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1. About LL Ethernet 10G MAC
2. Getting Started
3. LL Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Design Examples
4. Functional Description
5. Configuration Registers
6. Interface Signals
7. Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP User Guide Archives
8. Document Revision History for the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP User Guide
2.1. Introduction to Intel® FPGA IP Cores
2.2. Installing and Licensing Intel® FPGA IP Cores
2.3. Specifying the IP Core Parameters and Options ( Quartus® Prime Pro Edition)
2.4. IP Core Generation Output ( Quartus® Prime Pro Edition)
2.5. Files Generated for Intel IP Cores (Legacy Parameter Editor)
2.6. Simulating Intel® FPGA IP Cores
2.7. Creating a Signal Tap Debug File to Match Your Design Hierarchy
2.8. Parameter Settings for the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Core
2.9. Upgrading the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Core
2.10. Design Considerations for the Low Latency Ethernet 10G MAC Intel® FPGA IP Core
5.1. Register Map
5.2. Register Access Definition
5.3. Primary MAC Address
5.4. MAC Reset Control Register
5.5. TX Configuration and Status Registers
5.6. Flow Control Registers
5.7. Unidirectional Control Registers
5.8. RX Configuration and Status Registers
5.9. Timestamp Registers
5.10. ECC Registers
5.11. Statistics Registers
6.1. Clock and Reset Signals
6.2. Speed Selection Signal
6.3. Error Correction Signals
6.4. Unidirectional Signals
6.5. Avalon® Memory-Mapped Interface Programming Signals
6.6. Avalon® Streaming Data Interfaces
6.7. Avalon® Streaming Flow Control Signals
6.8. Avalon® Streaming Status Interface
6.9. PHY-side Interfaces
6.10. IEEE 1588v2 Interfaces
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6.6.1. Avalon® Streaming TX Data Interface Signals
Signal | Direction | Width | Description |
---|---|---|---|
avalon_st_tx_startofpacket | In | 1 | Assert this signal to indicate the beginning of the TX data. |
avalon_st_tx_endofpacket | In | 1 | Assert this signal to indicate the end of the TX data. |
avalon_st_tx_valid | In | 1 | Assert this signal to indicate that the avalon_st_tx_data[] signal and other signals on this interface are valid. |
avalon_st_tx_ready | Out | 1 | When asserted, indicates that the MAC IP core is ready to accept data. The reset value of this signal is non-deterministic.
Note: During reset, the value of the this signal can be 0 or 1.
|
avalon_st_tx_error | In | 1 | Assert this signal to indicate that the current TX packet contains errors. |
avalon_st_tx_data[] | In | 32/64 | TX data from the client. The client sends the TX data to the MAC IP core in this order: avalon_st_tx_data[31:24], avalon_st_tx_data[23:16], and so forth. The width is 64 bits when you enable the Use 64-bit Ethernet 10G MAC Avalon® streaming interface option. Otherwise, it is 32 bits |
avalon_st_tx_empty[] | In | 2/3 | Use this signal to specify the number of empty bytes in the cycle that contain the end of the TX data.
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