WireViz
glasgow
WireViz | glasgow | |
---|---|---|
16 | 4 | |
4,059 | 1,854 | |
21.9% | 2.4% | |
0.0 | 9.4 | |
6 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | BSD Zero Clause License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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WireViz
- WireViz: Easily document cables and wiring harnesses
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Nomnoml
If you don't mind my asking, what aspects of "acceptable layout" is usually the first to get busted?
I'm extremely excited about using WireViz[1] to automate wiring harness diagram creation, and if I can, I'd like to know the speedbumps before I hit them. I'm thinkin generous linking between diagrams will be one path.
[1] Project:: https://github.com/wireviz/WireViz SandboxP:: https://kroki.io/#try [select Diagram>WireViz]
- First PLC no experience
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Wiring harness CAD software?
Like WireViz?
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AutoCAD electrical or other software for control wiring drawing preparation?
WireViz is nice for generating manufacturing files for wiring looms, but you might want to use something else for descriptive documentation diagrams
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Embedded Systems Weekly #129
WireViz, Easily document cables and wiring harnesses WireViz is a little tool very handy to document your cabling and get beautiful visual from it.
- Harness Software
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Wiring Tool
I found that wireviz does have multicolour support, dashed and stripes but maybe not the angled one we'd need for earth lead in Australia (iec also). Diagrammatically it should look like a barbers pole. yellow and green
glasgow
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SuperH
This post is so timely!
Does anybody in this thread have details about the H-UDI proprietary SH4 JTAG extensions? Context here:
https://github.com/GlasgowEmbedded/glasgow/discussions/290
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Facts every web dev should know before they burn out and turn to painting
Hmm. A followup question: are there any cheats/hacks that would make it possible (if painful) to for example explore the world of USB3, PCIe, or Linux on low-end-ish ARM (eg https://www.thirtythreeforty.net/posts/2019/12/my-business-c..., based on the 533MHz https://linux-sunxi.org/F1C100s), without needing to buy equipment in the mid-4-figure/low-5-figure range, if I were able to substitute a statistically larger-than-average amount of free time (and discipline)?
For example, I learned about https://github.com/GlasgowEmbedded/glasgow recently, a bit of a niche kitchen sink that uses https://github.com/nmigen/nmigen/ to lower a domain-specific subset of Python 3 (https://nmigen.info/nmigen/latest/lang.html) into Verilog which then runs on the Glasgow board's iCE40HX8K. The project basically makes it easier to use cheap FPGAs for rapid iteration. (The README makes a point that the synthesis is sufficiently fast that caching isn't needed.)
In certain extremely specific situations where circumstances align perfectly (caveat emptor), devices like this can sometimes present a temporary escape to the inevitable process of acquiring one's first second-hand high-end oscilloscope (fingers-crossed the expensive bits still have a few years left in them). To some extent they may also commoditize the exploration of very high-speed interfaces, which are rapidly becoming a commonplace principal of computers (eg, having 10Gbps everywhere when USB3.1 hits market saturation will be interesting) faster than test and analysis kit can keep up (eg to do proper hardware security analysis work). The Glasgow is perhaps not quite an answer to that entire statement, but maybe represents beginning steps in that sort of direction.
So, to reiterate - it's probably an unhelpfully broad question, and I'm still learning about the field so haven't quite got the preciseness I want yet, but I'm curious what gadgetry, techniques, etc would perhaps allow someone to "hack it" and dive into this stuff on a shoestring budget? :)
- How does USB device discovery work? [video]
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Glasgow Interface Explorer: First fully open source FPGA based digital interface tool, allows you to decode, probe, and reverse engineer nearly any digital interface from Python
Project GitHub: https://github.com/GlasgowEmbedded/glasgow
What are some alternatives?
pyusb - Easy USB access for Python
amaranth - A modern hardware definition language and toolchain based on Python
fritzing-app - Fritzing desktop application
pclk-mn10 - (Attempting to) control the PCLK-MN10 USB device
scapy - Scapy: the Python-based interactive packet manipulation program & library. Supports Python 2 & Python 3.
eslint-plugin-compat - Check the browser compatibility of your code
Mermaid - Edit, preview and share mermaid charts/diagrams. New implementation of the live editor.
electron-inject - Inject javascript into closed source electron applications e.g. to enable developer tools for debugging.
pySerial - Python serial port access library
browserslist - 🦔 Share target browsers between different front-end tools, like Autoprefixer, Stylelint and babel-preset-env
nomnoml - The sassy UML diagram renderer
hBPF - hBPF = eBPF in hardware