Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Changing current allowed/preferred modes requires the device to be in low-power
mode, so we will make sure we return an error if any power operation is already
ongoing when a new one is requested.
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We handle all known CFUN? response values in the new parser, and report an error
if an unknown value is found.
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AT+URAT=? provides the format expected, but looks like it isn't implemented
differently for the different u-blox devices seen, so we need an additional
level of filtering which currently is applied per device model string.
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A default implementation to monitor the ongoing connection is provided in the
generic MMBroadbandModem, based on AT+CGACT? to check whether the PDP context
of the connection (identified by the cached cid) is active or not.
This commit also disables the connection monitoring logic in those plugins that
have custom connection methods.
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Instead of setting up a custom timeout source to poll the connection status, use
the generic logic in the base bearer object, and just re-implement the command
used to check the status.
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Split into two different actions the actual COPS? response parsing and the
operator name normalization process.
Also, allow parsing not only the operator string, but also the format, mode
and the optional access technology value.
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The dell plugin needs them.
ModemManager[727]: <warn> [1476194360.614829] [mm-plugin-manager.c:1494] load_plugin():
[plugin manager] could not load plugin '/usr/lib64/ModemManager/libmm-plugin-dell.so':
/usr/lib64/ModemManager/libmm-plugin-dell.so: undefined symbol: mm_telit_get_band_flag
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98207
Reported-by: Lubomir Rintel <lkundrak@v3.sk>
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This should avoid poluting the name space and also make module loading
faster.
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GE910 is a 2g only modem and when queried for bands it returns
only a 2g set of bands:
--> 'AT#BND=?<CR>'
<-- '<CR><LF>#BND: (0-3)<CR><LF><CR><LF>OK<CR><LF>'
Current regex fails, since it considers the 3g bands block mandatory.
A similar problem happens for current bands.
This patch modifies the regular expressions for properly
supporting GE910 and updates tests.
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GE910 family supports #PORTCFG layouts different than HE910
family ones.
This patch properly tags GE910 ports according to Telit document
"GE910 Family Ports Arrangements, 1vv0301049"
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This patch adds the udev rules for supporting GE910 (PID 0x22)
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<debug> (ttyUSB2): --> 'AT^SYSCFG?<CR>'
<debug> (ttyUSB2): <-- '<CR><LF>^SYSCFG:14,2,400380,1,2<CR><LF><CR><LF>OK<CR><LF>'
<warn> couldn't load current allowed/preferred modes: 'No SYSCFG combination found matching the current one (14,2)'
14,2 means "WCDMA-only; acquire WCDMA then GSM" which is somewhat
non-sensical. The supported modes parsing doesn't generate this
combination because it doesn't really make sense, so current mode
matching failed. Just fix up the non-sensical acquisition order
to 0 (automatic).
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Instead of relying on the udev daemon and GUDev to manage the devices reported
by the kernel, we can now run ModemManager relying solely on the kernel events
reported via the new ReportKernelEvent() API. Therefore, the '--no-auto-scan'
option is implicit for the ModemManager daemon when udev is disabled in the
build.
Additionally, a new custom implementation of the kernel device object is
provided, which uses sysfs to load the properties and attributes required in
each kernel device, instead of using a GUdevDevice.
The udev rule files are kept in place, and a simple custom parser is provided
which preloads all rules in memory once and then applies them to the different
kernel objects reported via ReportKernelEvent(), e.g. to set port type hints.
A simple unit test setup is prepared to validate the udev rules during the
`check' Makefile target.
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The mm_base_modem_grab_port() now receives a MMKernelDevice directly from the
plugin, which is then stored in the MMPort corresponding to the port.
This means that we have direct access to e.g. all properties set by udev rules
everywhere, and we don't need additional GUdevClient objects (e.g. like the one
used in the Huawei plugin to detect NDISDUP support during runtime).
For virtual ports (e.g. generated during unit tests), we have a new 'generic'
kernel device object which just provides the values from the kernel device
properties given during its creation.
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Instead of relying constantly on GUdevDevice objects reported by GUdev, we now
use a new generic object (MMKernelDevice) for which we provide an initial GUdev
based backend.
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All ports of the same modem reported by the kernel will all be associated with
a common 'uid' (unique id), which uniquely identifies the physical device. This
logic was already in place, what we do now is avoid calling it the 'sysfs
path' of the physical device, because we may not want to use that to identify
a device.
This logic now also enables the possibility of "naming" the modems in a unique
way by setting the "ID_MM_PHYSDEV_UID" property in the "usb_device" that owns
all the ports.
E.g. a custom device has 4 modems in 4 different USB ports. The device path of
each USB device will always be the same, so the naming rules could go like this:
$ vim /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/78-mm-naming.rules
ACTION!="add|change|move", GOTO="mm_naming_rules_end"
DEVPATH=="/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb4/4-1/4-1.5/4-1.5.1", ENV{ID_MM_PHYSDEV_UID}="USB-MODEM-1"
DEVPATH=="/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb4/4-1/4-1.5/4-1.5.2", ENV{ID_MM_PHYSDEV_UID}="USB-MODEM-2"
DEVPATH=="/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb4/4-1/4-1.5/4-1.5.3", ENV{ID_MM_PHYSDEV_UID}="USB-MODEM-3"
DEVPATH=="/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1d.0/usb4/4-1/4-1.5/4-1.5.4", ENV{ID_MM_PHYSDEV_UID}="USB-MODEM-4"
LABEL="mm_naming_rules_end"
Each of the modems found will have a unique UID retrieved from the previous list
of rules. Then, "mmcli" has also been updated to allow using the UID instead of
the modem DBus path or index, e.g.:
$ sudo mmcli -m USB-MODEM-1
/org/freedesktop/ModemManager1/Modem/0 (device id '988d83252c0598f670c2d69d5f41e077204a92fd')
-------------------------
Hardware | manufacturer: 'ZTE CORPORATION'
| model: 'MF637'
| revision: 'BD_W7P673A3F3V1.0.0B04'
| supported: 'gsm-umts'
| current: 'gsm-umts'
| equipment id: '356516027657837'
-------------------------
System | device: 'USB-MODEM-1'
| drivers: 'option'
| plugin: 'ZTE'
| primary port: 'ttyUSB5'
| ports: 'ttyUSB5 (at)'
...
$ sudo mmcli -m USB-MODEM-1 --enable
...
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Commit a66871a2876be2236f634ff6b5e59d20de1ce5df introduced an additional
ATTRS{idVendor} match condition in the same rules matching by interface class,
subclass and protocol. We shouldn't be doing that because we cannot mix parent
attribute matchings from different parents.
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Commit 7ff57f9808f35d434b638a67b84481271c67c90e introduced a change to try to
use ATTRS{bInterfaceNumber} as a common way to match by interface number, but
this logic is broken because all the rules that we use to match by interface
number (attribute in the interface device) also require matching by idVendor
and idProduct (attributes in the physdev device), and udev rules forbid matches
from more than one parent device at a time.
We could use ATTR{bInterfaceNumber} (instead of ATTRS) to tag the actual USB
interface device, but that would require a change in all the plugins to look for
the tag not in the TTY device, but in its parent.
So, recover the original behavior, where a hidden property is created containing
the first bInterfaceNumber found in the list of parent devices, and then run
the matches against idVendor and idProduct only if the hidden property is found
with the expected value.
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Rules with a single condition where a parent property is checked with != don't
work properly. E.g.:
SUBSYSTEMS!="usb", GOTO="end"
or:
ATTRS{idVendor}!="abcd", GOTO="end"
Instead, we can mix both those previous parent rules and match them:
SUBSYSTEMS=="usb",ATTRS{idVendor}=="abcd", GOTO="next"
GOTO="end"
LABEL="next"
# Apply rules here
LABEL="end"
In this case both SUBSYSTEMS and ATTRS conditions apply to the parent usb_device
(idVendor attribute is only available in the usb_device), so they apply to all
ports of the same device.
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Implement the detailed signal info interface for some Huawei 3GPP modems
including those based on HiSilicon chipsets like the E3276. Known not to
work on many Qualcomm-based Huawei modems like E392, E397, and E367 as
they don't support the ^HCSQ command, but they do support QMI and so
have access to the extended signal interface via QMI.
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MMBroadbandModemTelit:
* added logic to set MMBroadbandModem's SIM_HOT_SWAP property to TRUE
* added function to enable QSS unsolicited
* added QSS unsolicited handler
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The rules were matched only against devices with an exact 'tty' subsystem, and
that means that we were not properly adding additional tags on e.g. wwan or
cdc-wdm devices.
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