This is the repository of the RF Analyzer app for Android. It can be used to view a FFT plot and a waterfall plot of the frequency spectrum received by a HackRF. The new version can also demodulate audio from AM and FM signals!
(photo by Dennis Mantz)
See http://tech.mantz-it.com and [@dennismantz] (https://twitter.com/dennismantz) for updates.
RF Analyzer is also available on Google Play: [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mantz_it.rfanalyzer] (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mantz_it.rfanalyzer)
- Browse the spectrum by scrolling horizontally
- Zoom in and out, both horizontally and vertically
- Automatic re-tune while scrolling and zooming
- Auto scale the vertical axis
- Jump directly to a frequency
- Adjust the gain settings of the HackRF / RTL-SDR dongle
- Select a pre-recorded file as source instead of a real HackRF
- Change the FFT size
- Change FFT drawing mode: Line or Bars
- Waterfall color maps: JET, HOT, GQRX
- Peak hold
- Averaging
- Setting the frame rate either to a fixed value or to automatic control
- Activate logging and showing the log file
- Demodulate nFM, wFM, AM, LSB and USB with adjustable filters
- Adjust squelch and channel width
- Change the proportion of spectrum and waterfall
- Support for RTL-SDR dongles
- Record the raw IQ samples to a file and select files as source
- Select a fixed frequency shift (for upconverters)
RF Analyzer uses the hackrf_android libaray. Have a look at the corresponding repository for information about supported Android devices working with the HackRF: https://github.com/demantz/hackrf_android
RF Analyzer uses Martin Marinov's RTL2832U driver to use rtl-sdr dongles in Android. It is a wrapper for the rtl_tcp tool from the rtl-sdr project. Information about supported dongles can be found here: http://sdr.osmocom.org/trac/wiki/rtl-sdr
- HackRF: Strong aliasing images in some rare situations. Must be something wrong with the baseband filter width. But it's hard to reproduce.
- Low quality USB cables and OTG adapters might cause powering issues with the HackRF. If you can't get your HackRF to work, maybe try a different cable and/or a powered USB hub!
The app project in this repository was generated by Android Studio. Use the 'import project' function in Android Studio to import the repository as new project.
The RFAnalyzer.apk file is also in this repository so that it can be used without building it yourself. But it won't be synched to the latest code base all the time.
A basic how-to-start can be found on this blog post: [http://tech.mantz-it.com/2014/10/rf-analyzer-explore-frequency-spectrum.html] (http://tech.mantz-it.com/2014/10/rf-analyzer-explore-frequency-spectrum.html)
Here is short screen record of the application in action: http://youtu.be/r36fd_QhpNM
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html GPL version 2 or higher
principal author: Dennis Mantz <dennis.mantzgooglemail.com>