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1. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series General-Purpose I/O Overview
2. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series GPIO-B Banks
3. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series HPS I/O Banks
4. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series SDM I/O Banks
5. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series I/O Troubleshooting Guidelines
6. GPIO Intel® FPGA IP
7. Programmable I/O Features Description
8. Documentation Related to the Intel Agilex® 7 General-Purpose I/O User Guide: M-Series
9. Document Revision History for the Intel Agilex® 7 General-Purpose I/O User Guide: M-Series
2.5.1. I/O Standard Placement Restrictions for True Differential I/Os
2.5.2. VREF Sources and Input Standards Grouping
2.5.3. GPIO-B Pin Restrictions for External Memory Interfaces
2.5.4. RZQ Pin Requirement
2.5.5. I/O Standards Implementation Based on VCCIO_PIO Voltages
2.5.6. I/O Standard Selection and I/O Bank Supply Compatibility Check
2.5.7. Simultaneous Switching Noise
2.5.8. HPS Shared I/O Requirements
2.5.9. Clocking Requirements
2.5.10. SDM Shared I/O Requirements
2.5.11. Unused Pins
2.5.12. Voltage Setting for Unused GPIO-B Banks
2.5.13. GPIO-B Pins During Power Sequencing
2.5.14. Drive Strength Requirement for GPIO-B Input Pins
2.5.15. Maximum DC Current Restrictions
2.5.16. 1.05 V, 1.1 V, or 1.2 V I/O Interface Voltage Level Compatibility
2.5.17. Connection to True Differential Signaling Input Buffers During Device Reconfiguration
2.5.18. LVSTL700 I/O Standards Differential Pin Pair Requirements
2.5.19. Implementing a Pseudo Open Drain
2.5.20. Allowed Duration for Using RT OCT
2.5.21. Single-Ended Strobe Signal Differential Pin Pair Restriction
6.1. Release Information for GPIO Intel® FPGA IP
6.2. Generating the GPIO Intel® FPGA IP
6.3. GPIO Intel® FPGA IP Parameter Settings
6.4. GPIO Intel® FPGA IP Interface Signals
6.5. GPIO Intel® FPGA IP Architecture
6.6. Verifying Resource Utilization and Design Performance
6.7. GPIO Intel® FPGA IP Timing
6.8. GPIO Intel® FPGA IP Design Examples
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6.7.4. Timing Closure Guidelines
For the GPIO input registers, the input I/O transfer is likely to fail the hold time if you do not set the input delay chain. This failure is caused by the clock delay being larger than the data delay.
However, if the I/O PLL drives the clocks of the GPIO input registers (simple register or DDIO mode), you can set the compensation mode to source synchronous mode. The Fitter automatically configures the I/O PLL to improve the setup and hold slack for the input I/O timing analysis.
For the GPIO output and output enable registers, you can add delay to the output data and clock using the output and output enable delay chains.
- If you observe setup time violation, you can increase the output clock delay chain setting.
- If you observe hold time violation, you can increase the output data delay chain setting.