1 / 38

Configurations and Considerations for DDR Memory

Configurations and Considerations for DDR Memory. Bill Gervasi Chairman, JEDEC Memory Parametrics. Agenda. DDR Market Takes Off! DDR Configurations The JEDEC Standards Process DIMMs & SO-DIMMs Making the Most of DDR Technology Previews of Coming Attractions. A Look at the DDR Market.

zanna
Download Presentation

Configurations and Considerations for DDR Memory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Configurations and Considerations for DDR Memory Bill Gervasi Chairman, JEDEC Memory Parametrics

  2. Agenda • DDR Market Takes Off! • DDR Configurations • The JEDEC Standards Process • DIMMs & SO-DIMMs • Making the Most of DDR Technology • Previews of Coming Attractions

  3. A Look at the DDR Market

  4. DDR Market Takes Off! Servers Workstations PC Segment 2 PC Segment 1 PC Segment 0 Mobile Graphics DDR PC133 PC133 DDR Rambus DDR PC133 PC133 DDR DDR PC133 PC100 DDR PC133 DDR 1H00 2H00 1H01 2H01

  5. DDR Configurations

  6. DDR Configurations DIMM TSOP-II TQFP SO-DIMM

  7. DDR Naming Conventions • Chips have adopted “DDR” naming • Describes data rate per pin in MHz • DDR-266A is the fastest bin: 266 MHz data rate at CL 2.0 • DDR-266B is the bulk bin: 266 MHz data rate at CL 2.5 • DDR-200 is the catchall bin: 200 MHz data rate at any CL • Modules retain the “PC” name • Describes data rate per module in MB/s • PC-2100 is the fastest bin: 2.1 GB/s on a 64 bit bus • PC-1600 is the catchall bin: 1.6 GB/s on a 64 bit bus • Small Systems specs retain “SS” name • SS-333 and SS-400 for 333 & 400 MHz data rates per pin

  8. DDR Configurations, Chips • 66 pin TSOP-II • Used for DDR-266 and DDR-200 • Inexpensive high volume plastic package • Compatible pinout for X4, X8, X16 • 64Mb to 512Mb; 1Gb in development • 100 pin TQFP • Used for SS-333 and SS-400 • Inexpensive high volume plastic package • X32 configuration • 64Mb and 128Mb

  9. DDR Configurations, Modules • Desktop & Server 184 pins, 5.25” long X64 or X72 (ECC) 64MB to 2GB Mobile & Small Form FactorÞ • 200 pins, 2.7” long • X64 or X72 (ECC) • 32MB to 512MB

  10. JEDEC Standards Process

  11. The JEDEC Standards Process • JEDEC is a non-profit standards organization • Suppliers & users and even competitors • Working together to expand the market

  12. How standards get done • Any company presents a market need • Interested companies form a Task Group • “Design assumptions” from end users • TG members take assignments • TG reviews simulations, promotes results: • Rev 0.1 = Straw man proposal • Rev 0.2 = TG agreement on approach • Rev 0.3 = Passes simulation • Rev 0.5 = Passes in hardware tester • Rev 1.0 = Passes in end user hardware

  13. Task Group to Committee • Task Group regularly reports to Committee • Ballot presented to Committee for vote • Votes addressed & suggestions gathered • Reballoted to achieve consensus • JEDEC publishes the results • Full reference design specification • Application notes from design assumptions • Free module gerbers for industry use • TG reforms as needed for ECOs, upgrades

  14. Standards Process in Action:The DDR SO-DIMM

  15. DDR SO-DIMM Standardization • Initial concept by Hitachi and Transmeta • Task Group formed: ALi, AMD, AMI2, AMP, ATP, Celestica, Hitachi, Hyundai, IBM, InterWorks, Kentron, Melco, Micron, Molex, PNY, Samsung, SiQual, Toshiba, Transmeta, Via • Tasks divided: • AMP: socket definition • Hitachi: x16 chips, two bank • Samsung: x8 chips, one bank • Melco: x16 chips, one bank; x64 or x72 bus

  16. DDR SO-DIMM Sockets Layout UserConfiguration End UserAccess Height

  17. DDR SO-DIMM Assumptions Flexible model accounts for real system layouts SeriesTermination ParallelTermination Data Memory Controller Address& Control SO-DIMM 1 SO-DIMM 0 Data LCRS LRSD0 LD1RT LD0D1 System LCRS LRSD0 LD0D1 LD1RT Base Assumption 60-90mm 10-15mm 10-15mm 10-15mm

  18. 255% DDR SO-DIMM Assumptions Full system model developed for each signal SO-DIMM 0 TL2 Socket SDRAM TL1 225% Memory Controller TL0 DQDQSDMCB SDRAM R/C A, 2 Banks 255% VTT LD0D1 LD1RT LRSD0 LCRS SO-DIMM 1 TL2 Socket SDRAM TL1 225% MotherboardTrace = 6010% TL0 DDR SO-DIMMTrace = 6010% SDRAM R/C A, 2 Banks

  19. DDR SO-DIMM Simulations Experimentation with layouts, termination

  20. DDR SO-DIMM Status • Task Group specification split into 4 sections • ¾ of ballots submitted, all passed in June • 4th section under vote nowFinal approval expected in September

  21. Standards Results:The JEDEC Modules

  22. DDR Unbuffered DIMM • Least expensive module • Limits number of loads supportable • Address bus hits all DDR SDRAMs • Fastest access time DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM Data Data Address Data Data

  23. DDR Registered DIMM • Doubles density of each module orhalves number of address buses needed • Address bus latched before going to DDR SDRAMs • Access time increased by one clock DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM Register Data Data Address Data Data

  24. When Size Matters DIMM 50% smaller SO-DIMM

  25. Raw Card #DRAMs ChipOrg BusWidth # Banks Notes A 8 X16 64 2 Highest density B 8 X8 64 1 Highest density C 4 X16 64 1 Lowest density C 5 X16 72 1 ECC support DDR SO-DIMM • Newest member of the DDR family • Four configurations, support 32MB to 512MB

  26. Butterfly SO-DIMMs • Perfect for notebook, especially thin & light! • Single access door to both SO-DIMMs • Also good for small form factor desktop PCs Motherboard SO-DIMM SOCKET CPU CPU SO-DIMM SOCKET

  27. Making the Most ofDDR Technology

  28. Serial Presence Detect (SPD) • Every DDR module contains an EEPROM • Contains parameters for the module • Speed and access time • Number and organization of chips • Special features such as fast random access • Programmed by module supplier • Systems use SPD to configure at boot time • Without SPD, systems must use the most conservative timings! SPD

  29. RelativePower Clocks ofLatency Active on PowerState* 100% 4% 12% 0 Inactive on 3 Active off 1 Inactive off 0.2% 4 * Not industry standard terms – simplified for brevity Sleep  0.4% 200 Power Management

  30. Using Power States Power (mW)

  31. Power: DDR vs SDR DDR-266 3X PC-100 1X PC-133 0.8X

  32. Previews ofComingAttractions

  33. Next: Small Packages FBGA • Smaller footprint • Lower inductance • Tighter layouts enabled

  34. Next: DDR FET Switched DIMM • Quadruples density of each module ordoubles number of DIMM slots • Address bus latched before going to DDR SDRAMs • Data bus sees a single load per slot DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM DDRSDRAM Register FET FET FET FET Data Data Address Data Data

  35. Next: DDR II • Work well under way on DDR II • Double the speed • Lower power • Migration path from DDR I • Same controller can use DDR I and DDR II • Compatible process technologies

  36. Summary

  37. Summary • DDR explosion has begun • Configurations for every application • TSOPs and TQFPs for point to point • Unbuffered & Registered DIMMs for desktops & servers • SO-DIMMs for mobile & small desktop • JEDEC is the industry working together

  38. DDR Memory of choice for the future

More Related