Sep 14, 2019, 23:40 by
blaz...@gmail.com:
> Actually this is a better example because I do the exact same thing on this gizmo but in real use. The encoder is driven by a 2" diameter roller and the web driving it is running at 900fpm. That means the roller is spinning at ~1700 RPMs. That machine is using a much more complicated hal file, it counts index pulses (using updown) then triggers the an output on the comparator component. It's the same encoder, a 7i96 and a LinuxCNC PC @ ~2ghz with not great latencies, but it never really misses an index count. That machine runs a fairly huge Python file but all the logic is done in hal.
>
> Point is that all things being equal I probably shouldn't have an issue seeing an index pulse in the same manner at 1/100th the speed at 900MHz. But like I said, I do alot of monkeying around, maybe I damaged this encoder in some way.
>
>
Actually, without seeing the code you are using to set-up your system, it is just abstract talking.
What I had in mind is to determine if the problem is in Machinekit-HAL proper, HostMot2 driver or the MESA FPGA firmware. The actual counting of encoder's signals (A/B/Z) happens inside the FPGA firmware core and outside the scope of Machinekit. Machinekit-HAL only with periodicity of read function loop inside a real-time task (for example the 1ms long so called base-period) asks about update and receive state of registers inside the FPGA at some time.
What is needed is to investigate if the SoC FPGA firmware is functioning properly and you are - for example - only counting something improperly in Machinekit-HAL (can be - as I said - the problem with non-RT access to HAL from GUI), or if the whole FPGA firmware is shot.
So, please, tell me exactly what you are doing inside the HAL.
Cern.
>
> On Saturday, September 14, 2019 at 5:21:32 PM UTC-4, justin White wrote:
>
>> The "GUI" isn't counting the pulses. As I said/ I'm using the hal component "updown" which is a RT component as any other. That component outputs an unsigned integer that I just push to a gladevcp hal label. So it's being "counted" at the servo thread rate of 1ms or the .5ms that I briefly tried. I don't do any python coding or anything like that other than a very simple Python file to load the GUI as you typically would. The whole GUI is Hal files with a gladevcp interface, all it's doing is printing the number on the updown count pin.
>>
>> The 900MHz CPU in and of itself can't possibly be the issue. The HM2 encoder core runs at the same speed as it does on any of my Mesa ETH cards, and being ETH cards it means I use a Preempt-RT kernel on those PCs as well. An encoder spinning at 3000rpms and not missing a single pulse has that index pulse state in several orders of magnitude less FPGA cycles than me sitting here spinning an encoder by hand. A 2GHz x86 CPU with almost equal latency has far less opportunity to recognize that hm2 pin state than the Nano does at 900mhz with me spinning it by hand.
>>
>> On Saturday, September 14, 2019 at 5:01:39 PM UTC-4, >>
ce...@tuta.io <>>> wrote:
>>
>>> Sep 14, 2019, 20:04 by >>>
blaz...@gmail.com <>>>> :
>>>
>>> > Doing a little testing on my hardware I noticed there is an issue with encoder indexes being missed while trying to count them. It's difficult in hal to see the index pin change state on an encoder with reasonable resolution because the change in state is very short. So I added the function in my GUI to count up the encoder index pulses because it's obviously more visible when a number increments up vs trying to catch a small blip in halshow or halcmd. I noticed the index pulses are missed spinning the encoder at anything other than a very slow speed. I'm not really sure what communication method mksocfpga uses between the fpga and the cpu but I figured I'd try running a few non-fp components in a 0.2ms base thread to see if it helped. Didn't really seem to help at all
>>> >
>>> > I first tried this by routing the hm2<board>index-input hal pin into the updown component and sending the counts to a hal label in my gui. My first thought is that the state change is too short for the servo-thread to catch at 1ms, so I added the "edge" component to extend the length of the index-input on it's output but that didn't really help. The output of edge obviously only get's extended if it catches the input state change which it does no better than updown.
>>> >
>>> > The conclusion I'm drawing is that the RT behavior of the CPU or the communication between the FPGA and CPU cores is too slow for whatever reason, that or there's some issue with the encoder module in mksocfpga's hm2. I'm using 3 channels of a quad differential receiver chip for each encoder input. There is no difference between the index channel and A-B channels hardware wise, and this is the same on 6 identical instances of encoder inputs. The only difference is that hm2 counts the A-B channels in the FPGA while the index is not. I haven't seen any indication of missed counts on the A-B channels counting 4000 edges in quadrature. I've messed with the hm2 encoder sample-frequency too which also did not help. The only thing that helped somewhat is running a 0.5ms servo-thread but it still missed quite a few index's, and this is with me spinning the encoder by hand.
>>> >
>>> > I use this same model of encoder on a LinuxCNC machine with a Mesa 7i96 and again on a 7i76e and I've never really seen an index missed on those spindle motors at ~3000rpms. If this isn't an issue with the hm2 encoder module itself I'd expect to see the same issue with a normal GPIO input missing short/fast pulses but I would think that someone else would have noticed that issue by now?
>>> >
>>> > Thoughts?
>>> >
>>> Stupid question, but how exactly are you counting the Z pulses in your GUI? Are taking into account the non-RT nature of the GUI?
>>>
>>> I don't remember how exactly is the communication done in HostMot2, but I remember that you have to "compute" the index signal from A/B registers if you were to catch the sampling message (request and response from FPGA layer) outside the index occurrence.
>>>
>>> Cern.
>>>
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