1 / 21

Self-Healing Mixed-Signal Baseband Processor for Cognitive Radios

Self-Healing Mixed-Signal Baseband Processor for Cognitive Radios. Presented by oussama sekkat. Goal of the project. To implement a revolutionary new mixed-signal baseband processor targeting the task of spectrum sensing in cognitive radios. Will use both energy detection and pilot detection.

nelly
Download Presentation

Self-Healing Mixed-Signal Baseband Processor for Cognitive Radios

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Self-Healing Mixed-Signal Baseband Processor for Cognitive Radios Presented by oussamasekkat

  2. Goal of the project • To implement a revolutionary new mixed-signal baseband processor targeting the task of spectrum sensing in cognitive radios. • Will use both energy detection and pilot detection

  3. Berkeley Emulation Engine 2 (BEE 2) • The platform: • 5 high-performance Xilinx FPGAs (Virtex II Pro 70) each containing a power PC Core • Support for up to 20GB of high speed DDR2 DRAM • FPGAs laid out in a star topology with four user FPGAs in a ring and one control FPGA connected to each user. • User FPGAs each have four independent high speed serial channels which are capable of transferring data at 10Gbps (XAUI interface) • 1 Ethernet port.

  4. BEE 2 (Topology)

  5. BORPH Operating System • BORPH:Berkeley Os for ReProgrammable Hardware • Extended Linux kernel that treats FPGA resources as native computational resources . • Provides integral operating system supports for FPGA designs, such as the ability for an FPGA design to read/write to the standard Linux file system. A user process in BORPH, can therefore either be a software program running on a processor, or a hardware design running on a FPGA. 

  6. BORPH Operating System (cont.)

  7. Cognitive radio test bed • Front end board contains: • FPGA board • XAUI connection • Baseband processor • Front-end radio

  8. Development environment • MSSGE tool flow: • Matlab v7.0.4 (R14) SP2 • Simulink v6.2 (R14) SP2 • Xilinx System Generator v7.1 • Xilinx EDK v7.1.02i • Xilinx ISE v7.1.04i • MSSGE libraries (Simulink models etc..)

  9. Bee2 setup • SSH connection to Bee2 enabled. • IP: 128.97.88.153 • Can use a modified RS-232 cable to connect to Bee2 as a root. • Hardware process example:

  10. Hardware process example: • Counter:

  11. Hardware process (cont.)

  12. Hardware process (cont.) • matlab >> bee_xps

  13. Hardware process (cont.)

  14. Hardware process (cont.) • In BEE 2: user@bee2% ./testborph_oussama_floating_2009_Mar_12_1523.bof & user@bee2% ps PID TTY TIME CMD26427 pts/6 00:00:00 bash26488 pts/6 00:00:00 testborph_oussama_floating_2009_Mar_12_1523.bof 26525 pts/6 00:00:00 ps user@bee2% cd /proc/26488/hw user@bee2% lsioregioreg_mode region user@bee2% cdioreg user@bee2% lscnt_encnt_val user@bee2% cat cnt_val 00000000 user@bee2% echo 1 >> cnt_en user@bee2% cat cnt_val 000AC015 user@bee2% cat cnt_val 000ACFF9 user@bee2% echo 0 >> cnt_en user@bee2% cat cnt_val 000ADEF3 user@bee2% cat cnt_val 000ADEF3

  15. Data acquisition example Start the user FPGA process: user@bee2% ./bee_1_fe_fpga1_2009_Jan_15_1238.bof &

  16. Data acquisition example Start the control FPGA process: user@bee2% ./bee_cntlfpga_2009_Jan_22_1215.bof &

  17. Data acquisition example

  18. Data acquisition example user@bee2% ./init // Initialize front end user@bee2% ./status 0 // Status for front end 0 --RF-- FE 0: frequency 2445 FE 0: ant_select 0 FE 0: tx_on 1 FE 0: tx_power 7 FE 0: rx_lna_gain 0 FE 0: refadj 0 FE 0: rx_agc 120 --MxFE-- FE 0: clkout1_div 0 FE 0: clkout2_div 0 FE 0: tx_dac_gain 128 FE 0: tx_pga_gain 100 FE 0: tx_two_edges 0 FE 0: tx_inv_sample 0 FE 0: tx_twos_complement 0 FE 0: tx_inv_sync 0 FE 0: tx_q_i_order 0 FE 0: tx_retime 0 FE 0: tx_interpolate 0 FE 0: tx_hilbert 0 FE 0: tx_keep_ve 0 FE 0: rx_pga_a 15 FE 0: rx_pga_b 15 FE 0: rx_dcs_ena 0 FE 0: rx_hs_duty_cycle 0 FE 0: rx_decimate 0 FE 0: rx_hilbert 0 FE 0: rx_keep_ve 0 FE 0: rx_inv_sync 0 FE 0: rx_twos_complement 0 FE 0: rx_retime 0 FE 0: mxfe_spi_raw 0x00000000 FE 0: rssi_config 0x00000000 • --TxDatapath-- • FE 0: tx_sync_ena 1 • FE 0: tx_data_sel 1 • FE 0: tx_offset_i 120 • FE 0: tx_offset_q 120 • FE 0: tx_rate_i 3 • FE 0: tx_rate_q 3 • FE 0: tx_amplitude_i 0 • FE 0: tx_amplitude_q 0 • FE 0: tx_stepsize 1000 • FE 0: tx_signal_mem_1 0x00000000 • FE 0: tx_signal_mem_2 0x000100ff • terminal count 255 • step size 1 • FE 0: tx_signal_mem_3 0x00000001 • enable mask 0x1 • FE 0: tx_ext_up_dn_ena 0 • FE 0: tx_ext_up_dn 0 • FE 0: tx_ext_data_i 0 • FE 0: tx_ext_data_q 0 • --RxDatapath-- • FE 0: rx_test_sel 0 • FE 0: rx_fft_sel 0 • FE 0: rx_set_bias 0 • FE 0: rx_resolution 0 • --ChipScope-- • local: scope 0 • --HopControl-- • local: hop_config_1 0x00000000 • local: hop_config_2 0x00000000

  19. Data acquisition example user@bee2% ./sigmem spectra/14bit/256_10.txt // load signal from given file user@bee2% ./param tx_on 1 // set parameter tx_on of front end 0 to 1

  20. Bee2 and CR test bed demo DEMO

  21. Next steps • Use the ./acquire utility to capture received signal and transfer it to BEE2 file system • Use the extract_raw script to convert the binary dump file created by the “acquire” utility into a format readable my Matlab • Run fft_rx matlab script on the resulting file.

More Related