Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture

High speed serial protocols build upon multi-gigabit transceivers in the FPGA are the backbone of data communication industries. These protocols are now a fundamental requirement for today’s applications as well as addressing the needs of next generation systems. However, transferring command and s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Loh, Mui Soon
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.usm.my/41306/
http://eprints.usm.my/41306/1/LOH_MUI_SOON_24_Pages.pdf
_version_ 1848879254640525312
author Loh, Mui Soon
author_facet Loh, Mui Soon
author_sort Loh, Mui Soon
building USM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description High speed serial protocols build upon multi-gigabit transceivers in the FPGA are the backbone of data communication industries. These protocols are now a fundamental requirement for today’s applications as well as addressing the needs of next generation systems. However, transferring command and status packets explicitly in inter-FPGA control links efficiently via multi-gigabit transceivers without wasting data bandwidth become a challenge when architecting a modern design. Though time-division-multiplexing techniques could be deployed to address this issue, dedicated but unused time-slots for control link packets adversely affect the bandwidth efficiency and thus the system performance. Another common solution focuses on transferring the command and status packets in a separate control link; typically implemented in low to medium bandwidth serial protocols such as I2C and SPI. Though this solution is simple to implement in hardware with readily available device drivers, an unnecessary high latency overhead is introduced such as when transferring a 512-byte filter data coefficients to configure a 128-tap FIR filter. In this dissertation, a highly efficient, low latency command-status packet tunneling architecture built on top of the 25 Gbps Interlaken serial protocol for multi-gigabit inter-FPGA data streaming is proposed. Simulation results show that the proposed architecture works successfully with a high efficiency, utilizes only 13.21% and 10.34% of the clock cycles required in the conventional SPI and I2C implementations respectively. The proposed architecture also maintains a backward compatibility with control links implemented separately using SPI or I2C serial protocols to simplify the overall system design, reduce product development risks and system costs.
first_indexed 2025-11-15T17:44:19Z
format Thesis
id usm-41306
institution Universiti Sains Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-15T17:44:19Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling usm-413062018-08-13T08:54:02Z http://eprints.usm.my/41306/ Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture Loh, Mui Soon TK7870 Electronic packaging High speed serial protocols build upon multi-gigabit transceivers in the FPGA are the backbone of data communication industries. These protocols are now a fundamental requirement for today’s applications as well as addressing the needs of next generation systems. However, transferring command and status packets explicitly in inter-FPGA control links efficiently via multi-gigabit transceivers without wasting data bandwidth become a challenge when architecting a modern design. Though time-division-multiplexing techniques could be deployed to address this issue, dedicated but unused time-slots for control link packets adversely affect the bandwidth efficiency and thus the system performance. Another common solution focuses on transferring the command and status packets in a separate control link; typically implemented in low to medium bandwidth serial protocols such as I2C and SPI. Though this solution is simple to implement in hardware with readily available device drivers, an unnecessary high latency overhead is introduced such as when transferring a 512-byte filter data coefficients to configure a 128-tap FIR filter. In this dissertation, a highly efficient, low latency command-status packet tunneling architecture built on top of the 25 Gbps Interlaken serial protocol for multi-gigabit inter-FPGA data streaming is proposed. Simulation results show that the proposed architecture works successfully with a high efficiency, utilizes only 13.21% and 10.34% of the clock cycles required in the conventional SPI and I2C implementations respectively. The proposed architecture also maintains a backward compatibility with control links implemented separately using SPI or I2C serial protocols to simplify the overall system design, reduce product development risks and system costs. 2016 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.usm.my/41306/1/LOH_MUI_SOON_24_Pages.pdf Loh, Mui Soon (2016) Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture. Masters thesis, Universiti Sains Malaysia.
spellingShingle TK7870 Electronic packaging
Loh, Mui Soon
Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture
title Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture
title_full Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture
title_fullStr Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture
title_full_unstemmed Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture
title_short Highly Efficient Multi-Gigabit Commandstatus Packet Tunneling Technique In Inter-Fpga Packet Streaming Architecture
title_sort highly efficient multi-gigabit commandstatus packet tunneling technique in inter-fpga packet streaming architecture
topic TK7870 Electronic packaging
url http://eprints.usm.my/41306/
http://eprints.usm.my/41306/1/LOH_MUI_SOON_24_Pages.pdf