Hi
Solaris at least has "seen the light" and is becoming a lot more open than it
once was.
Bob
On Apr 25, 2010, at 8:01 AM, Magnus Danielson wrote:
> On 04/25/2010 10:55 AM, Steve Rooke wrote:
>> On 25 April 2010 02:39, Magnus Danielson wrote:
>>> On 04/24/2010 03:57 PM, Bob Camp wrote:
>>>
Is there any software around allows one to extract any useful information from an M12+ on a Linux,
FreeBSD or more importantly Solaris box?
I got my receiver Synergy today and whilst the 30-day trial of Tac32 will be useful, I want to find a
long term solution that does not include Windoze.
-
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Dr. David Kirkby" writes:
>Is there any software around allows one to extract any useful information from
>an M12+ on a Linux,
>FreeBSD or more importantly Solaris box?
>
>I got my receiver Synergy today and whilst the 30-day trial of Tac32 will be
>useful, I wa
Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
Is there any software around allows one to extract any useful
information from an M12+ on a Linux, FreeBSD or more importantly Solaris
box?
I got my receiver Synergy today and whilst the 30-day trial of Tac32
will be useful, I want to find a long term solution that doe
> Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
> >Is there any software around allows one to extract any useful
> >information from an M12+ on a Linux, FreeBSD or more importantly Solaris
> >box?
My evaluation board (it might be a M12, not a M12+) works fine with
ntp-4.2.0 on Solaris 8. It took a few tries to get it
John Ackermann N8UR wrote:
Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
Is there any software around allows one to extract any useful
information from an M12+ on a Linux, FreeBSD or more importantly
Solaris box?
I got my receiver Synergy today and whilst the 30-day trial of Tac32
will be useful, I want to find
Moin,
I'm looking for some non-GUI software to generate the different *DEV
plots we generally use to asses oscillators with. Timelab is nice,
but if you are evaluating two dozen measurements using different
parameters, it becomes very tedious to generate the plots. Not
to talk about the problem th
In message
, Anders Wallin writes:
>matplotlib works for plotting, but there are probably many alternatives.
There's always GNUplot, which has become quite a lot better from a
purely graphical point of view in recent years.
--
Poul-Henning Kamp | UNIX since Zilog Zeus 3.20
p...
Give rrdtool a shot. Many of the open source packages that have time series
based plots use it.
http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/gallery/index.en.html
it is both the data storage, conditioning and graphing all in one
On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 3:29 AM, Attila Kinali wrote:
> Moin,
>
> I'm looking fo
ila Kinali"
To: "Discussion of precise time and frequency measurement"
Sent: Thursday, March 17, 2016 3:29 AM
Subject: [time-nuts] Unix software to generate nice looking *DEV plots
> Moin,
>
> I'm looking for some non-GUI software to generate the different *DEV
> plots we g
Simplest solution is "gnuplot". You may already have it installed on your
system.
http://www.gnuplot.info
On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 3:29 AM, Attila Kinali wrote:
> Moin,
>
> I'm looking for some non-GUI software to generate the different *DEV
> plots we generally use to asses oscillators with.
Hi all,
Attila, take a look at SigmaTheta Software . I'm using it from a while,
and it's a collection of different, helpful scripts.
https://theta.obs-besancon.fr/spip.php?article103&lang=fr#download
If you need it i can send you a shell script that i've created to plot ,
convert and finalize
I have done something similar at work (not for adev, for plots of corona test
results on HV transformers) but since most engineers here are Linux/UNIX
challenged, I put the Perl scripts on a Linux box and let people send their
data through a web page via cgi, which returns the plot as graphic.
E
Hi Attila --
I have some stuff that does ADEV and similar calculations and shoves the
results into plots using the Grace plotting tool. It's basically a perl
script using some document formatting templates and a couple of shell
scripts for control. I use it to automagically create web pages
Here is what my tool looks like:
www.eds-fl.com/misc/graph/index.php
You need to download a data file first, I added a link to download a small file
9kB.
Again, this is not an ADEV tool, the file format is binary (came out of an old
DOS tool that could not plot to save its life...) but it's a
R might be a good place to start.
I use it extensively for astrophysics (all graphs in my recent pulsar paper
accepted in The Astrophysical Journal were done using R:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/1602.01899v1.pdf).
R has a huge support network. I haven't even looked, but I bet it'd be a
great place to st
allantools has functions for most of the xDEV statistics, and it is tested
against Stable32
https://github.com/aewallin/allantools
or
https://pypi.python.org/pypi/AllanTools
matplotlib works for plotting, but there are probably many alternatives.
Anders
On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 7:35 PM, Didier J
Before I start re-inventing wheels, has anyone got a non-graphical interface to
the PRS10.
Specifically, I want to log over time any/all the data points seen on the RbMon
output, though it would be nice to have a curses version of the window.
I have got a sniffer on the link and interaction look
Hi,
I have too been tempted to do this, but never got around to it.
It one among many projects I should do one of these days.
Have a bunch of PRS10 to debug.
Cheers,
Magnus
On 04/06/2016 11:13 AM, Mike Cook wrote:
Before I start re-inventing wheels, has anyone got a non-graphical interface to
Dear Mike,
I have a Perl script and a C++ application that may be of use. The Perl
script logs continuously, but is mainly for logging TT? responses. The C++
application is used interactively. Either could be modified to do what you
want.
Take a look at:
https://github.com/openttp/openttp/blob/d
Seems like you don't have to write much. Put you commands in a text file then a
cron job copies the file to the serial port and send any data coming back to
stdout. Gets piped to script that dumps that and current time to sql database.
I bet a dozen lines of code total.
> On Apr 6, 2016, at 3:
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