Thanks for responding.
I am currently testing in OS X so have modified the command a little.
As per the attached images, this command should clear the display:
F9...01...60 is where the device address is entered. I tried setting this to 00 which I think should be the broadcast address. However, nothing happens to the display - it continues to run through what looks like a demo program.
I don't know the device address and can't see any means of finding it out from the windows configuration / management software. It gave me the correct IP address and port which netcat confirms is open.
I have been testing like this but nothing happens to the display:
Command info:
Hi, Guys ...
I want to know how to use to 2 processes (A & B) communicating with each others through 2 pipes (Pipe1 & Pinpe2) :
such that process A write to Pipe1 and Process B read from Pipe1
and process B write to Pipe2 and Process A read from Pipe2 .
Does anyone have an idea about... (1 Reply)
I'd like to make a script that I can execute every time I sign on to my linux box that keeps track of the time and allows to me to add a remark to a file. So basically once I log in, I run the script, and it outputs the date and time to a text file (log.txt). But that isn't my problem.
I need... (1 Reply)
I am using system running on red hat linux 4.
I had connected health measuring machine to the serial port and configured it
stty -F /dev/ttyS0 9600 -parenb cs8 -cstopb
this machine requires a command to be passed to it for giving output. I am unable to pass command hexa format(0x68) to the... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I would like to know if it is possible to communicate between two terminals on seperate computers for free - e.g. not using proprietary software or using the built in UNIX terminals on operating systems of the UNIX flavor.
Thanks,
photray94 (2 Replies)
i want to know that my serial port ( pci slot with 2 port ) is working fine and communicating
is there any way to know the serialport is working and communicating?
please help (3 Replies)
Hello!
I am working on an application which reads environmental instruments which have serial ports. The application requires a serial port to be present to talk to the device (i.e. /dev/ttyS0 ). In some instances the environmental devices will be 100's of yards away from the computer, so a... (5 Replies)
$./a.out smtp.gmail.com 25
220 mx.google.com ESMTP 9sm2923369yxf.23
250 mx.google.com at your service
220 2.0.0 Ready to start TLS
after handshake
Common Name: smtp.gmail.com
after get cert dn
-----BEGIN SSL SESSION PARAMETERS-----... (0 Replies)
This is my situation
DOS pc serial cable (sl0) Linux Pc eth1
192.168.0.10 <-------------------->192.168.0.2 <------------>192.168.0.1 (router)
I connected the linux pc and the dos pc with a SLIP (serial line internet protocol), so they can communicate in the sl0 interface.
... (3 Replies)
I have a simple client/server program I am using for learning purposes.
I have it setup so that after server is setup and listening it than goes into a loop where it accepts incoming client connections. After each connection, the client socket is than passed to a thread routine where it can be... (3 Replies)
Hi there,
I have a Debian server (192.168.1.1) connected through ethernet to a RS232 device servers (192.168.1.5) that is then connected through RS232 to a Video Projector.
The idea is that I want to send commands to the video projector (eg. turn on/off) via the device server.
According to... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: chebarbudo
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
gpiv_combing
GPIV_COMBING(1) General Commands Manual GPIV_COMBING(1)NAME
gpiv_combing - Combines two single-exposed images into one image file for cross-correlation.
SYNOPSIS
gpiv_combing [-a | --suf_a S] [-b | --suf_b S] [-d | --dt S] [-h | --help] [-p | --print] [-s | --skip S] [-t | --type] [-u | --suf_num N]
[-v | --version] [-V | --verbose] [-w | --warning] file_basename
DESCRIPTION
gpiv_combing combines two images from a common image format that use lossless compressing schemes into a Portable Network Graphics image
with extension .png. The resulting 'double frame' image is used for cross-correlation with gpiv_rr (or gpiv). Additional information is
added to the image header, like the parameter for enabling cross correlation, separation time between the recordings of the two images and
the name of this program.
This program uses the IMG configuration parameters. As the input images are single-frame and will probably not contain the required X_corr
parameter in its header, the IMG.X_corr setting will have to be set to 0 for the correct loading.
The default settings may be overruled by the command line options, as explained below.
Options-h | --help
On-line help.
-a | --suf_a S
The filename of the first image is generated from the file_basename, the suffix S (default: _a) and from the image extension type.
-b | --suf_b S
The filename of the second image is generated from the file_basename, the suffix S (default: _b) and from the image extension type.
-d | --dt S
The time between subsequent images in milliseconds. The value will be written to the image header. If -s | --skip is used, the sepa-
ration time will be adapted to the correct value.
-p | --print
Prints parameters to stdout.
-s | --skip S
Skip S numbers; the first image with number N (defined by -u | --suf_num N) will be combined with the second image N+S+1 (default: S
= 0)
-t | --type
Type or format of the input image (default png). Supported formats are: raw binary (r), hdf5 (gpi), gif, tif, bmp and pgm. The for-
mat of the output image will always be png.
-u | --suf_num N
If images are numbered instead of having suffixes _a and _b. N represents the first of the two numbered frames which will be com-
bined with frame N + 1. The combined image will be named to file_basenameN.png. So, only odd or even numbered images will result to
be loaded in gpiv_rr (or gpiv) for cross-correlation.
-v | --version
Print version information on standard output, then exit successfully.
-V | --verbose
Program behaves verbose during operation, like printing filenames, separation time.
-w | --warning
Checks and warns if one of the two input images already contain an image pair, i.e. the header parameter X-corr is set TRUE. The
program will exit if this is the case. Besides this warning, the program will always check if the images are of equal sizes. If an
input image does not contain the X-corr parameter in its header, the parameter will be read from the parameter resources. Not using
this option allows one to keep the settings in the parameter resources in any state.
file_basename
The filename without the image extension (like .png, .tif etc) and suffix or number.
Examples
Suppose two single-exposed images will have to be combined for cross-correlation with names image_a.gif and image_b.gif: so the file_base-
name will be "image", _a and _b are default suffixes and the image type has to be defined. The program is used following:
gpiv_combing -t gif image
As PNG is default image format, -t key is not needed. Two images with names turtle_slow.png and turtle_fast.png are combined with:
gpiv_combing -a _slow -b _fast turtle
For two numbered images img03.png and img04.png only the starting number will have to defined:
gpiv_combing -u 3 img0
Two numbered images img03.png and img09.png will have to be combined by skipping 5 images in-between. If -d | --dt S is used, the correct
separation time between the combined frames is calculated from S:
gpiv_combing -u 3 -s 5 img0
SEE ALSO
gpivtools
NOTES
The program uses netpbm.
AUTHOR
Gerber Van der Graaf
31 October 2006 GPIV_COMBING(1)