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Microbenchmarking Wireless Modules for Embedded Projects

This repo contains the test firmware, raw logs and post-processing scripts for my "Comparing latencies of common wireless links for microcontrollers" blog post.

module-assortment

If you have any suggestions or feedback for the completed or any future tests, make an issue or email me.

At some point I might also compare power consumption and range behaviour.

Test Firmware

/firmware contains sub-folders with project setups for the test variations. Each project has it's own README with minimal description and instructions.

In general:

  • Ensure firmware is built with release optimisations for performance i.e. -o2.
  • Disable any debug logging or console echo as these impact test results.
  • For most build-chains I used environment variables to control which test packet size is sent/expected.

The raw logic-analyser captures have been left in these folders because I'm too lazy to re-organise the tree...

Experiment Setup

Test setups normally looked like a variation of this:

logic-on-table

Equipment:

  • Rigol DG1000 series signal generator to produce stimulus test pulses.
  • Saleae Logic 8 for test timing capture.
  • RSA3000 series real-time spectrum analyser.
  • Oscilloscope & Minicircuits ZX47-60-S+ RF power meter.
  • My treasured assortment of RF adapters, antennas, test cables, etc.

Process:

  • Use spectrum analyser to check the spectral region of interest isn't occupied.
    • Disable other hardware, add shielding and generally reduce noise floor where possible.
  • Flash two identical devkits and/or breakout boards with relevant benchmark firmware,
    • Typically positioned on table 1 m apart (closer for the photo).
    • Connected to host PC for power and programming.
  • Signal generator provides a 3.3 VDC, 50 μs wide square pulse at configurable interval as stimulus signal.
    • The interval was typically set manually to ensure the test was completed in half the trigger interval.
    • Some exceptions were made (i.e. LoRA), but I always test for any impact of trigger interval on the link behaviour prior to recording data.
  • When the trigger signal is flagged in firmware, the relevant test payload is sent.
  • When the payload is recieved by the other board, it checks length and CRC.
  • If valid, the micro drives an IO line high to indicate a valid transmission.
  • The logic analyser captures both the trigger and complete signals at 100 MS/s (10 ns resolution).
    • I typically captured for 1000x the trigger interval, i.e. 200 seconds for a 200 ms trigger interval.

Data Processing

Some R scripts help reshape the data from the Saleae Logic edge-timing export to pretty looking comparison charts like these:

esp32-nimble-fixes

  • saleae-latency-log-cleanup.R will create a column per valid .csv file in the working directory with rows per identified stimulus/result edge timing in milliseconds.
    • For most hardware benchmark tests, I've left the post-processed files in the analysis folder.
  • ridgeline.R was used for simpler plots - typically comparing the test packet sizes for a given setup.
    • The filename for a converted .csv from the prior step needs to be set in the script, along with relevant title changes and manually configured x-axis bounds.
    • It generates a .svg file. These aren't kept in this repo, but can be seen in the blog post.
  • Other ridgeline variation scripts handle more complex comparisons with chart facets. These typically have extra logic hacked on to improve specific comparisons.

I should point out that I don't really know or use R - it was just what I decided to try for this project, so sorry in advance if you actually read the R scripts...