This is bigger and more invasive then I wanted, but it's hard to break it
down into smaller pieces. Here's what it does:
The former "Download" button becomes the "Download", "Cancel download" and
"Retry" button. So this button controls your interaction with the dive
computer.
The other two buttons are now purely "OK" and "Cancel" for the dialog.
"Cancel" discards what happened (much easier now that we download into a
different table), and "OK" adds the dives that were selected in our
selection UI (by default all downloaded dives) to the real dive_table.
And while redoing all this, I also redid some of the state machine
underlying the dialog. The biggest change that the user will see is that
partial downloads (after canceling or after an error) will still offer the
dives that were completely downloaded up to that point in the selection
menu.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
Fix the name of a button so the download from dc actually works.
Signed-off-by: Tomaz Canabrava <tomaz.canabrava@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
This adds a checkbox for the divecomputer download dialog that allows you
to tell the download to put the newly downloaded dives into a trip of
their own. That in turn will disable the dive merging with any existing
dives, which means that you will not mix up your newly downloaded dives
with any old dives.
That, in turn, is very convenient of you know that some of the dives were
done by other divers (or from testing that happened during servicing etc),
or the dive dates etc were wrong because the dive computer date had reset
due to battery changes etc.
Once you have all the dives in a private trip of their own, you can then
fix them up (delete dives you don't want to merge etc), and then after all
the data is ok you might want to merge the cleaned-up results with
previous trips etc, and then manually ask subsurface to merge the dives or
whatever.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
The title of the form to download dives from a computer was
simply "Form".
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Fogel <nystire@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
Small changes to the names of elements the divecomputer download UI and
very simplistic first stab at populating the device_data_t structure.
This is lacking lots of things
- it should remember the last vendor / product used
- it should figure out which device (mount point) to offer
- it needs proper error handling
But it's a step in the right direction.
Signed-off-by: Dirk Hohndel <dirk@hohndel.org>
This is the skeleton code for a non-blocking ui-thread
It already creates the first-thread ( 'do not block the ui' )
and the second thread ('download from the dive computer')
We can in the future merge both in the same place - I didn't
want to do that now because the download function is written
in the libdivecomputer.c code, and I cant just transform that
to a QThread and use signals, so I used two threads for that.
Signed-off-by: Tomaz Canabrava <tcanabrava@kde.org>