How do I get bluez 5 to accept a fixed pin? - c

I can find nothing on how to do this. I am programming an Intel Edison in C and an Android phone in Java. I want to pair the Edison from the Android phone. I would think simple pairing (sspmode 1) would work but I get an error message on the phone about a wrong pin where no pin was requested. With sspmode 0 I get asked for a password but have no idea what it is as it is randomly generated in my NoInputNoOutput Edison. We have everything else working. If we pair from Edison manually, the rest of the code can connect and send bluetooth messages back and forth from the Edison to the phone. But pairing from Edison to any random phone that walks by is not acceptable. I think it is called Bluejacking.
I have seen some posts about using simple-agent but frankly what I understand is that BlueZ security changed so much between 4 and 5 that most all that I see doesn't work. I also see that the switch from 4 to 5 broke a lot of systems so I don't feel alone. I would try it but simple-agent is not on Edison and I have not found a procedure to install it. And as I don't know if the little I can find applies to version 5 as it all references version 4 I am feeling a little lost.
Can anyone point me in the right direction to something that will work on BlueZ 5? I am on 5.18.

The solution presented on the last post of this article does work
http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-wireless-networking-41/setting-up-bluez-with-a-passkey-pin-to-be-used-as-headset-for-iphone-816003/
Edit simple-agent, put it somewhere, make it executable, put the missing files in the same directory and run it. It must stay running for it to be active.
In my case, the missing file was bluezutils.py.
Run hciconfig hci0 sspmode 0 first

Pl use Bluz5.30.
Initially it was really difficult to bring up bluetooth using Bluez 5. It seems it was okay with Bluez 4.I have tried different versions of Bluez 5 on my LFS build. Even up to Bluez 5.28 it was not satisfactory. Now it is Bluz5.30, with this, LFS doc and lot of trail, I could manage. I feel Bluez is one of the most badly documented user unfriendly software. I also feel it is very buggy. It can hang machines forcing to hard boot the system. I have seen bluetooth forcing the Android phone also to reboot. So it is important to get the latest version of the software. But to make the bluetooth speaker work Pulseaudio was needed. It is better to get the latest version; here also LFS doc was fine.
So the process of connecting speaker was using bluetoothctl is as follows;
>> power on
>> scan on
>> pairable on
>> pair <device>
>> agent on
>> default-agent
Now the actual sound. Here pactl and pacmd are useful.
paplay -d can test the devices.
using pacmd with command 'list-sinks' can show the devices.
pacmd ->list-modules can show the modules loaded.
How to change automatically the audio output to bluetooth speaker when it is connected?
For me in one machine it was working fine, with an identical LFS in another machine it was not working. Finally it was identified as a
missing module module-device-manager with arg do_routing=1.
Once it was loaded everything was fine. This particular module was not shown in the pulse configurations. So I have to find that and load,
pacmd
load-module module-device-manager do_routing=1
One can add a line in the default configuration file available in /etc/pulse.or one can add it in the user configuration file also.Now to make the new bluetooth speaker being used to play sound. For that issue the command 'move-sink-input ' using pacmd. You can find the sink names my issuing the command 'list-sinks'.
If your speaker is not connecting, it may be that it is already connected elsewhere. If it is not so, remove-device; scan on; pair; and connect using bluetoothctl. I was worrying how to make file transfer using bluetooth (Bluez5). Actually very little information is available in LFS documention or in general in the NET. This very true and unfortunate about Bluez in general. They do not provide any real user doc or nothing is available in net. So the steps are as follows:
You need to install OBEX library. Then you build Bluez5 (if it not done already). It will install obexd. After installation you can find obexd in $PREFIX/libexec/bluetooth/obexd.This is where you find bluetoothd also. One generally makes a link for bluetoothd in /usr/sbin. A similar link can be made for obexd also. Once you start bluetoothd and obexd you can find object transfer profiles in bluetoothctl->show.If you need a phone to push objects to the computer, you need to run obexd with options '-a' and '-r '. if '-a' is not given phone will fail to send the file. Now how to push a file from Computer to Phone. For this you need obexctl, I do not think it is a finished tool, and it will not be installed while we build Bluez 5. I have seen it in the source tree and copied to /usr/bin/. It should be used to connect the Phone and when the connection is established one can 'send ' and you have to accept the request in the phone.
Starting obexd as a deamon was a problem. When obexd was tried on a text terminal (init 3) it was not possible to start since it needs a dbus session which in turn needs X display. It means one need to login an X seession before you start obexd. If you dissable X while building DBUS (--without-x) then Window Managers will not work. But there is solution with 'dus-run-session < command> [args]'. That means you can start a service obexd (like bluetoothd) in the system start-up. So just by switching on the Computer ( if pairing, trusting etc... was done earlier) one can push files from Phone to computer.
>> connect <device>
Second time onwards just connection is fine. Probably you can trust the device.
>> trust <device>

Related

Android Things - pico i.mx7 unable to connect

I've just unpacked my new Pico Pro Maker Kit and started flashing procedure. After creating a product in AndroidThings platform and downloading the build I've started flashing procedure.
Command flash-all.sh failed on fastboot syntax, so I've build that manually and found that it was failing on part "set_active _a". I've skipped that and continued to flash device.
Now device is rebooted, I can see on the screen androidThings logo and version + info about network status ("not connected").
I'm unable to find this device in
fastboot devices
or
adb devices
so it looks like I have no way to connect into it.
Do you know a way of fixing that? Is there any way to force fastboot reboot on that device?
Thanks!
I had a related problem for IMX7 on initial install, I thought I'd pass along the Boundary feedback in case it helps. Tech support at Boundary devices recommended that I try the following:
Please try to add androidboot.dm_verity=disabled and
androidboot.selinux=disabled options to bootargs.
I presume these would be options you'd set at the boot prompt ==> (from the serial connection) but I haven't had a chance to test, which I may get to next week. Interested in your feedback if this has any impact to your situation in the meantime.

ADB says 'Device Not Found' at last stage of sideloading lollipop

I'm trying to sideload Lollipop onto my Nexus 5 from the OTA zip file.
At this point, the adb recognizes the device after I plug in the USB cable, and spits out the serial number.
As I understand the instructions for sideloading, once I get to this point, I just need to reboot into recovery mode, (which works as expected) and then bypass the red exclamation point icon using "volume up and power" simultaneously. That works too.
At the point where the screen on the Nexus 5 says, "Now send the package you want to apply to the device with 'adb sideload &ltfilename&gt' I type "adb sideload + the OTA image file name", which I renamed for convenience". The file is in the platform-tools folder.
At which point the command window reports: error: device not found
So... the device is seen by the adb, but somehow is no longer found after the device reboots in recovery mode.
I've replaced all the usb drivers, enabled usb debugging and developer mode on the Nexus device. I've tried this in windows 7 and also in Linux (both from the android sdk tool kit and from an installation of Eclipse). I'm unable to get the adb to talk to the Nexus 5.
I read the android-windows usb inf file, and there is no section specifically for the Nexus 5, but I added a line under the "generic android" section with USB\VID_18D1&PID_D001 as has been suggested elsewhere for people who couldn't get the OS to see their nexus at all. My issue is not that the OS can't see it... and the adb sees it, too, until I try to sideload the OTA file in Recovery Mode.
Anyone else having this issue, or better yet... any ideas on how to solve it?
Thanks
It turns out that I had not enabled USB debugging before I tried to do this using Linux Ubuntu / Eclipse / Android SDK. So my problem was really a windows USB driver problem, I guess (though I can't be sure, since windows did see the device until I tried to transfer the file. Maybe that message was really conveying a permissions problem, too...)
I rebooted into Ubuntu and tried again and was able to transfer the update file. The only hitch I encountered at that point was to issue the sideload command as root. I didn't do that the first time I tried it, and got a message about lacking permissions.
I suspect the posted reply with a link to a universal USB inf file would have worked, but, though I'm grateful for the tip, I can't testify to that, since I managed to transfer the file without Windows.
Thanks to all who looked at this and especially to Alex P., for posting a possible solution. FW
IW, I'm glad to have finally been able to do this, but for anyone struggling to get Lollipop ahead of the OTA update... well, it's nice, but hardly worth a lot of effort.

Is it a good idea to use a Screensaver on a raspberry pi as digital signage?

I asked this question in the Raspberry PI section, so please forgive me for posting this here again. Its just there doesn't seem to be as active as this section of the forum. So, onto my question...
I have an idea and I'm working on it right now. I just wanted to see what the community's thought was on using a screensaver as digital signage. Every tutorial I've read shows someone using chromium in kiosk mode, and while that's fine and works well for some uses, it doesn't work for what I need. I have successfully completed a chromium kiosk, and it was cool. But the signage that I need to create now, has to work without internet. I've thought about installing LAMP locally on the PI, and still using chromium. I still may have to if this idea doesn't pan out. All I need from the signage is a Title Message in the top center, and a message body underneath it, with roughly 300-400 character limit. My idea is to write a screensaver module, in C, that will work with a screensaver such as xscreensaver. The module would need to be able to load messages from a directory on the pi. Then for my clients to update their signage text, I would write a simple client that sent commands as well as the text via SSH to the pi. I want to know what other people think about this. Is it a good idea? Bad idea? Should I "waste" my time doing something like this?
Thanks in advance.
I am already using a rPi as digital signage, just over a year. I am using two different setups:
version 1 uses Raspian loading xdesktop and qiv image viewer to cycle images stored on the Pi itself, synchronized with a remote server. The problem I found was power and SD stability, when the power fails, which it will do no matter what, just when... The Sd card can become corrupt due to all the writing that Raspian does all the time. Certainly does not really need to write to SD.
version 2 uses a RO-filesystem and a command line image tool. Uses the same process to show images from local, and sync with server. But power fail causes no ill effects.
I am not using screensaver to display images, that seemed redundant to me, and unnecessary to wait for the SS to start just to display the images.
Some of the images are created using imagemagik, which is nicely dynamic where needed.

TCP/IP Programming in C

I have an exam on tomorrow on TCP/IP programming. Following is one of the previous question on this paper.
Write and run a client and a server program. Using C language in UNIX, with the
following specifications :
• A TCP client program will send a range of number (e.g. 1 to 10) to the server.
• TCP server accept the number range from client and send back the sum of the
number range. Client will print the result.
I dont know how to setup the compiler and other settings to run this tcp ip programs. When I search online, I got two different programs, one for Client and another For server. Some please tell me how can i run these programs to get desired output. What kind of compiler should I install on my system.( I am using windows 7) ??
Since the assignment requires your code to work on a Unix system, you first need to install one. Follow these simple steps to install a virtual Unix environment on top of your existing Windows installation.
Download and install VirtualBox for Windows.
Download & unpack this Ubuntu 12.10 disc image (NOTE: Requires 7-Zip).
Launch VirtualBox and create a new Virtual Machine (name it Ubuntu).
In the "Virtual Hard Disk" settings, select "Use existing hard disk" and select the image file you just downloaded (NOTE: It's filename should end in ".vdi").
Run your new Virtual Machine. You should see the Ubuntu splash screen.
Login with username ubuntu and password reverse (NOTE: Case Sensitive!).
Open up Terminal and type sudo apt-get install build-essential (NOTE: when Terminal prompts you for a password, use reverse).
You should (with hope) have everything you need for your assignment. For more information on network programming, consult Beej's Guide to Network Programming -- Using Internet Sockets.
You need to open two different terminals on your system.
In the first terminal compile and run the server.c program.(make sure either you listen to all ips or your host ip(atleast).
while this is running.(it will wait for a request from your client program)
Run the client program in the other terminal.
Hope this solves the problem!
For details on how to create and run a file in unix refer http://www.wikihow.com/Compile-a-C-Program-Using-the-GNU-Compiler-%28GCC%29
P.S: you can do the same in win7 if iam not wrong only that terminal here in called command prompt!
Post the results if possible!
Download a thing called VMWare player. And look for a Ubuntu image that you can load with the VMWare player. That way, you will have a little Linux virtual machine that you can run inside or along with Windows 7. You can use the compiler GCC in your Ubuntu or whatever other Linux virtual machine. And get lots of coffee. Blargle is correct, but I think my suggestion is a little better, because you end up having a fairly complete Unix type environment to develop in. Blargle's way put Unix tools on top of Windows, which I find to be kind of clunky.
I learnt socket programming from this site. He has given everything in detail . Download an Vmware workstation and load up ubuntu . Understand the programs they are pretty much straight forward .
Maybe you can try to look at Network Socket on the web. You can easily find a lot of good tutorial that can answer your question.
You can use the compiler you want on your system, depending on what are you using now.

How to get harddrive serial number in C or asm without wmi

how to get harddrive serial number(not the volume # wich change at each reinstall of windows) in C or asm, without wmi (cause wmi required admin right). Any clue would be helpfull cause right now i found nothing on web in C without wmi, in dayss of searching... Thank you.
EDIT : For windows system
Please try my open source tool, DiskId32, which also has the source code at http://www.winsim.com/diskid32/diskid32.html . I only have an Win32 version at this time. Maybe some day I will add a Win64 version.
Hard drive serial number and other information about the harddrive like firmware version, etc. can only be obtained using SMART as far as I know and that requires special ioctls to the the block device node (/dev/sda or /dev/sdb) which is usually not available to a regular user.
I know there is a tool called smartctl which does exactly this:
sudo smartctl -i /dev/sda
Similar tools exist (hdparm, lshw, etc.) as well.
As far as trying to figure it out this info without being a privileged user, it might be possible only if it is exposed via /proc or /sys which I highly doubt is being done in the current SATA block device drivers.

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