view rvinterf/doc/rvtdump.usage @ 1001:7df4c9ae6ba4

loadtools/scripts: w220.{config,init} => chimei.{config,init} Motorola W220, first touched by FreeCalypso in 2019-05, is an ODM phone made by Chi-Mei, and its peculiar property of relevance to loadtools is that it has XRAM on Calypso nCS3 instead of the usual nCS1 - which matters for fc-xram. We are now discovering other Chi-Mei phones including Sony Ericsson J120, and they share the same quirk of XRAM on nCS3 - hence we rename this loadtools target from w220 to chimei.
author Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org>
date Sat, 09 Dec 2023 17:53:44 +0000
parents e7502631a0f9
children
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Rvtdump is a utility that listens on a serial port, receives traces or any other
packets emitted by the running firmware of a GSM device in TI's RVTMUX format,
decodes them into readable ASCII and emits them to stdout and/or to a log file.
It is to be invoked as follows:

rvtdump [options] /dev/ttyXXX

where the sole non-option argument is the serial port it should open and listen
on.

The available options are:

-b

	Normally the rvtdump process remains in the foreground and emits its
	output on stdout.  The -b option suppresses the normal output and causes
	rvtdump to put itself in the background: fork at startup, then have the
	parent exit while the child remains running.  -b is not useful and not
	allowed without -l.

-B baud

	Selects which RVTMUX serial channel baud rate our tool should listen
	for.  Defaults to 115200 baud, which appears to be TI's default and is
	correct for mokoN, leo2moko and Pirelli's fw.  Use -B 57600 for Compal's
	RVTMUX, the one accessible via **16379#.

-d <file descriptor number>

	This option is not meant for direct use by human users.  It is inserted
	automatically when rvtdump is launched from fc-xram as the secondary
	program that immediately takes over the serial channel.

-l logfile

	Log all received and decoded packets into the specified file in addition
	to (without -b) or instead of (with -b) dumping them on stdout.  Each
	line in the log file is also time-stamped; the timestamps are in GMT
	(gmtime(3)) instead of local time - Spacefalcon the Outlaw dislikes
	local times.