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PVA-3000 Reference Manual
December 2, 2019
Sifos Technologies
Page
56
The
Update Status & Count
button will show current
Receive Status
and will updated both the
Receive Count
and
the
Rx Error Count
to current values from the test port. This button can be pressed at any time regardless of the
Receive Status
. If packet counting is stopped, it will display the finished counts until a new count is commenced.
3.11.4.
Packet Flow Testing
Packet flow testing typically involves testing of a two-or-more-port device with bridging capability between ports.
This could be an Ethernet switch, hub, or repeater. Typically, one PVA test port would be used to transmit packets
while applying impairments and a second PVA test port would then received packets forwarded in the device under
test. In Figure 3.29, packets transmitted by PVA test port #1 and dropped
by the receiver at DUT
Port x
would fail to be forwarded and would not
show up in the packet count on PVA test port #2.
The standard sequence of operations to perform this packet flow test as
diagrammed in Figure 3.29 would be:
1.
Configure
AUTO Addressing
on all PVA test ports
2.
Configure impairments on PVA test port #1
3.
Start packet count on PVA test port #2
4.
Transmit fixed burst of packets from PVA test port #1
5.
Wait for burst completion on PVA test port #1
6.
Complete packet count on PVA test port #2
A successful result would then be a match of packets counted to the packet burst size transmitted.
One consideration for Ethernet switches is that packet flow between Port x and Port y may not occur until the device is
configured for VLAN support and/or until bridging has been “primed” so that MAC addresses of the PVA test ports are
learned by the device-under-test. Typically, that problem is addressed by flowing continuous packets from both PVA
test port #1 and test port #2 for a period of time until packets show up on each test port’s receivers. In some switches,
this “priming” process is necessary every time a new link is established.
The process described in this section could be effected simultaneously in both directions where both PVA test ports #1
and #2 are transmitting with impairment and counting packets all at the same time. This would effectively double the
testing throughput.
Figure 3.29
Packet Flow Testing
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