Camera Troubleshooting
Contents
Points of failure
In order for proper operation of the DFN observatory a few things need to happen:
- The observatory box must be powered - LED indicator are lit (at least on the micro controller PCB)
- The embedded PC must boot successfully - how to troubleshoot
- PC has to tell micro controller to power on
- DSLR has to power on
- PC has to tell microcontroller to start taking images
- Microcontroller has to trigger camera through optocoupler and shutter cable
- DSLR has to be configured properly to take photos via gPhoto2 over USB
- DSLR has to take photos - how to fix
- LC shutter has to flicker - investigate LC shutter malfunction
Initial Steps
The first task is to figure out what's not working, starting with the most likely and easiest to check steps. If that doesn't work then we can move on to the trickier steps later.
Are the drives full? Try df -h
to see how full they are. This will list a percentage full for all partitions (but not the external drives if they aren't powered on and mounted).
Check the camera state on remote site, reboot
DFNSMALL system
DFNEXT system
How to troubleshoot PC booting
- Power on the observatory box and try to locally connect with ethernet cable or WiFi (if the box is is equipped with it, eg DFNEXT type)
- for wired connection, make sure you using the correct ethernet port for laptop connection. (Better try both if unsure.)
- make sure the WiFi antenna is attached if you want to use WiFi - the white little stick on the bottom of the DFNEXT box.
- remember it may take a few minutes to boot the camera OS since powering it on
- for wifi, the observatory is by default configured as an access point (2.4GHz 802.11g), with SSID same as the observatory host name, eg DFNEXT014 - try scanning for this SSID.
- you can try ping the corresponding IP address first before ssh connection - for wired
-
ping 172.16.1.101
- or for wifi
-
ping 172.16.0.101
- If the previous step fails:
- It is possible that the filesystem got corrupted and the booting process is stuck at filesystem check & repair. That can happen if the observatory system was earlier powered off (unplugged) without shutting down the OS properly. In that case user keyboard interaction is required, so you will need to:
- connect USB keyboard
- connect monitor (HDMI works with all cameras, some DFNSMALLs support also VGA)
please note that the monitor in most cases must be plugged in before powering on the camera. If the camera is already powered, connect the keyboard and monitor, hit Ctrl+Alt+Delete at least seven times and wait for the box to reboot. Only if that is not working, power off and power on the box to enforce reboot - follow the instructions you will see on the screen
root password will be required, then it is mostly hitting 'y' key
DSLR is not taking photos
power on the DSLR (or stop interval control service if running)
run command "lsusb", should list device like
Bus 002 Device 004: ID 04b0:0436 Nikon Corp.
if not, visit te site and check the wiring - USB data cable and power cable to the DSLR
Test if DSLR can capture images
if listed, run command "gphoto2 --capture-image-and-download"
Samyang lens apperture ring not set correctly
if you get response
*** Error *** Camera Mode Not Adjust FNumber ERROR: Could not capture image. ERROR: Could not capture.
that means the Aperture ring of the Samyang lens is in wrong position.
Set it to F/22 (which printed in red)
- Photos have to be downloaded to the PC via gPhoto2 over USB
- Photos have to be stored in /data0 and renamed properly by the DFN's capture control software
- Photos have to be copied over to /data1, /data2 or /data3 by the data move script
DSLR memory card is full, download the images manually
This situation may occur for example when the regular interval capture during night is interrupted (power loss, operator SW stop) or when all the disks are full and no room is left to download images from the DSLR internal storage.
The software will eventually cope with that (whatever images found on the memory card DSLR are automatically downloaded at the beginning of regular run in the evening. However, there may be situations when one wants to put the files into specific directory - this section describes how to do it manually or semi manually.
Check if DSLR memory card has any data on it by
gphoto2 -L -R
Long list of files means it may be full.
A very useful diagnostic command is
gphoto2 --summary
which (togethher with heaps of other info) prints the usage and free space on the memory card:
Storage Devices Summary: store_00020001: StorageDescription: None VolumeLabel: [Slot 2] Storage Type: Removable RAM (memory card) Filesystemtype: Digital Camera Layout (DCIM) Access Capability: Read Only with Object deletion Maximum Capability: 64014417920 (61048 MB) Free Space (Bytes): 60096512 (57 MB) Free Space (Images): 0
This makes it clear the card is full.
To manually download the images and free up the card, there are two options:
1) Direct gphoto2 commands: 'gphoto2 -P -R' to download, followed by delete 'ghoto2 -D -R' - then you can drop the images to the corresponding (yesterday's or whatever) directory where they belong.
2) May be better and easier is to run interval control test /opt/dfn-software/interval_control_test.sh, that does everything like regular interval control run at night, but it forces ~ 5 minutes test run regardless the time of the day. Interval control test creates a new directory wgere it dumps all the images on card in the beginning plus the few taken during the short run.
DSLR memory card file sytem is corrupted or card damaged
Cannot delete images from card
The memory card problem can demonstrate by failing delete of all images from the card after download. The Interval capture control SW uses the following gphoto2 command internally and it is possible to run it manually to troubleshoot the problem - which otherwise may demonstrate as missing images from later part of the night.
more than to directories with images listed
gphoto2 --delete-all-files -R
or equivalent shorted
gphoto2 -D -R
in case of memory card FS problem we get
*** Error *** PTP Device Busy *** Error (-110: 'I/O in progress') ***
and the deleting fails.
Also two or more directories with images listed by
gphoto2 -L -R
There is no file in folder '/'. There is no file in folder '/store_00020001'. There is no file in folder '/store_00020001/DCIM'. There are 999 files in folder '/store_00020001/DCIM/139ND810'. #1 DSC_0042.NEF rd 45431 KB application/x-unknown #2 DSC_0043.NEF rd 45458 KB application/x-unknown #3 DSC_0044.NEF rd 44759 KB application/x-unknown ... #997 DSC_1038.NEF rd 39808 KB application/x-unknown #998 DSC_1039.NEF rd 39851 KB application/x-unknown #999 DSC_1040.NEF rd 39710 KB application/x-unknown There is no file in folder '/store_00020001/DCIM/140ND810'. There is no file in folder '/store_00020001/DCIM/141ND810'. There are 519 files in folder '/store_00020001/DCIM/142ND810'. #1000 DSC_1041.NEF #1001 DSC_1042.NEF rd 39875 KB application/x-unknown #1002 DSC_1043.NEF rd 39764 KB application/x-unknown ...
To fix this, format the memory card. If the problem repeats, replace the memory card and/or make sure the USB3 cable between the DSLR and PC is in a good shape and not causing errors (syslog inspection should reveal that if physical cable does not look damaged or sharp bent).
Solar Power
Morning Star Sun Saver charging controller
User manual - at manufacturer's web
User manual - at Battery Stuff web
Status LED Error Indications
Solar overload | Flashing Red |
High Voltage Disconnect | Flashing Red |
High Temperature Disconnect | Flashing Red |
Damaged local temp. sensor | Solid Red (1) |
Damaged heatsink temp. sensor | Solid Red (1) |
Damaged input MOSFETs | Solid Red (1) |
Firmware Error | Solid Red (1) |
(1) - A heartbeat indication flickers the Status LED off briefly every 5 seconds. A solid red Status LED indicates that a critical fault has been detected. Critical faults typically indicate that the controller is damaged and requires service.
Battery Status LED Error Indications
High Voltage Disconnect | R - G Sequencing |
High Temperature Disconnect | R - Y Sequencing |
External Wiring Error | R&G - Y Sequencing |
Load Overcurrent | R&G - Y Sequencing |
Load Short Circuit | R&G - Y Sequencing |
Self-test Error | R - Y - G Sequencing |
Note:
LED error indications can be interpreted as follows: “R - G sequencing” means that the Red LED is on, then the Green LED is on, then Red LED is on....
“R&G - Y sequencing” means that both the Red LED and Green LED are on, then just the Yellow LED is on, then Red and Green LED are on....
Common Problems
Problem: No LED indications
Solution: With a multi-meter, check the voltage at the Battery terminals on the SunSaver and the Solar terminals on the SunSaver. The solar module must be in good sun and battery voltage must be at least 1 V to power the SunSaver and activate the dead battery charging function. Problem: The SunSaver is not charging the battery. Solution: If the Status LED is solid or flashing red, see Error Indications. If the Status LED is off, measure the voltage across the Solar input terminals of the SunSaver. Input voltage must be greater than battery voltage. Check fuses and solar wiring connections. The solar module must in full natural sunlight.
Problem: No load output.
Solution: If the battery status indication is Solid Red, the SunSaver is in the Low Voltage Disconnect (LVD) condition. The load will automatically switch on when the battery recharges to the Low Voltage Reconnect (LVR) threshold voltage. See the specifications in section 7.0 for LVD & LVR settings.
NOTE: If the SunSaver model is SS-6-12V or SS-10-12V (no load control feature), the controller may be damaged.