Jon Trulson a8d96bd2d9 cwlsxxa: Initial implementation
The driver was developed using the Veris CWLSHTA CO2 Gas sensor.  The
'T' variant supports a temperature sensor, and the 'H' variant
supports a humidity sensor.

All 3 signals are provided by the device as analog 0-5Vdc, 0-10Vdc, or
4-20ma loop current outputs.  For devices supporting temperature, the
valid temperature range is 10C to 50C.  The humidity ranges from 0% to
100% (non-condensing).  The CO2 sensor ranges from 0 to 2000 ppm.

This driver was developed using the 5Vdc outputs and the 4-20ma
outputs.  For voltage outputs, your MCU must be configured for 5V
operation.  In addition, you must configure the sensor (via it's
configuration switches) to output 0-5VDC only.  Using any other analog
reference voltage will require the appropriate external circuitry
(such as a voltage divider) in order to interface safely with your
MCU.

In addition, the sensor can be configured for 4-20ma usage, by
specifying the correct receiver resistance (in ohms) in the
constructor.  This sensor was tested with a Cooking Hacks (Libelium)
4-channel 4-20ma Arduino interface shield.  For this interface, the
receiver resistance was specified as 165.0 ohms.

Signed-off-by: Jon Trulson <jtrulson@ics.com>
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Malik <abhishek.malik@intel.com>
2016-03-22 16:36:10 -07:00
2016-03-04 08:19:56 -08:00
2016-03-22 16:36:10 -07:00
2016-03-22 16:36:10 -07:00
2014-04-25 15:33:40 +01:00
2015-06-03 12:02:36 -07:00

UPM (Useful Packages & Modules) Sensor/Actuator repository for MRAA

UPM is a high level repository for sensors that use MRAA. Each sensor links to MRAA and are not meant to be interlinked although some groups of sensors may be. Each sensor contains a header which allows to interface with it. Typically a sensor is represented as a class and instantiated.

The constructor is expected to initialise the sensor and parameters may be used to provide identification/pin location on the board.

Typically an update() function will be called in order to get new data from the sensor in order to reduce load when doing multiple reads to sensor data.

Although implementation and API design is up to the developer, C++ interfaces have been defined for the following sensor/actuator types and developers are encouraged to implement them. Interface header files are in the src/upm folder.

  • Light controller
  • Light sensor
  • Temperature sensor
  • Humidity sensor
  • Pressure sensor
  • Analog to digital converter

Feedback on interface design and additions for new types are welcome

Example

A sensor/actuator is expected to work as such (here is the MMA7660 accelerometer API):

  // Instantiate an MMA7660 on I2C bus 0
  upm::MMA7660 *accel = new upm::MMA7660(MMA7660_I2C_BUS,
                                         MMA7660_DEFAULT_I2C_ADDR);

  // place device in standby mode so we can write registers
  accel->setModeStandby();

  // enable 64 samples per second
  accel->setSampleRate(upm::MMA7660::AUTOSLEEP_64);
  
  // place device into active mode
  accel->setModeActive();

  while (shouldRun)
    {
      int x, y, z;
      
      accel->getRawValues(&x, &y, &z);
      cout << "Raw values: x = " << x 
           << " y = " << y
           << " z = " << z
           << endl;
      
      float ax, ay, az;
      
      accel->getAcceleration(&ax, &ay, &az);
      cout << "Acceleration: x = " << ax 
           << "g y = " << ay
           << "g z = " << az
           << "g" << endl;
      
      usleep(500000);
    }

Browse through the list of all examples.

Multi-sensor samples for the starter and specialized kits can be found in the iot-devkit-samples repository.

Supported Sensors

Supported sensor list from API documentation.

You can also refer to the Intel® IoT Developer Zone.

IDE Integration

If you would like to create projects and run the UPM samples using an Intel recommended IDE, please refer to the Intel Developer Zone IDE page.

Building UPM

See building documentation here.

Making your own UPM module

Porting link has more information on making new UPM modules.

There is also an example available gfor max31855 sensor.

Guide on creating Java bindings.

Naming conventions and rules for new UPM contributions

Before you begin development, take a look at our naming conventions.

Also, please read the guidelines for contributions to UPM.

Don't forget to check the documentation section.

Make sure you add yourself as an author on every new code file submitted. If you are providing a fix with significant changes, feel free to add yourself as a contributor. Signing-off your commits is mandatory.

API Documentation

Changelog

Version changelog here.

Known Limitations

List of known limitations here.

Description
UPM is a high level repository that provides software drivers for a wide variety of commonly used sensors and actuators. These software drivers interact with the underlying hardware platform through calls to MRAA APIs.
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