XO Troubleshooting Battery
This is the portion of the XO Troubleshooting Guide for diagnosing problems with the battery and power on an XO laptop.
Start Here
What problem are you experiencing with your laptop ?
The laptop won't run using the battery
If the laptop functions fine using a known good test battery, the battery should be replaced.
If the laptop doesn't function from a known good test battery, see Diagnosing Battery Problems.
The battery light is flashing red
If the battery light is flashing red, this usually indicates an error with the battery. Try a full reset. If the problem persists, then the battery should be replaced.
If the replacement battery shows the same flashing red battery charge light, see common causes for lack of battery presence, below.
It is possible to obtain more information about the battery, and possibly repair it. See below.
The laptop can't charge the battery
If the laptop can charge a known good test battery, the battery should be replaced.
If the laptop can't charge the known good test battery, see Diagnosing Battery Problems.
The laptop won't run using the power adapter
If the laptop runs fine using a known good power adapter, the power adapter should be replaced.
If the laptop can't run from a known good power source:
- Does the battery charge LED still indicate the laptop thinks it has power ?
- Otherwise, the motherboard need repair:
- Check the fuse (F1) and diode (D21) on the motherboard protecting the DC input
- If the fuse was blown, check diode D123 and 38V zener diode D118 to see if they are OK.
The laptop emits a high pitched whine when using the power adapter
Working on this one
Diagnosing Battery Problems
Charging of the battery, and interpretation of the front panel buttons, is under the control of a separate microprocessor in the laptop, the Embedded Controller (EC). In order to ensure that battery communications are being properly handled, we must first establish that the EC is operating correctly:
Did the EC boot?
Follow the Full Reset procedure, and check to see if the battery LED flashes orange momentarily after reapplying power.
If it didn't flash at all, you probably have a broken motherboard. If it flashed another color (red or green), then you probably have a problem with the LED driver circuitry.
Does the EC recognize the battery?
When a battery is inserted into the laptop, the EC reads information about that battery from a integrated circuit inside the battery. If the EC does not receive valid information from this read, it will either assume that a battery does not exist, or report an error. The following tests tell if the EC is talking the battery correctly.
Does the battery light respond to changes in external power?
When you apply external power, the battery led should light up in one of four states:
- solid green - indicates a fully charged battery
- solid yellow - indicates a battery being charged
- solid red - indicates a battery in dire need of charging
- flashing red - indicates a battery error. See above and a detailed explanation below.
If the battery light does not indicate one of these states (e.g. nothing lights up) then the battery is not being recognized. If you get a solid battery light then the EC has successfully read the battery gauge. If the battery light stays unlit then either the battery is not recognized or the data read has confused the EC. Use one of the following methods to manually check for battery presence to determine the problem.
Checking for battery presence
The following methods may be used to manually check for battery presence.
Using Linux
Linux has an interface to the laptop's battery subsystem. Its available via sysfs at /sys/class/power_supply/olpc_battery/. The value of 'present' indicates if the EC thinks a battery exists. To check this value use the 'cat' command in the terminal app or at a vtty:
cat /sys/class/power_supply/olpc_battery/present
Using OpenFirmware
You will need a developer key for the laptop. Open Firmware has command that will talk to the EC and read the current battery info. This command is watch-battery. At the Open Firmware command prompt do:
ok watch-battery
If EC thinks a battery exists you should see a single line that gets updated with various pieces of battery information. If a battery does not exist then that will be indicated with a 'No battery' rather than battery status info.
Using OpenFirmware and batman.fth
You will need a developer key for the laptop. Batman.fth has comands that can interrogate the state machine of the EC's 1-wire interface. This allows you to see what's happening on the 1-wire bus. The command for this is see-bstate. If a battery is not detected the numbers printed will cycle between 0,1 and 2. Numbers other than that indicate the EC has detected a battery.
Common Causes for lack of battery presence
There are a number of possible causes for lack of battery presence. Here they are, in the order in which they should be checked.
Unplugged cable
Check to see that connectors CN21 and CN22 on the motherboard are firmly plugged in. There is a second connector, hidden in the bottom part of the laptop.
Broken Wire
If no batteries are detected, a break or bad connection between CN22 on the motherboard and the data pin on the battery connector results in no 1-wire communication (seen as this problem). Check continuity of the cable with an ohm meter.
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Bad data in battery EEPROM
Normally if the data in the EEPROM has been corrupted a flashing red LED error will result. However, depending on the corruption it may be possible to confuse the EC. Use a known good battery to ensure that the problem is with the battery and not the laptop.
A battery in this condition can be detected by watching the output of see-bstate.
One-wire Communication Error
The sensor inside the battery could be malfunctioning or the output from the EC could be corrupted from a manufacturing defect. If the laptop cannot communicate with the known good battery, and you have already checked for an unplugged cable or broken wire, then the error is in the laptop motherboard and it will need replacement.
Battery LED is flashing red
Flashing red LED indicates that the battery subsystem has detected an error. Open Firmware has a command that will read the error code from the EC. The command for this is 'ec-abnormal@'. At the Open Firmware use the following to view the error code.
ok ec-abnormal@ .
Note the '.' at the end. This is required to print the error code.
The error conditions should be listed...
Battery fails to charge?
Checking the actual charge level
olpc-pwr_log is a Linux bash script that allows you to measure the amount of charge delivered to or extracted from the battery. It can be used to determine if the battery is performing at its rated capacity.
Laptop abruptly shuts off before battery is capacity reaches < 10%
See above
Experimental LiFePO4 Recovery Procedure
Problem Symptoms
A small percentage of LiFePO4 batteries are exhibiting a problem where they do not charge correctly. The parameters that the EC watches while charging change in such a way that the EC thinks the battery is full and marks it as full. On some batteries this seems to happen in the first few minutes and on others it happens much later on. The end result in all cases is an abrupt shutoff when the voltage on the battery drops below the critical level where it can sustain operation.
Verifying the problem ( Under construction )
The first step in verify if this is the problem with your battery is to check what the current capacity is. The tool to do this is olpc-pwr_log. To use the script download it and copy it to your XO via a usb disk, SD card, or download it directly with wget.
wget http://dev.laptop.org/~rsmith/olpc-pwr_log
There have been a few reports of windows corrupting the file when it downloads it. If you download from a computer running a Windows OS then please get the .zip version instead and extract it to your storage media. olpc-pwr_log.zip is located in the same place as olpc-pwr_log.
Once its downloaded and on the XO then make sure its executable by typing
chmod +x olpc-pwr_log
Then you run the script with
./olpc-pwr_log
After a battery is detected A series of numbers will start listing on the screen. See XO_Power_Draw for the details. The number we care about for for diagnosing this problem is the last one. That is the net amount of charge delivered to the battery while the script is running. The units are in mAh.
The basic procedure:
- plug up your XO to ext power and allow the battery to charge until the EC thinks it is full ie. green charge LED lit.
- start olpc-pwr_log and let it report at least 1 line of data
- unplug external power
- let the XO run on battery until it dies
- remove the battery
- power the XO back up on ext power without the battery.
- start olpc-pwr_log
- insert the battery
- allow the battery to charge until the charge LED is green again.
- exit the script with 'ctrl-c'
Exceptions:
In many cases the battery despite being very low will have marked as fully charged by the EC. If this is the case then the EC will not attempt to enable the charging circuits. Yet if you unplug external power the XO shuts down immediately or within a few seconds and the battery is not marked as low. In this state its not possible to obtain any data with olpc-pwr_log. To fix this batman.fth allows you to reset the state of the battery and manually mark it low. This allows the EC to resync with the actual state of the battery and allow charging to be enabled. See #bat-set-low for the details.
Reading the log file
Recovery Procedure
Software Tools
olpc-pwr_log
Currently this tool is located at http://dev.laptop.org/~rsmith/olpc-pwr_log
To use olpc-pwr_log follow the following procedure:
- Copy (or download) olcp-pwr_log to the XO. It does not need any special priviledge
- Start it
The script will wait until it detects a battery and then begin to log various parameters via the olpc-battery subsystem. If you battery is really low and the EC is using trickle charge rather than main charge then the script will appear to be still looking for a battery even though the yellow charge light is on. Once the EC finishes trickle charging it will report that a valid battery is present and the script will continue.
The output of the script is both to the screen and to a file. The file name is 'pwr-<date>-<gauge ID>.csv'. Gauge ID is a unique ID number that is contained in the gas gague of each battery.
More details can be found here olpc_pwr_log
batman.fth
Batman.fth is a forth script that is available from [1]. To use it you must load it at an Open Firmware (OFW) prompt. Getting to an OFW prompt requires a developer key. At the OFW prompt the script is loaded with the 'fload' command specifying the storage device where bathman.fth is located. Examples:
USB disk:
fload usb:\batman.fth
SD card:
fload sd:\batman.fth
Nand:
fload nand:\batman.fth
Once loaded you run the commands in the script just like any other openfirmware command.
Key tools in batman.fth
- see-bstate
- bat-recover
Linux battery subsystem
More information needed here