Table of Contents
- DS18S20
- High-Precision 1-Wire Digital Thermometer
- DS1920
- iButton
version of the thermometer
Thermometer.
10 [.]XXXXXXXXXXXX[XX][/[
die | power | temperature | temphigh | templow | trim | trimblanket | trimvalid
| address | crc8 | id | locator | r_address | r_id | r_locator | type
]]
10
read-only,yes-no
Is the chip powered externally (=1) or from the parasitically from the
data bus (=0)?
read-only, floating point
Temperature read by the chip at high resolution (~12 bits). Units are selected
from the invoking command line. See owfs(1)
or owhttpd(1)
for choices. Default
is Celsius. Conversion takes 1000 msec.
When the
device exceeds either temphigh or templow temperature threshold the device
is in the alarm state, and will appear in the alarm directory. This provides
an easy way to poll for temperatures that are unsafe, especially if simultaneous
temperature conversion is done.
Units for the temperature alarms are in
the same temperature scale that was set for temperature measurements.
Temperature
thresholds are stored in non-volatile memory and persist until changed,
even if power is lost.
read-write, integer
Shows or sets the lower limit for the high temperature alarm state.
read-write,
integer
Shows or sets the upper limit for the low temperature alarm state.
There are a group of obscure internal properties exposed to protect
against an hardware defect in certain batches of the B7 die of some DS18x20
chips. See http://www.1wire.org/en-us/pg_18.html
or request AN247.pdf from Dallas
directly.
read-only,ascii
Two character manufacturing die lot. "B6" "B7" or "C2"
read-write,unsigned
integer
32 bit trim value in the EEPROM of the chip. When written, it does not seem
to read back. Used for a production problem in the B7 die.
Read allowed for
all chips. Only the B7 chips can be written.
read-write,yes-no
Writing non-zero (=1) puts a default trim value in the chip. Only applied
to the B7 die. Reading will be true (non-zero) if trim value is the blanket
value. Again, only B7 chips will register true, and since the written trim
values cannot be read, this value may have little utility.
read-only,yes-no
Is the trim value in the valid range? Non-zero if true, which includes
all non-B7 chips.
read-only,
ascii
The entire 64-bit unique ID. Given as upper case hexidecimal digits (0-9A-F).
address starts with the family code
r address is the address in reverse order, which is often used in other
applications and labeling.
read-only, ascii
The 8-bit error correction portion. Uses cyclic redundancy check. Computed
from the preceding 56 bits of the unique ID number. Given as upper case
hexidecimal digits (0-9A-F).
read-only, ascii
The 8-bit family code. Unique to each type of device. Given as upper case
hexidecimal digits (0-9A-F).
read-only, ascii
The 48-bit middle portion of the unique ID number. Does not include the family
code or CRC. Given as upper case hexidecimal digits (0-9A-F).
r id is the id in reverse order, which is often used in other applications
and labeling.
read-only, ascii
Uses an extension of the 1-wire design from iButtonLink company that associated
1-wire physical connections with a unique 1-wire code. If the connection is
behind a Link Locator the locator will show a unique 8-byte number (16 character
hexidecimal) starting with family code FE.
If no Link Locator is between the device and the master, the locator field
will be all FF.
r locator is the locator in reverse order.
read-only,
yes-no
Is the device currently present on the 1-wire bus?
read-only, ascii
Part name assigned by Dallas Semi. E.g. DS2401 Alternative packaging (iButton
vs chip) will not be distiguished.
1-wire is
a wiring protocol and series of devices designed and manufactured by Dallas
Semiconductor, Inc. The bus is a low-power low-speed low-connector scheme where
the data line can also provide power.
Each device is uniquely and unalterably
numbered during manufacture. There are a wide variety of devices, including
memory, sensors (humidity, temperature, voltage, contact, current), switches,
timers and data loggers. More complex devices (like thermocouple sensors)
can be built with these basic devices. There are also 1-wire devices that
have encryption included.
The 1-wire scheme uses a single bus master and
multiple slaves on the same wire. The bus master initiates all communication.
The slaves can be individually discovered and addressed using their unique
ID.
Bus masters come in a variety of configurations including serial, parallel,
i2c, network or USB adapters.
OWFS is a suite of programs that
designed to make the 1-wire bus and its devices easily accessible. The underlying
priciple is to create a virtual filesystem, with the unique ID being the
directory, and the individual properties of the device are represented
as simple files that can be read and written.
Details of the individual
slave or master design are hidden behind a consistent interface. The goal
is to provide an easy set of tools for a software designer to create monitoring
or control applications. There are some performance enhancements in the
implementation, including data caching, parallel access to bus masters,
and aggregation of device communication. Still the fundemental goal has
been ease of use, flexibility and correctness rather than speed.
The DS18S20 (3)
is one of several available 1-wire temperature sensors.
It has been largely replaced by the DS18B20 (3)
and DS1822 (3)
as well
as temperature/vlotage measurements in the DS2436 (3)
and DS2438 (3)
. For
truly versatile temperature measurements, see the protean DS1921 (3)
Thermachron
(3)
.
All 1-wire devices are factory assigned a unique
64-bit address. This address is of the form:
- Family Code
- 8 bits
- Address
- 48
bits
- CRC
- 8 bits
- Addressing under OWFS is in hexidecimal, of form:
- 01.123456789ABC
where 01 is an example 8-bit family code, and 12345678ABC is an example
48 bit address.
The dot is optional, and the CRC code can included. If included,
it must be correct.
http://pdfserv.maxim-ic.com/en/ds/DS18S20.pdf
owfs (1)
owhttpd
(1)
owftpd (1)
owserver (1)
owdir (1)
owread (1)
owwrite (1)
owpresent
(1)
owtap (1)
owfs (5)
owtap (1)
owmon (1)
owtcl (3)
owperl (3)
owcapi (3)
DS1427 (3)
DS1904(3)
DS1994
(3)
DS2404 (3)
DS2404S (3)
DS2415 (3)
DS2417 (3)
DS2401 (3)
DS2411 (3)
DS1990A (3)
DS1982 (3)
DS1985 (3)
DS1986 (3)
DS1991 (3)
DS1992 (3)
DS1993 (3)
DS1995 (3)
DS1996 (3)
DS2430A (3)
DS2431 (3)
DS2433 (3)
DS2502
(3)
DS2506 (3)
DS28E04 (3)
DS28EC20 (3)
DS2405 (3)
DS2406 (3)
DS2408
(3)
DS2409 (3)
DS2413 (3)
DS28EA00 (3)
DS1822 (3)
DS1825 (3)
DS1820 (3)
DS18B20 (3)
DS18S20 (3)
DS1920 (3)
DS1921 (3)
DS1821 (3)
DS28EA00
(3)
DS28E04 (3)
EDS0064 (3)
EDS0065 (3)
EDS0066 (3)
EDS0067 (3)
EDS0068
(3)
EDS0071 (3)
EDS0072 (3)
MAX31826 (3)
DS1922 (3)
DS2438 (3)
EDS0065 (3)
EDS0068 (3)
DS2450 (3)
DS2890 (3)
DS2436 (3)
DS2437 (3)
DS2438 (3)
DS2751
(3)
DS2755 (3)
DS2756 (3)
DS2760 (3)
DS2770 (3)
DS2780 (3)
DS2781 (3)
DS2788
(3)
DS2784 (3)
DS2423 (3)
LCD (3)
DS2408 (3)
DS1977
(3)
DS2406 (3)
TAI8570 EDS0066 (3)
EDS0068 (3)
EEEF (3)
DS2438 (3)
http://www.owfs.org
Paul Alfille (paul.alfille@gmail.com)
Table of Contents