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1. About the External Memory Interfaces Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA IP
2. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Introduction
3. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Product Architecture
4. Intel Agilex 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – End-User Signals
5. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Simulating Memory IP
6. Intel Agilex 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – DDR4 Support
7. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – DDR5 Support
8. Intel Agilex 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – LPDDR5 Support
9. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Timing Closure
10. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Controller Optimization
11. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP – Debugging
12. Document Revision History for External Memory Interfaces Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA IP User Guide
3.1.1. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O Subsystem
3.1.2. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O SSM
3.1.3. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O Bank
3.1.4. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: I/O Lane
3.1.5. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: Input DQS Clock Tree
3.1.6. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: PHY Clock Tree
3.1.7. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: PLL Reference Clock Networks
3.1.8. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Architecture: Clock Phase Alignment
3.1.9. User Clock in Different Core Access Modes
6.2.4.1. Address and Command Pin Placement for DDR4
6.2.4.2. DDR4 Data Width Mapping
6.2.4.3. General Guidelines - DDR4
6.2.4.4. x4 DIMM Implementation
6.2.4.5. Specific Pin Connection Requirements
6.2.4.6. Command and Address Signals
6.2.4.7. Clock Signals
6.2.4.8. Data, Data Strobes, DM/DBI, and Optional ECC Signals
6.3.5.1. Single Rank x 8 Discrete (Component) Topology
6.3.5.2. Single Rank x 16 Discrete (Component) Topology
6.3.5.3. ADDR/CMD Reference Voltage/RESET Signal Routing Guidelines for Single Rank x 8 and Single Rank x 16 Discrete (Component) Topologies
6.3.5.4. Skew Matching Guidelines for DDR4 Discrete Configurations
6.3.5.5. Power Delivery Recommendations for DDR4 Discrete Configurations
6.3.5.6. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Pin Swapping Guidelines
7.2.1. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP Interface Pins
7.2.2. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP Resources
7.2.3. Pin Guidelines for Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA EMIF IP
7.2.4. Pin Placements for Intel Agilex 7 M-Series FPGA DDR5 EMIF IP
7.2.5. Intel Agilex® 7 M-Series EMIF Pin Swapping Guidelines
7.3.1. PCB Stack-up and Design Considerations
7.3.2. General Design Considerations
7.3.3. DDR Differential Signals Routing
7.3.4. Ground Plane and Return Path
7.3.5. RDIMM, UDIMM, and SODIMM Break-in Layout Guidelines
7.3.6. DRAM Break-in Layout Guidelines
7.3.7. DDR5 PCB Layout Guidelines
7.3.8. DDR5 Simulation Strategy
7.3.7.1. DDR5 Discrete Component/Memory Down Topology: up to 40-Bit Interface (1 Rank x8 or x16, 2 Rank x8 or x16)
7.3.7.2. Routing Guidelines for DDR5 Memory Down: 1 Rank or 2 Rank (x8 bit or x16 bit) Configurations
7.3.7.3. Routing Guidelines for DDR5 RDIMM, UDIMM, and SODIMM Configurations
7.3.7.4. Example of a DDR5 layout on Intel FPGA Platform Board
11.1. Interface Configuration Performance Issues
11.2. Functional Issue Evaluation
11.3. Timing Issue Characteristics
11.4. Verifying Memory IP Using the Signal Tap Logic Analyzer
11.5. Generating Traffic with the Test Engine IP
11.6. Guidelines for Developing HDL for Traffic Generator
11.7. Debugging with the External Memory Interface Debug Toolkit
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6.2.1.1. Estimating Pin Requirements
You should use the Intel® Quartus® Prime software for final pin fitting. However, you can estimate whether you have enough pins for your memory interface by performing the following steps:
- Determine how many read/write data pins are associated per data strobe or clock pair.
- Calculate the number of other memory interface pins needed, including any other clocks (write clock or memory system clock), address, command, and RZQ. Refer to the External Memory Interface Pin Table to determine necessary Address/Command/Clock pins based on your desired configuration.
- Calculate the total number of I/O banks required to implement the memory interface, given that an I/O bank supports up to 96 pins.
You should test the proposed pin-outs with the rest of your design in the Intel® Quartus® Prime software (with the correct I/O standard and OCT connections) before finalizing the pin-outs. There can be interactions between modules that are illegal in the Intel® Quartus® Prime software that you might not know about unless you compile the design and use the Intel® Quartus® Prime Pin Planner.