• English
  • Products

    Protocol Exercisers & Analyzers

    • Storage
    • PCIe Protocol Analyzer
    • UFS 4.0 Protocol Analyzer
    • UFS 3.0 Protocol Analyzer
    • SoC based UFS Tester
    • eMMC,SD,SDIO Protocol Analyzer
    • SD, eMMC AC/DC Tester
    • SoC based eMMC Tester
    • QSPI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • UHS II Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • Mobile
    • I3C Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • RFFE Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • Automotive
    • xSPI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • 100Base-T1 Automotive Ethernet Protocol Analyzer

    Protocol Exercisers & Analyzers

    • Computer
    • PCIe Protocol Analyzer
    • PCIe Side Band Signal Analyzer
    • SRIO Protocol Analyzer
    • UART Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • SPMI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • Others
    • I2C/SPI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • PMBus Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • JTAG Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • SMBus Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • MDIO Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • 100G 802.3_2015 BERT & Analyzer

    Logic Analyzer

    • Discovery series for Embedded Interface

    Oscilloscope Based Software

    • Memory
    • UFS 3.0
    • QSPI
    • ONFI v4
    • eMMC 5.1/5.0/4.51
    • SD
    • Automotive
    • 10BaseT1S
    • 100Base T1
    • FlexRay
    • Others
    • I2C
    • SPI
    • UART
    • I2S
    • JTAG
    • SMBus

    Oscilloscope oftware

    • Computer
    • USB-PD
    • USB 2.0
    • USB 3.0
    • USB 3.1
    • STEPg1
    • PCIe
    • SPMI
    • HDMI
    • MHL
    • eSPI
    • Mobile
    • I3C EV
    • I3C PD
    • UniPRO
    • LLI
    • RFFE
    • HSIC
    • DigRF v4
    • SSIC
  • Resources

    Datasheets

    Application Notes

    Videos

    • Protocol Analyzer
    • Logic Analyzer

    blogs

    Forum

    Prodigy Partner Central

    • Login
  • Company

    Overview

    • About Us
    • Leadership Team

    Distributors

    • I2C
    • I3C
    • Other Protocols

    News

    • News
    • Automotive

    events

    • Webinar

    Newsletters

    • Automotive
  • Career
  • Support
What can we help you find?
  • Products

    Protocol Exercisers & Analyzers

    • Storage
    • PCIe Protocol Analyzer
    • UFS 4.0 Protocol Analyzer
    • UFS 3.0 Protocol Analyzer
    • SoC based UFS Tester
    • eMMC,SD,SDIO Protocol Analyzer
    • SD, eMMC AC/DC Tester
    • SoC based eMMC Tester
    • QSPI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • UHS II Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • Mobile
    • I3C Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • RFFE Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • Automotive
    • xSPI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • 100Base-T1 Automotive Ethernet Protocol Analyzer

    Protocol Exercisers & Analyzers

    • Computer
    • PCIe Protocol Analyzer
    • PCIe Side Band Signal Analyzer
    • SRIO Protocol Analyzer
    • UART Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • SPMI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • Others
    • I2C/SPI Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • PMBus Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • JTAG Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • SMBus Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • MDIO Protocol Exerciser & Analyzer
    • 100G 802.3_2015 BERT & Analyzer

    Logic Analyzer

    • Discovery series for Embedded Interface

    Oscilloscope Based Software

    • Memory
    • UFS 3.0
    • QSPI
    • ONFI v4
    • eMMC 5.1/5.0/4.51
    • SD
    • Automotive
    • 10BaseT1S
    • 100Base T1
    • FlexRay
    • Others
    • I2C
    • SPI
    • UART
    • I2S
    • JTAG
    • SMBus

    Oscilloscope oftware

    • Computer
    • USB-PD
    • USB 2.0
    • USB 3.0
    • USB 3.1
    • STEPg1
    • PCIe
    • SPMI
    • HDMI
    • MHL
    • eSPI
    • Mobile
    • I3C EV
    • I3C PD
    • UniPRO
    • LLI
    • RFFE
    • HSIC
    • DigRF v4
    • SSIC
  • Resources

    Datasheets

    Application Notes

    Videos

    • Protocol Analyzer
    • Logic Analyzer

    blogs

    Forum

    Prodigy Partner Central

    • Login
  • Company

    Overview

    • About Us
    • Leadership Team

    Distributors

    • I2C
    • I3C
    • Other Protocols

    News

    • News
    • Automotive

    events

    • Webinar

    Newsletters

    • Automotive
  • Career
  • Support
  • English

The change to the more modern Universal Flash Storage (UFS) 4.1 marks a turning point in the data architecture of mobile and automotive systems. The protocol can deliver on-device generative AI and advanced ADAS sensor fusion with rates of up to 23.2 Gbps per lane, or High-Speed Gear 5 (HS-G5) Rate B. This speed increase, however, poses a major “Signal Integrity Wall” for the validation engineer because the way it is observed can completely change the behaviour of the system under test.

The Physics of 23.2 Gbps and the Probing Crisis

Traditional passive interposers can be a low pass filter at the frequencies needed for HS-G5B, which can lead to the distortion of the M-PHY signal before it reaches the analyzer. The tolerance for these high-speed serial links becomes essentially zero; in fact, a few tens of picofarads of parasitic loading from a probe tip can “stub” the transmission line, generating false Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) errors and protocol “ghosts” not in the silicon itself.

To achieve true “Ground Truth” visibility at UniPro HS‑G5 speeds, validation must move to Active Probing. At 23.2 Gbps, UniPro/M‑PHY signals require substantial analog headroom, and only high‑bandwidth active probes can provide this while preserving DUT performance. Prodigy’s UFS active probes minimize electrical loading and maintain signal integrity, enabling the analyzer to capture the real timing of UniPro state‑machine transitions, including the High‑Speed Link Startup Sequence (HS‑LSS). This level of visibility allows engineers to identify and correct initialization inefficiencies, often reducing overall link‑bring‑up time by more than half.

In this session, students will learn about advanced Probing Architectures: mSMP and B2B Interposers

Among the most important physical issues of today’s device validation is the PCB density. Often there are not enough room for the regular SMPM connectors around UFS test points. The solution to this is two major high fidelity architectures that emerged,

  • Solder-down Active Probe Tips: These allow for direct access to M-PHY test pads between the host and the device. These tips provide high fidelity signal transmission with mSMP flexi-coax cables and are ideal for accessing the very close-packed mobile and automotive ECU boards.
  • Board-to-Board (B2B) Interposers: If the UFS device is not soldered to the main PCB, B2B interposers with embedded probe tips are a better option for development platforms. These interposers decrease the trace length between the test point and the analyzer’s front end, which minimizes the attenuation and reflections of the signal.

Demonstrating how protocol and physical layers are correlated.Validation Alliance: Correlating Protocol and Physical Layers

Decoding of protocols is no longer on its own. When it comes to deep root cause analysis, the engineers need to correlate a protocol-level event (like a Write Booster SLC cache flush) with the physical-layer events that generated it (like an HPB map correlation error).

The PGY‑UFS 4.0‑PA incorporates a dedicated Trigger‑Out SMA interface that provides deterministic, hardware‑level correlation between protocol‑layer events and physical‑layer signal behavior. The trigger engine inside the analyzer continuously monitors UniPro and UFS traffic for user‑defined conditions such as protocol errors, state‑machine anomalies, timing violations, or specific command sequences. When the configured event occurs, the analyzer asserts a clean, fixed‑width 100‑ns TTL pulse on the Trigger‑Out port. This pulse can be routed directly to a high‑bandwidth oscilloscope, enabling the scope to capture the exact analog waveform present at the moment of the protocol‑layer event.

The move from Consumer UFS 2.2 to Automotive UFS 4.1 is covered in this Strategic Roadmap

This Strategic Roadmap covers the move from Consumer UFS 2.2 to Automotive UFS 4.1.
A platform that can tie the entire storage roadmap together is required for validation maturity. UFS 4.1 is the standard of choice, but the performance/price ratio of UFS 2.2 is still ideal for many consumer consumer systems and automotive systems use UFS 3.1 for the challenging thermal conditions of the vehicle space where data storage must continue to perform reliably under temperatures ranging from -40 oC to +105 oC.

This 10-year evolutionary leap v2.1 – v4.1 needs to be covered by a modern validation tool on a single hardware unit. This means that “Backward Compatibility” doesn’t turn into “Behavioral Instability”, especially in transitioning between sleepy states (Hibernate) and “Zombie” power drains that can result from legacy firmware not exiting sleepy states during background flush cycles.

For flagship products, the ability to deliver peak theoretical performance won’t be the differentiator, it will be the ability to be “Day 180” reliable as we move forward with UFS 5.0 and beyond. With the probing paradigm and the use of high fidelity mSMP and B2B interposers, validation teams can break out of the synthetic benchmark. They can now see the truth of the protocol, making their designs communicate with purpose across all high-speed transitions.

  • Next Why Your On-Device AI Feature Fails at 3am When Nobody Is Looking

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Recent Posts

  • Probing Paradigm Mastering Signal Fidelity in UFS 4.1 Validation using mSMP and B2B Interposers
  • Why Your On-Device AI Feature Fails at 3am When Nobody Is Looking
  • 5G Hand offs: RFFE Timing is Killing Your Carrier Certification
  • Why Gen 5 Speed is a Myth (Unless You fix the Protocol)
  • Is it possible to survive a safety-critical bus infotainment collision?

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • October 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • February 2024
  • December 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • January 2021
  • November 2020
  • April 2020
  • September 2019

Categories

  • All products
  • Automotive
  • Datasheet
  • Device
  • Differences
  • eMMC
  • eMMC Protocol Analyzer
  • I2C
  • I3C
  • Logic Analyzer
  • Memory
  • news
  • PCIe
  • Protocols
  • SD
  • SDIO
  • SPI
  • UFS
  • Uncategorized
  • XSPI Protocol Analyzer
  • XSPI Protocol Analyzer

Search

Categories

  • All products
  • Automotive
  • Datasheet
  • Device
  • Differences
  • eMMC
  • eMMC Protocol Analyzer
  • I2C
  • I3C
  • Logic Analyzer
  • Memory
  • news
  • PCIe
  • Protocols
  • SD
  • SDIO
  • SPI
  • UFS
  • Uncategorized
  • XSPI Protocol Analyzer
  • XSPI Protocol Analyzer

Tags

100Base-T1 Automotive Ethernet Protocol Analyzer Clock Stretching DDR5 eMMC Protocol Analyzer I2C I3C I3C Protocol Logic Analyzer Passed PCIe PCIe Protocol Analyzer RFFE SD SDIO Serial RapidIO Protocol Analyzer UFS UFS 4.0 Webinar XSPI Protocol Analyzer

Our team represents a talented, experienced, and highly specialized group of development engineers, sales and marketing specialists. Through many years of direct engineering involvement with our customers, our personnel have developed expertise in wide range of technologies in serial data.

Follow us on

Linkedin Twitter Facebook Youtube

Quick links

  • Products
  • Resources
  • Company
  • Career
  • Support

Contact info

Prodigy Technovations Pvt Ltd

#294, 3rd Floor, 7th Cross, 7th Main, BTM II Stage,Bangalore – 560 076 | India

+91 80 4212 6100

contact@prodigytechno.com

© 2023 Prodigy Technovations. All Rights Reserved

Request Quote
Request Demo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9MHo4Ps78g

UFS 4.0

 

PGY-UFS4.0-PA, UFS Protocol Analyzer is the industry-first working and tested UFS4.0 Protocol Analyzer. It offers protocol data capture and debugging of data across MPHY, UniPro, and UFS protocol layers…

 

X
  • English