Goal
Facilitate hardware triggering firmware actions.
E.g.
Read ADC
Interact with GPIO
SPI
I2C
UART
CAN messages
PWM - later
Requirements
MVP
Python library to be accessed via python shell
Call functions like
gpio_set/get(port, pin) -> bool # re-init pin every time this is called adc_read_raw/converted(gpio_address) -> int spi_exchange(spi_port, mode, tx: list, rx_len, baudrate=None, cs=None) -> rx: list # re-init spi for given port every call i2c_write(i2c_port, addr, tx: list, reg=None) -> None i2c_read(i2c_port, addr, rx_len, reg=None) -> rx: list can_send_raw(id, data: list) -> None load_dbc(path) -> None # could be auto-loaded in 'make babydriver' can_send_msg(msg_name, *data) -> None # auto checks based on dbc if valid
Details
Two components: python library, and firmware project.
Communication between the two is all encoded as CAN messages.
Unfortunately, our CAN tooling only allows 64 CAN messages, most of which we’d like to use for the car itself. So we’re going to cram everything into one CAN message, SYSTEM_CAN_MESSAGE_BABYDRIVER
. This sucks because we can’t use our CAN library’s nice packing/unpacking features, but it is what it is.
General format of the babydriver CAN message:
uint8 id 7 * uint8: message-defined data
That is, the CAN message consists of 8 uint8s, the first of which is a babydriver-specific ID. The other 7 uint8s are generic data fields, the meaning of which is determined by the ID. Babydriver message IDs will be defined in an enum in C and a series of constants in Python.
We’ll have a generic status message sent by the firmware project at the end of any operation, allocating the uint8s as follows:
uint8 id = 0 uint8 status 6 * uint8 unused
The status will be one of the status codes from status.h
. The firmware project will send this message to the Python project at the end of every operation to signify that the operation is done and give the status.
More babydriver messages will be specified in tickets and/or on Confluence when they come up. Here are a couple examples.
Implementing gpio_set
The flow for gpio_set will look like this.
Python project sends a babydriver CAN message that looks like:
uint8 id = X // some constant defined in C/Python uint8 port // port of gpio pin to set uint8 pin // pin number of gpio pin to set uint8 state. // 1 or 0 to set to high or low respectively
The Python project then blocks until it sees a status babydriver CAN message or it times out.
The firmware project receives the message, initializes gpio on the pin, sets the appropriate gpio pin, and responds back with a status message indicating success or failure.
Upon receiving the status message, the Python project returns from gpio_set()
, raising an exception if the status code was non-zero.
Implementing SPI functions
SPI, I2C, etc are more special because they require transferring more data than can be fit in the 7 data uint8s we’re given. Thus, we need multiple messages.
To start a SPI exchange, the Python project will send these two messages:
Metadata message 1: uint8 id = X // some constant uint8 spi_port // 0 or 1 for SPI_PORT_1 or SPI_PORT_2 uint8 tx_len_high // high byte of tx_len (a uint16) uint8 tx_len_low // low byte of tx_len uint8 rx_len_high // high byte of rx_len (another uint16) uint8 rx_len_low // low byte of rx_len uint8 cs_port // port of chip select gpio pin uint8 cs_pin // pin of chip select gpio pin
Metadata message 2: uint8 id = X // some constant 4 * uint8 baudrate // a uint32
Note that since we’re representing everything as uint8s, we have to break up multiple-byte fields into their individual bytes and reconstruct them. This sucks, but it is what it is.
The Python project will then send enough generic “babydriver data” messages (another type of message with just 7 uint8s) to cover tx_len. The firmware project will send back enough generic data messages to cover the rx_len bytes received, then the status message.
Task list
setup project structure
make new C project
init CAN, write main() method, other setup (not registering specific rx handlers)
includes a
scripts
folder with python scriptsetup makefile to allow
make babydriver
program babydriver
puts you in a python shell with baby driver library loaded
write simple CAN abstraction layer
sending message, waiting for message, initializing CAN
have simple representation of can message
the
pack()
function takes in a list of tuples(len_in_bytes, val)
setup gpio functions in python
refer to this doc for details on flow
setup gpio functions in C and create CAN message in codegen-tooling
refer to this doc for details
etc. for other python and C implementations of firmware functions