Digital pattern generator
A digital pattern generator is a piece of electronic test equipment or software used to generate digital electronic stimuli. Digital electronics stimuli are a specific kind of electrical waveform varying between two conventional voltages that correspond to two logic states. The main purpose of a digital pattern generator is to stimulate the inputs of a digital electronic device. For that reason, the voltage levels generated by a digital pattern generator are often compatible with digital electronics I/O standards – TTL, LVTTL, LVCMOS and LVDS, for instance.
Digital pattern generators are sometimes referred to as "pulse generator" or "pulse pattern generator" which may be able to function as digital pattern generators as well. Hence, the distinction between the two types of equipment may not be clear. A digital pattern generator is a source of synchronous digital stimulus; the generated signal is interesting for testing digital electronics at the logic level - this is why they are also called "logic source". A pulse generator is of purpose to generate an electrical pulse of different shapes; they are mostly used for tests at an electrical or analog level.
Another common name for such equipment is "digital logic source" or "logic source".
Digital pattern generators can produce either repetitive, or single-shot signals in which case some kind of triggering source is required.
Types of digital pattern generators
Digital pattern generators are today available as stand-alone units, add-on hardware modules for other equipment such as a or as PC-based equipment.Stand-alone units are self-contained devices that include everything from the user interface to define the patterns that should be generated to the electronic equipment that actually generates the output signal.
Some test equipment manufacturers propose pattern generators as add-on modules for logic analyzers. In this case, the pattern generator is the "generation counterpart" to the analysis functionality offered by logic analyzers.
PC-based digital pattern generators are connected to a PC through peripheral ports such as PCI, USB, and/or Ethernet. They use the PC as a user interface for defining and storing the digital patterns to be sent.
Features
Digital pattern generators are primarily characterized by a number of digital channels, a maximum rate and the supported voltage standards.- The number of digital channels defines the maximum width of any pattern generated - typically, 8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit pattern generator. A 16-bit pattern generator is able to generate arbitrary digital samples on any number of bits from 1 to 16.
- The maximum rate defines the minimum time interval between 2 successive patterns. For instance, a 50 MHz digital pattern generator is able to output a new pattern every 20 nanoseconds.
- The supported voltage standards ultimately define the set of electronic devices a digital pattern generator can be used with. Concretely, the voltages and the transition characteristics of the signal at the output of the digital pattern generator will be compliant to these voltage standards. Examples of supported voltage standards: TTL, LVTTL, LVCMOS, LVDS.
Common applications
- Digital electronics and embedded system testing and debugging
- Stimulation of digital signal processing hardware
- Digital-to-analog converter stimulation
Special purpose digital pattern generators
In safety-critical technology such as automotive, specialized electronic systems are involved in keeping its correct functioning. These can be used to monitor brakes, motors, and airbags. Internal testing is undertaken for these electronic systems by pattern generators, i.e., LFSR that feeds the circuit under test, verifying output correctness.
Manufacturers of digital pattern generators
- Berkeley Nucleonics
- Chroma
- Keysight
- National Instruments
- Tektronix
- Active Technologies