Rtl-sdr » History » Revision 5
Revision 4 (steve-m, 02/19/2016 10:51 PM) → Revision 5/205 (steve-m, 02/19/2016 10:51 PM)
[[PageOutline]] = rtl-sdr = DVB-T sticks based on the Realtek RTL2832U can be used as a cheap SDR, since the chip allows transferring the raw I/Q samples to the host, which is officially used for DAB/DAB+/FM demodulation. == Specifications == The RTL2832U outputs 8-bit I/Q-samples, and the highest theoretically possible sample-rate is 3.2 MS/s, however, the highest sample-rate without lost samples that has been tested so far is 2.8 MS/s. The frequency range is highly dependent of the used tuner, sticks that use the Elonics E4000 offer the best range (64 - 1700 MHz). == Supported Hardware == So far, the following devices are supported: * ezcap USB 2.0 DVB-T/DAB/FM stick (Elonics E4000 tuner) * Terratec NOXON DAB/DAB+ USB-Stick (Fitipower FC0013 tuner) This is the PCB of the ezcap-stick:[[br]][[br]] [[Image(ezcap_top.jpg,50%)]] Other sticks based on the RTL2832U might be added in the future as well. This is the PCB of the ezcap-stick:[[br]][[br]] [[Image(ezcap_top.jpg,50%)]][[br]] More pictures can be found [http://www.steve-m.de/pictures/rtl-sdr/ here]. == Software == rtl-sdr is a commandline tool that can initialize the RTL2832, tune to a given frequency, and record the I/Q-samples to a file. The code can be checked out with: {{{ git clone git://git.osmocom.org/rtl-sdr.git }}} It can also be browsed on http://cgit.osmocom.org/cgit/rtl-sdr/ === Building the software === To build it, simply run 'make' in the src/-directory and make sure you have libusb1.0-0-dev installed. === Usage === Example: To tune to 392.0 MHz, and set the sample-rate to 1.8 MS/s, use: {{{ ./rtl-sdr /tmp/out.bin -s 1800000 -f 392000000 }}} If the device can't be opened, make sure you have the appropriate rights to access the device (udev-rules, or running it as root). === Known problems === * If the samples are written to a harddrive, and not a ramdisk, samples may get dropped. An improved version with proper buffering and asynchronous usage of libusb is in the works. == Using the data == To convert the data to a standard cfile, following GNU Radio Block can be used:[[br]] [[br]][[Image(rtl2832-cfile.png)]][[br]][[br]] The GNU Radio Companion flowgraph (rtl2832-cfile.grc) is attached to this page. It is based on the FM demodulation flowgraph posted by Alistair Buxton [http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.drivers.video-input-infrastructure/44461/focus=44525 on this thread].