upload mode. +

    +
  • +
+

For Bluetooth pairing of the dive computer, refer to the manufacturer’s user +guide. When using a Shearwater Predator/Petrel, select Dive Log → Upload +Log and wait for the Wait PC message.

+
    +
  • +

    +Pair the Subsurface computer with the dive computer. +

    +
  • +
+
On Windows:

Bluetooth is most likely already enabled. For pairing with the dive computer +choose Control Panel→Bluetooth Devices→Add Wireless Device. This should +bring up a dialog showing your dive computer (in Bluetooth mode) and +allowing pairing. Right click on it and choose Properties→COM Ports to +identify the port used for your dive computer. If there are several ports +listed, use the one saying "Outgoing" instead of "Incoming".

+

For downloading to Subsurface, the Subsurface drop-down list should +contain this COM port already. If not, enter it manually.

+

Note: If there are issues afterwards when downloading from the dive computer +using other software, remove the existing pairing with the dive computer.

+
On MacOS:

Click on the Bluetooth symbol in the menu bar and select Set up Bluetooth +Device…. The dive computer should then show up in the list of +devices. Select it and go through the pairing process. This step should only +be needed once for initial setup.

+

Once the pairing is completed the correct device is shown in the Device or +Mount Point drop-down in the Subsurface Import dialog.

+
On Linux

Ensure Bluetooth is enabled on the Subsurface computer. On most common +distributions this should be true out of the box and pairing should be +straight forward. For instance, Gnome3 shows a Bluetooth icon in the upper +right corner of the desktop where one selects Set up New Device. This +should show a dialog where one can select the dive computer (which already +should be in Bluetooth mode) and pair it. If a PIN is required, try +manually setting 0000.

+

In the rare cases where the above is not true, then depending on your +system, try initd or systemd. This might be different and also involve +loading modules specific to your hardware. In case your system is running +systemd, manually run systemctl start bluetooth.service to enable it, in +case of initd, run something like rc.config start bluetoothd or +/etc/init.d/bluetooth start.

+

One may also use a manual approach by using such commands:

+

hciconfig shows the Bluetooth devices available on your computer (not dive +computer), most likely one will see a hci0, if not try hcitool -a to see +inactive devices and run sudo hciconfig hci0 up to bring them up.

+

hcitool scanning gets a list of bluetooth enabled client devices, look for +the dive computer and remember the MAC address are shown there

+

bluez-simple-agent hci0 10:00:E8:C4:BE:C4 pairs the dive computer with the +bluetooth stack of the Subsurface computer, copy/paste the MAC address +from the output of hcitool scanning

+

Unfortunately on Linux binding to a communication device has to be done +manually by running:

+

rfcomm bind /dev/rfcomm0 10:00:E8:C4:BE:C4 binds the dive computer to a +communication device in the desktop computer, in case rfcomm is already +taken use rfcomm1 or up. IMPORTANT: Copy/paste the MAC address from the +output of hcitool scanning, the MAC address shown above will not work.

+

For downloading dives in Subsurface specify the device name connected to +the MAC address in the last step above, e.g. /dev/rfcomm0.

+
+
+
+
+

15. APPENDIX B: Dive Computer specific information for importing dive information.

+
+
+

15.1. Import from a Uemis Zurich

+
+ + + +
+Note +Subsurface downloads the information stored on the SDA (the built-in file +system of the Uemis) including information about dive spots and +equipment. Buddy information is not yet downloadable. Things are very +similar to a normal USB-connected dive computer (the Uemis is one of those +that recharge when connected to the USB port). The main difference is that +one does not enter a device name, but instead the location where the +UEMISSDA file system is mounted once connected to the dive computer. On +Windows this is a drive letter ( often E: or F:), on a Mac this is +/Volumes/UEMISSDA and on Linux systems this differs depending on the +distribution. On Fedora it usually is +/var/run/media/<your_username>/UEMISSDA. In all cases Subsurface should +suggest the correct location in the drop down list.
+
+

After selecting the above device name, download the dives from the Uemis +Zurich. One technical issue with the Uemis Zurich download implementation +(this is a Uemis firmware limitation, not a Subsurface issue) is that one +cannot download more than about 40-50 dives without running out of memory on +the SDA. This will usually only happen the very first time one downloads +dives from the Uemis Zurich. Normally when downloading at the end of a day +or even after a dive trip, the capacity is sufficient. If Subsurface +displays an error that the dive computer ran out of space the solution is +straight forward. Disconnect the SDA, turn it off and on again, and +reconnect it. You can now retry (or start a new download session) and the +download will continue where it stopped previously. One may have to do this +more than once, depending on how many dives are stored on the dive computer.

+
+
+

15.2. Importing dives from the Uwatec Galileo

+
+ + + +
+Note +The Uwatec Galileo dive computers use infra red (IrDA) communication between +the dive computer and Subsurface. The Uwatec hardware uses a USB dongle +based on the serial infra-red (SIR) protocol and the MSC7780 IrDA controller +manufactured by MosChip and marketed by Scubapro and some electronics +companies. Under Linux, the kernel already provides for communication using +the IrDA protocol. However, the user additionally needs to load a driver for +the IrDA interface with the dive computer. The easiest way is to load the +irda-tools package from the +Linux IrDA Project. After +the installation of the irda-tools, the root user can specify a device +name from the console as follows: irattach irda0
+
+

After executing this command, Subsurface will recognise the Galileo dive +computer and download dive information.

+

Under Windows, a similar situation exists. Drivers for the MCS7780 are +available from some Internet web sites e.g. +www.drivers-download.com.

+

For the Apple Mac, IrDA communication via the MCS7780 link is not available +for OSX 10.6 or higher.

+
+
+

15.3. Importing dives from Heinrichs Weikamp DR5

+
+ + + +
+Note +When mounted as a USB drive the Heinrichs Weikamp DR5 saves a single UDDF +file for every dive. Mark all the dives you’d like to import or open. +Note: The DR5 does not seem to store gradient factors nor deco information, +so for Subsurface it is not possible to display them. Adjust the gradient +factors in the Graph Settings in Subsurface to generate a deco overlay +in the Subsurface Dive Profile panel but please note that the deco +calculated by Subsurface will most likely differ from the one displayed on +the DR5.
+
+
+
+

15.4. Import from Shearwater Predator using Bluetooth

+
+ + + +
+Note +Using a Shearwater Predator one may be able to pair Bluetooth but then +encounter issues when downloading, showing errors like Slip RX: unexp. SLIP +END on the Predator. This might also arise when using other dive log +software and operating systems other than Linux. We have no detailed idea +about the source and how to fix this, but it is reported to be solved +sometimes by one of these steps:
+
+
    +
  • +

    +use the Bluetooth dongle which came with the Shearwater Predator instead of + the built-in one of the Subsurface computer +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +switch to different Bluetooth drivers for the same hardware +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +switch off WiFi while using Bluetooth +

    +
  • +
+
+
+

15.5. Importing dive logs from the Poseidon MkVI Discovery

+
+ + + +
+Note +Download of dive logs from the MkVI is performed using a custom +communications adapter and the Poseidon PC Configuration Software, +obtained when purchasing the MKVI equipment. The latter is a Windows +application allowing configuration of equipment and storage of dive +logs. Communication between dive computer and desktop computer utilises the +IrDA infra-red protocol. Only data for one dive can be downloaded at a time, +comprising three files:
+
+

Setup configuration for the dive and key dive parameters (file with a .txt +extension) +- Dive log details (file with a .csv extension) +Redbook format dive log (file with .cvsr extension). This is a compressed +version of the dive log using a proprietary format.

+

Subsurface accesses the .txt and the .csv files to obtain dive log +information.

+
+
+

15.6. Importing dive logs from the APD Inspiration CCR

+
+ + + +
+Note +The dive logs of an APD Inspiration or similar CCR dive computer are +downloaded using a communications adapter and AP Communicator, obtained +when purchasing the equipment. The dive logs can be viewed using the AP Log +Viewer, within Windows or Mac/OS. However, APD logs can be viewed and +managed from within Subsurface (together with dives using many other types +of dive computer). The APD inspiration dive logs are imported into +Subsurface as follows:
+
+
    +
  • +

    +Open a dive within the AP Log Viewer. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Select the tab at the top of the screen, entitled "Data". +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +If the raw dive log data show on the screen, click on "Copy to Clipboard". +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Open a text editor, e.g. Notepad (Windows), TextWrangler (Mac). +Copy the contents of the clipboard into the text editor and save the text +file with a filename extension of .CSV +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Within Subsurface, select Import→Import log files to open the + universal import dialogue. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +In the dropdown list towards the bottom right of the dialogue, select "CSV + files". +On the list of file names select the .CSV file that has been created +above. An import dialogue opens. +In the dropdown list on the middle right labeled 'Pre-configured imports", +select APD Log Viewer. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Ensure the other settings for the ADP dive log are appropriate, then select + OK. +

    +
  • +
+

The APD dive log will appear within Subsurface.

+
+
+
+
+

16. APPENDIX C: Exporting Dive log information from external dive log software.

+
+

The import of dive log data from external dive log software is mostly +performed using the dialogue found by selecting Import from the Main Menu, +then clicking on Import Log Files. This is a single-step process, more +information about which can be found here. However, in +some cases, a two-step process may be required:

+

Export the foreign dive log data to format that is accessible from +Subsurface. +2. Import the accessible dive log data into Subsurface.

+

This appendix provides some information about approaches to export dive log +data from foreign dive log software. The procedures below mostly apply to +Linux and/or Windows.

+
+

16.1. Exporting dives from Suunto Divemanager (DM3, DM4 or DM5)

+
+ + + +
+Note +DiveManager is a MS Windows application for Suunto dive computers. +Divemanager 3 (DM3) is an older version of the Suunto software. More recent +Suunto dive computers use Divemanager version 4 or 5 (DM4 or DM5). The +different versions of Divemanager use different methods and different file +naming conventions to export dive log data.
+
+

Divemanager 3 (DM3):

+
    +
  1. +

    +Start Suunto Divemanager 3 and log in with the name containing the logs +

    +
  2. +
  3. +

    +Do not start the import wizard to import dives from the dive computer. +In the navigation tree on the left side of the program-window, select the +appropriate dives. +

    +
  4. +
  5. +

    +Within the list of dives, select the dives you would like to import later: +

    +
      +
    • +

      +To select certain dives: hold ctrl and click the dive +To select all dives: Select the first dive, hold down shift and select the +last dive +

      +
    • +
    +
  6. +
  7. +

    +With the dives marked, use the program menu File → Export +

    +
  8. +
  9. +

    +The export pop-up will show. Within this pop-up, there is one field called + Export Path. +

    +
      +
    • +

      +Click the browse button next to the field Export Path +

      +
        +
      • +

        +A file-manager like window pops up +

        +
      • +
      • +

        +Navigate to the directory for storing the +Divelog.SDE file +

        +
      • +
      • +

        +Optionally change the name of the file for saving +

        +
      • +
      • +

        +Click Save +

        +
      • +
      +
    • +
    • +

      +Back in the Export pop-up, press the button Export +

      +
    • +
    +
  10. +
  11. +

    +The dives are now exported to the file Divelog.SDE. +

    +
  12. +
+

Divemanager 4 (DM4) and Divemanager 5 (DM5):

+

DM4 and DM5 use identical mechanisms for exporting dive logs. To export a +divelog from Divemanager one needs to locate the DM4/DM5 database where the +dives are stored. the user can either look for the original database or make +a backup of the dives. Both methods are described here.

+

Locating the Suunto DM4 (or DM5) database:

+
    +
  1. +

    +Start Suunto DM4/DM5 +

    +
  2. +
  3. +

    +Select Help → About +

    +
  4. +
  5. +

    +Click Copy after text Copy log folder path to clipboard +

    +
  6. +
  7. +

    +Now open Windows Explorer +

    +
  8. +
  9. +

    +Paste the address to the path box at the top of the File Explorer +

    +
  10. +
  11. +

    +The database is called DM4.db or DM5.db +

    +
  12. +
+

Making a backup copy of the Suunto DM4/DM5 database:

+
    +
  1. +

    +Start Suunto DM4/DM5 +

    +
  2. +
  3. +

    +Select File - Create backup +

    +
  4. +
  5. +

    +From the file menu select the location and name for the backup, we’ll use + DM4 (or DM5) in here with the default extension .bak +

    +
  6. +
  7. +

    +Click Save +

    +
  8. +
  9. +

    +The dives are now exported to the file DM4.bak (or DM5.bak) +

    +
  10. +
+
+
+

16.2. Exporting from Mares Dive Organiser V2.1

+
+ + + +
+Note +Mares Dive Organiser is a Windows application. The dive log is kept as a +Microsoft SQL Compact Edition database with a .sdf filename extension. The +database includes all Dive Organiser-registered divers on the particular +computer and all Mares dive computers used. The safest way to obtain a copy +of the dive database is to export the information to another compatible +format which can be imported into Subsurface.
+
+

Within Dive Organiser, select Database → Backup from the main menu and +back up the database to the desk top. This creates a zipped file +DiveOrganiserxxxxx.dbf. +Rename the file to DiveOrganiserxxxxx.zip. Inside the zipped directory is a +file DiveOrganiser.sdf. +3. Extract the .sdf file from the zipped folder to your Desktop. +4. The password for accessing the .zip file is mares.

+
+
+

16.3. Exporting dives from DivingLog 5.0

+
+ + + +
+Note +Unfortunately DivingLog XML files give us no indication on the preferences +set on one’s system. So in order for Subsurface to be able to successfully +import XML files from DivingLog one first needs to ensure that DivingLog is +configured to use the Metric system (one can easily change this within +Diving Log by selecting File → Preferences → Units and Language by +clicking the Metric button). Then do the following:
+
+
    +
  1. +

    +In DivingLog open the File → Export → XML menu +

    +
  2. +
  3. +

    +Select the dives to export +

    +
  4. +
  5. +

    +Click on the export button and select the filename +

    +
  6. +
+
+
+
+
+

17. APPENDIX D: Exporting a spreadsheet to CSV format

+
+

Many divers keep a diving log in some form of a digital file, commonly a +spreadsheet with various fields of information. These logs can be easily +imported into Subsurface (Importing dives +from_manually kept CSV file), after the spreadsheet is converted in a .CSV +file. This section explains the procedure to convert a diving logbook +stored in a spreadsheet to a .CSV file that will later be imported from +Subsurface. Creating a .CSV is a straightforward task, although the +procedure is somewhat different according to which spreadsheet program is +used.

+

The first step is to organize the diving data in the spreadsheet, so that +the first row contains the names (or titles) of each column and the +information for each dive is stored in a single row. Subsurface supports +many data items (Dive #, Date, Time, Duration, Location, GPS, Max Depth, +Mean Depth, Buddy, Notes, Weight and Tags). The user can organize dive data +following a few simple rules:

+
    +
  1. +

    +Date: use one of the following formats: yyyy-mm-dd, dd.mm.yyyy, mm/dd/yyyy +

    +
  2. +
  3. +

    +Duration: the format should be minutes:seconds. +

    +
  4. +
  5. +

    +Unit system: only one unit system shold be used (i.e., no mixture between + imperial and metric units) +

    +
  6. +
  7. +

    +Tags and buddies: values should be separated using a comma. +

    +
  8. +
  9. +

    +GPS position: users must use decimal degrees, e.g. 30.22496 30.821798 +

    +
  10. +
+
+

17.1. LibreOffice Calc and OpenOffice Calc

+

These are open source spreadsheet applications forming parts of larger open +source office suite applications. The user interaction with LibreOffice +and OpenOffice is very similar. In Libreoffice Calc the time format +should be set to minutes:seconds - [mm]:ss and dates should be set to one +of: yyyy-mm-dd, dd.mm.yyyy, mm/dd/yyyy. A typical dive log may look like +this:

+
+
+FIGURE: Spreadsheet data +
+
+

To export the data as a .CSV file from within LibreOffice click File → +Save As. On the dialogue that comes up, select the Text CSV (.csv) as the +file type and select the option Edit filter settings.

+
+
+FIGURE: Save as options +
+
+

After selecting Save, select the appropriate field delimiter (choose Tab +to prevent conflicts with the comma when using this as a decimal point), +then select OK.

+
+
+FIGURE: Field options +
+
+

One can double check the .CSV file by opening it with a text editor, and +then import the dive data as explained on the section +Importing dives from manually kept CSV files.

+
+
+

17.2. Microsoft Excel

+

The field delimiter (called "list separator" in Microsoft manuals) is not +accessible from within Excel and needs to be set through the Microsoft +Control Panel. After changing the separator character, all software on the +Windows machine use the new character as a separator. One can change the +character back to the default character by following the same procedure, +outlined below.

+
    +
  • +

    +In Microsoft Windows, click the Start button, and then select Control + Panel from the list on the right-hand side. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Open the Regional and Language Options dialog box. +Do one of the following: In Windows 7, click the Formats tab, and then +click Customize this format. In Windows XP, click the Regional +Options tab, and then click Customize. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Type a new separator in the List separator box. To use a TAB-delimited + file, type the word TAB in the box. +

    +
  • +
  • +

    +Click OK twice. +

    +
  • +
+

Below is an image of the Control Panel:

+
+
+FIGURE: Win List separator +
+
+

To export the dive log in CSV format:

+

With the dive log opened in Excel, select the round Windows button at the +top left, then Save As.

+
+
+FIGURE: Excel save as option +
+
+

Click on the left-hand part of the Save as option, NOT on the arrow on the +right-hand. This brings up a dialogue for saving the spreadsheet in an +alternative format. From the dropdown list at the bottom of the dialogue, +marked Save as Type:, select CSV(Comma delimited) (*.CSV). Ensure that +the appropriate folder has been selected to save the CSV file into.

+
+
+FIGURE: Excel save CSV dialogue +
+
+

Select the Save button. The CSV-formatted file is saved into the folder +that was selected. One can double check the .CSV file by opening it with a +text editor, and then import the dive data as explained on the section +Importing dives from manually kept CSV files.

+
+
+
+
+

18. APPENDIX E: FAQs.

+
+
+

18.1. Subsurface appears to miscalculate gas consumption and SAC

+

Question: I dived with a 12.2 l tank, starting with 220 bar and ending +with 100 bar, and I calculate a different SAC compared what Subsurface +calculates. Is Subsurface miscalculating?

+

Answer: Not really. What happens is that Subsurface actually calculates +gas consumption differently - and better - than you expect. In particular, +it takes the incompressibility of the gas into account. Traditionally, Gas +consumption and SAC should be: consumption = tank size x (start pressure - +end pressure)

+

and that’s true for an ideal gas, and it’s what you get taught in dive +theory. But an "ideal gas" doesn’t actually exist, and real gases actually +don’t compress linearly with pressure. Also, you are missing the fact that +one atmosphere of pressure isn’t actually one bar. So the real +calculation is:

+

consumption = (amount_of_air_at_beginning - amount_of_air_at_end)

+

where the amount of air is not just "tank size times pressure in bar". +It’s a combination of: "take compressibility into account" (which is a +fairly small issue under 220 bar - you’ll see more differences when you do +high-pressure tanks with 300bar) and "convert bar to atm" (which is the +majority of your discrepancy). Remember: one ATM is ~1.013 bar, so without +the compressibility, your gas use is:

+

12.2*((220-100)/1.013)

+

which is about 1445, not 1464. So there was 19 l too much in your simple +calculation that ignored the difference between 1 bar and one ATM. The +compressibility does show up above 200 bar, and takes that 1445 down about +eight litres more, so you really did use only about 1437 l of air at surface +pressure.

+

So be happy: your SAC really is better than your calculations indicated. Or +be sad: your cylinder contains less air than you thought it did. And as +mentioned, the "contains less air than you thought it did" really starts +becoming much more noticeable at high pressure. A 400 bar really does not +contain twice as much air as a 200 bar one. At lower pressures, air acts +pretty much like an ideal gas.

+
+
+

18.2. Some dive profiles have time discrepancies with the recorded samples from my dive computer…

+

Subsurface ends up ignoring surface time for many things (average depth, +divetime, SAC, etc). Question: Why do dive durations in my dive computer +differ from that given by Subsurface?

+

Answer: For example, if you end up doing a weight check (deep enough to +trigger the "dive started") but then come back up and wait five minutes for +your buddies, your dive computer may say that your dive is 50 minutes long - +because you have fifty minutes worth of samples - but subsurface will say +it’s 45 minutes - because you were actually diving for 45 minutes. It’s +even more noticeable if you do things like divemastering the initial OW +dives, when you may stay in the water for a long time, but spend most of it +at the surface. And then you don’t want that to count as some kind of long +dive”.

+
+
+
+
+

+ + + -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2