Wide frequency range, arbitrary waveform DDS...

S

Stef

Guest
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?


--
Stef

Baker\'s First Law of Federal Geometry:
A block grant is a solid mass of money surrounded on all sides by
governors.
 
On Tuesday, August 16, 2022 at 11:37:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

There is a STRONG objection to shortening the phase word. It will cause problems with close in spurs (which can\'t be filtered) and reduces your resolution. See below.

Instead of a pre-scaler, use a post divider. A pre-scaler on the clock to the DDS requires the analog filter to be adjusted to suit.


I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

If you are looking to generate a non-sine waveform, it is not needed, or useful.


If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

Do you work at Highland Technology?

I\'ve posted about an appropriate solution more than once in s.e.d. Here is a fair summary...

A DDS should be designed to generate a top frequency over a 2:1 range. This is easy stuff, with good accuracy and very low jitter if properly designed, use of a LONG phase word and a good filter after the DAC. It is important to NOT shorten the phase word as that introduces spurs close to the frequency being generated, which can not be filtered out. This is because the truncation of the phase word creates discontinuities which show up as close in spurs. Keep the phase word long and round the sine output to suit a 16 bit DAC. This generates harmonics which are much easier to filter.

You don\'t need to use a single large table for the sine. sin(a+b) = sin(a)cos(b) + cos(a)sin(b), where a is the msbs of the phase word and b is the lsbs. Use appropriately sized tables for sin(a), cos(b) and a single table for the product cos(a)sin(b). This is practical if (a) and (b) are each truncated a bit. Because sin(b) is always small, this term is always small and does not need to be calculated with full resolution on a and b. This product table also does not require the full word width. Three table lookups, one multiply and one add.

A programmable divider then divides the top frequency by 2**N by counting up to a settable value.

The top frequency can clock a final FF buffer register of your favorite technology to provide the actual pulse output with an appropriate jitter.

The settings of these two units can both be changed on a single clock cycle by writing to a buffer register and updating the actual operational registers simultaneously on a cue. The DDS will continue from the present phase, so will produce one top frequency clock pulse that is an intermediate period. The programmable divider will continue from the current count, either triggering right away, or continuing to count from the present value. Either way it will produce one output pulse that is within the range of the two settings, the prior setting and the new setting.

Does this make sense? Feel free to drop my name with your boss.

--

Rick C.

- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 2022-08-17 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Tuesday, August 16, 2022 at 11:37:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

There is a STRONG objection to shortening the phase word. It will cause problems with close in spurs (which can\'t be filtered) and reduces your resolution. See below.

Instead of a pre-scaler, use a post divider. A pre-scaler on the clock to the DDS requires the analog filter to be adjusted to suit.

Ah yes, changing the clock would require adjustment of the output
filter. Not something you would want to do.

How would you post-divide the (arbitrary waveform) output? Or do you
mean something else with the post-divide?

I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

If you are looking to generate a non-sine waveform, it is not needed, or useful.

Could you explain this? How would I generate an arbitrary waveform
without using a table?


If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

Do you work at Highland Technology?

No, I do not.

I\'ve posted about an appropriate solution more than once in s.e.d. Here is a fair summary...

I don\'t read there, so missed that. But are you now talking about an
appropriate solution for a specific Highland Technology problem, or a
general solution?

A DDS should be designed to generate a top frequency over a 2:1 range. This is easy stuff, with good accuracy and very low jitter if properly designed, use of a LONG phase word and a good filter after the DAC. It is important to NOT shorten the phase word as that introduces spurs close to the frequency being generated, which can not be filtered out. This is because the truncation of the phase word creates discontinuities which show up as close in spurs. Keep the phase word long and round the sine output to suit a 16 bit DAC. This generates harmonics which are much easier to filter.

You don\'t need to use a single large table for the sine. sin(a+b) = sin(a)cos(b) + cos(a)sin(b), where a is the msbs of the phase word and b is the lsbs. Use appropriately sized tables for sin(a), cos(b) and a single table for the product cos(a)sin(b). This is practical if (a) and (b) are each truncated a bit. Because sin(b) is always small, this term is always small and does not need to be calculated with full resolution on a and b. This product table also does not require the full word width. Three table lookups, one multiply and one add.

A programmable divider then divides the top frequency by 2**N by counting up to a settable value.

The top frequency can clock a final FF buffer register of your favorite technology to provide the actual pulse output with an appropriate jitter.

The settings of these two units can both be changed on a single clock cycle by writing to a buffer register and updating the actual operational registers simultaneously on a cue. The DDS will continue from the present phase, so will produce one top frequency clock pulse that is an intermediate period. The programmable divider will continue from the current count, either triggering right away, or continuing to count from the present value. Either way it will produce one output pulse that is within the range of the two settings, the prior setting and the new setting.

Does this make sense?

Not really. I don\'t need just a sin(a+b) signal, I need to implement
arbitrary (not realy arbitrary, but various rather complex) waveforms. I
don\'t see how your solution will do this, unless I totally misunderstood
it.

> Feel free to drop my name with your boss.

I can do that, but I doubt it it will ring a bell, even with your full
name. I believe we live on different continents, so I don\'t think we
have ever met.


--
Stef

A sinking ship gathers no moss.
-- Donald Kaul
 
In comp.arch.embedded Stef <me@this.is.invalid> wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

Well, your frequency will be less accurate. To see this let me
derive formula for DDS. Let t be DAC clock, T be period of desired
signal and assume that we have N samples at uniformly distributed
points. At n-th tick of DAC clock real time is nt. In the
scale of desired signal this corresponds to nt/T. To get
position within period we drop integer part of this, that is
take frac(nt/T). Then we need to round to closest sample point.
Actually instead of rounding we can multiply by N, add 0.5 as
bias and take integer part. So, sample index is:

[N frac(nt/T) + 0.5]

where [ ] denotes integer part. Assuming that N is power of 2,
say 2^m and all arthmetic is in fixed point binary frac above
is equvalent to dropping high bits, leaving only m bits before
binary point. Integer part means dropping bits after bianary
points. So formula simplified to

[nNt/T + 0.5] = [n*a + b]

where a = Nt/T and b = 0.5 is time shift. Note that taking

phi_n = n*a + b

we have phi_{n+1} = (n+1)*a + b = a + phi_n so single addition
is enough to adjust phase. What is effect of using smaller
number of bits to represent phase phi_n? Well, b needs only
1 bit, so if Nt/T fits into k bits with k bigger than m + 1,
then calculation using k bits gives exactly the same result
as calculation using infinite precision. In other words,
using k bits we get exact result but possibly for wrong
frequency.

In general acceptable frequency error depends on application.
But since good analog components are more expensive than
digital ones, simple heuristic says that resuluting of
phase accumulator should not degrade accuracy of
oscilator. Assuming few ppm quartz oscilator as source
of DAC clock, this means that we need about 20 significant
bits in parameter a. OTOH, at moderate freqences we do not
want to make big jumps, so parameter a should have m or more
zero bits at start. With m = 10 we arrive at 30 bits. Add
some margin for users that want slightly better results and
we arrive at 36 bits. In fact, if you want 0.5 mHz without
divisor on DAC clock you will have about 35 zero bits
at start of paramter a, so 55 bits phase accumultor would
be more appropriate. However, in in few hundreds Hertz
range and below pre-divisor on DAC clock seem quite
appropriate, so 36 bits + pre-divisor should be OK.

I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

If you go for 25 MHz DAC clock your DDS should be doable using
sufficiently fast processor. My rough guesstimate is that
to produce single sample (addjust phase accumulator, extract
bits and copy value) you need about 10 machine instructions,
so 250 MIPS processor should be fast enough to generate
samples. You probably need a DMA channel to transmit them
to DAC. I am not aware of processor with fast enough DAC,
but I think that there are processors capable of driving
external DAC at that speed.

OTOH with 12 MHz signal and 25 MHz DAC clock you essentially
are limited to sinusoidal signals, to have more variety
you need more samples per period, so either lower signal
frequency or higher DAC clock. So you may end up with
much higher DAC freqency and censequenty be forced to
use FPGA.

As I wrote earler, skimming bits on phase accumulator seems
unwise, it is at most one instruction in critical loop
in CPU realization and has _much_ smaller impact on
FPGA (think about size of your tables, single counter
is tiny compared to that).

--
Waldek Hebisch
 
On Wednesday, August 17, 2022 at 7:36:42 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-17 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Tuesday, August 16, 2022 at 11:37:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

There is a STRONG objection to shortening the phase word. It will cause problems with close in spurs (which can\'t be filtered) and reduces your resolution. See below.

Instead of a pre-scaler, use a post divider. A pre-scaler on the clock to the DDS requires the analog filter to be adjusted to suit.

Ah yes, changing the clock would require adjustment of the output
filter. Not something you would want to do.

How would you post-divide the (arbitrary waveform) output? Or do you
mean something else with the post-divide?

I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

If you are looking to generate a non-sine waveform, it is not needed, or useful.
Could you explain this? How would I generate an arbitrary waveform
without using a table?

It\'s not without a table, but not one huge table, 2^n length where n is the number of phase bits. I described the process below.


If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

Do you work at Highland Technology?
No, I do not.

Ok, someone there was inquiring about the exact same thing and often has one of his people enquire about such problems here when they potentially involve FPGAs. Sorry I mistook you for that.


I\'ve posted about an appropriate solution more than once in s.e.d. Here is a fair summary...

I don\'t read there, so missed that. But are you now talking about an
appropriate solution for a specific Highland Technology problem, or a
general solution?

The DDS is general. A single sine table is fine if you have the memory for it. But you can do very well with numerical methods and much smaller tables as well.


A DDS should be designed to generate a top frequency over a 2:1 range. This is easy stuff, with good accuracy and very low jitter if properly designed, use of a LONG phase word and a good filter after the DAC. It is important to NOT shorten the phase word as that introduces spurs close to the frequency being generated, which can not be filtered out. This is because the truncation of the phase word creates discontinuities which show up as close in spurs. Keep the phase word long and round the sine output to suit a 16 bit DAC. This generates harmonics which are much easier to filter.

You don\'t need to use a single large table for the sine. sin(a+b) = sin(a)cos(b) + cos(a)sin(b), where a is the msbs of the phase word and b is the lsbs. Use appropriately sized tables for sin(a), cos(b) and a single table for the product cos(a)sin(b). This is practical if (a) and (b) are each truncated a bit. Because sin(b) is always small, this term is always small and does not need to be calculated with full resolution on a and b. This product table also does not require the full word width. Three table lookups, one multiply and one add.

A programmable divider then divides the top frequency by 2**N by counting up to a settable value.

The top frequency can clock a final FF buffer register of your favorite technology to provide the actual pulse output with an appropriate jitter.

The settings of these two units can both be changed on a single clock cycle by writing to a buffer register and updating the actual operational registers simultaneously on a cue. The DDS will continue from the present phase, so will produce one top frequency clock pulse that is an intermediate period. The programmable divider will continue from the current count, either triggering right away, or continuing to count from the present value. Either way it will produce one output pulse that is within the range of the two settings, the prior setting and the new setting.

Does this make sense?
Not really. I don\'t need just a sin(a+b) signal, I need to implement
arbitrary (not realy arbitrary, but various rather complex) waveforms. I
don\'t see how your solution will do this, unless I totally misunderstood
it.

Ok, if you need an AWG, then you need a large memory. Your original post didn\'t seem to mention that. It only talked about sine waves.


Feel free to drop my name with your boss.
I can do that, but I doubt it it will ring a bell, even with your full
name. I believe we live on different continents, so I don\'t think we
have ever met.

Sorry, I was mistaken thinking you worked at Highland Tech.

--

Rick C.

+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
+ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On Wednesday, August 17, 2022 at 3:14:44 PM UTC-4, anti...@math.uni.wroc.pl wrote:
In comp.arch.embedded Stef <m...@this.is.invalid> wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?
Well, your frequency will be less accurate. To see this let me
derive formula for DDS. Let t be DAC clock, T be period of desired
signal and assume that we have N samples at uniformly distributed
points. At n-th tick of DAC clock real time is nt. In the
scale of desired signal this corresponds to nt/T. To get
position within period we drop integer part of this, that is
take frac(nt/T). Then we need to round to closest sample point.
Actually instead of rounding we can multiply by N, add 0.5 as
bias and take integer part. So, sample index is:

[N frac(nt/T) + 0.5]

where [ ] denotes integer part. Assuming that N is power of 2,
say 2^m and all arthmetic is in fixed point binary frac above
is equvalent to dropping high bits, leaving only m bits before
binary point. Integer part means dropping bits after bianary
points. So formula simplified to

[nNt/T + 0.5] = [n*a + b]

where a = Nt/T and b = 0.5 is time shift. Note that taking

phi_n = n*a + b

we have phi_{n+1} = (n+1)*a + b = a + phi_n so single addition
is enough to adjust phase. What is effect of using smaller
number of bits to represent phase phi_n? Well, b needs only
1 bit, so if Nt/T fits into k bits with k bigger than m + 1,
then calculation using k bits gives exactly the same result
as calculation using infinite precision. In other words,
using k bits we get exact result but possibly for wrong
frequency.

In general acceptable frequency error depends on application.
But since good analog components are more expensive than
digital ones, simple heuristic says that resuluting of
phase accumulator should not degrade accuracy of
oscilator. Assuming few ppm quartz oscilator as source
of DAC clock, this means that we need about 20 significant
bits in parameter a. OTOH, at moderate freqences we do not
want to make big jumps, so parameter a should have m or more
zero bits at start. With m = 10 we arrive at 30 bits. Add
some margin for users that want slightly better results and
we arrive at 36 bits. In fact, if you want 0.5 mHz without
divisor on DAC clock you will have about 35 zero bits
at start of paramter a, so 55 bits phase accumultor would
be more appropriate. However, in in few hundreds Hertz
range and below pre-divisor on DAC clock seem quite
appropriate, so 36 bits + pre-divisor should be OK.
I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?
If you go for 25 MHz DAC clock your DDS should be doable using
sufficiently fast processor. My rough guesstimate is that
to produce single sample (addjust phase accumulator, extract
bits and copy value) you need about 10 machine instructions,
so 250 MIPS processor should be fast enough to generate
samples. You probably need a DMA channel to transmit them
to DAC. I am not aware of processor with fast enough DAC,
but I think that there are processors capable of driving
external DAC at that speed.

OTOH with 12 MHz signal and 25 MHz DAC clock you essentially
are limited to sinusoidal signals, to have more variety
you need more samples per period, so either lower signal
frequency or higher DAC clock. So you may end up with
much higher DAC freqency and censequenty be forced to
use FPGA.

As I wrote earler, skimming bits on phase accumulator seems
unwise, it is at most one instruction in critical loop
in CPU realization and has _much_ smaller impact on
FPGA (think about size of your tables, single counter
is tiny compared to that).

In sine generation, it is often used in applications where spurs need to be minimized. A filter is good for a sine wave, but is limited on removing close in spurs. Truncation of the phase word (even just as an input to the sine generator) creates spurs close to the fundamental. It essentially creates phase discontinuities that manifest as close in spurs. These are virtually unfilterable. If jitter or close in spurs are not important, then shortening the phase word has other obvious limitations that can be evaluated readily.

--

Rick C.

-- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On Wednesday, August 17, 2022 at 10:20:09 PM UTC-4, gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wednesday, August 17, 2022 at 7:36:42 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-17 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Tuesday, August 16, 2022 at 11:37:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

There is a STRONG objection to shortening the phase word. It will cause problems with close in spurs (which can\'t be filtered) and reduces your resolution. See below.

Instead of a pre-scaler, use a post divider. A pre-scaler on the clock to the DDS requires the analog filter to be adjusted to suit.

Ah yes, changing the clock would require adjustment of the output
filter. Not something you would want to do.

How would you post-divide the (arbitrary waveform) output? Or do you
mean something else with the post-divide?

I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

If you are looking to generate a non-sine waveform, it is not needed, or useful.
Could you explain this? How would I generate an arbitrary waveform
without using a table?
It\'s not without a table, but not one huge table, 2^n length where n is the number of phase bits. I described the process below.

Opps, to correct myself... 2^(n-2) length table if you take advantage of the folding properties of the sine function.


If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

Do you work at Highland Technology?
No, I do not.
Ok, someone there was inquiring about the exact same thing and often has one of his people enquire about such problems here when they potentially involve FPGAs. Sorry I mistook you for that.
I\'ve posted about an appropriate solution more than once in s.e.d. Here is a fair summary...

I don\'t read there, so missed that. But are you now talking about an
appropriate solution for a specific Highland Technology problem, or a
general solution?
The DDS is general. A single sine table is fine if you have the memory for it. But you can do very well with numerical methods and much smaller tables as well.
A DDS should be designed to generate a top frequency over a 2:1 range.. This is easy stuff, with good accuracy and very low jitter if properly designed, use of a LONG phase word and a good filter after the DAC. It is important to NOT shorten the phase word as that introduces spurs close to the frequency being generated, which can not be filtered out. This is because the truncation of the phase word creates discontinuities which show up as close in spurs. Keep the phase word long and round the sine output to suit a 16 bit DAC. This generates harmonics which are much easier to filter.

You don\'t need to use a single large table for the sine. sin(a+b) = sin(a)cos(b) + cos(a)sin(b), where a is the msbs of the phase word and b is the lsbs. Use appropriately sized tables for sin(a), cos(b) and a single table for the product cos(a)sin(b). This is practical if (a) and (b) are each truncated a bit. Because sin(b) is always small, this term is always small and does not need to be calculated with full resolution on a and b. This product table also does not require the full word width. Three table lookups, one multiply and one add.

A programmable divider then divides the top frequency by 2**N by counting up to a settable value.

The top frequency can clock a final FF buffer register of your favorite technology to provide the actual pulse output with an appropriate jitter..

The settings of these two units can both be changed on a single clock cycle by writing to a buffer register and updating the actual operational registers simultaneously on a cue. The DDS will continue from the present phase, so will produce one top frequency clock pulse that is an intermediate period. The programmable divider will continue from the current count, either triggering right away, or continuing to count from the present value. Either way it will produce one output pulse that is within the range of the two settings, the prior setting and the new setting.

Does this make sense?
Not really. I don\'t need just a sin(a+b) signal, I need to implement
arbitrary (not realy arbitrary, but various rather complex) waveforms. I
don\'t see how your solution will do this, unless I totally misunderstood
it.
Ok, if you need an AWG, then you need a large memory. Your original post didn\'t seem to mention that. It only talked about sine waves.
Feel free to drop my name with your boss.
I can do that, but I doubt it it will ring a bell, even with your full
name. I believe we live on different continents, so I don\'t think we
have ever met.
Sorry, I was mistaken thinking you worked at Highland Tech.

--

Rick C.

-+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-+ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 2022-08-17 antispam@math.uni.wroc.pl wrote in comp.arch.embedded:
In comp.arch.embedded Stef <me@this.is.invalid> wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

Well, your frequency will be less accurate. To see this let me
derive formula for DDS.

<snip detailed DDS math>

If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

If you go for 25 MHz DAC clock your DDS should be doable using
sufficiently fast processor. My rough guesstimate is that
to produce single sample (addjust phase accumulator, extract
bits and copy value) you need about 10 machine instructions,
so 250 MIPS processor should be fast enough to generate
samples. You probably need a DMA channel to transmit them
to DAC. I am not aware of processor with fast enough DAC,
but I think that there are processors capable of driving
external DAC at that speed.

That is assuming the processor has not much else to do and that only a
single DDS channel is required. Both will not be true in the possible
application, I\'m affraid. The additional DDS channels can be a bit
slower, so it may still be doable.


OTOH with 12 MHz signal and 25 MHz DAC clock you essentially
are limited to sinusoidal signals, to have more variety
you need more samples per period, so either lower signal
frequency or higher DAC clock. So you may end up with
much higher DAC freqency and censequenty be forced to
use FPGA.

Yes, this is understood. Read the 10 MHz as bandwidth, not as the max
frequency at which a complex waveform should be generated. So the
waveform will degrade to a sine when sped up to 10 MHz.

As I wrote earler, skimming bits on phase accumulator seems
unwise, it is at most one instruction in critical loop
in CPU realization and has _much_ smaller impact on
FPGA (think about size of your tables, single counter
is tiny compared to that).

FPGA have memory blocks to hold such tables. A simple ripple counter
will indeed take a tiny amount of logic, a synchronous counter will take
more, certainly at 55 bits. But I think you need an adder if you want
variable accumulator steps and not only +1. Keeping the adder small
enough to fit in something like a 48-bit DSP slice will probably save
space.

The above is probably quite Xilinx specific, as that is the last FPGA I
have experience with. And even that was a while ago.

But again, I may be worrying too much about space already. When it comes
to it, I should first implement the \'best\' solution. And then probably
find that this uses less than 10% of my FPGA. :)


--
Stef

Don\'t shout for help at night. You might wake your neighbors.
-- Stanislaw J. Lem, \"Unkempt Thoughts\"
 
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Wednesday, August 17, 2022 at 7:36:42 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-17 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Tuesday, August 16, 2022 at 11:37:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:

<snip>

But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?

\'Hidden\' AWG hint.

If you are looking to generate a non-sine waveform, it is not needed, or useful.
Could you explain this? How would I generate an arbitrary waveform
without using a table?

It\'s not without a table, but not one huge table, 2^n length where n is the number of phase bits. I described the process below.


If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

Do you work at Highland Technology?
No, I do not.

Ok, someone there was inquiring about the exact same thing and often has one of his people enquire about such problems here when they potentially involve FPGAs. Sorry I mistook you for that.

I suspected something like this was the case, no problem. :)

I\'ve posted about an appropriate solution more than once in s.e.d. Here is a fair summary...

I don\'t read there, so missed that. But are you now talking about an
appropriate solution for a specific Highland Technology problem, or a
general solution?

The DDS is general. A single sine table is fine if you have the memory for it. But you can do very well with numerical methods and much smaller tables as well.

Yes DDS is general. But your method seemed to be aimed specifically at a
certain problem. But if I understand you correctly, the method you
describe is a general solution to generate sine waves without large
tables?

<snip>

> Ok, if you need an AWG, then you need a large memory. Your original post didn\'t seem to mention that. It only talked about sine waves.

Re-reading my original post, I see that was a bit hidden in the text and
may not have been clear to a reader not familiar with the application.
Sorry about that.

Feel free to drop my name with your boss.
I can do that, but I doubt it it will ring a bell, even with your full
name. I believe we live on different continents, so I don\'t think we
have ever met.

Sorry, I was mistaken thinking you worked at Highland Tech.

I thought you might have. ;-)


--
Stef

Hey, I had to let awk be better at *something*... :)
-- Larry Wall in <1991Nov7.200504.25280@netlabs.com>1
 
On Thursday, August 18, 2022 at 4:21:50 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-17 anti...@math.uni.wroc.pl wrote in comp.arch.embedded:
In comp.arch.embedded Stef <m...@this.is.invalid> wrote:
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).

Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?

Well, your frequency will be less accurate. To see this let me
derive formula for DDS.
snip detailed DDS math

If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

If you go for 25 MHz DAC clock your DDS should be doable using
sufficiently fast processor. My rough guesstimate is that
to produce single sample (addjust phase accumulator, extract
bits and copy value) you need about 10 machine instructions,
so 250 MIPS processor should be fast enough to generate
samples. You probably need a DMA channel to transmit them
to DAC. I am not aware of processor with fast enough DAC,
but I think that there are processors capable of driving
external DAC at that speed.
That is assuming the processor has not much else to do and that only a
single DDS channel is required. Both will not be true in the possible
application, I\'m affraid. The additional DDS channels can be a bit
slower, so it may still be doable.

You keep calling it a DDS, which apparently is correct in that it can be used generically. But conventionally this refers to generating a sine wave. The term, AWG (Arbitrary Waveform Generator) is more commonly used for what you are doing.


OTOH with 12 MHz signal and 25 MHz DAC clock you essentially
are limited to sinusoidal signals, to have more variety
you need more samples per period, so either lower signal
frequency or higher DAC clock. So you may end up with
much higher DAC freqency and censequenty be forced to
use FPGA.
Yes, this is understood. Read the 10 MHz as bandwidth, not as the max
frequency at which a complex waveform should be generated. So the
waveform will degrade to a sine when sped up to 10 MHz.
As I wrote earler, skimming bits on phase accumulator seems
unwise, it is at most one instruction in critical loop
in CPU realization and has _much_ smaller impact on
FPGA (think about size of your tables, single counter
is tiny compared to that).
FPGA have memory blocks to hold such tables. A simple ripple counter
will indeed take a tiny amount of logic, a synchronous counter will take
more, certainly at 55 bits. But I think you need an adder if you want
variable accumulator steps and not only +1. Keeping the adder small
enough to fit in something like a 48-bit DSP slice will probably save
space.

Ripple or synchronous would be the same, 1 FF and 1 LUT per bit. That\'s assuming an FPGA that supports addition in the LUT/FF cell, which most do. Even if your increment is +1, that uses the same logic because it\'s still 1 LUT. Of course, if you have other inputs, such as an enable or add/sub


The above is probably quite Xilinx specific, as that is the last FPGA I
have experience with. And even that was a while ago.

But again, I may be worrying too much about space already. When it comes
to it, I should first implement the \'best\' solution. And then probably
find that this uses less than 10% of my FPGA. :)

Yes, unless you have *a lot* going on in the FPGA, you won\'t need to worry about a 55 bit counter, running at 50 MHz. It won\'t be significant in your greater design.

--

Rick C.

+- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
+- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On Thursday, August 18, 2022 at 4:37:03 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Wednesday, August 17, 2022 at 7:36:42 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-17 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Tuesday, August 16, 2022 at 11:37:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
snip
But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?
\'Hidden\' AWG hint.
If you are looking to generate a non-sine waveform, it is not needed, or useful.
Could you explain this? How would I generate an arbitrary waveform
without using a table?

It\'s not without a table, but not one huge table, 2^n length where n is the number of phase bits. I described the process below.


If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?

Do you work at Highland Technology?
No, I do not.

Ok, someone there was inquiring about the exact same thing and often has one of his people enquire about such problems here when they potentially involve FPGAs. Sorry I mistook you for that.
I suspected something like this was the case, no problem. :)

I\'ve posted about an appropriate solution more than once in s.e.d. Here is a fair summary...

I don\'t read there, so missed that. But are you now talking about an
appropriate solution for a specific Highland Technology problem, or a
general solution?

The DDS is general. A single sine table is fine if you have the memory for it. But you can do very well with numerical methods and much smaller tables as well.
Yes DDS is general. But your method seemed to be aimed specifically at a
certain problem. But if I understand you correctly, the method you
describe is a general solution to generate sine waves without large
tables?

Yes, only sine waves. If you need an AGW, you need a large table, unless the waveform can be described mathematically in ways that can be synthesized in logic. Like combinations of sawtooth, triangle, sine, pulses, etc. That can be done with counters and added together.


Ok, if you need an AWG, then you need a large memory. Your original post didn\'t seem to mention that. It only talked about sine waves.
Re-reading my original post, I see that was a bit hidden in the text and
may not have been clear to a reader not familiar with the application.
Sorry about that.

You can combine the table with logic to produce a \"sparse\" waveform. Such as a burst of arbitrary data, followed by no signal or some base signal that can be easily synthesized, followed by another burst of arbitrary data. There\'s no limit to the combinations you might think of to suit a given problem.

--

Rick C.

++ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
++ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:

> You keep calling it a DDS, which apparently is correct in that it can be used generically. But conventionally this refers to generating a sine wave. The term, AWG (Arbitrary Waveform Generator) is more commonly used for what you are doing.

To me, the core of the DDS is the clock/phase accumulator/control word.
The phase output of this can be fed to any phase to amplitude conversion
you like. Complete DDS chips often include sine (table), sawtooth
(direct phase to DAC) and pulse (MSB of phase).

Although not an authoritive source, wikipedia agrees with this
interpretation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_digital_synthesis

AWG, to me, just means you can generate any waveform. But not how you
set the frequency of this waveform. It can be fixed or just use divide
by 2 stages on the clock, or wathever.

But this is all just personal interpretations, I think we both
understand what the other means right now. Maybe we should call it an
DDS AWG generator to cover everything. ;-)


--
Stef

The party adjourned to a hot tub, yes. Fully clothed, I might add.
-- IBM employee, testifying in California State Supreme Court
 
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 5:13:11 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
You keep calling it a DDS, which apparently is correct in that it can be used generically. But conventionally this refers to generating a sine wave. The term, AWG (Arbitrary Waveform Generator) is more commonly used for what you are doing.
To me, the core of the DDS is the clock/phase accumulator/control word.
The phase output of this can be fed to any phase to amplitude conversion
you like. Complete DDS chips often include sine (table), sawtooth
(direct phase to DAC) and pulse (MSB of phase).

Although not an authoritive source, wikipedia agrees with this
interpretation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_digital_synthesis

AWG, to me, just means you can generate any waveform. But not how you
set the frequency of this waveform. It can be fixed or just use divide
by 2 stages on the clock, or wathever.

But this is all just personal interpretations, I think we both
understand what the other means right now. Maybe we should call it an
DDS AWG generator to cover everything. ;-)

Sorry, I didn\'t mean to make a big deal of the nomenclature. So what are you trying to do that isn\'t obvious, given a phase accumulator and a lookup table?

The frequency is normally set by the increment on the phase accumulator. But maybe that doesn\'t work so well for an AWG? What sort of waveforms are you interested in generating?

--

Rick C.

--- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
--- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 5:13:11 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
You keep calling it a DDS, which apparently is correct in that it can be used generically. But conventionally this refers to generating a sine wave. The term, AWG (Arbitrary Waveform Generator) is more commonly used for what you are doing.
To me, the core of the DDS is the clock/phase accumulator/control word.
The phase output of this can be fed to any phase to amplitude conversion
you like. Complete DDS chips often include sine (table), sawtooth
(direct phase to DAC) and pulse (MSB of phase).

Although not an authoritive source, wikipedia agrees with this
interpretation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_digital_synthesis

AWG, to me, just means you can generate any waveform. But not how you
set the frequency of this waveform. It can be fixed or just use divide
by 2 stages on the clock, or wathever.

But this is all just personal interpretations, I think we both
understand what the other means right now. Maybe we should call it an
DDS AWG generator to cover everything. ;-)

I suppose to control the sample rate of the AGW, you could use a DDS with a clock output. The DDS would give a wide range of frequency with high resolution. What range of sample rate are you interested in?

--

Rick C.

--+ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
--+ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 2022-08-19 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 5:13:11 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
You keep calling it a DDS, which apparently is correct in that it can be used generically. But conventionally this refers to generating a sine wave. The term, AWG (Arbitrary Waveform Generator) is more commonly used for what you are doing.
To me, the core of the DDS is the clock/phase accumulator/control word.
The phase output of this can be fed to any phase to amplitude conversion
you like. Complete DDS chips often include sine (table), sawtooth
(direct phase to DAC) and pulse (MSB of phase).

Although not an authoritive source, wikipedia agrees with this
interpretation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_digital_synthesis

AWG, to me, just means you can generate any waveform. But not how you
set the frequency of this waveform. It can be fixed or just use divide
by 2 stages on the clock, or wathever.

But this is all just personal interpretations, I think we both
understand what the other means right now. Maybe we should call it an
DDS AWG generator to cover everything. ;-)

Sorry, I didn\'t mean to make a big deal of the nomenclature. So what are you trying to do that isn\'t obvious, given a phase accumulator and a lookup table?
I think it is obvious. Phase accumulator points to LUT, but LUT isn\'t a
sine table but sommething else.

The frequency is normally set by the increment on the phase accumulator. But maybe that doesn\'t work so well for an AWG? What sort of waveforms are you interested in generating?
This is the DDS part (as I interpret it) and this is what I intend to
do. I see no reason why this would not work for AWG. Except when you get
to higher frequencies, you start losing your waveform, until it degrades
to a sine at FS/2 (providing the output filter is correct).

For now, I need to accomodate \'anything you can draw\'. So a full phase
to amplitude LUT is required. Length and width TBD.


--
Stef

Don\'t read any sky-writing for the next two weeks.
 
On 8/19/22 6:45 AM, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-19 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 5:13:11 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
You keep calling it a DDS, which apparently is correct in that it can be used generically. But conventionally this refers to generating a sine wave. The term, AWG (Arbitrary Waveform Generator) is more commonly used for what you are doing.
To me, the core of the DDS is the clock/phase accumulator/control word.
The phase output of this can be fed to any phase to amplitude conversion
you like. Complete DDS chips often include sine (table), sawtooth
(direct phase to DAC) and pulse (MSB of phase).

Although not an authoritive source, wikipedia agrees with this
interpretation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_digital_synthesis

AWG, to me, just means you can generate any waveform. But not how you
set the frequency of this waveform. It can be fixed or just use divide
by 2 stages on the clock, or wathever.

But this is all just personal interpretations, I think we both
understand what the other means right now. Maybe we should call it an
DDS AWG generator to cover everything. ;-)

Sorry, I didn\'t mean to make a big deal of the nomenclature. So what are you trying to do that isn\'t obvious, given a phase accumulator and a lookup table?

I think it is obvious. Phase accumulator points to LUT, but LUT isn\'t a
sine table but sommething else.

The frequency is normally set by the increment on the phase accumulator. But maybe that doesn\'t work so well for an AWG? What sort of waveforms are you interested in generating?

This is the DDS part (as I interpret it) and this is what I intend to
do. I see no reason why this would not work for AWG. Except when you get
to higher frequencies, you start losing your waveform, until it degrades
to a sine at FS/2 (providing the output filter is correct).

For now, I need to accomodate \'anything you can draw\'. So a full phase
to amplitude LUT is required. Length and width TBD.

Normally for a Arbitrary Waveform, the phase increment is limited to no
more that one LUT entry per clock cycle, and if there aren\'t an integral
number of increments per phase increment of one LUT entry, you want
there to be a moderate number to avoid \"distortion\" of the waveform.

And you need to decide how the \"Arbitrary\" waveform is shaped between
points, normally either step held or lineally interpreted.
 
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 6:45:53 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-19 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 5:13:11 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-18 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
You keep calling it a DDS, which apparently is correct in that it can be used generically. But conventionally this refers to generating a sine wave. The term, AWG (Arbitrary Waveform Generator) is more commonly used for what you are doing.
To me, the core of the DDS is the clock/phase accumulator/control word.
The phase output of this can be fed to any phase to amplitude conversion
you like. Complete DDS chips often include sine (table), sawtooth
(direct phase to DAC) and pulse (MSB of phase).

Although not an authoritive source, wikipedia agrees with this
interpretation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_digital_synthesis

AWG, to me, just means you can generate any waveform. But not how you
set the frequency of this waveform. It can be fixed or just use divide
by 2 stages on the clock, or wathever.

But this is all just personal interpretations, I think we both
understand what the other means right now. Maybe we should call it an
DDS AWG generator to cover everything. ;-)

Sorry, I didn\'t mean to make a big deal of the nomenclature. So what are you trying to do that isn\'t obvious, given a phase accumulator and a lookup table?

I think it is obvious. Phase accumulator points to LUT, but LUT isn\'t a
sine table but sommething else.

Yes, it is obvious. That\'s why I\'m asking what you are looking for from this discussion.


The frequency is normally set by the increment on the phase accumulator. But maybe that doesn\'t work so well for an AWG? What sort of waveforms are you interested in generating?

This is the DDS part (as I interpret it) and this is what I intend to
do. I see no reason why this would not work for AWG. Except when you get
to higher frequencies, you start losing your waveform, until it degrades
to a sine at FS/2 (providing the output filter is correct).

I\'m not following what you are saying about your filter. It only needs to filter artifacts above the Nyquist rate of fs/2. It would not need to distort your waveform.


For now, I need to accomodate \'anything you can draw\'. So a full phase
to amplitude LUT is required. Length and width TBD.

Yes, if you want \"anything you can draw\", you need the LUT. But many waveforms can be constructed from simple shapes which can be generated digitally. The LUT won\'t be able to use the folding techniques that work for sine waves.

I don\'t know what your requirements are, but you can buy low cost AWG board level products and small box level products.

--

Rick C.

-+- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-+- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 2022-08-20 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
> On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 6:45:53 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:

....

I think it is obvious. Phase accumulator points to LUT, but LUT isn\'t a
sine table but sommething else.

Yes, it is obvious. That\'s why I\'m asking what you are looking for from this discussion.

In my original post, I had 2 questions

1) Are there objections to using a prescaler and a shorter phase
accumulator for generating frequencies over a wide range?

This has been discussed. Conclusions is that you should keep the
accumulator as long as possible for best performance.


2) Are the complete DDS chips available that have a downloadable LUT,
instead of the standard sine table?

If such chips are available, I may not have to develop a custom
(FPGA/CPU/DSP) solution. This question has not been answered and I have
found non myself sofar.

....


I don\'t know what your requirements are, but you can buy low cost AWG board level products and small box level products.

At this time there are only general requirements (AWG, 12MHz BW, ...).
If the project continues, this will be detailed further.

Do you have an example of such a board level product? If it can do what
will be required, it is certainly an option.


--
Stef

If everything seems to be going well, you have obviously overlooked something.
 
On Monday, August 22, 2022 at 4:24:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-20 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 6:45:53 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
...
I think it is obvious. Phase accumulator points to LUT, but LUT isn\'t a
sine table but sommething else.

Yes, it is obvious. That\'s why I\'m asking what you are looking for from this discussion.
In my original post, I had 2 questions

1) Are there objections to using a prescaler and a shorter phase
accumulator for generating frequencies over a wide range?

This has been discussed. Conclusions is that you should keep the
accumulator as long as possible for best performance.

If any of that is from my comments, I retract them. I was thinking of a typical DDS generating a sine wave.

You only need the clock rate to suit the waveform you are generating, such as Nyquist considerations. Your memory is finite, so you have a fundamental trade off between clock rate and duration of the AWG pattern. I don\'t know your real requirements, so I can\'t advise you about how to optimize this.. It will depend on your particular problem.


2) Are the complete DDS chips available that have a downloadable LUT,
instead of the standard sine table?

If such chips are available, I may not have to develop a custom
(FPGA/CPU/DSP) solution. This question has not been answered and I have
found non myself sofar.

Yeah, I\'ve never used DDS chips, so I couldn\'t say. As I\'ve mentioned, there are many AWG products at other levels of integration, modules and boards. eBay abounds with them.


I don\'t know what your requirements are, but you can buy low cost AWG board level products and small box level products.
At this time there are only general requirements (AWG, 12MHz BW, ...).
If the project continues, this will be detailed further.

Do you have an example of such a board level product? If it can do what
will be required, it is certainly an option.

Try punching AWG into eBay or one of the other sites.

--

Rick C.

-++ Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
-++ Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
 
On 2022-08-22 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Monday, August 22, 2022 at 4:24:41 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
On 2022-08-20 gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote in comp.arch.fpga:
On Friday, August 19, 2022 at 6:45:53 AM UTC-4, Stef wrote:
...
I think it is obvious. Phase accumulator points to LUT, but LUT isn\'t a
sine table but sommething else.

Yes, it is obvious. That\'s why I\'m asking what you are looking for from this discussion.
In my original post, I had 2 questions

1) Are there objections to using a prescaler and a shorter phase
accumulator for generating frequencies over a wide range?

This has been discussed. Conclusions is that you should keep the
accumulator as long as possible for best performance.

If any of that is from my comments, I retract them. I was thinking of a typical DDS generating a sine wave.

Most of those comments (and of Waldek) will also apply to AWG in some
way, so no need to retract. Also the output filter argument is one
against switching sample frequency. Ofcourse I can keep the pre-scaler
option in mind, but I don\'t think it should be the initial approach.
Only an optimization when really necessary (speed, size, etc).


You only need the clock rate to suit the waveform you are generating, such as Nyquist considerations. Your memory is finite, so you have a fundamental trade off between clock rate and duration of the AWG pattern. I don\'t know your real requirements, so I can\'t advise you about how to optimize this. It will depend on your particular problem.


2) Are the complete DDS chips available that have a downloadable LUT,
instead of the standard sine table?

If such chips are available, I may not have to develop a custom
(FPGA/CPU/DSP) solution. This question has not been answered and I have
found non myself sofar.

Yeah, I\'ve never used DDS chips, so I couldn\'t say. As I\'ve mentioned, there are many AWG products at other levels of integration, modules and boards. eBay abounds with them.


I don\'t know what your requirements are, but you can buy low cost AWG board level products and small box level products.
At this time there are only general requirements (AWG, 12MHz BW, ...).
If the project continues, this will be detailed further.

Do you have an example of such a board level product? If it can do what
will be required, it is certainly an option.

Try punching AWG into eBay or one of the other sites.

Searching on AWG alone will find you a lot of wire. ;-)
With \"arbitrary waveform generator\", I get a lot of complete bench top
generators. And a number of (usually the same) cheap bare board units
like this one:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/221506533974?mkcid=16&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-127632-2357-0&ssspo=MRtVGD4USYW&sssrc=2047675&ssuid=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY

This one is 8-bit 256 sample 100 kSPS. Not enough on every parameter and
it seems most of these modules have similar specs.

But this is the kind of board level product you meant? I hoped for
someting that can be placed on a board. Looks like I need to implement
something myself if this project continues.


--
Stef

Just type \'mv * /dev/null\'.
 

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