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Roche Accu-Chek Guide sample download utility

TL;DR:

Linux C++-17 code to download samples from a "ROCHE ACCU-CHEK Guide" blood glucose monitor using libusb

To compile:

  • install libusb-1.0-dev

  • install build-essential

  • in a shell, type:

    make

To run:

  • connect your device via USB to your computer

  • in a root shell, type:

    ./accuchek > samples.json

  • blood glucose levels should be in file samples.json

  • if it didn't work see "a number of things can go wrong" below

What it does:

  • scans all USB devices in the system
  • finds an Accu-Chek Guide device if there's one
  • connects to it
  • downloads all blood glucose samples
  • dumps them as JSON on stdout
  • hopefully exit gracefully

Of interest:

  • This has been tested on Ubuntu 20.04. On other Unixes, YMMV.

  • The file config.txt contains the USB id's of supported devices. If you have a slightly difference device that may work with this code, add its parameters (found in the output of lsusb) to the file and see if it works. Please submit a PR of it does.

  • This is a rough first cut, improvements via PRs are welcome.

  • Unless you enjoy futzing around with udev and the like, you should run the utility as root

  • Produced JSON has glucose levels in both mg/dL and mmol/L units

  • The ascii timestamps in JSON are expressed in the local device time

  • The epoch timestamps in JSON are GMT, assuming the computer running the utility is set to the same timezone as the Accu-Chek device.

  • The proprietary USB protocol needed to talk to the device was reverse-engineered from the Javascript code found here the author of which likely had access to the vendor documentation:

    https://github.com/tidepool-org/uploader/tree/master/lib/drivers/roche

  • The JS code has a little more functionality (eg it can set the device time), but as much as I can ascertain, it's not particularly portable: it only runs on top of Chrome, and even there, I have never really managed to get it to run on anything but windoze: the amount of dependencies you have to install to ever hope to see it run is simply frightening.

  • A number of things might go wrong with this code. When that happens:

    • disconnect device USB cable
    • kill the utility
    • re-connect device USB cable
    • make sure it says "data transfer / transferring data" on the device screen
    • type in a root shell: export ACCUCHEK_DBG=1
    • from the same shell, run the utility again to see what the problem is

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C++ code to read data from a Roche Accu-Chek Guide blood glucose monitor over bare metal USB

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