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  2. Jitter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jitter

    Deterministic jitter is a type of clock or data signal jitter that is predictable and reproducible. The peak-to-peak value of this jitter is bounded, and the bounds can easily be observed and predicted. Deterministic jitter has a known non-normal distribution.

  3. Data-dependent jitter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data-dependent_jitter

    Data-dependent jitter (DDJ) is a specific class of timing jitter. In particular, it is a form of deterministic jitter which is correlated with the sequence of bits in the data stream. It is also a form of ISI .

  4. Unit interval (data transmission) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_interval_(data...

    Jitter is often measured as a fraction of UI. For example, jitter of 0.01 UI is jitter that moves a signal edge by 1% of the UI duration. The widespread use of UI in jitter measurements comes from the need to apply the same requirements or results to cases of different symbol rates. This can be d

  5. Jitterlyzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jitterlyzer

    The FS5000 Jitterlyzer performs physical layer serial bus jitter evaluation. It can inject controlled jitter and measure the characteristics of incoming jitter. When teamed with a logic analyzer or protocol analyzer, it can correlate these measurements with protocol analysis. Physical-layer tests can be performed while the system under test is ...

  6. Time-Sensitive Networking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-Sensitive_Networking

    In contrast to standard Ethernet according to IEEE 802.3 and Ethernet bridging according to IEEE 802.1Q, time is very important in TSN networks.For real-time communication with hard, non-negotiable time boundaries for end-to-end transmission latencies, all devices in this network need to have a common time reference and therefore, need to synchronize their clocks among each other.

  7. TTEthernet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TTEthernet

    Three traffic classes cover different types of determinism - from soft-time best-effort traffic to "more deterministic" to "very deterministic" (max.latency defined per VL) to "strictly deterministic" (fixed latency, μs-jitter), thus creating a deterministic unified Ethernet networking technology.

  8. Eye pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_pattern

    Most high speed serial signals, such as PCIe, DisplayPort, and most variants of Ethernet, use a line code which is intended to allow easy clock recovery by means of a PLL. Since this is how the actual receiver works, the most accurate way to slice data for the eye pattern is to implement a PLL with the same characteristics in software.

  9. Clock skew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock_skew

    This of course means that the clock skew between two points varies from cycle to cycle, which is a complexity that is rarely mentioned. Many other authors use the term clock skew only for the spatial variation of clock times, and use the term clock jitter to represent the rest of the total clock timing uncertainty. This of course means that the ...