Added command line options:
-O, --eol-delay to have a separate delay for end of line
-U, --upper to enable translation of lower case alpha to upper case
Added ability to set mark parity.
Added ctrl-t U key sequence to allow enable/disable lower case alpha to
upper case during a session.
Updated Man page with command line options, ctrl-t sequences and
configuration file options.
Updated README.md, with above information.
MCUs like the ESP32 can be reset if the serial port DTR line is
pulsed for a short time. You could just type CTRL-t d CTRL-t d
but that's a little awkward since you have to lift your finger
off the CTRL key to type the Ds. Now you can just type CTRL-T D.
* Added new command "D" to pulse the DTR line. I.E. Toggle its
state twice with a configurable duration between toggles.
* Added new config/command line option "--dtr-pulse-duration"
to set the duration between the DTR state toggles. The default
is 100ms.
When enabled this option will timestamp new lines with the time elapsed
since the line before.
This is a very useful feature to identify which events takes the most
time.
Allow user to add options on both sides of the provided config argument.
For example:
$ tio -b 9600 am64-evm -e
Before, tio only allowed adding arguments after the config argument.
Implemented as simple as possible by introducing two stage option parsing.
While in hex mode (ctrl-t h) you can output hexadecimal values.
E.g.: to send 0x0A you have to type 0A (always 2 characters).
Added option -x, --hex to start in hexadecimal mode.
Added option --newline-in-hex to interpret newline characters in hex mode.
This is disabled by default, because, in my opinion, hex stream is
fundamentally different from text, so a "new line" is meaningless in this
context.
Optional arguments, as parsed by the getopt_long mechanism, are
inherently inconsistent with how you define required arguments.
To avoid confusion we decide to avoid this inconsistency by replacing
optional options with additional options with required argmuments.
This feature allows an external program to inject output into and
listen to input from a serial port via a Unix domain socket (path
specified via the -S/--socket command line flag, or the socket
config file option) while tio is running. This is useful for ad-hoc
scripting of serial port interactions while still permitting manual
control. Since many serial devices (at least on Linux) get confused
when opened by multiple processes, and most commands do not know
how to correctly open a serial device, this allows a more convenient
usage model than directly writing to the device node from an external
program.
Any input from clients connected to the socket is sent on the serial
port as if entered at the terminal where tio is running (except that
ctrl-t sequences are not recognized), and any input from the serial
port is multiplexed to the terminal and all connected clients.
Sockets remain open while the serial port is disconnected, and writes
will block.
Example usage 1 (issue a command):
echo command | nc -UN /path/to/socket > /dev/null
Example usage 2 (use the expect command to script an interaction):
#!/usr/bin/expect -f
set timeout -1
log_user 0
spawn nc -UN /path/to/socket
set uart $spawn_id
send -i $uart "command1\n"
expect -i $uart "prompt> "
send -i $uart "command2\n"
expect -i $uart "prompt> "
Also changes default timestamp format from ISO8601 to classic 24-hour
format as this is assumed to be the format that most users would prefer.
And reintroduces strict but optional ISO8601 format.
This feature allows to easily add more timestamp formats in the future.
Allow user to select which ANSI color code to use to colorize the tio
text. To successfully set the color the color code must be in the range
0..255.
If color code is negative tio will print all available ANSI colors.
The default color is changed to bold white to make tio defaults usable
for most users, including color blind users.