November-25th-2020, 01:06 PM
(October-16th-2020, 02:52 PM)Armin@netPI Wrote: Hi,Thanks Armin, will try this one out and roadrunner email update you soon.
all documents around netPI can be found here: https://www.netiot.com/netpi/industrial-raspberry-pi-3/. There you find also a common documentation for NPIX modules and also which GPIOs are physically connected it.
In order to show how NPIX modules can be used in the context of netPI I made a Node-RED (this is my preferred "language" doing it in node.js/javascript) container which includes two Node-RED nodes to read and write the NPIX IOs. The container is located here https://hub.docker.com/r/hilschernetpi/netpi-nodered
In detail the source code of the Node-RED npix-io nodes used in this container is located here https://github.com/HilscherAutomation/ne...ed-npix-io
To grant access in general to GPIOs within a Docker container the device
Code:/dev/gpiomem
needs to be mapped to the container independent which application wants to access the GPIOs. After mapping this device the GPIOs are automatically generated in the container following path as it is usual for Linux GPIOs
Code:/sys/class/gpio
Of course you could also read/write to GPIOs directly from a Linux shell as described here: https://sites.google.com/site/semilleroa...rials/gpio with a simple command like the following:
Code:echo 0/1 > /sys/class/gpio/gpioxx/value
There are also other examples on the web showing how to use Raspberry Pi GPIOs with languages like python, C or C++. netPI contains a standard Raspberry Pi 3B circuitry and everything you find on the web related to GPIOs is applicable. I personally can't give you a link how to do it in C++. I found this web page here https://www.digikey.com/en/maker/blogs/2...-pi-with-c with google search, but I don't know if it is good for you. It might be that my reply for you as a C++ programmer might be just useful for you to get to know the used GPIOs only.
Thx
Armin
Thanks again.