Tuesday, April 2, 2013

[Bluelog v1.1.1] Simple Bluetooth Scanner

Bluelog is a simple Bluetooth scanner designed to tell you how many discoverable devices there are in an area as quickly as possible.

It is intended to be used as a site survey tool, identifying the number of possible Bluetooth targets there are in the surrounding environment.


Changelog v1.1.1

Codename: “Marshmallow Peep Edition”
  • Merged in libmackerel
  • Merged in MACLIST from haraldscan
  • Experimental manufacturer lookups (currently x86 only)
  • Configuration options broken out into config.h
  • Allow for friendly class names in verbose mode, thanks Dean
  • EXPERIMENTAL: Added -e option to encode MACs with CRC32
  • Updated MAN page
  • Updated README
  • Improved memory management, thanks Paolo
  • Improved file cleanup, less idiotic

Compatibility
Bluelog has been written with portability and efficiency in mind, so it is able to run on a number of systems and hardware platforms. Basically, as long as the device can run (and get results from) “hcitool scan”, and you can compile software for it, there is a good chance Bluelog can run on it.

In addition to running on all major Linux distributions, Bluelog has been used successfully on Chrome OS (running on the CR-48 netbook), and MIPS based OpenWRT devices. For information on the OpenWRT build of Bluelog, see the “openwrt” directory.

More Information: here

Download Bluelog v1.1.1

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