mirror of
https://github.com/saymrwulf/uhd.git
synced 2026-05-16 21:10:10 +00:00
* New method: --values="key1=value1,key2=value2" * To read key2: --values="key1=value1,key2,key3=value2" * Added --read-all option to read all values in EEPROM without burning * Old arguments still work but print deprecation warning Conflicts: host/docs/usrp_x3x0.rst
474 lines
18 KiB
ReStructuredText
474 lines
18 KiB
ReStructuredText
========================================================================
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UHD - USRP2 and N2x0 Series Device Manual
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========================================================================
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.. contents:: Table of Contents
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Comparative features list
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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**Hardware Capabilities:**
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* 1 transceiver card slot
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* External PPS reference input
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* External 10 MHz reference input
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* MIMO cable shared reference
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* Fixed 100 MHz clock rate
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* Internal GPSDO option (N2x0 only)
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**FPGA Capabilities:**
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* 2 RX DDC chains in FPGA
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* 1 TX DUC chain in FPGA
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* Timed commands in FPGA (N2x0 only)
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* Timed sampling in FPGA
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* 16-bit and 8-bit sample modes (sc8 and sc16)
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* Up to 25 MHz of RF BW with 16-bit samples
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* Up to 50 MHz of RF BW with 8-bit samples
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Load the Images onto the SD card (USRP2 only)
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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**Warning!**
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Use **usrp2_card_burner** with caution. If you specify the wrong device node,
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you could overwrite your hard drive. Make sure that **--dev=** specifies the SD card.
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**Warning!**
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It is possible to use 3rd party SD cards with the USRP2.
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However, certain types of SD cards will not interface with the CPLD:
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* Cards can be SDHC, which is not a supported interface.
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* Cards can have unexpected timing characteristics.
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For these reasons, we recommend that you use the SD card that was supplied with the USRP2.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Use the card burner tool (UNIX)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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sudo <install-path>/lib/uhd/utils/usrp2_card_burner_gui.py
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-- OR --
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cd <install-path>/lib/uhd/utils
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sudo ./usrp2_card_burner.py --dev=/dev/sd<XXX> --fpga=<path_to_fpga_image>
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sudo ./usrp2_card_burner.py --dev=/dev/sd<XXX> --fw=<path_to_firmware_image>
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Use the **--list** option to get a list of possible raw devices.
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The list result will filter out disk partitions and devices too large to be the sd card.
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The list option has been implemented on Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Use the card burner tool (Windows)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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<path_to_python.exe> <install-path>/lib/uhd/utils/usrp2_card_burner_gui.py
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Load the Images onto the On-board Flash (USRP-N Series only)
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The USRP-N Series can be reprogrammed over the network to update or change the firmware and FPGA images.
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When updating images, always burn both the FPGA and firmware images before power cycling.
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This ensures that when the device reboots, it has a compatible set of images to boot into.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Use the net burner tool
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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Use default images:
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usrp_n2xx_simple_net_burner --addr=<IP address>
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Use custom-built images:
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usrp_n2xx_simple_net_burner --addr=<IP address> --fw=<firmware path> --fpga=<FPGA path>
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**Note:**
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Different hardware revisions require different FPGA images.
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Determine the revision number from the sticker on the rear of the chassis.
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Use this number to select the correct FPGA image for your device.
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For users who would prefer a graphical utility, a Python-based alternative exists.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Use the graphical net burner tool (Linux)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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<install-path>/lib/uhd/utils/usrp_n2xx_net_burner_gui.py
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Use the graphical net burner tool (Windows)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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<path_to_python.exe> <install-path>/lib/uhd/utils/usrp_n2xx_net_burner_gui.py
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Device recovery and bricking
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Its possible to put the device into an unusable state by loading bad images.
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Fortunately, the USRP-N Series can be booted into a safe (read-only) image.
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Once booted into the safe image, the user can once again load images onto the device.
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The safe-mode button is a pushbutton switch (S2) located inside the enclosure.
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To boot into the safe image, hold-down the safe-mode button while power-cycling the device.
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Continue to hold-down the button until the front-panel LEDs blink and remain solid.
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When in safe-mode, the USRP-N device will always have the IP address **192.168.10.2**.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Setup Networking
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The USRP2 only supports Gigabit Ethernet
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and will not work with a 10/100 Mbps interface.
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However, a 10/100 Mbps interface can be connected indirectly
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to a USRP2 through a Gigabit Ethernet switch.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Setup the host interface
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The USRP2 communicates at the IP/UDP layer over the gigabit ethernet.
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The default IP address of the USRP2 is **192.168.10.2**.
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You will need to configure the host's Ethernet interface with a static IP
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address to enable communication. An address of **192.168.10.1** and a subnet
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mask of **255.255.255.0** is recommended.
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On a Linux system, you can set a static IP address very easily by using the
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'ifconfig' command:
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::
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sudo ifconfig <interface> 192.168.10.1
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Note that **<interface>** is usually something like **eth0**. You can discover the
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names of the network interfaces in your computer by running **ifconfig** without
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any parameters:
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::
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ifconfig -a
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**Note:**
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When using UHD software, if an IP address for the USRP2 is not specified,
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the software will use UDP broadcast packets to locate the USRP2.
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On some systems, the firewall will block UDP broadcast packets.
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It is recommended that you change or disable your firewall settings.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Multiple devices per host
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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For maximum throughput, one Ethernet interface per USRP2 is recommended,
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although multiple devices may be connected via a Gigabit Ethernet switch.
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In any case, each Ethernet interface should have its own subnet,
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and the corresponding USRP2 device should be assigned an address in that subnet.
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Example:
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**Configuration for USRP2 device 0:**
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* Ethernet interface IPv4 address: **192.168.10.1**
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* Ethernet interface subnet mask: **255.255.255.0**
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* USRP2 device IPv4 address: **192.168.10.2**
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**Configuration for USRP2 device 1:**
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* Ethernet interface IPv4 address: **192.168.20.1**
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* Ethernet interface subnet mask: **255.255.255.0**
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* USRP2 device IPv4 address: **192.168.20.2**
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Change the USRP2's IP address
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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You may need to change the USRP2's IP address for several reasons:
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* to satisfy your particular network configuration
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* to use multiple USRP2s on the same host computer
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* to set a known IP address into USRP2 (in case you forgot)
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**Method 1:**
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To change the USRP2's IP address,
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you must know the current address of the USRP2,
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and the network must be setup properly as described above.
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Run the following commands:
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::
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cd <install-path>/lib/uhd/utils
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./usrp_burn_mb_eeprom --args=<optional device args> --values="ip-addr=192.168.10.3"
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**Method 2 (Linux Only):**
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This method assumes that you do not know the IP address of your USRP2.
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It uses raw Ethernet packets to bypass the IP/UDP layer to communicate with the USRP2.
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Run the following commands:
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::
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cd <install-path>/lib/uhd/utils
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sudo ./usrp2_recovery.py --ifc=eth0 --new-ip=192.168.10.3
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Communication Problems
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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When setting up a development machine for the first time,
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you may have various difficulties communicating with the USRP device.
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The following tips are designed to help narrow down and diagnose the problem.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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RuntimeError: no control response
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This is a common error that occurs when you have set the subnet of your network
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interface to a different subnet than the network interface of the USRP device. For
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example, if your network interface is set to **192.168.20.1**, and the USRP device is
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**192.168.10.2** (note the difference in the third numbers of the IP addresses), you
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will likely see a 'no control response' error message.
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Fixing this is simple - just set the your host PC's IP address to the same
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subnet as that of your USRP device. Instructions for setting your IP address are in the
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previous section of this documentation.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Firewall issues
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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When the IP address is not specified,
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the device discovery broadcasts UDP packets from each ethernet interface.
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Many firewalls will block the replies to these broadcast packets.
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If disabling your system's firewall
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or specifying the IP address yields a discovered device,
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then your firewall may be blocking replies to UDP broadcast packets.
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If this is the case, we recommend that you disable the firewall
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or create a rule to allow all incoming packets with UDP source port **49152**.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Ping the device
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The USRP device will reply to ICMP echo requests.
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A successful ping response means that the device has booted properly
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and that it is using the expected IP address.
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::
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ping 192.168.10.2
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Monitor the serial output
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Read the serial port to get debug verbose output from the embedded microcontroller.
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The microcontroller prints useful information about IP addresses,
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MAC addresses, control packets, fast-path settings, and bootloading.
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Use a standard USB to 3.3v-level serial converter at 230400 baud.
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Connect **GND** to the converter ground, and connect **TXD** to the converter receive.
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The **RXD** pin can be left unconnected as this is only a one-way communication.
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* **USRP2:** Serial port located on the rear edge
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* **N210:** Serial port located on the left side
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Monitor the host network traffic
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Use Wireshark to monitor packets sent to and received from the device.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Addressing the Device
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Single device configuration
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In a single-device configuration, the USRP device must have a unique IPv4
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address on the host computer. The USRP can be identified through its IPv4
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address, resolvable hostname, or by other means. See the application notes on
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`device identification <./identification.html>`_. Please note that this
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addressing scheme should also be used with the **multi_usrp** interface.
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Example device address string representation for a USRP2 with IPv4 address **192.168.10.2**:
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::
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addr=192.168.10.2
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Multiple device configuration
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In a multi-device configuration,
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each USRP device must have a unique IPv4 address on the host computer.
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The device address parameter keys must be suffixed with the device index.
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Each parameter key should be of the format <key><index>.
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Use this addressing scheme with the **multi_usrp** interface.
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* The order in which devices are indexed corresponds to the indexing of the transmit and receive channels.
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* The key indexing provides the same granularity of device identification as in the single device case.
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Example device address string representation for 2 USRP2s with IPv4 addresses **192.168.10.2** and **192.168.20.2**:
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::
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addr0=192.168.10.2, addr1=192.168.20.2
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Using the MIMO Cable
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The MIMO cable allows two USRP devices to share reference clocks,
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time synchronization, and the Ethernet interface.
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One of the devices will sync its clock and time references to the MIMO cable.
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This device will be referred to as the slave, and the other device, the master.
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* The slave device acquires the clock and time references from the master device.
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* The master and slave may be used individually or in a multi-device configuration.
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* External clocking is optional and should only be supplied to the master device.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Shared Ethernet mode
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In shared Ethernet mode,
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only one device in the configuration can be attached to the Ethernet.
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* Clock reference, time reference, and data are communicated over the MIMO cable.
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* Master and slave must have different IPv4 addresses in the same subnet.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Dual Ethernet mode
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In dual Ethernet mode,
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both devices in the configuration must be attached to the Ethernet.
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* Only clock reference and time reference are communicated over the MIMO cable.
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* The master and slave must have different IPv4 addresses in different subnets.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Configuring the slave
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In order for the slave to synchronize to the master over MIMO cable,
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the following clock configuration must be set on the slave device:
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::
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usrp->set_time_source("mimo", slave_index);
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usrp->set_clock_source("mimo", slave_index);
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Alternative stream destination
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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It is possible to program the USRP device to send RX packets to an alternative IP/UDP destination.
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Set the subnet and gateway
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To use an alternative streaming destination,
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the device needs to be able to determine if the destination address
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is within its subnet, and ARP appropriately.
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Therefore, the user should ensure that subnet and gateway addresses
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have been programmed into the device's EEPROM.
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Run the following commands:
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::
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cd <install-path>/lib/uhd/utils
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./usrp_burn_mb_eeprom --args=<optional device args> --values="subnet=255.255.255.0,gateway=192.168.10.1"
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Create a receive streamer
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Set the stream args "addr" and "port" values to the alternative destination.
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Packets will be sent to this destination when the user issues a stream command.
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::
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//create a receive streamer, host type does not matter
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uhd::stream_args_t stream_args("fc32");
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//resolvable address and port for a remote udp socket
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stream_args.args["addr"] = "192.168.10.42";
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stream_args.args["port"] = "12345";
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//create the streamer
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uhd::rx_streamer::sptr rx_stream = usrp->get_rx_stream(stream_args);
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//issue stream command
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uhd::stream_cmd_t stream_cmd(uhd::stream_cmd_t::STREAM_MODE_NUM_SAMPS_AND_DONE);
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stream_cmd.num_samps = total_num_samps;
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stream_cmd.stream_now = true;
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usrp->issue_stream_cmd(stream_cmd);
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**Note:**
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Calling recv() on this streamer object should yield a timeout.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Hardware Setup Notes
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Front panel LEDs
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The LEDs on the front panel can be useful in debugging hardware and software issues.
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The LEDs reveal the following about the state of the device:
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* **LED A:** transmitting
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* **LED B:** MIMO cable link
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* **LED C:** receiving
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* **LED D:** firmware loaded
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* **LED E:** reference lock
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* **LED F:** CPLD loaded
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Ref Clock - 10 MHz
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Using an external 10 MHz reference clock, a square wave will offer the best phase
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noise performance, but a sinusoid is acceptable. The reference clock requires the following power level:
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* **USRP2** 5 to 15 dBm
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* **N2XX** 0 to 15 dBm
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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PPS - Pulse Per Second
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Using a PPS signal for timestamp synchronization requires a square wave signal with the following amplitude:
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* **USRP2** 5Vpp
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* **N2XX** 3.3 to 5Vpp
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Test the PPS input with the following app:
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* **<args>** are device address arguments (optional if only one USRP device is on your machine)
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::
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cd <install-path>/lib/uhd/examples
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./test_pps_input --args=<args>
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Internal GPSDO
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Please see the `Internal GPSDO Application Notes <./gpsdo.html>`_
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for information on configuring and using the internal GPSDO.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Miscellaneous
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Available Sensors
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The following sensors are available for the USRP2/N-Series motherboards;
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they can be queried through the API.
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* **mimo_locked** - clock reference locked over the MIMO cable
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* **ref_locked** - clock reference locked (internal/external)
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* other sensors are added when the GPSDO is enabled
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Multiple RX channels
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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There are two complete DDC chains in the FPGA.
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In the single channel case, only one chain is ever used.
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To receive from both channels,
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the user must set the **RX** subdevice specification.
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This hardware has only one daughterboard slot,
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which has been aptly named slot **A**.
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In the following example, a TVRX2 is installed.
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Channel 0 is sourced from subdevice **RX1**,
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and channel 1 is sourced from subdevice **RX2** (**RX1** and **RX2**
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are the antenna ports on the TVRX2 daughterboard):
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::
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usrp->set_rx_subdev_spec("A:RX1 A:RX2");
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