Previously we only ever updated on the initial device assignments. Especially
when the device is offline while started, this means we never get the right
icon.
This broke device initialization in some cases (not sure why it worked until
today though). Where a device is in register mode but the ManufacturerData has
not yet updated to the 4-byte string (i.e. a device previously known
normally), the device would now always call listen(). The firmware - in
register mode - would start initializing the connection though and get
rejected, leaving us with a device that cannot be registered.
This reverts commit a061240b11.
No functional change, it just uses a dict now to pick the protocol class which
makes it *slightly* easier to read.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Instead of just doing a single log line, let's log this to a yaml file so we
have a permanent record of the interactions with the device for bug reports.
This was getting stacked - once on init and once whenever we actually made a
connecting, resulting in the signal never getting disconnected properly and
some races because we tried to sync twice.
The whole "listen()" vs "listening" vs "connected" etc. is a bit of a mess and
should be reworked for a proper fix to this. But for now this will do.
This may fix#124
Propagated whenever we start talking to the device (and then again when we
stop). The purpose of this signal is merely that a UI can show e.g. a progress
bar while we're talking to the device to ensure the user something is
happening.
Fixes#138
Virtually all the commands we have that don't have a specific opcode expect
0xb3. Since that's the general ACK command, we can default to that and make
everything else the exception.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Previously the menu was hand-composed, let's replace it with the glade files
as possible. And move the menu itself out into the source file so glade
doesn't keep overwriting it.
And drop the rotate/sync button while we're there. The rotate button because
it's not hooked up anyway. The sync button because that is not how we work: we
just always listen while we're running, any drawing will "immediately" be
synched from the device.
This is a quickly hacked-together versions with some bits in detail, others
just sketched in. Credit goes to Piper where much of the basic structure has
been taken from, and tuhi-kete where the DBus bindings were taken from.
Current functionality allows to register a new device and save drawings from
an existing device. Missing is the bit where we can download drawings from a
newly registered device. Several buttons are present but not hooked up yet,
several UI pieces are unpolished.
This UI is designed to work with one device only right now. If you have two
devices, you'll have to manually remove them from Tuhi and add one or the
other through this tool.
The UI is minimal. If you start it and Tuhi doesn't have a device yet, it will
immediately go into search mode and start registering the device. If you have
a device, it'll just display the data.
The data Tuhi exports is downloaded immediately and converted to SVG files,
stored in $XDG_DATA_HOME/tuhigui/<timestamp>.svg. Downloading a file through
the GUI merely copies that file into the target path. No support for rotation
at this point, but could and should be added (there's a button already!)
This is what the dbusserver module does as well, so we end up with a weird
mismatch: to the base module the device is still known and unregistered on the
next search start. So when we see the bluez properties float past, we don't
add a new devices.
To the dbusserver the device is gone though and since we don't add it again in
the base module, we never send a signal for it.
Since there's a reasonable assumption that if we don't register the device, we
don't want it anyway, let's delete it from the base device list too.
This doesn't fix the issue of a device timing out while waiting for a button
press. That device will count as known until the next search stop. But at
least now we don't have to restart tuhi.
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>
Drop pycairo by way of an environment variable, because we don't need it for
tuhi.
The way pygobject is setup it checks for setuptools during pip3 and then
complains that it's not there:
Collecting setuptools
Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement setuptools (from versions: )
No matching distribution found for setuptools
It's not actually needed since it has a fallback, but clearly... anyway.
Let's use the plain setup.py invocation, but with the right --prefix.
Of course that setup.py invocation doesn't work for the other packages,
so let's leave pip3 in place for those. Because how much worse would the world
be if this would just work...
Signed-off-by: Peter Hutterer <peter.hutterer@who-t.net>