/ _____) _ | | ( (____ _____ ____ _| |_ _____ ____| |__ \____ \| ___ | (_ _) ___ |/ ___) _ \ _____) ) ____| | | || |_| ____( (___| | | | (______/|_____)_|_|_| \__)_____)\____)_| |_| ©2013 Semtech-Cycleo Lora Gateway packet sender =========================== 1. Introduction ---------------- This software is used to send test packets with a Lora concentrator. The packets contain little information, on no protocol (ie. MAC address) information but can be used to assess the functionality of a gateway downlink using other gateways as receivers. 2. Dependencies ---------------- This program is a typical example of Lora Gateway HAL usage for sending packets. Only high-level functions are used (the ones contained in loragw_hal) so there is no hardware dependencies assuming the HAL is matched with the proper version of the hardware. Data structures of the sent packets are accessed by name (ie. not at a binary level) so new functionalities can be added to the API without affecting that program at all. It was tested with v1.0.0 of the libloragw library, and should be compatible with any later version of the library assuming the API is downward-compatible. 3. Usage --------- The application runs until the specified number of packets have been sent. Press Ctrl+C to stop the application before that. Use the -f option followed by a real number (decimal point and scientific 'E notation' are OK) to specify the modulation central frequency. Use the -s option to specify the Spreading Factor of Lora modulation (values 7 to 12 are valid). Use the -b option to set Lora modulation bandwidth in kHz (accepted values: 125, 250 or 500). Use the -p option to set the concentrator TX power in dBm. Not all values are supported by hardware (typically 14 et 20 dBm are supported, other values might not give expected power). Check with a RF power meter before connecting any sensitive equipment. Use the -t option to specify the number of milliseconds of pause between packets. Using zero will result in a quasi-continuous emission. Use the -x option to specify how many packets should be sent. Use the -i option to invert the Lora modulation polarity. The packets are 20 bytes long, and protected by the smallest supported ECC. The payload content is: [T][E][S][T][packet counter MSB][packet counter LSB] followed by ASCII padding. All Lora data is whitened, so the padding has no influence whatsoever on the packet error rate. 4. Changelog ------------- 2013-10-24, v1 Initial version.