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Hall D Level 1 Trigger

Hall D Level 1 Trigger. Dave Doughty 1/10/2008 Hall D Collaboration Meeting. Outline. Intro to the Trigger Photon Energy (Tagger) Track Count Processing Subsystem Processors and Global Trigger Crate Global Trigger Processors Trigger Timing Conclusions. L1 Trigger – Current plans.

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Hall D Level 1 Trigger

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  1. Hall DLevel 1 Trigger Dave Doughty 1/10/2008 Hall D Collaboration Meeting

  2. Outline • Intro to the Trigger • Photon Energy (Tagger) • Track Count Processing • Subsystem Processors and Global Trigger Crate • Global Trigger Processors • Trigger Timing • Conclusions

  3. L1 Trigger – Current plans • Five separate subsystems • Barrel Calorimeter - compute energy • Forward Calorimeter - compute energy • Forward TOF - compute number of tracks • Start Counter - compute number of tracks (?) • Tagger – compute photon energy (useful at lower lum) • Each subsystem computes continuously • Goal - At speed of the FADC pipelines - 250 MHz • Global Trigger Processor “combines” all five subsystems • 4 level hierarchy: Board -> Crate -> Subsystem -> Global

  4. Level 1 Trigger Block Diagram -Fiber links- 12 Crates ENERGY SUM PROCESSOR SUM/TIME (8 INPUTS) GTP Select FCAL Energy, BCAL Energy, Photon Energy, AND Track Counts F(x) TRIGGER SUPERVISOR ----------------- CLOCK TRIGGER SYNC ROC CONTROL FADC -VXS- BCAL SUM -Fiber links- 12 Crates ENERGY SUM PROCESSOR SUM/TIME (8 INPUTS) -VXS- FADC FCAL SUM -Fiber links- 2 Crates * Longest Link * TOF TRACK COUNT ENERGY SUM PROCESSOR** SUM/TIME (8 INPUTS) ** Process Track Counts FADC -VXS- -Fiber links- 2 Crates TAGGER ENERGY FADC -VXS- -Fiber link- 1 Crates Signal distribution to Front End Crates (Fiber Links) START COUNTER TRACK COUNT FADC -VXS- PAIR SPECTROMETER FADC -VXS-

  5. The (VXS) Serial Backplane • Convert Board Data to serial data • 16 bits @250 MHz -> 4 Gbit/s • Link speed of 3.125 Gbps => data rate => 2.5 Gbps • Packet overhead also! • Multiple “lanes” likely necessary • But two lanes will work fine • With four lanes - redundancy for free! • Higher speed in the future will also help • Use VXS “Switch Fabric” • VXS has “familiarity advantage” of VME at JLAB

  6. VXS Crate

  7. VXS Serial Routing

  8. Tagger in the Trigger • broad-band focal plane hodoscope • 144 readout channels • short scint. rods • max rate/chan: 2x106(107) • focal plane microscope • 120 readout channels • 600 scint. fibers • max rate/chan: 2x105(106) photon beam exits from tagger inside vacuum, continues 70 m down to collimator cave and Hall D • hodoscope exit window is 1 mm Al • other walls of vacuum chamber are 1 cm Al • exposed side of electron exit channel is 5 mm Al

  9. Microscope scintillating fiber design • Design parameters • square scintillating fibers • size 2 mm x 2 mm x 20 mm • clear light guide readout • aligned along electron directionfor reduced background sensitivity • readout with silicon photomultipliers (SiPM devices) SiPM sensors clear light fibers scintillating fibers focal plane electron trajectory

  10. Microscope electronics • SiPM “bases” • Programmable constant fraction discriminators: 120 channels • High resolution tdc (F1TDC): 120 channels • Pulse height needed: FADC is a good choice: 120 channels • essential for setup • useful for monitoring performance • rates alone give incomplete information • USED TO PRODUCE TRIGGER! • Scalers counting on all channels: 120 channels • provides bias voltage regulation: • regulation range: 48 ± 8 V • regulation stability: 0.1 V • regulation control: 0.1 V steps • reasonable packing density: 600 channels on 20x103 cm2

  11. Fixed array electronics • Conventional 1” phototubes, bases • High voltage for phototubes: 144 channels • Timing needed: High resolution tdc (F1TDC): 144 channels • for measuring coherent bremsstrahlung spectrum • time is compared with pair spectrometer trigger • at low intensities (107) can run concurrently with experiment • at high intensities (108) only for special low-intensity runs • Pulse height needed: FADC may not be a good choice: 144 channels (YES IT IS – if you want to ever trigger on it!) • essential for setup • at high intensities, monitor spectrum in integrating mode • Scalers counting on all channels: 144 channels

  12. Tagger trigger electronics • TaggerOR • fast logical OR of 120 channels from the microscope • sent over fiber to GlueX trigger electronics • Too primitive! We can do better! • Select channels in microscope • Optionally include main hodoscope • Without any extra hardware!

  13. Microscope - “Board Tag Word” • For microscope, not interested in a “sum,” we want an energy “tag” (or two) • Have one crate of FADCs for the microscope • @16 Flash ADC channels/board -> 8 boards • Use “hit bit” on each FADC channel as energy tag! • 16 bits – every 4 ns! • These 16 bits are exactly like the 16 bit board sum produced by the FADC for the calorimeters, except for the interpretation! • For calorimeters - 16 bit “board sum” every 4 ns • For microscope – 16 bit “board tag word” every 4 ns • Board tag words from all boards sent to “crate tagger processor” • 120 bits into crate tagger (at 250 MHz)

  14. Microscope Photon Energy Tag • Use one “Switch Slot” for Photon Crate Trigger Processor • FADCs in payload slots • All “board tag words” sent serially to Photon Crate Energy Tagger • (Note that Photon Crate Trigger Processor is same hardware as Crate Energy Summer – both are now called Crate Trigger Processors) • Photon Crate Trigger Processor (CTP) produces a 120 bit composite energy tag word from all microscope channels • Can download an energy “mask” to Photon CTP • CTP board is loadable via TI board! • Address of two “highest” or “lowest” energy tag bits are sent to Tagger Subsystem Processor • Need 7 bits to encode 120 bits, with 16 bit word can encode 2 tag bits • The “rate conundrum”

  15. For Hodoscope – Duplicate the System? • With 144 channels need 8 bits to encode each energy tag. • Two hits still fit into one 16 bit word! • No new development! • Option to include in trigger (or use by itself)

  16. Track Processing – at Front End • Easy in principle - just add up discriminators • How many layers (are there multiple layers)? • Which disc setting (is there a separate for trigger?) • Programmable time window • At pipeline resolution of 250 MHz - 4 ns time stamp • Only one crate of electronics for TOF? • Use for Start Counter as well? • Create crate track count • Use VXS backplane for communication • Can send any data desired over backplane • Track CTP computes total track count in crate • Time stamped track count data sent to Track Subsystem Processor (TSP)

  17. From Crates to Global Processor • Must move crate data (energy, track counts, photon energy) to the global trigger processor crate. • Use four lanes of fiber optics!

  18. HFBR-7934 Fiber Module • - POP4 compliant Fiber Optic Module. Uses 12 fiber MTP/MPO, 50/125μm multi-mode. • 8 Used Fibers: 4 Tx, 4 Rx @ 3.125Gbps each for a total bandwidth of 12.5Gbps in each direction • Small footprint allows 8 modules to fit VME 6U slot • up to 150m range with 500Mhz-Km fiber, or up to 350m range with 2000Mhz-Km fiber • Interfaces directly with Xilinx/Altera gigabit transceivers on FPGA

  19. Crate Sum -> Energy Sum Processor

  20. The Global Trigger Crate • Global Trigger Crate has eight SubSystem Processors (SSPs) on one logical “Side” • Global Trigger Crate has eight Global Trigger Processors (GTPs) on other logical “Side” • SSPs are connected to the GTPs via a custom backplane • “VXS-Like” • 8 x 8 Fully Connected • Each SSP talks to each GTP via a four-lane Aurora Backplane Link • Each SSP sources eight four-lane links to the backplane • Each GTP sinks eight four-lane links from the backplane

  21. The Global Trigger Crate (logical view) VME/ VXS bcal ESPs fcal ESPs tof TSP strt TSP phot ESP Clk/ Trig In Trig Out GTP Array SSP Array

  22. The Global Trigger Crate (physical view) VME/ VXS bcal ESPs fcal ESPs tof TSP strt TSP phot ESP Clk/ Trig In Trig Out GTP Array GTP Array SSP Array

  23. Global Crate Backplane Layout • In Logical Layout 64 4-lane signals must be routed across center • In Physical Layout 32 4-lane signals must be routed across center • In “Normal” VXS 18 4-lane signals are routed to each of two center boards • Will route!

  24. A Similar but Smaller Backplane (Bustronic)

  25. Subsystem Processors (SSPs) • Each of the subsystem processors resides in Global Trigger Crate • All subsystem processors are same physical PC boards! • Each SSP can receive up to eight four-lane “crate data links” • Each SSP has multiple Xilinx FPGAs for receiving and processing data from crates • Some SSPs use two boards (because of crate count) • If so – both board “Partial Results” sent to global processor • Eight SSPs are needed: • Two for BCAL – Energy Subsystem Processor (ESP) • Two for FCAL – Energy Subsystem Processor (ESP) • One for TOF – Track Subsystem Processor (TSP) • One for Start Counter – Track Subsystem Processor (TSP) ???? • One for Tagger – Photon Energy Subsystem Processor • One spare! • Each subsystem processor sends time-stamped Subsystem Event Reports (SER) to all Global Trigger Processors

  26. Global Trigger Processors (GTPs) • Run at the same 250 MHz pipeline speed as the subsystems • Receive (via backplane) data from all subsystems • TTOF - Tracks Forward TOF • EFCal1 - Energy Forward Calorimeter (partial sum 1) • EFCal2 – Energy Forward Calorimeter (partial sum 2) • EBCal1 – Energy Barrel Calorimeter (Partial sum 1) • EBCal2 – Energy Barrel Calorimeter (Partial sum 2) • Tagger – Photon Energy • STRT – Track count in Start Counter ? • Adds partial sums (but can use independently) • Adjusts data to match time-stamps • Does “global trigger computation” • Z >= TFM*TTOF + EFM*EFCal + RM*((EFCal +1)/(EBCal + 1)) • Or something similar

  27. GTPs - II • Each GTP has multiple internal processors (FPGAs), each looking for one of four triggers • With eight GTPs allows 32 different triggers • Output to electronics is “Programmable Delay” after computed trigger event time • Produces a result with constant latency (relative to time-stamped data) • Simplifies pipeline “lookback” for front end electronics - it’s fixed • Interfaces with TS

  28. Trigger Timing • Board sum 64 ns • Transfer to crate sum board 512 ns • Crate sum 64 ns • Link to subsystem 512 ns • Subsystem trigger processing 256 ns • Transfer SER to GTP 512 ns • GTP 256 ns • Level 1 output to FEE 256 ns TOTAL = 2.432 mS - design FEE for 3.5 ms

  29. Conclusion – Where is Level 1? • In relatively good shape! • Thanks to electronics group here at JLAB • Have plans and/or proof of concept for most of system • Minimal number of boards to be developed (but of course more “software” versions) • Crate Trigger Processor (CTP – simple prototype done) • SubSystem Processor (SSP) • Global Trigger Processor (GTP) • Things we still need • Re-do of L1 simulation • Current simulation dates from 2001 • Chinese post-doc here at the lab • Track Count Processing

  30. SSP ->Energy Sum Processors (ESPs) • Used for both BCAL and FCAL • Logic of both ESPs is essentially same as crate sum • Each ESP uses data from all (up to eight) its crates • Matches time-stamps and adds data • Knows time-stamp offsets for its subsystem (if any) • Passes energy sum results to all trigger processors • SER looks like: <Hdr><Time><Energy> • Time resolution is 4 ns

  31. Where the ESP sits in the Pipeline

  32. ESP Block Diagram (from Ben)

  33. SSP ->Track Subsystem Processor (TSP) • Used for TOF and perhaps Start Counter • Logic of both TSPs is essentially same as crate sum • Each TSP uses data from all its crates • Matches time-stamps and adds data • Knows time-stamp offsets (if any) • Passes total track counts when over threshold to trigger processors • SER looks like: <Hdr><Time><Count> • Time resolution is 4 ns

  34. SSP -> Tagger Energy Processor (TEPs) • Process data from Microscope and Hodoscope (?) • Matches time-stamps to correlate (if desired) data • Pass tagger energy results to global processor (in same crate) • SER looks like: <Hdr><Time><Photon Energy> • Time resolution is 4 ns

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