From: Frank Mori Hess Date: Sat, 26 Apr 2003 22:23:49 +0000 (+0000) Subject: STATUS_NONE is actually STATUS_UNKNOWN X-Git-Tag: r0_7_21~209 X-Git-Url: http://git.tremily.us/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=322bb4852b27f18f21f9c8f414beeeebe642ea4a;p=comedilib.git STATUS_NONE is actually STATUS_UNKNOWN --- diff --git a/comedi_calibrate/README b/comedi_calibrate/README index 445bd88..3fca219 100644 --- a/comedi_calibrate/README +++ b/comedi_calibrate/README @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ I'm writing this mostly for myself. Boards may have one of 4 calibrations statuses, depending on how well the calibration code is trusted. These are: -STATUS_NONE, the default for no information; STATUS_SOME, +STATUS_UNKNOWN, the default for no information; STATUS_SOME, meaning that a dump has been converted to initial code, but not tested; STATUS_DONE means that the output of a STATUS_SOME dump has been checked, and is correct; @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ interesting combinations are: The unipolar zero offset may not be available on some boards. -In a STATUS_NONE dump, for each measurable quantity and each +In a STATUS_UNKNOWN dump, for each measurable quantity and each calibration DAC, the DAC is varied throughout its entire range and the quantity measured. The data is linearly fit, and if the slope is statistically non-zero, a line is printed: @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ or there is systematic noise. The latter seems to common in E series boards, so I'm not too worried about the following dump where there are S_min/dof ratios above 4. -Here's an example dump, generated by a STATUS_NONE dump for +Here's an example dump, generated by a STATUS_UNKNOWN dump for a pci-mio-16xe-10, with the analog output section removed: Warning: device not fully calibrated due to insufficient information