The concept of streaming refers to the transportation of samples between host and device. A stream is an object that facilitates streaming between host application and device. An RX stream allows the user to receive samples from the device. A TX stream allows the user to transmit samples to the device.
The VITA49 standard provides encapsulation for sample data across a link layer. On all second generation hardware (and later), samples are encapsulated into VRT IF data packets. These packets also provide sample decoration such as stream time and burst flags. Sample decoration is exposed to the user in the form of RX and TX metadata structs.
The length of an IF data packet can be limited by several factors:
There are two important data types to consider when streaming:
The host data type refers to the format of samples used in the host for baseband processing. Typically, the data type is complex baseband such as normalized complex-float32 or complex-int16.
The link-layer or "over-the-wire" data type refers to the format of the samples sent through the link. Typically, this data type is complex-int16. However, to increase throughput over the link-layer, at the expense of precision, complex-int8 may be used.
The user may request arbitrary combinations of host and link data types; however, not all combinations are supported. The user may register custom data type formats and conversion routines. See convert.hpp and Converters for further documentation.