1. About LL Ethernet 10G MAC
2. Getting Started
3. LL Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Design Examples
4. Functional Description
5. Configuration Registers
6. Interface Signals
7. Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP User Guide Archives
8. Document Revision History for the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP User Guide
2.1. Introduction to Intel® FPGA IP Cores
2.2. Installing and Licensing Intel® FPGA IP Cores
2.3. Specifying the IP Core Parameters and Options ( Quartus® Prime Pro Edition)
2.4. IP Core Generation Output ( Quartus® Prime Pro Edition)
2.5. Files Generated for Intel IP Cores (Legacy Parameter Editor)
2.6. Simulating Intel® FPGA IP Cores
2.7. Creating a Signal Tap Debug File to Match Your Design Hierarchy
2.8. Parameter Settings for the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Core
2.9. Upgrading the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Core
2.10. Design Considerations for the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Core
5.1. Register Map
5.2. Register Access Definition
5.3. Primary MAC Address
5.4. MAC Reset Control Register
5.5. TX Configuration and Status Registers
5.6. Flow Control Registers
5.7. Unidirectional Control Registers
5.8. RX Configuration and Status Registers
5.9. Timestamp Registers
5.10. ECC Registers
5.11. Statistics Registers
6.1. Clock and Reset Signals
6.2. Speed Selection Signal
6.3. Error Correction Signals
6.4. Unidirectional Signals
6.5. Avalon® Memory-Mapped Interface Programming Signals
6.6. Avalon® Streaming Data Interfaces
6.7. Avalon® Streaming Flow Control Signals
6.8. Avalon® Streaming Status Interface
6.9. PHY-side Interfaces
6.10. IEEE 1588v2 Interfaces
4.8.1. 10GBASE-R Register Mode
The MAC IP core supports this feature for use with the Arria® 10, Cyclone® 10 GX, and Stratix® 10 Transceiver Native PHY IP core preset configurations. When operating in this mode, the round-trip latency for the MAC and PHY is reduced to 140 ns (for Arria® 10 and Cyclone® 10 GX devices) or 168 ns (for Stratix® 10 devices) with a slight increase in resource count and clock frequencies.
When you enable this feature, the MAC IP core implements two additional signals to determine the validity of the data on the TX and RX XGMII. These signals, xgmii_tx_valid and xgmii_rx_valid, ensure that the effective data rate of the MAC is 10 Gbps. You must also observe the following guidelines when using the register mode:
- For Arria® 10 and Cyclone® 10 GX devices, the selected preset is 10GBASE-R Register Mode.
- For Stratix® 10 devices, the selected preset is 10GBASE-R 1588.
- The PHY must expose the TX and RX parallel clocks.
- The PHY must expose data valid signals, with MAC/PHY TX/RX interfaces in register mode, as in the IEEE 1588v2 configuration.
- The MAC and PHY run at the parallel clock frequency of 322.265625 MHz (the PCS/PMA width equals to 32).
Figure 26. PHY Configuration with 10GBASE-R Register Mode Enabled for Arria® 10 and Cyclone® 10 GX Devices
Figure 27. PHY Configuration with 10GBASE-R with IEEE 1588v2 Enabled for Stratix® 10 Devices