People have various preferences when it comes to their physical work environment, and it's common for these preferences to conflict. Unfortunately, in the matter of lighting, it's common for this conflict to manifest in the form of a war over the dimmer-switch, leading to fluctuations in lighting throughout the day -- which tends to give me a headache.
lighting-arduino
seeks to use the SparkFun ESP32 Thing Plus
and the SparkFun Ambient Light Sensor
to measure and track workspace illuminance over
time.
OSHA specifies a minimum illuminance of 30 foot-candles in general office settings, with a recommendation of 20-50 foot-candles when working with CRT monitors, and up to 73 foot-candles when working with LED monitors (no minimum is set forth in this case).
- Serial output of the current illuminance, with support for configurable linear backoff polling to conserve energy
- Configuration for "acceptable min/max illuminance" and "LED behavior", s.t. the on-board LED either turns on, turns off, or blinks when the light level is acceptable (or unacceptable)
- BLE server w/ real-time output
- Storage of metrics (one datapoint at variable rates based on recency -- every sec for the last min, and every 15min after that) long-term trends
- (Stretch goal) a way to output a graph from the metrics
This sketch exposes a BLE peripheral (server) that sends notifications each
containing a field of the current datapoint and comprising a pair of 4-byte
integers of the format <FIELD_ID> <FIELD_VALUE>
. Much is written about BLE,
but it's hard to find a concise explanation that gives guarantees about data
transfer; as a precaution, the datapoints encode a schema version in the
DP_BEGIN_VERSION (0x00)
field and the number of internal fields in the
DP_END_LENGTH (0xFF)
field.
I'm not an expert in Bluetooth, so will not get the jargon right. Please open an issue or PR to correct any terminological impropriety!
In order to get the BLE server to broadcast notifications, it's necessary to discover and set the characteristic's CCC attribute to notify:
# List all characteristics; here, you can see the service's UUID
gatttool -b <DEVICE ADDRESS> --characteristics
# List service characteristic values (and their associated handles)
gatttool -b <DEVICE ADDRESS> --char-read-uuid <SERVICE UUID>
# Discover 2902 CCC attributes for a characteristic
gatttool -b <DEVICE ADDRESS> --char-read-uuid 2902 <CHARACTERISTIC HANDLE>
# Write 0100 `enable notifications` to the 2902 CCC attribute for our
# characteristic, and then listen for notifications
gatttool -b <DEVICE ADDRESS> --char-write-req <2902 CCC HANDLE> 0100 --listen