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sdrangel/plugins/samplesource/bladerfinput/readme.md

4.2 KiB

BladeRF input plugin

Introduction

This input sample source plugin gets its samples from a BladeRF device.

Build

The plugin will be built only if the BladeRF host library is installed in your system. If you build it from source and install it in a custom location say: /opt/install/libbladeRF you will have to add -DLIBBLADERF_INCLUDE_DIR=/opt/install/libbladeRF/include -DLIBBLADERF_LIBRARIES=/opt/install/libbladeRF/lib/libbladeRF.so to the cmake command line.

The BladeRF Host library is also provided by many Linux distributions and is built in the SDRangel binary releases.

Interface

BladeRF input plugin GUI

1: Common stream parameters

SDR Daemon FEC stream GUI

1.1: Frequency

This is the center frequency of reception in kHz.

1.2: Start/Stop

Device start / stop button.

  • Blue triangle icon: device is ready and can be started
  • Green square icon: device is running and can be stopped
  • Magenta (or pink) square icon: an error occured. In the case the device was accidentally disconnected you may click on the icon, plug back in and start again.

1.3: Record

Record baseband I/Q stream toggle button

1.4: Stream sample rate

Baseband I/Q sample rate in kS/s. This is the device sample rate (4) divided by the decimation factor (6).

2: Auto correction options

These buttons control the local DSP auto correction options:

  • DC: auto remove DC component
  • IQ: auto make I/Q balance

3: XB-200 add-on control

This controls the optional XB-200 add-on when it is fitted to the BladeRF main board. These controls have no effect if the XB-200 board is absent. Options are:

  • None: XB-200 is ignored
  • Bypass: XB-200 is passed through
  • Auto 1dB: The 50, 144 and 220 MHz filters are switched on automatically according to the frequency of reception when it is within the -1 dB passband of the filters
  • Auto 3dB: The 50, 144 and 220 MHz filters are switched on automatically according to the frequency of reception when it is within the -3 dB passband of the filters
  • Custom: The signal is routed through a custom filter
  • 50M: The signal is routed through the 50 MHz filter
  • 144M: The signal is routed through the 144 MHz filter
  • 222M: The signal is routed through the 222 MHz filter

4: Device sample rate

This is the BladeRF device ADC sample rate in kS/s. Possible values are: 1536, 1600, 2000, 2304, 2400, 3072, 3200, 4608, 4800, 6144, 7680, 9216, 9600, 10752, 12288, 18432, 19200, 24576, 30720, 36864, 39936 kS/s.

5: Rx filter bandwidth

This is the Rx filter bandwidth in kHz in the LMS6002D device. Possible values are: 1500, 1750, 2500, 2750, 3000, 3840, 5000, 5500, 6000, 7000, 8750, 10000, 12000, 14000, 20000, 28000 kHz.

6: Decimation factor

The I/Q stream from the BladeRF ADC is doensampled by a power of two before being sent to the passband. Possible values are increasing powers of two: 1 (no decimation), 2, 4, 8, 16, 32.

7: Baseband center frequency position relative the the BladeRF Rx center frequency

Possible values are:

  • Cen: the decimation operation takes place around the BladeRF Rx center frequency
  • Inf: the decimation operation takes place around the center of the lower half of the BladeRF Rx passband.
  • Sup: the decimation operation takes place around the center of the upper half of the BladeRF Rx passband.

8: LNA gain

This is the LNA gain in dB. LNA is inside the LMS6002D chip and is placed before the RF mixer. Possible values are:

  • 0 dB: no gain
  • 3dB
  • 6dB

9: Variable gain amplifier #1 gain

The VGA1 gain can be adjusted from 5 dB to 30 dB in 1 dB steps. The VGA1 is inside the LMS6002D chip and is placed between the RF mixer and the baseband filter.

10: Variable gain amplifier #2 gain

The VGA2 gain can be adjusted from 0 dB to 30 dB in 3 dB steps. The VGA2 is inside the LMS6002D chip and is placed between the baseband filter and the ADC.