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121gwcli

121GW multimeter command line data logger for Linux.

The script receives Bluetooth data from a 121GW digital multimeter and display them on a Linux system.

The script takes the output from the standard Bluetooth tool gatttool and parse it with a Perl script.

Data can be written to:

  • Text console
  • Tabulator separated Logfile
  • Json file for browser display

Tested on Debian 11 bullseye.

Installation

This system require some packages installed to fully operate:

  • bluez (gatttool)
  • bluez-tools (bt-device)
  • perl
  • libswitch-perl
sudo apt install perl libswitch-perl bluez{,-tools}

Text mode output to console

Turn on your 121GW multimeter and press 1ms PEAK for about one second to activate Bluetooth.

Start the main script 121gwcli.sh. It takes about 3-4 seconds to connect:

./121gwcli.sh

Example output:

2022-12-30 15:01:44.316	1.642	ACmV	62.97	Hz
2022-12-30 15:01:44.811	1.64	ACmV	62.97	Hz
2022-12-30 15:01:45.306	1.638	ACmV	62.97	Hz

Terminal screenshot

Columns:

  1. Date and time in ISO-8601 standard w/milli seconds
  2. Main value (as from the mittle of the display)
  3. Type af main meassuring
  4. Sub value (as from upper right corner)
  5. Type of sub meassuring

Options

-o <file>
--outfile=<file>
Write data to a file. By default the file will be appended. The output is tabulator formatted as on screen.
-j <file>
--jsonfile=<file>
Write data in JSON format to a file. This can be used to view the current status in a web browser. See the example of how to setup a web server.

Write to logfile

Write data to a tabulator separated logfile with option outfile:

./121gwcli.sh --outfile=o.log

Write JSON data and display in a browser

The data can be written in a JSON formatted file and then be viewed with a HTML file and a javascript.

Firefox showing the status data from 121GW:

Firefox screenshot

The files used in this setup:

File Purpose
121gwcli.sh Main script
parse121gw.pl Perl parser
html/index.html HTML and Javascript
html/data.js JSON-data from 121GW multimeter

Due to CORS-errors no browseres would allow you to just open the index.html file from the disk and view the incoming data. A web server is needed and Nginx is used in this example.

Install Nginx:

sudo apt install nginx

Create the file /etc/nginx/sites-available/121gw.conf

server {
    listen 80;
    server_name 121gw;
    root /home/joe/121gwcli/html; # set your path here
    access_log /var/log/nginx/121gw/access.log combined;
    error_log /var/log/nginx/121gw/error.log;
    index index.html;

    location / {
    }
}

Create a symlink to the config file:

sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/121gw.conf /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/121gw.conf

Reload Nginx:

sudo nginx -s reload

Add the hostname (server_name in Nginx) 121gw bound to localhost to line 1 in your /etc/hosts file:

sudo sed -i '1i127.0.0.1 121gw' /etc/hosts

Now you can start your browser and go to http://121gw/ .

Now turn on the multimeter and start writing to the JSON file:

./121gwcli.sh --jsonfile=html/data.js

The updated values will now be shown in the browser.

In another terminal console the JSON data can be verified:

tr , \\n < html/data.js

Example output:

{"mainValueFloat":1.638
"subValueFloat":62.97
"Mode_mainMode":"ACmV"
"Mode_subMode":"Hz"
"mainMode":4
"mainRange":0
"mainValue":1638
"subMode":6
"subRange":18
"subValue":6297
"barStatus":1
"barValue":0
"iconStatus":"0x0e2800"}

RAM disk

If you are planning to run the JSON file for a very long time, the disk might be damaged by writing the spot on the disk. A RAM disk can be useful.

In the directory where the index.html is located, create a subdirectory called tmpfs and then let the data.js JSON file be placed in there. Then change index.html to read from that directory.

Create a RAM disk with this command:

cd html
mkdir tmpfs
sudo mount -t tmpfs -o size=10K tmpfs ./tmpfs

Trouble shooting

It can happend that gatttool does connect the first time and you get a timeout error message. Try again.

Example:

connect to 88:6B:0F:81:E1:2F: Connection timed out (110)

Check the 121GW device is found:

bt-device --list | grep 121GW

Example output:

121GW (88:6B:0F:81:E1:2F)

If the device is not seen try go the Linux settings and enable 121GW in the Bluetooth configuration.

The Settings for Bluetooth seen in Debian when the datalogger is running:

Settings screenshot

When the datalogger is not running it shows 121GW Disconnected.

Further reading

Most of technical information about Bluetooth communication with 121GW comes from these projects:

Known bugs

  • If you turn off/on the multimeter during a logging, gatttool will not resume the connection.

TODO

Write a C program which does it all so a lot of scripts is not needed.

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121GW multimeter command line data dumper for Linux

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