When AT+CGML is used to retrieve list of SMS stored in modem inbox,
every message has an associated index. ETSI TS 127 005 v7.0.0 does not
specify what is the allowed range of such indices - all it says is
"integer type; value in the range of location numbers supported by the
associated memory".
Usually, AT modems use positive indexes (starting at 1). Quectel BG96
modem takes a different approach, indexing messages starting at 0.
Current implementation of `AT_CellularSMS::list_messages()` considers
index 0 invalid and ignores such message, effectively making it
impossible to access using mbed-os API.
This commit changes the behavior so that value of 0 is handled as any
other positive message index.
Currently, create_pdu receives a destination address without '+' prefix,
and always sets the "type of address" to "unknown". That means, the
number needs to contain appropriate international number prefix (00/011)
if necessary - which is not the case if the leading + is simply
stripped.
This changes send_sms behavior so that when a SMS is sent to an
international number (indicated by leading +):
- AT+CMGS command receives the number with + prefix,
- created PDU has the "international" flag set.
CellularContext now tries to get an IP address after connect and before
sending NSAPI_STATUS_GLOBAL_UP. Even if we don't the IP address from
the modem we will send NSAPI_STATUS_GLOBAL_UP and return success.
Modem has an ip address but for some reason some modems don't
give it to us.
If delete fails there is nothing we or application can do. There is no point
returning an error for this. This affects to AT_CellularContext::disconnect
not returning an error if context delete fails.
ARMC5 failed to compile the code with debug-profile (!!) as va_list
is getting into std:: namespace when one includes <cstdarg>. Other
compilers seem to be more relaxed, and so is ARMC5 if compiled
with other profiles.
Add the explicit std:: to references of va_list.
While here, remove one extra copy of "#include "PlatformMutex.h""
and a "#include <stdarg.h>" which is kind of duplicate of
"#include <cstdarg>".
Error being fixed:
--8<--8<--8<--
Compile [ 81.8%]: ATHandler.cpp
[Error] ATHandler.h@552,0: #20: identifier "va_list" is undefined
[Error] ATHandler.cpp@1226,0: #147: declaration is incompatible with "void mbed::ATHandler::handle_args(const char *, <error-type>)" (declared at line 552 of "./mbed-os/features/cellular/framework/AT/ATHandler.h")
[ERROR] "./mbed-os/features/cellular/framework/AT/ATHandler.h", line 552: Error: #20: identifier "va_list" is undefined
"./mbed-os/features/cellular/framework/AT/ATHandler.cpp", line 1226: Error: #147: declaration is incompatible with "void mbed::ATHandler::handle_args(const char *, <error-type>)" (declared at line 552 of "./mbed-os/features/cellular/framework/AT/ATHandler.h")
./mbed-os/features/cellular/framework/AT/ATHandler.cpp: 0 warnings, 2 errors
Deprecate wait() in favour of acquire(), try_acquire(),
try_acquire_for() and try_acquire_until().
Brings Semaphore more into line with CMSIS-RTOS 2 (which uses "acquire"),
itself (as it has "release"), and other classes having "try", "try for"
and "try until".
Also steps away from vague "wait" term - the primary operation here is
to acquire the semaphore, and this will of course sleep.
Local modem ip stacks vary in their implementations and the way of
working. Some of the modems may not open a socket until an IP context is
assigned. That's why we came up with a container that stores addresses of
any CellularSocket instances created on-demand by the application. When
the application requests opening a socket we store allocate and store the
premitive in the container however actual socket creation at the modem
may happen at a later stage, e.g., a call to send_to() may result in
actual opening of a socket.
That's why we must not assign socket ids in the CellularSocket object
during construction. It must happen when actual socket is opened and is
alive.
Another implication of the previous model is that we may have multiple
sockets created in our container but the actual socket ids are not
assigned yet, so we cannot directly map the socket id to the container
indices which has been happening previously.
To solve this issue we have promoted the AT_CellularStac::find_socket_index(...) method
to be a protected method rather than being private so that the children
can use the method to determine if the given index in the container
corrsponds to the assigned socket id or not.
We have given up on the socket->created flag and the whole decision
making to actually open a socket on the modem happens on the basis of a
valid socket being assigned or not.