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1. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Overview
2. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Architecture and Features
3. Stratix 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Design Considerations
4. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O Implementation Guides
5. LVDS SERDES Intel® FPGA IP References
6. Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O User Guide Archives
7. Document Revision History for the Stratix® 10 High-Speed LVDS I/O User Guide
3.1. PLLs and Clocking for Stratix® 10 Devices
3.2. Source-Synchronous Timing Budget
3.3. Guideline: LVDS SERDES IP Core Instantiation
3.4. Guideline: LVDS SERDES Pin Pairs for Soft-CDR Mode
3.5. Guideline: LVDS Transmitters and Receivers in the Same I/O Bank
3.6. Guideline: LVDS SERDES Limitation for Stratix® 10 GX 400, SX 400, and TX 400
3.1.1. Clocking Differential Transmitters
3.1.2. Clocking Differential Receivers
3.1.3. Guideline: LVDS Reference Clock Source
3.1.4. Guideline: Use PLLs in Integer PLL Mode for LVDS
3.1.5. Guideline: Use High-Speed Clock from PLL to Clock LVDS SERDES Only
3.1.6. Guideline: Pin Placement for Differential Channels
3.1.7. LVDS Interface with External PLL Mode
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4.1.4.3. Bitslip
Use bitslip circuitry to insert latencies in increments of one fast clock cycle for data word alignment.
The data slips one bit for every pulse of the rx_bitslip_ctrl signal. Because it takes at least two core clock cycles to clear the undefined data, wait at least four core clock cycles before checking if the data is aligned.
After enough bitslip signals are sent to rollover the bitslip counter, the rx_bitslip_max status signal is asserted after four core clock cycles to indicate that the bitslip counter rollover point has reached its maximum counter value.