Provided by: sigrok-cli_0.7.2-1build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       sigrok-cli - Command-line client for the sigrok software

SYNOPSIS

       sigrok-cli [OPTIONS] [COMMAND]

DESCRIPTION

       sigrok-cli is a cross-platform command line utility for the sigrok software.

       It  cannot display graphical output, but is still sufficient to run through the whole process of hardware
       initialization, acquisition, protocol decoding and saving the session.

       It is useful for running on remote or embedded systems, netbooks, PDAs, and for various other  use-cases.
       It can display samples on standard output or save them in various file formats.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Show a help text and exit.

       -V, --version
              Show sigrok-cli version and the versions of libraries used.

       -L, --list-supported
              Show  information  about  supported hardware drivers, input file formats, output file formats, and
              protocol decoders.

       --list-supported-wiki
              Show information about supported protocol decoders in MediaWiki syntax.  This  is  generally  only
              used by developers to easily update the list of supported protocol decoders in the sigrok wiki.

       -d, --driver <drivername>
              Unless  doing a global scan, users typically select one of the available drivers. This can speedup
              program start, and can avoid false matches for ambiguous configurations. Selecting a  driver  also
              allows to pass more driver specific options. Use the -L (--list-supported) option to get a list of
              available drivers.

              Drivers can take options, in the form key=value separated by colons.

              Drivers communicating with hardware via a serial port always need the port specified as  the  conn
              option. For example, to use the Openbench Logic Sniffer:

                $ sigrok-cli --driver=ols:conn=/dev/ttyACM0 [...]

              Some  USB  devices don't use a unique VendorID/ProductID combination, and thus need that specified
              as well. Notice that colons are used to separate the driver name from the conn option, thus colons
              cannot  be  used  within  the  conn option's argument. To select a specific USB device, use either
              VendorID.ProductID or bus.address:

              USB VendorID.ProductID example:

                $ sigrok-cli --driver=uni-t-ut61e:conn=1a86.e008 [...]

              USB bus.address example:

                $ sigrok-cli --driver=uni-t-ut61e:conn=4.6 [...]

       -D, --dont-scan
              Do not automatically scan for device drivers in the absence of a -d (--driver) specification.

       -c, --config <deviceoption>
              A colon-separated list of device options, where each option takes the  form  key=value.   Multiple
              occurances  of  the --config option are supported.  The first item in the list of options can take
              the form channel_group=<name> which would override the --channel-group specification for this list
              of  options.  Other  option  lists  in  other  --config occurances are not affected by this list's
              channel group name.

              For example, to set the samplerate to 1MHz on a device supported by the fx2lafw driver, you  might
              specify

                $ sigrok-cli -d fx2lafw --config samplerate=1m [...]

              Samplerate  is  an option common to most logic analyzers. The argument specifies the samplerate in
              Hz. You can also specify the samplerate in kHz, MHz or GHz.  The following are all equivalent:

                $ sigrok-cli -d fx2lafw --config samplerate=1000000 [...]

                $ sigrok-cli -d fx2lafw --config samplerate=1m [...]

                $ sigrok-cli -d fx2lafw --config "samplerate=1 MHz" [...]

              These examples specify options within a channel group.  The first two are equivalent.

                $ sigrok-cli -d demo --channel-group Logic --config pattern=random [...]

                $ sigrok-cli -d demo --config channel_group=Logic:pattern=random [...]

                $ sigrok-cli -d demo --config samplerate=1m --config channel_group=Logic:pattern=random [...]

       -i, --input-file <filename>
              Load input from a file instead of a hardware device. You can specify "-" to use stdin as input. If
              the  --input-format  option  is not supplied, sigrok-cli attempts to autodetect the file format of
              the input file.

              Example for loading a sigrok session file:

                $ sigrok-cli -i example.sr [...]

              Example for loading a WAV file (autodetection of input format):

                $ sigrok-cli -i example.wav [...]

              Example for loading a VCD file from stdin (autodetection of input format):

                $ cat example.vcd | sigrok-cli -i - [...]

       -I, --input-format <format>
              When loading an input file, assume it's in the specified format. If this option  is  not  supplied
              (in  addition  to  --input-file),  sigrok-cli  attempts to autodetect the file format of the input
              file. Use the -L (--list-supported) option to see a list of available input formats.

              The format name may optionally be followed by a colon-separated list of options, where each option
              takes the form key=value.

              Example for loading a binary file with options:

                $ sigrok-cli -i example.bin
                             -I binary:numchannels=4:samplerate=1mhz [...]

       -o, --output-file <filename>
              Save  output to a file instead of writing it to stdout. The default format used when saving is the
              sigrok session file format. This can be changed with the --output-format option.

              Example for saving data in the sigrok session format:

                $ sigrok-cli [...] -o example.sr

       -O, --output-format <format>
              Set the output format to use. Use the -L (--list-supported) option to  see  a  list  of  available
              output formats.

              The format name may optionally be followed by a colon-separated list of options, where each option
              takes the form key=value.

              For example, the bits or hex formats, for an ASCII bit or ASCII hexadecimal display,  can  take  a
              "width"  option,  specifying  the  number  of  samples  (in  bits)  to  display  per line. Thus -O
              hex:width=128 will display 128 bits per line, in hexadecimal:

               0:ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff ffff
               1:ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00 ff00

              The lines always start with the channel number (or name, if defined), followed by a colon.  If  no
              format is specified, it defaults to bits:width=64, like this:

               0:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
               1:11111111 00000000 11111111 00000000 [...]

              Example for saving data in the CSV format with options:

                $ sigrok-cli [...] -o example.csv -O csv:dedup:header=false

              Notice that boolean options are true when no value gets specified.

       -C, --channels <channellist>
              A comma-separated list of channels to be used in the session.

              Note  that sigrok always names the channels according to how they're shown on the enclosure of the
              hardware. If your logic analyzer numbers the channels 0-15, that's how you must specify them  with
              this option. An oscilloscope's channels would generally be referred to as "CH1", "CH2", and so on.
              Use the --show option to see a list of channel names for your device.

              The default is to use all the channels available on a device. You can name a  channel  like  this:
              1=CLK.  A range of channels can also be given, in the form 1-5.

              Example:

                $ sigrok-cli --driver fx2lafw --samples 100
                             --channels 1=CLK,2-4,7
               CLK:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
                 2:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
                 3:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
                 4:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]
                 7:11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111 [...]

              The comma-separated list is processed from left to right, i.e. items farther to the right override
              previous items. For example 1=CS,CS=MISO will set the name of channel 1 to MISO.

       -g, --channel-group <channel group>
              Specify the channel group to operate on. Some devices organize channels into groups, the  settings
              of which can only be changed as a group. The list of channel groups, if any, is displayed with the
              --show command.

              Examples:

                $ sigrok-cli -g CH1 [...]

                $ sigrok-cli -d demo -g Logic -c pattern=graycode [...]

              Channel group specifications in --get or --config options take precedence over channel group names
              in --channel-group so that a single sigrok-cli invocation can support the query or manipulation of
              multiple device options which reside in different channel groups.

       -t, --triggers <triggerlist>
              A comma-separated list of triggers to use, of the form <channel>=<trigger>.  You can use the  name
              or number of the channel, and the trigger itself is a series of characters:

              0 or 1: A low or high value on the pin.
              r or f: A rising or falling value on the pin. An r effectively corresponds to 01.
              e: Any kind of change on a pin (either a rising or a falling edge).

              Not every device supports all of these trigger types. Use the --show command to see which triggers
              your device supports.

       -w, --wait-trigger
              Don't output any sample data (even if it's actually received from the hardware) before the trigger
              condition is met. In other words, do not output any pre-trigger data. This option is useful if you
              don't care about the data that came before the trigger (but the hardware  delivers  this  data  to
              sigrok nonetheless).

       -P, --protocol-decoders <list>
              This  option  allows the user to specify a comma-separated list of protocol decoders to be used in
              this session. The decoders are specified by their  ID,  as  shown  in  the  -L  (--list-supported)
              output.

              Example:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P i2c

              Each  protocol decoder can optionally be followed by a colon-separated list of options, where each
              option takes the form key=value.

              Example:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr>
                            -P uart:baudrate=115200:parity_type=odd

              The list of supported options depends entirely on the protocol decoder. Every protocol decoder has
              different options it supports.

              Any  "options"  specified for a protocol decoder which are not actually supported options, will be
              interpreted as being channel name/number assignments.

              Example:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr>
                            -P spi:wordsize=9:miso=1:mosi=5:clk=3:cs=0

              In this example, wordsize is an option supported by the spi protocol  decoder.  Additionally,  the
              user  tells sigrok to decode the SPI protocol using channel 1 as MISO signal for SPI, channel 5 as
              MOSI, channel 3 as CLK, and channel 0 as CS# signal.

              Notice that the sigrok-cli application does not support "name matching". Instead it's assumed that
              the  traces  in  the  input  stream  match the order of the decoder's input signals, or that users
              explicitly specify the input channel to decoder signal mapping.

              When multiple decoders are specified in the same -P option, they will be stacked on  top  of  each
              other in the specified order.

              Example:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P i2c,eeprom24xx
               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P uart:baudrate=31250,midi

              When  multiple -P options are specified, each of them creates one decoder stack, which executes in
              parallel to other decoder stacks.

              Example:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P uart:tx=D0:rx=D1 -P timing:data=D2

       -A, --protocol-decoder-annotations <annotations>
              By default, all annotation output of all protocol decoders is shown. With this option  a  specific
              decoder's annotations can be selected for display, by specifying the decoder ID:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P i2c,i2cfilter,edid -A i2c

              If  a  protocol decoder has multiple annotation classes, you can also specify which one of them to
              show by specifying its short description like this:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P i2c,i2cfilter,edid
                            -A i2c=data-read

              Select multiple annotation classes by separating them with a colon:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P i2c,i2cfilter,edid
                            -A i2c=data-read:data-write

              Annotation row names will resolve to their respective list of classes.  Row and class names can be
              used in combination. When names are ambiguous then class names take precedence.

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P i2c
                            -A i2c=addr-data:warnings

              You  can also select multiple protocol decoders, with optionally selected annotation classes each,
              by separating them with commas:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -P i2c,i2cfilter,edid
                            -A i2c=data-read:data-write,edid

       -M, --protocol-decoder-meta <pdname>
              When given, show protocol decoder meta output instead of annotations.  The argument is the name of
              the decoder whose meta output to show.

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -M i2c

              Not every decoder generates meta output.

       -B, --protocol-decoder-binary <binaryspec>
              When  given, decoder "raw" data of various kinds is written to stdout instead of annotations (this
              could be raw binary UART/SPI bytes, or WAV files, PCAP files, PNG files, or anything else; this is
              entirely dependent on the decoder and what kinds of binary output make sense for that decoder).

              No  other  information is printed to stdout, so this is suitable for piping into other programs or
              saving to a file.

              Protocol decoders that support binary output publish a list of binary  classes,  for  example  the
              UART  decoder might have "TX" and "RX". To select TX for output, the argument to this option would
              be:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -B uart=tx

              If only the protocol decoder is specified, without  binary  class,  all  classes  are  written  to
              stdout:

               $ sigrok-cli -i <file.sr> -B uart

              (this  is  only  useful  in  rare cases, generally you would specify a certain binary class you're
              interested in)

              Not every decoder generates binary output.

       --protocol-decoder-samplenum
              When given, decoder annotations will include  sample  numbers,  too.   This  allows  consumers  to
              receive machine readable timing information.

       -l, --loglevel <level>
              Set  the  libsigrok and libsigrokdecode loglevel. At the moment sigrok-cli doesn't support setting
              the two loglevels independently. The higher the number, the more debug  output  will  be  printed.
              Valid loglevels are:

              0   None
              1   Error
              2   Warnings
              3   Informational
              4   Debug
              5   Spew

       --show
              Show  information  about  the selected option. For example, to see options for a connected fx2lafw
              device:

               $ sigrok-cli --driver fx2lafw --show

              In order to properly get device options for your hardware, some drivers might need a  serial  port
              specified:

               $ sigrok-cli --driver ols:conn=/dev/ttyACM0 --show

              This also works for protocol decoders, input modules and output modules:

               $ sigrok-cli --protocol-decoders i2c --show
               $ sigrok-cli --input-format csv --show
               $ sigrok-cli --output-format bits --show

              This also works for input files, including optional input format specifications:

               $ sigrok-cli --input-file <file.sr> --show
               $ sigrok-cli --input-file <file.vcd> --input-format vcd --show

       --scan Scan for devices that can be detected automatically.

              Example:

               $ sigrok-cli --scan
               The following devices were found:
               demo - Demo device with 12 channels: D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 A0 A1 A2 A3
               fx2lafw:conn=3.26 - CWAV USBee SX with 8 channels: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

              However, not all devices are auto-detectable (e.g. serial port based ones).  For those you'll have
              to provide a conn option, see above.

               $ sigrok-cli --driver digitek-dt4000zc:conn=/dev/ttyUSB0 --scan
               The following devices were found:
               Digitek DT4000ZC with 1 channel: P1

       --time <ms>
              Sample for <ms> milliseconds, then quit.

              You can optionally follow the number by s to specify the time to sample in seconds.

              For example, --time 2s will sample for two seconds.

       --samples <numsamples>
              Acquire <numsamples> samples, then quit.

              You can optionally follow the number  by  k,  m,  or  g  to  specify  the  number  of  samples  in
              kilosamples, megasamples, or gigasamples, respectively.

              For example, --samples 3m will acquire 3000000 samples.

       --frames <numframes>
              Acquire <numframes> frames, then quit.

       --continuous
              Sample continuously until stopped. Not all devices support this.

       --get <variable>
              Get  the  value of <variable> from the specified device and print it.  Multiple variable names can
              be specified and get separated by colon.  The list of variable names optionally can  be  preceeded
              by  channel_group=<name>  which  would override the --channel-group specification.  Multiple --get
              occurances are supported in a single sigrok-cli invocation.

               $ sigrok-cli -d demo --get samplerate:averaging --get channel_group=Logic:pattern

       --set  Set one or more variables specified with the --config option, without doing any acquisition.

EXAMPLES

       In order to get exactly 100 samples from the connected fx2lafw-supported logic analyzer hardware, run the
       following command:

         sigrok-cli --driver fx2lafw --samples 100

       If you want to sample data for 3 seconds (3000 ms), use:

         sigrok-cli --driver fx2lafw --time 3000

       Alternatively, you can also use:

         sigrok-cli --driver fx2lafw --time 3s

       To  capture  data  from  the  first  4 channels using the Openbench Logic Sniffer lasting 100ms at 10 MHz
       starting at the trigger condition
              0:high, 1:rising, 2:low, 3:high, use:

       sigrok-cli --driver ols:conn=/dev/ttyACM0 --config samplerate=10m \
              --output-format bits --channels 0-3 --wait-trigger \
              --triggers 0=1,1=r,2=0,3=1 --time 100

       To turn on internal logging on a Lascar EL-USB series device:

       sigrok-cli --driver lascar-el-usb:conn=10c4.0002 \
              --config datalog=on --set

EXIT STATUS

       sigrok-cli exits with 0 on success, 1 on most failures.

SEE ALSO

       pulseview(1)

BUGS

       Please report any bugs via Bugzilla (http://sigrok.org/bugzilla) or  on  the  sigrok-devel  mailing  list
       (sigrok-devel@lists.souceforge.net).

LICENSE

       sigrok-cli  is covered by the GNU General Public License (GPL). Some portions are licensed under the "GPL
       v2 or later", some under "GPL v3 or later".

AUTHORS

       Please see the individual source code files.

       This manual page was written by Uwe Hermann <uwe@hermann-uwe.de>.  It is licensed under the terms of  the
       GNU GPL (version 2 or later).

                                                 March 28, 2019                                    SIGROK-CLI(1)