On exit, do not reset the tty device settings to the state they were in
before the program started.
This is effective when sending characters at a low baud rate and then
immediately exiting, to ensure that the last character is output
correctly.
Lua API moved into a tio library table and names adjusted to Lua stdlib style.
Regex in expect() replaced with Lua patterns so binary data can be handled.
New tio.alwaysecho variable allows enabling and disabling echo to console.
Read and write functions now manage complex retry and timeout logic internally,
giving the user a simple "nil if fail" API like the rest of Lua.
exit() was removed, os.exit() already exists in the Lua standard library.
To include the contents of another configuration file simply do e.g.:
[include raspberrypi.conf]
Also, included file can include other files which can include other
files etc.
This feature is useful for managing many configuration files and sharing
configuration files with others.
After including the use of glib we might as well replace inih
with the glib key file parser.
All configuraiton file parsing has been reworked and also the options
parsing has been cleaned up, resulting in better and stricter
configuration file and option value checks.
Compared to old, configuration files now requires any default
configurations to be put in a group/section named [default].
Configuration file keywords such as "enable", "disable", "on",
"off", "yes", "no", "0", "1" have been retired. Now only "true" and
"false" apply to boolean configuration options. This is done to simplify
things and avoid any confusion.
The pattern option feature has been reworked so now the user can now
access the full match string and any matching subexpression using the
%mN syntax.
For example:
[usb devices]
pattern = usb([0-9]*)
device = /dev/ttyUSB%m1
Then when using tio:
$ tio usb12
%m0 = 'usb12' // Full match string
%m1 = 12 // First match subexpression
Which results in device = /dev/ttyUSB12
Collapses lua high(), low(), toggle(), config_high(), config_low(),
config_apply() into one simple function:
set{<line>=<state>, ...}
Line can be any of DTR, RTS, CTS, DSR, CD, RI.
State is high, low, or toggle.
Example:
script = set{DTR=high, RTS=low}; msleep(100); set{DTR=low, RTS=high}; msleep(100); set{RTS=low}
Notice the use of {} instad of () when calling the set function. This is
required to pass parameters by name in lua.
Adds support for hexN mode where N is a number in the range 1 to 4096
which defines how many hex values will be printed before a line break.
In short, it defines the width of the hex output.
In this mode, if timestamps are enabled they will be added to each hex
line.