A web server for monitoring and controlling a MakerBot Replicator over the USB host and ethernet.

Dependencies:   IAP NTPClient RTC mbed-rtos mbed Socket lwip-sys lwip BurstSPI

Fork of LPC1768_Mini-DK by Frank Vannieuwkerke

Makerbot Server for LPC1768 Copyright (c) 2013, jake (at) allaboutjake (dot) com All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  • Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
  • Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
  • The name of the author and/or copyright holder nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER, AUTHOR, OR ANY CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

Warnings:

This is not a commercial product or a hardened and secure network appliance. It is intended as a thought experiment or proof of concept and should not be relied upon in any way. Always operate your 3D printer in a safe and controlled manner.

Do not connect this directly to the exposed internet. It is intended to be behind a secure firewall (and NAT) such that it will only accept commands from the local network. Imagine how much fun a hacker could have instructing your 3D printer to continually print Standford bunnies. Well it could be much worse then that- a malicious user could send commands that could crash your machine (both in the software sense, as well as in the "smash your moving parts against the side of the machine repeatedly sense), overheat your extruders, cause your build plate to catch fire, and do severe damage to the machine, any surrounding building and propery. You have been warned.

Never print unattended and be ready to step in and stop the machine if something goes wrong. Keep in mind, a 3D printer has heaters that are operating at high temperatures, and if something starts to burn, it could cause damage to the machine, other property, and/or hurt yourself, pets, or others.

You should understand what you are doing. The source code here is not intended as a finished product or set of step by step instructions. You should engineer your own solution, which may wind up being better than mine.

Proceed at your own risk. You've been warned. (Several times) If you break your Makerbot, burn your house down, or injure yourself or others, I take no responsibility.

Introduction

I've been working on a side project to solve the "last mile" problem for people wanting to print from the network on their bots. I feel like the first half of the problem is solved with the FlashAir- getting the files to the card. The next step is a lightweight way of sending the "play back capture" command to the bot.

I looked around for a microcontroller platform that supports both networking and can function as a USB host. I happened to have an mbed (mbed) on hand that fit the bill. The mbed also has a working online toolchain (you need to own an mbed to gain access to the compiler). Some people don't like the online development environment, but I'm a fan of "working" and "Mac compatible." It was a good start, but cost wise, you would need an mbed LPC1768 module and some sort of carrier board that has both USB host and ethernet, or rig up your own connector solution. I happened to also have a Seedstudio mbed shield carrier board. This provides ethernet and USB connectors, but is another $25, putting the solution at around $75.

I also had an LPC1768 development board here called the "Mini-DK2". It has a USB host and a wired ethernet connector on board (search ebay if you're interested). It's a single-board solution that costs only $32 (and for $40 you can get one with a touchscreen) Its the cheapest development board I've seen with both USB host and an ethernet connector. I considered RasPi, but I'm not on that bandwagon. Since I had the Mini-DK2 on hand from another project that never went anywhere, I moved from the mbed module and carrier board to the DK2.

The mbed environment can compile binaries that work on the DK2 (again, you need to own at least one 1768 mbed already to get a license to use the compiler), and the mbed libraries provide some nice features. A USB Host library and and Ethernet library were readily available. The USBHost library didn't quite work out of the box. It took some time and more learning about the USB protocols than I would have liked, but I have the board communicating over the USB Host and the Makerbot.

Changes to stock mbed libraries

Many libraries are imported, but then converted to folders as to unlink them.

mbed provides a USHost library that includes a USBHostSerial object for connecting to CDC serial devices. Unfortunately, it did not work for me out of the box. I spent some time learning about USB protocols. One good reference is [Jan Axelson's Lakeview Research](http://www.lvr.com/usb_virtual_com_port.htm) discussion about CDC.

I found that the stock library was sending the control transfers to Interface 1. From what I understand, the control transfers needed to go to interface 0. I modified the USBHostSerial library to correct this, and the serial port interface came to life.

Next, I found that I wasn't able to get reliable communication. I traced it to what I think is an odd C++ inheritance and override problem. The USBHostSerial class implements the Stream interface, allowing printf/scanf operations. This is done by overriding the virtual _getc and _putc methods. Unfortunately, and for a reason I can't understand, these methods were not being called consistently. Sometimes they would work, but other times they would not. My solution was to implement transmit/receive methods with different names, and since the names were different, they seemed to get called consistently. I'd like to learn exactly what's going on here, but I don't feel like debugging it for academic purposes when it works just fine with the added methods.

Usage

Connect up your chosen dev board to power, ethernet and the USB host to the Makerbot's USB cable. The Mini-DK uses a USB-OTG adapter for the USB host. If you're using a Mini-DK board with an LCD, it will inform you of it's IP address on the display. This means it is now listening for a connection on port 7654.

If you are using an mbed dev board, or a Mini-DK without a display, the message will be directed to the serial console. Connect your computer to the appropriate port at a baud rate of 115200 to see the messages.

Use a telnet client to connect to the given IP address at port 7654. Telnet clients typically revert to "line mode" on ports other than 21. This means you get a local echo and the command isn't sent until you press enter.

Once connected, you can send the following commands:

A <username>:<password> : Set a username & password for the web interface and the telnet interface. Use the format shown with a colon separating the username from the password.

V : Print the version and Makerbot name, as well as the local firmware version (the Makerbot_Server firmware as discussed here).

B <filename.x3g> : Build from SD the given filename. According tot he protocol spec, this command is limited to 12 characters, so 8.3 filenames only.

P : Pause an active build

R : Resume active build

C : Cancel build- note that this immediately halts the build and does not clear the build area. You might want to pause the build first, and then cancel shortly after to make sure the nozzle isn't left hot and in contact with a printed part.

S : Print build status, tool and platform temps

Q : Quit and logout

The Mini-DK has two onboard buttons (besides the ISP and reset buttons). Currently one button will trigger a pause (if the Makerbot is printing) and the other will resume (if the Makerbot it paused)

Compiling

Edit "Target.h" to set whether you're building for an MBED module or the Mini-DK2

Installation

If you are using a mbed, then you can simply load the BIN file to the mbed using the mass storage bootloader. The mbed mounts as if it were a USB thumbdrive, and you copy the BIN file to the drive. After a reset, you're running the installed firmware.

The MiniDK has a serial bootloader. You connect to this bootloader from the "top" USB connector (not the USB host one). Hold down the ISP button and then tap the reset button and then release the ISP button to put it into programming mode. I use [lpc21isp](http://sourceforge.net/projects/lpc21isp/) to load the binary. The other option is FlashMagic, which uses HEX files, so you'll need to use some sort of bin2hex utility to convert the firmware file if you use this utility. I can't really say if/how this works, as I don't use this method. See this (http://mbed.org/users/frankvnk/notebook/lpc1768-mini-dk/) for more info.

Credits

Some credits, where credit is due.

EthernetInterface - modified to include PHY code for both the MiniDK2 and MBED based on selected #definitions

Mini-DK - Thanks for Frank and Erik for doing all the heavy lifting getting the MBED compiler and libraries and peripherals working on the Mini-DK2

NTP Client - Thanks to Donatien for this library to set the clock over the network

RTC - Thanks to Erik for the RTC library. I've got it in my project, but I don't think I'm using it for anything (yet).

SimpleSocket - Thanks to Yamaguchi-san. Modified slightly to take out references to EthernetInterface::init() and ::getIPAddress(). For some reason these don't like to be called in a thread.

JPEGCamera - Thanks again to Yamaguchi-san. Modified to output the JPEG binary over a socket rather than to a file descriptor.

USBHost - modified as noted above

IAP - Thanks to Okano-san. Pulled out of the Mini-DK folder so that I could link it back to the base repository at the root level.

Committer:
frankvnk
Date:
Thu Jan 03 10:54:09 2013 +0000
Revision:
2:d0acbd263ec7
Parent:
1:557df792279c
Child:
3:fb4d62b5ffb3
ONLY FOR TEST

Who changed what in which revision?

UserRevisionLine numberNew contents of line
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 1 #include "stdio.h"
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 2 #include "mbed.h"
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 3 #include "Mini_DK.h"
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 4 //#include "string"
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 5
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 6 extern unsigned char p1[]; // the mbed logo
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 7 #define RGB565CONVERT(red, green, blue) (uint16_t)( (( red >> 3 ) << 11 ) | (( green >> 2 ) << 5 ) | ( blue >> 3 ))
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 8
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 9 DigitalOut led(DK_LED1);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 10 // TFT -> mosi, miso, sclk, cs
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 11 SPI_TFT TFT(LCD_SDI, LCD_SDO, LCD_SCK, LCD_CS,"TFT");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 12 // ADS7843 -> mosi, miso, sclk, cs, irq
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 13 TouchScreenADS7843 TP(TP_SDI ,TP_SDO ,TP_SCK ,TP_CS ,TP_IRQ);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 14
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 15 // (To be modified) put these global vars back in Touch.cpp/Touch.h
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 16 //Matrix matrix;
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 17 //Coordinate display;
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 18 //Coordinate screen;
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 19
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 20 int main()
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 21 {
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 22 unsigned char Ads7846_status;
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 23 unsigned short LCD_id;
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 24 TFT.claim(stdout); // send stdout to the TFT display
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 25
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 26 TFT.background(Black); // set background to black
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 27 TFT.foreground(White); // set chars to white
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 28
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 29
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 30 // LCD demo
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 31 // first show the 4 directions
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 32 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 33 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial12x12);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 34 TFT.set_orientation(0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 35 TFT.locate(0,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 36 printf(" Hello Mbed 0");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 37 TFT.set_orientation(1);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 38 TFT.locate(0,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 39 printf(" Hello Mbed 1");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 40 TFT.set_orientation(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 41 TFT.locate(0,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 42 printf(" Hello Mbed 2");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 43 TFT.set_orientation(3);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 44 TFT.locate(0,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 45 printf(" Hello Mbed 3");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 46 TFT.set_orientation(1);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 47 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial24x23);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 48 TFT.locate(50,100);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 49 TFT.printf("TFT orientation");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 50
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 51 wait(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 52
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 53 // draw some graphics
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 54 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 55 TFT.set_orientation(1);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 56 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial24x23);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 57 TFT.locate(120,115);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 58 TFT.printf("Graphic");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 59 TFT.line(0,0,100,200,Green);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 60 TFT.rect(100,50,50,50,Red);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 61 TFT.fillrect(180,25,40,45,Blue);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 62 TFT.draw_ellipse(80, 150, 33, 33, White);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 63 TFT.fill_ellipse(80, 50, 33, 33, White);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 64 wait(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 65 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 66 TFT.draw_ellipse(160, 120, 100, 50, Yellow);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 67 TFT.draw_ellipse(160, 120, 100, 100, Blue);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 68 TFT.fill_ellipse(160, 120, 80, 40, Green);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 69 wait(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 70
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 71 // bigger text
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 72 TFT.foreground(White);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 73 TFT.background(Blue);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 74 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 75 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial24x23);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 76 TFT.locate(0,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 77 TFT.printf("Different Fonts :");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 78
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 79 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Neu42x35);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 80 TFT.locate(0,50);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 81 TFT.printf("Hello");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 82 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial24x23);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 83 TFT.locate(50,100);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 84 TFT.printf("Hello");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 85 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial12x12);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 86 TFT.locate(55,150);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 87 TFT.printf("Hello");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 88
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 89 TFT.set_orientation(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 90 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial24x23);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 91 TFT.locate(10,10);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 92 TFT.printf("Hi mbed");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 93 wait(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 94
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 95 // mbed logo
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 96 TFT.set_orientation(1);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 97 TFT.background(Black);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 98 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 99 TFT.Bitmap(90,90,172,55,p1);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 100
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 101 // Read LCD ID
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 102 TFT.set_orientation(0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 103 LCD_id = TFT.Read_ID();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 104 TFT.locate(10,10);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 105 TFT.printf("LCD: ILI%04X", LCD_id);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 106 wait(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 107
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 108 // RGB color wheel demo (cycle through all colors)
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 109 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 110 TFT.foreground(Yellow); // set chars to yellow
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 111 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial12x12);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 112 TFT.locate(10,10);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 113 TFT.printf("RGB color wheel (2x)");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 114
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 115 uint8_t r = 255, g = 0, b = 0, step = 5, i;
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 116 for (i=0;i<2;i++)
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 117 {
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 118 for(;g<255;g+=step) {TFT.fillrect(70,110,100,100,RGB565CONVERT(r, g, b));} // Cycle from FF0000 to FFFF00 : red to yellow
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 119 for(;r>0;r-=step) {TFT.fillrect(70,110,100,100,RGB565CONVERT(r, g, b));} // Cycle from FFFF00 to 00FF00 : yellow to green
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 120 for(;b<255;b+=step) {TFT.fillrect(70,110,100,100,RGB565CONVERT(r, g, b));} // Cycle from 00FF00 to 00FFFF : green to cyan
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 121 for(;g>0;g-=step) {TFT.fillrect(70,110,100,100,RGB565CONVERT(r, g, b));} // Cycle from 00FFFF to 0000FF : cyan to blue
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 122 for(;r<255;r+=step) {TFT.fillrect(70,110,100,100,RGB565CONVERT(r, g, b));} // Cycle from 0000FF to FF00FF : blue to purple
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 123 for(;b>0;b-=step) {TFT.fillrect(70,110,100,100,RGB565CONVERT(r, g, b));} // Cycle from FF00FF to FF0000 : purple to red
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 124 }
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 125 wait(2);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 126
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 127
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 128 // Touchpanel demo
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 129 TP.TouchPanel_Calibrate();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 130 TFT.set_font((unsigned char*) Arial12x12);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 131 TFT.set_orientation(0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 132 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 133 TFT.locate(0,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 134 TFT.printf(" X:");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 135 TFT.locate(70,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 136 TFT.printf(" Y:");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 137 while (1)
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 138 {
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 139 if (!TP._tp_irq)
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 140 {
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 141 Ads7846_status = TP.Read_Ads7846(&TP.screen);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 142 if (Ads7846_status)
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 143 {
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 144 TP.getDisplayPoint() ;
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 145 // TP.TP_DrawPoint(display.x,display.y, Blue);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 146 TFT.rect(TP.display.x,TP.display.y,1,1,Red);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 147 TFT.locate(25,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 148 printf("%03d",TP.display.x);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 149 TFT.locate(95,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 150 printf("%03d",TP.display.y);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 151 // Touchscreen area is larger than LCD area.
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 152 // We use the bottom area outside the LCD area to clear the screen (y value > 320).
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 153 if (TP.display.y > 320)
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 154 {
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 155 TFT.cls();
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 156 TFT.locate(0,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 157 TFT.printf(" X:");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 158 TFT.locate(70,0);
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 159 TFT.printf(" Y:");
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 160 }
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 161 }
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 162 }
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 163 }
frankvnk 2:d0acbd263ec7 164 }