Ok,
My project aims at programming the fpga as a fft-ifft block, but i am a
complete novice to the usrp, so as a basic first step, all i am trying to
accomplish is that i program the fpga as a simple 4-bit counter and take in the
data. I already have a code written ccs which works upon this data and gives me
results which help me on my work further. But till date, I was using a signal
generator to feed data to the DSK, but now, I want the fpga to do the same.
Once programmed, it should feed the DSK with data, so for starters, I want to
program it as a simple counter. Later, I want to model the fpga as a fft-ifft
block, which does the fft-ifft as required on being fed by the data from the
DSK. This is what I am aiming at.
So, after building the radio, i tried running the sample examples as given and
they ran perfectly. So,
Brian, do u now intend to tell me that I should I try Matt's usrp_std and
program the fpga with that. Even if I do that, how do I assign the pins for the
fpga, I mean, the external IO pins. Or is there any relevant documentation on
this anywhere?
Thanks a lot for the support.
Regards,
Kuntal
>
>
> First of all, thanks a lot Eric for last piece of advice, it helped a lot.
>
> But it still did not clarify me completely. I am a complete novice to the
> USRP, having got it a few days back. Ok, continuing with my last topic, can
> you please tell me how do I program the fpga specifically as a counter? I
> mean, I just wanted to know the steps involved in the process, like
> generating the .rbf files. I am currently working on Quartus II Web Edition
> v6.1.
Can you give a hint as to what exactly you are trying to accomplish
with your USRP setup? Unless you are already skilled with Verilog and
FPGA's, it would seem like you have a serious potential to break your
USRP.
The majority of your questions are related to how to run Quartus II
and the Altera website does a pretty good job documenting how that is
done.
> Upon doing this, how can I read the data being generated by the fpga and
> display it in the time domain. Also, how do I do the pin assignment for the
> fpga?
> Clarification of these basic doubts would do a world of good to my project.
To look at the data being generated by the FPGA, all you must do is
look at the interface connecting the FPGA to the AD9862 to a logic
analyzer, import it into your favorite graphing software, and there is
your time domain representation of your interpolated data before it
goes through the AD9862. I wouldn't recommend doing something along
those lines.
In fact, if you want to just see what would happen - I recommend you
start out with a simulation. I believe you an download ModelSim from
the Altera website for free and simulate the entire FPGA. I believe
Matt wrote a testbench for the top level that you can figure out.
> Thanks a lot.
>
> Regards,
> Kuntal Majumdar
Brian
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