.. currentmodule:: pyb .. _pyb.CAN: class CAN -- controller area network communication bus ====================================================== CAN implements the standard CAN communications protocol. At the physical level it consists of 2 lines: RX and TX. Note that to connect the pyboard to a CAN bus you must use a CAN transceiver to convert the CAN logic signals from the pyboard to the correct voltage levels on the bus. Example usage (works without anything connected):: from pyb import CAN can = CAN(1, CAN.LOOPBACK) can.setfilter(0, CAN.LIST16, 0, (123, 124, 125, 126)) # set a filter to receive messages with id=123, 124, 125 and 126 can.send('message!', 123) # send a message with id 123 can.recv(0) # receive message on FIFO 0 Constructors ------------ .. class:: pyb.CAN(bus, ...) Construct a CAN object on the given bus. *bus* can be 1-2, or ``'YA'`` or ``'YB'``. With no additional parameters, the CAN object is created but not initialised (it has the settings from the last initialisation of the bus, if any). If extra arguments are given, the bus is initialised. See :meth:`CAN.init` for parameters of initialisation. The physical pins of the CAN buses are: - ``CAN(1)`` is on ``YA``: ``(RX, TX) = (Y3, Y4) = (PB8, PB9)`` - ``CAN(2)`` is on ``YB``: ``(RX, TX) = (Y5, Y6) = (PB12, PB13)`` Class Methods ------------- .. classmethod:: CAN.initfilterbanks(nr) Reset and disable all filter banks and assign how many banks should be available for CAN(1). STM32F405 has 28 filter banks that are shared between the two available CAN bus controllers. This function configures how many filter banks should be assigned to each. *nr* is the number of banks that will be assigned to CAN(1), the rest of the 28 are assigned to CAN(2). At boot, 14 banks are assigned to each controller. Methods ------- .. method:: CAN.init(mode, extframe=False, prescaler=100, *, sjw=1, bs1=6, bs2=8, auto_restart=False, baudrate=0, sample_point=75) Initialise the CAN bus with the given parameters: - *mode* is one of: NORMAL, LOOPBACK, SILENT, SILENT_LOOPBACK - if *extframe* is True then the bus uses extended identifiers in the frames (29 bits); otherwise it uses standard 11 bit identifiers - *prescaler* is used to set the duration of 1 time quanta; the time quanta will be the input clock (PCLK1, see :meth:`pyb.freq()`) divided by the prescaler - *sjw* is the resynchronisation jump width in units of the time quanta; it can be 1, 2, 3, 4 - *bs1* defines the location of the sample point in units of the time quanta; it can be between 1 and 1024 inclusive - *bs2* defines the location of the transmit point in units of the time quanta; it can be between 1 and 16 inclusive - *auto_restart* sets whether the controller will automatically try and restart communications after entering the bus-off state; if this is disabled then :meth:`~CAN.restart()` can be used to leave the bus-off state - *baudrate* if a baudrate other than 0 is provided, this function will try to automatically calculate a CAN bit-timing (overriding *prescaler*, *bs1* and *bs2*) that satisfies both the baudrate and the desired *sample_point*. - *sample_point* given in a percentage of the bit time, the *sample_point* specifies the position of the last bit sample with respect to the whole bit time. The default *sample_point* is 75%. The time quanta tq is the basic unit of time for the CAN bus. tq is the CAN prescaler value divided by PCLK1 (the frequency of internal peripheral bus 1); see :meth:`pyb.freq()` to determine PCLK1. A single bit is made up of the synchronisation segment, which is always 1 tq. Then follows bit segment 1, then bit segment 2. The sample point is after bit segment 1 finishes. The transmit point is after bit segment 2 finishes. The baud rate will be 1/bittime, where the bittime is 1 + BS1 + BS2 multiplied by the time quanta tq. For example, with PCLK1=42MHz, prescaler=100, sjw=1, bs1=6, bs2=8, the value of tq is 2.38 microseconds. The bittime is 35.7 microseconds, and the baudrate is 28kHz. See page 680 of the STM32F405 datasheet for more details. .. method:: CAN.deinit() Turn off the CAN bus. .. method:: CAN.restart() Force a software restart of the CAN controller without resetting its configuration. If the controller enters the bus-off state then it will no longer participate in bus activity. If the controller is not configured to automatically restart (see :meth:`~CAN.init()`) then this method can be used to trigger a restart, and the controller will follow the CAN protocol to leave the bus-off state and go into the error active state. .. method:: CAN.state() Return the state of the controller. The return value can be one of: - ``CAN.STOPPED`` -- the controller is completely off and reset; - ``CAN.ERROR_ACTIVE`` -- the controller is on and in the Error Active state (both TEC and REC are less than 96); - ``CAN.ERROR_WARNING`` -- the controller is on and in the Error Warning state (at least one of TEC or REC is 96 or greater); - ``CAN.ERROR_PASSIVE`` -- the controller is on and in the Error Passive state (at least one of TEC or REC is 128 or greater); - ``CAN.BUS_OFF`` -- the controller is on but not participating in bus activity (TEC overflowed beyond 255). .. method:: CAN.info([list]) Get information about the controller's error states and TX and RX buffers. If *list* is provided then it should be a list object with at least 8 entries, which will be filled in with the information. Otherwise a new list will be created and filled in. In both cases the return value of the method is the populated list. The values in the list are: - TEC value - REC value - number of times the controller enterted the Error Warning state (wrapped around to 0 after 65535) - number of times the controller enterted the Error Passive state (wrapped around to 0 after 65535) - number of times the controller enterted the Bus Off state (wrapped around to 0 after 65535) - number of pending TX messages - number of pending RX messages on fifo 0 - number of pending RX messages on fifo 1 .. method:: CAN.setfilter(bank, mode, fifo, params, *, rtr) Configure a filter bank: - *bank* is the filter bank that is to be configured. - *mode* is the mode the filter should operate in. - *fifo* is which fifo (0 or 1) a message should be stored in, if it is accepted by this filter. - *params* is an array of values the defines the filter. The contents of the array depends on the *mode* argument. +-----------+---------------------------------------------------------+ |*mode* |contents of *params* array | +===========+=========================================================+ |CAN.LIST16 |Four 16 bit ids that will be accepted | +-----------+---------------------------------------------------------+ |CAN.LIST32 |Two 32 bit ids that will be accepted | +-----------+---------------------------------------------------------+ |CAN.MASK16 |Two 16 bit id/mask pairs. E.g. (1, 3, 4, 4) | | | | The first pair, 1 and 3 will accept all ids | | | | that have bit 0 = 1 and bit 1 = 0. | | | | The second pair, 4 and 4, will accept all ids | | | | that have bit 2 = 1. | +-----------+---------------------------------------------------------+ |CAN.MASK32 |As with CAN.MASK16 but with only one 32 bit id/mask pair.| +-----------+---------------------------------------------------------+ - *rtr* is an array of booleans that states if a filter should accept a remote transmission request message. If this argument is not given then it defaults to ``False`` for all entries. The length of the array depends on the *mode* argument. +-----------+----------------------+ |*mode* |length of *rtr* array | +===========+======================+ |CAN.LIST16 |4 | +-----------+----------------------+ |CAN.LIST32 |2 | +-----------+----------------------+ |CAN.MASK16 |2 | +-----------+----------------------+ |CAN.MASK32 |1 | +-----------+----------------------+ .. method:: CAN.clearfilter(bank) Clear and disables a filter bank: - *bank* is the filter bank that is to be cleared. .. method:: CAN.any(fifo) Return ``True`` if any message waiting on the FIFO, else ``False``. .. method:: CAN.recv(fifo, list=None, *, timeout=5000) Receive data on the bus: - *fifo* is an integer, which is the FIFO to receive on - *list* is an optional list object to be used as the return value - *timeout* is the timeout in milliseconds to wait for the receive. Return value: A tuple containing four values. - The id of the message. - A boolean that indicates if the message is an RTR message. - The FMI (Filter Match Index) value. - An array containing the data. If *list* is ``None`` then a new tuple will be allocated, as well as a new bytes object to contain the data (as the fourth element in the tuple). If *list* is not ``None`` then it should be a list object with a least four elements. The fourth element should be a memoryview object which is created from either a bytearray or an array of type 'B' or 'b', and this array must have enough room for at least 8 bytes. The list object will then be populated with the first three return values above, and the memoryview object will be resized inplace to the size of the data and filled in with that data. The same list and memoryview objects can be reused in subsequent calls to this method, providing a way of receiving data without using the heap. For example:: buf = bytearray(8) lst = [0, 0, 0, memoryview(buf)] # No heap memory is allocated in the following call can.recv(0, lst) .. method:: CAN.send(data, id, *, timeout=0, rtr=False) Send a message on the bus: - *data* is the data to send (an integer to send, or a buffer object). - *id* is the id of the message to be sent. - *timeout* is the timeout in milliseconds to wait for the send. - *rtr* is a boolean that specifies if the message shall be sent as a remote transmission request. If *rtr* is True then only the length of *data* is used to fill in the DLC slot of the frame; the actual bytes in *data* are unused. If timeout is 0 the message is placed in a buffer in one of three hardware buffers and the method returns immediately. If all three buffers are in use an exception is thrown. If timeout is not 0, the method waits until the message is transmitted. If the message can't be transmitted within the specified time an exception is thrown. Return value: ``None``. .. method:: CAN.rxcallback(fifo, fun) Register a function to be called when a message is accepted into a empty fifo: - *fifo* is the receiving fifo. - *fun* is the function to be called when the fifo becomes non empty. The callback function takes two arguments the first is the can object it self the second is a integer that indicates the reason for the callback. +--------+------------------------------------------------+ | Reason | | +========+================================================+ | 0 | A message has been accepted into a empty FIFO. | +--------+------------------------------------------------+ | 1 | The FIFO is full | +--------+------------------------------------------------+ | 2 | A message has been lost due to a full FIFO | +--------+------------------------------------------------+ Example use of rxcallback:: def cb0(bus, reason): print('cb0') if reason == 0: print('pending') if reason == 1: print('full') if reason == 2: print('overflow') can = CAN(1, CAN.LOOPBACK) can.rxcallback(0, cb0) Constants --------- .. data:: CAN.NORMAL CAN.LOOPBACK CAN.SILENT CAN.SILENT_LOOPBACK The mode of the CAN bus used in :meth:`~CAN.init()`. .. data:: CAN.STOPPED CAN.ERROR_ACTIVE CAN.ERROR_WARNING CAN.ERROR_PASSIVE CAN.BUS_OFF Possible states of the CAN controller returned from :meth:`~CAN.state()`. .. data:: CAN.LIST16 CAN.MASK16 CAN.LIST32 CAN.MASK32 The operation mode of a filter used in :meth:`~CAN.setfilter()`.