External Memory Interfaces Agilex™ 7 F-Series and I-Series FPGA IP User Guide

ID 683216
Date 11/28/2024
Public
Document Table of Contents

11.9.5.2.5. Address Pattern Examples - Basic Mode

The examples shown in this topic include the generated address on both the Avalon® address (amm_address_0) and the memory address (mem_addr).

The difference in widths between amm_address_0 and mem_addr is based on the number of symbols per word.

The following points apply to the four examples that follow:

  • A value of X indicates that a register is not used, making its value irrelevant.
  • The address width (31) is the SYMBOL ADDRESS, as output from the traffic generator. In the design used for these examples, the AMM_WORD_ADDRESS_WIDTH is 26 bits. To account for this difference, the traffic generator shifts all addresses by the difference (5 bits). The examples below use this shifted address, but the external memory interface does not see this shift on its side of the ctrl_amm interface.
  • The provided waveform is only a snippet of the full instruction pattern, to demonstrate the write instructions and the corresponding addresses. Not all read blocks are shown, due to space restrictions.

The width of the Avalon® address is based on the following:

  • The data width on the memory side.
  • Whether a configured EMIF IP is quarter rate, half rate, or full rate.
  • Whether the memory interface is double data rate or quarter data rate.

Example 1: Random Address Mode

Consider the following instruction pattern:

TG_LOOP_COUNT=2 TG_WRITE_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_IDLE_COUNT=2
TG_WRITE_COUNT=3 TG_READ_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_LOOP_IDLE_COUNT=0
TG_READ_COUNT=3 TG_BURST_LENGTH=1
Figure 212. Setting the Address Pattern in the Traffic Generator Configuration Interface

This configuration can be performed in basic mode. For the equivalent traffic pattern in advanced mode see example 1 in Address Pattern Examples - Advanced Mode.

Figure 213. Random Address Mode

Example 2: Sequential Address Mode

Consider the following instruction pattern:

TG_LOOP_COUNT=2 TG_WRITE_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_IDLE_COUNT=0
TG_WRITE_COUNT=3 TG_READ_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_LOOP_IDLE_COUNT=1
TG_READ_COUNT=3 TG_BURST_LENGTH=1
Figure 214. Setting the Address Pattern in the Traffic Generator Configuration Interface

This configuration can be performed in basic mode. For the equivalent traffic pattern in advanced mode see example 2 in Address Pattern Examples - Advanced Mode.

Figure 215. Sequential Address Mode

Example 3: Sequential Address Mode with TG_RETURN_TO_START_ADDR=1

Consider the following instruction pattern:

TG_LOOP_COUNT=2 TG_WRITE_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_IDLE_COUNT=0
TG_WRITE_COUNT=3 TG_READ_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_LOOP_IDLE_COUNT=1
TG_READ_COUNT=3 TG_BURST_LENGTH=1
Figure 216. Setting the Address Pattern in the Traffic Generator Configuration Interface

This configuration can be performed in basic mode. For the equivalent traffic pattern in advanced mode see example 3 in Address Pattern Examples - Advanced Mode.

Figure 217. Sequential Address Mode with TG_RETURN_TO_START_ADDR=1

Example 4: Random Sequential Address Mode

Consider the following instruction pattern:

TG_LOOP_COUNT=1 TG_WRITE_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_IDLE_COUNT=1
TG_WRITE_COUNT=8 TG_READ_REPEAT_COUNT=1 TG_RW_GEN_LOOP_IDLE_COUNT=1
TG_READ_COUNT=8 TG_BURST_LENGTH=1
Figure 218. Setting the Address Pattern in the Traffic Generator Configuration Interface

The goal of this address pattern is to create a random-sequential pattern, where:

  • The bottom 4 bits of the address increment by 2 for each new address.
  • The remaining upper bits are generated randomly for every fourth new address.

This configuration can be performed in basic mode. It automatically calculates the value for TG_ADDR_FIELD_MSB_INDEX+1 to ensure that a sufficient number of bits are reserved for field 0 based on the sequential address increment, num rand-seq addresses, burst length, and word-address-divisible-by values. For the equivalent traffic pattern in advanced mode, refer to example 4 in Address Pattern Examples - Advanced Mode.

Figure 219. Random-Sequential Address Mode