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  3. Time awareness and scheduling events

Time awareness and scheduling events

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Development
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  • greglG Offline
    greglG Offline
    gregl
    Hero Member
    wrote on last edited by
    #20

    No prob... you can remove the bugs ive added ;-)

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    • korttomaK Offline
      korttomaK Offline
      korttoma
      Hero Member
      wrote on last edited by
      #21

      Thanks! @GREGL I find it useful also for my project.

      • Tomas
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      • JohnJ Offline
        JohnJ Offline
        John
        Plugin Developer
        wrote on last edited by
        #22

        I would suggest to sync times a little bit more because if i remember correct the 1307 is quite sensitive for drifting because of temperature, if it would drift 3 seconds a day would be around 16 minutes a year, the DS3231 compansates this with the build in temp sensor.

        But i could be incorrect, but, update your rtc more often anyway ;)

        My Domotica project: http://www.pidome.org

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        • korttomaK Offline
          korttomaK Offline
          korttoma
          Hero Member
          wrote on last edited by korttoma
          #23

          Just tried the DS3232RTC library from the examples provided by @hek and it seems like the RTC I2C DS1307 AT24C32 (link to device in earlier post) I have is working happily with this library also. I guess all the features of the library does not work but since the features on my device are working I will stick with this lib since it is provided by MySensors.

          Maybe you should try it out to @gregl

          BTW!, the RTC I have seems to drift quite allot (~1s/h) so I would not recommend it to someone that needs accuracy.

          • Tomas
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          • T Offline
            T Offline
            ToSa
            Code Contributor
            wrote on last edited by
            #24

            All - help me understand the use-case for a RTC on a sensor please.

            From the discussion above I get that we might have two different needs:

            • really high accuracy
            • a second (or few seconds) deviation are acceptable

            We lose accuracy in RF transmission already, therefore fetching the time on the controller or gateway and sending it to the nodes is not appropriate for the high accuracy need. A RTC would not help in this case because you need to tell the RTC the current time to start with and if that's already inaccurate, you won't get the accuracy needed. The only way to get real accuracy would be to fetch it on the node directly e.g. with a DCF77 receiver.
            For the "less accuracy needed" scenario why would you add hardware to the node if receiving a time broadcast from the controller every x minutes is good enough to get the required (lower) accuracy "in software" without the need for hardware?

            hekH 1 Reply Last reply
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            • JohnJ Offline
              JohnJ Offline
              John
              Plugin Developer
              wrote on last edited by John
              #25

              You would be better of with an http://www.maximintegrated.com/en/products/digital/real-time-clocks/DS3231.html which has a theoretically drift between 1 and 2 minutes a year (depending on operating temperatures).If i'm correct it uses the internal temp sensor for drift compensation (and could also be read?).

              My Domotica project: http://www.pidome.org

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              • T ToSa

                All - help me understand the use-case for a RTC on a sensor please.

                From the discussion above I get that we might have two different needs:

                • really high accuracy
                • a second (or few seconds) deviation are acceptable

                We lose accuracy in RF transmission already, therefore fetching the time on the controller or gateway and sending it to the nodes is not appropriate for the high accuracy need. A RTC would not help in this case because you need to tell the RTC the current time to start with and if that's already inaccurate, you won't get the accuracy needed. The only way to get real accuracy would be to fetch it on the node directly e.g. with a DCF77 receiver.
                For the "less accuracy needed" scenario why would you add hardware to the node if receiving a time broadcast from the controller every x minutes is good enough to get the required (lower) accuracy "in software" without the need for hardware?

                hekH Offline
                hekH Offline
                hek
                Admin
                wrote on last edited by
                #26

                @ToSa said:

                All - help me understand the use-case for a RTC on a sensor please.

                If your mains powered watering node has a power failure (restarts) and loses connection to controller.

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                • JohnJ Offline
                  JohnJ Offline
                  John
                  Plugin Developer
                  wrote on last edited by John
                  #27

                  All - help me understand the use-case for a RTC on a sensor please.

                  http://forum.mysensors.org/topic/284/simple-temp-light-time-setup-with-lcd-1-4-no-beta-anymore

                  Time currently is being pushed every minute by the device created on the controller to "the display" (It has no RTC now). When it fails to receive the new time it would then be standing still. So it is nice to have without power failure.

                  My Domotica project: http://www.pidome.org

                  T 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • JohnJ John

                    All - help me understand the use-case for a RTC on a sensor please.

                    http://forum.mysensors.org/topic/284/simple-temp-light-time-setup-with-lcd-1-4-no-beta-anymore

                    Time currently is being pushed every minute by the device created on the controller to "the display" (It has no RTC now). When it fails to receive the new time it would then be standing still. So it is nice to have without power failure.

                    T Offline
                    T Offline
                    ToSa
                    Code Contributor
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #28

                    @hek @John
                    using the "time.h" library on the node the time will continue to run. It will not be very accurate (as accurate as the "millis" in arduino) which should be sufficient to turn off the water after 15 minutes (no matter if that's a few seconds off) and good enough to let the clock tick further unless the next successful submission is received from the controller.

                    JohnJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • T ToSa

                      @hek @John
                      using the "time.h" library on the node the time will continue to run. It will not be very accurate (as accurate as the "millis" in arduino) which should be sufficient to turn off the water after 15 minutes (no matter if that's a few seconds off) and good enough to let the clock tick further unless the next successful submission is received from the controller.

                      JohnJ Offline
                      JohnJ Offline
                      John
                      Plugin Developer
                      wrote on last edited by John
                      #29

                      @ToSa
                      True, I personally will be using some self build wall clocks, and the display will get a bigger role in our household, so it would be nice to keep track of time as close as possible.

                      My Domotica project: http://www.pidome.org

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                      • greglG Offline
                        greglG Offline
                        gregl
                        Hero Member
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #30

                        @ToSa
                        In my use case its a pool controller I use a rtc to do several things..but the desire to sync is really just to adjust for daylight savings changes.

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