1DS2437(3) One-Wire File System DS2437(3)
2
3
4
6 DS2437 - Smart Battery Monitor
7
9 Temperature Voltages and Memory.
10
11 1E [.]XXXXXXXXXXXX[XX][/[ current | date | disconnect/date | discon‐
12 nect/udate | endcharge/date | endcharge/udate | Ienable |
13 pages/page.[0-7|ALL] | temperature | udate | VAD | VDD | address | crc8
14 | id | locator | r_address | r_id | r_locator | type ]]
15
17 1E
18
20 date
21 read-write, ascii
22 26 character date representation of the counter value. Increments once
23 per second.
24 Setting date to a null string will put the current system time.
25 Accepted date formats are:
26 Sat[urday] March 12 12:23:59 2001
27 Apr[il] 4 9:34:56 2002
28 3/23/04 23:34:57
29 current locale setting (your system's format)
30
31 current
32 read-only, integer
33 Current reading. Actual current depends on Rsens resistor (see
34 datasheet).
35 The formula for current is I = current /(4096*Rsens)
36 with units in Amps and Ohms.
37 Current measurement will be temporarily enabled (see Ienable ) if not
38 currently enabled (pun intended) for this reading.
39
40 disconnect/date
41 read-write, ascii
42 26 character date representation of the disconnect/udate value. Time
43 when the battery pack waws removed from the charger. Format is the same
44 as the date property.
45
46 disconnect/udate
47 read-write, unsigned integer
48 Representation of disconnect/date as a number. See udate for details.
49
50 endcharge/date
51 read-write, ascii
52 26 character date representation of the endcharge/udate value. Format
53 is the same as the date property.
54
55 endcharge/udate
56 read-write, unsigned integer
57 Representation of endcharge/date as a number. See udate for details.
58
59 Ienable
60 read-write, unsigned integer
61 Status of current monitoring. When enabled, current sensing is per‐
62 formed 36.41 times/second. Values of Ienable are:
63
64 0 no current conversion
65
66 1 current conversion enabled
67
68 2 current conversion and accumulation
69
70 3 current conversion and accumulation with EEPROM backup
71
72 pages/page.0 ... pages/page.7 pages/page.ALL
73 read-write, binary
74 Memory is split into 8 pages of 8 bytes each. Only the pages 3-7 are
75 really available, and some of that appears to be reserved. See the
76 datasheet for details.
77 ALL is an aggregate of the pages. Each page is accessed sequentially.
78
79 temperature
80 read-only, floating point
81 Temperature read by the chip at high resolution (~13 bits). Units are
82 selected from the invoking command line. See owfs(1) or owhttpd(1) for
83 choices. Default is Celsius. Conversion takes ~20 msec.
84
85 udate
86 read-write, unsigned integer
87 Time represented as a number. udate increments once per second.
88 Usually set to unix time standard: number of seconds since Jan 1, 1970.
89 The date field will be the unix representation (ascii text) of udate
90 and setting either will change the other.
91
92 VAD VDD
93 read-only, floating point
94 Voltage read (~10 bits) at the one of the chip's two supply voltages.
95 Range VDD= 2.4V to 10V, VAD=1.5 to 10V.
96
98 address
99 r_address
100 read-only, ascii
101 The entire 64-bit unique ID. Given as upper case hexidecimal digits
102 (0-9A-F).
103 address starts with the family code
104 r address is the address in reverse order, which is often used in other
105 applications and labeling.
106
107 crc8
108 read-only, ascii
109 The 8-bit error correction portion. Uses cyclic redundancy check. Com‐
110 puted from the preceding 56 bits of the unique ID number. Given as
111 upper case hexadecimal digits (0-9A-F).
112
113 family
114 read-only, ascii
115 The 8-bit family code. Unique to each type of device. Given as upper
116 case hexadecimal digits (0-9A-F).
117
118 id
119 r_id
120 read-only, ascii
121 The 48-bit middle portion of the unique ID number. Does not include the
122 family code or CRC. Given as upper case hexadecimal digits (0-9A-F).
123 r id is the id in reverse order, which is often used in other applica‐
124 tions and labeling.
125
126 locator
127 r_locator
128 read-only, ascii
129 Uses an extension of the 1-wire design from iButtonLink company that
130 associated 1-wire physical connections with a unique 1-wire code. If
131 the connection is behind a Link Locator the locator will show a unique
132 8-byte number (16 character hexadecimal) starting with family code FE.
133 If no Link Locator is between the device and the master, the locator
134 field will be all FF.
135 r locator is the locator in reverse order.
136
137 present (DEPRECATED)
138 read-only, yes-no
139 Is the device currently present on the 1-wire bus?
140
141 type
142 read-only, ascii
143 Part name assigned by Dallas Semi. E.g. DS2401 Alternative packaging
144 (iButton vs chip) will not be distiguished.
145
147 None.
148
150 1-Wire
151 1-wire is a wiring protocol and series of devices designed and manufac‐
152 tured by Dallas Semiconductor, Inc. The bus is a low-power low-speed
153 low-connector scheme where the data line can also provide power.
154
155 Each device is uniquely and unalterably numbered during manufacture.
156 There are a wide variety of devices, including memory, sensors (humid‐
157 ity, temperature, voltage, contact, current), switches, timers and data
158 loggers. More complex devices (like thermocouple sensors) can be built
159 with these basic devices. There are also 1-wire devices that have
160 encryption included.
161
162 The 1-wire scheme uses a single bus master and multiple slaves on the
163 same wire. The bus master initiates all communication. The slaves can
164 be individually discovered and addressed using their unique ID.
165
166 Bus masters come in a variety of configurations including serial, par‐
167 allel, i2c, network or USB adapters.
168
169 OWFS design
170 OWFS is a suite of programs that designed to make the 1-wire bus and
171 its devices easily accessible. The underlying principle is to create a
172 virtual filesystem, with the unique ID being the directory, and the
173 individual properties of the device are represented as simple files
174 that can be read and written.
175
176 Details of the individual slave or master design are hidden behind a
177 consistent interface. The goal is to provide an easy set of tools for a
178 software designer to create monitoring or control applications. There
179 are some performance enhancements in the implementation, including data
180 caching, parallel access to bus masters, and aggregation of device com‐
181 munication. Still the fundamental goal has been ease of use, flexibil‐
182 ity and correctness rather than speed.
183
184 DS2437
185 The DS2437 (3) is an obsolete version of the DS2438 (3) battery chip.
186 Current sensing is available, but not implemented. The major advantage
187 compared to the DS2436 is that two voltages can be read, allowing cor‐
188 recting circuit nmeasurements to supply voltage and temperature. A bet‐
189 ter comparison is the DS276x family of chips.
190
192 All 1-wire devices are factory assigned a unique 64-bit address. This
193 address is of the form:
194
195 Family Code
196 8 bits
197
198 Address
199 48 bits
200
201 CRC 8 bits
202
203 Addressing under OWFS is in hexadecimal, of form:
204
205 01.123456789ABC
206
207 where 01 is an example 8-bit family code, and 12345678ABC is an example
208 48 bit address.
209
210 The dot is optional, and the CRC code can included. If included, it
211 must be correct.
212
214 http://pdfserv.maxim-ic.com/en/ds/DS2437.pdf
215 http://pdfserv.maxim-ic.com/en/an/humsensor.pdf
216
218 Programs
219 owfs (1) owhttpd (1) owftpd (1) owserver (1) owdir (1) owread (1)
220 owwrite (1) owpresent (1) owtap (1)
221
222 Configuration and testing
223 owfs (5) owtap (1) owmon (1)
224
225 Language bindings
226 owtcl (3) owperl (3) owcapi (3)
227
228 Clocks
229 DS1427 (3) DS1904 (3) DS1994 (3) DS2404 (3) DS2404S (3) DS2415 (3)
230 DS2417 (3)
231
232 ID
233 DS2401 (3) DS2411 (3) DS1990A (3)
234
235 Memory
236 DS1982 (3) DS1985 (3) DS1986 (3) DS1991 (3) DS1992 (3) DS1993 (3)
237 DS1995 (3) DS1996 (3) DS2430A (3) DS2431 (3) DS2433 (3) DS2502 (3)
238 DS2506 (3) DS28E04 (3) DS28EC20 (3)
239
240 Switches
241 DS2405 (3) DS2406 (3) DS2408 (3) DS2409 (3) DS2413 (3) DS28EA00 (3)
242
243 Temperature
244 DS1822 (3) DS1825 (3) DS1820 (3) DS18B20 (3) DS18S20 (3) DS1920 (3)
245 DS1921 (3) DS1821 (3) DS28EA00 (3) DS28E04 (3) EDS0064 (3) EDS0065 (3)
246 EDS0066 (3) EDS0067 (3) EDS0068 (3) EDS0071 (3) EDS0072 (3) MAX31826
247 [1m(3)
248
249 Humidity
250 DS1922 (3) DS2438 (3) EDS0065 (3) EDS0068 (3)
251
252 Voltage
253 DS2450 (3)
254
255 Resistance
256 DS2890 (3)
257
258 Multifunction (current, voltage, temperature)
259 DS2436 (3) DS2437 (3) DS2438 (3) DS2751 (3) DS2755 (3) DS2756 (3)
260 DS2760 (3) DS2770 (3) DS2780 (3) DS2781 (3) DS2788 (3) DS2784 (3)
261
262 Counter
263 DS2423 (3)
264
265 LCD Screen
266 LCD (3) DS2408 (3)
267
268 Crypto
269 DS1977 (3)
270
271 Pressure
272 DS2406 (3) TAI8570 (3) EDS0066 (3) EDS0068 (3)
273
274 Moisture
275 EEEF (3) DS2438 (3)
276
278 http://www.owfs.org
279
281 Paul Alfille (paul.alfille@gmail.com)
282
283
284
285OWFS Manpage 2003 DS2437(3)