Raspberry GPIO's Setup: Difference between revisions

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Lets consider we are going to use
Lets consider we are going to use


GPIO 17 (Pin 11) for COr input  
GPIO 17 (Pin 11) for COR input  


GPIO 27 (Pin 13) for PTT Output
GPIO 27 (Pin 13) for PTT Output


= Install wiringpi =
= Install wiringpi =

Revision as of 16:36, 23 November 2020

At this moment only PTT is working, COR is a work in progress

Lets consider we are going to use

GPIO 17 (Pin 11) for COR input

GPIO 27 (Pin 13) for PTT Output

Install wiringpi

sudo apt-get install git-core
sudo git clone https://github.com/WiringPi/WiringPi.git /opt/wiringpi
cd /opt/wiringpi
sudo ./build

Create an initialization file

Create the following file using nano:

sudo nano /usr/local/sbin/Init-GPIO.sh

Add the following code to the file

#!/bin/bash
#script name - Init_GPIO
# COS Input
gpio -g mode 17 in # makes gpio 17 pin 11 on Raspberry pi 2/3 as input
gpio -g mode 17 up # activates pull-up
# PTT pin (Output)
gpio -g mode 27 out # makes gpio 27 pin 13 as output
gpio -g write 27 0 # Default to 0/Off

After making your changes type <CTRL> + <X> and then type <Y> followed by <Enter>. You will be back to the previous menu and choose <Back>.

Create the COR monitoring script

Create the following file using nano:

sudo nano /usr/local/sbin/COR-wfi.sh
#!/bin/bash
gpio -g mode 17 in
gpio -g mode 17 up
while [ 1=1 ]
do
  # wait int pin to go low
  gpio -g wfi 17 both
    COR=$(gpio -g read 17)
    if [ "$COR" = "0" ]; then
      gpio -g write 27 1
      echo COR GPIO low/closed
    else
      gpio -g write 27 0
      echo COR GPIO high/open
    fi
done

After making your changes type <CTRL> + <X> and then type <Y> followed by <Enter>. You will be back to the previous menu and choose <Back>.

Create Event files

now create the following file using nano:

sudo nano /usr/local/sbin/PTT-GPIO-high.sh

Add the following lines to the file, in this example I am using GPIO 27 which is assigned to pin 13 on a Raspberry Pi Model 2/3.

#!/bin/bash
gpio -g write 27 1

After making your changes type <CTRL> + <X> and then type <Y> followed by <Enter>. You will be back to the previous menu and choose <Back>.

Next create the following file using nano:

sudo nano /usr/local/sbin/PTT-GPIO-low.sh

Add the following lines to the file, in this example I am using GPIO 27 which is assigned to pin 13 on a Raspberry Pi Model 2/3.

#!/bin/bash
gpio -g write 27 0

After making your changes type <CTRL> + <X> and then type <Y> followed by <Enter>. You will be back to the previous menu and choose <Back>.

Make the Init-GPIO and COR-wfi.sh scripts run at startup

you have to add a line to the rc.local file.

sudo nano /etc/rc.local

Before the exit 0 line you have to add:

# For AllStarLink
/usr/local/sbin/Init-GPIO.sh
/usr/local/sbin/COR-wfi.sh

After making your changes type <CTRL> + <X> and then type <Y> followed by <Enter>. You will be back to the previous menu and choose <Back>.

Edit rpt.conf file

Now use nano to edit your rpt.conf file:

sudo nano /etc/asterisk/rpt.conf

On your node number stanza, i.e. [12345] add the following line:

events=events12345;

Then at the end of the file add the following stanza:

[events12345]
sudo /usr/local/sbin/PTT-GPIO-high.sh = S|T|RPT_TXKEYED;
sudo /usr/local/sbin/PTT-GPIO-low.sh = S|F|RPT_TXKEYED;

After making your changes type <CTRL> + <X> and then type <Y> followed by <Enter>. You will be back to the previous menu and choose <Back>.

Set permissions to execute scripts

cd /usr/local/sbin
sudo chmod +x Init-GPIO.sh
sudo chmod +x COR-wfi.sh
sudo chmod +x PTT-GPIO-high.sh
sudo chmod +x PTT-GPIO-low.sh