ServoBlaster This is a Linux kernel driver for the RaspberryPi, which provides an interface to drive multiple servos via the GPIO pins. You control the servo postions by sending commands to the driver saying what pulse width a particular servo output should use. The driver maintains that pulse width until you send a new command requesting some other width. Currently is it configured to drive 8 servos. Servos typically need an active high pulse of somewhere between 0.5ms and 2.5ms, where the pulse width controls the position of the servo. The pulse should be repeated approximately every 20ms, although pulse frequency is not critical. The pulse width is critical, as that translates directly to the servo position. The driver creates a device file, /dev/servoblaster, in to which you can send commands. The command format is "=", where servo number is a number from 0 to 7 inclusive, and servo position is the pulse width you want in units of 10us. So, if you want to set servo 3 to a pulse width of 1.2ms you could do this at the shell prompt: echo 3=120 > /dev/servoblaster 120 is in units of 10us, so that is 1200us, or 1.2ms. Upon reading, the device file provides feedback as to what position each servo is currently set. For example, after starting the driver and running the previous command, you would see: pi@raspberrypi ~ $ cat /dev/servoblaster 0=0 1=0 2=0 3=120 4=0 5=0 6=0 7=0 pi@raspberrypi ~ $ When the driver is first loaded the GPIO pins are configure to be outputs, and their pulse widths are set to 0. This is so that servos don't jump to some arbitrary position when you load the driver. Once you know where you want your servos positioned, write a value to /dev/servoblaster to enable the respective output. When the driver is unloaded it attempts to shut down the outputs cleanly, rather than cutting some pulse short and causing a servo position to jump. The driver allocates a timeslot of 2.5ms to each output (8 servos resulting in a cycle time of 20ms). A servo output is set high at the start of its 2.5ms timeslot, and set low after the appropriate delay. There is then a further delay to take us to the end of that timeslot before the next servo output is set high. This way there is only ever one servo output active at a time, which helps keep the code simple. The driver works by setting up a linked list of DMA control blocks with the last one linked back to the first, so once initialized the DMA controller cycles round continuously and the driver does not need to get involved except when a pulse width needs to be changed. For a given servo there are four DMA control blocks; the first transfers a single word to the GPIO 'set output' register, the second transfers some number of words to the PWM FIFO to generate the required pulse width time, the third transfers a single word to the GPIO 'clear output' register, and the fourth transfers a number of words to the PWM FIFO to generate a delay up to the end of the 2.5ms timeslot. While the driver does use the PWM peripheral, it only uses it to pace the DMA transfers, so as to generate accurate delays. The PWM is set up such that it consumes one word from the FIFO every 10us, so to generate a delay of 1.2ms the driver sets the DMA transfer count to 480 (1200/10*4, as the FIFO is 32 bits wide). The PWM is set to request data as soon as there is a single word free in the FIFO, so there should be no burst transfers to upset the timing. I used Panalyzer running on one Pi to mointor the servo outputs from a second Pi. The pulse widths and frequencies seem very stable, even under heavy SD card use. This is expected, because the pulse generation is effectively handled in hardware and not influenced by interrupt latency or scheduling effects. Please read the driver source for more details, such as which GPIO pin maps to which servo number. The comments at the top of servoblaster.c also explain how to make your system create the /dev/servoblaster device node automatically when the driver is loaded. Alternatively running "make install" in the driver source directory will also create the necessary files. Further to this, running "make install_autostart" will create those files, plus perform the necessary changes to make servoblaster be automatically loaded at boot. Note that there are three different ways of referring to a specific servo control pin: by servo number, by GPIO pin on the processor, or by pin number on the P1 header on the Pi itself. The following table shows the mapping between these number schemes: Servo GPIO number P1 Pin 0 4 7 1 17 11 2 18 12 3 21 13 4 22 15 5 23 16 6 24 18 7 25 22 The driver uses DMA channel 0, and PWM channel 1. It makes no attempt to protect against other code using those peripherals. It sets the relevant GPIO pins to be outputs when the driver is loaded, so please ensure that you are not driving those pins externally. ServoBlaster currently uses the PWM hardware for timing purposes, so cannot be used at the same time as PWM audio on the 3.5mm jack, and if you play PWM audio after loading servoblaster.ko, you'll need to unload and reload servoblaster.ko in order to recover. I would of course recommend some buffering between the GPIO outputs and the servo controls, to protect the Pi. That said, I'm living dangerously and doing without :-) If you just want to experiment with a small servo you can probably take the 5 volts for it from the header pins on the Pi, but I find that doing anything non-trivial with four servos connected pulls the 5 volts down far enough to crash the Pi! If you wish to compile the module yourself, the approach I took was to run rpi-update to get the latest kernel from github, then follow the instructions on the wiki (http://elinux.org/RPi_Kernel_Compilation) to compile the kernel, then edit the servoblaster Makefile to point at your kernel tree, then build servoblaster. NOTE: There is some doubt over how to configure the PWM clock at present. For me the clock is 600KHz, which leads to a tick lenght of 10us. However at least one person has reported that the pulses are out by about a factor of about 8, and so are repeated every 2.5ms rather than every 20ms. To work round this I have added two module parameters: tick_scale defaults to 6, which should be a divisor of 600KHz, which should give a tick of 10us. You set the pulse width in ticks (echo 2=27 > /dev/panalyzer to set 27 ticks). cycle_ticks is the cycle time in ticks, and defaults to 2000 to give 20ms if one tick is 10us. cycle_ticks should be a multiple of 8. The max pulse width you can specify by writing to /dev/servoblaster is (cycle_ticks/8 - 1), so for the default parameters it is 249, or 2.49ms. For example: sudo insmod ./servoblaster.ko tick_scale=48 should slow it down by a factor of 8 (6*8=48). If you can't get quite what you want with tick_scale, you can also tweak cycle_ticks. Eventually I might get round to letting you specify how many servo control outputs you want, and which outputs to use, via module parameters. As of August 30th 2012 the servoblaster.ko module is built against a 2.6.27+ kernel source from github. Richard Hirst August 2012