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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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The Python module name is determined by the directory name (e.g. dcf77),
the *.py file names in that directory don't matter and can be kept
consistent.
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We need to flush the file output buffer(s), lacking a stop() call in
PDs at the moment, which could do the flush (or file close()) only once
at the end of the PD "session".
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This PD stacks on top of the UART protocol decoder, and ouputs the
decoded UART data in the "canonical" format, one byte after the other
without any metadata (start bits, stop bits, parity bits, errors) and
without any sample-numbers and such. This is basically what you would
see in a terminal program, such as minicom.
Per default it outputs to stdout, but using the 'filename' option
and/or the 'filename_rx'/'filename_tx' options it can also output to
files.
Using the 'tx' and 'rx' options you can also select whether both, or
only one of the data direction's data should be output.
Example:
sigrok-cli -i foo.sr \
-a uart:rx=0:tx=1,uart_dump:rx=no:tx=yes:filename=foo.txt \
-s uart,uart_dump
This PD is just an experiment for now, it's possible that it will be
replaced / reimplemented via a different sigrok facility later on.
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