EE450 Programming (Solution)

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Description

Problem Statement:
When you send a sequence of bits (message) from one point to another on a datalink, you want to know that the message arrived correctly. A common form of insurance is to use a parity bit scheme. Most communications protocols use a multibit generalization of the single parity bit called a “cyclic redundancy check” or CRC. Such an X-bit CRC has the mathematical property of detecting all errors that occur in X or fewer consecutive bits, for any length of message. A single CRC can be associated with a large block of data, with a consequent savings in communications bandwidth.

Part 1: CRC_Tx
In this project, you are required to implement CRC-12 both at the transmitter (Tx.) side and the receiver (Rx.) side. At transmitter side, CRC_Tx will read data and the corresponding generator from a dataTx.txt file provided. The file contains several rows of data separated by a new line. After CRC implementation,
CRC_Tx will printout generated codeword and corresponding CRC bits to add. You will use the standard CRC-12 generator: x12+x11+x3+𝑥2+𝑥+1 = 1100000001111.

Example input (from dataTx.txt):
10011010110101

Example output: codeword: 10011010110101111100001100
crc: 111100001100

Part 2: CRC_Rx
At the receiver side, CRC_Rx will read received codeword from dataRx.txt provided. Then CRC_Rx will printout the decision whether the received data should be accepted (Pass) or not (Not pass). Used the same CRC-12 generator as part 1.

Example input (from dataRx.txt):
10011010110101111100001100

Example output:
pass

Part 3: CRC_vs_Checksum
The last step will involve using both the transmitter and receiver steps, CRC_vs_Checksum will be programmed to compare the performance of CRC and checksum for some example data. CRC_vs_Checksum will read data from dataVs.txt which contains three parts: data, generator, and random bits error. It will then proceed to do the following:
1. Calculate the CRC and checksum for each data (each row in dataVs.txt will contain a new set of data).
2. Calculate the CRC and checksum bits
3. Append the CRC and checksum to the data
4. To introduce the random bits error, do XOR operation to the encoded data (random bits error has the same length as generated codeword: data+CRC and data+checksum, if it is 0, there is no error at the position; if it is 1, the bit of the codeword will be flipped). 5. Check the resulting data with CRC and checksum
6. Print the CRC and Checksum bits for that row.
7. Print whether the data would be accepted or not (pass vs not pass) for both CRC and Checksum.

How errors will be introduced:
Codeword: 10011010110101111100001100
Error bits from input file: 00001000001000000000001000
Codeword with errors (red highlights show errors): 10010010111101111100000100

**See the example output below in screenshots.

Source Code Files

Your implementation should include the source code files described below, for each component of the system.

1. CRC_Tx: You must name your code file: crc_tx.c or crc_tx.cc or crc_tx.cpp (all small letters). Also you must call the corresponding header file (if you have one; it is not mandatory) crc_tx.h (all small letters).
2. CRC_Rx: You must name your code file: crc_rx.c or crc_rx.cc or crc_rx.cpp (all small letters). Also you must call the corresponding header file (if you have one; it is not mandatory) crc_rx.h (all small letters).
3. CRC_vs_Checksum: You must name your code file: crc_vs_checksum.c or crc_vs_checksum.cc or crc_vs_checksum.cpp (all small letters). Also you must call the corresponding header file (if you have one; it is not mandatory) crc_vs_checksum.h (all small letters).

Example Output to Illustrate Output Formatting:

Assumptions:

If you need to have more code files than the ones that are mentioned here, please use meaningful names and all small letters and mention them all in your README file.

Requirements:

1. Your programs should terminate itself after all done.
2. All the naming conventions and the on-screen messages must conform to the previously mentioned rules.
3. All the on-screen messages must conform exactly to the project description. You should not add anymore on-screen messages. If you need to do so for the debugging purposes, you must comment out all the extra messages before you submit your project.

Programming platform and environment:

1. All your submitted code MUST work well on the provided virtual machine Ubuntu.
2. All submissions will only be graded on the provided Ubuntu. TAs won’t make any updates or changes to the virtual machine. It’s your responsibility to make sure your code working well on the provided Ubuntu. “It works well on my machine” is not an excuse and we don’t care.
3. Your submission MUST have a Makefile. Please follow the requirements in the following
“Submission Rules” section.

Programming languages and compilers:

You must use only C/C++ on UNIX.

You can use a unix text editor like emacs or gedit to type your code and then use compilers such as g++ (for C++) and gcc (for C) that are already installed on Ubuntu to compile your code. You must use the following commands and switches to compile yourfile.c or yourfile.cpp. It will make an executable by the name of “yourfileoutput”.

gcc -o yourfileoutput yourfile.c g++ -o yourfileoutput yourfile.cpp

Do NOT forget the naming conventions mentioned before!

Submission Rules:

Along with your code files, include a README file and a Makefile. In the README file write

1) Your Full Name as given in the class list
2) Your Student ID
3) What you have done in the assignment.
4) What your code files are and what each one of them does. (Please do not repeat the project description, just name your code files and briefly mention what they do).
5) Any idiosyncrasy of your project. It should say under what conditions the project fails, if any.
6) Reused Code: Did you use code from anywhere for your project? If not, say so. If so, say what functions and where they’re from. (Also identify this with a comment in the source code.)

Submissions without README and Makefile will be subject to a penalty.

Makefile tutorial:
https://www.cs.swarthmore.edu/~newhall/unixhelp/howto_makefiles.html

About the Makefile:

makefile should support following functions:

make all Compile all your files, create executable files, and run all three executables
./crc_tx Run CRC_Tx
./crc_rx Run CRC_Rx
./crc_vs_checksum Run CRC_vs_Checksum

** We will spend time discussing Makefiles in the 9/20 discussion session if this is your first time!

Other details for turning in the assignment:

1. Compress all your files including the README file into a single “tar ball” and call it: ee450_PA1_yourUSCusername.tar.gz. Please make sure that your name matches the one in the class list. Here are the instructions:

a. On your VM, go to the directory which has all your project files. Remove all executable and other unnecessary files. Only include the required source code files, Makefile and the README file. Now run the following commands:

b. Use these commands in the terminal to compress your files into a tar ball”
>> tar cvf ee450_PA1_yourUSCusername.tar *
>> gzip ee450_PA1_yourUSCusername.tar
Now, you will find a file named “ee450_PA1_yourUSCusername.tar.gz” in the same directory. Please notice there is a star(*) at the end of first command.

c. Do NOT include anything not required in your tar.gz file. Do NOT use subfolders. Any
compressed format other than .tar.gz will NOT be graded!

4. After receiving the confirmation email, please confirm your submission by downloading and compiling it on your machine. If the outcome is not what you expected, try to resubmit, and confirm again. We will only grade what you submitted even though it’s corrupted.

Grading Criteria:

Notice: We will only grade what is already done by the program instead of what will be done.
Your project is graded for 100 points and your grade will depend on the following:
1. Correct functionality.

2. Inline comments in your code. This is important as this will help in understanding what you have done.

3. Whether your programs work as you say they would in the README file.

4. If your submitted codes, cannot be compiled, you will receive 10 out of 100 for the project, assuming submission includes README file.

5. If your submitted codes compile using make but when executed, produce runtime errors without performing any tasks of the project, you will receive 15 out of 100 for the project.

7. Do not submit datafile (three .txt files) used for test, otherwise, you will lose 5 points.

8. The minimum grade for an on-time submitted project is 10 out of 100, assuming there are no compilation errors and the submission includes a working Makefile and a README.

9. There are no points for the effort or the time you spend working on the project or reading the tutorial. If you spend about 2 weeks on this project and it doesn’t even compile, you will receive only 10 out of 100.

Cautionary Words:

In view of what is a recurring complaint near the end of a project, we want to make it clear that the target platform on which the project is supposed to run is the provided Ubuntu (16.04). It is strongly recommended that students develop their code on this virtual machine. In case students wish to develop their programs on their personal machines, possibly running other operating systems, they are expected to deal with technical and incompatibility issues (on their own) to ensure that the final project compiles and runs on the requested virtual machine. If you do development on your own machine, please leave at least three days to make it work on Ubuntu. It might take much longer than you expect because of some incompatibility issues.

All students are expected to write all their code on their own.

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