CAN bus Linux driver
The current CAN bus driver uses SocketCAN API which is now the official CAN API for Linux. SocketCAN is based on the Linux socket. Further details can be found on the links at the bottom of this page.
Contents
Driver installation
- Nothing has to be done for the APF51Dev, the APF28Dev, APF6Dev and the OPOS6ULDev.
- For the APF27DevFull:
$ make linux-menuconfig
Networking support ---> <M> CAN bus subsystem support ---> --- CAN bus subsystem support <M> Raw CAN Protocol (raw access with CAN-ID filtering) <M> Broadcast Manager CAN Protocol (with content filtering) CAN Device Drivers ---> <M> Virtual Local CAN Interface (vcan) <M> Platform CAN drivers with Netlink support [*] CAN bit-timing calculation <M> Microchip 251x series SPI CAN Controller
$ make linux $ make
- Reflash kernel and rootfs
Usage
- Load all the required drivers (not needed on OPOS6UL):
# modprobe can # modprobe can-dev # modprobe can-raw
APF27 & APF51 | APF6 |
---|---|
# modprobe mcp251x |
# modprobe flexcan |
- Set the bitrate before all operations
Example: Set the bitrate of the can0 interface to 125kbps:
# ip link set can0 up type can bitrate 125000
- If the following error occurs when you do the last instruction :
ip: either "dev" is duplicate, or "type" is garbage
check that this command:
# which ip
return this message:
/sbin/ip
and not this one :
/bin/ip
If the binary is installed in /bin instead of /sbin, the executable file is a link to busybox and the command to set the bitrate doesn't work on busybox, so try the following instructions:
$ make busybox-clean $ make busybox-dirclean $ make menuconfig
Package Selection for the target ---> Networking applications ---> [*] iproute2
$ make
Then, reflash your rootfs.
Quick test
- Once the driver is installed and the bitrate is set, the CAN interface has to be started like a standard net interface:
# ifconfig can0 up
- and can be stopped like that:
# ifconfig can0 down
- The socketCAN version can be retrieved this way:
# cat /proc/net/can/version
- The socketCAN statistics can be retrieved this way:
# cat /proc/net/can/stats
Userspace tools
Several tools are provided by socketCAN:
- candump: dump traffic on a CAN network
The following command shows the received message from the CAN bus
candump can0
- cansend: simple command line tool to send CAN-frames via CAN_RAW sockets
exemple : The following command sends 3 bytes on the bus (0x1E, 0x10, 0x10) with the identifier 500.
cansend can0 500#1E.10.10
You can send a remote request message
cansend can0 500#R
The information with the identifier 500 will be available on the bus when the device receive the remote request message
- cangen: CAN frames generator for testing purpose
- canplayer: send CAN frames from a file to a CAN interface
These tools can be compiled and installed on the target by means of the Buildroot menuconfig:
$ make menuconfig
Package Selection for the target ---> Networking ---> [*] Socket CAN
$ make
then, reflash your rootfs.
Automatically launch CAN interface at startup
- Add the following lines to /etc/network/interfaces configuration file:
auto can0 iface can0 inet manual pre-up /sbin/ip link set $IFACE type can bitrate 125000 on up /sbin/ifconfig $IFACE up down /sbin/ifconfig $IFACE down
Links
- https://www.ridgerun.com/developer/wiki/index.php/How_to_configure_and_use_CAN_bus (How to configure and use CAN bus)
- http://developer.berlios.de/projects/socketcan/ (CAN Linux Driver)
- http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/21801e.pdf (MCP2515 datasheet)
- http://www.kvaser.com/can/protocol/index.htm (CAN introduction)
- Communication with a car's CAN bus