Matter Telink Lighting Example Application
Contents
Matter Telink Lighting Example Application#
The Telink Lighting Example demonstrates how to remotely control a white dimmable light bulb. It uses buttons to test changing the lighting and device states and LEDs to show the state of these changes. You can use this example as a reference for creating your own application.
Build and flash#
Pull docker image from repository:
$ docker pull connectedhomeip/chip-build-telink:latest
Run docker container:
$ docker run -it --rm -v ${CHIP_BASE}:/root/chip -v /dev/bus/usb:/dev/bus/usb --device-cgroup-rule "c 189:* rmw" connectedhomeip/chip-build-telink:latest
here
${CHIP_BASE}
is directory which contains CHIP repo files !!!Pay attention that OUTPUT_DIR should contains ABSOLUTE path to output dirActivate the build environment:
$ source ./scripts/activate.sh
In the example dir run:
$ west build
Flash binary:
$ west flash --erase
Usage#
UART#
To get output from device, connect UART to following pins:
Name |
Pin |
---|---|
RX |
PB3 (pin 17 of J34 connector) |
TX |
PB2 (pin 16 of J34 connector) |
GND |
GND |
LEDs#
Red LED indicates current state of Thread network. It ables to be in following states:
State |
Description |
---|---|
Blinks with short pulses |
Device is not commissioned to Thread, Thread is disabled |
Blinls with frequent pulses |
Device is commissioned, Thread enabled. Device trying to JOIN thread network |
Blinks with whde pulses |
Device commissioned and joined to thread network as CHILD |
Blue LED shows current state of lightbulb
CHIP tool commands#
Build chip-tool cli
Pair with device
${CHIP_TOOL_DIR}/chip-tool pairing ble-thread ${NODE_ID} hex:${DATASET} ${PIN_CODE} ${DISCRIMINATOR}
Example:
./chip-tool pairing ble-thread 1234 hex:0e080000000000010000000300000f35060004001fffe0020811111111222222220708fd61f77bd3df233e051000112233445566778899aabbccddeeff030e4f70656e54687265616444656d6f010212340410445f2b5ca6f2a93a55ce570a70efeecb0c0402a0fff8 20202021 3840
Switch on the light:
${CHIP_TOOL_DIR}/chip-tool onoff on 1
here:
onoff is name of cluster
on command to the cluster
1 ID of endpoint
Switch off the light:
${CHIP_TOOL_DIR}/chip-tool onoff off 1
here:
onoff is name of cluster
off command to the cluster
1 ID of endpoint
Read the light state:
${CHIP_TOOL_DIR}/chip-tool onoff read on-off 1
here:
onoff is name of cluster
read command to the cluster
on-off attribute to read
1 ID of endpoint
Change brightness of light:
${CHIP_TOOL_DIR}/chip-tool levelcontrol move-to-level 32 0 0 0 1
here:
levelcontrol is name of cluster
move-to-level command to the cluster
32 brightness value
0 transition time
0 option mask
0 option override
1 ID of endpoint
Read brightness level:
./chip-tool levelcontrol read current-level 1
here:
levelcontrol is name of cluster
read command to the cluster
current-level attribute to read
1 ID of endpoint
OTA with Linux OTA Provider#
OTA feature enabled by default only for ota-requestor-app example. To enable OTA feature for another Telink example:
set CONFIG_CHIP_OTA_REQUESTOR=y in corresponding “prj.conf” configuration file.
After build application with enabled OTA feature, use next binary files:
zephyr.bin - main binary to flash PCB (Use 2MB PCB).
zephyr-ota.bin - binary for OTA Provider
All binaries has the same SW version. To test OTA “zephyr-ota.bin” should have higher SW version than base SW. Set CONFIG_CHIP_DEVICE_SOFTWARE_VERSION=2 in corresponding “prj.conf” configuration file.
Usage of OTA:
Build the Linux OTA Provider
./scripts/examples/gn_build_example.sh examples/ota-provider-app/linux out/ota-provider-app chip_config_network_layer_ble=false
Run the Linux OTA Provider with OTA image.
./chip-ota-provider-app -f zephyr-ota.bin
Provision the Linux OTA Provider using chip-tool
./chip-tool pairing onnetwork ${OTA_PROVIDER_NODE_ID} 20202021
here:
${OTA_PROVIDER_NODE_ID} is the node id of Linux OTA Provider
Configure the ACL of the ota-provider-app to allow access
./chip-tool accesscontrol write acl '[{"fabricIndex": 1, "privilege": 5, "authMode": 2, "subjects": [112233], "targets": null}, {"fabricIndex": 1, "privilege": 3, "authMode": 2, "subjects": null, "targets": null}]' ${OTA_PROVIDER_NODE_ID} 0
here:
${OTA_PROVIDER_NODE_ID} is the node id of Linux OTA Provider
Use the chip-tool to announce the ota-provider-app to start the OTA process
./chip-tool otasoftwareupdaterequestor announce-ota-provider ${OTA_PROVIDER_NODE_ID} 0 0 0 ${DEVICE_NODE_ID} 0
here:
${OTA_PROVIDER_NODE_ID} is the node id of Linux OTA Provider
${DEVICE_NODE_ID} is the node id of paired device
Once the transfer is complete, OTA requestor sends ApplyUpdateRequest command to OTA provider for applying the image. Device will restart on successful application of OTA image.
Building with Pigweed RPCs#
The RPCs in lighting-common/lighting_service/lighting_service.proto
can be
used to control various functionalities of the lighting app from a USB-connected
host computer. To build the example with the RPC server, run the following
command with build-target replaced with the build target name of the Nordic
Semiconductor’s kit you own:
```
$ west build -b tlsr9518adk80d -- -DOVERLAY_CONFIG=rpc.overlay
```