quPy - Software controlling the DIY Foot Switch for the Allen & Heath Qu-Series
Original source: (C) 2014-2015, Niels Ott [email protected] http://zwei.drni.de/archives/1553-Kick-the-Qu-A-DIY-Foot-Switch-for-the-Allen-Heath-Qu-Series.html
Forked by chriszuercher
Release 0.1, 2015-07-05
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Built your foot switch. qu-foot-switch-raspberry-gpio.png in the docs folder contains the
schematics. There you can also find the original wiki post. -
Copy all files from the directory somewhere to your Raspberry Pi.
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Configure neede things:
config.py – needs the correct IP address for your QU desk – you can also edit mute group numbers vs buttons/leds on the footswitch in that file.
quPy.sh – needs the correct path info to files on your Pi
startup.sh – needed some attention on correct path as well – not sure why, but it’s maybe the way I have Linux set up on the Pi or something to do with the ‘dirname’ command?
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Run as root: ./startup.sh You will get debug output.
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You might get error messages if you're missing Python modules such as the one for the GPIO of the Pi. If so, install those modules via the package manager and retry.
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Assuming, you're using TinyCore Linux, you can use quPy.sh as a startup script in your boot sequence. This will even redirect the debug to the system log.
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The quPy software does not care for tap tempo messages from the console yet. This needs to be implemented in qunetworkhandler.py where the events from the MIDI-parser are dealt with
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Reading large amounts of MIDI data from the net is slow. This is while receiving the status dump after connecting takes quite a while. qunetworkhandler.py could probably have a better implementation for reading the data other than bytewise.
Most of the files in this directory were written by Niels Ott. They are released under the terms of GNU GPL V3, which can be found in LICENSE.txt
Other files are third party. Their status is a bit unclear, since they mostly are from Python tutorial sites or some FAQs. Sources are stated in comments.