Video: PTP Management and Media Flow Monitoring for All IP Infrastructures

Black and burst was always a ‘set and forget’ system. PTP, which replaces it, deserves active monitoring – and the same is true of your uncompressed media streams as we hear in this talk from the IP Showcase.

In professional essence-over-IP systems such as based on SMPTE ST 2110, timing needs to be rock solid. Thanks to asynchronous nature of IP many different flows can be carried across a network without having to be concerned with synchronization, but this presents a challenge in the production environment. To provide the necessary “genlock”, there is a need for a precise timing standard which is provided by SMPTE ST 2059 which defines the way broadcast signals relate to the IEEE 1588-2008 Precision Time Protocol, commonly referred to as PTPv2. This protocol is very different from analogue Black Burst and Tri-Level signals used in SDI world, so new tools and skills are required for fault finding.

In the first part of this presentation Thomas Gunkel from Skyline Communications focuses on the best practices to configure, monitor and manage PTP in an all-IP infrastructure covering the following:

  • PTP protocol vs reality (packet delay variation, network asymmetry, imperfect timestamping)
  • Increasing reliability of PTP (hardware timestamping, using QoS to prioritise PTP traffic, correcting timing intervals)
  • PTP device issues (grandmaster / boundary clock failure, loss of external reference, badly implemented BMCA)
  • PTP network issues (missing / corrupted event messages, increased packet delay variation, network asymmetry, multicast issues)
  • Automating PTP configuration (BMCA settings, messaging rate intervals, communication mode)
  • Automated PTP provisioning (detecting new PDP our devices using IS-04 or proprietary protocols, extracting end-to-end PTP topology with LLDP, applying standard PTP profiles)
  • PTP monitoring and control (monitor every single metric related to PTP like PTP offset, PTP mean path delay and multicast PTP network traffic for all grandmaster, master and slave devices, prevent slave devices from becoming master)

The second part of this video shows how to track uncompressed media flows in an ST 2110 IP-based media facility using a multi-layer approach and to how to pinpoint any potential issues using Network Monitoring System. Topics covered:

  • All IP flows vs SDI signals
  • Essentials for true orchestration (dynamically orchestrated resources and media services, monitoring / controlling infrastructure and media flows, automatic devices detection and provisioning)
  • Detecting issues (wrong DB entries for multicast essences, broadcast controller and SDN controller DBs out of sync, source not active, IGMP join / leave issues, SSM issues, network oversubscription)
  • Media flow tracking (reading cross point status from SDN controller, comparing this status with actual network topology, detecting “ghost” streams, using sFlow / NetFlow to track individual multicast flows)
  • Importance of true end-to-end SDN orchestration rather than SDN control (routing protocols which provides feedback)
  • All IP routing procedure (resolving multicast flow topology in combination with label management, checking source, checking destination route, presenting data for root cause analysis on each of these steps)

Watch now!

You can download the slides from here.

Speaker

Thomas Gunkel
Market Director Broadcast
Skyline Communications

Video: Uncompressed Video over IP & PTP Timing

PTP and uncompressed video go hand in hand so this primer on ST 2022 and ST 2110 followed by a PTP deep dive is a great way to gain your footing in the uncompressed world.

In the longest video yet on The Broadcast Knowledge, Steve Holmes on behalf of Tektronix delivers two talks and a practical demo for the SMPTE San Francisco section where he introduces the reasons for and solutions to uncompressed video and goes through the key standards and technologies from ST 2022, those being -6 video and -7 seamless switching plus the major parts of ST 2110, those being timing, video, audio and metadata.

After that, at the 47 minute mark, Steve introduces the need for PTP by reference to black and burst, and goes on to explain how SMPTE’s ST2059 brings PTP into the broadcast domain and helps us synchronise uncompressed essences. He covered how PTP actually works, boundary clocks, Grandmaster/Master/Slave clocks and everything else you need to understand the system,

This video finishes with plenty of questions plus a look at the GUI of measurement equipment showing PTP in real life.

Watch now!
Speaker

Steve Holmes Steve Holmes
Senior Applications Engineer,
Tektronix

Video: Using PTP & SMPTE 2059 A Practical Experience Perspective

NAB 2019 saw another IP Showcase with plenty of talks on the topic on many people’s minds: PTP and timing in IP systems. It seems there’s a lot which needs to be considered and, truth be told, a lot of people don’t feel they have the complete list of questions to be asking and certainly don’t know all the answers.

So, here, Greg Shay from Telos talks about the learnings from his extensive experience with timing IP signals and with PTP under SMPTE 2059. He hits the following topics;

  • Must you always have a GPS reference for the PTP master?
  • Are PTP-aware switches always necessary?
  • Can you safely not use PTP Peer Delay requests / responses?
  • What is the effect of internal oscillator tolerance and stability when designing PTP client equipment?

To my ears, these are 4 well placed questions because I’ve heard these asked; they are current in the minds of people who are grappling with current and prospective IP installations.

Greg treats gives each one of these due time and we see some interesting facts come out:
You don’t always need a time-synchronised PTP master (pretending to be in 1970 can work just fine).
Compensating for PTP Peer Delay can make things worse – which seems counter-intuitive to the point of PTP Peer Delay requests.
We also see why PTP-aware switches matter and a statistical method of managing without.

This is a talk which exemplifies IP talks which ‘go deeper’ than simply explaining the point of standards. Implementation always takes thought – not only in basic architecture but in use-cases and edge-cases. Here we learn about both.

Watch now!

Speakers

Greg Shay Greg Shay
CTO,
The Telos Alliance

Webinar: Voilà! Expert Secrets to Deploying a Successful PTP Network

Tuesday 4th September 2018, 15:00 BST

Setting up a PTP Network shouldn’t be difficult! Learn from the experts who have seen it all and know the tricks to keep you out of trouble and your IP network system perfectly timed. This webinar will discuss basic synchronization requirements and how PTP can serve them, provide a high-level view of how to clear PTP obstacles in media applications, and then launch into some monitoring and diagnosis best practices. Come, learn, and ask your toughest questions!

Erling Hedkvist
SVP and Product Manager
for Networked Audio & Video Solutions
Lawo

Erling Hedkvist is Senior Vice President and Business Development Manager at Lawo. Mr Hedkvist has been in the broadcast industry since 2000 and started his career in product management before making the move over to sales, business development and corporate management. Mr Hedkvist specialized early on in providing networking solutions for the broadcast and media & entertainment industry. Initially for contribution applications but lately with a focus on providing software defined networking solutions for live production workflows. As such he works with clients to design complete solutions for Remote Production, Master Control, Playout, PCR, OTT and other broadcast applications on top of IP and in a distributed and virtualized environment.

Andreas Hildebrand Andreas Hildebrand
RAVENNA Evangelist
ALC NetworX

Andreas Hildebrand is acting as Evangelist for the RAVENNA technology developed by ALC NetworX, Germany. His experience is based on more than 25 years of occupation in the Professional Audio / Broadcasting industry. He received a graduate diploma in computer science and worked as a software engineer and Head of Development for companies in Germany and the US for several years. He is a full-time participant in the AES Task Group defining and maintaining the AES67 AoIP standard. He is also participating in the AIMS Technical WG and the SMPTE ST2110 SVIP standardization.

Mike Overton
Principal Engineer
Tektronix

Mike Overton is a Principal Engineer at Tektronix. He has been a HW designer and project lead on SDI, MPEG, audio, signal generation, picture quality, and IP products. For the last 3 years, Mike has concentrated on IP-based systems, encompassing both the PTP reference and the ST2110 essence aspects. He led the definition and development of the SPG8000A PTP master and contributed to the definition and testing of the Prism IP monitor. He is the focal point for many POCs and recently helped define and execute the SMPTE-sponsored interoperability tests for PTP.