On Wed, 2007-01-17 at 09:22 -0700, Bahn William L Civ USAFA/DFCS wrote: > I have a file of waveform data that I want to send to the DAC on the > USRP. Can it be done? How do I do it? What format does the data in the > file need to be in?
You can use the gr.file_source block to turn a binary file into a stream of values that can be connected to further blocks. This could be raw input to the USRP, or could be preprocessed by other blocks in a flow graph. The gr.file_source block takes three parameters in it's constructor: itemsize - the length in bytes for an individual data item in the file filename - pathname of the file to open repeat - if true, loop to beginning of file when EOF if false, end when the file read is complete Other than the itemsize value, the actual format of the data in the file must correspond to the binary format of the data type expected by the block(s) that will be connected to the file_source. So if you have a sequence of short integers (16 bit), you can follow the file_source block with any block that takes shorts as an input (typically their name would have _s at the end.) Shorts are stored 'native-endian', that is, the file must have the low byte/high byte order the same as the native format of the machine reading the file. For x86 machines, this is little-endian, or low byte first. You can use GNU radio blocks to create files in the proper format by implementing a flow graph that ends in a gr.file_sink, and then use the output files later as input to something else. It's a very common testing technique. By the way, there is no notion of sample rate stored with the file; GNU radio will process the samples as fast as can be read from disk. So if you need to emulate a particular real-time data rate, you should follow your gr.file_source with a gr.throttle block. This won't be necessary if you have some other rate-limiting block in your flow graph, such as the USRP itself. There are several examples of gr.file_source use in the examples directory under python/usrp (you can grep for file_source to see them). Conceivably, if your waveform data is already in the right format, you could just use a gr.file_source and a usrp.sink_c to do what you were originally asking above. -- Johnathan Corgan, AE6HO Corgan Enterprises LLC [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio