On 3/13/2023 8:12 PM, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:
Gents,
I've been doing logic debugging (on a fairly primitive software defined radio I
designed back in 1999) with an old Philips logic analyzer. It's not bad, certainly
fast enough (I need 100 Msamples/s, it can do twice that) and it's more than wide
enough (I need 32 channels). But its capture memory is microscopic so I struggle to see
more than one or two transactions, and I need to see more than that.
Some poking around shows various USB-connected logic analyzers for quite low prices, and
a number of them seem to have suitable specs. I also ran across
sigrok.org which seems to
be an open source logic analysis framework that can drive a bunch of those devices. Nice
given that too many of them only come with Windows software.
I suspect there are others that have not too expensive logic analyzers and might be able
to offer up suggestions or product reviews.
paul
If you have 8 or 16 channels to watch, the Saleae units are absolutely
incredible:
https://www.saleae.com/
For more channels, I will admit I'm partial to old HP units, especially
the frames. I have a 16702A here, which I love. I have 3 333MHz LA
boards in it 68 channels per board, 204 channels overall. It's not
quite as trivial to use as the Saleae units, but it does offer remote
access via X or VNC.
Jim
--
Jim Brain
brain(a)jbrain.com
www.jbrain.com