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    EZIO Driver for LCDproc

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    • F
      fmertz
      last edited by

      Fascinating. Everything I have seen with these devices is 2400 bps. Yes, 2400!

      For the keyboard, you have to send a command to get the status. Then the PIC sends a response with the status of the keys.

      What would it take to program one of these? I mean once we had a compiled file, would something like an arduino be able to push it in the PIC? Enhancing the code while still using the existing hardware seems like fun, and some folks might actually use this…

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      • stephenw10S
        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
        last edited by

        This is great.  :)

        I think it might be a tough sell if the change broke compatibility with the original OS. Though personally I won't be going back.

        Still never seen the keys work on the display I have for some reason.

        Steve

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        • E
          evilgoat76
          last edited by

          @fmertz:

          Fascinating. Everything I have seen with these devices is 2400 bps. Yes, 2400!

          For the keyboard, you have to send a command to get the status. Then the PIC sends a response with the status of the keys.

          What would it take to program one of these? I mean once we had a compiled file, would something like an arduino be able to push it in the PIC? Enhancing the code while still using the existing hardware seems like fun, and some folks might actually use this…

          Pulled the one in my unit out and had a poke, the board has changed a little, one of the driver transistors has been removed, I dont know why it was there I suspect to spread the load of the backlight. You could use PWM here and control the brightness. I've never seen these with the backlight off but it would appear there is the facility.

          What is really interesting is the contrast pot, or rather, its lack. There is now a digital pot on the board, ISL90728W so the contrast may be adjustable.
          This suggests one thing right off the bat, there IS a later version than the last I saw and there IS more going on than serial to parralel. I suggested to thge MFR at the time that escape style codes could be used and my one I did just that.

          A look at the disassembly shows there is more in the IRQ routines than I recall, the hex dump is from this display so i'll do a diff when I have the old one. This does however confirm there is a 3rd version of this damn thing. Disassembling this will take a bi as it'll need commenting and to be fair, its not THAT well written.

          I have sucked the code off, they still dont set the CP bits. I've also wiped it, verified its blank then reflashed it so J5 on the back is a standard Microchip ICD port. Your choices are:

          PicKIT 2, 3 and ICD2/3 or anything newer. The ICD2 has some 'issues' with Win64 so mine is long gone. My PicKit 3 is a cheap china special and works. Yes you can use an arduino to burn the chip too, google is your friend.

          The hardware looks straight forward as I remeber it. The 4 bits of display data are on RB4 thru 7. Remaining ports pins drive the 'new' I2C pot chip. RA1,2, 3,4 and 5 are the key matrix. If you wanted to investigate dead keys this is your spot. RA1 and RA2 look to be used to also drive RS and !E to the display.

          I will verify the board layout over the weekend.

          New firmware should be easy….
          Init the chip
          Init the LCD
          Enable interrupts for serial
          Sit in a loop and see what comes bacl when you twoddle the colum lines. Store this and if it changes stuff a keycode out the UART
          Deal with IRqs as they happen, test what you have, if its <32 its a control code, go deal with it, else spit it out to the lcd.

          I'd suggest (as I did at the time) all non printables like BS, clear, home cr lf etc did as they should
          ESCn then can be used for the backlight, contrast etc.
          One fly in the ointment is that the pot is volatile. Now the EEPROM has a finite life, anyone thats had an older Audi knows where this path leads. The thing seems to be biased by resistors to give a good screen contrast out of the box so its not an issue so would we be happy sending commands to set contrast? Do we even want that facility? (I hate bit bang I2C)

          IF I were a gambling man I'd suggest the matrix or ribbon on  stephenw10's is either out of the FPC connector or duff. Dont be tempted to clean the connector end of the ribbon with anything chemical, you'll annihalate the contacts. Do check the little black plastic 'gate' is on and not kicking around loose in the box, these did come off in transit before now. If it has pop it back on and a bit of Kaptan tape will keep it there. Two screws in the base plate of the module and one in the lip of the case and the whol lot pops out as a unit and you can see the button pads.

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          • E
            evilgoat76
            last edited by

            Circuit diagram for current version. It seems that the change I suspected was a pot is actually an improved RS232 driver.
            The backlight control powers the WHOLE display down, so on returning backlight you'll be required to send another init sequence. The now missing Q2 is simply a load sharing setup, it WAS a way to do PWM on the backlight. The tracks have been merged into one larg polygon for some reason, I can se ethe old PTHs are still there for both tracks so this may be an error tahts disabled backlight control hence no point fitting Q2.

            New firmware should be easy. I do now have to re-assemble this unit and prepare it for its new home but soon as its gone I'll get a hold of another and/or see if this will mock up in PICsim easilly.

            Unless someone wants to loan a display assembly?

            StephenW10 - all you need to meter out the keyboard membrane is here.

            Untitled.png
            Untitled.png_thumb

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            • F
              fmertz
              last edited by

              Could you post a picture of your device? I took a look at mine a couple nights ago and could not really see the programming header, etc. you are talking about. My device has a sticker on the micro-controller that says "02A", which I think refers to the more recent firmware version. This is also referred to in the documentation. I acquired my display stand alone off of eBay. I do not have the appliance it was installed in. I'll post pictures of mine, too.

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              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                Mmm, wondering if this was customised for the Smoothwall boxes. That display is used in a number of other firewalls as well as Portwell's own gear.

                Steve

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                • F
                  fmertz
                  last edited by

                  @stephenw10:

                  In other news I have an EZIO-G500 but can find zero documentation for it. It does seem like you can just write to the serial port and it displays stuff but no formatting etc.

                  I would encourage you to start another thread for this. Also, post pictures. I actually reached out to Portwell for this, but I am told that initiating the effort of finding documentation requires an invoice number. Another avenue would be to reach out to whomever made the appliance this LCD came with and see if they are willing to help.

                  If it is serial, there is likely some form of a micro-controller involved. I assume the code could possibly be extracted and looked over to find out the commands. Alternatively, maybe there is some code in whatever distribution this LCD came bundled with. Sometimes researching into this leads to other key words that can be thrown in a search engine…

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                  • F
                    fmertz
                    last edited by

                    Pictures attached.

                    IMG_20171004_083854.png
                    IMG_20171004_083854.png_thumb
                    IMG_20171004_083923.png
                    IMG_20171004_083923.png_thumb
                    IMG_20171004_083907.png
                    IMG_20171004_083907.png_thumb

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                    • E
                      evilgoat76
                      last edited by

                      Thats a MUCH older board.

                      When I left the firmware had not been customised despite my insistance. Sadly my unit how now gone off to its new home complete with non working display (Vmware passthrough issues).

                      Take the unit out, separate the controller from the display (careful its fragile) and flip it over. Theres a programming header position marked with 5 pins as per the circuit diagram.

                      The chip should be a PIC 16F628A SOIC rather than a through hole. I seem to recall the very early caswell box we had to play with which was a 1st gen LGA775 Celeron D had a 16F84 through hole and four silver buttons, no matrix but tactile switches.

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                      • E
                        evilgoat76
                        last edited by

                        Another appliance ordered soleley for me to muck about with, so once thats here and I verify I have ESXI doing passthrough right I'll have a play.

                        The Developer never replied :( Sadly from what I know of him thats not THAT unexpected.

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                        • E
                          evilgoat76
                          last edited by

                          Well my new one arrived. FUll of bad joints in the PSU, so whipped apart, soldered up, and out of curiosity 8GB of ram popped in. Shouldnt work and didnt on the last, this board is happy with it AND I've allocated all 8GB and used it in ESXI6, 4GB allocated to PF and 4Gb to Freepbx so its stable. So as an aside, there's a newer BIOS out there for these that lifts the 4Gb limit.

                          The display is a version of the board. This one with a lot of unpopulated options. I set up the simulator as per my diagram and booted the firmware and got the two '*'s so the firmware hasnt changed, a diff confirms this.

                          Watching the simulator the display IS initalised by the firmware and those two *'s are sent by the PIC as an inialisation test.

                          ![DSC_0180 (Small).jpg](/public/imported_attachments/1/DSC_0180 (Small).jpg)
                          ![DSC_0180 (Small).jpg_thumb](/public/imported_attachments/1/DSC_0180 (Small).jpg_thumb)
                          ![DSC_0181 (Small).jpg](/public/imported_attachments/1/DSC_0181 (Small).jpg)
                          ![DSC_0181 (Small).jpg_thumb](/public/imported_attachments/1/DSC_0181 (Small).jpg_thumb)

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                          • E
                            evilgoat76
                            last edited by

                            Attached modified firmware simply changes the ** to a more friendly 'OK'
                            You'll need MPLAB and a PICKit2 or better. Chip is a 16F628A
                            BACKUP THE FIRMWARE FIRST!

                            ![DSC_0182 (Large).jpg](/public/imported_attachments/1/DSC_0182 (Large).jpg)
                            ![DSC_0182 (Large).jpg_thumb](/public/imported_attachments/1/DSC_0182 (Large).jpg_thumb)
                            FW.zip

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                            • F
                              fmertz
                              last edited by

                              Pretty neat!

                              Is there a human-readable version of this firmware you could share? Maybe there is some neat undocumented feature we could add to the driver… Thanks.

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                              • E
                                evilgoat76
                                last edited by

                                Documenting it as we speak. Its prettu horrible and from memory not a lot changed from the inital version, spends a hell of a lot of time in un-necessary register saves and generally odd code…

                                
                                											Save CPU State
                                    31   01E     00A0  MOVWF wsave                             	Save W reg
                                    32   01F     0803  MOVF STATUS, W                            	Copy Status to W
                                    33   020     00A1  MOVWF ssave                             	Save Status
                                
                                    34   021     2175  CALL 0x175 					Init Display                            
                                											Restore CPU State
                                    35   022     0821  MOVF ssave, W      				Load old Status into W                     
                                    36   023     0083  MOVWF STATUS                              	Reload Status register from W
                                    37   024     0820  MOVF wsave, W                           	Reload W 
                                
                                    38   025     1303  BCF STATUS, 0x6                           	BANK0
                                    39   026     1283  BCF STATUS, 0x5                              BANK0
                                    40   027     0803  MOVF STATUS, W 				Copy Status to W     			                      
                                    41   028     00A1  MOVWF ssave        				Save Status         
                                    42   029     304F  MOVLW 0x4f                             	Load 4Fh into W ('O')
                                    43   02A     2199  CALL 0x199                             		Call display char routine
                                    44   02B     0821  MOVF ssave, W                           	Copy old status into W
                                    45   02C     0083  MOVWF STATUS                              	Reload Status register from W
                                
                                

                                At least 10 lines of that are un-needed register/context saving.

                                The serial handling looks simple enough and I'm about to start on that. There is a very simple code block which is pretty much one character in and a huge switch statement based on the character. I should have it mapped out by the end of the evening if my brain hasn't died by then.

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                                • E
                                  evilgoat76
                                  last edited by

                                  Well its 23:19 and I'm sick of this.

                                  Its overly complicated and silly, theres some nasty code in here and thi HAS to be compiler generated, no human could make such a mess of this without help!

                                  The long and short seems to be that as per what I already knew from the older version, there arent really any fun features in here. For some reason someone went to a lot of trouble to add support for several dozen ASCII control codes only to have them all return an error!

                                  The only returncodes I see are for the buttons, errors and what looks like an ID (That may be useful for autodetection)

                                  The PIC does have control over the display power but its not exposed to the user in any way I can see. It's also power not backlight so to make it work you'd need to sleep the display, then on waking re-init and send the data again. From a firmware point of view thats doable, LCDPROC would need to know what to do.

                                  I'll trace out the protocol tomorrow and I propose rather than a new firmware that I get this into MPLAB, compiling and cleaned up. Once thats done I can bash up a quick Delphi app to excercise and test it, I should be able to generate some init codes/strings although I suspect they will match what fmertz has.

                                  Once thats done I can take a look at these 'stubs'…

                                     193   0C0     28F9  GOTO 0xf9                              		Yes, goto F9h (Error routine)
                                     194   0C1     3002  MOVLW 0x2                              		Load W with 02h (STX)
                                     195   0C2     0223  SUBWF temp, W                          		Subtract W from temp                          
                                     196   0C3     1903  BTFSC STATUS, Z  	                       	Was it zero?                        
                                     197   0C4     28F9  GOTO 0xf9                              		Yes, goto F9h (Error routine)	
                                     198   0C5     3006  MOVLW 0x06                              		Load W with 06h (ACK)
                                     199   0C6     0223  SUBWF temp, W                          		Subtract W from temp                          
                                     200   0C7     1903  BTFSC STATUS, Z  	                       	Was it zero?                         
                                     201   0C8     28FE  GOTO 0xfe                              		Yes, goto FEh
                                     202   0C9     3008  MOVLW 0x8                              		Load W with 08h (BACKSPACE)
                                     203   0CA     0223  SUBWF temp, W                          		Subtract W from temp                          
                                     204   0CB     1903  BTFSC STATUS, Z  	                       	Was it zero?                        
                                     205   0CC     28F9  GOTO 0xf9                              		Yes, goto F9h (Error routine)
                                     206   0CD     300C  MOVLW 0x0C                             		Load W with 0Ch	(LF)
                                     207   0CE     0223  SUBWF temp, W                          		Subtract W from temp                           
                                     208   0CF     1903  BTFSC STATUS, Z  	                       	Was it zero?                          
                                     209   0D0     28F9  GOTO 0xf9                              		Yes, goto F9h (Error routine)
                                     210   0D1     300D  MOVLW 0xd                              		Load W with 0Dh
                                     211   0D2     0223  SUBWF temp, W                          		Subtract W from temp                           
                                     212   0D3     1903  BTFSC STATUS, Z  	                       	Was it zero?                          
                                     213   0D4     28F9  GOTO 0xf9                              		Yes, goto F9h (Error routine)
                                  

                                  And see about using them for other things, primarilly turning the display on and off for now.
                                  In doing so I'll change the ID code it returns so it's detectable.

                                  A keypad read returns two bytes :
                                  0xFD - this is always the same.
                                  The next byte should be one of 4 possible bytes, however the code breaks if you try to be clever with the buttons, it factos in the individual buttons but not combinations, when it hits something it doesnt know it just passes the bitmap through, making about 20 lines of assembler redundant but gives us the following:

                                  The return is always 0xBn. The B can be masked off, its not used
                                  The N represents a bitmap containing the status of all the buttons. Its inversed but starting from the right as lsb:
                                  bit 0 - Top Left
                                  bit 1 - Bottom Left
                                  bit 2 - Bottom Right
                                  bit 3 - Top Right

                                  Of course this means we can use a modifier key and get 6 keys for the price of 4!

                                  diplay.zip

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                                  • E
                                    evilgoat76
                                    last edited by

                                    Right. First up, this is easy to get this stuck in odd states.

                                    If the display stops responding

                                    
                                    0x00, 0xFE, 0xFE, 0x37 
                                    

                                    should reset the state machine. In most places 0x00 will put you back to needing to do an init.

                                    Init is

                                    0xFE, 0x28
                                    

                                    Then either:
                                      Send chars as needed (You cant use 0x10 or 0xFE)
                                    OR
                                      Send 0x10 and the module will reply with the keystates, this means you HAVE to poll this (STUPID!). The Low baud rate and need to poll explains the issues people have had.
                                    OR
                                      Send 0xFE and one of the following commands…

                                    
                                    	5Ah - get ID, returns 0x02,0x05 so sending 0xFE, 0x28, 0xFE, 0x5A from cold will confirm the module is there and give the version (2.5)
                                    	01h - clear display 
                                    	02h - home - Sets Data pointer in LCD to 0
                                    	06h - read keypad
                                    	08h - Display off, Cursor Off, Blink off	
                                    	0Ch - Display on, Cursor off, blink off
                                    	0Dh - Display on, Cursor off, blink on
                                    	0Eh - Display on, Cursor on, blink off
                                    	10h - Cursor left 
                                    	14h - Cursor Right
                                    	18h - Display Left shift
                                     	1Ch - Display Right shift
                                    	40h - Set Char Gen ram address to 0
                                    	C0h - Home line 2 - Set Data pointer to halfway through data ram
                                    	37h - Reset command mode
                                    
                                    

                                    I'm not sure what use 0x40 really is
                                    That's all there is. Just going to bash together an app to test and play with now.

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                                    • F
                                      fmertz
                                      last edited by

                                      Ok, so that 0x5A version command is an undocumented feature…

                                      0x40 is documented, it is the beginning code for downloading custom characters.

                                      http://drivers.portwell.com/CA_Manual/EZIO/EZIO-FINAL.PDF

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                                      • E
                                        evilgoat76
                                        last edited by

                                        That sort of makes sense, looking at the code I really couldn't see how you could actually use it though.

                                        The disasembled code now compiles and SORT of works, need to fix what looks like a config word issue.

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                                        • L
                                          Lourensb
                                          last edited by

                                          Hi Guys

                                          I registered here, to see if I can get some help.

                                          I am a very basic user, with limited Skills.

                                          I have a CAR 3000 Portwell unit, that I installed pfSense on, the latest / Current Version.

                                          I followed, and tried about all the Steps, and for some time, all my Display  said, was pfSense Rules !

                                          I then Powered the Device down, and not it's back to **

                                          Can you please just give me a complete guide, as to what is needed, to get the Display to work please.

                                          I am willing to test for you also.

                                          System pfSense
                                          Netgate Device ID: 92f16f5ccf418fc9167a

                                          BIOS Vendor: American Megatrends Inc.
                                          Version: 080015
                                          Release Date: Mon Dec 21 2009

                                          Version 2.4.2-RELEASE (amd64)
                                          built on Mon Nov 20 08:12:56 CST 2017
                                          FreeBSD 11.1-RELEASE-p4

                                          The system is on the latest version.
                                          Version information updated at Sat Nov 25 13:29:23 -02 2017

                                          Thank You for your Help

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                                          • stephenw10S
                                            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                            last edited by

                                            This appears to be in the FreeBSD 11 stable package now. Wonder if we can get it pulled into our repo….

                                            Steve

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