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pikvm/docs/xh_hk4401.md

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# XH-HK4401 4-port HDMI USB KVM Switch
<img src="xh-hk4401.jpg" alt="drawing" width="300"/>
This KVM is [sold](https://www.aliexpress.com/item/4000849336545.html) under many names, and comes in two versions.
The only way these two versions differ is that one has one of its USB ports replaced with a PS/2 port. The
identifying feature is that they come with a small external control unit with 4 buttons. This controller is
connected to the main KVM via a micro USB cable, however this is **NOT** as USB connection.
!!! warning
Audio was not tested, it is assumed to be non-functional
## Connections
1. Connect the USB-A cable from the Raspberry Pi OTG port to to any of the USB ports on the XH-HK4401 switch. All 3/4 USB ports work exactly the same, internally they are just connected to a USB HUB.
2. Connect the HDMI out from the XH-HK4401 switch to the Raspberry Pi CSI-2 to HDMI input.
3. Connect host USB and HDMI cables from the XH-HK4401 switch to the machines to be managed per the switch instructions.
4. Finally see below for details about connecting to the control micro USB port. **This it not a normal USB micro port.**
!!! warning
There is a limitation in the underlying PiKVM software related to plugging video cables from a host which is already powered and connected to a monitor to a Raspberry Pi HDMI-CSI bridge. These limitations apply equally when using the XH-HK4401 KVM switch. If video is not present in PiKVM, try keeping all host machines off and connecting them directly to the XH-HK4401 switch before powering the hosts on.
## RS-232 control cable
The control unit communicates to the KVM using the RS-232 protocol (at 5v) not USB, and one of the following
solutions must be used.
### An inverter circuit
For this you will need:
* 2x 2n7000 MOSFETs
* 2x 10K resistors
* 1x USB Micro connector, or sacrificial micro USB cable
* *Optional:* USB UART adapter
<img src="xh-hk4401_circuit.jpg" />
You can connect this either via a USB UART adapter, or directly to the Raspberry Pi: `GND -> Pin 6`, `TX -> Pin 8`, `RX -> Pin 10`.
On the v3 PiKVM hat you will need to disable the UART jumpers to use the on-board UART.
!!! note
Please search online for USB pinouts to ensure you connect it properly.
### Inverting USB UART adapter
Some USB UART adapters have the rare feature to invert the logic level of the RX/TX signals. For example the FTDI FT232 can
be configured via the FTDI configuration GUI to do this. With such an adapter, the circuit above is not required. All you
need is to connect it to a micro-USB connector.
## Adding UI elements to control the KVM switch
The UI can be updated to add buttons to switch between KVM inputs and indicators for which input is currently selected. The instructions below will make these available in the PiKVM UI after clicking the "GPIO" menu button in the KVM view.
1. SSH into PiKVM
2. Enable read-write mode on the sd card via `rw`
3. Edit the `/etc/kvmd/override.yaml` file and include the following. Note the assumption that you are using a USB UART present on `/dev/ttyUSB0`:
```yaml
kvmd:
gpio:
drivers:
hk:
type: xh_hk4401
device: /dev/ttyUSB0
scheme:
ch0_led:
driver: hk
pin: 0
mode: input
ch1_led:
driver: hk
pin: 1
mode: input
ch2_led:
driver: hk
pin: 2
mode: input
ch3_led:
driver: hk
pin: 3
mode: input
ch0_button:
driver: hk
pin: 0
mode: output
switch: false
ch1_button:
driver: hk
pin: 1
mode: output
switch: false
ch2_button:
driver: hk
pin: 2
mode: output
switch: false
ch3_button:
driver: hk
pin: 3
mode: output
switch: false
view:
table:
- ["#Input 1", ch0_led, ch0_button]
- ["#Input 2", ch1_led, ch1_button]
- ["#Input 3", ch2_led, ch2_button]
- ["#Input 4", ch3_led, ch3_button]
```
4. Return to read-only mode for the sd card via `ro`
5. Restart the kvmd service: `systemctl restart kvmd`
## Switching between hosts in the UI
To switch between hosts, enter the KVM UI and click the "GPIO" menu. You should see 4 inputs, one of which will have a green circle indicating it is currently selected. Click the other inputs to change the selected host.