Visible to Intel only — GUID: mwh1409959130437
Ixiasoft
Visible to Intel only — GUID: mwh1409959130437
Ixiasoft
5.7.2.2. Consolidating Interfaces
The following example shows a system with a mix of components, each having different burst capabilities: a Nios® II/e core, a Nios® II/f core, and an external processor, which off-loads some processing tasks to the Nios® II/f core.
The Nios® II/f core supports a maximum burst size of eight. The external processor interface supports a maximum burst length of 64. The Nios® II/e core does not support bursting. The memory in the system is SDRAM with an Avalon® maximum burst length of two.
Platform Designer automatically inserts burst adapters to compensate for burst length mismatches. The adapters reduce bursts to a single transfer, or the length of two transfers. For the external processor interface connecting to DDR SDRAM, a burst of 64 words is divided into 32 burst transfers, each with a burst length of two. When you generate a system, Platform Designer inserts burst adapters based on maximum burstcount values; consequently, the interconnect logic includes burst adapters between hosts and agent pairs that do not require bursting, if the host is capable of bursts.
In this example, Platform Designer inserts a burst adapter between the Nios® II processors and the timer, system ID, and PIO peripherals. These components do not support bursting and the Nios® II processor performs a single word read and write accesses to these components.
To reduce the number of adapters, you can add pipeline bridges. The pipeline bridge, between the Nios® II/f core and the peripherals that do not support bursts, eliminates three burst adapters from the previous example. A second pipeline bridge between the Nios® II/f core and the DDR SDRAM, with its maximum burst size set to eight, eliminates another burst adapter, as shown below.