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PIKA Technologies Inc. PADS for the PIKA WARP Appliance March 2009

PIKA Technologies Inc. PADS for the PIKA WARP Appliance March 2009. PIKA WARP Customization. PIKA WARP is a customizable platform It can run stock Asterisk but it does not have to Why customize? Put my custom application on the appliance Make a modification to the stock Asterisk

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PIKA Technologies Inc. PADS for the PIKA WARP Appliance March 2009

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  1. PIKA Technologies Inc.PADS for the PIKA WARP Appliance March 2009

  2. PIKA WARP Customization • PIKA WARP is a customizable platform • It can run stock Asterisk but it does not have to • Why customize? • Put my custom application on the appliance • Make a modification to the stock Asterisk • Ideal for applications like alert notification systems, IVRs and PBXs

  3. What does the appliance offer to developers? • Hardware – a full computer • Embedded processor • Solid state memory • USB, NIC, Audio ports • Up to 9 analog ports • Software – many default packages • Full Pika suite of voice processing like tone detection and generation, play/record, VoIP and conferencing • Pre-loaded with operating system, drivers and tools • Initial SSH access and Asterisk • Database, web server, web language, common tools • With the ability to add any software package

  4. Pre-loaded Software • Bootloader (uBoot 1.3) • 2.6.26 linux kernel (stripped down) • Pika’s All-on-Host and Grandprix drivers • Asterisk 1.4.21 • AsteriskGUI • Busybox 1.8.2 (binaries linux tools) • SQlite3 database • Httpd webserver • PHP5 with support for SQLite, XML, PDO, etc. • NTP, DHCP (client), TFTP (server and client), VLAN, DNS • Dropbear (for ssh access)

  5. What API will be available? • To access telephony hardware outside of Asterisk … • High level Grandprix API • the same used on standard PCs!! • Low level AoH API will also be available • Many sample of this on the web • Some additional APIs will be added to our SDK. • For example, to control the audio in/out ports and the LCD • (Note: In Asterisk, audio ports are referenced in the dialplan and the LCD is integrated in channel driver but can be changed)

  6. Custom User Application /persistent /root Database Your Application Grandprix LCDlibrary Database server /u-boot /kernel Configuration files HMP PIKA Kernel Modules Linux Kernel /persistent1 Warploader Logs Busybox NTP /persistent2 Dropbear Skeleton

  7. Asterisk Application /persistent /root Configuration files AsteriskApplication Channel PIKA (glue) /u-boot /kernel Grandprix LCDlibrary HMP Linux Kernel /persistent1 PIKA Kernel Modules Logs Warploader Busybox NTP /persistent2 Dropbear Skeleton

  8. Pika’s Development Kit • Pika Application Development Suite (PADS) • Software package – “framework” • Full development kit • The kit will provide a toolchain - compiler (for our processor), linker and debugger • Installed on independent Linux machine (distribution independent) • Host machine is used to bypass the resource limitation of the embedded device • Attached through Ethernet • Allows all software on the appliance to be built (kernel and user) • Creates a PowerPC virtual environment • Retrieved through svn • Opens embedded development to Linux developers

  9. PADS • Package – this is where makefiles are included to describe where to get the code and how to compile it • DL – this is where the source code is automatically downloaded • Build_warp – this is where the resulting power pc binaries reside after being compiled. (after ‘make’) • Images – this contains compressed binaries (after ‘make image’) • Bin – this folder contains utilities such as a Flash Burning tool

  10. PADS diagram

  11. Steps to Building – the 3 ‘makes’ • make menuconfig • make 3) make image

  12. Step #1 – select packages • ‘make menuconfig’ allows you to select packages, tools and programs to include on the appliance through a package menu • Examples include Asterisk, webserver, etc.

  13. Step #2 – compiling • ‘make’ cross-compiles all the selected packages • The PADS framework defines where to retrieve the code and how to build the code • The result is Power PC binaries that can be directly run on the appliance

  14. Background - Memory • Four memory types • Small Flash (NOR) – 4 Mb • Contains bootloader • Quick boot-up • Can not be written by developers • Internal Flash (NAND) – 256 Mb • Compressed (read-only) • contains the kernel, tools and applications like asterisk and database • At runtime this image is uncompressed and run from RAM • Changes to this partition must be made through PADS (otherwise will be lost on reboot) • Uncompressed (persistent read-write) • Initial creation through PADS • Contains configuration files, play prompts, etc. • Memory that acts like a hard disk • Changes to this partition are saved even after reboot • SD card – up to 4 Gb • Read-write • Expands uncompressed persistent memory on the internal flash • Good for heavy write tasks like voicemails, logs and backups • RAM – 256 Mb • Run-time memory

  15. Background – Memory (cont’d)

  16. Step #3 – Creating and burning images • ‘make image’ creates three image types: • Core Kernel (filename -> cuImage.warp) • Applications (filename -> uRamdisk) • Persistent (filename -> image.jffs2) • Persistent1 (filename-> image1.jffs2) • Persistent2 (filename-> image2.jffs2) • Once happy with the images created by PADS they can be burnt to the flash on the appliance – this commits it to memory • An image file can be burnt to multiple appliances • Images can be burnt to appliance • through AsteriskGUI • command line tool (Warploader) • Copy the file locally to the appliance (scp,wget or tftp) and then … • warploader –p kernel cuImage.warp • warploader –p root uRamdisk • warploader –p persistent image.jffs2 • warploader –p persistent1 image1.jffs2 • warploader –p persistent2 image2.jffs2 • USB flash “hook”

  17. Development approach • Burn new images when necessary • Run locally • Drop files on the persistent file system • Web pages • Binary libraries created using the Pika development framework or from the web • Good for when only making a small number of changes

  18. Alternate approach – NFS • Optional –useful for large development projects • For development • Quick, volatile • Remotely mounted file system (in build_warp folder) • Use NFS server to mirror appliance memory on development PC • Changes made on remote machine but run by the processor on the appliance • Run without flashing to reduce development time • No code changes on the appliance • Attached through Ethernet (initially setup by serial cable)

  19. More Details on NFS

  20. Adding packages • If a package is not included in the list … • Add a new folder in the ‘package’ directory • In this directory add: • Config.in – to make the new package appear in the package menu • Yourapp.mk – a makefile to tell PADS how to get and build your package • Some packages are available in pikawarp.org

  21. Programming Considerations • Lots of resources for an embedded device!! • Be conscious of memory (256Mb total) • Mallocs may fail • Be careful where logs go, etc. • Memory chips have life span • Be conscious of processing (1200Mips total) • Speed optimizations are important • Big endian (not little endian) • Careful when communicating with other machine • C++ and threading is fine

  22. Thank you for your time.

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