[time-nuts] help
Bob Camp
kb8tq at n1k.org
Mon May 2 23:38:16 UTC 2016
Hi
A cheap GPS module and any of the nearly infinite number of sub $20 “demo boards” would make
short work of looking at the pps, the time string out of the GPS and figuring out when it’s the top of the
hour. I doubt it’s over 200 lines of code. I’m sure *somebody* will pop up with an example well below
that. No need for an OS. No need for anything complex. There’s sure to be enough room even on a $2 board
to include added stuff like real time clock driver and correcting the “local time” against GPS.
Bob
> On May 2, 2016, at 5:36 PM, Nick Sayer via time-nuts <time-nuts at febo.com> wrote:
>
>
>> On May 2, 2016, at 9:51 AM, jimlux <jimlux at earthlink.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>> The real question is whether "cron" is timely enough. No matter, just write a script (or python) that reads time in a loop (and you can put a sleep in there) and pulses the GPIO when needed.
>>
>
> A Raspberry Pi with nothing else on its plate will have a cron-to-shell script latency easily under 100 ms, possibly under 10.
>
> If it were me and I were triggering a relay for some sort of external circuit, I’d probably be happy it was on the right side of 500 ms. If I cared more than that, then step 1 would be to do as others have suggested and come up with a microcontroller + GPS solution instead of NTP + cron. Ironically, that’d be around the same price (albeit more engineering work).
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