Clyne
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Reviewed-on: #1 |
5 months ago | |
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cfg | 5 months ago | |
hardware | 5 months ago | |
qfplib-m0-full-20240105 | 5 months ago | |
.gitignore | 5 months ago | |
LICENSE | 5 months ago | |
Makefile | 5 months ago | |
README.md | 5 months ago | |
STM32G031x6.ld | 5 months ago | |
board.c | 5 months ago | |
board.h | 5 months ago | |
main.cpp | 5 months ago | |
osalconf.h | 5 months ago | |
qfplib-port.h | 5 months ago | |
sos-iir-filter.h | 5 months ago |
README.md
NoiseCard
NoiseCard is an attempt to build a dead easy tool for monitoring ambient noise levels. The ultra-low-power microcontroller takes periodic decibel measurements while powered on, using blinking LEDs for indication. The circuit requires only a few milliwatts to run, enabling it to run off of direct solar power without a battery (though some large capacitors provide a small reserve).
Ambient noise levels in populated areas, especially North America, can often exceed what is considered safe for our ears, with prolonged exposure leading to lasting impacts on our health. Through a tool like the NoiseCard, people can become more aware of the noisy environments they're living in (and potentially take action to reduce excess noise exposure).
Building the source
You need:
- ChibiOS sources
- The arm-none-eabi GCC toolchain (through your distro or from ARM developer)
- GNU Make
- OpenOCD or another tool to program the microcontroller
- KiCAD if you wish to work with the hardware files
Extract ChibiOS to a folder, edit the Makefile
so CHIBIOS points to that folder, then run make
.
Credits
- ESP32-I2S-SLM for a starting point with accurate decibel-measuring code.
- Qfplib for providing optimized floating-point code for the Cortex-M0+ microcontroller.
- ChibiOS for providing an awesome RTOS and HAL that made firmware porting and device configuration a breeze.