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:
26:cb71c4af2912
Child:
30:6e9902f06f48
Test of direct bit writes instead of SPI.

Who changed what in which revision?

UserRevisionLine numberNew contents of line
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1 /* Copyright 2014 M J Roberts, MIT License
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2 *
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 3 * Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 4 * and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 5 * restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 6 * distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 7 * Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 8 *
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 9 * The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 10 * substantial portions of the Software.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 11 *
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 12 * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 13 * BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 14 * NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM,
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 15 * DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 16 * OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 17 */
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 18
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 19 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 20 // Pinscape Controller
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 21 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 22 // "Pinscape" is the name of my custom-built virtual pinball cabinet, so I call this
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 23 // software the Pinscape Controller. I wrote it to handle several tasks that I needed
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 24 // for my cabinet. It runs on a Freescale KL25Z microcontroller, which is a small and
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 25 // inexpensive device that attaches to the cabinet PC via a USB cable, and can attach
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 26 // via custom wiring to sensors, buttons, and other devices in the cabinet.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 27 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 28 // I designed the software and hardware in this project especially for my own
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 29 // cabinet, but it uses standard interfaces in Windows and Visual Pinball, so it should
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 30 // work in any VP-based cabinet, as long as you're using the usual VP software suite.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 31 // I've tried to document the hardware in enough detail for anyone else to duplicate
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 32 // the entire project, and the full software is open source.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 33 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 34 // The Freescale board appears to the host PC as a standard USB joystick. This works
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 35 // with the built-in Windows joystick device drivers, so there's no need to install any
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 36 // new drivers or other software on the PC. Windows should recognize the Freescale
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 37 // as a joystick when you plug it into the USB port, and Windows shouldn't ask you to
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 38 // install any drivers. If you bring up the Windows control panel for USB Game
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 39 // Controllers, this device will appear as "Pinscape Controller". *Don't* do any
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 40 // calibration with the Windows control panel or third-part calibration tools. The
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 41 // software calibrates the accelerometer portion automatically, and has its own special
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 42 // calibration procedure for the plunger sensor, if you're using that (see below).
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 43 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 44 // This software provides a whole bunch of separate features. You can use any of these
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 45 // features individually or all together. If you're not using a particular feature, you
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 46 // can simply omit the extra wiring and/or hardware for that feature. You can use
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 47 // the nudging feature by itself without any extra hardware attached, since the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 48 // accelerometer is built in to the KL25Z board.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 49 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 50 // - Nudge sensing via the KL25Z's on-board accelerometer. Nudging the cabinet
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 51 // causes small accelerations that the accelerometer can detect; these are sent to
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 52 // Visual Pinball via the joystick interface so that VP can simulate the effect
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 53 // of the real physical nudges on its simulated ball. VP has native handling for
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 54 // this type of input, so all you have to do is set some preferences in VP to tell
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 55 // it that an accelerometer is attached.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 56 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 57 // - Plunger position sensing via an attached TAOS TSL 1410R CCD linear array sensor.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 58 // To use this feature, you need to buy the TAOS device (it's not built in to the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 59 // KL25Z, obviously), wire it to the KL25Z (5 wire connections between the two
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 60 // devices are required), and mount the TAOS sensor in your cabinet so that it's
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 61 // positioned properly to capture images of the physical plunger shooter rod.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 62 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 63 // The physical mounting and wiring details are desribed in the project
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 64 // documentation.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 65 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 66 // If the CCD is attached, the software constantly captures images from the CCD
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 67 // and analyzes them to determine how far back the plunger is pulled. It reports
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 68 // this to Visual Pinball via the joystick interface. This allows VP to make the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 69 // simulated on-screen plunger track the motion of the physical plunger in real
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 70 // time. As with the nudge data, VP has native handling for the plunger input,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 71 // so you just need to set the VP preferences to tell it that an analog plunger
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 72 // device is attached. One caveat, though: although VP itself has built-in
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 73 // support for an analog plunger, not all existing tables take advantage of it.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 74 // Many existing tables have their own custom plunger scripting that doesn't
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 75 // cooperate with the VP plunger input. All tables *can* be made to work with
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 76 // the plunger, and in most cases it only requires some simple script editing,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 77 // but in some cases it requires some more extensive surgery.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 78 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 79 // For best results, the plunger sensor should be calibrated. The calibration
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 80 // is stored in non-volatile memory on board the KL25Z, so it's only necessary
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 81 // to do the calibration once, when you first install everything. (You might
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 82 // also want to re-calibrate if you physically remove and reinstall the CCD
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 83 // sensor or the mechanical plunger, since their alignment shift change slightly
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 84 // when you put everything back together.) You can optionally install a
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 85 // dedicated momentary switch or pushbutton to activate the calibration mode;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 86 // this is describe in the project documentation. If you don't want to bother
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 87 // with the extra button, you can also trigger calibration using the Windows
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 88 // setup software, which you can find on the Pinscape project page.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 89 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 90 // The calibration procedure is described in the project documentation. Briefly,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 91 // when you trigger calibration mode, the software will scan the CCD for about
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 92 // 15 seconds, during which you should simply pull the physical plunger back
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 93 // all the way, hold it for a moment, and then slowly return it to the rest
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 94 // position. (DON'T just release it from the retracted position, since that
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 95 // let it shoot forward too far. We want to measure the range from the park
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 96 // position to the fully retracted position only.)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 97 //
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 98 // - Button input wiring. 24 of the KL25Z's GPIO ports are mapped as digital inputs
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 99 // for buttons and switches. The software reports these as joystick buttons when
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 100 // it sends reports to the PC. These can be used to wire physical pinball-style
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 101 // buttons in the cabinet (e.g., flipper buttons, the Start button) and miscellaneous
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 102 // switches (such as a tilt bob) to the PC. Visual Pinball can use joystick buttons
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 103 // for input - you just have to assign a VP function to each button using VP's
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 104 // keyboard options dialog. To wire a button physically, connect one terminal of
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 105 // the button switch to the KL25Z ground, and connect the other terminal to the
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 106 // the GPIO port you wish to assign to the button. See the buttonMap[] array
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 107 // below for the available GPIO ports and their assigned joystick button numbers.
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 108 // If you're not using a GPIO port, you can just leave it unconnected - the digital
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 109 // inputs have built-in pull-up resistors, so an unconnected port is the same as
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 110 // an open switch (an "off" state for the button).
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 111 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 112 // - LedWiz emulation. The KL25Z can appear to the PC as an LedWiz device, and will
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 113 // accept and process LedWiz commands from the host. The software can turn digital
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 114 // output ports on and off, and can set varying PWM intensitiy levels on a subset
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 115 // of ports. (The KL25Z can only provide 6 PWM ports. Intensity level settings on
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 116 // other ports is ignored, so non-PWM ports can only be used for simple on/off
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 117 // devices such as contactors and solenoids.) The KL25Z can only supply 4mA on its
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 118 // output ports, so external hardware is required to take advantage of the LedWiz
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 119 // emulation. Many different hardware designs are possible, but there's a simple
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 120 // reference design in the documentation that uses a Darlington array IC to
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 121 // increase the output from each port to 500mA (the same level as the LedWiz),
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 122 // plus an extended design that adds an optocoupler and MOSFET to provide very
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 123 // high power handling, up to about 45A or 150W, with voltages up to 100V.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 124 // That will handle just about any DC device directly (wtihout relays or other
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 125 // amplifiers), and switches fast enough to support PWM devices.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 126 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 127 // The device can report any desired LedWiz unit number to the host, which makes
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 128 // it possible to use the LedWiz emulation on a machine that also has one or more
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 129 // actual LedWiz devices intalled. The LedWiz design allows for up to 16 units
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 130 // to be installed in one machine - each one is invidually addressable by its
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 131 // distinct unit number.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 132 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 133 // The LedWiz emulation features are of course optional. There's no need to
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 134 // build any of the external port hardware (or attach anything to the output
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 135 // ports at all) if the LedWiz features aren't needed. Most people won't have
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 136 // any use for the LedWiz features. I built them mostly as a learning exercise,
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 137 // but with a slight practical need for a handful of extra ports (I'm using the
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 138 // cutting-edge 10-contactor setup, so my real LedWiz is full!).
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 139 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 140 // - Enhanced LedWiz emulation with TLC5940 PWM controller chips. You can attach
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 141 // external PWM controller chips for controlling device outputs, instead of using
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 142 // the limited LedWiz emulation through the on-board GPIO ports as described above.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 143 // The software can control a set of daisy-chained TLC5940 chips, which provide
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 144 // 16 PWM outputs per chip. Two of these chips give you the full complement
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 145 // of 32 output ports of an actual LedWiz, and four give you 64 ports, which
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 146 // should be plenty for nearly any virtual pinball project.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 147 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 148 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 149 // The on-board LED on the KL25Z flashes to indicate the current device status:
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 150 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 151 // two short red flashes = the device is powered but hasn't successfully
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 152 // connected to the host via USB (either it's not physically connected
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 153 // to the USB port, or there was a problem with the software handshake
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 154 // with the USB device driver on the computer)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 155 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 156 // short red flash = the host computer is in sleep/suspend mode
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 157 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 158 // long red/green = the LedWiz unti number has been changed, so a reset
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 159 // is needed. You can simply unplug the device and plug it back in,
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 160 // or presss and hold the reset button on the device for a few seconds.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 161 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 162 // long yellow/green = everything's working, but the plunger hasn't
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 163 // been calibrated; follow the calibration procedure described above.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 164 // This flash mode won't appear if the CCD has been disabled. Note
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 165 // that the device can't tell whether a CCD is physically attached;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 166 // if you don't have a CCD attached, you can set the appropriate option
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 167 // in config.h or use the Windows config tool to disable the CCD
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 168 // software features.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 169 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 170 // alternating blue/green = everything's working
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 171 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 172 // Software configuration: you can change option settings by sending special
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 173 // USB commands from the PC. I've provided a Windows program for this purpose;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 174 // refer to the documentation for details. For reference, here's the format
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 175 // of the USB command for option changes:
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 176 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 177 // length of report = 8 bytes
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 178 // byte 0 = 65 (0x41)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 179 // byte 1 = 1 (0x01)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 180 // byte 2 = new LedWiz unit number, 0x01 to 0x0f
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 181 // byte 3 = feature enable bit mask:
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 182 // 0x01 = enable CCD (default = on)
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 183 //
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 184 // Plunger calibration mode: the host can activate plunger calibration mode
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 185 // by sending this packet. This has the same effect as pressing and holding
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 186 // the plunger calibration button for two seconds, to allow activating this
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 187 // mode without attaching a physical button.
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 188 //
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 189 // length = 8 bytes
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 190 // byte 0 = 65 (0x41)
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 191 // byte 1 = 2 (0x02)
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 192 //
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 193 // Exposure reports: the host can request a report of the full set of pixel
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 194 // values for the next frame by sending this special packet:
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 195 //
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 196 // length = 8 bytes
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 197 // byte 0 = 65 (0x41)
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 198 // byte 1 = 3 (0x03)
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 199 //
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 200 // We'll respond with a series of special reports giving the exposure status.
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 201 // Each report has the following structure:
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 202 //
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 203 // bytes 0:1 = 11-bit index, with high 5 bits set to 10000. For
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 204 // example, 0x04 0x80 indicates index 4. This is the
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 205 // starting pixel number in the report. The first report
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 206 // will be 0x00 0x80 to indicate pixel #0.
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 207 // bytes 2:3 = 16-bit unsigned int brightness level of pixel at index
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 208 // bytes 4:5 = brightness of pixel at index+1
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 209 // etc for the rest of the packet
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 210 //
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 211 // This still has the form of a joystick packet at the USB level, but
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 212 // can be differentiated by the host via the status bits. It would have
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 213 // been cleaner to use a different Report ID at the USB level, but this
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 214 // would have necessitated a different container structure in the report
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 215 // descriptor, which would have broken LedWiz compatibility. Given that
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 216 // constraint, we have to re-use the joystick report type, making for
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 217 // this somewhat kludgey approach.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 218
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 219 #include "mbed.h"
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 220 #include "math.h"
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 221 #include "USBJoystick.h"
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 222 #include "MMA8451Q.h"
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 223 #include "tsl1410r.h"
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 224 #include "FreescaleIAP.h"
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 225 #include "crc32.h"
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 226 #include "TLC5940.h"
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 227
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 228 // our local configuration file
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 229 #define DECL_EXTERNS
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 230 #include "config.h"
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 231
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 232
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 233 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 234 // utilities
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 235
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 236 // number of elements in an array
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 237 #define countof(x) (sizeof(x)/sizeof((x)[0]))
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 238
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 239 // floating point square of a number
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 240 inline float square(float x) { return x*x; }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 241
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 242 // floating point rounding
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 243 inline float round(float x) { return x > 0 ? floor(x + 0.5) : ceil(x - 0.5); }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 244
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 245
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 246 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 247 // USB device vendor ID, product ID, and version.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 248 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 249 // We use the vendor ID for the LedWiz, so that the PC-side software can
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 250 // identify us as capable of performing LedWiz commands. The LedWiz uses
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 251 // a product ID value from 0xF0 to 0xFF; the last four bits identify the
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 252 // unit number (e.g., product ID 0xF7 means unit #7). This allows multiple
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 253 // LedWiz units to be installed in a single PC; the software on the PC side
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 254 // uses the unit number to route commands to the devices attached to each
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 255 // unit. On the real LedWiz, the unit number must be set in the firmware
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 256 // at the factory; it's not configurable by the end user. Most LedWiz's
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 257 // ship with the unit number set to 0, but the vendor will set different
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 258 // unit numbers if requested at the time of purchase. So if you have a
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 259 // single LedWiz already installed in your cabinet, and you didn't ask for
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 260 // a non-default unit number, your existing LedWiz will be unit 0.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 261 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 262 // Note that the USB_PRODUCT_ID value set here omits the unit number. We
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 263 // take the unit number from the saved configuration. We provide a
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 264 // configuration command that can be sent via the USB connection to change
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 265 // the unit number, so that users can select the unit number without having
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 266 // to install a different version of the software. We'll combine the base
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 267 // product ID here with the unit number to get the actual product ID that
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 268 // we send to the USB controller.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 269 const uint16_t USB_VENDOR_ID = 0xFAFA;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 270 const uint16_t USB_PRODUCT_ID = 0x00F0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 271 const uint16_t USB_VERSION_NO = 0x0006;
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 272
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 273
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 274 // Joystick axis report range - we report from -JOYMAX to +JOYMAX
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 275 #define JOYMAX 4096
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 276
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 277 // --------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 278 //
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 279 // Set up mappings for the joystick X and Y reports based on the mounting
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 280 // orientation of the KL25Z in the cabinet. Visual Pinball and other
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 281 // pinball software effectively use video coordinates to define the axes:
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 282 // positive X is to the right of the table, negative Y to the left, positive
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 283 // Y toward the front of the table, negative Y toward the back. The KL25Z
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 284 // accelerometer is mounted on the board with positive Y toward the USB
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 285 // ports and positive X toward the right side of the board with the USB
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 286 // ports pointing up. It's a simple matter to remap the KL25Z coordinate
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 287 // system to match VP's coordinate system for mounting orientations at
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 288 // 90-degree increments...
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 289 //
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 290 #if defined(ORIENTATION_PORTS_AT_FRONT)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 291 # define JOY_X(x, y) (y)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 292 # define JOY_Y(x, y) (x)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 293 #elif defined(ORIENTATION_PORTS_AT_LEFT)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 294 # define JOY_X(x, y) (-(x))
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 295 # define JOY_Y(x, y) (y)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 296 #elif defined(ORIENTATION_PORTS_AT_RIGHT)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 297 # define JOY_X(x, y) (x)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 298 # define JOY_Y(x, y) (-(y))
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 299 #elif defined(ORIENTATION_PORTS_AT_REAR)
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 300 # define JOY_X(x, y) (-(y))
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 301 # define JOY_Y(x, y) (-(x))
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 302 #else
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 303 # error Please define one of the ORIENTATION_PORTS_AT_xxx macros to establish the accelerometer orientation in your cabinet
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 304 #endif
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 305
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 306
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 307
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 308 // --------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 309 //
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 310 // Define a symbol to tell us whether any sort of plunger sensor code
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 311 // is enabled in this build. Note that this doesn't tell us that a
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 312 // plunger device is actually attached or *currently* enabled; it just
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 313 // tells us whether or not the code for plunger sensing is enabled in
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 314 // the software build. This lets us leave out some unnecessary code
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 315 // on installations where no physical plunger is attached.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 316 //
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 317 const int PLUNGER_CODE_ENABLED =
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 318 #if defined(ENABLE_CCD_SENSOR) || defined(ENABLE_POT_SENSOR)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 319 1;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 320 #else
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 321 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 322 #endif
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 323
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 324 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 325 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 326 // On-board RGB LED elements - we use these for diagnostic displays.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 327 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 328 // Note that LED3 (the blue segment) is hard-wired on the KL25Z to PTD1,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 329 // so PTD1 shouldn't be used for any other purpose (e.g., as a keyboard
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 330 // input or a device output). (This is kind of unfortunate in that it's
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 331 // one of only two ports exposed on the jumper pins that can be muxed to
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 332 // SPI0 SCLK. This effectively limits us to PTC5 if we want to use the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 333 // SPI capability.)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 334 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 335 DigitalOut ledR(LED1), ledG(LED2), ledB(LED3);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 336
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 337
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 338 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 339 //
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 340 // LedWiz emulation, and enhanced TLC5940 output controller
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 341 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 342 // There are two modes for this feature. The default mode uses the on-board
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 343 // GPIO ports to implement device outputs - each LedWiz software port is
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 344 // connected to a physical GPIO pin on the KL25Z. The KL25Z only has 10
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 345 // PWM channels, so in this mode only 10 LedWiz ports will be dimmable; the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 346 // rest are strictly on/off. The KL25Z also has a limited number of GPIO
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 347 // ports overall - not enough for the full complement of 32 LedWiz ports
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 348 // and 24 VP joystick inputs, so it's necessary to trade one against the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 349 // other if both features are to be used.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 350 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 351 // The alternative, enhanced mode uses external TLC5940 PWM controller
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 352 // chips to control device outputs. In this mode, each LedWiz software
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 353 // port is mapped to an output on one of the external TLC5940 chips.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 354 // Two 5940s is enough for the full set of 32 LedWiz ports, and we can
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 355 // support even more chips for even more outputs (although doing so requires
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 356 // breaking LedWiz compatibility, since the LedWiz USB protocol is hardwired
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 357 // for 32 outputs). Every port in this mode has full PWM support.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 358 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 359
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 360 // Figure the number of outputs. If we're in the default LedWiz mode,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 361 // we have a fixed set of 32 outputs. If we're in TLC5940 enhanced mode,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 362 // we have 16 outputs per chip. To simplify the LedWiz compatibility code,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 363 // always use a minimum of 32 outputs even if we have fewer than two of the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 364 // TLC5940 chips.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 365 #if !defined(ENABLE_TLC5940) || (TLC_NCHIPS) < 2
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 366 # define NUM_OUTPUTS 32
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 367 #else
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 368 # define NUM_OUTPUTS ((TLC5940_NCHIPS)*16)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 369 #endif
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 370
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 371 // Current starting output index for "PBA" messages from the PC (using
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 372 // the LedWiz USB protocol). Each PBA message implicitly uses the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 373 // current index as the starting point for the ports referenced in
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 374 // the message, and increases it (by 8) for the next call.
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 375 static int pbaIdx = 0;
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 376
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 377 // Generic LedWiz output port interface. We create a cover class to
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 378 // virtualize digital vs PWM outputs, and on-board KL25Z GPIO vs external
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 379 // TLC5940 outputs, and give them all a common interface.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 380 class LwOut
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 381 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 382 public:
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 383 // Set the output intensity. 'val' is 0.0 for fully off, 1.0 for
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 384 // fully on, and fractional values for intermediate intensities.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 385 virtual void set(float val) = 0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 386 };
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 387
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 388
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 389 #ifdef ENABLE_TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 390
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 391 // The TLC5940 interface object.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 392 TLC5940 tlc5940(TLC5940_SCLK, TLC5940_SIN, TLC5940_GSCLK, TLC5940_BLANK,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 393 TLC5940_XLAT, TLC5940_NCHIPS);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 394
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 395 // LwOut class for TLC5940 outputs. These are fully PWM capable.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 396 // The 'idx' value in the constructor is the output index in the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 397 // daisy-chained TLC5940 array. 0 is output #0 on the first chip,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 398 // 1 is #1 on the first chip, 15 is #15 on the first chip, 16 is
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 399 // #0 on the second chip, 32 is #0 on the third chip, etc.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 400 class Lw5940Out: public LwOut
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 401 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 402 public:
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 403 Lw5940Out(int idx) : idx(idx) { prv = -1; }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 404 virtual void set(float val)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 405 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 406 if (val != prv)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 407 tlc5940.set(idx, (int)(val * 4095));
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 408 }
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 409 int idx;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 410 float prv;
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 411 };
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 412
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 413 #else // ENABLE_TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 414
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 415 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 416 // Default LedWiz mode - using on-board GPIO ports. In this mode, we
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 417 // assign a KL25Z GPIO port to each LedWiz output. We have to use a
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 418 // mix of PWM-capable and Digital-Only ports in this configuration,
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 419 // since the KL25Z hardware only has 10 PWM channels, which isn't
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 420 // enough to fill out the full complement of 32 LedWiz outputs.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 421 //
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 422
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 423 // LwOut class for a PWM-capable GPIO port
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 424 class LwPwmOut: public LwOut
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 425 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 426 public:
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 427 LwPwmOut(PinName pin) : p(pin) { prv = -1; }
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 428 virtual void set(float val)
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 429 {
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 430 if (val != prv)
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 431 p.write(prv = val);
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 432 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 433 PwmOut p;
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 434 float prv;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 435 };
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 436
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 437 // LwOut class for a Digital-Only (Non-PWM) GPIO port
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 438 class LwDigOut: public LwOut
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 439 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 440 public:
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 441 LwDigOut(PinName pin) : p(pin) { prv = -1; }
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 442 virtual void set(float val)
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 443 {
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 444 if (val != prv)
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 445 p.write((prv = val) == 0.0 ? 0 : 1);
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 446 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 447 DigitalOut p;
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 448 float prv;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 449 };
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 450
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 451 #endif // ENABLE_TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 452
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 453 // LwOut class for unmapped ports. The LedWiz protocol is hardwired
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 454 // for 32 ports, but we might not want to assign all 32 software ports
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 455 // to physical output pins - the KL25Z has a limited number of GPIO
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 456 // ports, so we might not have enough available GPIOs to fill out the
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 457 // full LedWiz complement after assigning GPIOs for other functions.
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 458 // This class is used to populate the LedWiz mapping array for ports
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 459 // that aren't connected to physical outputs; it simply ignores value
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 460 // changes.
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 461 class LwUnusedOut: public LwOut
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 462 {
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 463 public:
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 464 LwUnusedOut() { }
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 465 virtual void set(float val) { }
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 466 };
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 467
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 468 // Array of output physical pin assignments. This array is indexed
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 469 // by LedWiz logical port number - lwPin[n] is the maping for LedWiz
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 470 // port n (0-based). If we're using GPIO ports to implement outputs,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 471 // we initialize the array at start-up to map each logical port to the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 472 // physical GPIO pin for the port specified in the ledWizPortMap[]
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 473 // array in config.h. If we're using TLC5940 chips for the outputs,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 474 // we map each logical port to the corresponding TLC5940 output.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 475 static LwOut *lwPin[NUM_OUTPUTS];
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 476
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 477 // initialize the output pin array
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 478 void initLwOut()
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 479 {
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 480 for (int i = 0 ; i < countof(lwPin) ; ++i)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 481 {
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 482 #ifdef ENABLE_TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 483 // Set up a TLC5940 output. If the output is within range of
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 484 // the connected number of chips (16 outputs per chip), assign it
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 485 // to the current index, otherwise leave it unattached.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 486 if (i < (TLC5940_NCHIPS)*16)
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 487 lwPin[i] = new Lw5940Out(i);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 488 else
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 489 lwPin[i] = new LwUnusedOut();
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 490
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 491 #else // ENABLE_TLC5940
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 492 // Set up the GPIO pin. If the pin is not connected ("NC" in the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 493 // pin map), set up a dummy "unused" output for it. If it's a
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 494 // real pin, set up a PWM-capable or Digital-Only output handler
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 495 // object, according to the pin type in the map.
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 496 PinName p = (i < countof(ledWizPortMap) ? ledWizPortMap[i].pin : NC);
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 497 if (p == NC)
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 498 lwPin[i] = new LwUnusedOut();
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 499 else if (ledWizPortMap[i].isPWM)
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 500 lwPin[i] = new LwPwmOut(p);
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 501 else
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 502 lwPin[i] = new LwDigOut(p);
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 503
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 504 #endif // ENABLE_TLC5940
mjr 26:cb71c4af2912 505
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 506 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 507 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 508
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 509 // Current absolute brightness level for an output. This is a float
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 510 // value from 0.0 for fully off to 1.0 for fully on. This is the final
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 511 // derived value for the port. For outputs set by LedWiz messages,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 512 // this is derived from te LedWiz state, and is updated on each pulse
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 513 // timer interrupt for lights in flashing states. For outputs set by
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 514 // extended protocol messages, this is simply the brightness last set.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 515 static float outLevel[NUM_OUTPUTS];
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 516
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 517 // LedWiz output states.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 518 //
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 519 // The LedWiz protocol has two separate control axes for each output.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 520 // One axis is its on/off state; the other is its "profile" state, which
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 521 // is either a fixed brightness or a blinking pattern for the light.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 522 // The two axes are independent.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 523 //
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 524 // Note that the LedWiz protocol can only address 32 outputs, so the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 525 // wizOn and wizVal arrays have fixed sizes of 32 elements no matter
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 526 // how many physical outputs we're using.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 527
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 528 // on/off state for each LedWiz output
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 529 static uint8_t wizOn[32];
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 530
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 531 // Profile (brightness/blink) state for each LedWiz output. If the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 532 // output was last updated through an LedWiz protocol message, it
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 533 // will have one of these values:
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 534 //
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 535 // 0-48 = fixed brightness 0% to 100%
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 536 // 129 = ramp up / ramp down
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 537 // 130 = flash on / off
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 538 // 131 = on / ramp down
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 539 // 132 = ramp up / on
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 540 //
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 541 // Special value 255: If the output was updated through the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 542 // extended protocol, we'll set the wizVal entry to 255, which has
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 543 // no meaning in the LedWiz protocol. This tells us that the value
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 544 // in outLevel[] was set directly from the extended protocol, so it
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 545 // shouldn't be derived from wizVal[].
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 546 //
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 547 static uint8_t wizVal[32] = {
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 548 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48,
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 549 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48,
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 550 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48,
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 551 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48, 48
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 552 };
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 553
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 554 // LedWiz flash speed. This is a value from 1 to 7 giving the pulse
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 555 // rate for lights in blinking states.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 556 static uint8_t wizSpeed = 2;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 557
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 558 // Current LedWiz flash cycle counter.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 559 static uint8_t wizFlashCounter = 0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 560
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 561 // Get the current brightness level for an LedWiz output.
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 562 static float wizState(int idx)
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 563 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 564 // if the output was last set with an extended protocol message,
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 565 // use the value set there, ignoring the output's LedWiz state
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 566 if (wizVal[idx] == 255)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 567 return outLevel[idx];
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 568
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 569 // if it's off, show at zero intensity
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 570 if (!wizOn[idx])
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 571 return 0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 572
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 573 // check the state
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 574 uint8_t val = wizVal[idx];
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 575 if (val <= 48)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 576 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 577 // PWM brightness/intensity level. Rescale from the LedWiz
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 578 // 0..48 integer range to our internal PwmOut 0..1 float range.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 579 // Note that on the actual LedWiz, level 48 is actually about
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 580 // 98% on - contrary to the LedWiz documentation, level 49 is
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 581 // the true 100% level. (In the documentation, level 49 is
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 582 // simply not a valid setting.) Even so, we treat level 48 as
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 583 // 100% on to match the documentation. This won't be perfectly
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 584 // ocmpatible with the actual LedWiz, but it makes for such a
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 585 // small difference in brightness (if the output device is an
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 586 // LED, say) that no one should notice. It seems better to
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 587 // err in this direction, because while the difference in
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 588 // brightness when attached to an LED won't be noticeable, the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 589 // difference in duty cycle when attached to something like a
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 590 // contactor *can* be noticeable - anything less than 100%
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 591 // can cause a contactor or relay to chatter. There's almost
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 592 // never a situation where you'd want values other than 0% and
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 593 // 100% for a contactor or relay, so treating level 48 as 100%
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 594 // makes us work properly with software that's expecting the
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 595 // documented LedWiz behavior and therefore uses level 48 to
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 596 // turn a contactor or relay fully on.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 597 return val/48.0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 598 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 599 else if (val == 49)
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 600 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 601 // 49 is undefined in the LedWiz documentation, but actually
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 602 // means 100% on. The documentation says that levels 1-48 are
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 603 // the full PWM range, but empirically it appears that the real
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 604 // range implemented in the firmware is 1-49. Some software on
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 605 // the PC side (notably DOF) is aware of this and uses level 49
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 606 // to mean "100% on". To ensure compatibility with existing
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 607 // PC-side software, we need to recognize level 49.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 608 return 1.0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 609 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 610 else if (val == 129)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 611 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 612 // 129 = ramp up / ramp down
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 613 if (wizFlashCounter < 128)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 614 return wizFlashCounter/127.0;
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 615 else
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 616 return (255 - wizFlashCounter)/127.0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 617 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 618 else if (val == 130)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 619 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 620 // 130 = flash on / off
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 621 return (wizFlashCounter < 128 ? 1.0 : 0.0);
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 622 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 623 else if (val == 131)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 624 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 625 // 131 = on / ramp down
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 626 return (255 - wizFlashCounter)/255.0;
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 627 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 628 else if (val == 132)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 629 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 630 // 132 = ramp up / on
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 631 return wizFlashCounter/255.0;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 632 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 633 else
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 634 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 635 // Other values are undefined in the LedWiz documentation. Hosts
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 636 // *should* never send undefined values, since whatever behavior an
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 637 // LedWiz unit exhibits in response is accidental and could change
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 638 // in a future version. We'll treat all undefined values as equivalent
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 639 // to 48 (fully on).
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 640 return 1.0;
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 641 }
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 642 }
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 643
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 644 // LedWiz flash timer pulse. This fires periodically to update
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 645 // LedWiz flashing outputs. At the slowest pulse speed set via
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 646 // the SBA command, each waveform cycle has 256 steps, so we
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 647 // choose the pulse time base so that the slowest cycle completes
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 648 // in 2 seconds. This seems to roughly match the real LedWiz
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 649 // behavior. We run the pulse timer at the same rate regardless
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 650 // of the pulse speed; at higher pulse speeds, we simply use
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 651 // larger steps through the cycle on each interrupt. Running
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 652 // every 1/127 of a second = 8ms seems to be a pretty light load.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 653 Timeout wizPulseTimer;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 654 #define WIZ_PULSE_TIME_BASE (1.0/127.0)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 655 static void wizPulse()
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 656 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 657 // increase the counter by the speed increment, and wrap at 256
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 658 wizFlashCounter += wizSpeed;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 659 wizFlashCounter &= 0xff;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 660
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 661 // if we have any flashing lights, update them
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 662 int ena = false;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 663 for (int i = 0 ; i < 32 ; ++i)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 664 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 665 if (wizOn[i])
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 666 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 667 uint8_t s = wizVal[i];
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 668 if (s >= 129 && s <= 132)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 669 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 670 lwPin[i]->set(wizState(i));
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 671 ena = true;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 672 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 673 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 674 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 675
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 676 // Set up the next timer pulse only if we found anything flashing.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 677 // To minimize overhead from this feature, we only enable the interrupt
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 678 // when we need it. This eliminates any performance penalty to other
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 679 // features when the host software doesn't care about the flashing
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 680 // modes. For example, DOF never uses these modes, so there's no
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 681 // need for them when running Visual Pinball.
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 682 if (ena)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 683 wizPulseTimer.attach(wizPulse, WIZ_PULSE_TIME_BASE);
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 684 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 685
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 686 // Update the physical outputs connected to the LedWiz ports. This is
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 687 // called after any update from an LedWiz protocol message.
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 688 static void updateWizOuts()
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 689 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 690 // update each output
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 691 int pulse = false;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 692 for (int i = 0 ; i < 32 ; ++i)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 693 {
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 694 pulse |= (wizVal[i] >= 129 && wizVal[i] <= 132);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 695 lwPin[i]->set(wizState(i));
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 696 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 697
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 698 // if any outputs are set to flashing mode, and the pulse timer
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 699 // isn't running, turn it on
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 700 if (pulse)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 701 wizPulseTimer.attach(wizPulse, WIZ_PULSE_TIME_BASE);
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 702 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 703
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 704 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 705 //
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 706 // Button input
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 707 //
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 708
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 709 // button input map array
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 710 DigitalIn *buttonDigIn[32];
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 711
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 712 // button state
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 713 struct ButtonState
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 714 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 715 // current on/off state
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 716 int pressed;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 717
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 718 // Sticky time remaining for current state. When a
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 719 // state transition occurs, we set this to a debounce
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 720 // period. Future state transitions will be ignored
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 721 // until the debounce time elapses.
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 722 int t;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 723 } buttonState[32];
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 724
mjr 12:669df364a565 725 // timer for button reports
mjr 12:669df364a565 726 static Timer buttonTimer;
mjr 12:669df364a565 727
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 728 // initialize the button inputs
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 729 void initButtons()
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 730 {
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 731 // create the digital inputs
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 732 for (int i = 0 ; i < countof(buttonDigIn) ; ++i)
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 733 {
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 734 if (i < countof(buttonMap) && buttonMap[i] != NC)
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 735 buttonDigIn[i] = new DigitalIn(buttonMap[i]);
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 736 else
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 737 buttonDigIn[i] = 0;
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 738 }
mjr 12:669df364a565 739
mjr 12:669df364a565 740 // start the button timer
mjr 12:669df364a565 741 buttonTimer.start();
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 742 }
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 743
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 744
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 745 // read the button input state
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 746 uint32_t readButtons()
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 747 {
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 748 // start with all buttons off
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 749 uint32_t buttons = 0;
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 750
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 751 // figure the time elapsed since the last scan
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 752 int dt = buttonTimer.read_ms();
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 753
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 754 // reset the timef for the next scan
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 755 buttonTimer.reset();
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 756
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 757 // scan the button list
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 758 uint32_t bit = 1;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 759 DigitalIn **di = buttonDigIn;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 760 ButtonState *bs = buttonState;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 761 for (int i = 0 ; i < countof(buttonDigIn) ; ++i, ++di, ++bs, bit <<= 1)
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 762 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 763 // read this button
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 764 if (*di != 0)
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 765 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 766 // deduct the elapsed time since the last update
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 767 // from the button's remaining sticky time
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 768 bs->t -= dt;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 769 if (bs->t < 0)
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 770 bs->t = 0;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 771
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 772 // If the sticky time has elapsed, note the new physical
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 773 // state of the button. If we still have sticky time
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 774 // remaining, ignore the physical state; the last state
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 775 // change persists until the sticky time elapses so that
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 776 // we smooth out any "bounce" (electrical transients that
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 777 // occur when the switch contact is opened or closed).
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 778 if (bs->t == 0)
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 779 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 780 // get the new physical state
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 781 int pressed = !(*di)->read();
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 782
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 783 // update the button's logical state if this is a change
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 784 if (pressed != bs->pressed)
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 785 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 786 // store the new state
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 787 bs->pressed = pressed;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 788
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 789 // start a new sticky period for debouncing this
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 790 // state change
mjr 19:054f8af32fce 791 bs->t = 25;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 792 }
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 793 }
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 794
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 795 // if it's pressed, OR its bit into the state
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 796 if (bs->pressed)
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 797 buttons |= bit;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 798 }
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 799 }
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 800
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 801 // return the new button list
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 802 return buttons;
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 803 }
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 804
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 805 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 806 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 807 // Customization joystick subbclass
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 808 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 809
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 810 class MyUSBJoystick: public USBJoystick
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 811 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 812 public:
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 813 MyUSBJoystick(uint16_t vendor_id, uint16_t product_id, uint16_t product_release)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 814 : USBJoystick(vendor_id, product_id, product_release, true)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 815 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 816 suspended_ = false;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 817 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 818
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 819 // are we connected?
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 820 int isConnected() { return configured(); }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 821
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 822 // Are we in suspend mode?
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 823 int isSuspended() const { return suspended_; }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 824
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 825 protected:
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 826 virtual void suspendStateChanged(unsigned int suspended)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 827 { suspended_ = suspended; }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 828
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 829 // are we suspended?
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 830 int suspended_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 831 };
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 832
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 833 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 834 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 835 // Accelerometer (MMA8451Q)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 836 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 837
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 838 // The MMA8451Q is the KL25Z's on-board 3-axis accelerometer.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 839 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 840 // This is a custom wrapper for the library code to interface to the
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 841 // MMA8451Q. This class encapsulates an interrupt handler and
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 842 // automatic calibration.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 843 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 844 // We install an interrupt handler on the accelerometer "data ready"
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 845 // interrupt to ensure that we fetch each sample immediately when it
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 846 // becomes available. The accelerometer data rate is fiarly high
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 847 // (800 Hz), so it's not practical to keep up with it by polling.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 848 // Using an interrupt handler lets us respond quickly and read
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 849 // every sample.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 850 //
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 851 // We automatically calibrate the accelerometer so that it's not
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 852 // necessary to get it exactly level when installing it, and so
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 853 // that it's also not necessary to calibrate it manually. There's
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 854 // lots of experience that tells us that manual calibration is a
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 855 // terrible solution, mostly because cabinets tend to shift slightly
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 856 // during use, requiring frequent recalibration. Instead, we
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 857 // calibrate automatically. We continuously monitor the acceleration
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 858 // data, watching for periods of constant (or nearly constant) values.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 859 // Any time it appears that the machine has been at rest for a while
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 860 // (about 5 seconds), we'll average the readings during that rest
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 861 // period and use the result as the level rest position. This is
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 862 // is ongoing, so we'll quickly find the center point again if the
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 863 // machine is moved during play (by an especially aggressive bout
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 864 // of nudging, say).
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 865 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 866
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 867 // I2C address of the accelerometer (this is a constant of the KL25Z)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 868 const int MMA8451_I2C_ADDRESS = (0x1d<<1);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 869
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 870 // SCL and SDA pins for the accelerometer (constant for the KL25Z)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 871 #define MMA8451_SCL_PIN PTE25
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 872 #define MMA8451_SDA_PIN PTE24
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 873
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 874 // Digital in pin to use for the accelerometer interrupt. For the KL25Z,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 875 // this can be either PTA14 or PTA15, since those are the pins physically
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 876 // wired on this board to the MMA8451 interrupt controller.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 877 #define MMA8451_INT_PIN PTA15
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 878
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 879
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 880 // accelerometer input history item, for gathering calibration data
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 881 struct AccHist
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 882 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 883 AccHist() { x = y = d = 0.0; xtot = ytot = 0.0; cnt = 0; }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 884 void set(float x, float y, AccHist *prv)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 885 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 886 // save the raw position
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 887 this->x = x;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 888 this->y = y;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 889 this->d = distance(prv);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 890 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 891
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 892 // reading for this entry
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 893 float x, y;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 894
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 895 // distance from previous entry
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 896 float d;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 897
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 898 // total and count of samples averaged over this period
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 899 float xtot, ytot;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 900 int cnt;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 901
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 902 void clearAvg() { xtot = ytot = 0.0; cnt = 0; }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 903 void addAvg(float x, float y) { xtot += x; ytot += y; ++cnt; }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 904 float xAvg() const { return xtot/cnt; }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 905 float yAvg() const { return ytot/cnt; }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 906
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 907 float distance(AccHist *p)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 908 { return sqrt(square(p->x - x) + square(p->y - y)); }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 909 };
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 910
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 911 // accelerometer wrapper class
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 912 class Accel
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 913 {
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 914 public:
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 915 Accel(PinName sda, PinName scl, int i2cAddr, PinName irqPin)
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 916 : mma_(sda, scl, i2cAddr), intIn_(irqPin)
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 917 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 918 // remember the interrupt pin assignment
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 919 irqPin_ = irqPin;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 920
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 921 // reset and initialize
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 922 reset();
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 923 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 924
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 925 void reset()
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 926 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 927 // clear the center point
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 928 cx_ = cy_ = 0.0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 929
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 930 // start the calibration timer
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 931 tCenter_.start();
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 932 iAccPrv_ = nAccPrv_ = 0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 933
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 934 // reset and initialize the MMA8451Q
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 935 mma_.init();
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 936
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 937 // set the initial integrated velocity reading to zero
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 938 vx_ = vy_ = 0;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 939
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 940 // set up our accelerometer interrupt handling
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 941 intIn_.rise(this, &Accel::isr);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 942 mma_.setInterruptMode(irqPin_ == PTA14 ? 1 : 2);
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 943
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 944 // read the current registers to clear the data ready flag
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 945 mma_.getAccXYZ(ax_, ay_, az_);
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 946
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 947 // start our timers
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 948 tGet_.start();
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 949 tInt_.start();
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 950 }
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 951
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 952 void get(int &x, int &y)
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 953 {
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 954 // disable interrupts while manipulating the shared data
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 955 __disable_irq();
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 956
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 957 // read the shared data and store locally for calculations
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 958 float ax = ax_, ay = ay_;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 959 float vx = vx_, vy = vy_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 960
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 961 // reset the velocity sum for the next run
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 962 vx_ = vy_ = 0;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 963
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 964 // get the time since the last get() sample
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 965 float dt = tGet_.read_us()/1.0e6;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 966 tGet_.reset();
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 967
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 968 // done manipulating the shared data
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 969 __enable_irq();
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 970
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 971 // adjust the readings for the integration time
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 972 vx /= dt;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 973 vy /= dt;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 974
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 975 // add this sample to the current calibration interval's running total
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 976 AccHist *p = accPrv_ + iAccPrv_;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 977 p->addAvg(ax, ay);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 978
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 979 // check for auto-centering every so often
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 980 if (tCenter_.read_ms() > 1000)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 981 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 982 // add the latest raw sample to the history list
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 983 AccHist *prv = p;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 984 iAccPrv_ = (iAccPrv_ + 1) % maxAccPrv;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 985 p = accPrv_ + iAccPrv_;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 986 p->set(ax, ay, prv);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 987
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 988 // if we have a full complement, check for stability
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 989 if (nAccPrv_ >= maxAccPrv)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 990 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 991 // check if we've been stable for all recent samples
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 992 static const float accTol = .01;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 993 AccHist *p0 = accPrv_;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 994 if (p0[0].d < accTol
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 995 && p0[1].d < accTol
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 996 && p0[2].d < accTol
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 997 && p0[3].d < accTol
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 998 && p0[4].d < accTol)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 999 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1000 // Figure the new calibration point as the average of
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1001 // the samples over the rest period
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1002 cx_ = (p0[0].xAvg() + p0[1].xAvg() + p0[2].xAvg() + p0[3].xAvg() + p0[4].xAvg())/5.0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1003 cy_ = (p0[0].yAvg() + p0[1].yAvg() + p0[2].yAvg() + p0[3].yAvg() + p0[4].yAvg())/5.0;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1004 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1005 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1006 else
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1007 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1008 // not enough samples yet; just up the count
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1009 ++nAccPrv_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1010 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1011
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1012 // clear the new item's running totals
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1013 p->clearAvg();
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1014
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1015 // reset the timer
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1016 tCenter_.reset();
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1017 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1018
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1019 // report our integrated velocity reading in x,y
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1020 x = rawToReport(vx);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1021 y = rawToReport(vy);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1022
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1023 #ifdef DEBUG_PRINTF
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1024 if (x != 0 || y != 0)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1025 printf("%f %f %d %d %f\r\n", vx, vy, x, y, dt);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1026 #endif
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1027 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1028
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1029 private:
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1030 // adjust a raw acceleration figure to a usb report value
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1031 int rawToReport(float v)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1032 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1033 // scale to the joystick report range and round to integer
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1034 int i = int(round(v*JOYMAX));
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1035
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1036 // if it's near the center, scale it roughly as 20*(i/20)^2,
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1037 // to suppress noise near the rest position
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1038 static const int filter[] = {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1039 -18, -16, -14, -13, -11, -10, -8, -7, -6, -5, -4, -3, -2, -2, -1, -1, 0, 0, 0, 0,
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1040 0,
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1041 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1042 };
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1043 return (i > 20 || i < -20 ? i : filter[i+20]);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1044 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1045
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1046 // interrupt handler
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1047 void isr()
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1048 {
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1049 // Read the axes. Note that we have to read all three axes
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1050 // (even though we only really use x and y) in order to clear
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1051 // the "data ready" status bit in the accelerometer. The
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1052 // interrupt only occurs when the "ready" bit transitions from
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1053 // off to on, so we have to make sure it's off.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1054 float x, y, z;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1055 mma_.getAccXYZ(x, y, z);
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1056
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1057 // calculate the time since the last interrupt
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1058 float dt = tInt_.read_us()/1.0e6;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1059 tInt_.reset();
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1060
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1061 // integrate the time slice from the previous reading to this reading
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1062 vx_ += (x + ax_ - 2*cx_)*dt/2;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1063 vy_ += (y + ay_ - 2*cy_)*dt/2;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1064
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1065 // store the updates
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1066 ax_ = x;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1067 ay_ = y;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1068 az_ = z;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1069 }
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1070
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1071 // underlying accelerometer object
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1072 MMA8451Q mma_;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1073
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1074 // last raw acceleration readings
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1075 float ax_, ay_, az_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1076
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1077 // integrated velocity reading since last get()
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1078 float vx_, vy_;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1079
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1080 // timer for measuring time between get() samples
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1081 Timer tGet_;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1082
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1083 // timer for measuring time between interrupts
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1084 Timer tInt_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1085
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1086 // Calibration reference point for accelerometer. This is the
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1087 // average reading on the accelerometer when in the neutral position
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1088 // at rest.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1089 float cx_, cy_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1090
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1091 // timer for atuo-centering
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1092 Timer tCenter_;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1093
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1094 // Auto-centering history. This is a separate history list that
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1095 // records results spaced out sparesely over time, so that we can
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1096 // watch for long-lasting periods of rest. When we observe nearly
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1097 // no motion for an extended period (on the order of 5 seconds), we
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1098 // take this to mean that the cabinet is at rest in its neutral
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1099 // position, so we take this as the calibration zero point for the
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1100 // accelerometer. We update this history continuously, which allows
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1101 // us to continuously re-calibrate the accelerometer. This ensures
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1102 // that we'll automatically adjust to any actual changes in the
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1103 // cabinet's orientation (e.g., if it gets moved slightly by an
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1104 // especially strong nudge) as well as any systematic drift in the
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1105 // accelerometer measurement bias (e.g., from temperature changes).
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1106 int iAccPrv_, nAccPrv_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1107 static const int maxAccPrv = 5;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1108 AccHist accPrv_[maxAccPrv];
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1109
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1110 // interurupt pin name
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1111 PinName irqPin_;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1112
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1113 // interrupt router
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1114 InterruptIn intIn_;
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1115 };
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1116
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1117
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1118 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1119 //
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1120 // Clear the I2C bus for the MMA8451Q. This seems necessary some of the time
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1121 // for reasons that aren't clear to me. Doing a hard power cycle has the same
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1122 // effect, but when we do a soft reset, the hardware sometimes seems to leave
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1123 // the MMA's SDA line stuck low. Forcing a series of 9 clock pulses through
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1124 // the SCL line is supposed to clear this condition. I'm not convinced this
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1125 // actually works with the way this component is wired on the KL25Z, but it
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1126 // seems harmless, so we'll do it on reset in case it does some good. What
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1127 // we really seem to need is a way to power cycle the MMA8451Q if it ever
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1128 // gets stuck, but this is simply not possible in software on the KL25Z.
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1129 //
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1130 // If the accelerometer does get stuck, and a software reboot doesn't reset
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1131 // it, the only workaround is to manually power cycle the whole KL25Z by
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1132 // unplugging both of its USB connections.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1133 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1134 void clear_i2c()
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1135 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1136 // assume a general-purpose output pin to the I2C clock
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1137 DigitalOut scl(MMA8451_SCL_PIN);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1138 DigitalIn sda(MMA8451_SDA_PIN);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1139
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1140 // clock the SCL 9 times
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1141 for (int i = 0 ; i < 9 ; ++i)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1142 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1143 scl = 1;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1144 wait_us(20);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1145 scl = 0;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1146 wait_us(20);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1147 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1148 }
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1149
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1150 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 14:df700b22ca08 1151 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1152 // Include the appropriate plunger sensor definition. This will define a
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1153 // class called PlungerSensor, with a standard interface that we use in
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1154 // the main loop below. This is *kind of* like a virtual class interface,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1155 // but it actually defines the methods statically, which is a little more
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1156 // efficient at run-time. There's no need for a true virtual interface
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1157 // because we don't need to be able to change sensor types on the fly.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1158 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1159
mjr 22:71422c359f2a 1160 #if defined(ENABLE_CCD_SENSOR)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1161 #include "ccdSensor.h"
mjr 22:71422c359f2a 1162 #elif defined(ENABLE_POT_SENSOR)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1163 #include "potSensor.h"
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1164 #else
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1165 #include "nullSensor.h"
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1166 #endif
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1167
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1168
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1169 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1170 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1171 // Non-volatile memory (NVM)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1172 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1173
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1174 // Structure defining our NVM storage layout. We store a small
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1175 // amount of persistent data in flash memory to retain calibration
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1176 // data when powered off.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1177 struct NVM
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1178 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1179 // checksum - we use this to determine if the flash record
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1180 // has been properly initialized
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1181 uint32_t checksum;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1182
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1183 // signature value
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1184 static const uint32_t SIGNATURE = 0x4D4A522A;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1185 static const uint16_t VERSION = 0x0003;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1186
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1187 // Is the data structure valid? We test the signature and
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1188 // checksum to determine if we've been properly stored.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1189 int valid() const
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1190 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1191 return (d.sig == SIGNATURE
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1192 && d.vsn == VERSION
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1193 && d.sz == sizeof(NVM)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1194 && checksum == CRC32(&d, sizeof(d)));
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1195 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1196
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1197 // save to non-volatile memory
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1198 void save(FreescaleIAP &iap, int addr)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1199 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1200 // update the checksum and structure size
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1201 checksum = CRC32(&d, sizeof(d));
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1202 d.sz = sizeof(NVM);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1203
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1204 // erase the sector
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1205 iap.erase_sector(addr);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1206
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1207 // save the data
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1208 iap.program_flash(addr, this, sizeof(*this));
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1209 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1210
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1211 // reset calibration data for calibration mode
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1212 void resetPlunger()
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1213 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1214 // set extremes for the calibration data
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1215 d.plungerMax = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1216 d.plungerZero = npix;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1217 d.plungerMin = npix;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1218 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1219
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1220 // stored data (excluding the checksum)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1221 struct
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1222 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1223 // Signature, structure version, and structure size - further verification
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1224 // that we have valid initialized data. The size is a simple proxy for a
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1225 // structure version, as the most common type of change to the structure as
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1226 // the software evolves will be the addition of new elements. We also
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1227 // provide an explicit version number that we can update manually if we
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1228 // make any changes that don't affect the structure size but would affect
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1229 // compatibility with a saved record (e.g., swapping two existing elements).
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1230 uint32_t sig;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1231 uint16_t vsn;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1232 int sz;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1233
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1234 // has the plunger been manually calibrated?
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1235 int plungerCal;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1236
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1237 // Plunger calibration min, zero, and max. The zero point is the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1238 // rest position (aka park position), where it's in equilibrium between
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1239 // the main spring and the barrel spring. It can travel a small distance
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1240 // forward of the rest position, because the barrel spring can be
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1241 // compressed by the user pushing on the plunger or by the momentum
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1242 // of a release motion. The minimum is the maximum forward point where
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1243 // the barrel spring can't be compressed any further.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1244 int plungerMin;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1245 int plungerZero;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1246 int plungerMax;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1247
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1248 // is the plunger sensor enabled?
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1249 int plungerEnabled;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1250
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1251 // LedWiz unit number
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1252 uint8_t ledWizUnitNo;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1253 } d;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1254 };
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1255
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1256
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1257 // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1258 //
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1259 // Main program loop. This is invoked on startup and runs forever. Our
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1260 // main work is to read our devices (the accelerometer and the CCD), process
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1261 // the readings into nudge and plunger position data, and send the results
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1262 // to the host computer via the USB joystick interface. We also monitor
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1263 // the USB connection for incoming LedWiz commands and process those into
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1264 // port outputs.
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1265 //
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1266 int main(void)
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1267 {
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1268 // turn off our on-board indicator LED
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 1269 ledR = 1;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 1270 ledG = 1;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 1271 ledB = 1;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1272
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1273 // initialize the LedWiz ports
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1274 initLwOut();
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1275
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 1276 // initialize the button input ports
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 1277 initButtons();
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 1278
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1279 // we don't need a reset yet
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1280 bool needReset = false;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1281
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1282 // clear the I2C bus for the accelerometer
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1283 clear_i2c();
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1284
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1285 // set up a flash memory controller
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1286 FreescaleIAP iap;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1287
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1288 // use the last sector of flash for our non-volatile memory structure
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1289 int flash_addr = (iap.flash_size() - SECTOR_SIZE);
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1290 NVM *flash = (NVM *)flash_addr;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1291 NVM cfg;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1292
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1293 // check for valid flash
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1294 bool flash_valid = flash->valid();
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1295
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1296 // if the flash is valid, load it; otherwise initialize to defaults
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1297 if (flash_valid) {
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1298 memcpy(&cfg, flash, sizeof(cfg));
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1299 printf("Flash restored: plunger cal=%d, min=%d, zero=%d, max=%d\r\n",
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1300 cfg.d.plungerCal, cfg.d.plungerMin, cfg.d.plungerZero, cfg.d.plungerMax);
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1301 }
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1302 else {
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1303 printf("Factory reset\r\n");
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1304 cfg.d.sig = cfg.SIGNATURE;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1305 cfg.d.vsn = cfg.VERSION;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1306 cfg.d.plungerCal = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1307 cfg.d.plungerMin = 0; // assume we can go all the way forward...
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1308 cfg.d.plungerMax = npix; // ...and all the way back
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1309 cfg.d.plungerZero = npix/6; // the rest position is usually around 1/2" back
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1310 cfg.d.ledWizUnitNo = DEFAULT_LEDWIZ_UNIT_NUMBER - 1; // unit numbering starts from 0 internally
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1311 cfg.d.plungerEnabled = PLUNGER_CODE_ENABLED;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1312 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1313
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1314 // Create the joystick USB client. Note that we use the LedWiz unit
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1315 // number from the saved configuration.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1316 MyUSBJoystick js(
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1317 USB_VENDOR_ID,
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1318 USB_PRODUCT_ID | cfg.d.ledWizUnitNo,
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1319 USB_VERSION_NO);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1320
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1321 // last report timer - we use this to throttle reports, since VP
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1322 // doesn't want to hear from us more than about every 10ms
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1323 Timer reportTimer;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1324 reportTimer.start();
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1325
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1326 // initialize the calibration buttons, if present
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1327 DigitalIn *calBtn = (CAL_BUTTON_PIN == NC ? 0 : new DigitalIn(CAL_BUTTON_PIN));
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1328 DigitalOut *calBtnLed = (CAL_BUTTON_LED == NC ? 0 : new DigitalOut(CAL_BUTTON_LED));
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1329
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1330 // plunger calibration button debounce timer
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1331 Timer calBtnTimer;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1332 calBtnTimer.start();
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1333 int calBtnLit = false;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1334
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1335 // Calibration button state:
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1336 // 0 = not pushed
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1337 // 1 = pushed, not yet debounced
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1338 // 2 = pushed, debounced, waiting for hold time
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1339 // 3 = pushed, hold time completed - in calibration mode
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1340 int calBtnState = 0;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1341
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1342 // set up a timer for our heartbeat indicator
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1343 Timer hbTimer;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1344 hbTimer.start();
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1345 int hb = 0;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1346 uint16_t hbcnt = 0;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1347
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1348 // set a timer for accelerometer auto-centering
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1349 Timer acTimer;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1350 acTimer.start();
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1351
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1352 // create the accelerometer object
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 1353 Accel accel(MMA8451_SCL_PIN, MMA8451_SDA_PIN, MMA8451_I2C_ADDRESS, MMA8451_INT_PIN);
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1354
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1355 #ifdef ENABLE_JOYSTICK
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1356 // last accelerometer report, in joystick units (we report the nudge
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1357 // acceleration via the joystick x & y axes, per the VP convention)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1358 int x = 0, y = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1359
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1360 // flag: send a pixel dump after the next read
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1361 bool reportPix = false;
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1362 #endif
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1363
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1364 #ifdef ENABLE_TLC5940
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1365 // start the TLC5940 clock
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1366 tlc5940.start();
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1367 #endif
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1368
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1369 // create our plunger sensor object
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1370 PlungerSensor plungerSensor;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1371
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1372 // last plunger report position, in 'npix' normalized pixel units
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1373 int pos = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1374
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1375 // last plunger report, in joystick units (we report the plunger as the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1376 // "z" axis of the joystick, per the VP convention)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1377 int z = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1378
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1379 // most recent prior plunger readings, for tracking release events(z0 is
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1380 // reading just before the last one we reported, z1 is the one before that,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1381 // z2 the next before that)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1382 int z0 = 0, z1 = 0, z2 = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1383
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1384 // Simulated "bounce" position when firing. We model the bounce off of
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1385 // the barrel spring when the plunger is released as proportional to the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1386 // distance it was retracted just before being released.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1387 int zBounce = 0;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1388
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1389 // Simulated Launch Ball button state. If a "ZB Launch Ball" port is
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1390 // defined for our LedWiz port mapping, any time that port is turned ON,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1391 // we'll simulate pushing the Launch Ball button if the player pulls
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1392 // back and releases the plunger, or simply pushes on the plunger from
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1393 // the rest position. This allows the plunger to be used in lieu of a
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1394 // physical Launch Ball button for tables that don't have plungers.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1395 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1396 // States:
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1397 // 0 = default
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1398 // 1 = cocked (plunger has been pulled back about 1" from state 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1399 // 2 = uncocked (plunger is pulled back less than 1" from state 1)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1400 // 3 = launching, plunger is forward beyond park position
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1401 // 4 = launching, plunger is behind park position
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1402 // 5 = pressed and holding (plunger has been pressed forward beyond
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1403 // the park position from state 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1404 int lbState = 0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1405
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1406 // Time since last lbState transition. Some of the states are time-
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1407 // sensitive. In the "uncocked" state, we'll return to state 0 if
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1408 // we remain in this state for more than a few milliseconds, since
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1409 // it indicates that the plunger is being slowly returned to rest
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1410 // rather than released. In the "launching" state, we need to release
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1411 // the Launch Ball button after a moment, and we need to wait for
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1412 // the plunger to come to rest before returning to state 0.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1413 Timer lbTimer;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1414 lbTimer.start();
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1415
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1416 // Launch Ball simulated push timer. We start this when we simulate
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1417 // the button push, and turn off the simulated button when enough time
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1418 // has elapsed.
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1419 Timer lbBtnTimer;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1420
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1421 // Simulated button states. This is a vector of button states
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1422 // for the simulated buttons. We combine this with the physical
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1423 // button states on each USB joystick report, so we will report
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1424 // a button as pressed if either the physical button is being pressed
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1425 // or we're simulating a press on the button. This is used for the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1426 // simulated Launch Ball button.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1427 uint32_t simButtons = 0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1428
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1429 // Firing in progress: we set this when we detect the start of rapid
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1430 // plunger movement from a retracted position towards the rest position.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1431 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1432 // When we detect a firing event, we send VP a series of synthetic
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1433 // reports simulating the idealized plunger motion. The actual physical
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1434 // motion is much too fast to report to VP; in the time between two USB
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1435 // reports, the plunger can shoot all the way forward, rebound off of
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1436 // the barrel spring, bounce back part way, and bounce forward again,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1437 // or even do all of this more than once. This means that sampling the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1438 // physical motion at the USB report rate would create a misleading
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1439 // picture of the plunger motion, since our samples would catch the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1440 // plunger at random points in this oscillating motion. From the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1441 // user's perspective, the physical action that occurred is simply that
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1442 // the plunger was released from a particular distance, so it's this
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1443 // high-level event that we want to convey to VP. To do this, we
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1444 // synthesize a series of reports to convey an idealized version of
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1445 // the release motion that's perfectly synchronized to the VP reports.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1446 // Essentially we pretend that our USB position samples are exactly
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1447 // aligned in time with (1) the point of retraction just before the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1448 // user released the plunger, (2) the point of maximum forward motion
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1449 // just after the user released the plunger (the point of maximum
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1450 // compression as the plunger bounces off of the barrel spring), and
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1451 // (3) the plunger coming to rest at the park position. This series
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1452 // of reports is synthetic in the sense that it's not what we actually
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1453 // see on the CCD at the times of these reports - the true plunger
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1454 // position is oscillating at high speed during this period. But at
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1455 // the same time it conveys a more faithful picture of the true physical
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1456 // motion to VP, and allows VP to reproduce the true physical motion
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1457 // more faithfully in its simulation model, by correcting for the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1458 // relatively low sampling rate in the communication path between the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1459 // real plunger and VP's model plunger.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1460 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1461 // If 'firing' is non-zero, it's the index of our current report in
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1462 // the synthetic firing report series.
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1463 int firing = 0;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1464
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1465 // start the first CCD integration cycle
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1466 plungerSensor.init();
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1467
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1468 // Device status. We report this on each update so that the host config
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1469 // tool can detect our current settings. This is a bit mask consisting
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1470 // of these bits:
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1471 // 0x01 -> plunger sensor enabled
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1472 uint16_t statusFlags = (cfg.d.plungerEnabled ? 0x01 : 0x00);
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1473
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1474 // we're all set up - now just loop, processing sensor reports and
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1475 // host requests
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1476 for (;;)
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1477 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1478 // Look for an incoming report. Process a few input reports in
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1479 // a row, but stop after a few so that a barrage of inputs won't
mjr 20:4c43877327ab 1480 // starve our output event processing. Also, pause briefly between
mjr 20:4c43877327ab 1481 // reads; allowing reads to occur back-to-back seems to occasionally
mjr 20:4c43877327ab 1482 // stall the USB pipeline (for reasons unknown; I'd fix the underlying
mjr 20:4c43877327ab 1483 // problem if I knew what it was).
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1484 HID_REPORT report;
mjr 20:4c43877327ab 1485 for (int rr = 0 ; rr < 4 && js.readNB(&report) ; ++rr, wait_ms(1))
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1486 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1487 // all Led-Wiz reports are 8 bytes exactly
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1488 if (report.length == 8)
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1489 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1490 uint8_t *data = report.data;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1491 if (data[0] == 64)
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1492 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1493 // LWZ-SBA - first four bytes are bit-packed on/off flags
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1494 // for the outputs; 5th byte is the pulse speed (1-7)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1495 //printf("LWZ-SBA %02x %02x %02x %02x ; %02x\r\n",
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1496 // data[1], data[2], data[3], data[4], data[5]);
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1497
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1498 // update all on/off states
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1499 for (int i = 0, bit = 1, ri = 1 ; i < 32 ; ++i, bit <<= 1)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1500 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1501 if (bit == 0x100) {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1502 bit = 1;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1503 ++ri;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1504 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1505 wizOn[i] = ((data[ri] & bit) != 0);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1506 }
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1507
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1508 // set the flash speed - enforce the value range 1-7
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1509 wizSpeed = data[5];
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1510 if (wizSpeed < 1)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1511 wizSpeed = 1;
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1512 else if (wizSpeed > 7)
mjr 29:582472d0bc57 1513 wizSpeed = 7;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1514
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1515 // update the physical outputs
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1516 updateWizOuts();
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1517
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1518 // reset the PBA counter
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1519 pbaIdx = 0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1520 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1521 else if (data[0] == 65)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1522 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1523 // Private control message. This isn't an LedWiz message - it's
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1524 // an extension for this device. 65 is an invalid PBA setting,
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1525 // and isn't used for any other LedWiz message, so we appropriate
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1526 // it for our own private use. The first byte specifies the
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1527 // message type.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1528 if (data[1] == 1)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1529 {
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1530 // 1 = Set Configuration:
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1531 // data[2] = LedWiz unit number (0x00 to 0x0f)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1532 // data[3] = feature enable bit mask:
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1533 // 0x01 = enable plunger sensor
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1534
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1535 // we'll need a reset if the LedWiz unit number is changing
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1536 uint8_t newUnitNo = data[2] & 0x0f;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1537 needReset |= (newUnitNo != cfg.d.ledWizUnitNo);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1538
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1539 // set the configuration parameters from the message
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1540 cfg.d.ledWizUnitNo = newUnitNo;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1541 cfg.d.plungerEnabled = data[3] & 0x01;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1542
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1543 // update the status flags
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1544 statusFlags = (statusFlags & ~0x01) | (data[3] & 0x01);
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1545
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1546 // if the ccd is no longer enabled, use 0 for z reports
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1547 if (!cfg.d.plungerEnabled)
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1548 z = 0;
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1549
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1550 // save the configuration
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1551 cfg.save(iap, flash_addr);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1552 }
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1553 #ifdef ENABLE_JOYSTICK
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1554 else if (data[1] == 2)
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1555 {
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1556 // 2 = Calibrate plunger
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1557 // (No parameters)
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1558
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1559 // enter calibration mode
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1560 calBtnState = 3;
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1561 calBtnTimer.reset();
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1562 cfg.resetPlunger();
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1563 }
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1564 else if (data[1] == 3)
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1565 {
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1566 // 3 = pixel dump
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1567 // (No parameters)
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1568 reportPix = true;
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1569
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1570 // show purple until we finish sending the report
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1571 ledR = 0;
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1572 ledB = 0;
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1573 ledG = 1;
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 1574 }
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1575 #endif // ENABLE_JOYSTICK
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1576 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1577 else
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1578 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1579 // LWZ-PBA - full state dump; each byte is one output
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1580 // in the current bank. pbaIdx keeps track of the bank;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1581 // this is incremented implicitly by each PBA message.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1582 //printf("LWZ-PBA[%d] %02x %02x %02x %02x %02x %02x %02x %02x\r\n",
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1583 // pbaIdx, data[0], data[1], data[2], data[3], data[4], data[5], data[6], data[7]);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1584
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1585 // update all output profile settings
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1586 for (int i = 0 ; i < 8 ; ++i)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1587 wizVal[pbaIdx + i] = data[i];
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1588
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1589 // update the physical LED state if this is the last bank
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1590 if (pbaIdx == 24)
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 1591 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1592 updateWizOuts();
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 1593 pbaIdx = 0;
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 1594 }
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 1595 else
mjr 13:72dda449c3c0 1596 pbaIdx += 8;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1597 }
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1598 }
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1599 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1600
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1601 // check for plunger calibration
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1602 if (calBtn != 0 && !calBtn->read())
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1603 {
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1604 // check the state
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1605 switch (calBtnState)
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1606 {
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1607 case 0:
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1608 // button not yet pushed - start debouncing
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1609 calBtnTimer.reset();
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1610 calBtnState = 1;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1611 break;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1612
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1613 case 1:
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1614 // pushed, not yet debounced - if the debounce time has
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1615 // passed, start the hold period
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1616 if (calBtnTimer.read_ms() > 50)
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1617 calBtnState = 2;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1618 break;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1619
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1620 case 2:
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1621 // in the hold period - if the button has been held down
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1622 // for the entire hold period, move to calibration mode
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1623 if (calBtnTimer.read_ms() > 2050)
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1624 {
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1625 // enter calibration mode
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1626 calBtnState = 3;
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1627 calBtnTimer.reset();
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1628 cfg.resetPlunger();
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1629 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1630 break;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1631
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1632 case 3:
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1633 // Already in calibration mode - pushing the button here
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1634 // doesn't change the current state, but we won't leave this
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1635 // state as long as it's held down. So nothing changes here.
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1636 break;
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1637 }
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1638 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1639 else
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1640 {
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1641 // Button released. If we're in calibration mode, and
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1642 // the calibration time has elapsed, end the calibration
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1643 // and save the results to flash.
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1644 //
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1645 // Otherwise, return to the base state without saving anything.
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1646 // If the button is released before we make it to calibration
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1647 // mode, it simply cancels the attempt.
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1648 if (calBtnState == 3 && calBtnTimer.read_ms() > 15000)
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1649 {
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1650 // exit calibration mode
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1651 calBtnState = 0;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1652
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1653 // save the updated configuration
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1654 cfg.d.plungerCal = 1;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1655 cfg.save(iap, flash_addr);
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1656
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1657 // the flash state is now valid
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1658 flash_valid = true;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1659 }
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1660 else if (calBtnState != 3)
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1661 {
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1662 // didn't make it to calibration mode - cancel the operation
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1663 calBtnState = 0;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1664 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1665 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1666
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1667 // light/flash the calibration button light, if applicable
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1668 int newCalBtnLit = calBtnLit;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1669 switch (calBtnState)
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 1670 {
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1671 case 2:
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1672 // in the hold period - flash the light
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1673 newCalBtnLit = ((calBtnTimer.read_ms()/250) & 1);
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1674 break;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1675
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1676 case 3:
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1677 // calibration mode - show steady on
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1678 newCalBtnLit = true;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1679 break;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1680
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1681 default:
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1682 // not calibrating/holding - show steady off
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1683 newCalBtnLit = false;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1684 break;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1685 }
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1686
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1687 // light or flash the external calibration button LED, and
mjr 3:3514575d4f86 1688 // do the same with the on-board blue LED
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1689 if (calBtnLit != newCalBtnLit)
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1690 {
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1691 calBtnLit = newCalBtnLit;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1692 if (calBtnLit) {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1693 if (calBtnLed != 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1694 calBtnLed->write(1);
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 1695 ledR = 1;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 1696 ledG = 1;
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1697 ledB = 0;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1698 }
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1699 else {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1700 if (calBtnLed != 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1701 calBtnLed->write(0);
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 1702 ledR = 1;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 1703 ledG = 1;
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1704 ledB = 1;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 1705 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1706 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 1707
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1708 // If the plunger is enabled, and we're not already in a firing event,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1709 // and the last plunger reading had the plunger pulled back at least
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1710 // a bit, watch for plunger release events until it's time for our next
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1711 // USB report.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1712 if (!firing && cfg.d.plungerEnabled && z >= JOYMAX/6)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1713 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1714 // monitor the plunger until it's time for our next report
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1715 while (reportTimer.read_ms() < 15)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1716 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1717 // do a fast low-res scan; if it's at or past the zero point,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1718 // start a firing event
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1719 if (plungerSensor.lowResScan() <= cfg.d.plungerZero)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1720 firing = 1;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1721 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1722 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1723
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1724 // read the plunger sensor, if it's enabled
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1725 if (cfg.d.plungerEnabled)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1726 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1727 // start with the previous reading, in case we don't have a
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1728 // clear result on this frame
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1729 int znew = z;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1730 if (plungerSensor.highResScan(pos))
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1731 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1732 // We got a new reading. If we're in calibration mode, use it
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1733 // to figure the new calibration, otherwise adjust the new reading
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1734 // for the established calibration.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1735 if (calBtnState == 3)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1736 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1737 // Calibration mode. If this reading is outside of the current
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1738 // calibration bounds, expand the bounds.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1739 if (pos < cfg.d.plungerMin)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1740 cfg.d.plungerMin = pos;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1741 if (pos < cfg.d.plungerZero)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1742 cfg.d.plungerZero = pos;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1743 if (pos > cfg.d.plungerMax)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1744 cfg.d.plungerMax = pos;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1745
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1746 // normalize to the full physical range while calibrating
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1747 znew = int(round(float(pos)/npix * JOYMAX));
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1748 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1749 else
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1750 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1751 // Not in calibration mode, so normalize the new reading to the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1752 // established calibration range.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1753 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1754 // Note that negative values are allowed. Zero represents the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1755 // "park" position, where the plunger sits when at rest. A mechanical
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1756 // plunger has a small amount of travel in the "push" direction,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1757 // since the barrel spring can be compressed slightly. Negative
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1758 // values represent travel in the push direction.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1759 if (pos > cfg.d.plungerMax)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1760 pos = cfg.d.plungerMax;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1761 znew = int(round(float(pos - cfg.d.plungerZero)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1762 / (cfg.d.plungerMax - cfg.d.plungerZero + 1) * JOYMAX));
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1763 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1764 }
mjr 7:100a25f8bf56 1765
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1766 // If we're not already in a firing event, check to see if the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1767 // new position is forward of the last report. If it is, a firing
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1768 // event might have started during the high-res scan. This might
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1769 // seem unlikely given that the scan only takes about 5ms, but that
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1770 // 5ms represents about 25-30% of our total time between reports,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1771 // there's about a 1 in 4 chance that a release starts during a
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1772 // scan.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1773 if (!firing && z0 > 0 && znew < z0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1774 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1775 // The plunger has moved forward since the previous report.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1776 // Watch it for a few more ms to see if we can get a stable
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1777 // new position.
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1778 int pos0 = plungerSensor.lowResScan();
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1779 int pos1 = pos0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1780 Timer tw;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1781 tw.start();
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1782 while (tw.read_ms() < 6)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1783 {
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1784 // read the new position
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1785 int pos2 = plungerSensor.lowResScan();
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1786
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1787 // If it's stable over consecutive readings, stop looping.
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1788 // (Count it as stable if the position is within about 1/8".
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1789 // pos1 and pos2 are reported in pixels, so they range from
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1790 // 0 to npix. The overall travel of a standard plunger is
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1791 // about 3.2", so we have (npix/3.2) pixels per inch, hence
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1792 // 1/8" is (npix/3.2)*(1/8) pixels.)
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1793 if (abs(pos2 - pos1) < int(npix/(3.2*8)))
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1794 break;
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1795
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1796 // If we've crossed the rest position, and we've moved by
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1797 // a minimum distance from where we starting this loop, begin
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1798 // a firing event. (We require a minimum distance to prevent
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1799 // spurious firing from random analog noise in the readings
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1800 // when the plunger is actually just sitting still at the
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1801 // rest position. If it's at rest, it's normal to see small
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1802 // random fluctuations in the analog reading +/- 1% or so
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1803 // from the 0 point, especially with a sensor like a
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1804 // potentionemeter that reports the position as a single
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1805 // analog voltage.) Note that we compare the latest reading
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1806 // to the first reading of the loop - we don't require the
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1807 // threshold motion over consecutive readings, but any time
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1808 // over the stability wait loop.
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1809 if (pos1 < cfg.d.plungerZero
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1810 && abs(pos2 - pos0) > int(npix/(3.2*8)))
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1811 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1812 firing = 1;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1813 break;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1814 }
mjr 23:14f8c5004cd0 1815
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1816 // the new reading is now the prior reading
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1817 pos1 = pos2;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1818 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1819 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1820
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1821 // Check for a simulated Launch Ball button press, if enabled
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1822 if (ZBLaunchBallPort != 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1823 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1824 const int cockThreshold = JOYMAX/3;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1825 const int pushThreshold = int(-JOYMAX/3 * LaunchBallPushDistance);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1826 int newState = lbState;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1827 switch (lbState)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1828 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1829 case 0:
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1830 // Base state. If the plunger is pulled back by an inch
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1831 // or more, go to "cocked" state. If the plunger is pushed
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1832 // forward by 1/4" or more, go to "pressed" state.
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1833 if (znew >= cockThreshold)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1834 newState = 1;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1835 else if (znew <= pushThreshold)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1836 newState = 5;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1837 break;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1838
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1839 case 1:
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1840 // Cocked state. If a firing event is now in progress,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1841 // go to "launch" state. Otherwise, if the plunger is less
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1842 // than 1" retracted, go to "uncocked" state - the player
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1843 // might be slowly returning the plunger to rest so as not
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1844 // to trigger a launch.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1845 if (firing || znew <= 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1846 newState = 3;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1847 else if (znew < cockThreshold)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1848 newState = 2;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1849 break;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1850
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1851 case 2:
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1852 // Uncocked state. If the plunger is more than an inch
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1853 // retracted, return to cocked state. If we've been in
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1854 // the uncocked state for more than half a second, return
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1855 // to the base state. This allows the user to return the
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1856 // plunger to rest without triggering a launch, by moving
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1857 // it at manual speed to the rest position rather than
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1858 // releasing it.
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1859 if (znew >= cockThreshold)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1860 newState = 1;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1861 else if (lbTimer.read_ms() > 500)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1862 newState = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1863 break;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1864
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1865 case 3:
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1866 // Launch state. If the plunger is no longer pushed
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1867 // forward, switch to launch rest state.
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1868 if (znew >= 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1869 newState = 4;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1870 break;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1871
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1872 case 4:
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1873 // Launch rest state. If the plunger is pushed forward
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1874 // again, switch back to launch state. If not, and we've
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1875 // been in this state for at least 200ms, return to the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1876 // default state.
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1877 if (znew <= pushThreshold)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1878 newState = 3;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1879 else if (lbTimer.read_ms() > 200)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1880 newState = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1881 break;
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1882
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1883 case 5:
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1884 // Press-and-Hold state. If the plunger is no longer pushed
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1885 // forward, AND it's been at least 50ms since we generated
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1886 // the simulated Launch Ball button press, return to the base
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1887 // state. The minimum time is to ensure that VP has a chance
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1888 // to see the button press and to avoid transient key bounce
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1889 // effects when the plunger position is right on the threshold.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1890 if (znew > pushThreshold && lbTimer.read_ms() > 50)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1891 newState = 0;
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1892 break;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1893 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1894
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1895 // change states if desired
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1896 const uint32_t lbButtonBit = (1 << (LaunchBallButton - 1));
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1897 if (newState != lbState)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1898 {
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1899 // If we're entering Launch state OR we're entering the
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1900 // Press-and-Hold state, AND the ZB Launch Ball LedWiz signal
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1901 // is turned on, simulate a Launch Ball button press.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1902 if (((newState == 3 && lbState != 4) || newState == 5)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1903 && wizOn[ZBLaunchBallPort-1])
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1904 {
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1905 lbBtnTimer.reset();
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1906 lbBtnTimer.start();
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1907 simButtons |= lbButtonBit;
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1908 }
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1909
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1910 // if we're switching to state 0, release the button
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1911 if (newState == 0)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1912 simButtons &= ~(1 << (LaunchBallButton - 1));
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1913
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1914 // switch to the new state
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1915 lbState = newState;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1916
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1917 // start timing in the new state
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1918 lbTimer.reset();
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1919 }
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1920
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1921 // If the Launch Ball button press is in effect, but the
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1922 // ZB Launch Ball LedWiz signal is no longer turned on, turn
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1923 // off the button.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1924 //
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1925 // If we're in one of the Launch states (state #3 or #4),
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1926 // and the button has been on for long enough, turn it off.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1927 // The Launch mode is triggered by a pull-and-release gesture.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1928 // From the user's perspective, this is just a single gesture
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1929 // that should trigger just one momentary press on the Launch
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1930 // Ball button. Physically, though, the plunger usually
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1931 // bounces back and forth for 500ms or so before coming to
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1932 // rest after this gesture. That's what the whole state
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1933 // #3-#4 business is all about - we stay in this pair of
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1934 // states until the plunger comes to rest. As long as we're
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1935 // in these states, we won't send duplicate button presses.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1936 // But we also don't want the one button press to continue
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1937 // the whole time, so we'll time it out now.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1938 //
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1939 // (This could be written as one big 'if' condition, but
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1940 // I'm breaking it out verbosely like this to make it easier
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1941 // for human readers such as myself to comprehend the logic.)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1942 if ((simButtons & lbButtonBit) != 0)
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1943 {
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1944 int turnOff = false;
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1945
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1946 // turn it off if the ZB Launch Ball signal is off
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1947 if (!wizOn[ZBLaunchBallPort-1])
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1948 turnOff = true;
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1949
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1950 // also turn it off if we're in state 3 or 4 ("Launch"),
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1951 // and the button has been on long enough
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1952 if ((lbState == 3 || lbState == 4) && lbBtnTimer.read_ms() > 250)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1953 turnOff = true;
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1954
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1955 // if we decided to turn off the button, do so
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1956 if (turnOff)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1957 {
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1958 lbBtnTimer.stop();
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1959 simButtons &= ~lbButtonBit;
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 1960 }
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 1961 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1962 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1963
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1964 // If a firing event is in progress, generate synthetic reports to
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1965 // describe an idealized version of the plunger motion to VP rather
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1966 // than reporting the actual physical plunger position.
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1967 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1968 // We use the synthetic reports during a release event because the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1969 // physical plunger motion when released is too fast for VP to track.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1970 // VP only syncs its internal physics model with the outside world
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1971 // about every 10ms. In that amount of time, the plunger moves
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1972 // fast enough when released that it can shoot all the way forward,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1973 // bounce off of the barrel spring, and rebound part of the way
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1974 // back. The result is the classic analog-to-digital problem of
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1975 // sample aliasing. If we happen to time our sample during the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1976 // release motion so that we catch the plunger at the peak of a
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1977 // bounce, the digital signal incorrectly looks like the plunger
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1978 // is moving slowly forward - VP thinks we went from fully
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1979 // retracted to half retracted in the sample interval, whereas
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1980 // we actually traveled all the way forward and half way back,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1981 // so the speed VP infers is about 1/3 of the actual speed.
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 1982 //
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1983 // To correct this, we take advantage of our ability to sample
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1984 // the CCD image several times in the course of a VP report. If
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1985 // we catch the plunger near the origin after we've seen it
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1986 // retracted, we go into Release Event mode. During this mode,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1987 // we stop reporting the true physical plunger position, and
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1988 // instead report an idealized pattern: we report the plunger
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1989 // immediately shooting forward to a position in front of the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1990 // park position that's in proportion to how far back the plunger
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1991 // was just before the release, and we then report it stationary
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1992 // at the park position. We continue to report the stationary
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1993 // park position until the actual physical plunger motion has
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1994 // stabilized on a new position. We then exit Release Event
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1995 // mode and return to reporting the true physical position.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1996 if (firing)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 1997 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1998 // Firing in progress. Keep reporting the park position
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 1999 // until the physical plunger position comes to rest.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2000 const int restTol = JOYMAX/24;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2001 if (firing == 1)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2002 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2003 // For the first couple of frames, show the plunger shooting
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2004 // forward past the zero point, to simulate the momentum carrying
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2005 // it forward to bounce off of the barrel spring. Show the
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2006 // bounce as proportional to the distance it was retracted
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2007 // in the prior report.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2008 z = zBounce = -z0/6;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2009 ++firing;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2010 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2011 else if (firing == 2)
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 2012 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2013 // second frame - keep the bounce a little longer
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2014 z = zBounce;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2015 ++firing;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2016 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2017 else if (firing > 4
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2018 && abs(znew - z0) < restTol
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2019 && abs(znew - z1) < restTol
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2020 && abs(znew - z2) < restTol)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2021 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2022 // The physical plunger has come to rest. Exit firing
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2023 // mode and resume reporting the actual position.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2024 firing = false;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2025 z = znew;
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 2026 }
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 2027 else
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 2028 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2029 // until the physical plunger comes to rest, simply
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2030 // report the park position
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 2031 z = 0;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2032 ++firing;
mjr 9:fd65b0a94720 2033 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2034 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2035 else
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2036 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2037 // not in firing mode - report the true physical position
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2038 z = znew;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2039 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2040
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2041 // shift the new reading into the recent history buffer
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2042 z2 = z1;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2043 z1 = z0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2044 z0 = znew;
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 2045 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2046
mjr 11:bd9da7088e6e 2047 // update the buttons
mjr 18:5e890ebd0023 2048 uint32_t buttons = readButtons();
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2049
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2050 #ifdef ENABLE_JOYSTICK
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2051 // If it's been long enough since our last USB status report,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2052 // send the new report. We throttle the report rate because
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2053 // it can overwhelm the PC side if we report too frequently.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2054 // VP only wants to sync with the real world in 10ms intervals,
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2055 // so reporting more frequently only creates i/o overhead
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2056 // without doing anything to improve the simulation.
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2057 if (reportTimer.read_ms() > 15)
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2058 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2059 // read the accelerometer
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2060 int xa, ya;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2061 accel.get(xa, ya);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2062
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2063 // confine the results to our joystick axis range
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2064 if (xa < -JOYMAX) xa = -JOYMAX;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2065 if (xa > JOYMAX) xa = JOYMAX;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2066 if (ya < -JOYMAX) ya = -JOYMAX;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2067 if (ya > JOYMAX) ya = JOYMAX;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2068
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2069 // store the updated accelerometer coordinates
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2070 x = xa;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2071 y = ya;
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2072
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2073 // Report the current plunger position UNLESS the ZB Launch Ball
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2074 // signal is on, in which case just report a constant 0 value.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2075 // ZB Launch Ball turns off the plunger position because it
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2076 // tells us that the table has a Launch Ball button instead of
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2077 // a traditional plunger.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2078 int zrep = (ZBLaunchBallPort != 0 && wizOn[ZBLaunchBallPort-1] ? 0 : z);
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2079
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 2080 // Send the status report. Note that we have to map the X and Y
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 2081 // axes from the accelerometer to match the Windows joystick axes.
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 2082 // The mapping is determined according to the mounting direction
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 2083 // set in config.h via the ORIENTATION_xxx macros.
mjr 25:e22b88bd783a 2084 js.update(JOY_X(x,y), JOY_Y(x,y), zrep, buttons | simButtons, statusFlags);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2085
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2086 // we've just started a new report interval, so reset the timer
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2087 reportTimer.reset();
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2088 }
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2089
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 2090 // If we're in pixel dump mode, report all pixel exposure values
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 2091 if (reportPix)
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 2092 {
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2093 // send the report
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2094 plungerSensor.sendExposureReport(js);
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2095
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 2096 // we have satisfied this request
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 2097 reportPix = false;
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 2098 }
mjr 10:976666ffa4ef 2099
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2100 #else // ENABLE_JOYSTICK
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2101 // We're a secondary controller, with no joystick reporting. Send
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2102 // a generic status report to the host periodically for the sake of
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2103 // the Windows config tool.
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2104 if (reportTimer.read_ms() > 200)
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2105 {
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2106 js.updateStatus(0);
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2107 }
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2108
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2109 #endif // ENABLE_JOYSTICK
mjr 21:5048e16cc9ef 2110
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2111 #ifdef DEBUG_PRINTF
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2112 if (x != 0 || y != 0)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2113 printf("%d,%d\r\n", x, y);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2114 #endif
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2115
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2116 // provide a visual status indication on the on-board LED
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2117 if (calBtnState < 2 && hbTimer.read_ms() > 1000)
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 2118 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2119 if (js.isSuspended() || !js.isConnected())
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 2120 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2121 // suspended - turn off the LED
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 2122 ledR = 1;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 2123 ledG = 1;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 2124 ledB = 1;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2125
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2126 // show a status flash every so often
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2127 if (hbcnt % 3 == 0)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2128 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2129 // disconnected = red/red flash; suspended = red
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2130 for (int n = js.isConnected() ? 1 : 2 ; n > 0 ; --n)
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2131 {
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2132 ledR = 0;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2133 wait(0.05);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2134 ledR = 1;
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2135 wait(0.25);
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2136 }
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2137 }
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 2138 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2139 else if (needReset)
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 2140 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2141 // connected, need to reset due to changes in config parameters -
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2142 // flash red/green
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2143 hb = !hb;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2144 ledR = (hb ? 0 : 1);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2145 ledG = (hb ? 1 : 0);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2146 ledB = 0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2147 }
mjr 17:ab3cec0c8bf4 2148 else if (cfg.d.plungerEnabled && !cfg.d.plungerCal)
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2149 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2150 // connected, plunger calibration needed - flash yellow/green
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2151 hb = !hb;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2152 ledR = (hb ? 0 : 1);
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2153 ledG = 0;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2154 ledB = 1;
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2155 }
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2156 else
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2157 {
mjr 6:cc35eb643e8f 2158 // connected - flash blue/green
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 2159 hb = !hb;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 2160 ledR = 1;
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 2161 ledG = (hb ? 0 : 1);
mjr 4:02c7cd7b2183 2162 ledB = (hb ? 1 : 0);
mjr 2:c174f9ee414a 2163 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 2164
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 2165 // reset the heartbeat timer
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 2166 hbTimer.reset();
mjr 5:a70c0bce770d 2167 ++hbcnt;
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 2168 }
mjr 1:d913e0afb2ac 2169 }
mjr 0:5acbbe3f4cf4 2170 }