An input/output controller for virtual pinball machines, with plunger position tracking, accelerometer-based nudge sensing, button input encoding, and feedback device control.

Dependencies:   USBDevice mbed FastAnalogIn FastIO FastPWM SimpleDMA

/media/uploads/mjr/pinscape_no_background_small_L7Miwr6.jpg

The Pinscape Controller is a special-purpose software project that I wrote for my virtual pinball machine.

New version: V2 is now available! The information below is for version 1, which will continue to be available for people who prefer the original setup.

What exactly is a virtual pinball machine? It's basically a video-game pinball emulator built to look like a real pinball machine. (The picture at right is the one I built.) You start with a standard pinball cabinet, either built from scratch or salvaged from a real machine. Inside, you install a PC motherboard to run the software, and install TVs in place of the playfield and backglass. Several Windows pinball programs can take advantage of this setup, including the open-source project Visual Pinball, which has hundreds of tables available. Building one of these makes a great DIY project, and it's a good way to add to your skills at woodworking, computers, and electronics. Check out the Cabinet Builders' Forum on vpforums.org for lots of examples and advice.

This controller project is a key piece in my setup that helps integrate the video game into the pinball cabinet. It handles several input/output tasks that are unique to virtual pinball machines. First, it lets you connect a mechanical plunger to the software, so you can launch the ball like on a real machine. Second, it sends "nudge" data to the software, based on readings from an accelerometer. This lets you interact with the game physically, which makes the playing experience more realistic and immersive. Third, the software can handle button input (for wiring flipper buttons and other cabinet buttons), and fourth, it can control output devices (for tactile feedback, button lights, flashers, and other special effects).

Documentation

The Hardware Build Guide (PDF) has detailed instructions on how to set up a Pinscape Controller for your own virtual pinball cabinet.

Update notes

December 2015 version: This version fully supports the new Expansion Board project, but it'll also run without it. The default configuration settings haven't changed, so existing setups should continue to work as before.

August 2015 version: Be sure to get the latest version of the Config Tool for windows if you're upgrading from an older version of the firmware. This update adds support for TSL1412R sensors (a version of the 1410 sensor with a slightly larger pixel array), and a config option to set the mounting orientation of the board in the firmware rather than in VP (for better support for FP and other pinball programs that don't have VP's flexibility for setting the rotation).

Feb/March 2015 software versions: If you have a CCD plunger that you've been using with the older versions, and the plunger stops working (or doesn't work as well) after you update to the latest version, you might need to increase the brightness of your light source slightly. Check the CCD exposure with the Windows config tool to see if it looks too dark. The new software reads the CCD much more quickly than the old versions did. This makes the "shutter speed" faster, which might require a little more light to get the same readings. The CCD is actually really tolerant of varying light levels, so you probably won't have to change anything for the update - I didn't. But if you do have any trouble, have a look at the exposure meter and try a slightly brighter light source if the exposure looks too dark.

Downloads

  • Config tool for Windows (.exe and C# source): this is a Windows program that lets you view the raw pixel data from the CCD sensor, trigger plunger calibration mode, and configure some of the software options on the controller.
  • Custom VP builds: I created modified versions of Visual Pinball 9.9 and Physmod5 that you might want to use in combination with this controller. The modified versions have special handling for plunger calibration specific to the Pinscape Controller, as well as some enhancements to the nudge physics. If you're not using the plunger, you might still want it for the nudge improvements. The modified version also works with any other input controller, so you can get the enhanced nudging effects even if you're using a different plunger/nudge kit. The big change in the modified versions is a "filter" for accelerometer input that's designed to make the response to cabinet nudges more realistic. It also makes the response more subdued than in the standard VP, so it's not to everyone's taste. The downloads include both the updated executables and the source code changes, in case you want to merge the changes into your own custom version(s).

    Note! These features are now standard in the official VP 9.9.1 and VP 10 releases, so you don't need my custom builds if you're using 9.9.1 or 10 or later. I don't think there's any reason to use my 9.9 instead of the official 9.9.1, but I'm leaving it here just in case. In the official VP releases, look for the checkbox "Enable Nudge Filter" in the Keys preferences dialog. (There's no checkbox in my custom builds, though; the filter is simply always on in those.)
  • Output circuit shopping list: This is a saved shopping cart at mouser.com with the parts needed for each output driver, if you want to use the LedWiz emulator feature. Note that quantities in the cart are for one output channel, so multiply everything by the number of channels you plan to use, except that you only need one of the ULN2803 transistor array chips for each eight output circuits.
  • Lemming77's potentiometer mounting bracket and shooter rod connecter: Sketchup designs for 3D-printable parts for mounting a slide potentiometer as the plunger sensor. These were designed for a particular slide potentiometer that used to be available from an Aliexpress.com seller but is no longer listed. You can probably use this design as a starting point for other similar devices; just check the dimensions before committing the design to plastic.

Features

  • Plunger position sensing, using a TAOS TSL 1410R CCD linear array sensor. This sensor is a 1280 x 1 pixel array at 400 dpi, which makes it about 3" long - almost exactly the travel distance of a standard pinball plunger. The idea is that you install the sensor just above (within a few mm of) the shooter rod on the inside of the cabinet, with the CCD window facing down, aligned with and centered on the long axis of the shooter rod, and positioned so that the rest position of the tip is about 1/2" from one end of the window. As you pull back the plunger, the tip will travel down the length of the window, and the maximum retraction point will put the tip just about at the far end of the window. Put a light source below, facing the sensor - I'm using two typical 20 mA blue LEDs about 8" away (near the floor of the cabinet) with good results. The principle of operation is that the shooter rod casts a shadow on the CCD, so pixels behind the rod will register lower brightness than pixels that aren't in the shadow. We scan down the length of the sensor for the edge between darker and brighter, and this tells us how far back the rod has been pulled. We can read the CCD at about 25-30 ms intervals, so we can get rapid updates. We pass the readings reports to VP via our USB joystick reports.

    The hardware build guide includes schematics showing how to wire the CCD to the KL25Z. It's pretty straightforward - five wires between the two devices, no external components needed. Two GPIO ports are used as outputs to send signals to the device and one is used as an ADC in to read the pixel brightness inputs. The config tool has a feature that lets you display the raw pixel readings across the array, so you can test that the CCD is working and adjust the light source to get the right exposure level.

    Alternatively, you can use a slide potentiometer as the plunger sensor. This is a cheaper and somewhat simpler option that seems to work quite nicely, as you can see in Lemming77's video of this setup in action. This option is also explained more fully in the build guide.
  • Nudge sensing via the KL25Z's on-board accelerometer. Mounting the board in your cabinet makes it feel the same accelerations the cabinet experiences when you nudge it. Visual Pinball already knows how to interpret accelerometer input as nudging, so we simply feed the acceleration readings to VP via the joystick interface.
  • Cabinet button wiring. Up to 24 pushbuttons and switches can be wired to the controller for input controls (for example, flipper buttons, the Start button, the tilt bob, coin slot switches, and service door buttons). These appear to Windows as joystick buttons. VP can map joystick buttons to pinball inputs via its keyboard preferences dialog. (You can raise the 24-button limit by editing the source code, but since all of the GPIO pins are allocated, you'll have to reassign pins currently used for other functions.)
  • LedWiz emulation (limited). In addition to emulating a joystick, the device emulates the LedWiz USB interface, so controllers on the PC side such as DirectOutput Framework can recognize it and send it commands to control lights, solenoids, and other feedback devices. 22 GPIO ports are assigned by default as feedback device outputs. This feature has some limitations. The big one is that the KL25Z hardware only has 10 PWM channels, which isn't enough for a fully decked-out cabinet. You also need to build some external power driver circuitry to use this feature, because of the paltry 4mA output capacity of the KL25Z GPIO ports. The build guide includes instructions for a simple and robust output circuit, including part numbers for the exact components you need. It's not hard if you know your way around a soldering iron, but just be aware that it'll take a little work.

Warning: This is not replacement software for the VirtuaPin plunger kit. If you bought the VirtuaPin kit, please don't try to install this software. The VP kit happens to use the same microcontroller board, but the rest of its hardware is incompatible. The VP kit uses a different type of sensor for its plunger and has completely different button wiring, so the Pinscape software won't work properly with it.

Committer:
mjr
Date:
Fri Sep 25 18:49:53 2015 +0000
Revision:
29:582472d0bc57
Parent:
28:2097c6f8f2db
Child:
30:6e9902f06f48
Test of direct bit writes instead of SPI.

Who changed what in which revision?

UserRevisionLine numberNew contents of line
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 1 // Pinscape Controller TLC5940 interface
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 2 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 3 // Based on Spencer Davis's mbed TLC5940 library. Adapted for the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 4 // KL25Z, and simplified to just the functions needed for this
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 5 // application. In particular, this version doesn't include support
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 6 // for dot correction programming or status input. This version also
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 7 // uses a different approach for sending the grayscale data updates,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 8 // sending updates during the blanking interval rather than overlapping
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 9 // them with the PWM cycle. This results in very slightly longer
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 10 // blanking intervals when updates are pending, effectively reducing
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 11 // the PWM "on" duty cycle (and thus the output brightness) by about
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 12 // 0.3%. This shouldn't be perceptible to users, so it's a small
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 13 // trade-off for the advantage gained, which is much better signal
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 14 // stability when using multiple TLC5940s daisy-chained together.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 15 // I saw a lot of instability when using the overlapped approach,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 16 // which seems to be eliminated entirely when sending updates during
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 17 // the blanking interval.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 18
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 19
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 20 #ifndef TLC5940_H
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 21 #define TLC5940_H
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 22
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 23 #include "mbed.h"
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 24 #include "FastPWM.h"
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 25
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 26 /**
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 27 * SPI speed used by the mbed to communicate with the TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 28 * The TLC5940 supports up to 30Mhz. It's best to keep this as
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 29 * high as the microcontroller will allow, since a higher SPI
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 30 * speed yields a faster grayscale data update. However, if
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 31 * you have problems with unreliable signal transmission to the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 32 * TLC5940s, reducing this speed might help.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 33 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 34 * The SPI clock must be fast enough that the data transmission
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 35 * time for a full update is comfortably less than the blanking
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 36 * cycle time. The grayscale refresh requires 192 bits per TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 37 * in the daisy chain, and each bit takes one SPI clock to send.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 38 * Our reference setup in the Pinscape controller allows for up to
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 39 * 4 TLC5940s, so a full refresh cycle on a fully populated system
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 40 * would be 768 SPI clocks. The blanking cycle is 4096 GSCLK cycles.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 41 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 42 * t(blank) = 4096 * 1/GSCLK_SPEED
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 43 * t(refresh) = 768 * 1/SPI_SPEED
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 44 * Therefore: SPI_SPEED must be > 768/4096 * GSCLK_SPEED
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 45 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 46 * Since the SPI speed can be so high, and since we want to keep
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 47 * the GSCLK speed relatively low, the constraint above simply
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 48 * isn't a factor. E.g., at SPI=30MHz and GSCLK=500kHz,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 49 * t(blank) is 8192us and t(refresh) is 25us.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 50 */
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 51 #define USE_SPI 1
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 52 #define SPI_SPEED 3000000
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 53
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 54 /**
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 55 * The rate at which the GSCLK pin is pulsed. This also controls
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 56 * how often the reset function is called. The reset function call
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 57 * rate is (1/GSCLK_SPEED) * 4096. The maximum reliable rate is
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 58 * around 32Mhz. It's best to keep this rate as low as possible:
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 59 * the higher the rate, the higher the refresh() call frequency,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 60 * so the higher the CPU load.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 61 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 62 * The lower bound is probably dependent on the application. For
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 63 * driving LEDs, the limiting factor is that lower rates will increase
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 64 * visible flicker. 200 kHz seems to be a good lower bound for LEDs.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 65 * That provides about 48 cycles per second - that's about the same as
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 66 * the 50 Hz A/C cycle rate in many countries, which was itself chosen
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 67 * so that incandescent lights don't flicker. (This rate is a function
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 68 * of human eye physiology, which has its own refresh cycle of sorts
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 69 * that runs at about 50 Hz. If you're designing an LED system for
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 70 * viewing by cats or drosophila, you might want to look into your
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 71 * target species' eye physiology, since the persistence of vision
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 72 * rate varies quite a bit from species to species.) Flicker tends to
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 73 * be more noticeable in LEDs than in incandescents, since LEDs don't
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 74 * have the thermal inertia of incandescents, so we use a slightly
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 75 * higher default here. 500 kHz = 122 full grayscale cycles per
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 76 * second = 122 reset calls per second (call every 8ms).
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 77 */
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 78 #define GSCLK_SPEED 500000
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 79
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 80 /**
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 81 * This class controls a TLC5940 PWM driver IC.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 82 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 83 * Using the TLC5940 class to control an LED:
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 84 * @code
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 85 * #include "mbed.h"
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 86 * #include "TLC5940.h"
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 87 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 88 * // Create the TLC5940 instance
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 89 * TLC5940 tlc(p7, p5, p21, p9, p10, p11, p12, 1);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 90 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 91 * int main()
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 92 * {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 93 * // Enable the first LED
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 94 * tlc.set(0, 0xfff);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 95 *
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 96 * while(1)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 97 * {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 98 * }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 99 * }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 100 * @endcode
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 101 */
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 102 class TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 103 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 104 public:
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 105 /**
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 106 * Set up the TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 107 * @param SCLK - The SCK pin of the SPI bus
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 108 * @param MOSI - The MOSI pin of the SPI bus
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 109 * @param GSCLK - The GSCLK pin of the TLC5940(s)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 110 * @param BLANK - The BLANK pin of the TLC5940(s)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 111 * @param XLAT - The XLAT pin of the TLC5940(s)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 112 * @param nchips - The number of TLC5940s (if you are daisy chaining)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 113 */
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 114 TLC5940(PinName SCLK, PinName MOSI, PinName GSCLK, PinName BLANK, PinName XLAT, int nchips)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 115 #if USE_SPI
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 116 : spi(MOSI, NC, SCLK),
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 117 #else
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 118 : sin(MOSI), sclk(SCLK),
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 119 #endif
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 120 gsclk(GSCLK),
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 121 blank(BLANK),
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 122 xlat(XLAT),
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 123 nchips(nchips),
mjr 28:2097c6f8f2db 124 newGSData(true)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 125 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 126 // allocate the grayscale buffer
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 127 gs = new unsigned short[nchips*16];
mjr 28:2097c6f8f2db 128 memset(gs, 0, nchips*16*sizeof(gs[0]));
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 129
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 130 #if USE_SPI
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 131 // Configure SPI format and speed. Note that KL25Z ONLY supports 8-bit
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 132 // mode. The TLC5940 nominally requires 12-bit data blocks for the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 133 // grayscale levels, but SPI is ultimately just a bit-level serial format,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 134 // so we can reformat the 12-bit blocks into 8-bit bytes to fit the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 135 // KL25Z's limits. This should work equally well on other microcontrollers
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 136 // that are more flexible. The TLC5940 appears to require polarity/phase
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 137 // format 0.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 138 spi.format(8, 0);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 139 spi.frequency(SPI_SPEED);
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 140 #else
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 141 sclk = 1;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 142 #endif
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 143
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 144 // Set output pin states
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 145 xlat = 0;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 146 blank = 1;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 147
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 148 // Configure PWM output for GSCLK frequency at 50% duty cycle
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 149 gsclk.period(1.0/GSCLK_SPEED);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 150 gsclk.write(.5);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 151 blank = 0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 152 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 153
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 154 // start the clock running
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 155 void start()
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 156 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 157 // Set up the first call to the reset function, which asserts BLANK to
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 158 // end the PWM cycle and handles new grayscale data output and latching.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 159 // The original version of this library uses a timer to call reset
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 160 // periodically, but that approach is somewhat problematic because the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 161 // reset function itself takes a small amount of time to run, so the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 162 // *actual* cycle is slightly longer than what we get from counting
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 163 // GS clocks. Running reset on a timer therefore causes the calls to
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 164 // slip out of phase with the actual full cycles, which causes
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 165 // premature blanking that shows up as visible flicker. To get the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 166 // reset cycle to line up exactly with a full PWM cycle, it works
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 167 // better to set up a new timer on each cycle, *after* we've finished
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 168 // with the somewhat unpredictable overhead of the interrupt handler.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 169 // This ensures that we'll get much closer to exact alignment of the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 170 // cycle phase, and in any case the worst that happens is that some
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 171 // cycles are very slightly too long or short (due to imperfections
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 172 // in the timer clock vs the PWM clock that determines the GSCLCK
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 173 // output to the TLC5940), which is far less noticeable than a
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 174 // constantly rotating phase misalignment.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 175 reset_timer.attach(this, &TLC5940::reset, (1.0/GSCLK_SPEED)*4096.0);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 176 }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 177
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 178 ~TLC5940()
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 179 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 180 delete [] gs;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 181 }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 182
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 183 /**
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 184 * Set the next chunk of grayscale data to be sent
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 185 * @param data - Array of 16 bit shorts containing 16 12 bit grayscale data chunks per TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 186 * @note These must be in intervals of at least (1/GSCLK_SPEED) * 4096 to be sent
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 187 */
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 188 void set(int idx, unsigned short data)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 189 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 190 // store the data, and flag the pending update for the interrupt handler to carry out
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 191 gs[idx] = data;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 192 // newGSData = true;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 193 }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 194
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 195 private:
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 196 // current level for each output
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 197 unsigned short *gs;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 198
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 199 #if USE_SPI
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 200 // SPI port - only MOSI and SCK are used
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 201 SPI spi;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 202 #else
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 203 DigitalOut sin;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 204 DigitalOut sclk;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 205 #endif
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 206
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 207 // use a PWM out for the grayscale clock - this provides a stable
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 208 // square wave signal without consuming CPU
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 209 FastPWM gsclk;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 210
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 211 // Digital out pins used for the TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 212 DigitalOut blank;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 213 DigitalOut xlat;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 214
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 215 // number of daisy-chained TLC5940s we're controlling
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 216 int nchips;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 217
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 218 // Timeout to end each PWM cycle. This is a one-shot timer that we reset
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 219 // on each cycle.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 220 Timeout reset_timer;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 221
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 222 // Has new GS/DC data been loaded?
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 223 volatile bool newGSData;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 224
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 225 // Function to reset the display and send the next chunks of data
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 226 void reset()
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 227 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 228 // turn off the grayscale clock, and assert BLANK to end the grayscale cycle
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 229 gsclk.write(0);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 230 blank = 1;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 231
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 232 // If we have new GS data, send it now
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 233 if (true) // (newGSData)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 234 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 235 // Send the new grayscale data.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 236 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 237 // Note that ideally, we'd do this during the new PWM cycle
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 238 // rather than during the blanking interval. The TLC5940 is
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 239 // specifically designed to allow this. However, in my testing,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 240 // I found that sending new data during the PWM cycle was
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 241 // unreliable - it seemed to cause a fair amount of glitching,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 242 // which as far as I can tell is signal noise coming from
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 243 // crosstalk between the grayscale clock signal and the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 244 // SPI signal. This seems to be a common problem with
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 245 // daisy-chained TLC5940s. It can in principle be solved with
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 246 // careful high-speed circuit design (good ground planes,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 247 // short leads, decoupling capacitors), and indeed I was able
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 248 // to improve stability to some extent with circuit tweaks,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 249 // but I wasn't able to eliminate it entirely. Moving the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 250 // data refresh into the blanking interval, on the other
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 251 // hand, seems to entirely eliminate any instability.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 252 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 253 // Note that there's no CPU performance penalty to this
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 254 // approach. The KL25Z SPI implementation isn't capable of
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 255 // asynchronous DMA, so the CPU has to wait for the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 256 // transmission no matter when it happens. The only downside
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 257 // I see to this approach is that it decreases the duty cycle
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 258 // of the PWM during updates - but very slightly. With the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 259 // SPI clock at 30 MHz and the PWM clock at 500 kHz, the full
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 260 // PWM cycle is 8192us, and the data refresh time is 25us.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 261 // So by doing the data refersh in the blanking interval,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 262 // we're effectively extending the PWM cycle to 8217us,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 263 // which is 0.3% longer. Since the outputs are all off
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 264 // during the blanking cycle, this is equivalent to
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 265 // decreasing all of the output brightnesses by 0.3%. That
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 266 // should be imperceptible to users.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 267 update();
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 268
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 269 // the chips are now in sync with our data, so we have no more
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 270 // pending update
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 271 newGSData = false;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 272
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 273 // latch the new data while we're still blanked
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 274 xlat = 1;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 275 xlat = 0;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 276 }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 277
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 278 // end the blanking interval and restart the grayscale clock
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 279 blank = 0;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 280 gsclk.write(.5);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 281
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 282 // set up the next blanking interrupt
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 283 reset_timer.attach(this, &TLC5940::reset, (1.0/GSCLK_SPEED)*4096.0);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 284 }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 285
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 286 void update()
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 287 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 288 #if USE_SPI
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 289 // Send GS data. The serial format orders the outputs from last to first
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 290 // (output #15 on the last chip in the daisy-chain to output #0 on the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 291 // first chip). For each output, we send 12 bits containing the grayscale
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 292 // level (0 = fully off, 0xFFF = fully on). Bit order is most significant
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 293 // bit first.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 294 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 295 // The KL25Z SPI can only send in 8-bit increments, so we need to divvy up
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 296 // the 12-bit outputs into 8-bit bytes. Each pair of 12-bit outputs adds up
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 297 // to 24 bits, which divides evenly into 3 bytes, so send each pairs of
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 298 // outputs as three bytes:
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 299 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 300 // [ element i+1 bits ] [ element i bits ]
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 301 // 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 302 // [ first byte ] [ second byte ] [ third byte ]
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 303 for (int i = 61 /* (16 * nchips) - 2 */ ; i >= 0 ; i -= 2)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 304 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 305 // first byte - element i+1 bits 4-11
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 306 spi.write(((gs[i+1] & 0xFF0) >> 4) & 0xff);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 307
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 308 // second byte - element i+1 bits 0-3, then element i bits 8-11
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 309 spi.write((((gs[i+1] & 0x00F) << 4) | ((gs[i] & 0xF00) >> 8)) & 0xFF);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 310
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 311 // third byte - element i bits 0-7
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 312 spi.write(gs[i] & 0x0FF);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 313 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 314 #else
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 315 // Send GS data, from last output to first output, 12 bits per output,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 316 // most significant bit first.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 317 for (int i = 16*3 - 1 ; i >= 0 ; --i)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 318 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 319 unsigned data = gs[i];
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 320 for (unsigned int mask = 1 << 11, bit = 0 ; bit < 12 ; ++bit, mask >>= 1)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 321 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 322 sclk = 0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 323 sin = (data & mask) ? 1 : 0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 324 sclk = 1;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 325 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 326 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 327 #endif
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 328 }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 329 };
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 330
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 331
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 332 #endif