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Pi4J Java Examples using the Pi4J Library
package odroid.c1;
/*
* #%L
* **********************************************************************
* ORGANIZATION : Pi4J
* PROJECT : Pi4J :: Java Examples
* FILENAME : SoftPwmExample.java
*
* This file is part of the Pi4J project. More information about
* this project can be found here: http://www.pi4j.com/
* **********************************************************************
* %%
* Copyright (C) 2012 - 2016 Pi4J
* %%
* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as
* published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the
* License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Lesser Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Lesser Public
* License along with this program. If not, see
* .
* #L%
*/
import com.pi4j.io.gpio.*;
import com.pi4j.platform.Platform;
import com.pi4j.platform.PlatformAlreadyAssignedException;
import com.pi4j.platform.PlatformManager;
import com.pi4j.util.CommandArgumentParser;
import com.pi4j.util.Console;
/**
*
* This example code demonstrates how to setup a software emulated PWM pin using the Odroid C1/C1+ GPIO pins.
*
*
* @author Robert Savage
*/
public class SoftPwmExample {
/**
* [ARGUMENT/OPTION "--pin (#)" | "-p (#)" ]
* This example program accepts an optional argument for specifying the GPIO pin (by number)
* to use with this GPIO listener example. If no argument is provided, then GPIO #1 will be used.
* -- EXAMPLE: "--pin 4" or "-p 0".
*
* @param args
* @throws InterruptedException
* @throws PlatformAlreadyAssignedException
*/
public static void main(String[] args) throws InterruptedException, PlatformAlreadyAssignedException {
// ####################################################################
//
// since we are not using the default Raspberry Pi platform, we should
// explicitly assign the platform as the Odroid platform.
//
// ####################################################################
PlatformManager.setPlatform(Platform.ODROID);
// create Pi4J console wrapper/helper
// (This is a utility class to abstract some of the boilerplate code)
final Console console = new Console();
// print program title/header
console.title("<-- The Pi4J Project -->", "SoftPWM Example (Software-driven PWM Emulation)");
// allow for user to exit program using CTRL-C
console.promptForExit();
// create gpio controller
final GpioController gpio = GpioFactory.getInstance();
// ####################################################################
//
// When provisioning a pin, use the OdroidC1Pin class.
//
// ####################################################################
// by default we will use gpio pin #01; however, if an argument
// has been provided, then lookup the pin by address
Pin pin = CommandArgumentParser.getPin(
OdroidC1Pin.class, // pin provider class to obtain pin instance from
OdroidC1Pin.GPIO_01, // default pin if no pin argument found
args); // argument array to search in
// we will provision the pin as a software emulated PWM output
// pins that support hardware PWM should be provisioned as normal PWM outputs
// each software emulated PWM pin does consume additional overhead in
// terms of CPU usage.
//
// Software emulated PWM pins support a range between 0 (off) and 100 (max) by default.
//
// Please see: http://wiringpi.com/reference/software-pwm-library/
// for more details on software emulated PWM
GpioPinPwmOutput pwm = gpio.provisionSoftPwmOutputPin(pin);
// optionally set the PWM range (100 is default range)
pwm.setPwmRange(100);
// prompt user that we are ready
console.println(" ... Successfully provisioned PWM pin: " + pwm.toString());
console.emptyLine();
// set the PWM rate to 100 (FULLY ON)
pwm.setPwm(100);
console.println("Software emulated PWM rate is: " + pwm.getPwm());
console.println("Press ENTER to set the PWM to a rate of 50");
System.console().readLine();
// set the PWM rate to 50 (1/2 DUTY CYCLE)
pwm.setPwm(50);
console.println("Software emulated PWM rate is: " + pwm.getPwm());
console.println("Press ENTER to set the PWM to a rate to 0 (stop PWM)");
System.console().readLine();
// set the PWM rate to 0 (FULLY OFF)
pwm.setPwm(0);
console.println("Software emulated PWM rate is: " + pwm.getPwm());
// stop all GPIO activity/threads by shutting down the GPIO controller
// (this method will forcefully shutdown all GPIO monitoring threads and scheduled tasks)
gpio.shutdown();
}
}
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