Skip to content
  • MySensors
  • OpenHardware.io
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Brand Logo
  1. Home
  2. Hardware
  3. Step-by-step procedure to connect the NRF24L01+ to the GPIO pins and use the Raspberry as a Serial Gateway (MySensors 1.x)

Step-by-step procedure to connect the NRF24L01+ to the GPIO pins and use the Raspberry as a Serial Gateway (MySensors 1.x)

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Hardware
nrf24raspberry piraspberryraspberry nrf24l01 gpiogateway
168 Posts 47 Posters 175.0k Views 36 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • GertSandersG Offline
    GertSandersG Offline
    GertSanders
    Hardware Contributor
    wrote on last edited by
    #125

    Has anyone used the Raspberry GW software in combination with nodes that run the new 2.0.0 MySensors code ?

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • tbowmoT Offline
      tbowmoT Offline
      tbowmo
      Admin
      wrote on last edited by
      #126

      @GertSanders

      It's not supported, 2.0.0 nodes require a 2.0.0 GW. And the raspberry pi port is not updated to 2.0.0 (and unfortunately there is currently no one in the core group that uses the rpi gw.. We all use serial / ethernet gw's of some sort)

      GertSandersG W 2 Replies Last reply
      0
      • tbowmoT tbowmo

        @GertSanders

        It's not supported, 2.0.0 nodes require a 2.0.0 GW. And the raspberry pi port is not updated to 2.0.0 (and unfortunately there is currently no one in the core group that uses the rpi gw.. We all use serial / ethernet gw's of some sort)

        GertSandersG Offline
        GertSandersG Offline
        GertSanders
        Hardware Contributor
        wrote on last edited by
        #127

        @tbowmo
        I was afraid of that. In my enthusiasm I updated to 2.0.0, but now my new nodes play dead.
        At least I know why.
        Time to make that old ethernet gateway functional again.
        Since Breda meetup is this weekend, I will have no more time to figure this out (if I could ever, this is UNIX). Maybe after I can try something.

        GertSandersG 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • tbowmoT tbowmo

          @GertSanders

          It's not supported, 2.0.0 nodes require a 2.0.0 GW. And the raspberry pi port is not updated to 2.0.0 (and unfortunately there is currently no one in the core group that uses the rpi gw.. We all use serial / ethernet gw's of some sort)

          W Offline
          W Offline
          wergeld
          wrote on last edited by
          #128

          @tbowmo

          What would be required to get the RPi gateway up and running? Having single controller/gateway is great.

          GertSandersG 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • GertSandersG Offline
            GertSandersG Offline
            GertSanders
            Hardware Contributor
            wrote on last edited by
            #129

            @tbowmo
            Is a 2.0.0 based gateway backward compatible with nodes in an older version ?

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • W wergeld

              @tbowmo

              What would be required to get the RPi gateway up and running? Having single controller/gateway is great.

              GertSandersG Offline
              GertSandersG Offline
              GertSanders
              Hardware Contributor
              wrote on last edited by
              #130

              @wergeld
              Probably porting the Arduino lib to Raspberry and compiling again ?

              W 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • GertSandersG GertSanders

                @tbowmo
                I was afraid of that. In my enthusiasm I updated to 2.0.0, but now my new nodes play dead.
                At least I know why.
                Time to make that old ethernet gateway functional again.
                Since Breda meetup is this weekend, I will have no more time to figure this out (if I could ever, this is UNIX). Maybe after I can try something.

                GertSandersG Offline
                GertSandersG Offline
                GertSanders
                Hardware Contributor
                wrote on last edited by
                #131

                @tbowmo
                Is the last 2.0.0-dev version (before the new 2.0.0 official release) still available somewhere ?
                That DEV version seemed to still work with my Raspi GW.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • GertSandersG GertSanders

                  @wergeld
                  Probably porting the Arduino lib to Raspberry and compiling again ?

                  W Offline
                  W Offline
                  wergeld
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #132

                  @GertSanders

                  Time to start reading up on converting the lib! Might have a go at it in week or so. Work is holding me hostage at the moment.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • GertSandersG Offline
                    GertSandersG Offline
                    GertSanders
                    Hardware Contributor
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #133

                    Praise Apple for making TimeMachine. I was able to set back the last version of MySensors lib I know was working with my gateway in a bout 1 minute.

                    Back in business now. Upgrading the gateway and nodes to full 2.0.0 is for later.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • tbowmoT Offline
                      tbowmoT Offline
                      tbowmo
                      Admin
                      wrote on last edited by tbowmo
                      #134

                      @wergeld

                      you need to port the mysensors core library.. It is however filled with arduino specifics at the moment (we have had some talks about removing arduino dependencies, but it's not made yet).

                      Ideally someone should make a raspberry pi port, that we can merge into the main repository, so the same codebase can be build for both raspberryPi and arduino based hardware.

                      @GertSanders

                      A 2.0.0 GW should be compatible with 1.5.x nodes, but 2.0.0 nodes require a 2.0.0 GW.. (I can't remember the specifics in what the changes are, @tekka is the brain behind that stuff). That said, we do recommend that both nodes and GW will be updated to same mysensors versions, as to avoid any problems.

                      mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • tbowmoT tbowmo

                        @wergeld

                        you need to port the mysensors core library.. It is however filled with arduino specifics at the moment (we have had some talks about removing arduino dependencies, but it's not made yet).

                        Ideally someone should make a raspberry pi port, that we can merge into the main repository, so the same codebase can be build for both raspberryPi and arduino based hardware.

                        @GertSanders

                        A 2.0.0 GW should be compatible with 1.5.x nodes, but 2.0.0 nodes require a 2.0.0 GW.. (I can't remember the specifics in what the changes are, @tekka is the brain behind that stuff). That said, we do recommend that both nodes and GW will be updated to same mysensors versions, as to avoid any problems.

                        mfalkviddM Offline
                        mfalkviddM Offline
                        mfalkvidd
                        Mod
                        wrote on last edited by mfalkvidd
                        #135

                        @tbowmo @wergeld @GertSanders a port is already available, see https://forum.mysensors.org/topic/2759/mysensors-raspberry-port-suggestions/11 (and github)

                        It would be awesome if someone could merge that great work with the MySensors repo.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • tbowmoT Offline
                          tbowmoT Offline
                          tbowmo
                          Admin
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #136

                          @mfalkvidd

                          Ok, didn't know that it was updated to 2.0.0 "final", thanks for the hint :+1:

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Sander TeunissenS Offline
                            Sander TeunissenS Offline
                            Sander Teunissen
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #137

                            Would it be safe to say a RPI gateway 2.0 is not available yet for beginners ? (like the instructions @mfalkvidd made are not usable for this ?)

                            GertSandersG 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Sander TeunissenS Sander Teunissen

                              Would it be safe to say a RPI gateway 2.0 is not available yet for beginners ? (like the instructions @mfalkvidd made are not usable for this ?)

                              GertSandersG Offline
                              GertSandersG Offline
                              GertSanders
                              Hardware Contributor
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #138

                              @Sander-Teunissen
                              At the moment I would advise beginners to use a separate GW for the official 2.0.0 (ethernet or serial based). I found the ethernet based gateway the easiest to use in various setups, espcially since Domoticz (my controller of choice) supported this.

                              Sander TeunissenS 1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • GertSandersG GertSanders

                                @Sander-Teunissen
                                At the moment I would advise beginners to use a separate GW for the official 2.0.0 (ethernet or serial based). I found the ethernet based gateway the easiest to use in various setups, espcially since Domoticz (my controller of choice) supported this.

                                Sander TeunissenS Offline
                                Sander TeunissenS Offline
                                Sander Teunissen
                                wrote on last edited by Sander Teunissen
                                #139

                                @GertSanders Thanks Gert !
                                I did a quick build of the serial gateway using an arduino which I connect to my RPI. Pretty easy. I'll be watching this when I can switch back to the RPI built gateway...

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                1
                                • mfalkviddM mfalkvidd

                                  Note: This guide is only applicable to MySensors 1.x. For MySensors 2, use this guide.

                                  I noticed that a step-by-step procedure to connect the NRF24L01 to the GPIO pins and use the Raspberry as a Serial Gateway was listed in the document for MySensors 1.6.

                                  Since I have three gateways configured this way, and I need to set up 3 more for covering different offices around the world, and I had already written the instructions in Swedish for Datormagazin, I thought I'd help out.

                                  This is the first draft. Any feedback is welcome.


                                  INTRODUCTION
                                  The radio module NRF24L01+ is cheap and power efficient, but it is unable to communicate with regular wifi. The bridge between NRF24L01+ nodes and the "computer world" is called a Gateway. You can use other types of gateways, but connecting the NRF24L01+ module directly to the Raspberry Pi is a simple and cheap alternative.

                                  Wiring Things Up
                                  Connect the NRF20L01+ radio module to the Raspberry Pi like this:
                                  raspi_mysensors[1].png

                                  Raspberry Pi NRF24L01+ Color
                                  6 / GND GND Black
                                  1 / 3.3V DC VCC Red
                                  22 / GPIO25 CE Orange
                                  24 / GPIO 8 CSN/CS Yellow
                                  23 / GPIO11 / SPI_CLK SCK Green
                                  19 / GPIO10 / SPI_MOSI MOSI Blue
                                  21 / GPIO9 / SPI_MISO MISO Violet

                                  The IRQ pin on NRF24L01 is not currently used.

                                  For a comprehensive view of the Raspberry Pi pins, see http://pinout.xyz/

                                  You should also connect a decoupling capacitor to the radio. See this guide.

                                  COMPILING THE GATEWAY
                                  Login to your Raspberry Pi (using SSH or open a terminal on the graphical console) and run these commands:

                                  git clone https://github.com/TMRh20/RF24.git
                                  cd RF24
                                  make all && sudo make install
                                  cd ..
                                  
                                  git clone https://github.com/mysensors/Raspberry.git
                                  cd Raspberry
                                  make all && sudo make install
                                  

                                  If you get the following error:

                                  pi@raspberrypi ~/RF24 $ make all && sudo make install
                                  g++ -Wall -fPIC -Ofast -mfpu=vfp -mfloat-abi=hard -mtune=arm1176jzf-s -march=armv7-a -D BCM2835_PERI_BASE=0x -c RF24.cpp
                                  gcc -Wall -fPIC -Ofast -mfpu=vfp -mfloat-abi=hard -mtune=arm1176jzf-s -march=armv7-a -D BCM2835_PERI_BASE=0x -c bcm2835.c
                                  bcm2835.c: In function ‘bcm2835_init’:
                                  bcm2835.c:1207:28: error: invalid suffix "x" on integer constant
                                  
                                  

                                  You've probably run into the problem discussed in this thread. People have had luck with different solutions. The simplest is to make the following change to ~/Raspberry/librf24-bcm/Makefile

                                  #IOBASE := $(shell cat /proc/iomem | grep bcm2708_vcio | cut -f 1 -d "-")
                                  IOBASE := 3F000000
                                  

                                  VERIFY THE GATEWAY
                                  Run sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial. The output should look like this:

                                  pi@raspberrypi ~/Raspberry $ sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial
                                  Starting PiGatewaySerial...
                                  Protocol version - 1.4
                                  Created PTY '/dev/pts/1'
                                  Gateway tty: /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway
                                  ================ SPI Configuration ================
                                  CSN Pin          = CE0 (PI Hardware Driven)
                                  CE Pin           = Custom GPIO25
                                  Clock Speed      = 8 Mhz
                                  ================ NRF Configuration ================
                                  STATUS           = 0x0e RX_DR=0 TX_DS=0 MAX_RT=0 RX_P_NO=7 TX_FULL=0
                                  RX_ADDR_P0-1     = 0xe7e7e7e7e7 0xc2c2c2c2c2
                                  RX_ADDR_P2-5     = 0xff 0xc4 0xc5 0xc6
                                  TX_ADDR          = 0xe7e7e7e7e7
                                  RX_PW_P0-6       = 0x00 0x00 0x20 0x00 0x00 0x00
                                  EN_AA            = 0x3b
                                  EN_RXADDR        = 0x07
                                  RF_CH            = 0x4c
                                  RF_SETUP         = 0x23
                                  CONFIG           = 0x0e
                                  DYNPD/FEATURE    = 0x3f 0x06
                                  Data Rate        = 250KBPS
                                  Model            = nRF24L01+
                                  CRC Length       = 16 bits
                                  PA Power         = PA_LOW
                                  

                                  If the NRF24L01+ isn't correctly wired, the following error will be shown

                                  pi@raspberrypi ~ $ sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial
                                  Starting PiGatewaySerial...
                                  Protocol version - 1.4
                                  Created PTY '/dev/pts/2'
                                  Gateway tty: /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway
                                  check wires
                                  

                                  If this happens, double-check your wiring and correct any problems. Press Ctrl+Z and type

                                  sudo killall PiGatewaySerial
                                  

                                  to get rid of the non-functioning Gateway. Then run sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial again

                                  If all is well, exit PiGatewaySerial by pressing Ctrl+C. Then run

                                  sudo /etc/init.d/PiGatewaySerial start
                                  

                                  to start the gateway as a background process. Verify that it started correctly by running

                                  sudo cat /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway
                                  

                                  You should see the message "Gateway startup complete". Exit by typing Ctrl+C.

                                  MAKE THE GATEWAY AUTOSTART
                                  To make sure the Gateway is started when your Raspberry Pi boots up, run the following command:

                                  sudo make enable-gwserial
                                  

                                  Enable the gateway for use with Domoticz
                                  Domoticz (and maybe other home automation systems) has trouble reading from the default path created by PiGatewaySerial. You might need to run the following command:

                                  sudo ln -s /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway /dev/ttyUSB20
                                  

                                  And change /etc/rc.local from this

                                  exit 0
                                  
                                  

                                  to this

                                  ln -s /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway /dev/ttyUSB20
                                  exit 0
                                  
                                  

                                  OTHER NOTES

                                  • The 3.3V power on the Raspberry Pi is rated for a maximum of 50mA. A regular NRF24L01+ only needs 15mA, but if you are using a power amplified version you might exceed what the Raspberry Pi can output. In that case, an external power supply might be required. If you use an external power source gnd must be connected to the Raspberry Pi's gnd.

                                  • Connecting the NRF24L01+ directly to your Raspberry Pi will prevent you from using the Raspberry Pi's gpio ports for other things, like a Z-wave board.

                                  • A user experienced slow data transfer compared to USB-to-Serial(ttl)<-->MySensors Gateway connection, especially on OTA firmware update. If you think this will cause a problem for you, an ethernet gateway might be a better alternative.

                                  As always, I stand on the shoulders of giants. Related posts:

                                  • http://forum.mysensors.org/topic/1151/tutorial-raspberry-pi-nrf24l01-direct-connection
                                  • http://forum.mysensors.org/topic/1974/domoticz-as-controller-and-a-gateway-for-mysensor-nodes-running-on-a-raspberry-pi-2

                                  TROUBLESHOOTING
                                  If you get this error

                                  pi@Domoticz3:~/Raspberry$ sudo /etc/init.d/PiGatewaySerial start
                                  [....] Starting PiGatewaySerial (via systemctl): PiGatewaySerial.serviceFailed to start PiGatewaySerial.service: Unit PiGatewaySerial.service failed to load: No such file or directory.
                                   failed!
                                  

                                  or this error

                                  pi@raspberrypi ~ $ sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial
                                  sudo: /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial: command not found
                                  

                                  you have probably forgotten to run sudo make install. Read the instructions again, and follow them this time :-) User @sineverba reported that a reboot of the Pi after running make install helped.

                                  F Offline
                                  F Offline
                                  flopp
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #140

                                  @mfalkvidd said:

                                  OTHER NOTES

                                  • The 3.3V power on the Raspberry Pi is rated for a maximum of 50mA. A regular NRF24L01+ only needs 15mA, but if you are using a power amplified version you might exceed what the Raspberry Pi can output. In that case, an external power supply might be required.

                                  Nice guide thanks.
                                  when using external power supply i think it is best to connect Ground from Rpi and ext power supply. Maybe write that in the guide?

                                  alexsh1A 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • F flopp

                                    @mfalkvidd said:

                                    OTHER NOTES

                                    • The 3.3V power on the Raspberry Pi is rated for a maximum of 50mA. A regular NRF24L01+ only needs 15mA, but if you are using a power amplified version you might exceed what the Raspberry Pi can output. In that case, an external power supply might be required.

                                    Nice guide thanks.
                                    when using external power supply i think it is best to connect Ground from Rpi and ext power supply. Maybe write that in the guide?

                                    alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1A Offline
                                    alexsh1
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #141

                                    @flopp the best would be to use Raspberry's 5V rail and reduce it to 3.3V via the LDO like @GertSanders did in his board.

                                    There is one member using 3.3V rail for powering PA+LNA Tranceiver without any issues - check out the latest open hardware. I have not tried it personally

                                    mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • alexsh1A alexsh1

                                      @flopp the best would be to use Raspberry's 5V rail and reduce it to 3.3V via the LDO like @GertSanders did in his board.

                                      There is one member using 3.3V rail for powering PA+LNA Tranceiver without any issues - check out the latest open hardware. I have not tried it personally

                                      mfalkviddM Offline
                                      mfalkviddM Offline
                                      mfalkvidd
                                      Mod
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #142

                                      @alexsh1 I wouldn't want a guide to recommend a solution that is way outside the specifications even if users might not experience problems. Strange problems usually happen outside specs, they are a pain to troubleshoot and in this case might lead to frying someone's Raspberry Pi.

                                      @flopp thanks for your suggestion, I've amended to guide.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • mfalkviddM mfalkvidd

                                        Note: This guide is only applicable to MySensors 1.x. For MySensors 2, use this guide.

                                        I noticed that a step-by-step procedure to connect the NRF24L01 to the GPIO pins and use the Raspberry as a Serial Gateway was listed in the document for MySensors 1.6.

                                        Since I have three gateways configured this way, and I need to set up 3 more for covering different offices around the world, and I had already written the instructions in Swedish for Datormagazin, I thought I'd help out.

                                        This is the first draft. Any feedback is welcome.


                                        INTRODUCTION
                                        The radio module NRF24L01+ is cheap and power efficient, but it is unable to communicate with regular wifi. The bridge between NRF24L01+ nodes and the "computer world" is called a Gateway. You can use other types of gateways, but connecting the NRF24L01+ module directly to the Raspberry Pi is a simple and cheap alternative.

                                        Wiring Things Up
                                        Connect the NRF20L01+ radio module to the Raspberry Pi like this:
                                        raspi_mysensors[1].png

                                        Raspberry Pi NRF24L01+ Color
                                        6 / GND GND Black
                                        1 / 3.3V DC VCC Red
                                        22 / GPIO25 CE Orange
                                        24 / GPIO 8 CSN/CS Yellow
                                        23 / GPIO11 / SPI_CLK SCK Green
                                        19 / GPIO10 / SPI_MOSI MOSI Blue
                                        21 / GPIO9 / SPI_MISO MISO Violet

                                        The IRQ pin on NRF24L01 is not currently used.

                                        For a comprehensive view of the Raspberry Pi pins, see http://pinout.xyz/

                                        You should also connect a decoupling capacitor to the radio. See this guide.

                                        COMPILING THE GATEWAY
                                        Login to your Raspberry Pi (using SSH or open a terminal on the graphical console) and run these commands:

                                        git clone https://github.com/TMRh20/RF24.git
                                        cd RF24
                                        make all && sudo make install
                                        cd ..
                                        
                                        git clone https://github.com/mysensors/Raspberry.git
                                        cd Raspberry
                                        make all && sudo make install
                                        

                                        If you get the following error:

                                        pi@raspberrypi ~/RF24 $ make all && sudo make install
                                        g++ -Wall -fPIC -Ofast -mfpu=vfp -mfloat-abi=hard -mtune=arm1176jzf-s -march=armv7-a -D BCM2835_PERI_BASE=0x -c RF24.cpp
                                        gcc -Wall -fPIC -Ofast -mfpu=vfp -mfloat-abi=hard -mtune=arm1176jzf-s -march=armv7-a -D BCM2835_PERI_BASE=0x -c bcm2835.c
                                        bcm2835.c: In function ‘bcm2835_init’:
                                        bcm2835.c:1207:28: error: invalid suffix "x" on integer constant
                                        
                                        

                                        You've probably run into the problem discussed in this thread. People have had luck with different solutions. The simplest is to make the following change to ~/Raspberry/librf24-bcm/Makefile

                                        #IOBASE := $(shell cat /proc/iomem | grep bcm2708_vcio | cut -f 1 -d "-")
                                        IOBASE := 3F000000
                                        

                                        VERIFY THE GATEWAY
                                        Run sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial. The output should look like this:

                                        pi@raspberrypi ~/Raspberry $ sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial
                                        Starting PiGatewaySerial...
                                        Protocol version - 1.4
                                        Created PTY '/dev/pts/1'
                                        Gateway tty: /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway
                                        ================ SPI Configuration ================
                                        CSN Pin          = CE0 (PI Hardware Driven)
                                        CE Pin           = Custom GPIO25
                                        Clock Speed      = 8 Mhz
                                        ================ NRF Configuration ================
                                        STATUS           = 0x0e RX_DR=0 TX_DS=0 MAX_RT=0 RX_P_NO=7 TX_FULL=0
                                        RX_ADDR_P0-1     = 0xe7e7e7e7e7 0xc2c2c2c2c2
                                        RX_ADDR_P2-5     = 0xff 0xc4 0xc5 0xc6
                                        TX_ADDR          = 0xe7e7e7e7e7
                                        RX_PW_P0-6       = 0x00 0x00 0x20 0x00 0x00 0x00
                                        EN_AA            = 0x3b
                                        EN_RXADDR        = 0x07
                                        RF_CH            = 0x4c
                                        RF_SETUP         = 0x23
                                        CONFIG           = 0x0e
                                        DYNPD/FEATURE    = 0x3f 0x06
                                        Data Rate        = 250KBPS
                                        Model            = nRF24L01+
                                        CRC Length       = 16 bits
                                        PA Power         = PA_LOW
                                        

                                        If the NRF24L01+ isn't correctly wired, the following error will be shown

                                        pi@raspberrypi ~ $ sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial
                                        Starting PiGatewaySerial...
                                        Protocol version - 1.4
                                        Created PTY '/dev/pts/2'
                                        Gateway tty: /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway
                                        check wires
                                        

                                        If this happens, double-check your wiring and correct any problems. Press Ctrl+Z and type

                                        sudo killall PiGatewaySerial
                                        

                                        to get rid of the non-functioning Gateway. Then run sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial again

                                        If all is well, exit PiGatewaySerial by pressing Ctrl+C. Then run

                                        sudo /etc/init.d/PiGatewaySerial start
                                        

                                        to start the gateway as a background process. Verify that it started correctly by running

                                        sudo cat /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway
                                        

                                        You should see the message "Gateway startup complete". Exit by typing Ctrl+C.

                                        MAKE THE GATEWAY AUTOSTART
                                        To make sure the Gateway is started when your Raspberry Pi boots up, run the following command:

                                        sudo make enable-gwserial
                                        

                                        Enable the gateway for use with Domoticz
                                        Domoticz (and maybe other home automation systems) has trouble reading from the default path created by PiGatewaySerial. You might need to run the following command:

                                        sudo ln -s /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway /dev/ttyUSB20
                                        

                                        And change /etc/rc.local from this

                                        exit 0
                                        
                                        

                                        to this

                                        ln -s /dev/ttyMySensorsGateway /dev/ttyUSB20
                                        exit 0
                                        
                                        

                                        OTHER NOTES

                                        • The 3.3V power on the Raspberry Pi is rated for a maximum of 50mA. A regular NRF24L01+ only needs 15mA, but if you are using a power amplified version you might exceed what the Raspberry Pi can output. In that case, an external power supply might be required. If you use an external power source gnd must be connected to the Raspberry Pi's gnd.

                                        • Connecting the NRF24L01+ directly to your Raspberry Pi will prevent you from using the Raspberry Pi's gpio ports for other things, like a Z-wave board.

                                        • A user experienced slow data transfer compared to USB-to-Serial(ttl)<-->MySensors Gateway connection, especially on OTA firmware update. If you think this will cause a problem for you, an ethernet gateway might be a better alternative.

                                        As always, I stand on the shoulders of giants. Related posts:

                                        • http://forum.mysensors.org/topic/1151/tutorial-raspberry-pi-nrf24l01-direct-connection
                                        • http://forum.mysensors.org/topic/1974/domoticz-as-controller-and-a-gateway-for-mysensor-nodes-running-on-a-raspberry-pi-2

                                        TROUBLESHOOTING
                                        If you get this error

                                        pi@Domoticz3:~/Raspberry$ sudo /etc/init.d/PiGatewaySerial start
                                        [....] Starting PiGatewaySerial (via systemctl): PiGatewaySerial.serviceFailed to start PiGatewaySerial.service: Unit PiGatewaySerial.service failed to load: No such file or directory.
                                         failed!
                                        

                                        or this error

                                        pi@raspberrypi ~ $ sudo /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial
                                        sudo: /usr/local/sbin/PiGatewaySerial: command not found
                                        

                                        you have probably forgotten to run sudo make install. Read the instructions again, and follow them this time :-) User @sineverba reported that a reboot of the Pi after running make install helped.

                                        SeanMarshS Offline
                                        SeanMarshS Offline
                                        SeanMarsh
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #143

                                        @mfalkvidd I"m confused. I noticed the instructions below is for 1.5X or below and will not work with 2.0. The link for 2.0 that is posted doesn't make any sense to me at all. It also takes me to a thread where I start reading the information from the middle of a thread. I'm coming to the conclusion that it doesn't work yet..... Am I right?
                                        SUPER New here. sorry

                                        mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • SeanMarshS SeanMarsh

                                          @mfalkvidd I"m confused. I noticed the instructions below is for 1.5X or below and will not work with 2.0. The link for 2.0 that is posted doesn't make any sense to me at all. It also takes me to a thread where I start reading the information from the middle of a thread. I'm coming to the conclusion that it doesn't work yet..... Am I right?
                                          SUPER New here. sorry

                                          mfalkviddM Offline
                                          mfalkviddM Offline
                                          mfalkvidd
                                          Mod
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #144

                                          @SeanMarsh I don't know anything more than what's stated in that thread, sorry. That's also why it is the last option of the alternatives. Go with a serial, wifi or ethernet gateway if you can.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          0
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes


                                          15

                                          Online

                                          11.7k

                                          Users

                                          11.2k

                                          Topics

                                          113.0k

                                          Posts


                                          Copyright 2019 TBD   |   Forum Guidelines   |   Privacy Policy   |   Terms of Service
                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          • First post
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • MySensors
                                          • OpenHardware.io
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular