Bfm memory map, Configuration space bus and device numbering, Configuration of root port and endpoint – Altera Arria V Hard IP for PCI Express User Manual

Page 244

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17–22

Chapter 17: Testbench and Design Example

Root Port BFM

Arria V Hard IP for PCI Express

December 2013

Altera Corporation

User Guide

BFM Memory Map

The BFM shared memory is configured to be two MBytes. The BFM shared memory is
mapped into the first two MBytes of I/O space and also the first two MBytes of
memory space. When the Endpoint application generates an I/O or memory
transaction in this range, the BFM reads or writes the shared memory. For illustrations
of the shared memory and I/O address spaces, refer to

Figure 17–5 on page 17–25

Figure 17–7 on page 17–27

.

Configuration Space Bus and Device Numbering

The Root Port interface is assigned to be device number 0 on internal bus number 0.
The Endpoint can be assigned to be any device number on any bus number (greater
than 0) through the call to procedure

ebfm_cfg_rp_ep

. The specified bus number is

assigned to be the secondary bus in the Root Port Configuration Space.

Configuration of Root Port and Endpoint

Before you issue transactions to the Endpoint, you must configure the Root Port and
Endpoint Configuration Space registers. To configure these registers, call the
procedure

ebfm_cfg_rp_ep

, which is included in altpcietb_bfm_driver_rp.v.

The

ebfm_cfg_rp_ep

executes the following steps to initialize the Configuration

Space:

1. Sets the Root Port Configuration Space to enable the Root Port to send transactions

on the PCI Express link.

2. Sets the Root Port and Endpoint PCI Express Capability Device Control registers

as follows:

a. Disables

Error

Reporting

in both the Root Port and Endpoint. BFM does not

have error handling capability.

b. Enables

Relaxed

Ordering

in both Root Port and Endpoint.

c. Enables

Extended

Tags

for the Endpoint, if the Endpoint has that capability.

d. Disables

Phantom

Functions

,

Aux

Power

PM

, and

No

Snoop

in both the Root Port

and Endpoint.

e. Sets the

Max

Payload

Size

to what the Endpoint supports because the Root Port

supports the maximum payload size.

f. Sets the Root Port

Max

Read

Request

Size

to 4 KBytes because the example

Endpoint design supports breaking the read into as many completions as
necessary.

g. Sets the Endpoint

Max

Read

Request

Size

equal to the

Max Payload

Size

because the Root Port does not support breaking the read request into multiple
completions.

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