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S/PDIF

S/PDIF (Sony/Philips Digital Interface)[1][2] is a type of digital audio interface used in consumer audio equipment to output audio over relatively short distances. The signal is transmitted over either a coaxial cable (using RCA or BNC connectors) or a fiber optic cable with TOSLINK connectors. S/PDIF interconnects components in home theaters and other digital high-fidelity systems.

TOSLINK connector (JIS F05)

S/PDIF is based on the AES3 interconnect standard.[3] S/PDIF can carry two channels of uncompressed PCM audio or compressed 5.1 surround sound (such as DTS audio codec or Dolby Digital codec); it cannot support lossless surround formats that require greater bandwidth.[4]

S/PDIF is a data link layer protocol as well as a set of physical layer specifications for carrying digital audio signals over either optical or electrical cable. The name stands for Sony/Philips Digital Interconnect Format but is also known as Sony/Philips Digital Interface. Sony and Philips were the primary designers of S/PDIF. S/PDIF is standardized in IEC 60958 as IEC 60958 type II (IEC 958 before 1998).[5]

Applications

A common use is to carry two channels of uncompressed digital audio from a CD player to an amplifying receiver.

The S/PDIF interface is also used to carry compressed digital audio for surround sound as defined by the IEC 61937 standard. This mode is used to connect the output of a Blu-ray, DVD player or computer, via optical or coax, to a home theatre amplifying receiver that supports Dolby Digital or DTS decoding.

Hardware specifications

 
Composite Video RCA connector (yellow)
 
Digital Audio Coaxial RCA connector (orange)

S/PDIF was developed at the same time as the main standard, AES3, used to interconnect professional audio equipment in the professional audio field. This resulted from the desire of the various stakeholders to have at least sufficient similarities between the two interfaces to allow the use of the same, or very similar, designs for interfacing ICs.[6] S/PDIF is nearly identical at the protocol level,[a] but uses either coaxial cable (with RCA connectors) or optical fibre (TOSLINK; i.e., F05 or EIAJ optical), both of which cost less than the XLR connection used by AES3. The RCA connectors are typically colour-coded orange to differentiate from other RCA connector uses such as composite video. S/PDIF uses 75 Ω coaxial cable while AES3 uses 110 Ω balanced twisted pair.

Signals transmitted over consumer-grade TOSLINK connections are identical in content to those transmitted over coaxial connectors, though TOSLINK S/PDIF commonly exhibits higher jitter.[7]

Comparison of AES3 and S/PDIF[8]
AES3 balanced AES3 unbalanced S/PDIF
Cabling 110 Ω STP 75 Ω coaxial 75 Ω coaxial or optical fibre
Connector 3-pin XLR BNC RCA, BNC or TOSLINK
Output level 2–7 V peak to peak 1.0–1.2 V peak to peak 0.5–0.6 V peak to peak
Min. input level 0.2 V 0.32 V 0.2 V
Max. distance 100 m 1000 m 10 m
Modulation Biphase mark code Biphase mark code Biphase mark code
Subcode information ASCII id. text ASCII id. text SCMS copy protection info.
Audio bit depth 24 bits 24 bits 20 bits (24 bits optional)[citation needed]

Protocol specifications

 
S/PDIF Signal

S/PDIF is used to transmit digital signals in a number of formats, the most common being the 48 kHz sample rate format (used in Digital Audio Tape) and the 44.1 kHz format, used in CD audio. In order to support both systems, as well as others that might be needed, the format has no defined bit rate. Instead, the data is sent using biphase mark code, which has either one or two transitions for every bit, allowing the original word clock to be extracted from the signal itself.

S/PDIF is meant to be used for transmitting 20-bit audio data streams plus other related information. To transmit sources with less than 20 bits of sample accuracy, the superfluous bits will be set to zero. S/PDIF can also transport 24-bit samples by way of four extra bits; however, not all equipment supports this, and these extra bits may be ignored.

S/PDIF protocol differs from AES3 only in the channel status bits. Both protocols group 192 samples into an audio block, and transmit one channel status bit per sample, providing one 192-bit channel status word per channel per audio block. For S/PDIF, the 192-bit status word is identical between the two channels and is divided into 12 words of 16 bits each, with the first 16 bits being a control code.

S/PDIF control word components[9]
Byte Bit Unset (0) Set (1)
0 0 Consumer (S/PDIF) Professional (AES3)
(changes meaning to AES3 channel status word)
0 1 Normal Compressed data
0 2 Copy restrict Copy permit
0 3 2 channels 4 channels
0 4
0 5 No pre-emphasis Pre-emphasis
0 6–7 Mode, defines subsequent bytes, always zero
1 0–6 Audio source category indicating the type of source equipment (general, CD-DA, DVD, etc.)
1 7 L-bit, original or copy[A]
2 0-3 Source number
2 4-7 Channel number
3 0-3 Sampling frequency
3 4-5 Clock accuracy
3 6-7 (undefined)
4 0 Word length 20 bits Word length 24 bits
4 1-3 Sample length (0=undefined, 1-4=word length minus 1-4 bits, 5=full word length)
4 4-7 (undefined)
5-11 0-7 EAN-13 code (BCD?)
11 4-7 (undefined; padding on 13-digit EAN code)
12-13 0-7 (undefined)
14 0-3 (undefined)
14-21 0-7 ISRC (encoding unclear; ISRC is 2 alphabetic, 3 alphanumeric and 7 numeric, which is 26^2 + 36^3 + 10^7 ≈ 2^48.164 and so obviously fits into 7.5 bytes, but a naive 5 ASCII + 7 BCD would be 8.5 bytes)
22-23 0-7 (undefined)
  1. ^ (for most category codes) indicates whether copy-restricted audio is original (may be copied once) or a copy (does not allow recording again). The L-bit is only used if bit 2 is zero, meaning copy-restricted audio. The L-bit polarity depends on the category, with recording allowed if it is 1 for DVD-R and DVD-RW, but 0 for CD-R, CD-RW, and DVD. For plain CD-DA (ordinary nonrecordable CDs), the L-bit is not defined, and recording is prevented by alternating bit 2 at a rate of 4–10 Hz.

Limitations

The receiver does not control the data rate, so it must avoid bit slip by synchronizing its reception with the source clock. Many S/PDIF implementations cannot fully decouple the final signal from influence of the source or the interconnect. Specifically, the process of clock recovery used to synchronize reception may produce jitter.[10][11][12] If the DAC does not have a stable clock reference then noise will be introduced into the resulting analog signal. However, receivers can implement various strategies that limit this influence.[12][13]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Consumer S/PDIF supports the Serial Copy Management System, whereas professional interfaces do not.

References

  1. ^ "S/PDIF Information". Intel. 21 July 2017. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  2. ^ "S/PDIF". Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  3. ^ "SoundSystem SixPack 5.1+ True 6 Channel + Digital In & out – Stuff Worth Knowing" (PDF). TerraTec. 5 July 2001. p. 43. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
  4. ^ Mark Johnson; Charles Crawford; Chris Armbrust (2007). High-Definition DVD Handbook : Producing for HD-DVD and Blu-Ray Disc: Producing for HD-DVD and Blu-Ray Disc. McGraw Hill Professional. pp. 4–10. ISBN 9780071485852. ...connections such as S/PDIF do not have the bandwidth necessary to deliver uncompressed surround sound...
  5. ^ "Sound card". kioskea.net. Kioskea Network. Retrieved 4 August 2010. The components of a sound card are: [...] An SPDIF digital output (Sony Philips Digital Interface, also known as S/PDIF or S-PDIF or IEC 958 or IEC 60958 since 1998). This is an output line that sends digitised audio data to a digital amplifier using a coaxial cable with RCA connectors at the ends.
  6. ^ Finger, Robert A. 1992 'AES3-1992: The RevisedTwo-ChannelDigital Audio Interface', J.AudioEng.Soc.,Vol.40,No.3, 1992 March, p108
  7. ^ "Toslink or Coax". Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  8. ^ Dennis Bohn (2001). "Interfacing AES3 & S/PDIF" (PDF). Rane Corporation. p. 2. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
  9. ^ at the Wayback Machine (archived 2019-02-28)
  10. ^ Giorgio Pozzoli. "DIGITabilis: crash course on digital audio interfaces" tnt-audio.com.
  11. ^ Chris Dunn, Malcolm J. Hawksford. "Is the AES/EBU/SPDIF Digital Audio Interface Flawed?" AES Convention 93, paper 3360.
  12. ^ a b Tracy, Norman. . Archived from the original on 1 July 2017.
  13. ^ Lesso, Paul (2006). (PDF). Audio Engineering Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 June 2014. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) AES Convention 121, paper 6948

External links

  • S/PDIF at Epanorama.net
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 2022-09-11)
  • More about channel data bits
  • Interfacing AES3 and S/PDIF

pdif, sony, philips, digital, interface, type, digital, audio, interface, used, consumer, audio, equipment, output, audio, over, relatively, short, distances, signal, transmitted, over, either, coaxial, cable, using, connectors, fiber, optic, cable, with, tosl. S PDIF Sony Philips Digital Interface 1 2 is a type of digital audio interface used in consumer audio equipment to output audio over relatively short distances The signal is transmitted over either a coaxial cable using RCA or BNC connectors or a fiber optic cable with TOSLINK connectors S PDIF interconnects components in home theaters and other digital high fidelity systems TOSLINK connector JIS F05 S PDIF is based on the AES3 interconnect standard 3 S PDIF can carry two channels of uncompressed PCM audio or compressed 5 1 surround sound such as DTS audio codec or Dolby Digital codec it cannot support lossless surround formats that require greater bandwidth 4 S PDIF is a data link layer protocol as well as a set of physical layer specifications for carrying digital audio signals over either optical or electrical cable The name stands for Sony Philips Digital Interconnect Format but is also known as Sony Philips Digital Interface Sony and Philips were the primary designers of S PDIF S PDIF is standardized in IEC 60958 as IEC 60958 type II IEC 958 before 1998 5 Contents 1 Applications 2 Hardware specifications 3 Protocol specifications 4 Limitations 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksApplications EditA common use is to carry two channels of uncompressed digital audio from a CD player to an amplifying receiver The S PDIF interface is also used to carry compressed digital audio for surround sound as defined by the IEC 61937 standard This mode is used to connect the output of a Blu ray DVD player or computer via optical or coax to a home theatre amplifying receiver that supports Dolby Digital or DTS decoding Hardware specifications Edit Composite Video RCA connector yellow Digital Audio Coaxial RCA connector orange S PDIF was developed at the same time as the main standard AES3 used to interconnect professional audio equipment in the professional audio field This resulted from the desire of the various stakeholders to have at least sufficient similarities between the two interfaces to allow the use of the same or very similar designs for interfacing ICs 6 S PDIF is nearly identical at the protocol level a but uses either coaxial cable with RCA connectors or optical fibre TOSLINK i e F05 or EIAJ optical both of which cost less than the XLR connection used by AES3 The RCA connectors are typically colour coded orange to differentiate from other RCA connector uses such as composite video S PDIF uses 75 W coaxial cable while AES3 uses 110 W balanced twisted pair Signals transmitted over consumer grade TOSLINK connections are identical in content to those transmitted over coaxial connectors though TOSLINK S PDIF commonly exhibits higher jitter 7 Comparison of AES3 and S PDIF 8 AES3 balanced AES3 unbalanced S PDIFCabling 110 W STP 75 W coaxial 75 W coaxial or optical fibreConnector 3 pin XLR BNC RCA BNC or TOSLINKOutput level 2 7 V peak to peak 1 0 1 2 V peak to peak 0 5 0 6 V peak to peakMin input level 0 2 V 0 32 V 0 2 VMax distance 100 m 1000 m 10 mModulation Biphase mark code Biphase mark code Biphase mark codeSubcode information ASCII id text ASCII id text SCMS copy protection info Audio bit depth 24 bits 24 bits 20 bits 24 bits optional citation needed Protocol specifications EditThis section is missing information about what compression methods specifically the fancy surround sound ones are available higher sample rates up to 768 kHz Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page September 2022 S PDIF Signal S PDIF is used to transmit digital signals in a number of formats the most common being the 48 kHz sample rate format used in Digital Audio Tape and the 44 1 kHz format used in CD audio In order to support both systems as well as others that might be needed the format has no defined bit rate Instead the data is sent using biphase mark code which has either one or two transitions for every bit allowing the original word clock to be extracted from the signal itself S PDIF is meant to be used for transmitting 20 bit audio data streams plus other related information To transmit sources with less than 20 bits of sample accuracy the superfluous bits will be set to zero S PDIF can also transport 24 bit samples by way of four extra bits however not all equipment supports this and these extra bits may be ignored S PDIF protocol differs from AES3 only in the channel status bits Both protocols group 192 samples into an audio block and transmit one channel status bit per sample providing one 192 bit channel status word per channel per audio block For S PDIF the 192 bit status word is identical between the two channels and is divided into 12 words of 16 bits each with the first 16 bits being a control code S PDIF control word components 9 Byte Bit Unset 0 Set 1 0 0 Consumer S PDIF Professional AES3 changes meaning to AES3 channel status word 0 1 Normal Compressed data0 2 Copy restrict Copy permit0 3 2 channels 4 channels0 4 0 5 No pre emphasis Pre emphasis0 6 7 Mode defines subsequent bytes always zero1 0 6 Audio source category indicating the type of source equipment general CD DA DVD etc 1 7 L bit original or copy A 2 0 3 Source number2 4 7 Channel number3 0 3 Sampling frequency3 4 5 Clock accuracy3 6 7 undefined 4 0 Word length 20 bits Word length 24 bits4 1 3 Sample length 0 undefined 1 4 word length minus 1 4 bits 5 full word length 4 4 7 undefined 5 11 0 7 EAN 13 code BCD 11 4 7 undefined padding on 13 digit EAN code 12 13 0 7 undefined 14 0 3 undefined 14 21 0 7 ISRC encoding unclear ISRC is 2 alphabetic 3 alphanumeric and 7 numeric which is 26 2 36 3 10 7 2 48 164 and so obviously fits into 7 5 bytes but a naive 5 ASCII 7 BCD would be 8 5 bytes 22 23 0 7 undefined for most category codes indicates whether copy restricted audio is original may be copied once or a copy does not allow recording again The L bit is only used if bit 2 is zero meaning copy restricted audio The L bit polarity depends on the category with recording allowed if it is 1 for DVD R and DVD RW but 0 for CD R CD RW and DVD For plain CD DA ordinary nonrecordable CDs the L bit is not defined and recording is prevented by alternating bit 2 at a rate of 4 10 Hz Limitations EditThe receiver does not control the data rate so it must avoid bit slip by synchronizing its reception with the source clock Many S PDIF implementations cannot fully decouple the final signal from influence of the source or the interconnect Specifically the process of clock recovery used to synchronize reception may produce jitter 10 11 12 If the DAC does not have a stable clock reference then noise will be introduced into the resulting analog signal However receivers can implement various strategies that limit this influence 12 13 See also EditADAT Lightpipe I S McASPNotes Edit Consumer S PDIF supports the Serial Copy Management System whereas professional interfaces do not References Edit S PDIF Information Intel 21 July 2017 Retrieved 3 April 2018 S PDIF Retrieved 3 April 2018 SoundSystem SixPack 5 1 True 6 Channel Digital In amp out Stuff Worth Knowing PDF TerraTec 5 July 2001 p 43 Retrieved 18 January 2011 Mark Johnson Charles Crawford Chris Armbrust 2007 High Definition DVD Handbook Producing for HD DVD and Blu Ray Disc Producing for HD DVD and Blu Ray Disc McGraw Hill Professional pp 4 10 ISBN 9780071485852 connections such as S PDIF do not have the bandwidth necessary to deliver uncompressed surround sound Sound card kioskea net Kioskea Network Retrieved 4 August 2010 The components of a sound card are An SPDIF digital output Sony Philips Digital Interface also known as S PDIF or S PDIF or IEC 958 or IEC 60958 since 1998 This is an output line that sends digitised audio data to a digital amplifier using a coaxial cable with RCA connectors at the ends Finger Robert A 1992 AES3 1992 The RevisedTwo ChannelDigital Audio Interface J AudioEng Soc Vol 40 No 3 1992 March p108 Toslink or Coax Retrieved 15 April 2015 Dennis Bohn 2001 Interfacing AES3 amp S PDIF PDF Rane Corporation p 2 Retrieved 18 January 2011 Understanding Analyzing Digital Audio Channel Status Bits at the Wayback Machine archived 2019 02 28 Giorgio Pozzoli DIGITabilis crash course on digital audio interfaces tnt audio com Chris Dunn Malcolm J Hawksford Is the AES EBU SPDIF Digital Audio Interface Flawed AES Convention 93 paper 3360 a b Tracy Norman On Jitter the S PDIF Standard and Audio DACs Archived from the original on 1 July 2017 Lesso Paul 2006 A High Performance S PDIF Receiver PDF Audio Engineering Society Archived from the original PDF on 4 June 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help AES Convention 121 paper 6948External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to S PDIF S PDIF at Epanorama net S PDIF at hardwarebook net at the Wayback Machine archived 2022 09 11 More about channel data bits Interfacing AES3 and S PDIF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title S PDIF amp oldid 1129781080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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