I folks, to complete the timing set, I also just added another timer module to gr-filerepeater. This one you can give a time-of-day (hours/minutes/seconds) and a duration and it'll generate a positive state transition when the specified time is reached every day, then a 0 state transition when the specified duration expires. So if you wanted to write to a file starting at 3am for 15 minutes, this would be the way to do it without having to wake up!
On Thu, May 2, 2019 at 9:35 AM GhostOp14 <ghosto...@gmail.com> wrote: > Ali, I just pushed a couple of updates. Let's see if that fixes it for > you. > > I added: > 1. [Timer] Some thread safety to the timer module. I also noticed in my > flowgraph if I went to the top block options and turned on "realtime > scheduling" it was generally more accurate on the timing (makes sense). > 2. [File Sink] Added a proper gnuradio stop() function to make sure files > get properly closed on exit. (Burns me every time.... swig doesn't > guarantee that C++ destructors get called so you really need to clean up in > stop(). I just get lazy sometimes) > > Anyway do a fresh git pull and let me know if that fixes any of your > issues or if you still experience them. > > > > On Wed, May 1, 2019 at 8:52 PM GhostOp14 <ghosto...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Thanks Ali, >> >> I'll take a look at what you found with inconsistencies and see if I can >> hunt them down. >> >> >> >> On Wed, May 1, 2019 at 5:35 PM Ali Dormiani <sdorm...@eng.ucsd.edu> >> wrote: >> >>> Hello GhostOp14 and USRP users, >>> >>> Your oot blocks are amazing. They do exactly what we need in a clean >>> way. In testing, we have found that there are rare anomalies though (occur >>> like a rare Poisson process). >>> >>> 1. Sometimes the advanced file sink will create an empty file of 0 >>> bytes. >>> >>> 2. Sometimes the state timer messes up. We avoid a runaway data capture >>> by using the 'max file size' parameter in the advanced file sink. >>> >>> Overall, this solution is very good and eliminates a lot of variables >>> from our experiments. All of our USRP devices are initialized once and >>> constantly stream data (only some of which is saved). Our phase calibration >>> is a lot more consistent now. >>> >>> Thank you again for providing these oot blocks on Github. My own custom >>> embedded python block was inelegant and inconsistent. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> >>> Ali >>> >>> >>> On Wed, May 1, 2019 at 6:19 AM GhostOp14 via USRP-users < >>> usrp-users@lists.ettus.com> wrote: >>> >>>> Morning everyone, not sure my note yesterday hit the list correctly so >>>> I'm trying again. >>>> >>>> Mark: I have a solution for you. I added a new block yesterday to >>>> gr-filerepeater (pybombs or github). There's now a state timer block >>>> that'll generate a message based on block-specified timing. Trigger time, >>>> cycle time, etc. gr-filerepeater also has a new file sink block I've added >>>> in the past couple of weeks specifically to address the same kind of >>>> problem. You can feed the timer msg out to the new sink msg in. The new >>>> block will then key off the state (1/0) in the msg metadata and start/stop >>>> writing to a file. You can specify a directory and a base file name, then >>>> every time a new file write is started it'll append a timestamp. Should >>>> exactly match up to what you're trying to accomplish. I'll post on the >>>> gnuradio list as well since they're gnuradio blocks. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> On Mon, Apr 29, 2019 at 8:24 PM Marcus D. Leech via USRP-users < >>>> usrp-users@lists.ettus.com> wrote: >>>> >>>>> On 04/29/2019 08:08 PM, Mark Wagner via USRP-users wrote: >>>>> > Hey all, >>>>> > >>>>> > I'd like to know how to write short files of streamed USRP data >>>>> > periodically using GNUradio. For instance, I'd like the USRP to >>>>> > automatically record 5 seconds of data every 10 minutes. It does not >>>>> > matter to me whether the USRP is constantly on and most of the data >>>>> is >>>>> > being discarded, or if the USRP wakes up every 10 minutes to record >>>>> > the data before sleeping. Whichever is easiest to achieve is fine by >>>>> > me. Does anyone have experience doing this kind of thing? >>>>> > >>>>> > -Mark >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> > -- >>>>> > Mark Wagner >>>>> > University of California San Diego >>>>> > Electrical and Computer Engineering >>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> If you're using Gnu Radio, you can simply use the file sink, and have >>>>> it >>>>> record to "/dev/null" most of the time, then have something (perhaps >>>>> via >>>>> the XMLRPC built-in feature) change the filename to whatever your >>>>> desired filename is, and then revert it back to "/dev/null". >>>>> >>>>> I think I said the same thing on the discuss-gnuradio mailing list a >>>>> few >>>>> days ago. >>>>> >>>>> The usrp-users mailing list isn't the best place to ask Gnu Radio >>>>> questions, a question like this, which is inherently radio-type >>>>> agnostic, probably >>>>> belongs on the discuss-gnuradio mailng list, because it's more >>>>> about >>>>> "how do I make Gnu Radio dance". >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> _______________________________________________ >>>>> USRP-users mailing list >>>>> USRP-users@lists.ettus.com >>>>> http://lists.ettus.com/mailman/listinfo/usrp-users_lists.ettus.com >>>>> >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> USRP-users mailing list >>>> USRP-users@lists.ettus.com >>>> http://lists.ettus.com/mailman/listinfo/usrp-users_lists.ettus.com >>>> >>>
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