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author | Robin ALEXANDER <colisee@hotmail.com> | 2022-06-09 16:32:38 +0200 |
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committer | Robin ALEXANDER <colisee@hotmail.com> | 2022-06-09 16:32:38 +0200 |
commit | 12f6dafebf798f4ecc8c80c74221ee9529767e70 (patch) | |
tree | 82f78fe468bab10648806c145b5218be698493ae /INSTALL.md | |
parent | 451a7fa16bb119d941cea29d76229a971f4e3cdc (diff) | |
download | dabmod-12f6dafebf798f4ecc8c80c74221ee9529767e70.tar.gz dabmod-12f6dafebf798f4ecc8c80c74221ee9529767e70.tar.bz2 dabmod-12f6dafebf798f4ecc8c80c74221ee9529767e70.zip |
Add 2 installation options
Diffstat (limited to 'INSTALL.md')
-rw-r--r-- | INSTALL.md | 170 |
1 files changed, 99 insertions, 71 deletions
@@ -1,41 +1,88 @@ -Required dependencies: -====================== - -* A C++11 capable compiler -* pkg-config -* FFTW 3.x -* autoconf -* Optional UHD for USRP -* Optional LimeSuite for LimeSDR support -* Optional SoapySDR (see below) -* Optional bladerf (see below) -* Optional ZeroMQ http://www.zeromq.org - -Simple install procedure: -========================= - - % tar xjf odr-dabmod-X.Y.Z.tar.bz2 # Unpack the source - % cd odr-dabmod-X.Y.Z # Change to the source directory - % ./configure - # Run the configure script - % make # Build ODR-DabMod - [ as root ] - % make install # Install ODR-DabMod - -Configure options -================= - +You have 3 ways to install odr-dabmod on your host: + +# Using binary debian packages +If your host is running a debian-based OS and its cpu is one of amd64, arm64 or arm/v7, then you can install odr-dabmod using the standard debian packaging system: +1. Update the debian apt repository list: + ``` + curl -fsSL http://debian.opendigitalradio.org/odr.asc | sudo tee /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/odr.asc 1>/dev/null + curl -fsSL http://debian.opendigitalradio.org/odr.list | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/odr.list 1>/dev/null + ``` +1. Refresh the debian packages list: + ``` + apt update + ``` +1. Install odr-audioenc: + ``` + sudo apt install --yes odr-dabmod + ``` + +**Attention**: odr- (2.6.0-1) does not include the web-based GUI and Digital Predistortion Computation engine + +# Using the dab-scripts +You can compile odr-dabmod as well as the other main components of the mmbTools set with an installation script: +1. Clone the dab-scripts repository: + ``` + git clone https://github.com/opendigitalradio/dab-scripts.git + ``` +1. Follow the [instructions](https://github.com/Opendigitalradio/dab-scripts/tree/master/install) + +# Compiling manually +Unlike the 2 previous options, this one allows you to compile odr-dabmod with the features you really need. + +## Dependencies +### Debian Bullseye-based OS: +``` +# Required packages +## C++11 compiler +sudo apt-get install --yes build-essential automake libtool + +## FFTW 3.x +sudo apt-get install --yes libfftw3-dev + +# optional packages +## ZeroMQ http://www.zeromq.org +sudo apt-get install --yes libzmq3-dev libzmq5 + +## UHD for USRP +sudo apt-get install --yes libuhd-dev + +## LimeSuite for LimeSDR support +sudo apt-get install --yes liblimesuite-dev + +## SoapySDR (see below) +sudo apt-get install --yes libsoapysdr-dev + +## bladerf (see below) +sudo apt-get install --yes libbladerf-dev +``` + +## Compilation +1. Clone this repository: + ``` + # stable version: + git clone https://github.com/Opendigitalradio/ODR-DabMod.git + + # or development version (at your own risk): + git clone https://github.com/Opendigitalradio/ODR-DabMod.git -b next + ``` +1. Configure the project + ``` + cd ODR-DabMod + ./bootstrap + ./configure + ``` +1. Compile and install: + ``` + make + sudo make install + ``` + +### Configure options The configure script can be launched with a variety of options: - -Disable ZeroMQ input (to be used with ODR-DabMux), output and remotecontrol: `--disable-zeromq` - -Disable the binding to the UHD driver for USRPs: `--disable-output-uhd` - -Compile using the `-ffast-math` option that gives a substantial speedup at the cost of floating point correctness: `--enable-fast-math` - -On some ARM systems you might need `--with-boost-libdir=/usr/lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf` so that boost gets found. - -Do not pass `-march=native` to the compiler: `--disable-native` +- Disable ZeroMQ input (to be used with ODR-DabMod), output and remotecontrol: `--disable-zeromq` +- Disable the binding to the UHD driver for USRPs: `--disable-output-uhd` +- Compile using the `-ffast-math` option that gives a substantial speedup at the cost of floating point correctness: `--enable-fast-math` +- Do not pass `-march=native` to the compiler by using the argument: `--disable-native` **Remark:** Do not compile ODR-DabMod with `-march=native` compiler option. This is meant for distribution package maintainers who want to use their own march option, and for people running into compilation issues due to `-march=native`. (e.g. GCC bug 70132 on ARM systems) @@ -44,11 +91,11 @@ Do not pass `-march=native` to the compiler: `--disable-native` Create debugging files for each DSP block for data analysis: `--enable-trace` For more information, call: +``` +./configure --help +``` - % ./configure --help - -Performance optimisation ------------------------- +#### Performance optimisation While the performance of modern systems is good enough in most cases to run ODR-DabMod, it is sometimes necessary to increase the compilation optimisation if all features are used or on slow systems. @@ -61,45 +108,28 @@ Tricks for best performance: * Disable assertions with `-DNDEBUG` Applying all together: +``` +./configure CFLAGS="-O3 -DNDEBUG" CXXFLAGS="-O3 -DNDEBUG" --enable-fast-math +``` - % ./configure CFLAGS="-O3 -DNDEBUG" CXXFLAGS="-O3 -DNDEBUG" --enable-fast-math - -Checking for memory usage issues --------------------------------- +#### Checking for memory usage issues If your compiler supports it, you can enable the address sanitizer to check for memory issues: - - % ./configure CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -g -O2" CXXFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -g -O2" +``` +./configure CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -g -O2" CXXFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -g -O2" +``` The resulting binary will be instrumented with additional memory checks, which have a measurable overhead. Please report if you get warnings or errors when using the sanitizer. -Nearly as simple install procedure using repository: -==================================================== - -* Download and install dependencies as above -* Clone the git repository -* Bootstrap autotools: - - % ./bootstrap.sh - - In case this fails, try: - - % aclocal && automake --gnu --add-missing && autoconf - -* Then use `./configure` as above - -SoapySDR support and required dependencies -========================================== - +## SoapySDR support and required dependencies SoapySDR is a vendor-neutral library to drive SDR devices. It can be used to drive the HackRF and the LimeSDR among others. Required dependencies that need to be installed are, in order: - 1. SoapySDR itself from https://github.com/pothosware/SoapySDR -2. The LimeSuite for the LimeSDR from https://github.com/myriadrf/LimeSuite -3. HackRF support for SoapySDR from https://github.com/pothosware/SoapyHackRF +1. The LimeSuite for the LimeSDR from https://github.com/myriadrf/LimeSuite +1. HackRF support for SoapySDR from https://github.com/pothosware/SoapyHackRF ODR-DabMod will automatically recognise if the SoapySDR library is installed on your system, and will print at the end of `./configure` if support is enabled or @@ -107,7 +137,5 @@ not. A configuration example is available in `doc/example.ini` -BladeRF support -=============== - +## BladeRF support In order to use `--enable-bladerf`, you need to install the `libbladerf2` including the -dev package. |