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2.3.2.1. Using Simulation Signal Activity Data in Power Analysis
2.3.2.2. Signal Activities from RTL (Functional) Simulation, Supplemented by Vectorless Estimation
2.3.2.3. Signal Activities from Vectorless Estimation and User-Supplied Input Pin Activities
2.3.2.4. Signal Activities from User Defaults Only
2.5.1. Complete Design Simulation Power Analysis Flow
2.5.2. Modular Design Simulation Power Analysis Flow
2.5.3. Multiple Simulation Power Analysis Flow
2.5.4. Overlapping Simulation Power Analysis Flow
2.5.5. Partial Design Simulation Power Analysis Flow
2.5.6. Vectorless Estimation Power Analysis Flow
3.4.1. Clock Power Management
3.4.2. Pipelining and Retiming
3.4.3. Architectural Optimization
3.4.4. I/O Power Guidelines
3.4.5. Dynamically Controlled On-Chip Terminations (OCT)
3.4.6. Memory Optimization (M20K/MLAB)
3.4.7. DDR Memory Controller Settings
3.4.8. DSP Implementation
3.4.9. Reducing High-Speed Tile (HST) Usage
3.4.10. Unused Transceiver Channels
3.4.11. Periphery Power reduction XCVR Settings
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3.4.1.5. Global Signals
Intel® FPGAs have different kinds of global signal resources available. Global signals can span the entire chip or smaller regions. Choose the clock networks that can cover all the fanout on a specific domain. For example, you can reduce clock power by switching from a clock network that spans the entire chip to one quarter of the chip, provided all the fanout for that clock is within that region of the chip.