Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A) announced this week, a high-performance
serial bit error ratio tester with advanced jitter generation capabilities for
jitter-tolerance testing (J-BERT) of serial gigabit devices up to 12.5 Gb/s.
The next generation of high-speed serial bus standards with data rates of 5
Gb/s and beyond is expected by 2006. The increasing speed will cause significant
signal integrity and jitter issues during the design and test of next-generation
serial bus devices. In addition, new transmission techniques, such as spread
spectrum clocking, make device performance characterization more difficult and
time-consuming. The Agilent N4903A provides calibrated jitter composition and
automated jitter characterization in a single box and is compliant with the
latest serial bus standards.
The N4903A provides built-in and calibrated jitter composition for stressed
eye testing of receivers. Automated and compliant jitter-tolerance testing
covers all popular serial bus standards, such as PCI Express, SATA, Fibre
Channel, FB-DIMM, CEI, Gigabit Ethernet and XFP.
"Jitter-tolerance testing is the most complex and time-consuming
measurement that design teams of next-generation serial devices have to deal
with," said Siegfried Gross, vice president and general manager of
Agilent's Digital Verification Solutions division. "With the introduction
of the first and only complete, one-box jitter-tolerance test solution, Agilent
continues to demonstrate its leadership in providing innovative physical layer
testers for the computer, storage and networking markets."
The Agilent N4903A features include the following:
- Built-in, calibrated, automated and compliant jitter-tolerance testing
with sources for PJ, RJ, BUJ, ISI and sinusoidal interference.
- Supports complex data patterns of serial bus interfaces.
- Unpredictable traffic can be analyzed with the bit recovery mode, enabling
more realistic test scenarios.
- Complex training sequences can be set up with the new pattern sequencer
easily, simplifying the test development process.
- Built-in CDR, new subrate clock outputs and spread-spectrum clocking (SSC),
which significantly simplify the clock setup. Accurate characterization with
the cleanest eyes, 20 ps transition times and 50 mV analyzer sensitivity.