Xilinx FPGA, Printed Circuit Board Guide

Xilinx FPGA, Printed Circuit Board Guide
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Below you will find brief information for FPGA. This guide provides information for FPGA designers and Printed Circuit Board (PCB) engineers about processes and mechanisms available within ISE and various Cadence tools to efficiently implement an FPGA on a PCB.

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Xilinx is disclosing this Document and Intellectual Property (hereinafter “the Design”) to you for use in the development of designs to operate on, or interface with Xilinx FPGAs. Except as stated herein, none of the Design may be copied, reproduced, distributed, republished, downloaded, displayed, posted, or transmitted in any form or by any means including, but not limited to, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written consent of Xilinx. Any unauthorized use of the Design may violate copyright laws, trademark laws, the laws of privacy and publicity, and communications regulations and statutes.

Xilinx does not assume any liability arising out of the application or use of the Design; nor does Xilinx convey any license under its patents, copyrights, or any rights of others. You are responsible for obtaining any rights you may require for your use or implementation of the Design.

Xilinx reserves the right to make changes, at any time, to the Design as deemed desirable in the sole discretion of Xilinx. Xilinx assumes no obligation to correct any errors contained herein or to advise you of any correction if such be made. Xilinx will not assume any liability for the accuracy or correctness of any engineering or technical support or assistance provided to you in connection with the Design.

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INCLUDING ANY LOST DATA AND LOST PROFITS, ARISING FROM OR RELATING TO YOUR USE OF THE DESIGN, EVEN IF YOU

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THE DESIGN TO YOU WITHOUT THESE LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY.

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Preface

About This Guide

This guide contains information for FPGA designers and Printed Circuit Board (PCB) engineers about processes and mechanisms available within ISE and various Cadence tools to efficiently implement an FPGA on a PCB. The first section of the guide covers the

PCB and FPGA design flows highlighting steps in these flows where data is exchanged between these two software environments. Then for each identified step the guide details processes, files, and options available to perform the identified task.

With Cadence’s broad software package availability, we cannot cover all of the features available to implement a printed circuit board with FPGAs in this document. For full details regarding these tools, please refer to Cadence’s documentation available at: www.cadence.com/support/sourcelink.aspx

.

If you use multiple vendor software tools for your PCB design flow, such as Cadence

OrCAD for schematic capture with Mentor Graphics PADs for PCB layout, refer to the vendor specific documentation. For Mentor Graphics tools please refer to the

“Xilinx/

Mentor Graphics PCB Guide”

for additional information. For other PCB software packages, please refer to the specific documentation for those tools.

Additional Resources

To find additional documentation, see the Xilinx website at: http://www.xilinx.com/literature .

To search the Answer Database of silicon, software, and IP questions and answers, or to create a technical support WebCase, see the Xilinx website at: http://www.xilinx.com/support .

To find additional documentation regarding Cadence PCB design tools, see: www.cadence.com/support/sourcelink.aspx

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Xilinx/Cadence PCB Guide

Table of Contents

Preface: About This Guide

Additional Resources

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

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Implementing a Xilinx FPGA on a Printed Circuit Board

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Design Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Schematic Capture Tool in the FPGA Design Flow

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

PCB Layout Tool in the FPGA Design Flow

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Cadence PCB Design Tools. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Cadence OrCAD Series

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Cadence Allegro Series

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Multi-Vendor Flow

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Common Tasks

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Create an Initial FPGA Pinout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Necessary Information

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Process

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Generate an Initial FPGA I/O User Constraint File (UCF) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

UCF Creation with a Text Editor

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

UCF Creation with PACE or Floorplan Editor

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

UCF Creation with the PIN2UCF Utility

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Create a Schematic Symbol (Schematic Shape and Content) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Necessary Information

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Process

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Create a Layout Symbol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

Map Schematic Symbols to the Layout Symbol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Update ISE from Pinout Changes Done in the Schematic Tool . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Process

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Update ISE with Pinout Changes Done in the Layout Tool . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Process

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Update the PCB Database with Pinout Changes Done in ISE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

Process

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

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Xilinx/Cadence PCB Guide

This guide contains the following sections:

“Implementing a Xilinx FPGA on a Printed Circuit Board”

“Common Tasks”

Implementing a Xilinx FPGA on a Printed Circuit Board

In recent years, the design of FPGAs and printed circuit boards (PCBs) have become increasingly parallelized as opposed to the traditional sequential model. This is mostly due to market pressure that demands a fast design cycle and rapid adaptability to specification changes. In the past the FPGA was typically designed before the board or was added to an already designed board to perform some glue logic function, voltage or protocol conversion. Often the same PCB engineers were doing both the FPGA and PCB designs.

Today, with their increasing internal and I/O capabilities, FPGAs can take on more core features of an application which require longer development time and greater expertise and manpower. On the board side, tight form factor, signal integrity, and electromagnetic regulations require sharp skills and dedicated personnel. Therefore, FPGA and PCB are now two separate design teams working in different environments and often physically distant. Paradoxically, pressures in terms of time and adaptability to market requires many more interactions between these design environments so that functionality, performance and cost objective are delivered on time. In practice, this translates into back and forth data exchanges throughout the design process between design teams to update the board symbols or FPGA constraints.

Design Flow

Figure 1, page 8 , System Development Cycle, shows a typical flow in the PCB and FPGA

development cycle (white boxes). It also highlights the steps that require communication

between FPGA and PCB software tools (grey boxes). “Common Tasks,” page 10 details the

mechanisms and processes available to perform each of these data exchanges.

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System Architecture Specification

FPGA Design Cycle

Design Exploration

Constraints:

Placement

Timing

Routing

Power

1. Generate Initial FPGA

I/O Constraint File (UCF)

Create Initial FPGA Pinout

2. Create Initial FPGA

Schematic Symbol

3. Create Layout Symbol

PCB Design Cycle

Design Exploration

Constraints:

Placement

Timing

Routing

Signal integrity

Power

Initial Implementation

Logic design

Implementation

Verifications

4. Update FPGA

I/O Constraint File

Y

FPGA

Perf.

met?

N

Subsequent Implementation(s)

Due to changes in:

Timing constraints

Placement constraints

Routing constraints

Logic redesign

Implementation strategies

Initial Implementation

Schematic capture

Layout

Verifications

Update FPGA Pinout

5. Update Schematic Symbol

6. Update Layout Symbol

Changes:

I/O layout

I/O properties

Pin swapped

Pin added

Pin removed

Pin moved

PCB

Perf.

met?

N

Y

Subsequent Implementation(s)

Due to changes in:

Layout constraints

Redesign connectivity

I/O Layout

I/O properties

N

FPGA

Perf.

met?

Y

N

N

Y

PCB

Perf.

met?

N

N

Syst

Perf.

met?

Y

N

Done

X10509

Figure 1:

System Design Cycle with FPGA and PCB Databases Synchronization Steps Highlighted

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Implementing a Xilinx FPGA on a Printed Circuit Board

PCB design requires two main tools; a schematic capture tool and a layout tool. These tools are described in the following sections.

Schematic Capture Tool in the FPGA Design Flow

The schematic capture tool enables designers to create a graphical representation of connections between components on the PCB. This data helps anyone involved in the project to understand how components on this board are connected between themselves and with the outside world. The layout designer also uses this information to physically place and route all signals on the PCB.

Tips: Since an FPGA is a programmable component, its requirements on the PCB are unique to your application. Xilinx recommends that you add within the schematic all the specific components necessary for both the programming and the behavior of this device in your particular application.

Add decoupling capacitors. Since FPGAs can be programmed to perform in a wide range of applications that translate into a wide range of decoupling needs, it is not practical for Xilinx to embed decoupling networks inside the device. The schematic engineer often adds all the decoupling network details on the schematic so as to let the PCB designer place these components in the vicinity of the FPGA package.

Add other external components necessary to enable specific FPGA features. For instance the schematic designer needs to attach digitally controlled impedance (DCI) calibration resistors to

VRN and VRP pins when I/Os on the device have the on-chip termination option enabled.

Add debug, probe, and test points.

Add pin swapping information. It is often useful at this point to define which pins can be swapped without violating FPGA pinout rules. This is very useful information for the PCB designer as it provides flexibility when trying to minimize wire crossover, congestion, and signal integrity in placing and routing signals.

PCB Layout Tool in the FPGA Design Flow

The PCB layout tool reads the component and connectivity description in the schematic capture tool and physically places and routes these components on the PCB. The output is a set of masks and geometries that allow manufacture of the PCB.

Tips: In order to efficiently place and route a programmable device, the PCB designer needs the following information:

Board physical dimensions. Dimension of the board, mandatory position of connectors, etc.

Stackup dimensions. Number and orientation of signal layers, number and location of power and ground planes, board material, traces properties, etc.

Components footprint. Exact dimensions of each component package.

Components landing pattern. Shape of the junction area between the component and the board including manufacturing tolerances.

Board environment properties. Available space around the PCB (air flow, obstacle, vibrations, cooling system, access to power and connectors, etc.)

Cadence PCB Design Tools

Below is a brief description of the Cadence tool chains and capabilities available for designing printed circuit boards. Please refer to the tool's documentation for further details.

Cadence OrCAD Series

This tool set is typically appropriate for low to medium complexity boards and single site design teams. This document refers to Capture as the schematic capture tool and Layout as

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the layout tool. Depending on your exact software configuration, your Cadence documentation might refer to slightly different names, however all features and methodologies presented here are available to you.

Cadence Allegro Series

This tool set is typically appropriate for medium to high complexity designs and for single to many site design teams. This document refers to Design Entry as the schematic capture tool and PCB Editor as the layout tool. Depending on your exact software configuration, your Cadence documentation might refer to slightly different names, however all features and methodologies presented here are available to you.

Multi-Vendor Flow

You can also use multiple vendor software tools for your PCB design. For instance,

Cadence OrCAD Capture can be used for schematic capture with Mentor Graphics PADs or Expedition series for PCB layout. Mentor Graphics users, please refer to the

“Xilinx/

Mentor Graphics PCB Guide”

for information about Mentor Graphics tools. When using other PCB software packages please refer to your vendor's documentation.

Common Tasks

The following section covers the process, available software features, and file manipulations needed to accomplish each task in the PCB or FPGA design flow related to the FPGA pinout. Each of these tasks is illustrated in the flow chart

Figure 1, page 8

. Tasks associated exclusively with either PCB or FPGA design flow are represented as white boxes. Tasks common to both design flows are represented as grey shaded boxes

Create an Initial FPGA Pinout

After taking into account the system specification describing the different parts and connectors on the board along with communication channels linking them together, the next step for the designer is to infer an FPGA device and package reference that can accommodate these communication channels. The next task requires knowledge of the

FPGA architecture and so is typically done by an FPGA engineer. This task is to expand, classify, and assign each signal to a particular pin on the chosen FPGA package.

Necessary Information

I/O placement requirements may come from a variety of sources. To save time Xilinx recommends that you draw the list of I/Os and learn about the FPGA architecture before starting I/O placement.

Tip: FPGA requirements can be found in the device data sheets and user guides.

System requirements:

Identify properties and number of each I/O standard required (including direction, input and output voltages, drive strength, slew rate, data rate, etc.).

Identify differential pairs.

Identify global/regional clock signal with their associated data signals.

Identify Multi Gigabit Serial Transceivers.

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Common Tasks

List I/O location constraints imposed by predefined IP Blocks (third party IP, IP generated by CORE Generator, Architecture Wizard, the Memory Interface

Generator, or the Embedded Development Kit (EDK)).

FPGA Requirements (refer to the device user guides for more information):

Acquire device knowledge including:

-

I/O compatibility or IO banking requirements.

-

Device package properties such as I/O count for the entire device and per bank and clock region, I/O data rate and signaling capabilities such as single ended/differential or single/dual data rate support, etc.

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I/O access to internal resources. Resources such as clock buffer, RAM, serializer/deserialiser, etc.

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Device clocking capabilities such as internal clock management resources,

I/O with direct access to clock networks, etc.

-

Device Simultaneous Switching Output specifications.

-

Package trace delays.

Reserve and Prohibit usage of special purpose pins:

-

Prohibit package pins. Because of die or package migration, or future design growth constraints.

-

Reserve configuration pins.

-

Reserve JTAG pins.

-

Reserve DCI pins.

PCB Requirements:

Formulate package escape strategies. Determine board number and direction of layers, pin spacing, etc.

Signal integrity. Estimate amplitude and timing margins for each signal type.

Air flow. Ensure work area has sufficient airflow.

Placement and orientation of neighboring parts that could constrain the FPGA placement or access of PCB signals to the FPGA.

Connectivity to other devices. Other device may impact the optimal FPGA I/O design.

Process

Depending on the your preferences and company policies, there are different mechanisms you can use to assign pins on an FPGA. The following three methods are the most common.

Create a Pinout in a Spreadsheet Environment

To create a pinout in a spreadsheet environment, create two spreadsheets, the first with your design I/O requirements (signal name, I/O standards, direction, etc.), and a second with properties for each pin in the package (pin number, I/O bank number, pin name, etc.).

Then going down the list of your design signals, filter out and sort package pins of the second spreadsheet to determine compatible device I/Os. Finally, go back to your original design I/O spreadsheet and assign pin numbers (or I/O bank numbers) to your signal names. Once this is done, you will export this pinout to the schematic and FPGA tools as detailed in the next paragraphs.

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This method is most often used by advanced users with extensive knowledge of the

FPGA’s capabilities. Since there is no design rules checking (DRC) done by any tool during this process, the resulting I/O assignment could fail during FPGA or board implementation.

Tip: You can easily create the package property spreadsheet with one of the following:

♦ Partgen utility. For example:

partgen -v xc5vlx30ff676

♦ Download the package file for your target:

-

Virtex families: Refer to Answer Record 20578 at: www.xilinx.com/xlnx/xil_ans_display.jsp?iLanguageID=1&iCountryID=1&getPagePath

=20578

-

Spartan-3 family: Refer to Answer Record 21035 at: www.xilinx.com/xlnx/xil_ans_display.jsp?iLanguageID=1&iCountryID=1&getPagePath

=21035

Create a Pinout in ISE (PACE or Floorplan Editor)

PACE and Floorplan Editor are similar graphical tools that assist with the floorplanning and pin assignment processes. The Package View tab and Design Objects tab of these tools allow you to edit signal properties and to drag and drop your signals to pin number or pin number to signal name. You can also use these tools to assign signals to sets of pins such as

I/O banks and leave the task of assigning individual signals to individual pin numbers within a specified range to the implementation tool. The Design Objects tab also presents signal properties such as I/O standards, direction, and voltages. The Package View tab uses color schemes to highlight I/Os belonging to the same I/O banks, and also displays the locations of differential pairs, global clock pins, and regional and local clocks with their associated data pins. You may also prohibit multiple pins in one action such as DCI, configuration pins, or prohibit package pins unavailable in another die/package combination. The Design Objects and Package View tab combination makes it easier to identify package pins that support your signal properties. To make an assignment, type in your assignments in the Design Objects tab or drag and drop a signal to a package pin in the Package View (or vice-versa).

Finally, the tool performs two types of checks. First it performs a set of checks while you are making assignments preventing the most common violations. You can also invoke a more complete set of verifications by clicking Run Design Rule Checks from the

Floorplan

drop-down menu. This generates a report with further details on violations.

Tip: In PACE or Floorplan Editor you do not need to completely define the I/O assignment within the tool itself. You may read in partial assignments in the form of spreadsheets (CSV) or Xilinx UCF files then assign pins that have not yet been assigned or modify any assignment. You may also use the spreadsheet import function to run DRC and verify an assignment done outside of Xilinx software.

Refer to the PACE or Floorplan Editor online help for more information on working with these tools.

Generate an Initial FPGA I/O User Constraint File (UCF)

In ISE, I/O constraints can be entered in a unique user constraint file (UCF) attached to the design project. They can also be attached to the HDL (Verilog or VHDL) source code, the synthesis constraint file (XCF) or embedded in the logic netlist (NGC, EDF, or EDN files, and associated NCF files). The problem with entering I/O properties and location constraints in multiple files is that maintenance, portability, and updates to the design

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become much more complex. Xilinx recommends that you specify the maximum number of I/O related constraint within a single UCF file.

UCF Creation with a Text Editor

You can create a UCF file by simply typing the constraints into a text editor. When creating a UCF file in this way, please refer to the

“Constraints Guide”

for the syntax of all I/O related constraints. This method is most often used by companies that have developed their own scripts that read in a spreadsheet and convert the data into UCF syntax.

If you already have your I/O constraints defined in a spreadsheet format, you can use the import function in PACE or Floorplan Editor. In this case, the tool parses your spreadsheet and converts recognized data into UCF syntax. Data is recognized for all column headers that match the following:

Pin Number

Pin Name

Signal Name

Direction

IO Standard

IO Bank Number

Drive (mA)

Slew Rate

Termination

IOB Delay

Diff Type

Diff Pair

Swap Group

Refer to the PACE or Floorplan Editor online help for more information.

UCF Creation with PACE or Floorplan Editor

When using PACE or Floorplan Editor, the assignments performed are saved by default in the UCF file defined during the initial project creation.

UCF Creation with the PIN2UCF Utility

With the other methods for creating a pinout described in this section you can either create a complete pin assignment or create a partial one (assign a signal names to sets of pin numbers) and let the back-end place and route tool perform the actual assignment within this specified set. In the second case, you can assign a signal or a set of signals to a pin, a set of pins, a bank, or a set of banks and thus give the implementation tool the task of assigning an exact package pin number to each individual user I/O.

If after the implementation you are satisfied with this pinout and want to preserve it for future implementation runs then you can do one of the following:

In Project Navigator go to the Process window and expand the Implement Design process. Next, expand the Place & Route process, and double-click Back-Annotate

Pin Locations

. A UCF file is created and has all your I/O signals locked to a specific package pin number.

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Use the PIN2UCF utility to lock a particular pinout for the next implementation iteration. To use the PIN2UCF utility, type the following at the command line.

pin2ucf

ncd_file_name | gyd_file_name -o ucf_file_name

Create a Schematic Symbol (Schematic Shape and Content)

An FPGA schematic symbol is used to describe the electrical connectivity between each device and its environment (other parts, and connectors). Unlike most other components,

FPGA symbols are not likely to reside in a predefined library since by definition an FPGA is programmable and application specific so no two designs will have the same connectivity (signal names and pinout) with the outside world. Therefore, few symbol properties can be reused from one project to another.

Necessary Information

Depending on your Cadence tool flow, an FPGA may be represented either as a graphical symbol to be placed on a schematic or as a spreadsheet. In either case, global properties are attached to the resulting representation. As a result, each spreadsheet or symbol lists available I/Os and may also tag I/Os with additional properties.

Typically FPGAs have more I/Os than can be represented on a single schematic sheet, therefore FPGA symbols are often split into multiple fractures and hierarchy levels to simplify readability. Each company and sometimes each engineer has their own process and opinion as to what an FPGA schematic symbol should look like or contain. Below is the minimum set of data required for an FPGA schematic signal plus some additional information that could make the FPGA schematic symbols more useful.

Graphical symbol — Allows the component can be placed on the schematic. Choose a shape that allows placement of a fair number of I/Os. Some engineers use a different shape depending on the type of interface.

Device name — Component ASCII name that makes it easy for someone reading the schematic to know what this component is.

Reference designator — Unique and short identifier for each component on the schematic.

I/O name (or pin name) — A separate name for each I/O on the symbol. Xilinx recommends using the same name as in the top level HDL description. Since this is the name FPGA designers will be familiar with, this makes for easier communications between schematic and FPGA designers. In addition each I/O can be tagged with additional visible or non-visible properties. Therefore, Xilinx recommends adding data sheet, pin name, and I/O direction.

Non-user I/Os — Ensure that all pins available on the package have an entry in the schematic symbol. Some of them may be visible such as unused or logistical I/O (DCI reference). Others may be hidden as they are not of interest for describing the board functionality, such as power, ground, no connect, or reserved I/Os. Having all I/Os present on the schematic symbol will be appreciated because it helps with mapping the schematic symbol to the layout symbol. It will also facilitate the maintenance of symbols when pin swaps occur.

Pin Number — Locates the I/O on the package ball array.

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Process

Depending on the engineers’ preferences and company policies, there are several mechanisms for creating schematic symbols for FPGAs. Most engineers use one of the three methods described below.

The basic symbol information such as pin name and pin number may be gathered from multiple sources. For instance, symbol information can be copied and pasted from the device user guide. This is not recommended since it is easy to mistakenly copy the wrong information or omit some pins. A more common way if you have a placed and routed

FPGA design, is to generate the I/O file, called a PAD file, from within ISE. This PAD file contains all the specific I/O information about your particular design. A PAD file requires an implemented FPGA design which you may not already have especially if the PCB and

FPGA design processes are highly parallelized. In such cases you can use the CSV output from an I/O assignment done in PACE or the Floorplan Editor. If this information is not available, you can create a generic symbol using the Partgen utility. Partgen creates a PKG file containing all I/O names and numbers available on the device. This is essentially the information you can find within the device user guide with the benefit of it being rapidly converted into a spreadsheet.

Tips:

To create a PAD file with ReportGen, type the following:

reportgen

ncd_filename –pad

To get details on all package pins, use the Partgen utility:

partgen -v

target_device

For example:

partgen -v xc5vlx30ff676

Note:

When importing PAD files into Cadence tools, you might find some parsing errors depending on which version of ISE is combined with which version of Allegro. In such cases please refer to

Cadence support site ( http://www.cadence.com/products/si_pk_bd/pcb_editor/index.aspx

) for a

PERL script utility that converts the ISE file into a format directly readable into Allegro Librarian.

Schematic Symbol Creation in a Text Editor

To create a schematic symbol in a text editor please refer to OrCAD or Allegro Design

Entry documentation on how to set the location, shape and all other properties of the symbol.

This method is most often used by companies that have developed their own scripts that read in a spreadsheet, HDL, or the post implementation I/O report (PAD file) and automatically convert the data onto a symbol.

Create a Schematic Symbol with OrCAD Capture

Within Capture, select the Generate Part option and follow the guided process which will successively let you import a spreadsheet based I/O assignment then let you add symbol graphics and pin properties.

Create a Schematic Symbol with Allegro Design Entry

Within PCB Librarian, directly read in the ISE PAD file or a PACE CSV spreadsheet and follow the guide process to add pin properties. For instance, power pins and unconnected pins can be tagged for special handling.

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Tip: You can find documentation for displaying "intelligent" symbol graphics to indicate pin type and other useful symbol properties on the IEEE website at http://www.ieee.org

.

Create a Layout Symbol

The layout symbol contains the device physical dimensions such that copper traces can be accurately routed to and from the FPGA pins or balls. The layout symbols are not design specific and can therefore be stored in a predefined library and shared among many FPGA designs with the same package. PADS and Expedition flows have dialog boxes that allow you to enter package physical dimensions such as ball location and dimension.

Tips:

Use the Mechanical Drawing section in the Packaging and Pinout Specification of the specific device user guide to capture this information.

Go to www.xilinx.com

and click Documentation to find the user guide for your device.

Map Schematic Symbols to the Layout Symbol

This is the process of mapping the pin numbers on the schematic symbols to the pin numbers on the layout symbol. Whenever possible, also enter pin swapability information during this step. Check the tool’s documentation for further information.

Update ISE from Pinout Changes Done in the Schematic Tool

There are several occasions throughout the design process where pinout changes may happen in the schematic tool and must then be propagated to the FPGA user constraint file

(UCF). For instance, the board design may have started before the FPGA internal logic.

Therefore, pins may have been added, removed, renamed, or relocated. The schematic engineer may also discover improperly assigned pins or that the system specifications have changed requiring more, fewer, or different I/O properties. The ISE user constraint file (UCF) must be kept in sync with the board I/O to avoid a system malfunction.

Process

In either OrCAD Capture or Allegro Design Entry there is no direct link to update the ISE user constraint file (UCF). Typically the schematic engineer will compile a list of pinout changes in the form of a spreadsheet or meet with the FPGA engineer to ensure those changes are propagated and possible within the FPGA environment.

Update ISE with Pinout Changes Done in the Layout Tool

At this stage in the design flow there are many ways to take advantage of FPGA I/O programmability by modifying its pinout to optimize the PCB. For instance, there may be a need to reduce wire cross over to be able to complete the PCB routing without requiring an additional routing layer. Another common practice is to move or swap pins in order to match or reduce trace length or reduce the number of vias or layer changes due to signal integrity or board timing concerns. This results in a PCB database that is out of sync with both the schematic and FPGA databases. To synchronize these environments, first propagate the pinout changes to the schematic database then to the FPGA database as previously described in

“Update ISE from Pinout Changes Done in the Schematic Tool.”

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Process

This is done in two steps. First propagate pin swaps from the layout tool to the schematic symbol. Refer to Cadence documentation for instructions. The second step is to update ISE by synchronizing the UCF file with the schematic symbol data base as previously described in

“Update the PCB Database with Pinout Changes Done in ISE.”

Update the PCB Database with Pinout Changes Done in ISE

Whether the I/O layout change is due to a timing constraint change, a new piece of logic being added, or a change to existing logic, pinout changes at the FPGA level happen throughout the design cycle. Whenever a pinout change occurs, it is important to propagate this change to the PCB schematic and layout environments to ensure they are not designing with an obsolete I/O assignment and that the board constraints have not been violated. First synchronize the schematic database with the new FPGA I/O layout.

Next, synchronize the layout database to the schematic database.

Process

Within either OrCAD or Allegro Design Entry design environment, there are no direct processes to update an FPGA schematic symbol. Typically the FPGA engineer compiles a list of pinout changes made in the form of a spreadsheet or a meets with the schematic engineer. Then the schematic engineer regenerates the symbol (using the Capture Generate

Part option or Allegro Librarian) or manually enter the changes.

Tips: Whenever a schematic symbol is regenerated there is a risk of this symbol loosing connectivity with the other parts on the schematic. Following are several tips to minimize this possibility.

Ensure that the pin locations stay the same on the symbol by using the same settings as much as possible.

Use find and replace features to reconnect the symbols properly.

Avoid direct connections of the nets on the schematics.

To propagate pin swaps or more generally I/O layout or property changes from the schematic editor to the layout tool, please refer to the Cadence documentation for your layout tool.

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Key Features

  • FPGA Design Flow
  • PCB Design Flow
  • Cadence PCB Design Tools
  • Multi-Vendor Flow
  • Create an Initial FPGA Pinout
  • Generate an Initial FPGA I/O User Constraint File (UCF)
  • Create a Schematic Symbol (Schematic Shape and Content)
  • Create a Layout Symbol
  • Map Schematic Symbols to the Layout Symbol
  • Update ISE from Pinout Changes Done in the Schematic Tool

Frequently Answers and Questions

What are the tools available for efficiently implementing an FPGA on a PCB?
The guide covers processes and mechanisms available within ISE and various Cadence tools.
What are the common tasks involved in implementing an FPGA on a PCB?
The guide goes through tasks like creating an initial FPGA pinout, generating an initial FPGA I/O constraint file, creating a schematic symbol, and updating the PCB database with pinout changes.
Can I use tools from multiple vendors for PCB design?
Yes, the guide mentions using Cadence OrCAD Capture for schematic capture with Mentor Graphics PADs or Expedition series for PCB layout.
How do I update the FPGA pinout in ISE when changes are made in the schematic tool?
You can compile a list of pinout changes and propagate them to the FPGA user constraint file (UCF).
How do I update the PCB database when pinout changes are made in the FPGA?
You can synchronize the schematic database and then the layout database with the new FPGA I/O layout.

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