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Re: How to downsample this signal?

From Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com>
Newsgroups comp.dsp
Subject Re: How to downsample this signal?
Organization Garner Underground, Inc.
References (6 earlier) <87h90mqfwv.fsf@garnerundergroundinc.com> <ofe7r4$oc4$1@dont-email.me> <8760h0pw02.fsf@garnerundergroundinc.com> <offk46$fi4$2@dont-email.me> <87pof8mw57.fsf@garnerundergroundinc.com>
Date 2017-05-16 15:40 -0400
Message-ID <87inl0mvyx.fsf@garnerundergroundinc.com> (permalink)

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Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> writes:

> rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> On 5/16/2017 1:11 PM, Randy Yates wrote:
>>> rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> writes:
>>>
>>>> On 5/15/2017 11:49 AM, Randy Yates wrote:
>>>>> rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> writes:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On 5/15/2017 1:21 AM, Piotr Wyderski wrote:
>>>>>>> rickman wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Are the 248 words for data or also program?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Data only, there are dedicated code memories. The control part
>>>>>>> is totally crazy: there are two separate code memories working
>>>>>>> in parallel (they take both paths simultaneosly in order to
>>>>>>> provide instructions with no delay in the case of a branch).
>>>>>>> But there is no such thing as a program counter, the code
>>>>>>> memories store instructions at consecutive addresses without
>>>>>>> any deeper structure. A run of instructions is called a block
>>>>>>> and is ended with the presence of a jump instruction. There
>>>>>>> is also a third control memory which stores the information
>>>>>>> where the i-th block begins and to which j-th state the FSM
>>>>>>> should go in the case of a branch. In short, hardware basic
>>>>>>> blocks. The data path is a VLIW with exposed pipelining,
>>>>>>> which adds fun.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> That should be plenty of room for coefficients.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> But doesn't the FIR require a lot of cells for
>>>>>>> the past data values?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Like I said, I wrote this a long time ago, so I am not the resource to
>>>>>> be asking.  I can't picture how it works, but I specifically remember
>>>>>> NOT needing to store previous data inputs.  I am thinking you store
>>>>>> outputs which will be fewer because of the decimation.  As the input
>>>>>> data comes in the output samples can be built up and when one is
>>>>>> complete it is outputted and replaced by a new one.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> But read a proper reference.  If I wasn't busy today I'd dig this up
>>>>>> for you.
>>>>>
>>>>> Yes you do need to store N-1 previous inputs (plus 1 current input) for
>>>>> a length N polyphase FIR decimation by M. Just think first principles:
>>>>> for any output y[k], you need N inputs to compute it, even if k = n*M.
>>>>
>>>> I am pretty sure that conclusion is not correct.  When I was asked to
>>>> implement a polyphase filter that was the part I had trouble getting
>>>> my head around but finally understood how it worked.  At the time this
>>>> was being done on a very early DSP chip with very limited memory, so
>>>> storing the N-1 previous samples was not an option.  The guy
>>>> presenting the problem to me was the classic engineer who could read
>>>> and understand things, but couldn't explain anything to other people.
>>>> So I had to take the paper he gave me and finally figure it out for
>>>> myself.
>>>>
>>>> I will dig around when I get a chance and figure out exactly how this
>>>> worked.  But the basic idea is that instead of saving multiple inputs
>>>> and calculating the outputs one at a time (iterating over the stored
>>>> inputs) - as each input comes in it is iterated over the stored
>>>> outputs and each output is ... well output, when it has been fully
>>>> calculated. Since there are fewer outputs than inputs (by the
>>>> decimation factor of M) you store fewer outputs than you would inputs.
>>>>
>>>> This is not hard to understand if you just stop thinking it *has* to
>>>> be the way you are currently seeing it.  (shown here with simplified
>>>> notation since it is too messy to show the indexes with decimation)
>>>>
>>>> y(k)   = a(0)x(i)   + a(1)x(i-1) + a(2)x(i-2) + ...
>>>> y(k+1) = a(0)x(i+1) + a(1)x(i)   + a(2)x(i-1) + ...
>>>> y(k+2) = a(0)x(i+2) + a(1)x(i+1) + a(2)x(i)   + ...
>>>> y(k+3) = a(0)x(i+3) + a(1)x(i+2) + a(2)x(i+1) + ...
>>>>
>>>> Instead of thinking you have to calculate all the terms of y(k) at one
>>>> time (and so store the last N*M values of x), consider that when x(i)
>>>> arrives, you can calculate the x(i) terms and add them into y(k)
>>>> (which is then output) and y(k+1), y(k+2)...  This allows the storage
>>>> of fewer values by a factor of M.  It does require more memory fetches
>>>> than the standard MAC calculation since you have to fetch not only the
>>>> coefficient and the input, but also the intermediate output value
>>>> being calculated on each MAC operation.
>>>>
>>>> Maybe I won't have to dig it up.  I'm pretty sure this is how it
>>>> worked. It ties in nicely with the "polyphase" aspect to allow a
>>>> minimum number of calculations on arrival of each input since not all
>>>> the coefficients are used on each input.  So the coefficients are
>>>> divided into "phases" (N/M coefficients) with only one phase used for
>>>> any given input sample.
>>>
>>> Counter-example: Consider M = 8, N = 8 (8 coefficients and decimating by
>>> 8). Then each output y(k) depends on x(k*M + n), 0 < n < M - 1, and thus
>>> the sets of input values for different outputs are disjoint.
>>
>> Yes, so what?  You still don't need to store any inputs to calculate
>> the output.
>
> Where would they come from if they were not stored?

OK I see what you mean now. You can do a running MAC as they come in.
That is certainly true.
-- 
Randy Yates, Embedded Firmware Developer
Garner Underground, Inc.
866-260-9040, x3901
http://www.garnerundergroundinc.com

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Thread

How to downsample this signal? Piotr Wyderski <peter.pan@neverland.mil> - 2017-05-13 09:23 +0200
  Re: How to downsample this signal? Evgeny Filatov <filatov.ev@mipt.ru> - 2017-05-13 15:42 +0300
  Re: How to downsample this signal? bitterlemon40@yahoo.ie - 2017-05-13 07:53 -0700
  Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-13 11:48 -0400
  Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <yates@digitalsignallabs.com> - 2017-05-13 12:58 -0400
    Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-13 16:04 -0400
      Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <yates@digitalsignallabs.com> - 2017-05-14 14:19 -0400
    Re: How to downsample this signal? Piotr Wyderski <peter.pan@neverland.mil> - 2017-05-15 00:42 +0200
      Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-15 00:46 -0400
        Re: How to downsample this signal? Piotr Wyderski <peter.pan@neverland.mil> - 2017-05-15 07:21 +0200
          Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-15 10:51 -0400
            Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-15 11:49 -0400
              Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-15 17:20 -0400
              Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-16 02:59 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? eric.jacobsen@ieee.org - 2017-05-16 15:59 +0000
                Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-16 15:36 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-16 13:11 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? eric.jacobsen@ieee.org - 2017-05-16 18:08 +0000
                Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-16 15:35 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-16 15:45 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-16 15:50 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-16 21:36 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-16 15:35 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-16 15:36 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-16 15:40 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? rickman <gnuarm@gmail.com> - 2017-05-16 22:06 -0400
                Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <yates@digitalsignallabs.com> - 2017-05-17 01:25 -0400
      Re: How to downsample this signal? Evgeny Filatov <filatov.ev@mipt.ru> - 2017-05-15 14:51 +0300
      Re: How to downsample this signal? Randy Yates <randyy@garnerundergroundinc.com> - 2017-05-15 10:37 -0400
  Re: How to downsample this signal? makolber@yahoo.com - 2017-05-15 06:27 -0700
    Re: How to downsample this signal? Piotr Wyderski <peter.pan@neverland.mil> - 2017-05-15 20:39 +0200

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