1. Agilex™ 5 Clocking and PLL Overview
2. Agilex™ 5 Clocking and PLL Architecture and Features
3. Agilex™ 5 Clocking and PLL Design Considerations
4. Clock Control Intel® FPGA IP Core
5. IOPLL Intel® FPGA IP Core
6. I/O PLL Reconfiguration
7. Document Revision History for the Clocking and PLL User Guide: Agilex™ 5 FPGAs and SoCs
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
6.1. Release Information for EMIF Calibration IP
6.2. Implementing HSIO I/O PLL Reconfiguration using EMIF Calibration IP
6.3. Implementing HVIO I/O PLL Reconfiguration
6.4. Reconfiguration Guideline for I/O PLLs
6.5. Axilite Interface Ports in the EMIF Calibration IP
6.6. Address Bus and Data Bus Settings
6.7. Design Example
1.1. Clock Networks Overview
Agilex™ 5 devices contain dedicated resources for distributing signals throughout the fabric. Typically, you use these resources for clock signals and other signals with low-skew requirements. In Agilex™ 5 devices, Altera implements these resources as a programmable clock routing network, creating various low-skew clock trees. This supports applications such as clock management in the hard processor system (HPS), clocking modes for embedded memory, configuration clocks, and transceiver clock architectures.