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Product Discontinuance Notification
1. About the 40- and 100-Gbps Ethernet MAC and PHY IP Core
2. Getting Started
3. Functional Description
4. Debugging the 40GbE and 100GbE Link
A. 40-100GbE IP Core Example Design
B. Address Map Changes for the 40-100GbE IP Core v12.0 Release
C. 10GBASE-KR Registers
D. Additional Information
2.1. Installing and Licensing Intel® FPGA IP Cores
2.2. Specifying the 40-100GbE IP Core Parameters and Options
2.3. IP Core Parameters
2.4. Files Generated for the 40-100GbE IP Core
2.5. Simulating the IP Core
2.6. Integrating Your IP Core in Your Design
2.7. 40-100GbE IP Core Testbenches
2.8. Simulating the 40‑100GbE IP Core With the Testbenches
2.9. Compiling the Full Design and Programming the FPGA
2.10. Initializing the IP Core
3.2.1. IP Core TX Datapath
3.2.2. IP Core TX Data Bus Interfaces
3.2.3. 40-100GbE IP Core RX Datapath
3.2.4. IP Core RX Data Bus Interfaces
3.2.5. 40GbE Lower Rate 24.24 Gbps MAC and PHY
3.2.6. 100GbE CAUI–4 PHY
3.2.7. External Reconfiguration Controller
3.2.8. Congestion and Flow Control Using Pause Frames
3.2.9. Pause Control and Generation Interface
3.2.10. Pause Control Frame and Non‑Pause Control Frame Filtering and Forwarding
3.2.11. 40-100GbE IP Core Modes of Operation
3.2.12. Link Fault Signaling Interface
3.2.13. Statistics Counters Interface
3.2.14. MAC – PHY XLGMII or CGMII Interface
3.2.15. Lane to Lane Deskew Interface
3.2.16. PCS Test Pattern Generation and Test Pattern Check
3.2.17. Transceiver PHY Serial Data Interface
3.2.18. 40GBASE-KR4 IP Core Variations
3.2.19. Control and Status Interface
3.2.20. Clocks
3.2.21. Resets
3.2.2.1. 40-100GbE IP Core User Interface Data Bus
3.2.2.2. 40-100GbE IP Core TX Data Bus with Adapters (Avalon-ST Interface)
3.2.2.3. 40-100GbE IP Core TX Data Bus Without Adapters (Custom Streaming Interface)
3.2.2.4. Bus Quantization Effects With Adapters
3.2.2.5. User Interface to Ethernet Transmission
3.2.3.1. 40-100GbE IP Core RX Filtering
3.2.3.2. 40-100GbE IP Core Preamble Processing
3.2.3.3. 40-100GbE IP Core FCS (CRC-32) Removal
3.2.3.4. 40-100GbE IP Core CRC Checking
3.2.3.5. RX CRC Forwarding
3.2.3.6. RX Automatic Pad Removal Control
3.2.3.7. Address Checking
3.2.3.8. Inter-Packet Gap
3.2.3.9. Pause Ignore
3.2.4.1. 40-100GbE IP Core User Interface Data Bus
3.2.4.2. 40-100GbE IP Core RX Data Bus with Adapters (Avalon-ST Interface)
3.2.4.3. 40-100GbE IP Core RX Data Bus Without Adapters (Custom Streaming Interface)
3.2.4.4. 100GbE IP Core RX Client Interface Examples
3.2.4.5. Error Conditions on the RX Datapath
3.4.1.1. Transceiver PHY Control and Status Registers
3.4.1.2. Lock Status Registers
3.4.1.3. Bit Error Flag Registers
3.4.1.4. PCS Hardware Error Register
3.4.1.5. BER Monitor Register
3.4.1.6. Test Mode Register
3.4.1.7. Test Pattern Counter Register
3.4.1.8. Link Fault Signaling Registers
3.4.1.9. MAC and PHY Reset Registers
3.4.1.10. PCS‑VLANE Registers
3.4.1.11. PRBS Registers
3.4.1.12. 40GBASE-KR4 Registers
3.4.1.13. MAC Configuration and Filter Registers
3.4.1.14. Pause Registers
3.4.1.15. MAC Hardware Error Register
3.4.1.16. CRC Configuration Register
3.4.1.17. MAC Feature Configuration Registers
3.4.1.18. MAC Address Registers
3.4.1.19. Statistics Registers
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1.3.1. Simulation Environment
Altera performs the following tests on the 40-100GbE MAC and PHY IP core in the simulation environment using internal and third party standard bus functional models (BFM):
- Constrained random tests that cover randomized frame size and contents
- Randomized error injection tests that inject Frame Check Sequence (FCS) field errors, runt packets, and corrupt control characters, and then check for the proper response from the IP core
- Assertion based tests to confirm proper behavior of the IP core with respect to the specification
- Extensive coverage of our runtime configuration space and proper behavior in all possible modes of operation