Intel® Agilex™ General-Purpose I/O and LVDS SERDES User Guide

ID 683780
Date 10/29/2021
Public

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4.6.4. Word Boundaries Alignment

You can perform word boundaries alignment with or without control characters in your data stream. If there are no training patterns or control characters available in the serial bit stream to use for word alignment, Intel recommends that you use the non-DPA mode.

Aligning with Control Characters

By adding control characters in the data stream, your logic can search for a known pattern to align the word boundaries. You can compare the received data for each channel, and then pulse the rx_bitslip_ctrl signal as required until you receive the control character.

Note: Intel recommends that you set the bit slip rollover count to the deserialization factor, or higher. This setting allows enough depth in the bit slip circuit to roll through an entire word, if required.

Aligning without Control Characters

Without control characters in the data stream, you need a deterministic relationship between the reference clock and the data. With the deterministic relationship, you can predict the word boundary using timing simulation or laboratory measurement. You can only use deterministic relationship in non-DPA mode.

The only way to ensure a deterministic relationship on the default word position in the SERDES when the device powers up, or anytime the PLL is reset, is to have a reference clock equal to the data rate divided by the deserialization factor. This is important because the PLL locks to the rising edge of the reference clock. If you have one rising edge on the reference clock per serial word received, the deserializer always starts at the same position.

For example, if the data rate is 800 Mbps and the deserialization factor is 8, the PLL requires a 100-MHz reference clock.

Using timing simulation, or lab measurements, monitor the parallel words received and determine how many pulses of the rx_bitslip_ctrl are required to set your word boundaries. You can create a simple state machine to apply the required number of pulses after you enter user mode or at any time after you reset the PLL.

Note: If you are using the DPA or soft-CDR modes, the word boundary is not deterministic. The initial training of the DPA allows it to move forward or backward in phase relative to the incoming serial data. Therefore, there can be a ±1 bit of variance in the serial bit where the DPA locks initially.