How does 'history' relate to i/o data indices? I assume you cannot have an index < zero.
Say your work function gets common i/o arrays const float *in = (const float *) input_items[0]; float *out = (float *) output_items[0]; and you set_history(ntaps), I guess that means you get ( noutput_items + ntaps ) for the number of intput items and can produce noutput_items output. Now I have two streams, one is pass-thru (symbol tags) and the other is the data to be filtered and gets delayed by ntaps. The filtered stream is processed by: d_equalizer->filter (in, in_tags, out, noutput_items); where out[x] is the processed sample in[x + ntaps] (?). So to keep the symbol tags aligned, should we use: for (int i = 0; i < noutput_items; i++) out_tags[i] = in_tags[i + d_offset]; d_offset = ntaps - npretaps - 1 Is that the correct thinking? size of out[] is noutput_items and size of in[] is noutput_items + history ?? history = ntaps, and is > ntaps _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio