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1. GTS Transceiver Overview
2. GTS Transceiver Architecture
3. Implementing the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP
4. Implementing the GTS System PLL Clocks Intel FPGA IP
5. Implementing the GTS Reset Sequencer Intel FPGA IP
6. GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP Example Design
7. Design Assistance Tools
8. Debugging GTS Transceiver Links with Transceiver Toolkit
9. Document Revision History for the GTS Transceiver PHY User Guide
3.1. IP Overview
3.2. Designing with the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP
3.3. Configuring the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP
3.4. Signal and Port Reference
3.5. Bit Mapping for PMA and FEC Mode PHY TX and RX Datapath
3.6. Clocking
3.7. Custom Cadence Generation Ports and Logic
3.8. Asserting reset
3.9. Bonding Implementation
3.10. Configuration Register
3.11. Configuring the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP for Hardware Testing
3.12. Configurable Quartus® Prime Software Settings
3.13. Hardware Configuration Using the Avalon® Memory-Mapped Interface
3.4.1. TX and RX Parallel and Serial Interface Signals
3.4.2. TX and RX Reference Clock and Clock Output Interface Signals
3.4.3. Reset Signals
3.4.4. FEC Signals
3.4.5. Custom Cadence Control and Status Signals
3.4.6. RX PMA Status Signals
3.4.7. TX and RX PMA and Core Interface FIFO Signals
3.4.8. Avalon Memory Mapped Interface Signals
3.8.1. Reset Signal Requirements
3.8.2. Power On Reset Requirements
3.8.3. Reset Signals—Block Level
3.8.4. Run-time Reset Sequence—TX
3.8.5. Run-time Reset Sequence—RX
3.8.6. Run-time Reset Sequence—TX + RX
3.8.7. Run-time Reset Sequence—TX with FEC
3.8.8. RX Data Loss/CDR Lock Loss (Auto-Recovery)
3.8.9. TX PLL Lock Loss
6.1. Instantiating the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP
6.2. Generating the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP Example Design
6.3. GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP Example Design Functional Description
6.4. Simulating the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP Example Design Testbench
6.5. Compiling the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP Example Design
3.10.4.2. Accessing GTS PMA Registers
The following table shows the offset address between lanes that you must add when you want to access the PMA registers for a design with more than one lane. Note that the word address is byte address/4.
| GTS Lane Number Configured in the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel FPGA IP | Offset (Byte Address) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0x000000 |
| 1 | 0x100000 |
| 2 | 0x200000 |
| 3 | 0x300000 |
| 4 | 0x400000 |
| 5 | 0x500000 |
| 6 | 0x600000 |
| 7 | 0x700000 |
Example 1: Accessing PMA Physical Lane Information
For example, if you want to read the physical lane number information for the GTS PMA lanes on the same side of the device, refer to the GTS_LANE_Number register (0x0A5000) in the register map file and add 0x100000h for each incremental lane, as shown below:
- For Lane 0: 0x0A5000
- For Lane 1: 0x1A5000
- For Lane 2: 0x2A5000
- For Lane 3: 0x3A5000
Note: Lane 0, 1, 2, or 3 are the physical locations where the channels are placed and correspond to CH0, CH1, CH2, and CH3, respectively. You can add an incremental offset of 0x100000 to this address to access up to lane 7 (0x7A5000) to read the physical GTS PMA lane information (if you enable 8 GTS PMA lanes in your design per side and do not Enable Separate Avalon interface per PMA feature in the GTS PMA/FEC Direct PHY Intel® FPGA IP).
Example 2: Accessing PMA Registers for TX Equalization Settings
For example, if you want to update the TX equalizer co-efficients settings for the GTS PMA lanes within a bank, refer to the SRDS_IP_IF_TX1 register (0x097830) in the register map file and add 0x100000h for each incremental lane, as shown below:
- For Lane 0: 0x097830
- For Lane 1: 0x197830
- For Lane 2 : 0x297830
- For Lane 3 : 0x397830
Note: You can access each GTS PMA channel’s registers in a bank through the same base address. For the example shown, all lanes use the same base address of 0x097830.