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ni.com/pxi CONTENTS Windows 10 Support PXIe-8880 Intel Xeon-Based Embedded Controller PXIe-1085 24 GB/s Chassis PXIe-8830mc Coprocessing Module Key Application Areas Additional Resources Supercharging Test and Measurement Systems With Windows 10, an Intel Xeon CPU, and PCI Express Gen 3 Technology

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Page 1: Supercharging Test and Measurement Systemsdownload.ni.com/evaluation/pxi/supercharging_test... · 2016-12-07 · Supercharging Test and Measurement Systems With Windows 10, an Intel

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C O N T E N T S

Windows 10 Support

PXIe-8880 Intel Xeon-Based Embedded Controller

PXIe-1085 24 GB/s Chassis

PXIe-8830mc Coprocessing Module

Key Application Areas

Additional Resources

Supercharging Test and Measurement Systems With Windows 10, an Intel Xeon CPU, and PCI Express Gen 3 Technology

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Windows 10 Support As the test and measurement industry continues to evolve, the reliance on software to perform the majority of instrumentation continues to increase. Virtual instrumentation, which was a term coined in the late 1980s to represent the importance of software, is now common terminology in the industry. A synergistic combination of the OS and application development environment is crucial to the success of virtual instrumentation. NI worked with Microsoft to ensure that all the application development environments and hardware device drivers work seamlessly and harvest the extensive capabilities of the OS.

Starting from Microsoft DOS and Windows 3.1 to the latest and greatest Windows 10 OS, NI’s hardware and software tools have been tested and optimized to perform at their best with the operating system. With renewed focus on system security and application optimization and best-in-class driver support, NI recommends Windows 10 for most test and measurement applications. National Instruments is proud to be the first test and measurement vendor to provide PXI Embedded controllers with Windows 10

NI recommends Windows.

For more information, visit ni.com/windows10.

Figure 1. The PXIe-1085 24 GB/s Chassis, PXIe-8880 Intel Xeon-Based Embedded Controller

With Windows 10 Support, and Various Modular Instruments

PXIe-8880 Intel Xeon-based Embedded Controller NI collaborated with Intel to deliver the server-class power of Intel Xeon processors to the test and measurement market. The PXIe-8880 embedded controller features eight cores, up to 24 GB of DDR4 memory, and 24 lanes of PCI Express Gen 3 connectivity to the backplane. This gives engineers and scientists up to twice the processing power and bandwidth compared with previous-generation controllers.

Controller Technology at a Glance Intel Xeon E5-2618L v3 processor With 2.3 GHz (base) and 3.4 GHz (Turbo Boost)

8 physical and 16 logical CPU Cores

8 GB DDR4 1866 MHz RAM (standard); 24 GB maximum

Up to 24 GB/s system bandwidth (each direction)

240 GB, 1.8 in. SSD hard drive

2 USB 3.0, 4 USB 2.0, 1 DisplayPort v1.2, 2 Gigabit Ethernet, GPIB, SMB trigger

Windows 10 64-bit or LabVIEW Real-Time OS

See the Resources section of the PXIe-8880 model page for the full user manual and specifications.

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Figure 2. (Left) Teardown View of PXIe-8880 Embedded Controller With Intel Xeon Processor Exposed and two 8 GB RAM Upgrades; (Right) Front View of the PXIe-8880 Embedded Controller With Peripherals

Performance Benchmarks To understand the value of the new PXIe-8880 controller, consider the raw performance power of the CPU. Because most test and measurement systems are more computationally intensive than graphically intensive, we used more processor-centric CPU benchmarks. Figure 3 shows that the new PXIe-8880 with an eight-core Intel Xeon E5-2618L v3 processor performs 76 percent better than the previous-generation PXIe-8135 quad-core Intel Core i7-3610QE processor in the CPU Mark benchmark.

Figure 3. The PXIe-8880 has a 76 percent CPU Mark performance improvement compared to the previous-generation PXIe-8135 embedded controller.

You also need to look at how the PXIe-8880 performs when used with test and measurement software, such as LabVIEW graphical system design software. A processor-intensive measurement that is commonly used in test and measurement is the fast Fourier transform (FFT). In Figure 4 below, you can see that the PXIe-8880 can compute 91 percent more FFTs than the previous-generation PXIe-8135 quad-core Intel Core i7-3610QE processor in the benchmarked time window. LabVIEW is a natively multithreading application software, so it highly leverages the eight cores of the Intel Xeon processor of the PXIe-8880 embedded controller.

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Figure 4. The PXIe-8880 computes 91 percent more LabVIEW FFTs compared to the previous-generation PXIe-8135 embedded controller.

“The use of the latest Intel Xeon processors is a new milestone for our collaboration with NI. The Internet of Things requires the highest possible processing power to reduce time to market and lower the cost of test, and NI’s approach with PXI is critical toward that goal.”

—Shahram Mehraban Director, Market Development for Industrial IoT, Intel

PXIe-1085 24 GB/s Chassis Since the inception of the PXI standard in 1997, NI has played a key role in building a foundation for innovation by continually delivering a broad and high-performance chassis portfolio to meet the I/O point and performance needs of customer applications. With the latest chassis release, NI has delivered the first PXI chassis based on PCI Express Gen 3 technology to offer engineers twice the slot and system bandwidth of previous-generation chassis.

Chassis Technology at a Glance PXI Express with PCI Express Gen 3 technology

16 hybrid slots; 1 PXI Express system timing slot; 1 system slot

Up to 24 GB/s system bandwidth (each direction)

Up to 8 GB/s slot bandwidth (each direction)

Removable power shuttle; 925 W total system power

38.25 W power and cooling capability per slot

Optional rack-mount kit

See the Resources section of the PXIe-1085 24 GB/s model page for the full user manual and specifications.

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Figure 5. Front View of a Vacant PXIe-1085 24 GB/s Chassis

PXI Express Specification As the complexity of customer applications and demand for processing power and bandwidth have grown over the past decades, the PXI specification has evolved to meet these needs. Initially PXI was based on PCI technology and provided 132 MB/s of data bandwidth. This specification then evolved into PXI Express by using PCI Express technology, which sends data serially through pairs of transmit and receive connections called lanes, providing the ability to transfer data at 250 MB/s per direction with PCI Express Gen 1 technology. Multiple lanes are grouped together to form x4, x8, and x16 links to increase bandwidth.

This then grew to 500 MB/s per lane with PCI Express Gen 2 technology. With the release of the PXIe-1085 24 GB/s chassis, the industry’s first chassis that is based on PCI Express Gen 3 technology, the lane bandwidth has been doubled to 1 GB/s per lane, and with 24 data lanes (x24), a total of 24 GB/s of data per direction can be sent from the controller to the PXI Express backplane as seen in Figure 6 below.

The system bandwidth outlined in the previous paragraph addresses only the amount of data that can be transferred between the system controller and the chassis. When using peer-to-peer (P2P) communication between peripheral modules, the total amount of data that can be transferred in the chassis increases dramatically. As an example, with three peripheral modules streaming to the system controller at 8 GB/s and seven pairs of modules using P2P at 8GB/s, in theory, total system bandwidth becomes 80 GB/s in single direction and 160 GB/s bidirectionally. Actual system bandwidth will vary based on many factors such as memory bandwidth, PCI Express packet sizes and overhead, single versus bidirectional traffic, and so on.

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Figure 6. System Bandwidth for Each Generation of PXI and PXI Express

Based on the 24 Available Data Lanes (x24)

All Hybrid Slots Along with advancements in chassis communication buses to incorporate the latest PC technology, PXI peripheral modules have evolved from PXI to PXI Express to take advantage of PCI Express communication bus capabilities. To ensure module compatibility between PXI and PXI Express modules, the PXI specification added the hybrid slot. With this slot, you can insert hybrid-compatible PXI or PXI Express peripheral modules in PXI chassis and use any previous investments in hybrid-compatible PXI modules. As with the previous 12 GB/s PXIe-1085 chassis, the 24 GB/s variant is an 18-slot chassis (1 system controller + 17 peripheral slots) with 16 hybrid slots.

PXI Backplane Technology A key benefit of the PXI platform over traditional instrumentation is the integration of triggering, power, reference clocks, and data buses, which are normally external cables, into the PXI chassis backplane. For the PXIe-1085 24 GB/s chassis based on PCI Express Gen 3 technology, the key innovation is implementation of two Gen 3 switches as seen in Figure 7. These switches handle the routing of information from module to module and between the modules and controllers.

Figure 7. Rear View of the PXIe-1085 24 GB/s Chassis With the Power Shuttle Removed to View the PCI Express Gen 3 Switching Technology

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PXIe-8830mc Coprocessing Module A recent development in the PXI platform is the PXI MultiComputing (PXImc) specification, which allows two or more intelligent systems to exchange data through PCI Express. Previously, you could use the PXIe-8383 peripheral slot to physically connect to a remote processor such as a workstation computer. The new PXIe-8830mc is an embedded coprocessing module that you can install directly into any PXI Express peripheral slot to quickly add processing power to your system. For example, in an 18-slot chassis, you can combine the PXIe-8880 with eight NI PXIe-8830mc co-processing modules for a total of 40 physical cores.

Coprocessing Module at a Glance Intel Core i7-4700EQ processor

4 Physical and 8 logical cores

2 USB 2.0, 1 Gigabit Ethernet LAN ports

4 GB (1 x 4 GB DIMM) single-channel 1600 MHz DDR3 RAM

Up to 4GB/s theoretical (2.7 GB/s actual) bandwidth for data transfer (single direction)

5 μs total (software plus hardware) latency between coprocessing module and main CPU

See resources section of PXIe-8830mc model page for full user manual and specifications.

Figure 8. A PXI System Full of High-Bandwidth, Signal-Processing Intensive RF Instrumentation and a PXIe-8830mc Coprocessing Module in Slots 6 and 7 to Add Four Processing Cores

“Over the past two decades, we have witnessed a gradual shift from traditional instrumentation in favor of the PXI platform for automated test. With the addition of Intel Xeon processor technology, we expect the adoption of PXI to only increase for high-performance applications.”

—Jessy Cavazos Industry Manager, Measurement and Instrumentation Frost & Sullivan

Key Application Areas In addition to the key application areas below, the new chassis and controller are ideal for any computationally intensive or high-bandwidth test and measurement application, as well as any application that must scale into the future without sacrificing performance.

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Wireless Test Since the implementation of the AMPS protocol in 1978, wireless communication protocols have continually demanded more bandwidth to transmit data. This means that the test systems built to validate the implementation of these protocols in devices must be able to acquire, analyze, and present large sets of data from instrumentation. With the average life span of five to seven years for a test system, wireless test engineers are adopting a modular approach to mitigate retooling costs to update software and hardware as each new protocol becomes implemented.

Semiconductor Test Though test systems for semiconductor, such as the Semiconductor Test System (STS), do not consume large sets of data, they do need to consume many sets of data in parallel to increase their test throughput or part per hour. A big contributor for multisite test throughput is the parallel test efficiency (PTE) of a test system, which is typically fixed for a system. But for a modular approach such as the STS, the ability to add an eight-core Intel Xeon processor and powerful multicore test executive software like TestStand provides an economical approach for increasing PTE, and therefore production throughput for semiconductor test engineers.

5G Prototyping Prototyping fifth-generation (5G) cellular systems requires intense signal processing, tight synchronization, control functionality, and the I/O points that can achieve multigigabit per second data rates. Along with powerful software such as the LabVIEW Communications System Design Suite, the multicore processing and high-bandwidth of the PXIe-8880 controller and PXIe-1085 24 GB/s chassis provide an ideal starting point for any prototyping platform.

Building a Future-Proofed Test and Measurement System on the Bedrock of NI PXI The past two decades have seen more technological innovation than we could have ever predicted. It took roughly 18 years to go from 1G to 2G cellular communication but LTE replaced 3G in just under 6 years. We have seen analog-to-digital converters go from hundreds of MS/s to tens of GS/s. And the predictions around the impact of the Internet of Things, which encourage us to enable every “thing” to sense, compute and communicate, will all be exceeded if the adoption rates continue at their current trajectory.

But innovation has implications. Going from “it works” in a design environment to “it works” when the user opens the box requires multiple test and measurement steps, and the need for increased bandwidth and processing power is increasing each year. Though sacrificing product quality is not a preferable option, neither is spending valuable time and money to bolt on additional hardware and software each time a new product releases. Predicting the future of product innovation is not possible, but choosing an architecture that accounts for flexibility and scalability is. With the modularity to meet evolving requirements, the combination of the PXIe-8880 embedded controller, the PXIe-1085 24 GB/s chassis, Windows 10 support, and the largest portfolio of modular instrumentation makes PXI a zero-compromise solution for any test and measurement application.

Additional Resources PXIe-8880 Embedded Controller

PXIe-1085 24 GB/s Chassis

PXIe-8830mc Co-Processing Module

Learn about the NI PXI Platform

Streaming Architecture of the Industry’s Highest Performance PXI Express Platform

©2016 National Instruments. All rights reserved. LabVIEW, National Instruments, NI, NI TestStand, and ni.com are trademarks of National Instruments.

Other product and company names listed are trademarks or trade names of their respective companies.