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Difference between revisions of "RockpiN10/dev/libmraa"

< RockpiN10‎ | dev
(UART test)
 
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   overlay_prefix=rockchip
 
   overlay_prefix=rockchip
 
   rootfstype=ext4
 
   rootfstype=ext4
   fdtfile=rockchip/rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dtb '''rk3399pro-uart2''' '''rk3399pro-uart4'''
+
   fdtfile=rockchip/rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dtb  
 
   '''console='''
 
   '''console='''
   overlays=rk3399pro-console-on-uart2
+
   overlays='''rk3399pro-uart2''' '''rk3399pro-uart4'''
 
   rootuuid=11958cc2-af5a-4e6f-9ad4-2b3baef3eebe
 
   rootuuid=11958cc2-af5a-4e6f-9ad4-2b3baef3eebe
 
   initrdsize=0x5649ac
 
   initrdsize=0x5649ac
Line 259: Line 259:
 
  rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo mraa-uart dev 0 baud 1500000 recv  1000
 
  rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo mraa-uart dev 0 baud 1500000 recv  1000
 
  radxa
 
  radxa
 
  
 
===== SPI test =====
 
===== SPI test =====

Latest revision as of 09:21, 18 December 2020

    ROCK Pi N10 >  Development >  Install Libmraa 

Libmraa on ROCK Pi N10

This guide describes how to use libmraa on ROCK Pi N10.

Install essential packages

Package libmraa is in the Radxa APT bionic-stable and buster-stable repositories.

Execute the following commands to add Radxa APT

rock@rockpin10:~$ export DISTRO=bionic-testing      # for Bionic

or

rock@rockpin10:~$ export DISTRO= buster-testing      # for Buster
rock@rockpin10:~$ echo "deb http://apt.radxa.com/$DISTRO/ ${DISTRO%-*} main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/apt-radxa-com.list

Get the pub key

rock@rockpin10:~$  wget -O -  apt.radxa.com/buster-testing/public.key | sudo apt-key add -

Install essential packages:

rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo apt-get update
rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo apt-get install -y rockchip-overlay libmraa  # libmraa version: >= 1.1
rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo apt-get install -y linux-4.4-rockpin10-latest # ROCK Pi N10 kernel version: >= 4.4.167-15

Install compiler:

rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo apt install -y build-essential

Enable interface

See ROCK Pi N10 GPIO pintout. ROCK Pi N10 has a 40-pin colorful expansion header. Each pin is distinguished by color. mraa define is shown below:

Hardware V11

25 GPIO:

   PIN03      GPIO2_A7
   PIN05      GPIO2_B0
   PIN07      GPIO2_B5
   PIN08      GPIO4_C4
   PIN10      GPIO4_C3
   PIN11      GPIO4_C2
   PIN12      GPIO0_B1
   PIN13      GPIO4_C6
   PIN15      GPIO4_C5
   PIN16      GPIO0_B0
   PIN18      GPIO2_A6
   PIN19      GPIO1_B0
   PIN21      GPIO1_A7
   PIN22      GPIO3_D4
   PIN23      GPIO1_B1
   PIN24      GPIO1_B2
   PIN29      GPIO2_B2
   PIN31      GPIO2_B1
   PIN32      GPIO3_D5
   PIN33      GPIO2_D5
   PIN35      GPIO2_A4
   PIN36      GPIO2_A2
   PIN37      GPIO3_D6
   PIN38      GPIO2_A3
   PIN40      GPIO1_A2 

3 I2C:

   PIN27      I2C2_SDA
   PIN28      I2C2_SCL
   PIN29      I2C6_SCL
   PIN31      I2C6_SDA
   PIN3       I2C7_SDA
   PIN5       I2C7_SCL
  

1 SPI:

   PIN19      SPI1TX        //must disable UART4
   PIN21      SPI1RX        //must disable UART4
   PIN23      SPI1CLK
   PIN24      SPI1CSN

2 UART:

   PIN8       UART2_TX
   PIN10      UART2_RX
   PIN19      UART4_TX  //must disable SPI1
   PIN21      UART4_RX  //must disable SPI1
  

2 PWM:

   PIN11      PWM0
   PIN13      PWM1

1 ADC:

   PIN26      ADC_IN1          //the measure voltage must lower than 1.8v

For those ROCK Pi N10 system images released after March 1st, 2020, the configuration file is /boot/uEnv.txt. For more details, follow this guide, Device tree overlays.

For those ROCK Pi N10 system images released before March 1st, 2020, the configuration file is /boot/hw_intfc.conf.


Test

Package libmraa provides some examples for testing spi, uart, i2c, gpio, etc. We way use the c files in /usr/local/share/mraa/examples/c.

And we copy them to home directory.

rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ cp -av /usr/local/share/mraa/examples/c /home/rock/mraa-examples

You should pay more attention to the Black Bold words when modifying configuration file /boot/uEnv.txt.

GPIO test
 rock@rockpin10:~$ mraa-gpio list
 01         3V3: 
 02          5V: 
 03        SDA7: GPIO I2C  
 04          5V: 
 05        SCL7: GPIO I2C  
 06         GND: 
 07    GPIO0_B5: GPIO 
 08        TXD2: GPIO UART 
 09         GND: 
 10        RXD2: GPIO UART 
 11        PWM0: GPIO PWM  
 12    GPIO0_B1: GPIO 
 13        PWM1: GPIO PWM  
 14         GND: 
 15    GPIO4_C5: GPIO 
 16    GPIO0_B0: GPIO 
 17         3V3: 
 18    GPIO2_A6: GPIO 
 19 SPI1TX,TXD4: GPIO SPI  UART 
 20         GND: 
 21 SPI1RX,RXD4: GPIO SPI  UART 
 22    GPIO3_D4: GPIO 
 23     SPI1CLK: GPIO SPI  
 24      SPI1CS: GPIO SPI  
 25         GND: 
 26     ADC_IN0: AIO  
 27        SDA2: GPIO I2C  
 28        SCL2: GPIO I2C  
 29 SCL6,SPI2RX: GPIO I2C  SPI  
 30         GND: 
 31 SDA6,SPI2TX: GPIO I2C  SPI  
 32    GPIO3_D5: GPIO 
 33    GPIO4_D5: GPIO 
 34         GND: 
 35    GPIO2_A4: GPIO 
 36    GPIO2_A2: GPIO 
 37    GPIO3_D6: GPIO 
 38    GPIO2_A3: GPIO 
 39         GND: 
 40    GPIO1_A2: GPIO
 root@rockpin10:~# mraa-gpio set 40 1           #pin40 pull high
 root@rockpin10:~# mraa-gpio set 40 0           #pin40 pull high
PWM test

ROCK Pi N10 V1.1 provides 2 PWM, PWM0 and PWM1. It is necessary to enable PWM0 and PWM1 at the same time if you need PWM function.

Firstly, modify the /boot/uEnv.txt file to add the following

 root@rockpin10:~# cat /boot/uEnv.txt
 verbosity=7
 overlay_prefix=rockchip
 rootfstype=ext4
 fdtfile=rockchip/rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dtb rk3399pro-pwm0 rk3399pro-pwm1
 overlays=rk3399pro-console-on-uart2
 rootuuid=11958cc2-af5a-4e6f-9ad4-2b3baef3eebe
 initrdsize=0x5649ac
 kernelversion=4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 initrdimg=initrd.img-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 kernelimg=vmlinuz-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8


Modify the macro PWM in /home/rock/mraa-examples/pwm.c as follows to test PWM0. To test PWM2, change #define PWM 11 to #define PWM 13.

/* PWM declaration */
#define PWM 11

Save and compile pwm.c

rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ gcc -o pwm pwm.c -lmraa
rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ sudo ./pwm 
PWM value is 0.010015
PWM value is 0.019985
PWM value is 0.030000
PWM value is 0.040014
PWM value is 0.049984
PWM value is 0.059999
I2C test

ROCK Pi N10 V1.1 provides 3 I2C,There are I2C2 ,I2C6, I2C7. If you need the I2C function, you can turn on one or more of them.

Firstly, modify the /boot/uEnv.txt file to add the following

 root@rockpin10:~# cat /boot/uEnv.txt
 verbosity=7
 overlay_prefix=rockchip
 rootfstype=ext4
 fdtfile=rockchip/rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dtb rk3399pro-i2c2 rk3399pro-i2c6 rk3399pro-i2c7
 overlays=rk3399pro-console-on-uart2
 rootuuid=11958cc2-af5a-4e6f-9ad4-2b3baef3eebe
 initrdsize=0x5649ac
 kernelversion=4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 initrdimg=initrd.img-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 kernelimg=vmlinuz-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8

We use MPU6050 tets i2c. Modify the macro MPU6050 in /home/rock/mraa-examples/i2c_mpu6050.c ,as follows to test I2C2. To test I2C6 and I2C7, change #define I2C_BUS 0 to #define I2C_BUS 1 or#define I2C_BUS 2 .

 /* mraa header */
  #include "mraa/i2c.h"
  #define I2C_BUS 0
  

Save and compile pwm.c

  rock@rockpis:~/mraa-examples$ gcc -o i2c_mpu6050 i2c_mpu6050.c  -lmraa
  rock@rockpis:~/mraa-examples$ sudo ./i2c_mpu6050
  accel: x:0 y:0 z:0
  gyro: x:-10 y:1 z:7
  
  accel: x:0 y:0 z:0
  gyro: x:107 y:-12 z:69
   
  accel: x:0 y:0 z:0
  gyro: x:6 y:136 z:-50


UART test

ROCK Pi n10 V1.1 provides 2 UART,There are uart2 ,uart4. If you need the uatr function, you can turn on one or more of them.

Firstly, Disable console and enable uart2 for uart test.modify the /boot/uEnv.txt file to add the following

 root@rockpin10:~# cat /boot/uEnv.txt
 verbosity=7
 overlay_prefix=rockchip
 rootfstype=ext4
 fdtfile=rockchip/rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dtb 
 console=
 overlays=rk3399pro-uart2 rk3399pro-uart4 
 rootuuid=11958cc2-af5a-4e6f-9ad4-2b3baef3eebe
 initrdsize=0x5649ac
 kernelversion=4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 initrdimg=initrd.img-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 kernelimg=vmlinuz-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8

Here set console to NULL value.

then reboot . use ssh connect to rockpin10,we must have 2 windows,one is for send data,anothor is for receive.

send command follow:

rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo mraa-uart dev 0 baud 1500000 send  radxa

Another window sets the baud 1500000 and receives the data

radxa

receive command follow:

rock@rockpin10:~$ sudo mraa-uart dev 0 baud 1500000 recv  1000
radxa
SPI test

Firstly, modify the /boot/uEnv.txt file.

 root@rockpin10:~# cat /boot/uEnv.txt
 verbosity=7
 overlay_prefix=rockchip
 rootfstype=ext4
 fdtfile=rockchip/rk3399pro-rockpi-n10-linux.dtb rk3399pro-spi-spidev 
 overlays=rk3399pro-console-on-uart2
 rootuuid=11958cc2-af5a-4e6f-9ad4-2b3baef3eebe
 initrdsize=0x5649ac
 kernelversion=4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 initrdimg=initrd.img-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8
 kernelimg=vmlinuz-4.4.167-14-rockchip-g53bdb2fa44e8

then execute command, sync, followed by reboot.

Create file test-spi.c and add the following contents.

rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ cat test-spi.c 
#include <signal.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>

/* mraa header */
#include "mraa/spi.h"

/* SPI declaration */
#define SPI_BUS 2

/* SPI frequency in Hz */
#define SPI_FREQ 10000000
int
main(int argc, char** argv)
{
    mraa_result_t status = MRAA_SUCCESS;
    mraa_spi_context spi;
    int i, j;

    /* initialize mraa for the platform (not needed most of the times) */
    mraa_init();

    //! [Interesting]
    /* initialize SPI bus */
    spi = mraa_spi_init(SPI_BUS);
    if (spi == NULL) {
        fprintf(stderr, "Failed to initialize SPI\n");
        mraa_deinit();
        return EXIT_FAILURE;
    }

    /* set SPI frequency */
    status = mraa_spi_frequency(spi, SPI_FREQ);
    if (status != MRAA_SUCCESS)
        goto err_exit;

    /* set big endian mode */
    status = mraa_spi_lsbmode(spi, 0);
    if (status != MRAA_SUCCESS) {
        goto err_exit;
    }
   
    j = 10;
    while(j) {
  	j--;
        printf("0x%x\n",mraa_spi_write(spi, 0xaa));
    }
err_exit:
    mraa_result_print(status);

    /* stop spi */
    mraa_spi_stop(spi);

    /* deinitialize mraa for the platform (not needed most of the times) */
    mraa_deinit();

     return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ gcc -o test-spi test-spi.c -lmraa

Then short pin19 and pin21 and run test-spi

rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ sudo ./test-spi 
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
0xaa
MRAA: SUCCESS


ADC test

connect signal you want to measure, and then compile mraa example c file, aio.c, to test.

rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ gcc -o aio aio.c -lmraa
rock@rockpin10:~/mraa-examples$ sudo ./aio
ADC A0 read 1A5 - 421
ADC A0 read float - 0.41153
ADC A0 read 1A5 - 421
ADC A0 read float - 0.41153
ADC A0 read 1A5 - 421
ADC A0 read float - 0.41153
ADC A0 read 1A5 - 421
ADC A0 read float - 0.41153

Development

More introduction of libmraa can look at libmraa official website.

Troubleshooting