But the throttle should roughly slow it down to a real-time rate. The top half of my grc file updates about 1 spectrum/second via a throttle, and writes those vectors to disk. If I read back the the file also through a throttle, it should have about the same rate, but it's much slower. Note to disable the top half when running the bottom half. Lou
Marcus Müller-3 wrote > Furthermore, and this also is something very often misunderstood, throttle > doesn't do anything with the samples. Really! It only copies them from in- > to output. Nothing changes. And just as you can't tell the difference > between a file that was downloaded with a fast internet connection and the > same file downloaded through the slowest connection on earth, the sample > file doesn't contain any difference whether you've used throttle or not. > GNU Radio works by trying to be the fastest signal processing "pipe" > possible. Throttle is really just as if someone deliberately stepped on > and of a hose just to regulate the average amount of stuff going through. -- View this message in context: http://gnuradio.4.n7.nabble.com/accumulate-spectrum-tp60256p60273.html Sent from the GnuRadio mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list Discuss-gnuradio@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio