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Blog AVNET SmartEdge IIOT Gateway: the 2020 Linux Image and IoTConnect Scripts
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  • Author Author: Jan Cumps
  • Date Created: 11 Dec 2020 12:32 AM Date Created
  • Views 7531 views
  • Likes 6 likes
  • Comments 55 comments
  • raspberry
  • avnet
  • smartedge
  • smartedge iiot gateway
  • iiot gateway
  • linux
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AVNET SmartEdge IIOT Gateway: the 2020 Linux Image and IoTConnect Scripts

Jan Cumps
Jan Cumps
11 Dec 2020

AVNET published an updated image for the SmartEdge IIOT GatewaySmartEdge IIOT Gateway.

Not a huge leap. It's still Raspbian GNU/Linux 9 (Stretch).

There are some improvements and changes worth updating for. The most important reason is the improved stability.

 

image

 

Some highlights:

  • The CAN driver got an update. There were issues after every other reboot with the original image.
  • It's now safe to call reboot without risk of bricking the device
  • It's safe to upgrade Linux on the device.

 

How to upgrade?

 

edit: avnet released an upgrade script: https://github.com/Avnet/avtse-iiotg-upgrade.

This is easier than the "from image" explanation below.

 

The SmartEdge is family of the Raspberry Pi Compute. You use a rpiboot to load an image.

I noticed that with my device, the Windows and Linux rpiboot didn't work.

If I build the AVNET version from source on a Linux (virtual) machine, it works.

 

sudo apt install libusb-1.0-0-dev

git clone https://github.com/Avnet/smartedge-iiot-gateway-custom.git
cd smartedge-iiot-gateway-custom/rpiboot
make

 

check what drives are available (look for sd* devices)

lsblk

 

unplug the SmartEdge, open it, connect the internal USB to your PC.

check that the jumper next to the USB connector is mounted.

 

sudo ./rpiboot

 

provide power to the SmartEdge

check what drives are added (look for new sd* devices, you should find a new sdX, sdX1 and sdX2)

lsblk

 

You can now use the dd utility to move the image to the SmartEdge (replace the X with the new device that appeared when running lsblk the 2nd time):

sudo dd if=avtse-iiotg-v11-20200326.img of=/dev/sdX

 

 

ntewinkel adds these parameters to see progress and get higher throughput:

bs=4M status=progress

 

Just before finishing, place an empty file called ssh on the boot partition. This will allow you to connect over an ssh terminal (e.g.: PuTTy) as soon as the device is set up. It saves you from having to go find a QUERTY keyboard and monitor.

 

Then you can unplug the USB cable,power cycle the SmartEdge, and use the AVNET's IoTConnect app to set the WiFi. I had to remove the existing device in the app, before searching for the "new" device.

 

The IoTConnect Integration

 

The SmartEdge image installs some services that make it interact with AVNET IoTConnect cloud service.

You get a 30 day subscription when registering your application with the app.

It's worth checking this out, and to try extend the examples.

The example is elaborate right out of the box. It will by default exchange the die temperature. If you attach SmartSensor devices to USB or RS-485, it will initiate those and try to exchange their data too.

You can enable the use of the DIGIO input pins, and exchange their status too.

I will write an article to investigate the scripts for cloud service and other SmartEdge specific services.

 

When not using the IoTConnect services:

 

If you used the original image before, you will have noticed that there are some changes in the way the AVNET IoTConnect scripts are started, and how the device specific hardware is handled in this version

In the first image, more was done in the rc* scripts. All has moved to system services now.

 

If you want to use the device in the intranet, or use another cloud service, it makes sense to disable the services.

This will free the following resources:

  • the custom LED is now available for your own program
  • the device doesn't connect to the internet every so many seconds
  • the I/O pins are pristine.
  • no traffic to RS-485

 

Easiest way: I disabled following services, by navigating to /etc/systemd/system and renaming them from *.service to *.bak:

  • iotconnectservice (connect to AVNET IoTConnect and run the demo)
  • ledservice (control the user LED, attention, also entertains the watchdog)
  • quectel (keep GSM modem connection alive. My box doesn't have the modem)
  • smartedgehalt  (part of the user LED functionality)

None of these changes are impacting. You can rename them back to *.service and you have the demo functionality back.

I left the services related to the reset button and watchdog running.

 

I commented out 2 lines in the reboot script, related to the user LED.

The script makes the led flash fast, and after reboot, that's normally stopped by the ledservice.

If we leave the two lines of code in, we have a flashing LED after reboot.

 

sudo nano /opt/avnet-iot/iotservices/reboot

 

Then at the end, put a # in front of the LED commands:

 

# echo 20 > /sys/class/leds/smartedge_led/brightness
# echo 128 > /sys/class/leds/smartedge_led_duty/brightness

 

 

A little harder but cleaner method: the proper way to disable the services is actually, for each service, stop and disable them.

There is some more work to it, because some of the scripts re-enable services (watchdog stopwd script tries to restart smartedgehalt.service).

If you want to do the exercise by disabling services instead of the rename "hack",

don't rename the .service files to .bak files, and follow instructions below:

 

sudo systemctl stop iotconnectservice.service
sudo systemctl disable iotconnectservice.service
sudo systemctl stop ledservice.service
sudo systemctl disable ledservice.service
sudo systemctl stop quectel.service
sudo systemctl disable quectel.service
sudo systemctl stop smartedgehalt.service
sudo systemctl disable smartedgehalt.service

 

 

Then make the same change to the reboot script as described above.

 

Then similar for the halt script, comment out the line that makes the red let blink at reboot:

 

sudo nano /opt/avnet-iot/iotservices/halt

 

# echo 36 > /sys/class/leds/smartedge_led/brightness

 

And in the stopwd script, prevent that the smartedgehalt.service gest re-enabled:

 

sudo nano /opt/avnet-iot/iotservices/stopwd

 

# systemctl enable smartedgehalt

 

Whether you used the 1st or 2nd method, the result is that the IoTConnect extensions aren't started at boot or reboot, and the red led is no longer used for signaling device / service specific statuses.

Watchdog and reboot service are still active.

 

Other Changes, Watch outs

 

You can now reboot without issues. The Linux default reboot command now points to /opt/avnet-iot/iotservices/reboot.

The reset button works better. A short press calls the above reboot script. A long press (> 10 seconds) resets to factory.

Attention when using the WatchDog service (when you put the watchdog jumper). The Led Service has to run too, because it stops the watchdog and prevents a reboot.

 

The initial image release could become unstable when performing an upgrade.

The user documentation contains the measures to take to avoid this. But at the end of the document, in an addendum.

The new image has these actions taken for you:

$ apt-mark showhold
raspberrypi-bootloader
raspberrypi-kernel
raspberrypi-sys-mods

 

The server isn't recognised by its name on my network. I had to install avahi for that:

sudo apt-get install avahi-daemon

Once that command executed the smartedge published the name it was given in the raspi-config utility.

 

In a later post I'll untangle how the different AVNET services work together.

 

Related Blog
Industrial I/O
Use the Industrial I/O
Control Industrial I/O directly from GPIO Pins
C Program for the Industrial I/O
Control Industrial I/O directly from Node-RED
Display Industrial I/O on Node-RED Dashboard
CAN Bus
Use the Isolated CAN
CAN programming in C on Linux: Filter and Mask
2020 Linux Image
The 2020 Linux Image and IoTConnect Scripts
Understand the Custom Scripts and Services (Pt. 1: intro and reset button service)
Understand the Custom Scripts and Services (Pt. 2: led service)
Understand the Custom Scripts and Services (Pt. 3: IoT Connect service)
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Top Comments

  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 4 years ago in reply to ntewinkel +2
    ntewinkel wrote: .... You said that after disabling the services: "> the I/O pins are pristine." Does that mean all of the regular Raspberry Pi pins are useable then? For example, I could hook it up to…
  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 4 years ago in reply to ntewinkel +2
    avnet released an upgrade script: https://github.com/Avnet/avtse-iiotg-upgrade I read it but haven't tested. Way easier than starting from fresh image.
  • ntewinkel
    ntewinkel over 4 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps +2
    I see their documentation hasn't improved any. They might have added a few extra notes and guidance into that github readme! side-note, looks like a version 1.3 is in progress too. Best, -Nico
Parents
  • ntewinkel
    ntewinkel over 4 years ago

    Thanks for the update, Jan!

     

    I still have a SmartEdge sitting on my desk, hoping to eventually put it to good use. It sounds like this new image might make it stable enough to use for something interesting, especially when using the extra settings you describe: ie, removing it from the Avnet cloud - I never did figure out how to connect a local ESP-based sensor to their cloud without a whole lot of hoops and hurdles.

     

    You said that after disabling the services:

    "> the I/O pins are pristine."

     

    Does that mean all of the regular Raspberry Pi pins are useable then? For example, I could hook it up to run my OpenSprinkler controller? That's assuming it can run all the usual Python type apps on it too.

     

    ps, I don't recall, but this unit doesn't have an SD card, right? Is it using built-in flash for that? how reliable is that, and what size? Does it makes sense, and is it possible, to add an SSD to the SmartEdge for things like a git server?

     

    Thanks,

    -Nico

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  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 4 years ago in reply to ntewinkel

    ntewinkel  wrote:

    ....

    You said that after disabling the services:

    "> the I/O pins are pristine."

     

    Does that mean all of the regular Raspberry Pi pins are useable then? For example, I could hook it up to run my OpenSprinkler controller? That's assuming it can run all the usual Python type apps on it too.

    ...

    I was referring to the industrial DIGIO pins that are available from the outside. The IoTCloud SDK demo reads the status of the input ones and sends that to the cloud, as part of the example.

    All classic Pi GIO pins should be available, whether you run the demo or not. They aren't tied to the Pi's GIO.

    Python 2.7.13 and 3.5.3 are installed.

    The GCC toolchain is 6.3.0.18

    All is fairly similar to Raspbian taste of stretch

     

    PRETTY_NAME="Raspbian GNU/Linux 9 (stretch)"
    NAME="Raspbian GNU/Linux"
    VERSION_ID="9"
    Linux smartedge 4.14.79-v7+ #91 SMP Tue Jul 16 05:42:32 PDT 2019 armv7l GNU/Linux

     

    It is stable now. The culprits for bricking were the custom reboot mechanism and issues when upgrading Linux (fixed by marking kernel and bootloader on hold for upgrades).

    Both are addressed. I've rebooted the device many times. And kept it running for days without issues.

     

    ps, I don't recall, but this unit doesn't have an SD card, right? Is it using built-in flash for that? how reliable is that, and what size? Does it makes sense, and is it possible, to add an SSD to the SmartEdge for things like a git server?

     

    There's no SDCard connector. It's using on-board memory. I forgot how to check the size, but when I download an expanded image, it's 7.12 GB.

    I have no experience with Pi and SSD. I read a post about it today, here on e14, for a Pi4.

    If it's an USB one, it should be as easy as mounting the /dev/sdX  device that pops up.

     

    edit: from product page:

    • Robust program storage with 8GB eMMC Flash pre-programmed with a secure boot version of the Raspbian Linux OS
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  • ntewinkel
    ntewinkel over 4 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    Thanks Jan, that's really encouraging information!

     

    Great to hear that it's stable - I think the main reason I stopped doing anything with it was because people's units kept bricking on them.

     

    >All classic Pi GIO pins should be available, whether you run the demo or not. They aren't tied to the Pi's GIO.

    That's really good to know, thanks for clarifying that.

    In a way I kinda hoped the outside connections were tied to the GPIO so I could plug my sprinkler board to it that way, without having to modify anything, but that's not a biggie.

     

    >Robust program storage with 8GB eMMC Flash

    "Robust" is good to know image  I guess the 8GB will be fully taken up by the system, but like you said, a USB external SSD should be easy to add for extra storage - I think the trick and achievement of an RPi booting from SSD was to remove the need for the SD cards, which are slow and more prone to failure. I'm guessing the eMMC will be fast and reliable enough to not need to worry about that.

     

    Best,

    -Nico

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  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 4 years ago in reply to ntewinkel

    avnet released an upgrade script: https://github.com/Avnet/avtse-iiotg-upgrade

    I read it but haven't tested. Way easier than starting from fresh image.

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  • ntewinkel
    ntewinkel over 4 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    I see their documentation hasn't improved any.

    They might have added a few extra notes and guidance into that github readme!

     

    side-note, looks like a version 1.3 is in progress too.

     

    Best,

    -Nico

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  • ntewinkel
    ntewinkel over 4 years ago in reply to Jan Cumps

    I see their documentation hasn't improved any.

    They might have added a few extra notes and guidance into that github readme!

     

    side-note, looks like a version 1.3 is in progress too.

     

    Best,

    -Nico

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  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 4 years ago in reply to ntewinkel

    There's a Programming Guide on the giithub now: https://github.com/Avnet/smartedge-iiot-gateway

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