subsurface/subsurface-mobile-main.cpp

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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/* main.c */
#include <locale.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <time.h>
#include "core/dive.h"
#include "core/divelog.h"
#include "core/color.h"
#include "core/downloadfromdcthread.h"
#include "core/parse.h"
#include "core/qt-gui.h"
#include "core/qthelper.h"
#include "core/subsurfacestartup.h"
#include "core/settings/qPref.h"
#include "core/settings/qPrefDisplay.h"
#include "core/tag.h"
#include "core/settings/qPrefCloudStorage.h"
cloudstorage: try to pick between multiple cloud servers The backend infrastructure will soon be able to support more than one cloud server which automagically stay in sync with each other. One critical requirement for that to work is that once a session was started with one of the servers, the complete session happens with that server - we must not switch from server to server while doing a git transaction. To make sure that's the case, we aren't trying to use DNS tricks to make this load balancing scheme work, but instead try to determine at program start which server is the best one to use. Right now this is super simplistic. Two servers, one in the US, one in Europe. By default we use the European server (most of our users appear to be in Europe), but if we can figure out that the client is actually in the Americas, use the US server. We might improve that heuristic over time, but as a first attempt it seems not entirely bogus. The way this is implemented is a simple combination of two free webservices that together appear to give us a very reliable estimate which continent the user is located on. api.ipify.org gives us our external IP address ip-api.com gives us the continent that IP address is on If any of this fails or takes too long to respond, we simply ignore it since either server will work. One oddity is that if we decide to change servers we only change the settings that are stored on disk, not the runtime preferences. This goes back to the comment above that we have to avoid changing servers in mid sync. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2021-04-11 01:03:08 +00:00
#include "core/checkcloudconnection.h"
#include <QApplication>
#include <QFont>
#include <QFontMetrics>
#include <QLocale>
#include <QLoggingCategory>
#include <QStringList>
#include <git2.h>
// Implementation of STP logging
#include "core/ssrf.h"
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int i;
QGuiApplication::setAttribute(Qt::AA_EnableHighDpiScaling);
QLoggingCategory::setFilterRules(QStringLiteral("qt.bluetooth* = true"));
// Start application
std::unique_ptr<QApplication> app(new QApplication(argc, argv));
// and get comand line arguments
QStringList arguments = QCoreApplication::arguments();
subsurface_console_init();
for (i = 1; i < arguments.length(); i++) {
QString a = arguments.at(i);
if (!a.isEmpty() && a.at(0) == '-') {
parse_argument(qPrintable(a));
continue;
}
}
git_libgit2_init();
setup_system_prefs();
if (QLocale().measurementSystem() == QLocale::MetricSystem)
default_prefs.units = SI_units;
else
default_prefs.units = IMPERIAL_units;
copy_prefs(&default_prefs, &prefs);
cloudstorage: try to pick between multiple cloud servers The backend infrastructure will soon be able to support more than one cloud server which automagically stay in sync with each other. One critical requirement for that to work is that once a session was started with one of the servers, the complete session happens with that server - we must not switch from server to server while doing a git transaction. To make sure that's the case, we aren't trying to use DNS tricks to make this load balancing scheme work, but instead try to determine at program start which server is the best one to use. Right now this is super simplistic. Two servers, one in the US, one in Europe. By default we use the European server (most of our users appear to be in Europe), but if we can figure out that the client is actually in the Americas, use the US server. We might improve that heuristic over time, but as a first attempt it seems not entirely bogus. The way this is implemented is a simple combination of two free webservices that together appear to give us a very reliable estimate which continent the user is located on. api.ipify.org gives us our external IP address ip-api.com gives us the continent that IP address is on If any of this fails or takes too long to respond, we simply ignore it since either server will work. One oddity is that if we decide to change servers we only change the settings that are stored on disk, not the runtime preferences. This goes back to the comment above that we have to avoid changing servers in mid sync. Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
2021-04-11 01:03:08 +00:00
CheckCloudConnection ccc;
ccc.pickServer();
fill_computer_list();
reset_tank_info_table(&tank_info_table);
parse_xml_init();
taglist_init_global();
// grab the system font size before we overwrite this when we load preferences
double initial_font_size = QGuiApplication::font().pointSizeF();
if (initial_font_size < 0.0) {
// The OS provides a default font in pixels, not points; doing some crude math
// to reverse engineer that information by measuring the height of a 10pt font in pixels
QFont testFont;
testFont.setPointSizeF(10.0);
QFontMetrics fm(testFont);
initial_font_size = QGuiApplication::font().pixelSize() * 10.0 / fm.height();
}
init_ui();
if (prefs.default_file_behavior == LOCAL_DEFAULT_FILE)
set_filename(prefs.default_filename);
else
set_filename(NULL);
// some hard coded settings
qPrefCloudStorage::set_save_password_local(true);
// always show the divecomputer reported ceiling in red
prefs.redceiling = 1;
init_proxy();
if (!quit)
run_mobile_ui(initial_font_size);
exit_ui();
clear_divelog(&divelog);
taglist_free(g_tag_list);
parse_xml_exit();
subsurface_console_exit();
// Sync struct preferences to disk
qPref::sync();
free_prefs();
clear_tank_info_table(&tank_info_table);
return 0;
}
void set_non_bt_addresses()
{
#if defined(Q_OS_LINUX) && !defined(Q_OS_ANDROID)
connectionListModel.addAddress("/dev/ttyS0");
connectionListModel.addAddress("/dev/ttyS1");
connectionListModel.addAddress("/dev/ttyS2");
connectionListModel.addAddress("/dev/ttyS3");
// this makes debugging so much easier - use the simulator
connectionListModel.addAddress("/tmp/ttyS1");
#endif
#if defined(SERIAL_FTDI)
connectionListModel.addAddress("FTDI");
#endif
}