On Aug 3, 2010, at 8:42 PM, Ashish Bansal wrote:
> I am using USRP2. The newer version of GNU 3.3 contains timestamp code.
> 1. What do you exactly mean by timestamp. Does it mean it will output the 64
> bit timer value with each sample. What is the command on the host side to see
> these time
Hi ,
I am using USRP2. The newer version of GNU 3.3 contains timestamp code.
Couls you please answer my following querries.
1. What do you exactly mean by timestamp. Does it mean it will output the 64
bit timer value with each sample. What is the command on the host side to
see these timestamps.
> my question is about the time stamp in rx_metadata->timestamp. I've got the
> rx_streaming_samples running and now I wondering what the time value is about.
> In the code I've found this:
> uint32_t timestamp; // time of rx or tx (100 MHz)
>
> Can you tell me what the timestamp exactl
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 08:12:08PM +0200, Michael Sprauer wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> my question is about the time stamp in rx_metadata->timestamp. I've got the
> rx_streaming_samples running and now I wondering what the time value is about.
> In the code I've found this:
> uint32_t timestamp;
Hello list,
my question is about the time stamp in rx_metadata->timestamp. I've got the
rx_streaming_samples running and now I wondering what the time value is about.
In the code I've found this:
uint32_ttimestamp; // time of rx or tx (100 MHz)
Can you tell me what the timestamp exa