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

Video: Enhanced Redundancy of ST 2059-2 Time Transfer over ST 2022-7 Redundant Networks

We’re all starting to get the hang of the basics: that PTP is the new Black and Burst, that we still need sync to make studios work and that PTP (IEEE1588) is standardised under ST 2059 for use in the broadcast industry. So given its importance, how can we make it redundant?

Thomas Kernen from Mellanox and Chair within the STMPE standards community takes about his real-lift work on implementing PTP with an eye on redundancy methods

Thomas covers the following and more:

  • Whether 2022-7 works for PTP
  • BMCA Redundancy Model
  • Multiple Grand master use
  • Adjusting to dynamic variations in timing feeds
  • IEEE 1588 v2.1
  • Timing Differences in basic networks

Speakers

Thomas Kernen Thomas Kernen
Staff Software Architect, Mellanox Technologies
Co-chair SMPTE 32NF Network Facilities Technology Committee

Video: ST 2110 over WAN

Andy Rayner from Nevion looks at using SMPTE ST 2110 on a Wide Area Network (WAN).

While using ST 2110 is a much discussed topic in the studio or within a building, there are extra difficulties in putting it between buildings, cities and countries with some saying it shouldn’t even be done. Here, Andy examines how you can do it whilst acknowledging the industry still has some decisions to make.

Topics discussed include:

  • SMPTE ST 2022-7 – dual flows
  • FEC use on ST 2110
  • Flow Trunking
  • Conversions to and from 2110 and 2022-6
  • Light/Mezzanine Compression
  • PTP Trunking and GPS-locked PTP
  • Multiple Timing Domains
  • Discovery & Control between buildings

Watch now!

Speaker

Andy Rayner Andy Rayner,
Chief Technologist,
Nevion

Video: Full Stack 2110 with John Mailhot



John Mailhot from Imagine Communications discusses what ‘Full Stack’ means for video over IP. The SMPTE 2110 suite of standards is mainly about the transport of essences – but how to you simply plug in some equipment and get going? You need standards which discover and register the new device, you need timing to synchronise devices. It’s a whole ecosystem.

John walks us through the data flows (and workflows) necessary when you plug new 2110 kit in and we quickly discover there is more depth than we imagined.

John also discusses how DHCP can give you more than just IP addresses.

Covering IS-04, IS-05, PTP/SMPTE 2059, ST 2110 and IEE 802.1AB (LLDP). This is a very practical video. Why? Because understanding all this is key to diagnosis and troubleshooting.

Watch now!

Speaker

John Mailhot John Mailhot
CTO Networking & Infrastructure