CLX000 TXT decoders overview
The TXT decoders, take a set of input-files[1] (containing encoded records), a set of DBC database-files (containing decoding rules), and produce a set of output-files (containing decoded signals).
Additional information common for all decoders can be found here:
The specific decoders can be found in the menu to the left.
Command line interface
All TXT decoders are designed as command-line-interface (CLI) tools. Each decoder can output a list of supported arguments by supplying the --help
argument.
Below is an example of a help text.
--help display this help and exit
-v, --version display tool version and exit
--verbosity=<n> verbosity level (0 to 4, 0=disable, 4=verbose, default=2)
--non-interactive does not print any progress output
-d, --delete-converted deletes files after conversion if specified
-X, --no-append-root do not add "_out" when converting folders
-b, --buffer=<n> buffer size in bytes. 0 disables and -1 takes entire file
--concat concatenate output when possible (default)
--no-concat do not concatenate output
--pgn-src-merge merge PGN source addresses
--no-pgn-src-merge do not merge PGN source addresses (default)
--pgn-dst-merge merge PGN destination addresses (default)
--no-pgn-dst-merge do not merge PGN destination addresses
--dbdump dump DBs as json (in working dir)
--no-dbdump do not dump DBs as json (default)
--dbc-can*=<file> path to DBC file for CAN (e.g. for channel 1 --dbc-can1=<path>)
-O, --output-directory=<file> path to output files
-i, --input-files=<file(s)/folder(s)> paths to input files/folders (must have common root)
Warning
The --dbc-*
input arguments can be repeated to assign multiple DBC-files to one interface/channel. When multiple DBC-files are assigned to the same interface/channel, it is the responsibility of the user to avoid ID-collisions.
J1939 PGN behavior
Bus IDs using (J1939) PGN format, contain node-source and (potentially) node-destination addresses. The decoders can be configured how to handle these addresses using below input arguments:
- PGN source address:
--pgn-src-merge
: All source addresses are merged to generate one output--no-pgn-src-merge
: Each source-address generates a separate output
- PGN destination address:
--pgn-dst-merge
: All destination addresses are merged to generate one output--no-pgn-dst-merge
: Each destination-address generates a separate output
Result summary
On completion, the TXT decoders displays a result summary similar to below example.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reader summary
- Files: 1
- Messages: 21312
- Size: 8 MB
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transport protocol summary
- Successful sessions: 21312
- Failed sessions: 0
- Unfinished sessions: 0
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Writer summary
- Files: 8
- Messages: 21312
- Signals: 85248
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Execution time: 4 s
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reader summary
Summary of processed input TXT files.
Transport protocol summary
Summary of transport protocol sessions.
Note
Transport protocol transmissions can fail (e.g. if the receiving node is not ready). Expect some failed session.
Writer summary
Summary of generated output files including the number of decoded messages and signals.
Tips & tricks
Below follows a collection of tips and tricks on how to use the decoders.
Alternative way of providing DBC-files
If no DBC-file paths are provided via the --dbc-*
input arguments, the decoder searches the working directory[2] for DBC-files matching the following pattern: ^(can|lin)(\d+)-(\S*)\.dbc$
Examples:
CAN channel 1:
can1-obd.dbc
CAN channel 1:
can1-obd.dbc
,can1-canmod-gnss.dbc
(two DBC-files associated with CAN channel 1)
Drag-and-drop (Windows only)
When dropping files/folders on an executable on Windows, the executable is executed with the full paths of the dropped elements appended as the final input arguments. The decoders take the input files (-i
/ --input-files
) as the final argument(s). Organizing the input arguments this way enables support for drag-and-drop decoding of single file/folder or multiple files/folders using the default decoder settings.
When using drag-and-drop, DBC-files should be provided as explained here: Alternative way of providing DBC-files.
Dragging and dropping the input directory AABBCCDD
onto the executable effectively executes the decoder with:
txt2csv_decode.exe [FULL-PATH]/AABBCCDD
It is possible to use drag-and-drop with custom arguments. This can be done by creating a Windows shortcut to the executable and adding the custom arguments to the shortcut target. E.g. a shortcut can be created to always output files to a specific directory and to not append the _out
prefix with:
"C:\decoder\txt2csv_decode.exe" -X -O "C:\decoder\static_output_dir"
Reduce output-size
Specific messages or signals can be ignored in the output using the custom DBC-attributes described here:
Note
If specific messages are irrelevant, consider applying filters directly on the CLX000 device
Output concatenation
When the --concat
option is enabled (default), the decoders attempt to concatenate output-files (as explained in detail here: Output concatenation). Concatenation of output-files can in some cases greatly reduce the number of output-files, which in turn can reduce post-processing time significantly.
Note
When running the decoders for one input-file at a time, it becomes impossible to concatenate output-files. Consider re-running decoders on a full set of input files to optimize concatenation.
Database dump to json
The --dbdump
input argument can be used to dump the internal interpretation of the loaded databases as json files. This can be useful for troubleshooting.
Limit on open files
The decoders potentially generate a large number of output files. During decoding, multiple files can be open at the same time. In extreme cases (with huge databases), the system limit of open file handles (for a specific process) can be reached - preventing the decoders from creating new files.
On Linux, the limit of allowed open files can be set with ulimit -n
, e.g.:
$ ulimit -n
1024
$ ulimit -n 2048
$ ulimit -n
2048
Note
If ulimit -n <value>
returns Operation not permitted, then the requested new limit is too high