Skip to content

A tool for reading the text that an Audi radio sends to the Driver Information System LCD.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

derpston/Audi-radio-DIS-reader

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

19 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Audi-radio-DIS-Reader

A tool for reading the text that an Audi radio sends to the Driver Information System LCD.

Background

The Driver Information System is the LCD in the middle of the dashboard clocks, seen here:

Audi DIS

The stock radios are able to send arbitrary text to the top third of this display. In the above picture, it is reporting that track 6 on CD 5 is playing.

The specific radio this worked with was an Audi Concert, model 4B0 035 186.

The radio uses three pins and a simple format to send this data to the DIS. The pins we're interested in are in the top 20-pin connector on the rear of the radio, pins 8, 9 and 10 and you can find a full pinout here.

Audi Concert radio connectors

  • 8: DIS clock signal
  • 9: DIS data signal
  • 10: DIS enable signal

These pins produce digital signals at 5V.

For the purpose of reading the DIS data sent by the radio, we can ignore pin 10, the DIS enable signal. This sends a high signal during transmission of DIS messages, and is low at all other times.

The radio was removed from the car and powered from a 12V supply in a lab environment. On the lower 8-pin connector ("III") use pin 8 for GND and 7 for +12V.

An oscilloscope was used to verify the clock/data pin understanding was correct and establish the signal levels:

Oscillopscope

In order to read the signals on pins 8 and 9, I used a PC soundcard with a stereo microphone feature. Pin 8 was connected to the left channel and pin 9 to the right. No discrete components were used between the two, the soundcard seemed to handle the 5V signals without complaint.

Lab overview

Connection closeup

In a sound editor, this is what I saw:

DIS clock/data signals

This is where the code in this repo comes in.

Reading the DIS data with Python

With the clock/data lines connected to the left/right audio channels, one can use PyAudio to read samples from the microphone and detect high/low bit states.

The protocol is relatively simple. Each time the clock signal shows a rising edge, read one bit from the data signal.

Decoding DIS data

Working with PyAudio to read this data is relatively simple.

Configure reading from the microphone port:

# Read from the microphone.
# Ask for 16-bit signed samples, stereo at 96kHz and 1024 samples
# each time we read from the buffer.
# Note that this requires stereo because the data has clock and data
# signals - we need both, and hardware capable of stereo input.
stream = pyaudio.PyAudio().open(
    format = pyaudio.paInt16,
    channels = 2,
    rate = 96000,
    input = True,
    frames_per_buffer = 1024)

Read one sample and convert the left and right channel values to integers.

sample = stream.read(1)

# One sample is 4 bytes, 2 for each channel.
# Unpack the 16-bit signed samples.
clock, data = struct.unpack("<hh", sample)

At this point, clock and data contain integers between -32k and 32k, corresponding to the voltage level on the signal lines at that time. If you compare that with, say, 20k, you can be reasonably sure you are seeing a '1' or a '0'.

After this, all that is needed is some simple logic to handle the format.

DIS data format

The messages appear to be a fixed 18 bytes, where the first is a header and can be discarded. The last byte is a checksum. The second to last byte appears to be an unprintable command byte. Many captured messages are in captured-dis-messages.txt

An example capture produces something like this:

1111 0000 '\xf0'  # header
0010 0000 ' '     # payload
0010 0000 ' '     # .
0011 0001 '1'     # .
0011 0000 '0'     # .
0011 0010 '2'     # .
0010 1110 '.'     # .
0011 0000 '0'     # .
0010 0000 ' '     # payload
0100 0110 'F'     # .
0100 1101 'M'     # .
0011 0001 '1'     # .
0010 1101 '-'     # .
0011 0011 '3'     # .
0010 0000 ' '     # .
0010 0000 ' '     # payload
0001 1100 '\x1c'  # command byte?
0101 1110 '^'     # checksum

Which corresponds to a DIS display of: " 102.0 FM1-3 "

Checksum

The checksum is calculated as the bitwise inversion of the least significant byte of the sum of all bytes in the message, including the header but excluding the checksum.

Dependencies

  • An Audi radio that generates this data.
  • A power supply to get it running in a lab environment. (12V, 5A)
  • An antenna. (A piece of wire will do.)
  • A sound device capable of stereo input.
  • PyAudio. (Available under Ubuntu from the python-pyaudio package)

Running it

Once you have the dependencies installed, try running it and pressing some preset buttons on the radio to make it generate DIS data.

~$ python dis-reader.py
Waiting for DIS radio messages.
(possible pyaudio/alsa/pulse/jack/etc warnings are expected)
[...audio system warnings snipped...]
'  103.8 FM1    \x1c' (checksum valid)
'SPIN1038FM1    \x1c' (checksum valid)
'  107.2 FM1-4  \x1c' (checksum valid)
'   89.1 FM1-6  \x1c' (checksum valid)
'RTE R1 \x1cFM1-6  \x1c' (checksum valid)
[...]

Troubleshooting

The first troubleshooting step should be to open a sound recording application like Audacity and record a sample. You should see spikes when the radio sends DIS data. Try zooming in on them to look at the quality of the waveforms. You should get something similar to the DIS clock/data signal screenshot above.

Contributing

Contributions welcome!

Attribution

For helping me figure this out, thanks to:

  • Jeff (Oscilloscope and help with initial investigation)
  • Becky ("Read on the rising clock edge!", format investigation and solving the checksum question)
  • nemo (Hint about the second to last byte possibly being a command byte)

About

A tool for reading the text that an Audi radio sends to the Driver Information System LCD.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages