They were never finished, never saw any release ever, and haven't
compiled for the better part of a decade. Given their HW capabilities [1],
they are not worth trying to fix.
[1] 1-2MB RAM, ~256MB onboard flash, no expandability
Change-Id: I7b2a5806d687114c22156bb0458d4a10a9734190
The Q and K have a slightly different case, but the hardware under the
shell is completely identical.
These models are rebadged versions:
* Hifiwalker H2 (== Q)
* AGPTek H3 (== K)
* Surfans F20 (== K)
Other notes:
* Significant improvements in the shared Hiby-platform launcher/loader
* SD card can theoretically be hot-swapped now
* Support external USB mass storage!
* Some consolidation of Hiby-platform targets
* Some consolidation of plugin keymaps
Todo/known issues:
* Keymaps need to be gone over properly
* Convert to HAVE_SCROLLWHEEL?
Change-Id: I5a8a4f22c38a5b69392ca7c0a8ad8c4e07d9523c
Most credit goes to: Roman Skylarov
Additional integration and refactoring by myself.
*** COMPLETELY UNTESTED ***
Change-Id: Ia64c36d92e0214c6b15f7a868df286f8113ea27b
Provided by Roman Stolyarov
Integration, Refactoring, and Upstreaming by Solomon Peachy
X3II confirmed working by forum tester, X20 is nearly identical.
This includes bootloader, main firmware, and the flash image patcher.
Eventual Todo:
* Further refactor AGPTek Rocker & xduoo hiby bootloaders
* Further refactor AGPTek Rocker & xduoo hosted platform code
Change-Id: I34a674051d368efcc75d1d18c725971fe46c3eee
Gives us the lowest HW sample rate that's >= 22KHz.
Needed because some targets that don't support 22K support 11K or 8K, so
HW_SAMPR_MIN will give us much lower quality than is acceptable.
Take advantage of this new macro in the SDL, MIDI, and MIKMOD plugins,
and implement a crude "fast enough" test to enable higher sample rates
on more capable targets.
Change-Id: I6ad38026fb3410c62da028e78512e027729bb851
Cleaned up, rebased, and forward-ported from the xvortex fork.
(original credit to vsoftster@gmail.com)
Change-Id: Ibcc023a0271ea81e901450a88317708c2683236d
Signed-off-by: Solomon Peachy <pizza@shaftnet.org>
gustable[] contained plain note frequencies in milliHertz, but
was named and documented to appear like a table of magic numbers.
The values also seemed to be slightly inaccurate (up to about
0.01Hz, so probably irrelevant).
This changes the name to freqtable to make the purpose clearer, and
uses slightly better values.
Change-Id: I6b568d834c8c2c92161bed5290572a29733e28dc
seems more logical to me, and is more consistent, since
"SAMSUNG_YH92X_PAD" is already used in the tex files.
Change-Id: Ie9a9d850ea86155a7dcf86c88a22a420a10a3837
The main "innovation" in this patch are two "virtual buttons"
for the record switch on YH92x targets. When the switch state
changes, a single BUTTON_REC_SW_ON or .._OFF button event will
be generated. Thus keymap code can react on switching, but
not on the actual state of the switch.
Wherever sensible, the following user scheme is applied:
- use PLAY as confirm button
- use REW button or Long REW to exit
- use REC (YH820) or FFWD (YH92X) as modifier key for button combos
Change-Id: Ic8d1db9cc6869daed8dda98990dfdf7f6fd5d5a1
The port to for this two targets has been entirely developped by Ilia Sergachev (alias Il or xzcc). His source
can be found at https://bitbucket.org/isergachev/rockbox . The few necesary modifications for the DX90 port
was done by headwhacker form head-fi.org. Unfortunately i could not try out the final state of the DX90 port.
The port is hosted on android (without java) as standalone app. The official Firmware is required to run this port.
Ilia did modify the source files for the "android" target in the rockbox source to make the DX port work. The work I did
was to separate the code for DX50 (&DX90) from the android target.
On this Target Ilia used source from tinyalsa from AOSP. I did not touch that part of the code because I do not understand it.
What else I changed from Ilias sources besides the separation from the target "android":
* removed a dirty hack to keep backlight off
* changed value battery meter to voltage battery meter
* made all plugins compile (named target as "standalone") and added keymaps
* i added the graphics for the manual but did not do anything else for the manual yet
* minor optimizations
known bugs:
* timers are slowed donw when playback is active (tinyalsa related?)
* some minor bugs
Things to do:
* The main prolem will be how to install the app correctly. A guy called DOC2008 added a CWM (by androtab.info) to the
official firmware and Ilia made a CWM installation script and a dualboot selector (rbutils/ibassoboot, build with
ndk-build). We will have to find a way to install rockbox in a proper way without breaking any copyrights.
Maybe ADB is an option but it is not enable with OF by default. Patching the OF is probably the way to go.
* All the wiki and manual
to build:
needed: android ndk installed, android sdk installed with additional build-tools 19.1.0 installed
./tools/configure
select iBasso DX50 or iBasso DX90
make -j apk
the content of rockbox.zip/.rockbox needs to be copied to /system/rockbox/app_rockbox/rockbox/ (rockbox app not needed)
the content of libs/armeabi to /system/rockbox/lib/ (rockbox app needed)
The boot selector is needed as /system/bin/MangoPlayer and the iBasso app as /system/bin/MangoPlayer_original. There
is also the "vold" file. The one from OF does not work with DX50 rockbox (DX90 works!?), the one from Ilia is necessary.
Until we have found a proper way to install it, it can only be installed following the instructions of Ilia on his
bitbucket page, using the CWM-OF and his installation script package.
Change-Id: Ic4faaf84824c162aabcc08e492cee6e0068719d0
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/941
Tested: Chiwen Chang <rock1104.tw@yahoo.com.tw>
Reviewed-by: Michael Giacomelli <giac2000@hotmail.com>
Although both players basically have the same keys, the
differences in the layout is rather big, so I think both
deserve their own keymaps.
(On the yh820 the FFWD/PLAY/REW buttons are located above the
direction keys, on the yh920 at the side of the player.
Furthermore the yh920/925 has a REC switch, whereas
yh820 has a push button.)
Change-Id: I0e62a1b101c387646c0bdb07ea142d9d2430ca15
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/814
Reviewed-by: Szymon Dziok <b0hoon@o2.pl>
This patch completes the plugin keymaps for the Zen X-Fi3 and enables those plugins for compilation.
One key was changed in "button-target.h" for compatibility with Rockboy.
This also caused the changes to "keymap-zenxfi3.c", to keep the stock functionality (no further changes in here).
Change-Id: Ic222faf89e9a9a2332a49d6e532cedb6eb16d3d7
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/762
Reviewed-by: Amaury Pouly <amaury.pouly@gmail.com>
The code assumes that gustable[] has 128 entries, while it
only had 120. Since the entries follow a simple pattern (they
seem to be note frequencies, so each entry is the previous one
multiplied by the 2^(1/12)), expanding the table is the simple
fix.
Change-Id: If5b5a50378afd3206c9d550227dd9aac8e355c96
Additional status callback is added to pcm_play/rec_data instead of
using a special function to set it. Status includes DMA error
reporting to the status callback. Playback and recording callback
become more alike except playback uses "const void **addr" (because
the data should not be altered) and recording uses "void **addr".
"const" is put in place throughout where appropriate.
Most changes are fairly trivial. One that should be checked in
particular because it isn't so much is telechips, if anyone cares to
bother. PP5002 is not so trivial either but that tested as working.
Change-Id: I4928d69b3b3be7fb93e259f81635232df9bd1df2
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/166
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
This port is a hybrid native/RaaA port. It runs on a embedded linux system,
but is the only application. It therefore can implement lots of stuff that
native targets also implement, while leveraging the underlying linux kernel.
The port is quite advanced. User interface, audio playback, plugins work
mostly fine. Missing is e.g. power mangement and USB (see SamsungYPR0 wiki page).
Included in utils/ypr0tools are scripts and programs required to generate
a patched firmware. The patched firmware has the rootfs modified to load
Rockbox. It includes a early/safe USB mode.
This port needs a new toolchain, one that includes glibc headers and libraries.
rockboxdev.sh can generate it, but e.g. codesourcey and distro packages may
also work.
Most of the initial effort is done by Lorenzo Miori and others (on ABI),
including reverse engineering and patching of the original firmware,
initial drivers, and more. Big thanks to you.
Flyspray: FS#12348
Author: Lorenzo Miori, myself
Merry christmas to ypr0 owners! :)
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@31415 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
Included are drivers for buttons, backlight, lcd, audio and storage.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@31000 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
some functions can be static -> static inline
some functions are external and can't be inlined -> remove inline
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@28019 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
Move to plugin_crt0.c, plugins don't need PLUGIN_IRAM_* macros anymore
IRAM is no longered zeroed before copying (as it is at the same address
than BSS) -> Fix FS#11581
Use cpucache_invalidate() (and not cpucache_flush), needed for self-modifying code on cached IRAM
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@27948 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
It handles exit() properly, calling the handler also when the plugin returns
normally (also make exit() more standard compliant while at it).
It also holds PLUGIN_HEADER, so that it doesn't need to be in each plugin anymore.
To work better together with callbacks passed to rb->default_event_handler_ex() introduce exit_on_usb() which will call the exit handler before showing the usb screen and exit() after it.
In most cases rb->default_event_handler_ex() was passed a callback which was manually called at all other return points. This can now be done via atexit().
In future plugin_crt0.c could also handle clearing bss, initializing iram and more.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@27873 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
It handles exit() properly, calling the handler also when the plugin returns
normally (also it makes exit() more standard compliant while at it).
It also holds PLUGIN_HEADER, so that it doesn't need to be in each plugin anymore.
To work better together with callbacks passed to rb->default_event_handler_ex introduce exit_on_usb() which will call the exit handler before showing the usb screen and exit() after it.
In most cases it was passed a callback which was manually called at all other return points. This can now be done via atexit().
In future plugin_crt0.c could also handle clearing bss, initializing iram and more.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@27862 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657
The simulator defines PLATFORM_HOSTED, as RaaA will do (RaaA will not define SIMULATOR).
The new define is to (de-)select code to compile on hosted platforms generally.
Should be no functional change to targets or the simulator.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.rockbox.org/rockbox/trunk@27019 a1c6a512-1295-4272-9138-f99709370657