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C driver to work with Sensirion's SF06 based flow sensors via I2C on Raspberry-Pi

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Sensirion/raspberry-pi-i2c-sfm-sf06

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Sensirion Raspberry Pi I²C SFM-SF06 Driver

The repository provides a driver for setting up a sensor of the SFM-SF06 family to run on a Raspberry Pi over I²C.

Click here to learn more about the Sensirion SFM-SF06 sensor family.

Not all sensors of this driver family support all measurements. In case a measurement is not supported by all sensors, the products that support it are listed in the API description.

Supported sensor types

Sensor name I²C Addresses
SFM4300 0x2A, 0x2B, 0x2C, 0x2D
SFM3119 0x29
SFM3003 0x28, 0x2D
SFM3013 0x2F
SFM3019 0x2E

The following instructions and examples use a SFM4300.

Connect the sensor

Your sensor has 6 different connectors: ADDR, SDA, GND, VDD, SCL, IRQn. Use the following pins to connect your SFM-SF06:

SFM-SF06 Cable Color Raspberry Pi
ADDR Pin
SDA Pin 3
GND Pin 6
VDD Pin 1
SCL Pin 5
IRQn Pin

Detailed sensor pinout

Pin Cable Color Name Description Comments
1 ADDR see data sheet section 4.1
2 SDA I2C: Serial data input / output Serial data, bidirectional
3 GND Ground
4 VDD Supply Voltage 3.0V to 5.0V
5 SCL I2C: Serial clock input
6 IRQn Active low. see data sheet section 3.3

Quick start example

  • Install the Raspberry Pi OS on to your Raspberry Pi

  • Enable the I²C interface in the raspi-config

  • Download the SFM-SF06 driver from Github and extract the .zip on your Raspberry Pi

  • Connect the SFM-SF06 sensor as explained in the section above

  • The provided example is working with a SFM4300, I²C address 0x2A. In order to use the code with another product or I²C address you need to change it in the call sfm_sf06_init(ADDRESS) in sfm_sf06_i2c_example_usage.c. The list of supported I²C-addresses is found in the header sfm_sf06_i2c.h.

  • Compile the driver

    1. Open a terminal

    2. Navigate to the driver directory. E.g. cd ~/raspberry-pi-i2c-sfm_sf06

    3. Navigate to the subdirectory example-usage.

    4. Run the make command to compile the driver

      Output:

      rm -f sfm_sf06_i2c_example_usage
      cc -Os -Wall -fstrict-aliasing -Wstrict-aliasing=1 -Wsign-conversion -fPIC -I. -o sfm_sf06_i2c_example_usage  sfm_sf06_i2c.h sfm_sf06_i2c.c sensirion_i2c_hal.h sensirion_i2c.h sensirion_i2c.c \
          sensirion_i2c_hal.c sensirion_config.h sensirion_common.h sensirion_common.c sfm_sf06_i2c_example_usage.c
      
  • Test your connected sensor

    • Run ./sfm_sf06_i2c_example_usage in the same directory you used to compile the driver. You should see the measurement values in the console.

Troubleshooting

Building driver failed

If the execution of make in the compilation step 3 fails with something like

 make: command not found

your RaspberryPi likely does not have the build tools installed. Proceed as follows:

$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get upgrade
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential

Initialization failed

If you run ./sfm_sf06_i2c_example_usage but do not get sensor readings but something like this instead

Error executing stop_continuous_measurement(): -1
Error executing read_product_identifier(): -1
Error executing start_O2_continuous_measurement(): -1
...

then go through the below troubleshooting steps.

  • Ensure that you connected the sensor correctly: All cables are fully plugged in and connected to the correct pin.
  • Ensure that I²C is enabled on the Raspberry Pi. For this redo the steps on "Enable the I²C interface in the raspi-config" in the guide above.
  • Ensure that your user account has read and write access to the I²C device. If it only works with user root (sudo ./sfm_sf06_i2c_example_usage), it's typically due to wrong permission settings. See the next chapter how to solve this.

Missing I²C permissions

If your user is missing access to the I²C interface you should first verfiy the user belongs to the i2c group.

$ groups
users input some other groups etc

If i2c is missing in the list add the user and restart the Raspberry Pi.

$ sudo adduser your-user i2c
Adding user `your-user' to group `i2c' ...
Adding user your-user to group i2c
Done.
$ sudo reboot

If that did not help you can make globally accessible hardware interfaces with a udev rule. Only do this if everything else failed and you are reasoably confident you are the only one having access to your Pi.

Go into the /etc/udev/rules.d folder and add a new file named local.rules.

$ cd /etc/udev/rules.d/
$ sudo touch local.rules

Then add a single line ACTION=="add", KERNEL=="i2c-[0-1]*", MODE="0666" to the file with your favorite editor.

$ sudo vi local.rules

Contributing

Contributions are welcome!

We develop and test this driver using our company internal tools (version control, continuous integration, code review etc.) and automatically synchronize the master branch with GitHub. But this doesn't mean that we don't respond to issues or don't accept pull requests on GitHub. In fact, you're very welcome to open issues or create pull requests :)

This Sensirion library uses clang-format to standardize the formatting of all our .c and .h files. Make sure your contributions are formatted accordingly:

The -i flag will apply the format changes to the files listed.

clang-format -i *.c *.h

Note that differences from this formatting will result in a failed build until they are fixed.

License

See LICENSE.