Pixelpulse is a powerful user interface for visualizing and manipulating signals while exploring systems attached to affordable analog interface devices, such as Analog Devices' ADALM1000.
Fully cross-platform using the Qt5 graphics toolkit and OpenGL accelerated density-gradiated rendering, it provides a powerful and accessible tool for initial interactive explorations.
Intuitive click-and-drag interfaces make exploring system behaviors across a wide range of signal amplitudes, frequencies, or phases a trivial exercise. Just click once to source a constant voltage or current and see what happens. Choose a function (sawtooth, triangle, sinusoidal, square) - adjust parameters, and make waves.
Zoom in and out with your scroll wheel or multitouch gestures (on supported platforms). Hold "Shift" to for Y-axis zooming.
Click and drag the X axis to pan in time.
- OSX - Navigate to the releases and collect the latest
pixelpulse2-bundled.dmg.zip
package. The latest testing build is available from Travis-CI. - Windows - For a testing build, download the dependency package and the latest binary build from appveyor. For an official release build, navigate to releases and collect the latest pixelpulse2-setup.exe.
- Linux - Build from source (below)
To build from source on any platform, you need to install a C++ compiler toolchain, collect the build dependencies, setup your build environment, and compile the project.
If you have not built packages from source before, this is ill-advised.
- Build and install libsmu (https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/libsmu)
- Install Qt5.4.
- On most Linux Distributions, Qt5 is available in repositories. The complete list of packages required varies, but includes qt's support for declarative (qml) UI programming, qtquick, qtquick-window, qtquick-controls, and qtquick-layouts.
- Binary installers are available from the Qt project for most platforms.
To build / run on a generic POSIX platform
git clone https://github.com/signalspec/pixelpulse2
cd pixelpulse2
mkdir build
cd build
qmake pixelpulse2.pro -qt=qt5
make
On Windows the qmake command should look like this
qmake pixelpulse2.pro "LIBSMU_LIBRARY = path_to_libsmu_dll" "LIBSMU_INCLUDE_PATH = path_to_libsmu_include_folder" -qt=qt5
After it is finished building, you have to copy the libsmu shared library into the build folder and Pixelpulse2 should be ready to use with your M1K
To build / install for Debian, from the pixelpulse2
directory:
dh_make -p pixelpulse2_0.8 -s -c blank --createorig
dpkg-buildpackage
sudo dpkg -i ../pixelpulse2_0.1-1_i386.deb
To build / run on Ubuntu 15.04, via shabaz on Farnell.
-
Please note that you make encounter issues if you are running a version of Ubuntu lower than 15.04, because the version of QT in the repositories will likely be less than 5.4 (this also applies if you are running a Linux distribution that uses an older version of Ubuntu, for example Linux Mint 17.1, which uses Ubuntu 14.04.)
-
Get ready
sudo apt-get update
-
Build and install libsmu (https://github.com/analogdevicesinc/libsmu)
-
Download and install Qt5.4
wget http://qtmirror.ics.com/pub/qtproject/development_releases/qt/5.4/5.4.0-rc/qt-opensource-linux-x64-5.4.0-rc.run chmod 755 qt-o* ./qt-opensource-linux-x64-5.4.0-rc.run
-
Install a couple extra Qt modules
sudo apt-get install qtdeclarative5-controls-plugin sudo apt-get install qtdeclarative5-quicklayouts-plugin sudo apt-get install qtdeclarative5-dev
-
Change your default configuration file
sudo su cd /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt-default/qtchooser ls -l rm default.conf ln -s ../../../../share/qtchooser/qt5-x86_64-linux-gnu.conf default.conf ls –l exit
-
Make a new folder, clone the pixelpulse library into it from git, and build it!
mkdir development cd development git clone https://github.com/signalspec/pixelpulse2 cd pixelpulse2 mkdir build cd build qmake pixelpulse2.pro .. make
-
Make sure your M1K is plugged into your computer. The onboard LED should light up when it is connected. You can double-check by typing
lsusb
. You should see something along the lines ofID 064b:784c Analog Devices, Inc. (White Mountain DSP)
-
You should be ready to launch Pixelpulse2. First, go to the directory it was built in:
cd ~/development/pixelpulse2/build
-
Run Pixelpulse2 as root
sudo ./pixelpulse2