Communication Interface for Vision Applications

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PH4705 ET4305 Interface Standards A number of standard digital data interfaces are used in measurement systems to connect instruments and computers for.
Advertisements

7-1 Digital Serial Input/Output Two basic approaches  Synchronous shared common clock signal all devices synchronised with the shared clock signal data.
Serial Communications Standards (Partly Excerpted from Simpl Primer) Cabling Configuration Protocol.
Embedded Systems Design
1 SD Recorder OS-TM-V701A for Driving Security Surveillance.
Peripheral Buses COMP Jamie Curtis. PC Buses ISA is the first generation bus 8 bit on IBM XT 16 bit on 286 or above (16MB/s) Extended through.
Camera Link Communication Interface for Vision Applications J. Egri 6/7/05.
HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) What is HDMI? Background Info Review Terminology Explain Operation Advantages.
USB host for web camera connection
Peripheral Busses COMP Jamie Curtis. PC Busses ISA is the first generation bus 8 bit on IBM XT 16 bit on 286 or above (16MB/s) Extended through.
A. Homs, BLISS Day Out – 15 Jan 2007 CCD detectors: spying with the Espia D. Fernandez A. Homs M. Perez C. Guilloud M. Papillon V. Rey V. A. Sole.
4.0 rtos implementation part II
[1] Reference: QCam API reference manual document version Charge Coupled Device (CCD)
02/2008 MATRIX VISION GmbH 1 Presentation The intelligent camera and Image processing sensor.
How to Choose Frame Grabber …that’s right for your application Coreco Imaging.
DIGITAL CONTROL INTERFACES MH0307 PLC & DATA ACQUISITION SYSTEMS DEPARTMENT OF MECHATRONICS ENGINEERING SRM UNIVERSITY.
William Stallings Data and Computer Communications
The Principle of Electronic Data Serial and Parallel Data Communication Transmission Rate Bandwidth Bit Rate Parity bits.
1 Presented By: Eyal Enav and Tal Rath Eyal Enav and Tal Rath Supervisor: Mike Sumszyk Mike Sumszyk.
1 Transmission of Digital Data : Interface and Modems.
Digital Interfaces An interface links two devices Interface Standards define: – mechanical specifications - how many wires & connector type –electrical.
1 Chapter Overview Modems The Internet and Web Browsers.
© 2007 – 2010, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco Public ITE PC v4.1 Chapter 4 1 Chapter 3: Point-to- Point Connections Connecting Networks.
COMPUTER FUNDAMENTALS David Samuel bhatti
Data Link Issues Relates to Lab 2.
The need for Speed and the potential of Thunderbolt Paul Maria Zalewski, Product Line Manager.
Lecture 2.4. Multiplexing. Learning Outcomes Discuss the concept of Multiplexing Explain & calculate frequency-division multiplexing. Explain & calculate.
Jeremy Sandoval University of Washington May 14, 2013
DIRECT MEMORY ACCESS and Computer Buses
Serial Communications
Bandwidth Utilization: Multiplexing and Spreading
Data Link Issues This module covers data link layer issues, such as local area networks (LANs) and point-to-point links, Ethernet, and the Point-to-Point.
Using VDSL2 over Copper in the Vertical String
Testing PCI Express Generation 1 & 2 with the RTO Oscilloscope
Abbreviated designation
RS-232 Communications.
I/O SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT Krishna Kumar Ahirwar ( )
HyperTransport™ Technology I/O Link
EE 107 Fall 2017 Lecture 5 Serial Buses – UART & SPI
IEEE 1394, USB, and AGP High Speed Transfer
6.1 Communication Methods
SCSI.
Bandwidth Utilization
Chapter 11: Inter-Integrated Circuit (I2C) Interface
Data Link Issues This module covers data link layer issues, such as local area networks (LANs) and point-to-point links, Ethernet, and the Point-to-Point.
Serial Communications
C_ITCO011/C_ITCO111 LECTURER: E.DONDO
E3165 DIGITAL ELECTRONIC SYSTEM
AMCOM Digital Archive Design Review - Week 3.
Controller Area Network (CAN) Training
Asynchronous Serial Communications
AT91RM9200 Boot strategies This training module describes the boot strategies on the AT91RM9200 including the internal Boot ROM and the U-Boot program.
Data Link Issues Relates to Lab 2.
PERSPECTIVE ON MICROWAVE MONITOR AND CONTROL INTERFACES
Physical Layer Digital Signals Lecture 5.
Communications channels تقديم المهندس سنان محمد حسن
Overview of Computer Architecture and Organization
Debugging Debug environments Debug via serial
Greg Bell Business Development Mgr Industrial & Security Markets
I/O BUSES.
Lecture 8: Modems (Converts analog signals to digital and vice-versa) 1nd semester By: Adal ALashban.
Data Communication.
Chapter 9 Transmission Modes
EEC4113 Data Communication & Multimedia System Chapter 1: Introduction by Muhazam Mustapha, July 2010.
Basics of Telecommunications and Networks
Universal Serial Bus (USB)
The Medium Access Control
communications system
PYTHON25K: CMOS Image Sensor, 26.2 MP, Global Shutter
Presentation transcript:

Communication Interface for Vision Applications Camera Link Communication Interface for Vision Applications J. Egri 6/7/05

Background Prior to Camera Link, there were a number of non-standard parallel interfaces using either LVDS or RS422 signaling Different connectors and pinouts made cable production difficult and confusing No standard communications method for configuring cameras existed

Camera Link was developed in 2000 by an industry consortium of camera and frame grabber companies Defines a connectivity standard between digital cameras and frame grabbers Ensures that all Camera Link products are interchangeable and interoperable de Facto standard for high speed/high resolution imaging

Overview Based on the field proven Channel Link technology developed for flat panel displays Utilizes LVDS signaling providing higher speed, lower power and greater noise immunity Transports synchronous digital video data and clock, a bi-directional communications channel and 4 discrete general purpose signals Camera Link reduces the number of signals required allowing for smaller, more reliable and lower cost cables Uses one ( for Base mode ) or two ( for Medium or Full mode ) 26 pin connectors

Channel Link Interface

Channel Link consists of a driver and receive pair Driver accepts 28 bit single ended data plus a clock The 28 bit data includes 24 bits of video data plus 4 strobes ( FVAL, LVAL, DVAL and spare ) Data is multiplexed 7:1 and serialized The resulting 4 data streams plus clock are driven out over 5 LVDS pairs Clock rate is from 20 to 85 MHz Yields up to 2.04 Gbps ( 24 bit video data * 85 MHz ) Cable length is 10 Meters maximum

Camera Link Interface Uses Channel Link for video data, strobes and clock Uses an additional LVDS receiver and driver for a bi-directional asynchronous communications channel Uses 4 additional LVDS pairs for 4 discrete general purpose camera control signals Provides 3 modes: Base, Medium and Full

Base mode: Medium mode: Full mode: one Channel Link interface one connector 24 bit video data up to 2.04 Gbps aggregate bandwidth Medium mode: two Channel Link interfaces two connectors 48 bit video data up to 4.08 Gbps aggregate bandwidth Full mode: three Channel Link interfaces 64 bit video data up to 5.44 Gbps aggregate bandwidth

G R A B E C A M E R F R A M E Base Mode

G R A B E C A M E R F R A M E Medium Mode

G R A B E C A M E R F R A M E Full Mode

Bandwidth (clock = 85MHz) Mode Ports ( 8 bit ) Supported Video data bits Number of connectors Bandwidth (clock = 85MHz) Base A,B,C 24 1 2.04 Gbps Medium A,B,C,D,E,F 48 2 4.08 Gbps Full A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H 64 5.44 Gbps Data Format Mode 1x8 2x8 3x8 1x10 2x10 1x12 2x12 1x14 1x16 24 RGB 4x8 3x10 4x10 3x12 4x12 30 RGB 36 RGB 8x8 Base b Medium Full

Strobes FVAL ( Frame Valid ) - envelopes all lines in a frame LVAL ( Line Valid ) - envelopes all pixels in a line DVAL ( Data Valid ) - qualifies valid pixels in a line

Communications Channel Used to configure camera’s operating parameters On the Imperx Lynx cameras: Also used to upload new firmware, software and lookup tables into the camera Two LVDS signals for asynchronous serial communications Frame Grabber–to–Camera communications Camera–to–Frame Grabber communications ASYNC format : 1 start, 8 data bits, 1 stop, 0 parity, no handshaking BAUD rates : 9600 bps to 115.2 Kbps Standard API using clser***.dll ensures interoperability between camera configuration software and frame grabber

Camera control via GUI Example from Imperx Lynx Configurator camera utility

Camera control via Terminal Example from Imperx LynxTerminal camera utility

Camera download Example from Imperx LynxTerminal camera utility

Camera Control signals 4 general purpose camera control signals ( CC1-CC4 ) Driven by the Frame Grabber to the Camera Use is defined by the camera vendor Often used as a software trigger Often used to control the camera exposure Example from Imperx FrameLink frame grabber

Advantages of Camera Link Industry tested and proven technology Easy camera/frame grabber integration Camera Link products are interchangeable and interoperable Standardized DLL based API for camera configuration Higher bandwidth and lower latency than competing interfaces Point-to-point interface yields deterministic data transfer rate Full use of available bandwidth for payload. No protocol overhead or encapsulation penalty Processing can be performed in frame grabber hardware rather than by CPU ( i.e. Bayer interpolation, table look up, frame averaging, pixel reordering, etc. )

Image is DMA’ed directly into system or video memory by the frame grabber freeing up the CPU Multiple cameras processed on frame grabber ( i.e. Zygo uses four Lynx cameras operating at 210 fps each for flat panel inspection ) Embedded serial communications channel for camera configuration Embedded discrete camera control signals Comprehensive set of video data modes supported Connectors, data format and control signals are all standardized Smaller cable size improves reliability and reduces cost Industry standard cable results in competitive pricing

Disadvantages of Camera Link Cable length is limited to 10 meters. This can be solved by using repeaters ( such as the Imperx model CLCL ) or fiber converters Requires a frame grabber Power is not supplied over the Camera Link cable and therefore cameras require a second connector for power

Why Imperx chose Camera Link We use high resolution Kodak CCD sensors which produce large video payloads and require high bandwidth transport Our customers demand low latency response for real time applications Camera H V clock (MHz) fps payload (MBps) Base CL 204 MBps USB2 48 MBps 1394a 40 MBps 1394b 80 MBps GigE 100 MBps IPX-VGA210-L 640 480 40 210 96.77 b r s IPX-1M48-L 1000 48 72.00 IPX-2M30-L 1600 1200 33 95.04 IPX-2M30H-L 1920 1080 102.64 IPX-4M15-L 2048 15 94.37 IPX-11M5-L 4000 2672 28 5 80.16 Note: Bandwidth listed is 80% of the theoretical maximum

Future of Camera Link New specification v1.1 ratified by AIA Adds additional functionality to the clser***.dll API for the serial interface Provides reference source code to committee members New draft in development: Adds additional video modes Introduces Honda miniature Camera Link connector Introduces new smaller diameter cable ( 28 vs. 26 gauge conductors ) Adds ‘power over cable’ capability