For the AXI stream interface we want to generate TLAST only at the end of
the transfer, rather than at the end of each burst.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
+ Both the data width and number of SDI lines are configurable
+ SER1W line is hardware configurable, it was removed from the IP
+ Add 'Hardware mode' support for the controller
For a better timing and control, the valid control lines are gated with flops, instead of combinatorial logic.
This is the main reason why we do not need the tdd_enable_synced signal anymore. The out coming data is delayed by one clock cycle to keep data and control lines synced.
Conflicts:
library/axi_ad9361/axi_ad9361_ip.tcl
library/axi_dmac/Makefile
library/axi_dmac/axi_dmac_constr.ttcl
library/axi_dmac/axi_dmac_ip.tcl
library/common/ad_tdd_control.v
projects/daq2/common/daq2_bd.tcl
projects/fmcjesdadc1/common/fmcjesdadc1_bd.tcl
projects/fmcomms2/zc706pr/system_project.tcl
projects/fmcomms2/zc706pr/system_top.v
projects/usdrx1/common/usdrx1_bd.tcl
This merge was made, to recover any forgotten fixes from master,
before creating the new release branch. All conflicts were reviewed
and resolved.
By reset the control lines (RF, VCO and DP) on an active sync pulse, can cause glitches on the ENABLE/TXNRX lines. The sync pulse resets just the TDD counter.
+ Define two control signal for util_tdd_sync : tdd_sync_en and tdd_terminal_type
+ Delete to old ad_tdd_sync.v instances from the core
+ Update Make files
+ Update ad_tdd_control: add additional CDC logic for tdd_sync (the sync comes from another clock domain)
+ Update the ad_tdd_sync module: it's just a simple pulse generator, the pulse period is defined using a parameter, pulse width is fixed: 128 x clock cycle
+ Update TDD regmap: tdd sync period is no longer software defined
A synchronization signal generator for AD9361 running on TDD mode.
If the associated device is master, the module generates a pulse in a defined interval. Otherwise receives the sync signal from outside.
In order to maximize the window where it is safe to capture data we ideally
want to launch data on the opposite edge to which it is captured. Since the
edge on which data is captured depends on the connected device add a
parameter that allows to configure the launching edge.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
By changing the parameter called SDI_DATA_WIDTH the spi framework can support multiple SDI lines.
The supported number of SDI lines are: 1, 2, 3 and 4.
Because of the new pack/upack modules on the data path, it makes more sense to split the data interface of the PR modules into separate channels.
The top module will supports max 4 channels.
Update the way how the fifo push out its content. By default the fifo pushes out all its content, if an xfer_last signal is received, the fifo saves the last write address, and reads out until the saved address.
Update the way how the fifo push out its content. By default the fifo pushes out all its content, if an xfer_last signal is received, the fifo saves the last write address, and reads out until the saved address.
Drive all output pins of the disabled interfaces with a constant value.
This avoids warnings from the tools about not driven output ports.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
Mark all unused output ports explicitly as explicitly. This makes it clear
that they are left unconnected on purpose and avoids warnings from the
tools about unconnected ports.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
Group the axi_dmac parameters by function and provide a human readable name
for the IPI GUI. This makes it easier to understand what parameter does
what when using the IPI GUI to configure the core.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
Add validation values for the different configuration parameters. This
enables the tools to check whether the configured value is valid and avoids
accidental misconfiguration.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
The address width for the AXI-Lite configuration bus for the core is only
14 bit. Remove the upper unused bits from the public interface.
This allows infrastructure code to know about this and it might be able to
perform optimizations of the interconnect based on this.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
Move the clock and reset signals of the m_axi_src interface next to the
other signals in the module definition.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
According to the documentation when using a BRAM block in SDP mode the
REGCEB pin is not used and should be connected to GND. The tools though
when inferring a BRAM connect REGCEB to the same signal REGCEA. This causes
issues with timing verification since the REGCEB pin is associated with the
write clock whereas the REGCEA pin is associated with the read clock.
Until this is fixed in the tools mark all paths to the REGCEB pin as false
paths.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
Configure the maximum burst size as well as the maximum number of active
requests on the AXI master interfaces according to the core configuration.
This allows connected slaves to know what kind of requests to expect and
allows them to configure themselves accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
The axi_dmac core does not issue narrow AXI bursts. Indicate this by
setting the SUPPORTS_NARROW_BURST property to 0 on both AXI master
interfaces.
This allows connected slaves to know that they will not receive narrow
bursts, which allows them to disable support for it.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
The axi_dmac core generates requests which are both AXI3 and AXI4
compliant. This means it is possible to connect it to both a AXI3 or AXI4
slave port without needing a AXI protocol converter. Unfortunately it is
not possible to declare a port as both AXI3 and AXI4 compliant, so the core
has the C_DMA_AXI_PROTCOL_SRC and C_DMA_AXI_PROTOCOL_DEST parameters, which
allow to configure the protocol type of the corresponding AXI master
interface. Currently the default is always AXI4.
But when being used on ZYNQ it is most likely that the AXI master interface
of the DMAC core ends up being connected to the AXI3, so change the default
to AXI3 if the core is instantiated in a ZYNQ design.
The default can still be overwritten by explicitly setting the
configuration property.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
Add support for querying the clock domains of the clock pins for the
axi_dmac controller. This allows the core to automatically figure out
whether its different parts run in different clock domains or not and setup
the configuration parameters accordingly.
Being able to auto-detect those configuration parameters makes the core
easier to use and also avoids accidental misconfiguration.
It is still possible to automatically overwrite the configuration
parameters by hand if necessary.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
bd files can be used to automate certain tasks in IP integrator when the
core is instantiated. Add a helper command for adding such files to a core.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
For the source controller use the pause signal that has been properly
transferred to the source clock domain rather than the pause signal from
the request clock domain.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
When having multiple DMA cores sharing the same constraint file Vivado
seems to apply the constraints from the first core to all the other cores
when re-running synthesis and implementation from within the Vivado GUI.
This causes wrong timing constraints if the DMA cores have different
configurations. To avoid this issue use a TTCL template that generates a
custom constraint file for each DMA core instance.
This also allows us to drop the asynchronous clock detection hack from the
constraint file and move it to the template and only generate the CDC
constraints if the clock domains are asynchronous.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
For the source controller use the pause signal that has been properly
transferred to the source clock domain rather than the pause signal from
the request clock domain.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
When having multiple DMA cores sharing the same constraint file Vivado
seems to apply the constraints from the first core to all the other cores
when re-running synthesis and implementation from within the Vivado GUI.
This causes wrong timing constraints if the DMA cores have different
configurations. To avoid this issue use a TTCL template that generates a
custom constraint file for each DMA core instance.
This also allows us to drop the asynchronous clock detection hack from the
constraint file and move it to the template and only generate the CDC
constraints if the clock domains are asynchronous.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
The synchronization interface is a single bidirectional line. Output for Master, input for Slave.
The sync_period value is relative to frame length and the digital interface clock. The actual synchronization
period will be: sync_period * frame_length * fb_clock_cycle
The memory mapped AXI interfaces for the AXI-DMAC are uni-directional.
Which means they are either write-only or read-only. Unfortunately the
Altera tools can't handle this, so we had to add dummy signals for the
other direction.
The Xilinx tools on the other hand handle uni-directional AXI interfaces
and in fact IPI can do a better job and use less resources when creating
the AXI interconnects when it knows that the interface is uni-directional.
So always disable the dummy ports for the IPI package.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
For some reason, if a core has an AXI and an AXI Stream interface too, the tool sets the AXI interface's ASSOCIATED_RESET parameter to the AXI Stream interface's reset.
This cause an unconnected AXI reset port in the block design. This 'set_property' command intended to overwrite this automated setup.
The memory mapped AXI interfaces for the AXI-DMAC are uni-directional.
Which means they are either write-only or read-only. Unfortunately the
Altera tools can't handle this, so we had to add dummy signals for the
other direction.
The Xilinx tools on the other hand handle uni-directional AXI interfaces
and in fact IPI can do a better job and use less resources when creating
the AXI interconnects when it knows that the interface is uni-directional.
So always disable the dummy ports for the IPI package.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
The memory mapped AXI interfaces for the AXI-DMAC are uni-directional.
Which means they are either write-only or read-only. Unfortunately the
Altera tools can't handle this, so we had to add dummy signals for the
other direction.
The Xilinx tools on the other hand handle uni-directional AXI interfaces
and in fact IPI can do a better job and use less resources when creating
the AXI interconnects when it knows that the interface is uni-directional.
So always disable the dummy ports for the IPI package.
Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>