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telemetry

Telemetry protocol with spec, transmit-side library, and visualization client.

Introduction

The telemetry library is designed to provide a simple and efficient way to get data off an embedded platform and both visualized and logged on a PC. The intended use case is streaming data from an embedded system to a PC through an UART interface with either a Bluetooth or UART bridge. Since data definitions are transmitted, users only need to alter code on the transmitting side, eliminating the need to keep both transmitter and visualizer definitions in sync.

The server-side (transmitter) code is written in C++ and designed with embedded constraints in mind (no dynamic memory allocation is done). Templated classes allow most native data types and a hardware abstraction layer allows multiple platforms (currently Arduino and mBed).

The client-side (plotter / visualizer) code is written in Python. A basic telemetry protocol parser is provided that separates and interprets telemetry packets and other data from the received stream. A matplotlib-based GUI is also provided on top of the parser that visualizes numeric data as a line plot and array-numeric data as a waterfall / spectrogram style plot.

The protocol spec defines a binary wire format along with packet structures for data and headers, allowing for other implementations of either side that interoperate.

Changelog

From Version 0.0 (Spring 2015)

  • Platform automatically detected by just including telemetry.h, no need to manually specify telemetry-arduino.h or telemetry-mbed.h.

Quickstart

Plotter setup

Telemetry depends on these:

  • Python (ideally 3.4 or later, may also work on 2.7)
  • numpy 1.9.2 or later
  • matplotlib 1.4.3 or later
  • PySerial

On Windows

For Windows platforms, Python, numpy, matplotlib and can be downloaded.

Other software can be installed through pip, Python's package manager. pip is located in your Python/Scripts folder, and the installation commands for the necessary packages are:

pip install pyserial

pip install six python-dateutil pyparsing

On Linux

For Linux platforms, the required software should be available from the OS package manager.

On Debian-based platforms, including Ubuntu, the installation commands for the necessary packages are:

TODO: commands

Transmitter library setup

Transmitter library sources are in telemetry/server-cpp. Add the folder to your include search directory and add all the .cpp files to your build. Your platform should be automatically detected based on common #defines, like ARDUINO for Arduino targets and __MBED__ for mbed targets.

For those using a SCons-based build system, a SConscript file is also included which defines a static library.

Transmitter library usage

Include the telemetry header in your code:

#include "telemetry.h"

Then, instantiate a telemetry HAL (hardware abstraction layer) for your platform. This adapts the platform-specific UART into a standard interface allowing telemetry to be used across multiple platforms.

For Arduino, instantiate it with a Serial object:

telemetry::ArduinoHalInterface telemetry_hal(Serial1);
telemetry::Telemetry telemetry_obj(telemetry_hal);

For mbed, instantiate it with a MODSERIAL object (which provides transmit and receive buffering):

MODSERIAL telemetry_serial(PTA2, PTA1);  // PTA2 as TX, PTA1 as RX
telemetry::MbedHal telemetry_hal(telemetry_serial);
telemetry::Telemetry telemetry_obj(telemetry_hal);

In future versions, telemetry will include a Serial buffering layer.

Next, instantiate telemetry data objects. These objects act like their templated data types (for example, you can assign and read from a telemetry::Numeric<uint32_t> as if it were a regular uint32_t), but can both send updates and be remotely set using the telemetry link.

This example shows three data objects needed for a waterfall visualization of a linescan camera and a line plot for motor command:

telemetry::Numeric<uint32_t> tele_time_ms(telemetry_obj, "time", "Time", "ms", 0);
telemetry::NumericArray<uint16_t, 128> tele_linescan(telemetry_obj, "linescan", "Linescan", "ADC", 0);
telemetry::Numeric<float> tele_motor_pwm(telemetry_obj, "motor", "Motor PWM", "%DC", 0);

In general, the constructor signatures for Telemetry data objects are:

  • template <typename T> Numeric(Telemetry& telemetry_container, const char* internal_name, const char* display_name, const char* units, T init_value)
    • Numeric describes numeric data is type T. Only 8-, 16-, and 32-bit unsigned integers and single-precision floating point numbers are currently supported.
    • telemetry_container: a reference to a Telemetry object to associate this data with.
    • internal_name: a string giving this object an internal name to be referenced in code.
    • display_name: a string giving this object a human-friendly name.
    • units: a string describing the units this data is in (not currently used for purposes other than display, but that may change).
  • template <typename T, uint32 t array_count> telemetry container, const char* internal_name, const char* display_name, const char* units, T elem_init_value)
    • NumericArray describes an array of numeric objects of type T. Same constraints on T as with Numeric apply. array_count is a template parameter (like a constant) to avoid dynamic memory allocation.
    • telemetry_container: a reference to a Telemetry object to associate this data with.
    • internal_name: a string giving this object an internal name to be referenced in code.
    • display_name: a string giving this object a human-friendly name.
    • units: a string describing the units this data is in (not currently used for purposes other than display, but that may change).
    • elem_init_value: initial value of array elements.

After instantiating a data object, you can also optionally specify additional parameters:

  • Numeric can have the limits set. The plotter GUI will set the plot bounds / waterfall intensity bounds if this is set, otherwise it will autoscale. This does NOT affect the embedded code, values will not be clipped.
    • tele_motor_pwm.set_limits(0.0, 1.0); // lower bound, upper bound

Note that there is a limit on how many data objects any telemetry object can have (this is used to size some internal data structures). This can be set by compiler-defining TELEMETRY_DATA_LIMIT. The default is 16.

Once the data objects have been set up, transmit the data definitions:

telemetry_obj.transmit_header();

The telemetry system is set up and ready to use now. Load data to be transmitted into the telemetry object by either using the assign operator or the array indexing operator. For example, to update the linescan data:

uint16_t* data = camera.read() ;
for ( uint16_t i = 0; i < 128; i++) {
  tele_linescan[i] = data[i]
}

Actual IO operations (and hence plotter GUI updates) only happen when Telemetry's do_io() method is called and should be done regularly. Only the latest update per do_io() is transmitted, intermediate values are clobbered. Remote set operations take effect during a do_io() and can also be clobbered by any set operations afterwards.

telemetry_obj.do_io();

You can continue using the UART to transmit other data (like with printfs) as long as this doesn't happen during a Telemetry do_io() operation (which will corrupt the sent data) or contain a start-of-frame sequence (0x05, 0x39).

You can also use the UART to receive non-telemetry data, which is made available through Telemetry's receive_available() and read_receive(). receive_available() will return true if there is received data in the buffer. read_receive() will return the next byte in the receive buffer (if the buffer is empty, the return is undefined - don't do it). The internal receive buffer size can be set by compiler-defining TELEMETRY_SERIAL_RX_BUFFER_SIZE. The default is 256 bytes.

One usage of this is to allow using a serial console side-by-side with the telemetry framework. An example to get commands from the console with a newline as the delimiter is:

const size_t bufsize = 256;
char inbuf[bufsize];  // receive buffer allocation
char* inptr = inbuf;  // next received byte pointer

while (telemetry_obj.receive_available()) {
  uint8_t rx = telemetry_obj.read_receive();
  if (rx == '\n') {
    *inptr = '\0';  // optionally append the string terminator
    // do something with the contents of inbuf here
    inptr = inbuf;  // reset the received byte pointer
  } else {
    *inptr = rx;
    inptr++;  // advance the received byte pointer
    if (inptr >= inbuf + bufsize) {
      // you should emit some helpful error on overflow
      inptr = inbuf;  // reset the received byte pointer, discarding what we have
    }
  }
}

Plotter GUI Usage

The plotter is located in telemetry/client-py/plotter.py and can be directly executed using Python. The arguments can be obtained by running it with --help:

  • Serial port: like COM1 for Windows or /dev/ttyUSB0 or /dev/ttyACM0 for Linux.
  • Baud rate: optional, defaults to 38,400.
  • Independent variable name: defaults to time.
  • Independent variable span: defaults to 10,000 (or 10 seconds, if your units are in milliseconds).

The plotter must be running when the header is transmitted, otherwise it will fail to decode the data packets (and notify you of such). The plotter will automatically reinitialize upon receiving a new header.

This simple plotter graphs all the data against a selected independent variable (like time). Numeric data is plotted as a line graph and array-numeric data is plotted as a waterfall / spectrograph-style graph. Regular UART data (like from printfs) will be routed to the console. All received data, including from printfs, is logged to a CSV. A new CSV is created each time a new header packet is received, with a timestamped filename. This can be disabled by giving an empty filename prefix.

You can double-click a plot to inspect its latest value numerically and optionally remotely set it to a new value. You can also send non-telemetry data by typing in the console (should have a Serial command to send: prompt); note that data is buffered (not sent) until you hit enter. A newline (\n) is included at the end of whatever you type.

If you feel really adventurous, you can also try to mess with the code to plot things in different styles. For example, the plot instantiation function from a received header packet is in subplots_from_header. The default just creates a line plot for numeric data and a waterfall plot for array-numeric data. You can make it do fancier things, like overlay a numerical detected track position on the raw camera waterfall plot.

Protips

Bandwidth limits: the amount of data you can send is limited by your microcontroller's UART rate, the UART-PC interface (like Bluetooth-UART or a USB-UART adapter), and transmission overhead (for example, at high baud rates, the overhead from mbed's putc takes longer than the physical transmission of the character). If you're constantly getting receive errors, try:

  • Reducing precision. A 8-bit integer is smaller than a 32-bit integer. If all you're doing is plotting, the difference may be visually imperceptible.
  • Decimating samples. Sending every nth sample will reduce the data rate by n. Again, the difference may be imperceptible if plotting, but you may also lose important high frequency components. Use with caution.

Future Work

These are planned features for the very near future:

Plotter GUI

  • Major code cleanup.
  • Multiple visualizations styles (including single-frame mode for arrays).

Known Issues

Transmitter Library

  • No header resend request, so the plotter GUI must be started before the transmitter starts.
  • No DMA support.
  • No CRC or FEC support.

Plotter GUI

  • Waterfall / spectrogram style plotting is CPU intensive and inefficient.

mbed HAL

  • Serial putc is highly inefficient for bulk data.

Copyright

Contents are licensed under the BSD 3-clause ("BSD simplified", "BSD new") license, the terms of which are reproduced below.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.

  2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

  3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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