I believe people are answering the question but are slightly off target.
Create a group on your Linux distribution call USRP, make sure those users
you want control the USRP as users (AND NOT ROOT) are in this group. The go
read the gnuradio wiki about the other changes granting device
http://gnuradio.org/redmine/projects/gnuradio/wiki/UbuntuInstall
has configuring USRP support. Following these instructions will allow users
in the USRP group to run the hardware without root access.
Bob
On Fri, Oct 7, 2011 at 7:01 AM, Robert McGwier rwmcgw...@gmail.com wrote:
I believe
On 07/10/2011 8:53 AM, Robert McGwier wrote:
http://gnuradio.org/redmine/projects/gnuradio/wiki/UbuntuInstall
has configuring USRP support. Following these instructions will allow
users in the USRP group to run the hardware without root access.
Bob
Also, the build-gnuradio script takes
Thanks a lot for all the replys!
Sorry that I forgot to mention I am using USRP2.
I think the link is for USRP which create a usrp group for non root control.
Best,
Guanbo
On Oct 7, 2011, at 6:01 AM, Robert McGwier rwmcgw...@gmail.com wrote:
I believe people are answering the question but are
Hi, all
We are interesting to build up a USRP testbed which allowed the guest remote
access to do some experiments.
I have seen someone's youtube video that they control the USRPs to transmit
different signals through SSH access.
But I want to double check if it allowed guest control of USRP
I have accessed and used a USRP over SSH before. In fact, I accessed it over
the Internet, not just a LAN. Although I was not the one who set it up, as
far as I know, nothing additional had to be done to enable this. I simply
logged in as the user account under which GNU Radio had been installed.
Remember that you in fact are not required to Login to the USRP at all, it
isn't an interactive device, more like a peripheral device to a host computer.
Thus your remote access limitation is purely dependent on the remote host you
utilize to run GNURadio to interface to the USRP. The main