1
0
mirror of https://github.com/f4exb/sdrangel.git synced 2024-11-15 12:51:49 -05:00
sdrangel/plugins/samplesink/filesink/readme.md

2.3 KiB
Raw Blame History

File sink plugin

Introduction

This output sample sink plugin sends its samples to file in the SDRangel .sdriq format.

The format is S16LE I/Q samples. Thus there are 4 bytes per sample. I and Q values are 16 bit signed integers. The file starts with a context header containing information about center frequency, sample rate and timestamp of the start of the recording. This header has a length which is a multiple of a sample size (normally 24 bytes thus 6 samples). Thus this file can be used as a raw I/Q file with S16LE samples tolerating a glitch at the start corresponding to the 6 "random" samples. For example in GNURadio you can simply specify your file source format as short complex.

You can also zap the 24 bytes header with this Linux command: tail -c +25 myfile.sdriq > myfile.raw

To convert in another format you may use the sox utility. For example to convert to 32 bit (float) complex samples do: sox -r 48k b 16 e signed-integer -c 2 myfile.raw -e float -c 2 myfilec.raw

Note that you have to specify the sampling rate and use .raw for the file extensions.

Build

The plugin is always built.

Interface

File sink plugin GUI

1: Start/Stop

Device start / stop button.

  • Blue triangle icon: device is ready and can be started
  • Red square icon: device is running and can be stopped
  • Magenta (or pink) square icon: an error occured

2: File stream sample rate

This is the file stream sample rate in kS/s after interpolation (4) from the baseband stream. Thus this is the sample rate (7) multiplied by the interpolation factor (6).

3: Frequency

This is the center frequency in kHz that will be put in the file header.

4: Output file selection

Use this file dialog to specify the output file.

5: File name

This is the file path of the output file.

6: Interpolation factor

The baseband stream is interpolated by this value before being written to file. It can vary in powers of two from 1 (no interpolation) to 64.

7: Baseband sample rate

This is the baseband sample rate before interpolation in kS/s. Possible values are: 32, 48, 64, 72, 128, 192, 256, 288, 300, 384, 512, 1000 kS/s.

8: Time counter

This is the recording time count in HH:MM:SS.SSS