Comedilib (libcomedi) library
![]() info in the demo directory. I've made it a bit more verbose and also took into account that now the generic_timed command takes more than one channel so that a user can experiment which sampling rates are possible with different channel numbers. I've also added an option to set the sampling rate for the generic_timed command. That sould actually not be needed but I'm sure there are drivers out there which do not correct the sampling rate downwards automatically. |
||
---|---|---|
c++ | ||
comedi_board_info | ||
comedi_config | ||
demo | ||
doc | ||
etc | ||
include | ||
lib | ||
m4 | ||
man | ||
perl | ||
scxi | ||
swig | ||
testing | ||
AUTHORS | ||
autogen.sh | ||
ChangeLog | ||
comedilib.pc.in | ||
comedilib.spec.in | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
INSTALL | ||
Makefile.am | ||
NEWS | ||
README | ||
README.Git | ||
todo |
COMEDILIB The Linux Control and Measurement Device Interface Library David Schleef <ds@schleef.org> * About Comedi: Comedi is a collection of drivers for data acquisition hardware. These drivers work with Linux, and also with Linux combined with the real-time extensions RTAI and RTLinux. The Comedi core, which ties all the driver together, allows applications to be written that are completely hardware independent. Comedi supports a variety of data acquisition hardware; an incomplete list can be found in the Comedi source. This distribution contains only the user-space library. You will almost certainly also want to download the Comedi kernel modules found in the "comedi" tarball. Also, the calibration programs comedi_calibrate and comedi_soft_calibrate can be found in the "comedi_calibrate" tarball. A few boards also need firmware found in the "comedi-nonfree-firmware" tarball. * Installation: Installation instructions are found in INSTALL. * Mailing List: Questions about Comedi and Comedilib should be sent to the Comedi mailing list, <comedi_list@googlegroups.com>. It is necessary to join the group before posting (see below). It is also possible to post to the list using the web interface (see below). Mailing the maintainer directly is always acceptable, but since the mailing list is archived and questions are often answered more quickly by others, the mailing list is preferred. To subscribe to and unsubscribe from the mailing list, or to read or post messages via the web interface, go to <http://groups.google.com/group/comedi_list>. Alternatively, you can send a blank email to <comedi_list+subscribe@googlegroups.com> to subscribe, or to <comedi_list+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com> to unsubscribe (making sure the "From:" email address matches the address you originally subscribed with!). Traffic on the list is light, and mainly questions/answers about comedi installation, bugs, and programming. General questions about data acquisition are also welcome. * More Information: Comedi also has a web page at <http://www.comedi.org/> from where updated versions may be downloaded. Often bugfixes and new features that are not in the current release can be found in the Git repository. Instructions for access to the Comedi and Comedilib repositories can be found at <http://www.comedi.org/download.html>. Git snapshots for Comedilib can be created automatically at <http://comedi.org/git?p=comedi/comedilib.git;a=tree>. The Git repository can be cloned locally using: git clone git://comedi.org/git/comedilib.git Comedilib may be freely distibuted and modified in accordance with the GNU Lesser General Public License. Portions of the Comedilib distribution fall under different licenses; see the individual files for details. The person behind all this misspelled humor is David Schleef <ds@schleef.org>.