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1 # Device drivers for IR (infra red) remote controls
2
3 This repo provides a driver to receive from IR (infra red) remote controls and
4 a driver for IR "blaster" apps. The device drivers are nonblocking. They do not
5 require `uasyncio` but are compatible with it.
6
7 The transmitter driver is specific to the Pyboard. The receiver is cross
8 platform and has been tested on Pyboard, ESP8266 and ESP32. See
9 [Receiver platforms](./README.md#42-receiver-platforms) for test results and
10 limitations.
11
12 # 1. IR communication
13
14 IR communication uses a carrier frequency to pulse the IR source. Modulation
15 takes the form of OOK (on-off keying). There are multiple protocols and at
16 least three options for carrier frequency, namely 36KHz, 38KHz and 40KHz.
17
18 The drivers support NEC and Sony protocols and two Philips protocols, namely
19 RC-5 and RC-6 mode 0. In the case of the transmitter the carrier frequency is a
20 runtime parameter: any value may be specified. The receiver uses a hardware
21 demodulator which should be purchased for the correct frequency. The receiver
22 device driver sees the demodulated signal and is hence carrier frequency
23 agnostic.
24
25 Examining waveforms from various remote controls it is evident that numerous
26 protocols exist. Some are doubtless proprietary and undocumented. The supported
27 protocols are those for which I managed to locate documentation. My preference
28 is for the NEC version. It has conservative timing and ample scope for error
29 detection. RC-5 has limited error detection, and RC-6 mode 0 has rather fast
30 timing.
31
32 A remote using the NEC protocol is [this one](https://www.adafruit.com/products/389).
33
34 Remotes transmit an address and a data byte, plus in some cases an extra value.
35 The address denotes the physical device being controlled. The data defines the
36 button on the remote. Provision usually exists for differentiating between a
37 button repeatedly pressed and one which is held down; the mechanism is protocol
38 dependent.
39
40 # 2. Hardware Requirements
41
42 The receiver is cross-platform. It requires an IR receiver chip to demodulate
43 the carrier. The chip must be selected for the frequency in use by the remote.
44 For 38KHz devices a receiver chip such as the Vishay TSOP4838 or the
45 [adafruit one](https://www.adafruit.com/products/157) is required. This
46 demodulates the 38KHz IR pulses and passes the demodulated pulse train to the
47 microcontroller. The tested chip returns a 0 level on carrier detect, but the
48 driver design ensures operation regardless of sense.
49
50 In my testing a 38KHz demodulator worked with 36KHz and 40KHz remotes, but this
51 is obviously neither guaranteed nor optimal.
52
53 The pin used to connect the decoder chip to the target is arbitrary. The test
54 program assumes pin X3 on the Pyboard, pin 23 on ESP32 and pin 13 on ESP8266.
55 On the WeMos D1 Mini the equivalent pin is D7.
56
57 The transmitter requires a Pyboard 1.x (not Lite) or a Pyboard D. Output is via
58 an IR LED which will normally need a transistor to provide sufficient current.
59 Typically these need 50-100mA of drive to achieve reasonable range and data
60 integrity. A suitable LED is [this one](https://www.adafruit.com/product/387).
61
62 The transmitter test script assumes pin X1 for IR output. It can be changed,
63 but it must support Timer 2 channel 1. Pins for pushbutton inputs are
64 arbitrary: X3 and X4 are used.
65
66 # 3. Installation
67
68 On import, demos print an explanation of how to run them.
69
70 ## 3.1 Receiver
71
72 Copy the following files to the target filesystem:
73 1. `ir_rx.py` The receiver device driver.
74 2. `ir_rx_test.py` Demo of a receiver.
75
76 There are no dependencies.
77
78 The demo can be used to characterise IR remotes. It displays the codes returned
79 by each button. This can aid in the design of receiver applications. The demo
80 prints "running" every 5 seconds and reports any data received from the remote.
81
82 ## 3.2 Transmitter
83
84 Copy the following files to the Pyboard filesystem:
85 1. `ir_tx.py` The transmitter device driver.
86 2. `ir_tx_test.py` Demo of a 2-button remote controller.
87
88 The device driver has no dependencies. The test program requires `uasyncio`
89 from the official library and `aswitch.py` from
90 [this repo](https://github.com/peterhinch/micropython-async).
91
92 # 4. Receiver
93
94 This implements a class for each supported protocol, namely `NEC_IR`,
95 `SONY_IR`, `RC5_IR` and `RC6_M0`. Applications should instantiate the
96 appropriate class with a callback. The callback will run whenever an IR pulse
97 train is received.
98
99 #### Common to all classes
100
101 Constructor:
102 Args:
103 1. `pin` is a `machine.Pin` instance configured as an input, connected to the
104 IR decoder chip.
105 2. `callback` is the user supplied callback.
106 3. `*args` Any further args will be passed to the callback.
107
108 The user callback takes the following args:
109 1. `data` (`int`) Value from the remote. Normally in range 0-255. A value < 0
110 signifies an NEC repeat code.
111 2. `addr` (`int`) Address from the remote.
112 3. `ctrl` (`int`) The meaning of this is protocol dependent:
113 NEC: 0
114 Philips: this is toggled 1/0 on repeat button presses. If the button is held
115 down it is not toggled. The transmitter demo implements this behaviour.
116 Sony: 0 unless receiving a 20-bit stream, in which case it holds the extended
117 value.
118 4. Any args passed to the constructor.
119
120 Bound variable:
121 1. `verbose=False` If `True` emits debug output.
122
123 Method:
124 1. `error_function` Arg: a function taking a single arg. If this is specified
125 it will be called if an error occurs. The value corresponds to the error code
126 (see below).
127
128 #### Properties specific to a class
129
130 `NEC_IR`:
131 `extended` `bool`. Remotes using the NEC protocol can send 8 or 16 bit
132 addresses. If `True` 16 bit addresses are assumed. If an 8 bit address is sent
133 it will be received as a 16 bit value comprising the address and (in bits 8-15)
134 its ones complement. Set `False` to enable error checking for remotes that
135 return an 8 bit address: the complement will be checked and the address will be
136 returned as an 8-bit value. The default is `True`.
137
138 `SONY_IR`:
139 `bits` `int`. The SIRC protocol comes in 3 variants: 12, 15 and 20 bits. The
140 default will handle bitstreams from all three types of remote. A value matching
141 your remote improves the timing reducing the likelihood of errors when handling
142 repeats: in 20-bit mode SIRC timing when a button is held down is tight. A
143 worst-case 20-bit block takes 39ms nominal, yet the repeat time is 45ms nominal.
144 The Sony remote tested issues both 12 bit and 15 bit streams. The default is
145 20.
146
147 # 4.1 Errors
148
149 IR reception is inevitably subject to errors, notably if the remote is operated
150 near the limit of its range, if it is not pointed at the receiver or if its
151 batteries are low. The user callback is not called when an error occurs.
152
153 On ESP8266 and ESP32 there is a further source of errors. This results from the
154 large and variable interrupt latency of the device which can exceed the pulse
155 duration. This causes pulses to be missed or their timing measured incorrectly.
156 On ESP8266 some improvment may be achieved by running the chip at 160MHz.
157
158 In general applications should provide user feedback of correct reception.
159 Users tend to press the key again if the expected action is absent.
160
161 In debugging a callback can be specified for reporting errors. The value passed
162 to the error function are represented by constants indicating the cause of the
163 error. These are as follows:
164
165 `BADSTART` A short (<= 4ms) start pulse was received. May occur due to IR
166 interference, e.g. from fluorescent lights. The TSOP4838 is prone to producing
167 200µs pulses on occasion, especially when using the ESP8266.
168 `BADBLOCK` A normal data block: too few edges received. Occurs on the ESP8266
169 owing to high interrupt latency.
170 `BADREP` A repeat block: an incorrect number of edges were received.
171 `OVERRUN` A normal data block: too many edges received.
172 `BADDATA` Data did not match check byte.
173 `BADADDR` (`NEC_IR`) If `extended` is `False` the 8-bit address is checked
174 against the check byte. This code is returned on failure.
175
176 # 4.2 Receiver platforms
177
178 Currently the ESP8266 suffers from [this issue](https://github.com/micropython/micropython/issues/5714).
179 Testing was therefore done without WiFi connectivity.
180
181 Philips protocols (especially RC-6) have tight timing constraints with short
182 pulses whose length must be determined with reasonable accuracy. The Sony 20
183 bit protocol also has a timing issue in that the worst case bit pattern takes
184 39ms nominal, yet the repeat time is 45ms nominal. These issues can lead to
185 errors particularly on slower targets. As discussed above, errors are to be
186 expected. It is up to the user to decide if the error rate is acceptable.
187
188 Reception was tested using Pyboard D SF2W, ESP8266 and ESP32 with signals from
189 remote controls (where available) and from the tranmitter in this repo. Issues
190 are listed below.
191
192 NEC: No issues.
193 Sony 12 and 15 bit: No issues.
194 Sony 20 bit: On ESP32 some errors occurred when repeats occurred.
195 Philips RC-5: On ESP32 with one remote control many errors occurred, but paired
196 with the transmitter in this repo it worked.
197 Philips RC-6: No issues. Only tested against the transmitter in this repo.
198
199 # 4.3 Principle of operation
200
201 Protocol classes inherit from the abstract base class `IR_RX`. This uses a pin
202 interrupt to store in an array the start and end times of pulses (in μs).
203 Arrival of the first pulse triggers a software timer which runs for the
204 expected duration of an IR block (`tblock`). When it times out its callback
205 (`.decode`) decodes the data and calls the user callback. The use of a software
206 timer ensures that `.decode` and the user callback can allocate.
207
208 The size of the array and the duration of the timer are protocol dependent and
209 are set by the subclasses. The `.decode` method is provided in the subclass.
210
211 CPU times used by `.decode` (not including the user callback) were measured on
212 a Pyboard D SF2W at stock frequency. They were: NEC 1ms for normal data, 100μs
213 for a repeat code. Philips codes: RC-5 900μs, RC-6 mode 0 5.5ms.
214
215 # 5 Transmitter
216
217 This is specific to Pyboard D and Pyboard 1.x (not Lite).
218
219 It implements a class for each supported protocol, namely `NEC`, `SONY`, `RC5`
220 and `RC6_M0`. The application instantiates the appropriate class and calls the
221 `transmit` method to send data.
222
223 Constructor
224 All constructors take the following args:
225 1. `pin` An initialised `pyb.Pin` instance supporting Timer 2 channel 1: `X1`
226 is employed by the test script. Must be connected to the IR diode as described
227 below.
228 2. `freq=default` The carrier frequency in Hz. The default for NEC is 38000,
229 Sony is 40000 and Philips is 36000.
230 3. `verbose=False` If `True` emits debug output.
231
232 The `SONY` constructor is of form `pin, bits=12, freq=40000, verbose=False`.
233 The `bits` value may be 12, 15 or 20 to set SIRC variant in use. Other args are
234 as above.
235
236 Method:
237 1. `transmit(addr, data, toggle=0)` Integer args. `addr` and `data` are
238 normally 8-bit values and `toggle` is normally 0 or 1.
239 In the case of NEC, if an address < 256 is passed, normal mode is assumed and
240 the complementary value is appended. 16-bit values are transmitted as extended
241 addresses.
242 In the case of NEC the `toggle` value is ignored. For Philips protocols it
243 should be toggled each time a button is pressed, and retained if the button is
244 held down. The test program illustrates a way to do this.
245 `SONY` ignores `toggle` unless in 20-bit mode, in which case it is transmitted
246 as the `extended` value and can be any integer in range 0 to 255.
247
248 The `transmit` method is synchronous with rapid return. Actual transmission
249 occurs as a background process, controlled by timers 2 and 5. Execution times
250 on a Pyboard 1.1 were 3.3ms for NEC, 1.5ms for RC5 and 2ms for RC6.
251
252 # 5.1 Wiring
253
254 I use the following circuit which delivers just under 40mA to the diode. R2 may
255 be reduced for higher current.
256 ![Image](images/circuit.png)
257
258 This alternative delivers a constant current of about 53mA if a higher voltage
259 than 5V is available. R4 determines the current value and may be reduced to
260 increase power.
261 ![Image](images/circuit2.png)
262
263 The transistor type is not critical.
264
265 The driver assumes circuits as shown. Here the carrier "off" state is 0V,
266 which is the driver default. If using a circuit where "off" is required to be
267 3.3V, the constant `_SPACE` in `ir_tx.py` should be changed to 100.
268
269 # 5.2 Principle of operation
270
271 The classes inherit from the abstract base class `IR`. This has an array `.arr`
272 to contain the duration (in μs) of each carrier on or off period. The
273 `transmit` method calls a `tx` method of the subclass which populates this
274 array. On completion `transmit` appends a special `STOP` value and initiates
275 physical transmission which occurs in an interrupt context.
276
277 This is performed by two hardware timers initiated in the constructor. Timer 2,
278 channel 1 is used to configure the output pin as a PWM channel. Its frequency
279 is set in the constructor. The OOK is performed by dynamically changing the
280 duty ratio using the timer channel's `pulse_width_percent` method: this varies
281 the pulse width from 0 to a duty ratio passed to the constructor. The NEC
282 protocol defaults to 50%, the Sony and Philips ones to 30%.
283
284 The duty ratio is changed by the Timer 5 callback `._cb`. This retrieves the
285 next duration from the array. If it is not `STOP` it toggles the duty cycle
286 and re-initialises T5 for the new duration.
287
288 The `IR.append` enables times to be added to the array, keeping track of the
289 notional carrier on/off state for biphase generation. The `IR.add` method
290 facilitates lengthening a pulse as required in the biphase sequences used in
291 Philips protocols.
292
293 # 6. References
294
295 [General information about IR](https://www.sbprojects.net/knowledge/ir/)
296
297 The NEC protocol:
298 [altium](http://techdocs.altium.com/display/FPGA/NEC+Infrared+Transmission+Protocol)
299 [circuitvalley](http://www.circuitvalley.com/2013/09/nec-protocol-ir-infrared-remote-control.html)
300
301 Philips protocols:
302 [RC5](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RC-5)
303 [RC6](https://www.sbprojects.net/knowledge/ir/rc6.php)
304
305 Sony protocol:
306 [SIRC](https://www.sbprojects.net/knowledge/ir/sirc.php)
307
308 # Appendix 1 NEC Protocol description
309
310 A normal burst comprises exactly 68 edges, the exception being a repeat code
311 which has 4. An incorrect number of edges is treated as an error. All bursts
312 begin with a 9ms pulse. In a normal code this is followed by a 4.5ms space; a
313 repeat code is identified by a 2.25ms space. A data burst lasts for 67.5ms.
314
315 Data bits comprise a 562.5µs mark followed by a space whose length determines
316 the bit value. 562.5µs denotes 0 and 1.6875ms denotes 1.
317
318 In 8 bit address mode the complement of the address and data values is sent to
319 provide error checking. This also ensures that the number of 1's and 0's in a
320 burst is constant, giving a constant burst length of 67.5ms. In extended
321 address mode this constancy is lost. The burst length can (by my calculations)
322 run to 76.5ms.
323
324 A pin interrupt records the time of every state change (in µs). The first
325 interrupt in a burst sets an event, passing the time of the state change. A
326 coroutine waits on the event, yields for the duration of a data burst, then
327 decodes the stored data before calling the user-specified callback.
328
329 Passing the time to the `Event` instance enables the coro to compensate for
330 any asyncio latency when setting its delay period.
331
332 The algorithm promotes interrupt handler speed over RAM use: the 276 bytes used
333 for the data array could be reduced to 69 bytes by computing and saving deltas
334 in the interrupt service routine.