Feedstock license: BSD-3-Clause
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: The free and open software radio ecosystem
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
GNU Radio is a free software development toolkit that provides the signal processing runtime and processing blocks to implement software radios using readily-available, low-cost external RF hardware and commodity processors. It is widely used in hobbyist, academic and commercial environments to support wireless communications research as well as to implement real-world radio systems. GNU Radio applications are primarily written using the Python programming language, while the supplied, performance-critical signal processing path is implemented in C++ using processor floating point extensions where available. Thus, the developer is able to implement real-time, high- throughput radio systems in a simple-to-use, rapid-application-development environment.
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: Polymorphic Type (PMT) library, bundled with GNU Radio
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio core functionality and modules
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: Meta-package for GNU Radio deps used to manually build OOT modules
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Install this meta-package into an environment with gnuradio
or gnuradio-core
in order to be able to build out-of-tree modules manually. DO NOT USE THIS IN CONDA RECIPES.
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio Companion graphical flowgraph interface
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio module for using IIO devices
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
This module provides GNU Radio blocks for using IIO devices, including the PlutoSDR.
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio QT module providing graphical components
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio SoapySDR module for using a variety of SDR devices
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
This module provides GNU Radio source and sink blocks for a variety of SDR devices using SoapySDR, a generalized C/C++ library which provides abstraction in interfacing with different SDR devices and vendors.
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio UHD module for Ettus USRP radios
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio SDL module providing video components
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Home: https://gnuradio.org/
Package license: GPL-3.0-or-later
Summary: GNU Radio ZeroMQ module for message passing functionality
Development: https://github.com/gnuradio/gnuradio
Documentation: https://gnuradio.org/doc/doxygen/
Name | Downloads | Version | Platforms |
---|---|---|---|
Installing gnuradio
from the conda-forge
channel can be achieved by adding conda-forge
to your channels with:
conda config --add channels conda-forge
conda config --set channel_priority strict
Once the conda-forge
channel has been enabled, gnuradio, gnuradio-build-deps, gnuradio-core, gnuradio-grc, gnuradio-iio, gnuradio-pmt, gnuradio-qtgui, gnuradio-soapy, gnuradio-uhd, gnuradio-video-sdl, gnuradio-zeromq
can be installed with conda
:
conda install gnuradio gnuradio-build-deps gnuradio-core gnuradio-grc gnuradio-iio gnuradio-pmt gnuradio-qtgui gnuradio-soapy gnuradio-uhd gnuradio-video-sdl gnuradio-zeromq
or with mamba
:
mamba install gnuradio gnuradio-build-deps gnuradio-core gnuradio-grc gnuradio-iio gnuradio-pmt gnuradio-qtgui gnuradio-soapy gnuradio-uhd gnuradio-video-sdl gnuradio-zeromq
It is possible to list all of the versions of gnuradio
available on your platform with conda
:
conda search gnuradio --channel conda-forge
or with mamba
:
mamba search gnuradio --channel conda-forge
Alternatively, mamba repoquery
may provide more information:
# Search all versions available on your platform:
mamba repoquery search gnuradio --channel conda-forge
# List packages depending on `gnuradio`:
mamba repoquery whoneeds gnuradio --channel conda-forge
# List dependencies of `gnuradio`:
mamba repoquery depends gnuradio --channel conda-forge
conda-forge is a community-led conda channel of installable packages. In order to provide high-quality builds, the process has been automated into the conda-forge GitHub organization. The conda-forge organization contains one repository for each of the installable packages. Such a repository is known as a feedstock.
A feedstock is made up of a conda recipe (the instructions on what and how to build the package) and the necessary configurations for automatic building using freely available continuous integration services. Thanks to the awesome service provided by Azure, GitHub, CircleCI, AppVeyor, Drone, and TravisCI it is possible to build and upload installable packages to the conda-forge anaconda.org channel for Linux, Windows and OSX respectively.
To manage the continuous integration and simplify feedstock maintenance
conda-smithy has been developed.
Using the conda-forge.yml
within this repository, it is possible to re-render all of
this feedstock's supporting files (e.g. the CI configuration files) with conda smithy rerender
.
For more information please check the conda-forge documentation.
feedstock - the conda recipe (raw material), supporting scripts and CI configuration.
conda-smithy - the tool which helps orchestrate the feedstock.
Its primary use is in the construction of the CI .yml
files
and simplify the management of many feedstocks.
conda-forge - the place where the feedstock and smithy live and work to produce the finished article (built conda distributions)
If you would like to improve the gnuradio recipe or build a new
package version, please fork this repository and submit a PR. Upon submission,
your changes will be run on the appropriate platforms to give the reviewer an
opportunity to confirm that the changes result in a successful build. Once
merged, the recipe will be re-built and uploaded automatically to the
conda-forge
channel, whereupon the built conda packages will be available for
everybody to install and use from the conda-forge
channel.
Note that all branches in the conda-forge/gnuradio-feedstock are
immediately built and any created packages are uploaded, so PRs should be based
on branches in forks and branches in the main repository should only be used to
build distinct package versions.
In order to produce a uniquely identifiable distribution:
- If the version of a package is not being increased, please add or increase
the
build/number
. - If the version of a package is being increased, please remember to return
the
build/number
back to 0.