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-rwxr-xr-xdatasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-parse-boards261
-rwxr-xr-xdatasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-reset-arduino115
2 files changed, 0 insertions, 376 deletions
diff --git a/datasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-parse-boards b/datasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-parse-boards
deleted file mode 100755
index e2de71b..0000000
--- a/datasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-parse-boards
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,261 +0,0 @@
-#! /usr/bin/perl
-
-use strict;
-use warnings;
-
-use Getopt::Long;
-use Pod::Usage;
-use YAML;
-
-my %Opt =
- (
- boards_txt => '/Applications/Arduino.app/Contents/Resources/Java/hardware/arduino/boards.txt',
- );
-
-GetOptions(\%Opt,
- "boards_txt=s", # filename of the boards.txt file
- "find!", # search for data
- "dump!", # dump the whole database
- "boards!", # dump a list of boards
- "help!",
- "info!",
- );
-
-if ($Opt{help} || $Opt{info})
- {
- usage();
- }
-
-my $db = parse_boards($Opt{boards_txt});
-
-if ($Opt{dump})
- {
- dump_data("$Opt{boards_txt} contains:", $db);
- }
-elsif ($Opt{find})
- {
- my @terms = @ARGV or usage();
- find_data($db, \@terms);
- }
-elsif ($Opt{boards})
- {
- dump_boards($db);
- }
-else
- {
- my $tag = shift @ARGV or usage();
-
- if (my $key = shift @ARGV)
- {
- die "$key isn't defined for the $tag board, "
- unless $db->{$tag} && exists $db->{$tag}->{$key};
-
- print $db->{$tag}->{$key}, "\n";
- }
- else
- {
- die "The $tag board isn't defined, "
- unless $db->{$tag};
-
- dump_data("The $tag board:", $db->{$tag});
- }
- }
-
-## here endeth the main
-
-sub usage
- {
- pod2usage(-verbose => 2);
- }
-
-# return HoH: {board}->{field} = value
-sub parse_boards
- {
- my $filename = shift;
-
- my %b;
-
- open(my $fh, '<', $filename)
- or die "Can't open $filename, ";
-
- while(<$fh>)
- {
- my ($board, $key, $value) = /^\s*(\S+?)\.(\S+?)\s*=\s*(.+?)\s*$/
- or next;
-
- $b{$board}->{$key} = $value;
- }
-
- return \%b;
- }
-
-# A rudimentary search engine
-sub find_data
- {
- my ($db, $term_list) = @_;
-
- my @q = map { qr/$_/i } @$term_list;
- my $q = join(' && ', map { "/$_/i" } @$term_list);
-
- my %hit;
- foreach my $b (keys %$db)
- {
- foreach my $k (keys %{$db->{$b}})
- {
- my $v = $db->{$b}->{$k};
- $hit{$b}->{$k} = $v if !grep { $v !~ /$_/i } @q;
- }
- }
-
- dump_data("Matches for $q:", \%hit);
- }
-
-# The list of boards...
-sub dump_boards
- {
- my $db = shift or return;
-
- my %name;
- my $max_l = 0;
- foreach my $b (keys %$db)
- {
- $name{$b} = $db->{$b}->{name} || 'Anonymous';
- $max_l = length($b) if $max_l < length($b);
- }
-
- my $fmt = sprintf("%%-%ds %%s\n", $max_l + 2);
-
- printf $fmt, "Tag", "Board Name";
- foreach my $b (sort keys %name)
- {
- printf $fmt, $b, $name{$b};
- }
- }
-
-
-# dump arbitrary data with a title
-sub dump_data
- {
- my ($title, $data) = @_;
-
- print "# $title\n", Dump($data);
- }
-
-__END__
-
-=head1 NAME
-
-ard-parse-boards - Read data from the Arduino boards.txt file
-
-=head1 USAGE
-
- Dump all the data in the file:
- $ ard-parse-boards --dump
-
- See which boards we know about:
- $ ard-parse-boards --boards
-
- Look for a particular board...
- $ ard-parse-boards --find uno
-
- ...multiple terms are implicitly ANDed:
- $ ard-parse-boards --find duemil 328
-
- Dump all the data for a particular board:
- $ ard-parse-boards atmega328
-
- Extract a particular field:
- $ ard-parse-boards atmega328 build.f_cpu
-
-=head1 DESCRIPTION
-
-The Arduino software package ships with a boards.txt file which tells
-the Arduino IDE details about particular hardware. So when the user
-says he's got a shiny new Arduino Uno, boards.txt knows that it has a
-16MHz ATmega328 on it. It would be nice to access these data from the
-command line too.
-
-In normal operation you simply specify the tag given to the board in
-the boards.txt file, and optionally a field name. This program then
-extracts the data to STDOUT.
-
-Most boards have names which are quite unwieldy, so we always refer to
-a board by a tag, not its name. Strictly the tag is the bit before the
-first dot in the boards.txt key. You can see a list of board tags and
-names with the C<--boards> option.
-
-=head1 OPTIONS
-
-=over
-
-=item --boards_txt=[file]
-
-Specify the full path to the boards.txt file.
-
-=back
-
-The following options all disable the normal 'lookup' operation.
-
-=over
-
-=item --dump
-
-Dump the complete database in YAML format.
-
-=item ---boards
-
-Print a list of the tag and name of every board in the file.
-
-=item --find [query] <query> ...
-
-Find matching data. Strictly, return a list of values which match all
-of the query terms, treating each term as a case-insensitive regexp.
-
-For example:
-
-=over
-
-=item --find 328
-
-List data containing 328 (anywhere in the value).
-
-=item --find due
-
-List data containing 'due' (e.g. duemilanove).
-
-=item --find 328 due
-
-List data containing both 328 and due.
-
-=back
-
-=back
-
-=head1 BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
-
-There are no known bugs in this application.
-
-Please report problems to the author.
-
-Patches are welcome.
-
-=head1 AUTHOR
-
-Martin Oldfield, ex-atelier@mjo.tc
-
-Thanks to Mark Sproul who suggested doing something like this to me ages ago.
-
-=head1 LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT
-
-Copyright (c) 2011, Martin Oldfield. All rights reserved.
-
-This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
-under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published
-by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
-(at your option) any later version.
-
-This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
-
diff --git a/datasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-reset-arduino b/datasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-reset-arduino
deleted file mode 100755
index 22c7109..0000000
--- a/datasources/arduino/arduinoAnalogStomp/bin/ard-reset-arduino
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,115 +0,0 @@
-#! /usr/bin/perl
-
-use strict;
-use warnings;
-
-use Device::SerialPort;
-use Getopt::Long;
-use Pod::Usage;
-
-my %Opt =
- (
- period => 0.1,
- );
-
-GetOptions(\%Opt,
- "period=f", # width of reset pulse in seconds
- "verbose!",
- "help!",
- "info!",
- );
-
-if ($Opt{help} || $Opt{info})
- {
- usage();
- }
-
-die "No Arduinos found!\n"
- unless @ARGV;
-
-foreach my $dev (@ARGV)
- {
- my $p = Device::SerialPort->new($dev)
- or die "Unable to open $dev: $!\n";
-
- my $dt = $Opt{period};
-
- print STDERR "Setting DTR high for ${dt}s on $dev\n"
- if $Opt{verbose};
-
- die "Invalid pulse width ($dt), "
- unless $dt > 0.0;
-
- $p->pulse_dtr_on($dt * 1000.0);
- }
-
-## here endeth the main
-
-sub usage
- {
- pod2usage(-verbose => 2);
- }
-
-__END__
-
-=head1 NAME
-
-ard-reset-arduino - Reset an Arduino
-
-=head1 USAGE
-
- $ ard-reset-arduino /dev/cu.usb*
-
- $ ard-reset-arduino --verbose --period=0.1 /dev/cu.usb*
-
-=head1 DESCRIPTION
-
-To reset (most) Arduinos, it's enough to just pulse the DTR line.
-
-You can do that from the shell with stty, but there's an interesting
-diversity of command flags. This little program gives a uniform interface
-at the cost of requiring C<Device::SerialPort>.
-
-=head1 OPTIONS
-
-=over
-
-=item --verbose
-
-Watch what's going on on STDERR.
-
-=item --period=0.25
-
-Specify the DTR pulse width in seconds.
-
-=back
-
-=head1 BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
-
-There are no known bugs in this application.
-
-Please report problems to the author.
-
-Patches are welcome.
-
-=head1 AUTHOR
-
-Martin Oldfield, ex-atelier@mjo.tc
-
-Thanks to Daniele Vergini who suggested this to me, and supplied
-a command line version.
-
-=head1 LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT
-
-Copyright (c) 2012, Martin Oldfield. All rights reserved.
-
-This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
-under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published
-by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
-(at your option) any later version.
-
-This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
-
-