Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
AHT20 Humidity + Temperature Sensor
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@sdetweil – Hi Sam, thanks for looking in on this.
I guess I don’t understand… If the module is calling a python script, and the script is polling the sensor - then it would seem to me that the browser isn’t accessing the hardware or files directly. Obviously I’m missing something here.
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@JohnGalt the browser (electron) wants to display the data from the sensor, but it cant read it directly. so the module sends a request to the helper to get the data from device 0x38
the module uses a python script to get the data
the python script is reporting an errorthat is what needs to be looked at.
you posted the code from the module/browser side which is not involved in getting the actual data
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the python script you are looking for is bme280.py
#!/usr/bin/python #-------------------------------------- # ___ ___ _ ____ # / _ \/ _ \(_) __/__ __ __ # / , _/ ___/ /\ \/ _ \/ // / # /_/|_/_/ /_/___/ .__/\_, / # /_/ /___/ # # bme280.py # Read data from a digital pressure sensor. # # Official datasheet available from : # https://www.bosch-sensortec.com/bst/products/all_products/bme280 # # Author : Matt Hawkins # Date : 21/01/2018 # # https://www.raspberrypi-spy.co.uk/ # #-------------------------------------- import smbus import sys import time from ctypes import c_short from ctypes import c_byte from ctypes import c_ubyte DEVICE = 0x76 # Default device I2C address try: #override device address like '0x77' DEVICE = int(sys.argv[1], 16) except: pass bus = smbus.SMBus(1) # Rev 2 Pi, Pi 2 & Pi 3 uses bus 1 # Rev 1 Pi uses bus 0 def getShort(data, index): # return two bytes from data as a signed 16-bit value return c_short((data[index+1] << 8) + data[index]).value def getUShort(data, index): # return two bytes from data as an unsigned 16-bit value return (data[index+1] << 8) + data[index] def getChar(data,index): # return one byte from data as a signed char result = data[index] if result > 127: result -= 256 return result def getUChar(data,index): # return one byte from data as an unsigned char result = data[index] & 0xFF return result def readBME280ID(addr=DEVICE): # Chip ID Register Address REG_ID = 0xD0 (chip_id, chip_version) = bus.read_i2c_block_data(addr, REG_ID, 2) return (chip_id, chip_version) def readBME280All(addr=DEVICE): # Register Addresses REG_DATA = 0xF7 REG_CONTROL = 0xF4 REG_CONFIG = 0xF5 REG_CONTROL_HUM = 0xF2 REG_HUM_MSB = 0xFD REG_HUM_LSB = 0xFE # Oversample setting - page 27 OVERSAMPLE_TEMP = 2 OVERSAMPLE_PRES = 2 MODE = 1 # Oversample setting for humidity register - page 26 OVERSAMPLE_HUM = 2 bus.write_byte_data(addr, REG_CONTROL_HUM, OVERSAMPLE_HUM) control = OVERSAMPLE_TEMP<<5 | OVERSAMPLE_PRES<<2 | MODE bus.write_byte_data(addr, REG_CONTROL, control) # Read blocks of calibration data from EEPROM # See Page 22 data sheet cal1 = bus.read_i2c_block_data(addr, 0x88, 24) cal2 = bus.read_i2c_block_data(addr, 0xA1, 1) cal3 = bus.read_i2c_block_data(addr, 0xE1, 7) # Convert byte data to word values dig_T1 = getUShort(cal1, 0) dig_T2 = getShort(cal1, 2) dig_T3 = getShort(cal1, 4) dig_P1 = getUShort(cal1, 6) dig_P2 = getShort(cal1, 8) dig_P3 = getShort(cal1, 10) dig_P4 = getShort(cal1, 12) dig_P5 = getShort(cal1, 14) dig_P6 = getShort(cal1, 16) dig_P7 = getShort(cal1, 18) dig_P8 = getShort(cal1, 20) dig_P9 = getShort(cal1, 22) dig_H1 = getUChar(cal2, 0) dig_H2 = getShort(cal3, 0) dig_H3 = getUChar(cal3, 2) dig_H4 = getChar(cal3, 3) dig_H4 = (dig_H4 << 24) >> 20 dig_H4 = dig_H4 | (getChar(cal3, 4) & 0x0F) dig_H5 = getChar(cal3, 5) dig_H5 = (dig_H5 << 24) >> 20 dig_H5 = dig_H5 | (getUChar(cal3, 4) >> 4 & 0x0F) dig_H6 = getChar(cal3, 6) # Wait in ms (Datasheet Appendix B: Measurement time and current calculation) wait_time = 1.25 + (2.3 * OVERSAMPLE_TEMP) + ((2.3 * OVERSAMPLE_PRES) + 0.575) + ((2.3 * OVERSAMPLE_HUM)+0.575) time.sleep(wait_time/1000) # Wait the required time # Read temperature/pressure/humidity data = bus.read_i2c_block_data(addr, REG_DATA, 8) pres_raw = (data[0] << 12) | (data[1] << 4) | (data[2] >> 4) temp_raw = (data[3] << 12) | (data[4] << 4) | (data[5] >> 4) hum_raw = (data[6] << 8) | data[7] #Refine temperature var1 = ((((temp_raw>>3)-(dig_T1<<1)))*(dig_T2)) >> 11 var2 = (((((temp_raw>>4) - (dig_T1)) * ((temp_raw>>4) - (dig_T1))) >> 12) * (dig_T3)) >> 14 t_fine = var1+var2 temperature = float(((t_fine * 5) + 128) >> 8); # Refine pressure and adjust for temperature var1 = t_fine / 2.0 - 64000.0 var2 = var1 * var1 * dig_P6 / 32768.0 var2 = var2 + var1 * dig_P5 * 2.0 var2 = var2 / 4.0 + dig_P4 * 65536.0 var1 = (dig_P3 * var1 * var1 / 524288.0 + dig_P2 * var1) / 524288.0 var1 = (1.0 + var1 / 32768.0) * dig_P1 if var1 == 0: pressure=0 else: pressure = 1048576.0 - pres_raw pressure = ((pressure - var2 / 4096.0) * 6250.0) / var1 var1 = dig_P9 * pressure * pressure / 2147483648.0 var2 = pressure * dig_P8 / 32768.0 pressure = pressure + (var1 + var2 + dig_P7) / 16.0 # Refine humidity humidity = t_fine - 76800.0 humidity = (hum_raw - (dig_H4 * 64.0 + dig_H5 / 16384.0 * humidity)) * (dig_H2 / 65536.0 * (1.0 + dig_H6 / 67108864.0 * humidity * (1.0 + dig_H3 / 67108864.0 * humidity))) humidity = humidity * (1.0 - dig_H1 * humidity / 524288.0) if humidity > 100: humidity = 100 elif humidity < 0: humidity = 0 return temperature/100.0,pressure/100.0,humidity def main(): # (chip_id, chip_version) = readBME280ID() # print("Chip ID :", chip_id) # print("Version :", chip_version) temperature,pressure,humidity = readBME280All() print(round(temperature,1),round(humidity,1),round(pressure,1)) if __name__=="__main__": main()
@JohnGalt said in AHT20 Humidity + Temperature Sensor:
Remote I/O error
The given error seems to by not a program but an I/O problem.
I’m not familiar with this sensor so I do not know how to connect and - most important - how to figure out the right “deviceAddress” - it seems that there is the error located.Either the address isn’t the correct one or the IO channel is somehow broken.
For the latter came in my mind: if this is a I2C conected device - do you have enabled I2C on your Raspi?I’ve tried to “understand” what happens in the python script above as well as in the C-exmaple program on the Bosch product page for bme280 sensor, but didn’t got it…
Regards,
Ralf -
@JohnGalt
just seen while re-reading my last posting:nodehelper.js (the part of the module which is communicating with the python program and so with the sensor) is calling python3 :
exec(`python3 ./modules/MMM-BME280/bme280.py ${deviceAddr}`, (error, stdout) => {
but the python script itself is referencing python 2 (see above post, source code of bme280.py, 1st line:
#!/usr/bin/python
I guess this must match and doesn’t …
So may this is the cause of your problems.And if this is true it is may really hard to get this working because you may run in several incompatibilities and library-conflicts …
Regards,
Ralf -
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@rkorell – Hi Ralf:
Yes, I2C is enabled and functioning. There is a test script that does return current temperature and humidity:
Invoking “python AHT20_test.py” does launch this script (Note - I launch from the terminal using ‘python’, not ‘python3’, telling me the system is indeed defaulting to python3):# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2021 ladyada for Adafruit Industries # SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT """ Basic `AHTx0` example test """ import time import board import adafruit_ahtx0 # Create sensor object, communicating over the board's default I2C bus i2c = board.I2C() # uses board.SCL and board.SDA # i2c = board.STEMMA_I2C() # For using the built-in STEMMA QT connector on a microcontroller sensor = adafruit_ahtx0.AHTx0(i2c) while True: print("\nTemperature: %0.1f C" % sensor.temperature) print("Humidity: %0.1f %%" % sensor.relative_humidity) time.sleep(2)
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@rkorell + @sdetweil - Thanks for the support. I think I have fixed this for myself by adapting an existing module (“MMM-Temperature”, // https://github.com/Tom-Hirschberger/MMM-Temperature).
That module calls scripts for various sensors to capture the data. I was able to adapt an existing script for use with this sensor, so I think I am good for now.
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@JohnGalt cool.
congratulations.
It’s may be worth to show the community what you have done?Regards,
Ralf -
@rkorell Yes, I can describe how I arrived at a resolution for my particular problem - which was to replace DHTxx sensors with the more accurate AHT20 temperature and humidity sensors.
Caveat: I do not necessarily recommend this for the average person though, because I did not find Magic Mirror modules that natively support this sensor, and as a result had to make changes outside of the config.js and custom.css files. As usual, this puts me at risk of something breaking when the module is updated.
The module being used (MMM-Temperature - found at https://github.com/Tom-Hirschberger/MMM-Temperature) utilizes python scripts to capture the data from the sensor. While the module is quite complete, with script support for many sensors, I did create a new script in order to use this particular sensor.
The sensor is supported by Adafruit (https://learn.adafruit.com/adafruit-aht20/python-circuitpython), with instructions to install various adafruit libraries including adafruit-ahtx0 (sudo pip3 install adafruit-circuitpython-ahtx0).
Using those libraries, your script needs to include the following instructions:
import board import adafruit_ahtx0 sensor = adafruit_ahtx0.AHTx0(board.I2C())
One of the existing scripts supports I2C sensors using the Adafruit libraries, so it looked like a good candidate to use as a model. See htu21:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 #pip3 install adafruit-circuitpython-htu21d import board from adafruit_htu21d import HTU21D import json result = {} try: # Create sensor object, communicating over the board's default I2C bus i2c = board.I2C() # uses board.SCL and board.SDA sensor = HTU21D(i2c) result["temperature_c"] = sensor.temperature result["humidity"] = sensor.relative_humidity result["temperature_f"] = (result["temperature_c"]*1.8) + 32 result["error"] = False except: result["temperature_c"] = 0.0 result["humidity"] = 0.0 result["temperature_f"] = (result["temperature_c"]*1.8) + 32 result["error"] = True print(json.dumps(result))
My resulting script is aht20:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 # aht20: Modeled on htu21 # pip3 install adafruit-circuitpython-htu21d # pip3 install adafruit-circuitpython-ahtx0 import board import adafruit_ahtx0 import json result = {} try: # Create sensor object, communicating over the board's default I2C bus i2c = board.I2C() # uses board.SCL and board.SDA # sensor = HTU21D(i2c) sensor = adafruit_ahtx0.AHTx0(board.I2C()) result["temperature_c"] = sensor.temperature result["humidity"] = sensor.relative_humidity result["temperature_f"] = (result["temperature_c"]*1.8) + 32 result["error"] = False except: result["temperature_c"] = 0.0 result["humidity"] = 0.0 result["temperature_f"] = (result["temperature_c"]*1.8) + 32 result["error"] = True print(json.dumps(result))
This module is now displaying the temperature and humidity from the sensor directly connected it it. Now all I have to do is figure out the complicated css and get it to look like the other modules on my Magic Mirror.
Barring any objections, I will mark this as solved.
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@JohnGalt css, use the developers window
see the second link in my signature below