Erik van der Zalm
13 years ago
4 changed files with 1784 additions and 1479 deletions
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/*
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motion_control.c - high level interface for issuing motion commands |
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Part of Grbl |
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Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Simen Svale Skogsrud |
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Copyright (c) 2011 Sungeun K. Jeon |
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Grbl is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify |
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
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the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or |
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(at your option) any later version. |
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|
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Grbl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
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GNU General Public License for more details. |
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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along with Grbl. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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*/ |
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//#include "motion_control.h"
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#include "Configuration.h" |
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#include "Marlin.h" |
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//#include <util/delay.h>
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//#include <math.h>
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//#include <stdlib.h>
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#include "stepper.h" |
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#include "planner.h" |
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// The arc is approximated by generating a huge number of tiny, linear segments. The length of each
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// segment is configured in settings.mm_per_arc_segment.
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void mc_arc(float *position, float *target, float *offset, uint8_t axis_0, uint8_t axis_1, |
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uint8_t axis_linear, float feed_rate, float radius, uint8_t isclockwise) |
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{ |
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// int acceleration_manager_was_enabled = plan_is_acceleration_manager_enabled();
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// plan_set_acceleration_manager_enabled(false); // disable acceleration management for the duration of the arc
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Serial.println("mc_arc"); |
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float center_axis0 = position[axis_0] + offset[axis_0]; |
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float center_axis1 = position[axis_1] + offset[axis_1]; |
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float linear_travel = target[axis_linear] - position[axis_linear]; |
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float r_axis0 = -offset[axis_0]; // Radius vector from center to current location
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float r_axis1 = -offset[axis_1]; |
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float rt_axis0 = target[axis_0] - center_axis0; |
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float rt_axis1 = target[axis_1] - center_axis1; |
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// CCW angle between position and target from circle center. Only one atan2() trig computation required.
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float angular_travel = atan2(r_axis0*rt_axis1-r_axis1*rt_axis0, r_axis0*rt_axis0+r_axis1*rt_axis1); |
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if (angular_travel < 0) { angular_travel += 2*M_PI; } |
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if (isclockwise) { angular_travel -= 2*M_PI; } |
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float millimeters_of_travel = hypot(angular_travel*radius, fabs(linear_travel)); |
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if (millimeters_of_travel == 0.0) { return; } |
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uint16_t segments = floor(millimeters_of_travel/MM_PER_ARC_SEGMENT); |
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/*
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// Multiply inverse feed_rate to compensate for the fact that this movement is approximated
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// by a number of discrete segments. The inverse feed_rate should be correct for the sum of
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// all segments.
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if (invert_feed_rate) { feed_rate *= segments; } |
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*/ |
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float theta_per_segment = angular_travel/segments; |
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float linear_per_segment = linear_travel/segments; |
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/* Vector rotation by transformation matrix: r is the original vector, r_T is the rotated vector,
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and phi is the angle of rotation. Based on the solution approach by Jens Geisler. |
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r_T = [cos(phi) -sin(phi); |
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sin(phi) cos(phi] * r ; |
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For arc generation, the center of the circle is the axis of rotation and the radius vector is |
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defined from the circle center to the initial position. Each line segment is formed by successive |
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vector rotations. This requires only two cos() and sin() computations to form the rotation |
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matrix for the duration of the entire arc. Error may accumulate from numerical round-off, since |
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all double numbers are single precision on the Arduino. (True double precision will not have |
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round off issues for CNC applications.) Single precision error can accumulate to be greater than |
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tool precision in some cases. Therefore, arc path correction is implemented. |
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Small angle approximation may be used to reduce computation overhead further. This approximation |
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holds for everything, but very small circles and large mm_per_arc_segment values. In other words, |
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theta_per_segment would need to be greater than 0.1 rad and N_ARC_CORRECTION would need to be large |
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to cause an appreciable drift error. N_ARC_CORRECTION~=25 is more than small enough to correct for |
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numerical drift error. N_ARC_CORRECTION may be on the order a hundred(s) before error becomes an |
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issue for CNC machines with the single precision Arduino calculations. |
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This approximation also allows mc_arc to immediately insert a line segment into the planner |
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without the initial overhead of computing cos() or sin(). By the time the arc needs to be applied |
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a correction, the planner should have caught up to the lag caused by the initial mc_arc overhead. |
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This is important when there are successive arc motions. |
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*/ |
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// Vector rotation matrix values
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float cos_T = 1-0.5*theta_per_segment*theta_per_segment; // Small angle approximation
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float sin_T = theta_per_segment; |
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float arc_target[3]; |
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float sin_Ti; |
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float cos_Ti; |
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float r_axisi; |
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uint16_t i; |
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int8_t count = 0; |
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// Initialize the linear axis
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arc_target[axis_linear] = position[axis_linear]; |
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for (i = 1; i<segments; i++) { // Increment (segments-1)
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if (count < N_ARC_CORRECTION) { |
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// Apply vector rotation matrix
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r_axisi = r_axis0*sin_T + r_axis1*cos_T; |
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r_axis0 = r_axis0*cos_T - r_axis1*sin_T; |
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r_axis1 = r_axisi; |
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count++; |
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} else { |
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// Arc correction to radius vector. Computed only every N_ARC_CORRECTION increments.
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// Compute exact location by applying transformation matrix from initial radius vector(=-offset).
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cos_Ti = cos(i*theta_per_segment); |
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sin_Ti = sin(i*theta_per_segment); |
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r_axis0 = -offset[axis_0]*cos_Ti + offset[axis_1]*sin_Ti; |
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r_axis1 = -offset[axis_0]*sin_Ti - offset[axis_1]*cos_Ti; |
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count = 0; |
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} |
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// Update arc_target location
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arc_target[axis_0] = center_axis0 + r_axis0; |
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arc_target[axis_1] = center_axis1 + r_axis1; |
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arc_target[axis_linear] += linear_per_segment; |
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plan_buffer_line(arc_target[X_AXIS], arc_target[Y_AXIS], arc_target[Z_AXIS], target[E_AXIS], feed_rate); |
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} |
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// Ensure last segment arrives at target location.
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plan_buffer_line(target[X_AXIS], target[Y_AXIS], target[Z_AXIS], target[E_AXIS], feed_rate); |
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// plan_set_acceleration_manager_enabled(acceleration_manager_was_enabled);
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} |
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@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ |
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/*
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motion_control.h - high level interface for issuing motion commands |
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Part of Grbl |
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|
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Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Simen Svale Skogsrud |
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Copyright (c) 2011 Sungeun K. Jeon |
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|
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Grbl is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify |
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
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the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or |
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(at your option) any later version. |
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|
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Grbl is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
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GNU General Public License for more details. |
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|
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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along with Grbl. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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*/ |
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#ifndef motion_control_h |
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#define motion_control_h |
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// Execute an arc in offset mode format. position == current xyz, target == target xyz,
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// offset == offset from current xyz, axis_XXX defines circle plane in tool space, axis_linear is
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// the direction of helical travel, radius == circle radius, isclockwise boolean. Used
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// for vector transformation direction.
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void mc_arc(float *position, float *target, float *offset, unsigned char axis_0, unsigned char axis_1, |
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unsigned char axis_linear, float feed_rate, float radius, unsigned char isclockwise); |
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#endif |
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