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Showing posts with label link layer test. Show all posts
Showing posts with label link layer test. Show all posts

15 March 2021

The Important Difference Between ProtoSync™ and CrossSync™ PHY

Figure 1: CrossSync PHY captures everything from physical through protocol layers at once.
Figure 1: CrossSync PHY captures everything from
physical through protocol layers at once.
With the recent release of our new CrossSync™ PHY for PCI Express® product, some of you may be wondering how it’s any different than ProtoSync™ for PCIe®, which has been around for quite a few years.

ProtoSync is an option for Teledyne LeCroy oscilloscopes with bandwidths that support high-speed serial data analysis. We’ve released ProtoSync options for PCIe, USB, SAS/SATA and Fibre Channel. ProtoSync links the same Protocol Analysis Suite software that is used with our protocol analyzers to the oscilloscope application, so that you can see physical layer decodings in the familiar PETracer and BITracer views right next to the decoded analog waveform. 

CrossSync PHY differs from ProtoSync in the three, significant ways:

30 January 2015

Plan For Successful USB Compliance Testing (Part III)

In USB 3.0 link-layer compliance test, all logical states of the LTSSM come into play
Figure 1: In USB 3.0 link-layer compliance test,
all logical states of the LTSSM come into play
In Part I and Part II of this series on USB compliance test, we've looked at some of the basic information on compliance testing and at some aspects of physical-layer test, respectively. In this third part of the series, we'll turn our attention to USB 3.0 link-layer testing.

16 January 2015

Plan For Successful USB Compliance Testing (Part I)

The coveted USB 3.1 logo
Figure 1: The coveted SuperSpeed USB logo
Certifying a device's implementation of a serial protocol standard is a fairly complex process involving a number of levels: electrical test, interoperability, backward compatibility, link layer, and so on. Generally, some organization oversees a given protocol, managing the revision process for the protocol itself as well as the testing process that a product must undergo. Passing the relevant compliance test suite and having a valid Trademark License Agreement on file bestows the prized right to display the protocol's logo on the product's box (Figure 1). That logo's presence tells the product's users that their device's serial interface operates within parameters set by the overseeing organization.