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dbus api
D-Bus is used as the main data exchange, to share values such as voltages, as well as settings and other data, between all the processes running on the CCGX. D-Bus is a common linux inter process communication mechanism, see google and the D-Bus page on wikipedia for more information.
Below diagram gives a good overview on the CCGX:
- Standard Linux D-Bus has two bus-es: Session and System. On the CCGX the System bus is used.
- The D-Bus connection-name of a D-Bus service always begins with com.victronenergy.
- For D-Bus services representing products connected to the system, the service name rules are:
- Connection via serial port (onboard VE.Bus connection, VE.Direct ports, usb-serial converters):
com.victronenergy.[product type].[tty name]
Note that this can be VE.Direct, but also a GPS for example - Connections via canbus:
''com.victronenergy.[product type].[interface]_di[device instance]_uc[unique-number]''
- Connection via serial port (onboard VE.Bus connection, VE.Direct ports, usb-serial converters):
- As implied by above naming rules, when one executable connects to different products, it will make create multiple D-Bus services. An example is the process taking care of all canbus communications, vecan-dbus.
- Never use the fourth part in the service name (interface, tty name etc.) to deduct the DeviceInstance or connection method. The only purposes of it is to make the name is unique and easy to identify from the command line. Use /DeviceInstance/ instead.
- Use SI units when publishing data on the D-bus.
Exceptions: use kWh for energy and degrees Celsius for temperature. - Processes representing products will connect to the dbus after they know what kind of product they will represent.
- Never change your the service name once on the D-Bus. Instead remove the service and register a new one.
- When a dbus service cannot communicate anymore with its direct counterpart, the process will disconnect from the D-Bus. And, if it has nothing else to do, will exit. An example is a BMV connected through VE.Direct stops communicating, perhaps because it is unplugged.
- Each object on the D-Bus represents one value. In VE.Bus for example, /Dc/0/Voltage is the voltage, /Dc/0/Current the current.
- An invalid value is represented by an empty array of integers. In Python this is ''dbus.Array([], signature=dbus.Signature('i'), variant_level=1)''. On MQTT, an invalid value is represented by
null
. Translating empty array of integers is taken care of by dbus-mqtt, and soon dbus-flashmq. See also issue 936.
- Applications publishing values to the dbus (ie a product driver), do not need to invalidate all values before going offline. Applications using values from dbus, such as the GUI or vrmlogger, need to monitor for nameowner changes / service watches. One reason: an application could also crash (so the dbus service dissapears without a chance of first sending out all invalids).
- Publish the service on dbus only after adding /DeviceInstance. And for CPU efficiency reasons its even better to publish only after setting up all paths and populating them with data: after a service goes on dbus, many other services will do a GetItems call(), and the more efficient this initialisation process happens, the better. In the velib_python implementation, this is done by setting the service name. See also this race condition issue.
- Applications using values from the D-Bus, such as GUI or vrmlogger, should take care that when a new D-Bus service comes online, it might not immediately have all object paths.
- Applications publishing values to the D-Bus, should, when adding object paths after they have already created their D-Bus service, send a PropertiesChanged signal for each of the afterwards added paths.
- Applications publishing values to the D-Bus, that change their /DeviceInstance, should disconnect their service from the D-Bus and reconnect with the new /DeviceInstance value. Or, change your name, to trigger nameowner changes.
- When putting a D-Bus service online, there is no need to send out a PropertiesChanged signal for all object paths, because all consumers would do a GetValue at the root object when a new D-Bus service comes online.
- NameOwnerChanged: standard signal from D-Bus spec. Used to see when services goes online, or offline.
- PropertiesChanged: this signal has been in the definition since beginning of Venus OS.
- ItemsChanged: this signal definition was added in 2021, as a less CPU load causing alternative for PropertiesChanged. With ItemsChanged, services can send all their changes in one signal. Rather than sending one PropertiesChanged signal for each path that has an update to its values.
This Signals section could do with a bit more details, for now you can refer to our implementation in Python for details: https://github.com/victronenergy/velib_python/blob/master/vedbus.py; or use a dbus-monitor on a working system.
The services below retrieve measurements from devices connected to the color control, and publish them on the D-Bus. The hyperlinks in the tables below refer to the source code of the projects on github. Services without hyperlink are not (yet) open sourced.
Below is a list of example possible and common service names.
Service name | Description |
---|---|
com.victronenergy.batter.ttyO2 | Battery monitor connected via VE.Direct at tty2 |
com.victronenergy.vebus.ttyO1 | mk2-dbus |
com.victronenergy.charger.ttyO0 | Charger connected via VE.Direct at tty0 |
com.victronenergy.solarcharger.ttyO2 | Solar charger connected via VE.Direct at tty2 |
com.victronenergy.solarcharger.ttyUSB2 | Solar charger connected via VE.Direct via USB cable |
com.victronenergy.vebus.socketcan_can0_di0 | VE.Bus system connected via canbus 0, and configured for device instance 0 |
com.victronenergy.vebus.socketcan_can0_di1 | VE.Bus system connected via canbus 0, and configured for device instance 1 |
com.victronenergy.charger.socketcan_can0_di0 | Skylla-i charger connected on canbus, device instance 0 |
com.victronenergy.genset.socketcan_can0_vi0_uc88 | Fischer Panda generator connected on canbus, vrm instance 0 |
com.victronenergy.pvinverter.qwacs_1 | Quby AC sensors on input 1 |
com.victronenergy.pvinverter.fronius_137_37823 | Fronius PV inverter with type ID 176 and serial 37823 |
com.victronenergy.pvinverter.vebusacsensor_input1 | Victron AC Current Sensor on input 1 |
com.victronenergy.grid.ttyUSB0_di32_mb1 | Carlo Gavazzi AC sensors on USB0 with device instance 32 and Modbus address 1 |
com.victronenergy.gps | USB/serial GPS retrieval |
com.victronenergy.battery.lg_resu | LG resu battery |
com.victronenergy.generator.startstop0 | Generator start/stop using CCGX internal relay |
Process | Description |
---|---|
com.victronenergy.settings | interface to xml-based non-volatile settings storage (/data/conf/settings.xml) |
com.victronenergy.gui | gui. takes care of buttons and lcd display |
vrmlogger | Communication between CCGX and VRM Database |
vrmpubnub | Two-communication via internet, (to be) used by mobile apps, Portal and VE Power Setup. |
com.victronenergy.system | Computes statistics from devices (total power, consumption, power to grid...) |
modbustcp | Modbustcp gateway, allows access to all connected products |
com.victronenergy.fronius | Fronius device scan status |
com.victronenergy.hub4 | Hub-4 advanced control |
The VRM device instance (object path /DeviceInstance) makes a device unique, within Venus OS used for certain selection settings (see below) and for the VRM Portal.
The VRM device instance needs to be unique per device class, ie all com.victronenergy.batterys need to have their a unique device instance, as do all com.victronenergy.inverters, com.victronenergy.pvinverters, and so forth. LocalSetting has a feature (since mid 2020) to hand-out and store such unique device instance numbers.
Above means, that there is overlap. Ie there can be a com.victronenergy.pvinverter with VRM Device Instance 0, as well as an com.victronenergy.grid.
For some connections, the used VRM Device Instance is deterministic, as a preferred one is used which is derived from for example the used serial port or other paramter. See below.
In more detail this is how it works: on startup, a service will first call localsettings.AddSetting(path='/Settings/Devices/[my-device-serial-no-ABCDE2]/ClassAndVrmInstance', ('temperature', 12))
. In this example, its of the temperature class, ie. com.victronenergy.temperature, and apparently that service prefers to get Device Instance 12. This request will make localsettings create a new entry in the settings, but only if there was none already. And LocalSettigns will check if instance 12 is available for the temperature class. If it is, it will store that one to belong to the passed unique string, and if not, it will select and store the next free one.
After that it will call localsettings.GetValue('/Settings/Devices/[my-device-serial-no-ABCDE2]/ClassAndVrmInstance')
. Which retrieves the assigned Device Instance.
As said, certain services have logic around the default instance, making them (somewhat) deterministic:
- NMEA2K devices: the NMEA2K device instance (max. 255).
- Devices connected to a (virtual) serial-port report from 256 up. Their instance is determined by the device name:
- /dev/ttyOx: 256 + x
- /dev/ttySx: 272 + x
- /dev/ttyUSBx: 288 + x
- COMx: 256 + x
- Quby AC sensors: 0 if on input 1, 1 if on output, 2 if on input 2
- Vebus AC sensors: 10 if on input 1, 11 if on output, 12 if on input 2
- Fronius PV inverters: 20 + x (x depends on order of detection)
- Carlo Gavazzi AC sensors: 30 + x (x depends on order of detection), can be changed in Gui
- SmartEnergyMeter / BLE networking: 40
- com.victronenergy.system (aka systemcalc): 0
- com.victronenergy.generator.startstop0: 0
Some more notes;
- For vedirect products, the instance is reserved by serial number of the vedirect product (ie the bmv or solar charger). Except when the device doesn’t send its serial number, like for the BMV, then the usbtty or number is used.
- Max value of /DeviceInstance is 32767. This is because its defined like that un the VRM db.
The device instance is used for several configuration items:
- Settings -> System Setup -> Main battery monitor
- Genset start/stop selection of battery monitor and ac source
- and perhaps more config items.
In logging to the VRM database (vrm.victronenergy.com) the device-instance is used, for example IV1[0] (input 1 voltage of device instance 0), and it (the instance) should therefore not change at random. Maximum of the instance field in the VRM database is 65535.
The ModbusTCP server, used by customers to query data from either the total system or separate devices, uses the ModbusTCP server in the addressing. The UnitID aka SlaveID in the request is mapped to the device instance.
This mapping is not one on one and has a bit of history, since we didn't realize at first that a lot of PLCs do not support a device instance above 247. Also one Customer reported that his PLC cant work with unitid 0.
More details: unitid2di.csv map in the sources. And also the user documentation, the modbustcp excelsheet and also the ModbusTCP FAQ.
The naming convention for new object paths is to write a full word. So /Ac/Voltage instead of /Ac/V and /Management instead of /Mgmt.
The list of available device type specific paths is here: https://github.com/victronenergy/venus/wiki/dbus.
Object-path | Definition |
---|---|
/Mgmt/ProcessName | For example vcan_dbus |
/Mgmt/ProcessVersion | For example v1.02 |
/Mgmt/Connection | Textual description for connection method. To be used in the menu (“VE.Direct port 2”) |
/ProductId
As defined in products.h in velib.
GetValue should return the decimal, as uint32 (ie 516).
GetText should return this as a hex string: 0x204.
/ProductName
As defined in products.c in velib, probably also on VE.Can as PGN 1F014, field 4 ‘Manufacturer’s Model ID’.
/FirmwareVersion
GetText: A string, containing the firmware version which is formatted equal as used in change logs of the product, and/or on labels etcetera. This string is also what the Venus GUI and VRM portal will show to users.
GetValue: Numeric representation of the firmware version. To be prepared for automatic firmware updates, make sure that the numeric value is such that a newer version leads to a higher number. And also that the number is in the same format in the firmware update files (if available for this product); so that when indexed in a library, the number can be used to check up-to-dateness of the product. All downstream software will not, and may not, format this number itself for showing the user. Instead it must use the string as returned by GetText.
/HardwareVersion
This should probably be similar as /FirmwareVersion, note though that this is given very little attention as its not used for Victron products.
/DeviceInstance
The Device Instance, see earlier chapter.
/Connected
Value 0 = not-connected, Value 1 = connected.
/Serial
String, containing one serialnumber. In a system with multiple units, the one from the master is shown.
/N2KUniqueNumber
Int, containing the N2K unique number. In a system with multiple units, the one from the master is shown.
/CustomName
String, containing an editable name. This can be set by a user to distinguish the device from other devices.
When a product name is presented to a user, /CustomName is the preferred name to present. When /CustomName is blank, /ProductName should be presented to the user. When /CustomName is changed, it will be stored in the device if the device supports this and otherwise in LocalSettings (com.victronenergy.settings).
When a product is connected with its VE.Direct port, the custom name is stored in the device using a set VREG over the VE.Direct protocol, VE_REG_DESCRIPTION1.
When a product is connected on VE.Can, the custom name is stored in a official N2K field: PGN 0x1F016 Configuration Information, Field 1, which is called Installation Description, Field 1
. That field can take both ASCII (char 8) and Unicode (char 16) characters; with a control byte telling the reader what format is in. While writing this, I don't know which format is used.
/Devices/…
Initially, the Devices object path was intented for products that operate in parallel or group mode; and because of that had only one service on the D-Bus. The /Devices path could then be used to address them individually. Examples of products operating in parallel mode are VE.Bus products (Inverters, Multi’s, Quattro’s), Skylla-i’s and MPPT 150/70’s. The first device will report under /Devices/0/… , the second device under /Devices/1/…. Etcetera. When relevant this numbering is kept equal to bus numbering. For example MK2-addressing.
Even though available on the D-Bus, there was very little code actually using these paths. Per 2019, this has changed, VictonConnect is using the /Devices path to enumerate all devices to show as being connected to a GX Device. Part of adding 'GX over MQTT' to VictronConnect. And once listed, it users the VregLink (see below) for the Remote settings feature for solar chargers and other devices. The mqtt-rpc vreg-device-list method scans each d-bus service for its entries on the /Devices sub-tree and returns the assembled data.
The paths used & required by VictronConnect are:
/Devices/0/CustomName my-bmv <- used, but non mandatory, falls back to /ProductName
/Devices/0/DeviceInstance 258 <- used to subscribe to proper path from dbus-mqtt publishes
/Devices/0/FirmwareVersion v2.06 <- not used; if needed, then fetched via VREG instead
/Devices/0/ProductId 0x0201 <- used to define the icon, mandatory
/Devices/0/ProductName BMV-700 <- used but non mandatory: falls back to hardcoded list based on productids
/Devices/0/ServiceName com.victronenergy.battery.ttyO2 <- used to do a firmware update
/Devices/0/VregLink (API)
vedirect_interface example. Note that vedirect_interface will publish only one entry per service, since there is also only one device connected.
com.victronenergy.battery.ttyO2:
/Devices/0/CustomName my-bmv
/Devices/0/DeviceInstance 258
/Devices/0/FirmwareVersion v2.06
/Devices/0/ProductId 0x0201
/Devices/0/ProductName BMV-700
/Devices/0/ServiceName com.victronenergy.battery.ttyO2
/Devices/0/VregLink (API)
vecan-dbus example. The first item is a 1st generation solar charger (which has a grouped entry on D-Bus). The second one is a 2nd generation solar charger; which are all uniquely on D-Bus. And for the VregLink they are found on the com.victronenergy.can0 service on D-Bus. Not under their individual entry on D-Bus.
com.victronenergy.vecan.can0:
/Devices/2CC03E5D/CustomName east-facing-array
/Devices/2CC03E5D/DeviceInstance 0
/Devices/2CC03E5D/FirmwareVersion v1.02
/Devices/2CC03E5D/Manufacturer 358 <- from the nmea2000 standard.
/Devices/2CC03E5D/Nad 123 <- canbus network address.
/Devices/2CC03E5D/ProductId 0x0301
/Devices/2CC03E5D/ProductName MPPT 150/60 Smart something.
/Devices/2CC03E5D/Serial 0015965 HQ1905944QQ <- we could consider splitting this up.
/Devices/2CC03E5D/ServiceName com.victronenergy.solarcharger.something
/Devices/2CC03E5D/VregLink (API)
The second one:
/Devices/3DD03E5D/CustomName east-facing-array
/Devices/3DD03E5D/DeviceInstance 0
/Devices/3DD03E5D/FirmwareVersion v2.04
/Devices/3DD03E5D/Manufacturer 358
/Devices/3DD03E5D/Nad 123
/Devices/3DD03E5D/ProductId 0x0101
/Devices/3DD03E5D/ProductName MPPT 150/70 Smart something
/Devices/3DD03E5D/Serial 0021124 HQ1250944QQ
/Devices/3DD03E5D/VregLink (API)
(Note that above doesn't seem to fully match reality. Login to a system, ie hub-1 to see
what paths are available for real).
/Interfaces/...
The Interfaces object path is used when access to a certain product goes via known interfaces. For VE.Bus products for example you could find the MK2 in /Interfaces/, or the mk2-can and the mk2. The reasons to do this are:
- How is the device connected
- Publish / retrieve firmware versions of intermediate interfaces
- Diagnostics (where is the connection lost) An example of the interfaces of a VE.Bus system connected through canbus:
/Interfaces/Mk2 | |
---|---|
/Interfaces/Mk2/Version | 1130132 |
/Interfaces/Mk2-can/ | |
/Interfaces/Mk2-can/Version | v1.12 |
All D-Bus object paths have the following interfaces:
(Variant value) GetValue()
Returns the value.
(String value) GetText()
Returns the value as string, including units. For example ‘21.3 W’. When invalid, it returns an empty string.
(Int32 retval) SetValue(Variant value)
Sets the specified value. Returns 0 when success, and something else when not allowed.
(Variant value) GetMin()
Returns the limit minimum.
(Variant value) GetMax()
Returns the limit maximum.
(Int 32 retval) SetDefault()
Sets the value(s) to default value. When this is called on a group (for example object path /Settings/Logscript, all values in this group are set to default.
(Variant value) GetDefault()
Returns the default value.
(Int32 retval) AddSetting(String group, String name, Variant defaultValue, String itemType, Variant minimum, Variant maximum)
Adds a new local setting according to the specified parameters.
The possible itemType's are 'i' (integer), 'f' (float) and 's' (string).
The minimum and maximum can be specified when the itemType is an integer or float.
Minimum and maximum are ignored when both are specified as 0 (zero).
(String data) Introspect()
Returns the introspection data in XML format.
Interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties
(Variant value) Get(String interface, String property)
Returns the value of specified interface and property. For example the interface com.victronenergy.BusItem and the property Valid.
The purpose of this D-Bus Interface is to make settings on devices (BMVs, Solar Chargers, and-so-forth) available via Venus; in a transparent way: get and set VREGs.
It is used by VictronConnect to allow remotely changing settings. It also provides the possibility to perform firmware updates remotely.
For a definition of the VREGs available per device, see whitepapers on our website.
Implementation in progress:
- add it to the vedirect-interface driver (done in Venus OS v2.31 or before already)
- add it do the dbus-vecan driver (done in Venus OS v2.90).
- add it to the vebus interface driver (mk2-dbus)
Also it’s implemented in mqtt-rpc (private repo), which exposes the VregLink interface on MQTT.
VictronConnect supports this feature since v5.20 for VE.Direct devices and since v5.70 also for most of the VE.Can connected products.
Some notes:
- Will mqtt-rpc actively keep informing whoever is on the other side (VictronConnect) that a device as found or a device is gone?
- No.
- How to handle VREGs that have multiple responses?
- For now those are not supported.
- Can D-Bus, (and its implementations!) handle a delayed response, which can also be out of sync?
- This is not a problem because dbus already implements remote calls asynchronously and libraries can handle this in either a blocking or non-blocking manner. The caveat is the response has to be faster than the default dbus timeout of 25 seconds.
-
[VREG]
is always an unsigned 16-bit integer. Its the VREG number -
[DATA]
is variable length; its length must match the definition of that VREG. Some are two bytes, some 4, some longer, such as a serial number.
dbus -y com.victronenergy.vecan.can1 /Devices/x/VregLink SetVreg [VREG] [DATA]
dbus -y com.victronenergy.vecan.can1 /Devices/x/VregLink GetVreg [VREG]
For example:
dbus -y com.victronenergy.battery.ttyO4 /Devices/0/VregLink GetVreg %0x010C
error = 0
data = [0]
For both SetVreg and GetVreg calls a 16-bit error value and a byte array with the requested data will be returned.
If there is a problem fetching the Vreg the error value will be non-zero. The error numbers follow the same rules as for VE.Can, where the upper byte indicates the error, while the lower byte can contain more information about the error.
However, when implementing the VregLink for VE.Can, it turned out that the error codes used for the VregLink for VE.Direct were not following the scheme as the VE.Can devices. There is also a diffent behavior for old and new VE.Can devices, which is related to the communication stack that is used in the product.
A list of errors (upper byte only) are:
0x0000 = OK
0x80xx = GetVreg, register not supported (VE.Can)
0x81xx = SetVreg, register not supported (VE.Can)
0x81xx = GetVreg & SetVreg, register not supported (VE.Direct)
0x83xx = SetVreg, data written is invalid or out of range (VE.Direct/VE.Can)
For VE.Direct and newer VE.Can devices, the lower byte may contain:
0x01 = VREG does not exist
0x02 = Not allowed, e.g. attempt to write a read-only value
0x04 = Value out of range or inconsistent
In practice this means that you will receive one of 0x0000
(no error), 0x8101
, 0x8302
or 0x8304
from a VE.Direct device.
An older VE.Can device will respond with 0x0000
(no error), 0x8000
, 0x8100
or 0x8300
.
A new VE.Can device responds with 0x0000
(no error), 0x8001
, 0x8101
, 0x8102
.
Do note that VE.Direct also sends the VREG data in the same mesage in case of an error. For VE.Can the error message does not contain any other payload than the error code, simply because the device does not send the data in the same VREG message if it even sends the data (that depends on the device implementation).