I welcome specific examples of how to get a serial LVDS 1 or 2Gb/s signal into the Red Pitaya FPGA, given the Red Pitaya's implementation w.r.t. I/O voltage and lack of ground pins on the connector.
The lack of grounds is a problem if you want to use a cable, if you plug in a board you'll have to measure it to see how much of an impedance bump you get, at GB speeds the choice of connector is probably a bigger problem
I don't have any suitable equipment to do that. I agree the connector certainly isn't ideal, but if everything else looked good it might have been worth taking a punt on a Pitaya.
Receiving LVDS, with an input configured for LVDS25 and powered by 3.3V is not a problem, the only issue in the internal termination that according to Xilinx will be ~80R, but the LVDS specification already have something like +/-20% spec on termination so the transmission line should just be designed for 80R instead of 100R
I haven't seen any source of information to that effect; what's the basis for those statements? I'm particularly curious as to why the termination would be 20% lower.
anywho, just get a microzed instead, the connectors are much better for high speed, have proper grounding, it looks each pair is matched length and it is less than half the price
Ah, just so. I'm ahead of you there - I already have a MicroZed as my primary development platform! It is a nice little board with all those advantages and more. There's also a small eco-system with several MicroZed variants and carrier boards. There are, of course, other similar boards from other manufacturers, albeit more expensive.
The advantage of a Red Pitaya is simply that it is "out there in the wild", with ADCs/scope, and with potentially a different ecosystem. That would be "nice to have" but definitely not "compelling".