Wifi 2.1beta6 from 3.5.0-rc.2/3 still disconnecting
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@moth4017 I would have expected to see details of the WiFi server connecting to your access point in that output, did you remove that from what you posted?
But anyway I don't see any signs of a problem with the WiFi module in that output.
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my loop in the config files was not the root unfortunately. The board is again not reachable. It lost the connection approximately 15 minutes after I started a print at a fresh booted printer. I will get an USB extension cable and connect via USB as soon as I have the cable.
I understood that you guys want M122, something else? M11? M552 s-1 followed by M522 S1?
Cheers, Chriss
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@Chriss I think ideally what we need is...
- Reboot the board
- Connect over USB
- Run M111 P14 S1
- Run m122
- Leave the USB connection open and wait for the WiFi disconnect
- Run M122
- run M552
- run M552 s-1
- run M552 s1
- capture all of the output from the above and post it here.
@droftarts may have other suggestions.
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Got it, so the current status does not help at all than. But I think that I can reproduce that now.
My local hardware dealer was unable to provide a long enough USB cable. Amazon will bring me one tomorrow noon. Is there anything I need to know for the serial interface? (115200 8n1?)
The only M575 I found is commented out:M575 P1 B115200 S1
Cheers, Chriss
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@Chriss If you haven't restarted the board since you lost the connection and it is still disconnected then running M122 might provide some information.
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@gloomyandy If you are connecting over USB it is not really a "serial" connection in the normal way of things (so things like the baud rate, stop bits etc. don't really apply).
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Well, at least the baud rate is needed. I will give it a try with 115200 or the half of it, let's see what I will get out of it.
The docu "https://docs.duet3d.com/en/How_to_guides/Getting_connected/Getting_connected_to_your_Duet" mentions "screen /dev/ttyACM0 115200", so it should be 115200 than.The printer is still printing and I do not want to disturb it now. I will give the M122 a try as soon as the print is finished and I found a laptop to provide the output from that till my long cable arrives out of the Amazon.
Cheers, Chriss
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@Chriss The baud rate means nothing when connecting via USB to RRF.
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@Chriss Hello, I'm also looking into this issue. I have a few questions:
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You mentioned that before 3.5.0rc2 + 2.1beta6, you also observed disconnects but reconnection always succeeded. Do you remember the RRF version and WiFi firmware version you were running then?
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You mentioned that all Duet boards you have on RRF 3.5rc + WiFi firmware 2.1beta6 have this issue, but the 'others' are fine. Can you tell me what versions these other boards are on?
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Can you downgrade maybe one of the problematic boards to RRF 3.5.0rc2 + WiFi firmware v1.27?
@moth4017 reports that this issue still occurs for the v1.27 firmware, just want to confirm if that also occurs for you. -
I assume the RRF firmware you flashed on the boards are exactly the release binaries in the GitHub repo. Is this correct?
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@gloomyandy That would be an surprise. I do not think that you can have a serial connection without that both sides use the same speed of the signals. But anyway, a topic for a talk later.
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@Chriss It isn't a serial connection. It is a direct USB connection that presents itself to Windows as a com port, that's why most of the "normal" serial settings do not apply. Do a search for USB CDC, RRF implements a USB CDC device that basically ignores all of the baud rate and other settings.
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@rechrtb s
- You mentioned that before 3.5.0rc2 + 2.1beta6, you also observed disconnects but reconnection always succeeded. Do you remember the RRF version and WiFi firmware version you were running then?
I'm not 100% sure, so please do not nail me down to it. But I think that it is 3.5.0RC2 I had before on it. But I saw that behaviour with the reconnects in 3.4 something already. It never bother me because the printer did always reconnect.
And it was only visible via the PanelDue, most of my printers do not have one.- You mentioned that all Duet boards you have on RRF 3.5rc + WiFi firmware 2.1beta6 have this issue, but the 'others' are fine. Can you tell me what versions these other boards are on?
My two other printers and my "on my desk test board" are on 3.4.6. And I have found a other printer which I did not upgraded to RC2, it is still 3.5.0rc2 and this one does not have the problem. And this is very much in use at the moment.
- Can you downgrade maybe one of the problematic boards to RRF 3.5.0rc2 + WiFi firmware v1.27?
Sure, I can do that, but please let Amazon deliver the USB cable first. I want to get the logs from the board in the problematic state. Bring it back into it etc. I will do the downgrade right after that.
- I assume the RRF firmware you flashed on the boards are exactly the release binaries in the GitHub repo. Is this correct?
Yes, all of them are downloaded from the duet githup repo, they are not self compiled.
Just to be clear here about the status and for unblocking my confusion:
1: RC3 with that problem, with PanelDue and printing (My Voron 2.4)
2: RC3 without problem, without PenalDue and not printing (VCast)
3: RC2 without problem, without PenalDue and printing (V0)
4: 3.4.7 without problem, without PenalDue and not printing (Workbench, VCore, Creality)I had to make that clear for me too.. I thought that my V0, which is printing and does not have the problem, is on RC3 already. But it is RC2. The VCast is not fully working at the moment so it is not in use but powered on and does not have the problem.
Cheers, Chriss
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@gloomyandy I wounder how that works than. What I see on linux is that the board behaves like any other serial device. Like a Arduino, a USB2Serial adapter etc. And what I do is connection with a terminal program like minicom to that port. So the "getty" (to stay here in the linux term) on the other side (on the board) must use the same speed as the terminal does. Both sides can not decode the signals via the serial interface otherwise.
That is at least how I understand serial connections, that is the first time in more than 30 years that I have heard that the baud rated does not matter. Do not get me wrong, I believe you, I'm a bit surprised only and I would like to understand it because that is against 80% of my understanding how serial connections work. (Or the duet board has some magic to detect the baud rate from the terminal and use that speed.)Cheers, Chriss
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I had a look at my WiFi access point. The AP told me that the "problematic board" is connected, the mac and the IP are correct. My workstation is connected to the AP via wire.
Don't know whether that helps or not, but I think that I should share every observation.Cheers, Chriss
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@Chriss As I said there is no actual serial port hardware involved in the connection between your linux box and the RRF board. There is a software driver on the linux side that sits on top of the USB endpoint that basically makes the USB connection look like a serial port, the USB system transfers the bytes to the RRF board and on the RRF side there is again software that allow RRF to simply view the data in and out as a simple byte stream. That entire process is defined by the USB CDC standard I mentioned above. This standard does allow for the communication via USB of the baudrate and other settings but in the case of a software only stack as used by RRF this information is not needed and is ignored.
That same standard is used to provide USB to UART devices. These present the same USB interface to your linux system, but they have an actual hardware UART interface that can then talk to other hardware UART devices. Some devices (like the original Arduinos) do not have built in USB hardware so instead they use a USB to UART converter (like the various FTDI chips or the CH340 and CP2102) and this in turn connects via an actual UART serial protocol to the UART built into the Arduino. In this case you do need to ensure that the baud rate and other settings match.
But more advanced micro-controllers like the those used by the Duet boards or many of the the other 32bit chips like the rPi Pico and STM32 chips provide hardware that supports USB directly and in this case the extra complexity (and cost) of the the USB to UART converter is not needed.
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@Chriss When it is in this state (showing up on the access point as being connected), but DWC not working. What happens if you force a refresh of the DWC window? Does it then connect?
What URL are you using to connect to your board? Are you using the IP address or are you using the .local name of your printer?
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@gloomyandy Hahaha.... we can start some levels deeper, my host does not get back the mac address. I see the arp requests (one collision domain) but I do never get an answer from the printer to inform my host which MAC access should be reached.
So you can forget DNS and all of the other stuff.
Cheers, Chriss
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@Chriss Can you confirm what version of the WiFi firmware you are running (It should be displayed as part of the M122 output, which we would also really like to see).
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@gloomyandy You will get that tomorrow noonish. I need the long USB cable first. You will get the M122 as soon as Amazon delivered +10Minutes.