Commit Graph

8 Commits (8d388dd4f28debd0dd08c3d0cd74a5a06009dea3)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Laszlo Nagy eb40b42c88 axi_dmac: preparation work for reporting length of partial transfers
Length of partial transfers are stored in a queue for SW reads.
The presence of partial transfer is indicated by a status bit.

The reporting can be enabled by a control bit.

The progress of any transfer can be followed by a debug register.
2018-09-07 11:38:04 +03:00
Lars-Peter Clausen 859e3d2ed1 axi_dmac: Rework data store-and-forward buffer
Currently the DMAC uses a simple FIFO as the store-and-forward buffer. The
FIFO handshaking is beat based whereas the remainder of the DMAC is burst
based. This means that additional control signals have to be combined with
the FIFO handshaking signal to generate the external handshaking signals.

Re-work the store-and-forward buffer to utilize a BRAM that is subdivided
into N segments. Where N is the maximum number of bursts that can be stored
in the buffer and each segment has the size of the maximum burst length.
Each segment stores the data associated with one burst and even when the
burst is shorter than the maximum burst length the next burst will be
stored in the next segment.

The new store-and-forward buffer takes care of generating all the
handshaking signals. This means handshaking is generated in a central place
and does not have to be combined from multiple data-paths simplifying the
overall logic.

The new store-and-forward buffer also takes care of data width up- and
down-sizing in case that the source and sink modules have a different data
width. This tighter integration will allow future enhancements like using
asymmetric memory.

This re-work lays the foundation of future enhancements to the DMA like
support for un-aligned transfers and early transfer abort which would have
been much more difficult to implement with the previous architecture.

In addition it significantly reduces the resource utilization of the
store-and-forward buffer and allows for better timing due to reduced
combinatorial path lengths.

Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
2018-07-03 13:44:34 +02:00
Lars-Peter Clausen 02bc91ad3a axi_dmac: Rework transfer shutdown
The DMAC allows a transfer to be aborted. When a transfer is aborted the
DMAC shuts down as fast as possible while still completing any pending
transactions as required by the protocol specifications of the port. E.g.
for AXI-MM this means to complete all outstanding bursts.

Once the DMAC has entered an idle state a special synchronization signal is
send to all modules. This synchronization signal instructs them to flush
the pipeline and remove any stale data and metadata associated with the
aborted transfer. Once all data has been flushed the DMAC enters the
shutdown state and is ready for the next transfer.

In addition each module has a reset that resets the modules state and is
used at system startup to bring them into a consistent state.

Re-work the shutdown process to instead of flushing the pipeline re-use the
startup reset signal also for shutdown.

To manage the reset signal generation introduce the reset manager module.
It contains a state machine that will assert the reset signals in the
correct order and for the appropriate duration in case of a transfer
shutdown.

The reset signal is asserted in all domains until it has been asserted for
at least 4 clock cycles in the slowest domain. This ensures that the reset
signal is not de-asserted in the faster domains before the slower domains
have had a chance to process the reset signal.

In addition the reset signal is de-asserted in the opposite direction of
the data flow. This ensures that the data sink is ready to receive data
before the data source can start sending data. This simplifies the internal
handshaking.

This approach has multiple advantages.
 * Issuing a reset and removing all state takes less time than
   explicitly flushing one sample per clock cycle at a time.
 * It simplifies the logic in the faster clock domains at the expense of
   more complicated logic in the slower control clock domain. This allows
   for higher fMax on the data paths.
 * Less signals to synchronize from the control domain to the data domains

The implementation of the pause mode has also slightly changed. Pause is
now a simple disable of the data domains. When the transfer is resumed
after a pause the data domains are re-enabled and continue at their
previous state.

Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
2018-07-03 13:44:34 +02:00
Lars-Peter Clausen 80cfe2675d axi_dmac: Be more specific about debug register timing exceptions
The timing exceptions for the debug paths are currently a bit to broad and
can include paths that should not have an exception.

All the debug signals are coming from the i_request_arb instance, so
include that in the match to avoid false positives.

For most projects this wont have been a problem since there is usually a
fair amount of slack on the paths that were affected by this. But in
projects with high utilization this might result in undefined behavior.

Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de>
2018-06-13 10:12:22 +02:00
Laszlo Nagy c42ed7dd52 axi_dmac: removed harmful SDC constraint
The set_false_path constraint targeted to the *ram* cells of the dmac
matched several intra clock domain paths where the timing analysis got
ignored resulting in intermitent data integrity issues.
2018-04-17 16:34:41 +03:00
Rejeesh Kutty 901bcb2c06 dma- constraints modifications 2015-07-22 12:46:06 -04:00
Rejeesh Kutty aa24c442f5 a10gx- no-ddr 2015-06-01 11:00:01 -04:00
Rejeesh Kutty 2a0bdbebf2 altera- sdc 2015-06-01 10:59:58 -04:00