> On 4 mars 2016, at 19:00, Ian Lepore <ian at freebsd.org> wrote:
>
>> On Fri, 2016-03-04 at 10:54 -0600, Karl Denninger wrote:
>>> On 3/3/2016 12:57, Peter Ankerst?l wrote:
>>> Hi!
>>>
>>> I have sort of exactly the same question as Erik:
>>> http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2014-July/2590
>>> 55.html
>>>
>>> I have bought a https://learn.adafruit.com/adafruit-ultimate-gps an
>>> d want to use the PPS output to discipline my clock.
>>>
>>> But the only source of information on how PPS works in FreeBSD I
>>> could find is this:
>>> https://docs.freebsd.org/doc/8.0-RELEASE/usr/share/doc/ntp/pps.html
>>> and it clearly states the two ways to provide a PPS signal.
"The
>>> PPS signal can be connected in either of two ways: via the data
>>> carrier detector (DCD) pin of a serial port or via the acknowledge
>>> (ACK) pin of a parallel port?
>>>
>>> Since the Pi doesn?t have any DCD pin i would like to use a generic
>>> GPIO for this. There is a linux kernel module for this: http://lxr.
>>> free-electrons.com/source/drivers/pps/clients/pps-gpio.c?v=3.6
>> GPIO is supported on the Pi, I'm using it on 11-Current on my home
>> control software to drive relays on my pool hardware (e.g. valves,
>> heater, VFD motor drive, etc) and it is working very well. I don't
>> believe tapping into that at the kernel level to expose a pps signal
>> (e.g. on /dev/pps or something of the like) would be very difficult
>> at
>> all, since the low-level driver capability is already present.
>>
>> If I get some free time I'll dig around a bit and see if I can
cobble
>> something up. It's of some interest to me as well since I have a
GPS
>> clock here that currently talks to a serial port on an Intel-based
>> machine and being able to move that to a $35 "appliance" for
NTP
>> using
>> the Adafruit setup looks sort of attractive given that the Pi plus
>> the
>> module would be under $100 all-in.
>
> Don't "cobble something up" just yet... there is "a
right way" to fix
> this, which is a generic gpio-pps driver. The problem is that it
> requires support from the new INTRNG, and the rpi hasn't been converted
> to that yet. I'm checking around to see if someone has done the
> conversion for rpi and it just hasn't been reveiwed/committed yet; if
> not, I guess I'll try to do it myself.
>
> Writing the actual gpio-pps driver will be pretty quick and easy once
> we have the intrng support, I think it'll take me a couple hours.
>
Oh, so there is hope. Thanks for looking into it.
Im not a programmer myself but im willing to help if I can.
> Also, FYI, another option with PPS is to use a usb-serial adapter and
> feed the PPS in on the CTS or DCD pin. I tested that on rpi a few
> months ago and it worked fine. There's surpisingly little jitter even
> when the usb bus is heavily loaded with other traffic such as disk or
> network IO.
>
Yes that was going to be my plan B. Good to know that it works.
/Peter.
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