view helpers/build-date.c @ 281:a75eefbf8be4

Phone boot with PWON: weed out short button presses Every standard end user phone has a design provision, most naturally implemented in firmware, whereby the PWON button effects a boot only if it is held down long enough - short presses of this PWON button are detected, assumed to be spurious and cause the fw to power back off instead of proceeding with boot. The present change introduces this standard function in FreeCalypso.
author Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org>
date Fri, 24 Sep 2021 02:03:08 +0000
parents 775dba605f33
children
line wrap: on
line source

/*
 * This program runs at firmware build time to produce a C file for the
 * fw build that includes the build date and time stamp.
 */

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <strings.h>
#include <time.h>

main(argc, argv)
	char **argv;
{
	time_t now;
	struct tm *tm;

	if (argc < 2 || argc > 4) {
		fprintf(stderr,
			"usage: %s config_name target_name src_version\n",
			argv[0]);
		exit(1);
	}
	time(&now);
	tm = gmtime(&now);
	printf("const char firmware_version_str[] =\n");
	if (argc >= 3)
		printf("\"FreeCalypso Tourmaline %s (%s), ", argv[1], argv[2]);
	else
		printf("\"FreeCalypso Tourmaline %s, ", argv[1]);
	if (argc >= 4 && strcmp(argv[3], "unknown"))
		printf("source version %s, ", argv[3]);
	printf("build date %d-%02d-%02dT%02d:%02d:%02dZ\";\n",
		tm->tm_year+1900, tm->tm_mon+1, tm->tm_mday,
		tm->tm_hour, tm->tm_min, tm->tm_sec);
	exit(0);
}