| .. _can_api: |
| |
| CAN Controller |
| ############## |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| :depth: 2 |
| |
| Overview |
| ******** |
| |
| Controller Area Network is a two-wire serial bus specified by the |
| Bosch CAN Specification, Bosch CAN with Flexible Data-Rate specification and the |
| ISO 11898-1:2003 standard. |
| CAN is mostly known for its application in the automotive domain. However, it |
| is also used in home and industrial automation and other products. |
| |
| A CAN transceiver is an external device that converts the logic level signals |
| from the CAN controller to the bus-levels. The bus lines are called |
| CAN High (CAN H) and CAN Low (CAN L). |
| The transmit wire from the controller to the transceiver is called CAN TX, |
| and the receive wire is called CAN RX. |
| These wires use the logic levels whereas the bus-level is interpreted |
| differentially between CAN H and CAN L. |
| The bus can be either in the recessive (logical one) or dominant (logical zero) |
| state. The recessive state is when both lines, CAN H and CAN L, at roughly at |
| the same voltage level. This state is also the idle state. |
| To write a dominant bit to the bus, open-drain transistors tie CAN H to Vdd |
| and CAN L to ground. |
| The first and last node use a 120-ohm resistor between CAN H and CAN L to |
| terminate the bus. The dominant state always overrides the recessive state. |
| This structure is called a wired-AND. |
| |
| .. warning:: |
| |
| CAN controllers can only initialize when the bus is in the idle (recessive) |
| state for at least 11 recessive bits. Therefore you have to make sure that |
| CAN RX is high, at least for a short time. This is also necessary for |
| loopback mode. |
| |
| .. image:: transceiver.svg |
| :width: 70% |
| :align: center |
| :alt: CAN Transceiver |
| |
| |
| The bit-timing as defined in ISO 11898-1:2003 looks as following: |
| |
| .. image:: timing.svg |
| :width: 40% |
| :align: center |
| :alt: CAN Timing |
| |
| A single bit is split into four segments. |
| |
| * Sync_Seg: The nodes synchronize at the edge of the Sync_Seg. It is always one time quantum in length. |
| |
| * Prop_Seg: The signal propagation delay of the bus and other delays of the transceiver and node. |
| |
| * Phase_Seg1 and Phase_Seg2 :Define the sampling point. The bit is sampled at the end of Phase_Seg1. |
| |
| The bit-rate is calculated from the time of a time quantum and the values |
| defined above. |
| A bit has the length of Sync_Seg plus Prop_Seg plus Phase_Seg1 plus Phase_Seg2 |
| multiplied by the time of single time quantum. |
| The bit-rate is the inverse of the length of a single bit. |
| |
| A bit is sampled at the sampling point. |
| The sample point is between Phase_Seg1 and PhaseSeg2 and therefore is a |
| parameter that the user needs to choose. |
| The CiA recommends setting the sample point to 87.5% of the bit. |
| |
| The resynchronization jump width (SJW) defines the amount of time quantum the |
| sample point can be moved. |
| The sample point is moved when resynchronization is needed. |
| |
| The timing parameters (SJW, bitrate and sampling point, or bitrate, Prop_Seg, |
| Phase_Seg1and Phase_Seg2) are initially set from the device-tree and can be |
| changed at run-time from the timing-API. |
| |
| CAN uses so-called identifiers to identify the frame instead of addresses to |
| identify a node. |
| This identifier can either have 11-bit width (Standard or Basic Frame) or |
| 29-bit in case of an Extended Frame. The Zephyr CAN API supports both Standard |
| and Extended identifiers concurrently. A CAN frame starts with a dominant |
| Start Of Frame bit. After that, the identifiers follow. This phase is called the |
| arbitration phase. During the arbitration phase, write collisions are allowed. |
| They resolve by the fact that dominant bits override recessive bits. |
| Nodes monitor the bus and notice when their transmission is being overridden and |
| in case, abort their transmission. |
| This effectively gives lower number identifiers priority over higher number |
| identifiers. |
| |
| Filters are used to whitelist identifiers that are of interest for the specific |
| node. An identifier that doesn't match any filter is ignored. |
| Filters can either match exactly or a specified part of the identifier. |
| This method is called masking. |
| As an example, a mask with 11 bits set for standard or 29 bits set for extended |
| identifiers must match perfectly. |
| Bits that are set to zero in the mask are ignored when matching an identifier. |
| Most CAN controllers implement a limited number of filters in hardware. |
| The number of filters is also limited in Kconfig to save memory. |
| |
| Errors may occur during transmission. In case a node detects an erroneous frame, |
| it partially overrides the current frame with an error-frame. |
| Error-frames can either be error passive or error active, depending on the state |
| of the controller. |
| In case the controller is in error active state, it sends six consecutive |
| dominant bits, which is a violation of the stuffing rule that all nodes can |
| detect. The sender may resend the frame right after. |
| |
| An initialized node can be in one of the following states: |
| |
| * Error-active |
| * Error-passive |
| * Bus-off |
| |
| After initialization, the node is in the error-active state. In this state, the |
| node is allowed to send active error frames, ACK, and overload frames. |
| Every node has a receive- and transmit-error counter. |
| If either the receive- or the transmit-error counter exceeds 127, |
| the node changes to error-passive state. |
| In this state, the node is not allowed to send error-active frames anymore. |
| If the transmit-error counter increases further to 255, the node changes to the |
| bus-off state. In this state, the node is not allowed to send any dominant bits |
| to the bus. Nodes in the bus-off state may recover after receiving 128 |
| occurrences of 11 concurrent recessive bits. |
| |
| You can read more about CAN bus in this |
| `CAN Wikipedia article <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAN_bus>`_. |
| |
| Zephyr supports following CAN features: |
| |
| * Standard and Extended Identifiers |
| * Filters with Masking |
| * Loopback and Silent mode |
| * Remote Request |
| |
| Sending |
| ******* |
| |
| The following code snippets show how to send data. |
| |
| |
| This basic sample sends a CAN frame with standard identifier 0x123 and eight |
| bytes of data. When passing NULL as the callback, as shown in this example, |
| the send function blocks until the frame is sent and acknowledged by at least |
| one other node or an error occurred. The timeout only takes effect on acquiring |
| a mailbox. When a transmitting mailbox is assigned, sending cannot be canceled. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| struct zcan_frame frame = { |
| .id_type = CAN_STANDARD_IDENTIFIER, |
| .rtr = CAN_DATAFRAME, |
| .id = 0x123, |
| .dlc = 8, |
| .data = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8} |
| }; |
| const struct device *can_dev = DEVICE_DT_GET(DT_CHOSEN(zephyr_canbus)); |
| int ret; |
| |
| ret = can_send(can_dev, &frame, K_MSEC(100), NULL, NULL); |
| if (ret != 0) { |
| LOG_ERR("Sending failed [%d]", ret); |
| } |
| |
| |
| This example shows how to send a frame with extended identifier 0x1234567 and |
| two bytes of data. The provided callback is called when the message is sent, or |
| an error occurred. Passing :c:macro:`K_FOREVER` to the timeout causes the |
| function to block until a transfer mailbox is assigned to the frame or an error |
| occurred. It does not block until the message is sent like the example above. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| void tx_callback(const struct device *dev, int error, void *user_data) |
| { |
| char *sender = (char *)user_data; |
| |
| if (error != 0) { |
| LOG_ERR("Sending failed [%d]\nSender: %s\n", error, sender); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| int send_function(const struct device *can_dev) |
| { |
| struct zcan_frame frame = { |
| .id_type = CAN_EXTENDED_IDENTIFIER, |
| .rtr = CAN_DATAFRAME, |
| .id = 0x1234567, |
| .dlc = 2 |
| }; |
| |
| frame.data[0] = 1; |
| frame.data[1] = 2; |
| |
| return can_send(can_dev, &frame, K_FOREVER, tx_irq_callback, "Sender 1"); |
| } |
| |
| Receiving |
| ********* |
| |
| Frames are only received when they match a filter. |
| The following code snippets show how to receive frames by adding filters. |
| |
| Here we have an example for a receiving callback as used for |
| :c:func:`can_add_rx_filter`. The user data argument is passed when the filter is |
| added. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| void rx_callback_function(const struct device *dev, struct zcan_frame *frame, void *user_data) |
| { |
| ... do something with the frame ... |
| } |
| |
| The following snippet shows how to add a filter with a callback function. |
| It is the most efficient but also the most critical way to receive messages. |
| The callback function is called from an interrupt context, which means that the |
| callback function should be as short as possible and must not block. |
| Adding callback functions is not allowed from userspace context. |
| |
| The filter for this example is configured to match the identifier 0x123 exactly. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| const struct zcan_filter my_filter = { |
| .id_type = CAN_STANDARD_IDENTIFIER, |
| .rtr = CAN_DATAFRAME, |
| .id = 0x123, |
| .rtr_mask = 1, |
| .id_mask = CAN_STD_ID_MASK |
| }; |
| int filter_id; |
| const struct device *can_dev = DEVICE_DT_GET(DT_CHOSEN(zephyr_canbus)); |
| |
| filter_id = can_add_rx_filter(can_dev, rx_callback_function, callback_arg, &my_filter); |
| if (filter_id < 0) { |
| LOG_ERR("Unable to add rx filter [%d]", filter_id); |
| } |
| |
| Here an example for :c:func:`can_add_rx_filter_msgq` is shown. With this |
| function, it is possible to receive frames synchronously. This function can be |
| called from userspace context. The size of the message queue should be as big |
| as the expected backlog. |
| |
| The filter for this example is configured to match the extended identifier |
| 0x1234567 exactly. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| const struct zcan_filter my_filter = { |
| .id_type = CAN_EXTENDED_IDENTIFIER, |
| .rtr = CAN_DATAFRAME, |
| .id = 0x1234567, |
| .rtr_mask = 1, |
| .id_mask = CAN_EXT_ID_MASK |
| }; |
| CAN_MSGQ_DEFINE(my_can_msgq, 2); |
| struct zcan_frame rx_frame; |
| int filter_id; |
| const struct device *can_dev = DEVICE_DT_GET(DT_CHOSEN(zephyr_canbus)); |
| |
| filter_id = can_add_rx_filter_msgq(can_dev, &my_can_msgq, &my_filter); |
| if (filter_id < 0) { |
| LOG_ERR("Unable to add rx msgq [%d]", filter_id); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| while (true) { |
| k_msgq_get(&my_can_msgq, &rx_frame, K_FOREVER); |
| ... do something with the frame ... |
| } |
| |
| :c:func:`can_remove_rx_filter` removes the given filter. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| can_remove_rx_filter(can_dev, filter_id); |
| |
| Setting the bitrate |
| ******************* |
| |
| The bitrate and sampling point is initially set at runtime. To change it from |
| the application, one can use the :c:func:`can_set_timing` API. This function |
| takes three arguments. The first timing parameter sets the timing for classic |
| CAN and arbitration phase for CAN-FD. The second parameter sets the timing of |
| the data phase for CAN-FD. For classic CAN, you can use only the first |
| parameter and put NULL to the second one. The :c:func:`can_calc_timing` |
| function can calculate timing from a bitrate and sampling point in permille. |
| The following example sets the bitrate to 250k baud with the sampling point at |
| 87.5%. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| struct can_timing timing; |
| const struct device *can_dev = DEVICE_DT_GET(DT_CHOSEN(zephyr_canbus)); |
| int ret; |
| |
| ret = can_calc_timing(can_dev, &timing, 250000, 875); |
| if (ret > 0) { |
| LOG_INF("Sample-Point error: %d", ret); |
| } |
| |
| if (ret < 0) { |
| LOG_ERR("Failed to calc a valid timing"); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| ret = can_set_timing(can_dev, &timing, NULL); |
| if (ret != 0) { |
| LOG_ERR("Failed to set timing"); |
| } |
| |
| SocketCAN |
| ********* |
| |
| Zephyr additionally supports SocketCAN, a BSD socket implementation of the |
| Zephyr CAN API. |
| SocketCAN brings the convenience of the well-known BSD Socket API to |
| Controller Area Networks. It is compatible with the Linux SocketCAN |
| implementation, where many other high-level CAN projects build on top. |
| Note that frames are routed to the network stack instead of passed directly, |
| which adds some computation and memory overhead. |
| |
| Samples |
| ******* |
| |
| We have two ready-to-build samples demonstrating use of the Zephyr CAN API |
| :ref:`Zephyr CAN sample <can-sample>` and |
| :ref:`SocketCAN sample <socket-can-sample>`. |
| |
| |
| CAN Controller API Reference |
| **************************** |
| |
| .. doxygengroup:: can_interface |
| |
| |
| CAN Transceiver API Reference |
| ***************************** |
| |
| .. doxygengroup:: can_transceiver |