:TEP: 109
:Group: Core Working Group
:Type: Documentary
-:Status: Draft
+:Status: Final
:TinyOS-Version: 2.x
-:Author: David Gay, Phil Levis, Wei Hong, Joe Polastre, and Gilman Tolle
-
-:Draft-Created: 10-Jun-2006
-:Draft-Discuss: TinyOS Developer List <tinyos-devel at mail.millennium.berkeley.edu>
+:Author: David Gay, Philip Levis, Wei Hong, Joe Polastre, and Gilman Tolle
.. Note::
with a generic name for application authors who only care about the
general class of the sensor.
-This document takes no position on the meaning of the values returned
-by sensor drivers. They MAY be raw uninterpreted values or they MAY
-have some physical meaning. If a driver returns uninterpreted values,
-the driver MAY provide additional interfaces that would allow
-higher-level clients to obtain information needed to properly
-interpret the value.
+This document requires that sensor components specify the range (in
+bits) of values returned by sensor drivers, but takes no position on
+the meaning of these values. They MAY be raw uninterpreted values or
+they MAY have some physical meaning. If a driver returns uninterpreted
+values, the driver MAY provide additional interfaces that would allow
+higher-level clients to obtain information (e.g. calibration
+coefficients) needed to properly interpret the value.
2. Sensor HIL Components
====================================================================
The getSignificantBits() call MUST return the number of significant
bits in the reading. For example, a sensor reading taken from a 12-bit
-ADC MUST return the value "12".
+ADC would typically return the value 12 (it might return less if, e.g.,
+physical constraints limit the maximum A/D result to 10-bits).
Sensor driver components SHOULD be named according to the make and
model of the sensing device being presented. Using specific names
management by the user, following the conventions described in
[TEP115]_.
-- A Resource[] interface for requesting access to the device and
- possibly performing automated power management.
+- A `Resource` interface for requesting access to the device and
+ possibly performing automated power management, following
+ the conventions described in [TEP108]_ and [TEP115]_.
-- Any other interfaces needed to control the device.
+- Any other interfaces needed to control the device, e.g., to
+ read or write calibration coefficients.
For example::
// connect to the sensor's platform-dependent HPL here
}
-4. Directory Organization Guidelines
+4. Sensor Component Organization and Compiler Interaction Guidelines
====================================================================
-Because the same physical sensor can be attached to TinyOS platforms
-in many different ways, the organization of sensor drivers SHOULD
-reflect the distinction between sensor and sensor interconnect.
-
-Sensor components commonly exist at three levels:
-platform-independent, sensorboard-dependent, and
-platform-dependent. Factoring a sensor driver into these three pieces
-allows for greater code reuse when the same sensor is attached to
-different sensorboards or platforms.
-
-Platform-independent sensor driver components for a particular sensor,
-like protocol logic, when in the core TinyOS 2.x source tree, SHOULD
-be placed into "tos/chips/<sensor>", where <sensor> reflects the make
-and model of the sensor device being supported. When not a part of the
-core source tree, this directory can be placed anywhere as long as the
-nesC compiler recieves a `-I` directive pointing to the sensor's
-directory. However, not all sensors have a sufficiently large amount
-of platform-independent logic to justify a separate "chips"
-directory. Sensor chips are more likely to be digital sensors than
-analog sensors, for example.
-
-A sensor board is a collection of sensor components with a fixed name,
-intended for attachment to multiple platforms. Each sensor board MUST
-have its own directory named <sensorboard>. Default TinyOS 2.x sensor
-boards are placed in "tos/sensorboards/<sensorboard>", but sensor
-board directories can be placed anywhere as long as the nesC compiler
-receives a `-I` directive pointing to the sensor board's directory.
-
-Both sensors and sensor boards MUST have unique names. Case is
-significant, but two sensor boards MUST differ in more than case. This
-is necessary to support platforms where filename case differences are
-not significant.
-
-Each sensor board directory MUST contain a `.sensor` file. This file
-is a perl script which gets executed as part of the `ncc` nesC
-compiler frontend. It can add or modify any compile-time options
-necessary for a particular sensor board. It MAY modify the following
-perl variables, and MUST NOT modify any others:
-
-- @new_args: This is the array of arguments which will be passed to
- nescc. For instance, you might add an include directive to @new_args
- with push @new_args, `-Isomedir`. This could be used to include
- subdirectories.
-
-- @commonboards: This can be set to a list of sensor board names which
- will be added to the include path list. These sensor boards MUST be
- in tinyos-2.x/tos/sensorboards.
-
-If the sensor board wishes to define any C types or constants, it
-SHOULD place these in a file named <sensorboard>.h in the sensor
-board's directory.
-
-A sensor board directory MAY contain a "chips" directory, with
-subdirectories for each of the sensors connected to the sensor board.
-If a "chips" subdirectory is used, sensorboard-dependent driver
-components needed to connect platform-independent logic to a
-particular attachment for that sensor SHOULD be placed in
-"<sensorboard>/chips/<sensor>".
-
-Components needed to connect the platform-independent sensor driver
-components or sensorboard-dependent components to the hardware
-resources available on a particular platform SHOULD be placed in
-"tos/<platform>/chips/<sensor>". In addition, components for a sensor
-that only exists on a particular platform SHOULD be placed in a such a
+Sensors are associated either with a particular sensor board or with a
+particular platform. Both sensors and sensor boards MUST have unique
+names. Case is significant, but two sensor (or sensor board) names
+MUST differ in more than case. This is necessary to support platforms
+where filename case differences are not significant.
+
+Each sensor board MUST have its own directory whose name is the sensor
+board's unique name (referred to as <sensorboard> in the rest of this
+section). Default TinyOS 2.x sensor boards are placed in
+``tos/sensorboards/<sensorboard>``, but sensor board directories can be
+placed anywhere as long as the nesC compiler receives a ``-I`` directive
+pointing to the sensor board's directory. Each sensor board directory
+MUST contain a ``.sensor`` file (described below). If the
+sensor board wishes to define any C types or constants, it SHOULD
+place these in a file named ``<sensorboard>.h`` in the sensor board's
directory.
-Sensors that exist as part of a larger chip, like a MCU internal
-voltage sensor, SHOULD be placed in a subdirectory of the chip's
-directory. "tos/<chip>/sensors/<sensor>".
+A sensor board MAY contain components that override the default TinyOS
+*demo sensors*. This allows the sensor board to easily be used with
+TinyOS sample applications that use the demo sensors. If a sensor
+board wishes to override the default demo sensor:
+
+* It MUST provide a generic component named ``DemoSensorC`` with the
+ following signature::
+
+ provides interface Read<uint16_t>;
+ provides interface DeviceMetadata;
+
+* It MAY provide a generic component named ``DemoSensorNowC`` with the
+ following signature::
+
+ provides interface ReadNow<uint16_t>;
+ provides interface DeviceMetadata;
+
+ This component SHOULD sample the same sensor as ``DemoSensorC``.
+
+* It MAY provide a generic component named ``DemoSensorStreamC`` with the
+ following signature::
-The `.platform` and `.sensor` files need to include enough `-I`
-directives to locate all of the necessary components needed to support
-the sensors on a platform and/or sensorboard.
+ provides interface ReadStream<uint16_t>;
+ provides interface DeviceMetadata;
-All of these directory organization guidelines are only intended for
-code that will enter the core source tree. In general, sensor
-components can be placed anywhere as long as the nesC compiler
-receives enough `-I` directives to locate all of the necessary pieces.
+ This component SHOULD sample the same sensor as ``DemoSensorC``.
+
+These components MUST be an alias for one of the sensor board's usual
+sensors, though they change the precision of the sensor if necessary.
+For instance, if ``DemoSensorC`` is an alias for a 20-bit sensor that
+provides a ``Read<uint32_t>`` interface, ``DemoSensorC`` would still
+provide ``Read<uint16_t>`` and would include code to reduce the
+precision of the aliased sensor.
+
+
+4.1 Compiler Interaction
+------------------------
+
+When the ``ncc`` nesC compiler frontend is passed a ``-board=X`` option,
+it executes the ``.sensor`` file found in the sensor board directory
+``X``. This file is a perl script which can add or modify any
+compile-time options necessary for the sensor board. It MAY modify the
+following perl variables, and MUST NOT modify any others:
+
+- ``@includes``: This array contains the TinyOS search path, i.e., the
+ directories which will be passed to nescc (the TinyOS-agnostic nesC
+ compiler) as ``-I`` arguments. You MUST add to ``@includes`` any
+ directories needed to compile this sensor board's components. For
+ instance, if your sensor boards depends on support code found in
+ ``tos/chips/sht11``, you would add ``"%T/chips/sht11"`` to ``@includes``.
+
+- ``@new_args``: This is the array of arguments which will be passed to
+ nescc. You MUST add any arguments other than ``-I`` that are necessary
+ to compile your sensor board components to ``@new_args``.
+
+If a sensor is associated with a platform `P` rather than a sensor
+board, then that platform MUST ensure that, when compiling for
+platform `P`, all directories needed to compile that sensor's
+component are added to the TinyOS search path (see [TEP131]_ for
+information on how to set up a TinyOS platform).
+
+4.2 Sensor Components
+---------------------
+
+A particular sensor is typically supported by many components,
+including the HIL and HAL components from Sections 2 and 3, A/D
+conversion components (for analog sensors), digital bus components
+(e.g., SPI, for digital sensors), system services (timers, resource
+and power management, ...), glue components (to connect sensors,
+sensor boards and platforms), etc. These components can be divided
+into three classes: sensorboard-dependent, platform-dependent and
+platform-independent. The sensorboard and platform MUST ensure
+(Section 4.1) that all these components can be found at compile-time.
+
+Because the same physical sensor can be used on many platforms or
+sensor boards, and attached in many different ways, to maximize code
+reuse the organization of sensor drivers SHOULD reflect the
+distinction between sensor and sensor interconnect. The sensor
+components SHOULD be platform-independent, while the sensor
+interconnect components are typically sensorboard or
+platform-dependent. However, some sensors (e.g. analong sensors) will
+not have a sufficiently large amount of platform-independent logic to
+justify creating platform-independent components.
+
+The following guidelines specify how to organize sensor and sensor
+interconnect components within TinyOS's directory hierarchy. These
+guidelines are only relevant to components that are part of the core
+source tree. The string ``<sensor>`` SHOULD reflect the make and model
+of the sensor device.
+
+- Platform-independent sensor components that exist as part of a
+ larger chip, like a MCU internal voltage sensor, SHOULD be placed in
+ a subdirectory of the chip's directory
+ ``tos/<chip>/sensors/<sensor>``.
+
+- Other platform-independent sensor components SHOULD be placed
+ in ``tos/chips/<sensor>``.
+
+- Sensorboard-dependent sensor and sensor interconnect components
+ SHOULD be placed either in the ``<sensorboard>`` directory or in a
+ ``<sensorboard>/chips/<sensor>`` directory.
+
+- Platform-dependent sensor and sensor interconnect components SHOULD
+ be placed in ``tos/<platform>/chips/<sensor>``.
5. Authors' Addresses
====================================================================
====================================================================
.. [TEP2] TEP 2: Hardware Abstraction Architecture
+.. [TEP108] TEP 108: Resource Arbitration
.. [TEP114] TEP 114: SIDs: Source and Sink Indepedent Drivers
.. [TEP115] TEP 115: Power Management of Non-Virtualized Devices
+.. [TEP131] TEP 131: Creating a New Platform for TinyOS 2.x
Appendix A: Sensor Driver Examples
====================================================================
tos/platforms/telosa/chips/s1087/HamamatsuS1087ParC.nc
+ // HIL for the HamamatsuS1087 analog photodiode sensor
generic configuration HamamatsuS1087ParC() {
provides interface Read<uint16_t>;
provides interface ReadStream<uint16_t>;
provides interface DeviceMetadata;
}
implementation {
+ // Create a new A/D client and connect it to the Hamamatsu S1087 A/D
+ // parameters
components new AdcReadClientC();
Read = AdcReadClientC;
#include "Msp430Adc12.h"
+ // A/D parameters for the Hamamatsu - see the MSP430 A/D converter manual,
+ // Hamamatsu specification, Telos hardware schematic and TinyOS MSP430
+ // A/D converter component specifications for the explanation of these
+ // parameters
module HamamatsuS1087ParP {
provides interface AdcConfigure<const msp430adc12_channel_config_t*>;
provides interface DeviceMetadata;
}
implementation {
-
msp430adc12_channel_config_t config = {
inch: INPUT_CHANNEL_A4,
sref: REFERENCE_VREFplus_AVss,
tos/platforms/telosa/UserButtonC.nc
+ // HIL for the user button sensor on Telos-family motes
configuration UserButtonC {
- provides interface Get<bool>;
- provides interface Notify<bool>;
+ provides interface Get<bool>; // Get button status
+ provides interface Notify<bool>; // Get button-press notifications
provides interface DeviceMetadata;
}
implementation {
+ // Simply connect the button logic to the button HPL
components UserButtonLogicP;
Get = UserButtonLogicP;
Notify = UserButtonLogicP;
tos/platforms/telosa/UserButtonLogicP.nc
+ // Transform the low-level (GeneralIO and GpioInterrupt) interface to the
+ // button to high-level SID interfaces
module UserButtonLogicP {
provides interface Get<bool>;
provides interface Notify<bool>;
command error_t Notify.enable() {
call GeneralIO.makeInput();
+ // If the pin is high, we need to trigger on falling edge interrupt, and
+ // vice-versa
if ( call GeneralIO.get() ) {
m_pinHigh = TRUE;
return call GpioInterrupt.enableFallingEdge();
return call GpioInterrupt.disable();
}
+ // Button changed, signal user (in a task) and update interrupt detection
async event void GpioInterrupt.fired() {
call GpioInterrupt.disable();
tos/platforms/telosa/HplUserButtonC.nc
+ // HPL for the user button sensor on Telos-family motes - just provides
+ // access to the I/O and interrupt control for the pin to which the
+ // button is connected
configuration HplUserButtonC {
provides interface GeneralIO;
provides interface GpioInterrupt;
tos/platforms/telosa/chips/sht11/SensirionSht11C.nc
+ // HIL interface to Sensirion SHT11 temperature and humidity sensor
generic configuration SensirionSht11C() {
provides interface Read<uint16_t> as Temperature;
provides interface DeviceMetadata as TemperatureDeviceMetadata;
provides interface DeviceMetadata as HumidityDeviceMetadata;
}
implementation {
+ // Instantiate the module providing the HIL interfaces
components new SensirionSht11ReaderP();
Temperature = SensirionSht11ReaderP.Temperature;
Humidity = SensirionSht11ReaderP.Humidity;
HumidityDeviceMetadata = SensirionSht11ReaderP.HumidityDeviceMetadata;
+ // And connect it to the HAL component for the Sensirion SHT11
components HalSensirionSht11C;
enum { TEMP_KEY = unique("Sht11.Resource") };
tos/chips/sht11/SensirionSht11ReaderP.nc
+ // Convert Sensirion SHT11 HAL to HIL interfaces for a single
+ // client, performing automatic resource arbitration
generic module SensirionSht11ReaderP() {
provides interface Read<uint16_t> as Temperature;
provides interface DeviceMetadata as TemperatureDeviceMetadata;
provides interface Read<uint16_t> as Humidity;
provides interface DeviceMetadata as HumidityDeviceMetadata;
+ // Using separate resource interfaces for temperature and humidity allows
+ // temperature and humidity measurements to be requested simultaneously
+ // (if a single Resource interface was used, a request for temperature would
+ // prevent any humidity requests until the temperature measurement was complete)
uses interface Resource as TempResource;
uses interface Resource as HumResource;
uses interface SensirionSht11 as Sht11Temp;
}
implementation {
command error_t Temperature.read() {
- call TempResource.request();
- return SUCCESS;
+ // Start by requesting access to the SHT11
+ return call TempResource.request();
}
event void TempResource.granted() {
error_t result;
+ // If the HAL measurement fails, release the SHT11 and signal failure
if ((result = call Sht11Temp.measureTemperature()) != SUCCESS) {
call TempResource.release();
signal Temperature.readDone( result, 0 );
}
event void Sht11Temp.measureTemperatureDone( error_t result, uint16_t val ) {
+ // Release the SHT11 and signal the result
call TempResource.release();
signal Temperature.readDone( result, val );
}
command uint8_t TemperatureDeviceMetadata.getSignificantBits() { return 14; }
command error_t Humidity.read() {
- call HumResource.request();
- return SUCCESS;
+ // Start by requesting access to the SHT11
+ return call HumResource.request();
}
event void HumResource.granted() {
error_t result;
+ // If the HAL measurement fails, release the SHT11 and signal failure
if ((result = call Sht11Hum.measureHumidity()) != SUCCESS) {
call HumResource.release();
signal Humidity.readDone( result, 0 );
}
event void Sht11Hum.measureHumidityDone( error_t result, uint16_t val ) {
+ // Release the SHT11 and signal the result
call HumResource.release();
signal Humidity.readDone( result, val );
}
command uint8_t HumidityDeviceMetadata.getSignificantBits() { return 12; }
+ // Dummy handlers for unused portions of the HAL interface
event void Sht11Temp.resetDone( error_t result ) { }
event void Sht11Temp.measureHumidityDone( error_t result, uint16_t val ) { }
event void Sht11Temp.readStatusRegDone( error_t result, uint8_t val ) { }
event void Sht11Hum.readStatusRegDone( error_t result, uint8_t val ) { }
event void Sht11Hum.writeStatusRegDone( error_t result ) { }
+ // We need default handlers as a client may wire to only the Temperature
+ // sensor or only the Humidity sensor
default event void Temperature.readDone( error_t result, uint16_t val ) { }
default event void Humidity.readDone( error_t result, uint16_t val ) { }
}
tos/platforms/telosa/chips/sht11/HalSensirionSht11C.nc
+ // HAL interface to Sensirion SHT11 temperature and humidity sensor
configuration HalSensirionSht11C {
+ // The SHT11 HAL uses resource arbitration to allow the sensor to shared
+ // between multiple clients and for automatic power management (the SHT11
+ // is switched off when no clients are waiting to use it)
provides interface Resource[ uint8_t client ];
provides interface SensirionSht11[ uint8_t client ];
}
implementation {
+ // The HAL implementation logic
components new SensirionSht11LogicP();
SensirionSht11 = SensirionSht11LogicP;
+ // And it's wiring to the SHT11 HPL - the actual resource management is
+ // provided at the HPL layer
components HplSensirionSht11C;
Resource = HplSensirionSht11C.Resource;
SensirionSht11LogicP.DATA -> HplSensirionSht11C.DATA;
::
tos/platforms/telosa/chips/sht11/HplSensirionSht11C.nc
-
+
+ // Low-level, platform-specific glue-code to access the SHT11 sensor found
+ // on telos-family motes - here the HPL just provides resource management
+ // and access to the SHT11 data, clock and interrupt pins
configuration HplSensirionSht11C {
provides interface Resource[ uint8_t id ];
provides interface GeneralIO as DATA;
provides interface GpioInterrupt as InterruptDATA;
}
implementation {
+ // Pins used to access the SHT11
components HplMsp430GeneralIOC;
components new Msp430GpioC() as DATAM;
components new Msp430GpioC() as PWRM;
PWRM -> HplMsp430GeneralIOC.Port17;
+ // HPL logic for switching the SHT11 on and off
components HplSensirionSht11P;
HplSensirionSht11P.PWR -> PWRM;
HplSensirionSht11P.DATA -> DATAM;
InterruptDATAC.HplInterrupt -> HplMsp430InterruptC.Port15;
InterruptDATA = InterruptDATAC.Interrupt;
+ // The arbiter and power manager for the SHT11
components new FcfsArbiterC( "Sht11.Resource" ) as Arbiter;
Resource = Arbiter;
tos/platforms/telosa/chips/sht11/HplSensirionSht11P.nc
+ // Switch the SHT11 on and off, and handle the 11ms warmup delay
module HplSensirionSht11P {
+ // The SplitControl interface powers the SHT11 on or off (it's automatically
+ // called by the SHT11 power manager, see HplSensirionSht11C)
+ // We use a SplitControl interface as we need to wait 11ms for the sensor to
+ // warm up
provides interface SplitControl;
uses interface Timer<TMilli>;
uses interface GeneralIO as PWR;
task void stopTask();
command error_t SplitControl.start() {
+ // Power SHT11 on and wait for 11ms
call PWR.makeOutput();
call PWR.set();
call Timer.startOneShot( 11 );
}
command error_t SplitControl.stop() {
+ // Power the SHT11 off
call SCK.makeInput();
call SCK.clr();
call DATA.makeInput();
signal SplitControl.stopDone( SUCCESS );
}
}
+
+4. MDA100 Sensor Board Directory Organization
+---------------------------------------------
+
+Here we show the organization of the sensor board directory for the
+mica-family Xbow MDA100CA and MDA100CB sensor boards, which have
+temperature and light sensors. It is found in
+``tos/sensorboards/mda100``::
+
+ ./tos/sensorboards/mda100:
+ .sensor # Compiler configuration
+ ArbitratedPhotoDeviceP.nc # Light sensor support component
+ ArbitratedTempDeviceP.nc # Temperature sensor support component
+ DemoSensorC.nc # Override TinyOS's default sensor
+ PhotoC.nc # Light sensor HIL
+ PhotoImplP.nc # Light sensor support component
+ PhotoTempConfigC.nc # Shared support component
+ PhotoTempConfigP.nc # Shared support component
+ SharedAnalogDeviceC.nc # Shared support component
+ SharedAnalogDeviceP.nc # Shared support component
+ TempC.nc # Temperature Sensor HIL
+ ca/TempImplP.nc # Temperature sensor support component
+ # (MDA100CA board)
+ cb/TempImplP.nc # Temperature sensor support component
+ # (MDA100CB board)
+ mda100.h # Header file for mda100
+
+This sensor board provides only a HIL (PhotoC and TempC components), and overrides the
+TinyOS demo sensor (DemoSensorC). The demo sensor is an alias for PhotoC.
+
+The two forms of the mda100 differ only by the wiring of the
+temperature sensor. The user has to specify which form of the sensor
+board is in use by providing a ``-I%T/sensorboards/mda100/ca`` or
+``-I%T/sensorboards/mda100/cb`` compiler option.
+
+This sensor board relies on a platform-provided ``MicaBusC`` component
+that specifies how the mica-family sensor board bus is connected to
+the microcontroller.