Porting MySensors to work with the RadioHead library


  • Mod

    @Zeph said:

    If the home automation controller will accept multiple gateways

    I currently use an MQTT broker as middleware - I can install a zillion gateways if I have to this way... 🙂


  • Hero Member

    @Damme said:

    I think we need to think about choosing a bitter atmega for this..
    Next up would be Arduino Mega 2560 with what it feels like 'Unlimited ram!'
    They are not That expensive today since china made its own ch340 usb - serial chip (Why this was the expensive component blows my mind :P) ATmega2560-16AU CH340G MEGA 256 you can find for ~10EUR / 13.50USD..

    Also note the ATMega2560 small form factor offering: http://www.ebay.com/itm/261541870545 which is similar to an Arduino Pro Mini but with the larger processor. And it has even more pins broken out than the Arduino Mega2560.


  • Hero Member

    @Zeph said:

    @kolaf said:

    It is not that simple because all the different specific drivers implement a bunch of their own functions which are not virtualised. This means that you need to static cast or dynamic cast the driver every time you want to use it which is a real pain.

    Are those driver-specific functions needed during normal operation, or are they only for non-default setup? (eg: frequency, bandwidth, etc)

    Just for setup. Runtime operation is handled by the manager and is independent of the radio driver.


  • Hero Member

    @Zeph And you even get the "mini mega" presoldered with the radio chip of your choice for $20 🙂

    https://lowpowerlab.com/shop/index.php?route=moteinomega


  • Hero Member

    @kolaf said:

    And you even get the "mini mega" presoldered with the radio chip of your choice for $20 🙂

    Well, it's actually another $6-7 for the radio, $1 for pins, and optionally $3 for extra flash. But it's still a good deal.

    It's nice to have more ATMega1284 based Arduino styles options available. The official Arduino folks went for the ATMega1280/2560 instead for their high end AVR based system, and they have their advantages, but the extra RAM on the 1284 is probably more useful than the extra Flash memory.

    For our nodes, the Moteino Mega probably has more than enough IO. Compared to the Arduino Pro Micor, it basically has 10 additional digital pins (plus all 8 analog pins can be used as digital, not just 6 of them). I2c is done with digital IO pins rather than analog pins. And it has another serial port.

    The ATMega2560-core (I posted an ebay link a couple msgs back) has a huge number of IO pins, including many that were not available in the Arduino Mega board - eg: the pins needed for doing SPI master mode with the additional USARTS. There are applications that might be useful for, but for sensor network nodes we would rarely need so many I/Os.

    (I'll stop there - these messages on other boards and chip might be a good candidate for a moderator to move to another thread)


  • Hero Member

    I took a look at the freeRam function to see if memory was part of my radio performance issues. However, are not able to make sense of the readings. It reports consistently -152 which seems a bit weird to me. Can anyone help me understand what this means, and whether it is a problem?


  • Mod

    @kolaf can you show us the internals of this function?


  • Hero Member

    It is the function that is included in the bottom of the radio library main file.

    return (int) &v - (__brkval == 0 ? (int) &__heap_start : (int) __brkval);

    I'm guessing that a negative value here is not a good sign. I have been battling with a very poor radio performance (10 cm range) and I think it is related to memory usage. If a switch from the mesh manager to the reliable datagram manager I suddenly get much better range, as well as heaps of free memory. I have started a thread on this on the Radiohead forum, so let's see if some bright guy there can help me.

    In the meantime I have two options: use only point to point links, or reimplement the multihop routing existing in the original MySensors library. For the moment I'll hold off to see what the other guys can tell me.


  • Mod

    @kolaf Please find a detailed explanation of the function here: http://jeelabs.org/2011/05/22/atmega-memory-use/


  • Hero Member

    I've turned off debug messages for the serial Gateway, and I now have 600 bytes free RAM when running. It should be even more on the sensor node, but I haven't checked. I hope this is sufficient to build relatively complex sensors without any problems.

    I'm still having problems with the mesh code giving the very poor range, but I have now ruled out that this is caused by lack of memory. Maybe there is a bug in Radiohead? The saga continues...


  • Hero Member

    Time for a short status update:

    I'm still working on trying to figure out why I get very poor radio range (10 cm) when using the automatic mesh functionality of Radiohead. I get no such issues when using simple point-to-point messages without the routing network layer.

    Through trial and error I have narrowed it down to possibly a problem with the serial gateway code. I am able to communicate successfully between two implementations of a sensor using gw.send and gw.process, but as soon as I change the type from MySensors to MyGateway in one node things stop working.

    I will be able to do more testing on this during the next few days. In the meantime, do you have any suggestions as to what can be different in MyGateway to stop things from working? The three things that come to my mind is its use of interrupts for inclusion mode, memory problems from increased functionality (unlikely), or possibly something to do with the serial communication.

    Could you please explain to me what the purpose of inclusion mode is? I cannot seem to find any code where this mode actually does anything useful 🙂

    I also don't quite understand how the serial communication works. It appears to be some kind of event handler tied to the serial port, but where and how is this done? Could this have impact on the issues I'm seeing, perhaps it is blocking for some time (although I find that hard to believe)?


  • Admin

    @kolaf said:

    Could you please explain to me what the purpose of inclusion mode is? I cannot seem to find any code where this mode actually does anything useful

    The gateway is just indicating when inclusion mode is active by flashing the LEDs. You can also enable/disable this mode by sending a message to controller. Noting more is done on the gateway side.
    The purpose is to prohibit unwanted device includes. You must actively enable the inclusion mode. And during this time all newly presented sensors will be added on the controller side.

    It is of course optional to use this functionality from a controller implementers point of view. It was necessary to provide this functionality when implementing support for the Vera controller as it tends to restarts every time you add a new device programatically. And you wouldn't want that to happen just by presenting a new sensor in your radio network.

    I doubt the interrupts would affect radio in this case. They are only triggered when pushing the inclusion button (attached at pin 3). Just check you didn't connect radio IRQ-pin to 3 🙂 which I did once with funny results.

    I also don't quite understand how the serial communication works. It appears to be some kind of event handler tied to the serial port, but where and how is this done? Could this have impact on the issues I'm seeing, perhaps it is blocking for some time (although I find that hard to believe)?

    Really doubt this is you problem.

    Gateway is always assigned radio-address 0. Does this perhaps have a special meaning in RadioHead?


  • Hero Member

    The gateway address 0 is not a problem, when I communicate between two sensors directly they have the addresses 0 and 1 without issue.

    For the moteino and anarduino the RF 69 radio is always connected to interrupt pin 2, so I agree with you that this should not be an issue.

    I'm also considering that I might be doing something different in the constructor since the sensor and gateway uses different constructors, but I also find this hard to believe. All radio initialisation is done inside setUpRadio which is common for both classes.

    Do you have a pointer to somewhere that explains the serial event handling?


  • Admin

    @kolaf said:

    Do you have a pointer to somewhere that explains the serial event handling?

    http://arduino.cc/en/Tutorial/SerialEvent


  • Hero Member

    @kolaf said:

    Do you have a pointer to somewhere that explains the serial event handling?

    Nevermind, I found it 🙂

    Regarding addresses, the only dress with a special meaning in Radiohead is 255 which is broadcast. This should not be an issue for my experiments since amusing fixed node IDs.


  • Hero Member

    I think I just found my problem!!

    I was looking at the header file for MyGateway and I suddenly noticed that I have a bogus default value for transmit power (-14 instead of 14). This explains nicely why my range suddenly gets limited when running the Gateway. Can't wait until I get home to test this :-).

    Still, experience shows it is never as easy as you think, so I won't know until tonight.


  • Hero Member

    OT but ... what's the point of SerialEvent()?

    From the description it's called between loop() calls if there is serial input data, and you should check for more than one byte of data.

    void loop() {
          // do stuff
    }
    
    void serialEvent() {
        while (Serial.available()) {
            char inChar = (char)Serial.read(); 
            // use it
        }
    }
    

    So wouldn't adding this to the end (or start) of loop do the same thing?

    void loop() {
          // do stuff
    
          while (Serial.available()) {
             char inChar = (char)Serial.read(); 
             // use it
          }
    }
    

    Except this would work on the Leonardo etc, so there must be advantage of serialEvent that I'm missing.


  • Code Contributor


  • Hero Member

    Good news everyone!

    My hunch was correct and I now finally have the MySensors library working correctly through my entire house (one hop covering 20 m through two timber walls) using the mesh network manager from Radiohead. I have not tried multiple hops yet, but I have no reason to believe that that should not work since I'm using the standard Radiohead library (famous last words?).

    I have pushed my current progress of the fully working version to my fork of mysensors. My ongoing task now is to merge in the current development branch and deal with all the conflicts. There are a lot of conflicts since I have changed a lot of functions signatures in my code. The next task is to try to generalise everything so that it works correctly with the radio you guys use with some decent defaults. My plan as we have discussed earlier is to have a minimal constructor and initialisation routine covers the basic functionality for every radio we want to support and exports the radio driver from the MySensors object so that power users can access this directly and tweak the settings for the radio if they want to.

    I have my first my sense and node working with the new code :-). It is a simple distance sensor with a 10 cm limit which gives a binary output detected/not detected. I use this to detect a hand waving in front of the sensor and send a message to the gateway every time a hand is detected and disappears again. This is piped through a modified version of the PC mqtt Gateway I have borrowed from zephy and modified to support communication over the serial port (not just sockets). This again is connected to openhab where I use a rule based on what has been described in another thread to toggle a relay on and off and control my light :-).

    When I enter my room, wave my hand, light on. When I leave my room, wave my hand, light off. Unfortunately I have to have this powered by the mains power system since I need it on all the time to have the response I want from the wave detector. If I sleep I might miss a wave, which means I will have to stand and wave for several seconds for something to happen.


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    My plan as we have discussed earlier is to have a minimal constructor and initialisation routine covers the basic functionality for every radio we want to support and exports the radio driver from the MySensors object so that power users can access this directly and tweak the settings for the radio if they want to.

    On a second thought, I prefer to not construct the radio instance in the MySensors library and expose its ptr for 'power users', but to create the radio instance from the sketch and pass it along with the MySensors c'tor or begin-method.
    This is in line with how the RadioHead library handles radios and more flexible when e.g. support for new radios is added to the RadioHead library (the MySensors library does not have to be modified then).
    I also don't like all the #ifdef's in the MySensors library for all the different radio types. This just pollutes the code...

    As an example I wrote down how the radio instantiation and passing it to MySensors could look like in a sketch:

    #include <SPI.h>
    #include <RH_NRF24.h>
    #include <MySensor.h>  
    
    RH_NRF24 nrf24;
    MySensor gw;
    
    void setup() 
    {
      nrf24.init();
      // I'm a power user, so let's change the channel ;-)
      nrf24.setChannel(1);
      // Start MySensors and pass it the radio to use
      gw.begin( nrf24 );
    }
    

    I think this notation is clean and easy to understand for novice users.
    How about it?

    modified version of the PC mqtt Gateway I have borrowed from zephy

    From Yveaux, I suppose?


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux said:

    I think this notation is clean and easy to understand for novice users.
    How about it?

    I support that wholeheartedly. The reason for my initial suggestion was the desire from the library side to be easy to initialise. Having the user initialise the radio separately removes a bunch of configuration complexity from the radio set up. The only trouble I foresee is that the typically are some standard commands required to initialise the different radios property. For instance, for my radio I have to set the frequency and transmit power. This will be identical for every sensor I will build, so it would be good to have some kind of default initialisation for the radios. I don't know what is required to set up the RF 24 radios (or was it RF 22)?

    modified version of the PC mqtt Gateway I have borrowed from zephy

    From Yveaux, I suppose?

    Sorry, I just remembered that it was a username with a weird combination of letters 😉


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    a weird combination of letters

    It's French 🙂
    Kinda....


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    The only trouble I foresee is that the typically are some standard commands required to initialise the different radios property. For instance, for my radio I have to set the frequency and transmit power. This will be identical for every sensor I will build, so it would be

    We should choose & define some sane defaults (like the current defaults).
    I think most of the users will just continue using the nRF24's, so this radio can be used in the examples.

    It will make the transtion rather painless, IMHO


  • Hero Member

    The trouble is that it cannot be solved just by using defines defaults. For my case I have to explicitly call

    driver.setTXPower(14)
    driver.setFrequency(868)
    

    Every time I initialise the driver. This is a pain. Perhaps we should have a separate initialisation routine that enters default values for each driver which is called in the constructor? Or maybe we call the driver specific initialisation on the object after we have constructed it?

    MyGateway gw(driver);
    gw.initialise_RF69()
    gw.begin();
    

    I must admit that this does not seem very elegant...


  • Mod

    @kolaf From my head, you're using the RF69 driver, right?
    Well, this applies to any driver....
    Looking in RH_RF69.cpp, RH_RF69::init(), it explicitly sets the TxPower to 13 as last statement of the init procedure.
    If this default is changed into a #define which can e.g. be overwritten with your own defaults we're also done, e.g.

    In e.g. RH_RF69.cpp

    #ifndef RF69_DEFAULT_TXPOWER
    #define RF69_DEFAULT_TXPOWER (13)
    #endif
    

    and then ofcourse in RH_RF69::init():

        setTxPower(RF69_DEFAULT_TXPOWER); 
    

    If we now allow a file with our own MySensors defaults to be included before the default definition of RF69_DEFAULT_TXPOWER, it has precedence over the RadioHead's defaults and we're done.

    This requires modifying RadioHead a little, but I can't imagine the maintainers would have a problem with implementing a mechanism for compile-time configurable default values.


  • Mod

    I just built my first nRF24L01+ setup using the RadioHead library running the nrf24_reliable_datagram_client and nrf24_reliable_datagram_server sketches on two Uno's.

    Works like a charm, after I disconnected the interrupt line to the nRF24.
    Don't know why yet (possibly an interrupt handler is 'secretly' installed by the library), but it took me some time to figure out...

    Also requires the driver to be constructed as RH_NRF24 driver(9, 10) when using the MySensors connection-scheme.


  • Hero Member

    Great to hear, I'm looking forward to seeing whether my implementation will work with your radio and whether there is any benefit from it, or just a big cost. I know that from my radio the radio library needs to know the interrupt pin, so definitely installs an interrupt handler. I shouldn't think it would do that for every driver, but I might very well be wrong. Let me know if you need any help getting my work in progress to work for you, though I suspect that you are knowledgeable enough to manage it yourself 🙂

    I agree that your solution to the configurations pretty elegant, and in fact for my specific case I don't think we need to change the defaults since the only reason I have to do my own initialisation is because I have the high-powered version. It makes sense to leave the RF 69 driver defaults as is, and I will just have to deal with it 🙂

    Still, I am a bit reluctant to make changes to the Radiohead library. The major reason is of course that it will be difficult to upgrade the library as new releases are published (which they are quite often, apparently). The new releases are only distributed using zip files as far as I can see, which means that we would need a manual merge job every time we want to upgrade the library. It would be easier if they had a git repository for the driver, then we could to a large extent handle merging in new versions automatically. I guess I could check on their Google group whether this is an option. Doing a manual merge is of course also possible, and maybe it turns out that this is the best option after all.

    Another option which is sort of a compromise is to have the main constructor detect which type of driver it is supplied with. I guess it is possible to do some kind of type checking to figure out which class it is an instance of. We can then build our own default initialisation routines (by all means based on defined values) which are called by the constructor automatically without the need for user interaction. The trouble is, obviously, but this might overwrite whatever initialisation is you did yourself before instantiating the class. I guess this can be sold with an additional parameter to turn this on and off, but then it becomes messy again.


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    Another option which is sort of a compromise is to have the main constructor detect which type of driver it is supplied with.

    I'm afraid this isn't an option as the linker will have to link code for all radios in then, got every radio configuration....


  • Hero Member

    The trouble with initialising the radio separately by the user is that it increases the complexity, which I think is one of @HEK's major points with the library. It definitely looks like the easiest way to support multiple radios, but the question is, is it good enough?


  • Mod

    @kolaf I understand @hek 's reservations.
    Maybe we can add a function to MySensors that returns a static instance to the radio, all configured to use with MySensors.

    #include <MySensor.h>  
    MySensor gw;
    
    void setup() 
    {
      // Start MySensors and pass it the radio to use. Mysensors manages the instance
      // and configures the radio with defaults for us.
      // 'power users' can instantiate their own radio and configure it to their liking
      gw.begin( gw.createRadio() );
    }
    

    How 'bout that?


  • Admin

    @Yveaux @kolaf

    Now we're talking!

    Really appreciate you're effort on RadioHead while still keeping it simple for the end-user.

    I'm finalizing the documentation for 1.4 so we can release it and continue the work on RadioHead and the new protocol changes. As @Damme said somewhere, this might be enough for a 2.0 version :).


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux said:

    How 'bout that?

    That makes sense. I will need some help to build the default radio configuration that you use, and I can start redoing the initialisation stuff.


  • Hero Member

    I have made some progress on the proposed initialisation routines and I am at the point where something works. The current initialisation for my sensor looks like this:

    #include <MySensor.h>
    #include <RH_RF69.h>
    #include <SPI.h>
    
    RH_RF69 driver;
    
    MySensor gw;
    void setup()  
    {  
      
      if(gw.setRadio(&driver)) {
    	driver.setFrequency(868);
    	driver.setTxPower(14);
    	gw.begin();
      }
    }
    

    I stumbled upon a few snags on the way. For instance, when you initialise the manager (after giving it the driver) it sets up a bunch of defaults. This means that we have to override these defaults after the manager is initialised. This is why I split this out in a separate function setRadio. This function initialises the manager and returns true if this is successful. You may then set up your optional parameters and call begin.

    A great benefit of having the radio include in the source file instead of in the library is that we now do not have to distribute it inside the MySensors library. We can now use a regular Radiohead installation in the Arduino environment. I have pushed this to my repository, let me know what you think.

    https://github.com/kolaf/Arduino/tree/radiohead_port


  • Hero Member

    The next challenge is sleeping. The different drivers sleep using different function calls.


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    For instance, when you initialise the manager (after giving it the driver) it sets up a bunch of defaults.

    Yes, I see it calls init() from the driver, which sucks...
    I'll guess you want gw.setradio to initialize the manager then (which in turn initializes the driver)? This way you'll be able to modify the driver's parameters before MySensors starts. Not a very elegant way... (but I also don't have a better solution at the moment...)


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux Exactly.


  • Mod

    @kolaf Have you checked initialization of the managers for any radio communication taking place? If it does, your solution will not work as it will be executed using the default radio parameters...


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux I don't think there is any radio communication, it just initialises the radio chip and confirms that it is able to communicate with it. Otherwise you would have had real problems with trying to start every radio at the same time 🙂


  • Mod

    @Yveaux said:

    Works like a charm, after I disconnected the interrupt line to the nRF24.

    I went through the RadioHead code, looking for enabled INT0 interrupts, interrupts handlers etc. in nRF24 code.
    Found none, so tested again today, with the interrupt line connected.

    Now it also works with interrupt connected...

    Don't know what went wrong before.


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux Good to hear that it is working out for you. I'm very curious to see whether you can get my version of the library working with your radio.

    I have posted on the Radiohead group to see whether they can implement a generic sleep function in the driver or in the manager. This would make it much easier for us to put everything to sleep when required. Short of that the only reasonable solution I can see to fix this is to create a sleep function in the sensor source code and pass this as a parameter to the library. Alternatively we can build a different sleep functions in the library, but I guess this will cause the same problems as you talked about earlier with bringing in a lot of code we do not need.


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    I have posted on the Radiohead group to see whether they can implement a generic sleep function in the driver or in the manager

    Ah great! Let's see how flexible they are 😉

    Btw. I'm not totally dismissive of the idea of making small changes to the RadioHead library when it makes our life easier to get a clean interface for MySensors users. Indeed, we have to sync changes (which are almost on a daily basis right now, but that will settle over time) but when the changes to the original library are relatively small this won't be too hard.

    Anyway, let's not give up yet and see if we can use the vanilla library.


  • Mod

    I created a github repo containing the RadioHead sources, including change history. The code is commit using a script, so future updates can easily be added.

    IMHO having the RadioHead library sourcecode under version control is a requrement for inclusion in MySensors and if we ever decide to make small changes to the library we can now easily fork from the original sourcecode.

    Get it at https://github.com/Yveaux/RadioHead


  • Admin

    @kolaf

    Agree on keeping the radio specific sleeping in each driver is the best option.


  • Hero Member

    Are we talking here about

    (1) each radio driver having its own full sleep library to put the processor to sleep (potentially in addition to the sleep library used by the main sketch), or

    (2) just each radio driver having its own function to put its radio into low power mode with/without IRQ?


  • Hero Member

    Just (2)


  • Hero Member

    Good. Let's call it prepare-to-sleep or power-down or something rather than sleep.


  • Hero Member

    @Zeph Fair enough.

    Since I'm not getting any response on their mailing list, perhaps we should just go ahead and implement something. My plan is to create a virtualised powerdown in RHGenericDriver and then implement a reasonable default at least for the two radios we use. We can then expand this as we gain more experience. I know that for the RF69 driver this should be no more than five minutes work. Does anyone want to take care of your radios?


  • Hero Member

    If it works out, we can send them a patch 🙂


  • Hero Member

    Scratch my previous messages. I took a new look at the documentation and there appears to be a function setMode which can set the radio to TX, RX, and idle. I think the idle mode is as close as you come to sleeping, and I know that several of the drivers have a function called setIdleMode which you can use to define how the radio sleeps. This means that we can initialise the sleep function in the same way as we initialise the the other radio specific parameters (e.g. power and frequency), and then simply set the radio to the generic idle mode when sleeping.


  • Mod

    Just a small update on my effort to get RadioHead & MySensors working with nRF24L01+...
    I managed to get the node configured correctly using the MySensors 'defaults'.
    I see data getting sent over the air (as my sniffer captures it). The only data on air, captured by Wireshark, is:

    ff:7e:01:00:ff:7e:00:52:00:01:01:00
    ff:7e:02:00:ff:7e:00:53:00:01:01:00
    ff:7e:03:00:ff:7e:00:54:00:01:01:00
    ff:7e:04:00:ff:7e:00:55:00:01:01:00
    etc.
    

    Roughly 4 seconds apart.
    I have to dive deeper into the protocol , but I suspect this is the node sending broadcasting requests to find a parent.
    The gateway doesn't acknowledge these broadcasts yet...
    Fixed a few small issues in the nRF24 driver along the way (see https://github.com/Yveaux/RadioHead/commits/MySensors/RadioHead/RH_NRF24.cpp)
    Seems like I'm almost there!

    Some things I miss in the library:

    • Normally the nRF24 changes its destination address when sending to the destination's node address. The current driver/RadioHead implementation just always broadcasts and the header of the data determines which node the data is really for. This means any node within range will always have to process all messages coming in to determine if they are meant for it or not. From a generic driver point-of-view I understand this approach, but it ignores powerful functionality of the nRF24. As the nRF24 is still the main radio target for the MySensors library we might have to think about a solution.
    • The library does not use the auto-acknowledge feature of the nRF24 but instead seems to retry on application level. Another nice feauture of the nRF24 which remains unused...

  • Hero Member

    I would guess it is a arp request. Weird that it does not use the radio properly, I think both addressing and retransmission works well with rf69.


  • Admin

    Using auto-ack would be impossible (i think) using the in radioheads mesh-setup where every message basically is a broadcast.

    I wondoer if it would it be possible to implement a mySensors class similar to RHMesh which actually works like MySensors do today using a star-topology and direct-addressed messages?


  • Hero Member

    radiohead uses direct messaging, with an arp protocol and route discovery to build local routing tables, much as original mysensors. At least as far as I understand it.

    Do you use the same library in both the sensor and gateway? It won't work of you mix network layer protocols.


  • Hero Member

    @kolaf with hop by hop acknowledgements


  • Mod

    @Yveaux said:

    ff:7e:01:00:ff:7e:00:52:00:01:01:00

    Ok, read a bit through the docs. Apparently this is what is sent:

    RHDatagram:  ff:7e:01:00     (TO:FROM:ID:FLAGS)
    RHRouter:    ff:7e:00:52:00  (DEST:SOURCE:HOPS:ID:FLAGS)
    RHMesh:      01:01:00        (ROUTE_DISCOVERY_REQUEST:<RESERVED>:DEST)
    

    Therefore the destination and source address are sent TWICE (destination even 3 times with nRF24, as the destination address is part of the nRF24 header). An ID byte (incremented with each message sent) is also present in RHDatagram & RHRouter.
    After the route is known, sending through RHMesh still requires 1 byte to indicate application payload is transmitted.
    For short, Every message will require 10 bytes header, at least, to which the MySensors payload is added (including its own header of currently 4 bytes) giving at least 14 bytes overhead of 32 bytes total.
    To me this feels like too much....


  • Admin

    Yep, a 10 byte header is a lot.


  • Hero Member

    @hek Maybe we should just use reliable datagram. The ms header could contain just "source, destination, and last", and rhreliabledatagram deals with hop by hop ack and addressing.


  • Mod

    @kolaf Just because of the size of the header?
    I would prefer to use the RadioHead library also for routing, but maybe the current implementation can be made more efficient, in terms of header length and also code space.
    Currently I can barely fit in a simple sensor example and Ethernet gateway also gives warning about ram usage...


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    I'm very curious to see whether you can get my version of the library working with your radio.

    Got it to work with nRF24!
    Still some issues every now and then and I have to verify the radio config but messages are exchanged between node & gateway, using RHMesh.

    Can't believe I ran into the same trap again as with the CRC8 calculation (remember @hek ?)
    sizeof(message) in MySensor::sendWrite is 33 bytes, which is one byte more than nRF24 can send, causing all transmissions to fail...

    See my changes here: https://github.com/Yveaux/Arduino/commits/radiohead_port


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux maybe I could give you write access to my repository. Will be much easier if we are working on the same thing, less hassle with keeping up to date.


  • Mod

    @kolaf OK, fine, but it's working now so I don't plan on much changes anymore.
    Could you merge all 1.4 changes to your fork? I feel it's quite running behind.
    Next I'll focus on a Wireshark dissector, as I'm not convinced everything on air is needed/correct...
    It would be great BTW if the sniffer would work with the Radiohead drivers, so it supports different radios....


  • Hero Member

    I pulled in the latest eight commits, merged, and pushed. I think I should be completely up-to-date with the development branch.


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux I think you have to submit a pull request for me to merge your changes in.


  • Mod

    @kolaf I think I just merged everything in your repo... This is all a bit new to me 😉


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux Got it, thanks.


  • Code Contributor

    @hek said:

    RadioHead library does not store any routing info in eeprom so everytime a node is powered up it need to rebuild this.

    That's beneficial in terms of available EEPROM space for other purposes - but would be interesting to see the shit-storm after a power-outage when all nodes power-up at the same time and need to rebuild the entire network tree from scratch?


  • Code Contributor

    @hek said:

    I wondoer if it would it be possible to implement a mySensors class similar to RHMesh which actually works like MySensors do today using a star-topology and direct-addressed messages?

    @Kolaf said:

    @hek Maybe we should just use reliable datagram. The ms header could contain just "source, destination, and last", and rhreliabledatagram deals with hop by hop ack and addressing.

    @Yveaux said:

    I would prefer to use the RadioHead library also for routing, but maybe the current implementation can be made more efficient, in terms of header length and also code space.
    Currently I can barely fit in a simple sensor example and Ethernet gateway also gives warning about ram usage...

    Just a thought (I did NOT review the entire RH code) - from the RH documentation it sounds like we could use the RH Drivers without using any of the RH Managers - keeping routing etc. within MySensors responsibility.
    Just checking as it appears that @kolaf and @Yveaux have spent significant time reviewing the code and I would want to understand if that's an option or a totally stupid idea 🙂


  • Hero Member

    @ToSa It is definitely not a stupid idea, it is a variation of what I suggested previously which you quoted in your post (using the reliable datagram manager instead). It is a question of the abstraction level we want to use. Personally I prefer to use a library where everything is built in and that has widespread use. This gives us much more features for "free", and depending on the user base also a lot more testing. However, it turns out that not everything is perfect. The header is too big, and the library is perhaps not as efficient as it could be.

    This boils down to whether we should do things more efficiently ourselves, or try to fix the library, either officially or unofficially. It looks like the maintainer of the project is very open to suggestions. In fact, I just saw a post where he said he had implemented a generic powerdown mode for all the drivers that I suggested a few days ago. My guess is that if we work with him we could get a lean and mean radio library which could benefit both the MySensors project and the Arduino community as a whole. There appears to be people here with quite good radio knowledge, so think this could be a very powerful combination. Still, it is a question of time, effort, and priorities...


  • Mod

    @kolaf I totally agree with you.
    The MySensors library currently has a solid nrf24 implementation and routing works fine (though not fully mesh) so there's no direct need to switch driver and routing layer.
    This is a roadmap item on which we should continue working, IMO together with the RadioHead development. The RadioHead library has only recently been developed (few months old or so) and is already very mature looking. This is very promising for the future and there's no use in developing/maintaining 2 nearly identical libraries.
    I think the current flaws (e.g. code & message size) can be improved with our help making it a solid base for MySensors.


  • Code Contributor

    Thanks @kolaf @Yveaux.

    makes sense - I thought "just" using the drivers at least as an interim step could give us a head-start but it appears that the majority of the "issues" with RH need to be fixed on the driver level anyways so we would still need to work these first with the RH team...

    @Yveaux said:

    Ok, read a bit through the docs. Apparently this is what is sent:

    RHDatagram:  ff:7e:01:00     (TO:FROM:ID:FLAGS)
    RHRouter:    ff:7e:00:52:00  (DEST:SOURCE:HOPS:ID:FLAGS)
    RHMesh:      01:01:00        (ROUTE_DISCOVERY_REQUEST:<RESERVED>:DEST)
    

    Therefore the destination and source address are sent TWICE (destination even 3 times with nRF24, as the destination address is part of the nRF24 header). An ID byte (incremented with each message sent) is also present in RHDatagram & RHRouter.
    After the route is known, sending through RHMesh still requires 1 byte to indicate application payload is transmitted.
    For short, Every message will require 10 bytes header, at least, to which the MySensors payload is added (including its own header of currently 4 bytes) giving at least 14 bytes overhead of 32 bytes total.
    To me this feels like too much....

    I think the addressing is not that bad: the TO/FROM is actually the next/last used in MySensors - only for a single-hop communication these are the same as SOURCE/DEST. With that FROM/SOURCE/DEST in RH == last/sender/destination in MySensors. The TO (next) is the one that is unnecessary because it's part of the nRF24 header - as this is not the case for all radios, this should be adjusted in the NRF24 specific code in RH and shouldn't be that hard to do.

    The ID fields are used to determine if a packet is a duplicate (once for the hop and once end-to-end). I'm wondering how this is done in MySensors today. For the single hop that's probably part of the nRF24 internals (auto-acknowledge / auto-resend) and maybe it could be avoided on the driver level in RH but probably needs some tweaking of ReliableDatagram as well. For e2e I don't think there is an equivalent in MySensors today and it might actually be a valuable add rather than a waste of a byte 🙂 what could happen without it: a node receives a packet and sends an ack - the ack does not make it to the sender and therefore the sender submits the same packet again - the node receives the package once again and thinks it's a new packet... think about a command that toggles a light - woulc toggle twice and go off->on->off instead of off->on.

    The FLAGS bytes appear to be a total waste of space.

    • Looking at the first FLAGS byte it's actually defined on the driver level already but not used in Driver or Datagram but only in ReliableDatagram and the only flag set is RH_FLAGS_ACK - a full byte for a single bit worth of information... The two options would be to either remove that byte and mark ACK packets differently or to just make use of the remaining 7 bits for other purposes. I would prefer using the 7 bits - protocol version (3 bits) is definitely a good fit - command (3 bits) might be the other. Using the lower four bits of FLAGS for application layer purposes is even foreseen in RH (and could be easily changed to use 6 bits for app layer in RHGenericDriver.h)
    • The benefit of the second FLAGS byte (from the Router) is totally unclear to me. It seems like the neither RHMesh nor RHRouter code uses it at all even if it's defined on that level so nothing else should use it either... worth a discussion with the RH team - and either remove it completely or use it again for app layer specific stuff (MySensors type?). I'm surprised that they don't use these FLAGS instead of the first byte of RHMesh messages to determine route discovery vs. app date vs. ...

    Assuming that we can get rid of the "TO" and the "driver level ID" and make use of the FLAGS fields as mentioned above the header would be:

    • RHDatagram: FROM:FLAGS (covering MyMessage last / ack / version / command)
    • RHRouter: DEST:SOURCE:HOPS:ID:FLAGS (covering MyMessage destination / sender / type)
    • RHMesh: one byte to determine "application data" - tbc if this can be moved to the FLAGS instead consuming less than a full byte. at least the MyMessage "payload type" can be included in that byte
    • MyMessage header: none (would need to talk to @hek but I think MyMessage::sensor should actually not be part of the header anymore but part of specific message types only).

    This would leave us with 2+5+1=8 bytes instead of the current 7 bytes for the header (to be fair 8 instead of 6 due to the removed sensor field). That's not as bad as 14!


  • Admin

    @ToSa said:

    MyMessage header: none (would need to talk to @hek but I think MyMessage::sensor should actually not be part of the header anymore but part of specific message types only).

    Yes, that makes sense.


  • Admin

    Reply from Mike:

    Some of your contributors have the wrong idea about the headers.

    There are 4 header bytes used by drivers, RHDatagram and RHReliableDatagram

    TO
    FROM
    ID
    FLAGS

    These are the hop-to-hop headers. In fact they are present in the payload (but
    effectively unused) even if you use the drivers directly.

    RHRouter and RHMesh (if you use them) add

    DEST
    SOURCE
    HOPS
    ID
    FLAGS

    these are end-to-end headers and are not necessarily the same as the hop-to-
    hop headers. In the general case they will be different values.

    In my view all these header are all necessary.

    BTW, new version 1.33 supports sleep mode for RH_RF69, RH_RF22, RH_NRF24,
    RH_RF24, RH_RF95 drivers.

    Cheers.


  • Code Contributor

    @hek said:

    Reply from Mike:

    these are end-to-end headers and are not necessarily the same as the hop-to-
    hop headers. In the general case they will be different values.

    yep 🙂

    In my view all these header are all necessary.

    Well, debatable at least for the FLAGS (or the size of the FLAGS).

    Three questions (@Mike, if you are reading here, just reply directly, otherwise I'll contact you via the RH channels...):

    • is the RH library itself using the end-to-end FLAGS? I couldn't find any reference other than setting it to 0 (when using RHMesh).
    • is the RH library itself using the hop FLAGS for anything other than identifying ACK packets (RH_FLAGS_ACK / RH_FLAGS_NONE)?
    • for the hop ID and TO - if the specific RF chip supports this internally (as part of the preamble/header the chip adds to the on-air packet), why duplicating this wasting valuable payload size - the driver for the specific RF chip could handle it internally and make it look the same for the outside world using the RHGenericDriver interface without changes... I'll give it a try and let you know.

  • Mod

    @hek Thanks for getting Mike 'on board'! Good move!


  • Hero Member

    Great work guys. I'm glad to see some enthusiasm for this as it will allow me to utilise the platform and not have to reinvent the wheel 🙂


  • Code Contributor

    Test compilation comparing code size with current MySensors 1.4 radio library and with radiohead. The radiohead integration to MySensors is not optimized (pushing full MySensors header through even if the radiohead header has the same content etc.) and the radiohead library provides some benefits (not just a 1:1 replacament) - so it's expected to be larger. Based on the two examples below it's right now about 4-5k flash and ~800 ram for global variables.

    => let's see how far we can get that down reducing the duplication of header data etc.

    **SerialGateway with MySensors: **
    Sketch uses 17,566 bytes (57%) of program storage space. Maximum is 30,720 bytes.
    Global variables use 688 bytes (33%) of dynamic memory, leaving 1,360 bytes for local variables. Maximum is 2,048 bytes.

    SerialGateway with RadioHead:
    Sketch uses 22,242 bytes (72%) of program storage space. Maximum is 30,720 bytes.
    Global variables use 1,455 bytes (71%) of dynamic memory, leaving 593 bytes for local variables. Maximum is 2,048 bytes.

    **DallasTemp with MySensors: **
    Sketch uses 20,288 bytes (66%) of program storage space. Maximum is 30,720 bytes.
    Global variables use 551 bytes (26%) of dynamic memory, leaving 1,497 bytes for local variables. Maximum is 2,048 bytes.

    DallasTemp with RadioHead:
    Sketch uses 24,592 bytes (80%) of program storage space. Maximum is 30,720 bytes.
    Global variables use 1,319 bytes (64%) of dynamic memory, leaving 729 bytes for local variables. Maximum is 2,048 bytes.


  • Code Contributor

    @ToSa Wonder what the runtime values are...


  • Mod

    @ToSa said:

    SerialGateway with RadioHead:
    Sketch uses 22,242 bytes (72%) of program storage space. Maximum is 30,720 bytes.
    Global variables use 1,455 bytes (71%) of dynamic memory, leaving 593 bytes for local variables. Maximum is 2,048 bytes.

    What radio/Arduino IDE did you compile for?

    For Serial Gateway, nrf24, Arduino 1.5.7 I get:
    Sketch uses 20.962 bytes (64%) of program storage space. Maximum is 32.256 bytes.
    Global variables use 1.471 bytes (71%) of dynamic memory, leaving 577 bytes for local variables. Maximum is 2.048 bytes.

    @Damme

    Wonder what the runtime values are...

    Currently MySensor::setRadio creates an instance of RHMesh at runtime, so RAM usage is even worse...


  • Code Contributor

    This post is deleted!

  • Code Contributor

    @Yveaux said:

    What radio/Arduino IDE did you compile for?

    nRF24 / 1.5.6-r2
    DEBUG turned on - your values appear to be with DEBUG turned off

    I did a few changes starting to reduce the header so I can't rerun with DEBUG off and compare right now...


  • Hero Member

    A small digression from the main topic here, but I just tested the mesh functionality of the library. I took a laptop with a serial gateway outside of the range of my sensor and observed that it stopped working. I then went back a few metres and powered up a battery powered sensor which basically just sent hello every second and processed messages. I was able to significantly extend my range, experiencing only a few seconds of interrupt in the ping flow.

    Moving back and powering down the intermediate node, the direct route was reestablished within a new couple of seconds and everything was working correctly again 🙂 I think I will have much fun playing with this.


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    I was unable to significantly extend my range, experiencing only a few seconds of interrupt in the ping flow.

    Shouldn't that be "I was able"?
    I want to be happy with you, but not sure now 😉


  • Hero Member

    You are most certainly correct, I have edited my original post. I'm suffering a bit from tendinitis, so I'm using speech recognition when I write. Sometimes it recognises almost exactly what I say 😉


  • Hero Member

    @Yveaux said:

    The MySensors library currently has a solid nrf24 implementation and routing works fine (though not fully mesh) so there's no direct need to switch driver and routing layer.

    What are the differences between the MySensors protocol and RH in terms of mesh dynamics?

    I'm guessing that RH is more dynamicly configured, but I'd like to understand more.


  • Mod

    @kolaf ah, great to see your results then!
    I read some mixed results on the Radiohead mailing list regarding mesh, so good to see it's working for you.
    BTW I'm in the progress of writing wireshark directors for Radiohead which can be used with the nrf24 sniffer. It'll give us better insight on Radiohead's performance and functioning.


  • Hero Member

    It makes sense to migrate the MySensors last,sender and destination bytes to RH from,source,dest.

    I do not think it makes sense to move type (V_code) or command into the RH FLAGs. Typically when such space is reserved for the protocol in the header but not yet fully used, it's subject to change as the protocal evolves. If part of the goal is to take advantage of the maintenance and ongoing development of RH, we don't want to set up a conflict - because other users are not going to use those FLAGs our way anyway.

    Basically, Radio Head should be concerned with delivering a payload (set of bytes) to a node. Everything specific to just the MySensors application should be in the payload (as seen by RH). That includes:

    • child id ("sensor")
    • command
    • V_code ("type")
    • version (if needed)
    • ack - is this still needed??

    If we want to remain compatible with other RH users (ie: their development), rather than re-allocating bytes or bits in the RH header to our own purposes, we would be putting our MySensors' header in the RH payload, but omitting from our header the redundant fields which are handled by RH:

    • last,
    • sender,
    • destination

    The RH payload would include the reduced MySensors header plus the MySensors payload.


  • Code Contributor

    @Zeph said:

    I do not think it makes sense to move type (V_code) or command into the RH FLAGs. Typically when such space is reserved for the protocol in the header but not yet fully used, it's subject to change as the protocal evolves. If part of the goal is to take advantage of the maintenance and ongoing development of RH, we don't want to set up a conflict - because other users are not going to use those FLAGs our way anyway.

    From the RH documentation / the source code:

    • for Datagram FLAGS:
      A bitmask of flags. The most significant 4 bits are reserved for use by RadioHead. The least significant 4 bits are reserved for applications.
    • for Router/Mesh FLAGS:
      Optional flags for use by subclasses or application layer

    Not setting up a conflict with the RH code will be the biggest issue: the two benefits of RH are the multi radio support and the more advanced Mesh topology - which would be worth a couple of additional bytes in flash and ram - but the other reason for the big overhead is that several advanced features of the nRF24 chip are not used because they are not available in all supported chips.

    Two examples:

    • the multi-pipe capability of nRF24 would allow to filter traffic to only current address and broadcast and avoid that any other traffic ever reaches the MCU (only slightly less code but wondering if that helps with battery powered nodes).
    • the ReliableDiagram processing in code essentially duplicates capabilities that are build into the chipset as well (auto-acknowledge / autoresubmit)

    I know you are interested in getting RF69 supported but the question is how much negative impact for all the other users (with current nRF24 setup) is acceptable. That's like using the RF69 and implementing an AES encryption in code rather than using the build-in capabilities of the chip...


  • Code Contributor

    Didn't want to sound too negative yesterday...

    • I'm still looking at the RH library but changes will be major and will not necessarily be in line with the RH purpose so Mike might not want to merge them into the main codebase: mainly defining what driver is used at compile time of the library (similar to MyConfig) which would then allow to e.g. "bypass" the majority of ReliableDatagram etc.
    • what we should definitely do is splitting application layer and network layer: no longer inherit MySensor from RF24 but create an RF24 instance at runtime / leave application layer message handling in MySensors / move network layer message handling to a separate class (the "driver" for RF24). This will make it way easier to switch radios in the future.

  • Hero Member

    @ToSa said:

    Didn't want to sound too negative yesterday...

    • I'm still looking at the RH library but changes will be major and will not necessarily be in line with the RH purpose so Mike might not want to merge them into the main codebase: mainly defining what driver is used at compile time of the library (similar to MyConfig) which would then allow to e.g. "bypass" the majority of ReliableDatagram etc.

    Is it not sufficient that we define the radio at compile time in the sensors and the gateway as we have done now?


  • Code Contributor

    @kolaf said:

    Is it not sufficient that we define the radio at compile time in the sensors and the gateway as we have done now?

    I'm talking about changing how the library is compiled and essentially having a separate ReliableDiagram class that bypasses manual handling of ACKs etc. and instead leaves reliable delivery to the radio itself. Mesh and Router are derived from the ReliableDatagram class - therefore we would need to define which radio to use prior to library compilation - not just prior to sketch compilation.


  • Hero Member

    @ToSa said:

    the two benefits of RH are the multi radio support and the more advanced Mesh topology

    Could someone summarize the differences between the current MySensors mesh and the RadioHead mesh, and why the latter is preferable for us?


  • Admin

    @Zeph

    RH is a true mesh where every node can communicate with any other directly (if in range). All nodes acts as repeaters.

    MySensors forms nodes forms a star network where every node has a parent and potentially a few child sensors. The gateway node is the "center". Every node always tries to find the closest (least number of hops) route to gateway.

             GW
             / \  
            A   D
           / \
          B   C
    

    If B want to communicate with C messages has to pass A in the MySensors case. In RH C and B will communicate directly if the can hear each other.

    RH does not use the nifty features NRF24L01 offers which offloads mcu (pipes/addresses) nor auto ack (impossible in RH setup). So nodes in range has to process every message it can "hear". And this can potentially be a lot.


  • Hero Member

    @hek
    Thanks, that was very helpful, and a good explanation.

    That helps explain the overhead in the RH library mesh. It sounds cool for some purposes, but it also sounds like possible overkill for the wireless sensor network. Allowing B and C to communicate directly is not a primary use case. The MySensors is purpose-built for the sensor network with central gateway use case, and is pretty lean thereby. As I see it, even allowing B to send to C via A is not a primary use case, but sort of falls out "for free" given the routing approach that allows repeating nodes.

    Aside - can B send a message to itself via A?

    In my case, I'm mainly focusing on multi-sensor nodes, so RAM or Flash could be in short supply with a larger radio library. Worse still, I want to be able to incorporate MySensors functionality into nodes which also have non MySensors functions (eg: xmas light control also usng nRF24L01+), so space is even more at a premium.

    So while the RH option is interesting, and a lighter weight RH derivative may pan out, I hope the MySensor WSN radio layer will continue to provide a "lean and mean" alternative into the future.


  • Hero Member

    @hek said:

    RH does not use the nifty features NRF24L01 offers which offloads mcu (pipes/addresses) nor auto ack (impossible in RH setup). So nodes in range has to process every message it can "hear". And this can potentially be a lot.

    So MySensors can use both individual node addresses as well a broadcast, while RH uses only broadcast (at the radio level)? I understand why RH needs to do this, and I wonder if the receive FIFO ever overruns with unneeded packets.

    I wonder if MySensors gets much savings from using the auto-ack of ESB. If you already have network ack code anyway, how much code & ram is saved by sometimes using ESB (one hop away) and sometimes not? (I do get that a star network with no repeater nodes could use only ESB autoack and save some code).


  • Admin

    @Zeph said:

    So MySensors can use both individual node addresses as well a broadcast, while RH uses only broadcast (at the radio level)?

    Yes.

    I think end-to-end ack is very important. The inter-node ack is only used as a trigger re-routing today (if communication fails 3 times to parent node .. the node tries to find another parent).


  • Hero Member

    Could someone please explain to me how the direct messaging of the NRF24 works? In my mind every radio network is a broadcast network on the physical layer, and it is up to the receiving radio to determine whether the packet is relevant or not. How is this different from your radios? Is it perhaps that your radios have a hardware address so that the filtering is done on the hardware level, while Radiohead uses a software address, so each packet has to be explicitly processed? I have no idea, I'm just guessing here...


  • Admin

    @kolaf

    Yes,

    NRF chip offer 6 reading "pipes". In practice it acts as a hw filter for addresses between 0-255.

    I use this to have one broadcast address (255) which all repeating nodes and gateway listens to and each sensor also listen to its own address.


  • Hero Member

    Looking at the documentation for the RF69 (page 41) it talks about sync word recognition. This is a programmable word that apparently can be used as the node's hardware address, similarly to the NRF24. Perhaps it is possible to expand the Radiohead drivers to utilise this functionality where it is available for filtering incoming packets?

    As for the dynamic mesh, this is a feature I find especially useful for one of my dream applications. We have horses, and it would be really fun to place a radio module with a accelerometer, and maybe GPS receiver, on each horse to track their movements. This could also be combined with a breakable wire in the harness which would let us know if the radio had been ripped off of the horse. Having a dynamic mesh will greatly increase the range of flexibility of such a monitoring network. I know that this is somewhat outside of the normal use case, but how fun wouldn't it be to build this? :-).

    Personally I'm also a bit interested in direct sensor to sensor configurations to allow for tightly coupled control systems without the need for a central controller in the loop (all the time). I know, we have resource limits so that I can probably not have everything, but one can dream...


  • Hero Member

    Nevermind the sink word recognition, this appears to function as some kind of network ID has to be the same for both the sender and receiver. However, there is also an optional address byte which is considered by the radio before the packet enters the FIFO queue. Page 55 of http://www.hoperf.com/upload/rfchip/RF69-V1.2.pdf


  • Mod

    @kolaf said:

    an optional address byte

    The trouble is you have to distinguish between broadcasts and direct messages, so you need to listen at 2 addresses at a time, so to say.


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