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What are FPGAs?

FPGAs are programmable digital logic chips. What that means is that you can program them to do almost any digital function. Here's the general workflow when working with FPGAs:

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You use a computer to describe a "logic function" that you want. You might draw a schematic, or create a text file describing the function, doesn't matter. You compile the "logic function" on your computer, using a software provided by the FPGA vendor. That creates a binary file that can be downloaded into the FPGA. You connect a cable from your computer to the FPGA, and download the binary file to the FPGA. That's it! Your FPGA behaves according to your "logic function".

Keep in mind that

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You can download FPGAs as many time as you want - no limit - with different functionalities every time if you want. If you make a mistake in your design, just fix your "logic function", re-compile and re-download it. No PCB, solder or component to change. The designs can run much faster than if you were to design a board with discrete components, since everything runs within the FPGA, on its silicon die. FPGAs lose their functionality when the power goes away (like RAM in a computer that loses its content). You have to re-download them when power goes back up to restore the functionality.

Who makes FPGAs?


There are (at least) 5 companies making FPGAs in the world. The first two (Xilinx and Altera) hold the bulk of the market.

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Xilinx invented the FPGA and is the biggest name in the FPGA world. Altera is the second FPGA heavyweight, also a well-known name. Lattice, Actel, Quicklogic and SiliconBlue are smaller players.

Xilinx

Xilinx has traditionally been the density and technology leader. Xilinx general philosophy is to provide all the features possible, at the cost of extra complexity.

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Biggest and most flexible (feature-full) devices. Complex architecture, powerful devices.

Altera

Altera philosophy is to provide the features that most people want while keeping their devices eas y to use.

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Lean and efficient devices architecture. Powerful devices.

FPGAs vs. CPLDs


Are FPGAs and CPLDs the same thing? No Both are programmable digital logic chips and are made by the same companies. But they have different characteristics.

FPGAs are "fine-grain" devices - that means that they contain a lot (up to 100000) of tiny blocks of logic with flip-flops. CPLDs are "coarse-grain" devices - they contain relatively few (a few 100's max) large blocks of logic with flip-flops. FPGAs are RAM based - they need to be "downloaded" (configured) at each power -up. CPLDs are EEPROM based - they are active at power-up (i.e. as long as they've been programmed at least once...). FPGAs have special routing resources to implement efficiently arithmetic functions (binary counters, adders, comparators...). CPLDs do not.

In general, FPGAs can contain large digital designs, while CPLDs can contain small designs only.

FPGAs vs. microcontrollers


Are FPGAs and microcontrollers the same thing? No

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FPGAs implement programmable logic elements running in a parallel fashion. Microcontrollers are based on a CPU architecture (executes a set of instructions in a sequential manner).

Microcontrollers have on-chip peripherals that also execute in parallel with their CPU. But they are still much less configurable than FPGAs.

How FPGAs work


Logic-cells
FPGAs are built from one basic "logic-cell", duplicated hundreds or thousands of time. A logic-cell is basically a small lookup table ("LUT"), a D-flipflop and a 2-to-1 mux (to bypass the flipflop if desired).

The LUT is like a small RAM that can implement any logic function. It has typically a few inputs (4 in the drawing above), so for example an AND gate with 3 inputs, whose result is then OR-ed with another input would fit in one 4-inputs LUT.

Interconnect
Each logic-cell can be connected to other logic-cells through interconnect resources (wires/muxes placed around the logic-cells). Each cell can do little, but with lots of them connected together, complex logic functions can be created.

IO-cells
The interconnect wires also go to the boundary of the device where I/O cells are implemented and connected to the pins of the FPGAs.

Dedicated routing/carry chains


In addition to general-purpose interconnect resources, FPGAs have fast dedicated lines in between neighboring logic cells. The most common type of fast dedicated lines are "carry chains". Carry

chains allow creating arithmetic functions (like counters and adders) efficiently (low logic usage & high operating speed).

Older programmable technologies (PAL/CPLD) don't have carry chains and so are quickly limited when arithmetic operations are required.

Internal RAM
In addition to logic, all new FPGAs have dedicated blocks of static RAM distributed among and controlled by the logic elements.

Internal RAM operation


There are many parameters affecting RAM operation. The main parameter is the number of agents that can access the RAM simultaneously.

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"single-port" RAMs: only one agent can read/write the RAM. "dual-port" or "quad-port" RAMs: 2 or 4 agents can read/write. Great to get data across clock domains (each agent can use a different clock).

Here's a simplified drawing of a dual-port RAM.

To figure out how many agents are available, count the number of separate address buses going to the RAM. Each agent has a dedicated address bus. Each agent has also a read and a write data bus. Writing to the RAM is usually done synchronously. Reading is usually done synchronously but can sometimes be done asynchronously.

Blockram vs. Distributed RAM


Now there are two types of internal RAMs in an FPGA: blockrams and distributed RAMs. The size of the RAM needed usually determines which type is used.

The big RAM blocks are blockrams, which are located in dedicated areas in the FPGA. Each FPGA has a limited number of these, and if you don't use them, you loose them (they cannot be used for anything but RAM). The small RAM blocks are either in smaller blockrams (Altera does that), or in "distributed RAM" (Xilinx does that). Distributed RAM allows using the FPGA logic-cells as tiny RAMs which provide a very flexible RAM distribution in an FPGA, but isn't efficient in term of area (a logic-cell can actually hold very little RAM). Altera prefers building different size blockrams around the device (more area efficient, but less flexible). Which one is better for you depends on your FPGA application.

FPGA pins
FPGAs tend to have lots of pins... So to make it a little simpler, let's put them them into two bins: "user pins" and "dedicated pins".

User pins
The user pins are called "IOs", or "I/Os", or "user I/Os", or "user IOs", or "IO pins", or ... you get the idea. IO stands for "input-output".

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You usually have total control over user IOs. They can be programmed to be inputs, outputs, or bi-directional (i.e. with tri-statable buffers). Each IO pin is connected to an "IO cell" inside the FPGA. The "IO cells" are powered by the VCCIO pins (IO power pins) - more details below.

Dedicated pins
The "dedicated pins" are hard-coded to a specific function. They fall into the three following subcategories.

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Power pins. Configuration pins: used to "download" the FPGA. Dedicated inputs, or clock pins: these are able to drive large nets inside the FPGA, suitable for clocks or signals with large fan-outs.

The power pins fall into two categories: "core voltage" and "IO voltage".

The core voltage is named "VCC" for Xilinx and "VCCINT" for Altera. It is fixed (set by the model of FPGA that you are using). It is used to power the logic gates and flipflops inside the FPGA. The voltage was 5V for older FPGA generations, and is coming down as new generations come (3.3V, 2.5V, 1.8V, 1.5V, 1.2V and even lower for the latest devices). The IO voltage is named "VCCO" for Xilinx and "VCCIO" for Altera. It is used to power the I/O blocks (= pins) of the FPGA. That voltage should match what the other devices connected to the FPGA expect.

An FPGA has many VCCIO pins that may be all powered by the same voltage. But new generations of FPGAs have a concept of "user IO banks": the IOs are split into groups, each having its own VCCIO pins. That allows using the FPGA as a voltage translator device, useful for example if one part of your board works with 3.3V logic, and another with 2.5V.

Clocks and Global lines


An FPGA design is usually "synchronous". Simply put, that means that the design is clock based each clock rising edge allows the D-flipflops to take a new state. In a synchronous design, a single clock may drive a lot of flipflops simultaneously. That can cause timing and electrical problems inside the FPGA. To get that working properly, FPGA manufacturers provide special internal wires called "global routing" or "global lines". They allow distributing the clock signal all over the FPGA with a low skew (i.e. the clock signal appears almost simultaneously to all the flipflops). When you feed a clock signal to your FPGA, you shouldn't use any FPGA pin, but use a dedic ated input clock pin. Usually, only such pin has the ability to drive a global line. FPGA software are aware of these dedicated input pins, and will automatically assign clocks to them if given the choice.

Clock domains
An FPGA can use multiple clocks (using multiple global lines and dedicated input pins). Each clock forms a "clock domain" inside the FPGA.

Flipflops and combinatorial logic in each clock domain


For each flipflop inside the FPGA, its clock domain is easy to determine. Just look at the flipflop clock input. But what about the combinatorial logic that sits in between flipflops?

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If there is some combinatorial logic in between "same clock domain" flipflops, the logic is said to be part of the clock domain too. If there is some combinatorial logic in between "different clock domains" flipflops, the logic is not owned by any clock domain. But in a typical FPGA design, there is no such logic; the only paths from different clock domains are synchronizers.

Clock domain speeds


For each clock domain, the FPGA software will analyze all flop-to-flop paths and give you a report with the maximum allowed frequencies. In the general case, only the paths from within each clock domains are analyzed. The synchronizer paths (from different clock domains) usually d on't matter and are not analyzed. One clock domain may work at 10MHz, while another may work at 100MHz. As long as each clock uses a global line, and you use clock speeds that are lower than the maximums reported by the software, you don't have to worry about internal timing issues, the design is guaranteed to work internally timing-wise. There may still be some timing issues from the FPGA input and output pins though. The software will give you a report about that. See also the next section.

Signals between clock domains


If you need to send some information across different clock domains, special considerations need to apply. In the general case, if your clocks have no relationship with one another, you cannot use a signal generated from one clock domain into another as-is. Doing so would violate setup and hold flipflop timings (in the destination clock domain), and cause metastability. Crossing clock domains requires special techniques, like the use of synchronizers (that's simple), or FIFOs (that's more complicated). See the fpga4fun's Crossing clock domains project to get some practical ideas, or these external links here, here and here.

FPGA download cables


FPGA vendors provide many ways to "configure" (i.e. download) their devices. One way is using a cable that connects from your PC to the FPGA board. The most popular cables connect to your PC's parallel or USB interface. These cables are sometimes called "JTAG cables" (because they often connect to the JTAG pins of an FPGA).

FPGA cables are vendor specific


The FPGA configuration interface from all the FPGA vendors are very much alike. That doesn't prevent each vendor to have their own proprietary connectors and cables.

The complete list of Altera cables can be found here. o The most popular one is the USB-Blaster. o Altera parallel cable are the ByteBlasterMV and ByteBlaster II.

The complete list of Xilinx cables can be found here. o The most popular one is the Platform Cable USB (and its PDF). o Xilinx parallel cable is called Parallel cable III. See also the cables Hardware user guide and the Parallel Cables page.

About parallel cables: a parallel cable connects to your PC's parallel (printer) port. It buffers a few pins of the PC parallel interface, and connects to the target board using a flat cable or flying leads. The parallel cable is an active device and needs power. It is usually powered from the target FPGA board. FPGA vendors sometimes provide the schematic of the cable, which is valuable if you want to build a cable yourself.

FPGA configuration
An FPGA can be into 2 states: "configuration mode" or "user mode". When the FPGA wakes up after power-up, it is in configuration mode, sitting idle with all its outputs inactive. You need to configure it. Configuring an FPGA means downloading a stream of 0's and 1's into it through some special pins. Once the FPGA is configured, it goes into "user-mode" and becomes active, performing accordingly to your programmed "logic function". There are 3 classical ways to configure your FPGA:

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You use a cable from your PC to the FPGA, and run a software on your PC to send data through the cable. You use a microcontroller on your board, with an adequate firmware to send data to the FPGA. You use a "boot-PROM" on your board, connected to the FPGA, that configures the FPGA automatically at power-up (FPGA vendors have such special boot-PROMs in their catalogs)

During development, the first method is the easiest and quickest. Once your FPGA design works, you probably don't need the PC anymore, so the other 2 methods come in use. Configuration works in a surprisingly identical way between Xilinx and Altera devices. The differences is mostly in the naming (pin names and modes of operation are na med differently), but the functionality provided is similar. Most FPGAs can be be configured in multiple ways, using either:

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The JTAG interface. The "synchronous serial" interface.

FPGA configuration can quickly become a complex subject, so you might wan to skip this section, t especially if you intend to use an already-made FPGA development board. Development boards usually come with a special cable that you can use to configure the FPGA from your PC with no knowledge of the underlying interface. But if you want to learn a little more, read-on.

The JTAG interface (or JTAG "port")


JTAG was originally designed for test and manufacturing purposes (as electronic boards became more and more compact, testing that a board was "good" became more and more difficult).

JTAG primary purpose is to allow a computer to take control of the state of all the device pins on a board. In turn, this allows all device-to-device combinations on the board to be tested. Standard JTAG commands can be used for this purpose. FPGAs are JTAG-aware and so all the FPGA IO pins can be controlled from the JTAG interface. FPGAs add the ability to be configured through JTAG (using proprietary JTAG commands).

How JTAG works


JTAG consists of 4 signals: TDI, TDO, TMS and TCK. A fifth pin, TRST, is optional. A single JTAG port can connect to one or multiple devices (as long as they are all JTAG-aware parts). With multiple devices, you create what is called a "JTAG chain". The TMS and TCK are tied to all the devices directly, but the TDI and TDO form a chain: TDO from one device goes to TDI of the next one in the chain. The master controlling the chain (a computer usually) closes the chain. TCK is the clock, TMS is used to send commands to the devices, and TDI/TDO are used to send and receive data. Each device in the chain has an ID, so the computer controlling the JTAG chain can figure out which devices are present. For more info, check the JTAG project.

The "synchronous serial" interface


It is a simple data/clock interface. It is synchronous and you provide one bit at a time to the FPGA. Here's a description of the 5 most important pins of this interface: Xilinx pin name data clk

Altera pin Direction name data0 dclk

Pin function

input to the configuration data bit FPGA input to the configuration clock, the configuration data bit is shifted in the FPGA FPGA at the clock rising-edge When asserted (i.e. when it goes low - this is an active low pin), input to the the FPGA is reset-ed and looses its configuration. If the FPGA was in user-mode, it stops operation immediately, and all IOs FPGA go back into tri-state mode. This pin indicates when the FPGA is ready to start the configuration process, soon after prog_b is de-asserted. It is output from useful in combination with prob_b because it takes a few milliseconds for the FPGA is get into a "clean state of mind", the FPGA once prog_b is de-asserted, after which pumping configuration data can actually start. output from When high, indicates that the FPGA is configured (in userthe FPGA mode).

prog_b

nConfig

init_b

nStatus

done

ConfDone

Note: the init_b and done pins are actually open-collector pins, so pull-up resistors are required on these. Also if multiple FPGAs are to be configured, these pins are usually connected together on all FPGAs, so that all the FPGAs switch into "user-mode" together. There is many more details, so for a complete description, check your FPGA datasheet.

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