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1. About the External Memory Interfaces Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA IP
2. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Introduction
3. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Product Architecture
4. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – End-User Signals
5. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Simulating Memory IP
6. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – DDR4 Support
7. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – QDR-IV Support
8. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Timing Closure
9. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – I/O Timing Closure
10. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Controller Optimization
11. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Debugging
12. External Memory Interfaces Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA IP User Guide Archives
13. Document Revision History for External Memory Interfaces Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA IP User Guide
3.1. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: Introduction
3.2. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Sequencer
3.3. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Calibration
3.4. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Controller
3.5. User-requested Reset in Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP
3.6. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF for Hard Processor Subsystem
3.7. Using a Custom Controller with the Hard PHY
3.1.1. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O Subsystem
3.1.2. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O SSM
3.1.3. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O Bank
3.1.4. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O Lane
3.1.5. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: Input DQS Clock Tree
3.1.6. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: PHY Clock Tree
3.1.7. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: PLL Reference Clock Networks
3.1.8. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Architecture: Clock Phase Alignment
3.3.4.3.1. Debugging Calibration Failure Using Information from the Calibration report
3.3.4.3.2. Debugging Address and Command Leveling Calibration Failure
3.3.4.3.3. Debugging Address and Command Deskew Failure
3.3.4.3.4. Debugging DQS Enable Failure
3.3.4.3.5. Debugging Read Deskew Calibration Failure
3.3.4.3.6. Debugging VREFIN Calibration Failure
3.3.4.3.7. Debugging LFIFO Calibration Failure
3.3.4.3.8. Debugging Write Leveling Failure
3.3.4.3.9. Debugging Write Deskew Calibration Failure
3.3.4.3.10. Debugging VREFOUT Calibration Failure
4.1. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP Interface and Signal Descriptions
4.2. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP AFI Signals
4.3. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP AFI 4.0 Timing Diagrams
4.4. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP Memory Mapped Register (MMR) Tables
4.1.1.1. local_reset_req for DDR4
4.1.1.2. local_reset_status for DDR4
4.1.1.3. pll_ref_clk for DDR4
4.1.1.4. pll_locked for DDR4
4.1.1.5. ac_parity_err for DDR4
4.1.1.6. oct for DDR4
4.1.1.7. mem for DDR4
4.1.1.8. status for DDR4
4.1.1.9. afi_reset_n for DDR4
4.1.1.10. afi_clk for DDR4
4.1.1.11. afi_half_clk for DDR4
4.1.1.12. afi for DDR4
4.1.1.13. emif_usr_reset_n for DDR4
4.1.1.14. emif_usr_clk for DDR4
4.1.1.15. ctrl_amm for DDR4
4.1.1.16. ctrl_amm_aux for DDR4
4.1.1.17. ctrl_auto_precharge for DDR4
4.1.1.18. ctrl_user_priority for DDR4
4.1.1.19. ctrl_ecc_user_interrupt for DDR4
4.1.1.20. ctrl_ecc_readdataerror for DDR4
4.1.1.21. ctrl_ecc_status for DDR4
4.1.1.22. ctrl_mmr_slave for DDR4
4.1.1.23. hps_emif for DDR4
4.1.1.24. emif_calbus for DDR4
4.1.1.25. emif_calbus_clk for DDR4
4.1.2.1. local_reset_req for QDR-IV
4.1.2.2. local_reset_status for QDR-IV
4.1.2.3. pll_ref_clk for QDR-IV
4.1.2.4. pll_locked for QDR-IV
4.1.2.5. oct for QDR-IV
4.1.2.6. mem for QDR-IV
4.1.2.7. status for QDR-IV
4.1.2.8. afi_reset_n for QDR-IV
4.1.2.9. afi_clk for QDR-IV
4.1.2.10. afi_half_clk for QDR-IV
4.1.2.11. afi for QDR-IV
4.1.2.12. emif_usr_reset_n for QDR-IV
4.1.2.13. emif_usr_clk for QDR-IV
4.1.2.14. ctrl_amm for QDR-IV
4.1.2.15. emif_calbus for QDR-IV
4.1.2.16. emif_calbus_clk for QDR-IV
4.4.1. ctrlcfg0
4.4.2. ctrlcfg1
4.4.3. dramtiming0
4.4.4. sbcfg1
4.4.5. caltiming0
4.4.6. caltiming1
4.4.7. caltiming2
4.4.8. caltiming3
4.4.9. caltiming4
4.4.10. caltiming9
4.4.11. dramaddrw
4.4.12. sideband0
4.4.13. sideband1
4.4.14. sideband4
4.4.15. sideband6
4.4.16. sideband7
4.4.17. sideband9
4.4.18. sideband11
4.4.19. sideband12
4.4.20. sideband13
4.4.21. sideband14
4.4.22. dramsts
4.4.23. niosreserve0
4.4.24. niosreserve1
4.4.25. sideband16
4.4.26. ecc3: ECC Error and Interrupt Configuration
4.4.27. ecc4: Status and Error Information
4.4.28. ecc5: Address of Most Recent SBE/DBE
4.4.29. ecc6: Address of Most Recent Correction Command Dropped
4.4.30. ecc7: Extension for Address of Most Recent SBE/DBE
4.4.31. ecc8: Extension for Address of Most Recent Correction Command Dropped
6.1. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP Parameter Descriptions
6.2. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series External Memory Interfaces Intel® Calibration IP Parameters
6.3. Register Map IP-XACT Support for Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF DDR4 IP
6.4. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP Pin and Resource Planning
6.5. DDR4 Board Design Guidelines
6.1.1. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: General
6.1.2. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: Memory
6.1.3. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: Mem I/O
6.1.4. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: FPGA I/O
6.1.5. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: Mem Timing
6.1.6. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: Controller
6.1.7. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: Diagnostics
6.1.8. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: Example Designs
6.5.1. Terminations for DDR4 with Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series Devices
6.5.2. Clamshell Topology
6.5.3. General Layout Routing Guidelines
6.5.4. Reference Stackup
6.5.5. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF-Specific Routing Guidelines for Various DDR4 Topologies
6.5.6. DDR4 Routing Guidelines: Discrete (Component) Topologies
6.5.7. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF Pin Swapping Guidelines
6.5.5.1. One DIMM per Channel (1DPC) for UDIMM, RDIMM, LRDIMM, and SODIMM DDR4 Topologies
6.5.5.2. Two DIMMs per Channel (2DPC) for UDIMM, RDIMM, and LRDIMM DDR4 Topologies
6.5.5.3. Two DIMMs per Channel (2DPC) for SODIMM Topology
6.5.5.4. Skew Matching Guidelines for DIMM Configurations
6.5.5.5. Power Delivery Recommendations for the Memory / DIMM Side
6.5.6.1. Single Rank x 8 Discrete (Component) Topology
6.5.6.2. Single Rank x 16 Discrete (Component) Topology
6.5.6.3. ADDR/CMD Reference Voltage/RESET Signal Routing Guidelines for Single Rank x 8 and R Rank x 16 Discrete (Component) Topologies
6.5.6.4. Skew Matching Guidelines for DDR4 Discrete Configurations
6.5.6.5. Power Delivery Recommendations for DDR4 Discrete Configurations
7.1.1. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP QDR-IV Parameters: General
7.1.2. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP QDR-IV Parameters: Memory
7.1.3. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP QDR-IV Parameters: FPGA I/O
7.1.4. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP QDR-IV Parameters: Mem Timing
7.1.5. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP QDR-IV Parameters: Controller
7.1.6. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP QDR-IV Parameters: Diagnostics
7.1.7. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP QDR-IV Parameters: Example Designs
7.3.3.1. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA EMIF IP Banks
7.3.3.2. General Guidelines
7.3.3.3. QDR IV SRAM Commands and Addresses, AP, and AINV Signals
7.3.3.4. QDR IV SRAM Clock Signals
7.3.3.5. QDR IV SRAM Data, DINV, and QVLD Signals
7.3.3.6. Specific Pin Connection Requirements
7.3.3.7. Resource Sharing Guidelines (Multiple Interfaces)
9.1. I/O Timing Closure Overview
9.2. Collateral Generated with Your EMIF IP
9.3. SPICE Decks
9.4. File Organization
9.5. Top-level Parameterization File
9.6. IP-Supplied Parameters that You Might Need to Override
9.7. Understanding the *_ip_parameters.dat File and Making a Mask Polygon
9.8. Multi-Rank Topology
9.9. Pin Parasitics
9.10. Mask Evaluation
10.4.1. Auto-Precharge Commands
10.4.2. Additive Latency
10.4.3. Bank Interleaving
10.4.4. Additive Latency and Bank Interleaving
10.4.5. User-Controlled Refresh
10.4.6. Frequency of Operation
10.4.7. Series of Reads or Writes
10.4.8. Data Reordering
10.4.9. Starvation Control
10.4.10. Command Reordering
10.4.11. Bandwidth
10.4.12. Enable Command Priority Control
10.4.13. Controller Pre-pay and Post-pay Refresh (DDR4 Only)
11.1. Interface Configuration Performance Issues
11.2. Functional Issue Evaluation
11.3. Timing Issue Characteristics
11.4. Verifying Memory IP Using the Signal Tap Logic Analyzer
11.5. Hardware Debugging Guidelines
11.6. Categorizing Hardware Issues
11.7. Debugging with the External Memory Interface Debug Toolkit
11.8. Using the Default Traffic Generator
11.9. Using the Configurable Traffic Generator (TG2)
11.10. EMIF On-Chip Debug Port
11.11. Efficiency Monitor
11.5.1. Create a Simplified Design that Demonstrates the Same Issue
11.5.2. Measure Power Distribution Network
11.5.3. Measure Signal Integrity and Setup and Hold Margin
11.5.4. Vary Voltage
11.5.5. Operate at a Lower Speed
11.5.6. Determine Whether the Issue Exists in Previous Versions of Software
11.5.7. Determine Whether the Issue Exists in the Current Version of Software
11.5.8. Try A Different PCB
11.5.9. Try Other Configurations
11.5.10. Debugging Checklist
11.7.4.3.1. Debugging Calibration Failure Using Information from the Calibration report
11.7.4.3.2. Debugging Address and Command Leveling Calibration Failure
11.7.4.3.3. Debugging Address and Command Deskew Failure
11.7.4.3.4. Debugging DQS Enable Failure
11.7.4.3.5. Debugging Read Deskew Calibration Failure
11.7.4.3.6. Debugging VREFIN Calibration Failure
11.7.4.3.7. Debugging LFIFO Calibration Failure
11.7.4.3.8. Debugging Write Leveling Failure
11.7.4.3.9. Debugging Write Deskew Calibration Failure
11.7.4.3.10. Debugging VREFOUT Calibration Failure
11.9.1. Enabling the Traffic Generator in a Design Example
11.9.2. Traffic Generator Block Description
11.9.3. Default Traffic Pattern
11.9.4. Configuration and Status Registers
11.9.5. User Pattern
11.9.6. Traffic Generator Status
11.9.7. Starting Traffic with the Traffic Generator
11.9.8. Traffic Generator Configuration User Interface
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6.1.6. Intel® Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series EMIF IP DDR4 Parameters: Controller
Display Name | Description |
---|---|
Enable Auto Power-Down | Enable this parameter to have the controller automatically place the memory device into power-down mode after a specified number of idle controller clock cycles. The idle wait time is configurable. All ranks must be idle to enter auto power-down. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_AUTO_POWER_DOWN_EN) |
Auto Power-Down Cycles | Specifies the number of idle controller cycles after which the memory device is placed into power-down mode. You can configure the idle waiting time. The supported range for number of cycles is from 1 to 65534. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_AUTO_POWER_DOWN_CYCS) |
Display Name | Description |
---|---|
Enable User Refresh Control | When enabled, user logic has complete control and is responsible for issuing adequate refresh commands to the memory devices, via the MMR interface. This feature provides increased control over worst-case read latency and enables you to issue refresh bursts during idle periods. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_USER_REFRESH_EN) |
Enable Auto-Precharge Control | Select this parameter to enable the auto-precharge control on the controller top level. If you assert the auto-precharge control signal while requesting a read or write burst, you can specify whether the controller should close (auto-precharge) the currently open page at the end of the read or write burst, potentially making a future access to a different page of the same bank faster. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_AUTO_PRECHARGE_EN) |
Address Ordering | Controls the mapping between Avalon addresses and memory device addresses. By changing the value of this parameter, you can change the mappings between the Avalon-MM address and the DRAM address. (CS = chip select, CID = chip ID in 3DS/TSV devices, BG = bank group address, Bank = bank address, Row = row address, Col = column address) (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_ADDR_ORDER_ENUM) |
Enable Reordering | Enable this parameter to allow the controller to perform command and data reordering. Reordering can improve efficiency by reducing bus turnaround time and row/bank switching time. Data reordering allows the single-port memory controller to change the order of read and write commands to achieve highest efficiency. Command reordering allows the controller to issue bank management commands early based on incoming patterns, so that the desired row in memory is already open when the command reaches the memory interface. For more information, refer to the Data Reordering topic in the EMIF Handbook. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_REORDER_EN) |
Starvation limit for each command | Specifies the number of commands that can be served before a waiting command is served. The controller employs a counter to ensure that all requests are served after a pre-defined interval -- this ensures that low priority requests are not ignored, when doing data reordering for efficiency. The valid range for this parameter is from 1 to 63. For more information, refer to the Starvation Control topic in the EMIF Handbook. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_STARVE_LIMIT) |
Enable Command Priority Control | Select this parameter to enable user-requested command priority control on the controller top level. This parameter instructs the controller to treat a read or write request as high-priority. The controller attempts to fill high-priority requests sooner, to reduce latency. Connect this interface to the conduit of your logic block that determines when the external memory interface IP treats the read or write request as a high-priority command. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_USER_PRIORITY_EN) |
Enable controller major mode | Enable read and write commands flow control in command arbiter to reduce turnaround time, thus improving efficiency of random traffic pattern. (Identifier: CRTL_DDR4_MAJOR_MODE_EN) |
Enable controller post-pay refresh | This feature allows the controller to delay refreshes to give way for mainband activities, or issue multiple refreshes when traffic is idle to improve HMC efficiency. (Identifier: CRTL_DDR4_POST_REFRESH_EN) |
Post-pay refresh lower limit | A low refresh threshold for controller to stop streaming refreshes to memory devices. (Identifier: CRTL_DDR4_POST_REFRESH_LOWER_LIMIT) |
Post-pay refresh upper limit | A panic refresh threshold for the controller to start streaming accumulated refreshes to memory devices. (Identifier: CRTL_DDR4_POST_REFRESH_UPPER_LIMIT) |
Enable controller pre-pay refresh | This feature allows the controller to pull in refreshes to give way for mainband activities, or issue multiple refreshes when traffic is idle to improve HMC efficiency. (Identifier: CRTL_DDR4_PRE_REFRESH_EN) |
Refresh pre-pay upper limit | A refresh threshold for controller to stop streaming pre-pay refreshes to memory devices. (Identifier: CRTL_DDR4_PRE_REFRESH_UPPER_LIMIT) |
Display Name | Description |
---|---|
Enable Memory-Mapped Configuration and Status Register (MMR) Interface | Enable this parameter to change or read memory timing parameters, memory address size, mode register settings, controller status, and request sideband operations. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_MMR_EN) |
Enable Error Detection and Correction Logic with ECC | Enables error-correction code (ECC) for single-bit error correction and double-bit error detection. ECC is implemented as soft logic. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_ECC_EN) |
Enable Auto Error Correction to External Memory | Specifies that the controller automatically schedule and perform a write back to the external memory when a single-bit error is detected. Regardless of whether the option is enabled or disabled, the ECC feature always corrects single-bit errors before returning the read data to user logic. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_ECC_AUTO_CORRECTION_EN) |
Enable ctrl_ecc_readdataerror signal to indicate uncorrectable data errors | Select this option to enable the ctrl_ecc_readdataerror signal on the controller top level. The signal has the same timing as the read data valid signal of the Controller Avalon Memory-Mapped interface, and is asserted high to indicate that the read data returned by the Controller in the same cycle contains errors uncorrectable by the ECC logic. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_ECC_READDATAERROR_EN) |
Export error-correction code (ECC) status ports | Enable this parameter to export ECC status ports. (Identifier:CRTL_DDR4_ECC_STATUS_EN) |
Display Name | Description |
---|---|
Additional read-to-write turnaround time (same rank) | Specifies additional number of idle controller (not DRAM) cycles when switching the data bus from a read to a write within the same logical rank. This can help resolve bus contention problems specific to your board topology. The value is added to the default which is calculated automatically. Use the default setting unless you suspect a problem exists. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_RD_TO_WR_SAME_CHIP_DELTA_CYCS) |
Additional write-to-read turnaround time (same rank) | Specifies additional number of idle controller (not DRAM) cycles when switching the data bus from a write to a read within the same logical rank. This can help resolve bus contention problems specific to your board topology. The value is added to the default which is calculated automatically. Use the default setting unless you suspect a problem exists. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_WR_TO_RD_SAME_CHIP_DELTA_CYCS) |
Additional read-to-read turnaround time (different ranks) | Specifies additional number of idle controller (not DRAM) cycles when switching the data bus from a read of one logical rank to a read of another logical rank. This can resolve bus contention problems specific to your board topology. The value is added to the default which is calculated automatically. Use the default setting unless you suspect a problem exists. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_RD_TO_RD_DIFF_CHIP_DELTA_CYCS) |
Additional read-to-write turnaround time (different ranks) | Specifies additional number of idle controller (not DRAM) cycles when switching the data bus from a read of one logical rank to a write of another logical rank. This can help resolve bus contention problems specific to your board topology. The value is added to the default which is calculated automatically. Use the default setting unless you suspect a problem exists. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_RD_TO_WR_DIFF_CHIP_DELTA_CYCS) |
Additional write-to-write turnaround time (different ranks) | Specifies additional number of idle controller (not DRAM) cycles when switching the data bus from a write of one logical rank to a write of another logical rank. This can help resolve bus contention problems specific to your board topology. The value is added to the default which is calculated automatically. Use the default setting unless you suspect a problem exists. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_WR_TO_WR_DIFF_CHIP_DELTA_CYCS) |
Additional write-to-read turnaround time (different ranks) | Specifies additional number of idle controller (not DRAM) cycles when switching the data bus from a write of one logical rank to a read of another logical rank. This can help resolve bus contention problems specific to your board topology. The value is added to the default which is calculated automatically. Use the default setting unless you suspect a problem exists. (Identifier: CTRL_DDR4_WR_TO_RD_DIFF_CHIP_DELTA_CYCS) |