The way to set the pad up in Bluetooth mode is fairly straight forward:
- Open the USB device
- Get the device's Bluetooth address through magic USB commands
- Write your Bluetooth adapter's address in the pad (magic USB commands again), and then give the device back to the USB HID driver, so that it works as a pad through USB.
- Set up the internals of bluetoothd so it recognises the device, and allows it to connect to your computer
- When the device connects through Bluetooth, poke at it with magic commands again to enable its HID mode (code is already in bluetoothd's input plugin)
First up, detecting the device being plugged in. I wanted to use DeviceKit's GObject helper library, but it uses the D-Bus DeviceKit daemon which will be going away (note, this is just the DeviceKit daemon itself, not the -power, or -disks "sub"-daemons), in favour of libudev usage.
So I ported devkit-gobject to use libudev directly. Patch is currently being reviewed (it's in DavidZ's inbox), and it should show up soon in udev-extras under a different namespace.
After a bit of work, I had a bluetoothd plugin that detected PS3 pads being plugged in, and did the necessary work to make bluetoothd recognise it on plug.
Next, finishing up the libudev GObject helper library, and getting the bluetoothd plugin reviewed. And it would be nice to finally get the extra functionality merged into a hid driver in the kernel.
PS: Any info on the PS3 Headset or the keypad?
Any chance of Wiimote support?
ReplyDeleteThe Wiimote shows up as a normal Bluetooth device and can be paired. The support for it is already in the latest gnome-bluetooth.
ReplyDeleteDoes that make it usable as a HID?
ReplyDeleteIs a joystick device node created?
Just wanted to thank you for your work on this. Pairing PS3 joypads is one of the most wanted features of the crazy people installing Ubuntu on their PS3.
ReplyDeletePlease make other posts about it when it gets accepted upstream (kernel, bluez) so that we can cherry pick the commits and help test it asap.
Thanks again
Pepsiman: Seriously, why don't you just try it?
ReplyDeleteajeans: given that we get about a person a day showing up with those questions on the #bluez channel, I'm pretty certain it's helping :)
hadess:
ReplyDeleteI'm using gnome-bluetooth 0.11.0-0ubuntu4.
I get "Pairing with Nintendo RVL-CNT-01 failed".
Pepsiman: gnome-bluetooth 0.11? You're using bluez-gnome to do the pairing then. Upgrade to gnome-bluetooth 2.27.x
ReplyDeletehadess: I've installed gnome-bluetooth 2.27.4-0ubuntu5 from https://launchpad.net/~bmillemathias/+archive/ppa
ReplyDeleteThe dialog is slightly different, but pairing fails in the same way.
Pepsiman: Try 2.27.5. And this is the last comment I'll reply to, this isn't a forum, and there's a mailing-list and a bug tracker...
ReplyDeletegnome-bluetooth 2.27.5 can pair with a Wiimote.
ReplyDeleteNothing useful happens while it is paired.
hi there.
ReplyDeleteI am developing an app that connects Sixaxis to PC through bluetooth.
I never liked to have a patched hidd just to connect it.
But having Sixaxis support out-of-the-box will be just awesome!
I also posted an idea on the Ubuntu Brainstorm about this (still using for aproval)
You sir, rock
ReplyDeleteNext up, the Guitar Hero drums? :D
ReplyDeleteAnon: If somebody buys me the gear :)
ReplyDeleteBluetooth gear wishlist lives here: http://www.amazon.co.uk/registry/wishlist/TKL85H14LHFU/ref=cm_wl_rlist_go