Title: Lecture 13: Other Devices on the XUP Board
1ECE 412 Microcomputer Laboratory
- Lecture 13 Other Devices on the XUP Board
2Objectives
- A whirlwind tour of the parts on the XUP board
that we havent used or talked about yet.
3Review Questions
- Why is the YUV format used by the video decoder
more efficient than using an RGB format?
The efficiency of YUV versus RGB lies in the fact
that YUV is basically a compressed form of RGB.
The encoding scheme takes advantage of the fact
that the human eye is more sensitive to changes
in brightness than changes in color. Therefore
the YUV system gives more weight to the
brightness (luminance) value of pixels. In RGB
format, each pixel is required to have 3 bytes of
information. In YUV format, only brightness data
is sent for each individual pixel. The color
data is only sent in 2 bytes for every-other
pixel, and is shared between 2 neighboring
pixels. Therefore, each set of 2 pixels features
two brightness values (1 for each pixel) and 2
color values that are shared between the two, for
a total of 4 bytes for 2 pixels. The same 2
pixels in RGB would take 6 bytes of space. This
compression scheme allows YUV to be more
efficient than RGB.
4Parts Well Cover
- AC97 CODEC and stereo amp
- LXT972A Ethernet Transceiver
- DS2401 serial interface SN ROM
- Also on XUP board
- Serial ATA ports (Advanced Technology Attachment
hard disk standard created to replace the
parallel ATA) - MGT transceivers
- Serial port
- USB 2.0 (used for programming at present)
- SystemAce (used for Linux file system)
- We have documentation on these for anyone
interested in using them in a project.
5XUP Development System Block Diagram
6LM4550 codec
- The LM4550 was designed specifically to provide a
high quality audio path and provide all analog
functionality in a PC audio system. - It features full duplex stereo ADCs and DACs and
analog mixers with access to 4 stereo and 4 mono
analog inputs. - Each mixer input has separate gain, attenuation
and mute control and the mixers drive 1 mono and
2 stereo analog outputs, each with attenuation
and mute control. - The LM4550 provides a stereo headphone amplifier
as one of its stereo outputs and also supports
Nationals 3D Sound stereo enhancement and a
comprehensive sample rate conversion capability. - The sample rate for the ADCs and DACs can be
programmed separately with a resolution of 1 Hz
to convert any rate in the range 4 kHz 48 kHz. - Sample timing from the ADCs and sample request
timing for the DACs are completely deterministic
to ease task scheduling and application software
development.
7Review of Digital Sampling
- Sampling is the process of converting a signal
(for example, a function of continuous time or
space) into a numeric sequence (a function of
discrete time or space). - Basic Idea If you take digital samples of an
analog signal at a high enough rate, it is
possible to convert the stream of digital samples
back into an faithful copy of the original signal - Nyquist-Shannon Sampling Theorem
- The theorem states, in the original words of
Shannon (where he uses "cps" for "cycles per
second" instead of the modern unit hertz) - If a function f(t) contains no frequencies higher
than W cps, it is completely determined by giving
its ordinates at a series of points spaced 1/(2W)
seconds apart.
8National LM4550 ADC/DAC
StereoAnalog Inputs
Serial Data
Low-Pass Filter
Analog-to- Digital Converter
Stereo Analog Outputs
Serial Data
Digital-to- Analog Converter
Low-Pass Filter
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10 More Specifics on LM4550VH ADC/DAC
- Both a stereo Analog-Digital Converter and a
stereo Digital-Analog Converter. - One output directly connects to audio headphone
amplifier - Digital data is based on the Audio Code 97
(AC97) standard - 18-bit accuracy (both input and output)
- 20-bit fields in AC97 (format require unused bits
to be filled with zeros. - Serial digital PCM in/out
- Pulse-code modulation (PCM) is a digital
representation of an analog signal - Sample rate set by AC97 input and crystal
frequency - Supports sample rates of 4-48kHz
- XTAL_IN is 24.576 MHz
- 22kHz is conventional high end of human hearing
range.
11AC97 Timing and Data
- Output frames
- 256 bits of data in a frame 16-bit TAG slot, 12
20-bit data slots - SDATA_IN Serial data, an output of LM4550
- A new Output Frame is signaled with a low-to-high
transition of SYNC. - The LM4550 checks each Frame to ensure 256 bits
are received. If a new Frame is detected (a
low-to-high transition on SYNC) before 256 bits
are received from the old Frame then the new
Frame is ignored.
12AC97 Timing and Data (cont)
- SYNC is sampled with the rising edge of BIT_CLK.
- The first tag bit in the Frame (Valid Frame)
should be clocked from the controller by the next
rising edge of BIT_CLK and sampled by the LM4550
on the following falling edge.
13Intel LXT972A Ethernet Transceiver
- 10/100 Mbit Dual-Speed Transceiver
- A single-port Fast Ethernet 10/100 Transceiver
that supports 10 Mbps and 100 Mbps networks. - It complies with all applicable requirements of
IEEE 802.3. - It can directly drive either a 100BASE-TX line
(up to 140 meters) or a 10BASE-T line (up to 185
meters). - Supports either wired or fiber-optic Ethernet
- XUP board only supports wired connection
- Built-in LED drivers
- Allow easy connection of status LEDs to
transceiver - Two control options
- MII (Media Independent Interface) for control by
a MAC (Media Access Controller) - Set of control registers and protocol for
accessing them - Hardware Control (signal pins)
14Block Diagram
15Some Detailed Features
- OSP Optimal Signal Processing
- mixed-signal processing in improved receiver
noise and cross-talk performance. - less computational logic than traditional
DSP-based designs. - When operating at 100 Mbps, the LXT972A
continuously transmits and receives MLT3 symbols.
- when not transmitting data, the LXT972A generates
IDLE symbols. - During 10 Mbps operation, Manchester-encoded data
is exchanged. - when no data is being exchanged, the line is left
in an idle state. Link pulses are transmitted
periodically to keep the link up. - The LXT972A provides both an MDIO interface and a
Hardware Control Interface for device
configuration and management. - supports the IEEE 802.3 MII Management Interface
also known as the Management Data Input/Output
(MDIO) Interface. This interface allows
upper-layer devices to monitor and control the
state of the LXT972A. - provides a Hardware Control Interface for
applications where the MDIO is not desired. The
Hardware Control Interface uses the three LED
driver pins to set device configuration.
16Initialization Sequence
17Some Details on Initialization
- On power-up or hardware reset the LXT972A reads
the Hardware Control Interface pins and sets the
MDIO registers accordingly. - The following modes are available using either
Hardware Control or MDIO Control - Force network link operation to
- 100BASE-TX, Full-Duplex
- 100BASE-TX, Half-Duplex
- 10BASE-T, Full-Duplex
- 10BASE-T, Half-Duplex
- Allow auto-negotiation/parallel-detection
- When the network link is forced to a specific
configuration, the LXT972A immediately begins
operating the network interface as commanded. - When auto-negotiation is enabled, the LXT972A
begins the auto-negotiation/parallel-detection
operation.
18Link Establishment Overview
19Connectivity to the LXT972A
MDC Management Data Clock. Clock for the MDIO
serial data channel. Maximum frequency is 8 MHz.
20Interfaces
- MDIO, MDC MDIO management data line and clock
line - COLLISION Collision Detected
- The LXT972A asserts its collision signal,
asynchronously to any clock, whenever the line
state is half-duplex and the transmitter and
receiver are active at the same time. - CARRIER_SENSE Carrier Sense
- For 100BASE-TX links, a start-of-stream delimiter
(SSD) causes assertion of carrier sense (CRS). - An end-of-stream delimiter (ESD) causes
de-assertion of CRS.
21Interfaces II
- RX_CLK Clock for incoming data and control
signals - Use this clock to latch incoming data
- Will need to synchronize latched data to main
system clock - RX_DV Indicates valid incoming data
- RX_ER Invalid (error) data received from
Ethernet - RXD0-3 Bus for received data
- Normal operation 4 bits of data at a time
- Hardware may support a 5-bit (Symbol) mode
22Interfaces III
- TX_CLK Clock for sending data to the chip
- Again, not synchronized to system clock
- An output of Ethernet transceiver
- TX_EN Valid data being transmitted
- Drive this high continuously from first to last
nibbles of a packet - TX_ER Transmission error detected by transceiver
- TXD0-3 Data to transmit
- Again, some support 4- or 5-bit format
23Device Identifier
- Many devices require unique identifier, so-called
silicon serial number - Example would be Ethernet 48-bit MAC address
- Minimum number of wires should be dedicated to
the infrequent access, ideally one (1-Wire
Protocol) - Concept manipulating a single line precisely in
time, a user can activate, program, or read back
a ROM
24Dallas Semiconductor DS2401
- The DS2401 enhanced Silicon Serial Number is a
low-cost, electronic registration number that
provides an absolutely unique identity. - The DS2401 consists of a factory-lasered, 64-bit
ROM that includes a unique 48-bit serial number,
an 8-bit CRC, and an 8-bit Family Code (01h). - Data is transferred serially via the 1-Wire
protocol that requires only a single data lead
and a ground return. - Power for reading and writing the device is
derived from the data line itself with no need
for an external power source. - XUP boards have such a 64-bit, factory electronic
registration number.
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