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    New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W

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    • o_lampeundefined
      o_lampe @dc42
      last edited by

      @dc42 I felt the same, when I studied the CanHack.py program. So we'd need both Can chips to make it work.

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      • zaptaundefined
        zapta @dc42
        last edited by

        @dc42 said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

        While the PIO state machines look very useful, the amount of instruction memory (32 instructions) and scratchpad memory (2x 32 bits) are nothing like enough to implement a protocol with the complexity of CAN-FD.

        @dc42, I am not familiar with CAN bus. What does the PIO need to do other than serializing bits in/out or detect collisions? Those PIO instructions are very capable (they have multiple fields and can do a few things in one instructions) and work well with the the hardware FIFOs, DMAs, and MCU interrupts.

        o_lampeundefined dc42undefined 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • o_lampeundefined
          o_lampe @zapta
          last edited by o_lampe

          @zapta The CanHack program lists many subroutines for testing and demonstration purposes and some real life routines. They are usually only a few lines of code. In C++ they might even be more compact.
          But for compatibility reasons beween Pico(with state machines) and Z2W(no state machines), the Can-Hat should have both Can chips anyway...

          zaptaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • zaptaundefined
            zapta @o_lampe
            last edited by

            @o_lampe, I see here two pdf schemas, one with a can controller and one with just the transceiver. What's the difference between them? Can the one without the MCP2518FD still support CAN functionality? Why two versions?

            https://github.com/kentindell/canhack/tree/master/pico

            o_lampeundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • o_lampeundefined
              o_lampe @zapta
              last edited by

              @zapta I'm no CAN expert either, but it seems it has some FiFo buffers, filters and CRC check of the SPI bus. The 40MHz crystal is another feature for better CAN-performance and reliability.
              CAN-chip.jpg

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              • o_lampeundefined o_lampe referenced this topic
              • o_lampeundefined
                o_lampe
                last edited by

                @ALL
                there's a dual CAN-FD Hat for RPi from Seeedstudio
                Does anyone see a reason, why this wouldn't work for SBC-purposes? (pins or I/O channels already in use)

                @PCR
                would it still make sense to design our own version?

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                • jay_s_ukundefined
                  jay_s_uk @o_lampe
                  last edited by

                  @o_lampe the raspberry pi shield might be a way to add CAN-FD in setups where it's not natively available, such as duet 2 + SBC and the STM/LPC port

                  Owns various duet boards and is the main wiki maintainer for the Teamgloomy LPC/STM32 port of RRF. Assume I'm running whatever the latest beta/stable build is

                  PCRundefined o_lampeundefined 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • PCRundefined
                    PCR @jay_s_uk
                    last edited by

                    @jay_s_uk Yep problem is that the Shield is using SPI i think?

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                    • o_lampeundefined
                      o_lampe @jay_s_uk
                      last edited by o_lampe

                      @jay_s_uk said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

                      the STM/LPC port

                      The super8 has a Can-Port, but it's not (yet) supported? OTOH, I wouldn't know how to link a RPi?

                      jay_s_ukundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • jay_s_ukundefined
                        jay_s_uk @o_lampe
                        last edited by

                        @o_lampe it does but it's only CAN over serial for the klipper guys

                        Owns various duet boards and is the main wiki maintainer for the Teamgloomy LPC/STM32 port of RRF. Assume I'm running whatever the latest beta/stable build is

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                        • o_lampeundefined
                          o_lampe @PCR
                          last edited by

                          @pcr said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

                          @jay_s_uk Yep problem is that the Shield is using SPI i think?

                          There are two different versions. As it seems they both use SPI.
                          Which I/O protokol would be best? UART, I2C, SPI?

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                          • o_lampeundefined
                            o_lampe @jay_s_uk
                            last edited by

                            @jay_s_uk said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

                            the raspberry pi shield might be a way to add CAN-FD in setups where it's not natively available, such as duet 2 + SBC

                            That's the idea, although I don't think we'll see a Duet2 with a Duet3-toolboard. There's latency between Duet <=> RPi and RPi <=> toolboard

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                            • dc42undefined
                              dc42 administrators @zapta
                              last edited by

                              @zapta said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

                              @dc42 said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

                              While the PIO state machines look very useful, the amount of instruction memory (32 instructions) and scratchpad memory (2x 32 bits) are nothing like enough to implement a protocol with the complexity of CAN-FD.

                              @dc42, I am not familiar with CAN bus. What does the PIO need to do other than serializing bits in/out or detect collisions? Those PIO instructions are very capable (they have multiple fields and can do a few things in one instructions) and work well with the the hardware FIFOs, DMAs, and MCU interrupts.

                              Lots of things. When receiving it has to generate a local clock that can handle variation and jitter in the received clock. It has to decode the initial ID byte format to determine whether it uses an 11-bit or 29-bit address, whether the node is interested in that ID, whether it is a CAN-FD or plain CAN packet, and whether bit rate switching is enabled (I guess you could avoid some of that by restricting the types of packet supported). It has to handle bit stuffing, and it has to calculate the CRC of the received message in real time so that it knows whether to assert the ACK bit at the end of the message.

                              Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                              Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                              http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

                              zaptaundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • zaptaundefined
                                zapta @dc42
                                last edited by

                                @dc42, yes, it sounds a lot of things. As you say, some could be addressed by focusing on message types that exist in a duet system but I am not sure about the CRC, how complex it is or what is the time to respond. On the other hand, the PIO provide room for creative solutions and possibly may be able to use a few state machines in parallel to divide the work, and there is also the second MCU core that is sitting idle and can be dedicated for the CAN decoding, and then there is an official API to overclock everything ... 😉

                                o_lampeundefined 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • o_lampeundefined
                                  o_lampe @zapta
                                  last edited by

                                  @zapta @dc42
                                  It would be interesting to know: are all of these functions hardwired in a Sammy-C21?

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                                  • dc42undefined
                                    dc42 administrators @o_lampe
                                    last edited by

                                    @o_lampe said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

                                    @zapta @dc42
                                    It would be interesting to know: are all of these functions hardwired in a Sammy-C21?

                                    Yes.

                                    Duet WiFi hardware designer and firmware engineer
                                    Please do not ask me for Duet support via PM or email, use the forum
                                    http://www.escher3d.com, https://miscsolutions.wordpress.com

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                                    • zaptaundefined
                                      zapta @o_lampe
                                      last edited by

                                      @o_lampe said in New Raspberry Pi Zero 2W:

                                      @zapta @dc42
                                      It would be interesting to know:

                                      To set the record straight, I know almost nothing about CANBUS and the little I know is mostly from this thread. 😉

                                      BTW, I do have some experience with another automotive bus call LINBUS that you can find in modern cars but is seldom mentioned. This product for example is based on a public domain design that I published on github http://t-design9.com/memory_module_porsche.html .

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