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  1. Home
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  3. 💬 Building a Raspberry Pi Gateway

💬 Building a Raspberry Pi Gateway

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  • B Offline
    B Offline
    barrydou
    wrote on last edited by
    #1002

    @mfalkvidd Thank you.
    I've found that too https://www.mysensors.org/apidocs/RFM69_8h_source.html
    It's clearly indicated that DIO0 is IRQ.

    So I think with "--my-rfm69-irq-pin=" it will do the job.

    I'll test it as soon as i'll receive RFM69.

    Thank you again

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • M marceloaqno

      @jerseyguy1996 Are you using a decoupling capacitor?

      R Offline
      R Offline
      rolandow
      wrote on last edited by
      #1003

      @marceloaqno Sorry to kick this old topic, but I will soon be trying to build my gateway with a Raspberry pi. I was wondering if the capacitor is also required for the gateway, or just for the nodes?

      Because at the instruction page on how to wire and build a Raspberry Pi gateway, the capacitor isn't mentioned.

      I'll be using a RPI 1 and NRF24L01+

      mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • R rolandow

        @marceloaqno Sorry to kick this old topic, but I will soon be trying to build my gateway with a Raspberry pi. I was wondering if the capacitor is also required for the gateway, or just for the nodes?

        Because at the instruction page on how to wire and build a Raspberry Pi gateway, the capacitor isn't mentioned.

        I'll be using a RPI 1 and NRF24L01+

        mfalkviddM Offline
        mfalkviddM Offline
        mfalkvidd
        Mod
        wrote on last edited by mfalkvidd
        #1004

        @rolandow yes the capacitor is needed. I'll add that info to the page. Thanks for noticing.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • R Offline
          R Offline
          rolandow
          wrote on last edited by
          #1005

          Ok, one more question. I thought I read somewhere that the wiring between the RPI and de radio should be as short as possible, but I can't find exactly where I read that anymore.

          At another project (zigbee2mqtt) I read that users had better reception when they placed the transceiver further away from the controller, because there was less inteference. So if possible, I would like to use a piece of UTP cable to wire the radio to the raspberry pi. That way I can put the rpi inside a closet, but the radio outside.

          So I am not sure if longer wires (say 2, 3 meters) is going to be a problem?

          mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • R rolandow

            Ok, one more question. I thought I read somewhere that the wiring between the RPI and de radio should be as short as possible, but I can't find exactly where I read that anymore.

            At another project (zigbee2mqtt) I read that users had better reception when they placed the transceiver further away from the controller, because there was less inteference. So if possible, I would like to use a piece of UTP cable to wire the radio to the raspberry pi. That way I can put the rpi inside a closet, but the radio outside.

            So I am not sure if longer wires (say 2, 3 meters) is going to be a problem?

            mfalkviddM Offline
            mfalkviddM Offline
            mfalkvidd
            Mod
            wrote on last edited by mfalkvidd
            #1006

            @rolandow there could be a problem.

            There are two things to consider.

            1. Power drop due to resistance in the cable. See https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/113253/voltage-drop-and-safe-current-load-on-cat5-cable for details but use the current used by the radio (provided in the datasheet) instead of the 2.5A used in that question.

            2. SPI communication problems due to capacitance in the cable. See https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/163468/spi-max-distance for details. See also my post at https://forum.mysensors.org/post/92967 for oscilloscope pictures of what an i2c signal can look like through a long cable. SPI can handle longer cable lengts than i2c though.

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • R Offline
              R Offline
              rolandow
              wrote on last edited by
              #1007
              1. For me, my electronics is not as good as my development skills ;-). But I gave it a try. According to the datasheet the NRF24 will consume about 14 mA max. My cable is 2 m max, so then the resistance is 0,16ohms. So if I understand correctly the voltage drop would be 0,00224 volt. Sounds neglegtable to me? Also; can't I just measure the voltage at the end of the cable once it's connected to the RPI?

              2. At the stackoverflow page somebody says: "In an answer on a Microchip forum, Jan Axelson, author of 'Serial Port Complete', claims a maximum cable length of 10' for the SPI bus. Other posts have mentioned the same figure.". So 10" is about 3 metres, so I am within that range. I do understand though that this isn't a preferred thing to do.

              Which makes me wonder how other people handle this. I mean; I think ideally you'd want the radio that is connected to the controller in the most 'center' way of the home, right? So do people just hange the Pi and the whole shebang to the ceiling? ;-) I'd rather put the controller in the closet where my modem and router are, and then only wire the receiver to outside the closet. Isn't there a better way to do this?

              mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • R rolandow
                1. For me, my electronics is not as good as my development skills ;-). But I gave it a try. According to the datasheet the NRF24 will consume about 14 mA max. My cable is 2 m max, so then the resistance is 0,16ohms. So if I understand correctly the voltage drop would be 0,00224 volt. Sounds neglegtable to me? Also; can't I just measure the voltage at the end of the cable once it's connected to the RPI?

                2. At the stackoverflow page somebody says: "In an answer on a Microchip forum, Jan Axelson, author of 'Serial Port Complete', claims a maximum cable length of 10' for the SPI bus. Other posts have mentioned the same figure.". So 10" is about 3 metres, so I am within that range. I do understand though that this isn't a preferred thing to do.

                Which makes me wonder how other people handle this. I mean; I think ideally you'd want the radio that is connected to the controller in the most 'center' way of the home, right? So do people just hange the Pi and the whole shebang to the ceiling? ;-) I'd rather put the controller in the closet where my modem and router are, and then only wire the receiver to outside the closet. Isn't there a better way to do this?

                mfalkviddM Offline
                mfalkviddM Offline
                mfalkvidd
                Mod
                wrote on last edited by mfalkvidd
                #1008

                Nice work @rolandow
                You can measure the voltage drop, if you put a load of 14mA on the cable. But without load, there will be no voltage drop.

                One small adjustment on your calculation: there will be 4m cable (2m to the radio and 2m back). But the drop will still be negligable for a normal nrf24.

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • monteM Offline
                  monteM Offline
                  monte
                  wrote on last edited by monte
                  #1009

                  Please edit the image used in this tutorial:
                  alt text
                  It is wrong and misleading, as it says that pin36 is SPI1 CS0. In fact SPI1 CS0 by default is pin12. To be able to use pin36 as SPI1 CS0 one have to follow implicit steps which can be found on this forum thread: https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=203776.
                  Also it would be useful to add instructions to enable SPI1 in /boot/config.txt to the tutorial.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • R Offline
                    R Offline
                    Rolo6442u
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #1010

                    I want to run this gateway with another networkid (RFM69) but can't find how to do this. The option --my-rfm69-networkid=105 in the config line is ignored. So maybe it should go in the mysensnsors.conf file, but what is the syntax of this option?
                    Thanks.

                    mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • R Rolo6442u

                      I want to run this gateway with another networkid (RFM69) but can't find how to do this. The option --my-rfm69-networkid=105 in the config line is ignored. So maybe it should go in the mysensnsors.conf file, but what is the syntax of this option?
                      Thanks.

                      mfalkviddM Offline
                      mfalkviddM Offline
                      mfalkvidd
                      Mod
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #1011

                      @rolo6442u where did you find my-rfm69-networkid? I don't think such an option has ever existed. If you found it somewhere we probably need to update that documentation.

                      Follow the instructions at https://www.mysensors.org/build/raspberry#advanced to set defines.

                      R 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • mfalkviddM mfalkvidd

                        @rolo6442u where did you find my-rfm69-networkid? I don't think such an option has ever existed. If you found it somewhere we probably need to update that documentation.

                        Follow the instructions at https://www.mysensors.org/build/raspberry#advanced to set defines.

                        R Offline
                        R Offline
                        Rolo6442u
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #1012

                        @mfalkvidd
                        I did not found it, I kind of made it up, following the syntax of other options.
                        Looks like there is no way of changing the ID at this moment for the PI gateway.

                        mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • R Rolo6442u

                          @mfalkvidd
                          I did not found it, I kind of made it up, following the syntax of other options.
                          Looks like there is no way of changing the ID at this moment for the PI gateway.

                          mfalkviddM Offline
                          mfalkviddM Offline
                          mfalkvidd
                          Mod
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #1013

                          @rolo6442u ok. Well, making things up will usually not add them to the code ;-)

                          There is a way. Two actually. Set the define in one of the two ways described on the link I provided.

                          R 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • mfalkviddM mfalkvidd

                            @rolo6442u ok. Well, making things up will usually not add them to the code ;-)

                            There is a way. Two actually. Set the define in one of the two ways described on the link I provided.

                            R Offline
                            R Offline
                            Rolo6442u
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #1014

                            @mfalkvidd
                            Thanks, will take a look at that.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • M Offline
                              M Offline
                              mafe
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #1015

                              Is it also possible to read a sensor directly at the Raspberry Pi MQTT Gateway? I only want to send the status of a GPIO via MQTT. Is there an example code for this combination?

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • alowhumA Offline
                                alowhumA Offline
                                alowhum
                                Plugin Developer
                                wrote on last edited by alowhum
                                #1016

                                Might be nice to know it compilation still seems to works fine on Raspbian Buster on a Raspberry Pi 4.

                                // Update: unlike on the Pi 3 I now had to activate SPI. Might be good to make that more prominent in the explanation now.

                                mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • alowhumA alowhum

                                  Might be nice to know it compilation still seems to works fine on Raspbian Buster on a Raspberry Pi 4.

                                  // Update: unlike on the Pi 3 I now had to activate SPI. Might be good to make that more prominent in the explanation now.

                                  mfalkviddM Offline
                                  mfalkviddM Offline
                                  mfalkvidd
                                  Mod
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #1017

                                  @alowhum to my knowledge, activating SPI has always been required, unless the user has already activated SPI by some other means.

                                  Do you have a suggestion on how to make it more prominent that what it is now? Preferably without contributing too much to the pileup of notices that scare users - everything is super-important to at least 1 person.

                                  alowhumA 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • mfalkviddM mfalkvidd

                                    @alowhum to my knowledge, activating SPI has always been required, unless the user has already activated SPI by some other means.

                                    Do you have a suggestion on how to make it more prominent that what it is now? Preferably without contributing too much to the pileup of notices that scare users - everything is super-important to at least 1 person.

                                    alowhumA Offline
                                    alowhumA Offline
                                    alowhum
                                    Plugin Developer
                                    wrote on last edited by alowhum
                                    #1018

                                    @mfalkvidd I don't know, perhaps mention it as something that has to be done upfront instead of something that might need to be done if there is an error?

                                    I'm not having any luck actually getting the radio to work. I now noticed this warning during compilation:

                                    g++ -MT build/drivers/Linux/GPIO.o -MMD -MP -DMY_RADIO_RF24 -DMY_GATEWAY_LINUX -DMY_GATEWAY_MQTT_CLIENT -DMY_DEBUG -DLINUX_SPI_SPIDEV -DMY_MQTT_CLIENT_ID=\"mygateway1\" -DMY_MQTT_SUBSCRIBE_TOPIC_PREFIX=\"mysensors-in\" -DMY_MQTT_PUBLISH_TOPIC_PREFIX=\"mysensors-out\" -DMY_CONTROLLER_IP_ADDRESS=127,0,0,1  -Ofast -g -Wall -Wextra  -I. -I./core -I./drivers/Linux -c drivers/Linux/GPIO.cpp -o build/drivers/Linux/GPIO.o
                                    drivers/Linux/GPIO.cpp: In constructor ‘GPIOClass::GPIOClass()’:
                                    drivers/Linux/GPIO.cpp:53:18: warning: ‘%s’ directive writing up to 255 bytes into a region of size 48 [-Wformat-overflow=]
                                        sprintf(file, "/sys/class/gpio/%s/base", de->d_name);
                                                      ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                                    drivers/Linux/GPIO.cpp:53:11: note: ‘sprintf’ output between 22 and 277 bytes into a destination of size 64
                                        sprintf(file, "/sys/class/gpio/%s/base", de->d_name);
                                        ~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                                    drivers/Linux/GPIO.cpp:62:18: warning: ‘%s’ directive writing up to 255 bytes into a region of size 48 [-Wformat-overflow=]
                                        sprintf(file, "/sys/class/gpio/%s/ngpio", de->d_name);
                                                      ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                                    drivers/Linux/GPIO.cpp:62:11: note: ‘sprintf’ output between 23 and 278 bytes into a destination of size 64
                                        sprintf(file, "/sys/class/gpio/%s/ngpio", de->d_name);
                                        ~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                                    
                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • alowhumA Offline
                                      alowhumA Offline
                                      alowhum
                                      Plugin Developer
                                      wrote on last edited by alowhum
                                      #1019

                                      Could this be an issue?

                                      ./configure without any additional parameters gives:

                                      [SECTION] Detecting target machine.
                                        [OK] machine detected: SoC=unknown, Type=unknown, CPU=armv7l.
                                      

                                      The rest looks fine:

                                      [SECTION] Checking GPIO Sysfs.
                                        [OK] /sys/class/gpio/export found.
                                      [SECTION] Detecting SPI driver.
                                        [OK] SPI driver detected:SPIDEV.
                                      [SECTION] Gateway configuration.
                                        [OK] Type: ethernet.
                                        [OK] Transport: rf24.
                                        [OK] Signing: Disabled.
                                        [OK] Encryption: Disabled.
                                        [OK] CPPFLAGS: -DMY_RADIO_RF24 -DMY_GATEWAY_LINUX -DMY_DEBUG -DLINUX_SPI_SPIDEV 
                                      [SECTION] Detecting init system.
                                        [OK] Init system detected: systemd.
                                      [SECTION] Saving configuration.
                                        [OK] Saved.
                                      [SECTION] Cleaning previous builds.
                                        [OK] Finished.
                                      

                                      Same thing happens with the dev version

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                                      0
                                      • mfalkviddM Offline
                                        mfalkviddM Offline
                                        mfalkvidd
                                        Mod
                                        wrote on last edited by mfalkvidd
                                        #1020

                                        Yes, if the configure script cannot detect which hardware to use, compilation failure could very well be the result.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • S Offline
                                          S Offline
                                          swedchef
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #1021

                                          Hi All

                                          I'm just venturing into this world of building my own sensors - but perhaps i am a tad late? Two months since last update.. Typically me - showing up to the party when everybody else has left.

                                          My main issue is, i am running the Raspberry Pi 4 - and when trying to build (i've tried both the development and master builds) i get from 4 (master build) to A BUNCH (development) of errors. First of all, the autodetect of SoC does not work for me either (just like @alowhum, and with the same warnings), and when using --help the actual SoC is not listed either, so should i just assume it does not work for Raspberry Pi 4?

                                          Is there any chance the 4 will be supported soon?

                                          Just a note - i can actually complete the configure and then make - but unfortunately i just get a TSP error when trying to fire up the radio.

                                          Hope i can get this working as it was the main reason for upgrading my RaspberryPi version 1 to a version 4 :man-facepalming:

                                          Thanks in advance for any and all help!

                                          mfalkviddM 1 Reply Last reply
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