irrecord - IR-codes recording tool for usage with LIRC
irrecord [
-f] [
-n] [
-H driver] [
-d device]
[
file]
irrecord -a <
file>
irrecord -l
irrecord --help | --version
This program will record the signals from your remote control and create a
config file for lircd. Although a good deal of effort is put in this program
it is often not possible to automatically recognize all features of a remote
control. See USAGE NOTES below.
If
file is not specified it defaults to "irrecord.lircd.conf"
If
file already exists and contains a valid config irrecord will use the
protocol description found there and will only try to record the buttons.
-
-a --analyse
- Analyse a raw_codes config file, trying to convert it to a
regular configuration.
-
-u --update
- Add new buttons to an existing config file. No protocol
information is updated.
-
-f --force
- Force raw mode. Use this if recording fails otherwise. This
creates a raw codes configuration file which can be used as-is or
converted using the -a option.
-
-n --disable-namespace
- Disable namespace checks.
-
-l --list-namespace
- List valid button names.
-
-H --driver=driver
- Use given driver. -H help lists available drivers.
-
-d --device=device
- Read from given device. Use mode2(1) --list-devices
to list available devices for a driver.
-
-U --plugindir=directory
- Load drivers from directory. See DRIVER LOADING.
-
-k --keep-root
- Don't drop root privileges after opening device. See
RUNNING AS ROOT.
-
-A, --driver-options
key:value[|key:value...]
- Set one or more options for the driver. The argument is a
list of key:value pairs delimited by '|'. The key can not contain spaces,
but such are allowed in the value part. Certain characters including '#'
and ';' are used as comment markers in the config file and are not allowed
anywhere.
-
-D --loglevel=level
- Determine the amount of logging information. [level] can be
a symbolic syslog level: 'error','warning, 'info', 'notice' or 'debug'.
lirc also defines three additional levels 'trace', 'trace1' and 'trace2'
which gives even more messages ('trace2' bringing the most). However, in
the log these messages are marked as 'debug'. The level can also be an
integer in the range 3 (almost no messages) to 10.
-
-O, --options-file <path>
- File containing default values for all options. A relative
path is interpreted from current directory. See [FILES] below.
-
-h --help
- Display this message.
-
-v --version
- Display version.
The primary options are --driver and usually also --device (some drivers does
not need --device). These could be verified using
mode2(1) if irrecord runs
into trouble.
When driver and device is known it saves some work to update lirc_options.conf
with the new values. irrecord uses the [lircd] section as a fallback, so with
a proper lirc_options.conf irrecord could be run without command line options.
Using an existing file as a template can sometimes be required for
irrecord to work. If using one of the generic templates it can also
provide better timing. See PROTOCOL PARAMETERS AND TEMPLATES.
If the program fails to recognize the protocol of the remote control you could
use the --force option to at least create a config file in raw mode.
After recording some buttons with irrecord, you should check the repeat masks.
These are needed in order to handle repeated button presses, which are very
common
Using the config file, start lircd and irw. Keeping a button pressed down, you
should see something like:<
0000000000f40bf0 00 KEY_1 ANIMAX
0000000000f40bf0 01 KEY_1 ANIMAX
0000000000f40bf0 02 KEY_1 ANIMAX
0000000000f40bf0 03 KEY_1 ANIMAX
0000000000f40bf0 04 KEY_1 ANIMAX
0000000000f40bf0 05 KEY_1 ANIMAX
Note how the second field gets incremented. This must work for correct
operation.
irrecord actually works in two phases. In the first, it tries to identify the
protocol used by the remote. Although this often works quite well, there are
advantages using an existing file as a template.
One reason to use a template is when irrecord fails to recognize the protocol in
the beginning. In such cases, try to find an existing configuration from the
same vendor using something like:
$ irdb-get find motorola
# lots of remotes listed...
$ irdb-get download motorola/VIP_1200.lircd.conf # Pick any
$ cp VIP_1200.lircd.conf my_remote.lircd.conf
$ irrecord my_remote.lircd.conf
Invoking irrecord this way re-uses the existing protocol which usually works
(vendors seldom changes protocol parameters).
Another reason to use an existing file is to get more exact timing, important
when planning to also transmit (blast). In such cases, using a generic
template found using
irdb-get find generic has advantages since the
timing values here are hand-crafted from specifications. To use these, you
need to know which protocol your remote uses, though.
If decoding of IR commands does not work reliably you can try to modify the eps
and aeps values in the lircd config file to adjust the tolerance of signal
lengths. aeps is an absolute value while eps is a relative value expressed in
percent. See
lircd.conf(5)
Some remotes actually emulates two or more remotes.
irrecord runs into
trouble if buttons from different logical remotes are mixed in the same run,
in particular in the initial protocol identification. For such devices,
irrecord must be invoked once for every logical device using only buttons from
this device during the run.
If there is various non-printable garbage on the screen when running irrecord
when using the default driver the rc protocol needs to be set. With a single
device the protocol can be set and inspected using
sudo sh -c "echo 'lirc' > /sys/class/rc/rc0/protocol"
cat /sys/class/rc/rc0/protocol
As for physical disturbances, the primary source is fluorescent light. You
should not have any such light around when using irrecord. It's also important
to have a suitable distance between the remote and the capture device, which
often is smaller than in typical, normal usage. However, making the distance
too small might cause other problems. At a first try use a foot or two.
Drivers are loaded dynamically. This is done from a traditional *ux
´:´-separated path where each component in the path is searched
(leading part first, trailing last).
The path used for this is determined by (falling priority):
- -
- The --plugindir option.
- -
- The 'plugindir' entry in the [lircd] section of the
lirc_options.conf file.
- -
- The environment variable LIRC_PLUGINDIR.
- -
- A hardcoded default
(/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/lirc/plugins).
In many cases irrecord needs to run as root to access devices not available to
regular users. On the other hand, running as root creates problems such as log
files owned by root, security concerns etc.
In order to cope with this, irrecord by default drops root privileges after
opening the input device. This support is based on that root permissions are
accquired using
sudo(1) e. g., using
$ sudo irrecord --device /dev/lirc0 --driver default
If not using sudo, the same behaviour could be accomplished using the SUDO_USER
environment variable e. g.,
# SUDO_USER=$LOGNAME irrecord --device /dev/lirc0 --driver default
The --keep-root option will make irrecord to keep root privileges for the
complete run.
- /etc/lirc/lirc_options.conf
- The options file holding default values for command line
options in the [irrecord] section. For some values including debug,
plugindir, driver and device irrecord falls back to the [lircd] section if
not found in [irrecord].
- -
- The location of this file can be changed using the
-O/--options-file command-line option or using the environment variable
LIRC_OPTIONS_PATH.
- ~/.cache/irrecord.log
- Debug output. Setting the XDG_CACHE_HOME environment
variable relocates this file to $XDG_CACHE_HOME/irrecord.log
https://sourceforge.net/p/lirc-remotes/wiki
irdb-get(1)
mode2(1)
lircd.conf(5)