1. Agilex™ 7 FPGA M-Series Clocking and PLL Overview
2. M-Series Clocking and PLL Architecture and Features
3. M-Series Clocking and PLL Design Considerations
4. Clock Control Intel® FPGA IP Core
5. IOPLL Intel® FPGA IP Core
6. I/O PLL Reconfiguration Using EMIF Calibration IP
7. Agilex™ 7 Clocking and PLL User Guide: M-Series Archives
8. Document Revision History for the Agilex™ 7 Clocking and PLL User Guide: M-Series
2.2.1. PLL Features
2.2.2. PLL Usage
2.2.3. PLL Locations
2.2.4. PLL Architecture
2.2.5. PLL Control Signals
2.2.6. PLL Feedback Modes
2.2.7. Clock Multiplication and Division
2.2.8. Programmable Phase Shift
2.2.9. Programmable Duty Cycle
2.2.10. PLL Cascading
2.2.11. PLL Input Clock Switchover
2.2.12. PLL Reconfiguration and Dynamic Phase Shift
2.2.13. PLL Calibration
3.1. Guidelines: Clock Switchover
3.2. Guidelines: Timing Closure
3.3. Guidelines: Resetting the PLL
3.4. Guidelines: Configuration Constraints
3.5. Clocking Constraints
3.6. IP Core Constraints
3.7. Guideline: Achieving 5% Duty Cycle for fOUT_EXT ≥ 300 MHz Using tx_outclk Port from LVDS SERDES Intel® FPGA IP
2.1.3.1.1. Root Clock Gate
There is one root clock gate per I/O bank and transceiver bank. This gate is a part of the periphery DCM.
The M-Series root clock gate is intended for limited clock gating scenarios where high insertion delay can be tolerated. When you use a root clock gate, set multicycle of several clock cycles between the generation of the clock gating signal in the core and the gated clock in the periphery to meet the timing requirement. For high frequency clocks that require single-cycle gating, use sector clock gates.