/* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include #include extern const AP_HAL::HAL& hal; #ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_BOARD_PX4FMU_V4 #define BOARD_RSSI_DEFAULT 1 #define BOARD_RSSI_ANA_PIN 11 #define BOARD_RSSI_ANA_PIN_HIGH 3.3f #else #define BOARD_RSSI_DEFAULT 0 #define BOARD_RSSI_ANA_PIN 0 #define BOARD_RSSI_ANA_PIN_HIGH 5.0f #endif const AP_Param::GroupInfo AP_RSSI::var_info[] = { // @Param: TYPE // @DisplayName: RSSI Type // @Description: Radio Receiver RSSI type. If your radio receiver supports RSSI of some kind, set it here, then set its associated RSSI_XXXXX parameters, if any. // @Values: 0:Disabled,1:AnalogPin,2:RCChannelPwmValue // @User: Standard AP_GROUPINFO("TYPE", 0, AP_RSSI, rssi_type, BOARD_RSSI_DEFAULT), // @Param: ANA_PIN // @DisplayName: Receiver RSSI analog sensing pin // @Description: This selects an analog pin where the receiver RSSI voltage will be read. // @Values: 0:APM2 A0,1:APM2 A1,13:APM2 A13,11:Pixracer,13:Pixhawk ADC4,14:Pixhawk ADC3,15: Pixhawk ADC6,103:Pixhawk SBUS // @User: Standard AP_GROUPINFO("ANA_PIN", 1, AP_RSSI, rssi_analog_pin, BOARD_RSSI_ANA_PIN), // @Param: PIN_LOW // @DisplayName: Receiver RSSI voltage low // @Description: This is the voltage value that the radio receiver will put on the RSSI_ANA_PIN when the signal strength is the weakest. Since some radio receivers put out inverted values from what you might otherwise expect, this isn't necessarily a lower value than RSSI_PIN_HIGH. // @Units: Volt // @Increment: 0.01 // @Range: 0 5.0 // @User: Standard AP_GROUPINFO("PIN_LOW", 2, AP_RSSI, rssi_analog_pin_range_low, 0.0f), // @Param: PIN_HIGH // @DisplayName: Receiver RSSI voltage high // @Description: This is the voltage value that the radio receiver will put on the RSSI_ANA_PIN when the signal strength is the strongest. Since some radio receivers put out inverted values from what you might otherwise expect, this isn't necessarily a higher value than RSSI_PIN_LOW. // @Units: Volt // @Increment: 0.01 // @Range: 0 5.0 // @User: Standard AP_GROUPINFO("PIN_HIGH", 3, AP_RSSI, rssi_analog_pin_range_high, BOARD_RSSI_ANA_PIN_HIGH), // @Param: CHANNEL // @DisplayName: Receiver RSSI channel number // @Description: The channel number where RSSI will be output by the radio receiver (5 and above). // @Units: // @User: Standard AP_GROUPINFO("CHANNEL", 4, AP_RSSI, rssi_channel, 0), // @Param: CHAN_LOW // @DisplayName: Receiver RSSI PWM low value // @Description: This is the PWM value that the radio receiver will put on the RSSI_CHANNEL when the signal strength is the weakest. Since some radio receivers put out inverted values from what you might otherwise expect, this isn't necessarily a lower value than RSSI_CHAN_HIGH. // @Units: Microseconds // @Range: 0 2000 // @User: Standard AP_GROUPINFO("CHAN_LOW", 5, AP_RSSI, rssi_channel_low_pwm_value, 1000), // @Param: CHAN_HIGH // @DisplayName: Receiver RSSI PWM high value // @Description: This is the PWM value that the radio receiver will put on the RSSI_CHANNEL when the signal strength is the strongest. Since some radio receivers put out inverted values from what you might otherwise expect, this isn't necessarily a higher value than RSSI_CHAN_LOW. // @Units: Microseconds // @Range: 0 2000 // @User: Standard AP_GROUPINFO("CHAN_HIGH", 6, AP_RSSI, rssi_channel_high_pwm_value, 2000), AP_GROUPEND }; // Public // ------ // constructor AP_RSSI::AP_RSSI() { AP_Param::setup_object_defaults(this, var_info); } // destructor AP_RSSI::~AP_RSSI(void) { } // Initialize the rssi object and prepare it for use void AP_RSSI::init() { // a pin for reading the receiver RSSI voltage. The scaling by 0.25 // is to take the 0 to 1024 range down to an 8 bit range for MAVLink rssi_analog_source = hal.analogin->channel(ANALOG_INPUT_NONE); } // Read the receiver RSSI value as a float 0.0f - 1.0f. // 0.0 represents weakest signal, 1.0 represents maximum signal. float AP_RSSI::read_receiver_rssi() { // Default to 0 RSSI float receiver_rssi = 0.0f; switch (rssi_type) { case RssiType::RSSI_DISABLED : receiver_rssi = 0.0f; break; case RssiType::RSSI_ANALOG_PIN : receiver_rssi = read_pin_rssi(); break; case RssiType::RSSI_RC_CHANNEL_VALUE : receiver_rssi = read_channel_rssi(); break; default : receiver_rssi = 0.0f; break; } return receiver_rssi; } // Read the receiver RSSI value as an 8-bit integer // 0 represents weakest signal, 255 represents maximum signal. uint8_t AP_RSSI::read_receiver_rssi_uint8() { return read_receiver_rssi() * 255; } // Private // ------- // read the RSSI value from an analog pin - returns float in range 0.0 to 1.0 float AP_RSSI::read_pin_rssi() { rssi_analog_source->set_pin(rssi_analog_pin); float current_analog_voltage = rssi_analog_source->voltage_average(); return scale_and_constrain_float_rssi(current_analog_voltage, rssi_analog_pin_range_low, rssi_analog_pin_range_high); } // read the RSSI value from a PWM value on a RC channel float AP_RSSI::read_channel_rssi() { uint16_t rssi_channel_value = hal.rcin->read(rssi_channel-1); float channel_rssi = scale_and_constrain_float_rssi(rssi_channel_value, rssi_channel_low_pwm_value, rssi_channel_high_pwm_value); return channel_rssi; } // Scale and constrain a float rssi value to 0.0 to 1.0 range float AP_RSSI::scale_and_constrain_float_rssi(float current_rssi_value, float low_rssi_range, float high_rssi_range) { float rssi_value_range = fabsf(high_rssi_range - low_rssi_range); if (is_zero(rssi_value_range)) { // User range isn't meaningful, return 0 for RSSI (and avoid divide by zero) return 0.0f; } // Note that user-supplied ranges may be inverted and we accommodate that here. // (Some radio receivers put out inverted ranges for RSSI-type values). bool range_is_inverted = (high_rssi_range < low_rssi_range); // Constrain to the possible range - values outside are clipped to ends current_rssi_value = constrain_float(current_rssi_value, range_is_inverted ? high_rssi_range : low_rssi_range, range_is_inverted ? low_rssi_range : high_rssi_range); if (range_is_inverted) { // Swap values so we can treat them as low->high uniformly in the code that follows current_rssi_value = high_rssi_range + fabsf(current_rssi_value - low_rssi_range); std::swap(low_rssi_range, high_rssi_range); } // Scale the value down to a 0.0 - 1.0 range float rssi_value_scaled = (current_rssi_value - low_rssi_range) / rssi_value_range; // Make absolutely sure the value is clipped to the 0.0 - 1.0 range. This should handle things if the // value retrieved falls outside the user-supplied range. return constrain_float(rssi_value_scaled, 0.0f, 1.0f); }