Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
40 lines (27 loc) · 2.42 KB

memcalc.md

File metadata and controls

40 lines (27 loc) · 2.42 KB

Memory Calculator

I've made this spreadsheet to estimate all of the main parameters for ESP32-HUB75-MatrixPanel-DMA lib driving any combination of matrices/chains so that I do not need to reflash it hundreds of times just to check for the debug info about memory. Be sure to enable embedded macro's to allow refresh rate calculations.

Just fill-in all of the INPUT fields and get the OUTPUTs.

So there are two main resources used to drive LED matrix

  • Memory
  • Bus clock speed (resulting in available bandwidth to pump pixel color data)

And there are lot's of hogs for those:

  • matrix resolution (number of pixels)
  • number of modules in chain
  • pixel color depth
  • BCM LSB to MSB transition
  • double buffering

Equalising ones with the others results in Refresh rate,

or (rough approximation)

//: # ($$RefreshRate=\frac{resolution \times chain \times (ColorDepth-LSB2MSB)}{ I ^2S _ {clock} }$$)

So, how to find optimum balance for all of these? Obviously you can't change resolution and chain length, it is physical characteristics and there is not much you can do about it except cutting off your chain or pushing it to the memory limits.

There are 3 parameters you can choose from (actually two:)

  • Color Depth - predefined at build-time option

  • I2S clock speed - run-time tunable with a very limited options

  • LSB-to-MSB transition - it can't be controlled in any way, library uses it internally trying to balance all of the above

Using provided table it is possible to estimate all of the parameters before running the library. Besides calculating memory requirements it could help to find optimum color depth for your matrix configuration. For higher resolutions default 8 bits could be too much to sustain minimal refresh rate and avoid annoying flickering. So the library would increase MSB transition to keep the balance, thus reducing dynamic range in shadows and dark colors. As a result it is nearly almost the same as just reducing overall color depth. But reducing global color depth would also save lot's of precious RAM! Now it's all up to you to decide :)

/Vortigont/