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+This week I attended linux.conf.au (for the first time) in Christchurch, New
+Zealand. It's a week long conference covering Linux, open open source software
+and hardware, privacy, security and much more. The theme this year was [IoT].
+In line with the theme I built a digital conference badge to take to the
+conference. It used a tri-colour e-Paper display and was powered by a Rust
+program I built running on Raspbian Linux. This post describes how it was
+built, how it works, and how it fared at the conference.
+
+### Building
+
+After booking my tickets in October I decided I wanted to build a digital
+conference badge. I'm not entirely sure what prompted me to do this but it was
+a combination of seeing projects like the [BADGEr] in past, the theme of
+linux.conf.au 2019 being IoT, and an excuse to write more Rust. Since it was
+ostensibly a Linux conference it also seemed appropriate for it to run Linux.
+
+Over the next few weeks I collected the parts and adaptors to build the badge. The main components were:
+
+* [Raspberry Pi Zero W] - AU$15.00
+* [Pimoroni Inky pHAT] e-Paper display - AU$38.00
+
+The Raspberry Pi Zero W is a single core 1Ghz ARM SoC with 512Mb RAM, Wi-FI,
+Bluetooth, microSD card slot, and mini HDMI. The Inky pHAT is a 212x104 pixel
+tri-colour (red, black, white) e-Paper display. It takes about 15 seconds to
+refresh the display but it draws very little power in between updates and the
+image persists even when power is removed.
+
+I powered the badge with a several year old 4800mAh USB battery pack that I
+already owned. Some rough calculations suggested that it should run for many
+hours on this battery but I didn't actually test this until day 1 of the
+conference.
+
+### Support Crates
+
+The first part of the project involved building a Rust driver for the
+controller in the e-Paper display. That involved determining what controller
+the display used, as Pimoroni did not document the display they used for the
+Inky pHAT. Searching online for some of the comments in the Python driver
+suggested the display was possibly a HINK-E0213A07 - Electronic Paper display
+from Holitech Co. Further searching based on [the datasheet for that
+display][HINK-E0213A07] suggested that the controller was a [Solomon Systech
+SSD1675][SSD1675]. Cross referencing the display datasheet, [SSD1675
+datasheet], and the [Python source of Pimoroni's Inky pHAT
+driver][https://github.com/pimoroni/inky] suggested I was on the right track.
+
+I set about building the Rust driver for the SSD1675 using the [embedded HAL
+traits]. These traits allow embedded Rust drivers to be built against a
+defacto-standard set of traits that allow the driver to be used in any
+environment that implements the traits. For example I make use of traits for
+[SPI] devices, and [GPIO] pins, which are implemented for
+[Linux][embedded-linx], as well as say, [STM32 dev boards]. This allows the
+driver to be written once and be potentially usable on may different devices.
+
+The result was the [ssd1675 crate]. It's a so called no-std crate. That means
+it does not use the Rust standard library, instead sticking only to the core
+library. This allows the crate to be used in devices and microcontrollers
+without features like file systems, or heap allocators. The crate also makes
+use of the [embedded-graphics crate][embedded-graphics], which makes it easy to
+draw text and basic shapes on the display in a memory efficient manner.
+
+Whilst testing the ssd1675 crate I also built another crate, [profont], which
+provides 7 sizes of the [ProFont font] for embedded graphics. The profont crate
+was published 24 Nov 2018, and ssd1675 was published a month later on 26 Dec
+2018.
+
+### The Badge Itself
+
+Now that I had all the prerequisites in place I could start working on the
+badge proper. I had a few goals for the badge and its implementation:
+
+* I wanted the badge to have some interactive component.
+* I wanted there to be some sort of Internet aspect to tie in with the IoT
+ theme of the conference.
+* I wanted the badge to be entirely powered by a single, efficient Rust binary,
+ that did not shell out to other commands, or anything like that.
+* Ideally it would be relatively power efficient.
+
+
+
+I settled on having the badge program serve up a web page with some information
+about the project, myself, and some live stats of the Raspberry Pi (uptime,
+free RAM, etc.). The plain text version of the page looked like this:
+
+[Insert sample response hre]
+
+The interactive part came in the form of a virtual 'hi' counter. Each HTTP POST
+to the `/hi` endpoint incremented the count, which was shown on the badge. The
+badge showed a URL to access in order to view the page, the URL was just the
+badge's IP address on the conference Wi-Fi. To provide a little protection
+against abuse I added code that only allowed a give IP to increment the count
+once per hour.
+
+When building the badge software these are some of the details and goals I implemented:
+
+* Wi-Fi going away
+* IP address changing
+* Memory use of large POSTs (don
+* Prevent duplicate submissions
+* Pluralisation of text on the badge and on the web page
+* Automatically shift the text as the count requires more digits
+* If the web page is requested with an `Accept` header that doesn't include
+ `text/html` (E.g. `curl`) then the response is plain text and the method to
+ "say hello" is a curl command. If the user agent indicates they accept HTML
+ then the page is HTML and conttains a form with a button to, "say hello".
+* Avoid aborting on errors:
+ * I kind of ran out of time to handle all errors well, but most are handled
+ gracefully and won't abort the program. In some cases a default is used in
+ the face of an eror. In other cases I just resorted to logging a mesasge and
+ carrying on.
+* Keep memory usage low:
+ * The web server efficiently discards any large POST requests sent to it, to
+ avoid exhausing RAM. Typical RAM stats showed around 420Mb free of the
+ 512Mb most of the time, of which some is taken for the GPU. The Rust
+ program itself using about 4Mb.
+* Be relatively power efficient
+ * Use Rust instead of a scripting language
+ * Only update the display when something it's showing changes
+ * Only check for changes every 15 seconds (the rest of the time that tread just slept)
+ * Put the display into deep sleep after updating
+
+I used [hyper] for the HTTP server. To get a feel for the limits of the device
+I did some rudimentary HTTP benchmarking with [wrk] and concluded that 300 requests
+per second was was probably going to be fine. ;)
+
+ Running 10s test @ http://10.0.0.18:8080/
+ 4 threads and 100 connections
+ Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
+ Latency 316.58ms 54.41ms 1.28s 92.04%
+ Req/Sec 79.43 43.24 212.00 67.74%
+ 3099 requests in 10.04s, 3.77MB read
+ Requests/sec: 308.61
+ Transfer/sec: 384.56KB
+
+### Mounting
+
+When I started the project I imagined it would hang it around my neck like
+conference lanyard. When departure day arrived I still hadn't worked out how
+this would work in practice (power delivery being a major concern). In the end
+I settled on attaching it to the strap on my backpack. My bag has lots of
+webbing so there were plenty of loops to hold it in place. I was also able to
+use the velcro covered holes intended for water tubes to get the cable neatly
+into the bag.
+
+## At the Conference
+
+I had everything pretty much working for the start of the conference, although
+I did make some final improvements and add a systemd unit to automatically start
+and restart the Rust binary once I arrived in my accommodation on the Sunday
+before the conference. At this point there were still two unknowns: battery
+life and how the Raspberry Pi would handle coming in and out of Wi-Fi range.
+The Wi-Fi turned out fine: automatically reconnecting whenever it came into
+range of the Wi-Fi.
+
+
+
+### Reception
+
+At this point I had not had time to test battery life, so day one I hooked it
+up and hoped for the best. Day 1 was a success! I had my first few people talk
+to me about the badge and increment the counter. Battery life was good too.
+After 12 hours of uptime the battery was still showing it was half full. Later
+in the week I left the badge running overnight to hit 24 hours uptime. The
+battery level indicator was on the last light so I suspect there wasn't much
+juice left.
+
+
+
+On day 2 I had had several people suggest that I needed a QR code for the URL.
+Turns out entering an IP address on a phone keyboard is tedious. So after talks
+that evening I added a QR code to the display. It's dynamically generated and
+contains the same URL that is shown on the display. There were several good crates
+to choose from. Ultimately I picked one that didn't have any image
+dependencies, which allowed my to convert the data into embedded-graphics
+pixels. The change was a success, most people scanned the QR code from this
+point on.
+
+
+
+On day 2 I also ran into [E. Dunham][edunham], and rambled briefly about my
+badge project and that it was built with Rust. To my absolute delight [the
+project was featured in their talk the next day][edunham-talk]. The project was
+mentioned and linked on slide and I was asked to raise my hand in case anyone
+wanted to chat afterwards.
+
+
+
+At the end of the talk the audience was asked to talk about a Rust project they
+were working on. Each person to do so got a little plush Ferris. I spoke about
+[Read Rust] and am now the proud owner of a litle Ferris.
+
+[Insert Ferris here]
+
+### CHANGEME What did I learn?
+
+By the end of the conference the badge showed a count of 12. It had worked
+flawlessly over the five days.
+
+Small projects with a fairly hard deadline are a good way to ensure it's seen
+through to completion. Also a great motivator to publish some open source code.
+
+I think I greatly overestimated the number of people that would interact with
+the badge. Of those that did I think most tapped the button to increase the
+counter and didn't read much else on the page. For example no one commented on
+the system stats at the bottom of the page. I had imagined the badge as a sort
+of digital business card but this did not really eventuate in practice.
+
+Attaching the Pi and display to my bag worked out pretty well although I did
+have to be careful when putting my bag on and it was easy to catch on my
+clothes. Also one day it started raining on the way back to the accommodation.
+I had not factored that in at all and given it wasn't super easy to take on and
+off I ended up shielding it with my hand all the way back.
+
+TODO: Link to code
+TODO: Add images
+
+### Would I do it again?
+
+If I were to do it again I might do something less interactive and perhaps more
+informational but updated more regularly. For example showing the previous and
+next talks to attend. Perhaps even allowing free text.
+
+
+Maybe. I think if I were to do something along these lines again I might try to tie into a talk submission.
+For example I could have submitted a talk about using the embedded Rust ecosystem on a Rasperry Pi and made
+reference to the badge in the talk or used it for examples. I think this would give more info about the project
+to a bunch of people at once and also potentially teach them something at the same time.
+
+[BADGEr]: https://wyolum.com/projects/badger/
+[HINK-E0213A07]: https://www.unisystem-displays.com/en/fileuploader/download/download/?d=0&file=custom%2Fupload%2Ffile%2F6f3084488018ca68c5bf0a26460e7c57%2FHINK-E0213A07-V1.1-Spec.pdf
+[SSD1675]: http://www.solomon-systech.com/en/product/advanced-display/bistable-display-driver-ic/SSD1675/
+[SSD1675 datasheet]: https://www.buydisplay.com/download/ic/SSD1675A.pdf
+[edunham-talk]: https://youtu.be/uCnnhMleoKA?t=530
+[edunham]: http://edunham.net/
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+---
+title: Rust powered linux.conf.au e-Paper badge
+extra: TODO
+kind: article
+section: technical
+created_at: 2019-01-26 16:17:00.000000000 +10:00
+keywords:
+ - rust
+ - linux
+ - linux.conf.au
+ - epaper
+ - display
+short_url:
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