Functions |
void | arm_fir_lattice_f32 (const arm_fir_lattice_instance_f32 *S, float32_t *pSrc, float32_t *pDst, uint32_t blockSize) |
| Processing function for the floating-point FIR lattice filter.
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void | arm_fir_lattice_init_f32 (arm_fir_lattice_instance_f32 *S, uint16_t numStages, float32_t *pCoeffs, float32_t *pState) |
| Initialization function for the floating-point FIR lattice filter.
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void | arm_fir_lattice_init_q15 (arm_fir_lattice_instance_q15 *S, uint16_t numStages, q15_t *pCoeffs, q15_t *pState) |
| Initialization function for the Q15 FIR lattice filter.
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void | arm_fir_lattice_init_q31 (arm_fir_lattice_instance_q31 *S, uint16_t numStages, q31_t *pCoeffs, q31_t *pState) |
| Initialization function for the Q31 FIR lattice filter.
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void | arm_fir_lattice_q15 (const arm_fir_lattice_instance_q15 *S, q15_t *pSrc, q15_t *pDst, uint32_t blockSize) |
| Processing function for the Q15 FIR lattice filter.
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void | arm_fir_lattice_q31 (const arm_fir_lattice_instance_q31 *S, q31_t *pSrc, q31_t *pDst, uint32_t blockSize) |
| Processing function for the Q31 FIR lattice filter.
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Description
This set of functions implements Finite Impulse Response (FIR) lattice filters for Q15, Q31 and floating-point data types. Lattice filters are used in a variety of adaptive filter applications. The filter structure is feedforward and the net impulse response is finite length. The functions operate on blocks of input and output data and each call to the function processes blockSize
samples through the filter. pSrc
and pDst
point to input and output arrays containing blockSize
values.
- Algorithm:
Finite Impulse Response Lattice filter
The following difference equation is implemented:
f0[n] = g0[n] = x[n]
fm[n] = fm-1[n] + km * gm-1[n-1] for m = 1, 2, ...M
gm[n] = km * fm-1[n] + gm-1[n-1] for m = 1, 2, ...M
y[n] = fM[n]
pCoeffs
points to tha array of reflection coefficients of size numStages
. Reflection Coefficients are stored in the following order.
{k1, k2, ..., kM}
where M is number of stages
pState
points to a state array of size numStages
. The state variables (g values) hold previous inputs and are stored in the following order.
{g0[n], g1[n], g2[n] ...gM-1[n]}
The state variables are updated after each block of data is processed; the coefficients are untouched.
- Instance Structure
- The coefficients and state variables for a filter are stored together in an instance data structure. A separate instance structure must be defined for each filter. Coefficient arrays may be shared among several instances while state variable arrays cannot be shared. There are separate instance structure declarations for each of the 3 supported data types.
- Initialization Functions
- There is also an associated initialization function for each data type. The initialization function performs the following operations:
- Sets the values of the internal structure fields.
- Zeros out the values in the state buffer.
- Use of the initialization function is optional. However, if the initialization function is used, then the instance structure cannot be placed into a const data section. To place an instance structure into a const data section, the instance structure must be manually initialized. Set the values in the state buffer to zeros and then manually initialize the instance structure as follows:
arm_fir_lattice_instance_f32 S = {numStages, pState, pCoeffs};
arm_fir_lattice_instance_q31 S = {numStages, pState, pCoeffs};
arm_fir_lattice_instance_q15 S = {numStages, pState, pCoeffs};
- where
numStages
is the number of stages in the filter; pState
is the address of the state buffer; pCoeffs
is the address of the coefficient buffer.
- Fixed-Point Behavior
- Care must be taken when using the fixed-point versions of the FIR Lattice filter functions. In particular, the overflow and saturation behavior of the accumulator used in each function must be considered. Refer to the function specific documentation below for usage guidelines.
Function Documentation