Sunday, December 19, 2021

Monitoring the vintage server room (and reverse-engineering USB sensors)

We're house hunting because of $JOB and $HOUR hour commute, and I just got word that the reseller I contract with for Floodgap's leased line is getting out of that business in mid-January. This makes finding new digs (or at least setting up some sort of temporary static IP alternative) a must because one of the gotta-haves is space for my vintage server room. Sure, you can outsource, or host things on slices, or put things on a rack of Raspberry Pis and call it a day. And admittedly that would probably take up less space, generate less heat, use less power and result in less inconvenience, but where's the fun in that when you can be running your own 2008-vintage IBM POWER6 for mail, web and gopher, or a Sawtooth Power Mac G4 file server, or a 1989 Mac IIci that still happily handles internal network DNS?

Part of the task of any home server room, vintage or otherwise, is monitoring. After all, you're now your own L1, L2 and L3 support. A camera passively observes the room that can be remotely viewed. The main server can generate alerts if it fails over to a UPS (power outage, blown supply, etc.). If the WAN connection goes down, an SMS gateway can communicate with me by text message and I can query it about the state of the internal network. I use an SMSEagle for that, basically a Raspberry Pi in a cool case with an LTE modem running modified Raspbian (which I naturally have modified further). All of the systems can send it alerts for broadcast via its internal APIs.

(The USB device plugged into it I'll discuss a little later.)

That leaves environmental controls. Here in Southern California, winters aren't that cold, so the major need is cooling during summer and fall. The room is cooled by a 12,000 BTU portable air conditioner that vents to an outflow portal on the roof and whose power is controlled by a programmable power strip. The A/C turns itself off and on based on its thermostat but the A/C isn't network enabled, so I need to know what temperature it actually is in the room, and whether the air conditioner is in fact running — ideally something that would assess if there's airflow.

The temperature sensor is a THUM.

I bought it back in the day because they had a native Power Mac command line client, but now that I have other things I'd like to connect it to (and the client was closed-source, at least at the time), I decided to reverse-engineer the protocol. Naturally, the first thing to do when you're doing that is to crack it open.
Internally the THUM is actually a relatively simple device. A small Sensirion SHT75 temperature and humidity sensor sticks out of the side of the case and is connected to a PIC 16C745-I/SP, which is the main chip dominating the board (the TMS SN65240 is there to suppress transient signals on the USB port). The theory of operation is thus fairly obvious: the PIC merely reads raw sensor data from the SHT75 and provides it to the connected system (it shows up as a USB HID). The next step was thus to reverse-engineer the actual wire protocol.

Snooping on a mysterious USB device is most easily done with the USB monitoring tools in Wireshark. I installed it on my MacBook Air and, with Wireshark running, would run the closed-source THUM Mac tool, note the temperature and relative humidity the official client reported, and then save the trace. Here's an example.

Every single session showed two URB_CONTROL and URB_INTERRUPT couplets. The control from the connected Mac was a two byte message, first 00 00 (which appears to be a temperature command), and then 01 00 (which appeared to be humidity). The THUM would then reply with its own two byte response. One would assume any reported value would increase as temperature and humidity both increased, so looking at the reports this value was most likely a 16-bit big-endian (yay!) unsigned short. I made a number of readings and then plugged them into LibreOffice.
Using LibreOffice's regression analysis tools, the fit is perfectly linear (assuming, of course, the sensor doesn't vary at its extents, which is always a risk with sensors) and we should now have an accurate intercept and slope to compute temperature in Centigrade from the provided value.

Humidity was a little harder, as relative humidity depends on temperature to determine how much water vapour the surrounding air can actually carry, and I wasn't able to get a good regression fit. After messing around with the numbers some, it dawned on me I could just go pull the datasheet for the sensor to see if the manufacturer had any coefficients I could plug in. Not only did the datasheet have a nice graph, it actually had formulae for computing a linear relative humidity value from the sensor value, and then to adjust it for the observed temperature. The formula matched the official THUM client's computation perfectly.

Now we have all the steps needed to actually write our own client, so I did, which I'll link to at the end (the same C source file compiles on Mac OS X and Linux). The only other glitch I ran into was that you must fetch the humidity after you fetch the temperature, and you must read both; you can't just fetch one or the other. If you try to do that, the PIC may flip out and even stop responding to you until the box is reset.

As a post-script, the datasheet also contained a formula for the temperature (as well as the valid ranges), but the coefficients didn't quite match my linear regression values. Later on someone at Practical Design Group responded to my E-mail and put up source code and pre-built binaries for the Raspberry Pi. This client seemed slower than my own client on my Raptor Talos II (and there wasn't Mac source code), so I'm sticking with my homebrew version, which is what runs on the G4 server now (which runs OS X Tiger). Interestingly Practical uses the Sensirion formulae for relative humidity, but their coefficients matched mine for computing temperature, so I kept those also.

Now, airflow. I decided an easy approach would be to monitor sound levels, since any audio pickup with its wind screen off will detect air passing by as noise. As an added bonus, if any alarms were going off, dying cooling fans, dying other things (always a possibility with old hardware), etc., the resulting audio disturbance would also be detectable.

The most inexpensive and easy way to get "live" USB-based decibel meters are versions of the GM1356, shown here in operation "monitoring" the air conditioning unit.

This ubiquitous meter is easily recognized by its six-button control panel and standard case and accessories, and was rebadged by a number of manufacturers (here a BAFX 3608) with logging software for Microsoft Windows. Fortunately some enterprising soul had already written a Ruby-based monitor for this device, so I figured it would be a simple matter to convert it to C and have it run on the G4 server too. I patterned off the same code I used to query the HID for the THUM, plugged it into the G5, and ... nothing but errors trying to talk to it. On the possibility this device was uncovering an irregularity with HID support in OS X Tiger, I plugged it into my NetBSD G4 Mac mini. It said there was a problem with the device and disabled the port.

Now wondering if I had a defective unit, I then plugged it into my Linux Raptor Talos II, determined its vendor and ID with lsusb and tried to pull a device report with lsusb -v -d 64bd:74e3. Besides showing an impossible HID polling interval of zero (!), lsusb did faithfully display the USB configuration report but then hung up and timed out with cannot read device status, Resource temporarily unavailable (11). At this point, since they were cheap, I bought a second one. It did the exact same thing.

It turns out this unit is obnoxiously non-compliant with the USB HID standard, just enough to work with Windows, which is its only supported platform. You can't use normal HID queries with it on apparently any operating system (for that matter, Linux libhid doesn't like it either), but if you send raw queries with usb_interrupt_write and usb_interrupt_read you can get something out of it in Linux, at least. I gave up trying to get OS X IOKit to play nice, so after porting the Ruby client to C on the Talos II, I put it on the only Linux system I have running in the vintage server room — the Raspbian SMSEagle. And that's what you see connected to it.

Does this work for monitoring? After all that, yes. I took some measurements and the baseline noise in the server room ranges from 54 to 56dB depending on how warm it is (on warmer days the cooling fans are louder). When the A/C comes on, it runs at full blast and the device picks up the airflow at 60dB+. This is a significant and easily noticed jump, so this benighted piece-of-crap still ends up being more than enough to know if the A/C's actually hauling A.

The next thing I'll add, probably in whatever crumbling shack we're able to afford in this hideous housing market, is power monitoring. While I can control outlets, I can't really determine short of manually grabbing a Kill-O-Watt how much draw is occurring on any given circuit or power strip. It would be nice to know who's sucking the amps other than, of course, the beasts themselves. They get a pass because they're still doing useful work, even if they aren't as sexy or efficient anymore.

The C code for the THUM command line tool (OS X, at least 10.4, possibly earlier and Linux) and GM1356 command line tool (Linux) are available as Github gists.

3 comments:

  1. You can look around for APC and Tripp-Lite (at least) networked power strips. They often show up used; can tell you amps used from each power port and often allow you to remotely reboot just 1 port,or all ports.

    BTW: got 2x PowerMac G5 DP's: was thinking of adding Sorbet Leopard to them; any views on best OS to install?

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    Replies
    1. I've looked around for ones similar but haven't had a lot of luck. Do you have a particular model number you recommend?

      As far as Sorbet Leopard, I'm just not a fan of Leopard (Snow Leopard, yes, but only for Intel Macs). I have a single Leopard system I use for testing purposes but otherwise all of my Power Macs run Tiger or earlier.

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    2. Here are some of the APC networked PDUs you might consider (or not, as noted). All of these can monitor current drawn and can control the state of individual outlets.

      The AP9210 is a very early model, but still shows up fairly often. The management board within is a modified AP9605 with firmware for the PDU application. Unlike the corresponding UPS board, this has both a web and telnet interface. As you might imagine for something built around an 80186 at 12 MHz, performance of the web interface is extremely unexciting at best. You also get SNMP based monitoring and control. I have a couple of the AP9505 boards still operating and they have been faultlessly reliable. I believe these do have some unresolved remotely exploitable security holes.

      An AP9211 or 9212 is almost the same thing, this time built around the AP9606 card and its faster (40MHz!) 80186 CPU. As every last one of my AP9606 management boards has failed, and the RTC/NVRAM uses a special "SnapHat" battery, I wouldn't recommend one of these.

      Next up is the AP7900, which I believe is still a current product and thus not particularly cheap yet. I believe this bases on the much newer "NMC1" AP9617 board, again with custom firmware for the PDU application. This one also has a nice LED display that shows current drawn in amps.

      If you have a Smart UPS 750 or better, you could also put an SNMP management card into the SmartSlot. This won't give you the per outlet control that the PDU has, but it will let you monitor the UPS, control it, and collect data. Some models even have an outboard temperature or temperature and humidity sensing probe.

      The older "UPSLink" or "APC Smart" protocol (SU/SUA) Smart UPS models can use any management card (AP9605/6, AP9617/18/19, AP9630/31/35). Newer ones using "Microlink" (SMT models) have to use the AP9630 or better. Many of these boards are again readily available and quite cheap on the secondhand market.

      Hopefully that helps!

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See more of my general vintage computing projects,
mostly microcomputers, 6502, PalmOS, 68K/Power Mac
and Unix workstations, but that's not all. Be kind, REWIND and PLAY.

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Thanks for reading. -- Cameron Kaiser