PX4 -> QGC connection through USB for VOXL2
-
Thank you for your replies! I will check these links out.
-
@modaltb Hii, is there any update on this?
-
@Sarika-Sharma It's not something we currently support
-
We discussed this internally and we will make an effort to formalize enabling the instructions (in a script) in the near future, but there is a relatively short way of enabling TCP/IP communication between VOXL2 and a QGC host. Please try these instructions and let us know if that works for you or what issue you run in to.
Basically, there is a command to enable the usb gadget in the kernel and this creates the network interface which you then have to configure on both sides. You can change the IP range if necessary.
Alex
# VOXL2 Setup # Begin by configuring the usb gadget sed -i '/ln -s functions\/ffs.adb configs\/c.1\/f2/a \ ln -s functions\/ncm.0 configs\/c.1\/f3 2>\/dev\/null | true' /sbin/usb/compositions/901D # Next setup a udev rule to give our NCM device a static IP (192.168.7.2) echo 'ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="net", KERNEL=="usb0", RUN+="/bin/sh -c '"'"'sleep 2; /sbin/ifconfig usb0 192.168.7.2 netmask 255.255.255.0 up'"'"'"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/80-usb-ncm.rules # Reboot VOXL2 # Check usb0 network device voxl2:/$ ifconfig usb0 usb0: flags=4163<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500 inet 192.168.7.2 netmask 255.255.255.0 broadcast 192.168.7.255 inet6 fe80::935f:1a09:ab1d:d2fb prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x20<link> ether 56:77:2d:6c:84:9b txqueuelen 1000 (Ethernet) RX packets 0 bytes 0 (0.0 B) RX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 frame 0 TX packets 0 bytes 0 (0.0 B) TX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 carrier 0 collisions 0 # Host Side Configuration - note that a network manager may rename the device from usb0 to something else.. ifconfig usb0 usb0: flags=4098<BROADCAST,MULTICAST> mtu 1500 ether fa:74:5a:f3:2b:88 txqueuelen 1000 (Ethernet) RX packets 0 bytes 0 (0.0 B) RX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 frame 0 TX packets 0 bytes 0 (0.0 B) TX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 carrier 0 collisions 0 #bring up the interface and set it to static ip sudo ip addr add 192.168.7.1/24 dev usb0 sudo ip link set usb0 up # Can also use Network manager to configure the network interface for a static configuration - address 192.168.7.1 - netmask 255.255.255.0 - gateway 192.168.7.1 # ping VOXL2 from linux host - ping 192.168.7.2 #set up QGC - use ip address:port : 192.168.7.2:14550 You can also use other network tools like ssh, etc, to communicate to the host, but this setup does not enable you to communicate from VOXL2 to outside world (using NAT to enable internet access via the host) -
Thankyou so much @Alex-Kushleyev
This setup solves my use case where Wi-Fi is not available. Thanks for the support — looking forward to the scripted version in the future.Best regards,
Sarika -
What is the recommended workflow to switch between usb0 and wlan0 ????
as when i tried to use voxl-wifi in station mode ,it configured succesfully.
But current IP is still:
voxl2-mini-test-fixture (TF-M0104):~$ voxl-my-ip
usb0: 192.168.7.2
voxl2-mini-test-fixture (TF-M0104):~$ -
If you have multiple active network interfaces, then you need to set up routing rules using standard linux network tools (
ip route ..). You can check the current routes usingip route liston voxl2.voxl-my-ipscript probably just returns the first available ip address. you can useifconfigto check all the interfaces.As an example... assuming your wifi ip range is 192.168.10.x (192.168.10.1 is the wifi router's ip address) and usb0 is 192.168.7.x
# route to the Linux host (192.168.7. subnet) via usb0 sudo ip route add 192.168.7.0/24 via 192.168.7.1 dev usb0 # default route for all other traffic via wlan0 sudo ip route add default via 192.168.10.1 dev wlan0If you want to make these routes persistent you will have to edit
/etc/network/interfaces.. Please check Linux networking documentation.Alex
-
@Alex-Kushleyev Should this work on a Voxl to Windows computer connection? I ran the sed and udev rule commands and how the voxl does indeed come up as an ethernet device upon connecting (UsbNcm Host Device) and I can set up the static IPs appropriately, but I cannot ping one to the other for some reason. I can still use the port as an ADB interface and I thought maybe that was the issue but doing adb kill-server on the windows side still doesn't do the trick
-
@Alex-Kushleyev I saw a post from @tom from a few years ago discussing how there should be the necessary drivers to support an RNDIS gadget so I assume that is my issue. Any insight on how to enable that?
[Apr 1 19:15] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +12.232553] usbpd usbpd0: Type-C Source (default) connected [ +0.019411] usbpd usbpd0: USB Type-C disconnect [ +0.004363] android_work: sent uevent USB_STATE=DISCONNECTED [ +0.001100] msm-dwc3 a600000.ssusb: DWC3 in low power mode [ +3.492478] usbpd usbpd0: Type-C Source (medium - 1.5A) connected [ +0.113740] msm-usb-ssphy-qmp 88e8000.ssphy: USB DP QMP PHY: Update TYPEC CTRL(3) [ +0.057403] msm-dwc3 a600000.ssusb: DWC3 exited from low power mode [ +0.068603] usbpd usbpd0: Type-C Source (high - 3.0A) connected [ +0.238255] android_work: sent uevent USB_STATE=CONNECTED [ +0.041534] configfs-gadget gadget: high-speed config #1: c [ +0.000644] android_work: sent uevent USB_STATE=CONFIGURED [ +0.195765] usbpd usbpd0: Type-C Source (medium - 1.5A) connected [ +0.021780] usbpd usbpd0: Type-C Source (high - 3.0A) connected [ +0.179818] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.000172] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.069075] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.002827] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.176097] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.001314] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.001331] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.250721] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.491456] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.000164] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.000446] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.067507] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.000984] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.012649] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.183993] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.001107] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.211788] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN [ +0.030077] configfs-gadget gadget: Wrong NDP SIGN -
@bendraper , If you see an ethernet connection to VOXL2 show up on your Windows host, then the usb gadget is properly configured on VOXL2. Perhaps something else is going on. Are you assigning a static ip on your host that is on the same subnet as VOXL2?
You should try to repeat the same test on a linux machine (or virtual machine) to see if you can get a working connection.
Alex
-
@Alex-Kushleyev Yea I can get a connection on a linux machine with no issue. I do need to get it working on a Windows machine for my purposes though. I definitely have the static IP setup correctly. I tried populating the gateway and also not populating it. I confirmed in powershell that there is indeed a route present for that traffic, but they do not want to communicate with each other. Some quick research seems to suggest Windows is very finicky with the CDC NCM protocol and it is more suited to work with an RNDIS interface. Were you able to ping/ssh to a voxl via an ethernet interface on the usb-c port to a windows machine using just the commands you listed above in this post?
-
@bendraper , I just tried this on a Windows 11 VM and even though i was able to see a network device appear in the VM and i configured the IPv4 properties, I cannot ping or ssh. It seems consistent with what you are seeing.
-
@Alex-Kushleyev It looks like someone on the forums maybe had success setting up the interface as an RNDIS gadget. I'll try to mess with it some more but let me know if you find a solution. Thanks!
-
@bendraper , I will ask around.
-
@Alex-Kushleyev So I can see a gadget functionality called gsi.rndis (I'd expect something called rndis.0 or something but maybe that is irrelevant) but when I change the line in /sbin/usb/compositions/901D to use gsi.rndis instead of ncm.0, my network interface on windows disappears and I can no longer ADB. I'd imagine there's something at the kernal level that doesn't like that but I'm out of my wheelhouse there. Setting it back to ncm.0 returns to the previous state but still cannot ping. Wireshark doesn't even see anything happening over that interface
-
Hi All - gonna spend a bit of time looking into this today so I can get some context on the problem.
Zach
-
This post is deleted! -
This post is deleted! -
@Alex-Kushleyev
That's not perfect but I created a shell script based on https://docs.modalai.com/qgc-via-adb/ for the drone configuraiton.
For my PC configuration, I created an udev rule to force an interface name since usb0 is renamed in "enx******". My udev rule can only work with my drone (I think). To define IP address, I add a conf file in /etc/systemd/network/
I have only tested on my linux and it works perfectly :#!/usr/bin/env bash set -euo pipefail # See ModalAI doc : https://docs.modalai.com/qgc-via-adb/ UDEV_RULE_DRONE="/etc/udev/rules.d/80-usb-ncm.rules" UDEV_RULE_PC="/etc/udev/rules.d/99-voxl-usb-ncm.rules" SYSTEMD_CONF_PC="/etc/systemd/network/10-voxl0.network" USB_COMP_QUALCOM="/sbin/usb/compositions/901D" # Network configuration USB_IFACE="usb0" USB_NET="192.168.7.0/24" PC_IP="192.168.7.1" DRONE_IP="192.168.7.2" NM_CONN_NAME="voxl-usb-ncm" show_help() { echo "Usage: $0 [--pc] [--drone] [--uninstall]" echo echo "Enable USB NCM networking for ModalAI VOXL / Starling 2 Max" echo echo "Options:" echo " --pc Configure host PC only" echo " --drone Configure drone via adb only" echo " --uninstall Remove configuration" echo " --help Show this help" echo echo "Defaults: if neither --pc nor --drone is provided, both are processed." } do_pc_install() { echo "[INFO][PC] Installing udev rule for VOXL USB NCM" cat > "$UDEV_RULE_PC" <<EOF SUBSYSTEM=="net", ACTION=="add", ATTRS{idVendor}=="05c6", ATTRS{idProduct}=="901d", ATTRS{serial}=="890d035c", NAME="voxl0" EOF echo "[INFO][PC] Creating systemd-networkd config for voxl0" cat > "$SYSTEMD_CONF_PC" <<EOF [Match] Name=voxl0 [Network] Address=${PC_IP}/24 LinkLocalAddressing=no IPv6AcceptRA=no EOF echo "[INFO][PC] Reloading udev rules" udevadm control --reload-rules udevadm trigger echo "[INFO][PC] Restarting systemd-networkd" systemctl restart systemd-networkd echo "[INFO][PC] PC installation complete" } do_pc_uninstall() { echo "[INFO][PC] Removing PC configuration" if [ -f "$UDEV_RULE_PC" ]; then rm -f "$UDEV_RULE_PC" echo "[INFO][PC] Removed udev rule" fi if [ -f "$SYSTEMD_CONF_PC" ]; then rm -f "$SYSTEMD_CONF_PC" echo "[INFO][PC] Removed systemd-networkd config" fi echo "[INFO][PC] Reloading udev rules" udevadm control --reload-rules udevadm trigger echo "[INFO][PC] Restarting systemd-networkd" systemctl restart systemd-networkd echo "[INFO][PC] PC uninstallation complete" } do_drone_install() { echo "[INFO][DRONE] Enabling USB NCM networking on VOXL via adb" adb root adb remount echo "[INFO][DRONE] Updating USB composition in Qualcomm script \ $USB_COMP_QUALCOM configure the usb gadget with \ the addition of the function NCM" echo "[INFO][DRONE] In $USB_COMP_QUALCOM, \ add the line 'ln -s functions/ncm.0 configs/c.1/f3 2>/dev/null | true' \ just after the line 'ln -s functions/ffs.adb configs/c.1/f2'" adb shell "sed -i '/ln -s functions\\/ffs.adb configs\\/c.1\\/f2/a \ \\ ln -s functions\\/ncm.0 configs\\/c.1\\/f3 2>\\/dev\\/null | true' \ $USB_COMP_QUALCOM" echo "[INFO][DRONE] Creating udev rule $UDEV_RULE_DRONE for usb0 with IP ${DRONE_IP}" adb shell "cat << 'EOF' > $UDEV_RULE_DRONE ACTION==\"add\", SUBSYSTEM==\"net\", KERNEL==\"usb0\", \ RUN+=\"/bin/sh -c 'sleep 2; /sbin/ifconfig usb0 ${DRONE_IP} netmask 255.255.255.0 up'\" EOF" echo "[INFO][DRONE] NCM enabled — reboot required" } do_drone_uninstall() { echo "[INFO][DRONE] Removing NCM configuration" adb root adb remount echo "[INFO][DRONE] Removing udev rule $UDEV_RULE_DRONE" adb shell "rm -f $UDEV_RULE_DRONE || true" echo "[INFO][DRONE] Reverting USB composition (901D)" adb shell " sed -i '/ln -s functions\\/ncm.0 configs\\/c.1\\/f3/d' \ $USB_COMP_QUALCOM " echo "[INFO][DRONE] USB NCM configuration removed" echo "[INFO][DRONE] Reboot required to fully apply changes" } # Arg parsing TARGET_PC=false TARGET_DRONE=false DO_UNINSTALL=false for arg in "$@"; do case "$arg" in --help) show_help; exit 0 ;; --pc) TARGET_PC=true ;; --drone) TARGET_DRONE=true ;; --uninstall) DO_UNINSTALL=true ;; *) echo "[ERROR] Unknown argument: $arg"; show_help; exit 1 ;; esac done # Default to both if none selected if ! $TARGET_PC && ! $TARGET_DRONE; then TARGET_PC=true TARGET_DRONE=true fi # Execute if $DO_UNINSTALL; then $TARGET_PC && do_pc_uninstall $TARGET_DRONE && do_drone_uninstall else $TARGET_PC && do_pc_install $TARGET_DRONE && do_drone_install fi echo "[INFO] All done." `` -
@Zachary-Lowell-0 Hey Zach did you discover anything in this effort? I played around with recompiling the kernel to include the CONFIG_USB_CONFIGFS_RNDIS=y flag and confirmed it took on my Voxl 2 Mini, and can see the existence of a new rndis.rndis function in the usb gadget functions directory, but when I try to reconfigure the 901D config file, I end up just breaking the USB port entirely.