TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect

TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
Introduction
Technical Note
Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
Introduction
This technical note describes how SPD is essential in helping to standardize the configuration, timing, and manufacturing information of any given memory module. SPD information is written to a single EEPROM that resides on the DIMM. The pins of the
EEPROM are routed to the edge connector of the module so that it may be accessed by
the system through the I2C or SMBus. In this manner, the DIMM’s configuration information stays with the module and is accessible by the system the module is installed in.
Figure 1:
I2C Bus Interface
EEPROM
I2C
EEPROM
I2C
EEPROM
I2C
EEPROM
I2 C
DRAM
bus
DRAM
controller
System
I2C or SMBus
controller
I2C bus
JEDEC Standards
SPD has two basic parts: the hardware, which consists of the EEPROM and the I2C bus
on which it resides and the module configuration information that is stored on the
EEPROM. JEDEC has defined both the hardware and the data and has documented it in
seperate sections of JEDEC Standard JESD21-C.
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Micron Technology, Inc., reserves the right to change products or specifications without notice.
©2002 Micron Technology, Inc. All rights reserved.
Products and specifications discussed herein are for evaluation and reference purposes only and are subject to change by
Micron without notice. Products are only warranted by Micron to meet Micron’s production data sheet specifications. All
information discussed herein is provided on an “as is” basis, without warranties of any kind.
TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
EEPROM
EEPROM
JEDEC Standard JESD21-C also contains two sections that define the EEPROMs used on
memory modules. Section 4.1.3, “Definition of the EE1002 and EE1002A Serial-Presence
Detect (SPD) EEPROMs” defines the 256-byte EEPROMs. Section 4.1 “Definition of the
TSE2002av, Serial Presence-Detect with Temperature Sensor” defines the temperature
sensor/EEPROM combination devices (pending JEDEC approval at the time of publication).
Combination devices consist of two I2C devices, a temperature sensor, and an EEPROM
in one 8-pin package. Combination devices were implemented into Micron’s product
line starting with 72-bit-wide DDR3 modules. Standard EEPROM devices are also in 8pin packages and have been in use on SDRAM, DDR, DDR2, and 64-bit DDR3 modules.
Serial Presence-Detect
JEDEC has created a General Standard Serial Presence-Detect Standard (section 4.1.2)
that is contained in JEDEC Standard JESD21-C. In addition to the general standard,
appendices specific to different technologies have been created to provide for that technology. These appendices define the format and the configuration information of any
given module and make up the SPD data that is stored within the EEPROM on every
module. Micron uses the appendices listed below to automatically generate SPD data for
every module manufactured. These appendices are available at www.jedec.org.
• Serial Presence-Detect Standard, General Standard – 4.1.2
• Appendix E: SDRAM Modules – 4.1.2.5
• Appendix D: DDR Modules – 4.1.2.4
• Appendix J: DDR2 Modules – 4.1.2.10
• Appendix X: Fully Buffered Modules – 4.1.2.7
• DDR3 Modules – 4.1.2 (pending JEDEC approval at the time of publication)
EEPROM
All SPD EEPROMs used on Micron memory modules are 256 bytes in size and are manufactured by qualified vendors. This technical note highlights the main features of the
EEPROM, but is not intended to be a complete reference. The EEPROM in combination
devices operates identical to the standard EEPROMs, except where noted. Refer to the
JEDEC specifications for complete details.
EEPROM Function
The module edge-connector pins used to operate the EEPROM consist of the following:
• Serial clock (SCL)
• Serial data (SDA)
• Write protect (WP)
• Address inputs (SA[2:0])
Serial Clock (SCL)
This input is used to clock all data into the device on the positive edge of the clock and
out of the device on the negative edge.
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
EEPROM
Serial Data (SDA)
This bidirectional signal is used to transfer data into and out of the device. It is an open
drain output and may be wired as logic "OR" with any number of other SDA pins.
Write Protect (WP)
This input signal is used for protecting the entire contents of the EEPROM from inadvertent WRITE operations. WP is used to enable (when LOW) or disable (when HIGH)
write instructions to the entire memory area or to the protection register. This pin is tied
HIGH on Micron memory modules, except where noted otherwise, permanently
disabling write protection functionality.
Address Inputs (SA[0:2])
These input signals are used to set the physical address of the EEPROMs on the I2C bus.
By hardwiring these pins to Vss or Vdd through the module edge connector, up to eight
unique addresses can be achieved.
Many SDR, DDR, and DDR2 modules have SA2 hardwired to Vss on the module PCB.
This is due to the fact that most systems that utilize these memory technologies cannot
support more than four modules.
Table 1:
EEPROM Pin Description
Pin
Symbol
Type
Description
1
SA0
Input
Address inputs
2
SA1
Input
Address inputs
Address inputs
3
SA2
Input
4
Vssspd
Supply
Power
5
SDA
I/O
Serial data
6
SCL
Input
Serial clock
7
WP
Input
Write protect
71
Event#
Output
(open drain)
Teperature event
8
VDDSPD
Supply
Ground
Notes:
1. Only applies to combination temperature sensor/EEPROM devices used with some modules,
beginning with modules.
Device Operation
For memory modules, the I²C bus specification/protocol developed by Philips® is used
as the communication protocol between the system and the SPD EEPROM. This twowire protocol is designed to minimize the EEPROM pin count to an 8-pin footprint and
to simplify the module printed circuit board (PCB) layout. In many mainstream
computers, the SPD EEPROM is connected to the system’s SMBus. SMBus is a subset of
the I2C bus/protocol and was developed by Intel®.
Each module’s SPD EEPROM behaves as a slave device in the I²C bus protocol (as seen in
Figure 2 on page 4), with all SPD memory operations synchronized by the serial clock.
All communications must be initiated by the bus master; in most cases, this is the I2C or
SMBus controller.
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
EEPROM
Figure 2:
I2C Bus Protocol
SCL
SDA
SCL
1
SDA
MSB
SDA
change
SDA
input
START
condition
2
STOP
condition
8
7
3
9
ACK
START
condition
SCL
1
SDA
MSB
2
3
7
8
9
ACK
STOP
condition
Clock and Data Conventions
Data states on the SDA line can only change during SCL LOW. SDA state changes during
SCL HIGH are reserved for indicating stop and start conditions.
Start/Stop Conditions
All commands are preceded by the start condition, which is a HIGH to LOW transition of
SDA when SCL is HIGH. The SPD continuously monitors the SDA and SCL lines for start
conditions and will not respond to any command until this condition is met.
All communications are terminated by a stop condition, which is a LOW to HIGH transition of SDA when SCL is HIGH. The stop condition is also used by the SPD to place the
device in standby power-down mode.
Acknowledge
Acknowledge (Ack) is a software convention used to indicate successful data transfers.
The transmitting device, either master or slave, will release the bus after transmitting
eight bits. During the ninth clock cycle, the receiver will pull the SDA line LOW to
acknowledge that it received the 8 bits of data.
The SPD will always respond with an Ack after recognition of a start condition and its
slave address. If both the device and WRITE operation are selected, the SPD will respond
with an Ack after the receipt of each subsequent 8-bit word.
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
Write Protection
Data Input
During data input, the device samples serial data (SDA) on the rising edge of the serial
clock (SCL). To ensure proper operation of the device, SDA must be stable during the
rising edge of SCL, and the SDA signal must change only when SCL is driven LOW.
Table 2:
Device Select Codes
Device Type Identifier
Chip Enable
R/W
Memory Area Function
b71
b6
b5
b4
b3
b2
b1
b0
READ/WRITE SPD memory
1
0
1
0
SA2
SA1
SA0
R/W#
SET WRITE PROTECTION (SWP)
0
0
1
0
CLEAR WRITE PROTECTION (CWP)
0
1
1
0
SA2
SA1
SA0
0
PERMANENTLY SET WRITE PROTECTION
(PSWP)2
0
1
1
0
READ SWP
READ PSWP2
READ/WRITE temperature registers3
Notes:
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
SA2
SA1
SA0
1
SA2
SA1
SA0
R/W#
1. The most significant bit is sent first.
2. SA0, SA1, and SA2 are compared against the respective external pins on the EEPROM.
3. Only applies to combination temperature sensor/EEPROM devices used with some modules,
beginning with DDR3.
Device Select Codes
Device select codes are 8-bit seqences that can be sent on the SDA line to initiate specific
functions and access registers within the SPD EEPROM. As specified by the I²C memory
standard, each SPD contains built-in 4-bit device type identifiers. These 4-bit identifiers
are used to address the following functions:
• EEPROM memory array (1010)
• Write protect settings (0110)
• Temperature sensor (0011)
These codes are used together with one of three addressing methods to select a specific
memory module’s SPD EEPROM attached to the I²C bus. For more information, refer to
Table 2 on page 5.
Write Protection
Software write protect, once enabled, protects only the first half of the EEPROM memory
array, bytes 0–127 (0x00–0x7F), from inadvertant writes. This leaves the
user-programmable area of the EEPROM, bytes 128–255 (0x80–0xFF), permanently
unprotected. Software write protect features do not apply to this half of the EEPROM’s
memory array.
Hardware Write Protection
The WP pin, if pulled LOW, would protect the entire array; however, to facilitate flexibility in production, Micron modules have pin WP tied to Vdd on the module PCB. This
permanently disables the hardware write protect feature leaving the software write
protection features available to be utilized by customers as they see fit.
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
SPD EEPROM Addressing and System Design
Some Micron modules use a seperate EEPROM and temperature sensor configuration.
These modules have WP connected to Vss through a pull-down resistor enabling the
EVENT# pin on the temperature sensor and the WP pin on the EEPROM to share a
module edge connection.
The WP pin on temperature sensor/EEPROM combination devices is not an external
connection. It is tied HIGH internal to the device. On combination devices, the EVENT#
pin is located where the external WP pin would be on a standard EEPROM.
Permanent Software Protection
Permanent software write protection is enabled by sending a PERMANENTLY SET
WRITE PROTECTION (PSWP) instruction to device address 0110. This feature enables
the lower half of the array (bytes 0–127) to be permanently write protected. The EEPROM
will no longer acknowledge the 0110 control byte after the write protect register has been
programmed. Permanent software write protection cannot be reversed by powering
down the device or attempting to drive WP to Vdd.
Reversible Software Write Protection
Reversible software write protection is enabled by sending a SET WRITE PROTECTION
(SWP) instruction to device address 0110. This feature enables the lower half of the array
(bytes 0–127) to be write protected temporarily. To reverse temporary write protection, a
clear write protection (CWP) instruction must be sent to the same device address.
When Micron modules leave Micron’s production facilities, the modules have had
neither a PSWP nor an SWP instruction exectuted.
SPD EEPROM Addressing and System Design
The SPD addressing can be incorporated into a system design in three ways:
• Common clock/common data
• Common clock/separate data
• Common data/separate clock
Designers will find that for systems using eight or fewer DIMM devices, implementing a
common clock/common data configuration will be to their advantage. For systems
requiring more than eight DIMM devices, the common clock/separate data and
common data/separate clock configurations are illustrated. Although these are viable
solutions, they require a significant increase in overhead.
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
SPD EEPROM Addressing and System Design
Common Clock/Common Data
The common clock/common data configuration is likely the most common implementation. SA0–SA2 are wired in a binary sequence at each DIMM socket for a maximum of
eight modules, as shown in Figure 3. All eight modules share a common clock and
common data line. Pull-up resistors (4.7K typical) are required on all SCL and SDA
signals because of their open drain interface.
Figure 3:
SPD Block Diagram for Common Clock/Common Data
Vdd
R
DIMM position 7
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
R
Vdd
DIMM position 6
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
DIMM position 5
SA2
Vdd
Vdd
DIMM position 4
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
DIMM position 3
SA2
Vdd
DIMM position 2
SA2
SA1
Vdd
DIMM position 1
SA2
SA1
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
DIMM position 0
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
SYS_SCL
SYS_SDA
Notes:
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1. SODIMM modules have SA2 hardwired to Vss on the module PCB. This is because most systems that use these memory technologies cannot support more than four modules.
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
SPD EEPROM Addressing and System Design
Common Clock/Separate Data
In the common clock/separate data configuration, SA0–SA2 are wired to the same
address at each DIMM socket (typically all to Vss), as shown in Figure 4. The SCL is wired
to all positions. The SDA is unique for each position, enabling more than 8 positions, but
not permitting CMAX to exceed 400pf. Because the data pins are separate, 8 positions
could provide parallel data paths of one byte (8x speed improvement).
Figure 4:
SPD Block Diagram for Common Clock/Separate Data
Vdd
R
DIMM position 7
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
R
SYS_SDA7
DIMM position 6
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
R
SYS_SDA6
DIMM position 5
Vdd
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
R
SYS_SDA5
DIMM position 4
Vdd
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
R
SYS_SDA4
DIMM position 3
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
R
SYS_SDA3
DIMM position 2
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
R
SYS_SDA2
DIMM position 1
SA2
SA1
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
R
SYS_SDA1
DIMM position 0
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
R
SYS_SDA0
SYS_SCL
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
SPD EEPROM Addressing and System Design
Common Data/Separate Clock
In the common data/separate clock configuration, SA0–SA2 are wired at each DIMM to
the same address, as shown in Figure 5. The SDA is wired to all positions. The SCL is
unique for each position, enabling more than 8 positions, but not permitting CMAX to
exceed 400pF.
Figure 5:
SPD Block Diagram for Common Data/Separate Clock
Vdd
DIMM position 7
SA1 SA0
SA2
SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK7
DIMM position 6
SA1
SA2
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK6
DIMM position 5
SA2
SA1
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK5
DIMM position 4
SA2
SA1
SA0
SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK4
DIMM position 3
SA2
SA1
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK3
DIMM position 2
SA2
SA1
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK2
DIMM position 1
SA2
SA1
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK1
DIMM position 0
SA2
SA1
SA0 SCL SDA
Vdd
SYS_CLK0
SYS_SDA
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
Decimal to Binary to Hex Conversions
Decimal to Binary to Hex Conversions
Table 3 shows how to place a decimal value in a binary (0/1) format and then create a
hex value from that binary value.
In the hexadecimal system, the 8 bits of each byte are split into 2 sets of 4 nibbles each.
The value generated from the bits in the upper nibble create the first hex character, while
the bit values in the lower nibble generate the second hex character. Each nibble can
have a maximum decimal value of 15. Hex values include 00 through 09, 10 = 0A, 11 = 0B,
12 = 0C, 13 = 0D, 14 = 0E, and 15 = 0F. Following this sequence, adding 1 to 0x0F results in
0x10, or 16 in decimal.
As shown in Table 3, the binary value of 45 results in a 2 in the upper hex nibble and 13
(or D) in the lower hex nibble. Thus, the hex value for 45 is 2D, usually displayed as 0x2D.
If this looks familiar, it is because ASCII is based in the hexadecimal numbering system.
Table 3:
Decimal to Binary to Hex Conversions
Binary values
Hex values
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
128
64
32
16
8
4
2
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
8
4
2
1
8
4
2
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
2
D
Decimal
Output
45
45
Serial Presence-Detect Tables
All serial presence-detect tables have the same basic format. Bytes are numbered
sequentially from 0 to 255, and each byte consists of 8 data bits. These 8 bits, either with
0 or 1 values, generate a byte’s hex value. Each SPD byte has an associated data or lookup
table, showing which module parameter is represented. In some instances, the hex value
directly represents a parameter. For example, SPD byte 0 has a hex value of 0x80, or
decimal 128. Byte 0 represents the number of SPD bytes used by the module manufacturer; Micron uses the first 128 SPD bytes.
The majority of SPD bytes are associated with lookup tables that define parameters associated to that specific module. A byte’s hex number will represent the parameters listed
in the table, not just the numeric hex value. SPD data tables for Micron module part
numbers can be viewed online in the SPD Lookup tool at www.micron.com/spd.
Step 1 - Identifying and Analyzing Bytes
The process for analyzing a specific SPD byte is shown in Table 4 on page 11 using bytes
14 and 15 from the DDR3 module SPD definitions (pending JEDEC approval at the time
of publication). For more information about a particular byte’s purpose and function,
refer to the appropriate appendix listed in the section,“Serial Presence-Detect” on
page 2.
Table 4 on page 11 is an example of a serial presence detect table for a DDR3 module.
Each byte defines a specific feature or parameter of the module. For this example, we will
verify the information held in bytes 14 and 15 against the JEDEC specification. Micronspecific SPD values can be seen by typing a Micron® module part number in the SPD
Lookup tool at www.micron.com/spd.
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
Serial Presence-Detect Tables
Table 4:
DDR3 SDRAM Serial Presence-Detect Table
Hex values shown are examples and will differ depending on the configuration of the module
Byte Number
0
Function Described
SPD Hex Values
DDR3-CRC RANGE, EEPROM BYTES, BYTES USED
92
1
DDR3-SPD REVISON
05
2
DDR3-DRAM DEVICE TYPE
0B
3
DDR3-MODULE TYPE (FORM FACTOR)
01
4
DDR3-SDRAM DEVICE DENSITY & BANKS
02
5
DDR3-SDRAM DEVICE ROW & COLUMN COUNT
12
6
DDR3-BYTE 6 RESERVED
00
7
DDR3-MODULE RANKS & DEVICE DQ COUNT
00
8
DDR3-ECC TAG & MODULE MEMORY BUS WIDTH
0B
9
DDR3-FINE TIMEBASE DIVIDEND/DIVISOR
52
10
DDR3-MEDIUM TIMEBASE DIVIDEND
01
11
DDR3-MEDIUM TIMEBASE DIVISOR
08
12
DDR3-MIN SDRAM CYCLE TIME (TCKMIN)
0C
13
DDR3-BYTE 13 RESERVED
00
14
DDR3-CAS LATENCIES SUPPORTED (CL4 => CL11) (LSB)
7C
15
DDR3-CAS LATENCIES SUPPORTED (CL12 => CL18) (MSB)
00
16
DDR3-MIN CAS LATENCY TIME (TAAMIN)
6C
17
DDR3-MIN WRITE RECOVERY TIME (TWRMIN)
78
18
DDR3-MIN RAS# TO CAS# DELAY (TRCDMIN)
6C
19
DDR3-MIN ROW ACTIVE TO ROW ACTIVE DELAY (TRRDMIN)
30
20
DDR3-MIN ROW PRECHARGE DELAY (TRPMIN)
6C
21
DDR3-UPPER NIBBLE FOR TRAS & TRC
11
22
DDR3-MIN ACTIVE TO PRECHARGE DELAY (TRASMIN)
20
23
DDR3-MIN ACTIVE TO ACTIVE/REFRESH DELAY (TRCMIN)
8C
24
DDR3-MIN REFRESH RECOVERY DELAY (TRFCMIN) LSB
70
25
DDR3-MIN REFRESH RECOVERY DELAY (TRFCMIN) MSB
03
26
DDR3-MIN INTERNAL WRITE TO READ CMD DELAY (TWTRMIN)
3C
27
DDR3-MIN INTERNAL READ TO PRECHARGE CMD DELAY (TRTPMIN)
3C
28
DDR3-MIN FOUR ACTIVE WINDOW DELAY (TFAWMIN) MSB
00
29
DDR3-MIN FOUR ACTIVE WINDOW DELAY (TFAWMIN) LSB
F0
30
DDR3-SDRAM DEVICE OUTPUT DRIVERS SUPPORTED
82
31
DDR3-SDRAM DEVICE THERMAL & REFRESH OPTIONS
05
32
DDR3-MODULE THERMAL SENSOR
80
33
DDR3-SDRAM DEVICE TYPE
00
DDR3-RESERVED BYTES 34–59
00
60
DDR3-MODULE HEIGHT (NOMINAL)
03
61
DDR3-MODULE THICKNESS (MAX)
11
62
DDR3-REFERENCE RAW CARD ID
0B
63
DDR3-ADDRESS MAPPING EDGE CONNECTOR TO DRAM
00
64
DDR3-HEAT SPREADER SOLUTION
00
65
DDR3-REGISTER VENDOR ID (LSB)
04
66
DDR3-REGISTER VENDOR ID (MSB)
B3
34–59
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
Serial Presence-Detect Tables
Table 4:
DDR3 SDRAM Serial Presence-Detect Table (continued)
Hex values shown are examples and will differ depending on the configuration of the module
Byte Number
67
Function Described
SPD Hex Values
DDR3-REGISTER REVISON NUMBER
03
68
DDR3-REGISTER TYPE
00
69
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 1 AND ZERO
00
70
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 3 AND 2
50
71
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 5 AND 4
55
72
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 7 AND 6
00
73
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 9 AND 8
00
74
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 11 AND 10
00
75
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 13 AND 12
00
76
DDR3-REG CTRL WORDS 15 AND 14
00
DDR3-RESERVED BYTES 77–116
00
77–116
117
DDR3-MODULE MFR ID (LSB)
80
118
DDR3-MODULE MFR ID (MSB)
2C
119
DDR3-MODULE MFR LOCATION ID
Variable
120
DDR3-MODULE MFR YEAR
Variable
121
122–125
DDR3-MODULE MFR WEEK
Variable
DDR3-MODULE SERIAL NUMBER
Variable
126–127
DDR3-CRC
128–145
DDR3-MODULE PART NUMBER
Variable
18JBF25672PY-1G4DZ
146
DDR3-MODULE DIE REV
44
147
DDR3-MODULE PCB REV
5A
148
DDR3-DRAM DEVICE MFR ID (LSB)
80
149
DDR3-DRAM DEVICE MFR (MSB)
2C
150–175
DDR3-MFR RESERVED BYTES 150–175
00
176–255
DDR3-CUSTOMER RESERVED BYTES 176–255
FF
Step 2 - Comparing Bytes Against JEDEC Specifications
Bytes 14 and 15 have values of 7Ch and 00h, respectively. Converting 07h to an 8-bit
binary word yields 00000111. Converting 00h to an 8-bit binary word yields 00000000.
Cross-referencing the 8-bit word against the lookup table for bytes 14 and 15 from the
DDR3 module SPD definitions (pending JEDEC approval at the time of publication)
shows that this module supports CAS latencies 6 through 10 (see Table 5 on page 13). In
this manner, the hexidecimal value of any byte can be translated into common terms.
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TN_04_42.fm - Rev. D 10/08 EN
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TN-04-42: Memory Module Serial Presence-Detect
Conclusion
Supported CAS Latencies Defined by Bytes 14 and 15
Bytes 14 and 15 define which CAS Latency (CL) values are supported. The range is from
CL = 4 through CL = 18, with 1 bit per possible CAS latency. A 1 in a bit position means
that CL is supported; a 0 in that bit position means it is not supported. Because CL = 6 is
required for all DDR3 speed bins, bit 2 of SPD byte 14 is always 1. These values are found
in the DDR3 SDRAM data sheet.
Table 5:
Byte 14: CAS Latencies Supported, Least Significant Byte
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
CL = 11
CL = 10
CL = 9
CL = 8
CL = 7
CL = 6
CL = 5
CL = 4
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
1
0 or 1
0 or 1
Notes:
Table 6:
1. For each bit position, 1 means this CAS latency is supported; 0 means this CAS latency is not
supported.
Byte 15: CAS Latencies Supported, Most Significant Byte
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Reserved
CL = 18
CL = 17
CL = 16
CL = 15
CL = 14
CL = 13
CL = 12
0
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
0 or 1
Notes:
1. For each bit position, 1 means this CAS latency is supported; 0 means this CAS latency is not
supported.
Conclusion
Timing parameters, operating frequencies, and other electrical attributes, as well as
many different physical and mechanical attributes, have been defined for memory
modules. SPD is essential to ensure the standardization of this information, making the
information usable for designers, manufacturers, and users.
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TN_04_42.fm - Rev. D 10/08 EN
13
Micron Technology, Inc., reserves the right to change products or specifications without notice.
©2002 Micron Technology, Inc. All rights reserved.