1. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Overview
2. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Architecture and Features
3. Stratix 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Design Considerations
4. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Implementation Guides
5. LVDS SERDES Intel® FPGA IP References
6. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O User Guide Archives
7. Document Revision History for the Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O User Guide
3.1. PLLs and Clocking for Stratix® 10 Devices
3.2. Source-Synchronous Timing Budget
3.3. Guideline: LVDS SERDES IP Core Instantiation
3.4. Guideline: LVDS SERDES Pin Pairs for Soft-CDR Mode
3.5. Guideline: LVDS Transmitters and Receivers in the Same I/O Bank
3.6. Guideline: LVDS SERDES Limitation for Stratix® 10 GX 400, SX 400, and TX 400
3.1.1. Clocking Differential Transmitters
3.1.2. Clocking Differential Receivers
3.1.3. Guideline: LVDS Reference Clock Source
3.1.4. Guideline: Use PLLs in Integer PLL Mode for LVDS
3.1.5. Guideline: Use High-Speed Clock from PLL to Clock LVDS SERDES Only
3.1.6. Guideline: Pin Placement for Differential Channels
3.1.7. LVDS Interface with External PLL Mode
2.5.1.2. Synchronizer
The synchronizer is a one-bit wide and six-bit deep FIFO buffer that compensates for the phase difference between dpa_fast_clock—the optimal clock that the DPA block selects—and the fast_clock that the I/O PLLs produce. The synchronizer can only compensate for phase differences, not frequency differences, between the data and the receiver’s input reference clock.
An optional port, rx_fifo_reset, is available to the internal logic to reset the synchronizer. The synchronizer is automatically reset when the DPA first locks to the incoming data. Altera recommends that you use rx_fifo_reset to reset the synchronizer when the data checker indicates that the received data is corrupted.
Note: The synchronizer circuit is bypassed in non-DPA and soft-CDR mode.