Table of Contents

Thermal Imaging

Thermal camera transmits udp packets to a windows application.

TODO

flow

we recorded a raw ethernet packet stream between the camera (source) and the windows (target) pc

bootloginplay.zip - pcap file recording of camera boot, stream request follwed by ~100 frames of thermal video. we used wireshark to filter and capture the handshake.

we noticed the stream gets initiated by a short udp packet from the target
we saved that packet and replayed it to the source using scapy lib for python.

#replay the "trigger" packet. 
#this packets will start the source broadcasting its packets. 
 
import base64
from scapy.all import *
 
# Base64 encoded packet data 
encoded_packet = "////////AAFsWfAKCABFAAA4KB0AAIARkEfAqAABwKgA/x+bH5wA2QAAASABgBtAACAAAAAAAAAADwAAAAEAAAEAACArAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAP//////////////////////////////////////////AAAAAAAAAAIBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA"
 
 
# Decode the Base64 encoded packet
decoded_packet = base64.b64decode(encoded_packet)
 
# Load packet with Scapy
packet = Ether(decoded_packet)
 
# (packet)
sendp(packet, iface="Ethernet")

this then started a network stream
the data stream was ordered and looked clean.
every frame starts with the following.

T=(-1.665884e-08)*X^4+(1.347094e-05)*X^3+(-4.396264e-03)*X^2+(9.506939e-01)*X+(-6.353247e+01)

that got our interest in that packet but from then we noticed each has a sequential header that we can follow.

we then decoded to video > https://git.telavivmakers.space/tami/thermalcam_decoder

here is a video (mp4,h264,8bpp) and an image (png,raw,16bpp)

raw data of single frame, in pcap format (TODO: not the same data as the png above.), frame2.7z

calibrate

we don't know the camera's conversion formula or lookup table
the spec mentions 8-14µm

According to Wien's Displacement Law, objects at different temperatures emit peak radiation at different wavelengths. The range of 8-14 µm is well-suited for detecting temperatures commonly encountered in industrial and environmental applications, typically ranging from about -20°C to 500°C or more. This range is sensitive enough to detect the radiation emitted by most objects under normal conditions.

i asked gpt if the formula we found in the first udp packet makes sense as a lookup table. he said no

then decided to capture a calibration sequence using our ANET printer hotbed and tip as a commendable temperature source.
set the hotbed to 100c (but its hardcoded to 90C tops on the merlin firmware) and 200deg for the hotend tip.
then “showed” it a piece of ice from the fridge. all measurements verified using a infrared thermometer. 90C,200C and 0C.

pxl_20231228_123144387.jpg

and revisiting that formula, what do you know!? it is legit

check this rust thingy out (more at the repo)

    let frame = data
        .iter()
        .copied()
        .map(|x| {
            let x: f64 = x.into();
            let x = x / 256.0;
            ((-1.665884e-08) * x.powf(4.)
                + (1.347094e-05) * x.powf(3.)
                + (-4.396264e-03) * x.powf(2.)
                + (9.506939e-01) * x
                + (-6.353247e+01)) as u8
        })
        .collect::<Vec<u8>>();

fridge frost - 0c
the heatbed at the back is ramping down from 90c (cam saturates well before)
pxl_20231228_123332554.jpg

TODO:

Linux

make sure all switches support (and dont block) jumbo frames.
enable jumbo frames on your device.

Jumbo Frames can enhance network performance by allowing larger packets of data to be sent.

First, identify the network interface you wish to configure. You can list all available network interfaces using:

ip link show

To set the MTU to 9000, use the following command, replacing 'eth0' with your interface name:

sudo ip link set eth0 mtu 9000

After setting the MTU, verify the changes with:

ip addr show eth0

Look for the 'mtu 9000' in the output to confirm the setting.

Note: These changes are temporary and will be reset after a system reboot. To make permanent changes, you need to edit the network configuration file, which varies based on the Linux distribution and network manager in use.

hunting for adapters

alon/paul gave advice and grep to find usb ethernet adapters with Jumbo frame support.

drivers/net/usb$ git grep max_mtu
aqc111.c:       dev->net->max_mtu = 16334;
asix_devices.c: dev->net->max_mtu = 16384 - (dev->net->hard_header_len + 4);
ax88179_178a.c: dev->net->max_mtu = 4088;
cdc-phonet.c:   dev->max_mtu            = PHONET_MAX_MTU;
cdc_ncm.c:      dev->net->max_mtu = cdc_ncm_max_dgram_size(dev) - cdc_ncm_eth_hlen(dev);
lan78xx.c:      netdev->max_mtu = MAX_SINGLE_PACKET_SIZE;
qmi_wwan.c:             net->max_mtu = ETH_MAX_MTU;
r8152.c:                netdev->max_mtu = size_to_mtu(9 * 1024);
r8152.c:                netdev->max_mtu = size_to_mtu(15 * 1024);
r8152.c:                netdev->max_mtu = size_to_mtu(16 * 1024);
r8152.c:                netdev->max_mtu = ETH_DATA_LEN;
sierra_net.c:   dev->net->max_mtu = SIERRA_NET_MAX_SUPPORTED_MTU;
smsc75xx.c:     dev->net->max_mtu = MAX_SINGLE_PACKET_SIZE;
smsc95xx.c:     dev->net->max_mtu = ETH_DATA_LEN;
usbnet.c:       net->max_mtu = ETH_MAX_MTU;

this one id as a r8152, and its on the list.
spec on the box looks great!

pxl_20240108_102817262.jpg

$ lsusb -v -d 0bda:8152
 
Bus 001 Device 011: ID 0bda:8152 Realtek Semiconductor Corp. RTL8152 Fast Ethernet Adapter
Device Descriptor:
  bcdUSB               2.10 
  bMaxPacketSize0        64
  idVendor           0x0bda Realtek Semiconductor Corp.
  idProduct          0x8152 RTL8152 Fast Ethernet Adapter
  iManufacturer           1 Realtek
  iProduct                2 USB 10/100 LAN
  iSerial                 3 00E04C3643B9

mybe we be lucky?

$ sudo ip link set enp0s20u3 mtu 1501
Error: mtu greater than device maximum.

the inside is a horid mess.

photo_2024-01-14_20-36-57.jpgphoto_2024-01-14_20-36-59.jpg

but!!!!

stumbled on another canidate @post office, same case, almost kinda the same packaging, but no mention of jumbo frames on the small print.
doesnt phase me, if they all lie, it can go both ways, no?

YES, its the RTL8153
photo_2024-01-14_19-50-02.jpg photo_2024-01-14_19-49-58.jpg

SOB

to get this thing mobile we will need to hook it up to some kind of System On Board. like the raspberry pi and the likes.

raspi

the raspi5 has working jumbo frame (mtu>=6K)

the RASPI 4/5 support cpi cards, jeff compiled a nice list of netwrok cards you can use with adaptors.

jetson tx2

we got one, or two. and they have a pci slot.

TODO

Model 695800

camera connects over 1Gb ethernet adaptor (make sure to enable Jumbo Frame 9k in adapter settings)

downloads

ax88772c_772b_772a_772_win11_64bit_driver_v3.22.0.0.zip - apple usb ethernet dongle

kernel driver

Rust in the kernel:

- instructions neglect to mention you must turn off DEBUG_INFO_BTF

  1. you can discover this by “make LLVM=1 xconfig”, then Ctrl-F RUST, then look at the text showing that CONFIG_RUST=N and follow the options, then look at your .config and see that DEBUG_INFO_BTF is y. Turn it to n.