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CHANGELOG.md

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VSS Changelog

The intent of this document is to highlight major changes in the VSS specification (syntax and/or signals). It shall include all changes that affect backward compatibility or may be important to know when upgrading from one version to another. It typically does not list all changes to signals. It includes changes that are included in released version, but also changes planned for upcoming releases.

This document only contains changes introduced in VSS 3.0 or later!

VSS 3.0

Complete release notes

Instantiate

A new attribute instantiate has been added to the syntax to exclude a child-node from the instantiation of the direct parent node. This attribute is by default true and is only relevant to use for signals.

An example on how these signals shall be handled by tools:

Vehicle.X:
  type: branch
  instances: Test[1,2]
  description: High-level vehicle data.

Vehicle.X.InstantiatedSignal:
  type: attribute
  description: "Instantiated Signal"
  datatype: string

Vehicle.X.NotInstantiatedSignal:
  type: attribute
  description: "Not Instantiated Signal"
  datatype: string
  instantiate: False

Results in the following dot-notated output:

Vehicle.X
Vehicle.X.NotInstantiatedSignal
Vehicle.X.Test1.NotInstantiatedSignal
Vehicle.X.Test2.NotInstantiatedSignal

The new attribute is not used for any signals in VSS 3.0. For more information see documentation.

Changed Path to Battery Signals

The path Vehicle.Powertrain.Battery was renamed to Vehicle.Powertrain.TractionBattery. The path name was changed to make it clear that the signals in the path concerns the traction battery (high voltage battery) used by electrical or hybrid vehicles, and not the supply battery (low voltage battery, typically 12 or 24 Volts).

Enum/Allowed attribute

Before VSS 3.0 the attribute enum could be used to list allowed values for a VSS signals, like in the example below:

LowVoltageSystemState:
  datatype: string
  type: sensor
  enum: [
    "UNDEFINED", # State of low voltage system not known
    "LOCK",      # Low voltage system off, steering lock or equivalent engaged
    "OFF",       # Low voltage system off, steering lock or equivalent not engaged
    "ACC",       # Vehicle Accessories on/living
    "ON",        # Engine start enabled (e.g. ignition on, diesel pre-heating, electrical drive released)
    "START"      # Engine starter relay closed (not applicable for electrical vehicles)
    ]
  description: State of the supply voltage of the control units (usually 12V).

From VSS 3.0 this attribute has been renamed to allowed. The background is that the old name was misleading, as it does not correspond to enum definitions in many programming languages, but rather just is a limitation of what values that are supported by the signal.

All signals in VSS previously using enum have been updated to use allowed, like in the example below:

LowVoltageSystemState:
  datatype: string
  type: sensor
  allowed: [
    'UNDEFINED', # State of low voltage system not known
    'LOCK',      # Low voltage system off, steering lock or equivalent engaged
    'OFF',       # Low voltage system off, steering lock or equivalent not engaged
    'ACC',       # Vehicle Accessories on/living
    'ON',        # Engine start enabled (e.g. ignition on, diesel pre-heating, electrical drive released)
    'START'      # Engine starter relay closed (not applicable for electrical vehicles)
    ]
  description: State of the supply voltage of the control units (usually 12V).

If the old keyword enum is used most tools will ignore it and give a warning.

Warning: Attribute(s) enum in element Position not a core or known extended attribute.

Seat signals

The signals in Vehicle.Cabin.Seat have been significantly refactored. The background is that the old representation included limitations and ambiguities.

VSS 3.1

Struct Support (Experimental)

VSS has been extended with syntax to define structs, and to use them for signals. For VSS 3.1, support is only experimental and syntax may change.

Note: Only a subset of VSS-tools for VSS 3.1 supports structs!

Actuator and Sensor Attributes

VSS has two attributes sensor and actuator that gives the possibility to specify which system/entity provides the value or tries to actuate the value. A possible hypothetical example is shown below showing that it is TemperatureSensorUnderDriverSeat that provides the values of Vehicle.Cabin.Temperature and it is HVACSystem that tries to assure that the specified temperature is achieved. These two attributes have never been used by signals in the VSS repository and it has been decided that these attributes no longer shall be part of the official VSS syntax. If needed, this type of information shall be provided by overlays.

Vehicle.Cabin.Temperature:
  type: actuator
  description: Temperature in cabin
  datatype: float
  unit: km/h
  sensor: 'TemperatureSensorUnderDriverSeat'
  actuator: 'HVACSystem'

For VSS 3.1 the two attributes will remain in the VSS Syntax, but are marked as deprecated. No change to tooling is implemented, as the vss-tools already give a warning if the attributes are used:

Warning: Attribute(s) sensor in element Temperature not a core or known extended attribute.

Deprecated or Deleted signals

  • Vehicle.TravelledDistance deprecated from 3.1. New signal Vehicle.TraveledDistanceadded. Background is to be aligned with VSS style guide using American English.
  • Vehicle.Powertrain.FuelSystem.TimeSinceStart deprecated from 3.1. New signal Vehicle.StartTime added. Reason is that TimeSinceStart is not powertrain-related and other signals related to current trip are located on top-level. After discussion it was agreed that it is better to have a signal for start time rather than duration.
  • Refactoring of signals in Vehicle.Body.Lights branch performed, some signals have new names.

VSS 4.0

Struct Support (Official)

The VSS-syntax now supports structs. Note however that not all exporters in VSS-tools 4.0 support structs yet.

Change of instance handling for seats, doors, mirrors and other branches.

Previously many signals used position for instance, where position 1 meant the leftmost item. This caused problems for some use-cases where it was more practical to reference to a door by its relative position, like the "DriverSide" door, as you then can describe wanted behavior in the same way for both LHD and RHD vehicles. By that reason instance handling has for some signal been changed to use ["DriverSide","Middle","PassengerSide"].

Actuator and Sensor Attributes

The attributes sensor and actuator, deprecated from VSS 3.1, have been removed from the VSS syntax.

Deprecated or Deleted signals

  • Vehicle.TravelledDistance
  • Vehicle.Powertrain.FuelSystem.TimeSinceStart

VSS 4.1 (Latest Release)

Unit file syntax updated, Quantity file introduced

A new syntax for unit files is introduced. Old syntax still supported. It is also possible to define quantity files, and a default quantity file (quantities.yaml) has been added.

New signals

Some signals have been added.

Updated tool dependency

A new version of vss-tools is used, with support for static IDs and jsonschema.

Deprecated or Deleted signals

  • Vehicle.Cabin.Seat.*.*.Heating deprecated from 4.1. New signal Vehicle.Cabin.Seat.*.*.HeatingCooling added.

Planned Changes VSS 5.0

UUID removed from release artifacts

VSS Release artifacts (VSS standard catalog in various formats) will no longer contain UUID information. If you need artifacts with UUID you need to generate the artifact yourself.

Instructions:

  1. Clone the repo and check out the tag you want, for example git checkout v5.0.
  2. Update submodules, for example git submodule update --init.
  3. Add --uuid as argument to the relevant command in Makefile.
  4. Run generation, for example make csv.

OBD Branch deprecated

The Vehicle.OBD branch is now deprecated. The plan is to remove it in VSS 6.0. The background is a decision that VSS standard catalog shall not contain a one-to-one representation of the OBD standard. Instead, VSS standard catalog may contain corresponding information elsewhere. As an example, instead of Vehicle.OBD.EngineSpeed (PID 0C), the VSS signal Vehicle.Powertrain.CombustionEngine.Speed can be used. Note that not all signals in Vehicle.OBD have "duplicates", especially in the area of combustion engine control (like Oxygen sensor lambda and voltage readings) VSS currently does not have any counterparts in other parts of the tree.

What to do if you as of today use signals from the OBD file:

  • Check if any suitable replacement signal exist. Example: if you use Vehicle.OBD.Speed, consider using Vehicle.Speed instead.
  • If not and the data may be of general interest; consider creating a pull request with a replacement signal. Example: VSS as of today only have Lambda information in OBD branch. If you need VSS signals for Lambda, consider creating new signals in Vehicle.Powertrain.CombustionEngine branch.
  • If you really need the signals in this file and cannot replace them, then consider using the overlay file in the overlays directory from VSS 6.0 onwards.

Planned Changes VSS 6.0

OBD Branch removed

The Vehicle.OBD branch is now removed. If needed there is an OBD overlay in the overlays directory.