bdaddr๐
Utility for changing the Bluetooth device address๐
- Authors:
Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org>
Adam Laurie <adam@algroup.co.uk>
- Version:
BlueZ
- Copyright:
Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public Licenses (LGPL).
- Date:
Sep 27, 2005
- Manual section:
1
- Manual group:
Linux System Administration
SYNOPSIS๐
bdaddr
bdaddr -h
bdaddr [-i <dev>] [-r] [-t] [new_bdaddr]
DESCRIPTION๐
bdaddr(1) is used to query or set the local Bluetooth device address (BD_ADDR). If run with no arguments, bdaddr prints the chip manufacturerโs name, and the current BD_ADDR. If the IEEE OUI index file โoui.txtโ is installed on the system, the BD_ADDR owner will be displayed. If the optional [new_bdaddr] argument is given, the device will be reprogrammed with that address. This can either be permanent or temporary, as specified by the -t flag. In both cases, the device must be reset before the new address will become active. This can be done with a โsoftโ reset by specifying the -r flag, or a โhardโ reset by removing and replugging the device. A โhardโ reset will cause the address to revert to the current non-volatile value.
bdaddr uses manufacturer specific commands to set the address, and is therefore device specific. For this reason, not all devices are supported, and not all options are supported on all devices. Current supported manufacturers are: Ericsson, Cambridge Silicon Radio (CSR), Texas Instruments (TI), Zeevo and ST Microelectronics (ST).
OPTIONS๐
- -h
Gives a list of possible commands.
- -i <dev>
Specify a particular device to operate on. If not specified, default is the first available device.
- -r
Reset device and make new BD_ADDR active. CSR devices only.
- -t
Temporary change. Do not write to non-volatile memory. CSR devices only.
FILES๐
- /usr/share/misc/oui.txt
IEEE Organizationally Unique Identifier consolidated file. Manually update from: http://standards.ieee.org/regauth/oui/oui.txt