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1.2.1. Timing Path and Clock Analysis
1.2.2. Clock Setup Analysis
1.2.3. Clock Hold Analysis
1.2.4. Recovery and Removal Analysis
1.2.5. Multicycle Path Analysis
1.2.6. Metastability Analysis
1.2.7. Timing Pessimism
1.2.8. Clock-As-Data Analysis
1.2.9. Multicorner Timing Analysis
1.2.10. Time Borrowing
2.1. Using Timing Constraints throughout the Design Flow
2.2. Timing Analysis Flow
2.3. Applying Timing Constraints
2.4. Timing Constraint Descriptions
2.5. Timing Report Descriptions
2.6. Scripting Timing Analysis
2.7. Using the Quartus® Prime Timing Analyzer Document Revision History
2.8. Quartus® Prime Pro Edition User Guide: Timing Analyzer Archive
2.4.4.5.1. Default Multicycle Analysis
2.4.4.5.2. End Multicycle Setup = 2 and End Multicycle Hold = 0
2.4.4.5.3. End Multicycle Setup = 2 and End Multicycle Hold = 1
2.4.4.5.4. Same Frequency Clocks with Destination Clock Offset
2.4.4.5.5. Destination Clock Frequency is a Multiple of the Source Clock Frequency
2.4.4.5.6. Destination Clock Frequency is a Multiple of the Source Clock Frequency with an Offset
2.4.4.5.7. Source Clock Frequency is a Multiple of the Destination Clock Frequency
2.4.4.5.8. Source Clock Frequency is a Multiple of the Destination Clock Frequency with an Offset
2.5.1. Report Fmax Summary
2.5.2. Report Timing
2.5.3. Report Timing By Source Files
2.5.4. Report Data Delay
2.5.5. Report Net Delay
2.5.6. Report Clocks and Clock Network
2.5.7. Report Clock Transfers
2.5.8. Report Metastability
2.5.9. Report CDC Viewer
2.5.10. Report Asynchronous CDC
2.5.11. Report Logic Depth
2.5.12. Report Neighbor Paths
2.5.13. Report Register Spread
2.5.14. Report Route Net of Interest
2.5.15. Report Retiming Restrictions
2.5.16. Report Register Statistics
2.5.17. Report Pipelining Information
2.5.18. Report Time Borrowing Data
2.5.19. Report Exceptions and Exceptions Reachability
2.5.20. Report Bottlenecks
2.5.21. Check Timing
2.5.22. Report SDC
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1.2.1.2. Timing Paths
Timing paths connect two design nodes, such as the output of a register to the input of another register.
Understanding the types of timing paths is important to timing closure and optimization. The Timing Analyzer recognizes and analyzes the following timing paths:
- Edge paths—connections from ports-to-pins, from pins-to-pins, and from pins-to-ports.
- Clock paths—connections from device ports or internally generated clock pins to the clock pin of a register.
- Data paths—connections from a port or the data output pin of a sequential element to a port or the data input pin of another sequential element.
- Asynchronous paths—connections from a port or asynchronous pins of another sequential element such as an asynchronous reset or asynchronous clear.
Figure 3. Path Types Commonly Analyzed by the Timing Analyzer
In addition to identifying various paths in a design, the Timing Analyzer analyzes clock characteristics to compute the worst-case requirement between any two registers in a single register-to-register path. You must constrain all clocks in your design before analyzing clock characteristics.