Software » History » Version 20

PRIETO, Matías, 03/22/2015 01:34 PM

1 1 PRIETO, Matías
h1. Software Design
2 1 PRIETO, Matías
3 2 PRIETO, Matías
{{>toc}}
4 2 PRIETO, Matías
5 1 PRIETO, Matías
System behavior is controlled by the MCU integrated in the motherboard, which communicates with other subsystems through the Cubesat Kit Bus. The MCU is programmed in C language based on the RTOS Salvos. Therefore, the stack implementation is programmed under these constraints. 
6 1 PRIETO, Matías
7 3 PRIETO, Matías
h2. Communication stack
8 3 PRIETO, Matías
9 1 PRIETO, Matías
Figure below presents the final implemented communication stack of the system as part of the communication chain design.
10 1 PRIETO, Matías
11 1 PRIETO, Matías
p=. !{width:40%}cubesat_stack.png!
12 1 PRIETO, Matías
_Communication stack._
13 1 PRIETO, Matías
14 1 PRIETO, Matías
h2. Concepts
15 1 PRIETO, Matías
16 1 PRIETO, Matías
h3. NMEA sentences
17 1 PRIETO, Matías
18 19 Muguerza, Joaquin
The National Marine Electronics Association (NMEA) has defined a standard intended to allow marine electronics to send navigation information to computers and to other marine equipment. Most GPS receivers communicate with other devices using this specification. Thus, most computer programs and applications which provide real time position information understand and expect data to be under NMEA specifications.
19 3 PRIETO, Matías
20 3 PRIETO, Matías
NMEA0183 is provided as a series of comma-delimited ASCII strings, each preceded with an identifying header. This set of strings are usually sent through a serial bus, which lets any microcontroller with a USART port extract data from and communicate to a GPS receiver module.
21 3 PRIETO, Matías
22 10 PRIETO, Matías
Each line of data is a sentence that is totally self contained and independent from other sentences. Each sentence begins with a '$' and ends with a carriage return/line feed sequence and can be no longer than 80 characters.
23 3 PRIETO, Matías
24 11 PRIETO, Matías
Inside a sentence, data fields are separated by commas. There is a provision for a checksum at the end of each sentence which may be used to verify the data integrity. The checksum field consists of a '*' and two hex digits representing an 8 bit exclusive OR of all characters between, but not including, the '$' and '*'.
25 3 PRIETO, Matías
26 3 PRIETO, Matías
There are standard sentences for each device category. For instance, for GPS receivers the prefix is GP.
27 1 PRIETO, Matías
Some standardized "sentences" from GPS devices are:
28 12 PRIETO, Matías
* <notextile>$GPGGA,170834,4124.8963,N,08151.6838,W,1,05,1.5,280.2,M,-34.0,M,,,*75</notextile>
29 12 PRIETO, Matías
* <notextile>$GPGSA,A,3,19,28,14,18,27,22,31,39,,,,,1.7,1.0,1.3*34</notextile>
30 12 PRIETO, Matías
* <notextile>$GPGSV,3,2,11,14,25,170,00,16,57,208,39,18,67,296,40,19,40,246,00*74</notextile>
31 12 PRIETO, Matías
* <notextile>$GPRMC,220516,A,5133.82,N,00042.24,W,173.8,231.8,130694,004.2,W*70</notextile>
32 3 PRIETO, Matías
33 3 PRIETO, Matías
The most important NMEA sentences include the GGA which provides the current Fix data, the RMC which provides the minimum gps sentences information, and the GSA which provides the Satellite status data.
34 1 PRIETO, Matías
35 3 PRIETO, Matías
h4. Details of a GGA NMEA sentence
36 3 PRIETO, Matías
37 1 PRIETO, Matías
GGA sentences carry essential fix data which provide 3D location and accuracy data.
38 3 PRIETO, Matías
39 12 PRIETO, Matías
Example: _&#36;GPGGA,123519,4807.038,N,01131.000,E,1,08,0.9,545.4,M,46.9,M,,&#42;47_
40 3 PRIETO, Matías
41 3 PRIETO, Matías
|_.Field value				|_.Data							|
42 3 PRIETO, Matías
| GGA 					| Global Positioning System Fix Data			|
43 3 PRIETO, Matías
| 123519				| Fix taken at 12:35:19 UTC				|
44 3 PRIETO, Matías
| 4807.038,N				| Latitude 48 deg 07.038' N				|
45 3 PRIETO, Matías
| 01131.000,E				| Longitude 11 deg 31.000' E				|
46 3 PRIETO, Matías
| 1					| Fix quality:						
47 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 0 = invalid						
48 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 1 = GPS fix (SPS)					
49 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 2 = DGPS fix						
50 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 3 = PPS fix						
51 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 4 = Real Time Kinematic				
52 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 5 = Float RTK						
53 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 6 = estimated (dead reckoning) (2.3 feature)		
54 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 7 = Manual input mode					
55 3 PRIETO, Matías
					 8 = Simulation mode					|
56 3 PRIETO, Matías
| 08					| Number of satellites being tracked			|
57 1 PRIETO, Matías
| 0.9					| Horizontal dilution of position			|
58 3 PRIETO, Matías
| 545.4,M				| Altitude, Meters, above mean sea level		|
59 3 PRIETO, Matías
| 46.9,M				| Height of geoid (mean sea level) above WGS84	ellipsoid |
60 3 PRIETO, Matías
| (empty field)				| time in seconds since last DGPS update		|
61 3 PRIETO, Matías
| (empty field)				| DGPS station ID number				|
62 11 PRIETO, Matías
| &#42;47				| the checksum data, always begins with &#42;		|
63 3 PRIETO, Matías
64 1 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Manchester encoding
65 1 PRIETO, Matías
66 3 PRIETO, Matías
In telecommunication, Manchester coding assigns for each data bit one transition and both states last the same time. Since there is at least one transition per bit, this allows the signal to be self-clocking, and the receiver to synchronize itself with the sender clock. The main drawback is that Manchester encoding requires the double of the bandwidth compared to a simple unipolar coding scheme.
67 3 PRIETO, Matías
68 3 PRIETO, Matías
There are two opposing conventions for the representations of data. The first of these was first published by G. E. Thomas and is followed by numerous authors. It specifies that for a 0 bit the signal levels will be low-high, with a low level in the first half of the bit period, and a high level in the second half. For a 1 bit the signal levels will be high-low.
69 3 PRIETO, Matías
70 3 PRIETO, Matías
The second convention is followed by numerous authors as well as by lower speed versions of IEEE 802.3 (Ethernet) standards. It states that a logic 0 is represented by a high-low signal sequence and a logic 1 is represented by a low-high signal sequence.
71 3 PRIETO, Matías
72 3 PRIETO, Matías
Let $x(t)$ be the unmodulated binary signal, $y(t)$ the modulated binary signal and $ck(t)$ the clock signal. Where the clock signal is a square wave signal with duty cycle of 50%. If $R_b$ is the bitrate for $x(t)$, then the bit period is $T_b = 1/R_b$.
73 3 PRIETO, Matías
74 3 PRIETO, Matías
Thus, Manchester (Thomas convention) defines:
75 3 PRIETO, Matías
$$y(t) = x(t) \textbf{ xor } (\textbf{ not } ck(t))$$
76 3 PRIETO, Matías
77 3 PRIETO, Matías
In the same way, Manchester (IEEE convention) defines:
78 3 PRIETO, Matías
$$y(t) = x(t) \textbf{ xor } ck(t)$$
79 3 PRIETO, Matías
80 1 PRIETO, Matías
For Thomas convention, this means that:
81 1 PRIETO, Matías
* If $x(t) = 0$, for $t_0 < t < t_0 + T_b$, then
82 15 PRIETO, Matías
** $y(t) = 0$, for $t_0 < t < t_0 + T_b/2$
83 15 PRIETO, Matías
** $y(t) = 1$, for $t_0 + T_b/2 < t < t_0 + T_b$
84 3 PRIETO, Matías
* If $x(t) = 1$, for $t_0 < t < t_0 + T_b$, then
85 15 PRIETO, Matías
** $y(t) = 1$, for $t_0 < t < t_0 + T_b/2$
86 15 PRIETO, Matías
** $y(t) = 0$, for $t_0 + T_b/2 < t < t_0 + T_b$
87 1 PRIETO, Matías
88 1 PRIETO, Matías
h2. Overall program description
89 1 PRIETO, Matías
90 18 PRIETO, Matías
The Salvo OS is a multitask operating system, based on the definition of multiple tasks. Each task is implemented inside an infinite loop.
91 1 PRIETO, Matías
92 1 PRIETO, Matías
The system main program is composed by two tasks. One in charge of L2+L1, controlling the physical layer and the other one in charge of acquiring plus filtering data from the GPS module, and formatting it (L4). In addition, a specific function is in charge of mapping the native ASCII messages coming from L4, into Baudot alphabet (L3) to be sent to L2+L1.
93 1 PRIETO, Matías
94 20 PRIETO, Matías
95 1 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Tasks, functions and main data structures description
96 1 PRIETO, Matías
97 20 PRIETO, Matías
Task and functions:
98 1 PRIETO, Matías
* _task_gps_update()_
99 1 PRIETO, Matías
* _task_rtty_phy()_
100 1 PRIETO, Matías
* _baud_coding()_
101 1 PRIETO, Matías
* _baudTranslate()_
102 1 PRIETO, Matías
* _inc_pointer()_
103 1 PRIETO, Matías
104 20 PRIETO, Matías
Data buffers:
105 20 PRIETO, Matías
* _asciiCharBuf[RTTY_BUFFER_SIZE]_: stores data at L4 to be sent to lower layers.
106 20 PRIETO, Matías
* _rtty_buffer[2*RTTY_BUFFER_SIZE]_: stores data at L3 which is the data coming from L4 mapped into Baudot alphabet.
107 1 PRIETO, Matías
108 1 PRIETO, Matías
Main system flags:
109 20 PRIETO, Matías
* _rts_flag_: flag which controls the behavior of the task _task_rtty_phy()_. When it is set, data stored in _rtty_buffer_ is modulated and sent to the physical layer L1. When it is not, an IDLE state signal is sent to L1.
110 20 PRIETO, Matías
* _cod_flag_: flag which controls the behavior of the task _task_gps_update()_. When it is set, data comming from GPS module is processed and filtered. When it is not, there is no processing and characters are discarded.
111 1 PRIETO, Matías
112 1 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Program workflow
113 1 PRIETO, Matías
114 19 Muguerza, Joaquin
Data coming from GPS is retrieved from the USART CSK_0 register. Since data is continuously sent character by character at a rate of 1 NMEA sentence per second, the _task_gps_update()_ has to filter the incoming characters waiting the right sequence which represents the start of a valid NMEA sentence. Then, characters must be stored in a buffer until the reception of the end of sentence indicator. The string stored in the ASCII buffer (_asciiCharBuf_) is the message that has to be sent later to the lower layers, representing the information held by the beacon. Optionally, an additional fixed messaged can be added to this buffer.
115 1 PRIETO, Matías
116 17 PRIETO, Matías
Once beacon message is defined, the task call the function _baud_coding()_, which maps the stored chars in the ASCII buffer to the Baudot alphabet. Finally, the output (the message in Baudot format) is stored in another buffer (_rtty_buffer_). This function, is supported by another one, _baudTranslate()_, which is called to perform a search and translation of symbols for each character using a look-up table.
117 1 PRIETO, Matías
Once data in the Baudot buffer is completed, a ready to send flag (_rts_flag_) is set to indicate the task which manage L2-L1 that there is data available ready to be sent.
118 1 PRIETO, Matías
119 1 PRIETO, Matías
_task_rtty_phy()_ is in charge of controlling lower layers and generate the output signal (at _IO.0_) which controls the 2-FSK transmitter. This task runs continuously and has the highest priority. Since a clock is required to generate the output signal, the task uses the OS timer. This timer is set to one tick per millisecond, this is 1000 ticks per second. Since required baudrate is 125, the bit period $T_b$ is 8 msec and the task uses 8 OS ticks per bit.
120 1 PRIETO, Matías
121 1 PRIETO, Matías
Each bit period $T_b$, the task performs an iteration and retrieves the bit to be sent at L3. Then it implements Manchester by setting the output signal at 0 (or 1) during $T_b/2$ and then switching to 1 (or 0) during other $T_b/2$.
122 1 PRIETO, Matías
123 1 PRIETO, Matías
p=. !{width:60%}main_program_states_mch.png!
124 1 PRIETO, Matías
_Main program states machine._
125 20 PRIETO, Matías
126 20 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Task task_gps_update()
127 20 PRIETO, Matías
128 20 PRIETO, Matías
129 20 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Task task_rtty_phy()
130 20 PRIETO, Matías
131 20 PRIETO, Matías
132 20 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Function baud_coding()
133 20 PRIETO, Matías
134 20 PRIETO, Matías
135 20 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Function baudTranslate()
136 20 PRIETO, Matías
137 20 PRIETO, Matías
138 20 PRIETO, Matías
h3. Function inc_pointer()
139 20 PRIETO, Matías
140 20 PRIETO, Matías
141 20 PRIETO, Matías
142 16 PRIETO, Matías
143 13 PRIETO, Matías
h2. References
144 14 PRIETO, Matías
145 13 PRIETO, Matías
[1] http://www.gpsinformation.org
146 13 PRIETO, Matías
[2] Datasheet: Parallax GPS Receiver Module (#28146)