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- <h3>fhem.pl - Hints for GNU/Linux</h3>
- Version: <b>EN</b> <a href="linux_DE.html">DE</a>
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- <h2>fhem.pl - Hints for GNU/Linux</h2>
- <table border=1><tr><td>
- Note: Depending on the GNU/Linux distribution (Debian, openSuSE, etc.) and
- version of the Linux kernel you may or <i>may not</i> have to do the
- following steps.<br>
- It is worth giving it a try without any modifications <b>first</b>.<br> We
- have convinced the kernel developers to enable all (currently known) ELV
- devices by default. Starting with kernel 2.6.24.2 (e.g. openSUSE 11) the
- changes below are <b>not</b> required. You can check your running kernel
- version using the command:
- <code><br>uname -r<br></code>
- </td></tr></table>
- <hr>
- <p><b><a name="onedevice">One device</a></b><br>
- If you connect one USB device (FHZ1000PC, FHZ1300PC, EM1010PC, WS300, ...) to
- your GNU/Linux server you can use the regular <i>ftdi_sio</i> kernel module.
- However, it may not recognize our device. Therefore you need to get the
- <i>vendor</i> and <i>product</i> codes:
- <code><br>
- # lsusb<br>
- ...<br>
- Bus 002 Device 002: ID <b>0403</b>:<b>e0e8</b> Future Technology Devices International, Ltd <br>
- ...<br>
- </code><br>
- Now you need to edit your <code>/etc/modprobe.conf</code> or
- <code>/etc/modprobe.conf.local</code> file (depending on your distribution).
- Add the following line to it:<br>
- <code><br>
- options ftdi_sio vendor=0x<b>0403</b> product=0x<b>e0e8</b><br>
- </code><br>
- Replace the vendor and product code with the output of the <i>lsusb</i>
- command. The you load the module using:<br>
- <code><br>
- # modprobe ftdi_sio<br>
- </code><br>
- <hr>
- <p><b><a name="multipledevices">Multiple devices</a></b><br>
- If you're using multiple USB devices (FHZ1000PC, FHZ1300PC, EM1010PC, WS300,
- ...) you cannot use the method above. You need to modify the ftdi_sio kernel
- module to make it work. The following example was done with openSuSE 10.1:<br>
- You need to have the kernel-source-<i>version</i> RPM of your current kernel
- (see output of <code>uname -r</code>) installed.<br>
- <code><br>
- # cd /usr/src/linux<br>
- # make cloneconfig<br>
- # make modules_prepare<br>
- # cp /boot/symvers-2.6.*-default.gz /usr/src/linux<br>
- # mv symvers-2.6.*-default.gz Module.symvers.gz<br>
- # gunzip /usr/src/linux/Module.symvers.gz<br>
- # make modules_prepare<br>
- # cd drivers/usb/serial<br>
- </code>
- For the EM1010PC you (may) need to add the following line:
- <code><br>
- # vi ftdi_sio.h<br>
- ...<br>
- #define FTDI_ELV_WS500_PID 0xE0E9 /* PC-Wetterstation (WS 500) */<br>
- <b>#define FTDI_ELV_EM1010PC_PID 0xE0EF /* EM 1010 PC */</b><br>
- </code><br>
- Now we need to uncomment some lines to enable all of our devices.
- <code><br>
- # vi ftdi_sio.c<br>
- ...<br>
- { USB_DEVICE(FTDI_VID, FTDI_ELV_WS300PC_PID) }, <br>
- { USB_DEVICE(FTDI_VID, FTDI_ELV_FHZ1300PC_PID) },<br>
- { USB_DEVICE(FTDI_VID, FTDI_ELV_WS500_PID) }, <br>
- { USB_DEVICE(FTDI_VID, FTDI_ELV_EM1010PC_PID) },<br>
- ...<br>
- </code><br>
- Remove the <b>/*</b> and <b>*/</b> of your devices and save the file.
- <br>
- <code>
- # cd /usr/src/linux<br>
- </code>
- Now you have 3 choices:<br>
- <table border=1>
- <tr><td>
- <code>
- # mv Module.symvers Module.symvers.notneeded<br>
- # make M=drivers/usb/serial</code>
- <td>
- ... to build the modules for all of <i>usb serial</i>.<br>
- If you have a less powerful machine like the ARM-Based NSLU2 then it is
- sufficient to only build the required module.
- </td></tr>
- <td><code>
- # make modules</code>
- </td><td>
- ... to build all modules (takes a long time).
- </td></tr>
- <tr><td>
- <code>
- # make driver/usb/serial/ftdi_sio.ko
- </code>
- </td><td>
- ... to build just the <i>ftdi_sio.ko</i> module. However, this does not seem
- to be working always.
- </td></tr>
- </table>
- Once you have the module:<br>
- <code><br>
- # cd /lib/modules/<i>yourKernelVerion</i>/kernel/drivers/usb/serial<br>
- # cp ftdi_sio.ko ftdi_sio.ko_backup<br>
- # cp /usr/src/linux/drivers/usb/serial/ftdi_sio.ko .<br>
- </code><br>
- To activete it you may need to stop applications (like fhem) who
- are using the /dev/ttyUSB device and unload the module and load it again.<br>
- <code><br>
- # rmmod ftdi_so<br>
- # modprobe ftdi_so<br>
- </code><br>
- You should now see multiple ttyUSB devices:
- <code><br>
- # ls -l /dev/ttyUSB*<br>
- crw-rw---- 1 root uucp 188, 0 2007-02-11 23:00 /dev/ttyUSB0<br>
- crw-rw---- 1 root uucp 188, 1 2007-02-11 23:00 /dev/ttyUSB1<br>
- </code><br>
- <hr>
- <p><b><a name="devicelinks">Device links</a></b><br>
- If you're using multiple USB devices (FHZ, EM, WS...) it might occur that the
- enumeration of the /dev/ttyUSB<i>n</i> numbers get mixed up if one of the
- device is missing or after a reboot.<br> Starting with kernel 2.6 the UDEV
- implements means for using virtual names instead of the bare numbers.<br>
- Edit the file <code>/etc/udev/rules.d/10-udev.rules</code> (create if
- necessary) and insert the following lines: <br>
- If you use udev prior to version 103:<br>
- <code>
- KERNEL=="ttyUSB*", SYSFS{product}=="ELV FHZ 1300 PC", SYMLINK+="elv_fhz1300pc"<br>
- KERNEL=="ttyUSB*", SYSFS{product}=="ELV EM 1010 PC", SYMLINK+="elv_em1010pc"<br>
- </code><br>
- Starting with udev 103 the SYSFS will be replaced by ATTRS:
- <br>
- <code>
- KERNEL=="ttyUSB*", ATTRS{product}=="ELV FHZ 1300 PC", SYMLINK+="elv_fhz1300pc"<br>
- KERNEL=="ttyUSB*", ATTRS{product}=="ELV EM 1010 PC", SYMLINK+="elv_em1010pc"<br>
- </code><br>
- Now you need to reload (rmmod/modprobe) the ftdio_sio kernel module to
- use the device paths <code><b>/dev/elv_fhz1300pc</b></code> or
- <code><b>/dev/elv_em1010pc</b></code> in your FHEM configuration file.
- <hr>
- <p><b><a name="log">Perl Device::SerialPort</a></b><br>
- On debian you may install the missing Device::SerialPort package with:
- <pre>
- apt-get install libdevice-serialport-perl
- </pre>
- <hr>
- <p><b><a name="log">Logfile config</a></b><br>
- For a weekly fhem.log rotation add to /etc/logrotate.conf:<br>
- <pre>
- /var/log/fhem.log {
- missingok
- weekly
- copytruncate
- rotate 5
- compress
- }
- </pre>
- </div>
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