GettingTheGCSRunningonAGumstixBoard

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Revision as of 07:32, 15 March 2013 by Sergiu (talk | contribs)
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Intro

Please take note that the page is in work at the moment and that I am doing my best to have it updated as soon as possible.

Would it not be great to have your small UAS in your backpack, throw it in the air and monitor and even adjust the flight via a small device in your pocket? If you think this would be awesome, read on, since that is what this page is all about. It is the first attempt and will not be about iPad, Android Phones, Amazon Kindles or the likes as a ground station. For this we have other wiki pages. No, we will use a thrusted solution; A Gumstix with Linux on it.

Outcome

Have the Paparazzi GCS monitoring and adjusting a UA via an small Gumstix based device.

Hardware

What do you need to get this working:

  1. A gumstix board
  2. Camera
  3. 3.5" screen (such as the LCD panel with the Chestnut) or 4.3"

Software

Needed softwares to run this application:

  1. Paparazzi software
  2. Kivy library
  3. Ubuntu kernel on your Gumstix
  4. Driver for the camera in order to be used with the Gumstix

How to start

Well, we have some tutorials on this wiki about how to install Paparazzi. If you need any help to install Kivy, please look at their website, you will find there a good tutorial about how to get started.

Connect to the Gumstix trought the network

Before starting this step you may want to set your OS to auto-login. Why? Because you may not have at any time a keyboard for the Gumstix around. It is explained here very well how to do it. You have to write in your command prompt: sudo gedit /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf and then modify the lines as indicated on the webpage above.

There is a chance to get an error like this "Gtk-WARNING **: Locale not supported by C library.". To solve this write into your command prompt: sudo locale-gen en_US.UTF-8 or the right locale for your keyboard. If this didn't solve your problem, you may want to read here more about it.

If you want to send files to the Gumstix, you can do it via a ssh connection. In order to do this, both devices, your computer and the Gumstix must be connected to the same same network. Once you did this, you can start setting up the connection. Fistly, you need to know the IP address of the Gumstix. Start by opening CuteCom and connect to the device. When the system loaded, type into CuteCom command prompt:

ifconfig -a

Among the data returned, you will see something like this:

eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:15:c9:28:c9:ff inet addr:169.16.29.3

Now enter into the command prompt: sudo dhclient eth1 169.16.29.3

When this is done write into the command prompt: sudo apt-get install openssh-server Set a password: sudo passwd password (replace password with any string you want as password)

Now you should be able to connect using: ssh root@169.16.29.3

Connecting peripherals

When you have a Linux version running on your Gumstix, you can add a LCD, or a mouse, or a keyboard.

To set up your LCD you must follow these steps:

Connect trough CuteCom to the Gumstix Restart the board and hit a key within 5 seconds:

Hit any key to stop autoboot: 5

Then type the following in the CuteCom command prompt:

setenv defaultdisplay lcd43

Or, if you are using a 3.5" screen (such as the LCD panel with the Palo35):

setenv defaultdisplay lcd35

You can save this setting for future boots by saving it:

saveenv

Finally, continue with the boot process by typing in CuteCom command prompt:

boot

Installing

Testing

Next

The next step will be to make onboard video work in the GCS.

Links