Drivers Ortec



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Final Backup Diesel generators: control in endurance

Control, for Ortec, means reiterating excellence, knowing how to supply it consistently and continually across all projects, under all conditions. The best example? An exceptional project over several years: that of equipping all French nuclear power plants with a Final Backup Diesel generator (FBD). A human and technical epic, and for Ortec a real demonstration of controlling ultra-complex projects.

There's introducing safety conditions on the site. There's control of processes, but also contingencies and anticipating risks. There's consideration of regulations, the delicacy of interventions, preparation and rehearsal of operations depending on the specific features of the site. There's the constant quest for continuous improvement... Ortec combines all these drivers to achieve control of its operations on sites or on its customers' sites. GPE Ortec: lifting operations for the FBD
Yannick Fons, director of Ortec's Major Energy Projects department, tells how this control is achieved on a project as complex and demanding as that for Final Backup Diesel generators (FBD) conducted for EDF:
Ortec, in a consortium with Clemessy and ABC, is selected to install a Final Backup Diesel generator (FBD) on each EDF nuclear power plant. This is one of the measures to improve the reliability of facilities, following the Fukushima accident in 2011. A delicate operation, to be repeated 36 times at industrial scale. Synergy and coordination from the preparation phase are the key to success of the work. From the outset, the 70 engineers and project designers working on the design of the facilities work in close collaboration across all Ortec business units. To optimise implementation, each decision is considered depending on the subsequent implementation phase of construction sites.
After two years of preparation, studies and tests, the first project begins at the Saint-Laurent-des-Eaux plant. Electricity generator, large components (air cooler, cooling unit), auxiliary systems, electrical cabinet and ventilation: the Ortec teams are responsible for installing almost all the equipment inside the building, but also for installing the piping systems. This first site will test the working methodology for installing the following 35 FBDs. Each phase is analysed and recorded, identifying possible improvements. The first project begins at the Saint-Laurent-des-Eaux plant
Successive sites are started and follow each other. Organisation of the work is refined a little further, taking advantage of previous experience. Accumulated knowledge and practice make each new site more efficient. Ortec branch offices provide their best technicians to support and train their colleagues. Thanks to this consistency, mutual assistance and faultless coordination, the teams will be able to maintain the pace over time. Because the challenge is immense: at the height of operations, 10 sites must be started in 10 weeks, i.e. one new site per week!

The VRC-1100 Ortek Vista MCE Remote is an inexpensive media center remote control that is bought at various retailers online. This remote includes a built in mouse. Out of the box everything seems to functions except programming the buttons can be kind of a pain, as it is detected as a wireless keyboard and mouse and is not detected by lircd, if you want to get this remote detected in lircd then read on.

There are two sets of instructions here. The first set gets the remote control working using `lircd`, the second set makes use of `inputlircd`, which has some advantages / disadvantages. For an alternate setup which does not use lirc, see Adesso ARC-1100 which is a rebranded clone of the Ortek VRC-1100.

  • 1lircd setup
    • 1.3Issues
  • 2inputlircd setup

lircd setup

The pages that helped me get this remote working were from [1], [2], and [3]

I wrote this as the information to get this working was a little scattered and outdated, if you follow these instructions your ortek remote will be recognized by lircd and MythTv however a few buttons still dont work. See the issues at the bottom of this page.

Getting Lircd to see it

1.First we need a different version of lircd.conf so backup your original

then download this version that has been made to work with devinput

then copy this over the old version (make sure you back it up incase you need it latter on


2.Now your going to need to know what devices your remote uses, there should be twoso in a console type

the output will be something like

you need to scroll the list looking for your remote this is identified by the 'N: Name='HID 05a4:9881'' line.

If you cant find '05a4:9881' then type in a console

and find your ortek remote mine is shown below

once your have the identifier number redo the 'cat /proc/bus/input/devices' like above


3.Ok so once you have identified your devices from 'cat /proc/bus/input/devices'you need to find the 'P: Phys=' line. From my example above the lines im looking for is

4.now we have are device phsical addess, now its time to configure our hardware.conf. If you are running ubuntu and installed lircd with apt-get then your hardware.conf will be located at '/etc/lirc/hardware.conf'

now you will need to make you hardware.conf look like the followingbut be sure to change the 'REMOTE_DEVICE=' line to reflect what you got from above

now restart lircd

now type irw in a console, on some systems you might need to specify the socket '/dev/lircd' this will be in hardware.conf under the 'REMOTE_SOCKET= line

or

Press some buttons on your remote and you should see some output

if not then something else is wrong with your setup, go back and make sure you have followed the instructions


5.So now if lirc has succefully recognized your remote (verified by using irw) all that is left to do is generate key mapping for mythtv

you could do this by running, but read below.

but it has some bugs (you should try mine below), it miss's some keys and makes duplicates

I tried this but then I ended up editing the completed file almost entirely, this is what I ended up with.

My lircrc file

This file needs to be placed in the file '/.lirc/mythtv' located in the home directory of the user that mythtv runs under. Just look around for a folder named '.lirc' (the period means its a hidden folder) that contains some files named mythtv, mplayer, xine, vlc, and so on, if you dont have a '.lirc' folder anywhere then create it. Then create the mythtv file inside of it(you can place application specific files within this folder) and paste in the contents below. You will need to add the following line to ~/.lircrc: 'include ~/.lirc/mythtv'. Create ~/.lircrc if it does not already exist.

Ortec

Feel free to edit this file how ever you want it pretty simple,the remote = line is the driver listed in irw, the last part when you press a buttonbutton = is what key was pressed on the remoteconfig = is what key to send to mythtc this can also contain combos like CTRL+R and ALT+Esc, besure to capitalize the CTRL and ALT parts


This file isnt 100% Please read the issues at the end, if you know how to fix any of these problem the please edit this wiki.

Drivers


Issues

A couple problems I'm still having with this remote is some of the buttons still don't work, although it is better than what it was before.

  1. Info button is not detected at all
  2. Some button cannot be assigned in mythtv because they send multiple keypress' to mythtv, button they have this problem are
    1. Start button
    2. Pound button
    3. Blue, Red, and Green

Example of issueWhen start button is pushed

each of these buttons are sent to lircd as if they where pushed individually


Note: For buttons which generate multiple keypresses, you can still get lircd to handle those and map them to single keyboard events - like this:

I did this for other programs rather than MythTV, but I think it should work the same in principle. There's also the inputlircd approach achieves this as well.

I do not take credit for this im just simply putting it somewhere that is easy to find, as it took me awhile to find this info, also this is my first wiki entry ever so please forgive any errors

XF86Audio<action> buttons

The XF86Audio buttons are not added at this point in time. These can be made available by using xmodmap. An example can be found in the Gyration-based MCE Remotes entry.


inputlircd setup

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Comparison to lircd setup

I initially set up my MythBox to use lircd directly. This worked fairly well - however, I wanted to get the remote control working with XBMC following instructions here, which suggests using inputlirc. After experimenting with it for a bit, I decided that I preferred to use inputlircd instead.

Disadvantages? Using inputlircd seems to stop the mouse control button from working. I'm not sure there's anything that can be done about that.

Advantages? It combines multiple keypresses together (for the coloured keys, for example). The Info button also gets picked up (it generates the same event as the right mouse click button).

Configuration

You just need to follow these instructions; specifically the first two sections ('UDev rule' and 'Lirc installation').

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In my experience on getting this to work on my Xubuntu 11,10 box, there were a few differences from these instructions (YMMV):

  • lircd recognises my devices as /dev/input/irremote0 rather than irremote0. When you run 'irw', you should be able to find out what name that 'lircd' uses for it.
  • Restarting some services didn't work as expected initially - running irw seemed to fail initially, and I had to restart to then get it working.

I haven't got a full lircrc file which takes advantage of the extra buttons yet - you can still use the file mentioned above, and do a find/replace changing 'devinput' to either 'irremote0' or '/dev/input/irremote0' (which is what I'm currently doing). I'll add an updated lircrc file later.

Example configuration

This is a commented version of the lircrc file which describes all the buttons on the control in order. The keypresses defined in this file correspond to the event names emitted by inputlircd. I've laid out the configuration to make it easier to customise if you want to change what the keys map to.

Drivers Of Technological Change

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