UDP Receive
Receive UDP packets
Library
Simulink Support Package for Android Devices / Communication
Description
Receive UDP packets from another UDP host on the same local network.
The UDP Receive block has two output ports: Data
and Size
.
The Data
port outputs the UDP packet data as an N-by-1 vector
with a data type specified by the Data type parameter. The
Size
output emits the current size of the data in the UDP
buffer as uint16
value.
The data type of the block output, Size
, is
uint16
.
The Size
port outputs a stream of zeros while UDP
Receive waits for new data to arrive. When new data arrives,
Size
changes to a non-zero value.
If you simulate a model that contains the UDP Receive block on your
host computer, set Simulation > Normal, then
Data
outputs a zero for each step of the simulation when no
UDP packets are available. As a free-running application with a shorter period than
the real-time application running on the Android® device, many zeros can be produced from the output port
Data
. In other words, the free-running simulation outputs
zeros while waiting for the slower real-time application on the Android device to send data.
Note
If you are having trouble using UDP to communicate with a computer, investigate if antivirus or firewall software is blocking UDP traffic. If so, try to configure the software to allow UDP traffic for a specific IP port number.
Parameters
- Local IP port
The number of the IP port on the local device, which can range from 1 – 65535. This value defaults to
25000
. The “local device” is the board running the model.- Data type
Set the data type of the vector elements in the Message output. Match the data type with the data input used to create the UDP packets. This option defaults to
uint8
.- Data size (N)
Set the number of data elements in each UDP packet. Match the data size used to create the UDP packets. This value defaults to
255
elements.- Sample time
Specify how often this block reads the port buffer. Enter a value greater than zero. This value defaults to a sample time of
0.01
seconds.Smaller values require the processor to complete the same number of instructions in less time, which can cause task overruns.
Extended Capabilities
Version History
Introduced in R2014a