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1. Functional Description—UniPHY
2. Functional Description— Intel® MAX® 10 EMIF IP
3. Functional Description—Hard Memory Interface
4. Functional Description—HPS Memory Controller
5. Functional Description—HPC II Controller
6. Functional Description—QDR II Controller
7. Functional Description—RLDRAM II Controller
8. Functional Description—RLDRAM 3 PHY-Only IP
9. Functional Description—Example Designs
10. Introduction to UniPHY IP
11. Latency for UniPHY IP
12. Timing Diagrams for UniPHY IP
13. External Memory Interface Debug Toolkit
14. Upgrading to UniPHY-based Controllers from ALTMEMPHY-based Controllers
1.1. I/O Pads
1.2. Reset and Clock Generation
1.3. Dedicated Clock Networks
1.4. Address and Command Datapath
1.5. Write Datapath
1.6. Read Datapath
1.7. Sequencer
1.8. Shadow Registers
1.9. UniPHY Interfaces
1.10. UniPHY Signals
1.11. PHY-to-Controller Interfaces
1.12. Using a Custom Controller
1.13. AFI 3.0 Specification
1.14. Register Maps
1.15. Ping Pong PHY
1.16. Efficiency Monitor and Protocol Checker
1.17. UniPHY Calibration Stages
1.18. Document Revision History
1.7.1.1. Nios® II-based Sequencer Function
1.7.1.2. Nios® II-based Sequencer Architecture
1.7.1.3. Nios® II-based Sequencer SCC Manager
1.7.1.4. Nios® II-based Sequencer RW Manager
1.7.1.5. Nios® II-based Sequencer PHY Manager
1.7.1.6. Nios® II-based Sequencer Data Manager
1.7.1.7. Nios® II-based Sequencer Tracking Manager
1.7.1.8. Nios® II-based Sequencer Processor
1.7.1.9. Nios® II-based Sequencer Calibration and Diagnostics
1.17.1. Calibration Overview
1.17.2. Calibration Stages
1.17.3. Memory Initialization
1.17.4. Stage 1: Read Calibration Part One—DQS Enable Calibration and DQ/DQS Centering
1.17.5. Stage 2: Write Calibration Part One
1.17.6. Stage 3: Write Calibration Part Two—DQ/DQS Centering
1.17.7. Stage 4: Read Calibration Part Two—Read Latency Minimization
1.17.8. Calibration Signals
1.17.9. Calibration Time
4.1. Features of the SDRAM Controller Subsystem
4.2. SDRAM Controller Subsystem Block Diagram
4.3. SDRAM Controller Memory Options
4.4. SDRAM Controller Subsystem Interfaces
4.5. Memory Controller Architecture
4.6. Functional Description of the SDRAM Controller Subsystem
4.7. SDRAM Power Management
4.8. DDR PHY
4.9. Clocks
4.10. Resets
4.11. Port Mappings
4.12. Initialization
4.13. SDRAM Controller Subsystem Programming Model
4.14. Debugging HPS SDRAM in the Preloader
4.15. SDRAM Controller Address Map and Register Definitions
4.16. Document Revision History
10.7.1. DDR2, DDR3, and LPDDR2 Resource Utilization in Arria V Devices
10.7.2. DDR2 and DDR3 Resource Utilization in Arria II GZ Devices
10.7.3. DDR2 and DDR3 Resource Utilization in Stratix III Devices
10.7.4. DDR2 and DDR3 Resource Utilization in Stratix IV Devices
10.7.5. DDR2 and DDR3 Resource Utilization in Arria V GZ and Stratix V Devices
10.7.6. QDR II and QDR II+ Resource Utilization in Arria V Devices
10.7.7. QDR II and QDR II+ Resource Utilization in Arria II GX Devices
10.7.8. QDR II and QDR II+ Resource Utilization in Arria II GZ, Arria V GZ, Stratix III, Stratix IV, and Stratix V Devices
10.7.9. RLDRAM II Resource Utilization in Arria® V Devices
10.7.10. RLDRAM II Resource Utilization in Arria® II GZ, Arria® V GZ, Stratix® III, Stratix® IV, and Stratix® V Devices
13.1. User Interface
13.2. Setup and Use
13.3. Operational Considerations
13.4. Troubleshooting
13.5. Debug Report for Arria V and Cyclone V SoC Devices
13.6. On-Chip Debug Port for UniPHY-based EMIF IP
13.7. Example Tcl Script for Running the Legacy EMIF Debug Toolkit
13.8. Document Revision History
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1.13.1. Bus Width and AFI Ratio
In cases where the AFI clock frequency is one-half or one-quarter of the memory clock frequency, the AFI data must be twice or four times as wide, respectively, as the corresponding memory data. The ratio between AFI clock and memory clock frequencies is referred to as the AFI ratio. (A half-rate AFI interface has an AFI ratio of 2, while a quarter-rate interface has an AFI ratio of 4.)
In general, the width of the AFI signal depends on the following three factors:
- The size of the equivalent signal on the memory interface. For example, if a[15:0] is a DDR3 address input and the AFI clock runs at the same speed as the memory interface, the equivalent afi_addr bus will be 16-bits wide.
- The data rate of the equivalent signal on the memory interface. For example, if d[7:0] is a double-data-rate QDR II input data bus and the AFI clock runs at the same speed as the memory interface, the equivalent afi_write_data bus will be 16-bits wide.
- The AFI ratio. For example, if cs_n is a single-bit DDR3 chip select input and the AFI clock runs at half the speed of the memory interface, the equivalent afi_cs_n bus will be 2-bits wide.
The following formula summarizes the three factors described above:
AFI_width = memory_width * signal_rate * AFI_RATE_RATIO
Note: The above formula is a general rule, but not all signals obey it. For definite signal-size information, refer to the specific table.