CAN bus
Hacking on car stuff in the modern era nearly inevitably requires working with CAN bus. My CAN adventures so far have been fairly sporadic over the years, but generally tedious, so I want to collect some notes here in the hopes that someone finds them useful. My current focus is on using my Linux laptop to interact with CAN bus on a 2014 Nissan Leaf, and with a much smaller bus on my workbench connecting a few bits I’ve scavenged off a crashed Leaf. More on that project in another post!
Nissan Leaf CAN buses
The Leaf, at least the one I’m interested in, has a few different CAN buses, three are available on the OBDII port (below the steering wheel) including what are known as Car-CAN, EV-CAN, and AV-CAN.
Car-CAN (“CAN communication circuit” in the Service Manual) is the general-purpose network, which most systems connect to.
EV-CAN (“EV system CAN circuit” in the Service Manual) connects the battery controller, inverter, TCU (helpfully, in the Service Manual’s Abbreviation list, TCU is said to stand for “TCU”) - basically the high power stuff that makes the car go. The EV-CAN connects to the Car-CAN via the VCM gateway.
AV-CAN apparently has to do with the audiovisual system.
Host-CAN hardware
Most inexpensive computer-to-CAN adapters seem to be based on the ELM327, or likely a clone of it. I have tried using these connected to a smartphone or laptop via USB, WiFi, and Bluetooth. Other than one Bluetooth ELM327 adapter, connected to an Android phone running LeafSpy, I have had very little success with the ELM327. The limited bandwidth of the ELM327 was ultimately what drove me to a different adapter, it can’t handle the traffic generated when the Leaf starts up.
I’ve wound up using a CANable Pro board, bought from AliExpress, stuck in the enclosure from one of the disapointing ELM327 adapters. This works with SocketCAN out of the box, and is capable of much higher bandwidth than ELM327.
Software
SocketCAN is a Linux technology which basically can provide a socket interface to CAN bus. This is a very helpful layer of the stack, which allows a program to do stuff with CAN bus without needing a driver for every CAN adapter.
Further Reading
Adequate CAN - List of CAN stuff by a likeminded Kiwi hacker.