Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This only compiles libsigrok into the one target that needs it, instead
of slopping it all over the place.
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This adds a tool in the tests directory, called pdtest. It uses the
"test/" directory in every PD directory, if present, to run the
PD against dumps found in the sigrok-dumps repository, and compares
the output against ".output" files in the "test/" directory. The file
"test/test.conf" is used to configure which tests to run.
A separate tool (tests/runtc.c) is used to run the actual decoding and
report output.
To get an overview of the options, run tests/pdtest without any options.
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Fixes bug 215.
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This fixes bug #202.
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We use the [XX] notation for non-printable characters, which is what
various other logic analyzer software packages do too, e.g. the
CWAV USBee Suite.
This fixes bug #201.
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This automatically figures out the files to install for each protocol
decoder, without involving autotools.
All python files (filenames ending in .py) are always installed. If a
protocol decoder requires installation of a non-python file, a small
file called 'config' can be created in that protocol decoder's
directory, with the following content:
# comments are ok
extra-install vendorlist.txt commands.txt
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Fixes bug 120.
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This causes compiler errors in some setups otherwise, e.g.:
CC libsigrokdecode_la-session.lo
session.c: In function 'srd_session_metadata_set':
session.c:195:46: error: expected ')' before 'PRIu64'
srd_dbg("Setting session %d samplerate to %"PRIu64".",
^
session.c: In function 'srd_session_send':
session.c:242:15: error: expected ')' before 'PRIu64'
"number %" PRIu64 ", %" PRIu64 " bytes at 0x%p",
^
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Python silently uses the existing module anyway, but the library
was counting it as an extra module. This was exposed by a test
case in the test suite.
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This fixes bug 177.
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This requires the PD to have a tuple in its class called 'binary',
which contains a list of strings describing the different binary
classes it can output. For the SPI decoder this might be 'MOSI' and
'MISO', for example.
The data is submitted to the frontend as struct srd_proto_data_binary,
which contains the class that data belongs to.
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This replaces the Decoder.add() method with Decoder.register().
The first argument is still output type, but all arguments are now
optional:
Decoder.register(output_type,
id='someid',
meta=(object-type, 'Name', 'Description'))
'id' defaults to the protocol decoder instance id, and only needs changing
if a decoder chain needs to fork.
'object-type' refers to a Python object, such as int or str.
After registering, the PD submits data as usual with Decoder.put(), with
the only argument a value of the registered object-type.
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struct srd_proto_data was supposed to be independent of the output
type, but a field specific to annotations snuck in there.
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This better reflects what it is: a python object generated and
processed by python code.
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srd_session_config_set() is now called srd_session_metadata_set(), and
SRD_CONF_NUM_PROBES and SRD_CONF_UNITSIZE are dropped.
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The SRD_CONF_NUM_PROBES metadata key was removed. It wasn't actually
used for anything, since this is trivially available via the configured
(or default) probe list.
The SRD_CONF_UNITSIZE key was removed. The unit size is instead derived
from the probe list: the number of probes packed into the least amount
of space possible defines the unit size.
PD changes:
* The start() method no longer takes a 'metadata' parameter.
* Metadata now comes in only via the metadata() method, which takes
a key and value. The only key defined so far is SRD_CONF_SAMPLERATE,
which is exported into the module namespace.
API changes:
* srd_session_send() now takes an end_samplenum parameter, and had its
options rearranged.
* srd_session_config_set() is now srd_session_metadata_set(). This keeps
"config" options for a future feature to allow PDs or frontends to
configure each other's options on the fly, up and down the stack.
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