
Now the old software refuses to install the controller drivers. It didn't restart properly, it BSOD'd with the SCPVBUS error or something. I used that and everything was fine until I restarted my PC. This SCP Toolkit, doesn't work with bluetooth. What I'm trying to say, The SCP-DS-Driver-Package-1.2.2.175 was the only way to get them to work via Bluetooth. My controllers is fine as they work via USB and on a PS3 and PS4. The vibration works perfectly fine otherwise.

Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub I can connect via bluetooth using old scp When using old scpserver, I can get my controllers to vibrate on usb mode,īut not on bluetooth mode. Version doesnt work with bluetooth on these fake controllers? Version of motioninjoy and scpserver works with bluetooth, but ur latest

Supplier told me its a genuine sony controller. Should I ask for a refund from the supplier? The 29, 2015 10:54 PM, "luzair" I have the same issue "FakeĬontroller detected". So, long story short: you should ask for a refund xDĮl dic. Who knows, maybe those fancyĬamouflage ones they sell are actually original, or they offer a dualshockĤ (I can dream hehe :P ) (seriously, I'll most likely get refunded) Instantly offered "a replacement or a refund". Original), mentioned that seemed to not be the case and I was almost If you want to know more about the inner workings of the Scp Bluetooth stack don't hesitate to not nefarius but you should. That's where the software is currently stuck. The PANHAIs just don't send the 3rd connection request for the HID Service channel which the originals do just fine. What I've discovered so far is, that the actual pairing (sadly people misuse this term all the time the flashing LEDs do not necessarily indicate a pairing problem) works fine, it's the L2CAP connections which fail after responding to a connection and configuration request. The Logs the toolkit produces won't help much since the inner workings of the protocols involved aren't logged it would add too much of an overhead. I don't have much time either since I'd like to focus on development rather than reverse engineering. Since my knowledge of the whole Bluetooth specification (if I recall correctly, v4 has nearly a 1000 pages.) is very limited I wasn't yet able to decipher those dumps.

I managed to tap into the communication between the Bluetooth controller chip and the micro controller (they communicate via UART thankfully) and actually could dump the streams they exchange when connecting to a genuine Sony PlayStation 3. I got some different "breeds" of those PANHAIs donated a few month ago and had them disassembled.
