Hi Rene,

Le 2021-02-14 22:15, reneherr...@gmail.com a écrit :
> Dear Maintainer,
> 
> I don't usually get to thank folks for everything that is made available to 
> the world, so a big and sincere thank you, despite not knowing who you are.
> 
> This is most definitely in the wishlist bucket as it is non-essential.  It is 
> however very low lying fruit.
> 
> J1939 and other derived protocols such as NMEA 2000 are widely used in the 
> automotive and marine industries to name a few.
> 
> I myself live on a sailboat and use various pieces of software that get 
> supercharged when they can collect data from other devices on the boat.
> 
> For example, I have an AIS and GPS devices on my NMEA 2000 bus that 
> broadcasts the boat's position and that of other vessels (avoiding large 
> metallic objects out at sea is a good thing).  The can-j1939 Linux Kernel 
> module does all the heavy lifting involved with the protocol which sits on 
> top of CAN and allows you to easily send and receive messages with hardware 
> devices already supported in Debian Linux (ex: CAN Bus Analyzer from 
> Microchip).  This module enables pulling that data and feeding it to a chart 
> plotter such as OpenCPN.  In simple terms, seeing a chart is nice, seing a 
> chart displaying your position and that of other boats is *very* nice, having 
> an alarm go off when a process detects a collision is eminant is *pure 
> awesomeness* as it can literally save your life.
> 
> The currect workaround is simply to pull the sources and recompiling the 
> kernel, which is not a huge deal, but it is a little anoying as this (idealy) 
> needs to be repeated every update.
> 
> Thanks for taking the time to read and consider this,
> 
> Rene

I sent a merge request for this:
https://salsa.debian.org/kernel-team/linux/-/merge_requests/329


Cheers,
Vincent

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