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Annapolis Wildstar FPGA Board

Annapolis Wildstar FPGA Board. Charles Ross Monica Chawathe. Wildstar Board. Starfire Board. WildStar Board (Simplified). 2M. 2M. 2M. 2M. 1M. 1M. Virtex 2000E “1”. Virtex 2000E “0”. Virtex 2000E “2”. Host. 1M. 1M. 2M. 2M. 2M. 2M. LAD Bus.

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Annapolis Wildstar FPGA Board

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  1. Annapolis Wildstar FPGA Board Charles Ross Monica Chawathe

  2. Wildstar Board

  3. Starfire Board

  4. WildStar Board (Simplified) 2M 2M 2M 2M 1M 1M Virtex 2000E “1” Virtex 2000E “0” Virtex 2000E “2” Host 1M 1M 2M 2M 2M 2M LAD Bus 3 Virtex 2000E FPGAs, 12 Memories (20 MB)

  5. Host LAD Bus

  6. StarFire Board (Simplified) 1M 1M 1M Virtex 1000 “1” Host 1M 1M 1M LAD Bus 1 Virtex 1000 FPGA, 6 Memories (6 MB)

  7. Memory Layout • Local • Always 32-bit words • Two on PE 1 • Two on PE 2 • Mezzanine • 32 or 64, depending on source (PEx / PE0) • Both address and word size • 4 between PE 1 & 0 • 4 between PE 2 & 0 • Latency: 4 cycles

  8. Mezzanine Memory • 32 vs 64 (Same memory) • Switch Modes • 00 Straight • 01 Crossed • 10 Lo Thru • 11 Hi Thru Mem Mem 64 32 PEx PE0

  9. PEx (1 and 2) Right Local Right Mezz STUFF Right Left Left Local Left Mezz LAD

  10. PE0 PE1 Right Mezz PE2 Right Mezz STUFF Right Left PE1 Left Mezz PE2 Left Mezz LAD

  11. Clocks – 4 of them!? • K, M, P, U • KClock LAD Transactions (K?) • MClock Memory Transactions • PClock Processing Clock • UClock User Clock • Okay, but why? What are they?

  12. KClock – LAD • PE  Host • 33MHz or 66MHz • 33MHz – Easy to Place and Route • 66MHz – 2X Host Bandwidth • Host and Chip must agree!! • Set in VHDL and Host Code • Clock is actually based on PCI Clock • Varies per host • Ours is approx. 33.23MHz / 66.46MHz • Asynchronous to all other clocks

  13. MClock – Memory • Speed of Memory IO • Both Local & Mezzanine • User Selectable • 25MHz – 133MHz Wildstar • 25MHz – 100MHz Starfire

  14. PClock – Processing • Based on MClock • Divisor between 1-16 • Slower than MClock (Or Equal) • Can “Speed up” Memory I/O • Decoupling may allow different Speeds • Increase M, increase Divisor • Ex: Slow Component in Application (30MHz) • M=30Mhz & Divisor = 1  P=30MHz • M=60Mhz & Divisor = 2  P=30MHz • 2 Memory Accesses per Clock

  15. PClock – Processing (More) • Optional • We normally don’t use it for ease • MClock is used Directly • Less Logic than “P=M/1” • No need to jump Clock Boundaries • Chip must either • Not care what the ratio is • Know at compile what ratio will be

  16. UClock – User Clock • User Selectable • 0.32MHz – 133MHz Wildstar • 0.32MHz – 100MHz Starfire • We have never used it • 3 is plenty, isn't it? • Asynchronous to all other clocks

  17. Hardware Components • Roll your own • Manual LAD addressing (33/66 Differ) • Manual Memory use Contention • Manual EVERYTHING! • CAN be very fast ~140 MHz • Annapolis Supplied Components • MUCH Easier • Slower (Approx. 40-60 MHz)

  18. LAD Bus • 33MHz / 66MHz Selectable • Changes the communication protocol • Amt of Latency, etc.. • Component Addressing scheme • 0x0000-0x7FFF – Component Within PE • Higher Bits Address Board and PE • Ignore them • unless you “roll your own” LAD code

  19. LAD Bus (More) • The Addressing of the LAD bus • A lot like subnet masks in IP Networking • MASK • Which bits address the component • Which bits are intra-component • BASE • Where does this component begin • ADDR&MASK==BASE “Are you talkin’ to ME?” • ADDR&(~MASK) = “What address in me?” • Examples: • B: 0x4800 M:0x7F00  0x4800 ~ 0x48FF • B: 0x3200 M:0x7C00  0x3200 ~ 0x35FF

  20. Inside the Chips Your Application Some Memory Mem Mux . . . . . . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge RegFile Reset Some Memory Mem Mux Clocks . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge LAD Mux Annapolis Provided User Provided LAD

  21. LAD-MUX Your Application Some Memory Mem Mux . . . . . . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge RegFile Reset Some Memory Mem Mux Clocks . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge LAD Mux LAD

  22. LAD-MUX • Gives LAD access to components • Bridges gap between IO Pins and “Logical” LAD • Handles Protocols for you • 66 and 33 • ONE per chip

  23. Reset Your Application Some Memory Mem Mux . . . . . . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge RegFile Reset Some Memory Mem Mux Clocks . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge LAD Mux LAD

  24. Reset • Allows Host to RESET the Chip • Causes clocks to destabilize momentarily • Causes chip to return to known init state • (If you write your VHDL right) • All Annapolis components are written right

  25. Clocks Your Application Some Memory Mem Mux . . . . . . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge RegFile Reset Some Memory Mem Mux Clocks . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge LAD Mux LAD

  26. Clocks • Provides user access to • All 4 Clocks (or Clock x2) • When clocks are stable • “DLL locked” Signals • Clocks on a Virtex use DLLs • Delay-Locked Loop • not Dynamic Link Library • Shame on you windows users!

  27. Register File Your Application Some Memory Mem Mux . . . . . . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge RegFile Reset Some Memory Mem Mux Clocks . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge LAD Mux LAD

  28. Register File • Provides host access to 1-D array of 32-bit registers • Size must be a power of 2 • Can be used for: • Ready – “The host says I can go now” • Done – “Hey Host, I am done!” • Small 32-bit IO – “The answer is 42!” • Run time parameters – “Threshold is 63”

  29. LAD to Mem Bridge Your Application Some Memory Mem Mux . . . . . . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge RegFile Reset Some Memory Mem Mux Clocks . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge LAD Mux LAD

  30. LAD to Mem Bridge • Provides host with access to the memories • Mezzanine or Local Memories • 2 Kinds, 32 and 64 • Transfers happen in bursts • 256 DWORDS for 32 bit memories • 512 DWORDS for 64 bit memories • (its all transparent to the user though)

  31. Memory-Mux Your Application Some Memory Mem Mux . . . . . . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge RegFile Reset Some Memory Mem Mux Clocks . . . . . LAD-Mem Bridge LAD Mux LAD

  32. Memory-Mux • Provide multiple clients with access to the memories • Arbitrates between clients • Priority • Number of the client decides priority • Maximum utilization • Might starve some clients • Fair • Round Robin • Wastes some cycles • Each Client gets 1/n

  33. Memory Access • Address of DWORD or QWORD • Data_Out To Memory • Data_In From Memory • Write Direction of Request • Request “I want memory” • Acknowledge “Okay!” • Data_Valid 4/5 Cycle Delayed Ack (See Bugs Later) • 32 bit Memories Only • Low/High Enable “This half is useful” • 64 bit Memories Only • High/Low_Data_Valid 4/5 Cycle Delayed (Ack & Low/High Enable) • 64 bit Memories Only

  34. 32-bit Memory Read

  35. 64-bit Memory Read

  36. 32-bit Memory Write

  37. 64-bit Memory Write

  38. Others - Useful • RAM Blocks • Host and Client Access to on-chip memories • 256 32-bit words • Interrupts to host • Systolic Buses • 2 36-bit busses between PE1 and PE2 • top and bottom • Bi-directional • Tri-state • PE0 Standard Buses • 2 2-bit busses between PE0 and Pex • Bi-directional • Tri-state

  39. Others – Useless • LED (there are 2 LEDs per Chip) • Red and Green • Cant see them… • IO Card • 114 bit IO • We don’t have one • Test Pins • 18 bits • No testing our board, please! =)

  40. Software API • Annapolis Supplied • Driver Functions • Open, Close, Set Clocks, DMA, Read, Write, Download Configurations, Interrupt, Readback, etc.. • Convenience Functions • Interface code to the“Lad to Memory Bridges”

  41. Open/Close • Grabs the board exclusively • Uses kernel mutex • CAN do it in shared mode, but DONT • Can set LAD Speed as well • See “Bugs” Later

  42. Chip Configuration • Programs a PE from a memory array containing the bitstream • x86 files • Can de-program as well • Why bother? • As long as everyone “Plays nice” • BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU PROGRAM! • if you program a PE with a bitstream that is corrupted, or not for the correct chip, or mangled in some way you can release the magic smoke from the chips! • $40,000 board!

  43. Set Clock Speeds • UClock speed • MClock speed • and PClock divisor

  44. Register IO • Reads/Writes to the LAD Address space • to communicate with anything plugged into a LAD MUX • Reset • Register Files • Etc.

  45. Memory IO • for LAD to MEM Bridges • Abstracts the IO Bursts, addressing, etc. • Create Memory Objects • Read/Write/Copy/Set • Release

  46. Others You Wont Need • Display (4 Char LCD on the board) • Interrupts • Temperature / Power • Readback / Singleshot • DMA • Versions / Hardware Config • Etc..

  47. Tools • You write Host code (in c) • compile with gcc, etc. • Link in the libraries and such • You write Chip code (in VHDL) • Simulate and Verify with ModelSim • Synthesize with Synplify • Linux / Solaris / WinNT • Place and Route with Xilinx foundation tools • WinNT / Linux (with wine)

  48. ModelSim • VHDL Simulation tool • Annapolis provides • Host simulation components • VHDL Description of the WHOLE board • LAD • Memories (Local & Mezzanine) • Busses • Etc • You provide • VHDL to run inside the chip (May contain Annapolis components as well) • Talk to me if you want to use ModelSim to debug!

  49. Synplify • Synplicity Inc. • Converts VHDL (or Verilog) into an EDIF • EDIF = description of your program in terms of virtex parts (4 input LUTs, FlipFlops, Ramblocks, Etc) • Fast • 1-30 minutes

  50. Place and Route • Maps to lower level components • Lays them out • Routes between them • Slow • 10 minutes – 2 days • Provides a bitstream (.bit file) • directly converted to .x86 for config

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