Chapter 10
Digital Routing and Clock Generation
10-6
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Using RTSI Terminals as Timing Input Signals
You can use RTSI terminals to route external timing signals to many
different M Series functions. Each RTSI terminal can be routed to any of
the following signals.
•
AI Convert Clock
•
AI Sample Clock
•
AI Start Trigger
•
AI Reference Trigger
•
AI Pause Trigger
•
AI Sample Clock Timebase
•
AO Start Trigger
•
AO Sample Clock
•
AO Sample Clock Timebase
•
AO Pause Trigger
•
Counter input signals for either counter—Source, Gate, Aux,
HW_Arm, A, B, or Z
Most functions allow you to configure the polarity of PFI inputs and
whether the input is edge or level sensitive.
RTSI Filters
You can enable a programmable debouncing filter on each PFI, RTSI, or
PXI_STAR signal. When the filters are enabled, your device samples the
input on each rising edge of a filter clock. M Series devices use an onboard
oscillator to generate the filter clock with a 40 MHz frequency.
Note
NI-DAQmx supports
only
filters on counter inputs.
The following is an example of low-to-high transitions of the input signal.
High-to-low transitions work similarly.
Assume that an input terminal has been low for a long time. The input
terminal then changes from low-to-high, but glitches several times. When
the filter clock has sampled the signal high on N consecutive edges, the
low-to-high transition is propagated to the rest of the circuit. The value of
N depends on the filter setting; refer to Table 10-2.