16 KiB
SDR++, The bloat-free SDR software
SDR++ is a cross-platform and open source SDR software with the aim of being bloat free and simple to use.
Features
- Wide hardware support (both through SoapySDR and dedicated modules)
- SIMD accelerated DSP
- Cross-platform (Windows, Linux, OSX and BSD)
- Full waterfall update when possible. Makes browsing signals easier and more pleasant
Installing
Windows
Download the latest release from the Releases page and extract to the directory of your choice.
To create a desktop shortcut, rightclick the exe and select Send to -> Desktop (create shortcut)
, then, rename the shortcut on the desktop to whatever you want.
Linux
Debian-based (Ubuntu, Mint, etc)
Download the latest release from the Releases page and extract to the directory of your choice.
Then, run:
sudo apt install libfftw3-dev libglfw3-dev libglew-dev libvolk2-dev libsoapysdr-dev libairspyhf-dev libiio-dev libad9361-dev librtaudio-dev libhackrf-dev
sudo dpkg -i sdrpp_debian_amd64.deb
If libvolk2-dev
is not available, use libvolk1-dev
.
Arch-based
Install the latest release from the sdrpp-git AUR package
Other
There are currently no existing packages for other distributions, for these systems you'll have to build from source.
MacOS
TODO
BSD
There are currently no BSD packages, refer to Building on Linux / BSD for instructions on building from source.
Building on Windows
The prefered IDE is VS Code in order to have similar development experience across platforms and to build with CMake using the command line.
Install dependencies
- cmake
- vcpkg
- PothosSDR (This will install libraries for most SDRs)
- RtAudio (You have to build and install it in
C:/Program Files (x86)/RtAudio/
)
After this, install the following dependencies using vcpkg:
- fftw3
- glfw3
- glew
You are probably going to build in 64 bit so make sure vcpkg installs the correct versions using
.\vcpkg.exe install <package>:x64-windows
Building using the command line
IMPORTANT: Replace <vcpkg install directory>
with vcpkg's install directory.
mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. "-DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=<vcpkg install directory>/scripts/buildsystems/vcpkg.cmake" -G "Visual Studio 16 2019"
cmake --build . --config Release
Running for development
Create a new configuration root directory
./create_root.bat
This will create the root_dev
directory that will be used to save the configs of sdrpp and the modules.
You will next need to edit the root_dev/config.json
file to point to the modules that were built. If the file is missing in your folder run the application once and it will create one with default value -- see later on how to run the application.
Run SDR++ from the command line
From the top directory, you can simply run:
./build/Release/sdrpp.exe -r root_dev -s
Or, if you wish to run from the build directory e.g. build/Release
and adapt the relative path to the root_dev
folder:
./sdrpp.exe -r ../../root_dev -s
The optional -s
argument is for keeping the console active in order to see the error messages.
Because all the paths are relative, for the rest of the command line instructions we are going to assume you are running from the top directory using the former command.
As mentioned previously you need to edit root_dev/config.json
to add the modules that were built. From the default configuration file you need to add the paths in the modules
section. Add to this list all the modules you wish to use.
...
"modules": [
"./build/radio/Release/radio.dll",
"./build/recorder/Release/recorder.dll",
"./build/rtl_tcp_source/Release/rtl_tcp_source.dll",
"./build/soapy_source/Release/soapy_source.dll",
"./build/audio_sink/Release/audio_sink.dll"
]
...
You also need to change the location of the resource and module directories, for development, I recommend:
...
"modulesDirectory": "root_dev/modules",
...
"resourcesDirectory": "root_dev/res",
...
Remember that these paths will be relative to the run directory.
Installing SDR++
If you choose to run SDR++ for development, you do not need this step.
First, copy over the exe and DLLs from build/Release/
to root_dev
.
Next you need to copy over all the modules that were compiled. To do so, copy the DLL file of the module (located in its build folder given below) to the root_dev/modules
directory and other DLLs (that do not have the exact name of the modue) to the root_dev
directory.
The modules built will be some of the following (Repeat the instructions above for all you wish to use):
build/radio/Release/
build/recorder/Release/
build/rtl_tcp_source/Release/
build/spyserver_source/Release/
build/soapy_source/Release/
build/airspyhf_source/Release/
build/plutosdr_source/Release/
build/audio_sink/Release/
Building on Linux / BSD
Select which modules you wish to build
Depending on which module you want to build, you will need to install some additional dependencies. Here are listed every module that requires addition dependencies. If a module enabled by default and you do not wish to install a perticular dependency (or can't, eg. the BladeRF module on Debian Buster), you can disable it using the module parameter listed in the table below
- soapy_source: SoapySDR + drivers for each SDRs (see SoapySDR docs)
- airspyhf_source: libairspyhf
- plutosdr_source: libiio, libad9361
- audio_sink: librtaudio-dev
Install dependencies
- cmake
- fftw3
- glfw
- glew
- libvolk
Next install dependencies based on the modules you wish to build (See previous step)
Note: make sure you're using GCC 8 or later as older versions do not have std::filesystem
built-in.
Building
replace <N>
with the number of threads you wish to use to build
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make -j<N>
Create a new root directory
sh ./create_root.sh
Running for development
If you wish to install SDR++, skip to the next step
First run SDR++ from the build directory to generate a default config file
./sdrpp -r ../root_dev/
Then, you will need to edit the root_dev/config.json
file to point to the modules that were built. Here is an example of what it should look like:
...
"modules": [
"./build/radio/radio.so",
"./build/recorder/recorder.so",
"./build/rtl_tcp_source/rtl_tcp_source.so",
"./build/soapy_source/soapy_source.so",
"./build/audio_sink/audio_sink.so"
]
...
Note: You can generate this list automatically by running find . | grep '\.so' | sed 's/^/"/' | sed 's/$/",/' | sed '/sdrpp_core.so/d'
in the build directory.
You also need to change the location of the resource and module directories, for development, I recommend:
...
"modulesDirectory": "./root_dev/modules",
...
"resourcesDirectory": "./root_dev/res",
...
Remember that these paths will be relative to the run directory.
Of course, remember to add entries for all modules that were built and that you wish to use.
Next, from the top directory, you can simply run:
./build/sdrpp -r root_dev
Or, if you wish to run from the build directory, you will need to correct the directories in the config.json file, and then run:
./sdrpp -r ../root_dev
Installing SDR++
To install SDR++, run the following command in your build
folder:
sudo make install
Module List
Not all modules are built by default. I decided to disable the build of those with large libraries, libraries that can't be installed through the package manager (or pothos) and those that are still in beta. Modules in beta are still included in releases for the most part but not enabled in SDR++ (need to be instantiated).
Sources
Name | Stage | Dependencies | Option | Built by default | Built in Release | Enabled in SDR++ by default |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
airspy_source | Working | libairspy | OPT_BUILD_AIRSPY_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
airspyhf_source | Working | libairspyhf | OPT_BUILD_AIRSPYHF_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
bladerf_source | Beta | libbladeRF | OPT_BUILD_BLADERF_SOURCE | ⛔ | ⚠️ (not Debian Buster) | ✅ |
file_source | Working | - | OPT_BUILD_FILE_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
hackrf_source | Working | libhackrf | OPT_BUILD_HACKRF_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
limesdr_source | Beta | liblimesuite | OPT_BUILD_LIMESDR_SOURCE | ⛔ | ✅ | ✅ |
sddc_source | Unfinished | - | OPT_BUILD_SDDC_SOURCE | ⛔ | ⛔ | ⛔ |
rtl_sdr_source | Working | librtlsdr | OPT_BUILD_RTL_SDR_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
rtl_tcp_source | Working | - | OPT_BUILD_RTL_TCP_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
sdrplay_source | Working | SDRplay API | OPT_BUILD_SDRPLAY_SOURCE | ⛔ | ✅ | ✅ |
soapy_source | Working | soapysdr | OPT_BUILD_SOAPY_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
spyserver_source | Unfinished | - | OPT_BUILD_SPYSERVER_SOURCE | ⛔ | ⛔ | ⛔ |
plutosdr_source | Working | libiio, libad9361 | OPT_BUILD_PLUTOSDR_SOURCE | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Sinks
Name | Stage | Dependencies | Option | Built by default | Built in Release | Enabled in SDR++ by default |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
audio_sink | Working | rtaudio | OPT_BUILD_AUDIO_SINK | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Decoders
Name | Stage | Dependencies | Option | Built by default | Built in Release | Enabled in SDR++ by default |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
falcon9_decoder | Beta | ffplay | OPT_BUILD_FALCON9_DECODER | ⛔ | ⛔ | ⛔ |
meteor_demodulator | Working | - | OPT_BUILD_METEOR_DEMODULATOR | ✅ | ✅ | ⛔ |
radio | Working | - | OPT_BUILD_RADIO | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
weather_sat_decoder | Unfinished | - | OPT_BUILD_WEATHER_SAT_DECODER | ⛔ | ⛔ | ⛔ |
Misc
Name | Stage | Dependencies | Option | Built by default | Built in Release | Enabled in SDR++ by default |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
discord_integration | Working | - | OPT_BUILD_DISCORD_PRESENCE | ✅ | ✅ | ⛔ |
frequency_manager | Beta | - | OPT_BUILD_FREQUENCY_MANAGER | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
recorder | Working | - | OPT_BUILD_RECORDER | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Toubleshooting
First, please make sure you're running the latest automated build. If your issue is linked to a bug it is likely that is has already been fixed in later releases
"hash collision" error when starting
You likely installed the soapysdr-module-all
package on Ubuntu/Debian. If not it's still a SoapySDR bug caused by multiple soapy modules comming in conflict. Uninstall anything related to SoapySDR then install soapysdr itself and only the soapy modules you actually need.
"I don't see -insert module name here-, what's going on?"
If the module was included in a later update, it's not enabled in the config. The easiest way to fix this is just to delete the config.json
file and let SDR++ recreate it (you will lose your setting relating to the main UI like VFO colors, zoom level and theme).
The best option however is to edit the config file to add an instance of the module you wish to hae enabled (see the Module List).
SDR++ crashes when stopping a RTL-SDR
This is a bug recently introduced by libusb1.4 To solve, this, simply downgrade to libusb1.3
SDR++ crashes when starting a HackRF
If you also have the SoapySDR module loaded (not necessarily enabled), this is a bug in libhackrf. It's caused by libhackrf not checking if it's already initialized.
The solution until a fixed libhackrf version is released is to completely remove the soapy_source module from SDR++. To do this, delete modules/soapy_source.dll
on windows
or /usr/share/sdrpp/plugins/soapy_source.so
on linux.
Issue not listed here?
If you still have an issue, please open an issue about it or ask on the discord. I'll try to respond as quickly as I can. Please avoid trying to contact me on every platform imaginable thinking I'll respond faster though...
Contributing
Feel free to submit pull requests and report bugs via the GitHub issue tracker. I will soon publish a contributing.md listing the code style to use.
Credits
Patrons
- Croccydile
- Daniele D'Agnelli
- W4IPA
- Lee Donaghy
- ON4MU
- Passion-Radio.com
- Scanner School
- SignalsEverywhere
Contributors
- Aang23
- Alexsey Shestacov
- Aosync
- Benjamin Kyd
- Benjamin Vernoux
- Cropinghigh
- Fred F4EED
- Howard0su
- Joshua Kimsey
- Martin Hauke
- Marvin Sinister
- Maxime Biette
- Paulo Matias
- Raov
- Starman0620
- Syne Ardwin (WI9SYN)
- Szymon Zakrent
- Tobias Mädel
- Zimm