The order I suggested was loosely based on trying to maintain connectivity (even if a module is causing a crash). I’ve put the least used modules (or those not related to connectivity) at the bottom of the list, and the most critical modules (but hopefully most reliable) at the top. Currently, Server V3 should be at the bottom, but I am hoping it will improve in reliability. Perhaps it should be after SIMCOM for the moment. The idea behind putting external 12v reasonable high (before vehicle) was (a) it is highly unlikely to cause us any issues, and (b) external displays may provide status and other indications useful to identify problems. It could probably swap with ‘vehicle’, without much impact. Regards, Mark.
On 28 Aug 2018, at 1:45 AM, Greg D. <gregd2350@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Mark,
The new proposal sounds like a good idea (in spite of putting OBD2ECU at the bottom {sniff} ). If we someday get the ability to configure the module from the Modem, would it be a good idea to move SIMCOM up in the priority chain, to allow for remote repair if either of the servers is causing the trouble? The V2 server has been pretty stable for a long time, but I wonder about V3.
Curious why you put External 12v above OBD2ECU. I'd move 12v to the bottom, so you don't turn on the external device until the server is running. What else is dependent on the external 12v supply?
Greg
Mark Webb-Johnson wrote:
Last week’s 3.1.009 issue with Tesla Roadsters was interesting. Looking at the car I saw with the problem, it was booting, crashing when the vehicle module received a certain CAN bus message (triggering the issue), and rebooting. It would do this 5 times, until it his the AUTO_INIT_INHIBIT_CRASHCOUNT count, and then AutoInit inhibit would kick in, and it would end up sitting idle with nothing loaded (and no network connection). The approach worked very well, and prevented an endless reboot loop.
However, we ended up with a car unable to connect to the network, and requiring a console cable and laptop to recover. I’ve been thinking about bluetooth (which is intended to provide a smartphone connection irrespective of wifi configuration), how that might work with a completely unconfigured module (for initial configuration), and I can suggest a workaround to try to improve this…
At the moment, the order of autoinit is:
External 12V Wifi Modem SIMCOM Vehicle OBD2ECU Server V2 Server V3
None of those run if the early crash count > AUTO_INIT_INHIBIT_CRASHCOUNT (coded as a constant 5).
My suggestion is to change this as follows:
Wifi Bluetooth Server V2 Server V3 Modem SIMCOM External 12V Vehicle ODB2ECU
But also to change that logic that: #8 will start if early crash count > AUTO_INIT_INHIBIT_CRASHCOUNT #7 will start if early crash count > AUTO_INIT_INHIBIT_CRASHCOUNT+1 #6 will start if early crash count > AUTO_INIT_INHIBIT_CRASHCOUNT+2 etc.
This will mean that once we hit the AUTO_INIT_INHIBIT_CRASHCOUNT limit, we turn off the least required module (OBD2ECU), then continue to see if that solves the problem. If not (ie; we crash and reboot), then we try turning off the Vehicle module and OBD2ECU, then continue to see if that solves the problem. etc.
In the example case of the Tesla Roadster vehicle module causing the issue, this revised approach would leave us up and running with Wifi and a Server Connection (but no vehicle data). Checking the module would identify the problem quite quickly (and remotely). Starting the vehicle module manually would presumably result in a crash and we would pretty quickly get an idea of the cause (especially if we added a command to show the status of AutoInit, what was started, and what wasn’t because it is causing a crash). I think we could even issue an Alert notification in the case where autoinit recovered after inhibiting certain modules (but not all).
The disadvantage is that we would crash more (up to 13 times, vs 5) in the case the system is badly messed up.
What do people think? Does this make sense?
Regards, Mark.
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