PMC PM7381

PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
PM7381
FREEDM™-32A672
FRAME ENGINE AND DATALINK
MANAGER 32A672
DATA SHEET
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL
ISSUE 6: AUGUST 2001
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
PUBLIC REVISION HISTORY
Issue No.
Issue Date
Details of Change
Issue 1
February 20, 2000
Created Document.
Issue 2
May 30, 1999
Added pinout.
Issue 3
January, 2000
Minor changes.
Issue 4
June 2000
Minor corrections and changes to some DC and AC
timing parameters.
Issue 5
October 2000
Re-issue for Minor corrections to Mechanical Drawing
and Design Summary sections. Because the changes
are so few, change bars have been kept to show both
Issue 4 and Issue 5 changes.
Issue 6
August 2001
Patent information included in legal footer. Change bars
reflect Issue 5.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
CONTENTS
1
FEATURES...............................................................................................1
2
APPLICATIONS ........................................................................................4
3
REFERENCES .........................................................................................5
4
BLOCK DIAGRAM....................................................................................6
5
DESCRIPTION .........................................................................................7
6
PIN DIAGRAM ........................................................................................ 11
7
PIN DESCRIPTION ................................................................................12
8
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION................................................................43
8.1
HIGH SPEED MULTI-VENDOR INTEGRATION PROTOCOL
(H-MVIP) ......................................................................................43
8.2
HIGH-LEVEL DATA LINK CONTROL (HDLC) PROTOCOL.........43
8.3
RECEIVE CHANNEL ASSIGNER ................................................44
8.4
8.5
8.3.1
Line Interface Translator (LIT) .......................................46
8.3.2
Line Interface .................................................................47
8.3.3
Priority Encoder .............................................................47
8.3.4
Channel Assigner ..........................................................48
8.3.5
Loopback Controller.......................................................48
RECEIVE HDLC PROCESSOR / PARTIAL PACKET BUFFER ...48
8.4.1
HDLC Processor............................................................49
8.4.2
Partial Packet Buffer Processor .....................................49
RECEIVE ANY-PHY INTERFACE ................................................51
8.5.1
FIFO Storage and Control..............................................52
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
8.5.2
8.6
8.7
8.8
9
11
Polling Control and Management...................................53
TRANSMIT ANY-PHY INTERFACE .............................................53
8.6.1
FIFO Storage and Control..............................................53
8.6.2
Polling Control and Management...................................55
TRANSMIT HDLC CONTROLLER / PARTIAL PACKET BUFFER56
8.7.1
Transmit HDLC Processor .............................................56
8.7.2
Transmit Partial Packet Buffer Processor ......................57
TRANSMIT CHANNEL ASSIGNER..............................................59
8.8.1
Line Interface Translator (LIT) .......................................61
8.8.2
Line Interface .................................................................61
8.8.3
Priority Encoder .............................................................62
8.8.4
Channel Assigner ..........................................................62
8.9
PERFORMANCE MONITOR .......................................................63
8.10
JTAG TEST ACCESS PORT INTERFACE...................................63
8.11
MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACE .............................................63
NORMAL MODE REGISTER DESCRIPTION ........................................66
9.1
10
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
MICROPROCESSOR ACCESSIBLE REGISTERS .....................66
TEST FEATURES DESCRIPTION .......................................................155
10.1
TEST MODE REGISTERS.........................................................155
10.2
JTAG TEST PORT .....................................................................156
10.2.1
Identification Register ..................................................157
10.2.2
Boundary Scan Register ..............................................157
OPERATIONS.......................................................................................175
11.1
TOCTL CONNECTIONS ............................................................175
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
11.2
12
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
JTAG SUPPORT........................................................................175
FUNCTIONAL TIMING..........................................................................182
12.1
RECEIVE H-MVIP LINK TIMING ...............................................182
12.2
TRANSMIT H-MVIP LINK TIMING .............................................183
12.3
RECEIVE NON H-MVIP LINK TIMING.......................................184
12.4
TRANSMIT NON H-MVIP LINK TIMING ....................................186
12.5
RECEIVE APPI TIMING .............................................................187
12.6
TRANSMIT APPI TIMING ..........................................................191
12.7
BERT INTERFACE.....................................................................194
13
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS........................................................196
14
D.C. CHARACTERISTICS....................................................................197
15
FREEDM-32A672 TIMING CHARACTERISTICS .................................199
16
ORDERING AND THERMAL INFORMATION ......................................213
17
MECHANICAL INFORMATION.............................................................214
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
LIST OF FIGURES
FIGURE 1 – H-MVIP PROTOCOL.....................................................................43
FIGURE 2 – HDLC FRAME...............................................................................44
FIGURE 3 – CRC GENERATOR.......................................................................44
FIGURE 4 – PARTIAL PACKET BUFFER STRUCTURE ..................................50
FIGURE 5 – PARTIAL PACKET BUFFER STRUCTURE ..................................57
FIGURE 6 – INPUT OBSERVATION CELL (IN_CELL) ...................................171
FIGURE 7 – OUTPUT CELL (OUT_CELL)......................................................172
FIGURE 8 – BI-DIRECTIONAL CELL (IO_CELL)............................................173
FIGURE 9 – LAYOUT OF OUTPUT ENABLE AND BI-DIRECTIONAL CELLS174
FIGURE 10 – BOUNDARY SCAN ARCHITECTURE ......................................176
FIGURE 11 – TAP CONTROLLER FINITE STATE MACHINE.........................178
FIGURE 12 – RECEIVE 8.192 MBPS H-MVIP LINK TIMING .........................182
FIGURE 13 – RECEIVE 2.048 MBPS H-MVIP LINK TIMING .........................183
FIGURE 14 – TRANSMIT 8.192 MBPS H-MVIP LINK TIMING .......................183
FIGURE 15 – TRANSMIT 2.048 MBPS H-MVIP LINK TIMING .......................184
FIGURE 16 – UNCHANNELISED RECEIVE LINK TIMING ............................185
FIGURE 17 – CHANNELISED T1/J1 RECEIVE LINK TIMING........................185
FIGURE 18 – CHANNELISED E1 RECEIVE LINK TIMING ............................186
FIGURE 19 – UNCHANNELISED TRANSMIT LINK TIMING ..........................186
FIGURE 20 – CHANNELISED T1/J1 TRANSMIT LINK TIMING .....................187
FIGURE 21 – CHANNELISED E1 TRANSMIT LINK TIMING..........................187
FIGURE 22 – RECEIVE APPI TIMING (NORMAL TRANSFER) .....................188
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DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
FIGURE 23 – RECEIVE APPI TIMING (AUTO DESELECTION) ....................189
FIGURE 24 – RECEIVE APPI TIMING (OPTIMAL RESELECTION)...............190
FIGURE 25 – RECEIVE APPI TIMING (BOUNDARY CONDITION) ...............191
FIGURE 26 – TRANSMIT APPI TIMING (NORMAL TRANSFER)...................192
FIGURE 27 – TRANSMIT APPI TIMING (SPECIAL CONDITIONS)................193
FIGURE 28 – TRANSMIT APPI TIMING (POLLING).......................................194
FIGURE 29 – RECEIVE BERT PORT TIMING................................................195
FIGURE 30 – TRANSMIT BERT PORT TIMING .............................................195
FIGURE 31 – RECEIVE DATA & FRAME PULSE TIMING (2.048 MBPS H-MVIP
MODE) ..................................................................................................201
FIGURE 32 – RECEIVE DATA & FRAME PULSE TIMING (8.192 MBPS H-MVIP
MODE) ..................................................................................................201
FIGURE 33 – RECEIVE DATA TIMING (NON H-MVIP MODE).......................202
FIGURE 34 – BERT INPUT TIMING ...............................................................202
FIGURE 35 – TRANSMIT DATA & FRAME PULSE TIMING (2.048 MBPS HMVIP MODE) ........................................................................................204
FIGURE 36 – TRANSMIT DATA & FRAME PULSE TIMING (8.192 MBPS HMVIP MODE) ........................................................................................205
FIGURE 37 – TRANSMIT DATA TIMING (NON H-MVIP MODE) ....................205
FIGURE 38 – BERT OUTPUT TIMING ...........................................................206
FIGURE 39 – RECEIVE ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE TIMING.................207
FIGURE 40 – TRANSMIT ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE TIMING ..............208
FIGURE 41 – MICROPROCESSOR READ ACCESS TIMING .......................209
FIGURE 42 – MICROPROCESSOR WRITE ACCESS TIMING...................... 211
FIGURE 43 – JTAG PORT INTERFACE TIMING............................................212
FIGURE 44 – 329 PIN PLASTIC BALL GRID ARRAY (PBGA)........................214
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DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
LIST OF TABLES
TABLE 1 – LINE SIDE INTERFACE SIGNALS (154) ........................................12
TABLE 2 – ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE SIGNALS (70) .............................22
TABLE 3 – MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACE SIGNALS (31).........................34
TABLE 4 – MISCELLANEOUS INTERFACE SIGNALS (9) ...............................36
TABLE 5 – PRODUCTION TEST INTERFACE SIGNALS (0 - MULTIPLEXED) 38
TABLE 6 – POWER AND GROUND SIGNALS (65)..........................................39
TABLE 7 – TRANSMIT POLLING......................................................................55
TABLE 8 – NORMAL MODE MICROPROCESSOR ACCESSIBLE REGISTERS
................................................................................................................63
TABLE 9 – RECEIVE LINKS #0 TO #2 CONFIGURATION ...............................98
TABLE 10 – RECEIVE LINKS #3 TO #31 CONFIGURATION ...........................99
TABLE 11 – CRC[1:0] SETTINGS ...................................................................106
TABLE 12 – CRC[1:0] SETTINGS................................................................... 117
TABLE 13 – FLAG[2:0] SETTINGS .................................................................122
TABLE 14 – LEVEL[3:0]/TRANS SETTINGS ..................................................124
TABLE 15 – TRANSMIT LINKS #0 TO #2 CONFIGURATION ........................139
TABLE 16 – TRANSMIT LINKS #3 TO #31 CONFIGURATION.......................140
TABLE 17 – TEST MODE REGISTER MEMORY MAP...................................156
TABLE 18 – INSTRUCTION REGISTER.........................................................157
TABLE 19 – BOUNDARY SCAN CHAIN .........................................................157
TABLE 20 – FREEDM–TOCTL CONNECTIONS ............................................175
TABLE 21 – FREEDM-32A672 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS .................196
TABLE 22 – FREEDM-32A672 D.C. CHARACTERISTICS .............................197
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
TABLE 23 – FREEDM-32A672 LINK INPUT (FIGURE 31 TO FIGURE 34) ....199
TABLE 24 – FREEDM-32A672 LINK OUTPUT (FIGURE 35 TO FIGURE 38) 202
TABLE 25 – ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE (FIGURE 39 TO FIGURE 40) ..206
TABLE 26 – MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACE READ ACCESS (FIGURE 41)
..............................................................................................................208
TABLE 27 – MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACE WRITE ACCESS (FIGURE 42)
..............................................................................................................210
TABLE 28 – JTAG PORT INTERFACE (FIGURE 43)...................................... 211
TABLE 29 – FREEDM-32A672 ORDERING INFORMATION..........................213
TABLE 30 – FREEDM-32A672 THERMAL INFORMATION ............................213
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
1
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
FEATURES
·
Single-chip multi-channel HDLC controller with a 50 MHz, 16 bit “Any-PHY”
Packet Interface (APPI) for transfer of packet data using an external
controller.
·
Supports up to 672 bi-directional HDLC channels assigned to a maximum of
32 H-MVIP digital telephony buses at 2.048 Mbps per link. The links are
grouped into 4 logical groups of 8 links. A common clock and a type 0 frame
pulse is shared among links in each logical group. The number of time-slots
assigned to an HDLC channel is programmable from 1 to 32.
·
Supports up to 672 bi-directional HDLC channels assigned to a maximum of 8
H-MVIP digital telephony buses at 8.192 Mbps per link. The links share a
common clock and a type 0 frame pulse. The number of time-slots assigned
to an HDLC channel is programmable from 1 to 128.
·
Supports up to 672 bi-directional HDLC channels assigned to a maximum of
32 channelised T1/J1 or E1 links. The number of time-slots assigned to an
HDLC channel is programmable from 1 to 24 (for T1/J1) and from 1 to 31 (for
E1).
·
Supports up to 32 bi-directional HDLC channels each assigned to an
unchannelised arbitrary rate link, subject to a maximum aggregate link clock
rate of 64 MHz in each direction. Channels assigned to links 0 to 2 support a
clock rate of up to 51.84 MHz. Channels assigned to links 3 to 31 support a
clock rate of up to 10 MHz.
·
Supports three bi-directional HDLC channels each assigned to an
unchannelised arbitrary rate link of up to 51.84 MHz when SYSCLK is running
at 45 MHz.
·
Supports a mix of up to 32 channelised, unchannelised and H-MVIP links,
subject to the constraint of a maximum of 672 channels and a maximum
aggregate link clock rate of 64 MHz in each direction.
·
Links configured for channelised T1/J1/E1 or unchannelised operation
support the gapped-clock method for determining time-slots which is
backwards compatible with the FREEDM-8 and FREEDM-32 devices.
·
For each channel, the HDLC receiver supports programmable flag sequence
detection, bit de-stuffing and frame check sequence validation. The receiver
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
supports the validation of both CRC-CCITT and CRC-32 frame check
sequences.
·
For each channel, the receiver checks for packet abort sequences, octet
aligned packet length and for minimum and maximum packet length. The
receiver supports filtering of packets that are larger than a user specified
maximum value.
·
Alternatively, for each channel, the receiver supports a transparent mode
where each octet is transferred transparently on the receive APPI. For
channelised links, the octets are aligned with the receive time-slots.
·
For each channel, time-slots are selectable to be in 56 kbits/s format or 64
kbits/s clear channel format.
·
For each channel, the HDLC transmitter supports programmable flag
sequence generation, bit stuffing and frame check sequence generation. The
transmitter supports the generation of both CRC-CCITT and CRC-32 frame
check sequences. The transmitter also aborts packets under the direction of
the external controller or automatically when the channel underflows.
·
Alternatively, for each channel, the transmitter supports a transparent mode
where each octet is inserted transparently from the transmit APPI. For
channelised links, the octets are aligned with the transmit time-slots.
·
Supports per-channel configurable APPI burst sizes of up to 256 bytes for
transfers of packet data.
·
Provides 32 Kbytes of on-chip memory for partial packet buffering in both the
transmit and the receive directions. This memory may be configured to
support a variety of different channel configurations from a single channel with
32 Kbytes of buffering to 672 channels, each with a minimum of 48 bytes of
buffering.
·
Provides a 16 bit microprocessor interface for configuration and status
monitoring.
·
Provides a standard 5 signal P1149.1 JTAG test port for boundary scan board
test purposes.
·
Supports 5 Volt tolerant I/O (except APPI).
·
Low power 2.5 Volt 0.25 mm CMOS technology.
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
·
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
329 pin plastic ball grid array (PBGA) package.
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3
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
2
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
APPLICATIONS
·
IETF PPP interfaces for routers
·
TDM switches
·
Frame Relay interfaces for ATM or Frame Relay switches and multiplexors
·
FUNI or Frame Relay service inter-working interfaces for ATM switches and
multiplexors.
·
Internet/Intranet access equipment.
·
Packet-based DSLAM equipment.
·
Packet over SONET.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
REFERENCES
1. International Organization for Standardization, ISO Standard 3309-1993,
"Information Technology - Telecommunications and information exchange between
systems - High-level data link control (HDLC) procedures - Frame structure",
December 1993.
2. RFC-1662 – “PPP in HDLC-like Framing" Internet Engineering Task Force, July
1994.
3. GO-MVIP, “MVIP-90 Standard”, October 1994, release 1.1.
4. GO-MVIP, “H-MVIP Standard”, January 1997, release 1.1a.
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5
PMC TES T
RBCLK
RBD
Transm it
Channel
Assigner
(TCAS672)
RS TB
TD[31:0]
TCLK [31:0]
TFPB[3:0]
TMV CK[3:0]
TMV 8DC
TMV8FPC
TFP8B
SYSC LK
Microprocessor
Interface
JTAG Port
Transm it
Any-PHY
Packet
Interface
(TA PI672)
TXCLK
TXADD R[12:0]
TPA 1[2:0]
TPA 2[2:0]
TR D Y
TXD ATA[15:0]
TXP R TY
TS X
TEO P
TMO D
TER R
ISSUE 6
Transm it HDLC Processor/
Partial Packet Buffer
(THDL672)
Perform ance Monitor
(PMON)
Receive HDLC Processor/
Partial Packet Buffer
(RHDL672)
4
Receive
Channel
Assigner
(RCAS672)
PMC-1990263
RD[31:0]
RCLK[31:0]
RFPB[3:0]
RMVCK[3:0]
RMV8DC
RMV8FPC
RFP8B
Receive
Any-PHY
Packet
Interface
(RAPI672)
RXCLK
RXADDR[2:0]
RPA
RENB
RXDA TA[15:0]
RXPRTY
RSX
REOP
RMOD
RERR
RVAL
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
BLOCK DIAGRAM
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6
TD O
TD I
TC K
TMS
TR S TB
IN TB
RDB
W RB
CSB
ALE
A[11:2]
D[15:0]
TBC LK
TB D
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
5
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
DESCRIPTION
The PM7381 FREEDM-32A672 Frame Engine and Datalink Manager device is a
monolithic integrated circuit that implements HDLC processing for a maximum of
672 bi-directional channels.
The FREEDM-32A672 may be configured to support H-MVIP, channelised
T1/J1/E1 or unchannelised traffic across 32 physical links.
The FREEDM-32A672 may be configured to interface with H-MVIP digital
telephony buses at 2.048 Mbps. For 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP links, the FREEDM32A672 allows up to 672 bi-directional HDLC channels to be assigned to
individual time-slots within a maximum of 32 H-MVIP links. The channel
assignment supports the concatenation of time-slots (N x DS0) up to a maximum
of 32 concatenated time-slots for each 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP link. Time-slots
assigned to any particular channel need not be contiguous within the H-MVIP
link. When configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP operation, the FREEDM-32A672
partitions the 32 physical links into 4 logical groups of 8 links. Links 0 through 7, 8
through 15, 16 through 23 and 24 through 31 make up the 4 logical groups.
Links in each logical group share a common clock and a common type 0 frame
pulse in each direction.
The FREEDM-32A672 may be configured to interface with H-MVIP digital
telephony buses at 8.192 Mbps. For 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP links, the FREEDM32A672 allows up to 672 bi-directional HDLC channels to be assigned to
individual time-slots within a maximum of 8 H-MVIP links. The channel
assignment supports the concatenation of time-slots (N x DS0) up to a maximum
of 128 concatenated time-slots for each 8.192 H-MVIP link. Time-slots assigned
to any particular channel need not be contiguous within the H-MVIP link. When
configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation, the FREEDM-32A672 partitions
the 32 physical links into 8 logical groups of 4 links. Only the first link, which
must be located at physical links numbered 4m (0£m£7), of each logical group
can be configured for 8.192 Mbps operation. The remaining 3 physical links in
the logical group (numbered 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3) are unused. All links
configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation will share a common type 0 frame
pulse, a common frame pulse clock and a common data clock.
For channelised T1/J1/E1 links, the FREEDM-32A672 allows up to 672 bidirectional HDLC channels to be assigned to individual time-slots within a
maximum of 32 independently timed T1/J1 or E1 links. The gapped clock
method to determine time-slot positions as per the FREEDM-8 and FREEDM-32
devices is retained. The channel assignment supports the concatenation of timeslots (N x DS0) up to a maximum of 24 concatenated time-slots for a T1/J1 link
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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DATASHEET
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
and 31 concatenated time-slots for an E1 link. Time-slots assigned to any
particular channel need not be contiguous within the T1/J1 or E1 link.
For unchannelised links, the FREEDM-32A672 processes up to 32 bi-directional
HDLC channels within 32 independently timed links. The links can be of arbitrary
frame format. When limited to three unchannelised links, each link can be rated
at up to 51.84 MHz provided SYSCLK is running at 45 MHz. For lower rate
unchannelised links, the FREEDM-32A672 processes up to 32 links each rated
at up to 10 MHz. In this case, the aggregate clock rate of all the links is limited to
64 MHz.
The FREEDM-32A672 supports mixing of up to 32 channelised T1/J1/E1,
unchannelised and H-MVIP links. The total number of channels in each direction
is limited to 672. The aggregate instantaneous clock rate over all 32 possible
links is limited to 64 MHz.
The FREEDM-32A672 provides a low latency “Any-PHY” packet interface (APPI)
to allow an external controller direct access into the 32 Kbyte partial packet
buffers. Up to seven FREEDM-32A672 devices may share a single APPI. For
each of the transmit and receive APPI, the external controller is the master of
each FREEDM-32A672 device sharing the APPI from the point of view of device
selection. The external controller is also the master for channel selection in the
transmit direction. In the receive direction, however, each FREEDM-32A672
device retains control over selection of its respective channels. The transmit and
receive APPI is made up of three groups of functional signals – polling, selection
and data transfer. The polling signals are used by the external controller to
interrogate the status of the transmit and receive 32 Kbyte partial packet buffers.
The selection signals are used by the external controller to select a FREEDM32A672 device, or a channel within a FREEDM-32A672 device, for data transfer.
The data transfer signals provide a means of transferring data across the APPI
between the external controller and a FREEDM-32A672 device.
In the receive direction, polling and selection are done at the device level.
Polling is not decoupled from selection, as the receive address pins serve as
both a device poll address and to select a FREEDM-32A672 device. In response
to a positive poll, the external controller may select that FREEDM-32A672 device
for data transfer. Once selected, the FREEDM-32A672 prepends an in-band
channel address to each partial packet transfer across the receive APPI to
associate the data with a channel. A FREEDM-32A672 must not be selected
after a negative poll response.
In the transmit direction, polling is done at the channel level. Polling is
completely decoupled from selection. To increase the polling bandwidth, up to
two channels may be polled simultaneously. The polling engine in the external
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
controller runs independently of other activity on the transmit APPI. In response
to a positive poll, the external controller may commence partial packet data
transfer across the transmit APPI for the successfully polled channel of a
FREEDM-32A672 device. The external controller must prepend an in-band
channel address to each partial packet transfer across the transmit APPI to
associate the data with a channel.
In the receive direction, the FREEDM-32A672 performs channel assignment and
packet extraction and validation. For each provisioned HDLC channel, the
FREEDM-32A672 delineates the packet boundaries using flag sequence
detection, and performs bit de-stuffing. Sharing of opening and closing flags, as
well as sharing of zeros between flags are supported. The resulting packet data
is placed into the internal 32 Kbyte partial packet buffer RAM. The partial packet
buffer acts as a logical FIFO for each of the assigned channels. An external
controller transfers partial packets out of the RAM, across the receive APPI bus,
into host packet memory. The FREEDM-32A672 validates the frame check
sequence for each packet, and verifies that the packet is an integral number of
octets in length and is within a programmable minimum and maximum lengths.
Receive APPI bus latency may cause one or more channels to overflow, in which
case, the packets are aborted. The FREEDM-32A672 reports the status of each
packet on the receive APPI at the end of each packet transfer.
Alternatively, in the receive direction, the FREEDM-32A672 supports a
transparent operating mode. For each provisioned transparent channel, the
FREEDM-32A672 directly transfers the received octets onto the receive APPI
verbatim. If the transparent channel is assigned to a channelised link, then the
octets are aligned to the received time-slots.
In the transmit direction, an external controller provides packets to transmit using
the transmit APPI. For each provisioned HDLC channel, an external controller
transfers partial packets, across the transmit APPI, into the internal 32 Kbyte
transmit partial packet buffer. The partial packets are read out of the partial
packet buffer by the FREEDM-32A672 and a frame check sequence is optionally
calculated and inserted at the end of each packet. Bit stuffing is performed
before being assigned to a particular link. The flag or idle sequence is
automatically inserted when there is no packet data for a particular channel.
Sequential packets are optionally separated by a single flag (combined opening
and closing flag) or up to 128 flags. Zeros between flags are not shared in the
transmit direction although, as stated previously, they are accepted in the receive
direction. Transmit APPI bus latency may cause one or more channels to
underflow, in which case, the packets are aborted. The FREEDM-32A672
generates an interrupt to notify the host of aborted packets. For normal traffic, an
abort sequence is generated, followed by inter-frame time fill characters (flags or
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
9
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
all-ones bytes) until a new packet is sourced on the transmit APPI. The
FREEDM-32A672 will not attempt to re-transmit aborted packets.
Alternatively, in the transmit direction, the FREEDM-32A672 supports a
transparent operating mode. For each provisioned transparent channel, the
FREEDM-32A672 directly inserts the transmitted octets provided on the transmit
APPI. If the transparent channel is assigned to a channelised link, then the
octets are aligned to the transmitted time-slots. If a channel underflows due to
excessive transmit APPI bus latency, an abort sequence is generated, followed
by inter-frame time fill characters (flags or all-ones bytes) to indicate idle channel.
Data resumes immediately when the FREEDM-32A672 receives new data on the
transmit APPI.
The FREEDM-32A672 is configured, controlled and monitored using the
microprocessor interface. The FREEDM-32A672 is implemented in low power
2.5 Volt 0.25 mm CMOS technology. All FREEDM-32A672 I/O except those
belonging to the APPI are 5 volt tolerant. The APPI I/O are 3.3 volt tolerant. The
FREEDM-32A672 is packaged in a 329 pin plastic ball grid array (PBGA)
package.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
10
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
6
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
PIN DIAGRAM
The FREEDM-32A672 is manufactured in a 329 pin plastic ball grid array
package.
23
22
A
RMVCK[2]
RD[16]
B
RFPB[2] RCLK[16]
C
RD[15]
D
RCLK[13]
RD[12]
F
RD[11]
G
RD[10]
RCLK[17] RCLK[19]
RD[18]
RD[20]
RD[8]
K
SYSCLK
L
RD[4]
17
16
RD[21]
RD[22]
RD[23]
RD[24]
VDD2V5
RCLK[14]
RD[17]
RD[19]
15
VDD3V3
RCLK[23]
RD[25]
VSS
14
13
RCLK[25] RCLK[27] RCLK[29]
RCLK[22] RFPB[3] RCLK[24] RCLK[26]
RCLK[15] RCLK[18] RCLK[20] RCLK[21] RMVCK[3]
VDD2V5
RCLK[12]
RD[27]
RD[26]
RD[28]
RD[30]
RCLK[28] RCLK[30]
VDD3V3
RD[29]
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
VDD2V5
RDB
A[10]
A[6]
A[3]
D[13]
D[11]
D[9]
D[6]
D[2]
D[0]
TPA2[2]
A
RCLK[31]
INTB
A[11]
A[8]
A[4]
D[15]
D[12]
VDD2V5
D[7]
D[3]
TPA2[0]
TPA2[1]
B
RD[31]
CSB
ALE
A[9]
A[5]
A[2]
D[10]
D[8]
D[4]
D[1]
N.C.
TPA1[1]
C
TXADDR
TXADDR
VSS
WRB
VDD3V3
A[7]
VSS
D[14]
VDD3V3
D[5]
TPA1[2]
TPA1[0]
TXADDR
TXADDR
[12]
[9]
RCLK[10] RCLK[11]
RD[9]
RCLK[8]
RD[14]
RMVCK[1] RFPB[1]
VDD2V5
RCLK[6]
RCLK[5]
RD[3]
RCLK[2]
RD[6]
RD[5]
RCLK[3]
RD[2]
[8]
TXADDR
TXADDR
TXADDR
[7]
[5]
[6]
TXADDR
TXADDR
TXADDR
TXADDR
[3]
[1]
[2]
VSS
RCLK[9]
BOTTOM VIEW
VDD3V3
VDD3V3
VSS
VSS
VDD3V3
RMV8FPC
R
RBD
RMV8DC
RFP8B
RBCLK
T
TCK
TMS
TRSTB
VDD3V3
RFPB[0] RMVCK[0]
VSS
RCLK[4]
P
RCLK[1]
TXCLK
TFP8B
V
TFPB[0]
W
TD[0]
TDO
TDI
TXDATA
TXDATA
TXDATA
[13]
[11]
[12]
[14]
VSS
RD[0]
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
VSS
TXDATA
TXDATA
TXDATA
[8]
[9]
[10]
TXDATA
TXDATA
VSS
VSS
TXPRTY
VSS
[6]
[7]
TXDATA
TXDATA
VDD3V3
TCLK[1]
VDD2V5
TD[1]
TCLK[0]
TCLK[2]
VSS
TCLK[15]
VDD3V3
TCLK[17]
VSS
TD[22]
VDD3V3
TD[24]
VSS
TCLK[27]
VDD3V3
TCLK[6]
TFPB[1]
[2]
[3]
[1]
VSS
TEOP
TMOD
TERR
P
RPA
TRDY
RVAL
RENB
R
VDD3V3
REOP
T
RMOD
RERR
RXDATA
RXDATA
[15]
[13]
RXDATA
RXDATA
RXDATA
[10]
[12]
[11]
RXDATA
RXDATA
[6]
[8]
[9]
RXADDR
RXDATA
RXDATA
TBD
TD[5]
AC
TCLK[5]
TCLK[4]
TCLK[7]
TCLK[8]
RXDATA
RSX
[5]
TD[9]
TD[10]
TD[13]
TCLK[14] TMVCK[2]
TD[17]
TCLK[18]
TD[20]
TCLK[20] TCLK[22] TFPB[3]
TD[25]
TCLK[26] TCLK[29] TCLK[30]
VDD2V5
TD[11]
TCLK[12]
TD[14]
TFPB[2] TCLK[16]
TD[19]
TCLK[19]
TD[21]
TD[23]
TMVCK[3] TCLK[25]
TD[27]
TCLK[28]
VDD2V5
[7]
RXDATA
TD[31]
[4]
[3]
RXADDR
RXDATA
[2]
[1]
PMCTEST
RXADDR
TD[6]
TD[7]
TD[8]
TCLK[9] TCLK[10] TCLK[11] TCLK[13]
TD[15]
TD[16]
TD[18]
VDD2V5
TCLK[21] TCLK[23] TCLK[24]
TD[26]
TD[28]
TD[29]
TD[30]
TCLK[31]
RXDATA
RXCLK
[0]
23
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
RXDATA
TBCLK
[2]
AB
M
[0]
RXDATA
TD[3]
VDD2V5
TXDATA
[1]
TCLK[3]
K
[4]
VDD2V5
TD[12]
J
TXDATA
VSS
VDD3V3
H
L
RXPRTY
TMVCK[1]
G
[5]
TD[2]
TD[4]
F
TXDATA
TMV8DC
VSS
E
TSX
VSS
VSS
D
TXDATA
[14]
TMV8FPC TMVCK[0]
[0]
TXDATA
RXDATA
U
[4]
TXADDR
RD[7]
RCLK[0]
RD[1]
[11]
TXADDR
VDD2V5
VSS
N
AA
18
[15]
RCLK[7]
Y
19
TXDATA
J
M
RD[13]
20
[10]
E
H
RSTB
21
4
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
[0]
3
2
11
1
N
U
V
W
Y
AA
AB
AC
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
7
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
PIN DESCRIPTION
Table 1 – Line Side Interface Signals (154)
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RCLK[0]
RCLK[1]
RCLK[2]
RCLK[3]
RCLK[4]
RCLK[5]
RCLK[6]
RCLK[7]
RCLK[8]
RCLK[9]
RCLK[10]
RCLK[11]
RCLK[12]
RCLK[13]
RCLK[14]
RCLK[15]
RCLK[16]
RCLK[17]
RCLK[18]
RCLK[19]
RCLK[20]
RCLK[21]
RCLK[22]
RCLK[23]
RCLK[24]
RCLK[25]
RCLK[26]
RCLK[27]
RCLK[28]
RCLK[29]
RCLK[30]
RCLK[31]
Input
N23
N21
M22
L21
L20
K22
J22
J23
G21
G20
F22
F21
E21
D23
D21
C21
B22
A21
C20
A20
C19
C18
B18
D17
B16
A15
B15
A14
C14
A13
C13
B12
The receive line clock signals (RCLK[31:0])
contain the recovered line clock for the 32
independently timed links. Processing of
the receive links are on a priority basis, in
descending order from RCLK[0] to
RCLK[31]. Therefore, the highest rate link
should be connected to RCLK[0] and the
lowest to RCLK[31].
For channelised T1/J1 or E1 links, RCLK[n]
must be gapped during the framing bit (for
T1/J1 interfaces) or during time-slot 0 (for
E1 interfaces) of the RD[n] stream. The
FREEDM-32A672 uses the gapping
information to determine the time-slot
alignment in the receive stream.
RCLK[31:0] is nominally a 50% duty cycle
clock of frequency 1.544 MHz for T1/J1 links
and 2.048 MHz for E1 links.
For unchannelised links, RCLK[n] must be
externally gapped during the bits or timeslots that are not part of the transmission
format payload (i.e. not part of the HDLC
packet). RCLK[2:0] is nominally a 50% duty
cycle clock between 0 and 51.84 MHz.
RCLK[31:3] is nominally a 50% duty cycle
clock between 0 and 10 MHz.
The RCLK[n] inputs are invalid and should
be forced to a low state when their
associated link is configured for operation in
H-MVIP mode.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
12
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RD[0]
RD[1]
RD[2]
RD[3]
RD[4]
RD[5]
RD[6]
RD[7]
RD[8]
RD[9]
RD[10]
RD[11]
RD[12]
RD[13]
RD[14]
RD[15]
RD[16]
RD[17]
RD[18]
RD[19]
RD[20]
RD[21]
RD[22]
RD[23]
RD[24]
RD[25]
RD[26]
RD[27]
RD[28]
RD[29]
RD[30]
RD[31]
Input
N20
N22
M21
L22
L23
K21
J21
J20
H23
G22
G23
F23
E23
D22
E20
C23
A22
D20
B21
D19
B20
A19
A18
A17
A16
C16
D15
C15
B14
D13
B13
C12
The receive data signals (RD[31:0]) contain
the recovered line data for the 32
independently timed links in normal mode
(PMCTEST set low). Processing of the
receive links is on a priority basis, in
descending order from RD[0] to RD[31].
Therefore, the highest rate link should be
connected to RD[0] and the lowest to
RD[31].
For H-MVIP links, RD[n] contains 32/128
time-slots, depending on the H-MVIP data
rate configured (2.048 or 8.192 Mbps).
When configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP
operation, RD[31:24], RD[23:16], RD[15:8]
and RD[7:0] are sampled on every 2nd rising
edge of RMVCK[3], RMVCK[2], RMVCK[1]
and RMVCK[0] respectively (at the ¾ point
of the bit interval). When configured for
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation, RD[4m]
(0£m£7) are sampled on every 2nd rising
edge of RMV8DC (at the ¾ point of the bit
interval).
For channelised links, RD[n] contains the 24
(T1/J1) or 31 (E1) time-slots that comprise
the channelised link. RCLK[n] must be
gapped during the T1/J1 framing bit position
or the E1 frame alignment signal (time-slot
0). The FREEDM-32A672 uses the location
of the gap to determine the channel
alignment on RD[n]. RD[31:0] are sampled
on the rising edge of the corresponding
RCLK[31:0].
For unchannelised links, RD[n] contains the
HDLC packet data. For certain transmission
formats, RD[n] may contain place holder bits
or time-slots. RCLK[n] must be externally
gapped during the place holder positions in
the RD[n] stream. The FREEDM-32A672
supports a maximum data rate of 10 Mbit/s
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
13
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
Pin Name
ISSUE 6
Type
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin
No.
Function
on an individual RD[31:3] link and a
maximum data rate of 51.84 Mbit/s on
RD[2:0]. RD[31:0] are sampled on the rising
edge of the corresponding RCLK[31:0].
RMVCK[0]
RMVCK[1]
RMVCK[2]
RMVCK[3]
Input
P21
H22
A23
C17
The receive MVIP data clock signals
(RMVCK[3:0]) provide the receive data clock
for the 32 links when configured to operate
in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
When configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP
operation, the 32 links are partitioned into 4
groups of 8, and each group of 8 links share
a common data clock. RMVCK[0],
RMVCK[1], RMVCK[2] and RMVCK[3]
sample the data on links RD[7:0], RD[15:8],
RD[23:16] and RD[31:24] respectively.
Each RMVCK[n] is nominally a 50% duty
cycle clock with a frequency of 4.096 MHz.
RMVCK[n] is ignored and should be tied low
when no physical link within the associated
logical group of 8 links is configured for
operation in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
RFPB[0]
RFPB[1]
RFPB[2]
RFPB[3]
Input
P22
H21
B23
B17
The receive frame pulse signals (RFPB[3:0])
reference the beginning of each frame for
the 32 links when configured for operation in
2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
When configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP
operation, the 32 links are partitioned into 4
groups of 8, and each group of 8 links share
a common frame pulse. RFPB[0], RFPB[1],
RFPB[2] and RFPB[3] reference the
beginning of a frame on links RD[7:0],
RD[15:8], RD[23:16] and RD[31:24]
respectively.
When configured for operation in 2.048
Mbps H-MVIP mode, RFPB[n] is sampled
on the falling edge of RMVCK[n].
Otherwise, RFPB[n] is ignored and should
be tied low.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
14
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RFP8B
Input
R21
The receive frame pulse for 8.192 Mbps HMVIP signal (RFP8B) references the
beginning of each frame for links configured
for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
RFP8B references the beginning of a frame
for any link configured for 8.192 Mbps HMVIP operation. Only links RD[4m] (0£m£7)
may be configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP
operation.
When one or more links are configured for
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation, RFP8B is
sampled on the falling edge of RMV8FPC.
When no links are configured for 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP operation, RFP8B is ignored
and should be tied low.
RMV8FPC
Input
P23
The receive 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP frame
pulse clock signal (RMV8FPC) provides the
receive frame pulse clock for links
configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps HMVIP mode.
RMV8FPC is used to sample RFP8B.
RMV8FPC is nominally a 50% duty cycle,
clock with a frequency of 4.096 MHz. The
falling edge of RMV8FPC must be aligned
with the falling edge of RMV8DC with no
more than ±10 ns skew.
RMV8FPC is ignored and should be tied low
when no physical links are configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
15
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RMV8DC
Input
R22
The receive 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP data clock
signal (RMV8DC) provides the receive data
clock for links configured to operate in 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP mode.
RMV8DC is used to sample data on RD[4m]
(0£m£7) when link 4m is configured for
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation. RMV8DC is
nominally a 50% duty cycle clock with a
frequency of 16.384 MHz.
RMV8DC is ignored and should be tied low
when no physical links are configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
RBD
Tristate
Output
R23
The receive BERT data signal (RBD)
contains the receive bit error rate test data.
RBD reports the data on the selected one of
the receive data signals (RD[31:0]) and is
updated on the falling edge of RBCLK.
RBD may be tristated by setting the RBEN
bit in the FREEDM-32A672 Master BERT
Control register low. BERT is not supported
for H-MVIP links.
RBCLK
Tristate
Output
R20
The receive BERT clock signal (RBCLK)
contains the receive bit error rate test clock.
RBCLK is a buffered version of the selected
one of the receive clock signals
(RCLK[31:0]). RBCLK may be tristated by
setting the RBEN bit in the FREEDM32A672 Master BERT Control register low.
BERT is not supported for H-MVIP links.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
16
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TCLK[0]
TCLK[1]
TCLK[2]
TCLK[3]
TCLK[4]
TCLK[5]
TCLK[6]
TCLK[7]
TCLK[8]
TCLK[9]
TCLK[10]
TCLK[11]
TCLK[12]
TCLK[13]
TCLK[14]
TCLK[15]
TCLK[16]
TCLK[17]
TCLK[18]
TCLK[19]
TCLK[20]
TCLK[21]
TCLK[22]
TCLK[23]
TCLK[24]
TCLK[25]
TCLK[26]
TCLK[27]
TCLK[28]
TCLK[29]
TCLK[30]
TCLK[31]
Input
W21
Y23
Y21
AA23
AB22
AC23
AA21
AB21
AB20
AC19
AC18
AC17
AB17
AC16
AA16
Y15
AB14
Y13
AA13
AB12
AA11
AC11
AA10
AC10
AC9
AB8
AA7
Y7
AB6
AA6
AA5
AC4
The transmit line clock signals (TCLK[31:0])
contain the transmit clocks for the 32
independently timed links. Processing of
the transmit links is on a priority basis, in
descending order from TCLK[0] to
TCLK[31]. Therefore, the highest rate link
should be connected to TCLK[0] and the
lowest to TCLK[31].
For channelised T1/J1 or E1 links, TCLK[n]
must be gapped during the framing bit (for
T1/J1 interfaces) or during time-slot 0 (for
E1 interfaces) of the TD[n] stream. The
FREEDM-32A672 uses the gapping
information to determine the time-slot
alignment in the transmit stream.
For unchannelised links, TCLK[n] must be
externally gapped during the bits or timeslots that are not part of the transmission
format payload (i.e. not part of the HDLC
packet).
TCLK[2:0] is nominally a 50% duty cycle
clock between 0 and 51.84 MHz.
TCLK[31:3] is nominally a 50% duty cycle
clock between 0 and 10 MHz. Typical
values for TCLK[31:0] include 1.544 MHz
(for T1/J1 links) and 2.048 MHz (for E1
links).
The TCLK[n] inputs are invalid and should
be tied low when their associated link is
configured for operation in H-MVIP mode.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
17
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TD[0]
TD[1]
TD[2]
TD[3]
TD[4]
TD[5]
TD[6]
TD[7]
TD[8]
TD[9]
TD[10]
TD[11]
TD[12]
TD[13]
TD[14]
TD[15]
TD[16]
TD[17]
TD[18]
TD[19]
TD[20]
TD[21]
TD[22]
TD[23]
TD[24]
TD[25]
TD[26]
TD[27]
TD[28]
TD[29]
TD[30]
TD[31]
Output
W23
Y22
W20
AA22
Y20
AB23
AC22
AC21
AC20
AA19
AA18
AB18
Y17
AA17
AB16
AC15
AC14
AA14
AC13
AB13
AA12
AB11
Y11
AB10
Y9
AA8
AC8
AB7
AC7
AC6
AC5
AB4
The transmit data signals (TD[31:0]) contain
the transmit data for the 32 independently
timed links in normal mode (PMCTEST set
low). Processing of the transmit links is on
a priority basis, in descending order from
TD[0] to TD[31]. Therefore, the highest rate
link should be connected to TD[0] and the
lowest to TD[31].
For H-MVIP links, TD[n] contain 32/128
time-slots, depending on the H-MVIP data
rate configured (2.048 or 8.192 Mbps).
When configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP
operation, TD[31:24], TD[23:16], TD[15:8]
and TD[7:0] are updated on every 2nd falling
edge of TMVCK[3], TMVCK[2], TMVCK[1]
and TMVCK[0] respectively. When
configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP
operation, TD[4m] (0£m£7) are updated on
every 2nd falling edge of TMV8DC.
For channelised links, TD[n] contains the 24
(T1/J1) or 31 (E1) time-slots that comprise
the channelised link. TCLK[n] must be
gapped during the T1/J1 framing bit position
or during the E1 frame alignment signal
(time-slot 0). The FREEDM-32A672 uses
the location of the gap to determine the
channel alignment on TD[n]. TD[31:0] are
updated on the falling edge of the
corresponding TCLK[31:0].
For unchannelised links, TD[n] contains the
HDLC packet data. For certain transmission
formats, TD[n] may contain place holder bits
or time-slots. TCLK[n] must be externally
gapped during the place holder positions in
the TD[n] stream. The FREEDM-32A672
supports a maximum data rate of 10 Mbit/s
on an individual TD[31:3] link and a
maximum data rate of 51.84 Mbit/s on
TD[2:0].
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
18
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
Pin Name
ISSUE 6
Type
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin
No.
Function
TD[31:0] are updated on the falling edge of
the corresponding TCLK[31:0] clock.
TMVCK[0]
TMVCK[1]
TMVCK[2]
TMVCK[3]
Input
V21
Y19
AA15
AB9
The transmit MVIP data clock signals
(TMVCK[3:0]) provide the transmit data
clocks for the 32 links when configured to
operate in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
When configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP
operation, the 32 links are partitioned into 4
groups of 8, and each group of 8 links share
a common clock. TMVCK[0], TMVCK[1],
TMVCK[2] and TMVCK[3] update the data
on links TD[7:0], TD[15:8], TD[23:16] and
TD[31:24] respectively. Each TMVCK[n] is
nominally a 50% duty cycle clock with a
frequency of 4.096 MHz.
TMVCK[n] is unused and should be tied low
when no physical links within the associated
group of 8 logical links is configured for
operation in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
TFPB[0]
TFPB[1]
TFPB[2]
TFPB[3]
Input
V23
AA20
AB15
AA9
The transmit frame pulse signals
(TFPB[3:0]) reference the beginning of each
frame when configured for operation in
2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
When configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP
operation, the 32 links are partitioned into 4
groups of 8, and each group of 8 links share
a common frame pulse. TFPB[0], TFPB[1],
TFPB[2] and TFPB[3] reference the
beginning of a frame on links TD[7:0],
TD[15:8], TD[23:16] and TD[31:24]
respectively.
When configured for operation in 2.048
Mbps H-MVIP mode, TFPB[n] is sampled on
the falling edge of TMVCK[n]. Otherwise,
TFPB[n] is ignored and should be tied low.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
19
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TFP8B
Input
U23
The transmit frame pulse for 8.192 Mbps HMVIP signal (TFP8B) references the
beginning of each frame for links configured
to operate in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
TFP8B references the beginning of a frame
for any link configured for 8.192 Mbps HMVIP operation. Only links 4m (0£m£7)
may be configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP
operation.
When one or more links are configured for
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation, TFP8B is
sampled on the falling edge of TMV8FPC.
When no links are configured for 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP operation, TFPB[n] is ignored
and should be tied low.
TMV8FPC
Input
V22
The transmit 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP frame
pulse clock signal (TMV8FPC) provides the
transmit frame pulse clock for links
configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps HMVIP mode.
TMV8FPC is used to sample TFP8B.
TMV8FPC is nominally a 50% duty cycle,
clock with a frequency of 4.096 MHz. The
falling edge of TMV8FPC must be aligned
with the falling edge of TMV8DC with no
more than ±10 ns skew.
TMV8FPC[n] is ignored and should be tied
low when no physical links are configured
for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
20
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TMV8DC
Input
U20
The transmit 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP data clock
signal (TMV8DC) provides the transmit data
clock for links configured to operate in 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP mode.
TMV8DC is used to update data on TD[4m]
(0£m£7) when link 4m is configured for
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation. TMV8DC is
nominally a 50% duty cycle clock with a
frequency of 16.384 MHz.
TMV8DC is unused and should be tied low
when no physical links are configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode.
TBD
Input
Y5
The transmit BERT data signal (TBD)
contains the transmit bit error rate test data.
When the TBERTEN bit in the BERT Control
register is set high, the data on TBD is
transmitted on the selected one of the
transmit data signals (TD[31:0]). TBD is
sampled on the rising edge of TBCLK.
BERT is not supported for H-MVIP links.
TBCLK
Tristate
Output
AA4
The transmit BERT clock signal (TBCLK)
contains the transmit bit error rate test clock.
TBCLK is a buffered version of the selected
one of the transmit clock signals
(TCLK[31:0]). TBCLK may be tristated by
setting the TBEN bit in the FREEDM32A672 Master BERT Control register low.
BERT is not supported for H-MVIP links.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
21
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Table 2 – Any-PHY Packet Interface Signals (70)
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TXCLK
Input
H2
The transmit clock signal (TXCLK) provides
timing for the transmit Any-PHY packet
interface. TXCLK is a nominally 50% duty
cycle, 25 to 50 MHz clock.
TXADDR[0]
TXADDR[1]
TXADDR[2]
TXADDR[3]
TXADDR[4]
TXADDR[5]
TXADDR[6]
TXADDR[7]
TXADDR[8]
TXADDR[9]
TXADDR[10]
TXADDR[11]
TXADDR[12]
Input
H1
G3
G2
G4
G1
F2
F1
F3
E1
E3
D2
D1
E4
The transmit address signals (TXADDR[12:0])
provide a channel address for polling a transmit
channel FIFO. The 10 least significant bits
provide the channel number (0 to 671) while the
3 most significant bits select one of seven
possible FREEDM-32A672 devices sharing a
single external controller. (One address is
reserved as a null address.) The Tx APPI of
each FREEDM-32A672 device is identified by
the base address in the TAPI672 Control
register.
The TXADDR[12:0] signals are sampled on the
rising edge of TXCLK.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
22
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TPA1[0]
TPA1[1]
TPA1[2]
TPA2[0]
TPA2[1]
TPA2[2]
Tristate
Output
D3
C1
D4
B2
B1
A1
The transmit packet available signals (TPA1[2:0]
and TPA2[2:0]) reflects the status of a poll of
two transmit channel FIFOs. TPA1[2:0] returns
the polled results for channel address ‘n’
provided on TXADDR[12:0] and TPA2[2:0]
returns the polled results for channel address
‘n+1’. TPAn[2] reports packet underrun events
and TPAn[1:0] report the fill state of the transmit
channel FIFO. TPAn[2] is set high when one or
more packets has underrun on the channel and
a further data transfer has occurred since it was
last polled. When TPAn[2] is set low, no packet
has underrun on the channel since the last poll.
TPAn[1:0] are coded as follows:
TPAn[1:0] = “11”
TPAn[1:0] = “10”
TPAn[1:0] = “01”
TPAn[1:0] = “00”
=>
=>
=>
=>
Starving
(Reserved)
Space
Full
A “Starving” polled response indicates that the
polled transmit channel FIFO is at risk of
underflowing and should be supplied with data
as soon as possible. A “Space” polled response
indicates that the polled transmit channel FIFO
can accept XFER[3:0] plus one blocks (16 bytes
per block) of data. A “Full” polled response
indicates that the polled transmit channel FIFO
cannot accept XFER[3:0] plus one blocks of
data. (XFER[3:0] is a per-channel
programmable value – see description of
register 0x38C.)
It is the responsibility of the external controller to
prevent channel underflow conditions by
adequately polling each channel before data
transfer.
TPAn[2:0] are tristate during reset and when a
device address other than the FREEDM32A672’s base address is provided on
TXADDR[12:10].
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
23
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
Pin Name
ISSUE 6
Type
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin
No.
Function
TPAn[2:0] are updated on the rising edge of
TXCLK.
TRDY
Tristate
Output
R3
The transmit ready signal (TRDY) indicates the
ability of the transmit Any-PHY packet interface
(APPI) to accept data. When TRDY is set low,
the transmit APPI is unable to accept further
data. When TRDY is set high, data provided on
the transmit APPI will be accepted by the
FREEDM-32A672 device.
TRDY is asserted one TXCLK cycle after TSX is
sampled high. TRDY is asserted by the
FREEDM-32A672 device which was selected by
the in-band channel address on TXDATA[15:0]
when TSX was sampled high. If TRDY is driven
low, the external controller must hold the data
on TXDATA[15:0] until TRDY is driven high.
TRDY may be driven low for 0 or more TXCLK
cycles before it is driven high. TRDY is always
driven tristate the TXCLK cycle after it is driven
high.
TRDY is tristate during reset.
TRDY is updated on the rising edge of TXCLK.
It is recommended that TRDY be connected
externally to a weak pull-up, e.g. 10 kW.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
24
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TXDATA[0]
TXDATA[1]
TXDATA[2]
TXDATA[3]
TXDATA[4]
TXDATA[5]
TXDATA[6]
TXDATA[7]
TXDATA[8]
TXDATA[9]
TXDATA[10]
TXDATA[11]
TXDATA[12]
TXDATA[13]
TXDATA[14]
TXDATA[15]
Input
N4
N1
N3
N2
M2
M3
L3
L2
K3
K2
K1
J3
J2
J4
J1
H3
The transmit data signals (TXDATA[15:0])
contain the transmit Any-PHY packet interface
(APPI) data provided by the external controller.
Data must be presented in big endian order, i.e.
the byte in TXDATA[15:8] is transmitted by the
FREEDM-32A672 before the byte in
TXDATA[7:0].
The first word of each data transfer contains an
address to identify the device and channel
associated with the data being transferred. This
prepended address must be qualified with the
TSX signal. The 10 least significant bits provide
the channel number (0 to 671) while the 3 most
significant bits select one of seven possible
FREEDM-32A672 devices sharing a single
external controller. (One address is reserved as
a null address.) The FREEDM-32A672 will not
respond to channel addresses outside the range
0 to 671, nor to device addresses other than the
base address stored in the TAPI672 Control
register.
The second and any subsequent words of each
data transfer contain packet data.
The TXDATA[15:0] signals are sampled on the
rising edge of TXCLK.
TXPRTY
Input
L4
The transmit parity signal (TXPRTY) reflects the
odd parity calculated over the TXDATA[15:0]
signals. TXPRTY is only valid when
TXDATA[15:0] are valid.
TXPRTY is sampled on the rising edge of
TXCLK.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
25
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TSX
Input
L1
The transmit start of transfer signal (TSX)
denotes the start of data transfer on the transmit
APPI. When the TSX signal is sampled high,
the sampled word on the TXDATA[15:0] signals
contain the device and channel address
associated with the data to follow. When the
TSX signal is sampled low, the sampled word
on the TXDATA[15:0] signals do not contain a
device/channel address.
The TSX signal is sampled on the rising edge of
TXCLK.
TEOP
Input
P3
The transmit end of packet signal (TEOP)
denotes the end of a packet. TEOP is only valid
during data transfer. When TEOP is sampled
high, the data on TXDATA[15:0] is the last word
of a packet. When TEOP is sampled low, the
data on TXDATA[15:0] is not the last word of a
packet.
TEOP is sampled on the rising edge of TXCLK.
TMOD
Input
P2
The transmit word modulo signal (TMOD)
indicates the size of the current word on
TXDATA[15:0]. TMOD is only valid when TEOP
is sampled high. When TMOD is sampled high
and TEOP is sampled high, only the
TXDATA[15:8] signals contain valid data and the
TXDATA[7:0] signals are invalid. When TMOD
is sampled low and TEOP is sampled high, the
complete word on TXDATA[15:0] contains valid
data. TMOD must be set low when TEOP is set
low.
TMOD is sampled on the rising edge of TXCLK.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
26
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TERR
Input
P1
The transmit error signal (TERR) indicates that
the current packet is errored and should be
aborted. TERR is only valid when TEOP is
sampled high. When TERR is sampled high
and TEOP is sampled high, the current packet is
errored and the FREEDM-32A672 will respond
accordingly. When TERR is sampled low and
TEOP is sampled high, the current packet is not
errored. TERR must be set low when TEOP is
set low.
TERR is sampled on the rising edge of TXCLK.
RXCLK
Input
AC2
The receive clock signal (RXCLK) provides
timing for the receive Any-PHY packet interface
(APPI). RXCLK is a nominally 50% duty cycle,
25 to 50 MHz clock.
RXADDR[0]
RXADDR[1]
RXADDR[2]
Input
AC3
Y4
AB2
The receive address signals (RXADDR[2:0])
serve two functions – device polling and device
selection. When polling, the RXADDR[2:0]
signals provide an address for polling a
FREEDM-32A672 device for receive data
available in any one of its 672 channels. Polling
results are returned on the RPA tristate output.
During selection, the address on the
RXADDR[2:0] signals is qualified with the RENB
signal to select a FREEDM-32A672 device
enabling it to output data on the receive APPI.
Note that up to seven FREEDM-32A672
devices may share a single external controller
(one address is reserved as a null address).
The Rx APPI of each FREEDM-32A672 device
is identified by the base address in the RAPI672
Control register.
The RXADDR[2:0] signals are sampled on the
rising edge of RXCLK.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
27
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RPA
Tristate
Output
R4
The receive packet available signal (RPA)
reflects the status of a poll on the receive APPI
of a FREEDM-32A672 device. When RPA is set
high, the polled FREEDM-32A672 device has
XFER[3:0] plus one blocks (16 bytes per block)
of data to transfer, or alternatively, a smaller
amount of data which includes an end of packet.
When RPA is set low, the polled FREEDM32A672 device does not have data ready to
transfer. (XFER[3:0] is a per-channel
programmable value – see description of
register 0x208.)
A FREEDM-32A672 device must not be
selected for receive data transfer unless it has
been polled and responded that it has data
ready to transfer.
When the RXADDR[2:0] inputs match the base
address in the RAPI672 Control register, that
FREEDM-32A672 device drives RPA one
RXCLK cycle after sampling RXADDR[2:0].
RPA is tristate during reset and when a device
address other than the FREEDM-32A672’s base
address is provided on RXADDR[2:0].
RPA is updated on the rising edge of RXCLK.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
28
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RENB
Input
R1
The receive enable signal (RENB) qualifies the
RXADDR[2:0] signals for selection of a
FREEDM-32A672 device. When RENB is
sampled high and then low in consecutive
RXCLK cycles, the address on RXADDR[2:0]
during the cycle when RENB is sampled high
selects a FREEDM-32A672 device enabling it to
output data on the receive APPI. The Rx APPI
of each FREEDM-32A672 device is identified by
the base address in the RAPI672 Control
register.
The polling function of the RXADDR[2:0] and
RPA signals operates regardless of the state of
RENB.
RENB may also be used to throttle the
FREEDM-32A672 during data transfer on the
Rx APPI. When the FREEDM-32A672 samples
RENB high during data transfer, the FREEDM32A672 will pause the data transfer and tri-state
the receive APPI outputs (except RPA) until
RENB is returned low. Since the Any-PHY bus
specification does not support deselection
during data transfers, the address on the
RXADDR[2:0] inputs during the cycle before
RENB is returned low must either re-select the
same FREEDM-32A672 device or be a null
address.
To commence data transfer, RENB must be
sampled low following device selection.
It is the responsibility of the external controller to
prevent overflow by providing each FREEDM32A672 device on an Any-PHY point to multipoint bus sufficient bandwidth through selection.
RENB is sampled on the rising edge of RXCLK.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
29
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RXDATA[0]
RXDATA[1]
RXDATA[2]
RXDATA[3]
RXDATA[4]
RXDATA[5]
RXDATA[6]
RXDATA[7]
RXDATA[8]
RXDATA[9]
RXDATA[10]
RXDATA[11]
RXDATA[12]
RXDATA[13]
RXDATA[14]
RXDATA[15]
Tristate
Output
AC1
AB1
AA3
AA1
AA2
Y3
W4
Y1
W3
W1
V3
V1
V2
U1
U4
U2
The receive data signals (RXDATA[15:0])
contain the receive Any-PHY packet interface
(APPI) data output by the FREEDM-32A672
when selected. Data is presented in big endian
format, i.e. the byte in RXDATA[15:8] was
received by the FREEDM-32A672 before the
byte in RXDATA[7:0].
The first word of each data transfer (when RSX
is high) contains an address to identify the
device and channel associated with the data
being transferred. The 10 least significant bits
(RXDATA[9:0]) contain the channel number (0 to
671) and the 3 most significant bits
(RXDATA[15:13]) contain the device base
address. The second and any subsequent
words of each data transfer contain valid data.
The FREEDM-32A672 may be programmed to
overwrite RXDATA[7:0] of the final word of each
packet transfer (REOP is high) with the status of
packet reception when that packet is errored
(RERR is high). This status information is bit
mapped as follows:
RXDATA[0]=’1’ => channel FIFO overrun.
RXDATA[1]=’1’ => max. packet length violation.
RXDATA[2]=’1’ => FCS error.
RXDATA[3]=’1’ => non-octet aligned.
RXDATA[4]=’1’ => HDLC packet abort.
RXDATA[7:5]=”Xh” => Reserved.
The RXDATA[15:0] signals are tristate when the
FREEDM-32A672 device is not selected via the
RENB signal.
The RXDATA[15:0] signals are updated on the
rising edge of RXCLK.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
30
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RXPRTY
Tristate
Output
U3
The receive parity signal (RXPRTY) reflects the
odd parity calculated over the RXDATA[15:0]
signals. RXPRTY is driven/tristate at the same
time as RXDATA[15:0].
RXPRTY is updated on the rising edge of
RXCLK.
RSX
Tristate
Output
Y2
The receive start of transfer signal (RSX)
denotes the start of data transfer on the receive
APPI. When the RSX signal is set high, the 3
most significant bits on the RXDATA[15:0]
signals contain the FREEDM-32A672 device
address and the 10 least significant bits on the
RXDATA[15:0] signals contain the channel
address associated with the data to follow. Valid
device addresses are in the range 0 through 7
(with one address reserved as a null address)
and valid channel addresses are in the range 0
through 671. When the RSX signal is sampled
low, the word on the RXDATA[15:0] signals does
not contain a device and channel address.
RSX is tristate when the FREEDM-32A672
device is not selected via the RENB signal.
RSX is updated on the rising edge of RXCLK.
It is recommended that RSX be connected
externally to a weak pull-down, e.g. 10 kW.
REOP
Tristate
Output
T3
The receive end of packet signal (REOP)
denotes the end of a packet. REOP is only valid
during data transfer. When REOP is set high,
RXDATA[15:0] contains the last data byte of a
packet. When REOP is set low, RXDATA[15:0]
does not contain the last data byte of a packet.
REOP is tristate when the FREEDM-32A672
device is not selected via the RENB signal.
REOP is updated on the rising edge of RXCLK.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RMOD
Tristate
Output
T2
The receive word modulo signal (RMOD)
indicates the size of the current word on
RXDATA[15:0]. When RDAT[15:0] does not
contain the last byte of a packet (REOP set
low), RMOD is set low. When RMOD is set high
and REOP is set high, RXDATA[15:8] contains
the last data byte of a packet. When RMOD is
set low and REOP is set high, RXDATA[7:0]
contains the last byte of the packet, or
optionally, the error status byte. The behavior of
RMOD relates only to packet data and is
unaffected when the FREEDM-32A672 device is
programmed to overwrite RXDATA[7:0] with
status information when errored packets are
received.
RMOD is tristate when the FREEDM-32A672
device is not selected via the RENB signal.
RMOD is updated on the rising edge of RXCLK.
RERR
Tristate
Output
T1
The receive error signal (RERR) indicates that
the current packet is errored and should be
discarded. When RDAT[15:0] does not contain
the last byte of a packet (REOP set low), RERR
is set low. When RERR is set high and REOP is
set high, the current packet is errored. When
RERR is set low and REOP is set high, the
current packet is not errored.
The FREEDM-32A672 may be programmed to
overwrite RXDATA[7:0] of the final word of each
packet transfer (REOP set high) with the status
of packet reception when that packet is errored
(RERR is high).
RERR is tristated when the FREEDM-32A672
device is not selected via the RENB signal.
RERR is updated on the rising edge of RXCLK.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
RVAL
Tristate
Output
R2
The receive data valid (RVAL) is asserted when
packet data is being output on RXDATA[15:0]. It
is deasserted whenever the FREEDM-32A672
device is selected, but not outputting packet
data on RXDATA[15:0]. (E.g., when RSX is high
and address/channel prepend is being output on
RXDATA[15:0], RVAL is deasserted.)
RVAL is tristated when the FREEDM-32A672
device is not selected via the RENB signal.
RVAL is updated on the rising edge of RXCLK.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Table 3 – Microprocessor Interface Signals (31)
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
D[0]
D[1]
D[2]
D[3]
D[4]
D[5]
D[6]
D[7]
D[8]
D[9]
D[10]
D[11]
D[12]
D[13]
D[14]
D[15]
I/O
A2
C3
A3
B3
C4
D5
A4
B4
C5
A5
C6
A6
B6
A7
D7
B7
The bi-directional data signals (D[15:0]) provide
a data bus to allow the FREEDM-32A672 device
to interface to an external micro-processor.
Both read and write transactions are supported.
The microprocessor interface is used to
configure and monitor the FREEDM-32A672
device.
A[2]
A[3]
A[4]
A[5]
A[6]
A[7]
A[8]
A[9]
A[10]
A[11]
Input
C7
A8
B8
C8
A9
D9
B9
C9
A10
B10
The address signals (A[11:2]) provide an
address bus to allow the FREEDM-32A672
device to interface to an external microprocessor. All microprocessor accessible
registers are dword aligned.
ALE
Input
C10
The address latch enable signal (ALE) latches
the A[11:2] signals during the address phase of
a bus transaction. When ALE is set high, the
address latches are transparent. When ALE is
set low, the address latches hold the address
provided on A[11:2].
ALE has an integral pull-up resistor.
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DATASHEET
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
WRB
Input
D11
The write strobe signal (WRB) qualifies write
accesses to the FREEDM-32A672 device.
When CSB is set low, the D[15:0] bus contents
are clocked into the addressed register on the
rising edge of WRB.
RDB
Input
A11
The read strobe signal (RDB) qualifies read
accesses to the FREEDM-32A672 device.
When CSB is set low, the FREEDM-32A672
device drives the D[15:0] bus with the contents
of the addressed register on the falling edge of
RDB.
CSB
Input
C11
The chip select signal (CSB) qualifies read/write
accesses to the FREEDM-32A672 device. The
CSB signal must be set low during read and
write accesses. When CSB is set high, the
microprocessor interface signals are ignored by
the FREEDM-32A672 device.
If CSB is not required (register accesses
controlled only by WRB and RDB) then CSB
should be connected to an inverted version of
the RSTB signal.
INTB
OpenDrain
Output
B11
The interrupt signal (INTB) indicates that an
interrupt source is active and unmasked. When
INTB is set low, the FREEDM-32A672 device
has an active interrupt that is unmasked. When
INTB is tristate, no interrupts are active, or an
active interrupt is masked. Please refer to the
register description section of this document for
possible interrupt sources and masking.
It is the responsibility of the external
microprocessor to read the status registers in
the FREEDM-32A672 device to determine the
exact cause of the interrupt.
INTB is an open drain output.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Table 4 – Miscellaneous Interface Signals (9)
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
SYSCLK
Input
K23
The system clock (SYSCLK) provides timing for
the core logic. SYSCLK is nominally a 50% duty
cycle, 25 to 45 MHz clock.
RSTB
Input
C22
The active low reset signal (RSTB) signal
provides an asynchronous FREEDM-32A672
reset. RSTB is an asynchronous input. When
RSTB is set low, all FREEDM-32A672 registers
are forced to their default states. In addition,
TD[31:0] are forced high and all APPI output pins
are forced tristate and will remain high or tristated,
respectively, until RSTB is set high.
PMCTEST
Input
AB3
The PMC production test enable signal
(PMCTEST) places the FREEDM-32A672 is test
mode. When PMCTEST is set high, production
test vectors can be executed to verify
manufacturing via the test mode interface signals
TA[11:0], TA[12]/TRS, TRDB, TWRB and
TDAT[15:0]. PMCTEST must be tied low for
normal operation.
TCK
Input
T23
The test clock signal (TCK) provides timing for
test operations that can be carried out using the
IEEE P1149.1 test access port. TMS and TDI are
sampled on the rising edge of TCK. TDO is
updated on the falling edge of TCK.
TMS
Input
T22
The test mode select signal (TMS) controls the
test operations that can be carried out using the
IEEE P1149.1 test access port. TMS is sampled
on the rising edge of TCK. TMS has an integral
pull up resistor.
TDI
Input
U21
The test data input signal (TDI) carries test data
into the FREEDM-32A672 via the IEEE P1149.1
test access port. TDI is sampled on the rising
edge of TCK.
TDI has an integral pull up resistor.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
Pin
No.
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
TDO
Tristate U22
Output
The test data output signal (TDO) carries test
data out of the FREEDM-32A672 via the IEEE
P1149.1 test access port. TDO is updated on the
falling edge of TCK. TDO is a tristate output
which is inactive except when scanning of data is
in progress.
TRSTB
Input
The active low test reset signal (TRSTB) provides
an asynchronous FREEDM-32A672 test access
port reset via the IEEE P1149.1 test access port.
TRSTB is an asynchronous input with an integral
pull up resistor.
T21
Function
Note that when TRSTB is not being used, it must
be connected to the RSTB input.
NC
Open
C2
This pin must be left unconnected.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Table 5 – Production Test Interface Signals (0 - Multiplexed)
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TA[0]
TA[1]
TA[2]
TA[3]
TA[4]
TA[5]
TA[6]
TA[7]
TA[8]
TA[9]
TA[10]
TA[11]
Input
G23
F23
E23
D22
E20
C23
A22
D20
B21
D19
B20
A19
The test mode address bus (TA[11:0]) selects
specific registers during production test
(PMCTEST set high) read and write accesses.
TA[11:0] replace RD[21:10] when PMCTEST is
set high.
TA[12]/TR
S
Input
A16
The test register select signal (TA[12]/TRS)
selects between normal and test mode register
accesses during production test (PMCTEST set
high). TRS is set high to select test registers and
is set low to select normal registers. TA[12]/TRS
replaces RD[24] when PMCTEST is set high.
TRDB
Input
A18
The test mode read enable signal (TRDB) is set
low during FREEDM-32A672 register read
accesses during production test (PMCTEST set
high). The FREEDM-32A672 drives the test data
bus (TDAT[15:0]) with the contents of the
addressed register while TRDB is low. TRDB
replaces RD[22] when PMCTEST is set high.
TWRB
Input
A17
The test mode write enable signal (TWRB) is set
low during FREEDM-32A672 register write
accesses during production test (PMCTEST set
high). The contents of the test data bus
(TDAT[15:0]) are clocked into the addressed
register on the rising edge of TWRB. TWRB
replaces RD[23] when PMCTEST is set high.
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DATASHEET
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
TDAT[0]
TDAT[1]
TDAT[2]
TDAT[3]
TDAT[4]
TDAT[5]
TDAT[6]
TDAT[7]
TDAT[8]
TDAT[9]
TDAT[10]
TDAT[11]
TDAT[12]
TDAT[13]
TDAT[14]
TDAT[15]
I/O
AC1
4
AA14
AC1
3
AB13
AA12
AB11
Y11
AB10
Y9
AA8
AC8
AB7
AC7
AC6
AC5
AB4
The bi-directional test mode data bus
(TDAT[15:0]) carries data read from or written to
FREEDM-32A672 registers during production
test. TDAT[15:0] replace TD[31:16] when
PMCTEST is set high.
Table 6 – Power and Ground Signals (65)
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
VDD3V3[1]
VDD3V3[2]
VDD3V3[3]
VDD3V3[4]
VDD3V3[5]
VDD3V3[6]
VDD3V3[7]
VDD3V3[8]
VDD3V3[9]
VDD3V3[10]
VDD3V3[11]
VDD3V3[12]
VDD3V3[13]
VDD3V3[14]
Power
D6
D10
D14
D18
H4
H20
M4
M20
T4
T20
Y6
Y10
Y14
Y18
The VDD3V3[14:1] DC power pins should be
connected to a well decoupled +3.3 V DC
supply. These power pins provide DC current
to the I/O pads.
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin Name
Type
Pin
No.
Function
VDD2V5[1]
VDD2V5[2]
VDD2V5[3]
VDD2V5[4]
VDD2V5[5]
VDD2V5[6]
VDD2V5[7]
VDD2V5[8]
VDD2V5[9]
VDD2V5[10]
VDD2V5[11]
VDD2V5[12]
Power
E2
M1
W2
AB5
AC1
2
AB19
W22
M23
E22
B19
A12
B5
The VDD2V5[12:1] DC power pins should be
connected to a well decoupled +2.5 V DC
supply. These power pins provide DC current
to the digital core.
VSS[1]
VSS[2]
VSS[3]
VSS[4]
VSS[5]
VSS[6]
VSS[7]
VSS[8]
VSS[9]
VSS[10]
VSS[11]
VSS[12]
VSS[13]
VSS[14]
Ground
D8
D12
D16
F4
F20
K4
K20
P4
P20
V4
V20
Y8
Y12
Y16
The VSS[14:1] DC ground pins should be
connected to ground. They provide a ground
reference for the 3.3 V rail. They also provide
a ground reference for the 2.5 V rail.
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
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Pin Name
ISSUE 6
Type
VSS[15]
VSS[16]
VSS[17]
VSS[18]
VSS[19]
VSS[20]
VSS[21]
VSS[22]
VSS[23]
VSS[24]
VSS[25]
VSS[26]
VSS[27]
VSS[28]
VSS[29]
VSS[30]
VSS[31]
VSS[32]
VSS[33]
VSS[34]
VSS[35]
VSS[36]
VSS[37]
VSS[38]
VSS[39]
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Pin
No.
Function
K10
K11
K12
K13
K14
L10
L11
L12
L13
L14
M10
M11
M12
M13
M14
N10
N11
N12
N13
N14
P10
P11
P12
P13
P14
The VSS[39:15] DC ground pins should be
connected to ground. They provide improved
thermal properties for the 329 PBGA package.
Notes on Pin Description:
1. All FREEDM-32A672 inputs and bi-directionals present minimum capacitive
loading and, with the exception of the Any-PHY interface, are 5V tolerant.
(The Any-PHY interface is 3.3V tolerant.)
2. All FREEDM-32A672 digital outputs and bi-directionals have 4 mA drive
capability except the RBCLK, TBCLK, RBD, D[15:0] and INTB outputs which
have 8 mA drive capability and the Any-PHY outputs (TPAn[2:0], TRDY, RPA,
RSX, REOP, RXDATA[15:0], RXPRTY, RMOD and RERR) which also have 8
mA drive capability.
3. All FREEDM-32A672 outputs can be tristated under control of the IEEE
P1149.1 test access port, even those which do not tristate under normal
operation. All outputs and bi-directionals with the exception of the Any-PHY
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
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interface are 5 V tolerant when tristated. (The Any-PHY interface is 3.3V
tolerant.)
4. All inputs with the exception of the Any-PHY and microprocessor interfaces
are Schmitt triggered. Inputs ALE, TMS, TDI and TRSTB have internal pullup resistors.
5. Power to the VDD3V3 pins should be applied before power to the VDD2V5
pins is applied. Similarly, power to the VDD2V5 pins should be removed
before power to the VDD3V3 pins is removed.
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PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
8
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
8.1
High Speed Multi-Vendor Integration Protocol (H-MVIP)
H-MVIP defines a synchronous, time division multiplexed (TDM) bus of Nx64
Kbps constant bit rate (CBR) data streams. Each 64 Kbps data stream (timeslot) carries an 8-bit byte of HDLC traffic, as described in the following section,
and is characterised by 8 KHz framing. H-MVIP supports higher bandwidth
applications on existing telephony networks by fitting more time-slots into a 125
ms frame. The FREEDM-32A672 supports H-MVIP data rates of 2.048 Mbps and
8.192 Mbps with 32 or 128 time-slots per frame and associated clocking
frequencies of 4.096 and 16.384 MHz respectively. Figure 1 shows a diagram of
the H-MVIP protocol supported by the FREEDM-32A672 device.
Figure 1 – H-MVIP Protocol
125 us
Data Clock
(4, 16 MH z)
Fram e Pulse C lock
(4 MHz)
Fram e P ulse
(8 KHz)
Serial Data
B7
B8
TS 31/127
8.2
B1
B2
B8
TS 0
B1
B2
B7
TS 1
B8
TS 31/127
High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC) Protocol
Figure 2 shows a diagram of the synchronous HDLC protocol supported by the
FREEDM-32A672 device. The incoming stream is examined for flag bytes
(01111110 bit pattern) which delineate the opening and closing of the HDLC
packet. The packet is bit de-stuffed which discards a "0" bit which directly follows
five contiguous "1" bits. The resulting HDLC packet size must be a multiple of an
octet (8 bits) and within the expected minimum and maximum packet length
limits. The minimum packet length is that of a packet containing two information
bytes (address and control) and FCS bytes. For packets with CRC-CCITT as
FCS, the minimum packet length is four bytes while those with CRC-32 as FCS,
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
the minimum length is six bytes. An HDLC packet is aborted when seven
contiguous "1" bits (with no inserted "0" bits) are received. At least one flag byte
must exist between HDLC packets for delineation. Contiguous flag bytes, or all
ones bytes between packets are used as an "inter-frame time fill". Adjacent flag
bytes may share zeros.
Figure 2 – HDLC Frame
Flag
Information
FCS
Flag
Flag
HDLC Packet
The CRC algorithm for the frame checking sequence (FCS) field is either a
CRC-CCITT or CRC-32 function. Figure 3 shows a CRC encoder block diagram
using the generating polynomial g(X) = 1 + g1X + g2X2 +…+ gn-1Xn-1 + Xn. The
CRC-CCITT FCS is two bytes in size and has a generating polynomial g(X) = 1 +
X5 + X12 + X16. The CRC-32 FCS is four bytes in size and has a generating
polynomial g(X) = 1 + X + X2 + X4 + X5 + X7 + X8 + X10 + X11 + X12 + X16 + X22
+ X23 + X26 + X32. The first FCS bit received is the residue of the highest term.
Figure 3 – CRC Generator
g1
D0
g2
D1
LSB
8.3
gn-1
D2
Message
Dn-1
Parity Check Digits
MSB
Receive Channel Assigner
The Receive Channel Assigner block (RCAS672) processes up to 32 serial links.
Links may be configured to support 2.048 or 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP traffic, to
support T1/J1/E1 channelised traffic or to support unchannelised traffic. When
configured to support 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP traffic, each group of 8 links share a
clock and frame pulse. All links configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP traffic share a
common clock and frame pulse. For T1/J1/E1 channelised traffic or for
unchannelised traffic, each link is independent and has its own associated clock.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
For each link, the RCAS672 performs a serial to parallel conversion to form data
bytes. The data bytes are multiplexed, in byte serial format, for delivery to the
Receive HDLC Processor / Partial Packet Buffer block (RHDL672) at SYSCLK
rate. In the event where multiple streams have accumulated a byte of data,
multiplexing is performed on a fixed priority basis with link #0 having the highest
priority and link #31 the lowest.
From the point of view of the RCAS672, links configured for H-MVIP traffic
behave identically to links configured for T1/J1/E1 channelised or unchannelised
traffic in the back end, only differing on the link side as described herein. First,
the number of time-slots in each frame is programmable to be 32 or 128 and has
an associated data clock frequency that is double the data rate. This provides
more bandwidth per link for applications requiring higher data densities on a
single link. Second, H-MVIP links reference the start of each frame with a frame
pulse, thereby avoiding having to gap the link clock during the framing bits/bytes
of each frame. The frame pulse is provided by an H-MVIP bus master and
ensures that all agents sharing the H-MVIP bus remain synchronized. When
configured for operation in 2.048 Mbps mode, the frame pulse is sampled using
the same clock which samples the data. When configured for operation in 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP mode, the frame pulse is sampled using a separate frame pulse
clock provided by an H-MVIP bus master. The frame pulse clock has a
synchronous timing relationship to the data clock. Third, not all links are
independent. When configured for operation in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode, each
group of 8 links share a clock and a frame pulse. Links 0 through 7, 8 through
15, 16 through 23 and 24 through 31 each share a clock and a frame pulse. Not
all 8 links within each group need to be configured for operation in 2.048 Mbps
H-MVIP mode. However, any link within each logical group of 8 which is
configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP operation will share the same clock and frame
pulse. When configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode, links 4m
(0£m£7) share a frame pulse, a data clock and a frame pulse clock. Again, not
all eight 4m (0£m£7) links need to be configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps
H-MVIP mode, however, any link which is configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP
operation will share the same frame pulse, data clock and frame pulse clock. If
link 4m is configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation, then data transferred on
that link is “spread” over links 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 from a channel
assigner point of view. Accordingly, when link 4m is configured for operation in
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 must also be configured
for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode. In the back end, the RCAS672
extracts and processes the time-slots in the same way as channelised T1/J1/E1
traffic.
Links containing a T1/J1 or an E1 stream may be channelised. Data at each
time-slot may be independently assigned to a different channel. The RCAS672
performs a table lookup to associate the link and time-slot identity with a channel.
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T1/J1 and E1 framing bits/bytes are identified by observing the gap in the link
clock which is squelched during the framing bits/bytes. For unchannelised links,
clock rates are limited to 51.84 MHz for links #0 to #2 and limited to 10 MHz for
the remaining links. All data on each link belongs to one channel. For the case
of a mixture of channelised, unchannelised and H-MVIP links, the total
instantaneous link rate over all the links is limited to 64 MHz. The RCAS672
performs a table lookup using only the link number to determine the associated
channel, as time-slots are non-existent in unchannelised links.
The RCAS672 provides diagnostic loopback that is selectable on a per channel
basis. The RCAS672 does not support diagnostic loopback for links configured
as H-MVIP. When a channel is in diagnostic loopback, stream data on the
received links originally destined for that channel is ignored. Transmit data of
that channel is substituted in its place.
8.3.1 Line Interface Translator (LIT)
The LIT block translates the information on the 32 physical links into a suitable
format for interpretation by the Line Interface block. The LIT block performs three
functions: data translation, clock translation and frame pulse generation.
When link 4m (0£m£7) is configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode,
the LIT block translates the 128 time-slots on link 4m to the Line Interface block
across links 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3. The LIT block provides time-slots 0
through 31, 32 through 63, 64 through 95 and 96 through 127 to the Line
Interface block on links 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 respectively. When link 4m
is configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode, data cannot be received
on inputs RD[4m+3:4m+1]. However, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 must be
programmed in the RCAS672 Link Configuration register for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP
operation. When links are configured for operation in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode,
channelised T1/J1/E1 mode or unchannelised mode, the LIT block does not
perform any translation on the link data.
When a link is configured for operation in H-MVIP mode, the LIT block divides the
appropriate clock (RMVCK[n] for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP and RMV8DC for 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP) by two and provides this divided down clock to the Line Interface
block. When a link is configured for operation in channelised T1/J1/E1 or
unchannelised mode, the LIT block does not perform any translation on the link
clock.
When a link is configured for operation in H-MVIP mode, the LIT block samples
the appropriate frame pulse (RFPB[n] for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP and RFP8B for
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP) and presents the sampled frame pulse to the Line Interface
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block. When a link is configured for operation in channelised T1/J1/E1 or
unchannelised mode, the gapped clock is passed to the LIT block unmodified.
8.3.2 Line Interface
There are 32 identical line interface blocks in the RCAS672. Each line interface
block contains 2 sub-blocks; one supporting channelised T1/J1/E1 streams and
the other H-MVIP streams. Based on configuration, only one of the sub-blocks
are active at one time; the other is held reset. Each sub-block contains a bit
counter, an 8-bit shift register and a holding register. Each sub-block performs
serial to parallel conversion. Whenever the holding register is updated, a request
for service is sent to the priority encoder block. When acknowledged by the
priority encoder, the line interface would respond with the data residing in the
holding register in the active sub-block.
To support H-MVIP links, each line interface block contains a time-slot counter.
The time-slot counter is incremented each time the holding register is updated.
When a frame pulse occurs, the time-slot counter is initialised to indicate that the
next bit is the most significant bit of the first time-slot.
To support non H-MVIP channelised links, each line interface block contains a
time-slot counter and a clock activity monitor. The time-slot counter is
incremented each time the holding register is updated. The clock activity monitor
is a counter that increments at the system clock (SYSCLK) rate and is cleared by
a rising edge of the receive clock (RCLK[n]). A framing bit (T1/J1) or a framing
byte (E1) is detected when the counter reaches a programmable threshold, in
which case, the bit and time-slot counters are initialised to indicate that the next
bit is the most significant bit of the first time-slot. For unchannelised links, the
time-slot counter and the clock activity monitor are held reset.
8.3.3 Priority Encoder
The priority encoder monitors the line interfaces for requests and synchronises
them to the SYSCLK timing domain. Requests are serviced on a fixed priority
scheme where highest to lowest priority is assigned from the line interface
attached to RD[0] to that attached to RD[31]. Thus, simultaneous requests from
RD[m] will be serviced ahead of RD[n], if m < n. When there are no pending
requests, the priority encoder generates an idle cycle. In addition, once every
fourth SYSCLK cycle, the priority encoder inserts a null cycle where no requests
are serviced. This cycle is used by the channel assigner downstream for host
microprocessor accesses to the provisioning RAMs.
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8.3.4 Channel Assigner
The channel assigner block determines the channel number of the data byte
currently being processed. The block contains a 1024 word channel provision
RAM. The address of the RAM is constructed from concatenating the link
number and the time-slot number of the current data byte. The fields of each
RAM word include the channel number and a time-slot enable flag. The time-slot
enable flag labels the current time-slot as belonging to the channel indicted by
the channel number field.
8.3.5 Loopback Controller
The loopback controller block implements the channel based diagnostic loopback
function. Every valid data byte belonging to a channel with diagnostic loopback
enabled from the Transmit HDLC Processor / Partial Packet Buffer block
(THDL672) is written into a 64 word FIFO. The loopback controller monitors for
an idle time-slot or a time-slot carrying a channel with diagnostic loopback
enabled. If either conditions hold, the current data byte is replaced by data
retrieved from the loopback data FIFO.
8.4
Receive HDLC Processor / Partial Packet Buffer
The Receive HDLC Processor / Partial Packet Buffer block (RHDL672)
processes up to 672 synchronous transmission HDLC data streams. Each
channel can be individually configured to perform flag sequence detection, bit destuffing and CRC-CCITT or CRC-32 verification. The packet data is written into
the partial packet buffer. At the end of a frame, packet status including CRC
error, octet alignment error and maximum length violation are also loaded into the
partial packet buffer. Alternatively, a channel can be provisioned as transparent,
in which case, the HDLC data stream is passed to the partial packet buffer
processor verbatim.
There is a natural precedence in the alarms detectable on a receive packet.
Once a packet exceeds the programmable maximum packet length, no further
processing is performed on it. Thus, octet alignment detection, FCS verification
and abort recognition are squelched on packets with a maximum length violation.
An abort indication squelches octet alignment detection, minimum packet length
violations, and FCS verification. In addition, FCS verification is only performed
on packets that do not have octet alignment errors, in order to allow the
RHDL672 to perform CRC calculations on a byte-basis.
The partial packet buffer is a 32 Kbyte RAM that is divided into 16-byte blocks.
Each block has an associated pointer which points to another block. A logical
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FIFO is created for each provisioned channel by programming the block pointers
to form a circular linked list. A channel FIFO can be assigned a minimum of 3
blocks (48 bytes) and a maximum of 2048 blocks (32 Kbytes). The depth of the
channel FIFOs are monitored in a round-robin fashion. Requests are made to
the Receive Any-PHY Interface block (RAPI672) to transfer, on the Rx APPI, data
in channel FIFOs with depths exceeding their associated threshold.
8.4.1 HDLC Processor
The HDLC processor is a time-slice state machine which can process up to 672
independent channels. The state vector and provisioning information for each
channel is stored in a RAM. Whenever new channel data arrives, the
appropriate state vector is read from the RAM, processed and written back to the
RAM. The HDLC state-machine can be configured to perform flag delineation, bit
de-stuffing, CRC verification and length monitoring. The resulting HDLC data
and status information is passed to the partial packet buffer processor to be
stored in the appropriate channel FIFO buffer.
The configuration of the HDLC processor is accessed using indirect channel read
and write operations. When an indirect operation is performed, the information is
accessed from RAM during a null clock cycle generated by the upstream Receive
Channel Assigner block (RCAS672). Writing new provisioning data to a channel
resets the channel's entire state vector.
8.4.2 Partial Packet Buffer Processor
The partial packet buffer processor controls the 32 Kbyte partial packet RAM
which is divided into 16 byte blocks. A block pointer RAM is used to chain the
partial packet blocks into circular channel FIFO buffers. Thus, non-contiguous
sections of the RAM can be allocated in the partial packet buffer RAM to create a
channel FIFO. System software is responsible for the assignment of blocks to
individual channel FIFOs. Figure 4 shows an example of three blocks (blocks 1,
3, and 200) linked together to form a 48 byte channel FIFO.
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Figure 4 – Partial Packet Buffer Structure
Partial Packet
Buffer RAM
Block
Pointer RAM
Block 0
16 bytes
Block 0
XX
Block 1
16 bytes
Block 1
0x03
Block 2
16 bytes
Block 2
XX
Block 3
16 bytes
Block 3
0xC8
Block 200
16 bytes
Block 200
0x01
Block 2047
16 bytes
Block 2047
XX
The partial packet buffer processor is divided into three sections: writer, reader
and roamer. The writer is a time-sliced state machine which writes the HDLC
data and status information from the HDLC processor into a channel FIFO in the
packet buffer RAM. The reader transfers channel FIFO data from the packet
buffer RAM to the downstream Receive Any-PHY Interface block (RAPI672).
The roamer is a time-sliced state machine which tracks channel FIFO buffer
depths and signals the reader to service a particular channel. If a buffer over-run
occurs, the writer ends the current packet from the HDLC processor in the
channel FIFO with an overrun flag and ignores the rest of the packet.
The FIFO algorithm of the partial packet buffer processor is based on a
programmable per-channel transfer size. Instead of tracking the number of full
blocks in a channel FIFO, the processor tracks the number of transactions.
Whenever the partial packet writer fills a transfer-sized number of blocks or writes
an end-of-packet flag to the channel FIFO, a transaction is created. Whenever
the partial packet reader transmits a transfer-size number of blocks or an end-ofpacket flag to the RAPI672 block, a transaction is deleted. Thus, small packets
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less than the transfer size will be naturally transferred to the RAPI672 block
without having to precisely track the number of full blocks in the channel FIFO.
The partial packet roamer performs the transaction accounting for all channel
FIFOs. The roamer increments the transaction count when the writer signals a
new transaction and sets a per-channel flag to indicate a non-zero transaction
count. The roamer searches the flags in a round-robin fashion to decide for
which channel FIFO to request transfer by the RAPI672 block. The roamer
informs the partial packet reader of the channel to process. The reader transfers
the data to the RAPI672 until the channel transfer size is reached or an end of
packet is detected. The reader then informs the roamer that a transaction is
consumed. The roamer updates its transaction count and clears the non-zero
transaction count flag if required. The roamer then services the next channel
with its transaction flag set high.
The writer and reader determine empty and full FIFO conditions using flags.
Each block in the partial packet buffer has an associated flag. The writer sets the
flag after the block is written and the reader clears the flag after the block is read.
The flags are initialized (cleared) when the block pointers are written using
indirect block writes. The writer declares a channel FIFO overrun whenever the
writer tries to store data to a block with a set flag. In order to support optional
removal of the FCS from the packet data, the writer does not declare a block as
filled (set the block flag nor increment the transaction count) until the first double
word of the next block in channel FIFO is filled. If the end of a packet resides in
the first double word, the writer declares both blocks as full at the same time.
When the reader finishes processing a transaction, it examines the first double
word of the next block for the end-of-packet flag. If the first double word of the
next block contains only FCS bytes, the reader would, optionally, process next
transaction (end-of-packet) and consume the block, as it contains information not
transferred to the RAPI672 block.
8.5
Receive Any-PHY Interface
The Receive Any-PHY Interface (RAPI672) provides a low latency path for
transferring data out of the partial packet buffer in the RHDL672 and onto the
Receive Any-PHY Packet Interface (Rx APPI). The RAPI672 contains a FIFO
block for latency control as well as to segregate the APPI timing domain from the
SYSCLK timing domain. The RAPI672 contains the necessary logic to manage
and respond to device polling from an upper layer device. The RAPI672 also
provides the upper layer device with status information on a per packet basis.
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8.5.1 FIFO Storage and Control
The FIFO block temporarily stores channel data during transfer across the Rx
APPI. RAPI672 burst data transfers are transaction based – a write burst data
transfer must be complete before any data will be read, and all data must be
completely read from the FIFO before any further data will be written into the
FIFO. To support full Rx APPI bus rate, a double buffer scheme is used. While
data is being read from one FIFO onto the Rx APPI, data can be written into the
other FIFO. Because the bandwidth on the writer side of the FIFOs is higher
than that on the reader side, the RAPI672 can maintain continuous full bandwidth
transfer over the Rx APPI.
A maximum of 256 bytes can be stored in one of the two FIFOs for any given
burst transfer. A separate storage element samples the 10 bit channel ID to
associate the data in that FIFO with a specific HDLC channel. This channel ID is
prepended in-band as the first word of every burst data transfer across the Rx
APPI. (The maximum length of a burst data transfer on the Rx APPI is therefore
129 words, including prepend.) The 3 most significant bits of the prepended
word of every burst data tansfer across the Rx APPI identify the FREEDM32A672 device associated with the transfer and reflect the value of the base
address programmed in the RAPI672 Control register.
The writer controller provides a means for writing data into the FIFOs. The writer
controller indicates that it can accept data when there is at least one completely
empty FIFO. In response, a complete burst transfer of data, up to a maximum of
256 bytes, is written into that empty FIFO. (The transfer is sourced by the
upstream RHDL672 block which selects from those channels with data available
using its round-robin algorithm.) The writer controller then informs the reader
controller that data is available in that FIFO. The writer controller now switches
to the other FIFO and repeats the process. When both FIFOs are full, the writer
throttles the upstream RHDL672 block to prevent of any further data writes into
the FIFOs.
The reader controller provides a means of reading data out of the FIFOs onto the
Rx APPI. When selected to do so, and the writer controller has indicated that at
least one FIFO is full, the reader controller will read the data out of the FIFOs in
the order in which they were filled. To prevent from overloading the Rx APPI with
several small bursts of data, the RAPI672 automatically deselects after every
burst transfer. This provides time for the upper layer device to detect an end of
packet indication and possibly reselect a different FREEDM-32A672 device
without having to store the extra word or two which may have been output onto
the Rx APPI during the time it took for deselection.
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The RAPI672 provides packet status information on the Rx APPI at the end of
every packet transfer. The RAPI672 asserts RERR at the end of packet
reception (REOP high) to indicate that the packet is in error. The RAPI672 may
be programmed to overwrite RXDATA[7:0] of the final word of each packet
transfer (REOP is high) with the status of packet reception when that packet is
errored (RERR is high). Overwriting of status information is enabled by setting
the STATEN bit in the RAPI Control register.
8.5.2 Polling Control and Management
The RAPI672 only responds to device polls which match the base address
programmed in the RAPI672 Control register. A positive poll response indicates
that at least one of the two FIFOs has a complete XFER[3:0] plus one blocks of
data, or an end of packet, and is ready to be selected to transfer this data across
the Rx APPI.
8.6
Transmit Any-PHY Interface
The Transmit Any-PHY Interface (TAPI672) provides a low latency path for
transferring data from the Transmit Any-PHY Packet Interface (Tx APPI) into the
partial packet buffer in the THDL672. The TAPI672 contains a FIFO block for
latency control as well as to segregate the APPI timing domain from the SYSCLK
timing domain. The TAPI672 contains the necessary logic to manage and respond
to channel polling from an upper layer device.
8.6.1 FIFO Storage and Control
The FIFO block temporarily stores channel data during transfer across the Tx
APPI. TAPI672 burst data transfers are transaction based on the writer side of
the FIFO – all data must be completely read from the FIFO before any further
data will be written into the FIFO. To support as close as possible to full Tx APPI
bus rate, a double buffer is used. While data is being read from the one FIFO,
data can be written into the other FIFO. Because the bandwidth on the reader
side of the FIFOs is higher than that on the writer side, the TAPI672 will not incur
any bandwidth reduction to maximum burst data transfers through its FIFOs.
The upper layer device cannot interrupt data transfers on the Tx APPI. However,
the FREEDM-32A672 may throttle the upper layer device if both FIFOs in the
TAPI672 are full. When the FIFOs in the TAPI672 cannot accept data, the
TAPI672 deasserts the TRDY output to the upper layer device connected to the
Tx APPI. In this instance, the upper layer device must halt data transfer until the
TRDY output is returned high. The upper layer device connected to the Tx APPI
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must sample the TRDY output high before continuing to burst data across the Tx
APPI.
A maximum of 256 bytes may be stored in one of the two FIFOs for any given
burst transfer. The first word of each burst transfer contains a prepended
address field. (The maximum length of a burst transfer on the Tx APPI is
therefore 129 words, including prepend.) A separate storage element samples
the 10 least significant bits of the prepended channel address to associate the
data with a specific channel. The 3 most significant bits must match the base
address programmed into the TAPI672 Control register for the TAPI672 to
respond to the data transaction on the Tx APPI.
The writer controller provides a means for writing data from the Tx APPI into the
FIFOs. The writer controller can accept data when there is at least one
completely empty FIFO. When a data transfer begins and there are no empty
FIFOs, the writer controller catches the data provided on the Tx APPI and
throttles the upper layer device. The writer controller will continue to throttle the
upper layer device until at least one FIFO is completely empty and can accept a
maximum burst transfer of data.
The whisper controller provides the channel address of the data being written
into the FIFO. As soon as the first word of data has been written into the FIFO,
the whisper controller provides the channel information for that data to the
downstream THDL672 block. The whisper controller will wait for
acknowledgement and the reader controller is then requested to read the data
from the FIFO. Once the reader controller has commenced the data transfer, the
whisper controller will provide the channel information for the other FIFO. The
whisper controller alternates between the two FIFOs in the order in which data is
written into them.
The reader controller provides a means of reading data out of the FIFOs. When
the writer controller indicates that data has been completely written into one of
the two FIFOs, the reader controller is permitted to read that data. The reader
controller will then wait for a request for data from the THDL672 block. When
requested to transfer data, the reader controller will completely read all the data
out of the FIFO before indicating to the writer controller that more data may be
written into the FIFO. Because the reader controller reads data out of the FIFOs
in the order in which they were filled, the THDL672 block will request data for
channels in the order in which they were whispered. The reader controller
manages the read and write FIFO pointers to allow simultaneous reading and
writing of data to/from the double buffer FIFO.
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8.6.2 Polling Control and Management
The TAPI672 only responds to poll addresses which are in the range
programmed in the base address field in the TAPI672 Control register. The
TAPI672 uses the 3 most significant bits of the poll address for device recognition
and the 10 least significant bits of the poll address for identification of a channel.
The TAPI672 provides three poll results for every poll address according to Table
7. The TPAn[0] bit indicates whether or not space exists in the channel FIFO for
data and the TPAn[1] bit indicates whether or not that polled channel FIFO is at
risk of underflowing and should be provided data soon. The TPAn[2] bit indicates
that an underflow event has occurred on that channel FIFO.
Table 7 – Transmit Polling
Poll
Address
TPA1[0]
TPA1[1]
TPA1[2]
TPA2[0]
TPA2[1]
TPA2[2]
(Full/Space)
(Space/Starving)
(Underflow)
(Full/Space)
(Space/Starving)
(Underflow)
Channel 0
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Channel 4
Channel 5
Channel 6
Channel 7
Channel 8
·
·
·
Channel
671
Channel 0
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Channel 4
Channel 5
Channel 6
Channel 7
Channel 8
·
·
·
Channel
671
Channel 0
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Channel 4
Channel 5
Channel 6
Channel 7
Channel 8
·
·
·
Channel
671
Channel 0
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Channel 4
Channel 5
Channel 6
Channel 7
Channel 8
·
·
·
Channel
671
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Channel 4
Channel 5
Channel 6
Channel 7
Channel 8
Channel 9
·
·
·
Channel 0
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Channel 4
Channel 5
Channel 6
Channel 7
Channel 8
Channel 9
·
·
·
Channel 0
Channel 1
Channel 2
Channel 3
Channel 4
Channel 5
Channel 6
Channel 7
Channel 8
Channel 9
·
·
·
Channel 0
The TAPI672 maintains a mirror image of the status of each channel FIFO in the
partial packet buffer. The THDL672 continuously reports the status of the 672
channel FIFOs to the TAPI672 and the TAPI672 updates the mirror image
accordingly. The THDL672 also signals to the TAPI672 whenever an underflow
event has occurred on a channel FIFO. At the beginning of every data transfer
across the Tx APPI, the TAPI672 sets the mirror image status of the channel to
“full”. Only the TAPI672 can cause the status to be set to “full” and only the
THDL672 can cause the status to be set to “space” or “starving”. Only the
THDL672 can cause the status to be set to “underflow” and only the TAPI672 can
clear the “underflow” status when that channel FIFO is polled. In the event that
both the TAPI672 and the THDL672 try to change the mirror image status of a
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particular channel simultaneously, the TAPI672 takes precedence, except for the
“underflow” status, where the THDL672 takes precedence.
8.7
Transmit HDLC Controller / Partial Packet Buffer
The Transmit HDLC Controller / Partial Packet Buffer block (THDL672) contains
a partial packet buffer for Tx APPI latency control and a transmit HDLC controller.
The THDL672 also contains logic to monitor the full/empty status of each channel
FIFO and push this status onto the polling interface signals.
The THDL672 requests data from the TAPI672 in response to control information
from the TAPI672 indicating the channel for which data is available and ready to
be transferred. Packet data received from the TAPI672 is stored in channel
specific FIFOs residing in the partial packet buffer. When the amount of data in a
FIFO reaches a programmable threshold, the HDLC controller is enabled to
initiate transmission. The HDLC controller performs flag generation, bit stuffing
and, optionally, frame check sequence (FCS) insertion. The FCS is software
selectable to be CRC-CCITT or CRC-32. The minimum packet size, excluding
FCS, is two bytes. A single byte payload is illegal. The HDLC controller delivers
data to the Transmit Channel Assigner block (TCAS672) on demand. A packet in
progress is aborted if an under-run occurs. The THDL672 is programmable to
operate in transparent mode where packet data retrieved from the TAPI672 is
transmitted verbatim.
8.7.1 Transmit HDLC Processor
The HDLC processor is a time-slice state machine which can process up to 672
independent channels. The state vector and provisioning information for each
channel is stored in a RAM. Whenever the TCAS672 requests data, the
appropriate state vector is read from the RAM, processed and finally written back
to the RAM. The HDLC state-machine can be configured to perform flag
insertion, bit stuffing and CRC generation. The HDLC processor requests data
from the partial packet processor whenever a request for channel data arrives.
However, the HDLC processor does not start transmitting a packet until the entire
packet is stored in the channel FIFO or until the FIFO free space is less than the
software programmable limit. If a channel FIFO under-runs, the HDLC processor
aborts the packet, generates a microprocessor interrupt and signals the
underflow to the transmit Any-PHY interface.
The configuration of the HDLC processor is accessed using indirect channel read
and write operations. When an indirect operation is performed, the information is
accessed from RAM during a null clock cycle inserted by the TCAS672 block.
Writing new provisioning data to a channel resets the channels entire state
vector.
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8.7.2 Transmit Partial Packet Buffer Processor
The partial packet buffer processor controls the 32 Kbyte partial packet RAM
which is divided into 16 byte blocks. A block pointer RAM is used to chain the
partial packet blocks into circular channel FIFO buffers. Thus, non-contiguous
sections of RAM can be allocated in the partial packet buffer RAM to create a
channel FIFO. Figure 5 shows an example of three blocks (blocks 1, 3, and 200)
linked together to form a 48 byte channel FIFO. The three pointer values would
be written sequentially using indirect block write accesses. When a channel is
provisioned within this FIFO, the state machine can be initialized to point to any
one of the three blocks.
Figure 5 – Partial Packet Buffer Structure
Partial Packet
Buffer RAM
Block
Pointer RAM
Block 0
16 bytes
Block 0
XX
Block 1
16 bytes
Block 1
0x03
Block 2
16 bytes
Block 2
XX
Block 3
16 bytes
Block 3
0xC8
Block 200
16 bytes
Block 200
0x01
Block 2047
16 bytes
Block 2047
XX
The partial packet buffer processor is divided into three sections: reader, writer
and roamer. The roamer is a time-sliced state machine which tracks each
channel’s FIFO buffer free space and signals the writer to service a particular
channel. The writer requests data from the TAPI672 block and transfers packet
data from the TAPI672 to the associated channel FIFO. The reader is a time-
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sliced state machine which transfers the HDLC information from a channel FIFO
to the HDLC processor in response to a request from the HDLC processor. If a
buffer under-run occurs for a channel, the reader informs the HDLC processor
and purges the rest of the packet. If a buffer overflow occurs for a channel, the
THDL672 disables the channel as if it were unprovisioned and does not transmit
any further data until that channel is reprovisioned. In both cases, an interrupt is
generated and the cause of the interrupt may be read via the interrupt status
register using the microprocessor interface.
The writer and reader determine empty and full FIFO conditions using flags.
Each block in the partial packet buffer has an associated flag. The writer sets the
flag after the block is written and the reader clears the flag after the block is read.
The flags are initialized (cleared) when the block pointers are written using
indirect block writes. The reader declares a channel FIFO under-run whenever it
tries to read data from a block without a set flag.
The FIFO algorithm of the partial packet buffer processor is based on perchannel software programmable transfer size and free space trigger level.
Instead of tracking the number of full blocks in a channel FIFO, the processor
tracks the number of empty blocks, called free space, as well as the number of
end of packets stored in the FIFO. Recording the number of empty blocks
instead of the number of full blocks reduces the amount of information the
roamer must store in its state RAM.
The partial packet roamer records the FIFO free space and end-of-packet count
for all channel FIFOs. When the reader signals that a block has been read, the
roamer increments the FIFO free space and sets a per-channel request flag if the
free space is greater than the limit set by XFER[3:0]. The roamer pushes this
status information to the TAPI672 to indicate that it can accept at least XFER[3:0]
blocks of data. The roamer also decrements the end-of-packet count when the
reader signals that it has passed an end of a packet to the HDLC processor. If
the HDLC processor is transmitting a packet and the FIFO free space is greater
than the free space trigger level and there are no complete packets within the
FIFO (end-of-packet count equal to zero), a per-channel starving flag is set. The
roamer searches the starving flags in a round-robin fashion to decide which
channel FIFOs are at risk of underflowing and pushes this status information to
the TAPI672. The roamer listens to control information from the TAPI672 to
decide which channel FIFO requests data from the TAPI672 block. The roamer
informs the partial packet writer of the channel FIFO to process and the FIFO
free space. The writer sends a request for data to the TAPI672 block and writes
the response data to the channel FIFO setting block full flags. The writer reports
back to the roamer the number of blocks and end-of-packets transferred. The
maximum amount of data transferred during one request is limited by a software
programmable limit.
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The roamer round-robins between all channel FIFOs and pushes the status to
the TAPI672 block. The status consists of two pieces of information: (1) is there
space in the channel FIFO for at least one XFER[3:0] of data, and (2) is this
channel FIFO at risk of underflowing. Where a channel FIFO is at risk of
underflowing, the THDL672 pushes a starving status for that channel FIFO to the
TAPI672 at the earliest possible opportunity.
The configuration of the HDLC processor is accessed using indirect channel read
and write operations as well as indirect block read and write operations. When
an indirect operation is performed, the information is accessed from RAM during
a null clock cycle identified by the TCAS672 block. Writing new provisioning data
to a channel resets the entire state vector.
8.8
Transmit Channel Assigner
The Transmit Channel Assigner block (TCAS672) processes up to 672 channels.
Data for all channels is sourced from a single byte-serial stream from the
Transmit HDLC Controller / Partial Packet Buffer block (THDL672). The
TCAS672 demultiplexes the data and assigns each byte to any one of 32 links.
Each link may be configured to support 2.048 or 8.192 H-MVIP traffic, to support
T1/J1/E1 channelised traffic or to support unchannelised traffic. When
configured to support H-MVIP traffic, each group of 8 links share a clock and
frame pulse, otherwise each link is independent and has its own associated
clock. For each high-speed link (TD[2:0]), the TCAS provides a six byte FIFO.
For the remaining links (TD[31:3]), the TCAS provides a single byte holding
register. The TCAS672 also performs parallel to serial conversion to form a bitserial stream. In the event where multiple links are in need of data, TCAS672
requests data from upstream blocks on a fixed priority basis with link TD[0]
having the highest priority and link TD[31] the lowest.
From the point of view of the TCAS672, links configured for H-MVIP traffic
behave identically to links configured for T1/J1/E1 channelised or unchannelised
traffic in the back end, only differing on the link side as described herein. First,
the number of time-slots in each frame is programmable to be 32 or 128 and has
an associated data clock frequency that is double the data rate. This provides
more bandwidth per link for applications requiring higher data densities on a
single link. Data at each time-slot may be independently assigned to be sourced
from a different channel. Second, H-MVIP links reference the start of each frame
with a frame pulse, thereby avoiding having to gap the link clock during the
framing bits/bytes of each frame. The frame pulse is provided by an H-MVIP bus
master and ensures that all agents sharing the H-MVIP bus remain synchronized.
When configured for operation in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode, the frame pulse is
sampled using the same clock which samples the data. When configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode, the frame pulse is sampled using a
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separate frame pulse clock provided by an H-MVIP bus master. The frame pulse
clock has a synchronous timing relationship to the data clock. Third, not all links
are independent. When configured for operation in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode,
each group of 8 links share a clock and a frame pulse. Links 0 through 7, 8
through 15, 16 through 23 and 24 through 31 each share a clock and a frame
pulse. Not all 8 links within each group need to be configured for operation in
2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode. However, any link within each logical group of 8
which is configured for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP operation will share the same clock
and frame pulse. When configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode,
links 4m (0£m£7) share a frame pulse, a data clock and a frame pulse clock.
Again, not all eight 4m (0£m£7) links need to be configured for operation in 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP mode, however, any link which is configured for 8.192 Mbps HMVIP operation will share the same frame pulse, data clock and frame pulse
clock. If link 4m is configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation, then data
transferred on that link is “spread” over links 4m, 4m+1 4m+2 and 4m+3 from a
channel assigner point of view. Accordingly, when link 4m is configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 must also
be configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode. In the back end, the
TCAS672 extracts and processes the time-slots identically to channelised
T1/J1/E1 traffic.
Links containing a T1/J1 or an E1 stream may be channelised. Data at each
time-slot may be independently assigned to be sourced from a different channel.
The link clock is only active during time-slots 1 to 24 of a T1/J1 stream and is
inactive during the frame bit. Similarly, the clock is only active during time-slots 1
to 31 of an E1 stream and is inactive during the FAS and NFAS framing bytes.
The most significant bit of time-slot 1 of a channelised link is identified by noting
the absence of the clock and its re-activation. With knowledge of the transmit
link and time-slot identity, the TCAS672 performs a table look-up to identify the
channel from which a data byte is to be sourced.
Links may also be unchannelised. Then, all data bytes on that link belong to one
channel. The TCAS672 performs a table look-up to identify the channel to which
a data byte belongs using only the outgoing link identity, as no time-slots are
associated with unchannelised links. Link clocks are no longer limited to T1/J1 or
E1 rates and may range up to a maximum clock rate of 51.84 MHz for TCLK[2:0]
and 10 MHz for TCLK[31:3]. The link clock is only active during bit times
containing data to be transmitted and inactive during bits that are to be ignored
by the downstream devices, such as framing and overhead bits. For the case of
three unchannelised links, the maximum link rate is 51.84 MHz. For the case of
more numerous unchannelised links or a mixture of channelised, unchannelised
and H-MVIP links, the total instantaneous link rate over all the links is limited to
64 MHz.
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8.8.1 Line Interface Translator (LIT)
The LIT block translates the information between the 32 physical links and the
Line Interface block. The LIT block performs three functions: data translation,
clock translation and frame pulse generation.
When link 4m (0£m£7) is configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode,
the LIT block translates the data arriving from the Line Interface block on links
4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 onto the 128 time-slot link 4m. The LIT block
translates data arriving from the Line Interface block on link 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and
4m+3 onto time-slots 0 through 31, 32 through 63, 64 through 95 and 96 through
127 respectively. When link 4m is configured for operation in 8.192 Mbps HMVIP mode, outputs TD[4m+3:4m+1] are driven with constant ones. However,
links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 must be programmed in the TCAS672 Link
Configuration register for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation. When links are
configured for operation in 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP mode, channelised T1/J1/E1
mode or unchannelised mode, the LIT block does not perform any translation on
the link data.
When a link is configured for operation in H-MVIP mode, the LIT block divides the
appropriate clock (TMVCK[n] for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP and TMV8DC for 8.192
Mbps H-MVIP) by two and provides this divided down clock to the Line Interface
block. When a link is configured for operation in channelised T1/J1/E1 or
unchannelised mode, the LIT block does not perform any translation on the link
clock.
When a link is configured for operation in H-MVIP mode, the LIT block samples
the appropriate frame pulse (TFPB[n] for 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP and TFP8B for
8.192 Mbps H-MVIP) and presents the sampled frame pulse to the Line Interface
block. When a link is configured for operation in channelised T1/J1/E1 or
unchannelised mode, the gapped clock is passed to the LIT block unmodified.
8.8.2 Line Interface
There are 32 identical line interface blocks in the TCAS672. Each line interface
block contains 2 sub-blocks; one supporting channelised T1/J1/E1 streams and
the other H-MVIP streams. Based on configuration, only one of the sub-blocks
are active at one time; the other is held reset. Each sub-block contains a bit
counter, an 8-bit shift register and a holding register. Each sub-block performs
parallel to serial conversion. Whenever the shift register is updated, a request for
service is sent to the priority encoder block. When acknowledged by the priority
encoder, the line interface would respond by writing the data into the holding
register in the active sub-block.
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To support H-MVIP links, each line interface block contains a time-slot counter.
The time-slot counter is incremented each time the holding register is updated.
When a frame pulse occurs, the time-slot counter is cleared to indicate that the
next byte belongs to the first time-slot.
To support non H-MVIP channelised links, each line interface block contains a
time-slot counter and a clock activity monitor. The time-slot counter is
incremented each time the shift register is updated. The clock activity monitor is
a counter that increments at the system clock (SYSCLK) rate and is cleared by a
rising edge of the transmit clock (TCLK[n]). A framing bit (T1/J1) or a framing
byte (E1) is detected when the counter reaches a programmable threshold, at
which point, the bit and time-slot counters are initialised to indicate that the next
bit sampled is the most significant bit of the first time-slot. For unchannelised
links, the time-slot counter and the clock activity monitor are held reset.
8.8.3 Priority Encoder
The priority encoder monitors the line interfaces for requests and synchronises
them to the SYSCLK timing domain. Requests are serviced on a fixed priority
scheme where highest to lowest priority is assigned from line interface TD[0] to
line interface TD[31]. Thus, simultaneous requests from line interface TD[m] will
be serviced ahead of line interface TD[n], if m < n. The priority encoder selects
the request from the link with the highest priority for service. When there are no
pending requests, the priority encoder generates an idle cycle. In addition, once
every fourth SYSCLK cycle, the priority encoder inserts a null cycle where no
requests are serviced. This cycle is used by the channel assigner downstream
for CBI accesses to the channel provision RAM.
8.8.4 Channel Assigner
The channel assigner block determines the channel number of the request
currently being processed. The block contains a 1024 word channel provision
RAM. The address of the RAM is constructed from concatenating the link
number and the time-slot number of the highest priority requester. The fields of
each RAM word include the channel number and a time-slot enable flag. The
time-slot enable flag labels the current time-slot as belonging to the channel
indicted by the channel number field. For time-slots that are enabled, the
channel assigner issues a request to the THDL672 block which responds with
packet data within one byte period of the transmit stream.
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Performance Monitor
The Performance Monitor block (PMON) contains four counters. The first two
accumulate receive partial packet buffer FIFO overrun events and transmit partial
packet buffer FIFO underflow events, respectively. The remaining two counters
are software programmable to accumulate a variety of events, such as receive
packet count, FCS error counts, etc. All counters saturate upon reaching
maximum value. The accumulation logic consists of a counter and holding
register pair. The counter is incremented when the associated event is detected.
Writing to the FREEDM-32A672 Master Clock / BERT Activity Monitor and
Accumulation Trigger register transfer the count to the corresponding holding
register and clear the counter. The contents of the holding register is accessible
via the microprocessor interface.
8.10 JTAG Test Access Port Interface
The JTAG Test Access Port block provides JTAG support for boundary scan. The
standard JTAG EXTEST, SAMPLE, BYPASS, IDCODE and STCTEST instructions
are supported. The FREEDM-32A672 identification code is 073810CD
hexadecimal.
8.11 Microprocessor Interface
The FREEDM-32A672 supports microprocessor access to an internal register
space for configuring and monitoring the device. All registers are 16 bits wide but
are DWORD aligned in the microprocessor memory map. The registers are
described below:
Table 8 – Normal Mode Microprocessor Accessible Registers
Address
Register
0x000
FREEDM-32A672 Master Reset
0x004
FREEDM-32A672 Master Interrupt Enable
0x008
FREEDM-32A672 Master Interrupt Status
0x00C
FREEDM-32A672 Master Clock / Frame Pulse / BERT
Activity Monitor and Accumulation Trigger
0x010
FREEDM-32A672 Master Link Activity Monitor
0x014
FREEDM-32A672 Master Line Loopback #1
0x018
FREEDM-32A672 Master Line Loopback #2
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Address
Register
0x01C
FREEDM-32A672 Reserved
0x020
FREEDM-32A672 Master BERT Control
0x024
FREEDM-32A672 Master Performance Monitor Control
0x028 – 0x0FC
Reserved
0x100
RCAS Indirect Channel and Time-slot Select
0x104
RCAS Indirect Channel Data
0x108
RCAS Framing Bit Threshold
0x10C
RCAS Channel Disable
0x110 – 0x17C
RCAS Reserved
0x180 – 0x1FC
RCAS Link #0 through #31 Configuration
0x200
RHDL Indirect Channel Select
0x204
RHDL Indirect Channel Data Register #1
0x208
RHDL Indirect Channel Data Register #2
0x20C
RHDL Reserved
0x210
RHDL Indirect Block Select
0x214
RHDL Indirect Block Data Register
0x218 – 0x21C
RHDL Reserved
0x220
RHDL Configuration
0x224
RHDL Maximum Packet Length
0x228 – 0x23C
RHDL Reserved
0x240 – 0x37C
Reserved
0x380
THDL Indirect Channel Select
0x384
THDL Indirect Channel Data #1
0x388
THDL Indirect Channel Data #2
0x38C
THDL Indirect Channel Data #3
0x390 – 0x39C
THDL Reserved
0x3A0
THDL Indirect Block Select
0x3A4
THDL Indirect Block Data
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Address
Register
0x3A8 – 0x3AC
THDL Reserved
0x3B0
THDL Configuration
0x3B4 – 0x3BC
THDL Reserved
0x3C0 – 0x3FC
Reserved
0x400
TCAS Indirect Channel and Time-slot Select
0x404
TCAS Indirect Channel Data
0x408
TCAS Framing Bit Threshold
0x40C
TCAS Idle Time-slot Fill Data
0x410
TCAS Channel Disable
0x414 – 0x47C
TCAS Reserved
0x480 – 0x4FC
TCAS Link #0 through #31 Configuration
0x500
PMON Status
0x504
PMON Receive FIFO Overflow Count
0x508
PMON Transmit FIFO Underflow Count
0x50C
PMON Configurable Count #1
0x510
PMON Configurable Count #2
0x514 – 0x51C
PMON Reserved
0x520 – 0x57C
Reserved
0x580
RAPI Control
0x584 – 0x5BC
RAPI Reserved
0x5C0 – 0x5FC
Reserved
0x600
TAPI Control
0x604
TAPI Indirect Channel Provisioning
0x608
TAPI Indirect Channel Data Register
0x60C – 0x63C
TAPI Reserved
0x640 – 0x7FC
Reserved
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NORMAL MODE REGISTER DESCRIPTION
Normal mode registers are used to configure and monitor the operation of the
FREEDM-32A672.
Notes on Normal Mode Register Bits:
1. Writing values into unused register bits has no effect. However, to ensure software
compatibility with future, feature-enhanced versions of the product, unused register
bits must be written with logic zero. Reading back unused bits can produce either a
logic one or a logic zero; hence, unused register bits should be masked off by
software when read.
2. Except where noted, all configuration bits that can be written into can also be read
back. This allows the processor controlling the FREEDM-32A672 to determine the
programming state of the block.
3. Writable normal mode register bits are cleared to logic zero upon reset unless
otherwise noted.
4. Writing into read-only normal mode register bit locations does not affect FREEDM32A672 operation unless otherwise noted.
5. Certain register bits are reserved. These bits are associated with megacell functions
that are unused in this application. To ensure that the FREEDM-32A672 operates
as intended, reserved register bits must only be written with their default values.
Similarly, writing to reserved registers should be avoided.
9.1
Microprocessor Accessible Registers
Microprocessor accessible registers can be accessed by the external
microprocessor. For each register description below, the hexadecimal register
number indicates the address in the FREEDM-32A672 when accesses are made
using the external microprocessor.
Note
These registers are not byte addressable. Writing to any one of these registers
modifies all 16 bits in the register.
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Register 0x000 : FREEDM-32A672 Master Reset
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
Reset
0
Unused
XH
Bit 14
to
Bit 12
Bit 11
R
TYPE[3]
0
Bit 10
R
TYPE[2]
0
Bit 9
R
TYPE[1]
0
Bit 8
R
TYPE[0]
1
Bit 7
R
ID[7]
0
Bit 6
R
ID[7]
0
Bit 5
R
ID[5]
0
Bit 4
R
ID[4]
0
Bit 3
R
ID[3]
0
Bit 2
R
ID[2]
0
Bit 1
R
ID[1]
1
Bit 0
R
ID[0]
0
This register provides software reset capability and device ID information.
RESET:
The RESET bit allows the FREEDM-32A672 to be reset under software
control. If the RESET bit is a logic one, the entire FREEDM-32A672, except
the microprocessor interface, is held in reset. This bit is not self-clearing.
Therefore, a logic zero must be written to bring the FREEDM-32A672 out of
reset. Holding the FREEDM-32A672 in a reset state places it into a low
power, stand-by mode. A hardware reset clears the RESET bit, thus negating
the software reset.
Note
Like the hardware reset input (RSTB), RESET forces the FREEDM-32A672’s
transmit link data pins (TD[31:0]) high and the APPI outputs tristate.
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TYPE[3:0]:
The Device Type bits (TYPE[3:0]) allow software to identify the device as the
FREEDM-32A672 member of the FREEDM family of products.
ID[7:0]:
The Device ID bits (ID[7:0]) allow software to identify the version level of the
FREEDM-32A672.
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Register 0x004 : FREEDM-32A672 Master Interrupt Enable
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
TFUDRE
0
Bit 14
R/W
TFOVRE
0
Bit 13
R/W
TUNPVE
0
Bit 12
R/W
TPRTYE
0
Unused
XXH
Bit 11
to
Bit 6
Bit 5
R/W
RFOVRE
0
Bit 4
R/W
RPFEE
0
Bit 3
R/W
RABRTE
0
Bit 2
R/W
RFCSEE
0
Bit 1
Unused
X
Bit 0
Unused
X
This register provides interrupt enables for various events detected or initiated by
the FREEDM-32A672.
RFCSEE:
The receive frame check sequence error interrupt enable bit (RFCSEE)
enables receive FCS error interrupts to the microprocessor. When RFCSEE
is set high, a mismatch between the received FCS code and the computed
CRC residue will cause an interrupt to be generated on the INTB output.
Interrupts are masked when RFCSEE is set low. However, the RFCSEI bit
remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to detect
receive FCS error events.
RABRTE:
The receive abort interrupt enable bit (RABRTE) enables receive HDLC abort
interrupts to the microprocessor. When RABRTE is set high, receipt of an
abort code (at least 7 contiguous 1’s) will cause an interrupt to be generated
on the INTB output. Interrupts are masked when RABRTE is set low.
However, the RABRTI bit remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may
be polled to detect receive abort events.
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
RPFEE:
The receive packet format error interrupt enable bit (RPFEE) enables receive
packet format error interrupts to the microprocessor. When RPFEE is set
high, receipt of a packet that is longer than the maximum specified in the
RHDL Maximum Packet Length register, or a packet that is shorter than 32
bits (CRC-CCITT) or 48 bits (CRC-32), or a packet that is not octet aligned
will cause an interrupt to be generated on the INTB output. Interrupts are
masked when RPFEE is set low. However, the RPFEI bit remains valid when
interrupts are disabled and may be polled to detect receive packet format
error events.
RFOVRE:
The receive FIFO overrun error interrupt enable bit (RFOVRE) enables
receive FIFO overrun error interrupts to the microprocessor. When RFOVRE
is set high, attempts to write data into the logical FIFO of a channel when it is
already full will cause an interrupt to be generated on the INTB output.
Interrupts are masked when RFOVRE is set low. However, the RFOVRI bit
remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to detect
receive FIFO overrun events.
TPRTYE:
The transmit parity error interrupt enable bit (TPRTYE) enables parity errors
on the transmit APPI to generate interrupts to the microprocessor. When
TPRTYE is set high, detection of a parity error on the transmit APPI will cause
an interrupt to be generated on the INTB output. Interrupts are masked when
TPRTYE is set low. However, the TPRTYI bit remains valid when interrupts
are disabled and may be polled to detect parity error events.
TUNPVE:
The transmit unprovisioned error interrupt enable bit (TUNPVE) enables
attempted transmissions to unprovisioned channels to generate interrupts to
the microprocessor. When TUNPVE is set high, attempts to write data to an
unprovisioned channel will cause an interrupt to be generated on the INTB
output. Interrupts are masked when TUNPVE is set low. However, the
TUNPVI bit remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to
detect attempted transmissions to unprovisioned channel events.
TFOVRE:
The transmit FIFO overflow error interrupt enable bit (TFOVRE) enables
transmit FIFO overflow error interrupts to the microprocessor. When
TFOVRE is set high, attempts to write data to the logical FIFO when it is
already full will cause an interrupt to be generated on the INTB output.
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Interrupts are masked when TFOVRE is set low. However, the TFOVRI bit
remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to detect
transmit FIFO overflow events.
TFUDRE:
The transmit FIFO underflow error interrupt enable bit (TFUDRE) enables
transmit FIFO underflow error interrupts to the microprocessor. When
TFUDRE is set high, attempts to read data from the logical FIFO when it is
already empty will cause an interrupt to be generated on the INTB output.
Interrupts are masked when TFUDRE is set low. However, the TFUDRI bit
remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to detect
transmit FIFO underflow events.
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Register 0x008 : FREEDM-32A672 Master Interrupt Status
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
TFUDRI
X
Bit 14
R
TFOVRI
X
Bit 13
R
TUNPVI
X
Bit 12
R
TPRTYI
X
Unused
XXH
Bit 11
to
Bit 6
Bit 5
R
RFOVRI
X
Bit 4
R
RPFEI
X
Bit 3
R
RABRTI
X
Bit 2
R
RFCSEI
X
Bit 1
Unused
X
Bit 0
Unused
X
This register reports the interrupt status for various events detected or initiated by
the FREEDM-32A672. Reading this registers acknowledges and clears the
interrupts.
RFCSEI:
The receive frame check sequence error interrupt status bit (RFCSEI) reports
receive FCS error interrupts to the microprocessor. RFCSEI is set high when
a mismatch between the received FCS code and the computed CRC residue
is detected. RFCSEI remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be
polled to detect receive FCS error events.
RABRTI:
The receive abort interrupt status bit (RABRTI) reports receive HDLC abort
interrupts to the microprocessor. RABRTI is set high upon receipt of an abort
code (at least 7 contiguous 1’s). RABRTI remains valid when interrupts are
disabled and may be polled to detect receive abort events.
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
RPFEI:
The receive packet format error interrupt status bit (RPFEI) reports receive
packet format error interrupts to the microprocessor. RPFEI is set high upon
receipt of a packet that is longer than the maximum programmed length, of a
packet that is shorter than 32 bits (CRC-CCITT) or 48 bits (CRC-32), or of a
packet that is not octet aligned. RPFEI remains valid when interrupts are
disabled and may be polled to detect receive packet format error events.
RFOVRI:
The receive FIFO overrun error interrupt status bit (RFOVRI) reports receive
FIFO overrun error interrupts to the microprocessor. RFOVRI is set high on
attempts to write data into the logical FIFO of a channel when it is already full.
RFOVRI remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to
detect receive FIFO overrun events.
TPRTYI:
The transmit parity error interrupt status bit (TPRTYI) reports the detection of
a parity on the transmit APPI. TPRTYI is set high upon detection of a parity
error. TPRTYI remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled
to detect parity errors.
TUNPVI:
The transmit unprovisioned error interrupt status bit (TUNPVI) reports an
attempted data transmission to an unprovisioned channel FIFO. TUNPVI is
set high upon attempts to write data to an unprovisioned channel FIFO.
TUNPVI remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to
detect an attempt to write data to an unprovisioned channel FIFO.
TFOVRI:
The transmit FIFO overflow error interrupt status bit (TFOVRI) reports
transmit FIFO overflow error interrupts to the microprocessor. TFOVRI is set
high upon attempts to write data to the logical FIFO when it is already full.
TFOVRI remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be polled to
detect transmit FIFO overflow events. (Note – Transmit FIFO overflows will
not occur if channels are properly polled on the Transmit APPI before
transferring data.)
TFUDRI:
The transmit FIFO underflow error interrupt status bit (TFUDRI) reports
transmit FIFO underflow error interrupts to the microprocessor. TFUDRI is set
high upon attempts to read data from the logical FIFO when it is already
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empty. TFUDRI remains valid when interrupts are disabled and may be
polled to detect transmit FIFO underflow events.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x00C : FREEDM-32A672 Master Clock / Frame Pulse / BERT
Activity Monitor and Accumulation Trigger
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 14
Function
Default
Unused
XH
Bit 13
R
TXCLKA
X
Bit 12
R
RXCLKA
X
Bit 11
R
TFPA[3]
X
Bit 10
R
TFPA[2]
X
Bit 9
R
TFPA[1]
X
Bit 8
R
TFPA[0]
X
Bit 7
R
RFPA[3]
X
Bit 6
R
RFPA[2]
X
Bit 5
R
RFPA[1]
X
Bit 4
R
RFPA[0]
X
Bit 3
R
TFP8A
X
Bit 2
R
RFP8A
X
Bit 1
R
TBDA
X
Bit 0
R
SYSCLKA
X
This register provides activity monitoring on the FREEDM-32A672 system clock,
Any-PHY clocks, H-MVIP frame pulse and BERT port inputs. When a monitored
input makes a transition, the corresponding register bit is set high. The bit will
remain high until this register is read, at which point, all the bits in this register are
cleared. A lack of transitions is indicated by the corresponding register bit
reading low. This register should be read periodically to detect for stuck at
conditions.
Writing to this register delimits the accumulation intervals in the PMON
accumulation registers. Counts accumulated in those registers are transferred to
holding registers where they can be read. The counters themselves are then
cleared to begin accumulating events for a new accumulation interval. The bits in
this register are not affected by write accesses.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
SYSCLKA:
The system clock active bit (SYSCLKA) monitors for low to high transitions on
the SYSCLK input. SYSCLKA is set high on a rising edge of SYSCLK, and is
set low when this register is read.
TBDA:
The transmit BERT data active bit (TBDA) monitors for low to high transitions
on the TBD input. TBDA is set high on a rising edge of TDB, and is set low
when this register is read.
RFP8A:
The receive 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP frame pulse activity bit (RFP8A) monitors for
low to high transitions on the RFP8B input. RFP8A is set high when RFP8B
has been sampled low and sampled high by falling edges of the RMV8FPC,
and is set low when this register is read.
TFP8A:
The transmit 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP frame pulse activity bit (TFP8A) monitors
for low to high transitions on the TFP8B input. TFP8A is set high when
TFP8B has been sampled low and sampled high by falling edges of the
TMV8FPC, and is set low when this register is read.
RFPA[3:0]:
The receive frame pulse activity bits (RFPA[3:0]) monitor for low to high
transitions on the RFPB[3:0] inputs. RFPA[n] is set high when RFPB[n] has
been sampled low and sampled high by falling edges of the corresponding
RMVCK[n], and is set low when this register is read.
TFPA[3:0]:
The transmit frame pulse activity bits (TFPA[3:0]) monitor for low to high
transitions on the TFPB[3:0] inputs. TFPA[n] is set high when TFPB[n] has
been sampled low and sampled high by falling edges of the corresponding
TMVCK[n], and is set low when this register is read.
RXCLKA / TXCLKA:
The Any-PHY clock active bits (RXCLKA, TXCLKA) monitor for low to high
transitions on the RXCLK and TXCLK inputs respectively. RXCLKA and
TXCLKA are set high on a rising edge of the corresponding clock, and are set
low when this register is read.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x010 : FREEDM-32A672 Master Link Activity Monitor
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
TLGA[7]
X
Bit 14
R
TLGA[6]
X
Bit 13
R
TLGA[5]
X
Bit 12
R
TLGA[4]
X
Bit 11
R
TLGA[3]
X
Bit 10
R
TLGA[2]
X
Bit 9
R
TLGA[1]
X
Bit 8
R
TLGA[0]
X
Bit 7
R
RLGA[7]
X
Bit 6
R
RLGA[6]
X
Bit 5
R
RLGA[5]
X
Bit 4
R
RLGA[4]
X
Bit 3
R
RLGA[3]
X
Bit 2
R
RLGA[2]
X
Bit 1
R
RLGA[1]
X
Bit 0
R
RLGA[0]
X
This register provides activity monitoring on FREEDM-32A672 receive and
transmit link inputs. When a monitored input makes a low to high transition, the
corresponding register bit is set high. The bit will remain high until this register is
read, at which point, all the bits in this register are cleared. A lack of transitions is
indicated by the corresponding register bit reading low. This register should be
read periodically to detect for stuck at conditions.
RLGA[0]:
The receive link group #0 active bit (RLGA[0]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[3:0] and RCLK[3:0]/RMVCK[0]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[0] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[3:0] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[3:0] inputs, or
2. Each of RD[3:0] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[0] input, or
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
3. RD[0] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[0] is set low when this register is read.
RLGA[1]:
The receive link group #1 active bit (RLGA[1]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[7:4] and RCLK[7:4]/RMVCK[0]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[1] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[7:4] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[7:4] inputs, or
2. Each of RD[7:4] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[0] input, or
3. RD[4] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[1] is set low when this register is read.
RLGA[2]:
The receive link group #2 active bit (RLGA[2]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[11:8] and RCLK[11:8]/RMVCK[1]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[2] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[11:8] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[11:8] inputs, or
2. Each of RD[11:8] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[1] input, or
3. RD[8] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[2] is set low when this register is read.
RLGA[3]:
The receive link group #3 active bit (RLGA[3]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[15:12] and RCLK[15:12]/RMVCK[1]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[3] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[15:12] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[15:12] inputs, or
2. Each of RD[15:12] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[1] input, or
3. RD[12] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[3] is set low when this register is read.
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RLGA[4]:
The receive link group #4 active bit (RLGA[4]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[19:16] and RCLK[19:16]/RMVCK[2]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[4] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[19:16] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[19:16] inputs, or
2. Each of RD[19:16] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[2] input, or
3. RD[16] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[4] is set low when this register is read.
RLGA[5]:
The receive link group #5 active bit (RLGA[5]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[23:20] and RCLK[23:20]/RMVCK[2]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[5] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[23:20] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[23:20] inputs, or
2. Each of RD[23:20] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[2] input, or
3. RD[20] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[5] is set low when this register is read.
RLGA[6]:
The receive link group #6 active bit (RLGA[6]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[27:24] and RCLK[27:24]/RMVCK[3]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[6] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[27:24] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[27:24] inputs, or
2. Each of RD[27:24] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[3] input, or
3. RD[24] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[6] is set low when this register is read.
RLGA[7]:
The receive link group #7 active bit (RLGA[7]) monitors for transitions on the
RD[31:28] and RCLK[31:28]/RMVCK[3]/RMV8DC inputs. RLGA[7] is set high
when either:
1. Each of RD[31:28] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the corresponding RCLK[31:28] inputs, or
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
2. Each of RD[31:28] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising
edges of the RMVCK[3] input, or
3. RD[28] has been sampled low and sampled high by rising edges of the
RMV8DC input.
RLGA[7] is set low when this register is read.
TLGA[0]:
The transmit link group #0 active bit (TLGA[0]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[3:0] & TMVCK[0] inputs. TLGA[0] is set high when
either:
1. Rising edges have been observed on all four TCLK[3:0] inputs, or
2. A rising edge has been observed on the TMVCK[0] input.
TLGA[0] is set low when this register is read.
TLGA[1]:
The transmit link group #1 active bit (TLGA[1]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[7:4] & TMVCK[1] inputs. TLGA[1] is set high when
either:
1. Rising edges have been observed on all four TCLK[7:4] inputs, or
2. A rising edge has been observed on the TMVCK[1] input.
TLGA[1] is set low when this register is read.
TLGA[2]:
The transmit link group #2 active bit (TLGA[2]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[11:8] & TMVCK[2] inputs. TLGA[2] is set high when
either:
1. Rising edges have been observed on all four TCLK[11:8] inputs, or
2. A rising edge has been observed on the TMVCK[2] input.
TLGA[2] is set low when this register is read.
TLGA[3]:
The transmit link group #3 active bit (TLGA[3]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[15:12] & TMVCK[3] inputs. TLGA[3] is set high when
either:
1. Rising edges have been observed on all four TCLK[15:12] inputs, or
2. A rising edge has been observed on the TMVCK[3] input.
TLGA[3] is set low when this register is read.
TLGA[4]:
The transmit link group #4 active bit (TLGA[4]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[19:16] inputs. TLGA[4] is set high when rising edges
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
have been observed on all four TCLK[19:16] inputs, and is set low when this
register is read.
TLGA[5]:
The transmit link group #5 active bit (TLGA[5]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[23:20] inputs. TLGA[5] is set high when rising edges
have been observed on all four TCLK[23:20] inputs, and is set low when this
register is read.
TLGA[6]:
The transmit link group #6 active bit (TLGA[6]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[27:24] inputs. TLGA[6] is set high when rising edges
have been observed on all four TCLK[27:24] inputs, and is set low when this
register is read.
TLGA[7]:
The transmit link group #7 active bit (TLGA[7]) monitors for low to high
transitions on the TCLK[31:28] & TMV8DC inputs. TLGA[7] is set high when
either:
1. Rising edges have been observed on all four TCLK[31:28] inputs, or
2. A rising edge has been observed on the TMV8DC input.
TLGA[7] is set low when this register is read.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x014 : FREEDM-32A672 Master Line Loopback #1
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
LLBEN[15]
0
Bit 14
R/W
LLBEN[14]
0
Bit 13
R/W
LLBEN[13]
0
Bit 12
R/W
LLBEN[12]
0
Bit 11
R/W
LLBEN[11]
0
Bit 10
R/W
LLBEN[10]
0
Bit 9
R/W
LLBEN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
LLBEN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
LLBEN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
LLBEN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
LLBEN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
LLBEN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
LLBEN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
LLBEN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
LLBEN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
LLBEN[0]
0
This register controls line loopback for links #0 to #15.
LLBEN[15:0]:
The line loopback enable bits (LLBEN[15:0]) controls line loopback for
links #15 to #0. When links #0 through #15 are configured for channelised
T1/J1/E1 or unchannelised traffic and LLBEN[n] is set high, the data on RD[n]
is passed verbatim to TD[n] which is then updated on the falling edge of
RCLK[n]. TCLK[n] is ignored. When LLBEN[n] is set low, TD[n] is processed
normally. Line loopback is not supported for H-MVIP traffic.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x018 : FREEDM-32A672 Master Line Loopback #2
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
LLBEN[31]
0
Bit 14
R/W
LLBEN[30]
0
Bit 13
R/W
LLBEN[29]
0
Bit 12
R/W
LLBEN[28]
0
Bit 11
R/W
LLBEN[27]
0
Bit 10
R/W
LLBEN[26]
0
Bit 9
R/W
LLBEN[25]
0
Bit 8
R/W
LLBEN[24]
0
Bit 7
R/W
LLBEN[23]
0
Bit 6
R/W
LLBEN[22]
0
Bit 5
R/W
LLBEN[21]
0
Bit 4
R/W
LLBEN[20]
0
Bit 3
R/W
LLBEN[19]
0
Bit 2
R/W
LLBEN[18]
0
Bit 1
R/W
LLBEN[17]
0
Bit 0
R/W
LLBEN[16]
0
This register controls line loopback for links #16 to #31.
LLBEN[31:16]:
The line loopback enable bits (LLBEN[31:16]) controls line loopback for
links #31 to #16. When links #16 through #31 are configured for channelised
T1/J1/E1 or unchannelised traffic and LLBEN[n] is set high, the data on RD[n]
is passed verbatim to TD[n] which is then updated on the falling edge of
RCLK[n]. TCLK[n] is ignored. When LLBEN[n] is set low, TD[n] is processed
normally. Line loopback is not supported for H-MVIP traffic.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x01C : FREEDM-32A672 Reserved
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 1
Bit 0
R/W
Function
Default
Unused
XXXXH
Reserved
0
Reserved:
The reserved bit must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
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Register 0x020 : FREEDM-32A672 Master BERT Control
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
TBEN
0
Bit 14
Unused
X
Bit 13
Unused
X
Bit 12
R/W
TBSEL[4]
0
Bit 11
R/W
TBSEL[3]
0
Bit 10
R/W
TBSEL[2]
0
Bit 9
R/W
TBSEL[1]
0
Bit 8
R/W
TBSEL[0]
0
Bit 7
R/W
RBEN
0
Bit 6
Unused
X
Bit 5
Unused
X
Bit 4
R/W
RBSEL[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
RBSEL[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
RBSEL[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
RBSEL[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
RBSEL[0]
0
This register controls the bit error rate testing of the receive and transmit links.
Bit error rate testing is not supported for links configured for H-MVIP traffic.
RBSEL[4:0]:
The receive bit error rates testing link select bits (RBSEL[4:0]) controls the
source of data on the RBD and RBCLK outputs when receive bit error rate
testing is enabled (RBEN set high). RBSEL[4:0] is a binary number that
selects a receive link configured for non H-MVIP traffic (RD[31:0]/RCLK[31:0])
to be the source of data for RBD and RBCLK outputs. RBSEL[4:0] is ignored
when RBEN is set low. RBSEL[4:0] cannot select a link configured for HMVIP traffic.
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RBEN:
The receive bit error rates testing link enable bit (RBEN) controls the receive
bit error rate testing port. When RBEN is set high, RBSEL[4:0] is a binary
number that selects a receive link configured for non H-MVIP traffic
(RD[31:0]/RCLK[31:0]) to be the source of data for RBD and RBCLK outputs.
When RBEN is set low, RBD and RBCLK are held tristated.
TBSEL[4:0]:
The transmit bit error rates testing link select bits (TBSEL[4:0]) controls the
over-writing of transmit data on TD[31:0] by data on TBD when transmit bit
error rate testing is enabled (TBEN set high) and the selected link is not in
line loopback (LLBEN[n] set low). TBSEL[4:0] is a binary number that selects
a transmit link configured for non H-MVIP traffic (TD[31:0]/TCLK[31:0]) to
carry the data on TBD. The TBCLK output is a buffered version of the
selected one of TCLK[31:0]. TBSEL[4:0] is ignored when TBEN is set low.
TBSEL[4:0] cannot select a link configured for H-MVIP traffic.
TBEN:
The transmit bit error rates testing link enable bit (TBEN) controls the transmit
bit error rate testing port. When TBEN is set high and the associated link in
not in line loopback (LLBEN set low), TBSEL[4:0] is a binary number that
selects a transmit link data configured for non H-MVIP traffic (TD[31:0]) to
carry the data on TBD and selects a transmit link clock (TCLK[31:0]) as the
source of TBCLK. When TBEN is set low, all transmit links are processed
normally and TBCLK is held tristated.
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x024 : FREEDM-32A672 Master Performance Monitor Control
Bit
Type
Bit 15
Function
Default
Unused
X
Bit 14
R/W
TP2EN
0
Bit 13
R/W
TABRT2EN
0
Bit 12
R/W
RP2EN
0
Bit 11
R/W
RLENE2EN
0
Bit 10
R/W
RABRT2EN
0
Bit 9
R/W
RFCSE2EN
0
Bit 8
R/W
RSPE2EN
0
Unused
X
Bit 7
Bit 6
R/W
TP1EN
0
Bit 5
R/W
TABRT1EN
0
Bit 4
R/W
RP1EN
0
Bit 3
R/W
RLENE1EN
0
Bit 2
R/W
RABRT1EN
0
Bit 1
R/W
RFCSE1EN
0
Bit 0
R/W
RSPE1EN
0
This register configures the events that are accumulated in the two configurable
performance monitor counters in the PMON block.
RSPE1EN:
The receive small packet error accumulate enable bit (RSPE1EN) enables
counting of minimum packet size violation events. When RSPE1EN is set
high, receipt of a packet that is shorter than 32 bits (CRC-CCITT, Unspecified
CRC or no CRC) or 48 bits (CRC-32) will cause the PMON Configurable
Accumulator #1 register to increment. Small packet errors are ignored when
RSPE1EN is set low.
RFCSE1EN:
The receive frame check sequence error accumulate enable bit (RFCSE1EN)
enables counting of receive FCS error events. When RFCSE1EN is set high,
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a mismatch between the received FCS code and the computed CRC residue
will cause the PMON Configurable Accumulator #1 register to increment.
Receive frame check sequence errors are ignored when RFCSE1EN is set
low.
RABRT1EN:
The receive abort accumulate enable bit (RABRT1EN) enables counting of
receive HDLC abort events. When RABRT1EN is set high, receipt of an abort
code (at least 7 contiguous 1’s) will cause the PMON Configurable
Accumulator #1 register to increment. Receive aborts are ignored when
RABRT1EN is set low.
RLENE1EN:
The receive packet length error accumulate enable bit (RLENE1EN) enables
counting of receive packet length error events. When RLENE1EN is set high,
receipt of a packet that is longer than the programmable maximum or of a
packet that in not octet aligned will cause the PMON Configurable
Accumulator #1 register to increment. (Receipt of a packet that is both too
long and not octet aligned results in only one increment.) Receive packet
length errors are ignored when RLENE1EN is set low.
RP1EN:
The receive packet enable bit (RP1EN) enables counting of receive error-free
packets. When RP1EN is set high, receipt of an error-free packet will cause
the PMON Configurable Accumulator #1 register to increment. Receive errorfree packets are ignored when RP1EN is set low.
TABRT1EN:
The transmit abort accumulate enable bit (TABRT1EN) enables counting of
transmit HDLC abort events. When TABRT1EN is set high, insertion of an
abort in the outgoing stream will cause the PMON Configurable Accumulator
#1 register to increment. Transmit aborts are ignored when TABRT1EN is set
low.
TP1EN:
The transmit packet enable bit (TP1EN) enables counting of transmit
error-free packets. When TP1EN is set high, transmission of an error-free
packet will cause the PMON Configurable Accumulator #1 register to
increment. Transmit error-free packets are ignored when TP1EN is set low.
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RSPE2EN:
The receive small packet error accumulate enable bit (RSPE2EN) enables
counting of minimum packet size violation events. When RSPE2EN is set
high, receipt of a packet that is shorter than 32 bits (CRC-CCITT, Unspecified
CRC or no CRC) or 48 bits (CRC-32) will cause the PMON Configurable
Accumulator #2 register to increment. Small packet errors are ignored when
RSPE2EN is set low.
RFCSE2EN:
The receive frame check sequence error accumulate enable bit (RFCSE2EN)
enables counting of receive FCS error events. When RFCSE2EN is set high,
a mismatch between the received FCS code and the computed CRC residue
will cause the PMON Configurable Accumulator #2 register to increment.
Receive frame check sequence errors are ignored when RFCSE2EN is set
low.
RABRT2EN:
The receive abort accumulate enable bit (RABRT2EN) enables counting of
receive HDLC abort events. When RABRT2EN is set high, receipt of an abort
code (at least 7 contiguous 2’s) will cause the PMON Configurable
Accumulator #2 register to increment. Receive aborts are ignored when
RABRT2EN is set low.
RLENE2EN:
The receive packet length error accumulate enable bit (RLENE2EN) enables
counting of receive packet length error events. When RLENE2EN is set high,
receipt of a packet that is longer than the programmable maximum or of a
packet that in not octet aligned will cause the PMON Configurable
Accumulator #2 register to increment. (Receipt of a packet that is both too
long and not octet aligned results in only one increment.) Receive packet
length errors are ignored when RLENE2EN is set low.
RP2EN:
The receive packet enable bit (RP2EN) enables counting of receive error-free
packets. When RP2EN is set high, receipt of an error-free packet will cause
the PMON Configurable Accumulator #2 register to increment. Receive errorfree packets are ignored when RP2EN is set low.
TABRT2EN:
The transmit abort accumulate enable bit (TABRT2EN) enables counting of
transmit HDLC abort events. When TABRT2EN is set high, insertion of an
abort in the outgoing stream will cause the PMON Configurable Accumulator
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#2 register to increment. Transmit aborts are ignored when TABRT2EN is set
low.
TP2EN:
The transmit packet enable bit (TP2EN) enables counting of transmit
error-free packets. When TP2EN is set high, transmission of an error-free
packet will cause the PMON Configurable Accumulator #2 register to
increment. Transmit error-free packets are ignored when TP2EN is set low.
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Register 0x100 : RCAS Indirect Link and Time-slot Select
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
BUSY
X
Bit 14
R/W
RWB
0
Unused
X
Bit 13
Bit 12
R/W
Reserved
0
Bit 11
R/W
Reserved
0
Bit 10
R/W
LINK[4]
0
Bit 9
R/W
LINK[3]
0
Bit 8
R/W
LINK[2]
0
Bit 7
R/W
LINK[1]
0
Bit 6
R/W
LINK[0]
0
Unused
X
Bit 5
Bit 4
R/W
TSLOT[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
TSLOT[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
TSLOT[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
TSLOT[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
TSLOT[0]
0
This register provides the receive link and time-slot number used to access the
channel provision RAM. Writing to this register triggers an indirect register
access.
TSLOT[4:0]:
The indirect time-slot number bits (TSLOT[4:0]) indicate the time-slot to be
configured or interrogated in the indirect access. For a channelised T1/J1
link, time-slots 1 to 24 are valid. For a channelised E1 link, time-slots 1 to 31
are valid. For an H-MVIP link, time-slots 0 to 31 are valid. For unchannelised
links, only time-slot 0 is valid.
LINK[4:0]:
The indirect link number bits (LINK[4:0]) select amongst the 32 receive links
to be configured or interrogated in the indirect access.
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Reserved:
The reserved bits must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
RWB:
The indirect access control bit (RWB) selects between a configure (write) or
interrogate (read) access to the channel provision RAM. The address to the
channel provision RAM is constructed by concatenating the TSLOT[4:0] and
LINK[4:0] bits. Writing a logic zero to RWB triggers an indirect write
operation. Data to be written is taken from the PROV, the CDLBEN and the
CHAN[9:0] bits of the RCAS Indirect Channel Data register. Writing a logic
one to RWB triggers an indirect read operation. Addressing of the RAM is the
same as in an indirect write operation. The data read can be found in the
PROV, the CDLBEN and the CHAN[9:0] bits of the RCAS Indirect Channel
Data register.
BUSY:
The indirect access status bit (BUSY) reports the progress of an indirect
access. BUSY is set high when this register is written to trigger an indirect
access, and will stay high until the access is complete. At which point, BUSY
will be set low. This register should be polled to determine when data from an
indirect read operation is available in the RCAS Indirect Channel Data register
or to determine when a new indirect write operation may commence.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x104 : RCAS Indirect Channel Data
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
CDLBEN
0
Bit 14
R/W
PROV
0
Unused
XH
Bit 13
to
Bit 10
Bit 9
R/W
CHAN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
CHAN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
CHAN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
CHAN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
CHAN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
CHAN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
CHAN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
CHAN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
CHAN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
CHAN[0]
0
This register contains the data read from the channel provision RAM after an
indirect read operation or the data to be inserted into the channel provision RAM
in an indirect write operation.
CHAN[9:0]:
The indirect data bits (CHAN[9:0]) report the channel number read from the
channel provision RAM after an indirect read operation has completed.
Channel number to be written to the channel provision RAM in an indirect
write operation must be set up in this register before triggering the write.
CHAN[9:0] reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent
indirect read operation.
PROV:
The indirect provision enable bit (PROV) reports the channel provision enable
flag read from the channel provision RAM after an indirect read operation has
completed. The provision enable flag to be written to the channel provision
RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this register before
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triggering the write. When PROV is set high, the current receive data byte is
processed as part of the channel as indicated by CHAN[9:0]. When PROV is
set low, the current time-slot does not belong to any channel and the receive
data byte ignored. PROV reflects the value written until the completion of a
subsequent indirect read operation.
CDLBEN:
The indirect channel based diagnostic loopback enable bit (CDLBEN) reports
the loopback enable flag read from channel provision RAM after an indirect
read operation has complete. The loopback enable flag to be written to the
channel provision RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this
register before triggering the write. When CDLBEN is set high, the current
receive data byte is to be over-written by data retrieved from the loopback
FIFO of the channel as indicated by CHAN[9:0]. When CDLBEN is set low,
the current receive data byte is processed normally. CDLBEN reflects the
value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect read operation.
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Register 0x108 : RCAS Framing Bit Threshold
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 7
Function
Default
Unused
XXXH
Bit 6
R/W
FTHRES[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
FTHRES[5]
1
Bit 4
R/W
FTHRES[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
FTHRES[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
FTHRES[2]
1
Bit 1
R/W
FTHRES[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
FTHRES[0]
1
This register contains the threshold used by the clock activity monitor to detect
for framing bits/bytes.
FTHRES[6:0]:
The framing bit threshold bits (FTHRES[6:0]) contains the threshold used by
the clock activity monitor to detect for the presence of framing bits. A counter
in the clock activity monitor of each receive link increments on each rising
edge of SYSCLK and is cleared, when the BSYNC bit of that link is set low,
by each rising edge of the corresponding RCLK[n]. When the BSYNC bit of
that link is set high, the counter is cleared at every fourth rising edge of the
corresponding RCLK[n]. When the counter exceeds the threshold given by
FTHRES[6:0], a framing bit/byte has been detected.
FTHRES[6:0] should be set as a function of the SYSCLK period and the
expected gapping width of RCLK[n] during data bits and during framing
bits/bytes. Legal range of FTHRESH[6:0] is ‘b0000001 to ‘b1111110.
Note: For operation with T1/J1 links and SYSCLK = 45 MHz, FTHRESH[6:0]
should be set to ‘b0100101’. The default value of this register reflects this
mode of operation.
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Register 0x10C : RCAS Channel Disable
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
CHDIS
0
Unused
XXH
Bit 14
to
Bit 10
Bit 9
R/W
DCHAN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
DCHAN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
DCHAN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
DCHAN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
DCHAN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
DCHAN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
DCHAN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
DCHAN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
DCHAN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
DCHAN[0]
0
This register controls the disabling of one specific channel to allow orderly
provisioning of time-slots associated with that channel.
DCHAN[9:0]:
The disable channel number bits (DCHAN[9:0]) selects the channel to be
disabled. When CHDIS is set high, the channel specified by DCHAN[9:0] is
disabled. Data in time-slots associated with the specified channel is ignored.
When CHDIS is set low, the channel specified by DCHAN[9:0] operates
normally.
CHDIS:
The channel disable bit (CHDIS) controls the disabling of the channels
specified by DCHAN[9:0]. When CHDIS is set high, the channel selected by
DCHAN[9:0] is disabled. Data in time-slots associated with the specified
channel is ignored. When CHDIS is set low, the channel specified by
DCHAN[9:0] operates normally.
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Register 0x180 – 0x188 : RCAS Links #0 to #2 Configuration
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 5
Bit 4
R/W
Bit 3
Function
Default
Unused
XXXH
BSYNC
0
Unused
X
Bit 2
R/W
MODE[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
MODE[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
MODE[0]
0
This register configures operational modes of receive links #0 to #2.
MODE[2:0]:
The mode select bits (MODE[2:0]) configures the corresponding receive link.
Table 9 details this procedure. When link 4m (0£m£7) is configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode (MODE[2:0]=”111”), data cannot be
received on links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3. However, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and
4m+3 must be configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode for correct operation
of the RCAS672. From a channel assignment point of view in the RCAS672
(Registers 0x100, 0x104), time-slots 0 through 31 of the H-MVIP link are
treated as time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m, time-slots 32 through 63 of the
H-MVIP link are treated as time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m+1, time-slots 64
through 95 of the H-MVIP link are treated as time-slots 0 through 31 of link
4m+2 and time-slots 96 through 127 of the H-MVIP link are treated as timeslots 0 through 31 of link 4m+3.
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Table 9 – Receive Links #0 to #2 Configuration
MODE[2:0]
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
Link Configuration
Unchannelised
Channelised T1/J1 (24 time slots labeled 1-24)
Channelised E1 (31 time slots labeled 1-31)
2 Mbps H-MVIP (32 time slots labeled 0-31)
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
8 Mbps H-MVIP (128 time slots mapped to timeslots 0 through 31 of links 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and
4m+3)
BSYNC:
The byte synchronization enable bit (BSYNC) controls the interpretation of
gaps in RCLK[n] when link #n is in unchannelised mode (MODE[2:0]=”000”).
When BSYNC is set high, the data bit on RD[n] clocked in by the first rising
edge of RCLK[n] after an extended quiescent period is considered to be the
most significant bit of a data byte. When BSYNC is set low, gaps in RCLK[n]
carry no special significance. BSYNC is ignored when MODE[2:0]¹”000”.
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Register 0x18C – 0x1FC : RCAS Links #3 to #31 Configuration
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 3
Function
Default
Unused
XXXXH
Bit 2
R/W
MODE[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
MODE[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
MODE[0]
0
This register configures operational modes of receive links #3 to #31.
MODE[2:0]:
The mode select bits (MODE[2:0]) configures the corresponding receive link.
Table 10 details this procedure. When link 4m (0£m£7) is configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode (MODE[2:0]=”111”), data cannot be
received on links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3. However, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and
4m+3 must be configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode for correct operation
of the RCAS672. From a channel assignment point of view in the RCAS672
(Registers 0x100, 0x104), time-slots 0 through 31 of the H-MVIP link are
treated as time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m, time-slots 32 through 63 of the
H-MVIP link are treated as time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m+1, time-slots 64
through 95 of the H-MVIP link are treated as time-slots 0 through 31 of link
4m+2 and time-slots 96 through 127 of the H-MVIP link are treated as timeslots 0 through 31 of link 4m+3.
Table 10 – Receive Links #3 to #31 Configuration
MODE[2:0]
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
Link Configuration
Unchannelised
Channelised T1/J1 (24 time slots labeled 1-24)
Channelised E1 (31 time slots labeled 1-31)
2 Mbps H-MVIP (32 time slots labeled 0-31)
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
8 Mbps H-MVIP (128 time slots mapped to timeslots 0 through 31 of links 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and
4m+3)
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Register 0x200 : RHDL Indirect Channel Select
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
BUSY
X
Bit 14
R/W
CRWB
0
Unused
XH
Bit 13
to
Bit 10
Bit 9
R/W
CHAN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
CHAN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
CHAN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
CHAN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
CHAN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
CHAN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
CHAN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
CHAN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
CHAN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
CHAN[0]
0
This register provides the channel number used to access the receive channel
provision RAM. Writing to this register triggers an indirect channel register
access.
CHAN[9:0]:
The indirect channel number bits (CHAN[9:0]) indicate the receive channel to
be configured or interrogated in the indirect access.
CRWB:
The channel indirect access control bit (CRWB) selects between a configure
(write) or interrogate (read) access to the receive channel provision RAM.
Writing a logic zero to CRWB triggers an indirect write operation. Data to be
written is taken from the Indirect Channel Data registers. Writing a logic one
to CRWB triggers an indirect read operation. The data read can be found in
the Indirect Channel Data registers.
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BUSY:
The indirect access status bit (BUSY) reports the progress of an indirect
access. BUSY is set high when this register is written to trigger an indirect
access, and will stay high until the access is complete. At which point, BUSY
will be set low. This register should be polled to determine when data from an
indirect read operation is available in the RHDL Indirect Channel Data #1 and
#2 registers or to determine when a new indirect write operation may
commence.
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Register 0x204 : RHDL Indirect Channel Data Register #1
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
PROV
0
Bit 14
R/W
STRIP
0
Bit 13
R/W
DELIN
0
Bit 12
R
TAVAIL
X
Bit 11
W
Reserved
X
Bit 10
W
FPTR[10]
X
Bit 9
W
FPTR[9]
X
Bit 8
W
FPTR[8]
X
Bit 7
W
FPTR[7]
X
Bit 6
W
FPTR[6]
X
Bit 5
W
FPTR[5]
X
Bit 4
W
FPTR[4]
X
Bit 3
W
FPTR[3]
X
Bit 2
W
FPTR[2]
X
Bit 1
W
FPTR[1]
X
Bit 0
W
FPTR[0]
X
This register contains data read from the channel provision RAM after an indirect
read operation or data to be inserted into the channel provision RAM in an
indirect write operation.
FPTR[10:0]:
The indirect FIFO block pointer (FPTR[10:0]) identifies one of the blocks of
the circular linked list in the partial packet buffer used in the logical FIFO of
the current channel. The FIFO pointer to be written to the channel provision
RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this register before
triggering the write. The FIFO pointer value can be any one of the blocks
provisioned to form the circular buffer.
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Reserved:
The reserved bit must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
TAVAIL:
The indirect transaction available bit (TAVAIL) reports the fill level of the partial
packet buffer used in the logical FIFO of the current channel. TAVAIL is set
high when the FIFO of the current channel contains sufficient data, as
controlled by XFER[3:0], to result in a transfer across the receive APPI.
TAVAIL is set low when the amount of receive data is too small to result in a
transfer across the receive APPI. TAVAIL is updated by an indirect channel
read operation.
DELIN:
The indirect delineate enable bit (DELIN) configures the HDLC processor to
perform flag sequence delineation and bit de-stuffing on the incoming data
stream. The delineate enable bit to be written to the channel provision RAM,
in an indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this register before
triggering the write. When DELIN is set high, flag sequence delineation and
bit de-stuffing is performed on the incoming data stream. When DELIN is set
low, the HDLC processor does not perform any processing (flag sequence
delineation, bit de-stuffing nor CRC verification) on the incoming stream.
DELIN reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect
channel read operation.
STRIP:
The indirect frame check sequence discard bit (STRIP) configures the HDLC
processor to remove the CRC from the incoming frame when writing the data
to the channel FIFO. The FCS discard bit to be written to the channel
provision RAM, in an indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this
register before triggering the write. When STRIP is set high and CRC[1:0] is
not equal to “00”, the received CRC value is not written to the FIFO. When
STRIP is set low, the received CRC value is written to the FIFO. The bytes in
buffer field of the RPD correctly reflect the presence/absence of CRC bytes in
the buffer. The value of STRIP is ignored when DELIN is low. STRIP reflects
the value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect channel read
operation.
PROV:
The indirect provision enable bit (PROV) reports the channel provision enable
flag read from the channel provision RAM after an indirect channel read
operation has completed. The provision enable flag to be written to the
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channel provision RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this
register before triggering the write. When PROV is set high, the HDLC
processor will process data on the channel specified by CHAN[9:0]. When
PROV is set low, the HDLC processor will ignore data on the channel
specified by CHAN[9:0]. PROV reflects the value written until the completion
of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
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Register 0x208 : RHDL Indirect Channel Data Register #2
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
7BIT
0
Bit 14
R/W
PRIORITY
0
Bit 13
R/W
INVERT
0
Unused
X
Bit 12
Bit 11
R/W
CRC[1]
0
Bit 10
R/W
CRC[0]
0
Bit 9
R/W
OFFSET[1]
0
Bit 8
R/W
OFFSET[0]
0
Bit 7
Unused
X
Bit 6
Unused
X
Bit 5
Unused
X
Bit 4
Unused
X
Bit 3
R/W
XFER[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
XFER[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
XFER[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
XFER[0]
0
This register contains data read from the channel provision RAM after an indirect
read operation or data to be inserted into the channel provision RAM in an
indirect write operation.
XFER[3:0]:
The indirect channel transfer size (XFER[3:0]) configures the amount of data
transferred in each transaction. The channel transfer size to be written to the
channel provision RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this
register before triggering the write. When the channel FIFO depth reaches
the depth specified by XFER[3:0] or when an end-of-packet exists in the
FIFO, a poll of this FREEDM-32A672 device will indicate that data exists and
is ready to be transferred across the receive APPI. Channel transfer size is
measured in 16 byte blocks. The amount of data transferred and the depth
threshold are specified by given setting is:
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XFER[3:0] + 1 blocks = 16 * (XFER[3:0] + 1) bytes
XFER[3:0] should be set such that the number of blocks transferred is at least
two fewer than the total allocated to the associated channel. XFER[3:0]
reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect channel
read operation.
OFFSET[1:0]:
The packet byte offset (OFFSET[1:0]) configures the partial packet processor
to insert invalid bytes at the beginning of a packet stored in the channel FIFO.
The value of OFFSET[1:0] to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an
indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this register before
triggering the write. The number of bytes inserted before the beginning of a
HDLC packet is defined by the binary value of OFFSET[1:0]. OFFSET[1:0]
reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect channel
read operation.
CRC[1:0]:
The CRC algorithm bits (CRC[1:0]) configures the HDLC processor to perform
CRC verification on the incoming data stream. The value of CRC[1:0] to be
written to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect channel write operation,
must be set up in this register before triggering the write. CRC[1:0] is ignored
when DELIN is low. CRC[1:0] reflects the value written until the completion of
a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
Table 11 – CRC[1:0] Settings
CRC[1]
CRC[0]
Operation
0
0
No Verification
0
1
CRC-CCITT
1
0
CRC-32
1
1
Reserved
INVERT:
The HDLC data inversion bit (INVERT) configures the HDLC processor to
logically invert the incoming HDLC stream from the RCAS672 before
processing it. The value of INVERT to be written to the channel provision
RAM, in an indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this register
before triggering the write. When INVERT is set to one, the HDLC stream is
logically inverted before processing. When INVERT is set to zero, the HDLC
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stream is not inverted before processing. INVERT reflects the value written
until the completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
PRIORITY:
The channel FIFO priority bit (PRIORITY) informs the partial packet processor
that the channel has precedence over other channels when being serviced by
the RAPI672 block for transfer across the receive APPI. The value of
PRIORITY to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect channel
write operation, must be set up in this register before triggering the write.
Channel FIFOs with PRIORITY set to one are serviced by the RAPI672
before channel FIFOs with PRIORITY set to zero. Channels with an HDLC
data rate to FIFO size ratio that is significantly higher than other channels
should have PRIORITY set to one. PRIORITY reflects the value written until
the completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
7BIT:
The 7BIT enable bit (7BIT) configures the HDLC processor to ignore the least
significant bit of each octet in the corresponding link RD[n]. The value of 7BIT
to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect channel write
operation, must be set up in this register before triggering the write. When
7BIT is set high, the least significant bit (last bit of each octet received), is
ignored. When 7BIT is set low, the entire receive data stream is processed.
7BIT reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect
channel read operation.
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Register 0x210 : RHDL Indirect Block Select
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
BUSY
X
Bit 14
R/W
BRWB
X
Bit 13
Unused
X
Bit 12
Unused
X
Bit 11
R/W
Reserved
X
Bit 10
R/W
BLOCK[10]
X
Bit 9
R/W
BLOCK[9]
X
Bit 8
R/W
BLOCK[8]
X
Bit 7
R/W
BLOCK[7]
X
Bit 6
R/W
BLOCK[6]
X
Bit 5
R/W
BLOCK[5]
X
Bit 4
R/W
BLOCK[4]
X
Bit 3
R/W
BLOCK[3]
X
Bit 2
R/W
BLOCK[2]
X
Bit 1
R/W
BLOCK[1]
X
Bit 0
R/W
BLOCK[0]
X
This register provides the block number used to access the block pointer RAM.
Writing to this register triggers an indirect block register access.
BLOCK[10:0]:
The indirect block number (BLOCK[10:0]) indicate the block to be configured
or interrogated in the indirect access.
Reserved:
The reserved bit must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
BRWB:
The block indirect access control bit (BRWB) selects between a configure
(write) or interrogate (read) access to the block pointer RAM. Writing a logic
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zero to BRWB triggers an indirect block write operation. Data to be written is
taken from the Indirect Block Data register. Writing a logic one to BRWB
triggers an indirect block read operation. The data read can be found in the
Indirect Block Data register.
BUSY:
The indirect access status bit (BUSY) reports the progress of an indirect
access. BUSY is set high when this register is written to trigger an indirect
access, and will stay high until the access is complete. At which point, BUSY
will be set low. This register should be polled to determine when data from an
indirect read operation is available in the RHDL Indirect Block Data register or
to determine when a new indirect write operation may commence.
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Register 0x214 : RHDL Indirect Block Data
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 12
Function
Default
Unused
XH
Bit 11
R/W
Reserved
X
Bit 10
R/W
BPTR[10]
0
Bit 9
R/W
BPTR[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
BPTR[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
BPTR[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
BPTR[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
BPTR[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
BPTR[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
BPTR[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
BPTR[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
BPTR[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
BPTR[0]
0
This register contains data read from the block pointer RAM after an indirect
block read operation or data to be inserted into the block pointer RAM in an
indirect block write operation.
BPTR[10:0]:
The indirect block pointer (BPTR[10:0]) configures the block pointer of the
block specified by the Indirect Block Select register. The block pointer to be
written to the block pointer RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up
in this register before triggering the write. The block pointer value is the block
number of the next block in the linked list. A circular list of blocks must be
formed in order to use the block list as a receive channel FIFO buffer.
BPTR[10:0] reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent
indirect block read operation. When provisioning a channel FIFO, all block
pointers must be re-written to properly initialize the FIFO.
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Reserved:
The reserved bit must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
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Register 0x220 : RHDL Configuration
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 10
Function
Default
Unused
XXH
Bit 9
R/W
LENCHK
0
Bit 8
R/W
TSTD
0
Bit 7
Unused
X
Bit 6
Unused
X
Bit 5
Unused
X
Bit 4
Unused
X
Bit 3
Unused
X
Bit 2
Unused
X
Bit 1
Unused
X
Bit 0
Unused
X
This register configures all provisioned receive channels.
TSTD:
The telecom standard bit (TSTD) controls the bit ordering of the HDLC data
transferred across the receive APPI. When TSTD is set low, the least
significant bit of each byte on the receive APPI bus (AD[0] and AD[8]) is the
first HDLC bit received and the most significant bit of each byte (AD[7] and
AD[15]) is the last HDLC bit received (datacom standard). When TSTD is set
high, AD[0] and AD[8] are the last HDLC bits received and AD[7] and AD[15]
are the first HDLC bits received (telecom standard).
LENCHK:
The packet length error check bit (LENCHK) controls the checking of receive
packets that are longer than the maximum programmed length. When
LENCHK is set high, receive packets are aborted and the remainder of the
frame discarded when the packet exceeds the maximum packet length given
by MAX[15:0]. When LENCHK is set low, receive packets are not checked for
maximum size and MAX[15:0] must be set to ‘hFFFF.
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Register 0x224 : RHDL Maximum Packet Length
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
MAX[15]
1
Bit 14
R/W
MAX[14]
1
Bit 13
R/W
MAX[13]
1
Bit 12
R/W
MAX[12]
1
Bit 11
R/W
MAX[11]
1
Bit 10
R/W
MAX[10]
1
Bit 9
R/W
MAX[9]
1
Bit 8
R/W
MAX[8]
1
Bit 7
R/W
MAX[7]
1
Bit 6
R/W
MAX[6]
1
Bit 5
R/W
MAX[5]
1
Bit 4
R/W
MAX[4]
1
Bit 3
R/W
MAX[3]
1
Bit 2
R/W
MAX[2]
1
Bit 1
R/W
MAX[1]
1
Bit 0
R/W
MAX[0]
1
This register configures the maximum legal HDLC packet byte length.
MAX[15:0]:
The maximum HDLC packet length (MAX[15:0]) configures the FREEDM32A672 to reject HDLC packets longer than a maximum size when LENCHK
is set high. Receive packets with total length, including address, control,
information and FCS fields, greater than MAX[15:0] bytes are aborted. When
LENCHK is set low, aborts are not generated regardless of packet length and
MAX[15:0] must be set to ‘hFFFF.
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Register 0x380 : THDL Indirect Channel Select
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
BUSY
X
Bit 14
R/W
CRWB
0
Unused
XH
Bit 13
to
Bit 10
Bit 9
R/W
CHAN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
CHAN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
CHAN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
CHAN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
CHAN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
CHAN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
CHAN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
CHAN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
CHAN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
CHAN[0]
0
This register provides the channel number used to access the transmit channel
provision RAM. Writing to this register triggers an indirect channel register
access.
CHAN[9:0]:
The indirect channel number bits (CHAN[9:0]) indicate the channel to be
configured or interrogated in the indirect access.
CRWB:
The channel indirect access control bit (CRWB) selects between a configure
(write) or interrogate (read) access to the channel provision RAM. Writing a
logic zero to CRWB triggers an indirect write operation. Data to be written is
taken from the Indirect Channel Data registers. Writing a logic one to CRWB
triggers an indirect read operation. The data read can be found in the Indirect
Channel Data registers.
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BUSY:
The indirect access status bit (BUSY) reports the progress of an indirect
access. BUSY is set high when this register is written to trigger an indirect
access, and will stay high until the access is complete. At which point, BUSY
will be set low. This register should be polled to determine when data from an
indirect read operation is available in the THDL Indirect Channel Data #1, #2
and #3 registers or to determine when a new indirect write operation may
commence.
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Register 0x384 : THDL Indirect Channel Data #1
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
PROV
0
Bit 14
R/W
CRC[1]
0
Bit 13
R/W
CRC[0]
0
Bit 12
R/W
DELIN
0
Bit 11
W
Reserved
X
Bit 10
W
FPTR[10]
0
Bit 9
W
FPTR[9]
0
Bit 8
W
FPTR[8]
0
Bit 7
W
FPTR[7]
0
Bit 6
W
FPTR[6]
0
Bit 5
W
FPTR[5]
0
Bit 4
W
FPTR[4]
0
Bit 3
W
FPTR[3]
0
Bit 2
W
FPTR[2]
0
Bit 1
W
FPTR[1]
0
Bit 0
W
FPTR[0]
0
This register contains data read from the channel provision RAM after an indirect
channel read operation or data to be inserted into the channel provision RAM in
an indirect channel write operation.
FPTR[10:0]:
The indirect FIFO block pointer (FPTR[10:0]) informs the partial packet buffer
processor about the circular linked list of blocks to use for a FIFO for the
channel. The FIFO pointer to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an
indirect write operation, must be set up in this register before triggering the
write. The FIFO pointer value can be any one of the block numbers
provisioned, by indirect block write operations, to form the circular buffer.
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Reserved:
The reserved bit must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
DELIN:
The indirect delineate enable bit (DELIN) configures the HDLC processor to
perform flag sequence insertion and bit stuffing on the outgoing data stream.
The delineate enable bit to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an
indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this register before
triggering the write. When DELIN is set high, flag sequence insertion, bit
stuffing and ,optionally, CRC generation is performed on the outgoing HDLC
data stream. When DELIN is set low, the HDLC processor does not perform
any processing (flag sequence insertion, bit stuffing nor CRC generation) on
the outgoing stream. DELIN reflects the value written until the completion of
a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
CRC[1:0]:
The CRC algorithm (CRC[1:0]) configures the HDLC processor to perform
CRC generation on the outgoing HDLC data stream. The value of CRC[1:0]
to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect channel write
operation, must be set up in this register before triggering the write. CRC[1:0]
is ignored when DELIN is low. CRC[1:0] reflects the value written until the
completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
Table 12 – CRC[1:0] Settings
CRC[1]
CRC[0]
Operation
0
0
No CRC
0
1
CRC-CCITT
1
0
CRC-32
1
1
Reserved
PROV:
The indirect provision enable bit (PROV) reports the channel provision enable
flag read from the channel provision RAM after an indirect channel read
operation has completed. The provision enable flag to be written to the
channel provision RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this
register before triggering the write. When PROV is set high, the HDLC
processor will service requests for data from the TCAS672 block. When
PROV is set low, the HDLC processor will ignore requests from the TCAS672
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block. PROV reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent
indirect channel read operation.
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Register 0x388 : THDL Indirect Channel Data #2
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
7BIT
0
Bit 14
R/W
Reserved
0
Bit 13
R/W
INVERT
0
Bit 12
R/W
DFCS
0
Bit 11
W
Reserved
0
Bit 10
W
FLEN[10]
0
Bit 9
W
FLEN[9]
0
Bit 8
W
FLEN[8]
0
Bit 7
W
FLEN[7]
0
Bit 6
W
FLEN[6]
0
Bit 5
W
FLEN[5]
0
Bit 4
W
FLEN[4]
0
Bit 3
W
FLEN[3]
0
Bit 2
W
FLEN[2]
0
Bit 1
W
FLEN[1]
0
Bit 0
W
FLEN[0]
0
This register contains data to be inserted into the channel provision RAM in an
indirect write operation.
FLEN[10:0]:
The indirect FIFO length (FLEN[10:0]) is the number of blocks, less one, that
is provisioned to the circular channel FIFO specified by the FPTR[10:0] block
pointer. The FIFO length to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an
indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this register before
triggering the write.
Reserved:
The reserved bits must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
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DFCS:
The diagnose frame check sequence bit (DFCS) controls the inversion of the
FCS field inserted into the transmit packet. The value of DFCS to be written
to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect channel write operation, must be
set up in this register before triggering the write. When DFCS is set to one,
the FCS field in the outgoing HDLC stream is logically inverted allowing
diagnosis of downstream FCS verification logic. The outgoing FCS field is
not inverted when DFCS is set to zero. DFCS reflects the value written until
the completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
INVERT:
The HDLC data inversion bit (INVERT) configures the HDLC processor to
logically invert the outgoing HDLC stream. The value of INVERT to be written
to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect channel write operation, must be
set up in this register before triggering the write. When INVERT is set to one,
the outgoing HDLC stream is logically inverted. The outgoing HDLC stream is
not inverted when INVERT is set to zero. INVERT reflects the value written
until the completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
7BIT:
The least significant stuff enable bit (7BIT) configures the HDLC processor to
stuff the least significant bit of each octet in the corresponding transmit link
(TD[n]). The value of 7BIT to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an
indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this register before
triggering the write. When 7BIT is set high, the least significant bit (last bit of
each octet transmitted) does not contain channel data and is forced to the
value configured by the BIT8 register bit. When 7BIT is set low, the entire
octet contains valid data and BIT8 is ignored. 7BIT reflects the value written
until the completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
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Register 0x38C : THDL Indirect Channel Data #3
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
TRANS
0
Bit 14
R/W
IDLE
0
Bit 13
Unused
X
Bit 12
Unused
X
Bit 11
R/W
LEVEL[3]
0
Bit 10
R/W
LEVEL[2]
0
Bit 9
R/W
LEVEL[1]
0
Bit 8
R/W
LEVEL[0]
0
Bit 7
R/W
FLAG[2]
0
Bit 6
R/W
FLAG[1]
0
Bit 5
R/W
FLAG[0]
0
Unused
X
Bit 4
Bit 3
R/W
XFER[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
XFER[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
XFER[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
XFER[0]
0
This register contains data read from the channel provision RAM after an indirect
read operation or data to be inserted into the channel provision RAM in an
indirect write operation.
XFER[3:0]:
The indirect channel transfer size (XFER[3:0]) specifies the amount of data
the partial packet processor requests from the TAPI672 block. The channel
transfer size to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect write
operation, must be set up in this register before triggering the write. When
the channel FIFO free space reaches or exceeds the limit specified by
XFER[3:0], the partial packet processor will inform the TAPI672 so that a poll
on that channel reflects that the channel FIFO is able to accept XFER[3:0] + 1
blocks of data. FIFO free space and transfer size are measured in number of
16-byte blocks. XFER[3:0] reflects the value written until the completion of a
subsequent indirect channel read operation.
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To prevent lockup, the channel transfer size (XFER[3:0]) can be configured to
be less than or equal to the start transmission level set by LEVEL[3:0] and
TRANS. Alternatively, the channel transfer size can be set such that the total
number of blocks in the logical channel FIFO minus the start transmission
level is an integer multiple of the channel transfer size.
FLAG[2:0]:
The flag insertion control (FLAG[2:0]) configures the minimum number of
flags or bytes of idle bits the HDLC processor inserts between HDLC packets.
The value of FLAG[2:0] to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an
indirect channel write operation, must be set up in this register before
triggering the write. The minimum number of flags or bytes of idle (8 bits of
1’s) inserted between HDLC packets is shown in the table below. FLAG[2:0]
reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect channel
read operation.
Table 13 – FLAG[2:0] Settings
FLAG[2:0]
Minimum Number of Flag/Idle Bytes
000
1 flag / 0 Idle byte
001
2 flags / 0 idle byte
010
4 flags / 2 idle bytes
011
8 flags / 6 idle bytes
100
16 flags / 14 idle bytes
101
32 flags / 30 idle bytes
110
64 flags / 62 idle bytes
111
128 flags / 126 idle bytes
LEVEL[3:0]:
The indirect channel FIFO trigger level (LEVEL[3:0]), in concert with the
TRANS bit, configure the various channel FIFO free space levels which
trigger the HDLC processor to start transmission of a HDLC packet as well as
trigger the partial packet buffer to request data from the TAPI672 as shown in
the following table. The channel FIFO trigger level to be written to the
channel provision RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this
register before triggering the write. LEVEL[3:0] reflects the value written until
the completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
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The HDLC processor starts transmitting a packet when the channel FIFO free
space is less than or equal to the level specified in the appropriate Start
Transmission Level column of the following table or when an end of a packet
is stored in the channel FIFO. When the channel FIFO free space is greater
than or equal to the level specified in the Starving Trigger Level column of the
following table and the HDLC processor is transmitting a packet and an end of
a packet is not stored in the channel FIFO, the partial packet buffer makes
expedited requests to the TAPI672 to retrieve XFER[3:0] + 1 blocks of data.
To prevent lockup, the channel transfer size (XFER[3:0]) can be configured to
be less than or equal to the start transmission level set by LEVEL[3:0] and
TRANS. Alternatively, the channel transfer size can be set such that the total
number of blocks in the logical channel FIFO, minus the start transmission
level, is an integer multiple of the channel transfer size. The starving trigger
level must always be set to a number of blocks greater than or equal to the
channel transfer size.
IDLE:
The interframe time fill bit (IDLE) configures the HDLC processor to use flag
bytes or HDLC idle as the interframe time fill between HDLC packets. The
value of IDLE to be written to the channel provision RAM, in an indirect
channel write operation, must be set up in this register before triggering the
write. When IDLE is set low, the HDLC processor uses flag bytes as the
interframe time fill. When IDLE is set high, the HDLC processor uses HDLC
idle (all one’s bit with no bit-stuffing pattern is transmitted) as the interframe
time fill. IDLE reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent
indirect channel read operation.
TRANS:
The indirect transmission start bit (TRANS), in concert with the LEVEL[3:0]
bits, configure the various channel FIFO free space levels which trigger the
HDLC processor to start transmission of a HDLC packet as well as trigger the
partial packet buffer to request data from the TAPI672 as shown in the
following table. The transmission start mode to be written to the channel
provision RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set up in this register
before triggering the write. TRANS reflects the value written until the
completion of a subsequent indirect channel read operation.
The HDLC processor starts transmitting a packet when the channel FIFO free
space is less than or equal to the level specified in the appropriate Start
Transmission Level column of the following table or when an end of a packet
is stored in the channel FIFO. When the channel FIFO free space is greater
than or equal to the level specified in the Starving Trigger Level column of the
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following table and the HDLC processor is transmitting a packet and an end of
a packet is not stored in the channel FIFO, the partial packet buffer makes
expedited requests to the TAPI672 to retrieve XFER[3:0] + 1 blocks of data.
To prevent lockup, the channel transfer size (XFER[3:0]) can be configured to
be less than or equal to the start transmission level set by LEVEL[3:0] and
TRANS. Alternatively, the channel transfer size can be set, such that, the
total number of blocks in the logical channel FIFO minus the start
transmission level is an integer multiple of the channel transfer size. The
starving trigger level must always be set to a number of blocks greater than or
equal to the channel transfer size.
Table 14 – Level[3:0]/TRANS Settings
LEVEL[3:0]
Starving
Trigger Level
Start
Transmission
Level (TRANS=0)
Start Transmission
Level (TRANS=1)
0000
2 Blocks
(32 bytes free)
1 Block
(16 bytes free)
1 Block
(16 bytes free)
0001
3 Blocks
(48 bytes free)
2 Blocks
(32 bytes free)
1 Block
(16 bytes free)
0010
4 Blocks
(64 bytes free)
3 Blocks
(48 bytes free)
2 Blocks
(32 bytes free)
0011
6 Blocks
(96 bytes free)
4 Blocks
(64 bytes free)
3 Blocks
(48 bytes free)
0100
8 Blocks
(128 bytes free)
6 Blocks
(96 bytes free)
4 Blocks
(64 bytes free)
0101
12 Blocks
(192 bytes free)
8 Blocks
(128 bytes free)
6 Blocks
(96 bytes free)
0110
16 Blocks
(256 bytes free)
12 Blocks
(192 bytes free)
8 Blocks
(128 bytes free)
0111
24 Blocks
(384 bytes free)
16 Blocks
(256 bytes free)
12 Blocks
(192 bytes free)
1000
32 Blocks
(512 bytes free)
24 Blocks
(384 bytes free)
16 Blocks
(256 bytes free)
1001
48 Blocks
(768 bytes free)
32 Blocks
(512 bytes free)
24 Blocks
(384 bytes free)
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LEVEL[3:0]
Starving
Trigger Level
Start
Transmission
Level (TRANS=0)
Start Transmission
Level (TRANS=1)
1010
64 Blocks
(1 Kbytes free)
48 Blocks
(768 bytes free)
32 Blocks
(512 bytes free)
1011
96 Blocks
(1.5 Kbytes free)
64 Blocks
(1 Kbytes free)
48 Blocks
(768 bytes free)
1100
192 Blocks
(3 Kbytes free)
128 Blocks
(2 Kbytes free)
96 Blocks
(1.5 Kbytes free)
1101
384 Blocks
(6 Kbytes free)
256 Blocks
(4 Kbytes free)
192 Blocks
(2 Kbytes free)
1110
768 Blocks
(12 Kbytes free)
512 Blocks
(8 Kbytes free)
384 Blocks
(4 Kbytes free)
1111
1536 Blocks
(24 Kbytes free)
1024 Blocks
(16 Kbytes free)
768 Blocks
(8 Kbytes free)
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Register 0x3A0 : THDL Indirect Block Select
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
BUSY
X
Bit 14
R/W
BRWB
0
Unused
XH
Bit 13
to
Bit 12
Bit 11
R/W
Reserved
X
Bit 10
R/W
BLOCK[10]
0
Bit 9
R/W
BLOCK[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
BLOCK[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
BLOCK[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
BLOCK[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
BLOCK[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
BLOCK[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
BLOCK[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
BLOCK[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
BLOCK[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
BLOCK[0]
0
This register provides the block number used to access the block pointer RAM.
Writing to this register triggers an indirect block register access.
BLOCK[10:0]:
The indirect block number (BLOCK[10:0]) indicate the block to be configured
or interrogated in the indirect access.
Reserved:
The reserved bit must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
BRWB:
The block indirect access control bit (BRWB) selects between a configure
(write) or interrogate (read) access to the block pointer RAM. Writing a logic
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zero to BRWB triggers an indirect block write operation. Data to be written is
taken from the Indirect Block Data register. Writing a logic one to BRWB
triggers an indirect block read operation. The data read can be found in the
Indirect Block Data register.
BUSY:
The indirect access status bit (BUSY) reports the progress of an indirect
access. BUSY is set high when this register is written to trigger an indirect
access, and will stay high until the access is complete. At which point, BUSY
will be set low. This register should be polled to determine when data from an
indirect read operation is available in the THDL Indirect Block Data register or
to determine when a new indirect write operation may commence.
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Register 0x3A4 : THDL Indirect Block Data
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
Reserved
0
Unused
XH
Bit 14
to
Bit 12
Bit 11
R/W
Reserved
X
Bit 10
R/W
BPTR[10]
0
Bit 9
R/W
BPTR[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
BPTR[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
BPTR[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
BPTR[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
BPTR[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
BPTR[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
BPTR[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
BPTR[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
BPTR[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
BPTR[0]
0
This register contains data read from the transmit block pointer RAM after an
indirect block read operation or data to be inserted into the transmit block pointer
RAM in an indirect block write operation.
BPTR[10:0]:
The indirect block pointer (BPTR[10:0]) configures the block pointer of the
block specified by the Indirect Block Select register. The block pointer to be
written to the transmit block pointer RAM, in an indirect write operation, must
be set up in this register before triggering the write. The block pointer value is
the block number of the next block in the linked list. A circular list of blocks
must be formed in order to use the block list as a channel FIFO buffer.
FPTR[10:0] reflects the value written until the completion of a subsequent
indirect block read operation.
When provisioning a channel FIFO, all blocks pointers must be re-written to
properly initialize the FIFO.
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Reserved:
The reserved bits (Reserved) must be set low for correct operation of the
FREEDM-32A672 device.
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Register 0x3B0 : THDL Configuration
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 10
Function
Default
Unused
XXH
Bit 9
R/W
BIT8
0
Bit 8
R/W
TSTD
0
Bit 7
R/W
Reserved
0
Unused
XH
Reserved
0H
Bit 6
to
Bit 4
Bit 3
to
Bit 0
R/W
This register configures all provisioned channels.
Reserved:
The reserved bits must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
TSTD:
The telecom standard bit (TSTD) controls the bit ordering of the HDLC data
transferred on the transmit APPI. When TSTD is set low, the least significant
bit of the each byte on the transmit APPI bus (AD[0] and AD[8]) is the first
HDLC bit transmitted and the most significant bit of each byte (AD[7] and
AD[15]) is the last HDLC bit transmitted (datacom standard). When TSTD is
set high, AD[0] and AD[8] are the last HDLC bit transmitted and AD[7] and
AD[15] are the first HDLC bit transmitted (telecom standard).
BIT8:
The least significant stuff control bit (BIT8) carries the value placed in the
least significant bit of each octet when the HDLC processor is configured
(7BIT set high) to stuff the least significant bit of each octet in the
corresponding transmit link (TD[n]). When BIT8 is set high, the least
significant bit (last bit of each octet transmitted) is forced high. When BIT8 is
set low, the least significant bit is forced low. BIT8 is ignored when 7BIT is set
low.
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Register 0x400 : TCAS Indirect Link and Time-slot Select
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
BUSY
X
Bit 14
R/W
RWB
0
Unused
X
Bit 13
Bit 12
R/W
Reserved
0
Bit 11
R/W
Reserved
0
Bit 10
R/W
LINK[4]
0
Bit 9
R/W
LINK[3]
0
Bit 8
R/W
LINK[2]
0
Bit 7
R/W
LINK[1]
0
Bit 6
R/W
LINK[0]
0
Unused
X
Bit 5
Bit 4
R/W
TSLOT[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
TSLOT[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
TSLOT[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
TSLOT[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
TSLOT[0]
0
This register provides the link number and time-slot number used to access the
transmit channel provision RAM. Writing to this register triggers an indirect
register access and transfers the contents of the Indirect Channel Data register to
an internal holding register.
TSLOT[4:0]:
The indirect time-slot number bits (TSLOT[4:0]) indicate the time-slot to be
configured or interrogated in the indirect access. For a channelised T1/J1
link, time-slots 1 to 24 are valid. For a channelised E1 link, time-slots 1 to 31
are valid. For a H-MVIP link, time-slots 0 to 31 are valid. For unchannelised
links, only time-slot 0 is valid.
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LINK[4:0]:
The indirect link number bits (LINK[4:0]) select amongst the 32 transmit links
to be configured or interrogated in the indirect access.
Reserved:
The reserved bits must be set low for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
RWB:
The indirect access control bit (RWB) selects between a configure (write) or
interrogate (read) access to the transmit channel provision RAM. The
address to the transmit channel provision RAM is constructed by
concatenating the TSLOT[4:0] and LINK[4:0] bits. Writing a logic zero to
RWB triggers an indirect write operation. Data to be written is taken from the
PROV and the CHAN[9:0] bits of the Indirect Data register. Writing a logic
one to RWB triggers an indirect read operation. Addressing of the RAM is the
same as in an indirect write operation. The data read can be found in the
PROV and the CHAN[9:0] bits of the Indirect Channel Data register.
BUSY:
The indirect access status bit (BUSY) reports the progress of an indirect
access. BUSY is set high when this register is written to trigger an indirect
access, and will stay high until the access is complete. At which point, BUSY
will be set low. This register should be polled to determine when data from an
indirect read operation is available in the TCAS Indirect Channel Data register
or to determine when a new indirect write operation may commence.
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Register 0x404 : TCAS Indirect Channel Data
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
PROV
0
Unused
XXH
Bit 14
to
Bit 10
Bit 9
R/W
CHAN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
CHAN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
CHAN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
CHAN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
CHAN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
CHAN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
CHAN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
CHAN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
CHAN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
CHAN[0]
0
This register contains the data read from the transmit channel provision RAM
after an indirect read operation or the data to be inserted into the transmit
channel provision RAM in an indirect write operation.
CHAN[9:0]:
The indirect data bits (CHAN[9:0]) report the channel number read from the
transmit channel provision RAM after an indirect read operation has
completed. Channel number to be written to the transmit channel provision
RAM in an indirect write operation must be set up in this register before
triggering the write. CHAN[9:0] reflects the value written until the completion
of a subsequent indirect read operation.
PROV:
The indirect provision enable bit (PROV) reports the channel provision enable
flag read from transmit channel provision RAM after an indirect read operation
has completed. The provision enable flag to be written to the transmit
channel provision RAM in an indirect write operation must be set up in this
register before triggering the write. When PROV is set high, the current time-
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slot is assigned to the channel as indicated by CHAN[9:0]. When PROV is
set low, the time-slot does not belong to any channel. The transmit link data
is set to the contents of the Idle Time-slot Fill Data register. PROV reflects the
value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect read operation.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x408 : TCAS Framing Bit Threshold
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 7
Function
Default
Unused
XXXH
Bit 6
R/W
FTHRES[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
FTHRES[5]
1
Bit 4
R/W
FTHRES[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
FTHRES[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
FTHRES[2]
1
Bit 1
R/W
FTHRES[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
FTHRES[0]
1
This register contains the threshold used by the clock activity monitors to detect
for framing bits/bytes.
FTHRES[6:0]:
The framing bit threshold bits (FTHRES[6:0]) contains the threshold used by
the clock activity monitor to detect for the presence of framing bits. A counter
in the clock activity monitor of each receive link increments on each rising
edge of SYSCLK and is cleared, when the BSYNC bit of that link is set low,
by each rising edge of the corresponding TCLK[n]. When the BSYNC bit of
that link is set high, the counter is cleared at every fourth rising edge of the
corresponding TCLK[n]. When the counter exceeds the threshold given by
FTHRES[6:0], a framing bit/byte has been detected.
FTHRES[6:0] should be set as a function of the SYSCLK period and the
expected gapping width of TCLK[n] during data bits and during framing
bits/bytes. Legal range of FTHRES[6:0] is ‘b0000001 to ‘b1111110.
Note: For operation with T1/J1 links and SYSCLK = 45 MHz, FTHRESH[6:0]
should be set to ‘b0100101’. The default value of this register reflects this
mode of operation.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x40C : TCAS Idle Time-slot Fill Data
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 8
Function
Default
Unused
XXH
Bit 7
R/W
FDATA[7]
1
Bit 6
R/W
FDATA[6]
1
Bit 5
R/W
FDATA[5]
1
Bit 4
R/W
FDATA[4]
1
Bit 3
R/W
FDATA[3]
1
Bit 2
R/W
FDATA[2]
1
Bit 1
R/W
FDATA[1]
1
Bit 0
R/W
FDATA[0]
1
This register contains the data to be written to disabled time-slots of a
channelised link.
FDATA[7:0]:
The fill data bits (FDATA[7:0]) are transmitted during disabled (PROV set low)
time-slots of channelised links.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x410 : TCAS Channel Disable
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
CHDIS
0
Unused
XXH
Bit 14
to
Bit 10
Bit 9
R/W
DCHAN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
DCHAN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
DCHAN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
DCHAN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
DCHAN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
DCHAN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
DCHAN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
DCHAN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
DCHAN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
DCHAN[0]
0
This register controls the disabling of one specific channel to allow orderly
provisioning of time-slots.
DCHAN[9:0]:
The disable channel number bits (DCHAN[9:0]) selects the channel to be
disabled. When CHDIS is set high, the channel specified by DCHAN[9:0] is
disabled. Data in time-slots associated with the specified channel is set to
FDATA[7:0] in the Idle Time-slot Fill Data register. When CHDIS is set low,
the channel specified by DCHAN[9:0] operates normally.
CHDIS:
The channel disable bit (CHDIS) controls the disabling of the channels
specified by DCHAN[9:0]. When CHDIS is set high, the channel selected by
DCHAN[9:0] is disabled. Data in time-slots associated with the specified
channel is set to FDATA[7:0] in the Idle Time-slot Fill Data register. When
CHDIS is set low, the channel specified by DCHAN[9:0] operates normally.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x480 – 0x488 : TCAS Links #0 to #2 Configuration
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 5
Bit 4
R/W
Bit 3
Function
Default
Unused
XXXH
BSYNC
0
Unused
X
Bit 2
R/W
MODE[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
MODE[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
MODE[0]
0
This register configures operational modes of transmit links #0 to #2.
MODE[2:0]:
The mode select bits (MODE[2:0]) configures the corresponding transmit link.
Table 15 details this procedure. When link 4m (0£m£7) is configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 are
driven with constant ones. However, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 must be
configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode for correct operation of the
TCAS672. From a channel assignment point of view in the TCAS672
(Registers 0x400, 0x404), time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m are mapped to
time-slots 0 through 31 of the H-MVIP link, time-slots 0 through 31 of link
4m+1 are mapped to time-slots 32 through 63 of the H-MVIP link, time-slots 0
through 31 of link 4m+2 are mapped to time-slots 64 through 95 of the HMVIP link and time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m+3 are mapped to time-slots
96 through 127 of the H-MVIP link.
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Table 15 – Transmit Links #0 to #2 Configuration
MODE[2:0]
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
Link Configuration
Unchannelised
Channelised T1/J1 (24 time slots labeled 1-24)
Channelised E1 (31 time slots labeled 1-31)
2 Mbps H-MVIP (32 time slots labeled 0-31)
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
8 Mbps H-MVIP (128 time slots mapped to timeslots 0 through 31 of links 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and
4m+3)
BSYNC:
The byte synchronization enable bit (BSYNC) controls the interpretation of
gaps in TCLK[n] when link #n is in unchannelised mode (MODE[2:0]=”000”).
When BSYNC is set high, the data bit on TD[n] clocked in by a downstream
device on the first rising edge of TCLK[n] after an extended quiescent period
is considered to be the most significant bit of a data byte. When BSYNC is
set quiescent, gaps in TCLK[n] carry no special significance. BSYNC is
ignored when MODE[2:0]¹”000”.
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139
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x48C – 0x4FC : TCAS Links #3 to #31 Configuration
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 3
Function
Default
Unused
XXXXH
Bit 2
R/W
MODE[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
MODE[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
MODE[0]
0
This register configures operational modes of transmit links #3 to #31.
MODE[2:0]:
The mode select bits (MODE[2:0]) configures the corresponding transmit link.
Table 16 details this procedure. When link 4m (0£m£7) is configured for
operation in 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 are
driven with constant ones. However, links 4m+1, 4m+2 and 4m+3 must be
configured for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP mode for correct operation of the
TCAS672. From a channel assignment point of view in the TCAS672
(Registers 0x100, 0x104), time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m are mapped to
time-slots 0 through 31 of the H-MVIP link, time-slots 0 through 31 of link
4m+1 are mapped to time-slots 32 through 63 of the H-MVIP link, time-slots 0
through 31 of link 4m+2 are mapped to time-slots 64 through 95 of the HMVIP link and time-slots 0 through 31 of link 4m+3 are mapped to time-slots
96 through 127 of the H-MVIP link.
Table 16 – Transmit Links #3 to #31 Configuration
MODE[2:0]
000
001
010
011
100
101
110
111
Link Configuration
Unchannelised
Channelised T1/J1 (24 time slots labeled 1-24)
Channelised E1 (31 time slots labeled 1-31)
2 Mbps H-MVIP (32 time slots labeled 0-31)
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
8 Mbps H-MVIP (128 time slots mapped to timeslots 0 through 31 of links 4m, 4m+1, 4m+2 and
4m+3)
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x500 : PMON Status
Bit
Type
Bit 15
to
Bit 6
Function
Default
Unused
XXXH
Bit 5
R
C2DET
X
Bit 4
R
C1DET
X
Bit 3
R
UFDET
X
Bit 2
R
OFDET
X
Bit 1
Unused
X
Bit 0
Unused
X
This register contains status information indicating whether a non-zero count has
been latched in the count registers.
OFDET:
The overflow detect bit (OFDET) indicates the status of the PMON Receive
FIFO Overflow Count register. OFDET is set high when overflow events have
occurred during the latest PMON accumulation interval. OFDET is set low if
no overflow events are detected.
UFDET:
The underflow detect bit (UFDET) indicates the status of the PMON Transmit
FIFO Underflow Count register. UFDET is set high when underflow events
have occurred during the latest PMON accumulation interval. UFDET is set
low if no underflow events are detected.
C1DET:
The configurable event #1 detect bit (C1DET) indicates the status of the
PMON Configurable Count #1 register. C1DET is set high when selected
events have occurred during the latest PMON accumulation interval. C1DET
is set low if no selected events are detected.
C2DET:
The configurable event #2 detect bit (C2DET) indicates the status of the
PMON Configurable Count #2 register. C2DET is set high when selected
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DATASHEET
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
events have occurred during the latest PMON accumulation interval. C2DET
is set low if no selected events are detected.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x504 : PMON Receive FIFO Overflow Count
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
OF[15]
X
Bit 14
R
OF[14]
X
Bit 13
R
OF[13]
X
Bit 12
R
OF[12]
X
Bit 11
R
OF[11]
X
Bit 10
R
OF[10]
X
Bit 9
R
OF[9]
X
Bit 8
R
OF[8]
X
Bit 7
R
OF[7]
X
Bit 6
R
OF[6]
X
Bit 5
R
OF[5]
X
Bit 4
R
OF[4]
X
Bit 3
R
OF[3]
X
Bit 2
R
OF[2]
X
Bit 1
R
OF[1]
X
Bit 0
R
OF[0]
X
This register reports the number of receive FIFO overflow events in the previous
accumulation interval.
OF[15:0]:
The OF[15:0] bits reports the number of receive FIFO overflow events that
have been detected since the last time this register was polled. This register
is polled by writing to the FREEDM-32A672 Master Clock / BERT Activity
Monitor and Accumulation Trigger register. The write access transfers the
internally accumulated error count to the FIFO overflow register and
simultaneously resets the internal counter to begin a new cycle of error
accumulation.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x508 : PMON Transmit FIFO Underflow Count
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
UF[15]
X
Bit 14
R
UF[14]
X
Bit 13
R
UF[13]
X
Bit 12
R
UF[12]
X
Bit 11
R
UF[11]
X
Bit 10
R
UF[10]
X
Bit 9
R
UF[9]
X
Bit 8
R
UF[8]
X
Bit 7
R
UF[7]
X
Bit 6
R
UF[6]
X
Bit 5
R
UF[5]
X
Bit 4
R
UF[4]
X
Bit 3
R
UF[3]
X
Bit 2
R
UF[2]
X
Bit 1
R
UF[1]
X
Bit 0
R
UF[0]
X
This register reports the number of transmit FIFO underflow events in the
previous accumulation interval.
UF[15:0]:
The UF[15:0] bits reports the number of transmit FIFO underflow events that
have been detected since the last time this register was polled. This register
is polled by writing to the FREEDM-32A672 Master Clock / BERT Activity
Monitor and Accumulation Trigger register. The write access transfers the
internally accumulated error count to the FIFO underflow register and
simultaneously resets the internal counter to begin a new cycle of error
accumulation.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x50C : PMON Configurable Count #1
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
C1[15]
X
Bit 14
R
C1[14]
X
Bit 13
R
C1[13]
X
Bit 12
R
C1[12]
X
Bit 11
R
C1[11]
X
Bit 10
R
C1[10]
X
Bit 9
R
C1[9]
X
Bit 8
R
C1[8]
X
Bit 7
R
C1[7]
X
Bit 6
R
C1[6]
X
Bit 5
R
C1[5]
X
Bit 4
R
C1[4]
X
Bit 3
R
C1[3]
X
Bit 2
R
C1[2]
X
Bit 1
R
C1[1]
X
Bit 0
R
C1[0]
X
This register reports the number events, selected by the FREEDM-32A672
Master Performance Monitor Control register, that occurred in the previous
accumulation interval.
C1[15:0]:
The C1[15:0] bits reports the number of selected events that have been
detected since the last time this register was polled. This register is polled by
writing to the FREEDM-32A672 Master Clock / BERT Activity Monitor and
Accumulation Trigger register. The write access transfers the internally
accumulated error count to the configurable count #1 register and
simultaneously resets the internal counter to begin a new cycle of event
accumulation.
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DATASHEET
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x510 : PMON Configurable Count #2
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
C2[15]
X
Bit 14
R
C2[14]
X
Bit 13
R
C2[13]
X
Bit 12
R
C2[12]
X
Bit 11
R
C2[11]
X
Bit 10
R
C2[10]
X
Bit 9
R
C2[9]
X
Bit 8
R
C2[8]
X
Bit 7
R
C2[7]
X
Bit 6
R
C2[6]
X
Bit 5
R
C2[5]
X
Bit 4
R
C2[4]
X
Bit 3
R
C2[3]
X
Bit 2
R
C2[2]
X
Bit 1
R
C2[1]
X
Bit 0
R
C2[0]
X
This register reports the number events, selected by the FREEDM-32A672
Master Performance Monitor Control register, that occurred in the previous
accumulation interval.
C2[15:0]:
The C2[15:0] bits reports the number of selected events that have been
detected since the last time this register was polled. This register is polled by
writing to the FREEDM-32A672 Master Clock / BERT Activity Monitor and
Accumulation Trigger register. The write access transfers the internally
accumulated error count to the configurable count #2 register and
simultaneously resets the internal counter to begin a new cycle of event
accumulation.
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x580 : RAPI Control
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
ENABLE
0
Bit 14
R/W
STATEN
0
Bit 13
R/W
Reserved
0
Unused
XXXH
Bit 12
to
Bit 4
Bit 3
R/W
ALL1ENB
1
Bit 2
R/W
BADDR[2]
1
Bit 1
R/W
BADDR[1]
1
Bit 0
R/W
BADDR[0]
1
This register provides the base address of the Rx APPI for purposes of
responding to polling and device selection. This register also enables the
RAPI672.
BADDR[2:0]:
The base address bits (BADDR[2:0]) configure the address space occupied
by the FREEDM-32A672 device for purposes of responding to receive polling
and receive device selection. During polling, the BADDR[2:0] bits are used to
respond to polling via the RXADDR[2:0] pins. During device selection, the
BADDR[2:0] are used to select a FREEDM-32A672 device, enabling it to
accept data on the receive APPI. During data transfer, the RXDATA[15:13]
pins of the prepended channel address reflect the BADDR[2:0] bits.
ALL1ENB:
The All Ones Enable bit (ALL1ENB) permits the FREEDM-32A672 to respond
to receive polling and device selection when BADDR[2:0] = ‘111’. When
ALL1ENB is zero, the FREEDM-32A672 responds to receive polling and
device selection when BADDR[2:0] = RXADDR[2:0] = ‘111’. When ALL1ENB
is one, the FREEDM-32A672 regards the all-ones address as a null address
and does not respond to receive polling and device selection when
BADDR[2:0] = ‘111’, regardless of the value of RXADDR[2:0].
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Reserved:
The reserved bit must be set to zero for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
STATEN:
The RAPI672 Status Enable bit (STATEN) enables the RAPI672 to provide
the status of an errored packet on RXDATA[7:0] during transfer of the final
word of that packet on the receive APPI (REOP and RERR high). When
STATEN is set high, the RAPI672 overwrites RXDATA[7:0] of the final word of
an errored packet with status information for that packet. When STATEN is
set low, the RAPI672 does not report detailed status information for an
errored packet. The RXDATA[15:0] connector description details the errored
packet status reporting when STATEN is set high.
ENABLE:
The RAPI672 Enable bit (ENABLE) enables normal operation of the
RAPI672. When ENABLE is set low, the RAPI672 will not transfer data from
the RHDL672 into its internal FIFOs. When ENABLE is set high, the
RAPI672 operates normally.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x600 : TAPI Control
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
ENABLE
0
Bit 14
R/W
Reserved
0
Bit 13
R/W
Reserved
0
Unused
XXXH
Bit 12
to
Bit 4
Bit 3
R/W
ALL1ENB
1
Bit 2
R/W
BADDR[2]
1
Bit 1
R/W
BADDR[1]
1
Bit 0
R/W
BADDR[0]
1
This register provides the base address of the Tx APPI for purposes of
responding to polling and Tx APPI data transfers. This register also enables the
TAPI672.
BADDR[2:0]:
The base address bits (BADDR[2:0]) configure the address space occupied
by the FREEDM-32A672 device for purposes of responding to transmit polling
and transmit data transfers. During polling, the TXADDR[12:10] pins are
compared with the BADDR[2:0] bits to determine if the poll address identified
by TXADDR[9:0] is intended for a channel in this FREEDM-32A672 device.
During data transmission, the TXDATA[15:13] pins of the prepended channel
address are compared with the BADDR[2:0] bits to determine if the data to
follow is intended for this FREEDM-32A672 device.
ALL1ENB:
The All Ones Enable bit (ALL1ENB) permits the FREEDM-32A672 to respond
to transmit polling and device selection when BADDR[2:0] = ‘111’. When
ALL1ENB is zero, the FREEDM-32A672 responds to transmit polling when
BADDR[2:0] = TXADDR[12:10] = ‘111’ and device selection when
BADDR[2:0] = TXDATA[15:13] = ‘111’. When ALL1ENB is one, the FREEDM32A672 regards the all-ones address as a null address and does not respond
to transmit polling and device selection when BADDR[2:0] = ‘111’, regardless
of the values of TXADDR[12:10] and TXDATA[15:13].
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Reserved:
The reserved bits must be set to zero for correct operation of the FREEDM32A672 device.
ENABLE:
The TAPI672 Enable bit (ENABLE) enables normal operation of the TAPI672.
When ENABLE is set low, the TAPI672 will complete the current data transfer
and will respond to any further transactions on the Tx APPI normally (by
setting TRDY high), but data provided will be ignored. When ENABLE is set
high, the TAPI672 operates normally.
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register 0x604 : TAPI Indirect Channel Provisioning
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R
BUSY
X
Bit 14
R/W
RWB
0
Unused
XH
Bit 13
to
Bit 10
Bit 9
R/W
CHAN[9]
0
Bit 8
R/W
CHAN[8]
0
Bit 7
R/W
CHAN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
CHAN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
CHAN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
CHAN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
CHAN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
CHAN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
CHAN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
CHAN[0]
0
The Indirect Channel Provisioning Register provides the channel number used to
access the TAPI672 channel provisioning RAM. Writing to this register triggers
an indirect channel register access.
CHAN[9:0]:
The indirect channel number bits (CHAN[9:0]) indicate the channel to be
configured or interrogated in the indirect access.
RWB:
The Read/Write Bar (RWB) bit selects between a provisioning/unprovisioning
operation (write) or a query operation (read). Writing a logic 0 to RWB
triggers the provisioning or unprovisioning of the channel specified by
CHAN[9:0]. Writing a logic 1 to RWB triggers a query of the channel specified
by CHAN[9:0].
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BUSY:
The indirect access status bit (BUSY) reports the progress of an indirect
access. BUSY is set high when this register is written to trigger an indirect
access, and will stay high until the access is complete. At which point, BUSY
will be set low. This register should be polled to determine when data from an
indirect read operation is available or to determine when a new indirect write
operation may commence.
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Register 0x608 : TAPI Indirect Channel Data Register
Bit
Type
Function
Default
Bit 15
R/W
PROV
0
Unused
XH
Bit 14
to
Bit 8
Bit 7
R/W
BLEN[7]
0
Bit 6
R/W
BLEN[6]
0
Bit 5
R/W
BLEN[5]
0
Bit 4
R/W
BLEN[4]
0
Bit 3
R/W
BLEN[3]
0
Bit 2
R/W
BLEN[2]
0
Bit 1
R/W
BLEN[1]
0
Bit 0
R/W
BLEN[0]
0
The TAPI Indirect Channel Data Register contains data read from the TAPI672
channel provision RAM after an indirect read operation or data to be written to
channel provision RAM in an indirect write operation.
BLEN[7:0]:
The channel burst length (BLEN[7:0]) bits report the data transfer burst length
read from the TAPI672 channel provision RAM after an indirect read operation
has completed. The data transfer burst length specifies the length (in bytes,
less one) of burst data transfers on the transmit APPI which are not
terminated by the assertion of TEOP. The data transfer burst length can be
specified on a per-channel basis. The data transfer burst length to be written
to the channel provision RAM in an indirect write operation must be set up in
this register before triggering the write. BLEN[7:0] reflects the value written
until the completion of a subsequent indirect read operation.
PROV:
The indirect provision enable bit (PROV) reports the channel provision enable
flag read from the TAPI672 channel provision RAM after an indirect read
operation has completed. The provision enable flag to be written to the
TAPI672 channel provision RAM, in an indirect write operation, must be set
up in this register before triggering the write. When PROV is set high, the
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channel as indicated by CHAN[9:0] is provisioned. When PROV is set low,
the channel indicated by CHAN[9:0] is unprovisioned. PROV reflects the
value written until the completion of a subsequent indirect read operation.
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TEST FEATURES DESCRIPTION
The FREEDM-32A672 also supports a standard IEEE 1149.1 five signal JTAG
boundary scan test port for use in board testing. All device inputs may be read
and all device outputs may be forced via the JTAG test port.
10.1 Test Mode Registers
Test mode registers are used to apply test vectors during production testing of
the FREEDM-32A672. Production testing is enabled by asserting the PMCTEST
pin. During production tests, FREEDM-32A672 registers are selected by the
TA[12:0] pins. The address of a register on TA[12:0] is identical to the offset of
that register when production testing is disabled (PMCTEST low). Read
accesses are enabled by asserting TRDB low while write accesses are enabled
by asserting TWRB low. Test mode register data is conveyed on the TDAT[15:0]
pins. Test mode registers (as opposed to normal mode registers) are selected
when TA[12]/TRS is set high.
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Table 17 – Test Mode Register Memory Map
Address TA[12:0]
Register
0x0000 - 0x07FE
Normal Mode Registers
0x0800 - 0x10FE
Reserved
0x1100 - 0x11FE
RCAS672 Test Registers
0x1200 - 0x123E
RHDL672 Test Registers
0x1240 - 0x137E
Reserved
0x1380 - 0x13BE
THDL672 Test Registers
0x13C0 - 0x13FE
Reserved
0x1400 - 0x14FE
TCAS672 Test Registers
0x1500 - 0x151E
PMON Test Registers
0x1520 - 0x157E
Reserved
0x1580 - 0x15BE
RAPI672 Test Registers
0x15C0 - 0x15FE
Reserved
0x1600 - 0x163E
TAPI672 Test Registers
0x1640 - 0x1FFE
Reserved
Notes on Test Mode Register Bits:
1. Writing values into unused register bits has no effect. However, to ensure software
compatibility with future, feature-enhanced versions of the product, unused register
bits must be written with logic zero. Reading back unused bits can produce either a
logic one or a logic zero; hence unused register bits should be masked off by
software when read.
2. Writable test mode register bits are not initialized upon reset unless otherwise noted.
10.2 JTAG Test Port
The FREEDM-32A672 JTAG Test Access Port (TAP) allows access to the TAP
controller and the 4 TAP registers: instruction, bypass, device identification and
boundary scan. Using the TAP, device input logic levels can be read, device
outputs can be forced, the device can be identified and the device scan path can
be bypassed. For more details on the JTAG port, please refer to the Operations
section.
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Table 18 – Instruction Register
Length - 3 bits
Instructions
Selected Register
Instruction Code IR[2:0]
EXTEST
Boundary Scan
000
IDCODE
Identification
001
SAMPLE
Boundary Scan
010
BYPASS
Bypass
011
BYPASS
Bypass
100
STCTEST
Boundary Scan
101
BYPASS
Bypass
110
BYPASS
Bypass
111
10.2.1 Identification Register
Length - 32 bits
Version number - 2H
Part Number - 7381H
Manufacturer's identification code - 0CDH
Device identification - 273810CDH
10.2.2 Boundary Scan Register
The boundary scan register is made up of 365 boundary scan cells, divided into
input observation (in_cell), output (out_cell), and bi-directional (io_cell) cells.
These cells are detailed in the following pages. The first 32 cells form the ID
code register, and carry the code 273810CDH. The cells are arranged as
follows:
Table 19 – Boundary Scan Chain
Pin/ Enable
RBCLK_OEN
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
0
OUT_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
RBCLK
1
OUT_CELL
-
RBD_OEN
2
OUT_CELL
-
RBD
3
OUT_CELL
-
TMV8DC
4
IN_CELL
-
TFP8B
5
IN_CELL
-
TMV8FPC
6
IN_CELL
-
TFPB[0]
7
IN_CELL
-
TMVCK[0]
8
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[0]
9
OUT_CELL
-
TD[0]
10
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[0]
11
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[1]
12
OUT_CELL
-
TD[1]
13
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[1]
14
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[2]
15
OUT_CELL
-
TD[2]
16
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[2]
17
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[3]
18
OUT_CELL
-
TD[3]
19
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[3]
20
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[4]
21
OUT_CELL
-
TD[4]
22
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[4]
23
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[5]
24
OUT_CELL
-
TD[5]
25
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[5]
26
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[6]
27
OUT_CELL
-
TD[6]
28
OUT_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TCLK[6]
29
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[7]
30
OUT_CELL
-
TD[7]
31
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[7]
32
IN_CELL
-
TFPB[1]
33
IN_CELL
-
TMVCK[1]
34
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[8]
35
OUT_CELL
-
TD[8]
36
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[8]
37
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[9]
38
OUT_CELL
-
TD[9]
39
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[9]
40
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[10]
41
OUT_CELL
-
TD[10]
42
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[10]
43
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[11]
44
OUT_CELL
-
TD[11]
45
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[11]
46
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[12]
47
OUT_CELL
-
TD[12]
48
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[12]
49
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[13]
50
OUT_CELL
-
TD[13]
51
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[13]
52
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[14]
53
OUT_CELL
-
TD[14]
54
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[14]
55
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[15]
56
OUT_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TD[15]
57
OUT_CELL
-
TCLK[15]
58
IN_CELL
-
TFPB[2]
59
IN_CELL
-
TMVCK[2]
60
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[16]
61
OUT_CELL
-
TD[16]
62
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[16]
63
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[17]
64
OUT_CELL
-
TD[17]
65
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[17]
66
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[18]
67
OUT_CELL
-
TD[18]
68
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[18]
69
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[19]
70
OUT_CELL
-
TD[19]
71
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[19]
72
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[20]
73
OUT_CELL
-
TD[20]
74
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[20]
75
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[21]
76
OUT_CELL
-
TD[21]
77
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[21]
78
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[22]
79
OUT_CELL
-
TD[22]
80
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[22]
81
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[23]
82
OUT_CELL
-
TD[23]
83
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[23]
84
IN_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TFPB[3]
85
IN_CELL
-
TMVCK[3]
86
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[24]
87
OUT_CELL
-
TD[24]
88
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[24]
89
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[25]
90
OUT_CELL
-
TD[25]
91
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[25]
92
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[26]
93
OUT_CELL
-
TD[26]
94
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[26]
95
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[27]
96
OUT_CELL
-
TD[27]
97
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[27]
98
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[28]
99
OUT_CELL
-
TD[28]
100
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[28]
101
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[29]
102
OUT_CELL
-
TD[29]
103
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[29]
104
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[30]
105
OUT_CELL
-
TD[30]
106
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[30]
107
IN_CELL
-
TD_OEN[31]
108
OUT_CELL
-
TD[31]
109
IO_CELL
-
TCLK[31]
110
IN_CELL
-
TBD
111
IN_CELL
-
TBCLK_OEN
112
OUT_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TBCLK
113
OUT_CELL
-
PMCTEST
114
IN_CELL
-
RXADDR[0]
115
IN_CELL
-
RXADDR[1]
116
IN_CELL
-
RXADDR[2]
117
IN_CELL
-
RXCLK
118
IN_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[0]
119
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[0]
120
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[1]
121
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[1]
122
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[2]
123
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[2]
124
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[3]
125
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[3]
126
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[4]
127
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[4]
128
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[5]
129
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[5]
130
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[6]
131
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[6]
132
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[7]
133
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[7]
134
IO_CELL
-
RSX_OEN
135
OUT_CELL
-
RSX
136
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[8]
137
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[8]
138
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[9]
139
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[9]
140
IO_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
RXDATA_OEN[10]
141
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[10]
142
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[11]
143
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[11]
144
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[12]
145
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[12]
146
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[13]
147
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[13]
148
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[14]
149
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[14]
150
IO_CELL
-
RXDATA_OEN[15]
151
OUT_CELL
-
RXDATA[15]
152
IO_CELL
-
RXPRTY_OEN
153
OUT_CELL
-
RXPRTY
154
IO_CELL
-
RERR_OEN
155
OUT_CELL
-
RERR
156
IO_CELL
-
RMOD_OEN
157
OUT_CELL
-
RMOD
158
IO_CELL
-
REOP_OEN
159
OUT_CELL
-
REOP
160
IO_CELL
-
RENB
161
IN_CELL
-
RPA_OEN
162
OUT_CELL
-
RPA
163
IO_CELL
-
RVAL_OEN
164
OUT_CELL
-
RVAL
165
IO_CELL
-
TRDY_OEN
166
OUT_CELL
-
TRDY
167
IO_CELL
-
TERR_OEN
168
OUT_CELL
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Pin/ Enable
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TERR
169
IO_CELL
-
TMOD_OEN
170
OUT_CELL
-
TMOD
171
IO_CELL
-
TEOP_OEN
172
OUT_CELL
-
TEOP
173
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[0]
174
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[0]
175
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[1]
176
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[1]
177
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[2]
178
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[2]
179
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[3]
180
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[3]
181
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[4]
182
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[4]
183
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[5]
184
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[5]
185
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[6]
186
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[6]
187
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[7]
188
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[7]
189
IO_CELL
-
TSX
190
IN_CELL
-
TXPRTY_OEN
191
OUT_CELL
-
TXPRTY
192
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[8]
193
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[8]
194
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[9]
195
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[9]
196
IO_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TXDATA_OEN[10]
197
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[10]
198
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[11]
199
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[11]
200
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[12]
201
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[12]
202
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[13]
203
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[13]
204
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[14]
205
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[14]
206
IO_CELL
-
TXDATA_OEN[15]
207
OUT_CELL
-
TXDATA[15]
208
IO_CELL
-
Unconnected
209
OUT_CELL
-
Unconnected
210
IO_CELL
-
TXCLK
211
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[0]
212
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[1]
213
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[2]
214
IN_CELL
-
Unconnected
215
OUT_CELL
-
Unconnected
216
OUT_CELL
-
TXADDR[3]
217
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR_OEN[4]
218
OUT_CELL
-
TXADDR[4]
219
IO_CELL
-
TXADDR[5]
220
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[6]
221
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[7]
222
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[8]
223
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[9]
224
IN_CELL
-
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Pin/ Enable
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TXADDR[10]
225
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[11]
226
IN_CELL
-
TXADDR[12]
227
IN_CELL
-
TPA1_OEN[0]
228
OUT_CELL
-
TPA1[0]
229
IO_CELL
-
TPA1_OEN[1]
230
OUT_CELL
-
TPA1[1]
231
IO_CELL
-
TPA1_OEN[2]
232
OUT_CELL
-
TPA1[2]
233
IO_CELL
-
TPA2_OEN[0]
234
OUT_CELL
-
TPA2[0]
235
IO_CELL
-
TPA2_OEN[1]
236
OUT_CELL
-
TPA2[1]
237
IO_CELL
-
TPA2_OEN[2]
238
OUT_CELL
-
TPA2[2]
239
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[0]
240
OUT_CELL
-
D[0]
241
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[1]
242
OUT_CELL
-
D[1]
243
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[2]
244
OUT_CELL
-
D[2]
245
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[3]
246
OUT_CELL
-
D[3]
247
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[4]
248
OUT_CELL
-
D[4]
249
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[5]
250
OUT_CELL
-
D[5]
251
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[6]
252
OUT_CELL
-
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
D[6]
253
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[7]
254
OUT_CELL
-
D[7]
255
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[8]
256
OUT_CELL
-
D[8]
257
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[9]
258
OUT_CELL
-
D[9]
259
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[10]
260
OUT_CELL
-
D[10]
261
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[11]
262
OUT_CELL
-
D[11]
263
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[12]
264
OUT_CELL
-
D[12]
265
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[13]
266
OUT_CELL
-
D[13]
267
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[14]
268
OUT_CELL
-
D[14]
269
IO_CELL
-
D_OEN[15]
270
OUT_CELL
-
D[15]
271
IO_CELL
-
A[2]
272
IN_CELL
-
A[3]
273
IN_CELL
-
A[4]
274
IN_CELL
-
A[5]
275
IN_CELL
-
A[6]
276
IN_CELL
-
A[7]
277
IN_CELL
-
A[8]
278
IN_CELL
-
A[9]
279
IN_CELL
-
A[10]
280
IN_CELL
-
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
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Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
A[11]
281
IN_CELL
-
ALE
282
IN_CELL
-
WRB
283
IN_CELL
-
RDB
284
IN_CELL
-
CSB
285
IN_CELL
-
INTB_OEN
286
OUT_CELL
-
INTB
287
OUT_CELL
-
RCLK[31]
288
IN_CELL
-
RD[31]
289
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[30]
290
IN_CELL
-
RD[30]
291
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[29]
292
IN_CELL
-
RD[29]
293
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[28]
294
IN_CELL
-
RD[28]
295
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[27]
296
IN_CELL
-
RD[27]
297
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[26]
298
IN_CELL
-
RD[26]
299
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[25]
300
IN_CELL
-
RD[25]
301
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[24]
302
IN_CELL
-
RD[24]
303
IN_CELL
-
RMVCK[3]
304
IN_CELL
-
RFPB[3]
305
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[23]
306
IN_CELL
-
RD[23]
307
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[22]
308
IN_CELL
-
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Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
RD[22]
309
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[21]
310
IN_CELL
-
RD[21]
311
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[20]
312
IN_CELL
-
RD[20]
313
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[19]
314
IN_CELL
-
RD[19]
315
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[18]
316
IN_CELL
-
RD[18]
317
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[17]
318
IN_CELL
-
RD[17]
319
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[16]
320
IN_CELL
-
RD[16]
321
IN_CELL
-
RMVCK[2]
322
IN_CELL
-
RFPB[2]
323
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[15]
324
IN_CELL
-
RD[15]
325
IN_CELL
-
RSTB
326
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[14]
327
IN_CELL
-
RD[14]
328
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[13]
329
IN_CELL
-
RD[13]
330
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[12]
331
IN_CELL
-
RD[12]
332
IN_CELL
-
RCLK[11]
333
IN_CELL
1
RD[11]
334
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[10]
335
IN_CELL
1
RD[10]
336
IN_CELL
1
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Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
RCLK[9]
337
IN_CELL
0
RD[9]
338
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[8]
339
IN_CELL
1
RD[8]
340
IN_CELL
1
RMVCK[1]
341
IN_CELL
0
RFPB[1]
342
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[7]
343
IN_CELL
0
RD[7]
344
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[6]
345
IN_CELL
1
RD[6]
346
IN_CELL
0
SYSCLK
347
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[5]
348
IN_CELL
0
RD[5]
349
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[4]
350
IN_CELL
0
RD[4]
351
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[3]
352
IN_CELL
1
RD[3]
353
IN_CELL
1
RCLK[2]
354
IN_CELL
1
RD[2]
355
IN_CELL
0
RCLK[1]
356
IN_CELL
0
RD[1]
357
IN_CELL
1
RCLK[0]
358
IN_CELL
1
RD[0]
359
IN_CELL
1
RMVCK[0]
360
IN_CELL
0
RFPB[0]
361
IN_CELL
0
RMV8FPC
362
IN_CELL
1
RFP8B
363
IN_CELL
0
RMV8DC
364
IN_CELL
0
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Register Bit
Cell Type
Device I.D.
TDO
TAP Output
-
TDI
TAP Input
-
TCK
TAP Clock
-
TMS
TAP Input
-
TRSTB
TAP Input
-
Notes:
1. RMV8DC is the first bit of the scan chain (closest to TDI).
2. Enable cell pinname_OEN, tristates pin pinname when set high.
3. Cells titled ‘Unconnected’ are Output or Bi-directional cells whose pad is
unconnected to the device package. In the case of bi-directional cells, the
pad always drives (i.e. never tri-states) and the pad input is the same logic
value as the pad output.
Figure 6 – Input Observation Cell (IN_CELL)
IDCODE
Scan Chain Out
INPUT
to internal
logic
Input
Pad
G1
G2
SHIFT-DR
I.D. Code bit
12
1 2 MUX
12
12
D
C
CLOCK-DR
Scan Chain In
In this diagram and those that follow, CLOCK-DR is equal to TCK when the
current controller state is SHIFT-DR or CAPTURE-DR, and unchanging
otherwise. The multiplexor in the center of the diagram selects one of four
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inputs, depending on the status of select lines G1 and G2. The ID Code bit is as
listed in the table above.
Figure 7 – Output Cell (OUT_CELL)
Scan Chain Out
G1
EXTEST
Output or Enable
from system logic
IDCODE
SHIFT-DR
I.D. code bit
1
G1
G2
1
1
1
1
2
2 MUX
2
2
1
Output or
Enable
MUX
D
C
D
C
CLOCK-DR
UPDATE-DR
Scan Chain In
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Figure 8 – Bi-directional Cell (IO_CELL)
Scan Chain Out
G1
EXTEST
OUTPUT from
internal logic
IDCODE
1
OUTPUT
to pin
MUX
1
G1
G2
SHIFT-DR
INPUT
from pin
I.D. code bit
INPUT
to internal
logic
12
1 2 MUX
12
12
D
C
D
C
CLOCK-DR
UPDATE-DR
Scan Chain In
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Figure 9 – Layout of Output Enable and Bi-directional Cells
Scan Chain Out
OUTPUT ENABLE
from internal
logic (0 = drive)
OUT_CELL
Scan Chain In
Scan Chain Out
INPUT to
internal logic
OUTPUT from
internal logic
IO_CELL
I/O
PAD
Scan Chain In
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11
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
OPERATIONS
This section presents connection details to the PM4388 TOCTL device, and
operating details for the JTAG boundary scan feature.
11.1 TOCTL Connections
The required connections between the PM4388 TOCTL and the FREEDM32A672 are shown in the following table:
Table 20 – FREEDM–TOCTL Connections
FREEDM Pin
Direction
TOCTL Pin
RCLK[n]
¬
ICLK/ISIG[m]
RD[n]
¬
ID[m]
n.c.
¬
IFP[m]
TCLK[n]
¬
EFP/RCLK/ESIG[m]
TD[n]
®
ED[m]
All 8 framers in the TOCTL should be programmed to operate in “Clock Master:
NxDS0” mode in both the ingress and egress direction.
11.2 JTAG Support
The FREEDM-32A672 supports the IEEE Boundary Scan Specification as
described in the IEEE 1149.1 standards. The Test Access Port (TAP) consists of
the five standard pins, TRSTB, TCK, TMS, TDI and TDO used to control the TAP
controller and the boundary scan registers. The TRSTB input is the active low
reset signal used to reset the TAP controller. TCK is the test clock used to
sample data on input, TDI and to output data on output, TDO. The TMS input is
used to direct the TAP controller through its states. The basic boundary scan
architecture is shown below.
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Figure 10 – Boundary Scan Architecture
Boundary Scan
Register
TDI
Device Identification
Register
Bypass
Register
Instruction
Register
and
Decode
Mux
DFF
TDO
Control
TMS
Test
Access
Port
Controller
Select
Tri-state Enable
TRSTB
TCK
The boundary scan architecture consists of a TAP controller, an instruction
register with instruction decode, a bypass register, a device identification register
and a boundary scan register. The TAP controller interprets the TMS input and
generates control signals to load the instruction and data registers. The
instruction register with instruction decode block is used to select the test to be
executed and/or the register to be accessed. The bypass register offers a single
bit delay from primary input, TDI to primary output , TDO. The device
identification register contains the device identification code.
The boundary scan register allows testing of board inter-connectivity. The
boundary scan register consists of a shift register placed in series with device
inputs and outputs. Using the boundary scan register, all digital inputs can be
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sampled and shifted out on primary output TDO. In addition, patterns can be
shifted in on primary input, TDI and forced onto all digital outputs.
TAP Controller
The TAP controller is a synchronous finite state machine clocked by the rising
edge of primary input, TCK. All state transitions are controlled using primary
input, TMS. The finite state machine is described below.
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Figure 11 – TAP Controller Finite State Machine
TRSTB=0
Test-Logic-Reset
1
0
1
1
Run-Test-Idle
1
Select-IR-Scan
Select-DR-Scan
0
0
0
1
1
Capture-IR
Capture-DR
0
0
Shift-IR
Shift-DR
1
1
0
1
1
Exit1-IR
Exit1-DR
0
0
Pause-IR
Pause-DR
0
1
0
1
0
0
Exit2-IR
Exit2-DR
1
1
Update-IR
Update-DR
1
0
1
0
0
All transitions dependent on input TMS
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Test-Logic-Reset
The test logic reset state is used to disable the TAP logic when the device is in
normal mode operation. The state is entered asynchronously by asserting input,
TRSTB. The state is entered synchronously regardless of the current TAP
controller state by forcing input, TMS high for 5 TCK clock cycles. While in this
state, the instruction register is set to the IDCODE instruction.
Run-Test-Idle
The run test/idle state is used to execute tests.
Capture-DR
The capture data register state is used to load parallel data into the test data
registers selected by the current instruction. If the selected register does not
allow parallel loads or no loading is required by the current instruction, the test
register maintains its value. Loading occurs on the rising edge of TCK.
Shift-DR
The shift data register state is used to shift the selected test data registers by one
stage. Shifting is from MSB to LSB and occurs on the rising edge of TCK.
Update-DR
The update data register state is used to load a test register's parallel output
latch. In general, the output latches are used to control the device. For example,
for the EXTEST instruction, the boundary scan test register's parallel output
latches are used to control the device's outputs. The parallel output latches are
updated on the falling edge of TCK.
Capture-IR
The capture instruction register state is used to load the instruction register with a
fixed instruction. The load occurs on the rising edge of TCK.
Shift-IR
The shift instruction register state is used to shift both the instruction register and
the selected test data registers by one stage. Shifting is from MSB to LSB and
occurs on the rising edge of TCK.
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Update-IR
The update instruction register state is used to load a new instruction into the
instruction register. The new instruction must be scanned in using the Shift-IR
state. The load occurs on the falling edge of TCK.
The Pause-DR and Pause-IR states are provided to allow shifting through the
test data and/or instruction registers to be momentarily paused.
Boundary Scan Instructions
The following is a description of the standard instructions. Each instruction
selects a serial test data register path between input, TDI and output, TDO.
BYPASS
The bypass instruction shifts data from input, TDI to output, TDO with one TCK
clock period delay. The instruction is used to bypass the device.
EXTEST
The external test instruction allows testing of the interconnection to other
devices. When the current instruction is the EXTEST instruction, the boundary
scan register is place between input, TDI and output, TDO. Primary device
inputs can be sampled by loading the boundary scan register using the
Capture-DR state. The sampled values can then be viewed by shifting the
boundary scan register using the Shift-DR state. Primary device outputs can be
controlled by loading patterns shifted in through input TDI into the boundary scan
register using the Update-DR state.
SAMPLE
The sample instruction samples all the device inputs and outputs. For this
instruction, the boundary scan register is placed between TDI and TDO. Primary
device inputs and outputs can be sampled by loading the boundary scan register
using the Capture-DR state. The sampled values can then be viewed by shifting
the boundary scan register using the Shift-DR state.
IDCODE
The identification instruction is used to connect the identification register between
TDI and TDO. The device's identification code can then be shifted out using the
Shift-DR state.
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STCTEST
The single transport chain instruction is used to test out the TAP controller and
the boundary scan register during production test. When this instruction is the
current instruction, the boundary scan register is connected between TDI and
TDO. During the Capture-DR state, the device identification code is loaded into
the boundary scan register. The code can then be shifted out output, TDO using
the Shift-DR state.
INTEST
The internal test instruction is used to exercise the device's internal core logic.
When this instruction is the current instruction, the boundary scan register is
connected between TDI and TDO. During the Update-DR state, patterns shifted
in on input, TDI are used to drive primary inputs. During the Capture-DR state,
primary outputs are sampled and loaded into the boundary scan register.
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12
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
FUNCTIONAL TIMING
12.1 Receive H-MVIP Link Timing
The timing relationship of the receive data clock (RMV8DC), frame pulse clock
(RMV8FPC), data (RD[n]) and frame pulse (RFP8B) signals of a link configured
for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation with a type 0 frame pulse is shown in Figure
12. The falling edges of each RMV8FPC are aligned to a falling edge of the
corresponding RMV8DC for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation. The FREEDM32A672 samples RFP8B low on the falling edge of RMV8FPC and references
this point as the start of the next frame. The FREEDM-32A672 samples the data
provided on RD[n] at the ¾ point of the data bit using the rising edge of RMV8DC
as indicated for bit 1 (B1) of time-slot 0 (TS 0) in Figure 12. B1 is the most
significant bit and B8 is the least significant bit of each octet. Time-slots can be
ignored by setting the PROV bit in the corresponding word of the receive channel
provision RAM in the RCAS672 block to low.
Figure 12 – Receive 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP Link Timing
RM V8DC
(16 M Hz)
RM V8F PC
(4 MHz)
RF P8B
RD[n]
B8
TS 127
B1
B2
B3
B4
B5
B6
B7
TS 0
B8
B1
TS 1
The timing relationship of the receive data clock (RMVCK[n]), data (RD[m], where
8n£m£8n+7) and frame pulse (RFPB[n]) signals of a link configured for 2.048
Mbps H-MVIP operation with a type 0 frame pulse is shown in Figure 13. The
FREEDM-32A672 samples RFPB[n] low on the falling edge of the corresponding
RMVCK[n] and references this point as the start of the next frame. The
FREEDM-32A672 samples the data provided on RD[m] at the ¾ point of the data
bit using the rising edge of the corresponding RMVCK[n] as indicated for bit 1
(B1) of time-slot 0 (TS 0) in Figure 13. B1 is the most significant bit and B8 is the
least significant bit of each octet. Time-slots can be ignored by setting the PROV
bit in the corresponding word of the receive channel provision RAM in the
RCAS672 block to low.
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Figure 13 – Receive 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP Link Timing
RM VCK[n]
(4 MHz)
RFPB[n]
RD[m ]
B8
B1
B2
B3
TS 31
B4
B5
B6
B7
B8
TS 0
B1
TS 1
12.2 Transmit H-MVIP Link Timing
The timing relationship of the transmit data clock (TMV8DC), frame pulse clock
(TMV8FPC), data (TD[n]) and frame pulse (TFP8B) signals of a link configured
for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation with a type 0 frame pulse is shown in Figure
14. The falling edges of each TMV8FPC are aligned to a falling edge of the
corresponding TMV8DC for 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP operation. The FREEDM32A672 samples TFP8B low on the falling edge of TMV8FPC and references this
point as the start of the next frame. The FREEDM-32A672 updates the data
provided on TD[n] on every second falling edge of TMV8DC as indicated for bit 2
(B2) of time-slot 0 (TS 0) in Figure 14. The first bit of the next frame is updated
on TD[n] on the falling TMV8DC clock edge for which TFP8B is also sampled
low. B1 is the most significant bit and B8 is the least significant bit of each octet.
Time-slots that are not provisioned to belong to any channel (PROV bit in the
corresponding word of the transmit channel provision RAM in the TCAS672 block
set low) transmits the contents of the Idle Fill Time-slot Data register.
Figure 14 – Transmit 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP Link Timing
TM V8DC
(16 M Hz)
TM V8F PC
(4 MHz)
TF P8B
TD[n]
B8
TS 127
B1
B2
B3
B4
B5
B6
B7
TS 0
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B8
B1
TS 1
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The timing relationship of the transmit data clock (TMVCK[n]), data (TD[m],
where 8n£m£8n+7) and frame pulse (TFPB[n]) signals of a link configured for
2.048 Mbps H-MVIP operation with a type 0 frame pulse is shown in Figure 15.
The FREEDM-32A672 samples TFPB[n] low on the falling edge of the
corresponding TMVCK[n] and references this point as the start of the next frame.
The FREEDM-32A672 updates the data provided on TD[m] on every second
falling edge of the corresponding TMVCK[n] as indicated for bit 2 (B2) of time-slot
0 (TS 0) in Figure 15. The first bit of the next frame is updated on TD[m] on the
falling TMVCK[n] clock edge for which TFPB[n] is also sampled low. B1 is the
most significant bit and B8 is the least significant bit of each octet. Time-slots
that are not provisioned to belong to any channel (PROV bit in the corresponding
word of the transmit channel provision RAM in the TCAS672 block set low)
transmits the contents of the Idle Fill Time-slot Data register.
Figure 15 – Transmit 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP Link Timing
TM VC K[n]
(4 MHz)
TFPB[n]
TD[m ]
B8
B1
B2
B3
TS 31
B4
B5
B6
B7
TS 0
B8
B1
TS 1
12.3 Receive non H-MVIP Link Timing
The timing relationship of the receive clock (RCLK[n]) and data (RD[n]) signals of
an unchannelised link is shown in Figure 16. The receive data is viewed as a
contiguous serial stream. There is no concept of time-slots in an unchannelised
link. Every eight bits are grouped together into a byte with arbitrary alignment.
The first bit received (B1 in Figure 16) is deemed the most significant bit of an
octet. The last bit received (B8) is deemed the least significant bit. Bits that are
to be processed by the FREEDM-32A672 are clocked in on the rising edge of
RCLK[n]. Bits that should be ignored (X in Figure 16) are squelched by holding
RCLK[n] quiescent. In Figure 16, the quiescent period is shown to be a low level
on RCLK[n]. A high level, effected by extending the high phase of the previous
valid bit, is also acceptable. Selection of bits for processing is arbitrary and is not
subject to any byte alignment nor frame boundary considerations.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Figure 16 – Unchannelised Receive Link Timing
RCLK[n]
RD[n]
B1 B2 B3 B4 X B5 X X X B6 B7 B8 B1 X
The timing relationship of the receive clock (RCLK[n]) and data (RD[n]) signals of
a channelised T1/J1 link is shown in Figure 17. The receive data stream is a
T1/J1 frame with a single framing bit (F in Figure 17) followed by octet bound
time-slots 1 to 24. RCLK[n] is held quiescent during the framing bit. The RD[n]
data bit (B1 of TS1) clocked in by the first rising edge of RCLK[n] after the
framing bit is the most significant bit of time-slot 1. The RD[n] bit (B8 of TS24)
clocked in by the last rising edge of RCLK[n] before the framing bit is the least
significant bit of time-slot 24. In Figure 17, the quiescent period is shown to be a
low level on RCLK[n]. A high level, effected by extending the high phase of bit
B8 of time-slot TS24, is equally acceptable. In channelised T1/J1 mode,
RCLK[n] can only be gapped during the framing bit. It must be active
continuously at 1.544 MHz during all time-slot bits. Time-slots can be ignored by
setting the PROV bit in the corresponding word of the receive channel provision
RAM in the RCAS672 block to low.
Figure 17 – Channelised T1/J1 Receive Link Timing
RCLK[n]
RD[n]
B7 B8 F B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B1 B2 B3
TS 24
TS 1
TS 2
The timing relationship of the receive clock (RCLK[n]) and data (RD[n]) signals of
a channelised E1 link is shown in Figure 18. The receive data stream is an E1
frame with a singe framing byte (F1 to F8 in Figure 18) followed by octet bound
time-slots 1 to 31. RCLK[n] is held quiescent during the framing byte. The RD[n]
data bit (B1 of TS1) clocked in by the first rising edge of RCLK[n] after the
framing byte is the most significant bit of time-slot 1. The RD[n] bit (B8 of TS31)
clocked in by the last rising edge of RLCLK[n] before the framing byte is the least
significant bit of time-slot 31. In Figure 18, the quiescent period is shown to be a
low level on RCLK[n]. A high level, effected by extending the high phase of bit
B8 of time-slot TS31, is equally acceptable. In channelised E1 mode, RCLK[n]
can only be gapped during the framing byte. It must be active continuously at
2.048 MHz during all time-slot bits. Time-slots can be ignored by setting the
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
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PROV bit in the corresponding word of the receive channel provision RAM in the
RCAS672 block to low.
Figure 18 – Channelised E1 Receive Link Timing
RCLK[n]
RD[n]
B6 B7 B8 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 F6 F7 F8 B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B1 B2 B3 B4
TS 31
FAS / NFAS
TS 1
TS 2
12.4 Transmit non H-MVIP Link Timing
The timing relationship of the transmit clock (TCLK[n]) and data (TD[n]) signals of
a unchannelised link is shown in Figure 19. The transmit data is viewed as a
contiguous serial stream. There is no concept of time-slots in an unchannelised
link. Every eight bits are grouped together into a byte with arbitrary byte
alignment. Octet data is transmitted from most significant bit (B1 in Figure 19)
and ending with the least significant bit (B8 in Figure 19). Bits are updated on
the falling edge of TCLK[n]. A transmit link may be stalled by holding the
corresponding TCLK[n] quiescent. In Figure 19, bits B5 and B2 are shown to be
stalled for one cycle while bit B6 is shown to be stalled for three cycles. In Figure
19, the quiescent period is shown to be a low level on TCLK[n]. A high level,
effected by extending the high phase of the previous valid bit, is also acceptable.
Gapping of TCLK[n] can occur arbitrarily without regard to byte nor frame
boundaries.
Figure 19 – Unchannelised Transmit Link Timing
TCLK[n]
TD[n]
B1 B2 B3 B4
B5
B6
B7 B8 B1
B2
The timing relationship of the transmit clock (TCLK[n]) and data (TD[n]) signals of
a channelised T1/J1 link is shown in Figure 20. The transmit data stream is a
T1/J1 frame with a single framing bit (F in Figure 20) followed by octet bound
time-slots 1 to 24. TCLK[n] is held quiescent during the framing bit. The most
significant bit of each time-slot is transmitted first (B1 in Figure 20). The least
significant bit of each time-slot is transmitted last (B8 in Figure 20). The TD[n] bit
(B8 of TS24) before the framing bit is the least significant bit of time-slot 24. In
Figure 20, the quiescent period is shown to be a low level on TCLK[n]. A high
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
level, effected by extending the high phase of bit B8 of time-slot TS24, is equally
acceptable. In channelised T1/J1 mode, TCLK[n] can only be gapped during the
framing bit. It must be active continuously at 1.544 MHz during all time-slot bits.
Time-slots that are not provisioned to belong to any channel (PROV bit in the
corresponding word of the transmit channel provision RAM in the TCAS672 block
set low) transmit the contents of the Idle Fill Time-slot Data register.
Figure 20 – Channelised T1/J1 Transmit Link Timing
TCLK[n]
TD[n]
B7 B8
TS 24
B1
B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B1 B2 B3
F
TS 1
TS 2
The timing relationship of the transmit clock (TCLK[n]) and data (TD[n]) signals of
a channelised E1 link is shown in Figure 21. The transmit data stream is an E1
frame with a singe framing byte (FAS/NFAS in Figure 21) followed by octet bound
time-slots 1 to 31. TCLK[n] is held quiescent during the framing byte. The most
significant bit of each time-slot is transmitted first (B1 in Figure 21). The least
significant bit of each time-slot is transmitted last (B8 in Figure 21). The TD[n] bit
(B8 of TS31) before the framing byte is the least significant bit of time-slot 31. In
Figure 21, the quiescent period is shown to be a low level on TCLK[n]. A high
level, effected by extending the high phase of bit B8 of time-slot 31, is equally
acceptable. In channelised E1 mode, TCLK[n] can only be gapped during the
framing byte. It must be active continuously at 2.048 MHz during all time-slot
bits. Time-slots that are not provisioned to belong to any channel (PROV bit in
the corresponding word of the transmit channel provision RAM in the TCAS672
block set low) transmit the contents of the Idle Time-slot Fill Data register.
Figure 21 – Channelised E1 Transmit Link Timing
TCLK[n]
TD[n]
B6 B7 B8
TS 31
B1
FAS / NFAS
B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B1 B2 B3 B4
TS 1
TS 2
12.5 Receive APPI Timing
The receive Any-PHY packet interface (APPI) timing is shown in Figure 22
through Figure 24. The FREEDM-32A672 device provides data to an external
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
controller using the receive APPI. The following discussion surrounding the
receive APPI functional timing assumes that multiple FREEDM-32A672 devices
share a single external controller. All Rx APPI signals are shared between the
FREEDM-32A672 devices.
Figure 22 – Receive APPI Timing (Normal Transfer)
RXCLK
RXADDR[2:0]
RPA
Dev 0
NULL
Dev 7
NULL
Dev 0
Dev 6
NULL
Dev 7
Dev 4
NULL
Dev 6
Dev 0
Dev 4
NULL
Dev 1
NULL
Dev 0
Dev 3
NULL
Dev 1
Dev 2
NULL
Dev 3
Dev 2
RENB
RXDATA[15:0]
CH 2
D0
Dev 0
D1
Dev 0
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
RVAL
RSX
REOP
RMOD
RERR
Figure 22 shows the transfer of an 8 word packet across the Rx APPI from
FREEDM-32A672 device 0, channel 2. In this example, seven FREEDM-32A672
devices are sharing the Rx APPI, with device 5 being the null address.
The data transfer begins when the external controller selects FREEDM-32A672
device 0 by placing that address on the RXADDR[2:0] inputs and setting RENB
high. The external controller sets RENB low in the next RXCLK cycle to
commence data transfer across the Rx APPI. The FREEDM-32A672 samples
RENB low and responds by asserting RSX two RXCLK cycles later. The start of
all burst data transfers is qualified with RSX and an in-band channel address on
RXDATA[15:0] to associate the data to follow with a HDLC channel.
During the cycle when D2 is placed on RXDATA[15:0], the external controller is
unable to accept any further data and sets RENB high. Two RXCLK cycles later,
the FREEDM-32A672 tristates the Rx APPI. The external controller may hold
RENB high for an indeterminate number of RXCLK cycles. The FREEDM32A672 will wait until the external controller returns RENB low. Because the
FREEDM-32A672 does not support interrupted data transfers on the Rx APPI,
the external controller must reselect FREEDM-32A672 device 0 or output a null
address during the clock cycle before it returns RENB low. However, while
RENB remains high, the address on the RXADDR[2:0] signals may change.
When the FREEDM-32A672 device 0 samples RENB low, it continues data
transfer by providing D4 on RXDATA[15:0]. Note that if D3 were the final word of
the packet (Status), in response to sampling REOP high, the external controller
does not have to reselect FREEDM-32A672 device 0. This is shown in Figure
25.
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The FREEDM-32A672 will not pause burst data transfers across the Rx APPI.
The FREEDM-32A672 automatically deselects at the end of all burst data
transfers. The FREEDM-32A672 must be reselected before any further data will
be transferred across the Rx APPI.
The RVAL and REOP signals indicate the presence and end of valid packet data
respectively. The RERR and RMOD signals are only valid at the end of a packet
and are qualified with the REOP signal. When a packet is errored, the FREEDM32A672 may be programmed to overwrite RXDATA[7:0] in the final word of
packet transfer with status information indicating the cause of the error.
RXDATA[15:0] is not modified if a packet is error free.
The RXADDR[2:0] signals serve to poll FREEDM-32A672 devices as well as for
selection. During data transfer, the RXADDR[2:0] signals continue to poll the
FREEDM-32A672 devices sharing the Rx APPI. Polled results are returned on
the RPA signal. Note that each poll address is separated by a NULL address to
generate tristate turn-around cycle in order to prevent multiple FREEDM-32A672
devices from briefly driving RPA. If RPA is a point-to-point signal for each
FREEDM-32A672 device on the board, then the tristate turn-around cycle is not
required, thereby effectively doubling the polling bandwidth at the expense of
extra signals.
Polled results reflect the status of the two FIFOs in the RAPI672. Polled
responses always refer to the next data transfer. In other words, polled
responses during or after the RXCLK cycle where RSX is set high refer to the
FIFO which is not involved in the current data transfer. For example, once FIFO
one begins transferring data on the Rx APPI (RSX set high), any polls against
that FREEDM-32A672 device respond with the status of FIFO two. This allows
the external controller to gather knowledge about the FIFO not involved in the
current data transfer so that it can anticipate reselecting that FREEDM-32A672
device (via RENB) to maximize bandwidth on the Rx APPI (shown in Figure 24).
Figure 23 – Receive APPI Timing (Auto Deselection)
RXCLK
RXADDR[2:0]
RPA
Dev 0
NULL
Dev 7
NULL
Dev 0
Dev 6
NULL
Dev 4
NULL
Dev 7
Dev 4
Dev 0
NULL
Dev 3
NULL
Dev 0
Dev 2
NULL
Dev 3
Dev 2
RENB
RXDATA[15:0]
CH 2
D0
Dev 0
D1
D98
D99
CH 8
Dev 0
D0
RVAL
RSX
REOP
RMOD
RERR
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Figure 23 shows the transfer of a 100 word packet across the Rx APPI from
FREEDM-32A672 device 0, channel 2 followed by the transfer of a 2 word packet
from FREEDM-32A672 device 0, channel 8. More importantly, Figure 23
illustrates that, for back-to-back transfers from the same FREEDM-32A672
(device 0), it must be reselected before any further data is provided on the Rx
APPI.
At the end of the first 100 word packet transfer across the Rx APPI, the
FREEDM-32A672 automatically deselects and must be reselected before the
second two word packet is transferred. When the external controller samples
REOP high, it recognizes that the burst transfer has completed. Two RXCLK
cycles later, the external controller reselects FREEDM-32A672 device 0 by
setting RENB high and placing address 0 on the RXADDR[2:0] signals. When
the FREEDM-32A672 samples RENB low, it begins the next data transfer as
before.
Figure 24 – Receive APPI Timing (Optimal Reselection)
RXCLK
RXADDR[2:0]
RPA
Dev 0
NULL
Dev 7
NULL
Dev 0
Dev 6
NULL
NULL
Dev 0
NULL
Dev 7
Dev 4
NULL
Dev 0
Dev 3
NULL
Dev 4
RENB
Dev 0
RXDATA[15:0]
CH 2
D0
D1
Dev 0
D125
D126
D127
CH 2
D128
RVAL
RSX
REOP
RMOD
RERR
Figure 24 shows optimal bandwidth utilization across the Rx APPI.
With knowledge that the maximum burst data transfer (excluding channel
address prepend) is 256 bytes, i.e. 128 words, the external controller sets RENB
high when the 127th word (D126) is placed on RXDATA[15:0] in anticipation of the
end of a burst transfer. The FREEDM-32A672 completes the burst data transfer
and tristates the Rx APPI one RXCLK cycle after RENB is sampled high.
Because the burst data transfer is complete and RENB is immediately returned
low following selection, the FREEDM-32A672 immediately begins the next data
transfer following the single turn-around cycle.
The protocol dictates that at least one tristate turn-around cycle be inserted
between data transfers, even if the external controller is reselecting the same
FREEDM-32A672 device. In other words, Figure 24 shows the earliest possible
time that the external controller could have set RENB high to reselect FREEDM32A672 device 0.
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Figure 25 – Receive APPI Timing (Boundary Condition)
RXCLK
RXADDR[2:0]
RPA
Dev 0
NULL
Dev 7
NULL
Dev 0
Dev 6
NULL
Dev 7
Dev 4
NULL
Dev 6
Dev 4
Dev 7
Dev 1
NULL
Dev 3
Dev 7
Dev 1
NULL
Dev 2
Dev 3
NULL
Dev 2
RENB
RXDATA[15:0]
CH 2
D0
D1
D2
D3
Dev 7
D8
CH 1
D9
RVAL
RSX
REOP
RMOD
RERR
Figure 25 shows the boundary condition where a packet transfer completes
shortly after the external controller has set RENB high to pause the FREEDM32A672 device. The second data transfer is the final two words of a packet for
FREEDM-32A672 device 7, channel 1.
When FREEDM-32A672 device 0 places D2 on RXDATA[15:0], the external
controller sets RENB high to pause the FREEDM-32A672 device. In the
following RXCLK cycle, the FREEDM-32A672 provides D3 on RXDATA[15:0] and
sets REOP high to conclude packet transfer. The external controller samples
REOP high while RENB is high and recognizes that the packet transfer is
complete. The external controller now knows that it doesn’t need to reselect
FREEDM-32A672 device 0, but can select another FREEDM-32A672 device
sharing the Rx APPI. The external controller decides to select FREEDM-32A672
device 7 by placing this address on the RXADDR[2:0] signals. The external
controller sets RENB low to commence data transfer from FREEDM-32A672
device 7.
12.6 Transmit APPI Timing
The transmit Any-PHY packet interface (APPI) timing is shown in Figure 26. An
external controller provides data to the FREEDM-32A672 device using the
transmit APPI. The following discussion surrounding the transmit APPI functional
timing assumes that multiple FREEDM-32A672 devices share a single external
controller. The three most significant bits of TXADDR[12:0] perform device
selection for purposes of polling while the ten least significant bits provide the
channel poll address. All Tx APPI signals are shared between the FREEDM32A672 devices.
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Figure 26 – Transmit APPI Timing (Normal Transfer)
TXCLK
TRDY
TXDATA[15:0]
CH 0
D0
D1
D2
D126
D127
CH 0
D128
Dev 4
D129
D130
D131
D132
D254
D255
TSX
TEOP
TMOD
TERR
Figure 26 shows transfer of a 256 word packet on the Tx APPI of FREEDM32A672 device 4, channel 0. The maximum burst data transfer (excluding
channel address prepend) is 128 words, so two data transfers are required to
complete the transfer of the 256 word packet.
The start of all burst data transfers is qualified with the TSX signal and an in-band
channel address on TXDATA[15:0] to associate the data to follow with a HDLC
channel. The TEOP signal indicates the end of valid packet data. The TMOD
and TERR signals held low except at the end of a packet (TEOP set high).
The FREEDM-32A672 starts driving the TRDY signal one TXCLK cycle after TSX
is sampled high. Upon sampling the TRDY signal high, the external controller
completes the current burst data transfer. The FREEDM-32A672 tristates the
TRDY signal one TXCLK cycle after it has been driven high. This is the case for
the first burst data transfer in Figure 26. In the second burst data transfer, the
FREEDM-32A672 drives the TRDY signal low to indicate that the FIFOs in the
TAPI672 are full and no further data may be transferred. Upon sampling the
TRDY signal low, the external controller must hold the last valid word of data on
TXDATA[15:0]. The FREEDM-32A672 may drive TRDY low for an indeterminate
number of TXCLK cycles. During this time, the external controller must wait and
is not permitted to begin another burst data transfer until TRDY is sampled high.
When the TAPI672 has at least one empty FIFO, the FREEDM-32A672 drives
the TRDY signal high. Upon sampling the TRDY signal high, the external
controller completes the current burst data transfer. The FREEDM-32A672
tristates the TRDY signal one TXCLK cycle after it has been driven high.
The external controller must sample the TRDY signal high before it can begin the
next burst data transfer. This prevents the external controller from bombarding
the FREEDM-32A672 device with small packets and allows the FREEDM32A672 to perform the necessary house-keeping and clean-up associated with
the ending of burst data transfers. This protocol also ensures that transitions
between burst data transfers do not require any extra per channel storage,
thereby simplifying implementation of both the external controller and the
FREEDM-32A672 device. Figure 27 illustrates this condition.
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Figure 27 – Transmit APPI Timing (Special Conditions)
TXCLK
TRDY
Dev 3
TXDATA[15:0]
CH 0
Dev 5
D0
CH 671
D0
D1
D2
CH 2
D0
TSX
TEOP
TMOD
TERR
Figure 27 shows two special conditions – (1) the transfer of a one word packet
illustrating how the external controller must wait until TRDY has been sampled
high before the next data transfer can begin, and (2) the transfer of a packet
which completes when TRDY is set low illustrating that although the packet has
been completely transferred, the external controller must still wait until TRDY has
been sampled high before the next data transfer can begin.
The first data transfer is a single word packet for FREEDM-32A672 device 3,
channel 0. The FREEDM-32A672 asserts TRDY high one TXCLK cycle after
TSX is sampled high. The Tx APPI protocol dictates that the external controller
must wait until TRDY is sampled high before beginning the next data transfer for
FREEDM-32A672 device 5, channel 671. The external controller must hold the
last valid word on TXDATA[15:0] until TRDY is sampled high. In this case, that
data is a don’t care. The FREEDM-32A672 tristates the TRDY signal one TXCLK
cycle after it has been driven high.
The second transfer is a three word packet which completes transfer in the same
TXCLK cycle that TRDY is sampled low by the external controller. Again, the
external controller must hold the last valid word on TXDATA[15:0] until TRDY is
sampled high. In this case, that data is D2, the last word of the packet. The
FREEDM-32A672 may drive TRDY low for an indeterminate number of TXCLK
cycles. During this time, the external controller must wait and is not permitted to
begin another burst data transfer until TRDY is sampled high. When the external
controller samples TRDY high, the current burst transfer is deemed to be
complete and the external controller may begin the next data transfer. The
FREEDM-32A672 tristates the TRDY signal one TXCLK cycle after it has been
driven high.
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Figure 28 – Transmit APPI Timing (Polling)
TXCLK
TXADDR[12:0]
CH 671
CH 0
Dev 0
CH 254
Dev 1
CH 8
NULL
Dev 0
CH 0
CH 254
TPA1[0]
CH 671
TPA1[1]
HUNGRY
STARVE
TPA1[2]
OK
UFLOW
CH 0
CH 399
NULL
CH 8
CH 0
Dev 1
CH 0
HUNGRY
STARVE
HUNGRY
STARVE
STARVE
OK
OK
OK
OK
UFLOW
CH 400
Dev 0
CH 1
CH 255
CH 399
TPA2[0]
CH 0
CH 9
CH 1
Dev 1
CH 1
TPA2[1]
STARVE
HUNGRY
STARVE
HUNGRY
HUNGRY
HUNGRY
STARVE
TPA2[2]
OK
OK
UFLOW
OK
OK
OK
UFLOW
Polling is completely decoupled from device and channel selection on the Tx
APPI. Accordingly, the TXADDR[12:0] signals continue to provide only a poll
address for any of the FREEDM-32A672 devices sharing the Tx APPI. The most
significant three bits provide the device address and the least significant ten bits
provide the channel address. Poll results are returned on the TPAn[2:0] signals.
The TPAn[0] bit indicates whether or not space exists in the channel FIFO for
data (high means space exists in the channel FIFO) and the TPAn[1] bit indicates
whether or not that polled channel FIFO is at risk of underflowing and should be
provided data soon (high means the channel FIFO is at risk of underflowing).
The TPAn[2] bit indicates whether or not an underflow condition has occurred on
the polled channel FIFO (high means an underflow condition occurred on that
channel). In Figure 28, channel 671 in device 0 reports that space does not exist
for data in the channel FIFO, that there is currently no risk of underflow on that
channel (hungry) and that an underflow event has not occurred on this channel
since the last poll. Channel 0 in device 0 reports that space exists for data in the
channel FIFO, that there is currently a risk of underflow on that channel (starving)
and that an underflow event has occurred on this channel since the last poll.
Polled results for two channels provide a two fold increase in the polling
bandwidth on the Tx APPI to accommodate the high density of 672 channels.
12.7 BERT Interface
The timing relationship between the receive link clock and data (RCLK[n] / RD[n])
and the receive BERT port signals (RBCLK / RBD) is shown in Figure 29. BERT
is not supported for H-MVIP links. For non H-MVIP links, the selected RCLK[n] is
placed on RBCLK after an asynchronous delay. The selected receive link data
(RD[n]) is sampled on the rising edge of the associated RCLK[n] and transferred
to RBD on the falling edge of RBCLK.
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Figure 29 – Receive BERT Port Timing
RCLK[n]
RD[n]
B1 B2 B3 B4 X B5 X X
X B6 B7 B8 B1 X
RBCLK
RBD
B1 B2 B3
B4
B5
B6 B7 B8
B1
The timing relationship between the transmit link clock and data (TCLK[n] / TD[n])
and the transmit BERT port signals (TBCLK / TBD) is shown in Figure 30. BERT
is not supported for H-MVIP links. TCLK[n] is shown to have an arbitrary
gapping. When TCLK[n] is quiescent, TBD is ignored (X in Figure 30). The
selected TCLK[n] is buffered and placed on TBCLK. The transmit BERT data
(TBD) is sampled on the rising edge of the TBCLK and transferred to the
selected TD[n] on the falling edge of TCLK[n].
Figure 30 – Transmit BERT Port Timing
TCLK[n]
TBCLK
TBD
TD[n]
B1 B2 B3 B4 X B5 X X X B6 B7 B8 B1 X B2
B1 B2 B3
B4
B5
B6 B7 B8
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Maximum rating are the worst case limits that the device can withstand without
sustaining permanent damage. They are not indicative of normal operating
conditions.
Table 21 – FREEDM-32A672 Absolute Maximum Ratings
Case Temperature under Bias
-40°C to +85°C
Storage Temperature
-40°C to +125°C
Supply Voltage (+3.3 Volt VDD3.3)
-0.3V to +4.6V
Supply Voltage (+2.5 Volt VDD2.5)
-0.3V to +3.5V
Voltage on Any Pin (non Any-PHY)
-0.3V to +6.0V
Volatge on Any Pin (Any-PHY)
-0.5V to VDD3.3 + 0.5V
Static Discharge Voltage
±1000 V
Latch-Up Current
±100 mA
DC Input Current
±20 mA
Lead Temperature
+230°C
Absolute Maximum Junction
Temperature
+150°C
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ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
D.C. CHARACTERISTICS
(TA = -40°C to +85°C, VDD3.3 = 3.0 V to 3.6 V, VDD2.5 = 2.3 V to 2.7V)
Table 22 – FREEDM-32A672 D.C. Characteristics
Symbol
Parameter
Min
Typ
Max
Units
VDD3.3
3.3V Power Supply
3.0
3.3
3.6
Volts
Note 4.
VDD2.5
2.5V Power Supply
2.3
2.5
2.7
Volts
Note 4.
VIL
Any-PHY Input
Low Voltage
-0.5
0.6
Volts
VIH
Any-PHY Input
High Voltage
2.0
VDD3.3
+ 0.5
Volts
VOL
Output or Bidirectional Low
Voltage
0.4
Volts
IOL = -4 mA for all outputs
except RBCLK, TBCLK,
RBD, D[15:0], INTB,
TPAn[2:0], TRDY, RPA,
RSX, REOP,
RXDATA[15:0], RXPRTY,
RMOD and RERR where
IOL = -8 mA. Note 3.
VOH
Output or Bidirectional High
Voltage
2.4
Volts
IOH = 4 mA for all outputs
except RBCLK, TBCLK,
RBD, D[15:0], INTB,
TPAn[2:0], TRDY, RPA,
RSX, REOP,
RXDATA[15:0], RXPRTY,
RMOD and RERR where
IOH = 8 mA. Note 3.
VT+
Schmitt Triggered
Input High Voltage
2.0
5.5
Volts
VT-
Schmitt Triggered
Input Low Voltage
-0.2
0.6
Volts
IILPU
Input Low Current
+10
45
+100
µA
VIL = GND, Notes 1, 3, 4.
IIHPU
Input High Current
-10
0
+10
µA
VIH = VDD, Notes 1, 3.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Parameter
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Conditions
IIL
Input Low Current
-10
0
+10
µA
VIL = GND, Notes 2, 3.
IIH
Input High Current
-10
0
+10
µA
VIH = VDD, Notes 2, 3.
CIN
Input Capacitance
5
pF
Excludes package.
Package typically 2 pF.
Note 4.
COUT
Output
Capacitance
5
pF
All pins. Excludes
package. Package
typically 2 pF. Note 4.
CIO
Bi-directional
Capacitance
5
pF
All pins. Excludes
package. Package
typically 2 pF. Note 4.
LPIN
Pin Inductance
2
nH
All pins. Note 4.
IDDOP
Operating Current.
220
mA
VDD2.5 = 2.7V, Outputs
Unloaded. RCLK[31:0]=
TCLK[31:0]= 2.048 MHz.
RMVCK[3:0] and
TMVCK[3:0] tied low.
RMV8DC and TMV8DC
tied low. Note 4.
IDDOP
Operating Current.
300
mA
VDD2.5 = 2.7V, Outputs
Unloaded. RCLK[2:0] =
TCLK[2:0] = 51.84 MHz.
RCLK[31:3], TCLK[31:3],
RMVCK[3:0] and
TMVCK[3:0] tied low.
RMV8DC and TMV8DC
tied low. Note 4.
Notes on D.C. Characteristics:
1. Input pin or bi-directional pin with internal pull-up resistor.
2. Input pin or bi-directional pin without internal pull-up resistor.
3. Negative currents flow into the device (sinking), positive currents flow out of the
device (sourcing).
4. Typical values are given as a design aid. The product is not tested to the typical
values given in the data sheet.
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
FREEDM-32A672 TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
(TA = -40°C to +85°C, VDD3.3 = 3.0 V to 3.6V, VDD2.5 = 2.3 V to 2.7 V)
Table 23 – FREEDM-32A672 Link Input (Figure 31 to Figure 34)
Symbol
Description
Min
Max
Units
RCLK[31:0] Frequency (See Note 3)
1.542
1.546
MHz
RCLK[31:0] Frequency (See Note 4)
2.046
2.050
MHz
RCLK[2:0] Frequency (See Note 5)
51.84
MHz
RCLK[31:3] Frequency (See Note 5)
10
MHz
RCLK[31:0] Duty Cycle
40
60
%
RMVCK[3:0] Frequency (See Note 6)
4.092
4.100
MHz
RMVCK[3:0] Duty Cycle
40
60
%
RMV8DC Frequency (See Note 7)
16.368
16.400
MHz
RMV8DC Duty Cycle
40
60
%
RMV8FPC Frequency (See Note 8)
4.092
4.100
MHz
RMV8FPC Duty Cycle
40
60
%
RMV8DC to RMV8FPC skew
-10
10
ns
SYSCLK Frequency
25
45
MHz
SYSCLK Duty Cycle
40
60
%
tSRD
RD[2:0] Set-Up Time
1
ns
tHRD
RD[2:0] Hold Time
2
ns
tSRD
RD[31:3] Set-Up Time
5
ns
tHRD
RD[31:3] Hold Time
5
ns
tSRD_2MVIP
RD[31:0] Set-Up Time
(2.048 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
5
ns
tHRD_2MVIP
RD[31:0] Hold Time
(2.048 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
5
ns
tSRD_8MVIP
RD[31:0] Set-Up Time
(8.192 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
5
ns
tPMVC
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Symbol
Description
Min
Max
Units
tHRD_8MVIP
RD[31:0] Hold Time
(8.192 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
5
ns
tSRFPB
RFPB[3:0] Set-Up Time
50
ns
tHRFPB
RFPB[3:0] Hold Time
50
ns
TSRFP8B
RFP8B Set-Up Time
50
ns
THRFP8B
RFP8B Hold Time
50
ns
tSTBD
TBD Set-Up Time (See Note 9)
15
ns
tHTBD
TBD Hold Time
0
ns
Notes on Input Timing:
1. When a set-up time is specified between an input and a clock, the set-up time is the
time in nanoseconds from the 1.4 Volt point of the input to the 1.4 Volt point of the
clock.
2. When a hold time is specified between an input and a clock, the hold time is the time
in nanoseconds from the 1.4 Volt point of the clock to the 1.4 Volt point of the input.
3. Applicable only to channelised T1/J1 links and measured between framing bits.
4. Applicable only to channelised E1 links and measured between framing bytes.
5. Applicable only to unchannelised links of any format and measured between any two
RCLK rising edges.
6. Applicable only to 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP links and measured between any two
RMVCK[n] falling edges.
7. Applicable only to 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP links and measured between any two
RMV8DC falling edges.
8. Applicable only to H-MVIP links and measured between any two RMV8FPC falling
edges.
9. TBD set-up time is measured with a 20 pF load on TBCLK. The set-up time
increases by typically 1 ns for each 10 pF of extra load on TBCLK.
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Figure 31 – Receive Data & Frame Pulse Timing (2.048 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
RMVCK[n]
tS RFPB
tH RFPB
RFPB[n]
tS RD _2MV IP
tH RD_2MVIP
RD[m]
(m =8n,8n+1...8n+7)
Figure 32 – Receive Data & Frame Pulse Timing (8.192 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
RMV8FPC
tS RFP8B
tH RFP8B
RFP8B
tP MVC
RMV8DC
tS RD_8MV IP
tH RD_8MVIP
RD[n]
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Figure 33 – Receive Data Timing (Non H-MVIP Mode)
RCLK[n]
tS RD
tH RD
RD[n]
Figure 34 – BERT Input Timing
TBCLK
tS TBD
tH TBD
TBD
Table 24 – FREEDM-32A672 Link Output (Figure 35 to Figure 38)
Symbol
Description
Min
Max
Units
TCLK[31:0] Frequency (See Note 4)
1.542
1.546
MHz
TCLK[31:0] Frequency (See Note 5)
2.046
2.050
MHz
TCLK[2:0] Frequency (See Note 6)
51.84
MHz
TCLK[31:3] Frequency (See Note 6)
10
MHz
TCLK[31:0] Duty Cycle
40
60
%
TMVCK[3:0] Frequency (See Note 7)
4.092
4.100
MHz
TMVCK[3:0] Duty Cycle
40
60
%
TMV8DC Frequency (See Note 8)
16.368
16.400
MHz
TMV8DC Duty Cycle
40
60
%
TMV8FPC Frequency (See Note 9)
4.092
4.100
MHz
TMV8FPC Duty Cycle
40
60
%
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Symbol
Description
Min
Max
Units
tPMVC
TMV8DC to TMV8FPC skew
-10
10
ns
tSTFPB
TFPB[3:0] Set-Up Time
50
ns
tHTFPB
TFPB[3:0] Hold Time
50
ns
TSTFP8B
TFP8B Set-Up Time
50
ns
THTF8PB
TFP8B Hold Time
50
ns
tPTD
TCLK[2:0] Low to TD[2:0] Valid
3
12
ns
tPTD
TCLK[31:3] Low to TD[31:3] Valid
4
25
ns
tPTD_2MVIP TMVCK[3:0] Low to TD[31:0] Valid
(2.048 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
4
25
ns
tPTD_8MVIP TMV8DC Low to TD[31:0] Valid
(8.192 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
4
25
ns
tPRBD
-1
5
ns
RBCLK Low to RBD Valid
Notes on Output Timing:
1. Output propagation delay time is the time in nanoseconds from the 1.4 Volt point of
the reference signal to the 1.4 Volt point of the output.
2. Maximum and minimum output propagation delays are measured with a 50 pF load
on all the outputs, except for the TD[2:0] outputs. For TD[2:0] outputs, propagation
delays are measured with a 20 pF load. Maximum propagation delay for TD[2:0]
increases by typically 1 ns for each 10 pF of extra load.
3. Output propagation delays of signal outputs that are specified in relation to a
reference output are measured with a 50 pF load on both the signal output and the
reference output.
4. Applicable only to channelised T1/J1 links and measured between framing bits.
5. Applicable only to channelised E1 links and measured between framing bytes.
6. Applicable only to unchannelised links of any format and measured between any two
TCLK rising edges.
7. Applicable only to 2.048 Mbps H-MVIP links and measured between any two
TMVCK[n] falling edges.
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8. Applicable only to 8.192 Mbps H-MVIP links and measured between any two
TMV8DC falling edges.
9. Applicable only to H-MVIP links and measured between any two TMV8FPC falling
edges.
10. Output tristate delay is the time in nanoseconds from the 1.4 Volt point of the
reference signal to the point where the total current delivered through the output is
less than or equal to the leakage current.
Figure 35 – Transmit Data & Frame Pulse Timing (2.048 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
TMVCK[n]
tS T FPB
tH T FP B
TFPB[n]
tP TD _2MV IP
TD[m ]
(m =8n,8n+1...8n+7)
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Figure 36 – Transmit Data & Frame Pulse Timing (8.192 Mbps H-MVIP Mode)
TMV8FPC
tS T FP 8B
tH T FP8B
TFP8B
tP MV C
TMV8DC
tP TD_8MV IP
TD[n]
Figure 37 – Transmit Data Timing (Non H-MVIP Mode)
TCLK[n]
tP TD
TD[n]
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Figure 38 – BERT Output Timing
RBCLK
tP RBD
RBD
Table 25 – Any-PHY Packet Interface (Figure 39 to Figure 40)
Symbol
Description
Min
Max
Units
RXCLK Frequency
0
50
MHz
RXCLK Duty Cycle
40
60
%
TXCLK Frequency
0
50
MHz
TXCLK Duty Cycle
40
60
%
tSAPPI
All APPI Inputs Set-up time to
RXCLK, TXCLK
4
ns
tHAPPI
All APPI Inputs Hold time to RXCLK,
TXCLK
1
ns
tPAPPI
RXCLK, TXCLK to all APPI Outputs
Valid
2
12
ns
tZAPPI
RXCLK, TXCLK to APPI Outputs
Tristate
2
12
ns
tZDAPPI
RXCLK, TXCLK to APPI Outputs
Driven
2
ns
Notes on Any-PHY Packet Interface Output Timing:
1. Maximum and minimum output propagation delays are measured with a 100 pF load
on all the outputs.
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Figure 39 – Receive Any-PHY Packet Interface Timing
RXCLK
tS APPI
tH A PP I
RXADDR[2:0]
RENB
tP APPI
RPA, RSX, RVAL
RXDATA[15:0]
RXPRTY, RE RR
REOP, RMOD
tZ APPI
RPA, RSX, RVAL
RXDATA[15:0]
RXPRTY, RE RR
REOP, RMOD
tZD APPI
RPA, RSX, RVAL
RXDATA[15:0]
RXPRTY, RE RR
REOP, RMOD
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ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Figure 40 – Transmit Any-PHY Packet Interface Timing
TXCLK
tS A PPI
TXADDR[12:0]
TXDATA[15:0]
TXPRTY, TSX
TEO P, TMOD
TERR
tH APPI
tP A PPI
TPAn[2:0]
TRDY
tZ A PP I
TPAn[2:0]
TRDY
tZD APP I
TPAn[2:0]
TRDY
Table 26 – Microprocessor Interface Read Access (Figure 41)
Symbol
Description
Min
tSAR
Address to Valid Read Set-up Time
10
ns
tHAR
Address to Valid Read Hold Time
5
ns
tSALR
Address to Latch Set-up Time
10
ns
tHALR
Address to Latch Hold Time
10
ns
tVL
Valid Latch Pulse Width
5
ns
tSLR
Latch to Read Set-up
0
ns
tHLR
Latch to Read Hold
5
ns
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208
Units
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32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Symbol
Description
tPRD
Min
Max
Units
Valid Read to Valid Data
Propagation Delay
40
ns
tZRD
Valid Read Deasserted to Output
Tristate
20
ns
tPINTH
Valid Read Deasserted to INTB High
50
ns
Figure 41 – Microprocessor Read Access Timing
tSAR
A[11:2]
Valid
Address
tH
AR
tS ALR
tV L
tH ALR
ALE
tS
tHLR
LR
(CSB+RDB)
tPINTH
INTB
tZ RD
tPRD
D[15:0]
Valid Data
Notes on Microprocessor Read Timing:
1. A valid read cycle is defined as a logical OR of the CSB and the RDB signals.
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2. Microprocessor Interface timing applies to normal mode register accesses only.
3. In non-multiplexed address/data bus applications, ALE should be held high,
parameters tSALR, tHALR, tVL, tSLR, and tHLR are not applicable.
4. Parameter tHAR is not applicable if address latching is used.
Table 27 – Microprocessor Interface Write Access (Figure 42)
Symbol
Description
Min
tSAW
Address to Valid Write Set-up Time
10
ns
tSDW
Data to Valid Write Set-up Time
20
ns
tSALW
Address to Latch Set-up Time
10
ns
tHALW
Address to Latch Hold Time
10
ns
tVL
Valid Latch Pulse Width
5
ns
tSLW
Latch to Write Set-up
0
ns
tHLW
Latch to Write Hold
5
ns
tHDW
Data to Valid Write Hold Time
5
ns
tHAW
Address to Valid Write Hold Time
5
ns
tVWR
Valid Write Pulse Width
20
ns
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Figure 42 – Microprocessor Write Access Timing
A[7:0]
Valid Address
tS ALW
tV L
tH ALW
tS LW
tHLW
ALE
tSAW
tH AW
tVWR
(CSB+WRB)
tS DW
D[7:0]
tH DW
Valid Data
Notes on Microprocessor Write Timing:
1. A valid write cycle is defined as a logical OR of the CSB and the WRB signals.
2. Microprocessor Interface timing applies to normal mode register accesses only.
3. In non-multiplexed address/data bus architectures, ALE should be held high,
parameters tSALW , tHALW , tVL, tSLW , and tHLW are not applicable.
4. Parameters tHAW and tSAW are not applicable if address latching is used.
Table 28 – JTAG Port Interface (Figure 43)
Symbol
Description
Min
TCK Frequency
Max
Units
1
MHz
60
%
TCK Duty Cycle
40
tSTMS
TMS Set-up time to TCK
50
ns
tHTMS
TMS Hold time to TCK
50
ns
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
211
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
Symbol
Description
Min
Max
tSTDI
TDI Set-up time to TCK
50
ns
tHTDI
TDI Hold time to TCK
50
ns
tPTDO
TCK Low to TDO Valid
2
60
Figure 43 – JTAG Port Interface Timing
TCK
tS TMS
tH TMS
tS TDI
tH TDI
TMS
TDI
TCK
tP TDO
TDO
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
212
Units
ns
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
16
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
ORDERING AND THERMAL INFORMATION
Table 29 – FREEDM-32A672 Ordering Information
PART NO.
DESCRIPTION
PM7381-PI
329 Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA)
Table 30 – FREEDM-32A672 Thermal Information
PART NO.
AMBIENT TEMPERATURE
Theta Ja
PM7381-PI
-40°C to +85°C
25 °C/W
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
213
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
17
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
MECHANICAL INFORMATION
Figure 44 – 329 Pin Plastic Ball Grid Array (PBGA)
Note – The FREEDM-32P672 is manufactured using the 4-layer variant of the package
shown in the drawing below.
A
0.20 (2X)
D
D1
B
A1 BAL L
CORNER
A1 B A LL
C OR N E R
Px
22
23
0.20 (2X)
21
20
18
19
16
14
17 15
12
13 1 1
10
8
9
6
7
4
5
2
3
1
b
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
J
K
L
M
N
P
R
T
U
A1 BAL L
INDICATOR
E1
E
e
Py
V
W
Y
AA
AB
AC
J
45 o CHAM FER
4 PLACES
"d" DIA.
3 PLACES
e
I
TO P VIEW
A
BO TTOM VIE W
30 o TYP +/- 1 o
A2
bbb C
aaa C
c
C
A1
SEATING PLA NE
SID E VIEW
NO TE S: 1) ALL D IM EN SIO NS IN M ILLIM ET ER .
2) DIM E NSION aaa DE NO TE S C OPLA NA RIT Y.
3) DIM E NS IO N bbb DE NO TE S PARALLE L.
PACKAGE TYPE : 329 PLASTIC BALL GRID ARRAY - PBGA
BO DY SIZE : 31 x 31 x 2.33 M M (4 layer)
Dim .
A
A
(2 layer) (4 layer)
A1
A2
D
D1
E
E1
I
J
-
1.53
-
Min.
2.12
2.12
0.50
1.12 30.80 25.50 30.80 25.50
Nom
.
Max.
2.33
2.33
0.60
1.17 31.00 26.00 31.00 26.00 1.53
2.54
2.56
0.70
1.22 31.20 26.70 31.20 26.70
-
c
c
d
e
0.60
-
-
-
-
27.84 27.84
-
-
0.76
0.56
0.56
1.0
1.27
27.94 27.94
-
-
0.90
-
-
-
-
b
(2 layer) (4 layer)
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA, INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
214
Px
Py
aaa bbb
28.04 28.04 0.15
0.15
PM7381 FREEDM-32A672
DATASHEET
PMC-1990263
ISSUE 6
32 LINK, 672 CHANNEL FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER WITH
ANY-PHY PACKET INTERFACE
CONTACTING PMC-SIERRA, INC.
PMC-Sierra, Inc.
8555 Baxter Place Burnaby, BC
Canada V5A 4V7
Tel:
(604) 415-6000
Fax:
(604) 415-6200
Document Information:
Corporate Information:
Application Information:
Web Site:
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
http://www.pmc-sierra.com
None of the information contained in this document constitutes an express or implied warranty by PMC-Sierra, Inc. as to the sufficiency, fitness or
suitability for a particular purpose of any such information or the fitness, or suitability for a particular purpose, merchantability, performance,
compatibility with other parts or systems, of any of the products of PMC-Sierra, Inc., or any portion thereof, referred to in this document.
PMC-Sierra, Inc. expressly disclaims all representations and warranties of any kind regarding the contents or use of the information, including, but not
limited to, express and implied warranties of accuracy, completeness, merchantability, fitness for a particular use, or non-infringement.
In no event will PMC-Sierra, Inc. be liable for any direct, indirect, special, incidental or consequential damages, including, but not limited to, lost profits,
lost business or lost data resulting from any use of or reliance upon the information, whether or not PMC-Sierra, Inc. has been advised of the possibility
of such damage.
FREEDM is a trademark of PMC-Sierra, Inc.
The technology discussed is protected by one or more of the following Patents:
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,640,398 and 6,188,699
Can. Patent No. 2,161,921
Relevant patent applications and other patents may also exist.
© 2001 PMC-Sierra, Inc PMC-1990263 (R6) Issue date: August 2001
PMC-Sierra, Inc.
8555 Baxter Place Burnaby, BC Canada V5A 4V7 604 .415.6000