This file is indexed.

/usr/share/doc/bluemon/README is in bluemon 1.4-6.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
Bluetooth Monitor System
------------------------

This comprises a daemon which monitors the status of a Bluetooth device (such
as a mobile phone) and emits DBUS signals when the device gets within a certain
threshold distance of the computer, a client program can start and stop
programs in response to these signals and a program which can query the status
of a device. The device must be paired with your computer. When starting the
daemon you specify the Bluetooth address of the device and a threshold; the
client you start with the Bluetooth address and programs to run whenever it
crosses the threshold.  

IPC is done over DBUS, so anything which can use DBUS can trap signals from
the daemon and query the status (see bluemon-dbus(7)) The XML
protocol description file is installed to 
$PREFIX/usr/share/doc/bluemon/bluemon-dbus.xml

Installation
------------

See INSTALL

Configuration
-------------

There is an example config file and init script in bluemon.default and
bluemon.init (these are installed in $PREFIX/usr/share/doc/bluemon/examples/).
The config file is just a convenience since all parameters must be passed on
the command line. The command line syntax for bluemon, bluemon-client and
bluemon-query is documented in the section 1 manpages.

Starting Bluemon
----------------

The sample initscript should be copied to the system initscript directory and
used to start the program. It uses a config file to read the parameters to pass
to the program. The config file is searched for as /etc/default/bluemon,
/etc/bluemon.conf or /etc/bluemon/bluemon.conf. If not, use man or --help to
decide which parameters you wish to use. A good sample command line is:

bluemon -qai 100 -t 210 -b BLUETOOTHADDR

as root, and then as a user:

bluemon-client -u "UP COMMAND" -d "DOWN COMMAND" -b BLUETOOTHADDR

where UP COMMAND is executed when the signal passes the threshold upwards
and DOWN COMMAND when it passes the threshold downwards.

Running bluemon with no session
-------------------------------

If you want to run bluemon as a purely system component, without having a
session or a login to run the client program, you can. Simply run the client command from an initscript in the background:

start-stop-daemon --start -x /usr/bin/bluemon-client -p /var/run/bluemon-client.pid -b -d / -m -- -u "UP COMMAND" -d "DOWN COMMAND" -b BLUETOOTHADDR

and to stop it:

start-stop-daemon --stop -x /usr/bin/bluemon-client -p /var/run/bluemon-client.pid  

you can add a -c parameter to start-stop-daemon to run it as a non-root user.

Up/Down Commands
----------------

The Up command is executed when the link quality becomes good. The Down command
is executed when the link quality becomes bad.

Thresholds
----------

The system works by sampling the signal strength of the Bluetooth connection
and then using a user-defined threshold to decide on whether the device is 'in
range' or not. Threshold values are in the range 0-255. Higher values indicate
a more sensitive system which requires the device to be in close proximity.
Lower values are less sensitive and will consider the device to be `in range'
even if it is quite a long way away. Features such as doors and walls cut the
signal strength such that a threshold of 'in the same room' is easy to achieve.
Testing suggests that values of around 210 for the threshold is good. For more
detail you can read section 4.1 of my paper on the subject
(http://www.matthew.ath.cx/publications/2005-JohnsonSta-hats.pdf)

Comments Etc
------------

To Matthew Johnson <debian@matthew.ath.cx>