can-j1939-kickstart: update documentation for testj1939
testj1939 need to use -B (broadcast) flag to be able to send or receive broadcast packages. Signed-off-by: Oleksij Rempel <o.rempel@pengutronix.de>pull/175/head
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@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ testj1939 can be told to print the used API calls by adding **-v** program argum
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Do in terminal 1
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./testj1939 -r can0:
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testj1939 -B -r can0
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Send raw CAN in terminal 2
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@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ is not meant for us and *testj1939* does not receive it.
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Binding a can-j1939 socket to a source address will register
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allow you to send packets.
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./testj1939 can0:0x80
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testj1939 can0:0x80
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Your system had, for a small moment, source address 0x80 assigned.
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@ -67,7 +67,7 @@ Your system had, for a small moment, source address 0x80 assigned.
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Terminal 1:
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./testj1939 -r can0:0x80
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testj1939 -r can0:0x80
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Terminal 2:
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@ -87,37 +87,42 @@ Open in terminal 1:
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And to these test in another terminal
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./testj1939 -s can0:0x80,0x3ffff
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testj1939 -B -s can0:0x80 can0:,0x3ffff
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This produces **1BFFFF80#0123456789ABCDEF** on CAN.
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Note: To be able to send a broadcast we need to use, we need to use "-B" flag.
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### Multiple source addresses on 1 CAN device
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./testj1939 -s can0:0x90,0x3ffff
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testj1939 -B -s can0:0x90 can0:,0x3ffff
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produces **1BFFFF90#0123456789ABCDEF** ,
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### Use PDU1 PGN
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./testj1939 -s can0:0x80,0x12345
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testj1939 -B -s can0:0x80 can0:,0x12300
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emits **1923FF80#0123456789ABCDEF** .
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Note that the real PGN is **0x12300**, and destination address is **0xff**.
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Note that the PGN is **0x12300**, and destination address is **0xff**.
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### Use destination address info
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Since in this example we use unicast source and destination addresses, we do
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not need to use "-B" (broadcast) flag.
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The destination field may be set during sendto().
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*testj1939* implements that like this
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./testj1939 -s can0:0x80,0x12345 can0:0x40
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testj1939 -s can0:0x80 can0:0x40,0x12300
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emits **19234080#0123456789ABCDEF** .
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The destination CAN iface __must__ always match the source CAN iface.
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Specifying one during bind is therefore sufficient.
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./testj1939 -s can0:,0x12300 :0x40
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testj1939 -s can0:0x80 :0x40,0x12300
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emits the very same.
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@ -129,13 +134,13 @@ __sendto( *peername* )__ , and only one is used.
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For broadcasted transmissions
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./testj1939 -s can0:0x80,0x12300 :,0x32100
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testj1939 -B -s can0:0x80 :,0x32100
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emits **1B21FF80#0123456789ABCDEF** rather than 1923FF80#012345678ABCDEF
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emits **1B21FF80#0123456789ABCDEF**
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Destination specific transmissions
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./testj1939 -s can0:0x80,0x12300 :0x40,0x32100
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testj1939 -s can0:0x80,0x12300 :0x40,0x32100
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emits **1B214080#0123456789ABCDEF** .
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@ -146,21 +151,7 @@ It makes sometimes sense to omit the PGN in __bind( *sockname* )__ .
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J1939 transparently switches to *Transport Protocol* when packets
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do not fit into single CAN packets.
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./testj1939 -s20 can0:0x80 :,0x12300
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emits:
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18ECFF80#20140003FF002301
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This is the first fragment for broadcasted *Transport Protocol*.
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_testj1939_ returns before the subsequent packets can leave, and
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as the last socket on the system closes, can-j1939 effectively
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cleans up all resources. Real-world applications will run like forever,
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and will not encounter this side-effect.
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Try again, and instruct _testj1939_ to keep the socket open for 1 second.
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./testj1939 -w1.0 -s20 can0:0x80 :,0x12300
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testj1939 -B -s20 can0:0x80 :,0x12300
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emits:
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@ -178,11 +169,11 @@ First assign 0x90 to the local system.
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This becomes important because the kernel must interact in the
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transport protocol sessions before the complete packet is delivered.
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./testj1939 can0:0x90 -r &
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testj1939 can0:0x90 -r &
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Now test:
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./testj1939 -s20 can0:0x80 :0x90,0x12300
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testj1939 -s20 can0:0x80 :0x90,0x12300
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emits:
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@ -200,8 +191,8 @@ This overhead scales very good for larger J1939 packets.
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### Change priority of J1939 packets
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./testj1939 -s can0:0x80,0x0100
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./testj1939 -s -p3 can0:0x80,0x0200
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testj1939 -B -s can0:0x80 :,0x0100
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testj1939 -B -s -p3 can0:0x80 :,0x0200
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emits
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