Difference between revisions of "GettingTheGCSRunningonAGumstixBoard"

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= Intro =
= Introduction =


Please take note that the page is in work at the moment and that we are doing our best to have it updated as soon as possible. Please feel free to contribute!
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 trusted solution; A Gumstix board with Linux on it connected to a small screen.
 
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.
[[Image:GumstixBoard_OpenUAS.jpg|right|Gumstix carrier board and touchscreen]]


= Outcome =
= Outcome =


Have the Paparazzi GCS monitoring and adjusting a UA via an small Gumstix based device.
The outcome of our efforts will be to:
 
#Have the Paparazzi GCS running on a small [https://www.gumstix.com Gumstix] computer board so we can monitoring and adjust the flight of our unmanned aircraft with just a small simple device.
#Have fully correct instructions on how to get it to work on this wiki page.
 
{TODO add screenshot of working setup}


= Hardware =
= Hardware =


What do you need to get this working:
What do you need to get your groundstation up and running:


# A gumstix board with a charger
# A [http://www.gumstix.com/ gumstix] board with a power supply
# 8 GB SD card
# 8 GB or higher capacity micro SD card, the faster the better
# USB to mini-USB cable
# USB to mini-USB cable
# UTP network cable
# Regular UTP network cable
# 3.5" screen (such as the LCD panel with the Chestnut) or 4.3"
# A small, or big screen, preferably with touch such as the 4.3" LCD panel that comes with the Chestnut board kit or this [https://www.gumstix.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=344 fully integrated Gumstix board]
# Micro-SD to USB adapter or card reader
# A computer that runs Linux OS


= Software =
= Software =


Needed softwares to run this application:
We will install the following on the micro SD card
 
#Ubuntu OS for Gumstix
#Support libraries
#Paparazzi main software
 
==Conventions==
Note: You can just copy the line(s) in the box and paste them in your terminal.
'''But do not copy the $ or # sign at the beginning of a line'''. This symbol is just added on this page to show that the command is to be pasted at a terminal prompt as regular user($) or root user(#).
this is an example of how a regular user command for your terminal looks


#Paparazzi software
= Get the Operating System =
#Ubuntu kernel on your Gumstix
#Driver for the camera in order to be used with the Gumstix
Well, we have some tutorials on this wiki about how to install Paparazzi. Please have a look and you will definetly find all you need to know.


= Before proceeding =
Pre-requisites
You may get some errors during this installation. This depends on how well you are cooling down your system, how much RAM you have on your platform, the OS you are using and so on.
Here are some of the errors I occured and how I solved them. You may need to worry about them or not.


If you get errors when trying install a big number of packages/libraries at once, try to divide them in smaller groups.
Have the micro SD card at hand and download this custom OS with everything already installed for a gumstix board and Chestnut43 with touchscreen.
#Add swap file
 
Due to lack of RAM memory it is possible to see errors like this:
{TODO: provide an image with everything already fully installed}
==== ERROR [while installing ocamlfind.1.3.3] ====
 
Internal error:
==Installation Steps==
  # opam-version    1.0.1 (1.0.0-84-g9b3ff34)
# os              linux
opam: "fork" failed: Cannot allocate memory
'opam install ocamlfind' failed.
The solution to this problem is to create a swap file. For this case I created a 512 MB swap file, but you should adapt it's size to the size of your SD card and the needed memory size.
Run this commands as sudo:
dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile1 bs=1024 count=524288 (will create 512 MB swap file)
mkswap /swapfile1
chown root:root /swapfile1
chmod 0600 /swapfile1
swapon /swapfile1
This will remove the swap file each time you shutdown. If you need the file, you have to repeat the swapon command after each boot.
For more explanations you can go to [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-add-a-swap-file-howto/ this website]


Because the original image was created as 4 GB big, you have to execute the fallowing set of instructions to enlarge it:
===I'm in ahurry===
#Add more space
  39  mkfs.ext3 /dev/mmcblk0p3
  40  vol_id --uuid /dev/mmcblk0p3
  41  blkid /dev/mmcblk0p3
  42  vim /etc/fstab
  43  mv /home /oldHome
  45  mkdir /home
  46  mount /home
  47  mount
  48  mv /oldHome/* /home/
  49  rmdir /oldHome/


= Create an OS =
If you are eager to start and do not want to install everything thant download [this file] and follow the steps of how to copy it ont an microSD card
Pre-requisites


# 8 GB SD card or larger
Unzip the downloaded OS via
# Download the pre-built image from [[http://releases.linaro.org/12.07/android/images/vexpress-ics-gcc47-armlt-staging-alt-open/vexpress-ics-gcc47-armlt-staging-alt-open.img.gz vexpress-ics-gcc47-armlt-staging-alt-open.img.gz]]


or maybe use this custom one if you want to have kernel driver for the video digitizer already in [http://openuas.org/pub/support/pprz/gumstix/linaro_for_gumstix.img.gz get this OS]
$ gunzip gcsStix.img.gz


Installation Steps
Insert micro SD card in an SD reader and plug it in a USB port of your PC, then on the terminal type:


#Unzip the downloaded pre-build image
$ dmesg
#Insert SD card and note the assigned '/dev/sdX'
<nowiki>
[170074.104194] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Write Protect is off
[170074.104199] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Mode Sense: 0b 00 00 08
[170074.104999] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
[170074.105005] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
[170074.107904] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
[170074.107911] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
[170074.109282]  sdb: sdb1 sdb2
[170074.112159] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
[170074.112165] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
[170074.112169] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Attached SCSI removable disk
[170074.904553] kjournald starting.  Commit interval 5 seconds
[170074.916813] EXT3-fs (sdb2): using internal journal
[170074.916823] EXT3-fs (sdb2): recovery complete
[170074.916826] EXT3-fs (sdb2): mounted filesystem with ordered data mode
</nowiki>
Note: for my local machine the micro SD card was mounted on /dev/sdb as shown in the code above. Be aware of what you are doing at the next steps, as dd can completely overwrite your hard drive or other devices.
Where sdX is the SD reader device found with the command above, replace sdX with your specific device in the following commands and /path/to/file with the path to your previously downloaded Gumstix image file.


  dmesg
  $ SDCARD=/dev/sdX
SDCARD=/dev/sdX   (sdcard found from dmesg above)
  $ sudo dd if=/path/to/file/gcsStix.img of=$SDCARD bs=64k
  sudo dd bs=64k if=vexpress-ics-gcc47-armlt-staging-alt-open.img of=$SDCARD    


Once you have the image written on your sd card you can insert it in the Gumstix and boot up.  
This will take several minutes depending on your configuration and when this is done, safely remove the micro SD card from your computer by right clicking on it and select eject. Then, insert the micro SD card into the Gumstix micro SD slot.
Then type the following in the CuteCom command prompt:
printenv
setenv defaultdisplay lcd43
saveenv
run mmcboot
After this you can reboot your system.


= Connecting peripherals=
== Connecting peripherals==
When you have a Linux version running on your Gumstix, you can add a LCD, or a mouse, or a keyboard.
When you have a Linux version running on your Gumstix, you can add a LCD, or a mouse, or a keyboard. First, install CuteCom on your local machine running on a terminal:


To set up your LCD you must follow these steps:
To set up your LCD you must follow these steps:
#Connect LCD flex cable to Gumstix connector
#Attach USB-to-mini-USB cable to both your local machine and Gumstix board.
#Power up Gumstix board
#Install and start cutecom
$ sudo apt-get install cutecom
$ cutecom
A window will pop up and you must adjust the pull-down menu settings as follows:
Device will usually be either /dev/ttyUSB0 or /dev/ttyUSB1 . You can figure this out by typing on your command prompt:
dmesg|tail
Note: This command lists the last connected devices.
Baud rate must be set to 115200, data bits to 8, stop bits to 1, parity to none, handshake none checked, open for both reading and writing checked, apply settings when opening checked, choose "CR,LF end line" and Char delay 1ms.


Connect trough CuteCom to the Gumstix
Click on Open device and your connection should start. If you encounter any problems, but you are sure you did everything right, check if your Gumstix board overheated or restart it.
Restart the board and hit a key within 5 seconds:
 
Connect through CuteCom to the Gumstix, restart the board and hit a key within 5 seconds:
  Hit any key to stop autoboot: 5
  Hit any key to stop autoboot: 5
Then type the following in the CuteCom command prompt:
Then type the following in the CuteCom command prompt:
Line 106: Line 113:
  boot
  boot


=Connect to the Gumstix through the network=
==Connect to the Gumstix through the network==


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 network. Once you've done this, you can start setting up the connection.
In order to do so you need to know the IP address of the  Gumstix.


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.
The first thing you need in order to get rid of the USB to mini-USB cable and its physical limitations is to create a user and set a password for it and install openssh.  
Fistly, you need to know the IP address of the  Gumstix. Start by opening CuteCom and connect to the device.
Please feel free to replace "sergiu" with whatever username you choose, but keep in mind that you must replace it everywhere you encounter "sergiu".
When the system loaded, type into CuteCom command prompt:
useradd -c "Sergiu S" -m -s "/bin/bash" -G sudo sergiu
 
Note: -G option will add the user to the specified group.
ifconfig -a (if you can't use this command from any reason you can get a list with all the ips on the network \
  $ passwd sergiu
  using 'arp -a')
You will be asked to enter a password and confirm it. Type your password, then hit CTRL + Enter key combination and then retype your password. If successful, you will get this message:
  passwd: password updated successfully


$ sudo apt-get install openssh-server
Once you have accomplished this, you must discover the Gumstix ip address, typing on CuteCom:
$ ifconfig -a
Note: if you can't use this command for any reason you can get a list with all the IP addresses on the network using 'arp -a' on your machine.
Among the data returned, you will see something like this:
Among the data returned, you will see something like this:
  <nowiki>eth0       
  <nowiki>
Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 00:15:c9:28:c9:ff   
eth0      Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 00:15:c9:28:c9:ff   
inet addr:169.16.29.3</nowiki>
          inet addr:192.168.0.100  Bcast:192.168.0.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
Now enter into the command prompt:
          inet6 addr: fe80::215:c9ff:fe28:c9ff/64 Scope:Link
  sudo dhclient eth1 169.16.29.3
          UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST  MTU:1500 Metric:1
When this is done, install on the Gumstix openssh write into the command prompt:
          RX packets:3960 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
  sudo apt-get install openssh-server
          TX packets:727 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
Set a password:
          collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000
sudo passwd username
          RX bytes:3734905 (3.7 MBTX bytes:63765 (63.7 KB)
password  (replace password with any string you want as password)
          Interrupt:80
password (retype the password you chose)
</nowiki>
To add the user to the sudoers group do:
sudo adduser username sudo


Now you should be able to connect using:
Now you should be able to connect using:
  ssh root@169.16.29.3
  $ ssh sergiu@192.168.0.100 {TODO USERNAME change}
You will be asked to type the password you previously set for the user.
 
==Working With Gumstix==
Note: You may get some errors during this installation. This depends on how well you are cooling down your system, how much RAM you have on your platform and so on.  If you get errors when trying install a large number of packages/libraries at once, try to divide them into smaller groups.
 
1. Add a swap file
Due to lack of RAM memory it is possible to see errors like this:
==== ERROR [while installing ocamlfind.1.3.3] ====
 
Internal error:
  # opam-version    1.0.1 (1.0.0-84-g9b3ff34)
# os              linux
opam: "fork" failed: Cannot allocate memory
'opam install ocamlfind' failed.
The solution to this problem is to create a swap file. For this case I created a 512 MB swap file, but you should adapt its size to the size of your SD card and the needed memory size.
 
Execute these commands to create and mount a swap file:
sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile1 bs=1024 count=524288 (will create 512 MB swap file)
sudo mkswap /swapfile1
sudo chown root:root /swapfile1
sudo chmod 0600 /swapfile1
sudo swapon /swapfile1
Note: this will remove the swap file each time you shutdown. If you need the file, you have to repeat the swapon command after each boot. An alternative would be to have it mounted every time you boot the system.
For more explanations you can go to [http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-add-a-swap-file-howto/ this website]
 
2. Autologin
 
Remove the login prompt
 
You may want to set your OS to auto-login. Why? Because there may be times you don't have a keyboard for the Gumstix around. You can find a good explanation of this [http://www.liberiangeek.net/2012/03/automatically-login-to-ubuntu-12-04-precise-pangolin/ here] .
 
$ sudo locale-gen en_US.UTF-8
$ sudo apt-get install vim nano # (or use your favorite editor)
 
Note: if you get an error at this step, use the --fix-missing option as recommended.


= Remove the login prompt=
  $ sudo vim /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf
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 [http://www.liberiangeek.net/2012/03/automatically-login-to-ubuntu-12-04-precise-pangolin/ here] very well how to do it.
You have to write in your command prompt:
  sudo vi /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:
Edit the autologin-user line by replacing the username with your own
  sudo update-locale en_US.UTF-8
 
sudo export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
autologin-user=sergiu
 
and add this line:
 
  autologin-user-timeout=0


or the right locale for your keyboard. If this didn't solve your problem, you may want to read [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Locale here] more about it.
or the right locale for your keyboard. If this didn't solve your problem, you may want to read [https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Locale here] more about it.


= Remove the Lightdm GUI for freeing memory=
3. More Memory
  sudo apt-get remove lightdm
 
After this step you must reboot.
Remove the Lightdm GUI manager in order to free memory
  $ sudo apt-get remove lightdm
After this step you '''must''' reboot.
 
4. More speed
 
Remove processes not needed
$ sudo killall -9 NetworkManager  #(for faster system), {TODO in start the config? still needed?}
Because the size of the original image was 4.3 GB, you have to execute the following set of instructions to resize the partition to 8 GB:
 
 
5. Add more space
 
#Insert the micro SD card in your local machine´s card reader
#Use gparted to increase the size of the partition
$ sudo apt-get install gparted
$ sudo gparted
 
==Install the prerequsites==
Installing one package at a time is the best path to succes since it is likely during installation that you will be asked to re-run some of the commands with the "--fix-missing" option.
 
$ sudo apt-get install gtk2-engines-pixbuf
$ sudo apt-get install make #already latest
$ sudo apt-get install gcc #already latest
$ sudo apt-get install g++ #already latest
$ sudo apt-get install libgsl0-dev
$ sudo apt-get install gnuplot
$ sudo apt-get install libgnomecanvas2-dev
$ sudo apt-get install bzip2
$ sudo apt-get install git
$ sudo apt-get install libusb-dev
$ sudo apt-get install speech-dispatcher
$ sudo apt-get install glade
$ sudo apt-get install imagemagick
$ sudo apt-get install libpcre3-dev
$ sudo apt-get install git-core
$ sudo apt-get install python-usb
$ sudo apt-get install python-lxml
$ sudo apt-get install python-wxgtk2.8
$ sudo apt-get install m4
$ sudo apt-get install python-yaml
$ sudo apt-get install subversion
$ sudo apt-get install libglade2-dev libgnomeui-dev libgnomecanvas2-dev librsvg2-dev libgtkspell-dev libcanberra-gtk-dev --fix-missing
$ sudo apt-get install libsdl1.2-dev
Create a subdirectory where you will download and install all the libraries and other software tools needed. To keep your home dir tidy use a ''develop'' directory to store all the relevant downloads.
 
$ mkdir ~/develop
$ cd ~/develop/
 
==OCAML==
 
$ wget http://caml.inria.fr/pub/distrib/ocaml-4.00/ocaml-4.00.1.tar.gz
$ tar -xvzf ocaml-4.00.1.tar.gz
$ cd ocaml-4.00.1
$ ./configure
$ make world
$ make opt
$ make ocamldoc
$ make ocamlbuild.native
$ make ocamlbuild.byte
$ sudo make install
$ sudo make installopt
$ ocaml -version  #(make sure you have the right version, meaning 4.00.1)
$ cd ~/develop


= Install paparazzi on the gumstix=
==Opam tool==
#Install all libraries needed
#Install the OCAML '''Opam''' tool
sudo apt-get install ocaml-findlib libxml-light-ocaml-dev liblablgtk2-ocaml-dev liblablgtk2-gnome-ocaml-dev \
libocamlnet-ocaml-dev libsdl-ocaml-dev libpcre-ocaml-dev gtk2-engines-pixbuf make gcc g++ libgsl0-dev gnuplot \
libgnomecanvas2-dev bzip2 git libusb-dev speech-dispatcher glade imagemagick libpcre3-dev git-core  python-usb \
python-lxml python-wxgtk2.8 speech-dispatcher m4 python-yaml


#Install Ocaml 4.0
  $ git clone https://github.com/OCamlPro/opam.git
  wget -O ocaml-4.00.0.tar.gz http://caml.inria.fr/pub/distrib/ocaml-4.00/ocaml-4.00.0.tar.gz
$ cd opam
  tar -xvzf ocaml-4.00.0.tar.gz
$ ./configure
  cd ocaml-4.00.0
$ make (because of overheating you may get some errors, but keep doing 'make')
  ./configure
  $ sudo make install
  make world
  $ cd ~/develop
  make opt
$ mkdir ~/.opam
  umask 022
$ opam init
  sudo make install
  $ eval `opam config env`
  cd ..
Please select yes.
  $ sudo opam install ocamlfind
  $ sudo opam install lablgtk
  $ sudo opam install pcre-ocaml
  $ sudo opam install ocamlnet
  $ sudo opam install xml-light


#Install Opam
=portability-support=
git clone https://github.com/OCamlPro/opam.git
cd opam
./configure
make (because of overheating you may get some errors, but keep doing 'make')
sudo make install


cd ~
#Get paparazzi-portability-support related files
mkdir develop
cd develop/
wget https://bitbucket.org/mmottl/pcre-ocaml/downloads/pcre-ocaml-6.2.5.tar.gz
tar -xvzf pcre-ocaml-6.2.5.tar.gz
cd pcre-ocaml-6.2.5
./configure
make
sudo make install
cd ..
ocaml -version (make sure you have the right version)
sudo opam install -v lablgtk
sudo opam install  xml-light
sudo opam install pcre-ocaml
sudo opam install -v ocamlnet
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi-portability-support.git
cd paparazzi-portability-support/
cd linux/
sudo ./develenv.sh
sudo apt-get install libxt-dev tcl8.4-dev
cd ivy/ivy-c/
  178  sudo apt-get install tcl-dev
  183  cd ~/paparazzi-portability-support/linux/ivy/ivy-c/
  189  fakeroot debian/rules get-orig-source
  191  tar -xvzf ivy-c_3.12.1.orig.tar.gz
  193  cd ivy-c-3.12.1/
  197  rm -rf debian/
  198  cp -r ../debian .
  227  make
  229  cd src
  233  make
  234  sudo make install
  235  cd ../develop/
  240  git clone https://github.com/OCamlPro/opam.git
sudo opam install ocamlfind xml-light pcre-ocaml


If you get an error when trying to install pcre-ocaml 7.0.2 please follow these steps:
$ sudo apt-get install debhelper devscripts fakeroot build-essential autoconf automake autotools-dev dh-make xutils lintian pbuilder dh-ocaml tcl-dev libxt-dev libXt-devel
$ cd ~/develop
$ <nowiki>git clone https://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi-portability-support.git</nowiki>
$ cd paparazzi-portability-support/linux/
$ sudo ./develenv.sh
$ cd ivy/
$ svn checkout http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-c/trunk ivy-c
$ cd ivy-c/src/


opam remove pcre-ocaml
Patchthe Makefile with :
wget https://bitbucket.org/mmottl/pcre-ocaml/downloads/pcre-ocaml-6.2.5.tar.gz
Patch content:
tar -xvzf pcre-ocaml-6.2.5.tar.gz
  --- Makefile.orig 2013-05-23 16:36:45.000000000 +0000
cd pcre-ocaml-6.2.5
  +++ Makefile 2013-05-23 16:32:22.000000000 +0000
make
  @@ -28,6 +28,11 @@
sudo make install
FPIC=
  260  cd ~/paparazzi-portability-support/linux/ivy/ivy-c
  endif
  265  pkbuild
   
  267  sudo apt-get install dpkg-dev debhelper devscripts fakeroot linda
  +MACHINE = $(shell uname -m)
  268  sudo apt-get install build-essential autoconf automake autotools-dev dh-make xutils lintian pbuilder
  +ifeq ("$(MACHINE)", "armv7l")
  281  sudo apt-get install dh-ocaml
  + FPIC = -fPIC
  271  cd ivy-c-3.12.1/
  +endif
  273  debuild -i -us -uc -b
  +
  279  cd develop/
   
  282  svn co http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-ocaml/trunk
  ifndef PREFIX
  283 mv trunk ivy-ocaml
export PREFIX=/usr/local
  284  cd ivy-ocaml/
  290  make
  291  ocamlmklib -o ivy-ocaml ivy.cmo ivyLoop.cmo civy.o civyloop.o  -livy
  293  vim Makefile  
  303  make
  304  sudo make install
  306  cd ..
  308  svn co http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-python/trunk
  309  mv trunk ivy-python
  310  cd ivy-python/
  312  sudo python setup.py
  313  sudo python setup.py install
  315  cd ../..
  317  git clone git://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi.git
  324  sudo fdisk /dev/mmcblk0
  325  sudo reboot
  326  sudo apt-get install subversion
  327  cd /usr/include/
  329  ll tc*
  331  git clone git://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi.git
  333 cd paparazzi
  334  git checkout -b master_sergiu origin/master
  337  make ground_segment
  338  apt-cache search glibivy
  339  locate ivy-ocaml
  340  cd ../develop/
  343  vim ivy-ocaml/META.glibivy
  344  vim ivy-ocaml/glibivy-ocaml.mli
  345  vim ivy-ocaml/glibivy-ocaml.a
  346  cd ivy-ocaml/
  349  vim Makefile  
  350  vim META.glibivy
  352  make clean
  353  make
  355  vim Makefile
  357  sudo make install
  360  make
  361  sudo make install
  363  cd ..
  364  mv ivy-ocaml ivy-ocaml-old
  365  git clone git://github.com/flixr/ivy-ocaml.git
  366 cd ivy-ocaml
  368  sudo make uninstall
  369  make clean
  370  make
  371  vim Makefile
  372  make
  373  make clean
  374  make
  375  sudo make install
  376  ocamlc -where
  378  sudo make install
  379  vim META.glibivy
  380  git log
  381  sudo make install
  384  vim Makefile
  385  sudo make install
  387  cp META META.ivy
  388  make clean
  389  make
  392  sudo make install
  393  cp META META.ivy
  394  vim Makefile
  395  sudo make uninstall
  398  sudo rm /usr/local/lib/ocaml/glibIvy.cmi
  399  sudo rm /usr/local/lib/ocaml/glibivy-ocaml.*
  401  sudo make install
  403  ocamlfind
  404  ocamlfind query glibivy
  405  ocamlfind query glibIvy
  406  vim Makefile
  407  ocamlfind query glibIvy-ocaml
  408  ocamlfind query glibivy-ocaml
  409  vim Makefile
  416  rm META
  417  sudo make install
  420  ocamlfind query glibivy
  421  ocamlfind query glibIvy
  422  ocamlfind query glibivy-ocaml
  423  ocamlfind query libglibivy-ocaml
  424  sudo make install
  425  vim /usr/local/lib/ocaml/3.12.0/ivy/META
  426  vim /usr/local/lib/ocaml/3.12.0/glibivy/META
  427  ocamlfind
  428  ocamlfind  list
  429  vim Makefile
  430  sudo make uninstall
  431  sudo make install
  433  cp META META.ivy
  434  sudo make install
  437  cp META.glibivy META
  438  ocamlfind install  glibivy META glibIvy.mli glibIvy.cmi glibIvy.cmx glibivy-ocaml.cma glibivy-ocaml.cmxa libglibivy-ocaml.a glibivy-ocaml.a dllglibivy-ocaml.so
  439  ocamlfind query glibivy
  440  ocamlfind query glibIvy
  441 ocamlfind list
  443 ocamlfind list|grep pcre
  445 sudo cp /usr/local/lib/ocaml/3.12.0/* /usr/local/lib/ocaml/ -r
  450  vim /home/sergiu/.opam/system/lib/findlib.conf
  457  vim /etc/ocamlfind.conf
  464  OCAMLFIND_CONF=/etc/ocamlfind.conf ocamlfind query
  465  export OCAMLFIND_CONF=/etc/ocamlfind.conf
  467  cp /home/sergiu/.opam/system/lib/findlib.conf /home/sergiu/.opam/system/lib/findlib.conf.old
  468  cp /etc/ocamlfind.conf /home/sergiu/.opam/system/lib/findlib.conf
  470  ocamlfind query
  471  ocamlfind list
  472  ocamlfind printconf
  474  sudo rm  /usr/local/lib/ocaml/pcre
  475  sudo rm  /usr/local/lib/ocaml/pcre -rf
  476 sudo rm  /usr/lib/ocaml/pcre -rf
  477  cd ..
  478  sudo apt-get install cvs
  479  cvs -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.motion-twin.com:/cvsroot co ocaml/xml-light
  480  wget http://tech.motion-twin.com/zip/xml-light-2.2.zip
  481  unzip xml-light-2.2.zip
  482  cd xml-light
  485  make
  486  make install
  487  sudo make install
  489  cd ..
  491  wget https://forge.ocamlcore.org/frs/download.php/545/ocaml-http-0.1.5.tar.gz --no-check-certificate
  492  tar -xzvf ocaml-http-0.1.5.tar.gz
  493  cd ocaml-http_0.1.5/
  495  make
  496  apt-cache search netstring
  497  ocamlobjinfo /usr/lib/ocaml/netstring/neturl.cmi
  501  vim INSTALL
  502  cd ..
  505  wget "http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/ocamlnet/ocamlnet/2.2.9/ocamlnet-2.2.9.tar.gz?r=http%3A%2F%2Fsourceforge.net%2Fprojects%2Focamlnet%2F&ts=1365529051&use_mirror=ignum"
  508  sudo killall -9 NetworkManager  (for faster system)
  515 mv ocamlnet-2.2.9.tar.gz\?r\=http\:%2F%2Fsourceforge.net%2Fprojects%2Focamlnet%2F\&ts\=1365529051\&use_mirror\=ignum.1 ocamlnet-2.2.9.tar.gz
  516 tar -xzvf ocamlnet-2.2.9.tar.gz
  517 cd ocaml/ocamlnet-2.2.9
  522 ./configure -enable-gtk2 -with-nethttpd
  523 make all
  526  cd ../../ocaml-4.00.0
  530  ./configure
  531  vim README
  532  vim INSTALL
  533  grep -R toploop .
  534  exit
  535  cd ocaml-4.00.0
  536  vim Makefile
  539  make compilerlibs
  540  sudo make installopt
  543  cd paparazzi
  545  vim sw/lib/ocaml/Makefile
  547  sudo apt-get install python-xml
  549  apt-cache xml-light
  550  apt-cache search xml-light
  551  sudo apt-get install libxml-light-ocaml-dev libxmlm-ocaml-dev
  553  apt-cache search ocamlnet
  555  apt-cache search ocaml |grep http
  556  sudo apt-get install libhttp-ocaml-dev
  557  make ground_segment
  563  vim /usr/lib/ocaml/netclient/http_client.mli
  564  apt-cache search ocamlnet
  565  sudo apt-get remove  libocamlnet-ocaml-bin
  573  opam remove ocamlnet (check where it was installed)
  578  sudo opam install ocamlnet
  579  sudo apt-get install htop
  581  sudo swapon /swapfile1
  582  sudo opam install ocamlnet
  583  apt-cache search liblgtk
  584  apt-cache search lablgtk
  586  sudo apt-get remove liblablgtk2-ocaml
  587  sudo opam install ocamlnet
  588  sudo opam install lablgtk2
  593  sudo opam install lablgtk
  594  sudo opam install ocamlnet
  595  sudo opam install topfind


  600  cd ../develop/ocamlnet-2.2.9
  $ make all
  601 make
  $ sudo make install
  605  cd paparazzi
  607 make  
  608  git status
  610  grep -R root ~sergiu/.opam/
  611  opam
  612  mv ~sergiu/.opam ~sergiu/.opam-old
  614  opam init
  615  ocamlfind list


= from history 1 =
==  IVY ==
  7 apt-get install openssh-server
  34  login
  37  opam init
  60  opam install ocamlnet
  61  exit
  62  echo $DISPLAY
  63  xterm
  64  cd ~sergiu/paparazzi
  65  ./paparazzi
  67  vim pprz_src_test.sh
  69  vim Makefile
  70  vim sw/simulator/Makefile
  76  ./paparazzi
  79  ps aux|grep make
  81  opam install ocamlnet
  82  cd /root/.opam/system/build/ocamlnet.3.6.0/src/netstring
  84  make
  85  make installopt
  86  make install
  87  cd ..
  89  cd ..
  91  make
  92  make optinstall
  95  make install
  96  vim Makefile
  98  cd ..
  100  cd ocamlnet.3.6.0/src/netclient/
  101  make install
  103  ocamlfind
  105  vim    def build(self):
  106  vim /root/.opam/system/lib/findlib.conf
  108  vim /root/.opam/system/lib/findlib.conf
  112  cd /opt/
  114  cp ~sergiu/.opam/system/
  115  cp -r ~/.opam ~sergiu/
  116  chown -R sergiu ~sergiu/.opam
  117  mkdir opam_sw
  118  opam opam config env
#Which is correct?
  119  opam config env
  120  opam config env --root
  121  opam config env --root /opt/opam_sw/
  122  opam init --root /opt/opam_sw/
  124  opam printenv
  126  opam config
  127  opam list
  130  cd opam_sw/
  132  diff . ~/.opam/
  133  diff -r . ~/.opam/
  134  diff -r ./system/ ~/.opam/system/
  135  cp -r ~/.opam/system/lib system/lib/
  136  cat ~/.bashrc
  137  . /root/.opam/opam-init/init.sh > /dev/null 2> /dev/null || true
  143  cd ~sergiu/paparazzi
  145  make
  146  opam install xml-light
  147  make
  165  vim    /root/.opam/system/lib/findlib.conf
  166  cp -r /opt/opam_sw/system/lib/xml-light ~/.opam/system/lib/
  167  make
  168  opam install glibivy
  169  opam install glibivy2
  174  cd /home/sergiu/develop/ivy-ocaml/
  178  make install
  181  cd ~sergiu/paparazzi
  182  make
  183  ocamlfind list|grep labl
  184  opam list|grep labl
  185  opam install lablgtk
  186  make
  190  cp  -r  /opt/opam_sw/system/lib/lablgtk* ~/.opam/system/lib/
  191  make
  192  apt-cache search gnomecanvas
  193  apt-get install libgnomecanvas2-dev libgnomecanvas2-0
  194  make
  199  vim sw/lib/ocaml/Makefile
  200  make
  201  ocamlfind list | grep gnome
  202  opam install lablgtk2.gnomeui
  210  vim sw/lib/ocaml/Makefile
  211  vim sw/lib/ocaml/META.pprz
  212  make
  213  apt-cache search gmktemp
  214  mktemp
  215  vim sw/supervision/Makefile
  216  make
  219  sudo apt-get install  liblablgtk2-ocaml
  221  export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/ocaml/stublibs/:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
  222  make
  223  apt-get install  liblablgtk2-gnome-ocaml
  224  make
  228  CCFLAGS = -I/root/.opam/system/lib/lablgtk2/ make ground_segment
  229  CCFLAGS=-I/root/.opam/system/lib/lablgtk2/ make ground_segment
  230  CCFLAGS=-I/root/.opam/system/lib/ make ground_segment
  235  export CAML_LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/root/.opam/system/lib/lablgtk2/:/root/.opam/system/lib/:$CAML_LD_LIBRARY_PATH
  245  export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/root/.opam/system/lib/lablgtk2/:/root/.opam/system/lib/:/root/.opam/system/lib/stublibs:/usr/local/lib/ocaml/stublibs
  255  vim sw/ground_segment/multimon/Makefile
  256  vim Makefile
  257  make pprzcenter
  258  make supervision
  260  cd sw/supervision/
  261  make
  262  export PPRZ_HOME=/home/sergiu/paparazzi/
  263  export PAPARAZZI_HOME=/home/sergiu/paparazzi/
  264  export PAPARAZZI_SRC=/home/sergiu/paparazzi/
  265  make supervision
  266  make
  267  vim Makefile
  268  vim sw/ground_segment/multimon/Makefile
  269  vim ../ground_segment/multimon/Makefile
  270  vim Makefile
  271  make
  272  vim Makefile
  273  ls
  274  ./paparazzicenter
  275  cd ../..
  276  ls
  279  cd sw/logalizer/
  280  vim Makefile
  281  make
  282  vim ../supervision/Makefile
  283  vim Makefile
  284  make
  285  vim Makefile
  286  make
  287  cd ../..
  292  vim sw/ground_segment/cockpit/Makefile
  297  vim sw/ground_segment/multimon/Makefile
  299  cd sw/ground_segment/multimon/
  300  make clean
  301  make
  302  cd ../..
  303  cd ..
  306  vim sw/supervision/Makefile
  307  vim sw/ground_segment/tmtc/Makefile
  308  make
  309  cd sw/ground_segment/tmtc/
  310  make clean
  311  make
  312  cd ../../..
  315  vim sw/simulator/Makefile
  316  cd sw/simulator/mak
  317  cd sw/simulator/
  318  make clean
  319  make
  320  cd ../..
  321  make ground_segment
  324  cd sw/ground_segment/joystick/
  332  cd ../tmtc/
  333  cd ../../tools/
  335  vim Makefile
  336  make clean
  337  cd ../
  339  cd ground_segment/joystick/
  340  make clean
  341  make
  346  cd ../../
  347  cd ..
  349  vim Makefile
  350  make
  351  make ground_segment
  353  X&
  354  export DISPLAY=:0
  355  xterm
  356  ./papara
  358  git status
  359  sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs  -b 192.168.209:2010
  360  sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs
  361  sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs  -b 192.168.209:2010
  362  mkdir /home/dirk
  363  mkdir /home/dirk/nonSynced
  365  ln -s /home/dirk/nonSynced/paparazzi /home/sergiu/paparazzi
  366  ln -s  /home/sergiu/paparazzi /home/dirk/nonSynced/paparazzi
  367  sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs  -b 192.168.209:2010


IVY is a simple protocol and a set of open-source libraries and programs that allows applications to broadcast information through text messages, with a subscription mechanism based on regular expressions. The project can be found at: http://www2.tls.cena.fr/products/ivy/ 


In the paparazzi project, Ivy is used to send telemetry data to where ever you want.


opam init
NOTE: Do not confuse this IVY with the Apache Ivy project.  
. /home/sergiu/.opam/opam-init/init.sh > /dev/null 2> /dev/null || true
eval 'opam config env'


If you will get an error when trying to install pcre-ocaml 7.0.2 please follow these steps:
== Ivy-OCAML ==
wget https://bitbucket.org/mmottl/pcre-ocaml/downloads/pcre-ocaml-6.2.5.tar.gz
tar -xvzf pcre-ocaml-6.2.5.tar.gz
cd pcre-ocaml-6.2.5
make
sudo make install


= Experimental steps =
The Ivy-ocaml is a Library that make it possible to use Ivy via the Ocaml language.


# Remove LightDM GUI to preserve Gumstix RAM
$ cd ~/develop/paparazzi-portability-support/linux/ivy/
$ <nowiki>svn checkout http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-ocaml/trunk ivy-ocaml</nowiki>
$ cd ivy-ocaml/
$ make
$ sudo PATH=$PATH make install


{TODO: Describe STEPS}


{install python}
=== Ivy-python ===
{install ivy python}
{install kivy}


Compile example
The ivy-python package makes it possible to use the IVY libraries from within the Python programming language. The ivy-python package is architecture independent, so it can be downloaded from the Ubuntu or Debian paparazzi repository. However since this is the from scratch page we will download it from the official source repository via


Source of Example
$ cd ~/develop/paparazzi-portability-support/linux/ivy/
$ <nowiki>svn co http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-python/trunk ivy-python</nowiki>
$ cd ivy-python/
$ sudo python setup.py install


X11 server to display on LCD
== Main sourcecode ==
Now all the prequisites are installed, finally we can grab a copy of the full Paparazzi project


= Installing =
$ cd ~
$ <nowiki>git clone https://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi.git</nowiki>
$ cd paparazzi
$ export PPRZ_HOME=~/paparazzi/
$ export PAPARAZZI_HOME=~/paparazzi/
$ export PAPARAZZI_SRC=~/paparazzi/
$ make ground_segment


Calibrate your touchsreen
$ sudo apt-get install xinput_calibrate
$ X &
$ export DISPLAY=:0
$ xinput_calibrate
You will have to touch the center of the  four circles. When you will have touched all four points, you will get a similar message on your command prompt.
--> Making the calibration permanent <--
  copy the snippet below into '/etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/99-calibration.conf'
Section "InputClass"
<nowiki> Identifier "calibration" </nowiki>
<nowiki> MatchProduct "ADS7846 Touchscreen" </nowiki>
<nowiki> Option "Calibration" "147 3917 3783 251" </nowiki>
EndSection
Note: each time you reboot you will need to start X server. Now, because we already started it to calibrate the screen, you can skip the next two commands. Only this time!
Fine, now lets start the X server.
$ X &
And make a display setting
$ export DISPLAY=:0
Finally, it's time to party, let's run the Paparazzi center
$ cd ~/paparazzi
$ ./paparazzi
Add this to the session
$ sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs -b 192.168.1:2010


= Testing =
= Testing =
= Telemetry =
Hardware list:
#Laptop with paparazzi softaware
#Gumstix board
#XBee module
#USB power hub
#UAV with RC transceiver and xbee module
#internet connection


= Next =
Note: from the tests made, the xbee module won't be seen by the Gumstix board if it is not connected before you power up the system.
For this tests, it was used this drone:


The next step will be to make onboard video work in the GCS.
{TODO provide pictures}
You can find here all the configuration files. Download them and copy them as it follows:
$ cd ~/paparazzi/conf/system/udev/rules/
$ sudo cp -av *rules /etc/udev/rules.d/
$ mkdir conf/radios/sergiu
$ cp conf/radios/sergiu ~Downloads/sergiu_mx22_pprz-ap.xml {TODO change the names with something more appropriate}
$ git remote -v
$ mkdir conf/airframes/sergiu
$ cp conf/airframes/sergiu ~/Downloads/orange.xml {TODO change file name}
$ cp conf/ ~/Downloads/conf.xml
$ cp conf/airframes/sergiu/ ~/Downloads/orange.xml
$ ./paparazzi
 
Download this tarball {TODO provide tarball} and extract it in /home/user/paparazzi/var/ . Inside you will find all the files needed to run paparazzi GCS with datalink.
 
{TODO provide files orange.xml,radio...xml, udev rules, config.xml; set datalink properly and
explain how to build, upload, execute + print screens}
 
= Add a joystick =
{TODO add calibration steps}
 
$ cd ~/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/joystick
$ make clean
$ make
In Paparazzi Center select Tool>>Joystick and make sure that the line looks like this:
/home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/joystick/input2ivy -ac orange2 extreme_3d_pro.xml
where '/sergiu' must be replaced with your user, 'orange2' with the name of your A/C and 'extreme_3d_pro.xml' with the name of your joystick.
 
Edited ~/paparazzi/conf/conf.xml .
 
<nowiki>opened tools:
server  /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/tmtc/server
gcs    /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs
data link  /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/tmtc/link  -udp
joystick  /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/joystick/input2ivy  -ac ardrone2_sdk  extreme_3d_pro.xml
messages  /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/tmtc/messages
real-time plotter  /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/logalizer/plotter
</nowiki>
Notes: wireless connection in between the drone and laptop is required for data link.
 
= Testing =
{TODO: Describe here a first run with Paparazzi Sim}
 
=onboard video=
 
System identification
$ cat /proc/bus/input/devices
output
I: Bus=0019 Vendor=0000 Product=0006 Version=0000
N: Name="Video Bus"
P: Phys=LNXVIDEO/video/input0
S: Sysfs=/devices/LNXSYSTM:00/LNXSYBUS:00/PNP0A08:00/LNXVIDEO:00/input/input4
U: Uniq=
H: Handlers=kbd event4
B: PROP=0
B: EV=3
B: KEY=3e000b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
 
Install mplayer
$ sudo apt-get install mplayer2
to make sure that the program is working properly type
$ mplayer
and you are supposed to get a list of the options available.
 
Get image using mplayer, Terratec Grabby digitizer, 2.4GHz receiver, and a camera with 2.4 GHz transmitter:
$ dmesg
and look if your digitizer is registered as /dev/video0 which is the default or otherwise and replace bellow
$  mplayer tv:// -tv driver=v4l2:width=320:height=240:norm=NTSC:input=0:device=/dev/video0:noaudio
where
  inputs: 0 = Composite1; 1 = S-Video;
If 0 doesn't work for you, try with value 1.
{TODO: video receiver connect description }
{TODO: video digitizer a description }


= Links =
= Links =
Links to related information


* [[OMAP]]
* [[OMAP]]
* https://www.gumstix.com/
* https://www.gumstix.com/
* [[Dev/Caspa]]
* [[Dev/Caspa]]
* https://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi-portability-support

Latest revision as of 11:24, 14 August 2013

Introduction

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 trusted solution; A Gumstix board with Linux on it connected to a small screen.

Gumstix carrier board and touchscreen

Outcome

The outcome of our efforts will be to:

  1. Have the Paparazzi GCS running on a small Gumstix computer board so we can monitoring and adjust the flight of our unmanned aircraft with just a small simple device.
  2. Have fully correct instructions on how to get it to work on this wiki page.

{TODO add screenshot of working setup}

Hardware

What do you need to get your groundstation up and running:

  1. A gumstix board with a power supply
  2. 8 GB or higher capacity micro SD card, the faster the better
  3. USB to mini-USB cable
  4. Regular UTP network cable
  5. A small, or big screen, preferably with touch such as the 4.3" LCD panel that comes with the Chestnut board kit or this fully integrated Gumstix board
  6. Micro-SD to USB adapter or card reader
  7. A computer that runs Linux OS

Software

We will install the following on the micro SD card

  1. Ubuntu OS for Gumstix
  2. Support libraries
  3. Paparazzi main software

Conventions

Note: You can just copy the line(s) in the box and paste them in your terminal. But do not copy the $ or # sign at the beginning of a line. This symbol is just added on this page to show that the command is to be pasted at a terminal prompt as regular user($) or root user(#).

$  this is an example of how a regular user command for your terminal looks

Get the Operating System

Pre-requisites

Have the micro SD card at hand and download this custom OS with everything already installed for a gumstix board and Chestnut43 with touchscreen.

{TODO: provide an image with everything already fully installed}

Installation Steps

I'm in ahurry

If you are eager to start and do not want to install everything thant download [this file] and follow the steps of how to copy it ont an microSD card

Unzip the downloaded OS via

$ gunzip gcsStix.img.gz

Insert micro SD card in an SD reader and plug it in a USB port of your PC, then on the terminal type:

$ dmesg 

[170074.104194] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Write Protect is off
[170074.104199] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Mode Sense: 0b 00 00 08
[170074.104999] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
[170074.105005] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
[170074.107904] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
[170074.107911] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
[170074.109282]  sdb: sdb1 sdb2
[170074.112159] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
[170074.112165] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
[170074.112169] sd 7:0:0:0: [sdb] Attached SCSI removable disk
[170074.904553] kjournald starting.  Commit interval 5 seconds
[170074.916813] EXT3-fs (sdb2): using internal journal
[170074.916823] EXT3-fs (sdb2): recovery complete
[170074.916826] EXT3-fs (sdb2): mounted filesystem with ordered data mode

Note: for my local machine the micro SD card was mounted on /dev/sdb as shown in the code above. Be aware of what you are doing at the next steps, as dd can completely overwrite your hard drive or other devices. Where sdX is the SD reader device found with the command above, replace sdX with your specific device in the following commands and /path/to/file with the path to your previously downloaded Gumstix image file.

$ SDCARD=/dev/sdX
$ sudo dd if=/path/to/file/gcsStix.img of=$SDCARD bs=64k

This will take several minutes depending on your configuration and when this is done, safely remove the micro SD card from your computer by right clicking on it and select eject. Then, insert the micro SD card into the Gumstix micro SD slot.

Connecting peripherals

When you have a Linux version running on your Gumstix, you can add a LCD, or a mouse, or a keyboard. First, install CuteCom on your local machine running on a terminal:

To set up your LCD you must follow these steps:

  1. Connect LCD flex cable to Gumstix connector
  2. Attach USB-to-mini-USB cable to both your local machine and Gumstix board.
  3. Power up Gumstix board
  4. Install and start cutecom
$ sudo apt-get install cutecom
$ cutecom

A window will pop up and you must adjust the pull-down menu settings as follows: Device will usually be either /dev/ttyUSB0 or /dev/ttyUSB1 . You can figure this out by typing on your command prompt:

dmesg|tail

Note: This command lists the last connected devices. Baud rate must be set to 115200, data bits to 8, stop bits to 1, parity to none, handshake none checked, open for both reading and writing checked, apply settings when opening checked, choose "CR,LF end line" and Char delay 1ms.

Click on Open device and your connection should start. If you encounter any problems, but you are sure you did everything right, check if your Gumstix board overheated or restart it.

Connect through 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

Connect to the Gumstix through the network

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 network. Once you've done this, you can start setting up the connection. In order to do so you need to know the IP address of the Gumstix.

The first thing you need in order to get rid of the USB to mini-USB cable and its physical limitations is to create a user and set a password for it and install openssh. Please feel free to replace "sergiu" with whatever username you choose, but keep in mind that you must replace it everywhere you encounter "sergiu".

useradd -c "Sergiu S" -m -s "/bin/bash" -G sudo sergiu

Note: -G option will add the user to the specified group.

$ passwd sergiu

You will be asked to enter a password and confirm it. Type your password, then hit CTRL + Enter key combination and then retype your password. If successful, you will get this message:

passwd: password updated successfully
$ sudo apt-get install openssh-server

Once you have accomplished this, you must discover the Gumstix ip address, typing on CuteCom:

$ ifconfig -a 

Note: if you can't use this command for any reason you can get a list with all the IP addresses on the network using 'arp -a' on your machine. Among the data returned, you will see something like this:

eth0      Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 00:15:c9:28:c9:ff  
          inet addr:192.168.0.100  Bcast:192.168.0.255  Mask:255.255.255.0
          inet6 addr: fe80::215:c9ff:fe28:c9ff/64 Scope:Link
          UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST  MTU:1500  Metric:1
          RX packets:3960 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
          TX packets:727 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
          collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000 
          RX bytes:3734905 (3.7 MB)  TX bytes:63765 (63.7 KB)
          Interrupt:80 

Now you should be able to connect using:

$ ssh sergiu@192.168.0.100 {TODO USERNAME change}

You will be asked to type the password you previously set for the user.

Working With Gumstix

Note: You may get some errors during this installation. This depends on how well you are cooling down your system, how much RAM you have on your platform and so on. If you get errors when trying install a large number of packages/libraries at once, try to divide them into smaller groups.

1. Add a swap file Due to lack of RAM memory it is possible to see errors like this:

==== ERROR [while installing ocamlfind.1.3.3] ====
Internal error:
  # opam-version    1.0.1 (1.0.0-84-g9b3ff34)
# os              linux
opam: "fork" failed: Cannot allocate memory
'opam install ocamlfind' failed.

The solution to this problem is to create a swap file. For this case I created a 512 MB swap file, but you should adapt its size to the size of your SD card and the needed memory size.

Execute these commands to create and mount a swap file:

sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/swapfile1 bs=1024 count=524288 (will create 512 MB swap file)
sudo mkswap /swapfile1
sudo chown root:root /swapfile1
sudo chmod 0600 /swapfile1
sudo swapon /swapfile1

Note: this will remove the swap file each time you shutdown. If you need the file, you have to repeat the swapon command after each boot. An alternative would be to have it mounted every time you boot the system. For more explanations you can go to this website

2. Autologin

Remove the login prompt

You may want to set your OS to auto-login. Why? Because there may be times you don't have a keyboard for the Gumstix around. You can find a good explanation of this here .

$ sudo locale-gen en_US.UTF-8
$ sudo apt-get install vim nano # (or use your favorite editor)

Note: if you get an error at this step, use the --fix-missing option as recommended.

$ sudo vim /etc/lightdm/lightdm.conf

Edit the autologin-user line by replacing the username with your own

autologin-user=sergiu

and add this line:

autologin-user-timeout=0

or the right locale for your keyboard. If this didn't solve your problem, you may want to read here more about it.

3. More Memory

Remove the Lightdm GUI manager in order to free memory

$ sudo apt-get remove lightdm

After this step you must reboot.

4. More speed

Remove processes not needed

$ sudo killall -9 NetworkManager  #(for faster system), {TODO in start the config? still needed?}

Because the size of the original image was 4.3 GB, you have to execute the following set of instructions to resize the partition to 8 GB:


5. Add more space

  1. Insert the micro SD card in your local machine´s card reader
  2. Use gparted to increase the size of the partition
$ sudo apt-get install gparted
$ sudo gparted

Install the prerequsites

Installing one package at a time is the best path to succes since it is likely during installation that you will be asked to re-run some of the commands with the "--fix-missing" option.

$ sudo apt-get install gtk2-engines-pixbuf
$ sudo apt-get install make #already latest
$ sudo apt-get install gcc #already latest
$ sudo apt-get install g++ #already latest
$ sudo apt-get install libgsl0-dev
$ sudo apt-get install gnuplot
$ sudo apt-get install libgnomecanvas2-dev
$ sudo apt-get install bzip2
$ sudo apt-get install git
$ sudo apt-get install libusb-dev
$ sudo apt-get install speech-dispatcher
$ sudo apt-get install glade
$ sudo apt-get install imagemagick 
$ sudo apt-get install libpcre3-dev
$ sudo apt-get install git-core
$ sudo apt-get install python-usb
$ sudo apt-get install python-lxml
$ sudo apt-get install python-wxgtk2.8
$ sudo apt-get install m4
$ sudo apt-get install python-yaml 
$ sudo apt-get install subversion
$ sudo apt-get install libglade2-dev libgnomeui-dev libgnomecanvas2-dev librsvg2-dev libgtkspell-dev libcanberra-gtk-dev --fix-missing
$ sudo apt-get install libsdl1.2-dev

Create a subdirectory where you will download and install all the libraries and other software tools needed. To keep your home dir tidy use a develop directory to store all the relevant downloads.

$ mkdir ~/develop
$ cd ~/develop/

OCAML

$ wget http://caml.inria.fr/pub/distrib/ocaml-4.00/ocaml-4.00.1.tar.gz
$ tar -xvzf ocaml-4.00.1.tar.gz 
$ cd ocaml-4.00.1
$ ./configure
$ make world
$ make opt
$ make ocamldoc
$ make ocamlbuild.native
$ make ocamlbuild.byte
$ sudo make install
$ sudo make installopt
$ ocaml -version  #(make sure you have the right version, meaning 4.00.1)
$ cd ~/develop

Opam tool

  1. Install the OCAML Opam tool
$ git clone https://github.com/OCamlPro/opam.git
$ cd opam
$ ./configure 
$ make (because of overheating you may get some errors, but keep doing 'make')
$ sudo make install
$ cd ~/develop
$ mkdir ~/.opam
$ opam init
$ eval `opam config env`

Please select yes.

$ sudo opam install ocamlfind
$ sudo opam install lablgtk 
$ sudo opam install pcre-ocaml
$ sudo opam install ocamlnet
$ sudo opam install xml-light

portability-support

  1. Get paparazzi-portability-support related files
$ sudo apt-get install  debhelper devscripts fakeroot build-essential autoconf automake autotools-dev dh-make xutils lintian pbuilder dh-ocaml tcl-dev libxt-dev libXt-devel
$ cd ~/develop
$ git clone https://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi-portability-support.git
$ cd paparazzi-portability-support/linux/
$ sudo ./develenv.sh
$ cd ivy/
$ svn checkout http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-c/trunk ivy-c
$ cd ivy-c/src/

Patchthe Makefile with : Patch content:

--- Makefile.orig	2013-05-23 16:36:45.000000000 +0000
+++ Makefile	2013-05-23 16:32:22.000000000 +0000
@@ -28,6 +28,11 @@
	FPIC=
endif

+MACHINE = $(shell uname -m)
+ifeq ("$(MACHINE)", "armv7l")
+	FPIC = -fPIC
+endif
+

ifndef PREFIX
	export PREFIX=/usr/local
$ make all
$ sudo make install

IVY

IVY is a simple protocol and a set of open-source libraries and programs that allows applications to broadcast information through text messages, with a subscription mechanism based on regular expressions. The project can be found at: http://www2.tls.cena.fr/products/ivy/

In the paparazzi project, Ivy is used to send telemetry data to where ever you want.

NOTE: Do not confuse this IVY with the Apache Ivy project.

Ivy-OCAML

The Ivy-ocaml is a Library that make it possible to use Ivy via the Ocaml language.

$ cd ~/develop/paparazzi-portability-support/linux/ivy/
$ svn checkout http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-ocaml/trunk ivy-ocaml
$ cd ivy-ocaml/
$ make
$ sudo PATH=$PATH make install


Ivy-python

The ivy-python package makes it possible to use the IVY libraries from within the Python programming language. The ivy-python package is architecture independent, so it can be downloaded from the Ubuntu or Debian paparazzi repository. However since this is the from scratch page we will download it from the official source repository via

$ cd ~/develop/paparazzi-portability-support/linux/ivy/
$ svn co http://svn.tls.cena.fr/svn/ivy/ivy-python/trunk ivy-python
$ cd ivy-python/
$ sudo python setup.py install

Main sourcecode

Now all the prequisites are installed, finally we can grab a copy of the full Paparazzi project

$ cd ~
$ git clone https://github.com/paparazzi/paparazzi.git
$ cd paparazzi
$ export PPRZ_HOME=~/paparazzi/
$ export PAPARAZZI_HOME=~/paparazzi/
$ export PAPARAZZI_SRC=~/paparazzi/
$ make ground_segment

Calibrate your touchsreen

$ sudo apt-get install xinput_calibrate
$ X &
$ export DISPLAY=:0
$ xinput_calibrate

You will have to touch the center of the four circles. When you will have touched all four points, you will get a similar message on your command prompt.

--> Making the calibration permanent <--
 copy the snippet below into '/etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/99-calibration.conf'
Section "InputClass"

Identifier "calibration" MatchProduct "ADS7846 Touchscreen" Option "Calibration" "147 3917 3783 251"

EndSection

Note: each time you reboot you will need to start X server. Now, because we already started it to calibrate the screen, you can skip the next two commands. Only this time!

Fine, now lets start the X server.

$ X &

And make a display setting

$ export DISPLAY=:0

Finally, it's time to party, let's run the Paparazzi center

$ cd ~/paparazzi
$ ./paparazzi

Add this to the session

$ sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs -b 192.168.1:2010

Testing

Telemetry

Hardware list:

  1. Laptop with paparazzi softaware
  2. Gumstix board
  3. XBee module
  4. USB power hub
  5. UAV with RC transceiver and xbee module
  6. internet connection

Note: from the tests made, the xbee module won't be seen by the Gumstix board if it is not connected before you power up the system. For this tests, it was used this drone:

{TODO provide pictures} You can find here all the configuration files. Download them and copy them as it follows:

$ cd ~/paparazzi/conf/system/udev/rules/
$ sudo cp -av *rules /etc/udev/rules.d/
$ mkdir conf/radios/sergiu
$ cp conf/radios/sergiu ~Downloads/sergiu_mx22_pprz-ap.xml {TODO change the names with something more appropriate}
$ git remote -v
$ mkdir conf/airframes/sergiu
$ cp conf/airframes/sergiu ~/Downloads/orange.xml {TODO change file name}
$ cp conf/ ~/Downloads/conf.xml
$ cp conf/airframes/sergiu/ ~/Downloads/orange.xml
$ ./paparazzi

Download this tarball {TODO provide tarball} and extract it in /home/user/paparazzi/var/ . Inside you will find all the files needed to run paparazzi GCS with datalink.

{TODO provide files orange.xml,radio...xml, udev rules, config.xml; set datalink properly and explain how to build, upload, execute + print screens}

Add a joystick

{TODO add calibration steps}

$ cd ~/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/joystick
$ make clean
$ make

In Paparazzi Center select Tool>>Joystick and make sure that the line looks like this:

/home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/joystick/input2ivy -ac orange2 extreme_3d_pro.xml 

where '/sergiu' must be replaced with your user, 'orange2' with the name of your A/C and 'extreme_3d_pro.xml' with the name of your joystick.

Edited ~/paparazzi/conf/conf.xml .

opened tools: server /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/tmtc/server gcs /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/cockpit/gcs data link /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/tmtc/link -udp joystick /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/joystick/input2ivy -ac ardrone2_sdk extreme_3d_pro.xml messages /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/ground_segment/tmtc/messages real-time plotter /home/sergiu/paparazzi/sw/logalizer/plotter Notes: wireless connection in between the drone and laptop is required for data link.

Testing

{TODO: Describe here a first run with Paparazzi Sim}

onboard video

System identification

$ cat /proc/bus/input/devices

output

I: Bus=0019 Vendor=0000 Product=0006 Version=0000
N: Name="Video Bus"
P: Phys=LNXVIDEO/video/input0
S: Sysfs=/devices/LNXSYSTM:00/LNXSYBUS:00/PNP0A08:00/LNXVIDEO:00/input/input4
U: Uniq=
H: Handlers=kbd event4 
B: PROP=0
B: EV=3
B: KEY=3e000b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Install mplayer

$ sudo apt-get install mplayer2

to make sure that the program is working properly type

$ mplayer

and you are supposed to get a list of the options available.

Get image using mplayer, Terratec Grabby digitizer, 2.4GHz receiver, and a camera with 2.4 GHz transmitter:

$ dmesg

and look if your digitizer is registered as /dev/video0 which is the default or otherwise and replace bellow

$  mplayer tv:// -tv driver=v4l2:width=320:height=240:norm=NTSC:input=0:device=/dev/video0:noaudio

where

 inputs: 0 = Composite1; 1 = S-Video;

If 0 doesn't work for you, try with value 1. {TODO: video receiver connect description } {TODO: video digitizer a description }

Links

Links to related information