1. About the Nios® V Embedded Processor
2. Nios® V Processor Hardware System Design with Quartus® Prime Software and Platform Designer
3. Nios® V Processor Software System Design
4. Nios® V Processor Debugging, Verifying, and Simulating
5. Nios® V Processor Configuration and Booting Solutions
6. Finding Nios® V Processor Design Example
7. Nios® V Processor - Using the MicroC/TCP-IP Stack
8. Nios® V Processor — Remote System Update
9. Nios® V Processor — Using Custom Instruction
10. Nios® V Processor – Running TinyML Application
11. Nios® V Processor – Implementing Lockstep Capabilities
12. Nios® V Embedded Processor Design Handbook Archives
13. Document Revision History for the Nios® V Embedded Processor Design Handbook
2.1. Creating Nios® V Processor System Design with Platform Designer
2.2. Clocks and Resets Best Practices
2.3. Designing a Nios® V Processor Memory System
2.4. Assigning a UART Agent for Printing
2.5. Assigning a Default Agent
2.6. Understanding the Design Requirement with JTAG Signals
2.7. Optimizing Platform Designer System Performance
2.8. Integrating Platform Designer System into the Quartus® Prime Project
2.9. Handing Off to an Embedded FPGA Software Developer
4.2.3.2.1. Enabling Signal Tap Logic Analyzer
4.2.3.2.2. Adding Signals for Monitoring and Debugging
4.2.3.2.3. Specifying Trigger Conditions
4.2.3.2.4. Assigning the Acquisition Clock, Sample Depth, and Memory Type, and Buffer Acquisition Mode
4.2.3.2.5. Compiling the Design and Programming the Target Device
4.6.1. Prerequisites
4.6.2. Setting Up and Generating Your Simulation Environment in Platform Designer
4.6.3. Creating Nios V Processor Software
4.6.4. Generating Memory Initialization File
4.6.5. Generating System Simulation Files
4.6.6. Running Simulation in the QuestaSim Simulator Using Command Line
5.1. Introduction
5.2. Linking Applications
5.3. Nios® V Processor Booting Methods
5.4. Introduction to Nios® V Processor Booting Methods
5.5. Nios® V Processor Booting from On-Chip Flash (UFM)
5.6. Nios® V Processor Booting from General Purpose QSPI Flash
5.7. Nios® V Processor Booting from Configuration QSPI Flash
5.8. Nios® V Processor Booting from On-Chip Memory (OCRAM)
5.9. Nios® V Processor Booting from Tightly Coupled Memory (TCM)
5.10. Summary of Nios® V Processor Vector Configuration and BSP Settings
5.11. Reducing Nios® V Processor Booting Time
7.2. Software Architecture
The onion diagram shows the architectural layers of a Nios® V processor µC/OS-II software application.
Figure 188. Layered Software Model
Each layer encapsulates the specific implementation details of that layer, abstracting the data for the next outer layer. The following list describes each layer:
- Nios® V processor system hardware: The core of the onion diagram represents the Nios® V processor and hardware peripherals implemented in the Altera FPGA.
- Software device drivers: The software device drivers layer contains the software functions that manipulate the Ethernet and hardware peripherals. These drivers know the physical details of the peripheral devices, abstracting those details from the outer layers.
- HAL API: The Hardware Abstraction Layer (HAL) application programming interface (API) provides a standardized interface to the software device drivers, presenting a POSIX-like API to the outer layers.
- MicroC/OS-II: The µC/OS-II RTOS layer provides multitasking and inter-task communication services to the µC/TCP-IP Stack and the Nios V processor.
- MicroC/TCP-IP Stack software component: The µC/TCP-IP Stack software component layer provides networking services to the application layer and application-specific system initialization layer through the sockets API.
- Application-specific system initialization: The application-specific system initialization layer includes the µC/OS-II and µC/TCP-IP Stack software component initialization functions invoked from main(), as well as creates all application tasks, and all the semaphores, queue, and event flag RTOS inter-task communication resources.
- Application: The outermost application layer contains the Nios V µC/TCP-IP Stack application.