subsurface/profile.c

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/* profile.c */
/* creates all the necessary data for drawing the dive profile
* uses cairo to draw it
*/
Conversion to gettext to allow localization This is just the first step - convert the string literals, try to catch all the places where this isn't possible and the program needs to convert string constants at runtime (those are the N_ macros). Add a very rough first German localization so I can at least test what I have done. Seriously, I have never used a localized OS, so I am certain that I have many of the 'standard' translations wrong. Someone please take over :-) Major issues with this: - right now it hardcodes the search path for the message catalog to be ./locale - that's of course bogus, but it works well while doing initial testing. Once the tooling support is there we just should use the OS default. - even though de_DE defaults to ISO-8859-15 (or ISO-8859-1 - the internets can't seem to agree) I went with UTF-8 as that is what Gtk appears to want to use internally. ISO-8859-15 encoded .mo files create funny looking artefacts instead of Umlaute. - no support at all in the Makefile - I was hoping someone with more experience in how to best set this up would contribute a good set of Makefile rules - likely this will help fix the first issue in that it will also install the .mo file(s) in the correct place(s) For now simply run msgfmt -c -o subsurface.mo deutsch.po to create the subsurface.mo file and then move it to ./locale/de_DE.UTF-8/LC_MESSAGES/subsurface.mo If you make changes to the sources and need to add new strings to be translated, this is what seems to work (again, should be tooled through the Makefile): xgettext -o subsurface-new.pot -s -k_ -kN_ --add-comments="++GETTEXT" *.c msgmerge -s -U po/deutsch.po subsurface-new.pot If you do this PLEASE do one commit that just has the new msgid as changes in line numbers create a TON of diff-noise. Do changes to translations in a SEPARATE commit. - no testing at all on Windows or Mac It builds on Windows :-) Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2012-10-11 00:42:59 +00:00
#include <glib/gi18n.h>
#include "dive.h"
#include "display.h"
#if USE_GTK_UI
#include "display-gtk.h"
#endif
#include "divelist.h"
#include "profile.h"
#include "libdivecomputer/parser.h"
#include "libdivecomputer/version.h"
int selected_dive = 0;
char zoomed_plot = 0;
char dc_number = 0;
static struct plot_data *last_pi_entry = NULL;
#define cairo_set_line_width_scaled(cr, w) \
cairo_set_line_width((cr), (w) * plot_scale);
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
#define SENSOR_PR 0
#define INTERPOLATED_PR 1
#define SENSOR_PRESSURE(_entry) (_entry)->pressure[SENSOR_PR]
#define INTERPOLATED_PRESSURE(_entry) (_entry)->pressure[INTERPOLATED_PR]
#define GET_PRESSURE(_entry) (SENSOR_PRESSURE(_entry) ? : INTERPOLATED_PRESSURE(_entry))
#if USE_GTK_UI
/* keep the last used gc around so we can invert the SCALEX calculation in
* order to calculate a time value for an x coordinate */
static struct graphics_context last_gc;
int x_to_time(double x)
{
int seconds = (x - last_gc.drawing_area.x) / last_gc.maxx * (last_gc.rightx - last_gc.leftx) + last_gc.leftx;
return (seconds > 0) ? seconds : 0;
}
/* x offset into the drawing area */
int x_abs(double x)
{
return x - last_gc.drawing_area.x;
}
static void move_to(struct graphics_context *gc, double x, double y)
{
cairo_move_to(gc->cr, SCALE(gc, x, y));
}
static void line_to(struct graphics_context *gc, double x, double y)
{
cairo_line_to(gc->cr, SCALE(gc, x, y));
}
static void set_source_rgba(struct graphics_context *gc, color_indice_t c)
{
const color_t *col = &profile_color[c];
struct rgba rgb = col->media[gc->printer];
double r = rgb.r;
double g = rgb.g;
double b = rgb.b;
double a = rgb.a;
cairo_set_source_rgba(gc->cr, r, g, b, a);
}
void init_profile_background(struct graphics_context *gc)
{
set_source_rgba(gc, BACKGROUND);
}
static void pattern_add_color_stop_rgba(struct graphics_context *gc, cairo_pattern_t *pat, double o, color_indice_t c)
{
const color_t *col = &profile_color[c];
struct rgba rgb = col->media[gc->printer];
cairo_pattern_add_color_stop_rgba(pat, o, rgb.r, rgb.g, rgb.b, rgb.a);
}
#endif /* USE_GTK_UI */
/* debugging tool - not normally used */
static void dump_pi (struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
printf("pi:{nr:%d maxtime:%d meandepth:%d maxdepth:%d \n"
" maxpressure:%d mintemp:%d maxtemp:%d\n",
pi->nr, pi->maxtime, pi->meandepth, pi->maxdepth,
pi->maxpressure, pi->mintemp, pi->maxtemp);
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = &pi->entry[i];
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
printf(" entry[%d]:{cylinderindex:%d sec:%d pressure:{%d,%d}\n"
" time:%d:%02d temperature:%d depth:%d stopdepth:%d stoptime:%d ndl:%d smoothed:%d po2:%lf phe:%lf pn2:%lf sum-pp %lf}\n",
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
i, entry->cylinderindex, entry->sec,
entry->pressure[0], entry->pressure[1],
entry->sec / 60, entry->sec % 60,
entry->temperature, entry->depth, entry->stopdepth, entry->stoptime, entry->ndl, entry->smoothed,
entry->po2, entry->phe, entry->pn2,
entry->po2 + entry->phe + entry->pn2);
}
printf(" }\n");
}
#define ROUND_UP(x,y) ((((x)+(y)-1)/(y))*(y))
/*
* When showing dive profiles, we scale things to the
* current dive. However, we don't scale past less than
* 30 minutes or 90 ft, just so that small dives show
* up as such unless zoom is enabled.
* We also need to add 180 seconds at the end so the min/max
* plots correctly
*/
int get_maxtime(struct plot_info *pi)
{
int seconds = pi->maxtime;
if (zoomed_plot) {
/* Rounded up to one minute, with at least 2.5 minutes to
* spare.
* For dive times shorter than 10 minutes, we use seconds/4 to
* calculate the space dynamically.
* This is seamless since 600/4 = 150.
*/
if (seconds < 600)
return ROUND_UP(seconds+seconds/4, 60);
else
return ROUND_UP(seconds+150, 60);
} else {
/* min 30 minutes, rounded up to 5 minutes, with at least 2.5 minutes to spare */
return MAX(30*60, ROUND_UP(seconds+150, 60*5));
}
}
/* get the maximum depth to which we want to plot
* take into account the additional verical space needed to plot
* partial pressure graphs */
int get_maxdepth(struct plot_info *pi)
{
unsigned mm = pi->maxdepth;
int md;
if (zoomed_plot) {
/* Rounded up to 10m, with at least 3m to spare */
md = ROUND_UP(mm+3000, 10000);
} else {
/* Minimum 30m, rounded up to 10m, with at least 3m to spare */
md = MAX(30000, ROUND_UP(mm+3000, 10000));
}
md += pi->maxpp * 9000;
return md;
}
/* collect all event names and whether we display them */
struct ev_select {
char *ev_name;
gboolean plot_ev;
};
static struct ev_select *ev_namelist;
static int evn_allocated;
static int evn_used;
int evn_foreach(void (*callback)(const char *, int *, void *), void *data)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < evn_used; i++) {
/* here we display an event name on screen - so translate */
callback(_(ev_namelist[i].ev_name), &ev_namelist[i].plot_ev, data);
}
return i;
}
void clear_events(void)
{
evn_used = 0;
}
void remember_event(const char *eventname)
{
int i = 0, len;
if (!eventname || (len = strlen(eventname)) == 0)
return;
while (i < evn_used) {
if (!strncmp(eventname, ev_namelist[i].ev_name, len))
return;
i++;
}
if (evn_used == evn_allocated) {
evn_allocated += 10;
ev_namelist = realloc(ev_namelist, evn_allocated * sizeof(struct ev_select));
if (! ev_namelist)
/* we are screwed, but let's just bail out */
return;
}
ev_namelist[evn_used].ev_name = strdup(eventname);
ev_namelist[evn_used].plot_ev = TRUE;
evn_used++;
}
#if USE_GTK_UI
static void plot_one_event(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi, struct event *event)
{
int i, depth = 0;
int x,y;
char buffer[256];
/* is plotting this event disabled? */
if (event->name) {
for (i = 0; i < evn_used; i++) {
if (! strcmp(event->name, ev_namelist[i].ev_name)) {
if (ev_namelist[i].plot_ev)
break;
else
return;
}
}
}
if (event->time.seconds < 30 && !strcmp(event->name, "gaschange"))
/* a gas change in the first 30 seconds is the way of some dive computers
* to tell us the gas that is used; let's not plot a marker for that */
return;
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *data = pi->entry + i;
if (event->time.seconds < data->sec)
break;
depth = data->depth;
}
/* draw a little triangular marker and attach tooltip */
x = SCALEX(gc, event->time.seconds);
y = SCALEY(gc, depth);
set_source_rgba(gc, ALERT_BG);
cairo_move_to(gc->cr, x-6, y+12);
cairo_line_to(gc->cr, x+6, y+12);
cairo_line_to(gc->cr, x , y);
cairo_line_to(gc->cr, x-6, y+12);
cairo_stroke_preserve(gc->cr);
cairo_fill(gc->cr);
set_source_rgba(gc, ALERT_FG);
cairo_move_to(gc->cr, x, y+3);
cairo_line_to(gc->cr, x, y+7);
cairo_move_to(gc->cr, x, y+10);
cairo_line_to(gc->cr, x, y+10);
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
/* we display the event on screen - so translate */
if (event->value) {
if (event->name && !strcmp(event->name, "gaschange")) {
unsigned int he = event->value >> 16;
unsigned int o2 = event->value & 0xffff;
if (he) {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s:%u/%u",
_(event->name), o2, he);
} else {
if (o2 == 21)
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s:%s",
_(event->name), _("air"));
else
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s:%u%% %s",
_(event->name), o2, "O" UTF8_SUBSCRIPT_2);
}
} else if (event->name && !strcmp(event->name, "SP change")) {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s:%0.1f", _(event->name), (double) event->value / 1000);
} else {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s:%d", _(event->name), event->value);
}
} else if (event->name && !strcmp(event->name, "SP change")) {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), _("Bailing out to OC"));
} else {
snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "%s%s", _(event->name),
event->flags == SAMPLE_FLAGS_BEGIN ? C_("Starts with space!"," begin") :
event->flags == SAMPLE_FLAGS_END ? C_("Starts with space!", " end") : "");
}
attach_tooltip(x-6, y, 12, 12, buffer, event);
}
static void plot_events(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi, struct divecomputer *dc)
{
struct event *event = dc->events;
if (gc->printer)
return;
while (event) {
plot_one_event(gc, pi, event);
event = event->next;
}
}
static void render_depth_sample(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_data *entry, const text_render_options_t *tro)
{
int sec = entry->sec, decimals;
double d;
d = get_depth_units(entry->depth, &decimals, NULL);
plot_text(gc, tro, sec, entry->depth, "%.*f", decimals, d);
}
static void plot_text_samples(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
static const text_render_options_t deep = {14, SAMPLE_DEEP, CENTER, TOP};
static const text_render_options_t shallow = {14, SAMPLE_SHALLOW, CENTER, BOTTOM};
int i;
int last = -1;
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry + i;
if (entry->depth < 2000)
continue;
if ((entry == entry->max[2]) && entry->depth != last) {
render_depth_sample(gc, entry, &deep);
last = entry->depth;
}
if ((entry == entry->min[2]) && entry->depth != last) {
render_depth_sample(gc, entry, &shallow);
last = entry->depth;
}
if (entry->depth != last)
last = -1;
}
}
static void plot_depth_text(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int maxtime, maxdepth;
/* Get plot scaling limits */
maxtime = get_maxtime(pi);
maxdepth = get_maxdepth(pi);
gc->leftx = 0; gc->rightx = maxtime;
gc->topy = 0; gc->bottomy = maxdepth;
plot_text_samples(gc, pi);
}
static void plot_smoothed_profile(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry;
set_source_rgba(gc, SMOOTHED);
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->smoothed);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->smoothed);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
}
static void plot_minmax_profile_minute(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi,
int index)
{
int i;
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry;
set_source_rgba(gc, MINUTE);
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->min[index]->depth);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->min[index]->depth);
}
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->max[index]->depth);
entry--;
}
cairo_close_path(gc->cr);
cairo_fill(gc->cr);
}
static void plot_minmax_profile(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
if (gc->printer)
return;
plot_minmax_profile_minute(gc, pi, 2);
plot_minmax_profile_minute(gc, pi, 1);
plot_minmax_profile_minute(gc, pi, 0);
}
static void plot_depth_scale(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i, maxdepth, marker;
static const text_render_options_t tro = {DEPTH_TEXT_SIZE, SAMPLE_DEEP, RIGHT, MIDDLE};
/* Depth markers: every 30 ft or 10 m*/
maxdepth = get_maxdepth(pi);
gc->topy = 0; gc->bottomy = maxdepth;
switch (prefs.units.length) {
case METERS: marker = 10000; break;
case FEET: marker = 9144; break; /* 30 ft */
}
set_source_rgba(gc, DEPTH_GRID);
/* don't write depth labels all the way to the bottom as
* there may be other graphs below the depth plot (like
* partial pressure graphs) where this would look out
* of place - so we only make sure that we print the next
* marker below the actual maxdepth of the dive */
for (i = marker; i <= pi->maxdepth + marker; i += marker) {
double d = get_depth_units(i, NULL, NULL);
plot_text(gc, &tro, -0.002, i, "%.0f", d);
}
}
static void setup_pp_limits(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int maxdepth;
gc->leftx = 0;
gc->rightx = get_maxtime(pi);
/* the maxdepth already includes extra vertical space - and if
* we use 1.5 times the corresponding pressure as maximum partial
* pressure the graph seems to look fine*/
maxdepth = get_maxdepth(pi);
gc->topy = 1.5 * (maxdepth + 10000) / 10000.0 * SURFACE_PRESSURE / 1000;
gc->bottomy = -gc->topy / 20;
}
static void plot_pp_text(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
double pp, dpp, m;
int hpos;
static const text_render_options_t tro = {PP_TEXT_SIZE, PP_LINES, LEFT, MIDDLE};
setup_pp_limits(gc, pi);
pp = floor(pi->maxpp * 10.0) / 10.0 + 0.2;
dpp = pp > 4 ? 1.0 : 0.5;
hpos = pi->entry[pi->nr - 1].sec;
set_source_rgba(gc, PP_LINES);
for (m = 0.0; m <= pp; m += dpp) {
move_to(gc, 0, m);
line_to(gc, hpos, m);
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
plot_text(gc, &tro, hpos + 30, m, "%.1f", m);
}
}
static void plot_pp_gas_profile(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
struct plot_data *entry;
setup_pp_limits(gc, pi);
if (prefs.pp_graphs.pn2) {
set_source_rgba(gc, PN2);
entry = pi->entry;
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->pn2);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
if (entry->pn2 < prefs.pp_graphs.pn2_threshold)
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->pn2);
else
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->pn2);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
set_source_rgba(gc, PN2_ALERT);
entry = pi->entry;
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->pn2);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
if (entry->pn2 >= prefs.pp_graphs.pn2_threshold)
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->pn2);
else
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->pn2);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
}
if (prefs.pp_graphs.phe) {
set_source_rgba(gc, PHE);
entry = pi->entry;
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->phe);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
if (entry->phe < prefs.pp_graphs.phe_threshold)
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->phe);
else
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->phe);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
set_source_rgba(gc, PHE_ALERT);
entry = pi->entry;
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->phe);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
if (entry->phe >= prefs.pp_graphs.phe_threshold)
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->phe);
else
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->phe);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
}
if (prefs.pp_graphs.po2) {
set_source_rgba(gc, PO2);
entry = pi->entry;
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->po2);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
if (entry->po2 < prefs.pp_graphs.po2_threshold)
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->po2);
else
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->po2);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
set_source_rgba(gc, PO2_ALERT);
entry = pi->entry;
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->po2);
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry++;
if (entry->po2 >= prefs.pp_graphs.po2_threshold)
line_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->po2);
else
move_to(gc, entry->sec, entry->po2);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
}
}
static int setup_temperature_limits(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int maxtime, mintemp, maxtemp, delta;
/* Get plot scaling limits */
maxtime = get_maxtime(pi);
mintemp = pi->mintemp;
maxtemp = pi->maxtemp;
gc->leftx = 0; gc->rightx = maxtime;
/* Show temperatures in roughly the lower third, but make sure the scale
is at least somewhat reasonable */
delta = maxtemp - mintemp;
if (delta < 3000) /* less than 3K in fluctuation */
delta = 3000;
gc->topy = maxtemp + delta*2;
if (PP_GRAPHS_ENABLED)
gc->bottomy = mintemp - delta * 2;
else
gc->bottomy = mintemp - delta / 3;
pi->endtempcoord = SCALEY(gc, pi->mintemp);
return maxtemp && maxtemp >= mintemp;
}
static void plot_single_temp_text(struct graphics_context *gc, int sec, int mkelvin)
{
double deg;
const char *unit;
static const text_render_options_t tro = {TEMP_TEXT_SIZE, TEMP_TEXT, LEFT, TOP};
deg = get_temp_units(mkelvin, &unit);
plot_text(gc, &tro, sec, mkelvin, "%.2g%s", deg, unit);
}
static void plot_temperature_text(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
int last = -300, sec = 0;
int last_temperature = 0, last_printed_temp = 0;
if (!setup_temperature_limits(gc, pi))
return;
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry+i;
int mkelvin = entry->temperature;
sec = entry->sec;
if (!mkelvin)
continue;
last_temperature = mkelvin;
/* don't print a temperature
* if it's been less than 5min and less than a 2K change OR
* if it's been less than 2min OR if the change from the
* last print is less than .4K (and therefore less than 1F */
if (((sec < last + 300) && (abs(mkelvin - last_printed_temp) < 2000)) ||
(sec < last + 120) ||
(abs(mkelvin - last_printed_temp) < 400))
continue;
last = sec;
plot_single_temp_text(gc,sec,mkelvin);
last_printed_temp = mkelvin;
}
/* it would be nice to print the end temperature, if it's
* different or if the last temperature print has been more
* than a quarter of the dive back */
if ((abs(last_temperature - last_printed_temp) > 500) ||
((double)last / (double)sec < 0.75))
plot_single_temp_text(gc, sec, last_temperature);
}
static void plot_temperature_profile(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
cairo_t *cr = gc->cr;
int last = 0;
if (!setup_temperature_limits(gc, pi))
return;
cairo_set_line_width_scaled(gc->cr, 2);
set_source_rgba(gc, TEMP_PLOT);
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry + i;
int mkelvin = entry->temperature;
int sec = entry->sec;
if (!mkelvin) {
if (!last)
continue;
mkelvin = last;
}
if (last)
line_to(gc, sec, mkelvin);
else
move_to(gc, sec, mkelvin);
last = mkelvin;
}
cairo_stroke(cr);
}
/* gets both the actual start and end pressure as well as the scaling factors */
static int get_cylinder_pressure_range(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
gc->leftx = 0;
gc->rightx = get_maxtime(pi);
if (PP_GRAPHS_ENABLED)
gc->bottomy = -pi->maxpressure * 0.75;
else
gc->bottomy = 0;
gc->topy = pi->maxpressure * 1.5;
if (!pi->maxpressure)
return FALSE;
while (pi->endtempcoord <= SCALEY(gc, pi->minpressure - (gc->topy) * 0.1))
gc->bottomy -= gc->topy * 0.1;
return TRUE;
}
/* set the color for the pressure plot according to temporary sac rate
* as compared to avg_sac; the calculation simply maps the delta between
* sac and avg_sac to indexes 0 .. (SAC_COLORS - 1) with everything
* more than 6000 ml/min below avg_sac mapped to 0 */
void set_sac_color(struct graphics_context *gc, int sac, int avg_sac)
{
int sac_index = 0;
int delta = sac - avg_sac + 7000;
if (!gc->printer) {
sac_index = delta / 2000;
if (sac_index < 0)
sac_index = 0;
if (sac_index > SAC_COLORS - 1)
sac_index = SAC_COLORS - 1;
set_source_rgba(gc, SAC_COLORS_START_IDX + sac_index);
} else {
set_source_rgba(gc, SAC_DEFAULT);
}
}
#endif /* USE_GTK_UI */
/* Get local sac-rate (in ml/min) between entry1 and entry2 */
int get_local_sac(struct plot_data *entry1, struct plot_data *entry2, struct dive *dive)
{
int index = entry1->cylinderindex;
cylinder_t *cyl;
int duration = entry2->sec - entry1->sec;
int depth, airuse;
pressure_t a, b;
double atm;
if (entry2->cylinderindex != index)
return 0;
if (duration <= 0)
return 0;
a.mbar = GET_PRESSURE(entry1);
b.mbar = GET_PRESSURE(entry2);
if (!a.mbar || !b.mbar)
return 0;
/* Mean pressure in ATM */
depth = (entry1->depth + entry2->depth) / 2;
atm = (double) depth_to_mbar(depth, dive) / SURFACE_PRESSURE;
cyl = dive->cylinder + index;
airuse = gas_volume(cyl, a) - gas_volume(cyl, b);
/* milliliters per minute */
return airuse / atm * 60 / duration;
}
/* calculate the current SAC in ml/min and convert to int */
#define GET_LOCAL_SAC(_entry1, _entry2, _dive) \
get_local_sac(_entry1, _entry2, _dive)
#define SAC_WINDOW 45 /* sliding window in seconds for current SAC calculation */
#if USE_GTK_UI
static void plot_cylinder_pressure(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi,
struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc)
{
int i;
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
int last = -1, last_index = -1;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
int lift_pen = FALSE;
int first_plot = TRUE;
int sac = 0;
struct plot_data *last_entry = NULL;
if (!get_cylinder_pressure_range(gc, pi))
return;
cairo_set_line_width_scaled(gc->cr, 2);
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
int mbar;
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry + i;
mbar = GET_PRESSURE(entry);
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
if (entry->cylinderindex != last_index) {
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
lift_pen = TRUE;
last_entry = NULL;
}
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
if (!mbar) {
lift_pen = TRUE;
continue;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
}
if (!last_entry) {
last = i;
last_entry = entry;
sac = GET_LOCAL_SAC(entry, pi->entry + i + 1, dive);
} else {
int j;
sac = 0;
for (j = last; j < i; j++)
sac += GET_LOCAL_SAC(pi->entry + j, pi->entry + j + 1, dive);
sac /= (i - last);
if (entry->sec - last_entry->sec >= SAC_WINDOW) {
last++;
last_entry = pi->entry + last;
}
}
set_sac_color(gc, sac, dive->sac);
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
if (lift_pen) {
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
if (!first_plot && entry->cylinderindex == last_index) {
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
/* if we have a previous event from the same tank,
* draw at least a short line */
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
int prev_pr;
prev_pr = GET_PRESSURE(entry - 1);
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
move_to(gc, (entry-1)->sec, prev_pr);
line_to(gc, entry->sec, mbar);
} else {
first_plot = FALSE;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
move_to(gc, entry->sec, mbar);
}
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
lift_pen = FALSE;
} else {
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
line_to(gc, entry->sec, mbar);
}
cairo_stroke(gc->cr);
move_to(gc, entry->sec, mbar);
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
last_index = entry->cylinderindex;
}
}
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
static void plot_pressure_value(struct graphics_context *gc, int mbar, int sec,
int xalign, int yalign)
{
int pressure;
const char *unit;
pressure = get_pressure_units(mbar, &unit);
text_render_options_t tro = {PRESSURE_TEXT_SIZE, PRESSURE_TEXT, xalign, yalign};
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
plot_text(gc, &tro, sec, mbar, "%d %s", pressure, unit);
}
static void plot_cylinder_pressure_text(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
int i;
int mbar, cyl;
int seen_cyl[MAX_CYLINDERS] = { FALSE, };
int last_pressure[MAX_CYLINDERS] = { 0, };
int last_time[MAX_CYLINDERS] = { 0, };
struct plot_data *entry;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
if (!get_cylinder_pressure_range(gc, pi))
return;
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
cyl = -1;
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
entry = pi->entry + i;
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
mbar = GET_PRESSURE(entry);
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
if (!mbar)
continue;
if (cyl != entry->cylinderindex) {
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
cyl = entry->cylinderindex;
if (!seen_cyl[cyl]) {
plot_pressure_value(gc, mbar, entry->sec, LEFT, BOTTOM);
seen_cyl[cyl] = TRUE;
}
}
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
last_pressure[cyl] = mbar;
last_time[cyl] = entry->sec;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
}
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
for (cyl = 0; cyl < MAX_CYLINDERS; cyl++) {
if (last_time[cyl]) {
plot_pressure_value(gc, last_pressure[cyl], last_time[cyl], CENTER, TOP);
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
}
}
}
static void plot_deco_text(struct graphics_context *gc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
if (prefs.profile_calc_ceiling) {
float x = gc->leftx + (gc->rightx - gc->leftx) / 2;
float y = gc->topy = 1.0;
text_render_options_t tro = {PRESSURE_TEXT_SIZE, PRESSURE_TEXT, CENTER, -0.2};
gc->bottomy = 0.0;
plot_text(gc, &tro, x, y, "GF %.0f/%.0f", prefs.gflow * 100, prefs.gfhigh * 100);
}
}
#endif /* USE_GTK_UI */
static void analyze_plot_info_minmax_minute(struct plot_data *entry, struct plot_data *first, struct plot_data *last, int index)
{
struct plot_data *p = entry;
int time = entry->sec;
int seconds = 90*(index+1);
struct plot_data *min, *max;
int avg, nr;
/* Go back 'seconds' in time */
while (p > first) {
if (p[-1].sec < time - seconds)
break;
p--;
}
/* Then go forward until we hit an entry past the time */
min = max = p;
avg = p->depth;
nr = 1;
while (++p < last) {
int depth = p->depth;
if (p->sec > time + seconds)
break;
avg += depth;
nr ++;
if (depth < min->depth)
min = p;
if (depth > max->depth)
max = p;
}
entry->min[index] = min;
entry->max[index] = max;
entry->avg[index] = (avg + nr/2) / nr;
}
static void analyze_plot_info_minmax(struct plot_data *entry, struct plot_data *first, struct plot_data *last)
{
analyze_plot_info_minmax_minute(entry, first, last, 0);
analyze_plot_info_minmax_minute(entry, first, last, 1);
analyze_plot_info_minmax_minute(entry, first, last, 2);
}
static velocity_t velocity(int speed)
{
velocity_t v;
if (speed < -304) /* ascent faster than -60ft/min */
v = CRAZY;
else if (speed < -152) /* above -30ft/min */
v = FAST;
else if (speed < -76) /* -15ft/min */
v = MODERATE;
else if (speed < -25) /* -5ft/min */
v = SLOW;
else if (speed < 25) /* very hard to find data, but it appears that the recommendations
for descent are usually about 2x ascent rate; still, we want
stable to mean stable */
v = STABLE;
else if (speed < 152) /* between 5 and 30ft/min is considered slow */
v = SLOW;
else if (speed < 304) /* up to 60ft/min is moderate */
v = MODERATE;
else if (speed < 507) /* up to 100ft/min is fast */
v = FAST;
else /* more than that is just crazy - you'll blow your ears out */
v = CRAZY;
return v;
}
static struct plot_info *analyze_plot_info(struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
int nr = pi->nr;
/* Smoothing function: 5-point triangular smooth */
for (i = 2; i < nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry+i;
int depth;
if (i < nr-2) {
depth = entry[-2].depth + 2*entry[-1].depth + 3*entry[0].depth + 2*entry[1].depth + entry[2].depth;
entry->smoothed = (depth+4) / 9;
}
/* vertical velocity in mm/sec */
/* Linus wants to smooth this - let's at least look at the samples that aren't FAST or CRAZY */
if (entry[0].sec - entry[-1].sec) {
entry->velocity = velocity((entry[0].depth - entry[-1].depth) / (entry[0].sec - entry[-1].sec));
/* if our samples are short and we aren't too FAST*/
if (entry[0].sec - entry[-1].sec < 15 && entry->velocity < FAST) {
int past = -2;
while (i+past > 0 && entry[0].sec - entry[past].sec < 15)
past--;
entry->velocity = velocity((entry[0].depth - entry[past].depth) /
(entry[0].sec - entry[past].sec));
}
} else {
entry->velocity = STABLE;
}
}
/* One-, two- and three-minute minmax data */
for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry +i;
analyze_plot_info_minmax(entry, pi->entry, pi->entry+nr);
}
return pi;
}
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
/*
* simple structure to track the beginning and end tank pressure as
* well as the integral of depth over time spent while we have no
* pressure reading from the tank */
typedef struct pr_track_struct pr_track_t;
struct pr_track_struct {
int start;
int end;
int t_start;
int t_end;
int pressure_time;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
pr_track_t *next;
};
static pr_track_t *pr_track_alloc(int start, int t_start) {
pr_track_t *pt = malloc(sizeof(pr_track_t));
pt->start = start;
pt->end = 0;
pt->t_start = pt->t_end = t_start;
pt->pressure_time = 0;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
pt->next = NULL;
return pt;
}
/* poor man's linked list */
static pr_track_t *list_last(pr_track_t *list)
{
pr_track_t *tail = list;
if (!tail)
return NULL;
while (tail->next) {
tail = tail->next;
}
return tail;
}
static pr_track_t *list_add(pr_track_t *list, pr_track_t *element)
{
pr_track_t *tail = list_last(list);
if (!tail)
return element;
tail->next = element;
return list;
}
static void list_free(pr_track_t *list)
{
if (!list)
return;
list_free(list->next);
free(list);
}
static void dump_pr_track(pr_track_t **track_pr)
{
int cyl;
pr_track_t *list;
for (cyl = 0; cyl < MAX_CYLINDERS; cyl++) {
list = track_pr[cyl];
while (list) {
printf("cyl%d: start %d end %d t_start %d t_end %d pt %d\n", cyl,
list->start, list->end, list->t_start, list->t_end, list->pressure_time);
list = list->next;
}
}
}
/*
* This looks at the pressures for one cylinder, and
* calculates any missing beginning/end pressures for
* each segment by taking the over-all SAC-rate into
* account for that cylinder.
*
* NOTE! Many segments have full pressure information
* (both beginning and ending pressure). But if we have
* switched away from a cylinder, we will have the
* beginning pressure for the first segment with a
* missing end pressure. We may then have one or more
* segments without beginning or end pressures, until
* we finally have a segment with an end pressure.
*
* We want to spread out the pressure over these missing
* segments according to how big of a time_pressure area
* they have.
*/
static void fill_missing_segment_pressures(pr_track_t *list)
{
while (list) {
int start = list->start, end;
pr_track_t *tmp = list;
int pt_sum = 0, pt = 0;
for (;;) {
pt_sum += tmp->pressure_time;
end = tmp->end;
if (end)
break;
end = start;
if (!tmp->next)
break;
tmp = tmp->next;
}
if (!start)
start = end;
/*
* Now 'start' and 'end' contain the pressure values
* for the set of segments described by 'list'..'tmp'.
* pt_sum is the sum of all the pressure-times of the
* segments.
*
* Now dole out the pressures relative to pressure-time.
*/
list->start = start;
tmp->end = end;
for (;;) {
int pressure;
pt += list->pressure_time;
pressure = start;
if (pt_sum)
pressure -= (start-end)*(double)pt/pt_sum;
list->end = pressure;
if (list == tmp)
break;
list = list->next;
list->start = pressure;
}
/* Ok, we've done that set of segments */
list = list->next;
}
}
/*
* What's the pressure-time between two plot data entries?
* We're calculating the integral of pressure over time by
* adding these up.
*
* The units won't matter as long as everybody agrees about
* them, since they'll cancel out - we use this to calculate
* a constant SAC-rate-equivalent, but we only use it to
* scale pressures, so it ends up being a unitless scaling
* factor.
*/
static inline int pressure_time(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct plot_data *a, struct plot_data *b)
{
int time = b->sec - a->sec;
int depth = (a->depth + b->depth)/2;
return depth_to_mbar(depth, dive) * time;
}
static void fill_missing_tank_pressures(struct dive *dive, struct plot_info *pi, pr_track_t **track_pr)
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
{
int cyl, i;
struct plot_data *entry;
int cur_pr[MAX_CYLINDERS];
if (0) {
/* another great debugging tool */
dump_pr_track(track_pr);
}
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
for (cyl = 0; cyl < MAX_CYLINDERS; cyl++) {
if (!track_pr[cyl])
continue;
fill_missing_segment_pressures(track_pr[cyl]);
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
cur_pr[cyl] = track_pr[cyl]->start;
}
/* The first two are "fillers", but in case we don't have a sample
* at time 0 we need to process the second of them here */
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
double magic, cur_pt;
pr_track_t *segment;
int pressure;
entry = pi->entry + i;
cyl = entry->cylinderindex;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
if (SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry)) {
cur_pr[cyl] = SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry);
continue;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
}
/* Find the right pressure segment for this entry.. */
segment = track_pr[cyl];
while (segment && segment->t_end < entry->sec)
segment = segment->next;
/* No (or empty) segment? Just use our current pressure */
if (!segment || !segment->pressure_time) {
SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry) = cur_pr[cyl];
continue;
}
/* Overall pressure change over total pressure-time for this segment*/
magic = (segment->end - segment->start) / (double) segment->pressure_time;
/* Use that overall pressure change to update the current pressure */
cur_pt = pressure_time(dive, &dive->dc, entry-1, entry);
pressure = cur_pr[cyl] + cur_pt * magic + 0.5;
INTERPOLATED_PRESSURE(entry) = pressure;
cur_pr[cyl] = pressure;
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
}
}
static int get_cylinder_index(struct dive *dive, struct event *ev)
{
int i;
int best = 0, score = INT_MAX;
int target_o2, target_he;
/*
* Crazy gas change events give us odd encoded o2/he in percent.
* Decode into our internal permille format.
*/
target_o2 = (ev->value & 0xFFFF) * 10;
target_he = (ev->value >> 16) * 10;
/*
* Try to find a cylinder that best matches the target gas
* mix.
*/
for (i = 0; i < MAX_CYLINDERS; i++) {
cylinder_t *cyl = dive->cylinder+i;
int delta_o2, delta_he, distance;
if (cylinder_nodata(cyl))
continue;
delta_o2 = get_o2(&cyl->gasmix) - target_o2;
delta_he = get_he(&cyl->gasmix) - target_he;
distance = delta_o2 * delta_o2 + delta_he * delta_he;
if (distance >= score)
continue;
score = distance;
best = i;
}
return best;
}
struct event *get_next_event(struct event *event, char *name)
{
if (!name || !*name)
return NULL;
while (event) {
if (!strcmp(event->name, name))
return event;
event = event->next;
}
return event;
}
static int set_cylinder_index(struct plot_info *pi, int i, int cylinderindex, unsigned int end)
{
while (i < pi->nr) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry+i;
if (entry->sec > end)
break;
if (entry->cylinderindex != cylinderindex) {
entry->cylinderindex = cylinderindex;
entry->pressure[0] = 0;
}
i++;
}
return i;
}
static void check_gas_change_events(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i = 0, cylinderindex = 0;
struct event *ev = get_next_event(dc->events, "gaschange");
if (!ev)
return;
do {
i = set_cylinder_index(pi, i, cylinderindex, ev->time.seconds);
cylinderindex = get_cylinder_index(dive, ev);
ev = get_next_event(ev->next, "gaschange");
} while (ev);
set_cylinder_index(pi, i, cylinderindex, ~0u);
}
void calculate_max_limits(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct graphics_context *gc)
{
struct plot_info *pi;
int maxdepth;
int maxtime = 0;
int maxpressure = 0, minpressure = INT_MAX;
int mintemp, maxtemp;
int cyl;
/* The plot-info is embedded in the graphics context */
pi = &gc->pi;
memset(pi, 0, sizeof(*pi));
maxdepth = dive->maxdepth.mm;
mintemp = dive->mintemp.mkelvin;
maxtemp = dive->maxtemp.mkelvin;
/* Get the per-cylinder maximum pressure if they are manual */
for (cyl = 0; cyl < MAX_CYLINDERS; cyl++) {
unsigned int mbar = dive->cylinder[cyl].start.mbar;
if (mbar > maxpressure)
maxpressure = mbar;
}
/* Then do all the samples from all the dive computers */
do {
int i = dc->samples;
int lastdepth = 0;
struct sample *s = dc->sample;
while (--i >= 0) {
int depth = s->depth.mm;
int pressure = s->cylinderpressure.mbar;
int temperature = s->temperature.mkelvin;
if (!mintemp && temperature < mintemp)
mintemp = temperature;
if (temperature > maxtemp)
maxtemp = temperature;
if (pressure && pressure < minpressure)
minpressure = pressure;
if (pressure > maxpressure)
maxpressure = pressure;
if (depth > maxdepth)
maxdepth = s->depth.mm;
if ((depth > SURFACE_THRESHOLD || lastdepth > SURFACE_THRESHOLD) &&
s->time.seconds > maxtime)
maxtime = s->time.seconds;
lastdepth = depth;
s++;
}
} while ((dc = dc->next) != NULL);
if (minpressure > maxpressure)
minpressure = 0;
pi->maxdepth = maxdepth;
pi->maxtime = maxtime;
pi->maxpressure = maxpressure;
pi->minpressure = minpressure;
pi->mintemp = mintemp;
pi->maxtemp = maxtemp;
}
static struct plot_data *populate_plot_entries(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int idx, maxtime, nr, i;
int lastdepth, lasttime;
struct plot_data *plot_data;
maxtime = pi->maxtime;
/*
* We want to have a plot_info event at least every 10s (so "maxtime/10+1"),
* but samples could be more dense than that (so add in dc->samples), and
* additionally we want two surface events around the whole thing (thus the
* additional 4).
*/
nr = dc->samples + 5 + maxtime / 10;
plot_data = calloc(nr, sizeof(struct plot_data));
pi->entry = plot_data;
if (!plot_data)
return NULL;
pi->nr = nr;
idx = 2; /* the two extra events at the start */
lastdepth = 0;
lasttime = 0;
for (i = 0; i < dc->samples; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = plot_data + idx;
struct sample *sample = dc->sample+i;
int time = sample->time.seconds;
int depth = sample->depth.mm;
int offset, delta;
/* Add intermediate plot entries if required */
delta = time - lasttime;
if (delta < 0) {
time = lasttime;
delta = 0;
}
for (offset = 10; offset < delta; offset += 10) {
if (lasttime + offset > maxtime)
break;
/* Use the data from the previous plot entry */
*entry = entry[-1];
/* .. but update depth and time, obviously */
entry->sec = lasttime + offset;
entry->depth = interpolate(lastdepth, depth, offset, delta);
/* And clear out the sensor pressure, since we'll interpolate */
SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry) = 0;
idx++; entry++;
}
if (time > maxtime)
break;
entry->sec = time;
entry->depth = depth;
entry->stopdepth = sample->stopdepth.mm;
entry->stoptime = sample->stoptime.seconds;
entry->ndl = sample->ndl.seconds;
pi->has_ndl |= sample->ndl.seconds;
entry->in_deco = sample->in_deco;
entry->cns = sample->cns;
entry->po2 = sample->po2 / 1000.0;
/* FIXME! sensor index -> cylinder index translation! */
entry->cylinderindex = sample->sensor;
SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry) = sample->cylinderpressure.mbar;
entry->temperature = sample->temperature.mkelvin;
lasttime = time;
lastdepth = depth;
idx++;
}
/* Add two final surface events */
plot_data[idx++].sec = lasttime+10;
plot_data[idx++].sec = lasttime+20;
pi->nr = idx;
return plot_data;
}
static void populate_cylinder_pressure_data(int idx, int start, int end, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
/* First: check that none of the entries has sensor pressure for this cylinder index */
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry+i;
if (entry->cylinderindex != idx)
continue;
if (SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry))
return;
}
/* Then: populate the first entry with the beginning cylinder pressure */
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry+i;
if (entry->cylinderindex != idx)
continue;
SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry) = start;
break;
}
/* .. and the last entry with the ending cylinder pressure */
for (i = pi->nr; --i >= 0; /* nothing */) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry+i;
if (entry->cylinderindex != idx)
continue;
SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry) = end;
break;
}
}
static void populate_secondary_sensor_data(struct divecomputer *dc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
/* We should try to see if it has interesting pressure data here */
}
static void setup_gas_sensor_pressure(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
struct divecomputer *secondary;
/* First, populate the pressures with the manual cylinder data.. */
for (i = 0; i < MAX_CYLINDERS; i++) {
cylinder_t *cyl = dive->cylinder+i;
int start = cyl->start.mbar ? : cyl->sample_start.mbar;
int end = cyl->end.mbar ? : cyl->sample_end.mbar;
if (!start || !end)
continue;
populate_cylinder_pressure_data(i, start, end, pi);
}
/*
* Here, we should try to walk through all the dive computers,
* and try to see if they have sensor data different from the
* primary dive computer (dc).
*/
secondary = &dive->dc;
do {
if (secondary == dc)
continue;
populate_secondary_sensor_data(dc, pi);
} while ((secondary = secondary->next) != NULL);
}
static void populate_pressure_information(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i, cylinderindex;
pr_track_t *track_pr[MAX_CYLINDERS] = {NULL, };
pr_track_t *current;
gboolean missing_pr = FALSE;
cylinderindex = -1;
current = NULL;
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry + i;
unsigned pressure = SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry);
/* discrete integration of pressure over time to get the SAC rate equivalent */
if (current) {
current->pressure_time += pressure_time(dive, dc, entry-1, entry);
current->t_end = entry->sec;
}
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
/* track the segments per cylinder and their pressure/time integral */
Fix overly complicated and fragile "same_cylinder" logic The plot-info per-event 'same_cylinder' logic was fragile, and caused us to not print the beginning pressure of the first cylinder. In particular, there was a nasty interaction with not all plot entries having pressures, and the whole logic that avoid some of the early plot entries because they are fake entries that are just there to make sure that we don't step off the edge of the world. When we then only do certain things on the particular entries that don't have the same cylinder as the last plot entry, things don't always happen like they should. Fix this by: - get rid of the computed "same_cylinder" state entirely. All the cases where we use it, we might as well just look at what the last cylinder we used was, and thus "same_cylinder" is just about testing the current cylinder index against that last index. - get rid of some of the edge conditions by just writing the loops more clearly, so that they simply don't have special cases. For example, instead of setting some "last_pressure" for a cylinder at cylinder changes, just set the damn thing on every single sample. The last pressure will automatically be the pressure we set last! The code is simpler and more straightforward. So this simplifies the code and just makes it less fragile - it doesn't matter if the cylinder change happens to happen at a sample that doesn't have a pressure reading, for example, because we no longer care so deeply about exactly which sample the cylinder change happens at. As a result, the bug Mika noticed just goes away. Reported-by: Miika Turkia <miika.turkia@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-25 01:55:48 +00:00
if (entry->cylinderindex != cylinderindex) {
cylinderindex = entry->cylinderindex;
current = pr_track_alloc(pressure, entry->sec);
Plot tank pressures for multiple tanks The code keeps track of the segments of time when a specific tank was used and interpolates the pressure values for that tank based on a simulated average SAC rate for the times in which no pressure readings are available. This changes the way we used to plot the pressure when only beginning and end pressure of a tank are known; it used to be a straight line, now it is a sloped line where the steepness of the slope is proportional to the depth at that point - which is much more realistic. We also plot the pressures in two colors now. The old green for pressure data that came from the input file (that is not the same thing as saying it came from the computer - divelog for example appear to create pressure readings in the samples even if it only has beginning and end pressure). Interpolated values are plotted in yellow. If you have a sub-standard dive computer which has a frequently failing pressure sensor, you can now tell the parts of the plot where data was missing and we are filling in. The function that prints the pressure text labels had to be completely redone as it previously assumed one tank for the whole dive and simplisticly printed that tank's start and end pressure at the beginning and end of the profile plot with the y-values being the maximum and minimum pressure... This commit introduces a custom simplistic single linked list data structure to keep track of the pressure information per segment - Linus hated the idea of using GList for this purpose, and I have to admit that in the end this was very straight forward to implement and made the code easier to read and debug. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2011-10-22 02:04:44 +00:00
track_pr[cylinderindex] = list_add(track_pr[cylinderindex], current);
continue;
}
if (!pressure) {
missing_pr = 1;
continue;
}
current->end = pressure;
/* Was it continuous? */
if (SENSOR_PRESSURE(entry-1))
continue;
/* transmitter changed its working status */
current = pr_track_alloc(pressure, entry->sec);
track_pr[cylinderindex] = list_add(track_pr[cylinderindex], current);
}
if (missing_pr) {
fill_missing_tank_pressures(dive, pi, track_pr);
}
for (i = 0; i < MAX_CYLINDERS; i++)
list_free(track_pr[i]);
}
static void calculate_deco_information(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct plot_info *pi)
{
int i;
double amb_pressure;
double surface_pressure = (dc->surface_pressure.mbar ? dc->surface_pressure.mbar : get_surface_pressure_in_mbar(dive, TRUE)) / 1000.0;
for (i = 1; i < pi->nr; i++) {
int fo2, fhe, j, t0, t1;
double tissue_tolerance;
struct plot_data *entry = pi->entry + i;
int cylinderindex = entry->cylinderindex;
amb_pressure = depth_to_mbar(entry->depth, dive) / 1000.0;
fo2 = get_o2(&dive->cylinder[cylinderindex].gasmix);
fhe = get_he(&dive->cylinder[cylinderindex].gasmix);
double ratio = (double)fhe / (1000.0 - fo2);
if (entry->po2) {
/* we have an O2 partial pressure in the sample - so this
* is likely a CC dive... use that instead of the value
* from the cylinder info */
double po2 = entry->po2 > amb_pressure ? amb_pressure : entry->po2;
entry->po2 = po2;
entry->phe = (amb_pressure - po2) * ratio;
entry->pn2 = amb_pressure - po2 - entry->phe;
} else {
entry->po2 = fo2 / 1000.0 * amb_pressure;
entry->phe = fhe / 1000.0 * amb_pressure;
entry->pn2 = (1000 - fo2 - fhe) / 1000.0 * amb_pressure;
}
/* Calculate MOD, EAD, END and EADD based on partial pressures calculated before
* so there is no difference in calculating between OC and CC
* EAD takes O2 + N2 (air) into account
* END just uses N2 */
entry->mod = (prefs.mod_ppO2 / fo2 * 1000 - 1) * 10000;
entry->ead = (entry->depth + 10000) *
(entry->po2 + (amb_pressure - entry->po2) * (1 - ratio)) / amb_pressure - 10000;
entry->end = (entry->depth + 10000) *
(amb_pressure - entry->po2) * (1 - ratio) / amb_pressure / N2_IN_AIR * 1000 - 10000;
entry->eadd = (entry->depth + 10000) *
(entry->po2 / amb_pressure * O2_DENSITY + entry->pn2 / amb_pressure *
N2_DENSITY + entry->phe / amb_pressure * HE_DENSITY) /
(O2_IN_AIR * O2_DENSITY + N2_IN_AIR * N2_DENSITY) * 1000 -10000;
if (entry->mod < 0)
entry->mod = 0;
if (entry->ead < 0)
entry->ead = 0;
if (entry->end < 0)
entry->end = 0;
if (entry->eadd < 0)
entry->eadd = 0;
if (entry->po2 > pi->maxpp && prefs.pp_graphs.po2)
pi->maxpp = entry->po2;
if (entry->phe > pi->maxpp && prefs.pp_graphs.phe)
pi->maxpp = entry->phe;
if (entry->pn2 > pi->maxpp && prefs.pp_graphs.pn2)
pi->maxpp = entry->pn2;
/* and now let's try to do some deco calculations */
t0 = (entry - 1)->sec;
t1 = entry->sec;
tissue_tolerance = 0;
Fix odd calculated deco "ripples" Previously we calculate the ceiling at every single second, using the interpolated depth but then only *save* the ceiling at the points where we have a profile event (the whole deco_allowed_depth() function doesn't change any state, so we can just drop it entirely at points that we aren't going to save) Why is it incorrect? I'll try to walk through my understanding of it, by switching things around a bit. - the whole "minimum tissue tolerance" thing could equally well be rewritten to be about "maximum ceiling". And that's easier to think about (since it's what we actually show), so let's do that. - so turning "min_pressure" into "max_ceiling", doing the whole comparison inside the loop means is that we are calculating the maximum ceiling value for the duration of the last sample. And then instead of visualizing the ceiling AT THE TIME OF MAXIMUM CEILING, we visualize that maximal ceiling value AT THE TIME OF THE SAMPLE. End result: we visualize the ceiling at the wrong time. We visualize what was *a* ceiling somewhere in between that sample and the previous one, but we then assign that value to the time of the sample itself. So it ends up having random odd effects. And that also explains why you only see the effect during the ascent. During the descent, the max ceiling will be at the end of our linearization of the sampling, which is - surprise surprise - the position of the sample itself. So we end up seeing the right ceiling at the right time while descending. So the visualization matches the math. But during desaturation, the maximum ceiling is not at the end of the sample period, it's at the beginning. So the whole "max ceiling" thing has basically turned what should be a smooth graph into something that approaches being a step-wise graph at each sample. Ergo: a ripple. And doing the "max_ceiling during the sample interval" thing may sound like the safe thing to do, but the thing is, that really *is* a false sense of safety. The ceiling value is *not* what we compute. The ceiling value is just a visualization of what we computed. Playing games with it can only make the visualization of the real data worse, not better. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-14 16:26:40 +00:00
for (j = t0+1; j <= t1; j++) {
int depth = interpolate(entry[-1].depth, entry[0].depth, j - t0, t1 - t0);
double min_pressure = add_segment(depth_to_mbar(depth, dive) / 1000.0,
&dive->cylinder[cylinderindex].gasmix, 1, entry->po2 * 1000, dive);
Fix odd calculated deco "ripples" Previously we calculate the ceiling at every single second, using the interpolated depth but then only *save* the ceiling at the points where we have a profile event (the whole deco_allowed_depth() function doesn't change any state, so we can just drop it entirely at points that we aren't going to save) Why is it incorrect? I'll try to walk through my understanding of it, by switching things around a bit. - the whole "minimum tissue tolerance" thing could equally well be rewritten to be about "maximum ceiling". And that's easier to think about (since it's what we actually show), so let's do that. - so turning "min_pressure" into "max_ceiling", doing the whole comparison inside the loop means is that we are calculating the maximum ceiling value for the duration of the last sample. And then instead of visualizing the ceiling AT THE TIME OF MAXIMUM CEILING, we visualize that maximal ceiling value AT THE TIME OF THE SAMPLE. End result: we visualize the ceiling at the wrong time. We visualize what was *a* ceiling somewhere in between that sample and the previous one, but we then assign that value to the time of the sample itself. So it ends up having random odd effects. And that also explains why you only see the effect during the ascent. During the descent, the max ceiling will be at the end of our linearization of the sampling, which is - surprise surprise - the position of the sample itself. So we end up seeing the right ceiling at the right time while descending. So the visualization matches the math. But during desaturation, the maximum ceiling is not at the end of the sample period, it's at the beginning. So the whole "max ceiling" thing has basically turned what should be a smooth graph into something that approaches being a step-wise graph at each sample. Ergo: a ripple. And doing the "max_ceiling during the sample interval" thing may sound like the safe thing to do, but the thing is, that really *is* a false sense of safety. The ceiling value is *not* what we compute. The ceiling value is just a visualization of what we computed. Playing games with it can only make the visualization of the real data worse, not better. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2013-01-14 16:26:40 +00:00
tissue_tolerance = min_pressure;
}
if (t0 == t1)
entry->ceiling = (entry - 1)->ceiling;
else
entry->ceiling = deco_allowed_depth(tissue_tolerance, surface_pressure, dive, !prefs.calc_ceiling_3m_incr);
}
#if DECO_CALC_DEBUG & 1
dump_tissues();
#endif
}
/*
* Create a plot-info with smoothing and ranged min/max
*
* This also makes sure that we have extra empty events on both
* sides, so that you can do end-points without having to worry
* about it.
*/
struct plot_info *create_plot_info(struct dive *dive, struct divecomputer *dc, struct graphics_context *gc)
{
struct plot_info *pi;
/* The plot-info is embedded in the graphics context */
pi = &gc->pi;
/* reset deco information to start the calculation */
init_decompression(dive);
/* Create the new plot data */
if (last_pi_entry)
free((void *)last_pi_entry);
last_pi_entry = populate_plot_entries(dive, dc, pi);
/* Populate the gas index from the gas change events */
check_gas_change_events(dive, dc, pi);
/* Try to populate our gas pressure knowledge */
setup_gas_sensor_pressure(dive, dc, pi);
/* .. calculate missing pressure entries */
populate_pressure_information(dive, dc, pi);
/* Then, calculate partial pressures and deco information */
calculate_deco_information(dive, dc, pi);
pi->meandepth = dive->dc.meandepth.mm;
if (0) /* awesome for debugging - not useful otherwise */
dump_pi(pi);
return analyze_plot_info(pi);
}
#if USE_GTK_UI
static void plot_set_scale(scale_mode_t scale)
{
switch (scale) {
default:
case SC_SCREEN:
plot_scale = SCALE_SCREEN;
break;
case SC_PRINT:
plot_scale = SCALE_PRINT;
break;
}
}
#endif
/* make sure you pass this the FIRST dc - it just walks the list */
static int nr_dcs(struct divecomputer *main)
{
int i = 1;
struct divecomputer *dc = main;
while ((dc = dc->next) != NULL)
i++;
return i;
}
struct divecomputer *select_dc(struct divecomputer *main)
{
int i = dc_number;
struct divecomputer *dc = main;
while (i < 0)
i += nr_dcs(main);
do {
if (--i < 0)
return dc;
} while ((dc = dc->next) != NULL);
/* If we switched dives to one with fewer DC's, reset the dive computer counter */
dc_number = 0;
return main;
}
static void plot_string(struct plot_data *entry, char *buf, size_t bufsize,
int depth, int pressure, int temp, gboolean has_ndl)
{
int pressurevalue, mod, ead, end, eadd;
const char *depth_unit, *pressure_unit, *temp_unit;
char *buf2 = malloc(bufsize);
double depthvalue, tempvalue;
depthvalue = get_depth_units(depth, NULL, &depth_unit);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("D:%.1f %s"), depthvalue, depth_unit);
if (pressure) {
pressurevalue = get_pressure_units(pressure, &pressure_unit);
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nP:%d %s"), buf2, pressurevalue, pressure_unit);
}
if (temp) {
tempvalue = get_temp_units(temp, &temp_unit);
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nT:%.1f %s"), buf2, tempvalue, temp_unit);
}
if (entry->ceiling) {
depthvalue = get_depth_units(entry->ceiling, NULL, &depth_unit);
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nCalculated ceiling %.0f %s"), buf2, depthvalue, depth_unit);
}
if (entry->stopdepth) {
depthvalue = get_depth_units(entry->stopdepth, NULL, &depth_unit);
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
if (entry->ndl) {
/* this is a safety stop as we still have ndl */
if (entry->stoptime)
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nSafetystop:%umin @ %.0f %s"), buf2, entry->stoptime / 60,
depthvalue, depth_unit);
else
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nSafetystop:unkn time @ %.0f %s"), buf2,
depthvalue, depth_unit);
} else {
/* actual deco stop */
if (entry->stoptime)
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nDeco:%umin @ %.0f %s"), buf2, entry->stoptime / 60,
depthvalue, depth_unit);
else
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nDeco:unkn time @ %.0f %s"), buf2,
depthvalue, depth_unit);
}
} else if (entry->in_deco) {
/* this means we had in_deco set but don't have a stop depth */
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nIn deco"), buf2);
} else if (has_ndl) {
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nNDL:%umin"), buf2, entry->ndl / 60);
}
if (entry->cns) {
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nCNS:%u%%"), buf2, entry->cns);
}
if (prefs.pp_graphs.po2) {
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\npO%s:%.2fbar"), buf2, UTF8_SUBSCRIPT_2, entry->po2);
}
if (prefs.pp_graphs.pn2) {
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\npN%s:%.2fbar"), buf2, UTF8_SUBSCRIPT_2, entry->pn2);
}
if (prefs.pp_graphs.phe) {
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\npHe:%.2fbar"), buf2, entry->phe);
}
if (prefs.mod) {
mod = (int)get_depth_units(entry->mod, NULL, &depth_unit);
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nMOD:%d%s"), buf2, mod, depth_unit);
}
if (prefs.ead) {
ead = (int)get_depth_units(entry->ead, NULL, &depth_unit);
end = (int)get_depth_units(entry->end, NULL, &depth_unit);
eadd = (int)get_depth_units(entry->eadd, NULL, &depth_unit);
memcpy(buf2, buf, bufsize);
snprintf(buf, bufsize, _("%s\nEAD:%d%s\nEND:%d%s\nEADD:%d%s"), buf2, ead, depth_unit, end, depth_unit, eadd, depth_unit);
}
free(buf2);
}
void get_plot_details(struct graphics_context *gc, int time, char *buf, size_t bufsize)
{
struct plot_info *pi = &gc->pi;
int pressure = 0, temp = 0;
struct plot_data *entry = NULL;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < pi->nr; i++) {
entry = pi->entry + i;
if (entry->temperature)
temp = entry->temperature;
if (GET_PRESSURE(entry))
pressure = GET_PRESSURE(entry);
if (entry->sec >= time)
break;
}
if (entry)
plot_string(entry, buf, bufsize, entry->depth, pressure, temp, pi->has_ndl);
}