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Casserole

An open source alternative to the now-defunct Green Bean adapter to monitor and control GE appliances through their RJ45 port.

Installation

# Clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/puddly/casserole
cd casserole

# Setup a new virtual Python env (optional but recommended)
python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate

# Install dependencies
pip install -r requirements.txt

# Compile and upload the firmware to your ESP32
platformio run -t upload -v -e esp32 --upload-port=/dev/cu.SLAB_USBtoUART

# Run the host software and see what your appliance is doing
python protocol.py

What works

  1. All bus messages are sent back to the computer, including ones sent by the appliance user input boards.
  2. Messages can be sent to the bus.

What doesn't work

  1. Other devices occasionally interrupt the adapter's messages. I'm not sure how devices take turns when sending data over the bus.
  2. GE/FirstBuild's open source SDK is incomplete and does not document any way to remotely start some appliances (like my washer).

Hardware

I don't know much about building electronics but here are the parts I've used:

Wiring:

  • Regulate the 9V from the GE bus down to 5V and connect it both your ESP32's Vin pin and to the high voltage input of the bus transceiver.
  • Connect the ESP32's 3.3V pin to the low voltage input of the bus transceiver.
  • Tie together the ESP32's second UART's RX and TX pins (16 and 17) and connect them to the low voltage input of the bus transceiver.
  • Connect pin 18 (though any will work) to the direction control of the bus transceiver.
[insert proper diagram here]

Low-level details

RJ45 Port

The RJ45 (Ethernet) port on some GE appliances exposes a bus that allows for communication with the appliance's controller board. The three pins are labeled GND, COMM, and 9V.

The COMM bus uses 5V logic and is an inverted UART at 19,200 baud.

Protocol

I've been unable to acquire an actual Green Bean module so all of the information here is based on what I can capture from my washing machine. Here is a sample packet:

e2 23 22 2d f1 03 f1 2e 0e 03 03 01 19 15 05 2a 00 0a f1 76 fc 0f 0a f1 39 01 03 f1 33 01 5d 9c 30 e3 e1

All packets begin with e2 and end with e3 e1 (although very rarely just e3). The byte e0 acts as an escape character and all instances of e0, e1, e2, and e3 in the body of the packet are escaped with e0 (so aa e0 bb e1 cc becomes aa e0 e0 bb e0 e1 cc).

Each packet has a simple structure:

  • (1 byte) e2. Everything after this but before the final e1 is encoded using the above scheme.

  • (1 byte) packet destination

  • (1 byte) total packet length (before the e[0-3] bytes have been escaped)

  • (1 byte) packet sender

  • (1 byte) command type

  • (? bytes) data

  • (2 bytes) CRC-16 checksum of the entire packet up until the start of the checksum bytes. It is a 16-bit CRC with the following parameters:

    width=16  poly=0x1021  init=0xe300  refin=false  refout=false  xorout=0x0000  check=0x5b10  residue=0x0000  name=(none)
    

    As before, this is computed on the packet payload before the e[0-3] bytes have been escaped. Interestingly, this specific CRC-16 has the following property:

    crc16(packet_until_checksum || crc16(packet_until_checksum)) == 0x0000
    
  • (1 or 2 bytes) e1 e3, although very rarely a packet is sent (consistently) with e3 missing.

The packet command type determines how the data is interpreted. A command type of f1 is used internally for all reads/writes and has the following structure:

  • (1 byte) f1
  • (1 byte) number of reads/writes encoded in data
  • A list of commands:
    • (1 byte) f0 is read, f1 is write.
    • (1 byte) endpoint ID
    • (1 byte) (This and the following bytes are absent in read requests and write acknowledgements) size of read respons or data to be written
    • (? bytes) data

The Green Bean uses a different syntax for reads (writes TBD) for what it calls ERDs:

  • (1 byte) f0
  • (1 byte) 01 for reads
  • (2 byte) 16-bit ERD, big-endian

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