Difference between revisions of "E320 Getting Started Guide"

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(USRP E320 Device Specific Operations)
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==Known Issues==
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===Problematic NICs===
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In some streaming modes, the Intel I219-LM NIC can produce flow control and sequence errors. It is recommended to use a USB3 Gigabit Ethernet Adapter for hosts which have a I219-LM NIC.
  
 
==Technical Support and Community Knowledge Base==
 
==Technical Support and Community Knowledge Base==

Revision as of 12:50, 21 November 2018

Contents

Kit Contents

E320 Board-only

  • USRP E320
  • Power Connector
  • 1 Gigabit Ethernet Cat-5e Cable (3m)
  • USB-A to Micro USB-B Cable (1m)
  • 1 Gigabit SFP+ to RJ45 Adapter
  • Getting Started Guide
  • Ettus Research Sticker

E320 Full Enclosure

  • USRP E320 in enclosure
  • DC Power Supply (12V, 7A)
  • 1 Gigabit Ethernet Cat-5e Cable (3m)
  • USB-A to Micro USB-B Cable (1m)
  • 1 Gigabit SFP+ to RJ45 Adapter
  • Getting Started Guide
  • Ettus Research Sticker
  • T8 Torx Wrench

Verify the Contents of Your Kit

Ensure that your kit contains all the items listed above. If any items are missing, please contact sales@ettus.com​ immediately.

You Will Need

  • For Network Mode: A host computer with an 1 or 10 Gigabit Ethernet interface. Optionally a second 1 Gb Ethernet interface can be used to connect to the onboard ARM CPU. If operating with the 10Gb Ethernet interface, the "XG" FPGA image must be loaded before the SFP+ port will operate at 10Gb speeds.
  • For Embedded Mode: A host computer is only required for initial device configuration, remote control and management, or data visualization. The host computer can connect to the RJ45 1 Gb port or Serial Console port to remotely access the Open Embedded Linux operating system running on the ARM CPU. Once configured, the USRP E320 can operate as a stand-alone device without a connection to a remote host computer.

Proper Care and Handling

All Ettus Research products are individually tested before shipment. The USRP is guaranteed to be functional at the time it is received by the customer. Improper use or handling of the USRP can cause the device to become non-functional. Take the following precautions to prevent damage to the unit.

  • Never allow anything especially metal objects to touch the board while it is powered on.
  • Always properly terminate the transmit port with an antenna or 50Ω load.
  • Always handle the board with proper anti-static methods.
  • Never allow the board to directly or indirectly come into contact with any voltage spikes.
  • Never allow any water or condensing moisture to come into contact with the device.
  • Always use caution with FPGA, firmware, or software modifications.
  • Never touch the circuit board or heatsink while the device is powered on.
  • All connections should be made/removed while is device is powered off.
Caution.png
Never apply more than -15 dBm of power into any RF input.
Caution.png
Always use at least 30dB attenuation if operating in loopback configuration

Install and Setup the Software Tools on Your Host Computer

To use your Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP™), you must have the software tools correctly installed and configured on your host computer. A step-by-step guide for doing this is available at the Building and Installing the USRP Open-Source Toolchain (UHD and GNU Radio) on Linux, OS X and Windows Application Notes.

It is strongly​ recommended to use the latest stable version of UHD. It is generally recommended to use the maintenance branch of the latest stable version, for example UHD-3.13.

To find the latest release of UHD, see the UHD repository at https://github.com/ettusresearch/uhd.

The USRP E320 requires UHD version 3.13.0.2 or later. It is recommended to use the UHD-3.13 maintenance branch at the time of this writing.

NOTE: Before operating the device, it is​ ​strongly​ recommended to update to the latest version of the Embedded Linux file system. If you are operating the device in Network Mode, the version of UHD running on the host machine and E320 USRP must match.

Connecting the Device

Interfaces Overview

Listed below are the interfaces to connect to the USRP E320. Each interface has specific functionality, limitations and purpose.

Serial Console

The Serial Console provides a low-level interface to the device, typically used for debugging.

1 Gigabit RJ45 Connection

The 1 Gigabit RJ45 Connection interfaces with the on-board ARM CPU. When operated in "Host mode", this interface can optionally be used for UHD management traffic. Regardless of the operation mode (Host vs Embedded) this interface can be used to connect to the ARM via SSH. By default, the 1Gb RJ45 connection is configured to use a DHCP assigned IP address.

SFP+ Connection

The SFP+ Connection supports multiple configurations for streaming high-speed, low-latency data, depending upon which FPGA image is loaded.

Setting up a Serial Console Connection

It is possible to gain shell access to the device using a serial terminal emulator via the Serial Console port. Most Linux, OS X, or other Unix based operating systems have a utility called screen which can be used for this purpose.

If you do not have screen installed, it can be installed via your distribution's package manager. For Ubuntu/Debian based operating systems it can be installed with the package manager apt such as:

   sudo apt install screen

The default Baud Rate for the Serial Console is: 115200

The exact device node you should attach to depends on your operating system's driver and other USB devices that might already be connected. Modern Linux systems offer alternatives to simply trying device nodes; instead, the OS might have a directory of symlinks under /dev/serial/by-id:

   $ ls /dev/serial/by-id
   usb-FTDI_Dual_RS232-HS-if00-port0
   usb-FTDI_Dual_RS232-HS-if01-port0
   usb-Silicon_Labs_CP2105_Dual_USB_to_UART_Bridge_Controller_007F6A69-if00-port0
   usb-Silicon_Labs_CP2105_Dual_USB_to_UART_Bridge_Controller_007F6A69-if01-port0

NOTE: Exact names depend on the host operating system version and may differ.

Every E320 series device connected to USB will by default show up as four different devices. The devices labeled "USB_to_UART_Bridge_Controller" are the devices that offer a serial prompt. The first (with the if00 suffix) connects to the STM32 Microcontroller, whereas the second connects to the ARM CPU.

If you have multiple E320 Serial Consoles connected to a single host, you may have to empirically test nodes.

Connecting to the ARM CPU can be performed with the command:

   $ sudo screen  /dev/serial/by-id/usb-Silicon_Labs_CP2105_Dual_USB_to_UART_Bridge_Controller_007F6A69-if01-port0 115200

Upon starting the USRP E320, boot messages will appear and rapidly update. Once the boot process successfully completes, a login prompt like the following should appear:

   Alchemy 2018.04 ni-e320-serial ttyPS0
   ni-e320-serial login:

Enter the username: ​root

By default, the root user's password is left blank. Press the Enter key when prompted for a password.

You should now be presented with a shell prompt similar to the following:

   root@ni-e320-<motherboard serial #>:~#

Using the default configuration, the serial console will show all kernel log messages (which are not available when using SSH) and give access to the boot loader (U-boot prompt). This can be used to debug kernel or boot-loader issues more efficiently than when logged in via SSH.

Connecting to the microcontroller

Using the Serial Console interface, it is possible to connect to the STM32 microcontroller with the command below. The STM32 controls the power sequencing and several other low-level device operations.

   $ sudo screen  /dev/serial/by-id/usb-Silicon_Labs_CP2105_Dual_USB_to_UART_Bridge_Controller_007F6A69-if00-port0 115200

The STM32 interface provides a very simple prompt. The command help will list all available commands. A direct connection to the microcontroller can be used to hard-reset the device without physically accessing it (i.e., emulating a power button press) and other low-level diagnostics.

Connecting to the ARM via SSH

By default, the RJ45 1 Gb management interface is configured to be assigned a DHCP IP address.

If you have access to a network which provides a DHCP server (such as a common router's LAN), attach the RJ45 1 Gb port to this network. Details vary by vendor, however, most router management interfaces will provide a list of attached devices to the LAN including their IP address.

Without access to a router management interface, you can identify the IP address by connecting to the ARM CPU via Serial Console as detailed in the section above and running the command ip a:

Example Output:

# ip a
1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue qlen 1000
    link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
    inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 1000
    link/ether 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
    inet 192.168.1.151/24 brd 192.168.1.255 scope global dynamic eth0
       valid_lft 42865sec preferred_lft 42865sec
3: sfp0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 8000 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 1000
    link/ether 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
    inet 192.168.10.2/24 brd 192.168.10.255 scope global sfp0
       valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever

If you do not have access to a network with a DHCP server, you can create one using the Linux utility dnsmasq:

   $ sudo dnsmasq -i <ETHERNET_ADAPTER_NAME> --dhcp-range=192.168.1.50,192.168.1.100 --except-interface=lo --bind-dynamic --no-daemon

NOTE: Modify the value <ETHERNET_ADAPTER_NAME> to match the interface you would like to create a DHCP server on.

After the device has obtained an IP address, you can remotely log into it from a Linux or macOS systems with SSH, as shown below:

   $ ssh root@192.168.1.51

NOTE: The IP address may vary depending on your network setup.

NOTE: The root password is empty/blank.

On Microsoft Windows, the SSH connection can be established using the third-party program, such as ​PuTTY.

After logging in, you should be presented with a shell prompt like the following:

   root@ni-e320-<motherboard serial #>:~#

Updating the Linux File System

Before operating the device, it is​ ​strongly​ recommended to update to the latest version of the Embedded Linux file system. If you are operating the device in Network Mode, the version of UHD running on the host machine and E320 USRP must match.

There is two ways to update the file system for the E320 USRP:

1. Mender

2. Physically remove microSD card from device and write a new file system to the microSD card.

File System Partition Layout

The SD Card is divided into four partitions. There is two root file system partitions, a boot partition and a data partition.

Any data you would like to preserve through Mender updates should be saved to the data partition, which is mounted at /data.

Updating the file system with Mender

Mender is third-party software that enables remote updating of the root file system without physically accessing the device (see also the Mender website https://mender.io). Mender can be executed locally on the device, or a Mender server can be set up which can be used to remotely update an arbitrary number of USRP devices. Mender servers can be self-hosted or hosted by Mender.io (see mender.io for pricing and availability).

Mender Update Process

When updating the file system using Mender, the tool will overwrite the root file system partition that is not currently mounted. Any data stored in the root partitions will be permanently lost with a Mender update.

After updating a partition with Mender, it will reboot into the newly updated partition. Only if the update is confirmed by the user, the update will be made permanent. This means that if an update fails, the device will be always able to reboot into the partition from which the update was originally launched, which presumably is in a working state. Another update can be launched now to correct the previous, failed update, until it works.

To obtain the file system Mender image (these are files with a .mender suffix), run the following command on the host computer with Internet access:

   $ sudo uhd_images_downloader -t mender -t e320

Example Output:

   [INFO] Images destination: /usr/local/share/uhd/images
   395769 kB / 395769 kB (100%) e3xx_e320_mender_default-v3.13.1.0.zip
   [INFO] Images download complete.

NOTE: In the output of the command, the folder destination where the images are saved is printed out.

Next, you will need to copy this Mender file system image to the USRP E320. This can be done with the Linux utility scp.

   $ scp /usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.mender root@192.168.1.51:~/. 

Note: The path and IP may different for your configuration, the command above assumes you're using the default installation path of /usr/local and that the E320's IP is 192.168.1.51.

After copying the Mender file system image to the E320, connect to the E320 using either the Serial Console, or via SSH to gain shell access.

On the E320, run mender -rootfs /path/to/latest.mender to update the file system:

   root@ni-e320-serial:~# mender -rootfs /home/root/usrp_e320_fs.mender

Example Output:

root@ni-e320-316E375:~# mender -rootfs /home/root/usrp_e320_fs.mender                       
INFO[0000] Start updating from local image file: [/home/root/usrp_e320_fs.mender]  module=rootfs
Installing update from the artifact of size 399640064
INFO[0000] opening device /dev/mmcblk0p3 for writing     module=block_device
INFO[0000] partition /dev/mmcblk0p3 size: 2046820352     module=block_device
................................   0% 1024 KiB
................................   0% 2048 KiB
................................   0% 3072 KiB
[truncated for readability]
................................  99% 389120 KiB
................................  99% 390144 KiB
................................ 100% 390273 KiB
INFO[0740] wrote 2046820352/2046820352 bytes of update to device /dev/mmcblk0p3  module=device
INFO[0744] Enabling partition with new image installed to be a boot candidate: 3  module=device

The artifact can also be stored on a remote server:

   $ mender -rootfs <http://server.name/path/to/latest.mender>

This procedure will take a few minutes to complete. After mender has logged a successful update, reboot the device:

   $ reboot

If the reboot worked, and the device seems functional, commit the changes so that the boot loader knows to permanently boot into this partition:

   $ mender -commit

To identify the currently installed Mender artifact from the command line, the following file can be queried on the E320:

   $ cat /etc/mender/artifact_info

If you are running a hosted Mender server, the updates can be initiated from a web dashboard. From there, you can start the updates without having to log into the device, and you can update groups of USRPs with a few clicks in a web GUI. The dashboard can also be used to inspect the state of USRPs. This is a simple way to update groups of rack-mounted USRPs with custom file systems.

For more information on updating the file-system, refer to the UHD Manual at ​http://uhd.ettus.com.

Updating the files system by writing the disk image

The microSD card is accessible directly on the Board-only version of the E320 USRP. The E320 Full Enclosure versions must be opened with the included Torx wrench.

NOTE: This will overwrite all data saved on the microSD card, including any data saved to the /data parition.

Downloading the SD Card / File System Image

To obtain the file system SD card image, run the following command on the host computer with Internet access:

   $ sudo uhd_images_downloader -t sdimg -t e320

Example Output:

   $ sudo uhd_images_downloader -t sdimg -t e320
   [INFO] Images destination: /usr/local/share/uhd/images
   [INFO] No inventory file found at /usr/local/share/uhd/images/inventory.json. Creating an empty one.
   795674 kB / 795674 kB (100%) e3xx_e320_sdimg_default-v3.13.1.0.zip
   [INFO] Images download complete.

NOTE: In the output of the command, the folder destination where the images are saved is printed out.

Identifying UHD Installation Prefix

An alternative method to identify your installation prefix is to run the command:

   $ uhd_config_info --install-prefix

Example Output:

   Install prefix: /usr/local

The default folder location for FPGA and SD card images is:

   <UHD_INSTALL_PREFIX>/share/uhd/images/

Verify the SD card image is at this location:

   $ ls /usr/local/share/uhd/images/*.sdimg

Example Output:

   /usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.sdimg

Identifying SD Card Mount Location

Insert the microSD card into the host computer.

To identify the device where the microSD card is, run the command:

   dmesg | tail

Example Output (partially truncated for readability):

   [21265.575488] usb-storage 1-2:1.0: USB Mass Storage device detected
   [21266.586983] scsi 0:0:0:0: Direct-Access     Generic  Mass-Storage     1.11 PQ: 0 ANSI: 2
   [21266.588024] sd 0:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg0 type 0
   [21267.299812] sd 0:0:0:0: [sdb] 31116288 512-byte logical blocks: (15.9 GB/14.8 GiB)
   [21267.302687]  sdb: sdb1 sdb2 sdb3 sdb4

NOTE: In this specific example configuration, the SD card has been attached to sdb.

Another method to finding the device node the disk is attached at is to use the Linux utility lsblk:

Example Output:

   $ lsblk
   NAME           MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE  MOUNTPOINT
   sdb      8:16   1 14.9G  0 disk
   ├─sdb1   8:17   1   16M  0 part /media/user/boot
   ├─sdb2   8:18   1  1.9G  0 part /media/user/primary
   ├─sdb3   8:19   1  1.9G  0 part /media/user/secondary
   └─sdb4   8:20   1   11G  0 part /media/user/data

Unmount Auto-mounted Partitions

Some operating systems by default will auto-mount the partitions on a block device when it is attached. Before writing a new disk image to the SD card, you should first unmount any mounted partitions. This can be done with the Linux utility umount as shown below:

   $ sudo umount /media/user/data
   $ sudo umount /media/user/primary
   $ sudo umount /media/user/secondary
   $ sudo umount /media/user/boot

Running the command lsblk again will show these partitions have been unmounted:

Example Output:

   $ lsblk
   NAME           MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE RO TYPE  MOUNTPOINT
   sdb      8:16   1 14.9G  0 disk
   ├─sdb1   8:17   1   16M  0 part
   ├─sdb2   8:18   1  1.9G  0 part
   ├─sdb3   8:19   1  1.9G  0 part
   └─sdb4   8:20   1   11G  0 part

Writing the SD Card Image

Using dd to write the disk image

WARNING: The Linux utility dd can cause unrecoverable data loss if the incorrect disk is selected, or if the parameters are input incorrectly. Ensure you have selected the correct input and output parameters for your system configuration.

NOTE: You must use a 16GB or larger SD card.

The ​<SD_CARD_DEV_NAME>​ device node depends on your operating system and which other devices are plugged in. Typical values are ​sdb​ or mmcblk0​.

In the example above:

   <IMAGE>=/usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.sdimg
   
   <SD_CARD_DEV_NAME>=/dev/sdb

Write the disk image with the command:

   $ sudo dd if=<IMAGE> of=<SD_CARD_DEV_NAME> bs=1M

This step of writing the disk image to the SD card can take several minutes to complete.

Example Output:

   $ sudo dd if=/usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.sdimg of=/dev/sdb bs=1M
   15160+0 records in
   15160+0 records out
   15896412160 bytes (16 GB, 15 GiB) copied, 1160.93 s, 13.7 MB/s

To ensure the disk is synchronized, run the sync command:

   $ sync

You can now remove the microSD card from your host computer and insert it into the USRP E320.

Using bmaptool to write the disk image

The Linux utility bmaptool can be used in place of the utility dd, and will generally write the SD card image faster, however it is not a standard Linux utility and must be installed on your host system.

   $ sudo bmaptool copy <IMAGE> <SD_CARD_DEV_NAME> --bmap <IMAGE BMAP (*.sdimg.bmap)>
   $ sudo bmaptool copy /usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.sdimg /dev/sdb --bmap /usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.sdimg.bmap
   bmaptool: info: block map format version 2.0
   bmaptool: info: 3875840 blocks of size 4096 (14.8 GiB), mapped 596649 blocks (2.3 GiB or 15.4%)
   bmaptool: info: copying image ‘/usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.sdimg' to block device '/dev/sdb' using bmap file '/usr/local/share/uhd/images/usrp_e320_fs.sdimg.bmap'
   bmaptool: info: 100% copied
   bmaptool: info: synchronizing '/dev/sdb'
   bmaptool: info: copying time: 4m 10.3s, copying speed 9.3 MiB/sec

Updating the Network Configurations

The USRP E320 systemd network configuration files are located at: /etc/systemd/network/

   # ls /etc/systemd/network/
   eth0.network  sfp0.network 

For details on configuration please refer to the systemd-networkd manual pages.

The factory settings are as follows:

eth0 (DHCP):

    [Match]
    Name=eth0

    [Network]
    DHCP=v4

    [DHCPv4]
    UseHostname=false

sfp0 (static):

    [Match]
    Name=sfp0

    [Network]
    Address=192.168.10.2/24

    [Link]
    MTUBytes=8000

Additional notes on networking:

  • Care needs to be taken when editing these files on the device, since vi / vim sometimes generates undo files (e.g. /etc/systemd/network/sfp0.network~), that systemd-networkd might accidentally pick up.
  • Temporarily setting the IP addresses or MTU sizes via ifconfig or other command line tools will only change the value until the next reboot or reload of the FPGA image.
  • If the MTU of the device and host computers differ, streaming issues can occur.
  • Streaming via SFP0 at 1 GbE rates requires a MTU of 1500
  • Streaming via SFP0 at 10 GbE rates requires a MTU of 8000

For addition details on network configuration here: https://files.ettus.com/manual/page_usrp_e320.html#e320_network_configuration

Updating the FPGA Image

Host Mode FPGA Image Update

The FPGA image should match the version of UHD installed on the host computer when operated in Host Mode.

Host Mode FPGA image updates must be made through the RJ45 management interface.

To obtain all the FPGA images for your installed version of UHD, run the following command on the host computer with internet access:

   $ sudo uhd_images_downloader -t e320 -t fpga

Example Output:

   $ uhd_images_downloader -t e320 -t fpga
   [INFO] Images destination: /usr/local/share/uhd/images
   [INFO] No inventory file found at /usr/local/share/uhd/images/inventory.json. Creating an empty one.
   05920 kB / 05920 kB (100%) e3xx_e320_fpga_default-g494ae8bb.zip
   [INFO] Images download complete.

There is two versions of the E320 FPGA images shipped with UHD:

- 1G for 1 Gigabit rates on the SFP+ port (default image)

- XG for 10 Gigabit rates on the SFP+ port

In this example, we load the XG variant of the FPGA image.

   $ uhd_image_loader --args "type=e3xx,mgmt_addr=<E320_RJ45_IP_ADDR>,fpga=XG"

Example Output:

   $ uhd_image_loader --args "mgmt_addr=192.168.1.51,type=e3xx,fpga=XG"
   [INFO] [UHD] linux; GNU C++ version 5.4.0 20160609; Boost_105800; UHD_3.13.1.0-1-gd3b7e90a
   [INFO] [MPMD] Initializing 1 device(s) in parallel with args: mgmt_addr=192.168.1.51,type=e3xx,product=e320,serial=316E375,claimed=False,skip_init=1
   [INFO] [MPMD] Claimed device without full initialization.
   [INFO] [MPMD IMAGE LOADER] Starting update. This may take a while.
   [INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Updating component `fpga'
   [INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Updating component `dts'
   [INFO] [MPM.RPCServer] Resetting peripheral manager.
   [INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Device serial number: 316E375
   [INFO] [MPMD IMAGE LOADER] Update component function succeeded.
   [INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Found 1 daughterboard(s).

The FPGA is immediately updated, and this FPGA image will continue to be used. The device does not need to be power cycled to use the new image.

To load a different FPGA image (i.e. 1G), modify the device argument fpga= to a value of fpga=1G.

To specify the path to a custom FPGA image, use the ​--fpga-path​ argument.

   $ uhd_image_loader --args "type=e3xx,mgmt_addr=<E320_RJ45_IP_ADDR>" --fpga-path=/path/to/custom/fpga.bit


Caution.png
The Verilog code for the FPGA in the USRP E320 is open-source, and users are free to modify and customize it for their needs. However, certain modifications may result in either bricking the device, or even in physical damage to the unit. Please note that modifications to the FPGA are made at the risk of the user, and may not be covered by the warranty of the device.


Embedded Mode FPGA Image Update

It is possible to update the FPGA image when operated in Embedded mode. Connect to the ARM CPU via Serial Console or SSH as detailed in the section Connecting to the ARM via SSH.

Run the command uhd_images_downloader to download the FPGA images to the device's file system:

NOTE: The 1 GB RJ45 management interface will require Internet access for this next step.

root@ni-e320-serial:~# python3 /usr/bin/uhd_images_downloader -t e320 -t fpga
[INFO] Images destination: /usr/share/uhd/images
[INFO] No inventory file found at /usr/share/uhd/images/inventory.json. Creating an empty one.
05920 kB / 05920 kB (100%) e3xx_e320_fpga_default-g494ae8bb.zip
[INFO] Images download complete.

NOTE: The default UHD FPGA Images destination within the E320's file-system is /usr/share/uhd/images. The default UHD FPGA Images destination on a typical host installation is /usr/local/share/uhd/images.

Updating the FPGA image from the ARM CPU is the same as detailed above for a Host mode update:

root@ni-e320-serial:~# uhd_image_loader --args "type=e3xx,fpga=1G"
[INFO] [UHD] linux; GNU C++ version 7.3.0; Boost_106600; UHD_3.13.1.0-0-unknown
[INFO] [MPMD] Initializing 1 device(s) in parallel with args: mgmt_addr=127.0.0.1,type=e3xx,product=e320,serial=316E375,claimed=False,skip_init=1
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager.UDP] No CHDR interfaces found!
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager.UDP] No CHDR interfaces found!
[INFO] [MPMD] Claimed device without full initialization.
[INFO] [MPMD IMAGE LOADER] Starting update. This may take a while.
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Updating component `fpga'
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Updating component `dts'
[INFO] [MPM.RPCServer] Resetting peripheral manager.
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Device serial number: 316E375
[INFO] [MPMD IMAGE LOADER] Update component function succeeded.
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] Found 1 daughterboard(s).

For more information on updating the FPGA image, refer to the UHD Manual at http://uhd.ettus.com.

Setting Up a Streaming Connection

The device supports multiple high-speed, low-latency interfaces on the SFP+ port for streaming samples to the host computer.

1Gb Streaming via SFP+ Port

Complete the steps below to set up a streaming connection over the 1 Gigabit Ethernet interface on the SFP+ Port.

When streaming via SFP Port at 1 Gb speeds, it is important that the connection is direct between the Host and USRP. Placing a switch or other network gear between the Host and USRP can reduce throughput of the transport link. It is also generally recommended to avoid using USB to Ethernet Adapters for the high-speed streaming interface, as they may limit performance or cause periodic flow control errors.

NOTE: The 1G FPGA image must be loaded for the SFP+ Port to operate at 1Gb speeds. If the XG image is loaded, the port will be unresponsive at 1Gb speeds.

1. Configure your Host's 1Gb Ethernet interface as shown below. This interface should be separate from the 1Gb NIC/network which is connected to the 1Gb RJ45 management interface.

   IP Address: 192.168.10.1
   Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0
   Gateway: 0.0.0.0
   MTU: 1500

NOTE: When operating the SFP Port at 1Gb speeds, it is important to set a MTU of 1500 and not a value of automatic. Mismatched MTU values on either the Host or E320 may cause flow control errors. Your computer may need to be restarted for the MTU value to take effect.

2. Insert the RJ45-to-SFP+ adapter ​into the​ SFP Port​.

3. Connect the SFP+ adapter on the device to an Ethernet port on the host computer using a standard Ethernet cable.

The ​ Green LED​ above the ​SFP Port​ should illuminate.

4. To test the connection,​ ​ping​ the device at address 192.168.10.2​ from the host, as shown below:

   $ ping 192.168.10.2
   PING 192.168.10.2 (192.168.10.2) 56(84) bytes of data.
   64 bytes from 192.168.10.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=1.06 ms
   ^C
   --- 192.168.10.2 ping statistics ---
   1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms
   rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 1.065/1.065/1.065/0.000 ms
   

Press CTRL+C to stop the ping program.

5. Verify your MTU is set correctly for 1 Gb speeds on the E320. See the section Updating the Network Configurations for additional details.

Proceed to the next section Verifying Device Operation.

10Gb Streaming via SFP+ Port

Load the XG FPGA image for 10 Gb streaming as detailed in the section Updating the FPGA Image. You will need to use a 10 GigE cable that can be plugged in directly to the SFP+ connector on the board.

When streaming via SFP+ Port at 10 Gb speeds, it is important that the connection is direct between the Host and USRP. Placing a switch or other network gear between the Host and USRP can reduce throughput of the transport link or cause periodic flow control errors.

NOTE: The XG FPGA image must be loaded for the SFP+ Port to operate at 10Gb speeds. If the 1G image is loaded, the port will be unresponsive at 10Gb speeds. Mismatched MTU values on either the Host or E320 may cause flow control errors.

1. Configure your Host's 10Gb Ethernet interface as shown below.

   IP Address: 192.168.10.1
   Subnet Mask: 255.255.255.0
   Gateway: 0.0.0.0
   MTU: 8000

NOTE: When operating the SFP Port at 10Gb speeds, it is important to set a MTU of 8000 and not a value of automatic. Mismatched MTU values on either the Host or E320 may cause flow control errors. Your computer may need to be restarted for the MTU value to take effect.

2. Connect the SFP+ port on the device to an Ethernet port on the host computer using a 10Gb SFP+ copper or fiber cable.

The ​ Green LED​ above the ​SFP+ Port​ should illuminate.

4. To test the connection,​ ​ping​ the device at address 192.168.10.2​ from the host, as shown below:

   $ ping 192.168.10.2
   PING 192.168.10.2 (192.168.10.2) 56(84) bytes of data.
   64 bytes from 192.168.10.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=1.06 ms
   ^C
   --- 192.168.10.2 ping statistics ---
   1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms
   rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 1.065/1.065/1.065/0.000 ms
   

Press CTRL+C to stop the ping program.

5. Verify your MTU is set correctly for 10 Gb speeds on the E320. See the section Updating the Network Configurations for additional details.

Proceed to the next section Verifying Device Operation.

Verifying Device Operation

Once you have successfully setup a management interface and streaming interface, you can now verify the devices operation using the include UHD utilities.

Subdevice Specification Mapping

The USRP E320 contains 2 channels, each represented on the front panel as RF A and RF B. Below is the subdev mapping of RF Ports.

E320

  • RF A = A:0
  • RF B = A:1

Additional details of UHD Subdevice Specifications can be found here in the UHD Manual: http://files.ettus.com/manual/page_configuration.html#config_subdev

Supported Sample Rates

The USRP E320 supports master clock rate from 200 kHz to 61.44 MHz and can be changed by adding master_clock_rate= <rate> to the default UHD args. The default master clock rate is 16 MHz.

Sample rates as delivered to/from the host computer for USRP devices are constrained to follow several important rules.

It is important to understand that strictly-integer decimation and interpolation are used within USRP hardware to meet the requested sample rate requirements of the application at hand. That means that the desired sample rate must meet the requirement that master-clock-rate/desired-sample-rate be an integer ratio. Further, it is strongly desirable for that ratio to be even. This ratio is the decimation (down-conversion) or interpolation (up-conversion) factor. The decimation or interpolation factor may be between 1 and 1024. There are further constraints on the decimation or interpolation factor. If the decimation or interpolation factor exceeds 128, then it must be evenly divisible by 2. If the decimation or interpolation factor exceeds 256, then it must be evenly divisible by 4.

Additional information on Sample Rates can be found here in the UHD Manual: http://files.ettus.com/manual/page_general.html#general_sampleratenotes

Probe the USRP E320

The UHD utility uhd_usrp_probe provides detailed information of the USRP device.

From your host computer, run the command uhd_usrp_probe:

$ uhd_usrp_probe --args "addr=192.168.10.2"
[INFO] [UHD] linux; GNU C++ version 5.4.0 20160609; Boost_105800; UHD_3.13.1.0-1-gd3b7e90a
[INFO] [MPMD] Initializing 1 device(s) in parallel with args: mgmt_addr=192.168.10.2,type=e3xx,product=e320,serial=316E375,claimed=False,addr=192.168.10.2
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] init() called with device args `product=e320,mgmt_addr=192.168.10.2'.
[INFO] [0/DmaFIFO_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0xF1F0D00000000000)
[INFO] [0/DmaFIFO_0] BIST passed (Throughput: 1343 MB/s)
[INFO] [0/DmaFIFO_0] BIST passed (Throughput: 1335 MB/s)
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0x12AD100000003320)
[INFO] [0/DDC_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0xDDC0000000000000)
[INFO] [0/DUC_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0xD0C0000000000002)
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] Performing CODEC loopback test... 
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] CODEC loopback test passed
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] Performing CODEC loopback test... 
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] CODEC loopback test passed
  _____________________________________________________
 /
|       Device: E300-Series Device
|     _____________________________________________________
|    /
|   |       Mboard: ni-e320-316E375
|   |   eeprom_version: 2
|   |   mpm_version: 3.13.1.0-gd3b7e90a
|   |   pid: 58144
|   |   product: e320
|   |   rev: 2
|   |   rpc_connection: remote
|   |   serial: 316E375
|   |   type: e3xx
|   |   MPM Version: 1.2
|   |   FPGA Version: 3.0
|   |   RFNoC capable: Yes
|   |   
|   |   Time sources:  internal, external, gpsdo
|   |   Clock sources: external, internal, gpsdo
|   |   Sensors: gps_locked, temp_main_power, ref_locked, temp_rf_channelA, temp_fpga, gps_sky, temp_rf_channelB, fan, temp_internal, gps_tpv, gps_time
|   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |    /
|   |   |       RX Dboard: A
|   |   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |   |    /
|   |   |   |       RX Frontend: 0
|   |   |   |   Name: Neon
|   |   |   |   Antennas: RX2, TX/RX
|   |   |   |   Sensors: lo_locked, ad9361_temperature, rssi, lo_lock
|   |   |   |   Freq range: 70.000 to 6000.000 MHz
|   |   |   |   Gain range PGA: 0.0 to 76.0 step 1.0 dB
|   |   |   |   Bandwidth range: 20000000.0 to 40000000.0 step 0.0 Hz
|   |   |   |   Connection Type: IQ
|   |   |   |   Uses LO offset: No
|   |   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |   |    /
|   |   |   |       RX Frontend: 1
|   |   |   |   Name: Neon
|   |   |   |   Antennas: RX2, TX/RX
|   |   |   |   Sensors: lo_locked, ad9361_temperature, rssi, lo_lock
|   |   |   |   Freq range: 70.000 to 6000.000 MHz
|   |   |   |   Gain range PGA: 0.0 to 76.0 step 1.0 dB
|   |   |   |   Bandwidth range: 20000000.0 to 40000000.0 step 0.0 Hz
|   |   |   |   Connection Type: IQ
|   |   |   |   Uses LO offset: No
|   |   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |   |    /
|   |   |   |       RX Codec: A
|   |   |   |   Name: AD9361 Dual ADC
|   |   |   |   Gain Elements: None
|   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |    /
|   |   |       TX Dboard: A
|   |   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |   |    /
|   |   |   |       TX Frontend: 0
|   |   |   |   Name: Neon
|   |   |   |   Antennas: TX/RX
|   |   |   |   Sensors: lo_locked, ad9361_temperature
|   |   |   |   Freq range: 47.000 to 6000.000 MHz
|   |   |   |   Gain range PGA: 0.0 to 89.8 step 0.2 dB
|   |   |   |   Bandwidth range: 20000000.0 to 40000000.0 step 0.0 Hz
|   |   |   |   Connection Type: IQ
|   |   |   |   Uses LO offset: No
|   |   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |   |    /
|   |   |   |       TX Frontend: 1
|   |   |   |   Name: Neon
|   |   |   |   Antennas: TX/RX
|   |   |   |   Sensors: lo_locked, ad9361_temperature
|   |   |   |   Freq range: 47.000 to 6000.000 MHz
|   |   |   |   Gain range PGA: 0.0 to 89.8 step 0.2 dB
|   |   |   |   Bandwidth range: 20000000.0 to 40000000.0 step 0.0 Hz
|   |   |   |   Connection Type: IQ
|   |   |   |   Uses LO offset: No
|   |   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |   |    /
|   |   |   |       TX Codec: A
|   |   |   |   Name: AD9361 Dual DAC
|   |   |   |   Gain Elements: None
|   |     _____________________________________________________
|   |    /
|   |   |       RFNoC blocks on this device:
|   |   |   
|   |   |   * DmaFIFO_0
|   |   |   * Radio_0
|   |   |   * DDC_0
|   |   |   * DUC_0


ASCII Art Example

The UHD driver includes several example programs, which may serve as test programs or the basis for your application program. The source code can be obtained from the UHD repository on github at: https://github.com/EttusResearch/uhd/tree/master/host/examples

You can quickly verify the operation of your USRP E320 by running the rx_ascii_art_dft UHD example program.

The rx_ascii_art_dft utility is a simple console ­based, real-time FFT display tool. It is not graphical in nature, so it can be easily run over an SSH connection within a terminal window, and does not need any graphical capability, such as X Windows, to be installed. It can also be run over a serial console connection, although this is not recommended, as the formatting may not render correctly.

You can run a simple test of the E320 USRP by connecting an antenna and observing the spectrum of a commercial FM radio station in real-time, following the steps below:

1. Attach an antenna to the RF A / RX2­ antenna port of the E320.

2. From your host computer, run the command:

   $ /usr/local/lib/uhd/examples/rx_ascii_art_dft \
   --args "addr=192.168.10.2" \
   --freq 98.5e6 \
   --rate 2e6 \
   --gain 40 \
   --ref-lvl="-30" \
   --dyn-rng 90 \
   --ant "RX2" \
   --subdev "A:0"

NOTE: Modify the command­line argument freq ​above to specify a tuning frequency for a strong local FM radio station. You will also need to update the IP Address to match your device IP.

3. You should see a real-time FFT display of 2 MHz of spectrum, centered at the specified tuning frequency.

4. Type "Q" to stop the program and to return to the Linux command line.

5. You can run with the ​­­--help ​argument to see a description of all available command-line options.

Example Output:

$ ./rx_ascii_art_dft --args "addr=192.168.10.2" --freq 98.5e6 --rate 2e6 --gain 40 --ref-lvl="-30" --dyn-rng 90 --ant "RX2" --subdev "A:0"

Creating the usrp device with: addr=192.168.10.2...
[INFO] [UHD] linux; GNU C++ version 5.4.0 20160609; Boost_105800; UHD_3.13.1.0-1-gd3b7e90a
[INFO] [MPMD] Initializing 1 device(s) in parallel with args: mgmt_addr=192.168.10.2,type=e3xx,product=e320,serial=316E375,claimed=False,addr=192.168.10.2
[INFO] [0/DmaFIFO_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0xF1F0D00000000000)
[INFO] [0/DmaFIFO_0] BIST passed (Throughput: 1334 MB/s)
[INFO] [0/DmaFIFO_0] BIST passed (Throughput: 1325 MB/s)
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0x12AD100000003320)
[INFO] [0/DDC_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0xDDC0000000000000)
[INFO] [0/DUC_0] Initializing block control (NOC ID: 0xD0C0000000000002)
[INFO] [MPM.PeriphManager] init() called with device args `product=e320,mgmt_addr=192.168.10.2'.
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] Performing CODEC loopback test... 
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] CODEC loopback test passed
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] Performing CODEC loopback test... 
[INFO] [0/Radio_0] CODEC loopback test passed
Using Device: Single USRP:
  Device: E300-Series Device
  Mboard 0: ni-e320-316E375
  RX Channel: 0
    RX DSP: 0
    RX Dboard: A
    RX Subdev: Neon
  TX Channel: 0
    TX DSP: 0
    TX Dboard: A
    TX Subdev: Neon
  TX Channel: 1
    TX DSP: 1
    TX Dboard: A
    TX Subdev: Neon

Setting RX Rate: 2.000000 Msps...
Actual RX Rate: 2.000000 Msps...

Setting RX Freq: 98.500000 MHz...
Actual RX Freq: 98.500000 MHz...

Setting RX Gain: 40.000000 dB...
Actual RX Gain: 40.000000 dB...

Checking RX: all_los: locked ...

Done!

Benchmarking your system

Included with the UHD driver example programs is a utility, benchmark_rate to benchmark the transport link of the system.

A system's maximum performance is dependent upon many factors. benchmark_rate will exercise the transport link and CPU of the system.

1 Gb Interface

NOTE: This example requires the 1G FPGA image to be loaded.

This example will test one full-duplex stream using "RFA/A:0", at a rate of 2 MS/s, for 60 seconds:

   /usr/local/lib/uhd/examples/benchmark_rate  \
   --args "addr=192.168.10.2" \
   --duration 60 \
   --channels "0" \
   --rx_rate 2e6 \
   --rx_subdev "A:0" \
   --tx_rate 2e6 \
   --tx_subdev "A:0"

This example will test two full-duplex streams at 2 MS/s, for 60 seconds:

   /usr/local/lib/uhd/examples/benchmark_rate  \
   --args "addr=192.168.10.2" \
   --duration 60 \
   --channels "0,1" \
   --rx_rate 2e6 \
   --rx_subdev "A:0 A:1" \
   --tx_rate 2e6 \
   --tx_subdev "A:0 A:1"

This example will test two full-duplex streams at 12.5 MS/s, for 60 seconds:

   /usr/local/lib/uhd/examples/benchmark_rate  \
   --args "addr=192.168.10.2,master_clock_rate=25e6" \
   --duration 60 \
   --channels "0,1" \
   --rx_rate 12.5e6 \
   --rx_subdev "A:0 A:1" \
   --tx_rate 12.5e6 \
   --tx_subdev "A:0 A:1"

When streaming samples over a 1 Gb transport link, the maximum accumulative rate for all channels is 25 MS/s with a sc16 OTW format. To achieve higher streaming rates, it is recommended to use the 10 Gb interfaces.

10 Gb Interface

NOTE: These examples require the XG FPGA image to be loaded.

This example will test one full-duplex stream using "RFA/A:0", at a rate of 61.44 MS/s, for 60 seconds:

   /usr/local/lib/uhd/examples/benchmark_rate  \
   --args "addr=192.168.10.2,master_clock_rate=61.44e6" \
   --duration 60 \
   --channels "0" \
   --rx_rate 61.44e6 \
   --rx_subdev "A:0" \
   --tx_rate 61.44e6 \
   --tx_subdev "A:0" 

This example will test two full-duplex stream, at a rate of 30.72 MS/s, for 60 seconds:

   /usr/local/lib/uhd/examples/benchmark_rate  \
   --args "addr=192.168.10.2,master_clock_rate=61.44e6" \
   --duration 60 \
   --channels "0,1" \
   --rx_rate 30.72e6 \
   --rx_subdev "A:0 A:1" \
   --tx_rate 30.72e6 \
   --tx_subdev "A:0 A:1"

USRP E320 Device Specific Operations

Turning the Device Off/On

To avoid damaging the file system and causing any corruption, do not turn the device off with the power button without first shutting down the system. Use this command to cleanly and properly shut the system down:

   shutdown ­-h now

Enable Auto Booting

Auto booting of the E320 when power is applied can be configured by enabling the flag on the device's EEPROM with the following command:

   eeprom-set-flags 0x1

Default Password

The default user is root and the password is empty (no password).

It is recommended to update the root password, which can be done with the command passwd:

Example Output:

   root@ni-e320-serial:~# passwd
   Changing password for root
   New password:
   Re-enter new password:
   passwd: password changed.

Known Issues

Problematic NICs

In some streaming modes, the Intel I219-LM NIC can produce flow control and sequence errors. It is recommended to use a USB3 Gigabit Ethernet Adapter for hosts which have a I219-LM NIC.

Technical Support and Community Knowledge Base

Technical support for USRP hardware is available through email only. If the product arrived in a non­functional state or you require technical assistance, please contact support@ettus.com. Please allow 24 to 48 hours for response by email, depending on holidays and weekends, although we are often able to reply more quickly than that.

We also recommend that you subscribe to the community mailing lists. The mailing lists have a responsive and knowledgeable community of hundreds of developers and technical users who are located around the world. When you join the community, you will be connected to this group of people who can help you learn about SDR and respond to your technical and specific questions. Often your question can be answered quickly on the mailing lists. Each mailing list also provides an archive of all past conversations and discussions going back many years. Your question or problem may have already been addressed before, and a relevant or helpful solution may already exist in the archive.

Discussions involving the USRP hardware and the UHD software itself are best addressed through the u​srp­-users ​mailing list at http://usrp-users.ettus.com.

Discussions involving the use of GNU Radio with USRP hardware and UHD software are best addressed through the d​iscuss­-gnuradio​ mailing list at https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss­gnuradio​.

Discussions involving the use of OpenBTS® with USRP hardware and UHD software are best addressed through the o​penbts­-discuss​ mailing list at https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/openbts­discuss​.​

The support page on our website is located at https://www.ettus.com/support​. The Knowledge Base is located at ​https://kb.ettus.com​.

Legal Considerations

Every country has laws governing the transmission and reception of radio signals. Users are solely responsible for insuring they use their USRP system in compliance with all applicable laws and regulations. Before attempting to transmit and/or receive on any frequency, we recommend that you determine what licenses may be required and what restrictions may apply.

  • NOTE: This USRP product is a piece of test equipment.

Sales and Ordering Support

If you have any non­-technical questions related to your order, then please contact us by email at orders@ettus.com​, or by phone at +1­408­610­6399 (Monday-Friday, 8 AM - 5 PM, Pacific Time). Please be sure to include your order number and the serial number of your USRP.

Terms and Conditions of Sale

Terms and conditions of sale can be accessed online at the following link: http://www.ettus.com/legal/terms-and-conditions-of-sale