Take a look at the Adafruit project and particularly the datasheet for the MCP3008 - what we're making is a hardware volume control using a 10K potentiometer. Instead of using the GPIO pins and bit-banging the SPI protocol I'm using the proper SPI pins and the hardware driver.

The connections from the cobbler to the MCP3008 are as follows:

With the bit-banging code you're in control of the chip-select, clock, in and out pins and so you can effectively write and read a single bit at a time. When you use the hardware driver you talk using 8-bit words and it takes care of the lower level protocol for you. This changes the challenge slightly because the MCP3008 uses 10-bits for the values giving a range from 0 to 1023. Thankfully the Python wrapper is excellent and the datasheet has good documentation:

This project was built using Occidentalis v0.2 from Adafruit which takes the hassle out of fiddling with Linux. It comes with the hardware SPI driver ready to go. (It also has super-simple wifi setup if you have a dongle like the Edimax EW-7811UN ). A couple of packages are required to complete this project. Firstly the mp3 player:and secondly the Python wrapper for SPI:

.... ...s S210 xxxx xxxx xxxx 0000 0001 1000 0000 0000 0000

???? ???? ???? ?n98 7654 3210 0110 0111 1000 0010 1110 0110

# read SPI data from MCP3008 chip, 8 possible adc's (0 thru 7) def readadc(adcnum): if ((adcnum > 7) or (adcnum < 0)): return -1 r = spi.xfer2([1,(8+adcnum)<<4,0]) adcout = ((r[1]&3) << 8) + r[2] return adcout





The rest of the code is pretty much the same as the Adafruit example. My version is available on git here: https://github.com/jerbly/Pi/blob/master/raspi-adc-pot.py

Run it

Start up mpg321 with your favourite mp3 in the background and then run the Python code:

mpg321 song.mp3 & sudo python raspi-adc-pot.py

Turn the pot to adjust the volume.









Extra goodies

Combine this with the TextStar screen and the Python code from my previous blog entry: Raspberry Pi with TextStar serial LCD to have a nice bar graph for the pot position. Just use this method on one of the pages and in the on_tick handler so it updates every 0.1 seconds:





# Add this to the display class def capped_bar(self, length, percent): self.ser.write(ESC+'b'+chr(length)+chr(percent)) s = spidev.SpiDev() s.open(0,0) def get_val(): r = s.xfer2([1,128,0]) v = ((r[1]&3) << 8) + r[2] return v def write_pots(): display.position_cursor(1, 1) val = get_val() percent = int(val/10.23) display.ser.write(str(val).ljust(16)) display.capped_bar(16, percent)









So from the diagram above you can see that to read the value on CH0 we need to send 24 bits:Let's say the current value is 742 which is 10 1110 0110 in 10-bit binary. This is what is returned in B9 to B0 in the diagram. The driver and Python wrapper returns this as 3 8-bit bytes as seen above, the mildly confusing thing is that you'll get some bits set where the question marks are in the diagram which you have to ignore (if you were sending a continuous stream these would be more useful). The 24 bits returned will be something like this:The python wrapper will give you 3 ints in a list:[103,130,230]So, we ignore the first int and then mask out all the bits apart from the last two of the second int by anding it with 3 (0000 0011). In this case you get 0000 0010. We then shift this left by 8 positions to give 10 0000 0000 and then add the third int to give 10 1110 0110 which is 742 decimal. Here's the Python for that: