By cascading the full 24-bit crc generator matrix with the (240,74) LDPC code generator, create a (240,50) generator that is used to decode with approximately 1 dB better sensitivity than the (240,64) with 14-bit CRC approach that is normally used. This approach treats the CRC bits as additional parity bits and provides no means for identifying incorrect codewords. All codewords on the list generated by the OSD algorithm have CRCs that match the CRC of the message payload. Codewords are validated by unpacking the message and comparing the unpacked message with the list of stored callsign/grid pairs stored in the fst4w_calls.txt file.
Version information and more in the Windows resources for main
applications, installer and un-installer.
Update CMake policies for new project() command, and DEB
dependency changes
Support older libgfortran packages, and other Linux package
dependencies.
Use new project description file in Debian packaging.
Linux packaging dependency adjustments for Debian style packages,
including a machine readable Debian copyright format, project
description in separate file for CPack compatibility, and use for
DEB packaging.
Configure check for need to link libm Standard C Math Library.
CMake compatibility for <3.17.
Version information and more in the Windows resources for main
applications, installer and un-installer.
Update CMake policies for new project() command, and DEB
dependency changes
Support older libgfortran packages, and other Linux package
dependencies.
Use new project description file in Debian packaging.
Linux packaging dependency adjustments for Debian style packages,
including a machine readable Debian copyright format, project
description in separate file for CPack compatibility, and use for
DEB packaging.
Configure check for need to link libm Standard C Math Library.
CMake compatibility for <3.17.
The Qt team have switched to separate debug symbol files rather than
separate debug libraries for plugins. We need to exclude these from
packaging as they break the BundleUtilities CMake tools.
Rotated log files limited to ten saved logs with timestamped and
counted file names. Logs written to writeable files directory. Formats
and file names hard coded with expression templates fro efficiency,
but with the ability to provide a user-defined configuration file that
overrides the hard-coded defaults. The configuration file must be in
the configuration files directory and named wsjtx_log_config.ini.
where possible audio devices that disappear are not forgotten until
the user selects another device, this should allow temporarily missing
devices or forgetting to switch on devices before starting WSJT-X to
be handled more cleanly. If all else fails, visiting the Settings
dialog and clicking OK should get things going again. Note that we
still do not have a reliable way of detecting failed audio out
devices, in that case selecting another device and then returning to
the original should work.
Enumerating audio devices is expensive and on Linux may take many
seconds per device. To avoid lengthy blocking behaviour until it is
absolutely necessary, audio devices are not enumerated until one of
the "Settings->Audio" device drop-down lists is opened. Elsewhere when
devices must be discovered the enumeration stops as soon as the
configured device is discovered. A status bar message is posted when
audio devices are being enumerated as a reminder that the UI may block
while this is happening.
The message box warning about unaccounted-for input audio samples now
only triggers when >5 seconds of audio appears to be missing or over
provided. Hopefully this will make the warning less annoying for those
that are using audio sources with high and/or variable latencies. A
status bar message is still posted for any amount of audio input
samples unaccounted for >1/5 second, this message appearing a lot
should be considered as notification that there is a problem with the
audio sub-system, system load is too high, or time synchronization is
stepping the PC clock rather than adjusting the frequency to maintain
monotonic clock ticks.
uses a settings file to define log sink back-ends, by default uses
:/wsjtx_log_config.ini from the resources file-system. Users may
override by placing their own wsjtx_log_config.ini into the WSJT-X
config location. The settings file format is as described in the Boost
log
documentation (https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_74_0/libs/log/doc/html/log/detailed/utilities.html#log.detailed.utilities.setup.settings_file)
with the additional feature that allows some pre-defined variables to
be expanded. The predefined variables refer to standard locations in
the file-system, and allow log files and rotation target directory
paths to be specified. The pre-defined variables are:
DesktopLocation
DocumentsLocation
TempLocation
HomeLocation
CacheLocation
GenericCacheLocation
GenericDataLocation
AppDataLocation
and must be used enclosed on braces and preceded by a '$'
character. E.g. to define the pattern for a sink's log file:
FileName="${AppLocalDataLocation}/wsjtx_syslog.log"
this would place the log file wsjtx_syslog.log in the WSJT-X log files
directory, on all platforms.