WSJT-X/TransceiverBase.hpp
Bill Somerville ac859c8f68 Several rig control enhancements and fixes
Use the  new DX Lab Suite  Commander command option to  stop Commander
trying to change the rig Tx VFO mode when we don't want to. Requires a
recent DX Lab Suite Commander version.

All rig controllers  can now detect 20Hz resolution  rigs, still needs
2Hz resolution code which will be needed for the FT-891 AFAIK.

Enhance  the HRD  interface  to be  able to  use  the alternative  PTT
command as found on most Kenwood  rigs for audio source selection. Fix
Icom data mode selection issues.

git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.code.sf.net/p/wsjt/wsjt/branches/wsjtx@7357 ab8295b8-cf94-4d9e-aec4-7959e3be5d79
2016-12-04 00:55:07 +00:00

171 lines
5.4 KiB
C++

#ifndef TRANSCEIVER_BASE_HPP__
#define TRANSCEIVER_BASE_HPP__
#include <stdexcept>
#include <QString>
#include "Transceiver.hpp"
//
// Base Transceiver Implementation
//
// Behaviour common to all Transceiver implementations.
//
// Collaborations
//
// Implements the Transceiver abstract interface as template methods
// and provides a new abstract interface with similar functionality
// (do_XXXXX operations). Provides and calls abstract interface that
// gets called post the above operations (do_post_XXXXX) to allow
// caching implementation etc.
//
// A key factor is to catch all exceptions thrown by sub-class
// implementations where the template method is a Qt slot which is
// therefore likely to be called by Qt which doesn't handle
// exceptions. Any exceptions are converted to Transceiver::failure()
// signals.
//
// Sub-classes update the stored state via a protected interface.
//
// Responsibilities:
//
// Wrap incoming Transceiver messages catching all exceptions in Qt
// slot driven messages and converting them to Qt signals. This is
// done because exceptions make concrete Transceiver implementations
// simpler to write, but exceptions cannot cross signal/slot
// boundaries (especially across threads). This also removes any
// requirement for the client code to handle exceptions.
//
// Maintain the state of the concrete Transceiver instance that is
// passed back via the Transceiver::update(TransceiverState) signal,
// it is still the responsibility of concrete Transceiver
// implementations to emit the state_change signal when they have a
// status update.
//
// Maintain a go/no-go status for concrete Transceiver
// implementations ensuring only a valid sequence of messages are
// passed. A concrete Transceiver instance must be started before it
// can receive messages, any exception thrown takes the Transceiver
// offline.
//
// Implements methods that concrete Transceiver implementations use
// to update the Transceiver state. These do not signal state change
// to clients as this is the responsibility of the concrete
// Transceiver implementation, thus allowing multiple state component
// updates to be signalled together if required.
//
class TransceiverBase
: public Transceiver
{
Q_OBJECT;
protected:
TransceiverBase (QObject * parent)
: Transceiver {parent}
, last_sequence_number_ {0}
{}
public:
//
// Implement the Transceiver abstract interface.
//
void start (unsigned sequence_number) noexcept override final;
void set (TransceiverState const&,
unsigned sequence_number) noexcept override final;
void stop () noexcept override final;
//
// Query operations
//
TransceiverState const& state () const {return actual_;}
protected:
//
// Error exception which is thrown to signal unexpected errors.
//
struct error
: public std::runtime_error
{
explicit error (char const * const msg) : std::runtime_error (msg) {}
explicit error (QString const& msg) : std::runtime_error (msg.toStdString ()) {}
};
// Template methods that sub classes implement to do what they need to do.
//
// These methods may throw exceptions to signal errors.
virtual int do_start () = 0; // returns resolution, See Transceiver::resolution
virtual void do_post_start () {}
virtual void do_stop () = 0;
virtual void do_post_stop () {}
virtual void do_frequency (Frequency, MODE, bool no_ignore) = 0;
virtual void do_post_frequency (Frequency, MODE) {}
virtual void do_tx_frequency (Frequency, MODE, bool no_ignore) = 0;
virtual void do_post_tx_frequency (Frequency, MODE) {}
virtual void do_mode (MODE) = 0;
virtual void do_post_mode (MODE) {}
virtual void do_ptt (bool = true) = 0;
virtual void do_post_ptt (bool = true) {}
virtual void do_sync (bool force_signal = false, bool no_poll = false) = 0;
virtual bool do_pre_update () {return true;}
// sub classes report rig state changes with these methods
void update_rx_frequency (Frequency);
void update_other_frequency (Frequency = 0);
void update_split (bool);
void update_mode (MODE);
void update_PTT (bool = true);
// Calling this eventually triggers the Transceiver::update(State) signal.
void update_complete (bool force_signal = false);
// sub class may asynchronously take the rig offline by calling this
void offline (QString const& reason);
private:
void startup ();
void shutdown ();
bool maybe_low_resolution (Frequency low_res, Frequency high_res);
// use this convenience class to notify in update methods
class may_update
{
public:
explicit may_update (TransceiverBase * self, bool force_signal = false)
: self_ {self}
, force_signal_ {force_signal}
{}
~may_update () {self_->update_complete (force_signal_);}
private:
TransceiverBase * self_;
bool force_signal_;
};
TransceiverState requested_;
TransceiverState actual_;
TransceiverState last_;
unsigned last_sequence_number_; // from set state operation
};
// some trace macros
#if WSJT_TRACE_CAT
#define TRACE_CAT(FAC, MSG) qDebug () << QString {"%1::%2:"}.arg ((FAC)).arg (__func__) << MSG
#else
#define TRACE_CAT(FAC, MSG)
#endif
#if WSJT_TRACE_CAT && WSJT_TRACE_CAT_POLLS
#define TRACE_CAT_POLL(FAC, MSG) qDebug () << QString {"%1::%2:"}.arg ((FAC)).arg (__func__) << MSG
#else
#define TRACE_CAT_POLL(FAC, MSG)
#endif
#endif