Reputation: 31
I use a OneWire sensor (ds18b20) to read out a temperature and use it in a PI-algorithm to controll a SSR relay. I want to use a Pipe between the two functions to to send the temperature and make te "Reg" function to run as fast as possible. If I don't use a Pipe the Reg-function waits for the temperature-function (uses 0.75 seconds) and the output gets wrong... Can anyone please show me how to use the Pipe function.??
The code:
import time
import RPi.GPIO as GPIO
import os
GPIO.setwarnings(False)
GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BCM)
GPIO.setup(22, GPIO.OUT)
def temperatur(self):
while True:
tfile = open("/sys/bus/w1/devices/28-00000433f810/w1_slave")
text = tfile.read()
tfile.close()
secondline = text.split("\n")[1]
temperaturedata = secondline.split(" ")[9]
temp2 = float(temperaturedata[2:])
self.temp = temp2 / 1000
print self.temp
def reg(self):
while True:
ek = self.ref - self.temp
P_del = self.Kp * ek
I_del = ((self.Kp * self.Syklustid) / self.Ti) * ek
Paadrag = P_del + I_del
if Paadrag > 100:
Paadrag = 100
if Paadrag < 0:
Paadrag = 0
print "Paadrag: ", Paadrag, " Temperatur: ", self.temp
duty = Paadrag / 100.0
on_time = self.Syklustid * (duty)
off_time = self.Syklustid * (1.0-duty)
print "On_time: ", on_time, " Off_time: ", off_time
GPIO.output(22, GPIO.HIGH)
time.sleep(on_time)
GPIO.output(22, GPIO.LOW)
time.sleep(off_time
if __name__ == '__main__':
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1924
Reputation: 379
This is straight from the python documentation: http://docs.python.org/2/library/multiprocessing.html
from multiprocessing import Process, Pipe
def f(conn):
conn.send([42, None, 'hello'])
conn.close()
if __name__ == '__main__':
parent_conn, child_conn = Pipe()
p = Process(target=f, args=(child_conn,))
p.start()
print parent_conn.recv() # prints "[42, None, 'hello']"
p.join()
I've had better results using shared state. Especially for simple data like temperature (a number I assume - not a complex custom object or whatever) Here is a wee example (again you will find more in the python docs)
#import stuff
from multiprocessing import Process, Manager
# Create a shared dictionary of paremeters for both processes to use
manager = Manager()
global_props = manager.dict()
# SuperImportant - initialise all parameters first!!
global_props.update({'temp': 21.3})
def functionOne(global_props):
# Do some stuff read temperature
global_props['temp'] = newVal
def functionTwo(global_props):
temp = global_props['temp']
# Do some stuff with the new value
# assign listeners to the two processes, passing in the properties dictionary
handlerOne = functionOne # This can also be a class in which case it calls __init__()
handlerTwo = functionTwo
processOne = Process(target=handlerOne,
args=(global_props))
processTwo = Process(target=handlerTwo,
args=(global_props))
# Start the processes running...
processOne.start()
processTwo.start()
processOne.join()
processTwo.join()
Upvotes: 1