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2README.devices
3-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4
5This README contains various notes for users of libsigrok (or frontends
6that are based on libsigrok) about device- and/or driver-specific issues.
7
8
9Firmware
10--------
11
12Some devices supported by libsigrok need a firmware to be uploaded every time
13the device is connected to the PC (usually via USB), before it can be used.
14
15The default locations where libsigrok expects the firmware files are:
16
17 $SIGROK_FIRMWARE_DIR (environment variable)
18 $HOME/.local/share/sigrok-firmware
19 $prefix/share/sigrok-firmware
20 /usr/local/share/sigrok-firmware
21 /usr/share/sigrok-firmware
22
23($prefix is usually /usr/local or /usr, depending on your ./configure options)
24
25For further information see the section below and also:
26
27 http://sigrok.org/wiki/Firmware
28
29
30Per-driver firmware requirements
31--------------------------------
32
33The following drivers/devices require a firmware upload upon connection:
34
35 - asix-sigma: The ASIX SIGMA and SIGMA2 require various firmware files,
36 depending on the settings used. These files are available from our
37 'sigrok-firmware' repository/project under a license which allows us
38 to redistribute them.
39
40 - fx2lafw: Logic analyzers based on the Cypress FX2(LP) chip need the
41 firmware files from the 'sigrok-firmware-fx2lafw' repository/project.
42 The firmware is written from scratch and licensed under the GNU GPLv2+.
43
44 - hantek-6xxx: Certain oscilloscopes based on the Cypress FX2(LP) chip, such
45 as the Hantek 6022BE/6022BL, SainSmart DDS120, and Rocktech BM102, need the
46 firmware files from the 'sigrok-firmware-fx2lafw' repository/project.
47 The firmware is written from scratch and licensed under the GNU GPLv2+.
48
49 - hantek-dso: The Hantek DSO-2090 (and other supported models of the same
50 series of Hantek PC oscilloscopes) need firmware files.
51 These can be extracted from the vendor's Windows drivers using a tool
52 from our 'sigrok-util' repository/project.
53
54 - lecroy-logicstudio: The LeCroy LogicStudio requires FPGA bitstream files.
55 These can be extracted from the vendor's Windows software using a tool
56 from our 'sigrok-util' repository/project.
57 Additionally, it requires a Cypress FX2 firmware. This can be extracted
58 from the vendor's Windows software using another tool. Details:
59
60 http://sigrok.org/wiki/LeCroy_LogicStudio#Firmware
61
62 - saleae-logic16: The Saleae Logic16 needs a firmware file for the
63 Cypress FX2 chip in the device, as well as two FPGA bitstream files.
64 These can be extracted from the vendor's Linux application using a tool
65 from our 'sigrok-util' repository/project.
66
67 - sysclk-lwla:
68
69 - The Sysclk LWLA1034 requires various bitstream files.
70 These files are available from our 'sigrok-firmware' repository/project
71 under a license which allows us to redistribute them.
72
73 - The Sysclk LWLA1016 requires various bitstream files.
74 These can be extracted from the vendor's Windows drivers using a tool
75 from our 'sigrok-util' repository/project.
76
77The following drivers/devices do not need any firmware upload:
78
79 - agilent-dmm
80 - appa-55ii
81 - arachnid-labs-re-load-pro
82 - atten-pps3xxx
83 - baylibre-acme
84 - beaglelogic
85 - brymen-bm86x
86 - brymen-dmm
87 - cem-dt-885x
88 - center-3xx (including all subdrivers)
89 - chronovu-la
90 - colead-slm
91 - conrad-digi-35-cpu
92 - demo
93 - fluke-dmm
94 - ftdi-la
95 - gmc-mh-1x-2x (including all subdrivers)
96 - gwinstek-gds-800
97 - hameg-hmo
98 - hp-3457a
99 - hung-chang-dso-2100
100 - ikalogic-scanalogic2
101 - ikalogic-scanaplus
102 - kecheng-kc-330b
103 - kern-scale
104 - lascar-el-usb
105 - link-mso19
106 - manson-hcs-3xxx
107 - maynuo-m97
108 - mic-985xx (including all subdrivers)
109 - motech-lps-30x
110 - norma-dmm
111 - openbench-logic-sniffer
112 - pce-322a
113 - pipistrello-ols
114 - rigol-ds
115 - scpi-pps
116 - serial-dmm (including all subdrivers)
117 - serial-lcr (including all subdrivers)
118 - siglent-sds
119 - teleinfo
120 - testo
121 - tondaj-sl-814
122 - uni-t-dmm (including all subdrivers)
123 - uni-t-ut32x
124 - victor-dmm
125 - yokogawa-dlm
126 - zeroplus-logic-cube
127
128
129Specifying serial ports
130-----------------------
131
132Many devices supported by libsigrok use serial port based cables (real RS232
133or USB-to-serial ones) to connect to a PC.
134
135For all these devices, you need to specify the serial port they are connected
136to (e.g. using the 'conn' option in sigrok-cli). It is not possible to scan
137for such devices without specifying a serial port.
138
139Example:
140
141 $ sigrok-cli --driver <somedriver>:conn=/dev/ttyUSB0 ...
142
143The following drivers/devices require a serial port specification. Some of
144the drivers implement a default for the connection.
145
146 - agilent-dmm
147 - appa-55ii
148 - atten-pps3xxx
149 - brymen-dmm
150 - cem-dt-885x
151 - center-3xx (including all subdrivers)
152 - colead-slm
153 - conrad-digi-35-cpu
154 - fluke-dmm
155 - gmc-mh-1x-2x (including all subdrivers)
156 - hameg-hmo
157 - link-mso19
158 - mic-985xx (including all subdrivers)
159 - norma-dmm
160 - openbench-logic-sniffer
161 - rigol-ds (for RS232; not required for USBTMC or TCP)
162 - serial-dmm (including all subdrivers)
163 - serial-lcr (including all subdrivers)
164 - teleinfo
165 - tondaj-sl-814
166
167The following drivers/devices do not require a serial port specification:
168
169 - asix-sigma
170 - brymen-bm86x
171 - chronovu-la
172 - demo
173 - fx2lafw
174 - hantek-dso
175 - ikalogic-scanalogic2
176 - ikalogic-scanaplus
177 - kecheng-kc-330b
178 - lascar-el-usb
179 - pipistrello-ols
180 - rigol-ds (USBTMC or TCP)
181 - saleae-logic16
182 - sysclk-lwla
183 - uni-t-dmm (including all subdrivers)
184 - uni-t-ut32x
185 - victor-dmm
186 - yokogawa-dlm (USBTMC or TCP)
187 - zeroplus-logic-cube
188
189Beyond strict serial communication over COM ports (e.g. /dev/ttyUSB0), the
190conn= property can also address specific USB devices, as well as specify TCP
191or VXI communication parameters. See these examples:
192
193 $ sigrok-cli --driver <somedriver>:conn=<vid>.<pid> ...
194 $ sigrok-cli --driver <somedriver>:conn=tcp-raw/<ipaddr>/<port> ...
195 $ sigrok-cli --driver <somedriver>:conn=vxi/<ipaddr> ...
196
197The following drivers/devices accept network communication parameters:
198
199 - hameg-hmo
200 - rigol-ds
201 - siglent-sds
202 - yokogawa-dlm
203
204
205Specifying serial port parameters
206---------------------------------
207
208Every serial device's driver has default serial port parameters like baud
209rate, number of data bits, stop bits and handshake status. If a device requires
210different parameters, pass them as option "serialcomm" with the driver name.
211See libsigrok docs for the function serial_set_paramstr() for complete specs.
212
213Example:
214
215 $ sigrok-cli --driver <somedriver>:conn=<someconn>:serialcomm=9600/7n1/dtr=1
216
217
218Permissions of serial port based devices
219----------------------------------------
220
221When using devices supported by libsigrok that use serial port based cables
222(real RS232 or USB-to-serial ones) to connect to a PC, you need to ensure
223that the user running the libsigrok frontend has (read/write) permissions to
224access the serial port device (e.g. /dev/ttyS0, /dev/ttyUSB0, and so on).
225
226You can use 'chmod' to apply permissions as you see fit, and/or 'chown' to
227change the owner of the serial port device to a certain user or group.
228
229For USB-to-serial based devices, we recommended using our udev rules file
230(see below for details).
231
232
233Permissions for USB devices (udev rules files)
234----------------------------------------------
235
236When using USB-based devices supported by libsigrok, the user running the
237libsigrok frontend (e.g. sigrok-cli) has to have (read/write) permissions
238for the respective USB device.
239
240On Linux, this is accomplished using udev rules. libsigrok ships a rules
241file containing all supported devices which can be detected reliably
242(generic USB-to-serial converters are omitted, as these are used for a wide
243range of devices, e.g. GPS receivers, which are not handled by libsigrok).
244
245The file is available in contrib/60-libsigrok.rules. This file just contains
246the list of devices and flags these devices with ID_SIGROK="1". Access is
247granted by the 61-libsigrok-plugdev.rules or 61-libsigrok-uaccess.rules files,
248allowing access to members of the plugdev group or to currently logged in
249users, respectively.
250
251When using a libsigrok package from your favorite Linux distribution, the
252files should already be installed in /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/, i.e.
25360-libsigrok.rules and one of the access granting rules files. Use of
25461-libsigrok-uaccess.rules is encouraged on systemd distributions.
255
256The access policy can be locally overridden by placing appropriate rules in
257/etc/udev/rules.d/, disabling or ammending the default policy. See the
258udev documentation, e.g. man 7 udev, for details.
259
260If you're building from source, you need to copy the file to the place
261where udev will read these rules. Local rules should go to /etc/udev/rules.d.
262Keep the file naming, otherwise interaction between the libsigrok rules and
263rules shipped by the system will be broken.
264
265Please consult the udev docs for details.
266
267
268Cypress FX2 based devices
269-------------------------
270
271Devices using the Cypress FX2(LP) chip without any specific USB VID/PID will
272be enumerated with VID/PID 04b4:8613 (the default for "unconfigured FX2").
273These are usually "FX2 eval boards" (that can also be used as LAs, though).
274
275On Linux, the 'usbtest' driver will usually grab such devices, and they will
276thus not be usable by libsigrok (and frontends).
277
278You can fix this by running 'rmmod usbtest' as root before using the device.
279
280
281UNI-T DMM (and rebranded models) cables
282---------------------------------------
283
284UNI-T multimeters (and rebranded devices, e.g. some Voltcraft models) can
285ship with different PC connectivity cables:
286
287 - UT-D04 (USB/HID cable with Hoitek HE2325U chip, USB VID/PID 04fa:2490)
288 - UT-D04 (USB/HID cable with WCH CH9325 chip, USB VID/PID 1a86:e008)
289 - UT-D02 (RS232 cable)
290
291The above cables are all physically compatible (same IR connector shape)
292with all/most currently known UNI-T multimeters. For example, you can
293use either of the UT-D04 USB/HID cables or the UT-D02 RS232 cable with
294the UNI-T UT61D multimeter.
295
296When using the UT-D02 RS232 cable with any of the supported UNI-T DMMs,
297you have to use the respective driver with a '-ser' drivername suffix
298(internally all of these models are handled by the 'serial-dmm' driver).
299
300You also need to specify the serial port via the 'conn' option, e.g.
301/dev/ttyUSB0 (attached via a USB-to-serial cable) or /dev/ttyS0 (actual
302RS232 port) on Linux (see above).
303
304Finally, the user running the frontend (e.g. sigrok-cli) also needs
305permissions to access the respective serial port (see above).
306
307Examples (sigrok-cli):
308
309 $ sigrok-cli --driver uni-t-ut61e-ser:conn=/dev/ttyUSB0 ...
310 $ sigrok-cli --driver voltcraft-vc820-ser:conn=/dev/ttyS0 ...
311
312When using any of the UT-D04 USB/HID cables you have to use the respective
313driver _without_ the '-ser' drivername suffix (internally all of these models
314are handled by the 'uni-t-dmm' driver).
315
316You also need to specify the USB vendor/device IDs of the cable.
317Autodetection is not possible here, since various other products use the
318USB VID/PID of those cables too, and there is no way to distinguish them.
319
320Since the UT-D04 cables are USB based (but don't use a USB-to-serial chip)
321there is no need to specify a serial port via 'conn', of course.
322However, the user running the frontend does also need to have permissions
323to access the respective USB device (see above).
324
325Examples (sigrok-cli):
326
327 $ sigrok-cli --driver uni-t-ut61e:conn=1a86.e008 ...
328 $ sigrok-cli --driver voltcraft-vc820:conn=04fa.2490 ...
329
330
331UNI-T UT-D04 cable issue on Linux
332---------------------------------
333
334The UNI-T UT-D04 cable with Hoitek HE2325U (or WCH CH9325) chip seems to have
335a very specific problem on Linux. Apparently it requires to be put into
336suspend (and woken up again) before it is usable. This seems to be a
337Linux-only issue, Windows is not affected by this since apparently the
338Windows kernel does this for every USB device, always.
339
340Thus, if you want to use any of the UNI-T DMMs with this specific cable,
341you'll have to run the following script (as root) once, every time you attach
342the cable via USB. The script was written by Ralf Burger.
343
344See also: http://erste.de/UT61/index.html
345
346 #!/bin/bash
347 for dat in /sys/bus/usb/devices/*; do
348 if test -e $dat/manufacturer; then
349 grep "WCH.CN" $dat/manufacturer > /dev/null && echo auto > ${dat}/power/level && echo 0 > ${dat}/power/autosuspend
350 fi
351 done
352
353
354Enabling multimeter / data logger measurement output
355----------------------------------------------------
356
357Some multimeters or data loggers will not start outputting measurement data
358unless a certain action has been performed by the user beforehand. This is
359usually mentioned in the vendor manual of the respective device, but here's
360a short list for convenience:
361
362 - BBC Goertz Metrawatt M2110: Briefly press the "Start/Reset" button on the
363 interface panel on top.
364 - Digitek DT4000ZC: Briefly press the "RS232" button.
365 - Gossen Metrawatt Metrahit 1x/2x devices, driver gmc-mh-1x-2x-rs232:
366 - Power on the device with the "DATA" button pressed.
367 - Metrahit 2x devices must be configured for the respective interface type.
368 - Gossen Metrawatt Metrahit 2x devices, driver gmc-mh-2x-bd232:
369 - 'BD232' interface:
370 The multimeter must be configured for the respective interface type.
371 - 'SI232-II' interface ("PC Mode"):
372 The multimeter must be configured for interface type 'BD232' (all),
373 'SI232 online' (28-29S) or 'SI232 store' (22-26x). The interface must
374 be configured to the same baud rate as the host (default 9600).
375 Multimeter and interface must be configured to the same address.
376 - Metrix MX56C: Press the PRINT button to have the meter send acquisition
377 data via IR. Hold the PRINT button to adjust the meter's transmission
378 interval.
379 - Norma DM950: If the interface doesn't work (e.g. USB-RS232 converter), power
380 on the device with "FUNC" pressed (to power the interface from the DMM).
381 - PCE PCE-DM32: Briefly press the "RS232" button.
382 - RadioShack 22-812: Press and hold "SELECT" and "RANGE" together.
383 - TekPower TP4000ZC: Briefly press the "RS232" button.
384 - Tenma 72-7750: Briefly press the "RS232C" button.
385 - UNI-T UT60G: Briefly press the "RS232C" button.
386 - UNI-T UT61B/C/D: Press the "REL/RS232/USB" button for roughly 1 second.
387 - UNI-T UT71x: Press the "SEND/-/MAXMIN" button for roughly 1 second.
388 Briefly pressing the "EXIT" button leaves this mode again.
389 - UNI-T UT325: Briefly press the "SEND" button (as per manual). However, it
390 appears that in practice you don't have to press the button (at least on
391 some versions of the device), simply connect the device via USB.
392 - V&A VA18B/VA40B: Keep the "Hz/DUTY" key pressed while powering on the DMM.
393 - Victor 70C/86C: Press the "REL/RS232" button for roughly 1 second.
394 - Voltcraft VC-830: Press the "REL/PC" button for roughly 2 seconds.
395 - Voltcraft VC-870: Press the "REL/PC" button for roughly 1 second.
396
397
398ChronoVu LA8/LA16 USB VID/PIDs
399------------------------------
400
401The ChronoVu LA8/LA16 logic analyzer is available in two revisions. Previously,
402the device shipped with a USB VID/PID of 0403:6001, which is the standard ID
403for FTDI FT232 USB chips.
404
405Since this made it hard to distinguish the LA8/LA16 from any other device
406with this FTDI chip connected to the PC, the vendor later shipped the
407device with a USB VID/PID of 0403:8867.
408
409The 'chronovu-la' driver in libsigrok supports both VID/PID pairs and
410automatically finds devices with either VID/PID pair.
411
412
413OLS
414---
415
416The Dangerous Prototypes Openbench Logic Sniffer (OLS) logic analyzer
417driver in libsigrok assumes a somewhat recent firmware has been flashed onto
418the OLS (it doesn't need a firmware upload every time it's attached via USB,
419since the firmware is stored in the device permanently).
420
421The most recent firmware version that is tested is 3.07.
422
423If you use any older firmware and your OLS is not found or is not working
424properly, please upgrade to at least this firmware version. Check the
425Dangerous Prototypes wiki for firmware upgrade instructions:
426
427 http://dangerousprototypes.com/docs/Logic_Sniffer_upgrade_procedure
428
429Also, you need to specify a serial port for the OLS in the frontends, e.g.
430using the 'conn' option in sigrok-cli, and you also need to have the
431permissions to access the serial port (see above).
432
433Example:
434
435 $ sigrok-cli --driver ols:conn=/dev/ttyACM0 ...
436