Step-motor controller for CNC-like devices (or 3D printers) using the PRU (Programmable Realtime Unit) of the Beaglebone Black to create precisely timed and fast stepper-pulses for acceleration and travel. (And with fast, we're talking up to 1Mhz fast. For 8 motors in parallel. In a controlled move (G1). So this is not a limit in real-world applications).
Works with a cape designed by the author (the BUMPS cape), but also provides relatively easy adaption to new hardware (currently: support for CRAMPS). See hardware subdirectory.
This was one of my very early tests:
The {accl-,decel-}eration and travel motion profile is entirely created within the PRU from parameters sent by the host CPU decoupled via a ring-buffer. The BeagleBone main CPU prepares the data, such as parsing the G-Code and doing travel planning, while all the real-time critical parts are done in the PRU. The host CPU typically needs less than 1% CPU-time doing everything else (and there is no need for a real-time kernel).
The main machine-control
program is parsing G-Code, extracting axes moves and
enqueues them to the realtime unit. It can receive G-Code from a file or
socket (you can just telnet to it for an interactive session, how
cool is that?).
For detailed system configuration and building the machine-control
binary, see
INSTALL.md.
Before you can use beagleg and get meaningful outputs on the GPIO pins, two things are required on a fresh Beaglebone installation (we recommend the IoT image).
To enable the PRU the way we use it, we need to /boot/uEnv.txt
and
enable the correct uboot_overlay_pru
line.
We need to disable the line containing PRU-RPROC
(add a #
in front) and
enable the line containing the PRU-UIO
(remove #
in front).
###pru_uio (4.14.x-ti, 4.19.x-ti & mainline/bone kernel)
uboot_overlay_pru=/lib/firmware/AM335X-PRU-UIO-00A0.dtbo
Reboot.
The GPIO pins used for each hardware This is how you initialize the pins if you use the BUMPS board:
/opt/source/bb.org-overlays/tools/beaglebone-universal-io/config-pin -f hardware/BUMPS/bumps.pins
See the Hardware page for more boards.
To control a machine with G-Code, use the machine-control
binary.
This either takes a filename or a TCP port to listen on.
Usage: ./machine-control [options] [<gcode-filename>]
Options:
-c, --config <config-file> : Configuration file. (Required)
-p, --port <port> : Listen on this TCP port for GCode.
-b, --bind-addr <bind-ip> : Bind to this IP (Default: 0.0.0.0).
-l, --logfile <logfile> : Logfile to use. If empty, messages go to syslog (Default: /dev/stderr).
--param <paramfile> : Parameter file to use.
-d, --daemon : Run as daemon.
--priv <uid>[:<gid>] : After opening GPIO: drop privileges to this (default: daemon:daemon)
--help : Display this help text and exit.
Mostly for testing and debugging:
-f <factor> : Feedrate speed factor (Default 1.0).
-n : Dryrun; don't send to motors, no GPIO or PRU needed (Default: off).
-P : Verbose: Show some more debug output (Default: off).
-S : Synchronous: don't queue (Default: off).
--allow-m111 : Allow changing the debug level with M111 (Default: off).
Segment acceleration tuning:
--threshold-angle : Specifies the threshold angle used for segment acceleration (Default: 10 degrees).
--speed-tune-angle : Specifies the angle used for proportional speed-tuning. (Default: 60 degrees)
The --threshold-angle + --speed-tune-angle must be less than 90 degrees.
Configuration file overrides:
--homing-required : Require homing before any moves (require-homing = yes).
--nohoming-required : (Opposite of above^): Don't require homing before any moves (require-homing = no).
--norange-check : Disable machine limit checks. (range-check = no).
The axis configurations (max feedrate, acceleration, travel, motor mapping,...) is configured in a configuration file like in this example.
The G-Code understands logical axes X, Y, Z, E, A, B, C, U, V, and W.
More details about the G-Code code parsed and handled can be found in the G-Code documentation.
For testing your motor settings, you might initially just have a simple file:
sudo ./machine-control -c hardware/BUMPS/bumps.config -f 10 myfile.gcode
Output the file myfile.gcode
in 10x the original speed (say you want to
stress-test). Note, the factor will only scale feedrate, but the machine will
always obey the machine constraints with maximum feed and acceleration given in
the configuration file.
echo "G1 X100 F10000 G1 X0 F1000" | sudo ./machine-control /dev/stdin
This command directly executes some GCode coming from stdin. This is in particular useful when you're calibrating your machine and need to work on little tweaks.
sudo ./machine-control -c my.config --port 4444
Listen on TCP port 4444 for incoming connections and execute G-Codes over this
line. So you could use telnet beaglebone-hostname 4444
to have an interactive
session or send a file simple via socat
from a remote machine:
cat myfile.gcode | socat -t5 - TCP4:beaglebone-hostname:4444
Use socat
, don't use the ancient nc
(netcat) - its buffering seems to be
broken so that it can get stuck. With socat
, it should be possible to connect
to a pseudo-terminal in case your printer-software only talks to a terminal
(haven't tried that yet, please let me know if it works).
Note, there can only be one open TCP connection at any given time (after all, there is only one physical machine).
There is a binary gcode-print-stats
to extract information from the G-Code
file e.g. accurate expected print-time, Object height (=maximum Z-axis),
filament length. This is in particular useful because many GCode runtime
estimators are widely off; this is accurate to the second because it takes all
acceleration phases into account.
Usage: ./gcode-print-stats [options] <gcode-file> [<gcode-file> ..]
Options:
-c <config> : Machine config
-f <factor> : Speedup-factor for feedrate.
-H : Toggle print header line
Use filename '-' for stdin.
The output is in column form, so you can use standard tools to process them. For instance, from a bunch of gcode files, find the one that takes the longest time
./gcode-print-stats -c my.config *.gcode | sort -k2 -n
The BUMPS-cape is one of the capes to use, it was developed together with BeagleG (but it is not widely distributed yet). BeagleG also works with the CRAMPS board, which is a popular motor driver cape for the BeagleBone Black. You can easily adapt your own hardware, check the hardware sub-directory.
Each board has a number of connectors for motors and switches to which you connect your physical motors and end-switches to.
To map these connector positions to logical axes names, the machine-control
binary has a configuration file in which you can configure not only the
various axis parameters (max speed, acceleration, steps/mm), but also assign
these axes to motor drivers provided by the cape (motor_1
, motor_2
,...)
and end switches (switch_1
, switch_2
,...) to logical functions
(e.g. min_x
). See the annotated config file.
BeagleG provides a tool, gcode2ps
to export the machine path and speed into
a color-coded image for inspection. The color coding shows the machine speed
according to the configured machine constraints.
If you want to use the nicely seprated sub-APIs of BeagleG programmatically or want to get involved in the development, check the Development page.
BeagleG is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.