100th supported sigrok protocol decoder: cc1101

Once again, libsigrokdecode has gained support for yet another protocol decoder. This time: cc1101.

This PD decodes the SPI-based protocol of the Texas Instruments CC1101 sub-1GHz RF transceiver chip.

As usual, there are a few sample files in our sigrok-dumps repo and a few test-cases in the sigrok-test repo (for catching regressions and such).

The decoder was contributed by Marco Geisler, thanks a lot!

Also, congratulations for contributing the 100th protocol decoder supported by libsigrokdecode!

You can checkout all 100 supported decoders (authored by roughly 50 or so unique contributors) in our wiki. There's also a huge bunch of additional decoders that are on our wishlist and/or are already work-in-progress, i.e. the work towards 200 supported decoders has already begun. Also, your contribution could help us get there faster, hint hint :)

New protocol decoder: ds2408

libsigrokdecode now supports yet another protocol decoder: ds2408.

This one decodes the Maxim DS2408 1-Wire 8-channel addressable switch protocol.

Some example traces are available in the sigrok-dumps repo, as usual.

The decoder was contributed by Mariusz Bialonczyk, thanks a lot!

 

PulseView now has session setup save/restore support

PulseView recently gained initial support for a feature that has been requested quite a bit in the past: saving and restoring a specific session setup.

There was support for restoring (most of) the state from the last PulseView run already; it would re-open your last-used *.sr file, the decoders that were used, and so on.

However, in the current nightly builds you can now also save a specific session to a new file type with the .pvs extension, and restore settings from that file at a later point in time.

For example, if you're working with a foo.sr file and a bar.sr file, different settings and decoders in each, you can now also save a foo.pvs and/or bar.pvs file, and restore those specific session setups a few weeks later, without having to remember the exact setup, without having to click a whole bunch of times to restore all decoders and so on...

Feedback (e.g. on IRC, #sigrok on Freenode) and bug reports for this feature are welcome, as always.

Introduction to sigrok lightning talk @ 35C3

As mentioned previously, there was a short "Introduction to sigrok" lightning talk by Soeren Apel at the 35C3 congress in Leipzig, Germany recently.

The video of the talk is now up on various platforms:

Have fun!

sigrok at 35C3

If you're at this year's CCC Congress (35C3) December 27-30 in Leipzig, Germany, please feel free to drop by at the sigrok assembly.

We'll be there all 4 days of the congress (with the usual set of random test & measurement devices) for hackathons and random development discussions.

We're always happy to chat with users and contributors, hear about your feature requests and ideas for improvements etc. You can also bring your own devices, chances are we might be able to write drivers for some of the "simpler" devices right then and there, or at least grab some relevant information (photos, lsusb, possibly teardowns if you want).

There will also be an Introduction to sigrok lightning talk (2018-12-29, 12:05–12:10, Borg) by Soeren Apel (abraxa on IRC), make sure to check it out.

Assembly location: I2, Exhibition Hall 2, Level 0.

PulseView 0.4.1 released!

We're happy to announce the new PulseView 0.4.1 release!

This is quite a major release with loads of new features and bugfixes.

It requires the recently released libsigrok 0.5.1 and libsigrokdecode 0.5.2.

We provide various binary builds for Linux (AppImage), Windows (.exe installer) and Mac OS X (DMG) for the release version over at the Downloads page (in addition to the usual nightly builds).

Major new features and improvements:

  • One of the most-often requested features has been implemented: Snapping cursors to signal edges. The current implementation snaps to edges of a specific channel if the mouse cursor is inside that channel, and it snaps to edges of any channel otherwise. When moving both cursors at the same time, only the left cursor will snap, while the overall distance between the cursors stays the same (which allows for easy measurements/comparisons).
  • There's a bunch of new command-line switches such as --driver or --dont-scan, as well as option support for --input-file, see manpage for details. You can now also load multiple files at once when starting Pulseview, e.g. via "pulseview *.sr" or the like.
  • There's support for converting analog channels to digital/logic channels now, either via a threshold or a schmitt-trigger method. This allows feeding the converted channels to protocol decoders, which was not possible before.
  • PulseView now has theme support and ships with the current (default) "light" theme and two new "dark"-style themes which some people might prefer.
  • There have been a bunch of UI improvements, such as showing a tooltip for the cursor measurement values if needed, logic high areas are now colored differently for clearer visualization, there's a convenience mouse hover vertical line now, you can enable/disable many channels more easily via buttons, and lots more.
  • Protocol decoder annotations can now be exported in a user-configurable format, either all annotations, or only those of a certain annotation row, or only those between the cursors, etc.
  • Protocol decoder channel name auto-mapping has been improved, so it'll probably match your desired channel setup more often without requiring manual channel assignment.

There's also a new PulseView HTML manual as well as a PDF manual with a bunch of explanations and help. If you're missing something in there, please let us know and/or provide patches!

Additionally, there have been quite a few performance and memory usage improvements. E.g. files should load quite a bit faster now, some painting operations are faster as well, various memory leaks and inefficiencies have been fixed, and so on.

Of course there have also been a huge amount of fixes for some rather annoying bugs (e.g. UI lag when changing decoder options/channels) and also many smaller ones. A bunch of crash conditions on various OSes have also been fixed.

See the NEWS file for a much more detailed list of changes, or browse the git history for even more details.

 

sigrok-cli 0.7.1 released!

We're happy to announce the release of sigrok-cli 0.7.1. Tarballs and binaries are available from the Downloads page, as usual.

In addition to the usual nightly binaries for Linux (AppImage) and Windows (.exe installer), we now also offer a stable set of binaries of this 0.7.1 sigrok-cli release. These binaries will stay unchanged (for easier debugging and problem analysis, if needed). They include the currently released versions of the required libraries/components: libserialport 0.1.1, libsigrok 0.5.1, libsigrokdecode 0.5.2, sigrok-firmware-fx2lafw 0.1.6.

This is a minor release with small additions (e.g. --protocol-decoder-samplenum), documentation fixes, performance improvements, random bugfixes, and a few other improvements.

See the NEWS file for a much more detailed list of changes, or browse the git history for even more details.

 

libsigrok 0.5.1 released!

We're happy to announce the release of libsigrok 0.5.1. Tarballs are available from the Downloads page, as usual.

This is a "minor" release that doesn't change or remove any existing public API functions, so all existing clients will continue to work (without even the need to recompile).

The following hardware is now (additionally) supported:

  • Logic analyzers: DreamSourceLab DSLogic Basic/Plus, Hantek 4032L, IPDBG (ipdbg.org FPGA IP debugger), Meilhaus Logian-16L, Saleae Logic Pro 16, ZEROPLUS Logic Cube LAP-C (16128+) / LAP-16032U
  • Oscilloscopes: Agilent MSO7034A, Hantek DSO-2250, Rigol DS4000 series, Siglent SDS1000/SDS2000 series
  • Programmable power supplies: GW Instek GPD series, HP 6631B/66332A/6633B/6634B, Korad KD3005P, RDTech DPS/DPH series, Rigol DP711/DP712, RND KA3005P, Tenma 72-2540
  • Electronic loads: ZKETECH EBD-USB
  • Multimeters: EEVblog 121GW, Fluke 45, HP 3478A, MASTECH MS8250D, Metex M-3860M, PeakTech 4390A, SparkFun 70C, Victor DMMs with Mini-USB connector, Voltcraft VC-96

Pretty much every existing hardware driver has also received numerous fixes and improvements.

There have also been quite a few bugfixes, documentation fixes, portability fixes, build system improvements, performance improvements, and so on.

There are some new API calls now, you can read up all the details in the API docs.

See the NEWS file for a much more detailed list of changes, or browse the git history for even more details.
 

libsigrokdecode 0.5.2 released!

We're happy to announce the release of libsigrokdecode 0.5.2. Tarballs are available from the Downloads page, as usual.

This is a "minor" release that doesn't change or remove any existing public API functions, so all existing clients will continue to work (without even the need to recompile).

The following new protocol decoders are now available:

  • mcs48: Intel MCS-48 external memory access protocol
  • st7735: Sitronix ST7735 TFT controller protocol
  • atsha204a: Microchip ATSHA204A CryptoAuthentication device
  • cfp: 100 Gigabit C form-factor pluggable (CFP) protocol
  • jtag_ejtag: MIPS EJTAG protocol
  • swim: STM8 Single Wire Interface Module (SWIM) protocol
  • cec: HDMI Consumer Electronics Control (CEC) protocol
  • miller: Miller encoding protocol
  • ook: On-off keying protocol
  • ook_oregon: Oregon Scientific weather sensor protocol
  • ook_vis: OOK visualisation in various formats

In total, we now support 93 different protocol decoders. If you're working on additional PDs, please send patches our way!

See the NEWS file for a much more detailed list of changes, or browse the git history for even more details.

New protocol decoder: sda2506

lisigrokdecode has recently gained support for yet another protocol decoder: sda2506.

This PD decodes the Siemens SDA 2506-5 serial nonvolatile 1-Kbit EEPROM protocol.

This is a non-standard EEPROM (i.e., not one of the common I²C based 24xx series EEPROMs).

As usual there are a few example files in the sigrok-dumps repo and some test-cases in sigrok-test.

The decoder was contributed by Max Weller, thanks a lot!

 

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