Digilent 6015-410-001P User Manual

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NetFPGA-1G-CML™ Board Reference Manual

Table of Contents

Table of Contents .................................................................................................................. 1
Overview ............................................................................................................................... 3
1 FPGA Configuration ........................................................................................................ 4
2 Power Supplies .............................................................................................................. 5
3 Oscillators and Clocks ..................................................................................................... 6
4 FPGA Memory ................................................................................................................ 7
5 DDR3 Memory ............................................................................................................... 7
6 QDRII+ Memory ............................................................................................................. 7
7 BPI Flash Memory .......................................................................................................... 7
8 SD Card .......................................................................................................................... 8
9 PCle Interface ................................................................................................................ 8
10 Ethernet PHYs ................................................................................................................ 8
11 PIC Subsystem................................................................................................................ 9
12 On-Board I/O ............................................................................................................... 10
13 PMOD Expansion Connectors ....................................................................................... 10
DOC#: 6015-502-001
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NetFPGA-1G-CML™ Board Reference Manual
14 FMC Expansion Connector ............................................................................................ 11
Appendix A: Manufacturing Test .......................................................................................... 12
Appendix B: FPGA Pin Constraints........................................................................................ 13
System Clock and Reset ............................................................................................................ 13
DDR3 SDRAM ............................................................................................................................ 13
QDRII+ ....................................................................................................................................... 15
SD Card Connector .................................................................................................................... 18
PCI Express ................................................................................................................................ 18
Ethernet PHYS ........................................................................................................................... 19
PIC Interface .............................................................................................................................. 21
On-Board LED and Button I/O ................................................................................................... 21
PMOD Connectors .................................................................................................................... 21
FMC Connector ......................................................................................................................... 22
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NetFPGA-1G-CML™ Board Reference Manual
general-purpose buttons

Overview

The NetFPGA-1G-CML is a versatile, low cost network hardware development platform featuring a Xilinx® Kintex®­7 XC7K325T FPGA and includes four Ethernet interfaces capable of negotiating up to 1 GB/s connections. 512 MB of 800 MHz DDR3 can support high-throughput packet buffering while 4.5 MB of QDRII+ can maintain low-latency access to high demand data, like routing tables. Rapid boot configuration is supported by a 128 MB BPI Flash, which is also available for non-volatile storage applications. The standard PCIe form factor supports high speed x4 Gen 2 interfacing. The FMC carrier connector provides a convenient expansion interface for extending card functionality via Select I/O and GTX serial interfaces. The FMC connector can support SATA-II data rates for network storage applications. The FMC connector can also be used to extend functionality via a wide variety of other cards designed for communication, measurement, and control.
The NetFPGA-1G-CML
Xilinx Kintex-7 XC7K325T-1FFG676 FPGA
Low-jitter 200 MHz oscillator
Four 10/100/1000 Ethernet PHYs with
RGMII
X4 Gen 2 PCI Express
X16 4.5 MB QDRII+ static RAM (450
MHz)
X8 512 MB DDR3 dynamic RAM (800
MHz)
1-Gbit BPI Flash
SD card slot
32-bit PIC microcontroller
USB microcontroller
Real time clock
Crypto-authentication chip
High pin count FMC connector (VITA 57)
with 100 Select-IO and 4 GTX serial pairs
Two PMOD connectors
Four on-board LEDs and four on-board
The NetFPGA-1G-CML is designed to support the Stanford NetFPGA architecture with reference designs available through the NetFPGA GitHub Organization (www.github.com/organizations/NetFPGA). It is fully compatible with Xilinx Vivado™ and ISE® Design Suites as well as the Xilinx SDK for embedded software design.
Copyright Digilent, Inc. All rights reserved. Other produc t and compa ny names mentioned may be trademarks of their res pective owne rs.
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NetFPGA-1G-CML™ Board Reference Manual
The Kintex-7 XC7K325T-1FFG676 FPGA has ample logic and I/O capacity for supporting a wide range of designs with the following capabilities:
50,950 slices, each containing
four 6-input LUTs and eight flip­flops
Over 16 Mbit of fast on-chip
block RAM
Ten clock management tiles with
one PLL and one mixed-mode clock manager each
840 DSP slices
Integrated PCI Express
Integrated AES bitstream
encryption and SHA-256 authentication with battery­backed encryption key
400 Select I/O ports (250 high
range, 150 high speed)
Eight 6.6 Gb/s GTX serial
transceivers

1 FPGA Configuration

The system logic configuration is stored within the FPGA in SRAM-based memory cells. This data defines the FPGA’s logic functions and circuit connections, but it is volatile since it remains valid only as long as power is applied. Because of this, the device is configured (i.e., programmed) every time it is turned-on. In addition, it may also be re-configured at any time power is applied. Once power is removed, the most recently programmed logic configuration is lost. The configuration data is commonly called a bitstream which is most often contained in files of type “.bit” or “.mcs”. These files may be created several different ways using Xilinx development software.
The FPGA may be configured from three different sources. These include the on-board BPI flash, an off-board USB flash drive, or via a PC. The NetFPGA-1G follows a specific configuration sequence when it powers up and comes out of reset. If a valid “download.bit” file is detected on an attached USB flash drive, that bitstream will be used to program the FPGA. The flash drive must be FAT formatted, contain a single “download.bit” file, and be attached to the USB-HOST port (J13) with jumper JP4 in place. If no flash drive bitstream is detected, an attempt will be made to configure the device from the on-board BPI flash address 0x0. If no flash bitstream is available, the board idles until it is programmed from a PC. PC programming can be done either via a USB cable connected to the USB PROG port (J12), or a JTAG programming cable connected to the XILINX PROG CABLE port (J15). Any flash drive bitstreams that are not built for the Xilinx XC7K325T FPGA will be ignored. This power-on programming sequence can be re-initiated at any time after power is applied by depressing the red PROG button (BTN5).
Both Digilent and Xilinx distribute free software that can be used to transfer bitstreams from a PC as well as create bitstream files to load via a flash drive. Digilent’s Adept and Xilinx’s iMPACT applications can directly program the FPGA using a .bit file via a standard USB A to Micro B cable connected to J12 or through any of several Digilent JTAG programming cables connected to J15. The on-board BPI flash is programmed via similar means. When programming the BPI, iMPACT transfers a .mcs format bitstream to the flash in a two-step process. iMPACT first
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programs the FPGA directly with a special purpose BPI flash interface. It will then transfer the .mcs bitstream to the flash through that interface. This process is fully automated by the iMPACT program, so a designer only needs to be concerned with the creation of the .mcs file using Xilinx’s design software.
More details on configuring the XC7K325T FPGA via the on board BPI (using Master BPI mode), via the PIC USB­HOST (using Slave Serial mode), and via the JTAG mode can be found in the Xilinx 7 Series FPGAs Configuration User Guide (UG470).

2 Power Supplies

The NetFPGA-1G requires a 12V, 5A, or greater power source. Power is supplied via the J17 Molex connector at the rear of the PCB, as is often done with high performance PC graphics cards. No power is supplied via the PCIe motherboard bus connector.
The NetFPGA-1G can be powered using the 6-pin PCIe power supply connector (Fig. 1) of any standard ATX power supply. When installed on a PC motherboard, you can directly plug the 6-pin PCIe power supply connector of your PC power supply into J17. When used standalone (without a motherboard), you need to short pins 15 and 16 (pulling down PS_ON signal) of the main 20-pin connector of the standard ATX power supply to power-on the ATX unit (Fig. 1).
Figure 1. Left: NetFPGA-1G can be powered by plugging the 6-pin PCIe power connector in J17; Right: Pin 16 and 17 are shorted using a jumper
to power on a standard ATX power supply when used standalone.
Analog Devices voltage regulators provide a number of on-board power and reference voltages that are derived from the main 12V supply, as shown in Table 1. Supply power-on and power-off sequencing follows manufacturer recommendations. The on-board battery that supports encryption key storage and the real-time clock is charged when the PCB is powered on and should not need to be replaced during the lifetime of the board.
VADJ controls the signal levels used between the FMC connector and two FPGA Select I/O banks and can be set to
1.2 V, 1.8 V, 2.5 V, or 3.3 V as needed. The board is shipped with the VADJ supply turned off. To turn on VADJ, jumper JP5 is installed and the FPGA is configured to drive the VADJ_EN pin (AD16) high. The VADJ voltage is selected via the FPGA configuration using pins AF19 and AF20 as shown in Table 1.
When jumper JP4 is in place, the USB HID connector provides 5V at up to 0.5 A to external USB devices, including keyboards, mice, and thumb drives. An Analog Devices ADM1177 hot swap controller and power monitor is used to allow safe device attachment and removal while the board is powered up. The PIC can also measure USB current and voltage by accessing the on-chip power monitor via the PIC I2C peripheral bus.
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5.0 V
12.0 V
USB HID; FMC
SD Card; Ethernet PHYs; Cypress FX2LP; Microchip PIC; BPI Flash; FPGA I/O Banks 14,15; FMC; PMODs
FPGA auxiliary supply, VCC
; Backup battery; Real-time clock
backup.
1.8 V
12.0 V
QDRII+ supply
1.8 V
3.3 V
FPGA GTX transceiver Quad PLL
1.5 V
12.0 V
DDR3; FPGA I/O Bank 34
1.2 V
12.0 V
FPGA GTX transceiver termination
1.0 V
12.0 V
FPGA GTX analog supply
1.0 V
3.3 V
FPGA Core
0.9 V
3.3 V
QDRII+ reference
0.75 V
3.3 V
DDR3 reference
SET_VADJ2
FPGA AF20
SET_VADJ1 FPGA AF19
0 0 1.2 V
0 1 1.8 V
1 0 2.5 V
1 1 3.3 V
The Xilinx Kintex-7 Data Sheet: DC and AC Switching Characteristics (DS182) provides more information on the power supply requirements of the FPGA board.
Supply Derived From Application
3.3 V 12.0 V
2.0 V 5.0 V
VADJ 12.0 V
BAT
FPGA I/O Banks 12, 13; FMC; Configurable.
VADJ
Table 1. On-board power supplies.

3 Oscillators and Clocks

On-board oscillators support various board subsystems. A low-jitter 125 MHz oscillator is provided for the Ethernet PHYs and a 50 MHz oscillator drives the FPGA master configuration clock. The Cypress FX2LP and Microchip PIC microcontrollers each contain on-chip oscillators running at 24 MHz and 8 MHz, respectively.
The main FPGA system clock is provided by an ultra-low-jitter 200 MHz differential oscillator connected to pins AA2 and AA3 in I/O bank 34. This can drive up to ten internal PLLs (Phase Locked Loops) and MMCMs (Mixed­Mode Clock Managers) on the FPGA for high-performance multi-clock-domain designs. Please refer to the Xilinx 7- series Clock Resources User Guide (UG472) for more details on FPGA internal clocking resources.
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4 FPGA Memory

The XC7K325T FPGA includes 445 on-chip Block RAMs (BRAMs) of 36Kb, or 4096 bytes with two-bit error correction, which amounts to a total of 1.78 MB of on-chip, error-corrected static RAM that can be used for a variety of purposes ranging from program storage for deeply embedded “bare metal” applications to data buffering and table lookup. Each 36Kb BRAM can be partitioned into two completely independent 18Kb RAMs to help facilitate more efficient hardware utilization. Furthermore, each BRAM can be configured for dual-port operation and includes register infrastructure to support FIFO functionality. These BRAM ports can be organized in either single or dual-clock configurations. The Xilinx tool chain includes a rich selection of resources for on-chip BRAM configuration and initialization. Further information is provided in the Xilinx 7 Series FPGAs Memory Resources User Guide (UG473).

5 DDR3 Memory

The NetFPGA-1G includes a Micron MT41K512M8 512 MB DDR3 SDRAM which employs an 800 MHz byte-wide data bus capable of operating at a data rate of 1600 MT/s. Project development with the SDRAM involves using the Xilinx Memory Interface Generator (MIG) in either the XPS design tool or the Vivado Design Suite. The MIG is an interface generation wizard for selecting part types and configuring FPGA Select I/O resources for the memory hardware interface. The interface is automatically configured by the MIG for use with the AXI4 system bus and provides options for 2:1 or 4:1 memory-to-bus clock ratios. The NetFPGA-1G uses a VCC high performance DDR3 frequency settings. Please see the Xilinx 7 Series FPGAs Memory Interface Solutions User Guide (UG586) and the Micron 4Gb:x4,x8,x16 DDR3L SDRAM data sheet for more details.
of 2.0V to support
AUX-IO

6 QDRII+ Memory

A 4.5 MB Cypress CY7C2263KV18 QDRII+ Quad Data Rate SRAM is provided for applications that require high speed, low-latency memory. Common applications include FIFO buffers and table lookups. The notion of “Quad” data rate comes from the ability to simultaneously read from a unidirectional read port and write to a unidirectional write port on both clock edges. The NetFPGA-1G QDRII+ is capable of operating at up to 450MHz to yield data transfer rates of up to 900 MT/s per 2-byte port. This yields a peak bandwidth of up to 3.6 GB/s. The Xilinx Memory Interface Generator (MIG) is able to generate and configure an AXI4 based interface into the QDRII+ via the user friendly wizard tool. More information regarding the QDRII+ memory part and the Xilinx MIG tool can be found in the Cypress CY7C2263KV18/CY7C2265KV18 data sheet, the Cypress Application Note QDR-II, QDR-II+, DDR-II, DDR-II+ Design Guide (AN4065), and the Xilinx 7 Series FPGAs Memory Interface Solutions User Guide (UG586).

7 BPI Flash Memory

A 1-Gbit Numonyx BPI (Byte Peripheral Interface) flash memory in a 128 MB x16 configuration is provided to support high-speed FPGA configuration after board reset. High-speed single-step configuration enables enumeration via the PCIe interface within 100 mS, as required by the PCI specification. In BPI configuration mode, the FPGA acts as the bus master, driving the flash address and control signals to transfer previously stored bitstream data into the configuration SRAM.
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The BPI flash has enough capacity to store multiple device configurations. This facilitates multi-stage configuration boot as well as applications that utilize dynamic reconfiguration. Configuration bitstreams are not the only data which can be stored in the BPI flash. After configuration is complete, the BPI programming pins may be used as normal Select I/O within the design. As a result, non-volatile data of any type can also be stored to and retrieved from the BPI after device configuration is complete. More information regarding BPI based device configuration is available in the Xilinx 7 Series FPGAs Configuration User Guide (UG470) and application note XAPP587 BPI Fast
Configuration and iMPACT Flash Programming with 7 Series FPGAs. Please also refer to the Numonyx P30-65nm Flash Memory data sheet for more specifics regarding device operation.

8 SD Card

The NetFPGA-1G SD card connector supports a second non-volatile storage resource which is also removable. This connector supports a standard size SD memory card and meets all physical layer requirements of both SPI and SD bus protocols. It supports the UHS-I pin assignment standard (but not UHS-II) and provides high speed signaling at
3.3V to support SC, HC, and XC class SD cards. Please see SD Specifications Part 1 Physical Layer Simplified Specification by the Technical Committee of the SD Card Association for more details regarding the use of SD memory cards with this connector.

9 PCIe Interface

The NetFPGA-1G is designed with a PCI-Express form factor to support interconnection with common processor motherboards. Four of the FPGA’s eight high speed serial GTX transceivers are dedicated to implementing up to four-lanes of Gen. 2.0 (5 GB/s) PCIe communications with a host processing system. These transceivers work in conjunction with the on-chip 7 Series Integrated PCI Express Block and synthesizable on-chip logic to provide a scalable, high performance PCI Express I/O core.
This core is configured and incorporated into designs using either the Xilinx ISE Coregen tool or via instantiation and customization from the Vivado Design Suite IP catalog. Please refer to the Xilinx 7 Series FPGAs Integrated Block for PCI Express V2.0 (PG054) product guide and 7 Series FPGAs GTX/GTH Transceivers (UG476) user guide for more information.

10 Ethernet PHYs

Four Realtek RTL8211 Ethernet transceivers (PHYs) are provided to interface to network connections via on-board RJ-45 connectors. Each RJ-45 has two LEDs to indicate link status and activity. Each PHY controls three LEDs: two on an associated RJ-45 and a third on-board (LD5 –LD8.) The PHYs are programmed via a shared MDIO bus and are accessed via MDIO addresses 1 through 4: corresponding to connectors ETH1 through ETH4 on the PCB. At reset, each PHY defaults to 1Gbps with the LED configuration shown in Table 2.
On each RJ45, the bottom LED is the one that is closest to the PCIe connector. The default behavior of the on­board LED is to mimic that of the top RJ45 LED. The default auto-negotiation behavior allows each PHY to independently adjust its data rate to 10/100 Mbps or 1Gbps as needed.
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