Zap time explained

The zap time is the total duration of time from which the viewer changes the channel using a remote control to the point that the picture of the new channel is displayed. This includes the corresponding audio. These delays exist in all television systems, but they are more pronounced in digital television and systems that use the internet such as IPTV. Human interaction with the system is completely ignored in these measurements, so zap time is not the same as channel surfing.

Zap time can be very disturbing for some viewers and for this reason it is considered an issue that must be addressed in IPTV systems.[1]

Factors

The delays when changing the channel can be caused by several different factors. These factors can be classified according to the systems that cause them. Consequently, there are network factors, MPEG acquisition factors, and set top box buffering/decode factors.[2] [3]

Network Factors

  1. STBIGMP Leave channel X, Join Y
  2. DSLAM – Stop X, Start Y
  3. DSL FEC/Interleave
  4. IGMP features used (version, fast leave, snooping, etc.)
  5. Availability of the channel (channel replication point)
  1. Multicast routing mechanisms used
  2. Availability of the channel (channel replication point)

Network factors tend to make up only a small portion of the overall delay, between 50 and 200ms of the overall zap time. Network quality of service (QoS) can reduce these time to minimize jitter, latency, and packet drop.

MPEG Acquisition Factors

  1. Wait for and parse PAT (Program Association Table)
  2. Wait for and parse PMT (Program Map Table)
  1. I-frame (MPEG 2) or IDR frame (H.264)
  2. One Index frame per group of pictures (GOP) – 12 to 30 (IBP) frames
  3. Typical frequency of I-frame – 500ms.
  4. Long GOP structure (2–4 seconds) saves bandwidth, but can cause significant channel change latency

Set Top Box Buffering/Decode Factors

Zap Time Examples

The various factors that affect zap time do not do so in the same way. The table below is an example of zap time in IPTV DSL:

Channel Change Latency FactorDevice/LocationTypical LatencyCumulative Latency
1Send IGMP Leave for channel XSTB< 10 ms
2Send IGMP Join for channel YSTB< 10 ms
3DSLAM receives Leave for channel XDSLAM/Network< 10 ms
4DSLAM receives Join for channel YDSLAM/Network< 10 ms~ 20 - 40 ms
5DSLAM stops channel X, and sends Channel YDSLAM/Network~ 30 – 50 ms~ 50 – 90 ms
6DSL Latency (FEC/Interleave)DSLAM/Network~ 10 ms~ 60 - 100 ms
7Core/Agg Network LatencyRouter/Network~ 20 – 60ms~ 80 – 160ms
8De-jitter bufferSTB~ 300 ms~ 380 - 460 ms
9Wait for PAT/PMTSTB MPEG buffer~ 125 ms~ 500 - 580 ms
10Wait for ECM/CASTB MPEG buffer~ 125 ms~ 620 - 700 ms
11Wait for I-frameSTB MPEG buffer~ 250 ms to 2s~ 870 ms – 2.7s
12MPEG bufferSTB MPEG buffer~ 1s to 2s~ 1.8s – 4.7s
13DecodeSTB~ 50ms~ 1.9s – 4.8s

Zap time delays are greater in IPTV television than in other technologies. For example:

External links

Notes and References

  1. IPTV over DSL systems. "IPTV testing over DSL "
  2. IPTV challenges and metrics. "IPTV Challenges "
  3. https://subscriptioniptv.com IPTV