Texas Instruments TMS320C645X User Manual

Page 20

Advertising
background image

www.ti.com

1.25-3.125 Gbps

differential data

Rx Clock

recovery

S2P

10b
Clk 8b/10b

decode

8b

Clock

recovery

Rx

8b

8b/10b

decode

10b
Clk

S2P

Clock

recovery

Rx

8b

8b/10b

decode

10b
Clk

S2P

Clock

recovery

Rx

8b

8b/10b

decode

10b
Clk

S2P

PLL

Tx

Tx

Tx

Tx

P2S

P2S

P2S

P2S

8b

8b

8b

8b

10b

8b/10b

coding

Clk

8b/10b

coding

8b/10b

coding

8b/10b

coding

10b

Clk

10b

Clk

10b
Clk

FIFO

FIFO

FIFO

FIFO

System

clock

Capability

registers

Control

Command

and status

registers

SERDES

Clock domain 2

Clock domain 3

Clock domain 1

DMA

bus

Packet Generation

Lane striping

Lane de-skew

CRC error detection

CRC generation

Buf

fering address and data handof

f

FIFO

FIFO

FIFO

FIFO

SRIO Functional Description

Figure 4. SRIO Peripheral Block Diagram

Within the physical layer, the data next goes to the 8b/10b decode block. 8b/10b encoding is used by
RapidIO to ensure adequate data transitions for the clock recovery circuits. Here the 20% encoding
overhead is removed as the 10-bit data is decoded to the raw 8-bit data. At this point, the recovered byte
clock is still being used.

The next step is clock synchronization and data alignment. These functions are handled by the FIFO and
lane de-skewing blocks. The FIFO provides an elastic store mechanism used to hand off between the
recovered clock domains and a common system clock. After the FIFO, the four lanes are synchronized in
frequency and phase, whether 1X or 4X mode is being used. The FIFO is 8 words deep. The lane
de-skew is only meaningful in the 4X mode, where it aligns each channel’s word boundaries, such that the
resulting 32-bit word is correctly aligned.

The CRC error detection block keeps a running tally of the incoming data and computes the expected
CRC value for the 1X or 4X mode. The expected value is compared against the CRC value at the end of
the received packet.

After the packet reaches the logical layer, the packet fields are decoded and the payload is buffered.
Depending on the type of received packet, the packet routing is handled by functional blocks which control
the DMA access.

2.1.2

SRIO Packets

The SRIO data stream consists of data fields pertaining to the logical layer, the transport layer, and the
physical layer.

The logical layer consists of the header (defining the type of access) and the payload (if present).

The transport layer is partially dependent on the physical topology in the system, and consists of
source and destination IDs for the sending and receiving devices.

The physical layer is dependent on the physical interface (i.e., serial versus parallel RapidIO) and
includes priority, acknowledgment, and error checking fields.

2.1.2.1

Operation Sequence

SRIO transactions are based on request and response packets. Packets are the communication element
between endpoint devices in the system. A master or initiator generates a request packet which is
transmitted to a target. The target then generates a response packet back to the initiator to complete the
transaction.

20

Serial RapidIO (SRIO)

SPRU976 – March 2006

Submit Documentation Feedback

Advertising