FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-docs
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TCH-tap-modes: document FACCH/H observations
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
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date | Mon, 22 Jul 2024 23:02:54 +0000 |
parents | 12424010d7b8 |
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FreeCalypso software install location ===================================== FreeCalypso queendom includes several software packages that are meant to be installed on the user's general-purpose Unix/Linux host computer such as a Linux PC or laptop. The principal component packages in this category are FC host tools (for operating on GSM MS devices), FC SIM tools (for operating on SIM cards) and FC USB-serial tools (for operating on FTDI and Silabs chips) - but these listed tool packages are not the only ones. All FC software packages that run on a general-purpose Unix/Linux host computer are meant to be installed in one specific file system location; the present article applies to all of these packages. The install location for all FC host software packages is fixed as /opt/freecalypso - this install location is NOT changeable. The directory tree that exists under /opt/freecalypso is defined by the Mother of FreeCalypso in her sole authority, and it includes both FHS-style and non-FHS-style, FC-specific subdirectories. The following subdirectories are currently defined under /opt/freecalypso: (FHS-style) bin All Unix/Linux host binaries are installed here. include Some FC host software components provide header files that are intended to be used by other (later in the dependency graph) FC host sw components. FC host tools rvinterf headers are installed here currently, used by fc-rfcal-tools. lib Currently hypothetical, may be used in the future similarly to include subdir. (non-FHS-style, FC-specific) aud-* Images of /aud FFS directory subtree (audio mode config files) for different supported FreeCalypso devices, either FC hardware products or aftermarket configurations. batteries Collection of battery discharge threshold configuration files. buz FFS subtree with PWT buzzer melodies, to be uploaded into /buz on those FC devices that feature a traditional ringing buzzer. charging Collection of battery charging configuration files. cp2102 CP2102 baud rate tables and EEPROM patch files. fluid Helper files for fluid-mnf port. ftdi FTDI EEPROM configuration files. gcc The recommend install location for our ARM7 gcc toolchain is /opt/freecalypso/gcc. helpfiles Help files for those FC host utilities which implement a help command. loadtools Hardware parameter files and init scripts which underlie the all-important -h option to fc-loadtool, fc-iram and fc-xram, collectively known as loadtools. mel FFS subtree with E1 melodies, to be uploaded into /mel on those FC devices that will use a voice path loudspeaker for ringing. rfcal This subdir only appears if you are doing RF calibration and install fc-rfcal-tools, and some of the necessary config files under that subdir you have to create yourself using your own RF knowledge specific to your particular setup. scripts Command scripts for FC host tools other than fc-loadtool, currently for fc-fsio. sim-data SIM card database files for FC SIM tools. sim-scripts Command scripts and associated "canned" data files for fc-simtool and fc-uicc-tool. target-bin ARM7 target binaries for Calypso GSM MS devices. User interaction with /opt/freecalypso file system tree ======================================================= The only subdirectory under /opt/freecalypso which all users need to be aware of is /opt/freecalypso/bin - all executable binaries are installed there, hence you need to either add this directory to your PATH or make symlinks from some "standard" binary directory to ours. Most other subdirectories and files that reside in them are accessed "under the hood" by tools that need them - however, there are times when various "canned" workflow instructions will direct you to type out the path to some file or another that reside in some FC-specific location somewhere in /opt/freecalypso tree. The beauty of this fixed /opt/freecalypso installation directory is that as long as you follow the rules and don't try to outsmart the Mother, these "canned" instructions will always work on every installation, not affected by any local variations. Interdependencies between different FC tools ============================================ Many FreeCalypso host tool programs depend on other FC tool binaries, invoking them behind the scenes as needed. In cases where the tool depending on other FC tool binaries is itself a compiled C program, the full path under /opt/freecalypso/bin is always used. The same approach is also used in the case of simplest shell script wrappers - however, most higher-level FC tools that are implemented as shell scripts expect their subordinate tools (binaries or subordinate shell scripts) to be accessible via current PATH. Optional symlinks to FC tool binaries ===================================== Given that FreeCalypso host tool programs need to be accessible via shell search path, without manually typing out the full path on each invokation, there are two possible solutions: Option 1: add /opt/freecalypso/bin to your PATH. This option is ideal for those who use FC host tools heavily and regularly, on machines where such heavy and regular usage takes place. Option 2: make symbolic links from some "standard" binary install location (e.g., /usr/bin or /usr/local/bin) to /opt/freecalypso/bin for each installed FC host tool program (binary or installed shell script). This option should be preferred for installations where only some FreeCalypso utilities are expected to be used, and only rarely/occasionally - or where the desire is to make the utilities appear "ordinary", without making the user enter FC queendom explicitly by adding /opt/freecalypso/bin to their PATH. To make it easier to automate Option 2, new versions of FC host sw component packages include a file in the source distribution named Installed-binaries. This file lists, one per line, the names of all binaries (or shell scripts) installed by the package in question in /opt/freecalypso/bin - the intent is that this file will be used as the list of symlinks to be created. Please also note that if you going for this Option 2, you really do need to create symbolic links, NOT move the actual installed binaries! Moving FC tool binaries out of /opt/freecalypso/bin will break every instance where one FC program invokes another by absolute pathname - so don't do it. Locating and patching all instances of another program invokation is NOT an acceptable solution - there may be invokations from other FC software components which you are not considering. In short. don't try to outsmart the Mother! Why, why, why? ============== The Mother of FreeCalypso is fully aware that this requirement of fixed paths under /opt/freecalypso runs totally counter to typical Unix/Linux application software development and packaging conventions. The latter conventions call for changeable paths: the person compiling or packaging the application chooses the install location via ./configure --prefix option or some equivalent means, and the software obeys. If FreeCalypso followed this convention, all of our FC-specific, non-FHS-relevant stuff would be in either /usr/share/freecalypso or /usr/local/share/freecalypso depending on how the software was installed by each given user: via packaging, or by direct compilation and installation from source. In the earliest years of FreeCalypso, all binaries were installed into /usr/local/bin and all support files were in /usr/local/share/freecalypso. The big and ever-controversial decision to move to /opt/freecalypso was made in late 2016, and all of justifying reasons back then still hold true today: * There are all kinds of occasions where one needs to type the full path to some file in one of FC-specific, non-FHS-relevant directories, and typing /opt/freecalypso is much shorter than /usr/share/freecalypso, let alone /usr/local/share/freecalypso. * The number of different support files (FC-specific, non-FHS-relevant) keeps growing, and so does their complex organization. Having all of these files reside at fixed pathnames (as opposed to pathnames that change based on the whim of whoever does sw installation or packaging) makes life much easier. * Implementing a ./configure system that dynamically changes pathnames for our myriad of FC-specific, non-FHS-relevant support and data files would be a huge pain, and more work than is justifiable. * FreeCalypso is not a single software package, but a complex queendom. We have separate sw packages for FC host tools (operating on GSM MS devices), SIM card tools, RF calibration tools, USB-serial tools etc - trying to put all of them into one package would be difficult, inconvenient and unnatural, hence they are separate sw packages. But these separate sw packages have interdependencies, sometimes mandatory (fc-rfcal-tools strictly depend on FC host tools), othertimes optional (intertie between FC host tools and FC SIM tools is strictly optional, appearing only in certain workflows), and they do belong to the same FreeCalypso queendom. With a fixed mandated install path, each sw component in the queendom can freely reference bits from other components - whereas if we adopted the conventional packaging paradigm, we would have to deal with the possibility of different packages being installed under different paths. Don't try to outsmart the Mother! ================================= We are aware of certain rogue packagers who were determined to have their way and change the install location to something other than /opt/freecalypso, no matter how much we admonish against doing so. In the world of freely published software distributed as source, it is of course impossible to actually enforce any kind of usage rules - however, we do operate with the following set of policies: * Any packagings of FreeCalypso software in which the install location has been changed to something other than /opt/freecalypso are considered to be rogue packages. Such packages shall be regarded as malware - do not install, do not use! * We shall not, under any circumstances, provide any kind of technical support to anyone who uses a rogue package. Anyone using a rogue package will be told to migrate to either direct from-source installation or a properly constructed downstream package, with /opt/freecalypso install location preserved, before any other issues can be addressed.