The 7i90hd might work for you. It uses SPI, not Ethernet. SPI is about as fast as Ethernet
I am trying to figure out how a UDP packet might get "walked on" in a modern Ethernet network. Back in the days of un-switched networks that used either 10BaseT hubs (hubs not switches) or that used coaxial cable then yes I can see that happening. But a switched network is different EVERY line is isolated from all the other by the switch. The switch has memory and queues the packets. Let's say we have two computers and each is sending UDP packets to two different Mesa cards. I can't see how those packets would ever be on the same physical cable, assuming a switched network. Each computer has its own cable to the switch. The switch will read the packets and place them on different outbound ports each with its own cable going to the different Mesa boards. The UDP packets can't collide On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 6:52 PM, Gene Heskett <[email protected]> wrote: > Greetings guys; I hope everyone has arrived back home without incidents > involving bent sheet metal or worse. > > 1. someone said the 7i92H needs its own dedicated ethernet port, > presumably because udp patckets are not subject to any attempts at error > correction resends if other traffic walks on a udp packet. > > So that means I'd need to find an Orange Pi with 2 ethernet sockets so > two independant paths/addresses can be setup. > > None of these low power use cards have that, none that I've found have a > 2nd port. Is this a case of just waiting till it does happen? Space > considerations for the rj45 socket says it not going to be at all > likely. > > Comments anybody? > > 2. In playing with this phony vfd today after I got everything bolted > down again, I find the lack of docs a good sized problem. My test code > loop to exercise it has a direct reversal in it at one point and I'd > like to decelerate it to about 25 hertz in 5 to 7.5 seconds from > whatever speed its turning, switching on the dc brakes at that point to > bring it to a smooth halt. Then accelerate smoothly in the other > direction. It acts like that is what its doing for a straight stop from > either direction. and the booklet says in can go directly from one to > the other. However, in trying to speed up the changes, if I just switch > directions, it gets down to about 25 hz, then jumps off the table about > an inch, and is then running the other direction at the set speed even > if the set speed is 120 hz! No accelleration softening ramp at all. > This controller has about 8 registers that can be set for various speeds > where they are in effect, but zero discussion about what they effect in > this little booklet. So how to go about optimizing those settings? > > If anyone has any wisdom to share, I'd sure appreciate it. > > Thanks everybody. > > Cheers, Gene Heskett > -- > "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: > soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." > -Ed Howdershelt (Author) > Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene> > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > The Command Line: Reinvented for Modern Developers > Did the resurgence of CLI tooling catch you by surprise? > Reconnect with the command line and become more productive. > Learn the new .NET and ASP.NET CLI. Get your free copy! > http://sdm.link/telerik > _______________________________________________ > Emc-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users -- Chris Albertson Redondo Beach, California ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Command Line: Reinvented for Modern Developers Did the resurgence of CLI tooling catch you by surprise? Reconnect with the command line and become more productive. Learn the new .NET and ASP.NET CLI. Get your free copy! http://sdm.link/telerik _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users
