Software: Overview
This project uses free open source software (FOSS). The operating system is Linux although everything should run under Windows. The Perl module GD::Graph is used to plot the data. The graphs and data are displayed with a web server, usually Apache. More detailed installation instructions are on the Forums. The code will be available at GitHub.
Contents
Linux Distributions
Linux distros that have been tested are:
- Debian Wheezy
- Lubuntu (lightweight Ubuntu)
- Slackware 13.0
Reading the Sensors
Scale
For tips on serial communication with the scale see Tips:Scale Talking to the scale is straight forward. Usually send a short character string to the scale and listen for a reply. For the Adam Equipment:
echo "N\r\n" > /dev/ttyS0 read -t 1 SCALE < /dev/ttyS0
To use the Cisco Linksys WRT160NL wireless router to talk to the My Weigh HD300 scale, first detach a process that sleeps for a second and sends a carriage return. Then read the data. The detached bit sleeps for a second, allowing the read to get latched onto the serial port, and then sends the command, which promptly returns data.
'sleep 1;echo -e "\r" > /dev/ttyUSB0' & read -t 3 SCALE /dev/ttyUSB0.
Temperature Sensors
TEMPered reads the RDing TEMPerHUM USB thermometer/hygrometer. Source code is at github.com/edorfaus/TEMPered instructions for installing TEMPered on the Pi.
Logging the Data
Every 5 minutes cron kicks off the bash script hive.sh that reads the sensors. The data is appended to a flat text log file hive.log and written in xml format to the temporary file hive.xml. cURL is used to send the xml file to a hosted web server where a perl script extracts the xml encoded data and inserts a row into the database.
Graphing the Data
GD::Graph
The Perl module GD::Graph is used to plot the data.