Jump to content

Livewire (networking)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by AnomieBOT (talk | contribs) at 01:41, 30 November 2016 (Dating maintenance tags: {{Advert}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Livewire+
Updated Livewire logo
Manufacturer Info
ManufacturerAxia Audio, a brand of The Telos Alliance
Development date2003
Network Compatibility
SwitchableYes
RoutableYes
Ethernet data ratesFast Ethernet, Gigabit Ethernet
Audio Specifications
Minimum latency0.75 ms[1]
Maximum sampling rate48 kHz[2]
Maximum bit depth24 bits[2]

Livewire is an audio-over-Ethernet system that was created by Axia Audio, a division of The Telos Alliance. Its primary purpose is routing and distributing broadcast-quality audio in radio stations.

The original Livewire was introduced in 2003. Livewire was superseded by Livewire+, which enables full AES67 interoperability. Designed as a superset of Livewire functionality utilizing common protocols and formats, Livewire+ is available as an open standard through Axia's Livewire+ Partner Program.

Livewire+ is interoperable with other Ravenna standards-based systems and equipment.[3]

History

Before the advent of Livewire, the infrastructure of analog radio plants consisted of miles of multiconductor audio cable wired to walls full of punch blocks at each end. Installation and maintenance was time consuming and expensive. Telos founder and president Steve Church set out to find a better way.

He looked to computer networks for inspiration. If data could be divided into packets and routed on a single Ethernet cable, why couldn't the same thing be done with broadcast audio? There were many hurdles, such as latency, lost packets, and prioritizing audio over other traffic on the network. One by one, these and other problems were solved. The theory was put into practice, and workable products were developed.[4]

File:Livewire Badge.jpg
Original Livewire branding

Livewire made its debut in 2003 at the NAB Show in Las Vegas. The original Liveweire-capable products included the SmartSurface console, Studio Engine, analog, AES, mic and GPIO nodes, as well as the Router Selector node.[5]At the conclusion of the show, Livewire received two awards. Radio World bestowed its Cool Stuff award to Livewire, while BE Radio Magazine gave it a Pick Hit award. Both awards are given to the best new products shown at NAB.[6]

Livewire, the new Audio-over-Ethernet solution introduced by Telos Systems, gathered awards from two major broadcast technology magazines at the 2003 NAB convention in Las Vegas.

Radio World’s Cool Stuff award and BE Radio Magazine’s Pick Hit award are given to the best new products shown at the NAB. Livewire’s unique approach to real-time networking of studio audio using standard Ethernet cabling and switched hubs earned awards from both publications.

The NAB premiere of Livewire marked the dawn of Audio over IP (AoIP). The concept caught on, and before long, other manufacturers were making their own AoIP broadcast equipment. Soon, there developed the need for a standard so AoIP gear from different manufacturers could communicate with each other. Telos worked with other manufacturers to develop the AES67 standard for AoIP interoperability. The Telos Alliance is a founding member of the Media Networking Alliance, which promotes adoption of the AES67 standard on behalf of the pro audio industry.[7] Livewire+ was developed to bring the original Livewire protocol into AES67 compliance.

To date, there are over 80 Livewire+ Partner companies. Over 6,000 studios have been installed with Livewire+ worldwide, and there are over 60,000 individual Livewire+ devices in the field.[8]

Benefits

Livewire+ provides routing of audio from 'anywhere-to-anywhere' using multicast sources and destinations of uncompressed PCM audio that is globally visible on a LAN. Distribution is via 8-conductor cables and RJ-45 connectors. These are smaller than the standard XLR interconnects, and improve flexibility while reducing the amount of wiring required for installations.[9]

Protocol

The following table lists ports and protocols used in Livewire systems.[10][11][12]

Port Protocol Multicast Address Purpose Notes
67, 68 UDP BOOTP Server/Client Remote IP address assignment
93 TCP Livewire Routing Protocol Also provides transparent passing of custom messages, similar to the Ancillary Data Transmission feature of AES3
123 UDP Network Time Protocol
514 UDP Syslog Activity logging to a syslog receiver.
2055 UDP 239.192.255.4 Multicast-based GPIO (CMsg2 protocol) GPIO commands, GPIO node → console-type endpoint
2060 UDP 239.192.255.4 Multicast-based GPIO (CMsg2 protocol) GPIO commands, console-type endpoint → GPIO node
4000 UDP Livewire Advertisement and Source Allocation Protocol Verbose advertisement and source allocation requests
4001 UDP 239.192.255.3 Livewire Advertisement and Source Allocation Protocol Periodic and verbose announcements;

Source allocation state announcements and responses

4002 UDP 239.192.255.3 Engine Supervision Protocol
4010 TCP Livewire Control Protocol
4011 UDP 239.192.255.4 LWCP for Accessory Modules Module → Console
4012 UDP 239.192.255.3 LWCP for Accessory Modules Console → Module
5004 UDP 239.192.x.x RTP Livewire Audio Last two address octets pertain to Axia channel ID, e.g. 9999 = 39 15 (hex 27 0F)
7000 UDP Livewire Clock One device assigns itself as LAN-wide reference, all other devices slave to it
9997 TCP Protocol logging Debug protocol logging for Element

References

  1. ^ "Best Practices in Network Audio" (PDF). Audio Engineering Society. 2009. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  2. ^ a b Introduction to Livewire+ (PDF), The Telos Alliance, May 2015, retrieved 30 July 2015
  3. ^ Axia Debuts Livewire Limitless License, Radio, 2011-04-07, retrieved 30 July 2015
  4. ^ "Steve Church Remembered". Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  5. ^ Personal communication, Clark Novak, The Telos Alliance, 30 July 2015
  6. ^ https://www.telosalliance.com/News/Livewire-Wins-Dual-Awards-at-NAB
  7. ^ http://www.medianetworkingalliance.com/
  8. ^ "Axia Livewire+ Partners". Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  9. ^ Matt Rockwell (2011-07-01). "Axia Audio Element Leads New Studio". Radio World. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  10. ^ "Configuring Windows Firewall for use with the Axia IP-Audio Driver" (PDF). The Telos Alliance. 31 October 2006. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  11. ^ "Axia IP-Audio Driver for Windows, rev. 2.5 manual" (PDF). The Telos Alliance. August 2010. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  12. ^ Steve Church; Skip Pizzi (10 September 2012). Audio Over IP: Building Pro AoIP Systems with Livewire. CRC Press. pp. 4–. ISBN 978-1-136-03057-4.