Embedded Peripherals IP User Guide

ID 683130
Date 10/24/2025
Public
Document Table of Contents
1. Introduction 2. Avalon® -ST Serial Peripheral Interface Core 3. SPI Core 4. SPI Agent/JTAG to Avalon® Host Bridge Cores 5. Intel eSPI Agent Core 6. eSPI to LPC Bridge Core 7. Ethernet MDIO Core 8. Intel FPGA 16550 Compatible UART Core 9. UART Core 10. Lightweight UART Core 11. JTAG UART Core 12. Intel FPGA Avalon® Mailbox Core 13. Intel FPGA Avalon® Mutex Core 14. Intel FPGA Avalon® I2C (Host) Core 15. Intel FPGA I2C Agent to Avalon® -MM Host Bridge Core 16. EPCS/EPCQA Serial Flash Controller Core 17. Intel FPGA Serial Flash Controller Core 18. Intel FPGA Serial Flash Controller II Core 19. Intel FPGA Generic QUAD SPI Controller Core 20. Intel FPGA Generic QUAD SPI Controller II Core 21. Interval Timer Core 22. Intel FPGA Avalon FIFO Memory Core 23. On-Chip Memory (RAM and ROM) Intel FPGA IP 24. On-Chip Memory II (RAM or ROM) Intel FPGA IP 25. PIO Core 26. PLL Cores 27. DMA Controller Core 28. Modular Scatter-Gather DMA Core 29. Scatter-Gather DMA Controller Core 30. Video Sync Generator and Pixel Converter Cores 31. Intel FPGA Interrupt Latency Counter Core 32. Performance Counter Unit Core 33. Vectored Interrupt Controller Core 34. System ID Peripheral Core 35. Intel FPGA GMII to RGMII Converter Core 36. HPS GMII to RGMII Adapter IP 37. Intel FPGA MII to RMII Converter Core 38. HPS GMII to TSE 1000BASE-X/SGMII PCS Bridge Core IP 39. Intel FPGA HPS EMAC to Multi-rate PHY GMII Adapter Core 40. Intel FPGA MSI to GIC Generator Core 41. Cache Coherency Translator IP 42. Altera ACE5-Lite Cache Coherency Translator

27.2.2. The Host Read and Write Ports

The DMA controller reads data from the source address through the host read port, and then writes to the destination address through the host write port. You program the DMA controller using byte addresses. Read and write start addresses should be aligned to the transfer size. For example, to transfer data words, if the start address is 0, the address will increment to 4, 8, and 12. For heterogeneous systems where a number of different agent devices are of different widths, the data width for read and write hosts matches the width of the widest data-width agent addressed by either the read or the write host. For bursting transfers, the burst length is set to the DMA transaction length with the appropriate unit conversion. For example, if a 32-bit data width DMA is programmed for a word transfer of 64 bytes, the length registered is programmed with 64 and the burst count port will be 16. If a 64-bit data width DMA is programmed for a doubleword transfer of 8 bytes, the length register is programmed with 8 and the burst count port will be 1.

There is a shallow FIFO buffer between the host read and write ports. The default depth is 2, which makes the write action depend on the data-available status of the FIFO, rather than on the status of the host read port.

Both the read and write host ports can perform Avalon® transfers with flow control, which allows the agent peripheral to control the flow of data and terminate the DMA transaction.

For details about flow control in Avalon® -MM data transfers and Avalon® -MM peripherals, refer to Avalon® Interface Specifications.