I've lost the previous thread amidst other threads, and figured enough new developments and different issues have arisen to warrant another.
I've written a simple pipeline, which generates a signal, sends it through the dbpsk modulation block, and transmits it over the USRP. A receiving USRP intercepts this and transmits anything it receives. Finally, the original computer is also waiting to receive from the USRP, and stores the results in a file sink. The results leave much to be desired, though. Even assuming the most basic sort of transmission, where all USRP input is monitored and stored rather than detecting when data is incoming (generating a constant signal by removing gr.head() from the transmission executable), it still doesn't function properly. It compiles, and runs, and outputs... but I get a file of significantly smaller size than what has been transmitted. And even more curiously, the received file isn't playable by audio_play.py. It runs, but there is no sound. Even if audio_play.py were given pseudo-random numbers (supplied by urandom), it would still output sound, even if white noise. This would all be far simpler if I were aware of how to remove the modulation aspect from benchmark_tx. The goal here is to have the capability to supply a modulated bitstream from another source, and have that transmitted, rather than GNU Radio handling modulation. We would probably get better results in the end anyway, if we made modifications to a previously tried method. But... knowing what's wrong here is still quite helpful. Code is as follows: http://www.nabble.com/file/p20964979/loopback_transmitter.py loopback_transmitter.py http://www.nabble.com/file/p20964979/loopback_reciever.py loopback_reciever.py http://www.nabble.com/file/p20964979/loopback.py loopback.py -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Attempting-DBPSK-again-tp20964979p20964979.html Sent from the GnuRadio mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
