hi-Can anybody offer some sort of solution for this? if somebody could, I could offer some sort of reward. regards. S.



[Bluez-devel] rfcomm connection using multiple dongles
From: Stephen Keegan <stephen.keegan@uc...> - 2007-08-02 16:58
Hi,

I'd really appreciate some help on a problem I'm having. I've tried to
solve it myself but have been unable to do so for quite some time.
Basically, I want to create an rfcomm connection to a remote device
using 2 different dongles (at different times). My local devices are
shown here:

root@3[src]# hciconfig
hci0: Type: USB
BD Address: 00:0A:3A:66:62:57 ACL MTU: 1017:8 SCO MTU: 64:8
UP RUNNING PSCAN ISCAN
RX bytes:12081 acl:204 sco:0 events:308 errors:0
TX bytes:4672 acl:204 sco:0 commands:125 errors:0

hci1: Type: USB
BD Address: 00:0A:3A:66:63:31 ACL MTU: 1017:8 SCO MTU: 64:8
UP RUNNING PSCAN ISCAN
RX bytes:2535 acl:28 sco:0 events:77 errors:0
TX bytes:1044 acl:28 sco:0 commands:41 errors:0


Here is the code I am using:


****************************************************************************************************************
#include <errno.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <bluetooth/bluetooth.h>
#include <bluetooth/rfcomm.h>
#include <bluetooth/hci.h>
#include <bluetooth/hci_lib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>

int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
bdaddr_t m_bdaddrDongle;
char thedongle[20];
strcpy(thedongle,argv[1]);

if(argc != 3)
{
printf("%s <mac_address> <channel>\n\n", argv[0]);
return 1;
}

int dev_id = hci_devid( thedongle );
struct hci_dev_info m_DevInfo;
int dd = hci_open_dev(dev_id);
if (dd < 0)
{
printf("Error opening bluetooth device\n");
}


m_DevInfo.dev_id = dev_id;
if (ioctl(dd, HCIGETDEVINFO, (void*) &m_DevInfo))
{
printf("Error opening bluetooth device\n");
hci_close_dev(dd);
return 1;
}
char addr[18];
ba2str(&m_DevInfo.bdaddr, addr);
printf("Attached to BT adapter: %s\t%s\n", m_DevInfo.name, addr);

bacpy(&m_bdaddrDongle, &m_DevInfo.bdaddr);
struct sockaddr_rc laddr, raddr;
laddr.rc_family = AF_BLUETOOTH;
bacpy(&laddr.rc_bdaddr, &m_bdaddrDongle);
laddr.rc_channel = 0;

char remote_bdaddr[20] = "08:00:17:1B:13:DE";
printf("Remote Mac address: %s\n", remote_bdaddr);

raddr.rc_family = AF_BLUETOOTH;
str2ba(remote_bdaddr, &raddr.rc_bdaddr);
raddr.rc_channel = atoi(argv[2]);
printf("Channel: %d\n", raddr.rc_channel);

int m_CommHandle;
if ((m_CommHandle = socket(AF_BLUETOOTH, SOCK_STREAM, BTPROTO_RFCOMM)) < 0)
{
printf("Can't create RFCOMM socketi\n");
return 1;
}

int r, e = 0;
errno = 0;
while ((r = connect(m_CommHandle, (struct sockaddr *)&raddr,
sizeof(raddr))) == -1)
{
e = errno;
if (e != EBUSY)
break;
errno = e = 0;
usleep(500000);
}
printf("r=%d; errno=%d; result=%s\n", r, e, strerror(e));

return r != 0;
}


****************************************************************************************************************

So then, I attempt to run the code with each of my dongles using the
following commands:

./test 00:0A:3A:66:63:31 6

and

./test 00:0A:3A:66:62:57 6

When I run the code, the connection is detected by the remote
device(08:00:17:1B:13:DE) and the connection is created successfully.
The problem is that each time I run the code, the first dongle (hci0) is
used by the bluetooth stack. (That dongle starts flashing). Why is this?
I believe that it is due to a problem with the command:

while ((r = connect(m_CommHandle, (struct sockaddr *)&raddr,
sizeof(raddr))) == -1)

I think that I may need to specify which dongle (hc0 or hci1) should be
used in this command.

If anybody could advise on a solution, I would be very grateful.

regards,

Stephen.