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content/posts/wifi-led-driver/resource/lyza_schematic_and_pcb.pdf (limited to 'content/posts') diff --git a/content/posts/hsm-basics/index.rst b/content/posts/hsm-basics/index.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 99aedba..0000000 --- a/content/posts/hsm-basics/index.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,209 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Hardware Security Module Basics" -date: 2019-05-17T15:29:20+08:00 ---- - -Hardware Security Modules and Security Research and Cryptography -================================================================ - -On May 17 2019 I gave a short presentation on the fundamentals of hardware security modules at the weekly seminar of -Prof. Mori's security research working group at Waseda University. The motivation for this was that outside of low-level -hardware security people and people working in the financial industry HSMs are not thought about that often. In -particular most network or systems security people would not consider them an option. Also it could turn out to be -really interesting to think about what could be done with an HSM in conjunction with modern cryptography (instead of -just plain old RSA-OAEP and AES-CBC). - -`Click here to download a PDF with the slides for this talk. `__ - -Ideas for research in HSMs -========================== - -Preparing for this talk brought me back to some research ideas I've been working on for a while now. Since I'm not sure -I'll find the time to properly research this topic, I thought it would be great to write down some rought outlines first -for future reference. - -The Problem with current HSM tech ---------------------------------- - -Currently, HSMs are only used in certain specific niche applications such as certificate authority key management and -financial transaction data handling. One key reason for this is that HSMs currently don't provide the affordances that -would be needed for them to be adopted more widely by the cryptographic and security engineering community. As far as I -can tell, the two core missing affordances are: - -1. To be more widely adopted, HSMs must become less expensive. Currently, they go for several tens of thousands of Euro, - which puts them outside most budgets. -2. To be more widely adopted, HSMs must provide the standardized programming interfaces familiar to cryptographic - developers. Currently, every HSM vendor has their own custom cryptographic API and a developer will have to train on - one specific vendor's tooling. Furthermore, any documentation of these internals is kept secret behind NDAs. This - constitutes a high barrier to entry, decreasing adoption in particular with young developers accustomed to - open-source ecosystems. - -Attacking cost of implementation --------------------------------- - -The first issue can be addressed by simply creating a viable low-cost alternative. There is no fundamental technical -reason for the high cost of HSMs. This cost is instead due to manufacturers trying to recoup their expenses for R&D as -well as certification from the small volumes HSMs are sold in. - -Compared to system integration and certification the pure R&D cost of HSM defense mechanisms themselves is not too high -in an academic context it should be feasible to develop a sort of HSM blueprint that can then be cheaply produced by -anyone in need. Since the application areas outlined here are far from the core business areas of the clients of -established HSM vendors this would most likely not be a realistic threat to any established vendor's business and a -co-existence of both should not pose any problems in the short term. - -Benefits of an academic HSM standard ------------------------------------- - -Tackling the high cost of current HSM hardware with an open-source HSM blueprint would yield -several academic advantages beyond cost reduction. - -1. An open-source blueprint could serve as an academic reference design to evaluate and compare other HSM designs - against. For instance this would not only allow quantifying the effectiveness of academic security measures but also - allow an evaluation of commercial HSMs. -2. An open-source blueprint could stimulate academic research in this academically very quiet albeit commercially - important area. This research would ultimately benefit everyone employing HSMs by raising security standards in the - field. Since HSMs are never solely relied upon for overal system security both defensive and offensive security - research would yield these benefits. -3. An open-source blueprint would encourage new people to get into the field and both apply HSMs to practical problems - as well as improve HSMs themselves. Currently, this is highly discouraged due to the strictly proprietary nature of - all available systems. -4. Finally, developing an open-source HSM blueprint might yield new findings in adjacent academic areas due to the - hightly multi-disciplinary nature of security research in general and HSM design in particular. - -Scope of an academic HSM standard ---------------------------------- - -An academic HSM blueprint would need to be flexible so that researchers can adapt it to their particular problem. A -modular architecture would lend itself to this flexibility. Fundamentally, there would be three components to this -architecture. First, a **base** containing infrastructure such as the surveillance microcontroller, power supplies, -power supply filtering and hardware DPA countermeasures, and possibly a standardized mechanical and electrical -interface. - -Next to the base, a system integrator would put their *payload*. The nature of this payload is intentionally kept -unspecified, and it might be anything from a cryptographic microcontroller to a small embedded system such as a -raspberry pi single board computer. Keeping the *payload* open like this achieves two benefits: It gives the HSM -blueprint's user *their* familiar tooling and the hardware *they* need, allowing fast adoption. Someone well-versed in -e.g. Javascript could literally implement their cryptography in Javascript, run it on an off-the-shelf raspberry pi and -just apply the HSM blueprint around it. In addition, keeping the *payload* open reduces the scope of what needs to be -implemented. Building a general SDK on top of something like a bare ARM SoC such as a TI OMAP or a Freescale/NXP IMX -would be a considerable additional burden, on top of the actual HSM design. Keeping the *payload* open allows research -to concentrate on the actual point, the HSM design. - -The final and most important component would be a set of *security measures* that can be combined with the base to -form the final HSM. Each of these *security measures* would entail a detailed specification of its design, manufacture -and security properties. These *security measures* could be simple things like tamper switches or potting, but could -also be complex things like security meshes. - -Given these three components -- *base*, *payload* and *security measures* as detailed specifications any engineer should -be able to design and manufacture a HSM customized to their needs. Unifying these three components within the HSM -blueprint would be a set of reference designs. Each reference design would implement a particular parametrization of the -three architectural components with a physical hole cut out where the payload would go.. These reference designs would -for one serve to guide any implementer on the customization and integration of their own derivation from the blueprint. -In addition it would serve as an extremely simple, low-cost point of entry into the ecosystem. A curious researcher -could simply replicate the reference design and put their existing payload inside. Practically this might mean e.g. a -researcher having PCBs produced according to the design files for a reference design for a mesh-based HSM, producing -their own mesh, physically glueing a raspberry pi SBC into the middle of it, and potting the resulting system. Given the -ease of prototype PCB fabrication today this would realistically allow evaluation of HSM technologies on a budget that -is orders of magnitude less than the cost of current HSMs. - -Research ideas for tamper detection mechanisms -============================================== - -The core component of an HSM blueprint would be a suite of tamper detection mechanisms. Following are a few ideas on how -to improve on the current state of the art of membrane tamper switches plus temperature sensors plus PCB and printed -security meshes plus potting. - -Improvements on existing techniques ------------------------------------ - -Light sensors -~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -**Advanced analog sensing** -**Self-test functionality** - -Security meshes -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -**Analog sensing** - - -DIY or small lab mesh production --------------------------------- -**3D metal patterning techniques** refers to any technique for producing thin, patterned metal structures on a -three-dimensional plastic substrate. The basic process would consist of 3D-printing the polymer substrate, depositing a -thin metal layer on top and then patterning this metal layer. A good starting point here would be the recent work of -`Ben Kraznow`_ on this exact thing. - -**Copper filament methods** would be any method embedding copper wire from a spool in some resin or other matrix. This -could mean either of a systematic approach of carefully winding or folding the copper wire into patterns or a -non-systematic approach of simply stuffing a large tangle of copper wire into a small space. The main challenge with the -former would be to find a non-tedious way of production. The main challenge with the latter would be to find process -parameters that guarantee complete coverage of the HSM without holes or other areas of lower sensitivity to intrusions. -Both approaches would require careful consideration of the overall design including the polymer resin supporting -structure to ensure sensitivity against attacks since copper wire is mechanically much stronger than the micrometre-thin -metal coatings used in patterning techniques. - -Envelope measurement --------------------- - -Finally, I think there is another set of currently under-utilized tamper-detection methods that would be very -interesting to explore. I am not aware of an academic term for these, so I am just going to dub them *envelope -measurement* here. - -The fundamental apporach of a mesh is to build a physical security envelope (the mesh) that physically detects when it -is disturbed (open or short circuits). This approach works well but has the disadvantage that these meshes are rather -complex to manufacture since effectively every part of them is acting as a sensing element. A conceptually more complex -but in practice potentially simpler approach might be to split the functions of security envelope and sensing element. -This would mean that in place of the mesh, some form of passive element such as metal foil forms the security envelope -which is then checked for tampering using a very sensitive sensor inside. This remote-sensing approach might simplify -the manufacture of the envelope itself and thus yield a design that is more easily customized. Following are a few ideas -on how to approach this envelope measurement problem. - -**Ultrasonic** If the HSM is potted, a few ultrasonic transducers could be added inside the potting. With several -transducers, any one could be used to transmit ultrasound while the others measure complex phase and energy of the -signal they receive. The circuitry for this could be made fairly simple if using a static transmit frequency or a low -chirp rate by using a homodyne receiver built around a comparator fed into some timers. This approach would likely -detect any mechanical attack and would also rule out chemical attacks involving liquids (though starting from which -amount of liquid depends on receiver sensitivity). The main disadvantages might be high power consumption and cost and -size of the ultrasonic transducers. Traditional cheap transducers made for air as a transmission medium are fairly large -and might not adequately couple into potting compound. If somehow one could convince a standard small piezo element to -do the same job that would be great as far as cost and size are concerned. A concern in some fringe use cases might be -suceptibility to ambient noise, though this could easily be reduced at the expense of space and heat dissipation -capacity by adding sound dampening on the outside. A likely attack vector against this approach might be using a laser -cutter to drill a hole through the potting compound, then inserting probes carefully chosen to not couple too much -to the potting compound ultrasonically. - -**Light** In either an unpotted HSM or one potted with a transparent (at some wavelengths) potting compound one could -embed LEDs and photodiodes in a similar setup to the ultrasonic setup described above. In contrast to the ultrasound, -the LEDs would literally have to light up the HSM's interior and shadows might be an issue since the HSM is likely some -flat rectangular shape. A possible solution to this would be to coat both the embedded payload and the lid with some -highly reflective paint such as some glossy silver paint or simple white paint. The basic approach might be as simple as -simply turning on several LEDs distributed throughout the HSM in turn and measuring amplitude at several photodetectors, -or as complex as doing a LIDAR-like phase measurement sweeping through a range of frequencies to determine not only -absorption but also phase/distance characteristics between emitter LED and detector photodiode. Using some high-gain TIA -along with a homodyne detector (lock-in amplifier) and changing emitter intensity, very precise measurements of both -absorption and phase might be possible, as might be measurements through almost opaque, diffuse potting compounds such -as a grey epoxide resin. The main disadvantages of this method would likely be the need to thoroughly light-proof the -entire HSM (likely by wrapping it in metal foil) and the potentially high cost of transmitter and receiver circuitry -(nice TIAs aren't cheap). To be effective against attacks using e.g. very fine drills and probes the system would likely -have to be very sensitive. - -**Radar** Finally, one could turn to standard radar techniques to fingerprint the inside of the HSM. The goal here would -be fingerprinting instead of mapping since only changes need to be detected. In this approach one could use homodyne -detection to improve sensitivity and reduce receiver complexity, and sweep frequencies similar to an FMCW radar (but -probably without exploiting the self-demodulation effect). Besides high cost, this approach has two disadvantages. -First, such a system would likely not go beyond 24GHz or maybe 40GHz due to component availability issues. Even at 40GHz -the wavelength in the potting compound would be in the order of magnitude of several millimeters. Fine intrusions using -some tool chosen to not interact too much with the EM field inside the HSM such as a heated ceramic needle or simply a -laser cutter might not be detectable using this approach. In any case, this system would certainly not be able to detect -small holes piercing the HSM enclosure. The HSM enclosure would have to be made into an RF shield, likely by using some -metal foil in it. - -Overall in the author's opinion these three techniques are most promising in order *Light*, *Ultrasonic*, *Radar*. Light -would prbably provide the best sensitivity at expense of some cost. Ultrasonic might be used in conjunction with light -to cover some additional angles since it is potentially very low-cost. 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- - - - - - \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/content/posts/kicad-mesh-plugin/index.rst b/content/posts/kicad-mesh-plugin/index.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 85b407c..0000000 --- a/content/posts/kicad-mesh-plugin/index.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,221 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Kicad Mesh Plugin" -date: 2020-08-18T13:15:39+02:00 ---- - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- -Tamper Detection Meshes -======================= - -Cryptography is at the foundation of our modern, networked world. From email to card payment infrastructure in brick and -mortar stores, cryptographic keys secure almost every part of our digital lives againts cybercriminals or curious -surveillance capitalists. Without cryptography, many of the things we routinely do in our lives such as paying for -groceries with a credit card, messaging a friend on `Signal `_ or unlocking a car with its keyfob -would not be possible. The security of all of these systems in its core lies on the secrecy of cryptographic keys. -Systems differ in what kind of keys they use, how often these keys are replaced and the intricacies of the cryptographic -operations these keys fit into but all have in common that their security relies on keeping the keys secret. - -In practice, this secrecy has been implemented in many different ways. Mass-market software such as browsers or -messenger apps usually relies on some operating system facility to tell the computer "*please keep this piece of memory -away from all other applications*". While on desktop operating systems usually this does not provide much of a barrier -to other programs on the same computer, on modern mobile operating systems this approach is actually quite secure. -However, given sufficient resources no security is perfect. All of these systems can be compromised if the host -operating system is compromised sufficiently, and for organizations with considerable resources a market has sprung up -that offers turn-key solutions for all wiretapping needs. - -In some applications, this level of security has not been considered sufficient. Particularly financial infrastructure -is such a high-profile target that a lot of effort has been put into the security of cryptographic implementations. The -best cryptographic algorithm is useless if it is run on a compromised system (from that system's point of view anyway). -One of the core cryptographic components in financial applications are smartcards like they are used as payment cards in -most countries nowadays. These smartcards contain a small, specialized cryptographic microcontroller that is designed to -be hard to tamper with. Though one of the design goals of the system is to reduce the amount of sensitive information -stored on the card, things such as copying of a card can only be hindered by making the chip hard to read out. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- -With smartcards being the means of choice on one side of the counter in electronic payments, on the other side of the -counter a different technology prevails. Attacks on payment terminals are bound to have much more dire consequences than -attacks on individual cards since one terminal might see hundreds of cards being read every day. For this reason, the -level of attack countermeasures employed in these terminals is a considerable step up from bare smartcards. While a -smartcard is made physically hard to tamper, it does not have a battery and it can only detect tampering once it is -powered by a reader. This allows for well-equipped attackers to use tools such as Focused Ion Beam (FIB) workstations to -circumvent the smartcard's defences while it is powered down, and then power up the card to carry out the actual attack. - -The answer to this problem in electronic payment infrastructure is called *Hardware Security Module*, or HSM. An HSM is -similar to a smartcard in its function (cryptographic processing using keys that are meant to never leave the protection -of the HSM). The one major between the two is that an HSM has its own battery and is continuously powered from its -manufacture to the day it is scrapped. If the HSM looses power at any point in time, it uses a small amount of energy -stored internally to securely wipe all cryptographic secrets from its memory within a few milliseconds. - -Being powered at all times allows the HSM to actively detect and respond to attacks. The most common way this is done is -by wrapping the juicy secret parts in a foil or a printed circuit board that is patterned with a long and convoluted -maze of wires, called a *mesh*. The HSM is continuously monitoring these wires for changes (such as shorts, breaks or -changes in resistance) and will sound the alarm when any are detected. Practically, this presents a considerable hurdle -to any attacker: They have to find a way to disable or circumvent the mesh while it is being monitored by the HSM. In -practice, often this is no insurmountable challenge but it again increases attack costs. - -DIY Meshes -========== - -Throughout my studies in security research I have always had an interest in HSMs. I have taken apart my fair share of -HSMs and at this point, to understand the technology more, I want to experiment with building my own HSM. In last year's -`HSM basics <{{}}>`_ post I have lined out some ideas for a next generation design that -deviates from the bread-and-butter apporoach of using a mesh as the primary security feature. Before embarking on -practical experiments with these ideas, I want to first take a stab at replicating the current state of the art as best -I can. State of the art meshes often use exotic substrates such as 3D plastic parts with traces chemically deposited on -their surface or special flexible substrates with conductive ink traces. These technologies will likely be too -cumbersome for me to implement myself only for a few prototypes, and industrial manufacturers will most likely be too -expensive. Thus, I will concentrate on regular PCB technology for now. - -The idea of a mesh on a PCB is pretty simple: You have one or several traces that you try to cover every corner of the -mesh PCB's area with. To be most effective, the traces should be as thin and as close together as possible. To increase -the chances of a manipulation being detected, multiple traces can also be used that can then be monitored for shorts -between them. - -While one can feasibly lay out these traces by hand, this really is an ideal application of a simple auto-router. While -general PCB autorouting is *hard*, auto-routing just a few traces to approximate a space-filling curve is not. Since I -am just starting out, I went with the simplest algorithmic solution I could think of. I first approximate the area -designated to the mesh with a square grid whose cells are a multiple of my trace/space size. The mesh will only be drawn -into grid cells that are fully inside the set boundaries. All cells outside or going across the border are discarded in -this step. - -I decided to implement this auto-router in a KiCAD plugin. Though KiCADs plugin API is not the best, it was just about -usable for this task. - -.. raw:: html - -
- KiCAD showing an irregular board shape with rounded corners and
-        indents. In the middle of the board there is a footprint for a 4-pin surface-mount pin header. -
The process starts out with the mesh shape being defined inside KiCAD. The mesh's outline is drawn - onto one of the graphical "Eco" layers. A footprint is placed to serve as a placeholder for the mesh's - connections to the outside world. This footprint is later used as the starting point for the mesh generation - algorithm.
-
- -.. raw:: html - -
- A vizualization of the grid fitting process. Over the mesh's irregular
-        outline a grid is drawn. In this picture, all grid cells that are fully inside the grid are shown. Grid cells
-        that overlap the mesh border are highlighted. Grid cells outside of the mesh border are not drawn. -
A visualization of the grid fitting process. First, a grid large enough to contain the mesh border - is generated. Then, every cell is checked for overlap with the mesh border area. If the cell is fully inside, it - (yellow), it is considered in the mesh generation later. Cells outside (gray) or on the border (red) are - discarded.
-
- -After generating the grid, starting from the place I want to connect to the mesh, I walk the grid's cells one by one to -generate a tree that covers the entire grid's area. To set the mesh's starting place I place a footprint on the board -(dark gray in the picture above) whose designator I then tell my script. The tree generation algorithm looks like a -depth-first search, except all checks are random. Depending on the level of randomness used at each step of the -algorithm it yields more or less organized-looking results. Below are five example runs of the algorithm at differing -levels of randomness with the cells colored according to their distance from the tree root. 0% randomness means that the -algorithm is going to try cells in forward direction first on every step, and only then try out left and right. 100% -means that on every step, the algorithm is choosing a new direction at random. - -.. raw:: html - -
-
- a completely organized looking grid with spiral patterns all over. -
0%
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- -
25%
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- -
50%
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- -
75%
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- a completely random looking grid with cells aggregating into ireggular
-        areas that look like paint splotches. -
100%
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- -After I have built this tree like you would do in a depth-first search, I draw my one or several mesh mesh traces into -it. The core observation here is that there is only 16 possible ways a cell can be connected: It has four neighbors, -each of which it can either be connected to or not, which results in 2^4 options. If you consider rotations and -mirroring, this works out to rotations or mirrored versions of only six base tiles: The empty tile, a tile with all four -sides connected, a straight through, a 90 degree bend, and a "T"-junction—see the illustration below. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- There are six possible tile types in our connectivity graph inside its square tiling. This graphic illustrates - all sixteen rotations of these with how they would look in a two-conductor mesh. -
-
- -After tiling the grid according to the key above, we get the result below. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- An auto-routed mesh with traces colored according to tile types. -
-
- -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- The same mesh, but with traces all black. -
-
- -Putting it all together got me the KiCAD plugin you can see in the screenshot below. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- The plugin settings window open. -
-
- -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- After runing the plugin, the generated mesh looks like this in pcbnew. -
-
- -I am fairly happy with the result, but getting there was a medium pain. Especially KiCAD's plugin API is still very -unfinieshed. It is hard to use, most parts are completely undocumented and if you use anything but its most basic parts -things tend to break. One particular pain point for me was that after generating the mesh, the traces have been added to -the board, but are still invisible for some reason. You have to save the board first, then re-load the file for them to -become visible. Also KiCAD crashes whenever the plugin tries to remove a trace, so currently my workflow involves always -making a copy of the board file first and treating mesh generation as a non-reversible finishing step. - -`Check out the code on my cgit `_. - -.. :: - - .. raw:: html - -
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-Preface -------- - -Recently, I have been working on a `small driver`_ for ambient lighting using 12V LED strips like you can get -inexpensively from China. I wanted to be able to just throw one of these somewhere, stick down some LED tape, hook it up -to a small transformer and be able to control it through Wifi. When I was writing the firmware, I noticed that when -fading between different colors, the colors look *all wrong*! This observation led me down a rabbit hole of color -perception and LED peculiarities. - -The idea of the LED driver was that it can be used either with up to eight single-color LED tapes or, much more -interesting, with up to two RGB or RGBW (red-green-blue-white) LED tapes. For ambient lighting high color resolution was -really important so you could dim it down a lot without flickering. I ended up using the same driver stage I used in the -`multichannel LED driver`_ project for its great color resolution and low hardware requirements. - -.. raw:: html - -
- An illustration of the RGB color cube. -
An illustration of the RGB color cube. - Picture by - Maklaan from Wikimedia Commons, - CC-BY-SA 3.0 -
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- -To make setting colors over Wifi more intuitive I implemented support for HSV colors. RGB is fine for communication -between computers, but I think HSV is easier to work with when manually inputting colors from the command line. RGB is -close to how most monitors, cameras and the human visual apparatus work on a very low level but doesn't match -higher-level human color perception very well. When we describe a color we tend to think in terms of "hue" or -"brightness", and computing a measure of those from RGB values is not easy. - -Colors and Color Spaces ------------------------ - -`Color spaces`_ are a mathematical abstraction of the concept of color. When we say "RGB", most of the time we actually -mean `sRGB`_, a standardized notion of how to map three numbers labelled "red", "green" and "blue" onto a perceived -color. `HSV`_ is an early attempt to more closely align these numbers with our perception. After HSV, a number of other -*perceptual* color spaces such as `XYZ (CIE 1931)`_ and `CIE Lab/LCh`_ were born, further improving this alignment. In -this mathematical model, mapping a color from one color space into another color space is just a coordinate -transformation. - -.. raw:: html - -
- An illustration of the HSV color space as a cylinder. -
An illustration of the HSV color space as a cylinder. - Picture by - SharkD from Wikimedia Commons, - CC-BY-SA 3.0 -
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- -CIE 1931 XYZ is much larger than any other color space, which is why it is a good basis to express other color spaces -in. In XYZ there are many coordinates that are outside of what the human eye can perceive. Below is an illustration of -the sRGB space within XYZ. The wireframe cube is (0,0,0) to (1,1,1) in XYZ. The colorful object in the middle is what -of sRGB fits inside XYZ, and the lines extending out from it indicate the space that can be expressed in sRGB but not in -XYZ. The fat white curve is a projection of the *monochromatic spectral locus*, that is the curve of points you get in -XYZ for pure visible wavelengths. - -As you can see, sRGB is *much* smaller than XYZ or even the part within the monochromatic locus that we can perceive. In -particular in the blues and greens we loose *a lot* of colors to sRGB. - -.. raw:: html - -
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Illustration of the measured sRGB color space within XYZ. The thick, white line is the spectral - locus. - - mkv/h264 download / - webm download -
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- -The wrong colors I got when fading between colors were caused by this coordinate transformation being askew. Thinking -over the problem, there are several sources for imperfections: - -* The LED driver may not be entirely linear. For most modulations such as PWM the brightness will be linear starting - from a certain value, but there is probably an offset caused by imperfect edges of the LED current. This offset can be - compensated with software calibration. I built a calibration setup for driver linearity in the `multichannel LED - driver`_ project. Below are pictures of ringing on the edges of an LED driver's waveform. - -* The red, green and blue channels of the LEDs used on the LED tape are not matched. This skews the RGB color space. - In practice, the blue channel of my RGB tape to me *looks* much brighter than the red channel. - -* The precise colors of the red, green and blue channels of the LEDs are unknown. Though the red channel *looks* red, it - may be of a slightly different hue compared to the reference red used in `sRGB`_ which would also skew the RGB color - space. - -.. raw:: html - -
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- Strong ringing on the LED voltage waveform edge at about
-            100% overshoot during about 70% of the cycle time. -
The LED strip being at the end of a couple meters of wire caused extremely bad ringing at high - driving frequencies.
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- Weak ringing on the LED voltage waveform edge at about 30%
-            overshoot during about 20% of the cycle time. -
Adding a resistor in front of the MOSFET gate to slow the transition dampened the ringing - somewhat, but ultimately it cannot be eliminated entirely.
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- -These last two errors are tricky to compensate. What I needed for that was basically a model of the *perceived* colors -of the LED tape's color channels. A way of doing his is to record the spectra of all color channels and then evaluate -their respective XYZ coordinates. If all three channels are measured in one go with the same setup the relative -magnitudes of the channels in XYZ will be accurate. - -To map any color to the LEDs, the color's XYZ coordinates simply have to be mapped onto the linear coordinate system -produced by these three points within XYZ. LEDs are mostly linear in their luminous flux vs. current characteristic so -this model will be adequate. The spectral integrals mapping the channels' measured responses to XYZ need only be -calculated once and their results can be used as scaling factors thereafter. - -Measuring the spectrum ----------------------- - -In order to compensate for the cheap LED tape's non-ideal performance I had to measure the LED's red, green and blue -channels' spectra. The obvious thing would be to go out and buy a `spectrograph`_, or ask someone to borrow theirs. The -former is kind of expensive, and I did not want to wait two weeks for the thing to arrive. The latter I could probably -not do every time I got new LED tape. Thus the only choice was to build my own. - -Luckily, building your own spectrometer is really easy. The first thing you need is something that splits incident light -into its constituent wavelengths. In professional devices this is called the *`monochromator`_*, since it allows extraction -of small color bands from the spectrum. The second thing is some sort of optics that project the incident light onto a -screen behind the monochromator. In professional devices lenses or curved mirrors are used. In a simple homebrew job a -pinhole as you would use in a `camera obscura`_ does a remarkably nice job. - -For the monochromator component several things could be used. A prism would work, but I did not have any. The -alternative is a `diffraction grating`_. Professional gratings are quite specialized pieces of equipment and thus -rather expensive. Luckily, there is a common household item that works almost as well: A regular CD or DVD. The -microscopic grooves that are used to record data in a CD or DVD work the same as the grooves in a professional -diffraction grating. - -Household spectra ------------------ - -From this starting point, a few seconds on my favorite search engine yielded an `article by two researchers from the -National Science Museum in Tokyo`_ providing a nice blueprint for a simple cardboard-and-DVD construction for use in -classrooms. I replicated their device using a DVD and it worked beautifully. Daylight and several types of small LEDs I -had around did show the expected spectra. Small red, yellow, green, and blue LEDs showed narrow spectra, daylight one -continuous broad one, and white LEDs a continuous broad one with a distinct bright spot in the blue part. The -single-color LED spectra are quite narrow since they are determined by the LED's semiconductor's band gap, which is -specific to the semiconductor used and is quite precise. White LEDs are in fact a blue LED chip covered with a so-called -*phosphor*. This phosphor is not elementary phosphorus but an anorganic compound that absorbs the LED chip's blue light -and re-emits a broader spectrum of more yellow-ish wavelengths instead. The final LED spectrum is a superposition of -both spectra, with some of the original blue light leaking through the phosphor mixing with the broadband yellow -spectrum of the phosphor. - -.. raw:: html - -
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The ingredients. The cup of coffee and Madoka Magica DVD set are essential to the eventual - function of the appartus.
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Step 1: Cut to size and mark down all holes as described in the manual
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Step 2: Cut out all holes
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The finished result with the back side showing. The viewing window is on the bottom of the other - side.
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- - -Now that I had a spectrograph, I needed a somewhat predictable way of measuring the spectrum it gave me. - -Measuring a spectrum --------------------- - -Pointing a camera at the spectrograph would be the obvious thing to do. This produces pretty images but has one critical -flaw: I wanted to acquire quantitative measurements of brightness across the spectrum. Since I don't have a precise -technical datasheet specifying the spectral response of any of my cameras I can't compare the absolute brightness of -different colors on their pictures. Some other sensor was needed. - -.. raw:: html - -
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The daylight spectrum as seen using a DVD as a grating. - Picture by - Xofc from Wikimedia Commons, - CC-BY-SA 4.0 -
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- - -Measuring light intensity -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Looking around my lab, I found a bag of `SFH2701`_ visible-light photodiodes. Their -datasheet includes their spectral response so I can compensate for that, allowing precise-ish absolute intensity -measurements. Just like LEDs, photodiodes are extremely linear across several orders of magnitude. The datasheet of the -classic `BPW34`_ photodiode shows that this photodiode's light current is exactly proportional to illuminance over at -least three orders of magnitude. The `SFH2701`_ datasheet does not include a similar graph but its performance will be -similar. The `SFH2701`_ photodiodes I had at hand were perfect for the job compared to the vintage `BPW34`_ since their -active sensing area is really small (0.6mm by 0.6mm) compared to the BPW34 (a whopping 3mm by 3mm). If I were to use a -`BPW34`_ I would have to insert some small apterture in front of it so it does not catch too broad a part of the -spectrum at once. The `SFH2701`_ is small enough that if I just point it at the projected spectrum directly I will -already get only a small part of the spectrum inside its 0.6mm active area. - -To convert the photodiode's tiny photocurrent into a measurable voltage I built another copy of the `transimpedance -amplifier`_ circuit I already used in the `multichannel LED driver`_. A `transimpedance amplifier`_ is an -amplifiert that produces a large voltage from a small current. The weird name comes from the fact that it works kind of -like an amplified resistor (which can be generalized as an *impedance* electrically). Apply a current to a resistor and -you get a voltage. A transimpedance amplifiert does the same with the difference that its input always stays at 0V, -making it look like an ideal current sink to the connected current source. - -Transimpedance amplifiers are common in optoelectronics to convert small photocurrents to voltages. In this instance I -built a very simple circuit with a dampened transimpedance amplifier stage followed by a simple RC filter for noise -rejection and a regular non-inverting amplifier using another op-amp from the same chip to further boost the filtered -transimpedance amplifier output. I put all the passives setting amplifier response (the gain-setting resistors and the -filter resistor and capacitors) on a small removable adapter so I could easily change them if necessary. I put a small -trimpot on the virtual ground both amplifers use as a reference so I could trim that if necessary. - -.. raw:: html - -
- A drawing of the photodiode preamplifier's schematic -
The photodiode preamplifier schematic. Schematic drawn with an unlicensed copy of - DaveCAD.
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- -Following are pictures of the preamplifier board. The connectors on the top-left side are two copies of the analog -signal for the ADC and a small panel meter. The SMA connector is used as the photodiode input since coax cables are -generally low-leakage and have built-in shielding. The circuit is powered via the micro-USB connector and the analog -ground bias voltage can be adjusted using the trimpot. - -For easy replacement, all passives setting gain and frequency response are on a small, pluggable carrier PCB made from a -SMD-to-DIP adapter. - -Flying-wire construction is just fine for this low-frequency circuit. In a high-speed photodiode preamp, the -transimpedance amplifier circuit would be highly sensitive to stray capacitance, but we're not aiming at high speed -here. - -.. raw:: html - -
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The front side of the preamplifier board.
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The wiring of the photodiode preamp.
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- -Given a way to measure intensity what remains missing is a way to scan a single photodiode across the spectrum. - -Scanning the projection -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -A cheap linear stage can be found in any old CD or DVD drive. These drives use a small linear stage based on a -stepper-driven screw to move the laser unit radially. Removing the laser unit and connecting a leftover stepper driver -module I was left with a small linear stage with about 45 steps per cm without microstepping enabled. The driver I used -was an `A4988`_ module that required at least 8V motor drive voltage. I used a small micro USB-input boost converter -module to generate a stable 10V supply for the motor driver, with the USB's 5V rail used as a logic supply for the motor -driver. - -The `SFH2701`_ can easily be mounted to the linear stage using a small SMD breakout board glued in place with thin wires -connecting it to the transimpedance amplifier. The DVD drive linear stage is not very strong so it is important that -this wire does not put too much strain on it. - -Above the photodiode, I mounted a small piece of paper on the linear stage to be used as a projection screen to align -the linear stage in front of the spectrometer viewing window. A line on the screen paper points to the photodiode die in -parallel to the linear stage allowing precise alignment. - -The whole unit with photodiode preamplifier, linear stage, photodiode and stepper motor driver finally looks like this: - -.. raw:: html - -
- The complete electronics setup of the spectrograph. In the back
-        there is the DVD drive stepper stage. In front of it, mounted on a piece of wood are a small USB-to-12V
-        switching-regulator module to power the stepper motor in the top left, below on the bottom left is the
-        photodiode preamp and on the right is a breadboard with the stepper driver module and lots of jumper wires
-        interconnecting everything. On the right of the breadboard, a buspirate is attached to interface everything to a
-        computer. On the bottom edge of the piece of wood, two LED panel meters are mounted for readout of the preamp
-        output and the stepper supply voltages. -
The complete electronics setup. The buspirate on the right interfaces to a computer and controls the - stepper driver and ADC'es the preamp output. The two panel meters show the preamp output and stepper voltage for - setup.
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- -The projection of the spectrum can be adjusted by moving the light source relative to the entry slot and by moving -around the grating DVD. - -The capture process -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -To capture a spectrum, first the light source has to be mounted near the spectrograph's entry slot. The LED tape I -tested I just taped face-down directly into it. Next, the grating DVD has to be adjusted to make sure the spectrum -covers a sensible part of the photodiode's path. Mostly, this boils down to adjusting the photodiode distance and height -to match the vertical extent and wiggling the grating DVD to adjust the projection's horizontal position. - -After the optics are set-up, the photodiode preamplifier has to be adjusted. In my experiments, most LED tape at 5GΩ -required a high-ish amplification. The goal in this step is to maximize the peak response of the preamp to be just -shy of its VCC rail to make best use of its dynamic range. To adjust the pre-amp, I took several very coarsely-spaced -measurements to give me an estimate of the peak while I did not yet know its precise location. - -Since stray daylight totally swamped out the weak projection of the LED's spectrum I shielded the entire setup with a -small box made of black cardboard and two black t-shirts on top. This shielding proved adequate for all my measurements -but I had to be careful not to accidentially move the DVD that was stuck into the spectrograph with the shielding -t-shirts. - -For capturing a single spectrum I wrote a small python script that will automatically move the stepper in adjustable -intervals and take two measurements at each point, one with the LED tape off that can be used for offset calibration and -one with the LED tape on. All measurements are stored in a sqlite database that can then be accesssed from other -scripts. - -I built a small script that shows the progress of the current run and an jupyter notebook for data analysis. The jupyter -notebook is capable of live-updating a graph with the in-progress spectrum's data. This was quite useful as a sanity -check for when I made some mistake easy to spot in the resulting data. - -After one color channel is captured, the LED tape has to be manually set to the next color and the next measurement can -begin. - -.. raw:: html - -
- A plot with three wide peaks, two large peaks on both sides and
-        one smaller one in the middle. The middle one overlaps the two on the sides. The large ones are about 2.5V in
-        amplitude. Overall, the plot is about 300 stepper steps wide with each peak being around 130 steps wide. -
A plot of the raw preamp output voltage versus stepper position. From left to right, the three peaks - are blue, green and red. Step 0 corresponds to the bottommost stepper position and the shortest wavelength. -
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- - -Data analysis -~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Data analysis consists of three major steps: Offset- and stray light removal, wavelength and amplitude calibration and -color space mapping. - -Offset removal -************** -The first task is to remove the offset caused by dark current as well as stray light of the LED's bright primary -reflection on the DVD. The LED is very bright and only a small part of its light gets reflected by the grating towards -the photodiode screen. The remaining part of the light is reflected onto the table in front of the DVD spectrograph. -Though I covered all of this with black cardboard, some of that light ultimately gets reflected onto the photodiode. -This causes a large offset, in particular in the blue part of the spectrum since in this part the photodiode is closest -to the spectrograph's opening. - -The composite offset can be approximated with a second-order polynomial that is fitted to all the data outside of the -main peak's area. Since at this point the wavelength of each data point is still unknown this is done with a rough first -estimate of the three colors' peaks' locations and widths. - -Wavelength- and amplitude calibration -************************************* -The photodiode's response is strongly wavelength-dependent. In particular in the blue band, the photodiode's sensitivity -gets very poor down to about 20% at the edge to ultraviolet. This effect is strong enough to move the apparent location -of the blue peak towards red. - -.. raw:: html - -
- A plot of photodiode sensitivity against wavelength relative
-        to peak sensitivity at 820nm.  The sensitivity rises from 20% at 380nm approximately linearly to 80% at 620nm,
-        then the rise rolls off. -
A plot of the photodiode's relative sensitivity in the visible spectrum. The sensitivity is - normalized against its peak at 820nm. -
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- -The problem is that in order to remove this non-linearity, we would already have to know the wavelength of the measured -light. Since I don't, I settled for a two-step process. First, a coarse wavelength calibration is done relative to the -red peak and the short-wavelength edge of the blue peak. The photodiode measurements are then sensitivity-corrected -using this coarse measurement. Then all three channel peaks are measured in the resulting data and a fine wavelength -estimate is produced by a least-squares fit of a linear function. This fine estimate is then used for a second -sensitivity correction of all original measurements and the scale is changed from stepper motor step count to -wavelength in nanometers. - -.. raw:: html - -
- A plot with three wide peaks, all three of different
-        heights. The leftmost peak is highest at 6nA, the middle peak lowest at 1.6nA and the rightmost peak in between
-        at 4nA.  The middle one overlaps the two on the sides.  Overall, the plot spans about 300nm on its x axis with
-        each peak being around 100nm wide. -
A plot of the processed measurements. From left to right, the three peaks are blue, green and red. -
-
- -.. FIXME re-do these measurements, avoiding clipping -.. FIXME re-do calibration using CCFL -.. FIXME calibration for brightness imbalance due to wedge-shaped projection of spectrum - -Color space mapping -******************* -Finally, to achieve the objective of measuring the LED tape's channels' precise color coordinates the measured spetra -have to be matched against the color spaces' *color matching functions*. The color matching functions describe how -strong the color space's idealized *standard observer* would react to light at a particular wavelength. Going from a -measured spectrum to color coordinates XYZ works by integrating over the product of the measurement and each color -coordinate's color matching function. - -The result are three color coordinates X, Y and Z for each channel R, G and B yielding nine coordinates in total. When -written as a matrix conversion between XYZ color space and LED-RGB color space is as simple as multiplying that matrix -(or its inverse) and a vector from one of the color spaces. - -In XYZ space, the set of colors that can be produced with this LED tape is described by the `parallelepiped`_ spanned by -the three channel's XYZ vectors. In the following figures, you can see a three-dimensional model of the RGB LED's color -space (colorful) as well as sRGB (white) for comparison plotted within CIE 1931 XYZ. There is no natural map to scale -both so for this illustration the LED color space has been scaled to fit. These figures were made with blender and a few -lines of python. The blender project file including all settings and the python script to generate the color space -models can be found in the `project repo`_. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
Illustration of the measured LED color space scaled to fit within XYZ with sRGB (light gray) for - comparison. The thick, white line is the spectral locus. - - mkv/h264 download / - webm download -
-
- -As you can see, the result is pretty disappointing. The LED's color space parallepiped is very narrow, which is because -the blue channel is much brighter than the other two channels. An easy fix for this is to scale-up the RGB space and -drop any values outside XYZ. The scaling factor is a trade-off between color space coverage and brightness. You can -produce the most colors when you clip all channels to brightness of the weakest channel (green in this case), but that -will make the result very dim. Scaling brightness like that stretches the RGB parallelepiped along its major axis. Up to -a point the number of possible colors (the gamut) increases at expense of maximum brightness. When the parallelepiped is -stretched far enought for all three channel vectors to be outside the 1,1,1 XYZ-cube, maximum brightness continues to -decrease but the gamut stays constant. I don't know a simple scientific way to solve this problem, so I just played -around with a couple of factors and settled on 2.5 as a reasonable compromise. Below is an illustration. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
Illustration of the measured LED color space at scale factor 2.5 within XYZ with sRGB (light gray) - for comparison. The thick, white line is the spectral locus. - - mkv/h264 download / - webm download -
-
- -Firmware implementation ------------------------ -In the end, the above measurements yield two matrices: One for mapping XYZ to RGB, and one for mapping RGB to XYZ. Of -the several versions of CIE XYZ I chose the CIE 1931 XYZ color space as a basis for the firmware because it is most -popular. Mapping a color coordinate in one color space to the other is as simple as performing nine floating-point -multiplications and six additions. Mapping Lab or Lch to RGB is done by first mapping Lab/Lch to XYZ, then XYZ to RGB. -Lab to XYZ is somewhat complex since it requires a floating-point power for gamma correction, but any self-respecting -libc will have one of those so this is still no problem. Lch also requires floating-point sine and cosine functions, but -these should still be no problem on most hardware. - -My implementation of these conversions in the ESP8266 firmware of my `Wifi LED driver`_ can be found `on Github`_. You -can view the Jupyter notebook most of the analysis above `here `__. - -.. _`on Github`: https://github.com/jaseg/esp_led_drv/blob/master/user/led_controller.c -.. _`project repo`: https://github.com/jaseg/led_drv -.. _`Wifi LED driver`: {{}} -.. _`small driver`: {{}} -.. _`multichannel LED driver`: {{}} -.. _`sRGB`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SRGB -.. _`CC BY-SA 3.0`: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0 -.. _`Color spaces`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_space -.. _`HSV`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HSL_and_HSV -.. _`CIE Lab/LCh`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lab_color_space -.. _`XYZ (CIE 1931)`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIE_1931_color_space -.. _`camera obscura`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinhole_camera -.. _`article by two researchers from the National Science Museum in Tokyo`: http://www.candac.ca/candacweb/sites/default/files/BuildaSpectroscope.pdf -.. _`spectrograph`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultraviolet%E2%80%93visible_spectroscopy -.. _`monochromator`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochromator -.. _`diffraction grating`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffraction_grating -.. _`SFH2701`: https://dammedia.osram.info/media/resource/hires/osram-dam-2495903/SFH%202701.pdf -.. _`BPW34`: http://www.vishay.com/docs/81521/bpw34.pdf -.. _`transimpedance amplifier`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transimpedance_amplifier -.. _`A4988`: https://www.pololu.com/file/0J450/A4988.pdf -.. _`parallelepiped`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallelepiped diff --git a/content/posts/led-characterization/video/led_within_srgb_fancy_camera_path_scale=2.5.mkv b/content/posts/led-characterization/video/led_within_srgb_fancy_camera_path_scale=2.5.mkv deleted file mode 100644 index 0a1eece..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/led-characterization/video/led_within_srgb_fancy_camera_path_scale=2.5.mkv and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/led-characterization/video/led_within_srgb_fancy_camera_path_scale=2.5.webm 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This tape is like regular RGB tape but with an additional warm white channel, which makes for much -more natural pastels and whites. There are several variants of RGBW tape. Cheap ones have separate RGB and white LEDs, -which is fine for indirect lighting but does not work for direct lighting. Since we wanted to mount our tape in channels -at the front of the steps, we had to use the slightly more expensive variant with integrated RGBW LEDs. These are LEDs -in the 5050 (5.0mm by 5.0mm) form factor common with RGB LEDs that have a small section divided off for the white -channel. The red, green and blue LED chips sit together in the larger section covered with clear epoxy and the white -channel is made up from the usual blue LED inside a yellow phosphor in the smaller section. - -Since we wanted to light up all of 15 steps, and for greatest visual effect we would have liked to be able to control -each step individually we had to find a way to control 60 channels of LED tape with a reasonable amount of hardware. - -LED tape has integrated series resistors and runs off a fixed 12V or 24V constant-voltage supply. This means you don't -need a complex constant-current driver as you'd need with high-power LEDs. You can just hook up a section of LED tape -to a beefy MOSFET to control it. Traditionally, you would do *Pulse Width Modulation* (PWM) on the MOSFET's input to -control the LED tape's brightness. - -Pulse Width Modulation ----------------------- - -`Pulse Width Modulation`_ is a technique of controlling the brightness of a load such as an LED with a digital signal. -The basic idea is that if you turn the LED on and off much too fast for anyone to notice, you can control its power by -changing how long you turn it on versus how long you leave it off. - -PWM divides each second into a large number of periods. At the beginning of each period, you turn the LED on. After -that, you wait a certain time until you turn it off. Then, you wait for the next period to begin. The periods are always -the same length but you can set when you turn off the LED. If you turn it off right away, it's off almost all the time -and it looks like it's off to your eye. If you turn it off right at the end, it's on almost all the time and it looks -super bright to your eye. Now, if you turn it off halfway into the cycle, it's on half the time and it will look to your -eye as half as bright as before. This means that you can control the LED's brightness with only a digital signal and -good timing. - -.. raw:: html - -
- A visualization of PWM at different duty cycles. -
Waveforms of two PWM cycles at different duty cycles.
-
- -PWM works great if you have a dedicated PWM output on your microcontroller. It's extremely simple in both hardware and -software. Unfortunately for us, controlling 32 channels with PWM is not that easy. Cheap microcontrollers only have `a -handful of hardware PWM outputs`_, so we'd either have to do everything in software, bit-banging our LED modulation, or -we'd have to use a dedicated chip. - -Doing PWM in software is both error-prone and slow. Since the maximum dynamic range of a PWM signal is limited by the -shortest duty cycle it can do, software PWM being slow means it has poor PWM resolution at maybe 8 bits at most. Poor -color resolution is not a problem if all you're doing is to fade around the `HSV rainbow`_, but for ambient lighting -where you *really* want to control the brightness down to a faint shimmer you need all the color resolution you can get. - -If you rule out software PWM, what remains are dedicated `hardware PWM controllers`_. Most of these have either of three -issues: - -* They're expensive -* They don't have generous PWM resolution either (12 bits if you're lucky) -* They're meant to drive small LEDs such as a 7-segment display directly and you can't just hook up a MOSFET to their - output - -This means we're stuck in a dilemma between two poor solutions if we'd want to do PWM. Luckily for us, PWM is not the -only modulation in town. - -.. _`Pulse Width Modulation`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulse-width_modulation -.. _`a handful of hardware PWM outputs`: https://www.nxp.com/parametricSearch#/&c=c731_c380_c173_c161_c163&page=1 -.. _`HSV rainbow`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HSL_and_HSV -.. _`hardware PWM controllers`: http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/tlc5940.pdf - -Binary Code Modulation ----------------------- - -PWM is the bread-and-butter of the maker crowd. Everyone and their cat is doing it and it works really well most of the -time. Unbeknownst to most of the maker crowd, there is however another popular modulation method that's mostly used in -professional LED systems: Enter `*Binary Code Modulation* (BCM) `_. - -BCM is to PWM sort of what barcodes are to handwriting. While PWM is easy to understand and simple to implement if all -you have is a counter and an IO pin, BCM is more complicated. On the other hand, computers can do complicated and BCM -really shines in multi-channel applications. - -Similar to PWM, BCM works by turning on and off the LED in short periods fast enough to make your eye perceive it as -partially on all the time. In PWM the channel's brightness is linearly dependent on its duty cycle, i.e. the percentage -it is turned on. In PWM the duty cycle D is the total period T divided by the on period T_on. The issue with doing PWM -on many channels at once is that you have to turn off each channel at the exact time to match its duty cycle. -Controlling many IO pins at once with precise timing is really hard to do in software. - -BCM avoids this by further dividing each period into smaller periods which we'll call *bit periods* and splitting each -channel's duty cycle into chunks the size of these bit periods. The amazingly elegant thing in BCM now is that as you -can guess from the name these bit periods are weighted in powers of two. Say the shortest bit period lasts 1 -microsecond. Then the second-shortest bit period is 2 microseconds and the third is 4, the fifth 8, the sixth 16 and so -on. - -.. raw:: html - -
- A visualization of BCM at different duty cycles. -
Waveforms of a single 4-bit BCM cycle at different duty cycles. This BCM can produce 16 different - levels.
-
- -Staggered like this, you turn on the LED for integer value of microseconds by turning it on in the bit periods -corresponding to the binary bits of that value. If I want my LED to light for 19 microseconds every period, I turn it on -in the 16 microsecond bit period, the 2 microsecond bit period and the 1 microsecond bit period and leave it off for the -4 and 8 mircosecond bit periods. - -Now, how this is better instead of just more complicated than plain old PWM might not be clear yet. But consider this: -Turning on and off a large number of channels, each at its own arbitrary time is hard because doing the timing in -software is hard. We can't use hardware timers since we only have two or three of those, and we have 32 channels. -However, we can use one hardware timer to trigger a really cheap external latch to turn on or off the 32 channels all at -once. With this setup, we can only controll all channels at once, but we can do so with very precise timing. - -All we need to do is to set our timer to the durations of the BCM bit periods, and we can get the same result as we'd -get with PWM with only one hardware timer and a bit of code that is not timing-critical anymore. - -Applications of Binary Code Modulation -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -BCM is a truly wondrous technique, and outside of hobbyist circles it is in fact very widely known. Though we're using -it to control just 32 channels here, you can do much more channels without any problems. The most common application -where BCM is invariably used is *any* kind of LED screen. Controlling the thousands and thousands of LEDs in an LED -screen with PWM with a dedicated timer for each LED would not be feasible. With BCM, all you need to dedicate to a -single LED is a flipflop (or part of one if you're multiplexing). In fact, there is a whole range of `ICs with no other -purpose than to enable BCM on large LED matrices `_. Basically, these are a -high-speed shift register with latched outputs much like the venerable 74HC595_, only their outputs are constant-current -sinks made so that you can directly connect an LED to them. - -.. _74HC595: http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/sn74hc595.pdf - -Running BCM on LED tape -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -In our case, we don't need any special driver chips to control our LED tape. We just connect the outputs of a 74HC595_ -shift register to one MOSFET_ each, and then we directly connect the LED tape to these MOSFETs. The MOSFETs allow us to -drive a couple of amps into the LED tape from the weak outputs of the shift register. - -The BCM timing is done by hooking up two timer channels of our microcontroller to the shift registers *strobe* and -*reset* inputs. We set the timer to PWM mode so we can generate pulses with precise timing. At the beginning of each -bit period, a pulse will strobe the data for this bit period that we shifted in previously. At the end of the bit -period, one pulse will reset the shift register and one will strobe the freshly-reset zeros into the outputs. - -.. raw:: html - -
- From left to right, we see the STM32, one of the shift
-        registers, and the LEDs and MOSFETs. The LED tape is driven to ground by the MOSFETs, which are in turn directly
-        driven from the shift register outputs. The shift register is wired up to the STM32 with its clock and data
-        inputs on SCK and MOSI and its RESET and STROBE inputs on channel 2 and 3 of timer 1. -
- The schematic of a single output of this LED driver. Multiple shift register stages can be cascaded. -
-
- - -Our implementation of this system runs on an STM32F030F4P6_, the smallest, cheapest ARM microcontroller you can get from -ST. This microcontroller has only 16kB of flash and 1kB of RAM, but that's plenty for our use. We use its SPI controller -to feed the modulation data to the shift registers really fast, and we use two timer channels to control the shift -registers' reset and strobe. - -We can easily cascade shift registers without any ill side-effects, and even hundreds of channels should be no problem -for this setup. The only reason we chose to stick to a 32-channel board is the mechanics of it. We thought it would be -easier to have several small boards instead of having one huge board with loads of connectors and cables coming off it. - -The BOM cost per channel for our system is 3ct for a reasonable MOSFET, about 1ct for one eighth of a shift register -plus less than a cent for one resistor between shift register and MOSFET. In the end, the connectors are more expensive -than the driving circuitry. - -.. _MOSFET: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOSFET -.. _STM32F030F4P6: http://www.st.com/resource/en/datasheet/stm32f030f4.pdf - -Hardware design -=============== - -From this starting point, we made a very prototype-y hardware design for a 32-channel 12V LED tape driver. The design is -based on the STM32F030F4P6_ driving the shift registers as explained above. The system is controlled through an RS485_ -bus that is connected up to the microcontroller's UART using an MAX485_-compatible RS485 transceiver. The LED tape is -connected using 9-pin SUB-D_ connectors since they are cheap and good enough for the small current of our short segments -of LED tape. The MOSFETs we use are small SOT-23_ logic-level MOSFETs. In various prototypes we used both International -Rectifier's IRLML6244_ as well as Alpha & Omega Semiconductor's AO3400_. Both are good up to about 30V/5A. Since we're -only driving about 2m of LED tape per channel we're not going above about 0.5A and the MOSFETs don't even get warm. - -.. _RS485: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RS-485 -.. _MAX485: https://datasheets.maximintegrated.com/en/ds/MAX1487-MAX491.pdf -.. _IRLML6244: https://www.infineon.com/dgdl/?fileId=5546d462533600a4015356686fed261f -.. _AO3400: http://aosmd.com/pdfs/datasheet/AO3400.pdf -.. _SUB-D: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-subminiature -.. _SOT-23: http://www.nxp.com/documents/outline_drawing/SOT23.pdf - -Switching nonlinearities ------------------------- -During testing of our initial prototype, we noticed that the brightness seemed to jump around when fading to very low -values. It turned out that our extremely simple LED driving circuit consisting of only the shift register directly -driving a MOSFET, which in turn directly drives the LED tape was maybe a little bit too simple. After some measurements -it turned out that we were looking at about 6Vpp of ringing on the driver's output voltage. The picture below is the -voltrage we saw on our oscilloscope on the LED tape. - -.. raw:: html - -
- Strong ringing on the LED voltage waveform edge at about
-            100% overshoot during about 70% of the cycle time. -
Bad ringing on the LED output voltage caused by wiring inductance. Note that the effect on the - actual LED current is less bad than this looks since the LED's V/I curve is nonlinear.
-
- - -Dynamic switching behavior: Cause and Effect -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -A bit of LTSpice_ action later we found that the inductance of the few metres of cable leading to the LED tape is the -likely culprit. The figure below is the schematic used for the simulations. - -.. raw:: html - -
- The LTSpice schematic of one output of the driver,
-        taking into account the shift register's output ESR and the wiring ESL. -
The schematic of the simulation in LTSpice
-
- -As tested, the driver does not include any per-output smoothing so the ~.5A transient on each BCM cycle hits the cable -in full. Combined with the cable inductance, this works out to a considerable lag of the rising edge of the LED -current, and bad ringing on its falling edge. Below is the voltage on the LED output from an LTSpice simulation of our -driver. - -.. raw:: html - -
- The result of the LTSpice simulation of our driver output. The LED
-        current shows similar ringing to what we measured using the oscilloscope. Interestingly, the gate voltage shows
-        strong ringing, too. -
The result of our LTSpice simulation. This simulation assumes 1µH of wiring inductance and 50Ω of - output impedance on the part of the shift register. The ringing at the gate visible in the gate voltage graph is - due to feed-through of the ringing at the output through the MOSFET's parasitic Cgd.
-
- -We were able to reduce the rining and limit the effect somewhat by putting a 220Ω series resistor in between the shift -register output and the MOSFET gate. This resistor forms an RC circuit with the MOSFET's nanofarad or two of gate -capacitance. The result of this is that the LED current passing the wire's ESL rises slightly more slowly and thus the -series inductance gets excited slightly less, and the overshoot decreases. Below is a picture of the waveform with the -damping resistor in place and a picture of our measurement for comparison. The resistor values don't agree perfectly -since the estimated ESL and stray capacitance of the wiring is probably way off. - -.. raw:: html - -
- Weak ringing on the LED voltage waveform edge at about 30%
-        overshoot during about 20% of the cycle time. -
Adding a resistor in front of the MOSFET gate to slow the transition damped the ringing somewhat, - but ultimately it cannot be eliminated entirely. Note how you can actually see the miller plateau on the - trailing edge of this signal. -
-
- -.. raw:: html - -
- The result of the LTSpice simulation of our driver output with an
-        extra 100 Ohms between shift register output and MOSFET gate. Similar to the oscilloscope measurement the
-        ringing is much reduced in its amplitude. -
The LTSpice simulation result with the same parameters as above but with an extra 100Ω between the - shfit register's output and the MOSFET's gate.
-
- -A side effect of this fix is that now the effective on-time of the LED tape is much longer than the duty cycle at the -shift register's output at very small duty cycles (1µs or less). This is caused by the MOSFET's `miller -plateau`_. For illustration, below is a graph of both the excitation waveform (the boxy line) and the resulting LED -current (the other ones) both without damping (top) and with 220Ω damping (bottom). As you can see the effective duty -cycle of the LED current is not at all equal to the 50% duty cycle of the excitation square wave. - -.. raw:: html - -
- The result of an LTSpice simulation of the LED duty cycle without and
-        with damping. Dampening widens the LED current waveform from 50% duty cycle with sharp edges to about 80% duty
-        cycle with soft edges. -
Simulated LED duty cycle with and without damping. The damping resistance used in this simulation - was 220Ω.
-
- -.. raw:: html - -
- The gate voltages in the spice simulation above. The undamped
-        response shows sharp edges with the miller plateau being a barely noticeable step, but with strong ringing on
-        the trailing edge. The damped response shows RC-like slow-edges, but has wide miller plateaus on both edges
-        adding up to about 50% of the pulse width. -
The MOSFET gate voltage from the simulation in the figure above. You can clearly see how the miller - plateau (the horizontal part of the trace at about 1V) is getting much wider with added damped, and how the - resulting gate charge/discharge curve is not at all that of a capacitor anymore.
-
- - - -In conclusion, we have three major causes for our calculated LED brightness not matching reality: - -* Ringing of the equivalent series inductance of the wiring leading up to the LED tape -* Miller plateau lag -* The damping resistor and the MOSFET gate forming an RC filter that helps with wire ESL ringing but worsens the miller - plateau issue and deforms the LED current edges. - -Added up, these three effects yield a picture that agrees well with our simulations and measurements. The overall effect -is neglegible at long period durations (>10µs), but gets really bad at short period durations (<1µs). The effect is -non-linear, so correcting for it is not as simple as adding an offset. - -.. _LTSpice: http://www.analog.com/en/design-center/design-tools-and-calculators/ltspice-simulator.html -.. _`miller plateau`: https://www.vishay.com/docs/68214/turnonprocess.pdf - -Measuring LED tape brightness -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -In order to correct for the nonlinearities mentioned above, we decided to implement a lookup table mapping BCM period to -actual timer setting. That is, each row of the table contains the actual period length we need to set the -microcontroller's timer to in order to get our intended brightness steps. - -To calibrate our driver, we needed a setup for reproducible measurement of the relative brightness of our LED tape at -different settings. Absolute brightness is not of interest to us as the eye can't perceive it. To perform the -calibration, the LED driver is set to enable each single BCM period in turn, i.e. brightness values 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 etc. - -The setup we used to measure the LED tape's brightness consists of a bunch of LED tape stuck into a tin can for -shielding against both stray light and electromagnetic interference and a photodiode looking at the LED tape. We used -the venerable BPW34_ photodiode in our setup as I had a bunch leftover from another project and because they are quite -sensitive owing to their physically large die area. - -.. raw:: html - -
- The led measurement setup consists of several PCBs and a
-        breadboard linked with a bunch of wires and a big tin can to shield the LEDs and the photodiode. A large sub-D
-        connector is put into the top of the tin can as a feed-through for the LED tape's control signals and the
-        photodiode signal. In the background the control laptop is visible. -
The LED brighness measurement setup. The big tin can contains a bunch of LED tape and the - photodiode. The breadboard on the right is used for the photodiode preamplifier and for jumpering around the LED - tape's channels. The red board next to it is the buspirate used as ADC. The board on the bottom left is a - TTL-to-RS485 converter and the board in the middle is the unit under test.
-
- -The photodiode's photocurrent is converted into a voltage using a very simple transimpedance amplifier based around a -MCP6002_ opamp that was damped into oblivion with a couple nanofarads of capacitance in its feedback loop. The MCP6002_ -is a fine choice here since I had a bunch and because it is a CMOS opamp, meaning it has low bias current that would -mess up our measurements. For many applications, opamp bias current is not a big issue but when using the opamp to -directly measure very small currents at its input it quickly swamps out the signal for most BJT-input types. - -The transimpedance amplifier's output is read from the computer using the ADC input of a buspirate USB thinggamajob. In -general I would not recommend the buspirate as a tool for this job since it's ADC is not particularly good and it's -programming interface is positively atrocious, but it was what I had and it beat first wiring up one of the dedicated -ADC chips I had in my parts bin. - -The computer runs a small python script cycling the LED tape through all its BCM period settings and taking a brightness -measurement at each step. Later on, these measurements can be plotted to visualize the resulting slope's linearity, and -we can even do a simulation of the resulting brightness for all possible control values by just adding the measured -photocurrents for a certain BCM setpoint just as our retinas would do. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
- A plot of the measured brightness of our LED tape for each BCM period. The brightness values are normalized - to the value measured at the LSB setpoint (brightness=1/65535). Ideally, this plot would show a straight - line with slope 1. Obviously, it doesn't. The bend in the curve is caused by the above-mentioned duty cycle - offset adding an offset to all brightness values. Shown is both the raw data (light), which has essentially zero - measurement error and a linear fit (dark). - - The plot is in log-log to approximate how the human eye would perceive brightness, i.e. highly sensitive at - low values but not very sensitive at all at large values. -
-
- -While it would be possible to fully automate the optimization of BCM driver lookup tables, we needed only one and in the -end I just sat down and manually tweaked the ideal values we initially calculated until I liked the result. You can see -the resulting brightness curve below. - -.. raw:: html - -
-
- -
- Calculated brightness curve for the uncorrected BCM setup. As you can see, at low setpoints the result - is about as smooth as sandpaper, which is well in line with our observations. At high setpoints the - offset gets swamped out and the nonlinearity in the low bits is not visible anymore. -
-
- -
- Brightness curve for the corrected BCM setup extrapolated using actual measurements. Looks as buttery - smooth in real life as it does in this plot. -
- -
-
- -.. _BPW34: http://www.vishay.com/docs/81521/bpw34.pdf -.. _MCP6002: http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/21733j.pdf - -Controlling the driver ----------------------- - -Now that our driver was behaving linear enough that you couldn't see it actually wasn't we needed a nice way to control -it from a computer of our choice. In the ultimate application (our staircase) we'll use a raspberry pi for this. Since -we already settled on an RS485_ bus for its robustness and simplicity, we had to device a protocol to control the driver -over this bus. Here, we settled on a simple, COBS_-based protocol for the reasons I wrote about in `How to talk to your -microcontroller over serial `_. - -To address our driver nodes, we modified the Makefile to build a random 32-bit MAC into each firmware image. The -protocol has only five message types: - -1. A 0-byte *ping* packet, to which each node would reply with its own address in the - first 100ms after boot. This can be used to initially discover the addresses of all nodes connected to the bus. You'd - spam the bus with *ping* packets, and then hit reset on each node in turn. The control computer would then receive - each device's MAC address as you hit reset. -2. A 4-byte *address* packet that says which device that the following packet is for. This way of us using the packet - length instead of a packet type field is not particularly elegant, but our system is simple enough and it was easy to - implement. -3. A 64-byte *frame buffer* packet that contains 16 bits of left-aligned brightness data for every channel -4. A one-byte *get status* packet that tells the device to respond with... -5. ...a 27-byte status packet containing a brief description of the firmware (version number, channel count, bit depth - etc.) as well as the device's current life stats (VCC, temperature, uptime, UART frame errors etc.). - -Wrapped up in a nice python interface we can now easily enumerate any drivers we connect to a bus, query their status -and control their outputs. - -.. _COBS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consistent_Overhead_Byte_Stuffing - -Conclusion ----------- - -.. raw:: html - -
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- - A picture of the LED driver schematic - -
The LED driver schematic
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- - A picture of the LED driver PCB layout - -
The LED driver PCB layout
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-
- -Putting some thought into the control circuitry and software, you can easily control large numbers of channels of LEDs -using extremely inexpensive driving hardware without any compromises on dynamic range. The design we settled on can -drive 32 channels of LED tape with a dynamic range of 14bit at a BOM cost of below 10€. All it really takes is a couple -of shift registers and a mildly bored STM32 microcontroller. - -Get a PDF file of the schematic and PCB layout `here `__ or download the CAD files -and the firmware sources `from github `_. You can view the Jupyter notebook used to -analyze the brightness measurement data `here `__. - diff --git a/content/posts/multichannel-led-driver/olsndot_v02_schematics_and_pcb.pdf b/content/posts/multichannel-led-driver/olsndot_v02_schematics_and_pcb.pdf deleted file mode 100644 index 2a4e037..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/multichannel-led-driver/olsndot_v02_schematics_and_pcb.pdf and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/index.rst b/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/index.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 797de50..0000000 --- a/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/index.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,38 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Private Contact Discovery" -date: 2019-06-22T10:30:00+08:00 ---- - -Private Contact Discovery -========================= - -Private Contact Discovery (PCD) is the formal name for the problem modern smartphone messenger applications have on -installation: Given a user's address book, find out which of their contacts also use the same messenger without the -messenger's servers learning anything about the user's address book. The widespread non-private way to do this is to -simply upload the user's address book to the app's operator's servers and do an SQL JOIN keyed on the phone number field -against the database of registered users. People have tried sprinkling some hashes over these phone numbers in an -attempt to improve privacy, but obviously running a brute-force preimage attack given a domain of maybe a few billion -valid inputs is not cryptographically hard. - -Private Contact Discovery can be phrased in terms of Private Set Intersection (PSI), the cryptographic problem of having -two parties holding one set each find the intersection of their sets without disclosing any other information. PSI has -been an active field of research for a while and already yielded useful results for some use cases. Alas, none of those -results were truly practical yet for usage in PCD in a typical messenger application. They would require too much CPU -time or too much data to be transferred. - -At USENIX Security 2019, Researchers from technical universities Graz and Darmstadt published a paper titled *Private -Contact Discovery at Scale* -(`eprint `__ | `PDF `__). -In this paper, they basically optimize the hell out of existing cryptographic solutions to private contact discovery, -jumping from a still-impractical state of the art right to practicality. Their scheme allows a client with 1k contacts -to run PCD against a server with 1B contacts in about 3s on a phone. The main disadvantage of their scheme is that it -requires the client to in advance download a compressed database of all users, that clocks in at about 1GB for 1B users. - -I found this paper very interesting for its immediate practical applicability. As an excuse to dig into the topic some -more, I gave a short presentation at my university lab's research seminar on this paper -(slides: `PDF `__ | `ODP `__). - -Even if you're not working on secure communication systems on a day-to-day basis this paper might interest you. If -you're working with social account information of any kind I can highly recommend giving it a look. Not only might your -users benefit from improved privacy, but your company might be able to avoid a bunch of data protection and -accountability issues by simply not producing as much sensitive data in the first place. diff --git a/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/mori_semi_psi_talk.odp b/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/mori_semi_psi_talk.odp deleted file mode 100644 index e7df32e..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/mori_semi_psi_talk.odp and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/mori_semi_psi_talk.pdf b/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/mori_semi_psi_talk.pdf deleted file mode 100644 index e06fd63..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/private-contact-discovery/mori_semi_psi_talk.pdf and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/serial-protocols/index.rst b/content/posts/serial-protocols/index.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 5797947..0000000 --- a/content/posts/serial-protocols/index.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,249 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "How to talk to your microcontroller over serial" -date: 2018-05-19T08:09:46+02:00 ---- - -Scroll to the end for the `TL;DR `_. - -In this article I will give an overview on the protocols spoken on serial ports, highlighting common pitfalls. I will -summarize some points on how to design a serial protocol that is simple to implement and works reliably even under error -conditions. - -If you have done low-level microcontroller firmware you will regularly have had to stuff some data up a serial port to -another microcontroller or to a computer. In the age of USB, a serial port is still the simplest and quickest way to get -communication to a control computer up and running. Integrating a ten thousand-line USB stack into your firmware and -writing the necessary low-level drivers on the host side might take days. Poking a few registers to set up your UART to -talk to an external hardware USB to serial converter is a matter of minutes. - -This simplicity is treacherous, though. Oftentimes, you start writing your serial protocol as needs arise. Things might -start harmless with something like ``SET_LED ON\n``, but unless you proceed it is easy to end up in a hot mess of command -modes, protocol states that breaks under stress. The ways in which serial protocols break are manifold. The simplest one -is that at some point a character is mangled, leading to both ends of the conversation ending up in misaligned protocol -states. With a fragile protocol, you might end up in a state that is hard to recover from. In extreme cases, this leads -to code such as `this gem`_ performing some sort of arcane ritual to get back to some known state, and all just because -someone did not do their homework. Below we'll embark on a journey through the lands of protocol design, exploring the -facets of this deceptively simple problem. - -.. _`this gem`: https://github.com/juhasch/pyBusPirateLite/blob/master/pyBusPirateLite/BBIO_base.py#L68 - -Text-based serial protocols -=========================== - -The first serial protocol you've likely written is a human-readable, text-based one. Text-based protocols have the big -advantage that you can just print them on a terminal and you can immediately see what's happening. In most cases you can -even type out the protocol with your bare hands, meaning that you don't really need a debugging tool beyond a serial -console. - -However, text-based protocols also have a number of disadvantages. Depending on your application, these might not matter -and in many cases a text-based protocol is the most sensible solution. But then, in some cases they might and it's good -to know when you hit one of them. - -Problems --------- - -Low information density -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Generally, you won't be able to stuff much more than four or five bit of information down a serial port using a -human-readable protocol. In many cases you will get much less. If you have 10 commands that are only issued a couple -times a second nobody cares that you spend maybe ten bytes per command on nice, verbose strings such as ``SET LED``. But -if you're trying to squeeze a half-kilobyte framebuffer down the line you might start to notice the difference between -hex and base-64 encoding, and a binary protocol might really be more up to the job. - -Complex parsing code -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -On the computer side of thing, with the whole phalanx of an operating system, the standard library of your programming -language of choice and for all intents and purposes unlimted CPU and memory resources to spare you can easily parse -anything spoken on a serial port in real time, even at a blazing fast full Megabaud. The microcontroller side however is -an entirely different beast. On a small microcontroller, printf_ alone will eat about half your flash. On most small -microcontrollers, you just won't get a regex library even though it would make parsing textual commands *so much -simpler*. Lacking these resources, you might end up hand-knitting a lot of low-level C code to do something seemingly -simple such as parsing ``set_channel (13, 1.1333)\n``. These issues have to be taken into account in the protocol design -from the beginning. If you don't really need matching parentheses, don't use them. - -Fragile protocol state -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Say you have a ``SET_DISPLAY`` command. Now say your display can display four lines of text. The obvious approach to this -is probably the SMTP_ or HTTP_ way of sending ``SET_DISPLAY\nThis is line 1\nThis is line 2\n\n``. This would certainly -work, but it is very fragile. With this protocol, you're in trouble if at any point the terminating second newline -character gets mangled (say, someone unplugs the cable, or the control computer reboots, or a cosmic ray hits something -and ``0x10 '\n'`` turns into ``0x50 'P'``). - -.. _SMTP: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Mail_Transfer_Protocol -.. _HTTP: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol - -Timeouts don't work -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -You might try to solve the problem of your protocol state machine tangling up with a timeout. "If I don't get a valid -command for more than 200ms I go back to default state." But consider the above example. Say, your control computer -sends a ``SET_DISPLAY`` command every 100ms. If in one of them the state machine tangles up, the parser hangs since the -timeout is never hit, a new line of text arriving every 100ms. - -Framing is hard -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -You might also try to drop the second newline and using a convention such as ``SET_DISPLAY`` is followed by two lines of -text, then commands resume.". This works as long as your display contents never look like commands. If you are only ever -displaying the same three messages on a character LCD that might work, but if you're displaying binary framebuffer -data you've lost. - -Solutions ---------- - -Keep the state machine simple -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Always use a single line of text to represent a single command. Don't do protocol states or modes where you can toggle -between different interpretations for a line. If you have to send human-readable text as part of a command (such as -``SET_DISPLAY``) escape it so it doesn't contain any newlines. - -This way, you keep your protocol state machine simple. If at any time your serial trips and flips a bit or looses a byte -your protocol will recover on the next newline character, returning to its base state. - -Encode numbers in hex when possible -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Printing a number in hexadecimal is a very tidy operation, even on the smalest 8-bit microcontrollers. In contrast, -printing decimal requires both division and remainder in a loop which might get annoyingly code- and time-intensive on -large numbers (say a 32-bit int) and small microcontrollers. - -If you have to send fractional values, consider their precision. Instead of sending a 12 bit ADC result as a 32-bit -float formatted like ``0.176513671875`` sending ``0x2d3`` and dividing by 4096 on the host might be more sensible. If you -really have to communicate big floats and you can't take the overhead of including both printf_ and scanf_ you can -use hexadecimal floating point, which is basically ``hex((int)foo) + "." + hex((int)(65536*(foo - (int)foo)))`` for four -digits. You can also just hex-encode the binary IEEE-754_ representation of the float, sending ``hex(*(int *)&float)``. -Most programming languages will have a `simple, built-in means to parse this sort of thing -`__. - -.. _printf: http://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/tree/src/stdio/vfprintf.c -.. _scanf: http://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/tree/src/stdio/vfscanf.c -.. _IEEE-754: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_754 - -Escape multiline strings -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -If you have to send arbitrary strings, escape special characters. This not only has the advantage of yielding a robust -protocol: It also ensures you can actually see everything that's going on when debugging. The string ``"\r\n"`` is easy to -distinguish from ``"\n"`` while your terminal emulator might not care. - -The simplest encoding to use is the C-style backslash encoding. Host-side, most languages will have a `built-in means of -escaping a string like that `__. - -Encoding binary data --------------------- - -For binary data, hex and base-64 are the most common encodings. Since hex is simpler to implement I'd go with it unless -I really need the 30% bandwidth improvement base-64 brings. - -Binary serial protocols -======================= - -In contrast to anything human-readable, binary protocols are generally more bandwidth-efficient and are easier to format -and parse. However, binary protocols come with their own version of the caveats we discussed for text-based protocols. - -The framing problem in binary protocols ---------------------------------------- - -The most basic problems with binary protocols as with text-based ones is framing, i.e. splitting up the continuous -serial data stream into discrete packets. The issue is that it is that you have to somehow mark boundaries between -frames. The simplest way would be to use some special character to delimit frames, but then any 8-bit character you -could choose could also occur within a frame. - -SLIP/PPP-like special character framing -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Some protocols solve this problem much like we have solved it above for strings in line-based protocols, by escaping any -occurence of the special delimiter character within frames. That is, if you want to use ``0x00`` as a delimiter, you would -encode a packet containing ``0xde 0xad 0x00 0xbe 0xef`` as something like ``0xde 0xad 0x01 0x02 0xbe 0xef``, replacing the -null byte with a magic sequence. This framing works, but is has one critical disadvantage: The length of the resulting -escaped data is dependent on the raw data, and in the worst case twice as long. In a raw packet consisting entirely of -null bytes, every byte must be escaped with two escape bytes. This means that in this case the packet length doubles, -and in this particular case we're even less efficient than base-64. - -Highly variable packet length is also bad since it makes it very hard to make any timing guarantees for our protocol. - -9-bit framing -~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -A framing mode sometimes used is to configure the UARTs to transmit 9-bit characters and to use the 9th bit to designate -control characters. This works really well, and gives plenty of control characters to work with. The main problem with -this is that a 9-bit serial interface is highly nonstandard and you need UARTs on both ends that actually support this -mode. Another issue is that though more efficient than both delmitier-based and purely text-based protocols, it still -incurs an extra about 10% of bandwidth overhead. This is not a lot if all you're sending is a little command every now -and then, but if you're trying to push large amounts of data through your serial it's still bad. - -COBS -~~~~ - -Given the limitations of the two above-mentioned framing formats, we really want something better. The `Serial Line -Internet Protocol (SLIP)`_ as well as the `Point to Point Protocol (PPP)`_, standardized in 1988 and 1994 respectively, -both use escape sequences. This might come as a surprise, but humanity has actually still made significant technological -progress on protocols for 8-bit serial interfaces until the turn of the millennium. In 1999, `Consistent Overhead Byte -Stuffing (COBS)`_ (`wiki `__) was published by a few -researchers from Apple Computer and Stanford University. As a reaction on the bandwidth doubling problem present in -PPP_, COBS *always* has an overhead of a single byte, no matter what or how long a packet's content is. - -COBS uses the null byte as a delimiter interleaves all the raw packet data and a `run-length encoding`_ of the non-zero -portions of the raw packet. That is, it prepends the number of bytes until the first zero byte to the packet, plus one. -Then it takes all the leading non-zero bytes of the packet, unmodified. Then, it again encodes the distance from the -first zero to the second zero, plus one. And then it takes the second non-zero run of bytes unmodified. And so on. At -the end, the packet is terminated with a zero byte. - -The result of this scheme is that the encoded packet does not contain any zero bytes, as every zero byte has been -replaced with the number of bytes until the next zero byte, plus one, and that can't be zero. Both formatter and parser -each have to keep a counter running to keep track of the distances between zero bytes. The first byte of the packet -initializes that counter and is dropped by the parser. After that, every encoded byte received results in one raw byte -parsed. - -While this might sound more complicated than the escaping explained above, the gains in predictability and efficiency -are worth it. An implementation of encoder and decoder should each be about ten lines of C or two lines of Python. A -minor asymmetry of the protocol is that while decoding can be done in-place, encoding either needs two passes or you -need to scan forward for the next null byte. - -.. _`Point to Point Protocol (PPP)`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point-to-Point_Protocol -.. _PPP: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point-to-Point_Protocol -.. _`Serial Line Internet Protocol (SLIP)`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_Line_Internet_Protocol -.. _`Consistent Overhead Byte Stuffing (COBS)`: http://www.stuartcheshire.org/papers/COBSforToN.pdf -.. _`Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point-to-Point_Protocol -.. _`run-length encoding`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Run-length_encoding - -State machines and error recovery ---------------------------------- - -In binary protocols even more than in textual ones it is tempting to build complex state machines triggering actions on -a sequence of protocol packets. Please resist that temptation. As with textual protocols keeping the protocol state to -the minimum possible allows for a self-synchronizing protocol. A serial protocol should be designed such that if due to -a dropped packet or two both ends will naturally re-synchronize within another packet or two. A simple way of doing that -is to always transmit one semantic command per packet and to design these commands in the most idempotent_ way possible. -For example, when filling a framebuffer piece by piece, include the offset in each piece instead of keeping track of it -on the receiving side. - -.. _idempotent: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence#Computer_science_meaning - -Conclusion -========== - -Here's your five-step guide to serial bliss: - -1. Unless you have super-special requirements, always use the slowest you can get away with from 9600Bd, 115200Bd or - 1MBd. 8N1 framing if you're talking to anything but another microcontroller on the same board. These settings are - the most common and cover any use case. You'll inevitably have to guess these at some point in the future. -2. If you're doing something simple and speed is not a particular concern, use a human-readable text-based protocol. Use - one command/reply per line, begin each line with some sort of command word and format numbers in hexadecimal. You get - bonus points if the device replies to unknown commands with a human-readable status message and prints a brief - protocol overview on boot. -3. If you're doing something even slightly nontrivial or need moderate throughput (>1k commands per second or >20 byte of - data per command) use a COBS-based protocol. If you don't have a better idea, go for an ``[target MAC][command - ID][command arguments]`` packet format for multidrop busses. For single-drop you may decide to drop the MAC address. -4. Always include some sort of "status" command that prints life stats such as VCC, temperature, serial framing errors - and uptime. You'll need some sort of ping command anyway and that one might as well do something useful. -5. If at all possible, keep your protocol context-free across packets/lines. That is, a certain command should always be - self-contained, and no command should change the meaning of the next packet or line that is sent. This is really - important to allow for self-synchronization. If you really need to break up something into multiple commands, say you - want to set a large framebuffer in pieces, do it in a idempotent_ way: Instead of sending something like ``FRAMEBUFFER - INCOMING:\n[byte 0-16]\n[byte 17-32]\n[...]\nEND OF FRAME`` rather send ``FRAMEBUFFER DATA FOR OFFSET 0: [byte - 0-16]\nFRAMEBUFFER DATA FOR OFFSET 17: [byte 17-32]\n[...]\nSWAP BUFFERS\n``. - diff --git a/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/images/succulents.jpg b/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/images/succulents.jpg deleted file mode 100755 index 938bffd..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/images/succulents.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/index-old.rst b/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/index-old.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 6f1bee3..0000000 --- a/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/index-old.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,244 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Theia Attack Resistance and Digital Identity" -date: 2020-09-09T15:00:00+02:00 ---- - -.. raw:: html - -
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Photo by Tim Bennett on Unsplash
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- - -Theia in Cyberspace -=================== - -In informatics, the term *distributed system* is used to describe the aggregate behavior of a complex network made up of -individual computers. For decades, computer scientists to some success have been trying to figure out how exactly the -individual computers that make up such a distributed system need to be programmed for the resulting amalgamation to -behave in a predictable, maybe even a desirable way. Though seemingly simple on its surface, this problem has a -surprising depth to it that has yielded research questions for a whole field for several decades now. One particular -as-of-yet unsolved problem is resistance against *theia attacks* (or "sybil" attacks in older terminology). - - Named after the 1973 book by Flora Rheta Schreiber on dissociative identity disorder, a sybil attack is an - attack where one computer in a distributed system pretends to be multiple computers to gain an advantage. From your - author's standpoint, naming a type of computer security attack after a medical condition was an unfortunate choice. - For this reason this post uses the term *Theia attack* to refer to the same concept. Theia is a greek godess of light - and glitter and the name alludes to the attacker performing something alike an optical illusion, causing the attacked - to perceive multiple distinct images that in the end are all only reflections of the same attacker. - -The core insight of computer science research on theia attacks is that there cannot be any technological way of -preventing such an attack, and any practical countermeasure must be grounded in some authority or ground truth that is -external to the systems—bridging from technology to its social or political context. - -Looking around, we can see a parallel between this question ("which computer is a real computer?") and a social issue -that recently has been growing in importance: Just like computers can pretend to be other computers, they can also -pretend to be humans. As can humans. Be it within the context of election manipulation or down-to-earth astroturfing_ -the recurring issue is that in today's online communities, it is hard for an individual to tell who of their online -acquaintances are who they seem to be. Different platforms attempt different solutions to this problem, and all fail in -some way or another. Facebook employs good old snitching, turning people against each other and asking them "Do you know -this person?". Twitter is more laid-back and avoids this Stasi_ methodology in favor of requiring a working mobile phone -number from its subjects, essentially short-circuiting identity verification to the phone company's check of their -subscriber's national passport. - -.. the preceding is a simplified representation of these platform's practices. In particular facebook uses several - methods depending on the case. I think this abbreviated discussion should be ok for the sake of the argument. I am - not 100% certain on the accuracy on the accuracy of the statement though. Does fb still do the snitching thing? Is - twitter usually content with a phone number? - -Trusting Crypto-Anarchist Authorities -===================================== - -Beyond these centralistic solutions to the problem, crypto-anarchists and anarcho-capitalists have been brewing on some -interesting novel approaches to online identity based on *blockchain* distributed ledger technology. Distributed -ledgers are a distributed systems design pattern that yields a system that works like an append-only logbook. -Participants can create new entries in this logbook, but no one—neither the original author, nor other participants—can -retroactively change a logbook entry once it has been written. In the blockchain model, past entries are essentially -written into stone. This near-perfect immutability is what opens them for a number of use cases from cryptographic -pseudo-currencies [#cryptocurrency]_. - -An overview over a variety of these unconventional blockchain identity verification approaches can be found in `this -unpublished 2020 survey by Siddarth, Ivliev, Siri and Berman `_. -They walk their readers through a number of different projects that try to solve the question "Is this human who they -pretend to be?" using joint socio-technological approaches. In the following few sections, you may find a short outline -of a small selection of them. The conlusion of this post will be a commentary on these approaches, and on the underlying -problem of identity in a digital world. - -.. BrightID - -In one scheme, identity is determined by "notary" computers that aggregate large amounts of information on a user's -social contacts. These computers then run an algorithm derived from the SybilGuard_, SybilLimit_ and SybilInfer_ lineage -of random-walk based algorithms. These algorithms assume that authentic social graphs are small world graphs: Everyone -knows everyone else through a friend's friend's friend. They also assume that there is an upper bound on how many -connections with authentic users an attacker can forge: Anyone who is not embedded into the graph well enough is cut -out. Like this, they put an upper limit on the number of theia identites an attacker can assume given a certian number -of connections to real people. - -Disregarding the catastrophic privacy issues of storing large amounts of data on social relationships on someone else's -computer, this second assumption is where this model unfortunately breaks down. Applying common sense, it is completely -realistic for an attacker to forge a large number of social connections: This is precisely what most of social media -marketing is about! A more malicious angle on this would be to consider how in meatspace [#meatspacefn]_ multi-level -marketing schemes are successful in coaxing people to abuse their social graphs to disastrous consequences to the -well-being of themselves and others. Similar schemes would certainly be possible in cyberspace as well. An additional -point to consider is that the upper limit SybilGuard_ and others place on the number of fake identities one can have is -simply not that strict at all. An attacker could still get away with a reasonable number of false identities before -getting caught by any such algorithm. - -.. Duniter - -In another scheme, identity is awarded to anyone who can convince several people already in the network to vouch for -them, and who is at most a few degrees removed from one of several pre-determined celebrities. Apart from again being -vulnerable to conmen and other scammers, this system has the glaring flaw of roundly refusing to recognize any person -who is not willing or able to engage with multiple of its members. Along with the system's informal requirement for -members to only vouch for people they have physically met this leads to a nonstarter in a cyberspace that grown -specifically *because* it transcends national borders and physical distance—two most serious obstacles to in-person -communication. - -.. Idena Network - -The last scheme I will outline in this post is based around a set of `Turing tests`_; that is, quizzes that are designed -to tell apart man and machine. In this system, all participants have to simultaneously undergo a Turing test once in a -fortnight. The idea is that this limits the number of theia identities an attacker can assume since they can only solve -that many Turing tests at the same time. The system uses a particular type of picture classification-based Turing test -and does not seem to be designed with the blind or mentally disabled in mind with accessibility concerns nowhere to be -found in the so-called "manifesto" published by its creators. But even ignoring that, the system obviously fails at an -even more basic level: The idea that everyone takes a Turing test at the same time only works in a world without time -zones. Or jobs for that matter. Also, it assumes that an attacker cannot simply hire a small army of people someplace -else to fool the system. - -.. _SybilLimit: https://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/~yuhf/yuh-sybillimit.pdf -.. _SybilGuard: http://www.math.cmu.edu/~adf/research/SybilGuard.pdf -.. _SybilInfer: https://www.princeton.edu/~pmittal/publications/sybilinfer-ndss09.pdf -.. _`Turing Tests`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_test - -Identity between Cyberspace and Meatspace -========================================= - -A common thread in these solutions, from the Facebook'esque Stasi_ methods to the crypto-anarchist challenge-response -utopias, is that they all approach digital identity as a question of Objective Truth™ that can unanimously be decided at -a system level—or that can be externalized to the next larger system such as the state. Alas, the important question -remains unasked: - - What *is* identity? - -The answer to this question certainly depends on the system being examined. For example, an important reason the -capitalist corporations mentioned above require knowledge about their users' identity is to generate plausible -statistics for the advertisers that form their customer base, similar to how a farmer will keep statics on yield and -quality for the buyers of his crop. With this background, a full decoupling of platform accounts from a notion of legal -identity seems at odds with the platform's business model—and we will have to adjust our expectations for reform -accordingly. - -A common thread among all systems mentioned above is that they all have a social component to them. For this common use -case of social systems, I want to make a suggestion on how we can approach digital identity in a more practical, less -discriminatory [#discriminatory]_ manner than any of the methods we discussed above. I think both using people's social -connections and proxying the decisions of external authorities such as the state are bad systems to decide who is a -person and who is not. I will now illustrate this point a bit. Let us think about how many digital identities a human -beign might have. First, consider the case of n=0, someone who simply wants no business with the system at all. For -simplicity, let us assume that we have solved this issue of consent, i.e. every person who is identified by the system -consents to this practice. For n=1, the approaches outlined above all provide some approximate solution. States may not -grant every human sufficient ID (e.g. children, the mentally disabled or prisoners might be left out), and the social -systems might fail to catch people who simply do not have any friends, but otherwise their approximations hold. Maybe. -But what about n=2, n=3, ...? None of these systems adequately consider cases where a human being might legitimately -wish to hold multiple digital identities, non-maliciously. - -Consider a hypothetical lesbian, conservative politician. An active social media presence is a core component of a -modern politician's carreer. At the same time, "conservative homophobe" is still well within the realm of tautology and -it would be legitimate for this politician to wish to not disclose a large fraction of their private life to the world -at large. They might have a separate online identity for matters related to it. For this politician, the social -relationship-based systems referenced above would either incorporate outing as a design feature, or they would force -the politician to choose either of their two identities: To choose between private life and carreer. When deferring to -the state as the decider over personhood, at least the platform's operator would know about the outrageously sensitive -link between the politician's online identities. Clearly, no such solution can be considered socially just. - -Let us try not to be caught up on saving the world at this point. The issue of conservative homophobia is out of the -scope of our consideration, and it is not one that anyone can solve in the near future. Magical realism aside, least of -all can some technological thing beckon this change. There is a case for legitimate uses of multiple, separate digital -identities, and we do not have a technical or political answer to it. All hope is not lost yet, though. We can easily -undo this gordian knot by acknowledging an unspoken assumption that underlies any social relationships between real -people, past the procrustean bed of computer systems or organizational structures these relationships are cast into. - - As a function of social interaction, digital identities conform to roles_ in sociological terminology, and are not - at all the same as personhood_. Roles are subjective and arise from a relationship between people, and a single - person might legitimately perform different roles depending on context. - -When computer scientists or programmers are creating new systems, there always is an (often implicit) modelling stage. -Formally, during this stage a domain expert and a modeller with a computer science background come together, each -contributing their knowledge to form a model that is both appropriate for real-world use and practical from an -engineering point of view. In practice, these two roles are often necessarily fulfilled by the same person, who is often -also the programmer of the thing. This leads to many computer systems using poor models. A typical example of this issue -are systems requiring a person's name that use three input fields labelled "First Name", "Middle Initial" and "Last -Name". These systems are often created by US-American programmers, who are used to this naming schema from their lived -experience. Unfortunately, this schema breaks down for those few billion people who use their last name first, who have -more than one middle name, or who have multiple given names and do not normally use the first one of those. - -Once a system creator's implicit assumptions have been encoded into the system like this, it is often very hard to get -out of that situation. A pattern to use during careful modelling is to keep the model flexible to account for unforeseen -corner cases. For example, when modelling a system requiring a person's name, one would have to ask what the name is -used for. It may be the most sensible decision to simply ask the user for their name twice: Once in first name/last name -format for e.g. tax purposes, and once with a free-form text field for e.g. displaying on their account page. - -While for names, many systems already use some form of flexible model by e.g. having a *handle* or *nickname* separate -from the *display name*, "social" systems still often are stuck with an identity model based around a concept of a -single, rigid identity. In practice, people perform different roles_ in different circumstances. When asking for a -person's identity, one would get wildly different answers from different people. A person's identity as perceived by -others is coupled to their relationship more than to some underlying, biological or administrative truth. Thinking back -to the straw man politician above, this is evident in subtle ways in almost all our everyday relationships: Some people -may know me by my legal name, some by my online nickname. To some I may be a computer scientist, to some a flatmate. -None of my friends and acquaintances have ever wanted to see my passport, or asked to take my DNA to ascertain that I am -a distinct human being from the other humans they know. Likewise, identifying me by my social connections is impractical -as it would require an exceedingly weird amount of what can only be described as snooping. Yet, this concept of a -single, consistent, global, true identity is exactly what up to now all technological solutions to the identity problem -are trying to achieve. - -Building Bridges -================ - -I think I can offer you one main take-aways from the discussion above. - - During modelling social systems, focus on relationships—not identity. - -Rephrased into more actionable points, as someone designing a social digital system, do the following: - -0. Early in the design stages, take the time to consider fundamental modelling issues like this one. If you don't, you - will likely get stuck with a sub-optimal model that will be hard to get rid of. -1. Where possible, be flexible. Allow people to chose their own identifier. Don't require them to use their real names, - they may not wish to disclose those or they may not be in a format that is useful to you (they may be too long, too - short, too ubiquituous, in foreign characters etc.). A free-form text field with a reasonable length limit is a good - approach here. -2. Do not use credit cards or phone numbers to identify people. There are many people who do not have either, and - scammers can simply buy this data in bulk on the darknet. -3. Allow people to create multiple identites [#accountswitchopsec]_, and acknowledge the role of social relationships in - your interaction features. People have very legitimate reasons to separate areas of their lifes, and it is not for - you or your computer to decide who is who to whom. If your thing requires a global search function, re-consider the - data protection aspects of your system. If you want to encourage social functions in the face of bots and trolls, - make it easy for people to share their identities out-of-band, such as through a QR code or a copy-and-pasteable - short link. If you require someone's legal name or address for billing purposes, unify these identities behind the - scenes if at all and allow them to act as if fully independent in public. - -While change of perspective comes with its share of user experience challenges, but also with a promise for a more -human, more dignified online experience. Perhaps we can find a way to adapt cyberspace to humans, instead of continuing -trying it the other way around. - -.. _astroturfing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astroturfing -.. _Stasi: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi - -.. [#cryptocurrency] Pseudo-currencies in that, while they provide some aspects of a regular currency such as ownership - and transactions, they lack most others. Traditional currencies are backed by states, regulated by central banks - tasked with maintaining their stability and ultimately provide accountability through law enforcement, courts - and political elections. - -.. [#discriminatory] Discriminatory as in discriminating against minorities, but also as in deciding what is and what is - not. - -.. [#accountswitchopsec] This does mean that you should not actively prevent people from creating multiple accounts. It - does not necessarily entail building a proper user interface around this practice. If you do the latter, e.g. by - offering a "switch identity" button or an identiy drop-down menu on a post submission form, you can easily - encourage slip-ups that might disclose the connection between two identities, and you make it possible for - someone hacking a single login to learn about this connection as well. - -.. [#meatspacefn] Meatspace_ is where people physically are, as opposed to cyberspace - -.. _Meatspace: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/meatspace -.. _roles: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Role -.. _personhood: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personhood diff --git a/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/index.rst b/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/index.rst deleted file mode 100644 index f90b5ac..0000000 --- a/content/posts/sybil-resistance-identity/index.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,89 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Identity between Cyberspace and Meatspace" -date: 2020-09-09T15:00:00+02:00 -draft: true ---- - -.. raw:: html - -
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Photo by Tim Bennett on Unsplash
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- -Identity in Cyberspace -====================== - -.. Identity is a frequent problem -.. Easy solutions abound -.. Precise modelling is uncommon -.. True identity is sensitive, hard to handle -.. -.. Often, conversational features emphasized -> true identity is unnecessary -.. Social role theory -.. Call to action - -Most computer systems that interface with humans have a concept of user identity. The data structures used for its -storage vary, but usually one *account* corresponds to one human *user*. In many applications, the system operator tries -to ensure that one user cannot create multiple accounts. In online social networks, astrotufing_ and trolling are easier -to fight when limits are imposed on account creation. In online stores, fraud prevention means the store operator needs -their customers legal identity and the operator must be able to ban offending customers. In mobile messaging systems, -users have to be able to find each other by some identifier such as name or phone number, and this identifier has to be -unique and hard to forge. - -Today, in systems that allow anyone to create an account have largely converged to require either an email address or a -mobile phone number. Email addresses are used by systems that are less vulnerable to abuse and that are used on laptop -or desktop computers. Mobile phone numbers are abundantly used in smartphone apps, as well as in systems more prone to -abuse such as online social networks or ecommerce. Both are easily verified using a confirmation email or SMS. - -When designing or programming an online system, it is uncommon that the precise real-world semantics of accounts are -modelled. Most computer systems use ad-hoc data models. During their creation, their programmers implicit assumptions -about the world are encoded into these data models. Most of the time this works fine, but it does lead to significant -blind spots that can make systems break down for a fraction of their users. - -Lives in Meatspace -================== - -A consequence of the proliferation of phone numbers being used to identify people is that most people will not be able -to create multiple accounts. *"That's the point!"* you might say, but while we want to prevent scammers, spammers and -boored schoolchildren from messing with our systems, everybody else may have legitimate reasons to have more than one -account. - -We can apply sociology's model of roles_ to understand this issue. In sociology, a role is the comprehensive pattern of -rules and expectations that govern an individual's behavior corresponding to their social position. A key fact is that -most people occupy mutliple roles. A parent may also be a company employee or a wife and perform accordingly given the -circumstances. Systems that tie digital identity to legal personhood through the contracts behind phone numbers impede -their users' attempts at role separation. Effects of this are e.g. that nowadays employers routinely screen applicants' -social media accounts for unacceptable content. - -While this role conflict merely amounts to a minor inconvenience to most there are many to who it poses an existential -problem. Consider an LGBT+ person living in a repressive country or a politically conservative person living in a -very liberal city. Both have legitimate reasons to strictly separate parts of their private lives from others. For both, -much is at stake. Yet, both will have to practically circumvent most online systems registration barriers to implement -this separation. - -Trusting the User -================= - -While there is no single solution to these issues, there are several possible mitigations. The first and most important -one is to systematically think about the system's data model when creating it. Which assumptions about the real world -are inherent in it? Are these assumptions likely to cause issues? Ad-hoc models are easily created, but hard to get rid -of when they start causing problems. - -A general guideline on identity should be that hindering trolls by requiring things like phone numbers or credit card -numbers is very likely to also be an obstacle to many entirely legitimate uses. Captchas_ or invitation links can help -to keep out the trolls. Another approach is to limit the damage a troll can cause with things like effective moderation -systems, reputation systems or by limiting the reach of newly created accounts. - -Outside of e-commerce, actually tying a digital account to a real-world identity is very rarely necessary. The value of -a messenger app is not in the names in its contacts list, but the conversations behind these names. When two people meet -each other on the street, their interaction is shaped by a myriad of social factors—but *not* by them showing each other -their photo ID. - -Humans with their messy identities do not fit today's cyberspace well. Let's adapt cyberspace to humans, instead of -trying it the other way around. - -.. _astroturfing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astroturfing -.. _roles: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Role -.. _Captchas: https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/3-540-39200-9_18.pdf - diff --git a/content/posts/thors-hammer/images/thors_hammer_breadboard.jpg b/content/posts/thors-hammer/images/thors_hammer_breadboard.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index 4504d83..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/thors-hammer/images/thors_hammer_breadboard.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/thors-hammer/images/thors_hammer_schematic.jpg b/content/posts/thors-hammer/images/thors_hammer_schematic.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index 3061f61..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/thors-hammer/images/thors_hammer_schematic.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/thors-hammer/index.rst b/content/posts/thors-hammer/index.rst deleted file mode 100644 index ba851a5..0000000 --- a/content/posts/thors-hammer/index.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,60 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Thor's Hammer" -date: 2018-05-03T11:59:37+02:00 ---- - -In case you were having an inferiority complex because your friends' IBM Model M keyboards are so much louder than the -shitty rubber dome freebie you got with your pc... Here's the solution: Thor's Hammer, a simple typing cadence enhancer -for `PS/2`_ keyboards. - -.. raw:: html - -
- -
A demonstration of the completed project. - - h264 download / - webm download -
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- -The connects to the keyboard's PS/2 clock line and briefly actuates a large solenoid on each key press. An interesting -fact about PS/2 is that the clock line is only active as long as either the host computer or the input device actually -want to send data. In case of a keyboard that's the case when a key is pressed or when the host changes the keyboard's -LED state, otherwise the clock line is silent. We ignore the LED activity for now as it's generally coupled to key -presses. By just triggering an NE555 configured as astable flipflop we can stretch each train of clock pulses to a -pulse a few tens of milliseconds long that is enough to actuate the solenoid. - -.. raw:: html - -
- The schematic of the PS2 driver -
The schematic of the driver stretching the PS/2 clock pulses to drive the solenoid.
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- - -Since PS/2 sends each key press and key release separately this circuit will pulse twice per keystroke. It would be -possible to ignore one of them but I figure the added noise just adds to the experience. - -Built on a breadboard, the circuit looks like this. - -.. raw:: html - -
- The circuit built on a breadboard -
The completed circuit built up on a breadboard and attached to a keyboard.
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- - -Since my solenoid did not have a tensioning spring I used a rubber band and some vinyl tape to make an adjustable -tensioner. The small orange USB hub serves as an end-stop because I had nothing else of the right shape. The sound and -resonance of the thing can be adjusted to taste by moving the end stop, adjusting the tensioning rubber and tuning the -excitation duration using the potentiometer. My particular solenoid was a bit slow so I added some pieces of circuit -board as shims between the plunger and the case to limit the plunger's travel inside the solenoid core. - -.. _`PS/2`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PS/2_port - diff --git a/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.mkv b/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.mkv deleted file mode 100644 index c9581e9..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.mkv and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.mov b/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.mov deleted file mode 100644 index fff65a8..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.mov and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.webm b/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.webm deleted file mode 100644 index 2bcf1ca..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/thors-hammer/video/thors_hammer.webm and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/layout.png b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/layout.png deleted file mode 100644 index 11fc50e..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/layout.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_board_in_case.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_board_in_case.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index 843900a..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_board_in_case.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_board_in_case.small.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_board_in_case.small.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index 5c0aa81..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_board_in_case.small.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_boards.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_boards.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index 79f8154..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_boards.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_boards.small.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_boards.small.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index 6f5c28c..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_boards.small.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_complete.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_complete.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index c784149..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_complete.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_complete.small.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_complete.small.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index db9b083..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_complete.small.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_raw.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_raw.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index 4b61a52..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_raw.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_raw.small.jpg b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_raw.small.jpg deleted file mode 100644 index a8d416e..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/lyza_case_raw.small.jpg and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/schematic.png b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/schematic.png deleted file mode 100644 index 8294f12..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/images/schematic.png and /dev/null differ diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/index.rst b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/index.rst deleted file mode 100644 index 0cc27c9..0000000 --- a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/index.rst +++ /dev/null @@ -1,162 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Wifi Led Driver" -date: 2018-05-02T11:31:03+02:00 ---- - -Project motivation -================== - -.. FIXME finished project picture with LED tape -.. raw:: html - -
- -
The completed driver board installed in the 3D-printed case. This device can now be connected to - 12V and two segments of LED tape that can then be controlled trough Wifi. The ESP8266 module goes on the pin - header on the left and was removed for this picture. -
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- -After the `multichannel LED driver`_ was completed, I was just getting used to controlling LEDs at 14-bit resolution. -I liked the board we designed in this project, but at 32 channels it was a bit large for most use cases. Sometimes I -just want to pop a piece of LED tape or two somewhere, but I don't need a full 32 channels of control. I ended up -thinking that a smaller version of the 32-channel driver that didn't require a separate control computer would be -handy. So I sat down and designed a variant of the design with only 8 channels instead of 32 and an on-board ESP8266_ -module instead of the RS485_ transceiver for WiFi connectivity. - -The Electronics -=============== - -The schematic was mostly copy-pasted from the 32-channel design. The PCB was designed from scratch. This time, I went -for a 5x7cm form factor to allow for enough room for all connectors and to give the ESP8266_'s WiFi antenna enough -space. The board has two 5-pin Phoenix-style_ for two RGB-White (RGBW) tapes and one 2-pin Phoenix-style_ connector for -12V power input. The control circuitry and the serial protocol are unchanged, but the STM32_ now talks to an ESP-01_ -module running custom firmware. - -The LEDs are driven using a 74HC595_ shift register controlling a bunch of AO3400_ MOSFETs_, with resistors in front of -the MOSFETs_' gates to slow down the transitions a bit to reduce brighntess nonlinearities and EMI_ resulting from -ringing of the LED tape's wiring inductance. - -The board has two spots for either `self-resettable fuses (polyfuses) `__ or regular melting-wire fuses_ in -a small SMD_ package, one for each RGBW output. For low currents the self-resettable fuses should be okay but at higher -currents their `trip times get long enough that they become unlikely to trip in time to save anything -`__, so plain old non-resettable fuses would be the way to go there. - -.. FIXME finished board photos -.. FIXME board with test tape picture - -.. raw:: html - -
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- The schematic of the driver board, with the ESP8266 on the top left, the STM32 microcontroller for LED - modulation below, the shift register in the middle and the LED drivers and outputs on the right. - Download PDF -
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- The board layout with the top side being visible. The top side contains the footprint for the ESP8266, the - microcontroller, fuses, filter cap, connectors and the shift register. The LEDs are connected on the left, - with one connector per LED tape segment. The power input connector is on the bottom right. The LED driver - MOSFETs are in small SOT-23 packages on the back of the board. Since this board is not intended for - super-high currents, the MOSFETs are adequately cooled just through the board's copper planes. - Download PDF -
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- -.. raw:: html - -
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The completed PCBs of this project (front) and the `multichannel LED driver`_ project the driver - circuitry was derived from (back). -
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- - -The Firmware -============ - -The STM32_ firmware only had to be slightly modified to accomodate the reduced channel count since the protocol remains -unchanged. The ESP firmware is based on esphttpd_ by Spritetm_. The modifications to the webserver firmware are pretty -basic. First, the UART console has been disabled since I use the UART to talk to the STM32. The few bootloader messages -popping out the UART on boot are not an issue, since they're unlikely to contain the fixed 32-bit address prefix the -serial protocol requires for the STM32_ to do anything. - -Second, I added LED control by adding drivers for the serial protocol and a bunch of colorspace conversion functions. -When I first tested the prototype software, I noticed that color reproduction was extremely poor. When I just sent a -HSV_ rainbow fade from a python command line, the result looked totally wrong. The fade did not seem to go at a constant -speed and some colors, in particular yellow, orange and greens, were not visible at all. The problem turned out to be a -stark mismatch of the red, green and blue channels of the LED tape and less-than-optimal color reproduction of the pure -colors. I decided to properly measure the LED tape's color reproduction so I could compensate for it in software. This -turned out to be an extremely interesting project, the details of which you can read in my `LED characterization`_ -article. - -Third, I updated the built-in websites with some ad-hoc documentation on how to use the thing and a basic interface for -LED control. - -.. FIXME screenshot of firmware website - -Making an enclosure -=================== - -To be actually useful, the driver needed a robust enclosure. Bare PCBs are nice for prototyping, but for actually -putting the thing anywhere it needs a case to protect it against random destruction. - -The board has four mounting holes with comfortable spacing in its corners to allow easy mounting inside a 3D-printed -case. The case itself is described in an OpenSCAD_ script. To make it look a little nicer, a little 3D relief is laid -into the lid. The 3D relief is generated with a bit of blender magic. The source STL_ model is loaded into blender, then -blender's amazingly flexible rendering system is used to export a depth map of a projection of the model as a PNG_ file. -This depth map is then imported as a triangle mesh into OpenSCAD_. - -For the relief to look good, I chose a rather high resolution for the depth map. This unfortunately leads to extreme -memory use and processing time on the part of OpenSCAD_, but since I have access to a sufficiently fast machine that is -not a problem. Just be careful if you try opening the OpenSCAD_ file on your machine, OpenSCAD_ will probably crash -unless you're on a beefy machine or interrupt it when it starts auto-rendering the file. - -The board is mounted into the enclosure using knurled insert nuts that are pressed into a 3D-printed hole using a bit of -violence. - -.. FIXME openscad screenshot -.. FIXME enclosure parts -.. FIXME finished enclosure with board inside - -.. raw:: html - -
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The 3D-printed case with threaded inserts before painting.
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The 3D-printed case with the board installed after painting. This was my first attempt at - painting a 3D-printed case so it looks pretty bad.
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- -.. _`multichannel LED driver`: {{}} -.. _`LED characterization`: {{}} -.. _ESP8266: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESP8266 -.. _RS485: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RS-485 -.. _Phoenix-style: https://www.phoenixcontact.com/online/portal/de?uri=pxc-oc-itemdetail:pid=1757019&library=dede&tab=1 -.. _STM32: http://www.st.com/resource/en/datasheet/stm32f030f4.pdf -.. _ESP-01: http://www.watterott.com/de/ESP8266-WiFi-Serial-Transceiver-Modul -.. _74HC595: http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/sn74hc595.pdf -.. _AO3400: http://aosmd.com/pdfs/datasheet/AO3400.pdf -.. _MOSFETs: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOSFET -.. _EMI: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_interference -.. _polyfuse: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resettable_fuse -.. _SMD: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surface-mount_technology -.. _fuses: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuse_(electrical) -.. _littlefuse-16r-datasheet: http://m.littelfuse.com/~/media/electronics/datasheets/resettable_ptcs/littelfuse_ptc_16r_datasheet.pdf.pdf -.. _OpenSCAD: http://www.openscad.org/ -.. _STL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STL_(file_format) -.. _PNG: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_Network_Graphics -.. _esphttpd: https://github.com/Spritetm/esphttpd -.. _Spritetm: http://spritesmods.com/ -.. _`HSV`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HSL_and_HSV - diff --git a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/resource/lyza_schematic_and_pcb.pdf b/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/resource/lyza_schematic_and_pcb.pdf deleted file mode 100644 index 6532888..0000000 Binary files a/content/posts/wifi-led-driver/resource/lyza_schematic_and_pcb.pdf and /dev/null differ -- cgit