1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/calls.git synced 2024-11-16 05:15:36 +00:00
Purism-Calls/README.md
Guido Günther b04d564bcf manager: Allow to add plugin dir via environent
This eases testing of plugins from the source tree:

  CALLS_PLUGIN_DIR=_build/plugins/dummy/ _build/src/gnome-calls -p dummy
2021-04-01 14:07:27 +02:00

2.5 KiB

Calls

A phone dialer and call handler.

License

Calls is licensed under the GPLv3+.

Dependencies

To build Calls you need to first install the build-deps defined by the debian/control file

If you are running a Debian based distribution, you can easily install all those the dependencies making use of the following command

sudo apt-get build-dep .

Building

We use the meson and thereby Ninja. The quickest way to get going is to do the following:

meson -Dprefix=/usr/local/stow/calls-git ../calls-build
ninja -C ../calls-build
ninja -C ../calls-build install

Running

Calls has a variety of backends. The default backend is "mm", which utilises ModemManager. To choose a different backend, use the -p command-line option. For example, to run with the dummy backend and some useful debugging output:

export G_MESSAGES_DEBUG=all
/usr/local/stow/calls-git/bin/calls -p dummy

If using ModemManager, Calls will wait for ModemManager to appear on D-Bus and then wait for usable modems to appear. The UI will be inactive and display a status message until a usable modem appears.

When running from the source tree you can use CALLS_PLUGIN_DIR environment varible to specify the directroy from where plugins are loaded. To e.g. load the dummy plugin from the source tree:

export CALLS_PLUGIN_DIR=_build/plugins/dummy/
_build/src/gnome-calls -p dummy

oFono

There is also an oFono backend, "ofono". This was the first backend developed but has been superceded by the ModemManager backend so it may suffer from a lack of attention.

The ofono backend depends on oFono Modem objects being present on D-Bus. To run oFono with useful output:

sudo OFONO_AT_DEBUG=1 ofonod -n -d

The test programs within the oFono source tree are useful to bring up a modem to a suitable state. For example:

cd $OFONO_SOURCE/test
./list-modems
./enable-modem /sim7100
./online-modem /sim7100

Then run Calls:

/usr/local/stow/calls-git/bin/calls -p ofono

Phonesim

One can also make use of the oFono modem simulator, phonesim (in the ofono-phonesim package in Debian):

ofono-phonesim -p 12345 -gui /usr/local/share/phonesim/default.xml

then, ensuring /etc/ofono/phonesim.conf has appropriate contents like:

[phonesim]
Address=127.0.0.1
Port=12345

run oFono as above, then:

cd $OFONO_SOURCE/test
./enable-modem /phonesim
./online-modem /phonesim

And again run Calls.