QPro XQ18V04 (XQR18V04) QML In-System Programmable Configuration PROMs
8 www.xilinx.com DS082 (v1.2) Nov em ber 5, 2001
1-800-255-7778 Preliminary Product Specification
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Connecting Configuration PROMs
Connecting the FPGA device with th e configuration PROM
(see Figure 6).
• The DATA output(s) of the PROM(s) drives the D
IN
input of the lead FPGA device.
• The Master FPGA CCLK output drives the CLK input(s)
of the PROM(s) (in Master Serial mode only).
• The CEO
output of a PROM drives the CE input of the
next PROM in a daisy chain (if any).
• The OE/RESET
input of all PROMs is best dr iven by
the INIT
output of the lead FPGA device. This
connection assures that the PROM address counte r is
reset before the start of any (re)configuration, even
when a reconfiguration is initiated by a V
CC
glitch.
• The PROM CE
input can be driven from the DONE pin.
The CE
input of the first (or only) PROM can be driven
by the DONE output of the first FPGA device, provided
that DONE is not permanently grounded. CE
can also
be permanently tied Low, but this keeps the DATA
output active and causes an unnecessary supply
current of 20 mA maximum.
• Express/SelectMap mode is similar to slave serial
mode. The DATA is clocked out of the PROM one by te
per CCLK instead of one bit per CCLK cycle. See
FPGA data sheets for special configuration
requirements.
Initiating FPGA Configuration
The XQ(R)18V04 devices incorporate a pin nam ed CF that
is controllable through the JTAG CONFIG instruction. Executing the CONFIG instruction through JTAG pulses the CF
low for 300-500 ns, which resets the FPGA and initiates
configuration.
The CF
pin must be connected to the PROGRAM pin on the
FPGA(s) to use this feature.
The JTAG Programmer software can also issue a JTAG
CONFIG command to initiate FPGA configuration through
the "Load FPGA" setting.
Selecting Configuration Modes
The XQ(R)18V04 accomm odates serial and parallel m ethods of configuration. The configuration modes are selectable through a user control register in the XQ(R)18V04
device. This control register is accessible through JTAG,
and is set using the "Parallel mode" setting on the Xilinx
JT A G Program mer software. Serial output is the default programming mode.
Master Serial Mode Summary
The I/O and logic func tions of the Configurable Log ic Block
(CLB) and their associated interconnections are established
by a configuration program. The program is loaded either
automatically upon power up, or on command, depending
on the state of the three FPGA mode pins. In Master Serial
mode, the FPGA automatically loads the configuration program from an external memory. Xilinx PROMs are designed
to accommodate the Master Serial mode.
Upon power-up or reconfiguration, an FPGA enters the
Master Serial mode whenever all three of the FPGA
mode-select pins are Low (M0=0, M1=0, M2=0). Data is
read from the PROM sequentially on a single data line. Synchronization is provided by the rising edge of the temporary
signal CCLK, which i s gene rated by the FPGA during configuration.
Master Serial Mode provides a simple configuration interface. Only a serial dat a line, a clock line, and two control
lines are required to configure an FPGA. Data from the
PROM is read sequentially, accessed via the internal
address and bit count ers which are increment ed on every
valid rising edge of CCLK. If the user-programmable,
dual-function D
IN
pin on the FPGA is used only for configuration, it m ust st ill be held at a de fined level dur ing n orma l
operation. The Xilinx FPGA families take care of this automatically with an on-chip pu ll-up resist or.
Cascading Configuration PROMs
For multiple FPGAs configured as a serial daisy-chain, or a
single FPGA requir ing larger configuration memories in a
serial or SelectMAP configuration mode, cascaded PROMs
provide additional memory (Figure 5). Multiple XQ(R)18V04
devices can be concatenated by using the CEO
output to
drive the CE
input of the downstream device. The clock
inputs and the data outputs of all XQ(R)18V04 devices in
the chain are interconnecte d. Afte r the last bit from the first
PROM is read, the next clock signal to the PROM asserts its
CEO
output Low and drives its DATA line to a high-impedance state. The second PROM recognizes the Low level on
its CE
input and enables its DATA output. See Figure 6.
After configuration is complete, the address counters of all
cascaded PROMs are reset if the PROM OE/RESET
pin
goes Low.