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The aim of this project is to build a test environment based on ESP8266 and ESP32 for LoRa as LPWAN long-range radio. For this purpose, two identical test modules are used were each equipped with a LoRa transceiver, a GPS module and an OLED display for displaying the actual data.

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urmel79/IO_esp8266_oled_gps_lora_gh

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LoRa and LoRaWAN testing bench with GPS tracking

Last changed on June 30, 2022.

Table of contents

Introduction

Aim of the project

The aim of this project is to build a test environment based on ESP8266 or ESP32 for LoRa and LoRaWAN as LPWAN long-range radio network.

Requirements to the testing bench

For this purpose, two identical test modules were each equipped with a LoRa transceiver, a GPS module and an OLED display for displaying the current data.

Both test modules were initially prototypically built on breadboards. Power is supplied via the microUSB port of the ESP8266 NodeMCU (respectively NodeMCU ESP-32S) and optionally connected to the USB port of the development computer. This allows debugging via the serial interface and the serial monitor at the same time.

Alternatively, a LiPo power bank can also be used for both test modules, making them mobile for upcoming range tests.

At the moment, watertight food storage boxes are used as provisional and outdoor-suitable housings.

Firmware updates can be submitted via USB-to-serial interface or by using the Over-The-Air (OTA) update functionality to take advantage of maximum mobility :) In my opinion this is an essential feature for IoT applications! For an introduction to this technique start here: Over-the-air programming or there: ESP8266 OTA Updates with Arduino IDE | Over the Air.

GPS coordinates are transferred via MQTT to a Raspberry-based Node-RED-Server. On this server there is a dedicated flow what cares for

  • the displaying on the OpenStreetMap widget (install 'node-red-contrib-web-worldmap' package) and
  • the storage of the GPS coordinates (smoothed by floating average) in a SQLite database (install 'node-red-node-sqlite' package).

A brief overview of LoRa topologies

LoRa is usable in an Point to Point communication like this:

(image will follow soon)

Furthermore, it can be used in an full blown LoRa network on the basis of LoRaWAN like this:

(image will follow soon)

LoRa or LoRaWAN? - The difference is 1 GPIO pin of the ESP

For the application of a TTN based LoRaWAN network 1(!) additional GPIO pin of the ESP mcu to the LoRa transceiver module is required. Unfortunately, this pin of the ESP8266 is not available because all others are already occupied by the other peripherals and communication channels (e. g. UART to the gps sensor, I2C to the OLED display and SPI to the LoRa transceiver module itself).

Because of this dilemma the whole project had to be migrated for the use of ESP32 with its significantly more GPIO pins. It was a hard piece of work since there are many differences in the Arduino API especially in the wifi handling. So there are many #defines in the source for choosing the right mcu platform and software modules.

Node-RED Flows

Here you can see the Node-RED Flow for displaying the GPS coordinates on the OpenStreetMap and for storaging in an SQLite database for 2 ESP nodes:

Node-RED Flow LoRa Nodes 1 and 2 and GPS mapping

There is my Node-RED Flow ready to import it to your own Node-RED installation lora_1u2_map.json. To use it, you have to additionally install following Node-RED packages:

  • node-red-dashboard
  • node-red-contrib-web-worldmap
  • node-red-node-sqlite

Display GPS tracks on OSM worldmap

The experimental breadboard setup (including the gps sensor) is located on the outside windowsill of my office with a view to the southeast. This is a screenshot of the OSM worldmap and the gps tracks recorded over some time:

OSM worldmap with LoRa 1

The colors of the gps tracks have the following meaning:

  • blue: raw positioning data from gps sensor
  • red: smoothed data by running average
  • green: smoothed data by running median

Storing the transmitted data: SQLite database layout

Here is a screenshot of phpLiteAdmin to show my SQLite database layout for storing the GPS coordinates:

SQLite database layout

Visual impressions of my experimental breadboard setup

Here you can see one of two test modules build on breadboard:

Breadboard Layout

In this picture you can see the other test module on top of the provisional and outdoor-suitable housing (watertight food storage box):

Breadboard Layout and case

Bill of materials (BOM)

Following parts I have used in this project (every component you will need twice of course):

  • NodeMCU v2 (ESP8266) or NodeMCU ESP-32S
  • OLED I2C display, 128 x 64 Pixel, 1.3 Zoll (SSH1106 chip)
  • GPS module u-blox Neo-6M (GY-GPS6MV2 chip)
  • LoRa transceiver Adafruit RFM9x LoRa Radio (RFM95W chip, 868 MHz)
  • LoRa antenna (868 MHz), 3 dBi omnidirectional
  • u.FL/IPEX to SMA connector (so called 'pigtail')
  • USB cable with micro USB plug
  • breadboard full+ (830 holes)
  • wire jumpers
  • LiPo battery pack

Breadboard layout and schematics (version with ESP8266)

With Fritzing (https://fritzing.org) I have created following breadboard layout:

Breadboard Layout

The schematics looks like this:

Schematics

Breadboard layout and schematics (version with ESP32)

With Fritzing (https://fritzing.org) I have created following breadboard layout:

Breadboard Layout

The schematics looks like this:

Schematics

Troubleshooting

In this section I will describe some typical hardware or software problems that I have struggled with for several days.

(to be continued)

Writing serial output with timestamps to a logfile

Connect the ESP8266 / ESP32 via a microUSB cable directly to a Linux computer or a Raspberry Pi.

Method 1: Use minicom

Start minicom and configure the serial connection via C-a o. Especially the path to the serial device (e. g. /dev/ttyUSB0), the correct baud rate (115200 baud) and the stop and parity bits (8N1) have to be set.

Activate timestamps via C-a n. Do that several times and cycle through the timestamps modes: 'no timestamps', 'simple timestamps' and 'advanced timestamps' (with milliseconds). I use the latter mode, because the serial output with 115200 baud is really fast. See the screenshot below.

Screenshot of minicom with activated timestamps

Activate the logging function in minicom via C-a l. In the dialog box you have to set your desired file name.

Method 2: Use command line tools

Build a pipeline with several command line tools. For getting timestamps I use the ts command - the package moreutils has to be installed first (# apt install moreutils).

Prerequisite: The serial device has to be opened first with the correct settings via another serial tool, like minicom.

This is the complete command pipeline:

$ ts '[%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%.S]' < /dev/ttyUSB0 | tee -a $(date +%Y-%m-%d)_esp32.log

Here is the screenshot showing this method:

Screenshot of minicom with activated timestamps

The advantage of piping the tee command is, that you can watch the serial output while the logging is done in the background. The option -a means, that the given file is appended and not overwritten.

I²C: fighting strange pixel errors on OLED display

Observation

After some time there are random pixel errors on the OLED display. It can also happen that the display turns almost completely white and nothing is readable anymore.

Strange pixel errors on disturbed display Undisturbed display

Hint: I blurred the GPS positions for data protection reasons on both images.

Thesis 1: EMC issues with the LoRa radio module

Approach:
Shielding with a grounded copper shield (self-adhesive copper foil) and soldered wires to ground.

Shielding with a grounded copper shield

Results:

  • LoRa signal strength (RSSI value in dB) decreased significantly
  • display errors still appear after a while

Thesis 2: Power supply of the MCU is to weak

Approach:

External power supply via adjustable DC-DC step-down converter

Results:

Thesis 3: I²C signals at SDA and SCL line are disturbed

Because the OLED display is connected to the I²C bus, I used my storage oscilloscope to examine the signal quality on both the clock (SCL) and the data line (SDA). It turned out that both signals were very disturbed and that the signal edges were not sufficiently good.

Approach:

Results:

Wikipedia:

Forum:

Migrate to MySQL, phpMyAdmin and Grafana

Data from the nodes are stored in SQLite databases until now. The graphical admin gui is phpLiteAdmin.

For advanced exploring the data Grafana is a very useful tool. Unfortunately it does not support SQLite databases as data sources. So the challenging task is to install MySQL, PHP7, Grafana and for administration of the MySQL databases phpMyAdmin. Then the massive data of the SQLite databases collected in the last half year have to be converted to the MySQL compatible format.

To install the pre-requisites I had done the following on my Raspi with Raspbian GNU/Linux 9.13 (stretch):

Sources:

# apt update
# apt upgrade

# apt install mysql-server
//# apt install libapache2-mod-auth-mysql phpmyadmin
# apt install phpmyadmin

# nano /etc/apache2/apache2.conf
# service apache2 restart

phpMyAdmin is now reachable here: http://192.168.16.184/phpmyadmin/

# nano /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini
# nano /etc/php/7.0/apache2/php.ini
# cat /etc/php/7.0/apache2/php.ini | grep -i extension=mysql
# mysql -u root -p

# service apache2 restart
# wget -q -O - https://packages.grafana.com/gpg.key | sudo apt-key add -
# echo "deb https://packages.grafana.com/oss/deb stable main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/grafana.list
# apt update
# apt install grafana
# systemctl status grafana-server
# systemctl start grafana-server

Convert SQLite databases to MySQL format

Unfortunately the data formats and SQL syntaxes are not compatible between SQLite and MySQL databases! So you have to convert the database dump files from one format to the other. Especially if there are plenty of datasets the use of a tool is strongly recommended. I used the python tool sqlite3-to-mysql here. First you have to install it via pip install sqlite3-to-mysql.

The tool will convert the SQLite data and stream it directly to the MySQL database - so it will be easier if you do it directly on the hosting Raspberry Pi (and slower of course). The name of the existing database in MySQL is here lora_gps.

$ sqlite3mysql -c 500 -f lora_gps.sqlite3 -d lora_gps -u <mysql user> -p '<password of mysql user>'

Install Grafana

The installation process is very straight forward and described here: Install Grafana.

License

This project is licensed under the terms of "GNU General Public License v3.0". For details see LICENSE.

About

The aim of this project is to build a test environment based on ESP8266 and ESP32 for LoRa as LPWAN long-range radio. For this purpose, two identical test modules are used were each equipped with a LoRa transceiver, a GPS module and an OLED display for displaying the actual data.

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