Timer with very precise period time
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I have a script that plays a sound every 15 minutes a given number of times. It is triggered at a given datetime. As I would like to use it to calculate the clock drift of a recorder, I need it to be extremely precise. The following script works but is not very precise on the period time (15 minutes +/- some milliseconds). Is there a way to link it with .NET times or any other more precise protocol?
fTime = datetime('30-Nov-2021 13:00:00.000');
period = 15 * 60;
n = 3;
fs=41000;
click=sin(2*pi*10000/fs + pi);
t = timer('StartDelay', 0, 'Period', period, 'TasksToExecute', n, 'ExecutionMode', 'FixedRate');
t.StartFcn = @(~,thisEvent)disp([thisEvent.Type ' executed '...
datestr(thisEvent.Data.time,'dd-mmm-yyyy HH:MM:SS.FFF')]);
t.StopFcn = @(~,thisEvent)disp([thisEvent.Type ' executed '...
datestr(thisEvent.Data.time,'dd-mmm-yyyy HH:MM:SS.FFF')]);
t.TimerFcn = {@PlaySound, click};
startat(t,fTime)
function PlaySound(obj, event, x)
sound(x)
event_time = datestr(event.Data.time,'dd-mmm-yyyy HH:MM:SS.FFF' );
disp (['Sound played at ' event_time])
end
2 comentarios
Eric Sofen
el 10 de Dic. de 2021
It looks like you're using timer correctly. This advice on using drawnow to avoid timer delays might be helpful.
What precision do you need and what precision are you getting (and how are you determining it)?
Adam Danz
el 10 de Dic. de 2021
The timer object is subject to the limitations of your hardware, operating system, and software. Avoid using timer objects for real-time applications. If MATLAB is busy processing another task, the timer callback might not execute.
Respuestas (1)
Jan
el 10 de Dic. de 2021
Under ideal conditions a high accuracy timer of the operating system inside a C-mex function. See e.g. FEX: HAT . But remember, that in the real life, the timer may be accurate, but triggering the sound can be delayed again. Sometimes even some updates of the operating system causes delays in the mouse movement.
A stable method to create a sound with certain intervals is to produce a continous sound with corresponding phases of silence and to play it on a real-time system. A cheap version is a CD, DVD or BlueRay player. This wil much much simpler and more stable than using a mulithreaded multipurpose computer, which adjusts the CPU frequency dynamically.
6 comentarios
Jan
el 13 de Dic. de 2021
Editada: Jan
el 13 de Dic. de 2021
Install a compiler: https://www.mathworks.com/support/requirements/supported-compilers.html
Then follow the instructions found in hat.c:
* compile command for Windows (needs Windows SDK)
* mex -O hat.c
* compile command for Linux
* mex -O hat.c -lrt
Using the high accuracy timer inside the MEX function, but triggeting the sound in Matlab, causes some delays and an additional jitter. Prefer to start the sound inside the C-mex function and to check the HAT after the playing again.
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