forked from M-Labs/artiq
doc: use wavedrom to visualize stuff
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@ -27,6 +27,7 @@ requirements:
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- asyncserial
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- sphinx
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- sphinx-argparse
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- sphinxcontrib-wavedrom
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- h5py
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- dateutil
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- pyqt5
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@ -53,6 +53,7 @@ extensions = [
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'sphinx.ext.mathjax',
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'sphinx.ext.viewcode',
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'sphinxarg.ext',
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'sphinxcontrib.wavedrom',
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]
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# Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory.
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@ -40,23 +40,45 @@ When computing the difference of absolute timestamps, use ``mu_to_seconds(t2-t1)
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When accumulating time, do it in machine units and not in SI units, so that rounding errors do not accumulate.
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The following basic example shows how to place output events on the timeline.
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It emits a precisely timed 10 µs pulse:::
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It emits a precisely timed 2 µs pulse:::
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ttl.on()
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delay(10*us)
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delay(2*us)
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ttl.off()
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The device ``ttl`` represents a single digital output channel
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(:class:`artiq.coredevice.ttl.TTLOut`).
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The :meth:`artiq.coredevice.ttl.TTLOut.on` method places an rising edge on the timeline at the current cursor position (``now``).
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Then the cursor is moved forward 10 µs and a falling edge event is placed at the new cursor position.
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Then the cursor is moved forward 2 µs and a falling edge event is placed at the new cursor position.
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Then later, when the wall clock reaches the respective timestamps the RTIO gateware executes the two events.
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The following diagram shows what is going on at the different levels of the software and gateware stack:
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.. wavedrom::
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{
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signal: [
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{name: 'kernel', wave: 'x22.2x', data: ['on()', 'delay(2*us)', 'off()'], node: '..A.XB'},
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{name: 'now_mu', wave: '2...2.', data: ['7000', '9000'], node: '..P..Q'},
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{name: 'slack', wave: 'x2x.2x', data: ['4400', '5800']},
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{},
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{name: 'rtio_counter', wave: 'x2x|2x|2x2x', data: ['2600', '3200', '7000', '9000'], node: ' V.W'},
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{name: 'ttl', wave: 'x1.0', node: ' R.S', phase: -7.5},
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{ node: ' T.U', phase: -7.5}
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],
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edge: [
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'A~>R', 'P~>R', 'V~>R', 'B~>S', 'Q~>S', 'W~>S',
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'R-T', 'S-U', 'T<->U 2µs'
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],
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}
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The sequence is exactly equivalent to:::
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ttl.pulse(10*us)
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ttl.pulse(2*us)
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The :meth:`artiq.coredevice.ttl.TTLOut.pulse` method advances the timeline cursor (using ``delay()``) while other methods such as :meth:`artiq.coredevice.ttl.TTLOut.on`, :meth:`artiq.coredevice.ttl.TTLOut.off`, :meth:`artiq.coredevice.dds._DDSGeneric.set`, or the ``set_*()`` methods of :class:`artiq.coredevice.spi.SPIMaster` do not. The latter are called *zero-duration* methods.
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Underflow exceptions
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--------------------
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3
setup.py
3
setup.py
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@ -12,7 +12,8 @@ if sys.version_info[:3] < (3, 5, 2):
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# Depends on PyQt5, but setuptools cannot check for it.
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requirements = [
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"sphinx", "sphinx-argparse", "asyncserial", "numpy", "scipy",
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"sphinx", "sphinx-argparse", "sphinxcontrib-wavedrom",
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"asyncserial", "numpy", "scipy",
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"python-dateutil", "prettytable", "h5py",
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"quamash", "pyqtgraph", "pygit2", "aiohttp",
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"llvmlite_artiq", "pythonparser", "python-Levenshtein",
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