.. Copyright (C) 2014, 2015 Robert Jordens <jordens@gmail.com> FAQ ### How do I ... ============ prevent my first RTIO command from causing an underflow? -------------------------------------------------------- The first RTIO event is programmed with a small timestamp above the value of the timecounter at the start of the experiment. If the kernel needs more time than this timestamp to produce the event, an underflow will occur. You can prevent it by calling ``break_realtime`` just before programming the first event, or by adding a sufficient delay. organize parameters in folders? ------------------------------- Folders are not supported yet, use GUI filtering for now. Names need to be unique. enforce functional dependencies between parameters? --------------------------------------------------- If you want to override a parameter ``b`` in the PDB to be ``b = 2*a``, use wrapper experiments, overriding parameters by passing them to the experiment's constructor (``param_override`` argument). write a generator feeding a kernel feeding an analyze function? --------------------------------------------------------------- Like this:: def run(self): self.parse(self.pipe(iter(range(10)))) def pipe(self, gen): for i in gen: r = self.do(i) yield r def parse(self, gen): for i in gen: pass @kernel def do(self, i): return i create and use variable lengths arrays in kernels? -------------------------------------------------- Don't. Preallocate everything. Or chunk it and e.g. read 100 events per function call, push them upstream and retry until the gate time closes. execute multiple slow controller RPCs in parallel without losing time? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Use ``threading.Thread``: portable, fast, simple for one-shot calls. write part of my experiment as a coroutine/asyncio task/generator? ------------------------------------------------------------------ You can not change the API that your experiment exposes: ``__init__()``, ``build()``, ``run()`` and ``analyze()`` need to be regular functions, not generators or asyncio coroutines. That would make reusing your own code in sub-experiments difficult and fragile. You can however always use the scheduler API to achieve the same (``scheduler.yield(duration=0)``) or wrap your own generators/coroutines/tasks in regular functions that you then expose as part of the API. determine the pyserial URL to attach to a device by its serial number? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- You can list your system's serial devices and print their vendor/product id and serial number by running:: $ python3 -m serial.tools.list_ports -v It will give you the ``/dev/ttyUSBxx`` (or the ``COMxx`` for Windows) device names. The ``hwid:`` field gives you the string you can pass via the ``hwgrep://`` feature of pyserial `serial_for_url() <http://pyserial.sourceforge.net/pyserial_api.html#serial.serial_for_url>`_ in order to open a serial device. The preferred way to specify a serial device is to make use of the ``hwgrep://`` URL: it allows to select the serial device by its USB vendor ID, product ID and/or serial number. Those never change, unlike the device file name. See the :ref:`TDC001 documentation <tdc001-controller-usage-example>` for an example of ``hwgrep://`` usage. run unit tests? --------------- The unit tests assume that the Python environment has been set up in such a way that ``import artiq`` will import the code being tested, and that this is still true for any subprocess created. This is not the way setuptools operates as it adds the path to ARTIQ to ``sys.path`` which is not passed to subprocesses; as a result, running the tests via ``setup.py`` is not supported. The user must first install the package or set ``PYTHONPATH``, and then run the tests with e.g. ``python3.5 -m unittest discover`` in the ``artiq/test`` folder and ``lit .`` in the ``artiq/test/lit`` folder.