zephyr/samples/bluetooth
Johan Hedberg a3c057a5e9 Bluetooth: samples/hci_uart: Remove redundant semicolon
Remove redundant semicolon from the end of a while loop.

Change-Id: I02cef7879efe0d6eeae59595e14fb1d9b00a6d52
Signed-off-by: Johan Hedberg <johan.hedberg@intel.com>
2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
..
beacon Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
central Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
central_hr Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
eddystone Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
gatt
handsfree Bluetooth: Sample: handsfree sample application 2016-11-09 08:57:52 +02:00
hci_uart Bluetooth: samples/hci_uart: Remove redundant semicolon 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
hci_usb Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
ipsp
peripheral Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
peripheral_csc Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
peripheral_dis Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
peripheral_esp Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
peripheral_hids Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
peripheral_hr Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
peripheral_sc_only Bluetooth: Kconfig: Restructure for a more logical hierarchy 2016-11-11 07:59:15 +02:00
README

Bluetooth subsystem

= Building =

Build samples

$ make -C samples/bluetooth/<app>

= Bluetooth Sample application =

Host Bluetooth controller is connected to the second qemu serial line
through a UNIX socket (qemu option -serial unix:/tmp/bt-server-bredr).
This option is already added to qemu through QEMU_EXTRA_FLAGS in Makefile.

On the host side BlueZ allows to "connect" Bluetooth controller through
a so-called user channel. Use the btproxy tool for that:

$ sudo tools/btproxy -u
Listening on /tmp/bt-server-bredr

Note that before calling btproxy make sure that Bluetooth controller is down.

Now running qemu result connecting second serial line to 'bt-server-bredr'
UNIX socket. When Bluetooth (CONFIG_BLUETOOTH) and Bluetooth HCI UART driver
(CONFIG_BLUETOOTH_H4) are enabled, Bluetooth driver registers to the system.
From now on Bluetooth might be used by the application. To run application in
the qemu run:

$ make qemu

= Bluetooth sanity check =

There is smoke test application in tests directory which gets run in sanity
check script:

$ scripts/sanity_chk/sanitycheck [-P <platform>]

To only run Bluetooth tests use the -t bluetooth switch:

$ scripts/sanity_chk/sanitycheck -t bluetooth

= Summary of available applications =

beacon:
        A simple application demonstrating the BLE Broadcaster role
        functionality by advertising an Eddystone URL (the Zephyr
        website).

central:
        Application demonstrating very basic BLE Central role
        functionality by scanning for other BLE devices and establishing
        a connection to the first one with a strong enough signal.

central_hr:
        Similar to 'central', except that this application specifically
        looks for heart-rate monitors and reports the heart-rate
        readings once connected.

eddystone:
        Application demostrating Eddystone Configuration Service:
        https://github.com/google/eddystone/tree/master/configuration-service

gatt:
        Not an application, but a set of reusable modules for common
        GATT profiles & services.

hci_uart:
	Expose Zephyr Bluetooth Controller support over UART to another
	device/CPU using the H:4 HCI transport protocol (requires HW
	flow control from the UART).

hci_usb:
	Make a USB Bluetooth dongle out of Zephyr. Requires USB device
	support from the board it runs on (e.g. Arduino 101 has this).

ipsp:
        Application demonstrating the IPSP (Internet Protocol Support
        Profile) Node role. IPSP is the Bluetooth profile that
        underneath utilizes 6LoWPAN, i.e. gives you IPv6 connectivity
        over BLE.

peripheral:
        Application demonstrating the BLE Peripheral role. It has
        several well-known and vendor-specific GATT services that it
        exposes.

peripheral_csc:
        Similar to 'peripheral', except that this application
        specifically exposes the CSC (Cycling Speed and Cadence)
        GATT Service.

peripheral_dis:
        Similar to 'peripheral', except that this application
        specifically exposes the DIS (Device Information) GATT Service.

peripheral_esp:
        Similar to 'peripheral', except that this application
        specifically exposes the ESP (Environmental Sensing Profile)
        GATT Service.

peripheral_hr:
        Similar to 'peripheral', except that this application
        specifically exposes the HR (Heart Rate) GATT Service. Once a
        device connects it will generate dummy heart-rate values.

peripheral_hids:
        Similar to 'peripheral', except that this application
        specifically exposes the HID GATT Service. The report map used
	is for a generic mouse.