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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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3.4.10. Unused Transceiver Channels
Transceivers in the device degrade over time unless you preserve them. The Intel® Quartus® Prime software generates a warning message if a design contains unused XCVRs.
You do not need to preserve transceivers under 8Gbps. For transceivers over 8Gbps, the best practice is to preserve if there is a possibility for future usage. Otherwise, you can turn the transceivers off. You enable unused transceivers through dynamic reconfiguration or a new device programming file.