repeaters don’t reply to keep alives while they are transmitting.
Changed addes so that when voice packets are received, the keep-alive
monitor is reset for that peer.
0x61, 0x62 and 0x63 have been mostly decoded. Still don’t know what all
of the pieces do, but know what they’re for finally!
This will mean big things for log.py as I figure out the details.
Move bridge.py's config information to a separate file.
Provide a sample file for bridge.py (bridge_rules_SAMPLE.py)
Tell peers we're a 3rd party app and repeater monitor.
Also gently nudged potential users to remember this is a VOLUNTEER project with 1.1 developers... and the 1 part is a novice programmer at best. Also, a reminder (again here) that this software is NOT for commercial use.
Internal data structure change for how peers are stored. Instead of a
list of dicts, it is now a dict of dicts where the dict key IS the
radio ID, and the Radio ID is no longer stored in the "inner" dict.
This does NOT affect bridge.py or log.py, only dmrlink.py
This has gotten messy durring development, so I decided to clean it up
some. The system logger should ONLY be used for internal logging of the
program, not to try and make a "netwatch" out of (for you c-Bridge
users). Please use the log.py module for that type of thing.
Fixed a bug where I accidentally over-wrote original packet data when
forwarding to an IPSC peer... making it impossible to bridge a packet
to more than one destination IPSC correctly. Currently, DMRlink is
bridging three IPSCs and transcoding group IDs.
unauthenticated packets were subject to having their hashes stripped
just like other packets. The problem is that they don't have hashes to
strip, so I was throwing away part of the packet. Fixed in log.py,
dmrlink.py and bridge.py
did not add the additional code to use unauthenticated IPSC with the
log mixin. Added it blind - as in I've not tested it yet. If someone
finds this and tests it BEFORE I do, please let me know if it works.