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A minimalistic MIDI interface for the Raspberry Pi / play a MIDI
file
Tested on a Raspberry Pi 2 and Raspberry Pi Zero W.
Works also with Raspberry Pi as
USB/Bluetooth MIDI host, and you can even use the Pi-Zero's
USB-client-mode-feature to recognize all the collected MIDI I/O as
one MIDI device at your PC.
This schematic can also be used with 3.3V-based
microcontroller-boards:
(old version with
rare optocoupler)
How does this work? In an official MIDI-schematic for MIDI from a
MIDI-device, I found two resistors with 220 Ohm in series, but
that's for 5 volts.
We only have 3.3V here. The current for the 6N136 found in the
datasheet is 16mA. So we need for the resistors:
R_opto = (3.3V - 1.45V_forward) / 16mA = 116 Ohm. Or represented
with two resistors in series: About two times 65 Ohm.
Set up the Pi's serial-port for MIDI:
Because MIDI has that weird non-standard baud-rate of 31250, we have
to tweak so things in /boot/config.txt.
Just add this at the end of the file and reboot:
enable_uart=1
dtoverlay=pi3-miniuart-bt
dtoverlay=midi-uart0
After every reboot, you need to set the baud-rate to "38400" which,
with the tweak in config.txt, is actually 31250:
stty -F /dev/serial0 38400
Now you can send MIDI-date to /dev/serial0.
Here is a way to test your MIDI-output with http://www.varal.org/ttymidi/
(needs libasound2-dev),
and the midi-player pmidi, for which a debian-package is available:
I had to add -lpthread to this line of ttymidi/Makefile:
gcc src/ttymidi.c -o ttymidi -lasound -lpthread
Add your user (pi) to the dialout group, for accessing the serial
port:
sudo usermod -aG dialout pi
Then start it with:
./ttymidi -s /dev/serial0 -b 38400 &
Now we can see a MIDI-device:
aconnect -l
client 0: 'System' [type=kernel]
0 'Timer '
1 'Announce '
client 14: 'Midi Through' [type=kernel]
0 'Midi Through Port-0'
client 128: 'ttymidi' [type=user,pid=2865]
0 'MIDI out '
1 'MIDI in '
Note that "in" is here from the perspective of ttymidi.
pmidi luno-midi-test.mid -p 128:1
plays my
boring test-midi-file :)
Licensed under Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
License.
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