NAME

mode2 - Show kernel output available for LIRC drivers
 

SYNOPSIS

mode2 --driver <driver> [--device <device>] [ other options]
mode2 --raw --device <device> [other options]
mode2 --driver <driver> --list-devices
 

DESCRIPTION

The original purpose of this program has been to check operation of home-brew LIRC receiver hardware and to see the IR waveform of the remote controller without an expensive oscilloscope. Over time, mode2 has evolved to a generic tool to check what kind of output the kernel makes available for lirc.
mode2 will simply print pulse and space lengths to stdout for drivers supporting LIRC_MODE_MODE2. For drivers supporting LIRC_MODE_LIRCCODE such as TV-cards and the irman driver writes the decoded, integer values.
From version 0.9.4, mode2 can also list the devices available for a given driver. This requires enumeration support which is available in most but not all drivers.
When given the correct driver mode2 should always work. Without a driver, the --raw option should always work for /dev/lirc* devices. At the time of writing, usb devices also works in most cases. However, since it is tricky to get the path to the usb device, such ones are normally best accessed using a driver.
Not all drivers requires a device.

OPTIONS

-d --device=device
Read from given device.
-H --driver=driver
Use given driver.
-m --mode
Write pulse/space data as raw config files. Does not affect LIRCCODE drivers.
-s --scope=time
Enable 'scope like display with time us per char. Does not affect lirccode drivers.
-k --keep-root
Don't drop root privileges after opening device. See RUNNING AS ROOT.
-l --list-devices
List all available devices for given driver. Requires support not present in all drivers.
-g --gap=time
Treat spaces longer than time as the gap. Time is in microseconds.
-r --raw
Access device directly. This is primarely intended to be used with kernel rc drivers i .e., when accessing /dev/lirc* devices. Using other devices might work, but is in general undefined.
-A --driver-options=key:value[|key:value...]
Set driver-specific option named key to given value.
-U --plugindir=directory
Load drivers from directory. See DRIVER LOADING.
-O, --options-file <path>
File containing default values for all options. A relative path is interpreted from current directory. See [FILES] below.
-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.
-h --help
Display usage summary.
-v --version
Display version.

RUNNING AS ROOT

In many cases mode2 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, mode2 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 mode2 --raw /dev/lirc0
If not using sudo, the same behaviour could be accomplished using the SUDO_USER environment variable e. g.,
# SUDO_USER=$LOGNAME mode2 --raw /dev/lirc0
The --keep-root option will make mode2 to keep root privileges for the complete run.
 

EXAMPLES

Invoked with a MODE2 type driver with mode2 prints space/mark timings:
     al@snorken $ ./mode2 --driver default --device /dev/lirc0
     Using driver default on device /dev/lirc0
     Trying device: /dev/lirc0
     Using device: /dev/lirc0
     pulse 2750
     space 800
     pulse 500
     space 350
     pulse 550
     space 350
     pulse 550
     ...
Invoked with a LIRCCODE type driver mode2 prints decoded values:
$ ./mode2 --driver atilibusb Using driver atilibusb on device /dev/lirc0 Trying device: /dev/bus/usb/001/007 Using device: /dev/bus/usb/001/007 code: 0x14709b0000 code: 0x14709b0000 code: 0x14709b0000 code: 0x14709b0000 code: 0x14709b0000 ...
Invoked using mode2 --list-devices for the devinput driver with a single X10 RF usb device plugged in: $ ./mode2 --list-devices --driver devinput /dev/input/event12 [0bc7:0006] X10 WTI RF receiver vers: 1.10 serial: ? /dev/input/by-id/usb-X10_WTI_RF_receiver-event-if00 -> ../event12 /dev/input/by-path/pci-0000:0b:00.0-usb-0:1:1.0-event -> ../event12

DRIVER LOADING

Drivers are loaded dynamically. The search 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).

ENVIRONMENT

LIRC_LOGLEVEL
Used as fallback when there is no --loglevel option present. Syntax is the same as for --loglevel, see OPTIONS.

FILES

/etc/lirc/lirc_options.conf
The options file holding default values for command line options in the [mode2] section. For some values including debug, plugindir, driver and device mode2 falls back to the [lircd] section if not found in [mode2].
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/mode2.log
Debug log. Setting the XDG_CACHE_HOME environment variable relocates this file to $XDG_CACHE_HOME/mode2.log. The amount of logging respects the LIRC_LOGLEVEL environment variable, defaulting to the debug value in lirc_options.conf.

SEE ALSO

xmode2(1)
 
lirc(4)
 
The documentation for lirc is maintained as html pages. They are located under html/ in the documentation directory.

Recommended readings

Pages related to mode2 you should read also: