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Raspberry Pi and MPU-9250 setup for the truck project

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Introduction

This repository contains a framework to extract data acquired from sensors connected to a RPi, using the MQTT protocol, as well as provide an easy way to access those data points using a REST API.

For this example we are using a remote control LEGO Truck (Mercedes-Benz Arocs) in conjunction with a RPi connected to an Inertial Measurement Unit(IMU), a Camera module and a Sonar Sensor Module.

Example Diagram

Requirements and connection for data streaming

Required hardware

  • MPU-9250 (IMU);
  • PiCam V2 Camera Module;
  • HC-SR05 Sonar Module;
  • 1kOhm resistor
  • 2kOhm resistor
  • Micro SD card + Adaptor to connect to your laptop;
  • Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+ (RPi) + Charger;
  • Keyboard + mouse + screen;
  • Jumper wires to connect sensor to RPi (some other options are available);

The sources that were used to set up the RPi were mainly:

So it is expected that most of the instructions will be similar to the ones you can find there.


Setting up the RPi

Step 1: OS setup on RPi

In order to setup your RPi follow the instructions here. In the end you should have your RPi up and running with its own OS.

Step 2: Connect the cables

The sensor will have the GND, VCC, SDA and SCL pins connected to the RPi. Here you need to be careful to connect the VCC to the right pin in the RPi otherwise you can damage it. So, following the diagram:

RPi diagram

You should connect:

Raspberry Pi (RPi) Sensor MPU-9250 Sensor HC-SR05
3.3 VDC Power - 1 VCC ----
5 VDC Power - 2 ---- VCC
GPIO 2 SDA1 (I2C) - 3 SDA ----
GPIO 3 SCL1 (I2C) - 5 SCL ----
GPIO 17 - 11 ---- TRIG
GPIO 27 - 11 ---- ECHO Voltage Divider - Check this
Ground - 9 GND GND

Setting up MQTT Broker

MQTT is a lightweight, low power, easy to implement publish/subscribe protocol which makes it ideal for the M2M(Machine to Machine) communication performed by IOT devices. If you are new to MQTT I recommend reading this article.

Step 1: Set up your MQTT Broker

You can use a free online mqtt broker such as the Mosquitto Test Broker, although it is not recommended, since you won't have any control over the broker, and anyone can listen and publish to your topics.

For this example we are using a MOSQUITTO broker set-up in the cloud, and you can set-up your own following this tutorial

Step 2: Testing the MQTT Broker

In order to check if the MQTT broker was setup correctly you can use the mosquitto_pub tool to publish to a test topic.

First install mosquitto

$ apt-get install mosquitto mosquitto-clients

Then open another terminal window and subscribe to the topic

$ mosquitto_sub -h YourBrokerIp -t test -v

And in the first terminal window publish something to the test topic

$ mosquitto_pub -h YourBrokerIp -t test -m "Hello World"

If everything is working correctly you should see the message on the terminal running the subscriber.

Step 3: Configure the MQTT Client

In this repository you can find the configuration file. There you can add all the information relative to your MQTT broker and the mqttClient should work without further modifications.


Setting up new components

New components can be easily set up by implementing the componentClass which provides the constructor and the mqttHandler for communication with the broker using the methods provided by the Paho-MQTT Library by the Eclipse foundation.

In order for the components to work correctly with the proposed system, you are required to implement the setup method and one of the methods described below:

Data acquisition components

If your component is supposed to acquire data from a sensor and relay it to the network using MQTT, you should implement the acquireData method, which will be called according to the polling rate defined on the component. Furthermore it would be useful to create a structure for the payload by implementing the gen_payload_message method.

For an example of this implementation check the imuClass

Parallel streaming components

If your component is supposed to run on a parallel loop, such as a camera streaming video over the internet, you should include the necessary code in the run method. The main.py will then spawn a new thread to execute your components run code.

ComponentsDiagram

MQTT topics framework

In order to maintain consistency, all new topics should follow the framework:

project/component

Eg. truck1/imu : JSON payload containing the data given by the IMU in truck1.
{
    'accel': {
        'x': "X-axis value of the accelerometer",
        'y': "Y-axis value of the accelerometer",
        'z': "Z-axis value of the accelerometer"
    },
    'gyro': {
        'x': "X-axis value of the gyroscope",
        'y': "Y-axis value of the gyroscope",
        'z': "Z-axis value of the gyroscope"
    },
    'timestamp': "Timestamp of the measurement"
}

Which is made easier by the fact that the componentClass receives the root topic during initialization and exposes the method set_topic to be called during the component setup, in order to set the name and formulate the topic for that component.

Adding the components to the system

After the component has been set up and tested on its own, you can run it in parallel to the other components by simply altering the componentDic and adding its sampling rate in seconds on the configuration file, as so:

componentDic = {"imuClass" : "Imu", "Name Of The File", "Name Of The Class"}
componentsSamplingIntevalInSeconds = {"imuClass": 0.1, "motorClass": 10.0}

And the main.py will import it, create the object and invoke the run method of all the components in parallel

Note: The effect this has on reading several sensors has yet to be tested, although it shouldn't be a problem due to the quad core nature of the RPi3B+.

The root/components topic

The componentClass provides a method to publish a JSON with information related to the configuration of the component to the topic root/components. This method is called after they are setup in the main.py, so you can check the information for all the current components running on that system by subscribing to that topic.


Setting up the IMU data streaming

Step 1: Install libraries and connect the sensor

Create and cd into the folder where the whole project will sit (and create a scripts folder that will be used later as our working directory):

$ mkdir truck_project_db
$ cd truck_project_db
$ mkdir scripts

Then install the I2C software

$ sudo apt-get install i2c-tools

In the Menu (top left corner) go to Preferences > Raspberry Pi Configuration > Interfaces and enable i2c. This last step requires a reboot.

$ sudo reboot

Verify if the sensor is connected by running

$ sudo i2cdetect -y 1

the number 68 should show up in the grid, corresponding to the sensor's default address.

The following installations are needed:

$ sudo apt-get install cmake
$ sudo apt-get install python-dev
$ sudo apt-get install octave

If you get an error related with jre-headless run the following:

$ sudo apt-get purge openjdk-8-jre-headless
$ sudo apt-get install openjdk-8-jre-headless
$ sudo apt-get install openjdk-8-jre

Next clone the repository that has the tools to interface with the sensor:

$ git clone https://github.com/richardstechnotes/RTIMULib2.git

This repository contains several different apps that might be worth exploring. In our case we are going to install only the app that will help us to calibrate the sensor:

$ cd RTIMULib2/Linux/RTIMULibCal
$ make -j4
$ sudo make install

Then we need to copy RTEllipsoidFit folder into a folder that is at the same level as our working directory (requirement stated in the RTIMULib repo) - in our case scripts folder:

$ cp -r /home/pi/truck_project_db/RTIMULib2/RTEllipsoidFit/ /home/pi/truck_project_db/
$ cd /home/pi/truck_project_db/RTEllipsoidFit/

Follows some edits stated in the RTIMULib's repo before we can proceed to calibrate our sensor.

  • edit file /etc/modules

    $ sudo vi /etc/modules

    this file should contain the following lines uncommented / added:

      i2c-dev
      i2c-bcm2708
    
  • edit/create file /etc/udev/rules.d/90-i2c.rules:

    $ sudo vi /etc/udev/rules.d/90-i2c.rules

    add the following line to the file:

      KERNEL==“i2c-[0-7]”,MODE=“0666” in /etc/udev/rules.d/90-i2c.rules
    
  • edit/create file /boot/config.txt:

    $ sudo vi /boot/config.txt

    and add at the bottom of the file the line

      dtparam=i2c1_baudrate=400000
    

After all the edits reboot your RPi:

$ sudo reboot

Step 2: Calibrating MPU-9250

From /home/pi/truck_project_db/RTEllipsoidFit/ run

$ RTIMULibCal

and follow the instructions to calibrate the sensor. Then copy the file resulting from the calibration RTIMULib.ini to the working directory:

$ cp RTIMULib.ini /home/pi/truck_project_db/scripts

in order to change the sampling rate it is advised to do so in the file RTIMULib.ini. In this particular example we tuned the following parameters:

MPU9250GyroAccelSampleRate=5
MPU9250CompassSampleRate=5
MPU9250GyroLpf=2
MPU9250AccelLpf=2

Step 3: Visualizing the sensor (optional)

In order to evaluate if the calibration process went well we will use a visualization tool RTIMULibDemoGL that will read the sensor data and show the axis orientation in real-time. In order to setup the RTIMULibDemoGL app you need to install the following:

$ sudo apt-get install cmake
$ sudo apt-get install libqt4-dev

Then we can proceed with the installation of the app:

$ cd /home/pi/RTIMULib2/Linux/RTIMULibDemoGL
$ qmake
$ make -j4
$ sudo make install

Now if you want to try out and visualize your sensor working run

$ RTIMULibDemoGL

Other apps are available in /RTIMULib2/Linux/. Check out its repo for description of the apps and how to set them up.

Step 4: Streaming the IMU data

To begin streaming the IMU data to the MQTT broker, run the imuClass.py. In this case the data will be published to the topic /truck1/imu with the following format:

{
    'accel': {
        'x': "X-axis value of the accelerometer",
        'y': "Y-axis value of the accelerometer",
        'z': "Z-axis value of the accelerometer"
    },
    'gyro': {
        'x': "X-axis value of the gyroscope",
        'y': "Y-axis value of the gyroscope",
        'z': "Z-axis value of the gyroscope"
    },
    'timestamp': "Timestamp of the measurement"
}

Nevertheless you can change the topics to whatever fits your project best.


Setting up the communication with the S-BRICK

The LEGO Truck uses a S-BRICK with a bluetooth interface to allow the user to control the motors using the S-BRICK app. Since our objective is to have all the components communicating using MQTT we can use the open source framework created by Benson Hsu to implement the bluetooth communication as well as listening for commands sent via MQTT.

Step 1: Install and setup the SBrick Framework

Follow the instructions contained in the SBrick Framework repo and save your SBrick MAC address, it will be used in the next step.

Note: I highly recommend using the branch patch-01 from this fork of the repository since it adds support for authentication. It also corrects some errors that were causing the disconnection of the SBrick and further crashing of the program. A pull request has already been made to the master repository, but as of time of writing hasn't been accepted

Step 2: Run the SBrick server

Start the sbrick daemon with:

$ sudo python3 sbrick_server.py --connect --broker-ip YourBrokerIP --broker-port YourBrokerPort --log-level debug --sbrick-id YourSBrickMAC

Step 3: Communicate with the SBrick

The framework offers an array of messages and communications, which can be explored to the fullest in the future, but since we are only interested in controlling the motors only two are relevant:

# Publish this to sbrick/01/sp/drive
drive_msgs ={
    "sbrick_id": "YourSbrickMac",  #"string. SBrick ID. <sbrick MAC>",
    "channel": "02",  #" string. hex string. the LEGO power function port you want to drive. <00|01|02|03>. In our case channel 00 is for turning, and channel 02 is for driving straight",
    "direction": "01", #"string. clockwise or counterclockwise. <00|01>",
    "power": "ff", #"string. hex string. FF means 100% speed. <00~FF>",
    "exec_time": 5556 # "number. seconds. 5566 means forever."
    }

# Publish this to sbrick/01/sp/stop
stop_msg ={
    "sbrick_id": "YourSbrickMac",  #"string. SBrick ID. <sbrick MAC>",
    "channels": ['00', '01','02','03']  #" string. hex string. the LEGO power function port you want to drive. <00|01|02|03>",
}

get_adc = {
    'status': 0,
    'req_msg': '{
        "sbrick_id": "Your SBrick"
    }',
    'resp_topic': 'sbrick/01/rr_resp/get_adc'
}

Step 4: Testing the controls

In order to test the drive you can use the controller provided in rcController.py and follow the instructions provided there.

Step 5: Getting the Temperature and Battery Voltage of the Sbrick (Optional)

You can also get information on battery voltage and the temperature of the SBrick by publishing to the topic /sbrick/01/rr/get_adc the following message

get_adc = {
    'status': 0,
    'req_msg': '{
        "sbrick_id": "Your SBrick"
    }',
    'resp_topic': 'Topic to get the response' #usually '/sbrick/01/rr_resp/get_adc'
}

Setting up the Camera

Step 1

With the RPi turned off, connect the camera.

Step 2

Go to the terminal and type

    sudo raspi-config

Step 3

Go to Interfacing-Options -> Camera -> Enable and reboot

Step 4

Test the camera with

    raspistill -v -o test.jpg

Setting up the Proximity Sensors

Follow this guide on the PiHut in order to mount the Proximity Sensor

Note: Instead of using the GPIO 23 for the TRIG and 24 for the ECHO, use the ports 17 for the TRIG and 27 for the ECHO


Running the program

After all the setting up is done just run main.py like

python main.py

Worth noting

  • The sampling rate defined for the components is not precise, there is always an error of around +2% on the actual sampling interval. For example, the system is supposed to read and publish the IMU values every 12ms, but the delta between two timestamps is not 12ms, but something around 12.11ms. Using higher sampling intervals such as 1 second yields similar results of around 1-2% error. This may be an issue related to the way the scheduler of the RPi OS functions.

  • It takes roughly 0.04ms to send the request and receive a response from the from the IMU.

  • The code for the proximity sensors returns a moving average of the last 10 measurements in order to filter noise, since it is sampling at a high rate and small sample the reaction to change of the sensor is not very much affected, while the measurement results were shown to improve a lot.

  • The servo motor in our unit is not working properly when tuning in one of the directions, I've applied a software "fix" on the API that sends the drive commands, but it is not perfect, the solution is to replace the servo motor or follow this post to fix it.


Worth checking

Setting up a script to run on RPi Boot


Contributing

Review the contributing guidelines before you make your awesome contribution


License

This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license. See LICENSE

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Raspberry Pi and MPU-9250 setup for the truck project

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