02-01-2012
You should contact technical support at SCO. They can give you better advise than we can here.
Read the /usr/adm/messages file. That will tell you why it crashed.
My SCO knowledge is scanty. If I were running it, I would reboot often enough to prevent the crash, until you get a patch, fix, or help from SCO.
If you have no support you will have to attempt to use SCO's dbx to analyze the dump file.
In general, my experience with UNIX has been that it is extremely stable. As a wild guess, I would suspect some kind of hardware issue, but you state there is none....
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BTSCO(4) BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual BTSCO(4)
NAME
btsco -- Bluetooth SCO Audio
SYNOPSIS
btsco* at bthub?
audio* at audiobus?
DESCRIPTION
The btsco driver provides support for Bluetooth SCO Audio devices through the audio(4) driver.
The btsco driver must be configured at run time with the btdevctl(8) program. The following properties are used by the btsco driver during
autoconfiguration:
local-bdaddr
Local device address.
remote-bdaddr
Remote device address.
service-name
The btsco driver matches the 'HF' and 'HSET' services. For the 'HF' service, the btsco device will, on open(2), listen for incom-
ing connections from the remote device. Otherwise, btsco will attempt to initiate a connection to the remote device.
rfcomm-channel
This integer value is not used directly, but will be stored and passed via the BTSCO_INFO ioctl as below:
SCO connections require a baseband connection between the two devices before they can be created. The btsco driver does not create this, but
can provide information to facilitate an application setting up a control channel prior to use, via the BTSCO_INFO ioctl(2) call on the mixer
device, which returns a btsco_info structure as follows:
#include <dev/bluetooth/btsco.h>
struct btsco_info {
bdaddr_t laddr; /* controller bdaddr */
bdaddr_t raddr; /* headset bdaddr */
uint8_t channel; /* RFCOMM channel */
int vgs; /* mixer index speaker */
int vgm; /* mixer index mic */
};
#define BTSCO_INFO _IOR('b', 16, struct btsco_info)
The btsco driver can be configured to act in Connect or Listen mode. In Connect mode, the btsco driver will initiate a connection to the
remote device on an open(2) call, whereas in Listen mode, open(2) will block until the remote device initiates the connection.
SEE ALSO
bthset(1), ioctl(2), audio(4), bluetooth(4), bthub(4), btdevctl(8)
HISTORY
The btsco driver was written for NetBSD 4.0 by Iain Hibbert under the sponsorship of Itronix, Inc.
BUGS
btsco takes no notice of the HCI Voice Setting in the Bluetooth controller, and this must be 0x0060 (the default) as alternate values are
currently unsupported.
BSD
October 4, 2006 BSD