1. About the Nios® V Processor Lockstep
2. Overview
3. Controlling the Nios® V Processor Lockstep
4. Programming Model
5. Signals, Interfaces, and Build Parameters
6. Using Nios® V Processor Lock Step
A. Document Revision History for the Nios® V Processor: Lockstep Implementation User Guide
B. Appendix
4.4.1. CPUs’ Reset Control Register - DCLSM_CPURC
4.4.2. DCLSM Basic Control Register - DCLSM_CTRL
4.4.3. DCLSM Blind Window Control Register - DCLSM_BWCR
4.4.4. All Alarms’ Prior Alarms’ Fault Injection Register - ERRCTRL_ALL_ALARMS_PRIOR_AFI
4.4.5. INTREQ Configuration Register - ERRCTRL_INTREQ_CONF
4.4.6. Timeout Deadline and Status Register - ERRCTRL_TIMEOUT
4.4.7. Timeout Acknowledgment Register - ERRCTRL_TIMEOUT_ACK
4.4.8. Enable Key fRSmartComp Control Register - ERRCTRL_ENABLE_KEY
4.4.9. Root Fault Injection Control register - ERRCTRL_ROOT_INJ
4.4.10. Alarm Fault Injection Control register - ERRCTRL_ALARM_INJ
4.4.11. Event Mask Configuration register - ERRCTRL_MASKA and ERRCTRL_MASKB
4.4.12. Alarm Routing Configuration register - ERRCTRL_ROUTA and ERRCTRL_ROUTB
4.4.13. Error Controller PGO LOG Reset Control register - ERRCTRL_PGOLOGRST
4.4.14. PGO0 and PGO4 Configuration registers - ERRCTRL_PGO0 and ERRCTRL_PGO4
4.4.15. FN_MODEIN Control Register - ERRCTRL_FNMODEIN
4.4.16. FN_MODEOUT register - ERRCTRL_FNMODEOUT
4.4.17. All Alarms After Fault Injection - ERRCTRL_FNGIALARMS
4.4.18. Error Controller Context Register - ERRCTRL_FNGICTXT4
4.4.19. CMP Mismatch CONTEXT Registers - ERRCTRL_FNGICMPCTXT0 … ERRCTRL_FNGICMPCTXT3
4.4.20. STATISTICS registers: ERRCTRL_FNGISTAT0 and ERRCTRL_FNGISTAT4
4.4.21. State register - ERRCTRL_FNPERIPHGI4
6.2.3.3. ALARMS Interfaces
Use the following fRSmartComp ALARMS interfaces to control fail-safe and other alarms’ detection actions as you need according to the Safety Architecture:
- OKNOK[1:0]: Usually to put the system in safe-state, by hardware (Altera recommends from a Functional Safety point of view) or by software (running on the Supervisor, not on the Nios® V processor).
- ERROR[1:0], WARNING[1:0] and INFO[1:0]: Connect according to your Safety architecture, also to put the system in safe-state.
For example, according to the system-level safety architecture as follows:
- ERROR is left unconnected (as OKNOK is already used),
- WARNING is used to activate a yellow LED on the system dashboard, and
- INFO is used to trigger a Nios V interrupt request (An alternative to INTREQ).