Bridge Technologies Develop Unique PTS-PCR Checks And Alarms

Building upon their market-leading understanding of IP broadcast, packet behaviour and timing, Bridge Technologies announce the development of two new PTS/PCR time checks, which will provide even more in-depth analysis of misalignment and timing slippage, and allow for detection of hard-to-identify buffer timing issues, which – under traditional PTS/PCR comparison checks included in as part of the standard TR 101 290 checks – might previously have been missed. These checks will be available as part of the new version 6.2 upgrade, available for all Bridge Technologies’ probes, include their flagship VB330 IP monitoring probe.

Whilst IP-based broadcast delivers innumerable benefits in terms of audio-visual delivery, the complexity of timing issues associated with IP can cause issues in terms of sync, not only between audio and video, but also additional elements such as subtitles. These individual assets generally maintain their own PTS (Presentation timestamp) within each stream, which can then be referenced against the PCR (Program Clock Reference) to ensure alignment. Whilst clock slippage necessarily constitutes a part of most major IP monitoring systems by virtue of the mandatory PTS Repetition check that forms part of the ETSI TR 101 290 specification, its analysis generally only goes as far as indicating presence of slippage. As such, it lacks diagnostic or predictive power. In SFN-based terrestrial networks or in head-end satellite ingest systems particularly, conventional clock slippage monitoring methods may often prove insufficient.

The two new standards, developed by Bridge, aim to address this issue. Through a more sophisticated understanding of difference values and their interactions and patterns, alarm trigger thresholds can be configured to identify and alert engineers to time slippage skew in much harder-to-detect contexts (including subtitling), and thus predict eventual errors far more promptly and accurately.

Bridge Technologies will be demonstrating the potential of these two new clock checks and associated alarms at the upcoming NAB2024 show in Las Vegas. 

You might also like...

IP Monitoring & Diagnostics With Command Line Tools: Part 8 - Caching The Results

Storing monitoring outcomes in temporary cache containers separates the observation and diagnostic processes so they can run independently of the centralised marshalling and reporting process.

IP Monitoring & Diagnostics With Command Line Tools: Part 7 - Remote Agents

How to run diagnostic processes in each machine and call them remotely from a centralised system that can marshal the results from many other networked systems. Remote agents act on behalf of that central system and pass results back to…

IP Monitoring & Diagnostics With Command Line Tools: Part 6 - Advanced Command Line Tools

We continue our series with some small code examples that will make your monitoring and diagnostic scripts more robust and reliable

IP Monitoring & Diagnostics With Command Line Tools: Part 5 - Using Shell Scripts

Shell scripts enable you to edit your diagnostic and monitoring commands into a script file so they can be repeated without needing to type them manually every time. Shell scripts also offer some unique and powerful features that help to…

IP Monitoring & Diagnostics With Command Line Tools: Part 4 - SSH Public Keys

Installing public SSH keys created on your workstation in a server will authenticate you without needing a password. This streamlines the SSH interaction and avoids the need to use stored and visible passwords in your scripts.