AT commands to a Sierra Wireless EM9291
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@tom need Meson to get newest libqmi. Tried installing that but ran into more errors, I hate feeling like I am asking to be spoonfed but I really could use some guided direction here - I am extremely out of my element
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@groupo You can install
meson
andninja
withsudo apt install meson ninja-build
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@tom I did that successfully, the error came with running the third line below
voxl2:/$ sudo apt install meson ninja-build Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information... Done ninja-build is already the newest version (1.8.2-1). meson is already the newest version (0.45.1-2ubuntu0.18.04.2). 0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 37 not upgraded. voxl2:/$ cd libqmi voxl2:/libqmi(main)$ meson setup build --prefix=/usr The Meson build system Version: 0.45.1 Source dir: /libqmi Build dir: /libqmi/build Build type: native build meson.build:223:10: ERROR: lexer test_env = { ^ A full log can be found at /libqmi/build/meson-logs/meson-log.txt
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@groupo Hmm meson isn't something I'm familiar with so I don't know how to debug that.
Do you know if the version of libqmi has to be newer than 1.30? Otherwise you could try the older way to build using make
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@tom unfortunately, the ability to send AT commands via qmicli was introduced in 1.32. What about trying the drivers again? I goofed the symbolic linking earlier. I redid it and the make script gets farther, but still eventually fails.
How come PORT is initialized with certain modems in voxl-configure-modem but not with the em9291. It looks like you just set PORT to ttyUSB0 and echo to it to send AT commands. Can i not just add that into the em9291 logic flow?
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@groupo
/dev/ttyUSB0
only enumerates if the driver recognizes the hardware of having said capability. In this case, the driver that controls that port doesn't recognize that modem hardware, likely the driver is from before that hardware existed.In these cases we usually have to make custom tweaks to the linux kernel drivers in order to add the support for the hardware.
If you'd like to experiment with doing that you can, building custom kernels allows adding custom support for new or existing hardware.
You can read more about building a custom kernel here: https://docs.modalai.com/voxl2-kernel-build-guide/
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@tom I will explore the kernel stuff.
Re updating qmicli, I need meson >= 0.53.0 which is not supported on drone's ubuntu version. Is upgrading to a newer ubuntu on the drone an option?
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@groupo It is not. Ubuntu 20 is on our road map but that's a while out
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@tom If I solely wanted to update the driver that controls that port is making a custom kernel the only way to do that? If that is the case, what is the least invasive way to do that? Where does that driver exists and what is the process for updating it? Which driver is responsible for that port? It looks like the guide shows you the things to download if you wanted to make your own kernel, but where do you change stuff to make it your own?
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@tom Found the drivers I believe I want to change. Do i change them inside or outside of the docker?
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@groupo , all the source code for the kernel will exist on your host system. When you enter the docker container, it maps your current directory into the docker container.
qrb5165-sync.sh
andqrb5165-patch.sh
commands (executed inside docker) will download all the required sources to the shared folder and will be accessible on host system and inside the docker container.You should make sure you can build the original kernel according to the standard instructions (sync, patch, build). Then make change to your driver either manually or apply your custom diff / patch and build again (do not sync or patch the whole project again).
Alex
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Yeah I was able to sync, patch, and build successfully. When making those changes, is it done inside or outside of the docker? I can see the drivers I want to change in qrb5165-kernel-...sh, but that is outside the docker. I dont find the driver files insiede the docker.
For any driver I want to edit, my understanding is that I change it in the qrb5165-kernel-...sh folder outside the docker, then I go into the docker and build. Is that correct?
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hey have made some good progress on the drivers - still curious about the docker question but because they are mounted, does it not matter which side of the docker (inside or outside) I change them?
anyways other question:
I see in the repo README it discusses debug messages, and I can see debug msgs in the code for drivers like below:
How can I print these out/where are they printed so I can read thru them?
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@groupo , it does not matter where you edit the files (inside the docker container or the host). On the host side, there will be a new folder created for the kernel source files (
workspace
), where you can find all the source files and build output. In the docker container, the same files will be in/home/user/build_mount
, as specified here : https://gitlab.com/voxl-public/system-image-build/qrb5165-kernel-build-docker/-/blob/qrb5165-ubun1.0-14.1a/docker-run-image.sh?ref_type=heads#L9If you build the kernel in debug mode, you can use
dmesg
command to print out all the kernel messages. Even with non-debug kernel, there will be some essential messages from kernel there. If you are looking for a particular string, you can use grep to filter the messages:dmesg -w | grep "Num Interfaces"
If the messages from your driver have some common string, you can use that string to filter the
dmesg
output.Alex
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Thanks for the explanation - I am still getting the hang of Docker.
I think logging was turned off in all the drivers I am curious about. I think I just turned it on.
Do i need to run ./qrb-clean.sh every time before I run ./qrb-build.sh? I see you use it in the example on the documentation, but I am unclear if its necessary for what I am doing (make changes -> build -> flash -> repeat if not working)
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When in doubt, it is better to do a full clean before re-building. Especially when you are changing configuration like debug or non-debug version of the kernel.
For simple changes inside your kernel module / driver, you can test by trial and error to see if you need to re-build when you make a small code change. Once you have the debug prints working, this will be easy to test.
Alex
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Some further investigation, I grep'd inside the docker for one of the driver files I am trying to edit (qcserial.c) and find it in a few locations, all of which are in the build_mount.
I vim'd all files and none of them reflect the changes I made to qcserial.c located in qrb5165-kernel-v1.1.7.4.... am I changing this file in the wrong place?
Again, my process is
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Change files in mydir/qrb5165-kernel-v1.1.7.4
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Enter mydir/qrb5165-kernel-build-docker-qrb5165-ubun1.0-14.1a
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run ./docker-run-image.sh
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(in docker) run ./qrb5165-build.sh
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once that is done, I follow the steps listed here https://docs.modalai.com/voxl2-kernel-build-guide/#flashing-guide
I assume I am not changing qcserial in the right place?
Also, one of the places Grep returns is in patches. I can see you guys have made edits to that driver too. Will the version in patches override anything else I try to do?
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@groupo , I will ask my colleagues to help answer this question..
Are the changes that you are making being undone after you run the build? This will tell you if the build process is patching the files again, but i would assume that the patching step (
/qrb5165-patch.sh
) applies the patches and no more patching is done.You can look at what the patch is doing and modify the file that is the patch is patching. and then clean and rebuild.
Another way to check if your change is being compiled or not, is to modify the .c source file and add something with a syntax error (some stray characters), so that the build should fail. If the build does not fail, then your changes are not being compiled.
Alex
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@Alex-Kushleyev No there are no changes to the files in mydir/qrb5165-kernel-v1.1.7.4
I am not sure what my drone shipped with, but I assume 1.1.3 or 1.2 as we received them in May. I did have to reflash at one point and grabbed SDK 1.3.0. I followed the kernel build guide to the letter, which has steps for 1.1.3 and tags 1.7.4. I assume this is another issue of mine. It looks like I need tag 1.7.8 for SDK 1.3.0... can you confirm? Do all the steps defined in kernel-build-guide still hold save the tag differnece?
the c syntax error is a good idea. I will try that once I get back to a workable state
for clariity here is what my start up screen says
looks like my image and voxl-suite are good, but I def followed the kernel steps for 1.7.4 so that kernel I just put on there I believe is outdated - if you think that would matter. -
@Alex-Kushleyev You can ignore most of my last post - I believe I understand now that running qrb-sync just pulls all assets (qrb5165-kernel, voxl2, etc.). I pulled them myself and had them sitting outside the docker on my host machine making changes assuming somehow your build script was mounting them. I am running out of time today but I do believe that when I went through through the kernel build steps and flashed the drone it did not work properly. I want to repeat the drone flashing process again to ensure I am not missing something before I broach this though