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List supported devices, modules, decoders via --list-supported.
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1.TH SIGROK\-CLI 1 "May 04, 2014"
2.SH "NAME"
3sigrok\-cli \- Command-line client for the sigrok software
4.SH "SYNOPSIS"
5.B sigrok\-cli [OPTIONS] [COMMAND]
6.SH "DESCRIPTION"
7\fBsigrok\-cli\fP is a cross-platform command line utility for the
8\fBsigrok\fP software.
9.PP
10It cannot display graphical output, but is still sufficient to run through
11the whole process of hardware initialization, acquisition, protocol decoding
12and saving the session.
13.PP
14It is useful for running on remote or embedded systems, netbooks, PDAs,
15and for various other use-cases. It can display samples on standard output or
16save them in various file formats.
17.SH OPTIONS
18.TP
19.B "\-h, \-\-help"
20Show a help text and exit.
21.TP
22.B "\-V, \-\-version"
23Show
24.B sigrok-cli
25version and the versions of libraries used.
26.TP
27.B "\-L, \-\-list-supported"
28Show information about supported hardware drivers, input file
29formats, output file formats, and protocol decoders.
30.TP
31\fB\-d, \-\-driver\fP <drivername>
32A driver must always be selected (unless doing a global scan). Use the
33\fB-V\fP option to get a list of available drivers.
34.sp
35Drivers can take options, in the form \fBkey=value\fP
36separated by colons.
37.sp
38Drivers communicating with hardware via a serial port always need the port
39specified as the \fBconn\fP option. For example, to use the
40Openbench Logic Sniffer:
41.sp
42.RB " $ " "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver=ols:conn=/dev/ttyACM0"
43.sp
44Some USB devices don't use a unique VendorID/ProductID combination, and thus
45need that specified as well. This also uses the \fBconn\fP option, using
46either \fBVendorID.ProductID\fP or \fBbus.address\fP:
47.sp
48.RB " $ " "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver=uni-t-ut61e:conn=1a86.e008"
49.TP
50.BR "\-c, \-\-config " <device>
51A colon-separated list of device options, where each option takes the form
52.BR key=value .
53For example, to set the samplerate to 1MHz on a device supported by the
54fx2lafw driver, you might specify
55.sp
56.RB " $ " "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver=fx2lafw \-\-config samplerate=1m"
57.sp
58Samplerate is an option common to most logic analyzers. The argument specifies
59the samplerate in Hz. You can also specify the samplerate in kHz, MHz or GHz.
60The following are all equivalent:
61.sp
62.RB " $ " "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-config samplerate=1000000"
63.sp
64.RB " $ " "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-config samplerate=1m"
65.sp
66.RB " $ " "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-config \(dqsamplerate=1 MHz\(dq"
67.TP
68.BR "\-i, \-\-input\-file " <filename>
69Load input from a file instead of a hardware device. If the
70.B \-\-input\-format
71option is not supplied, sigrok-cli attempts to autodetect the file format of
72the input file.
73.TP
74.BR "\-I, \-\-input\-format " <format>
75When loading an input file, assume it's in the specified format. If this
76option is not supplied (in addition to
77.BR \-\-input\-file ),
78sigrok-cli attempts to autodetect the file format of the input file. Use the
79.B \-V
80option to see a list of available input formats.
81.sp
82The format name may optionally be followed by a colon-separated list of
83options, where each option takes the form
84.BR "key=value" .
85.TP
86.BR "\-o, \-\-output\-file " <filename>
87Save output to a file instead of writing it to stdout. The default format
88used when saving is the sigrok session file format. This can be changed with
89the
90.B \-\-output\-format
91option.
92.TP
93.BR "\-O, \-\-output\-format " <formatname>
94Set the output format to use. Use the
95.B \-V
96option to see a list of available output formats.
97.sp
98The format name may optionally be followed by a colon-separated list of
99options, where each option takes the form
100.BR "key=value" .
101.sp
102Supported formats currently include
103.BR bits ,
104.BR hex ,
105.BR ascii ,
106.BR binary ,
107.BR vcd ,
108.BR ols ,
109.BR gnuplot ,
110.BR chronovu-la8 ,
111.BR csv ", and"
112.BR analog .
113.sp
114The
115.B bits
116or
117.B hex
118formats, for an ASCII bit or ASCII hexadecimal display, can take a "width" option, specifying the number of samples (in bits) to display per line. Thus
119.B hex:width=128
120will display 128 bits per line, in hexadecimal:
121.sp
122 0:ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff
123 1:ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00
124.sp
125The lines always start with the channel number (or name, if defined), followed by a colon. If no format is specified, it defaults to
126.BR bits:width=64 ,
127like this:
128.sp
129 0:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
130 1:11111111 00000000 11111111 00000000 [...]
131.TP
132.BR "\-C, \-\-channels " <channellist>
133A comma-separated list of channels to be used in the session.
134.sp
135Note that sigrok always names the channels according to how they're shown on
136the enclosure of the hardware. If your logic analyzer numbers the channels 0-15,
137that's how you must specify them with this option. An oscilloscope's channels
138would generally be referred to as "CH1", "CH2", and so on.
139Use the \fB\-\-show\fP option to see a list of channel names for your device.
140.sp
141The default is to use all the channels available on a device. You can name
142a channel like this:
143.BR "1=CLK" .
144A range of channels can also be given, in the form
145.BR "1\-5" .
146.sp
147Example:
148.sp
149.RB " $ " "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-samples 100"
150.br
151.B " \-\-channels 1=CLK,2\-4,7"
152.br
153 CLK:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
154 2:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
155 3:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
156 4:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
157 7:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
158.sp
159The comma-separated list is processed from left to right, i.e. items farther
160to the right override previous items. For example
161.B "1=CS,CS=MISO"
162will set the name of channel 1 to
163.BR "MISO" .
164.TP
165.BR "\-g, \-\-channel\-group "<channel\ group>
166Specify the channel group to operate on.
167
168Some devices organize channels into groups, the settings of which can
169only be changed as a group. The list of channel groups, if any, is displayed
170with the \fB\-\-show\fP command.
171.TP
172.BR "\-t, \-\-triggers " <triggerlist>
173A comma-separated list of triggers to use, of the form
174.BR "<channel>=<trigger>" .
175You can use the name or number of the channel, and the trigger itself is a
176series of characters:
177.sp
178.BR "0 or 1" :
179A low or high value on the pin.
180.br
181.BR "r or f" :
182A rising or falling value on the pin. An
183.B r
184effectively corresponds to
185.BR 01 .
186.br
187.BR "e" :
188Any kind of change on a pin (either a rising or a falling edge).
189.sp
190Not every device supports all of these trigger types. Use the \fB\-\-show\fP
191command to see which triggers your device supports.
192.TP
193.BR "\-w, \-\-wait-trigger"
194Don't output any sample data (even if it's actually received from the
195hardware) before the trigger condition is met. In other words, do not output
196any pre-trigger data. This option is useful if you don't care about the data
197that came before the trigger (but the hardware delivers this data to sigrok
198nonetheless).
199.TP
200.BR "\-P, \-\-protocol\-decoders " <list>
201This option allows the user to specify a comma-separated list of protocol
202decoders to be used in this session. The decoders are specified by their
203ID, as shown in the
204.B \-\-version
205output.
206.sp
207Example:
208.sp
209 $
210.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-P i2c"
211.sp
212Each protocol decoder can optionally be followed by a colon-separated list
213of options, where each option takes the form
214.BR "key=value" .
215.sp
216Example:
217.sp
218 $
219.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> "
220.br
221.B " \-P uart:baudrate=115200:parity_type=odd"
222.sp
223The list of supported options depends entirely on the protocol decoder. Every
224protocol decoder has different options it supports.
225.sp
226Any "options" specified for a protocol decoder which are not actually
227supported options, will be interpreted as being channel name/number assignments.
228.sp
229Example:
230.sp
231 $
232.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr>"
233.br
234.B " \-P spi:wordsize=9:miso=1:mosi=5:clk=3:cs=0"
235.sp
236In this example,
237.B wordsize
238is an option supported by the
239.B spi
240protocol decoder. Additionally, the user tells sigrok to decode the SPI
241protocol using channel 1 as MISO signal for SPI, channel 5 as MOSI, channel 3
242as CLK, and channel 0 as CS# signal.
243.TP
244.BR "\-A, \-\-protocol\-decoder\-annotations " <annotations>
245By default, only the stack's topmost protocol decoder's annotation output is
246shown. With this option another decoder's annotation can be selected for
247display, by specifying its ID:
248.sp
249 $
250.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-P i2c,i2cfilter,edid -A i2c"
251.sp
252If a protocol decoder has multiple annotations, you can also specify
253which one of them to show by specifying its short description like this:
254.sp
255 $
256.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-P i2c,i2cfilter,edid"
257.br
258.B " \-A i2c=data-read"
259.sp
260Select multiple annotations by separating them with a colon:
261.sp
262 $
263.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-P i2c,i2cfilter,edid"
264.br
265.B " \-A i2c=data-read:data-write"
266.sp
267You can also select multiple protocol decoders, with an optional selected
268annotation each, by separating them with commas:
269.sp
270 $
271.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-P i2c,i2cfilter,edid"
272.br
273.B " \-A i2c=data-read:data-write,edid"
274.TP
275.BR "\-M, \-\-protocol\-decoder\-meta " <pdname>
276When given, show protocol decoder meta output instead of annotations.
277The argument is the name of the decoder whose meta output to show.
278.sp
279 $
280.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-M i2c"
281.sp
282Not every decoder generates meta output.
283.TP
284.BR "\-B, \-\-protocol\-decoder\-binary " <binaryspec>
285When given, decoder "raw" data of various kinds is written to stdout instead
286of annotations (this could be raw binary UART/SPI bytes, or WAV files, PCAP
287files, PNG files, or anything else; this is entirely dependent on the
288decoder and what kinds of binary output make sense for that decoder).
289.sp
290No other information is printed to stdout, so this is
291suitable for piping into other programs or saving to a file.
292.sp
293Protocol decoders that support binary output publish a list of binary
294classes, for example the UART decoder might have "TX" and "RX". To
295select TX for output, the argument to this option would be:
296.sp
297 $
298.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-B uart=tx"
299.br
300.sp
301If only the protocol decoder is specified, without binary class, all classes
302are written to stdout:
303.sp
304 $
305.B "sigrok\-cli \-i <file.sr> \-B uart"
306.sp
307(this is only useful in rare cases, generally you would specify a certain
308binary class you're interested in)
309.sp
310Not every decoder generates binary output.
311.TP
312.BR "\-l, \-\-loglevel " <level>
313Set the libsigrok and libsigrokdecode loglevel. At the moment \fBsigrok-cli\fP
314doesn't support setting the two loglevels independently. The higher the
315number, the more debug output will be printed. Valid loglevels are:
316.sp
317\fB0\fP None
318.br
319\fB1\fP Error
320.br
321\fB2\fP Warnings
322.br
323\fB3\fP Informational
324.br
325\fB4\fP Debug
326.br
327\fB5\fP Spew
328.TP
329.B "\-\-show"
330.br
331Show information about the selected option. For example, to see options for a
332connected fx2lafw device:
333.sp
334 $
335.B "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-show
336.sp
337In order to properly get device options for your hardware, some drivers might
338need a serial port specified:
339.sp
340 $
341.B "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver ols:conn=/dev/ttyACM0 \-\-show
342.sp
343This also works for protocol decoders, input modules and output modules:
344.sp
345 $
346.B "sigrok\-cli \-\-protocol\-decoders i2c \-\-show
347 $
348.B "sigrok\-cli \-\-input\-format csv \-\-show
349 $
350.B "sigrok\-cli \-\-output\-format bits \-\-show
351.TP
352.B "\-\-scan"
353Scan for devices that can be detected automatically.
354.sp
355Example:
356.sp
357 $
358.B "sigrok\-cli \-\-scan
359.br
360 The following devices were found:
361.br
362 demo - Demo device with 12 channels: D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 A0 A1 A2 A3
363.br
364 fx2lafw:conn=3.26 - CWAV USBee SX with 8 channels: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
365.sp
366However, not all devices are auto-detectable (e.g. serial port based ones).
367For those you'll have to provide a \fBconn\fP option, see above.
368.sp
369 $
370.B "sigrok\-cli \-\-driver digitek-dt4000zc:conn=/dev/ttyUSB0 \-\-scan
371.br
372 The following devices were found:
373.br
374 Digitek DT4000ZC with 1 channel: P1
375.TP
376.BR "\-\-time " <ms>
377Sample for
378.B <ms>
379milliseconds, then quit.
380.sp
381You can optionally follow the number by \fBs\fP to specify the time to
382sample in seconds.
383.sp
384For example,
385.B "\-\-time 2s"
386will sample for two seconds.
387.TP
388.BR "\-\-samples " <numsamples>
389Acquire
390.B <numsamples>
391samples, then quit.
392.sp
393You can optionally follow the number by \fBk\fP, \fBm\fP, or \fBg\fP to
394specify the number of samples in kilosamples, megasamples, or gigasamples,
395respectively.
396.sp
397For example,
398.B "\-\-samples 3m"
399will acquire 3000000 samples.
400.TP
401.BR "\-\-frames " <numframes>
402Acquire
403.B <numframes>
404frames, then quit.
405.TP
406.BR "\-\-continuous"
407Sample continuously until stopped. Not all devices support this.
408.TP
409.BR "\-\-get " <variable>
410Get the value of
411.B <variable>
412from the specified device and print it.
413.TP
414.BR "\-\-set"
415Set one or more variables specified with the \fB\-\-config\fP option, without
416doing any acquisition.
417.SH EXAMPLES
418In order to get exactly 100 samples from the connected fx2lafw-supported logic
419analyzer hardware, run the following command:
420.TP
421.B " sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-samples 100"
422.TP
423If you want to sample data for 3 seconds (3000 ms), use:
424.TP
425.B " sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-time 3000"
426.TP
427Alternatively, you can also use:
428.TP
429.B " sigrok\-cli \-\-driver fx2lafw \-\-time 3s"
430.TP
431To capture data from the first 4 channels using the Openbench Logic Sniffer lasting 100ms at 10 MHz starting at the trigger condition
4320:high, 1:rising, 2:low, 3:high, use:
433.TP
434.nf
435\fBsigrok\-cli \-\-driver ols:conn=/dev/ttyACM0 \-\-config samplerate=10m \\\fP
436\fB\-\-output\-format bits \-\-channels 0\-3 \-\-wait\-trigger \\\fP
437\fB\-\-triggers 0=1,1=r,2=0,3=1 \-\-time 100\fP
438.TP
439To turn on internal logging on a Lascar EL-USB series device:
440.TP
441\fBsigrok\-cli \-\-driver lascar\-el\-usb:conn=10c4.0002 \\\fP
442\fB\-\-config datalog=on \-\-set\fP
443.SH "EXIT STATUS"
444.B sigrok\-cli
445exits with 0 on success, 1 on most failures.
446.SH "SEE ALSO"
447\fBpulseview\fP(1)
448.SH "BUGS"
449Please report any bugs via Bugzilla
450.RB "(" http://sigrok.org/bugzilla ")"
451or on the sigrok\-devel mailing list
452.RB "(" sigrok\-devel@lists.souceforge.net ")."
453.SH "LICENSE"
454.B sigrok\-cli
455is covered by the GNU General Public License (GPL). Some portions are
456licensed under the "GPL v2 or later", some under "GPL v3 or later".
457.SH "AUTHORS"
458Please see the individual source code files.
459.PP
460This manual page was written by Uwe Hermann <uwe@hermann\-uwe.de>.
461It is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL (version 2 or later).