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configured in drivers.
368 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
368 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Installation Notes for X-10 software
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Eugene W. Stark (stark@cs.sunysb.edu)
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October 30, 1993
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(latest update May 29, 1997)
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The TW523 is a carrier-current modem for home control/automation purposes.
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It is made by:
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X-10 Inc.
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185A LeGrand Ave.
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Northvale, NJ 07647
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USA
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(201) 784-9700 or 1-800-526-0027
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X-10 Home Controls Inc.
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1200 Aerowood Drive, Unit 20
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Mississauga, Ontario
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(416) 624-4446 or 1-800-387-3346
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The TW523 is designed for communications using the X-10 protocol,
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which is compatible with a number of home control systems, including
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Radio Shack "Plug 'n Power(tm)" and Stanley "Lightmaker(tm)."
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I bought my TW523 from:
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Home Control Concepts
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9353-C Activity Road
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San Diego, CA 92126
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(619) 693-8887
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They supplied me with the TW523 (which has an RJ-11 four-wire modular
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telephone connector), a modular cable, an RJ-11 to DB-25 connector with
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internal wiring, documentation from X-10 on the TW523 (very good),
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an instruction manual by Home Control Concepts (not very informative),
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and a floppy disk containing binary object code of some demonstration/test
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programs and of a C function library suitable for controlling the TW523
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by an IBM PC under MS-DOS (not useful to me other than to verify that
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the unit worked). I suggest saving money and buying the bare TW523
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rather than the TW523 development kit (what I bought), because if you
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are running FreeBSD you don't really care about the DOS binaries.
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For details on the X-10 protocol itself, refer to the documentation from
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X-10 Inc.
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The interface to the TW-523 consists of four wires on the RJ-11 connector,
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which are jumpered to somewhat more wires on the DB-25 connector, which
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in turn is intended to plug into the PC parallel printer port. I dismantled
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the DB-25 connector to find out what they had done:
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Signal RJ-11 pin DB-25 pin(s) Parallel Port
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Transmit TX 4 (Y) 2, 4, 6, 8 Data out
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Receive RX 3 (G) 10, 14 -ACK, -AutoFeed
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Common 2 (R) 25 Common
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Zero crossing 1 (B) 17 or 12 -Select or +PaperEnd
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NOTE: In the original cable I have (which I am still using, May, 1997)
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the Zero crossing signal goes to pin 17 (-Select) on the parallel port.
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In retrospect, this doesn't make a whole lot of sense, given that the
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-Select signal propagates the other direction. Indeed, some people have
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reported problems with this, and have had success using pin 12 (+PaperEnd)
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instead. This driver searches for the zero crossing signal on either
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pin 17 or pin 12, so it should work with either cable configuration.
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My suggestion would be to start by making the cable so that the zero
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crossing signal goes to pin 12 on the parallel port.
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I use the TW-523 and this software in the USA with 120V/60Hz power.
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Phil Sampson (vk2jnt@gw.vk2jnt.ampr.org OR sampson@gidday.enet.dec.com)
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in Australia has reported success in using a TW-7223 (a local version
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of the TW-523) and Tandy modules with this software under 240V/50Hz power.
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For reasons explained in the comments in the driver, it will probably not
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work if you have three-phase power, but this is usually not the case for
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normal residences and offices.
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1. Installing the TW523 Device Driver
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I assume that you are running FreeBSD. If you are running some other
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system, you are more or less on your own, though I can try to help if you
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have problems.
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Check the configuration parameters at the beginning of the file
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/sys/i386/isa/tw.c
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Probably the only thing you might need to change is to change the
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definition of HALFCYCLE from 8333 to 10000 if you are using 50Hz power.
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The driver assumes that the TW523 device is connected to a parallel port.
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See the comments near the beginning of the file to find out where to
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get a TW523 if you don't have one, and how to make a cable for it to
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connect to your parallel port.
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Add a line like the following
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device tw0 at isa? port 0x278 tty irq 5
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to /sys/i386/conf/YOURSYSTEM, but make sure to change the I/O port and
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interrupt to match your hardware configuration.
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Cd to /sys/i386/conf and do "config YOURSYSTEM".
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Cd to /sys/compile/YOURSYSTEM and do "make depend", then "make".
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(If you have any troubles, I suggest starting fresh by doing a full
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"make clean; make depend; make".) Assuming the make works correctly, do
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make install
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(Take the usual precautions by saving a known working kernel until you
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verify that the new kernel actually boots.)
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Reboot the system. You should see a line indicating that the TW523 has
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been configured as the system comes up. If you see this line, then probably
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everything is going to work OK, because the TW523 will only get configured
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if the driver is able to sync to the power line. If the TW523 is not plugged
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in, or the driver is not getting sync for some reason, then you won't see
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any message on bootup.
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NOTE: I have received a report that some multi IDE/SIO/PARALLEL cards
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"cheat" and use TTL outputs rather than pullup open collector outputs,
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and this can mess up the scheme by which sync gets to the driver.
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If you are having trouble getting the driver to work, you might want to
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look into this possibility.
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In directory /dev, execute the command
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MAKEDEV tw0
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2. Installing the X-10 Daemon
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The X-10 daemon "xtend" is integrated in to the FreeBSD "/etc/sysconfig"
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system configuration file. To enable the daemon, simply edit that file,
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find the "xtend" line, change it to read as below.
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# Set to YES if you want to run the X-10 power controller daemon
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xtend=YES
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This will cause the X-10 daemon to be invoked automatically when you boot
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the system. To test the installation, you can either reboot now, or
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you can just run "xtend" by hand. The daemon should start up, and it should
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create files in /var/spool/xten. Check the file /var/spool/xten/Log to
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make sure that the daemon started up without any errors.
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Now you are ready to start trying X-10 commands. Try doing
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xten A 1 Off
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xten A 1 On 1 Dim:10
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etc. The "xten" program expects a house code as its first argument, then
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a series of key codes, which are either unit names ("1" through "16") or
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else are command names. You can find the list of command names by looking
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at the table in the file "xten.c". Each key code can optionally be followed
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by a colon : then a number specifying the number of times that command is
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to be transmitted without gaps between packets. The default is 2, and this
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is the normal case, but some commands like Bright and Dim are designed to
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be transmitted with counts other than 2. See the X-10 documentation for
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more detail.
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The "xten" program works by connecting to "xtend" through a socket, and
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asking that the X-10 codes be transmitted over the TW523. All activity
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on the TW523 is logged by the daemon in /var/spool/xten/Log. The daemon
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also attempts to track the state of all devices. (Of course, most X-10
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devices do not transmit when they are operated manually, so if somebody
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operates a device manually there is no way the X-10 daemon will know
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about it.)
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3. Low-level Programming of the TW523 Driver
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Normally, you would never operate the TW523 directly, rather you would
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use the shell command "xten" or you would connect to "xtend" through its
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socket. However, if you don't want to run "xtend", you can manipulate
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the TW523 directly through the device /dev/tw0. Have a look at the
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xtend code for a programming example.
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The driver supports read(), write(), and select() system calls.
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The driver allows multiple processes to read and write simultaneously,
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but there is probably not much sense in having more than one reader or more
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than one writer at a time, and in fact there may currently be a race
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condition in the driver if two processes try to transmit simultaneously
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(due to unsynchronized access to the sc_pkt structure in tw_sc).
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Transmission is done by calling write() to send three byte packets of data.
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The first byte contains a four bit house code (0=A to 15=P). The second byte
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contains five bit unit/key code (0=unit 1 to 15=unit 16, 16=All Units Off
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to 31 = Status Request). The third byte specifies the number of times the
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packet is to be transmitted without any gaps between successive transmissions.
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Normally this is 2, as per the X-10 documentation, but sometimes (e.g. for
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bright and dim codes) it can be another value. Each call to write can specify
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an arbitrary number of data bytes, but at most one packet will actually be
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processed in any call. Any incomplete packet is buffered until a subsequent
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call to write() provides data to complete it. Successive calls to write()
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leave a three-cycle gap between transmissions, per the X-10 documentation.
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The driver transmits each bit only once per half cycle, not three times as
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the X-10 documentation states, because the TW523 only provides sync on
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each power line zero crossing. So, the driver will probably not work
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properly if you have three-phase service. Most residences use a two-wire
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system, for which the driver does work.
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Reception is done using read(). The driver produces a series of three
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character packets. In each packet, the first character consists of flags,
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the second character is a four bit house code (0-15), and the third character
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is a five bit key/function code (0-31). The flags are the following:
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#define TW_RCV_LOCAL 1 /* The packet arrived during a local transmission */
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#define TW_RCV_ERROR 2 /* An invalid/corrupted packet was received */
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The select() system call can be used in the usual way to determine if there
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is data ready for reading.
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Happy Controlling!
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Gene Stark
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stark@cs.sunysb.edu
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Appendix. Miscellaneous Additional Information
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The following excerpts from my E-mail correspondence may be relevant
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to some situations:
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From: Steve Passe
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Subject: Re: tw woes
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Date: Sat, 09 Dec 1995 20:57:15 -0700
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Hi,
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I have just verified that /dev/tw works on 2.1.0-RELEASE. I can
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send and receive x10 commands via my x10 daemon and X11 based tools.
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I used a "cross-over" cable between tw523 and db-25 connector:
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|||||-----------|||||
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\ /
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NOTE: I am NOT using the RadioShack brand of hood:
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looking at INSIDE of hood:
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----------
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| B G B | < Black, Green, Blue
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| W R Y | < White, Red, Yellow
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----------
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OUTSIDE:
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Hood TW523
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---------- ------------------
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| | | |
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| ------ | | +------+ |
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| -- -- | | +-- --+ |
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| | | | | | | |
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| -- | | -- |
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| | | 1 2 3 4 |
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---------- ------------------
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Y G R B B R G Y
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| | | | | | | |
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| | | |--------------------| | | |
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| | |------------------------| | |
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| |----------------------------| |
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|--------------------------------|
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Be sure that the tw523 is NOWHERE NEAR a surge protector. I have seen
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x-10 devices fail to work when plugged in NEXT to a surge protector!
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I placed the tw option before the lpt entries in my config file:
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device tw0 at isa? port 0x378 tty irq 7
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device lpt0 at isa? port? tty irq 7
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from dmesg I get:
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Dec 9 19:11:59 ilsa /kernel: tw0 at 0x378-0x37f irq 7 on isa
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Dec 9 19:11:59 ilsa /kernel: lpt0 not probed due to I/O address conflict with
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tw0 at 0x378
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Once I have opened /dev/tw with my daemon I get messages
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(pressing UNIT J, key 16):
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Dec 9 20:18:26 ilsa /kernel: TWRCV: valid packet: (22, 1f8) J 16
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Dec 9 20:18:26 ilsa /kernel: TWRCV: valid packet: (22, 1f8) J 16
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These messages from the driver should be dis-abled once you get it working,
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you'll fill up the var partition with a lot of useless garbage otherwise!
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From: Steve Passe
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Subject: Re: tw woes
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Date: Sat, 16 Dec 1995 11:56:59 -0700
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Hi,
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I now more or less understand the set of problems concerning cabling
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for using /dev/tw and a tw523. Summary:
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1: modular cables come in 2 flavors:
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|||||----------||||| <- "phone" cable
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\ /
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\
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|||||----------||||| <- "data" cable
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\
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we need to be able to clearly differentiate the two. I suggest we
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standardize on using "phone" cables only.
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2: modular db25 connectors ARE NOT CONSISTANT in their color code
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scheme, EVEN within the same BRAND!
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we can't describe the connection in terms of cable/connector wire color.
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we must clearly explain the consequences of mis-connection:
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POSSIBLE damage to (but NOT limited to) the parallel port and/or tw523.
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3: not all parallel ports have pullups on their status inputs. I found
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2 different port boards in my junk box without pullups on paper-out.
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As is, these boards failed to work, ie the probe routine failed.
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By adding 10K pullup resistors (to +5v) to both ACK and paper-out
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(pins 10 & 12) I was able to make these boards work: probe succeeds,
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transmit and receive work reliably.
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we must describe a test to determine if a parallel port will work as is.
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perhaps something like:
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Not a parallel ports will work with the connector described in this paper.
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To test your port for usability you should take the following measurements
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with a voltmeter. The computer must be powered-up, and preferably in
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a safe state for tinkering, such as halted in a startup menu. Nothing
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should be attached to the parallel ports, except perhaps an extension
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cable for testing convenience.
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1: measure the voltage between pins 10 & 25 (GND) of the parallel port.
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2: measure the voltage between pins 12 & 25 (GND) of the parallel port.
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If both of these measurements have a value of >= 4.0 volts your port
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should work as is. If either is below 4.0 volts (typically less than
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1.0 volt) your port will NOT WORK RELIABLY as is. It can be made to
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work by adding 10k ohm pull-up resistors to either line that is below
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the minimum 4.0 volts. This is an ADVANCED TECHNIQUE that should NOT
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be attempted by anyone without some hardware construction experience.
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Assuming that you do feel competant to make these modifications it is
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easiest to tack 10k resistors on the bottom side of the port board
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from each of pins 10 & 12 of the parallel port connector to a source
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of +5 volts. This will probably be the power pin of one of the ICs.
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CAUTION: there may also be +-12 volts on a port board supplying some
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of the ICs. If your port is on your motherboard it would probably be
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best to obtain an external port card, and disable/re-address the 1st
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parallel port.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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