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Piface Binding
Documentation for the Piface binding
A Piface extension board is attached to a Raspberry Pi via the GPIO connector. It has 8 digital input and 8 digital output pins. It is not possible to set the value of input pins, or read the value of output pins. There is plenty of documentation on the web about the Piface board and how it can be used.
For installation of the binding, please see Wiki page Bindings.
In order to communicate with the Raspberry Pi carrying the PiFace daughter board please install the scripts that can be found here. If you upgrade from an older openhab version make sure that you update the scripts to avoid watchdog errors in your logfile.
In newer RasPi kernel versions the hardware resource allocation is handled by the device tree. This may stop the SPI kernel module from loading after an update of the RasPi firmware (rpi-update command) even if the the ohpiface scripts are correctly installed and where already working. If you experiencing issues please
- Check if the SPI kernel module is loaded
- Check if the SPI kernel module can be loaded
- Modify /boot/config.txt to enable SPI in the device tree
- Reboot your Raspberry
The command
lsmod | grep spi_bcm2708
or
lsmod | grep spi_bcm2835
checks if the kernel module is loaded. If the module is loaded you will get output like
spi_bcm2708 6018 0
if not - no output is generated.
If the module is not loaded you may try
modprobe spi_bcm2708
to load the kernel module. If you get an error message
Add the line
device_tree_param=spi=on
to the file /boot/config.txt to enable SPI in the device tree and reboot. The kernel module should now load into the kernel and the ohpiface scripts should work again.
The binding supports multiple Piface devices by specifying a unique PifaceId in the binding configuration. The PifaceId is used in the item configuration to identify which device it is associated with.
################################ PiFace Binding #####################################
# Host address of the Piface device (mandatory)
piface:pifaceid1.host=<ipaddress>
# Port the Piface device is listening on for commands FROM the binding
# (optional - defaults to 15432)
#piface:pifaceid1.listenerport=
# Port the Piface device uses to send updates TO the binding
# (optional - defaults to 15433)
#piface:pifaceid1.monitorport=
# Watchdog polling interval (optional, defaults to 60000) (since v1.4.0)
#piface:watchdog.interval=
The binding supports SWITCH and CONTACT item types only. In order to associate an item with a particular Piface pin/port you must first define the PifaceId, as configured in the binding config, and then specify the pin type and number.
The syntax (by way of example) of the item configuration is shown below:
/* Two Piface items - an OUT switch, and an IN contact */
Switch PifaceSwitch1 "Switch 1" { piface="pifaceid1:OUT:1" }
Contact PifaceContact1 "Contact 1" { piface="pifaceid1:IN:1" }
In this example the first item is a SWITCH, which when activated in openHAB, will set OUTPUT pin 1 on the Piface board high/low. I.e. this is enabling openHAB to turn on/off something in the real-world - e.g. a garage door opener.
The second item is a CONTACT item which will be updated to open/closed when INPUT pin 1 on the Piface board is set high/low. I.e. this is reading the state of something in the real-world - e.g. it could be a reed switch on a garage door.
When the binding is initialised it will attempt to read the current state of any INPUT pins and update the items on the openHAB event bus. Output pins cannot be read currently so should be initialised to a known state by a rule in your openHAB configuration.
WATCHDOG monitor is a new feature added in version 1.4.0 to ensure your Pi is connected and responding. No further configuration is required as long as you do not want to make use of the watchdog feature.
By binding a switch/contact item to the WATCHDOG command for a Piface board you will be able to check your Pi is alive. The watchdog polling interval is configured in your openhab.cfg file (see above).
Switch PiFaceWatchDog1 "Watchdog 1" { piface="pifaceid1:WATCHDOG" }
Below is an example of my setup. I am using one of the output relays to control my underfloor heating system, and the other to activate my garage door opener. I also have 3 inputs configured, one from the underfloor thermostat controller, one from a reed switch on my garage door, and one attached to a homemade water sensor (just two pieces of aluminium foil wrapped around a piece of plastic with a 5mm gap).
// Underfloor heating
Switch UFThermostat "Underfloor Thermostat" <heating> { piface="piface1:IN:0" }
Switch UFHeatpump "Underfloor Heatpump" <heating> { piface="piface1:OUT:1" }
// Garage door
Contact GarageDoor "Garage Door [%s]" <garagedoor> { piface="piface1:IN:3" }
Switch GarageDoorOpener "Garage Door Opener" <remotecontrol> { piface="piface1:OUT:0" }
// Hot Water Cylinder cupboard water sensor
Switch HWCWaterSensor "HWC Water Sensor" <watersensor> { piface="piface1:IN:7" }
The rules for these items are below. The underfloor heating rule is pretty simple, if the thermostat decides it is time to heat openHAB simply passes this signal onto the heat pump, unless I am away on holiday! There is also a rule to check if the forecast is for a cold day ahead, and if the heat pump isn't already running at 5am, to give the heating a boost for a couple of hours. It should be noted I only run the heat pump from 9pm till 7am as this is when I get cheap power.
// turn on/off the underfloor heatpump based on the thermostat
rule "Underfloor heating"
when
Item UFThermostat changed
then
// don't turn on heating if we are on 'holiday' (unless there is a house sitter)
if (Holidays_Holiday.state != ON || Presence_HouseSitter.state == ON) {
if (UFThermostat.state == ON)
sendCommand(UFHeatpump, ON)
else
sendCommand(UFHeatpump, OFF)
}
end
// if the underfloor heatpump is off at 5am and tomorrow is looking
// cold then we give the underfloor a boost for a couple of hours
rule "Underfloor boost"
when
Time cron "0 0 5 * * ?"
then
// the minimum forecast max temperature before we attempt to boost
var boostTempThreshold = 10
// don't turn on heating if we are on 'holiday' (unless there is a house sitter)
if (Holidays_Holiday.state != ON || Presence_HouseSitter.state == ON) {
// if the heat pump is currently off then check the weather forecast for today
if (UFHeatpump.state == OFF && Weather_TodayMax.state < boostTempThreshold) {
sendCommand(UFHeatpump, ON)
sendTweet("Boosting underfloor heating since it looks chilly today")
}
}
end
rule "Shutoff underfloor heating"
when
Time cron "0 0 7 * * ?"
then
if (UFHeatpump.state == ON) {
sendCommand(UFHeatpump, OFF);
}
end
The garage door opener is a simple rule that effectively turns the switch into a 'button press', simulating the button being held down for one second. I also have a few notifications setup so any XBMC instances that are running get a popup when the garage door is opened. There are other rules linked to the garage door as well, i.e. to turn on the internal garage light for 5 mins when the door is opened.
var Timer openGarageDoorTimer = null
rule "Garage door opener"
when
Item GarageDoorOpener received command ON
then
if (openGarageDoorTimer != null)
openGarageDoorTimer.cancel()
// release the garage door 'opener' after a short delay
openGarageDoorTimer = createTimer(now.plusSeconds(1)) [|
sendCommand(GarageDoorOpener, OFF)
]
end
rule "Garage door open notification"
when
Item GarageDoor changed to OPEN
then
sendXbmcNotification("192.168.1.40", 80, "openHAB Alert", "Garage door is open!")
sendXbmcNotification("192.168.1.41", 80, "openHAB Alert", "Garage door is open!")
end
The HWC sensor rule is there to alert me of any leak and to 'dampen' the notification frequency, since my sensor tends to change rapidly when it gets wet - flicking on/off very quickly!
rule "HWC Water Sensor"
when
Item HWCWaterSensor changed to ON
then
// the water sensor can rapidly switch on/off when water detected - don't want 100's of alerts
// so ignore all activations for 5 mins once it is triggered
if (!ignore_HWCWaterSensor) {
// send an email and notification
sendMail("[email protected]", "openHAB Alert", "WATER detected in HWC cupboard!!!")
sendXMPP("[email protected]", "WATER detected in HWC cupboard!!!")
// send a notification to both XBMCs
sendXbmcNotification("192.168.1.40", 80, "openHAB Alert", "WATER detected in HWC cupboard!!!")
sendXbmcNotification("192.168.1.41", 80, "openHAB Alert", "WATER detected in HWC cupboard!!!")
// we only send the alerts once every 5 mins
ignore_HWCWaterSensor = true
if (timer_HWCWaterSensor != null)
timer_HWCWaterSensor.cancel()
// reset the ignore sensor flag after 5 mins
timer_HWCWaterSensor = createTimer(now.plusMinutes(5)) [|
ignore_HWCWaterSensor = false
]
}
end
ℹ Please find all documentation for openHAB 2 under http://docs.openhab.org.
The wiki pages here contain (outdated) documentation for the older openHAB 1.x version. Please be aware that a lot of core details changed with openHAB 2.0 and this wiki as well as all tutorials found for openHAB 1.x might be misleading. Check http://docs.openhab.org for more details and consult the community forum for all remaining questions.
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A good source of inspiration and tips from users gathered over the years. Be aware that things may have changed since they were written and some examples might not work correctly.
Please update the wiki if you do come across any out of date information.
- Rollershutter Bindings
- Squeezebox
- WAC Binding
- WebSolarLog
- Alarm Clock
- Convert Fahrenheit to Celsius
- The mother of all lighting rules
- Reusable Rules via Functions
- Combining different Items
- Items, Rules and more Examples of a SmartHome
- Google Map
- Controlling openHAB with Android
- Usecase examples
- B-Control Manager
- Spell checking for foreign languages
- Flic via Tasker
- Chromecast via castnow
- Speedtest.net integration