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 CYNSE70032
CYNSE70032 Network Search Engine
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation Document #: 38-02042 Rev. *E
*
3901 North First Street
*
San Jose, CA 95134
* 408-943-2600 Revised May 5, 2003
CYNSE70032
TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 OVERVIEW ..................................................................................................................................... 9 2.0 CYNSE70032 FEATURES .............................................................................................................. 9 3.0 BLOCK DIAGRAM ........................................................................................................................ 10 4.0 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION ...................................................................................................... 10 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Command Bus and DQ Bus ..................................................................................................... 10 Database Entry (Data Array and Mask Array) ......................................................................... 10 Arbitration Logic ....................................................................................................................... 10 Pipeline and SRAM Control ..................................................................................................... 11 Full Logic .................................................................................................................................. 11
5.0 SIGNAL DESCRIPTIONS ............................................................................................................. 11 6.0 CLOCKS ........................................................................................................................................ 13 7.0 REGISTERS .................................................................................................................................. 13 7.1 Comparand Registers .............................................................................................................. 13 7.2 Mask Registers ........................................................................................................................ 14 7.3 Search Successful Registers (SSR[0:7]) ................................................................................. 14 8.0 COMMAND REGISTER ................................................................................................................ 14 9.0 INFORMATION REGISTER .......................................................................................................... 15 9.1 Read Burst Address Register .................................................................................................. 16 9.2 Write Burst Address Register Description ................................................................................ 16 9.3 NFA Register ........................................................................................................................... 16 10.0 NSE ARCHITECTURE AND OPERATION OVERVIEW ............................................................ 17 11.0 DATA AND MASK ADDRESSING ............................................................................................. 18 12.0 COMMANDS ............................................................................................................................... 18 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 Command Codes ................................................................................................................... 18 Commands and Command Parameters ................................................................................ 19 Read Command ..................................................................................................................... 19 Write Command ..................................................................................................................... 21
13.0 SEARCH COMMAND ................................................................................................................. 24 13.1 68-bit Search on Tables Configured as x68 using a Single CYNSE70032 Device ............... 24 13.2 68-bit Search on Tables Configured as x68 Using up to Eight CYNSE70032 Devices ......... 26 13.3 68-bit Search on Tables Configured as x68 Using up to 31 CYNSE70032 Devices ............. 31 13.4 136-bit Search on Tables Configured as x136 Using a Single CYNSE70032 Device ........... 45 13.5 136-bit Search on Tables Configured as x136 Using up to Eight CYNSE70032 Devices ..... 48 13.6 136-bit Search on Tables Configured as x136 using up to 31 CYNSE70032 Devices ......... 54 13.7 272-bit Search on Tables Configured as x272 using a Single CYNSE70032 Device ........... 69 13.8 272-bit Search on Tables Configured as x272 and Using up to Eight CYNSE70032 Devices .................................................................................................. 71 13.9 272-bit Search on Tables Configured as x272 using up to 31 CYNSE70032 Devices ......... 76 13.10 Mixed-Size Searches on Tables Configured with Different Widths Using an CYNSE70032 Device ................................................................................................................. 91 13.11 LRAM and LDEV Description ............................................................................................... 92 13.12 Learn Command .................................................................................................................. 92
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CYNSE70032
TABLE OF CONTENTS (continued) 14.0 DEPTH-CASCADING .................................................................................................................. 96 14.1 Depth-Cascading up to Eight Devices (One Block) ............................................................... 96 14.2 Depth-Cascading up to 31 Devices (Four Blocks) ................................................................. 97 14.3 Depth-Cascading for a FULL Signal ...................................................................................... 97 15.0 SRAM ADDRESSING ................................................................................................................. 98 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 15.7 15.8 Generating an SRAM BUS Address ...................................................................................... 99 SRAM PIO Access ................................................................................................................. 99 SRAM Read with a Table of One Device ............................................................................... 99 SRAM Read with a Table of up to Eight Devices ................................................................. 100 SRAM Read with a Table of up to 31 Devices ..................................................................... 103 SRAM Write with a Table of One Device ............................................................................. 106 SRAM Write with a Table of up to Eight Devices ................................................................. 107 SRAM Write with Table(s) Consisting of up to 31 Devices .................................................. 110
16.0 POWER ..................................................................................................................................... 114 16.1 The Proper Power-up Sequence ......................................................................................... 114 17.0 APPLICATION .......................................................................................................................... 114 18.0 JTAG (1149.1) TESTING .......................................................................................................... 115 19.0 ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS ............................................................................................. 116 20.0 AC TIMING WAVEFORMS ....................................................................................................... 117 21.0 PINOUT DESCRIPTIONS AND PACKAGE DIAGRAMS ......................................................... 120 22.0 ORDERING INFORMATION ..................................................................................................... 124 23.0 PACKAGE DIAGRAMS ............................................................................................................ 124
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CYNSE70032
LIST OF FIGURES Figure 6-1. CYNSE70032 Clocks (CLK2X and PHS_L) ...................................................................... 13 Figure 7-1. Comparand Register Selection during Search and Learn Instructions ............................. 13 Figure 7-2. Addressing the Global Mask Register Array ..................................................................... 14 Figure 10-1. CYNSE70032 Database Width Configuration ................................................................. 17 Figure 10-2. Multiwidth Database Configurations ................................................................................ 18 Figure 11-1. Addressing CYNSE70032 Data and Mask Arrays .......................................................... 18 Figure 12-1. Single-Location Read Cycle Timing ................................................................................ 20 Figure 12-2. Burst Read of the Data and Mask Arrays (BLEN = 4) ..................................................... 21 Figure 12-3. Single Write Cycle Timing ............................................................................................... 22 Figure 12-4. Burst Write of the Data and Mask Arrays (BLEN = 4) ..................................................... 23 Figure 13-1. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search in x68 Table (One Device) ........................................ 24 Figure 13-2. Hardware Diagram for a Table with a Single Device ....................................................... 25 Figure 13-3. x68 Table with One Device ............................................................................................. 25 Figure 13-4. Hardware Diagram for a Table with Eight Devices .......................................................... 27 Figure 13-5. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search Device Number 0 ....................................................... 28 Figure 13-6. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search Device Number 1 ....................................................... 29 Figure 13-7. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search Device Number 7 (Last Device) ................................ 30 Figure 13-8. x68 Table with Eight Devices .......................................................................................... 31 Figure 13-9. Hardware Diagram for a Table with 31 Devices .............................................................. 32 Figure 13-10. Hardware Diagram for a Block of up to Eight Devices .................................................. 33 Figure 13-11. Timing Diagram for Each Device in Block Number 0 (Miss on Each Device) ............... 34 Figure 13-12. Timing Diagram for Each Device Above the Winning Device in Block Number 1 ......... 35 Figure 13-13. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 1 ................................. 36 Figure 13-14. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 1 ................. 37 Figure 13-15. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................ 38 Figure 13-16. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................................. 39 Figure 13-17. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................. 40 Figure 13-18. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 3 ................ 41 Figure 13-19. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 3 ................................. 42 Figure 13-20. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 3 (Except the Last Device [Device Number 30]) ...................................................................................... 43 Figure 13-21. Timing Diagram for Device Number 6 in Block Number 3 (Device Number 30 in Depth-Cascaded Table) .................................................................................... 44 Figure 13-22. x68 Table with 31 Devices ............................................................................................ 45 Figure 13-23. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search (One Device) ......................................................... 46 Figure 13-24. Hardware Diagram for a Table With One Device .......................................................... 46 Figure 13-25. x136 Table with One Device ......................................................................................... 47 Figure 13-26. Hardware Diagram for a Table with Eight Devices ........................................................ 49 Figure 13-27. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search Device Number 0 ................................................... 50 Figure 13-28. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search Device Number 1 ................................................... 51 Figure 13-29. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search Device Number 7 (Last Device) ............................ 52 Figure 13-30. x136 Table with Eight Devices ...................................................................................... 53 Figure 13-31. Hardware Diagram for a Table with 31 Devices ............................................................ 55 Figure 13-32. Hardware Diagram for a Block of up to Eight Devices .................................................. 56 Figure 13-33. Timing Diagram for Each Device in Block Number 0 (Miss on Each Device) ............... 57 Figure 13-34. Timing Diagram for Each Device Above the Winning Device in Block Number 1 ......... 58 Figure 13-35. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 1 ................................. 59 Figure 13-36. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 1 ................. 60
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CYNSE70032
LIST OF FIGURES (continued) Figure 13-37. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................ 61 Figure 13-38. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................................. 62 Figure 13-39. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................. 63 Figure 13-40. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 3 ................ 64 Figure 13-41. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 3 ................................. 65 Figure 13-42. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 3 Except Device Number 30 (the Last Device) ........................................................................................ 66 Figure 13-43. Timing Diagram for Device Number 6 in Block Number 3 (Device Number 30 in Depth-Cascaded Table) .................................................................................... 67 Figure 13-44. X136 Table with 31 Devices .......................................................................................... 68 Figure 13-45. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search (One Device) ......................................................... 69 Figure 13-46. Hardware Diagram for a Table With One Device .......................................................... 69 Figure 13-47. X272 Table with One Device ......................................................................................... 70 Figure 13-48. Hardware Diagram for a Table with Eight Devices ........................................................ 72 Figure 13-49. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search Device Number 0 ................................................... 73 Figure 13-50. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search Device Number 1 ................................................... 74 Figure 13-51. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search Device Number 7 (Last Device) ............................ 75 Figure 13-52. X272 Table with Eight Devices ...................................................................................... 76 Figure 13-53. Hardware Diagram for a Table with 31 Devices ............................................................ 77 Figure 13-54. Hardware Diagram for a Block of up to Eight Devices .................................................. 78 Figure 13-55. Timing Diagram for Each Device in Block Number 0 (Miss on Each Device) ............... 79 Figure 13-56. Timing Diagram for Each Device Above the Winning Device in Block Number 1 ......... 80 Figure 13-57. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 1 ................................. 81 Figure 13-58. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 1 ................. 82 Figure 13-59. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................ 83 Figure 13-60. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................................. 84 Figure 13-61. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 2 ................. 85 Figure 13-62. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 3 ................ 86 Figure 13-63. Timing Diagram for Globally WInning Device in Block Number 3 ................................. 87 Figure 13-64. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 3 Except Device Number 30 (the Last Device) ......................................................... 88 Figure 13-65. Timing Diagram of the Last Device in Block Number 3 (Device 30 in the Table) .......... 89 Figure 13-66. X272 Table with 31 Devices .......................................................................................... 90 Figure 13-67. Timing Diagram for Mixed Search (One Device) ........................................................... 91 Figure 13-68. Multiwidth Configurations Example ............................................................................... 91 Figure 13-69. Learn Timing Diagram (TLSZ = 00) ............................................................................... 93 Figure 13-70. Learn Timing Diagram (TLSZ = 01 [Except on the Last Device]) .................................. 94 Figure 13-71. Learn Timing Diagram on Device Number 7 (TLSZ = 01) ............................................. 95 Figure 14-1. Depth-Cascading to Form a Single Block ....................................................................... 96 Figure 14-2. Depth-Cascading Four Blocks ......................................................................................... 97 Figure 14-3. FULL Generation in a Cascaded Table ........................................................................... 98 Figure 15-1. SRAM Read ACCESS (TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1) ..................... 100 Figure 15-2. Table of a Block of Eight Devices .................................................................................. 101 Figure 15-3. SRAM Read Through Device Number 0 in a Block of Eight Devices ............................ 102 Figure 15-4. SRAM Read Timing for Device Number 7 in a Block of Eight Devices ......................... 103 Figure 15-5. Table of 31 Devices Made of Four Blocks ..................................................................... 104 Figure 15-6. SRAM Read Through Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 Devices (Device Number 0 Timing) .................................................................................................................. 105
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CYNSE70032
LIST OF FIGURES (continued) Figure 15-7. SRAM Readthrough Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 Devices (Device Number 30 Timing) ................................................................................................................ 106 Figure 15-8. SRAM Write Access (TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1) ......................... 107 Figure 15-9. Table of a Block of Eight Devices .................................................................................. 108 Figure 15-10. SRAM Write Through Device Number 0 in a Block of Eight Devices .......................... 109 Figure 15-11. SRAM Write Timing for Device Number 7 in a Block of Eight Devices ....................... 110 Figure 15-12. Table of 31 Devices (Four Blocks) .............................................................................. 111 Figure 15-13. SRAM Write Through Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 Devices (Device 0 Timing) . 112 Figure 15-14. SRAM Write Through Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 CYNSE70032 Devices (Device Number 30 Timing) ................................................................................................................ 113 Figure 16-1. Power-up sequence ...................................................................................................... 114 Figure 17-1. Sample Switch/Router Using the CYNSE70032 Device ............................................... 115 Figure 20-1. Input Waveform for CYNSE70032 ................................................................................ 118 Figure 20-2. Output Load for CYNSE70032 ...................................................................................... 118 Figure 20-3. 2.5 I/O Output Load Equivalent for CYNSE70032 ........................................................ 118 Figure 20-4. AC Timing Waveforms with CLK2X ............................................................................... 119 Figure 21-1. Pinout Diagram (Top View) ........................................................................................... 120 Figure 23-1. Package ........................................................................................................................ 124
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CYNSE70032
LIST OF TABLES Table 5-1. CYNSE70032 Signal Description ....................................................................................... 11 Table 7-1. Register Overview .............................................................................................................. 13 Table 7-2. Search Successful Register Description ............................................................................14 Table 8-1. Command Register Description .......................................................................................... 14 Table 9-1. Information Register Description ........................................................................................ 15 Table 9-2. Read Burst Register Description ........................................................................................ 16 Table 9-3. Write Burst Register Description ........................................................................................ 16 Table 9-4. NFA Register ...................................................................................................................... 16 Table 10-1. Bit Position Match ............................................................................................................. 17 Table 12-1. Command Codes .............................................................................................................. 18 Table 12-2. Command Parameters ..................................................................................................... 19 Table 12-3. Read Command Parameters ............................................................................................ 19 Table 12-4. Read Address Format for Data Array, Mask Array, or SRAM .......................................... 20 Table 12-5. Read Address Format for Internal Registers .................................................................... 21 Table 12-6. Read Address Format for Data and Mask Arrays ............................................................. 21 Table 12-7. Write Address Format for Data Array, Mask Array, or SRAM (Single Write) .................... 22 Table 12-8. Write Address Format for Internal Registers .................................................................... 22 Table 12-9. Write Address Format for Data and Mask Array (Burst Write) ......................................... 23 Table 13-1. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ................................................ 26 Table 13-2. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................... 26 Table 13-3. HIT/MISS Assumption ...................................................................................................... 26 Table 13-4. Search latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle .................................................. 31 Table 13-5. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................... 31 Table 13-6. Hit/Miss Assumption ......................................................................................................... 32 Table 13-7. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ................................................. 45 Table 13-8. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................... 45 Table 13-9. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ................................................. 47 Table 13-10. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................. 47 Table 13-11. Hit/Miss Assumptions ..................................................................................................... 48 Table 13-12. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ............................................... 53 Table 13-13. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................. 53 Table 13-14. Hit/Miss Assumptions ..................................................................................................... 54 Table 13-15. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ............................................... 68 Table 13-16. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................. 68 Table 13-17. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ............................................... 70 Table 13-18. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................. 70 Table 13-19. Hit/Miss Assumptions ..................................................................................................... 71 Table 13-20. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ............................................... 76 Table 13-21. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................. 76 Table 13-22. Hit/Miss Assumptions ..................................................................................................... 77 Table 13-23. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle ............................................... 90 Table 13-24. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR .................................................................................. 90 Table 13-25. SRAM Write Cycle Latency from Second Cycle of Learn Instruction ............................. 95 Table 15-1. SRAM Bus Address .......................................................................................................... 99 Table 18-1. Supported Operations .................................................................................................... 115 Table 19-1. DC Electrical Characteristics for CYNSE70032 .............................................................116 Table 19-2. Operating Conditions for CYNSE70032 ......................................................................... 116 Table 18-2. TAP Device ID Register ................................................................................................. 116
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CYNSE70032
LIST OF TABLES (continued) Table 19-3. Table 20-1. Table 20-2. Table 21-1. Table 22-1. Operating Range for CYNSE70032 ................................................................................ 117 AC Timing Parameters with CLK2X ............................................................................... 117 Test Conditions of CYNSE70032 ...................................................................................117 Pinout Descriptions for Pinout Diagram ..........................................................................120 Ordering Information ....................................................................................................... 124
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CYNSE70032
1.0 Overview
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation's (Cypress's) CYNSE70032 network search engine (NSE) incorporates patent-pending Associative Processing TechnologyTM (APT) and is designed to be a high-performance, pipelined, synchronous, 16K-entry NSE. The CYNSE70032 database entry size can be 68, 136, or 272 bits. In the 68-bit entry mode, the size of the database is 16K entries. In the 136-bit mode, the size of the database is 8K entries, and in the 272-bit mode, the size of the database is 4K entries. The CYNSE70032 is configurable to support multiple databases with different entry sizes. The 36-bit entry table can be implemented using the global mask registers (GMRs) building-database size of 32K entries with a single device. The search engine can sustain 83 million transactions per second when the database is programmed or configured as 68 or 136 bits. When the database is programmed to have an entry size of 34 or 272 bits, the search engine will perform at 41.5 million transactions per second. The CYNSE70032 can be used to accelerate network protocols such as longest-prefix match (CIDR), address-resolution protocol (ARP), multiprotocol label switching (MPLS), and other layer 2, 3, and 4 protocols. This high-speed, high-capacity NSE can be deployed in a variety of networking and communications applications. The performance and features of the CYNSE70032 device make it attractive in applications such as Enterprise local-area network (LAN) switches and routers and broadband switching and/or routing equipment supporting multiple data rates at OC-48 and beyond. The NSE is designed to be scalable in order to support network database sizes of up to 992K entries specifically for environments that require large network policy databases. The block diagram for the CYNSE70032 device is shown on page 10.
2.0
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
CYNSE70032 Features
32K 34-bit entries in a single device 16K entries in 68-bit mode, 8K entries in 136-bit mode, 4K entries in 272-bit mode 83 million transactions per second in 68- and 136-bit configurations 41.5 million transactions in 34- and 272-bit configurations Searches any subfield in a single cycle Synchronous pipelined operation Up to 31 NSEs can be cascaded When cascaded, the database entries can range to 992K 36-bit entries Multiple width tables in a single database bank Glueless interface to industry standard SRAMs and/or SSRAMs Simple hardware instruction interface IEEE 1149.1 test access port 1.8V core voltage supply 2.5/3.3V I/O voltage supply 272-pin BGA package.
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CYNSE70032
3.0 Block Diagram
PHS_L CLK2X RST_L Compare/PIO Data Comparand Register Pairs [15:0] Global Mask Register Pairs [7:0] Information and Command Register Burst Read Register Burst Write Register Next-free Address Register Search Successful Index Registers [7:0] [All registers are 68 bits wide.]
TAP Controller
TAP
DQ[67:0]
CMD Compare/PIO Data Address Decode Configurable as 16K x 68 8K x 136 4K x 272 Data Array Configurable as 16K x 68 8K x 136 4K x 272 Mask Array Pipeline Priority Encode Match Logic and SRAM Control
SADR[21:0] OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L
CMD[8:0] CMDV ACK EOT
Command Decode and PIO Access
ID[4:0] LHI[6:0] Arbitration FULI[6:0] BHI[2:0] Full Logic FULL FULO[1:0] Logic LHO[1:0] BHO[2:0] SSF SSV
4.0
Functional Description
The following subsections contain the following descriptions: command (CMD) and DQ bus (command and databus), database entry, arbitration logic, pipeline and SRAM control, and full logic.
4.1
Command Bus and DQ Bus
CMD[8:0] carries the command and its associated parameter. DQ[67:0] is used for data transfer to and from the database entries, which is made up of data and mask fields that are organized as data and mask arrays. The DQ bus carries the Search data (of the data and mask arrays and internal registers) during the Search command, as well as the address and data during Read or Write operations. The DQ bus can also carry address information for the flow-through accesses to the external SRAMs or SSRAMs.
4.2
Database Entry (Data Array and Mask Array)
Each database entry comprises a data and a mask field. The resultant value of the entry is "1," "0," or "X (don't care)," depending on the value in the data mask bit. The on-chip priority encoder selects the first matching entry in the database that is nearest to location 0.
4.3
Arbitration Logic
When multiple search engines are cascaded to create large databases, the data being searched is presented simultaneously to all search engines in the cascaded system. If multiple matches occur within the cascaded devices, arbitration logic on the search engines will enable the winning device (with a matching entry that is closest to address 0 of the cascaded database) to drive the SRAM bus.
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CYNSE70032
4.4 Pipeline and SRAM Control
Pipeline latency is added to give enough time to a cascaded system's arbitration logic to determine the device that will drive the index of the matching entry on the SRAM bus. Pipeline logic adds latency to both the SRAM access cycles and the SSF and SSV signals in order to align them to the host ASIC that receives the associated data.
4.5
Full Logic
Bit[0] in each of the 68-bit entries has a special purpose for the Learn command (0 = empty, 1 = full). When all the data entries have bit[0] set to 1, the database asserts the FULL flag, indicating that all the search engines in the depth-cascaded array are full.
5.0
Signal Descriptions
Table 5-1 lists and describes all CYNSE70032 signals. Table 5-1. CYNSE70032 Signal Description Parameter Clocks and Reset CLK2X Type[1] I Description Master Clock. CYNSE70032 samples all the data and control pins on the positive edge of CLK2X. All signals are driven out of the device on the rising edge of CLK2X (when PHS_L is low). Phase. This signal runs at half the frequency of CLK2X and generates an internal clock from CLK2X. See Section 6.0, "Clocks" on page 13. Reset. Driving RST_L low initializes the device to a known state. Command Bus. [1:0] specifies the command and [8:2] contains the command parameters. The descriptions of individual commands explains the details of the parameters. The encoding of commands based on the [1:0] field are: 00: PIO Read 01: PIO Write 10: Search 11: Learn. Command Valid. This signal qualifies the command bus: 0: No command 1: Command. Address/Data Bus. This signal carries the Read and Write address and data during register, data, and mask array operations. It carries the compare data during Search operations. It also carries the SRAM address during SRAM PIO accesses. Read Acknowledge. This signal indicates that valid data is available on the DQ bus during register, data, and mask array Read operations, or that the data is available on the SRAM data bus during SRAM Read operations. End of Transfer. This signal indicates the end of burst transfer to the data or mask array during Read or Write burst operations. Search Successful Flag. When asserted, this signal indicates that the device is the global winner in a Search operation. Search Successful Flag Valid. When asserted, this signal qualifies the SSF signal. SRAM Address. This bus contains address lines to access off-chip SRAMs that contain associative data. See Table 15-1 for the details of the generated SRAM address. In a database of multiple CYNSE70032 devices, each corresponding bit of the SRAM address from all cascaded devices must be connected. SRAM Chip Enable. This is the chip-enable control for external SRAMs. In a database of multiple CYNSE70032 devices, CE_L of all cascaded devices must be connected. This signal is then driven by only one of the devices. SRAM Write Enable. This is the write-enable control for external SRAMs. In a database of multiple CYNSE70032 devices, WE_L of all cascaded devices must be connected together. This signal is then driven by only one of the devices.
PHS_L RST_L Command and DQ Bus CMD[8:0]
I I I
CMDV
I
DQ[67:0] ACK[2] EOT[2] SSF SSV SRAM Interface SADR[21:0]
I/O
T
T T T T
CE_L
T
WE_L
T
Notes: 1. I = Input only, I/O = Input or Output, O = Output only, T = three-state output. 2. ACK and EOT require a weak external pull-down such as 47K or 100K.
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CYNSE70032
Table 5-1. CYNSE70032 Signal Description (continued) Parameter OE_L ALE_L Type[1] T T Description SRAM Output Enable. This is the output-enable control for external SRAMs. Only the last device drives this signal (with the LRAM bit set). Address Latch Enable. When this signal is low, the addresses are valid on the SRAM address bus. In a database of multiple CYNSE70032s, the ALE_L of all cascaded devices must be connected. This signal is then driven by only one of the devices. Local Hit In. These pins depth cascade the device to form a larger table. One signal of this bus is connected to the LHO[1] or LHO[0] of each of the upstream devices in a block. All unused LHI pins are connected to a logic 0. (For more information, see Section 14.0, "Depth-Cascading" on page 96.) Local Hit Out. LHO[1] and LHO[0] are the same logical signal. Either the LHO[1] or the LHO[0] is connected to one input of the LHI bus of up to four downstream devices in a block of up to eight. (For more information see Section 14.0, "Depth-Cascading" on page 96.) Block Hit In. Inputs from the previous block BHO[2:0] are tied to the BHI[2:0] of the current device. In a four-block system, the last block can contain only seven devices because the identification code 11111 is used for broadcast access. Block Hit Out. These outputs from the last device in a block are connected to the BHI[2:0] inputs of the devices in the downstream blocks. Full In. Each signal in this bus is connected to FULO[0] or FULO[1] of an upstream device to generate the FULL flag for the depth-cascaded block. Full Out. FULO[1] and FULO[0] are the same logical signal. One of these two signals must be connected to the FULI of up to four downstream devices in a depth-cascaded table. Bit[0] in the data array indicates whether the entry is full (1) or empty (0).This signal is asserted if all bits in the data array are 1s. (Refer to Section 14.0, "Depth-Cascading" on page 96, for information on how to generate the FULL flag.) Full Flag. When asserted, this signal indicates that the table of multiple depth-cascaded devices is full. Device Identification. The binary-encoded device identification for a depth-cascaded system starts at 00000 and goes up to 11110. 11111 is reserved for a special broadcast address that selects all cascaded search engines in the system. On a broadcast Read-only, the device with the LDEV bit set to 1 responds. Chip Core Supply. 1.8V. Chip I/O Supply. 2.5V or 3.3V. Test Access Port's Test Data In. Test Access Port's Test Clock. Test Access Port's Test Data Out. Test Access Port's Test Mode Select. Test Access Port's Reset.
Cascade Interface LHI[6:0]
I
LHO[1:0]
O
BHI[2:0]
I
BHO[2:0] FULI[6:0] FULO[1:0]
O I O
FULL Device Identification ID[4:0]
O
I
Supplies VDD VDDQ Test Access Port TDI TCK TDO TMS TRST_L n/a n/a I I T I I
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CYNSE70032
6.0 Clocks
The CYNSE70032 device receives the CLK2X and PHS_L signals. It uses the PHS_L signal to divide CLK2X and generate an internal clock (CLK[3]), as shown in Figure 6-1. The CYNSE70032 device uses CLK2X and CLK for internal operations. CLK2X
PHS_L
CLK[4] Figure 6-1. CYNSE70032 Clocks (CLK2X and PHS_L)
7.0
Registers
All registers in the CYNSE70032 are 68 bits wide. The CYNSE70032 device contains sixteen pairs of comparand storage registers, eight pairs of GMRs, eight search successful index registers and one each of command, information, burst Read, burst Write, and next-free address registers. Table 7-1 provides an overview of all the CYNSE70032 registers. The registers are listed in ascending address order. Each register group is then described in the subsections that follow. Table 7-1. Register Overview Address 0-31 32-47 48-55 56 57 58 59 60 61-63 Abbreviation COMP0-31 MASKS SSR0-7 COMMAND INFO RBURREG WBURREG NFA - Type R RW R RW R RW RW R - Name Sixteen pairs of comparand registers that store comparands from the DQ bus for learning later. Eight GMR pairs. Eight search successful index registers. Command register. Information register. Burst Read register. Burst Write register. Next-free address register. Reserved.
7.1
Comparand Registers
The device contains 32 68-bit comparand registers (sixteen pairs) dynamically selected in every Search operation to store the comparand presented on the DQ bus. The Learn command will later use these registers when it is executed. The CYNSE70032 device stores the Search command's cycle A comparand in the even-numbered register and its cycle B comparand in the odd-numbered register, as shown in Figure 7-1. Address 68 68 index 135 0 0 1 0 2 3 1 4 5 6 7
30 31 15 Figure 7-1. Comparand Register Selection during Search and Learn Instructions
Notes: 3. Any reference to "CLK" cycles means one cycle of CLK. 4. ."CLK" is an internal clock signal.
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CYNSE70032
7.2 Mask Registers
The device contains sixteen 68-bit global mask registers (eight pairs) dynamically selected in every Search operation to select the search subfield. The addressing of these registers is explained in Figure 7-2. The three-bit GMR Index supplied on the CMD bus can apply eight pairs of global masks during the Search and Write operations, as shown below. Note. In 68-bit Search and Write operations, the host ASIC must program both the even and odd mask registers with the same values. 68 68 Index 135 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 2 4 5 3 6 7 4 8 9 5 10 11 6 12 13 7 14 15 Search and Write Command Global Mask Selection Figure 7-2. Addressing the Global Mask Register Array Each mask bit in the GMRs is used during Search and Write operations. In Search operations, setting the mask bit to 1 enables compares; setting the mask bit to 0 disables compares (forced match) at the corresponding bit position. In Write operations to the data or mask array, setting the mask bit to 1 enables writes; setting the mask bit to 0 disables writes at the corresponding bit position.
7.3
Search Successful Registers (SSR[0:7])
The device contains eight SSRs to hold the index of the location where a successful search occurred. The format of each register is described in Table 7-2. The Search command specifies which SSR stores the index of a specific Search command in cycle B of the Search instruction. Subsequently, the host ASIC can use this register to access that data array, mask array, or external SRAM using the index as part of the indirect access address (see Table 7-2 and Table 8-1). The device with a valid bit set performs a Read or Write operation. All other devices suppress the operation. Table 7-2. Search Successful Register Description Field INDEX Range [13:0] Initial Value X Description Index. This is the address of the 68-bit entry where a successful Search occurs. The device updates this field only when the Search is successful. If a hit occurs in a 136-bit entry-size quadrant, the least significant bit (LSB) is 0. If a hit occurs in a 272-bit entry-size quadrant, the two LSBs are 00. This index updates if the device is either a local or global winner in a Search operation. Reserved. Valid. During a Search operation in a depth-cascaded configuration, the device that is a global winner in a match sets this bit to 1. It updates only when the device is a global winner in a Search operation. Reserved.
- VALID
[30:14] [31]
0 0
-
[67:32]
0
8.0
Command Register
Table 8-1 describes the command register fields. Table 8-1. Command Register Description Field SRST Range [0] Initial Value 0 Description Software Reset. If 1, this bit resets the device with the same effect as a hardware reset. Internally, it generates a reset pulse lasting for eight CLK cycles. This bit automatically resets to 0 after the reset has completed. Device Enable. If 0, it keeps the SRAM bus (SADR, WE_L, CE_L, OE_L, and ALE_L), SSF, and SSV signals in a three-state condition and forces the cascade interface output signals LHO[1:0] and BHO[2:0] to 0. It also keeps the DQ bus in input mode. The purpose of this bit is to make sure that there are no bus contentions when the devices power up in the system.
DEVE
[1]
0
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CYNSE70032
Table 8-1. Command Register Description (continued) Field TLSZ Range [3:2] Initial Value 01 Description Table Size. The host ASIC must program this field to configure the chips into a table of a certain size. This field affects the pipeline latency of the Search and Learn operations as well as the Read and Write accesses to the SRAM (SADR[21:0], CE_L, OE_L, WE_L, ALE_L, SSV, SSF, and ACK). Once programmed, the Search latency stays constant. The latency by number of CLK cycles is as follows: 00: One device 4 01: Up to eight devices 5 10: Up to 31 devices 6 11: Reserved. Latency of Hit Signals. This field further adds latency to the SSF and SSV signals by the following number of CLK cycles during searches and ACKs in an SRAM Read access: 000: 0 100: 4 001: 1 101: 5 010: 2 110: 6 011: 3 111: 7. Last Device in the Cascade. When set, this is the last device in the depth-cascaded table and is the default driver for the SSF and SSV signals. In the event of a Search failure, the device with this bit set drives the hit signals as follows: SSF = 0, SSV = 1. During nonSearch cycles, the device with this bit set drives the signals as follows: SSF = 0, SSV = 0. Last Device on the SRAM Bus. When set, this device is the last device on the SRAM bus in the depth-cascaded table and is the default driver for the SADR, CE_L, WE_L, and ALE_L signals. In cycles where no CYNSE70032 device (in a depth-cascaded table) drives these signals, the signals are driven as follows: SADR = 22'h3FFFFF, CE_L = 1, WE_L = 1, and ALE_L = 1. OE_L is always driven by the device for which this bit is set. Database Configuration. The device is divided internally into four partitions of 8K x 68 bits, each of which can be configured as 8K x 68 bits, 4K x 136 bits, or 2K x 272 bits, as follows: 00: 4K x 68 bits 01: 2K x 136 bits 10: 1K x 272 bits 11: Reserved. Bits[10:9] apply to configuring the first partition in the address space. Bits[12:11] apply to configuring the second partition in the address space. Bits[14:13] apply to configuring the third partition in the address space. Bits[16:15] apply to configuring the fourth partition in the address space. Reserved.
HLAT
[6:4]
000
LDEV
[7]
0
LRAM
[8]
0
CFG
[16:9]
00000000
[67:17]
0
9.0
Information Register
Table 9-1 describes the information register fields. Table 9-1. Information Register Description Field Revision Implementation Reserved Device ID Device ID Device ID MFID Reserved Range [3:0] [6:4] [7] [11:8] [12] [15:13] [31:16] [67:32] Initial Value 0001 000 0 0001 0 or 1 000 1101_1100_0111_1111 Description Revision Number. This is the current device revision number. Numbers start at one and increment by one for each revision of the device. This is the device implementation number. Reserved. This is the device identification number. Reserved. These are the three most significant bits of the device identification number. Manufacturer ID. This field is the same as the manufacturer identification number and continuation bits in the TAP controller. Reserved.
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CYNSE70032
9.1 Read Burst Address Register
Table 9-2 shows the Read burst address register (RBURREG) fields that must be programmed before a burst Read. Table 9-2. Read Burst Register Description Field ADR Range [13:0] Initial Value 0 Description Address. This is the starting address of the data or mask array during a burst Read operation. It automatically increments by one for each successive Read of the data or mask array. Once the operation is complete, the contents of this field must be reinitialized for the next operation. Reserved. Length of Burst Access. The device provides the capability to Read from 4-511 locations in a single burst. The BLEN decrements automatically. Once the operation is complete, the contents of this field must be reinitialized for the next operation. Reserved.
BLEN
[18:14] [27:19]
0
[67:28]
9.2
Write Burst Address Register Description
Table 9-3 describes the Write burst address register (WBURREG) fields that must be programmed before a burst Write. Table 9-3. Write Burst Register Description Field ADR Range [13:0] Initial Value 0 Description Address. This is the starting address of the data or mask array during a burst Write operation. It automatically increments by one for each successive write of the data or mask array. Once the operation is complete, the contents of this field must be reinitialized for the next operation. Reserved. Length of Burst Access. The device provides the capability to write from 4-511 locations in a single burst. The BLEN decrements automatically. Once the operation is complete, the contents of this field must be reinitialized for the next operation. Reserved.
BLEN
[18:14] [27:19]
0
[67:28]
9.3
NFA Register
Bit[0] of each 68-bit data entry is specially designated for use in the operation of the Learn command. For 68-bit-configured quadrants, this bit indicates whether a location is full (bit set to 1) or empty (bit set to 0). Every Write or Learn command loads the address of the first 68-bit location containing a 0 into the entry's bit[0]. This is stored in the NFA register (see Table 9-4). If all the bits[0] in a device are set to 1, the CYNSE70032 asserts FULO[1:0] to 1. For a 136-bit-configured quadrants, the LSB of the NFA register is always set to 0. The host ASIC must set both bit[0] and bit[68] in a 136-bit word to either 0 or 1 to indicate full or empty status. Both bit[0] and bit[68] must be set to either 0 or 1, (that is, the 10 or 01 settings are invalid). Table 9-4. NFA Register Address 60 67-14 Reserved 13-0 Index
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10.0 NSE Architecture and Operation Overview
The CYNSE70032 device consists of 16K x 68-bit storage cells referred to as data bits. There is a mask cell corresponding to each data cell. Figure 10-1 shows the three organizations of the device based on the value of the CFG bits in the command register. 68 136 272
Masks
4K 8K Masks Data
Masks Data CFG = 10101010
16K
Data
CFG = 01010101
CFG = 00000000 Figure 10-1. CYNSE70032 Database Width Configuration During a Search operation, the Search data bit (S), the data array bit (D), the mask array bit (M), and the global mask bit (G) are used in the following manner to generate a match at that bit position (see Table 10-1). The entry with a match on every bit position results in a successful Search during a Search operation. Table 10-1. Bit Position Match G 0 1 1 1 1 1 M X 0 1 1 1 1 D X X 0 1 0 1 S X X 0 0 1 1 Match 1 1 1 0 0 1
In order for a successful Search to make the device the local winner in the Search operation, all 68-bit positions within a device must generate a match for a 68-bit entry in 68-bit-configured quadrants, or all 136-bit positions must generate a match for two consecutive even and odd 68-bit entries in quadrants configured as 136 bits, or all 272-bit positions must generate a match for four consecutive entries aligned to four entry-page boundaries of 68-bit entries in quadrants configured as 272 bits. An arbitration mechanism using a cascade bus determines the global winning device among the local winning devices in a Search cycle. The global winning device drives the SRAM bus, SSV, and the SSF signals. In the case of a Search failure, the device(s) with LDEV and LRAM bits set drive the SRAM bus, SSF, and SSV signals. The CYNSE70032 device can be configured to contain tables of different widths, even within the same chip. Figure 10-2 shows a sample configuration of different widths.
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CYNSE70032
68 4K 68 4K 136 272
2K 1K
CFG = 10010000 Figure 10-2. Multiwidth Database Configurations
11.0
Data and Mask Addressing
68 0 3 7 16383 64K 68 135 0 2 4 6 1 3 5 7 68 0
Figure 11-1 shows CYNSE70032 data and mask array addressing. 68 68 68 68 67 0 283 0 0 1 2 1 4 5 6 4K 2 3 16380 16381 16382 16K
16383 16382 16383 CFG = 00000000 CFG = 01010101 (68-bit configuration) (136-bit configuration) Figure 11-1. Addressing CYNSE70032 Data and Mask Arrays
CFG = 10101010 (272-bit configuration)
12.0
Commands
A master device such as an ASIC controller issues commands to the CYNSE70032 device using the command valid (CMDV) signal and the CMD bus. The following subsections describe the operation of the commands.
12.1
Command Codes
The CYNSE70032 device implements four basic commands, shown in Table 12-1. The command code must be presented to CMD[1:0] while keeping the CMDV signal high for two CLK2X cycles (cycles A and B). The controller ASIC must align the instructions using the PHS_L signal. The CMD[8:2] field passes the parameters of the command in cycles A and B. Table 12-1. Command Codes Command Code 00 01 10 11 Command Description Read Reads one of the following: data array, mask array, device registers, or external SRAM. Write Writes one of the following: data array, mask array, device registers, or external SRAM. Search Searches the data array for a desired pattern using the specified register from the GMR array and local mask associated with each data cell. Learn The device has internal storage for up to 16 comparands that it can learn. The device controller can insert these entries at the next free address (as specified by the NFA register) using the Learn instruction.
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CYNSE70032
12.2 Commands and Command Parameters
Table 12-2 lists the CMD bus fields that contain the CYNSE70032 command parameters and their respective cycles. Each command is described separately in the subsections that follow. Table 12-2. Command Parameters Command Read CYC A B Write A B Search A 8 SADR[21] 0 SADR[21] 0 SADR[21] 7 SADR[20] 0 SADR[20] 0 SADR[20] 6 SADR[19] 0 SADR[19] 0 SADR[19] 2 0 = Single 1 = Burst 0 0 0 0 = Single 1 = Burst GMR Index [2:0] 0 = Single 1 = Burst GMR Index [2:0] 0 = Single 1 = Burst GMR Index 2:0] 68-bit or 136-bit: 0 272-bit: 1 in first cycle 0 in second cycle Comparand Register Index Comparand Register Index Comparand Register Index 5 0 4 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0
Learn
[5]
B A B
SADR[21] 0
SSR Index[2:0] SADR[20] SADR[19] 0 Mode 0: 68-bit 1: 136-bit
1 1 1
0 1 1
12.3
Read Command
The Read can be a single Read of a data array, a mask array, an SRAM, or a register location (CMD[2] = 0). It can be a burst Read of the data (CMD[2] = 1) or mask array locations using an internal autoincrementing address register (RBURADR). A description of each type is provided in Table 12-3. A single-location Read operation lasts six cycles, as shown in Figure 12-1. The burst Read adds two cycles for each successive Read. The SADR[21:19] bits supplied in Read instruction cycle A drive SADR[21:19] signals during the Read of an SRAM location. Table 12-3. Read Command Parameters Command Parameter CMD[2] 0 1 Read Command Description Single Read Reads a single location of the data array, mask array, external SRAM, or device registers. All access information is applied on the DQ bus. Burst Read Reads a block of locations from the data or mask arrays as a burst. The RBURADR specifies the starting address and the length of the data transfer from the data or mask array, and it autoincrements the address for each access. All other access information is applied on the DQ bus. Note. The device registers and external SRAM can only be read in single-Read mode.
Note: 5. The 272-bit-configured devices or 272-bit-configured quadrants within devices do not support the Learn instruction.
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CYNSE70032
cycle 1 CLK2X PHS_L cycle 2 cycle 3 cycle 4 cycle 5 cycle 6
CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ Read A B X Data
Address
ACK Figure 12-1. Single-Location Read Cycle Timing The single Read operation takes six clock cycles that are performed in the following sequence. * Cycle 1: The host ASIC applies the Read instruction on CMD[1:0] (CMD[2] = 0) using CMDV = 1, and the DQ bus supplies the address as shown in Table 12-4 and Table 12-5. The host ASIC selects the CYNSE70032 device for which ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. If DQ[25:21] = 11111, the host ASIC selects the CYNSE70032 with the LDEV bit set. The host ASIC also supplies SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6] in cycle A of the Read instruction if the Read is directed to the external SRAM. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC floats DQ[67:0] to a three-state condition. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC keeps DQ[67:0] in a three-state condition. * Cycle 4: The selected device starts to drive the DQ[67:0] bus, and drives the ACK signal from Z to low. * Cycle 5: The selected device drives the Read data from the addressed location on the DQ[67:0] bus, and drives the ACK signal high. * Cycle 6: The selected device floats the DQ[67:0] to a three-state condition and drives the ACK signal low. At the termination of cycle 6, the selected device releases the ACK line to a three-state condition. The Read instruction is complete, and a new operation can begin. Note. The latency of the SRAM Read will be different than the one described above (see Subsection 15.2, "SRAM PIO Access" on page 99). Table 12-4 lists and describes the format of the Read address for a data array, mask array, or SRAM. Table 12-5 describes the Read address format for the internal registers. Figure 12-2 illustrates the timing diagram for the burst Read of the data or mask array. Table 12-4. Read Address Format for Data Array, Mask Array, or SRAM DQ DQ DQ DQ DQ DQ [67:30] [29] [28:26] [25:21] [20:19] [18:14] DQ[13:0] Reserved 0: Direct SSR Index ID 00: Data Reserved If DQ[29] is 0, this field carries the address of the data array 1: Indirect (applicable if Array location. If DQ[29] is 1, the SSR Index specified on DQ[29] is DQ[28:26] is used to generate the address of the data array indirect) location: {SSR[13:2], SSR[1] | DQ[1], SSR[0] | DQ[0]}.[6] Reserved 0: Direct SSR Index ID 01: Mask Reserved If DQ[29] is 0, this field carries the address of the mask array 1: Indirect (applicable if Array location. If DQ[29] is 1, the SSR Index specified on DQ[29] is DQ[28:26] is used to generate the address of the mask array indirect) location: {SSR[13:2], SSR[1] | DQ[1], SSR[0] | DQ[0]}.[6] Reserved 0: Direct SSR Index ID 10: Reserved If DQ[29] is 0, this field carries the address of the SRAM 1: Indirect (applicable if External location. If DQ[29] is 1, the SSR Index specified on DQ[29] is SRAM DQ[28:26] is used to generate the address of the SRAM indirect) location: {SSR[13:2], SSR[1] | DQ[1], SSR[0] | DQ[0]}.[6]
Note: 6. " | " stands for logical OR operation. "{}" stands for concatenation operator.
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CYNSE70032
Table 12-5. Read Address Format for Internal Registers DQ[67:26] Reserved DQ[25:21] ID DQ[20:19] 11: Register DQ[18:6] Reserved DQ[5:0] Register Address
cycle cyclecycle cyclecyclecycle cycle cyclecyclecycle cyclecycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ ACK EOT Figure 12-2. Burst Read of the Data and Mask Arrays (BLEN = 4) The read operation lasts 4 + 2n CLK cycles (where n is the number of accesses in the burst specified by the BLEN field of the RBURREG) in the sequence shown below. This operation assumes that the host ASIC has programmed the RBURREG with the ADR and the BLEN before initiating a burst Read command. * Cycle 1: The host ASIC applies the Read instruction on CMD[1:0] (CMD[2] = 1) using CMDV = 1 and the address supplied on the DQ bus as shown in Table 12-6. The host ASIC selects the CYNSE70032 device where ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. If DQ[25:21] = 11111, the host ASIC selects the CYNSE70032 device with the LDEV bit set. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC floats DQ[67:0] to a three-state condition. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC keeps DQ[67:0] in a three-state condition. * Cycle 4: The selected device starts to drive the DQ[67:0] bus, and drives ACK and EOT from Z to low. * Cycle 5: The selected device drives the Read data from the addressed location on the DQ[67:0] bus and drives the ACK signal high. Cycles 4 and 5 repeat for each additional access until all the accesses specified in the BLEN field of the RBURREG are complete. On the last transfer, the CYNSE70032 device drives the EOT signal high. * Cycle (4 + 2n): The selected device drives the DQ[67:0] to a three-state condition, and drives the ACK and EOT signals low. At the termination of cycle (4 + 2n), the selected device floats the ACK line to a three-state condition. The burst Read instruction is complete, and a new operation can begin. Table 12-6 describes the Read address format for data and mask arrays for burst Read operations. Table 12-6. Read Address Format for Data and Mask Arrays DQ[67:26] DQ[25:21] DQ[20:19] DQ[18:14] DQ[13:0] Reserved ID 00: Data Array Reserved Do not care. These fifteen bits come from the internal RBURADR, which increments for each access. Reserved ID 01: Mask Array Reserved Do not care. These fifteen bits come from the internal RBURADR, which increments for each access. Read AB Address FF Data0 FF Data1 FF Data2 FF Data3
12.4
Write Command
The Write command can be a single Write of a data array, mask array, register, or an external SRAM location (CMD[2] = 0). It can also be a burst Write (CMD[2] = 1) using an internal auto-incrementing address register (WBURADR) of the data or mask array locations. A single-location Write is a three-cycle operation as shown in Figure 12-3. The burst Write adds one extra cycle for each successive location Write.
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CYNSE70032
cycle 0 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ A Write B Address Data X cycle 1 cycle 2 cycle 3 cycle 4
Figure 12-3. Single Write Cycle Timing The following is the Write operation sequence, and Table 12-7 shows the Write address format for the data array, the mask array, or the single-Write SRAM. Table 12-8 shows the Write address format for the internal registers. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Write instruction to CMD[1:0] (CMD[2] = 0) using CMDV = 1 and the address supplied on the DQ bus. The host ASIC also supplies the GMR Index to mask the write to the data or mask array location on CMD[5:3]. For SRAM Writes, the host ASIC must supply SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6]. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Write instruction to CMD[1:0] (CMD[2] = 0) using CMDV = 1 and the address supplied on the DQ bus. The host ASIC continues to supply the GMR Index to mask the Write to the data or mask array locations in CMD[5:3]. The host ASIC selects the device where ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines, or it selects all the devices when DQ[25:21] = 11111. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC drives the DQ[67:0] with the data to be written to the data array, the mask array, or the register location of the selected device. * Cycle 3: Idle cycle. At the termination of cycle 3, another operation can begin. Note. The latency of the SRAM Write will be different than the one described above (see Subsection 15.2, "SRAM PIO Access" on page 99). Figure 12-4 shows the timing diagram of a burst Write operation of the data or mask array. Table 12-7. Write Address Format for Data Array, Mask Array, or SRAM (Single Write) DQ DQ DQ DQ [67:30] [29] [28:26] [25:21] Reserved 0: Direct SSR (applicable if ID 1: Indirect DQ[29] is indirect) DQ [20:19] 00: Data Array DQ [18:14] DQ[13:0] Reserved If DQ[29] is 0, this field carries the address of the data array location. If DQ[29] is 1, the SSR specified on DQ[28:26] is used to generate the address of the data array location: {SSR[13:2], SSR[1] | DQ[1], SSR[0] | DQ[0]}.[6] Reserved If DQ[29] is 0, this field carries the address of the mask array location. If DQ[29] is 1, the SSR specified on DQ[28:26] is used to generate the address of the mask array location: {SSR[13:2], SSR[1] | DQ[1], SSR[0] | DQ[0]}.[6] Reserved If DQ[29] is 0, this field carries the address of the SRAM location. If DQ[29] is 1, the SSR specified on DQ[28:26] is used to generate the address of the SRAM location: {SSR[13:2], SSR[1] | DQ[1], SSR[0] | DQ[0]}.[6]
Reserved 0: Direct SSR (applicable if 1: Indirect DQ[29] is indirect)
ID
01: Mask Array
Reserved 0: Direct SSR (applicable if 1: Indirect DQ[29] is indirect)
ID
10: External SRAM
Table 12-8. Write Address Format for Internal Registers DQ[67:26] Reserved DQ[25:21] ID DQ[20:19] 11: Register DQ[18:6] Reserved DQ[5:0] Register address
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cycle 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] Write cycle 2 cycle 3 cycle 4 cycle 5 cycle 6
A
B
DQ EOT
Address Data0 Data1 Data2 Data3
X
Figure 12-4. Burst Write of the Data and Mask Arrays (BLEN = 4) The burst Write operation lasts for (n + 2) CLK cycles. n signifies the number of accesses in the burst as specified in the BLEN field of the WBURREG. The following is the block Write operation sequence. This operation assumes that the host ASIC has programmed the WBURREG with the ADR and the BLEN before initiating a burst Write command. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Write instruction to CMD[1:0] (CMD[2] = 1) using CMDV = 1, and the address supplied on the DQ bus, as shown in Table 12-9. The host ASIC also supplies the GMR Index to mask the Write to the data or mask array locations in CMD[5:3]. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Write instruction on CMD[1:0] (CMD[2] = 1) using CMDV = 1 and the address supplied on the DQ bus. The host ASIC continues to supply the GMR Index to mask the Write to the data or mask array locations in CMD[5:3]. The host ASIC selects the device for which ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. It selects all the devices when DQ[25:21] = 11111. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC drives the DQ[67:0] with the data to be written to the data or mask array location of the selected device. The CYNSE70032 device writes the data from the DQ[67:0] bus only to the subfield that has the corresponding mask bit set to 1 in the GMR specified by the index CMD[5:3]supplied in cycle 1. * Cycles 3 to n + 1: The host ASIC drives DQ[67:0] with the data to be written to the next data or mask array location of the selected device (addressed by the auto-increment ADR field of the WBURREG register). The CYNSE70032 device writes the data on the DQ[67:0] bus only to the subfield that has the corresponding mask bit set to 1 in the GMR that is specified by the index CMD[5:3] supplied in cycle 1. The CYNSE70032 device drives the EOT signal low from cycle 3 to cycle n; the CYNSE70032 device drives the EOT signal high in cycle n + 1 (n is specified in the BLEN field of the WBURREG). * Cycle n + 2: TheCYNSE70032 drives the EOT signal low. At the termination of cycle n + 2, the CYNSE70032 device floats the EOT signal to a three-state operation, and a new instruction can begin. Table 12-9. Write Address Format for Data and Mask Array (Burst Write) DQ [67:26] Reserved Reserved DQ [25:21] ID ID DQ [20:19] 00: Data array 01: Mask array DQ [18:14] Reserved Reserved DQ[13:0]
Do not care. These fifteen bits come from the internal
WBURADR, which increments with each access.
Do not care. These fifteen bits come from the internal
WBURADR, which increments with each access.
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CYNSE70032
13.0
* * * * * * * * * *
Search Command
This subsection will describe the following searches. 68-bit Search on tables configured as x68 using one device 68-bit Search on tables configured as x68 using up to eight devices 68-bit Search on tables configured as x68 using up to 31 devices 136-bit Search on tables configured as x136 using one device 136-bit Search on tables configured as x136 using up to eight devices 136-bit Search on tables configured as x136 using up to 31 devices 272-bit Search on tables configured as x272 using one device 272-bit Search on tables configured as x272 using up to eight devices 272-bit Search on tables configured as x272 using up to 31 devices Mixed-size searches on tables configured with different widths using an CYNSE70032.
13.1
68-bit Search on Tables Configured as x68 using a Single CYNSE70032 Device
Figure 13-1 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in a 68-bit-configured table (CFG = 00000000) consisting of a single device for one set of parameters: TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1. The hardware diagram for this Search subsystem is shown in Figure 13-2. cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4
CMD[8:2]
A B AB A BAB
DQ SADR[21:0] 1 1 1 0 0 0
D1
D2
D3
D4 A1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 A3 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0
CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 00, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Search1 Search3 Search2 Search4 Hit Miss Hit Miss Figure 13-1. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search in x68 Table (One Device)
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DQ[67:0] CMDV, CMD[8:0]
BHI[2:0]
6
5
4
3 LHI
2
1
0 SRAM LHO[0]
CYNSE70032 SSF, SSV BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
Figure 13-2. Hardware Diagram for a Table with a Single Device The following is the sequence of operation for a single 68-bit Search command (also refer to "Command and Command Parameters," Subsection 12.2 on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven by the index to the GMR pair for use in this Search operation. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the same bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] by this device if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data to be compared. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and to apply Search command (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[5:2] must be driven by the index of the comparand register pair for storing the 136-bit word presented on the DQ bus during cycles A and B. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and the hit flag (see page 14 for information on SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] continues to carry the 68-bit data to be compared.
Note. For 68-bit searches, the host ASIC must supply the same 68-bit data on DQ[67:0] during both cycles A and B. The even
and odd GMR pairs selected for the compare must be programmed with the same value. The logical 68-bit Search operation is shown in Figure 13-3. The entire table of 68-bit entries is compared to a 68-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in both cycles A and B of the command) using the GMR and the local mask bits. The effective GMR is the 68-bit word specified by the identical value in both even and odd GMR pairs selected by the GMR Index in the command's cycle A. The 68-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in both cycles A and B of the command) is also stored in both even and odd comparand register pairs selected by the Comparand Register Index in the command's cycle B. In a x68 configuration, only the even comparand register can subsequently be used by the Learn command. The word K (presented on the DQ bus in both cycles A and B of the command) is compared with each entry in the table, starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on the SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). 0 67 GMR K Location 67 address 0 67 0 1 Comparand Register (even) 2 K 3 Comparand Register (odd) K L 16383 CFG = 00000000 (68-bit configuration) Figure 13-3. x68 Table with One Device The Search command is a pipelined operation and executes a Search at half the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 68-bit searches in x68-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 68-bit Search command cycle (which is two CLK2X cycles) is shown in Table 13-1. 0
(First matching entry)
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Table 13-1. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 16K x 68 bits 128K x 68 bits 496K x 68 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 4 for a single device in the table with TLSZ = 00. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT as specified in Table 13-2. Table 13-2. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
13.2
68-bit Search on Tables Configured as x68 Using up to Eight CYNSE70032 Devices
The hardware diagram of the Search subsystem of eight devices is shown in Figure 13-4. The following are the parameters programmed into the eight devices. * First seven devices (devices 0-6): CFG = 00000000, TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 010, LRAM = 0, and LDEV = 0. * Eighth device (device 7): CFG = 00000000, TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 010, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1.
Note. All eight devices must be programmed with the same values for TLSZ and HLAT. Only the last device in the table (device number 7 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 1 and LDEV = 1. All other upstream devices (devices 0 through 6 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 0 and LDEV = 0.
Figure 13-5 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 68-bit-configured table of eight devices for device number 0. Figure 13-6 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 68-bit-configured table of eight devices for device number 1. Figure 13-7 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 68-bit-configured table of eight devices for device number 7 (the last device in this specific table). For these timing diagrams four 68-bit searches are performed sequentially. HIT/MISS assumptions were made as shown below in Table 13-3. Table 13-3. HIT/MISS Assumption Search Number Device 0 Device 1 Devices 2-6 Device 7 1 Hit Miss Miss Miss 2 Miss Hit Miss Miss 3 Hit Hit Miss Hit 4 Miss Miss Miss Hit
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SRAM BHI[2:0] LHO[1] SSF, SSV 3 LHI CYNSE70032 #0 6 5 4 2 1 0 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 CYNSE70032 #1 LHI
2
1 LHO[0]
0
DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 LHI CYNSE70032 #2
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 2 LHI CYNSE70032 #3 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
654 3 CYNSE70032 #4 LHI LHO[0]
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
65 4 CYNSE70032 LHI #5 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 54 LHI CYNSE70032 #6 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
5 4 LHI CYNSE70032 #7
6
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 13-4. Hardware Diagram for a Table with Eight Devices
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4
CMD[8:2]
A B AB A BAB
DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] z z z z z z z 0
D1
D2
D3
D4
A1 0 0 1
z z z z
A3 0 0 1
z z z z
CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
1 1
z z
1 1
z z
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 010, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (This device (This device is the global is the global winner.) winner.) Search4 Search2 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-5. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search Device Number 0
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4
CMD[8:2]
A B AB A BAB
DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF z z z
D1
D2
D3
D4
A2 0 0 1 z z
z z z z
z
1 1
z z
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 010, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 (Miss on this device.)
Search3 (Local but not global winner.) Search4 Search2 (This device (Miss on this device.) is global winner.)
Figure 13-6. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search Device Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 1 0 0 0 z z z A4 0 0 1 z z 1 1 0 0
Search1 01
Search3
01 01 01 Search2 Search4
A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
z
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 010, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Local but this device.) not global winner.) Search2 Search4 (Global (Miss on this device.) winner.)
Figure 13-7. Timing Diagram for 68-bit Search Device Number 7 (Last Device) The following is the sequence of operation for a single 68-bit Search command (also refer to "Command and Command Parameters," Subsection 12.2 on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) to CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair for use in this Search operation. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the same bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] by this device if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data to be compared. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and to apply Search command (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[5:2] must be driven by the index of the comparand register pair for storing the 136-bit word presented on the DQ bus during cycles A and B. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and hit flag (see page 14 for a description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] continues to carry the 68-bit data to be compared.
Note. For 68-bit searches, the host ASIC must supply the same 68-bit data on DQ[67:0] during both cycles A and B. The even
and odd GMR pairs selected for the comparison must also be programmed with the same value. The logical 68-bit Search operation is shown in Figure 13-8. The entire table of eight devices of 68-bit entries is compared to a 68-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in both cycles A and B of the command) using the GMR and local mask bits. The effective GMR is the 68-bit word specified by the identical value in both even and odd GMR pairs in each of the eight devices and selected by the GMR Index in the command's cycle A. The 68-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in both cycles A and B of the command) is also stored in both even and odd comparand register pairs (selected by the Comparand Register Index in command cycle B) in each of the eight devices. In the x68 configuration, only the even comparand register can subsequently be used by the Learn command in one of the devices (the first non-full device only). The word K (presented on the DQ bus in both cycles A and B of Document #: 38-02042 Rev. *E Page 30 of 126
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the command) is compared with each entry in the table, starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on the SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). The global winning device will drive the bus in a specific cycle. On a global miss cycle the device with LRAM = 1 (default driving device for the SRAM bus) and LDEV = 1 (default driving device for SSF and SSV signals) will be the default driver for such missed cycles. 67 Must be same in each of the eight devices Location 67 address 0 1 2 3 L (First matching entry) 131071 Will be the same in each of the eight devices CFG = 00000000 (68-bit configuration) GMR K 0 0
67
0
Comparand Register (Even) K Comparand Register (Odd) K
Figure 13-8. x68 Table with Eight Devices The Search command is a pipelined operation and executes a Search at half the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 68-bit searches in x68-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 68-bit Search command cycle (two CLK2X cycles) is shown in Table 13-4. Table 13-4. Search latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 16K x 68 bits 128K x 68 bits 496K x 68 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 5 for up to eight devices in the table (TLSZ = 01). SSV and SSF also shift further to the right for different values of HLAT as specified in Table 13-5. Table 13-5. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
13.3
68-bit Search on Tables Configured as x68 Using up to 31 CYNSE70032 Devices
The hardware diagram of the Search subsystem of 31 devices is shown in Figure 13-9. Each of the four blocks in the diagram represents eight CYNSE70032 devices (except the last, which has seven devices). The diagram for a block of eight devices is shown in Figure 13-10. The following are the parameters that are programmed into the 31 devices. * First thirty devices (devices 0-29): CFG = 00000000, TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 001, LRAM = 0, and LDEV = 0. * Thirty-first device (device 30): CFG = 00000000, TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 001, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1.
Note. All devices must be programmed with the same values for TLSZ and HLAT. Only the last device in the table (device
number 30 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 1 and LDEV = 1. All other upstream devices (devices 0 through 29 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 0 and LDEV = 0. Document #: 38-02042 Rev. *E Page 31 of 126
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The timing diagrams referred to in this paragraph reference the Hit/Miss assumptions defined in Table 13-6. For the purpose of illustrating timings, it is further assumed that the there is only one device with a matching entry in each of the blocks. Figure 13-11 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 68-bit-configured table of 31 devices for each of the eight devices in block number 0. Figure 13-12 shows a timing diagram for a Search command in the 68-bit-configured table of 31 devices for all the devices in block number 1 (above the winning device in that block). Figure 13-13 shows the timing diagram for the globally winning device (defined as the final winner within its own and all blocks) in block number 1. Figure 13-14 shows the timing diagram for all the devices below the globally winning device in block number 1. Figure 13-15, Figure 13-16, and Figure 13-17, respectively, show the timing diagrams of the devices above the globally winning device, the globally winning device, and the devices below the globally winning device for block number 2. Figure 13-18, Figure 13-19, Figure 13-20, and Figure 13-21, respectively, show the timing diagrams of the devices above the globally winning device, the globally winning device, and the devices below the globally winning device except the last device (device 30) for block number 3. The 68-bit Search operation is pipelined and executed as follows. Four cycles from the Search command, each of the devices knows the outcome internal to it for that operation. In the fifth cycle after the Search command, the devices in a block arbitrate for a winner amongst them (a "block" being defined as less than or equal to eight devices resolving the winner between them using the LHI[6:0] and LHO[1:0] signalling mechanisms). In the sixth cycle after the Search command, the blocks resolve the winning block through the BHI[2:0] and BHO[2:0] signalling mechanisms. The winning device within the winning block is the global winning device for a Search operation. Table 13-6. Hit/Miss Assumption Search Number Block 0 Block 1 Block 2 Block 3 1 Miss Miss Miss Hit 2 Miss Miss Hit Hit 3 Miss Hit Hit Miss 4 Miss Miss Miss Miss
BHI[2] SSF, SSV
BHI[1]
BHI[0] GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 0 (devices 0-7) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
SRAM
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] GND Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 1 (devices 8-15) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 2 (devices 16-23) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] Block of 7 CYNSE70032s Block 3 (devices 24-30) DQ[67:0] BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0] CMD[8:0], CMDV Figure 13-9. Hardware Diagram for a Table with 31 Devices
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BHI[2:0] BHI[2:0] LHO[1] 3 LHI CYNSE70032 #0 6 5 4 2 1 0 LHO[0] SRAM
BHI[2:0] DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0] SSV, SSF LHO[1]
6543 CYNSE70032 #1 LHI
2
1 LHO[0]
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 LHI CYNSE70032 #2
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 2 LHI CYNSE70032 #3 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
654 3 CYNSE70032 #4 LHI LHO[0]
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
65 4 CYNSE70032 LHI #5 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 5 4 LHI CYNSE70032 #6 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
54 LHI CYNSE70032 #7
6
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 13-10. Hardware Diagram for a Block of up to Eight Devices
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Figure 13-11. Timing Diagram for Each Device in Block Number 0 (Miss on Each Device)
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0)] stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Figure 13-12. Timing Diagram for Each Device Above the Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z Search1 Search3 (Miss on (This device is this device.)global winner.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
A3
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Figure 13-13. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
z SSF CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-14. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
Search1 Search3 CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Search2 Search4 Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal. Figure 13-15. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z 0 z z z z z 1 1 z z 0 1 z z A2 z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
Search1 Search3 (Miss on CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. (Hit but not this device.) winner.) Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Search2 Search4 Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. (Miss on (Global Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. winner.) this device.) Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal. Figure 13-16. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-17. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. this device.) this device.) Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Search2 Search4 Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal. Figure 13-18. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 3
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z 0 z 0 z z z z 1 1 z z 1 z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
A1
Search1 Search3 CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. (Global (Miss on Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. winner.) this device.) Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Hit but not Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. global winner.)this device.) Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal. Figure 13-19. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 3
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-20. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 3 (Except the Last Device [Device Number 30])
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
0 0 1 z z 1 0
z
CFG = 00000000, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Note: |(BHI[2:0)] stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Hit on some (Hit on some device above.)device above.) Search2 Search4 (Hit on some (Global miss; device above.) this device default driver.)
Figure 13-21. Timing Diagram for Device Number 6 in Block Number 3 (Device Number 30 in Depth-Cascaded Table) The following is the sequence of operation for a single 68-bit Search command (also refer to "Command and Command Parameters," Subsection 12.2 on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair for use in this Search operation. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the same bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] by this device if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data to be compared. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and applies Search command (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[5:2] must be driven by the index of the comparand register pair for storing the 136-bit word presented on the DQ bus during cycles A and B. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and the hit flag (see page 14 for the description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] continues to carry the 68-bit data to be compared.
Note. For 68-bit searches, the host ASIC must supply the same 68-bit data on DQ[67:0] during both cycles A and B. The even
and odd GMR pairs selected for the compare must be programmed with the same value. The logical 68-bit Search operation is shown in Figure 13-22. The entire table (31 devices of 68-bit entries) is compared to a 68-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in both cycles A and B of the command) using the GMR and the local mask bits. The effective GMR is the 68-bit word specified by the identical value in both even and odd GMR pairs in each of the eight devices and selected Document #: 38-02042 Rev. *E Page 44 of 126
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by the GMR Index in the command's cycle A. The 68-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) is also stored in both even and odd comparand register pairs in each of the eight devices (and selected by the Comparand Register Index in command's cycle B). In the x68 configuration, the even comparand register can subsequently be used by the Learn command, but only in the first non-full device. The word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) is compared with each entry in the table, starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on the SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). The global winning device will drive the bus in a specific cycle. On global miss cycles the device with LRAM = 1 and LDEV = 1 will be the default driver for such missed cycles. 0 67 Must be same in each of the eight devices Location 67 address Comparand Register (even) 0 K 1 2 Comparand Register (odd) 3 K 67 0 L (First matching entry) GMR K 0
Will be same in each of the eight devices
CFG = 00000000 (68-bit configuration) Figure 13-22. x68 Table with 31 Devices The Search command is a pipelined operation and executes a search at half the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 68-bit searches in x68-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 68-bit Search command cycle (two CLK2X cycles) is shown in Table 13-7. Table 13-7. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 16K x 68 bits 128K x 68 bits 496K x 68 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
507903
For up to 31 devices in the table (TLSZ = 10), search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 6. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT as specified in Table 13-8. Table 13-8. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
13.4
136-bit Search on Tables Configured as x136 Using a Single CYNSE70032 Device
Figure 13-23 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 136-bit-configured table (CFG = 01010101) consisting of a single device for one set of parameters: TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 001, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. The hardware diagram for this Search subsystem is shown in Figure 13-24.
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4
CMD[8:2]
A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4 A1 1 0 0 1 0 1 A3 0 0 1 0 1
DQ SADR[21:0]
CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
1 1 0 0 0
1 1 0 1 1
1 1 0 0
0
1
0
Search1 Search3 Hit Hit Search2 Search4 Miss Miss CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 00, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Figure 13-23. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search (One Device)
DQ[67:0] CMDV, CMD[8:0] SSF, SSV
BHI[2:0]
6
5
4
3 LHI
2
1
0 SRAM LHO[0]
CYNSE70032 BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
Figure 13-24. Hardware Diagram for a Table With One Device The following is the operation sequence for a single 136-bit Search command (also refer to "Command and Command Parameters," Subsection 12.2 on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) to CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair for use in this Search operation. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the same bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] by this device if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([135:68]) to be compared against all even locations. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[5:2] must be driven by the index of the comparand register pair for storing the 136-bit word presented on the DQ bus during cycles A and B. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and hit flag (see page 14 for the description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] is driven with 68-bit data ([67:0]), compared to all odd locations.
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Note. For 136-bit searches, the host ASIC must supply two distinct 68-bit data words on DQ[67:0] during cycles A and B. The
even-numbered GMR of the pair specified by the GMR Index is used for masking the word in cycle A. The odd-numbered GMR of the pair specified by the GMR Index is used for masking the word in cycle B. The logical 136-bit search operation is shown in Figure 13-25. The entire table of 136-bit entries is compared to a 136-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) using the GMR and local mask bits. The GMR is the 136-bit word specified by the even and odd global mask pair selected by the GMR Index in the command's cycle A. The 136-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) is also stored in both even and odd comparand register pairs selected by the Comparand Register Index in the command's cycle B. The two comparand registers can subsequently be used by the Learn command with the even comparand register stored in an even location, and the odd comparand register stored in an adjacent odd location. The word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) is compared with each entry in the table starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). Note. The matching address is always going to be an even address for a 136-bit Search. 0 135 Even A 135 Location address 0 67 0 2 Comparand Register (even) 4 A 6 Comparand Register (odd) B L GMR K 16382 CFG = 01010101 (136-bit configuration) Figure 13-25. x136 Table with One Device The Search command is a pipelined operation that executes searches at half the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 136-bit searches in x136-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 136-bit Search command cycle (two CLK2X cycles) is shown in Table 13-9. Table 13-9. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 8K x 136 bits 64K x 136 bits 248K x 136 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6 Odd B 0
(First matching entry)
For a single device in the table with TLSZ = 00, the Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 4. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT, as specified in Table 13-10. Table 13-10. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
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13.5 136-bit Search on Tables Configured as x136 Using up to Eight CYNSE70032 Devices
The hardware diagram of the Search subsystem of eight devices is shown in Figure 13-26. The following are parameters programmed into the eight devices. * First seven devices (devices 0-6): CFG = 01010101, TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 010, LRAM = 0, and LDEV = 0. * Eighth device (device 7): CFG = 01010101, TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 010, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1.
Note. All eight devices must be programmed with the same value of TLSZ and HLAT. Only the last device in the table (device
number 7 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 1 and LDEV = 1. All other upstream devices (devices 0 through 6 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 0 and LDEV = 0. Figure 13-27 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 136-bit-configured table of eight devices for device number 0. Figure 13-28 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 136-bit-configured table consisting of eight devices for device number 1. Figure 13-29 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 136-bit configured table consisting of eight devices for device number 7 (the last device in this specific table). For these timing diagrams, four 136-bit searches are performed sequentially, and the following Hit/Miss assumptions were made (see Table 13-11). Table 13-11. Hit/Miss Assumptions Search Number Device 0 Device 1 Device 2-6 Device 7 1 Hit Miss Miss Miss 2 Miss Hit Miss Miss 3 Hit Hit Miss Hit 4 Miss Miss Miss Hit
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SRAM BHI[2:0] 6543 LHI CYNSE70032 #0 LHO[1] 2 1 0 LHO[0]
SSF, SSV
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 CYNSE70032 #1 LHI
2
1 LHO[0]
0
DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 LHI CYNSE70032 #2
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 2 LHI CYNSE70032 #3 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
654 3 CYNSE70032 #4 LHI LHO[0]
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
65 4 CYNSE70032 LHI #5 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 54 LHI CYNSE70032 #6 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
5 4 LHI CYNSE70032 #7
6
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 13-26. Hardware Diagram for a Table with Eight Devices
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4
CMD[8:2]
A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4 0
DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] z z z z z z z
A1 0 0 1
z z z z
A3 0 0 1
z z z z
CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
1 1
z z
1 1
z z
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 010, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (This device is (This device is global winner.) global winner.) Search4 Search2 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-27. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search Device Number 0
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4
CMD[8:2] DQ LHI[6:0] LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF z z z
A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
A2 0 0 1 z z
z z z z
z
1 1
z z
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 010, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Local but not (Miss on this global winner.) device.) Search4 Search2 (Miss This device is global winner.) on this device.)
Figure 13-28. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search Device Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 1 0 0 0 z z 1 1 0 0 z z z A4 0 0 1 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 010, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search3 Search1 (Miss on (Local but not this device.)global winner.) Search4 Search2 (Miss on (Global winner.) this device.)
Figure 13-29. Timing Diagram for 136-bit Search Device Number 7 (Last Device) The following is the sequence of operation for a single 136-bit Search command (also see Subsection 12.2, "Commands and Command Parameters" on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair for use in this Search operation. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the same bits that will be driven by this device on SADR[21:19] if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([135:68]) in order to be compared against all even locations. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and to apply Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[5:2] must be driven by the index of the comparand register pair for storing the 136-bit word presented on the DQ bus during cycles A and B. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the SSR index that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and the hit flag (see page 14 for the description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] is driven with 68-bit data ([67:0]) compared against all odd locations. The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and to apply Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[5:2] must be driven by the index of the comparand register pair for storing the 136-bit word presented on the DQ bus during cycles A and B. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the SSR index that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and the hit flag (see page 14 for the description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] is driven with 68-bit data ([67:0]) compared against all odd locations. The logical 136-bit Search operation is shown in Figure 13-30. The entire table (eight devices of 136-bit entries) is compared to a 136-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) using the GMR and local mask bits. The GMR is the 136-bit word specified by the even and odd global mask pair selected by the GMR Index in the command's cycle A. Document #: 38-02042 Rev. *E Page 52 of 126
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The 136-bit word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) is also stored in the even and odd comparand registers specified by the Comparand Register Index in the command's cycle B. In x136 configurations, the even and odd comparand register can subsequently be used by the Learn command in only one of the devices (the first non-full device). The word K (presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command) is compared to each entry in the table, starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on the SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). The global winning device will drive the bus in a specific cycle. On global miss cycles, the device with LRAM = 1 (the default driving device for the SRAM bus) and LDEV = 1 (the default driving device for SSF and SSV signals) will be the default driver for such missed cycles. Note. During 136-bit searches of 136-bit-configured tables, the Search hit will always be at an even address. 0 135 Must be same in each of the eight devices Even Odd GMR B A K Location 135 address 0 67 0 2 Comparand Register (even) 4 A 6 Comparand Register (odd) B L 131070 0
(First matching entry) Will be same in each of the eight devices CFG = 01010101 (136-bit configuration) Figure 13-30. x136 Table with Eight Devices
The Search command is a pipelined operation and executes a Search at half the rate of the CLK2X frequency for 136-bit searches in x136-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 136-bit Search command cycle (two CLK2X cycles) is shown in Table 13-12. Table 13-12. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 8K x 136 bits 64K x 136 bits 248K x 136 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
For one to eight devices in the table and TLSZ = 01, Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 5. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT, as specified in Table 13-13. Table 13-13. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
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13.6 136-bit Search on Tables Configured as x136 using up to 31 CYNSE70032 Devices
The hardware diagram of the Search subsystem of 31 devices is shown in Figure 13-31. Each of the four blocks in the diagram represents a block of eight CYNSE70032 devices (except the last, which has seven devices). The diagram for a block of eight devices is shown in Figure 13-32. The following are the parameters programmed into the 31 devices. * First 30 devices (devices 0-29): CFG = 01010101, TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 001, LRAM = 0, and LDEV = 0. * 31st device (device 30): CFG = 01010101, TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 001, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1.
Note. All 31 devices must be programmed with the same value of TLSZ and HLAT. Only the last device in the table (device number
30 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 1 and LDEV = 1. All other upstream devices (devices 0 through 29 in this case) must be programmed with LRAM = 0 and LDEV = 0. The timing diagrams referred to in this paragraph reference the Hit/Miss assumptions listed in Table 13-14. For the purpose of illustrating timings, it is further assumed that the there is only one device with a matching entry in each of the blocks. Figure 13-33 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 136-bit-configured table (31 devices) for each of the eight devices in block number 0. Figure 13-34 shows the timing diagram for Search command in the 68-bit-configured table (31 devices) for all devices above the winning device in block number 1. Figure 13-35 shows the timing diagram for the globally winning device (the winner within its own and all blocks) in block number 1. Figure 13-36 shows the timing diagram for all devices below the globally winning device in block number 1. Figure 13-37, Figure 13-38, and Figure 13-39, respectively, show the timing diagrams of the devices above globally winning device, the globally winning device, and the devices below the globally winning device for block number 2. Figure 13-40, Figure 13-41, Figure 13-42, and Figure 13-43, respectively, show the timing diagrams of the devices above the globally winning device, the globally winning device, and the devices below the globally winning device except the last device (device 30) for block number 3, and then the last device (device 30) for block number 3. The 136-bit Search operation is pipelined and executes as follows. Four cycles from the Search command, each of the devices knows the outcome internal to it for that operation. In the fifth cycle after the Search command, the devices in a block arbitrate for a winner from among them (a "block" being less than or equal to eight devices resolving the winner by using LHI[6:0] and LHO[1:0] signalling mechanisms). In the sixth cycle after the Search command, the blocks of devices resolve the winning block through the BHI[2:0] and BHO[2:0] signalling mechanisms. The winning device in the winning block is the global winning device for a Search operation. Table 13-14. Hit/Miss Assumptions Search Number Block 0 Block 1 Block 2 Block 3 1 Miss Miss Miss Hit 2 Miss Miss Hit Hit 3 Miss Hit Hit Miss 4 Miss Miss Miss Miss
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BHI[2] SSF, SSV
BHI[1]
BHI[0] GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 0 (devices 0-7) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
SRAM
GND Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 1 (devices 8-15) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 2 (devices 16-23) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
DQ[67:0] CMD[8:0], CMDV
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] Block of 7 CYNSE70032s Block 3 (devices 24-30) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
Figure 13-31. Hardware Diagram for a Table with 31 Devices
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BHI[2:0] BHI[2:0] LHO[1] 3 LHI CYNSE70032 #0 6 5 4 2 1 0 LHO[0]
SRAM
BHI[2:0] DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0] SSV, SSF LHO[1]
3 LHI CYNSE70032 #1
6
5
4
2
1 LHO[0]
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 LHI CYNSE70032 #2
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 2 LHI CYNSE70032 #3 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
654 3 CYNSE70032 #4 LHI LHO[0]
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
65 4 CYNSE70032 LHI #5 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 54 LHI CYNSE70032 #6 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
54 LHI CYNSE70032 #7
6
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 13-32. Hardware Diagram for a Block of up to Eight Devices
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.)
Figure 13-33. Timing Diagram for Each Device in Block Number 0 (Miss on Each Device)
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.)
Figure 13-34. Timing Diagram for Each Device Above the Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 1 1 z zz z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
A3 0 0 1
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (This device this device.)global winner.) Search2 (Miss on this device.) Search4 (Miss on this device.)
Figure 13-35. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0] stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI(6:0) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.)
Figure 13-36. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.)
Figure 13-37. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z 0 z 0 z z z z 1 1 z z 1 z z A2 z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Hit but not this device.) winner.) Search2 Search4 (Global winner.) (Miss on this device.)
Figure 13-38. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-39. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-40. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 3
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z 0 z 0 z z z z 1 1 z z 1 z z z z 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
A1
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Global (Miss on winner.) this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Hit but not global winner.) this device.)
Figure 13-41. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 3
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 01 Search2 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) Search2 Search4 (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.)
Figure 13-42. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 3 Except Device Number 30 (the Last Device)
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV Search1 CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 1 0 0 0 z z 1 0 0 0 0 0 z z z 0 0 1 01 Search3 01 01 01 Search2 Search4 A B AB A BAB A B AB A BAB D1 D2 D3 D4
z
CFG = 01010101, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Note: |(BHI[2:0)] stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search3 (Hit on some (Hit on some device above.) device above.) Search4 Search2 (Global miss; (Hit on some device above.) this device is default driver.) Figure 13-43. Timing Diagram for Device Number 6 in Block Number 3 (Device Number 30 in Depth-Cascaded Table)
The following is the sequence of operation for a single 136-bit Search command (also refer to "Command and Command Parameters," Subsection 12.2 on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair for use in this Search operation. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] by this device if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([135:68]) in order to be compared against all even locations. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and to apply Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[5:2] must be driven by the index of the comparand register pair for storing the 136-bit word presented on the DQ bus during cycles A and B. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching
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entry and the hit flag (see page 14 for the description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] is driven with 68-bit data ([67:0])to be compared against all odd locations. A logical 136-bit Search operation is shown in Figure 13-44. The entire table made up of 31 devices and consisting of 136-bit entries is compared against a 136-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus (using the GMR and local mask bits) in cycles A and B of the command. The GMR is the 136-bit word specified by the even and odd global mask pair selected by the GMR Index in the command's cycle A. The 136-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command is also stored in the even and odd comparand registers specified by the Comparand Register Index in the command's cycle B. In x136 configurations, the even and odd comparand registers can subsequently be used by the Learn command in the first non-full device only. Note. The Learn command is supported for only one of the blocks consisting of up to eight devices in a depth-cascaded table of more than one block. The word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A and B of the command is compared with each entry in the table, starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on the SADR[21:0] lines (see Section 15.0, "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). The global winning device will drive the bus in a specific cycle. In global miss cycles, the device with LRAM = 1 (the default driving device for the SRAM bus) and LDEV = 1 (the default driving device for SSF and SSV signals) will be the default driver for such missed cycles. Note. During 136-bit searches of 136-bit-configured tables, the Search hit will always be at an even address. Must be same in each of the 31 devices 135 GMR K Even A Odd B 0 0
Location 135 address 0 67 0 2 Comparand Register (even) 4 A 6 Comparand Register (odd) B L
(First matching entry) Will be same in each of the 31 devices CFG = 01010101 (136-bit configuration) Figure 13-44. x136 Table with 31 Devices 507902
The Search command is a pipelined operation. It executes a Search at half the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 136-bit searches in x136-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 136-bit Search command cycle (two CLK2X cycles) is shown in Table 13-15. Table 13-15. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 8K x 136 bits 64K x 136 bits 248K x 136 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 6 for 1-31 devices in the table and TLSZ = 10. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT, as specified in Table 13-16. Table 13-16. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Document #: 38-02042 Rev. *E Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Page 68 of 126
CYNSE70032
13.7 272-bit Search on Tables Configured as x272 using a Single CYNSE70032 Device
Figure 13-45 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 272-bit-configured table (CFG = 10101010) consisting of a single device for one set of parameters: TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 001, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1. The hardware diagram for this search subsystem is shown in Figure 13-46. cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] A B AB A BAB A B CD A BCD D2 D1 A1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 Search1 01 Search2 01
DQ SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 001, TLSZ = 00, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Search1 Search2 Hit Miss Figure 13-45. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search (One Device) BHI[2:0] 6 5 4 3 LHI 2 1 0 SRAM LHO[0]
DQ[67:0] CMDV, CMD[8:0] SSF, SSV
CYNSE70032 BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
Figure 13-46. Hardware Diagram for a Table With One Device The following is the sequence of operation for a single 136-bit Search command (also refer to Subsection 12.2, "Commands and Command Parameters" on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair used for bits [271:136] of the data being searched. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([271:204]) to be compared to all locations 0 in the four 68-bits-word page. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 1. Note. CMD[2] = 1 signals that the search is a x272-bit search. CMD[8:3] in this cycle is ignored.
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* Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and continues to apply Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. The DQ[67:0] is driven with the 68-bit data ([203:136]) to be compared to all locations 1 in the four 68-bits-word page. * Cycle C: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair used for bits [135:0] of the data being searched. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] by this device if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([135:68]) to be compared to all locations 2 in the four 68-bits-word page. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle D: The host ASIC continues to drive the CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and hit flag (see page 14 for the description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] is driven with the 68-bit data ([67:0]) to be compared to all locations 3 in the four 68-bits-word page. CMD[5:2] is ignored because the Learn instruction is not supported for x272 tables. Note. For 272-bit searches, the host ASIC must supply four distinct 68-bit data words on DQ[67:0] during cycles A, B, C, and D. The GMR index in cycle A selects a pair of GMRs that apply to DQ data in cycles A and B. The GMR index in cycle C selects a pair of GMRs that apply to DQ data in cycles C and D. The logical 272-bit Search operation is shown in Figure 13-47. The entire table of 272-bit entries is compared to a 272-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A, B, C, and D of the command using the GMR and local mask bits. The GMR is the 272-bit word specified by the two pairs of GMRs selected by the GMR Indexes in the command's cycles A and C. The 272-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A, B, C, and D of the command is compared with each entry in the table starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). Note. The matching address is always going to be location 0 in a four-entry page for a 272-bit Search (two LSBs of the matching index will be 00). 271 0 GMR A K Location 271 address 0 4 8 12 1 B 2 C 3 D 0 0
L (First matching entry) 16380 CFG = 10101010 (272-bit configuration) Figure 13-47. x272 Table with One Device
The Search command is a pipelined operation and executes at one-fourth the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 272-bit searches in x272-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 272-bit Search command (measured in CLK cycles) from the CLK2X cycle that contains the C and D cycles is shown in Table 13-17. Table 13-17. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 4K x 272 bits 32K x 272 bits 124K x 272 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 4 for a single device in the table and TLSZ = 00. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT, as specified in Table 13-18. Table 13-18. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3
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Table 13-18. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR (continued) HLAT 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 4 5 6 7
13.8
272-bit Search on Tables Configured as x272 and Using up to Eight CYNSE70032 Devices
The hardware diagram of the Search subsystem of eight devices is shown in Figure 13-48. The following are the parameters programmed into the eight devices. * First seven devices (devices 0-6): CFG = 10101010, TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 0, and LDEV = 0. * Eighth device (device 7): CFG = 10101010, TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1.
Note. All eight devices must be programmed with the same value of TLSZ and HLAT. Only the last device in the table must be
programmed with LRAM = 1 and LDEV = 1 (device number 7 in this case). All other upstream devices must be programmed with LRAM = 0 and LDEV = 0 (devices 0 through 6 in this case). Figure 13-49 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 272-bit-configured table of eight devices for device number 0. Figure 13-50 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 272-bit-configured table of eight devices for device number 1. Figure 13-51 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 272-bit-configured table of eight devices for device number 7 (the last device in this specific table). For these timing diagrams, three 272-bit searches are performed sequentially. The following Hit/Miss assumptions were made, as shown in Table 13-19. Table 13-19. Hit/Miss Assumptions Search Number Device 0 Device 1 Devices 2-6 Device 7 1 Hit Miss Miss Miss 2 Miss Hit Miss Miss 3 Miss Miss Miss Miss
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SRAM BHI[2:0] LHO[1] SSF, SSV 3 LHI CYNSE70032 #0 6 5 4 2 1 0 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
3 LHI CYNSE70032 #1
6
5
4
2
1 LHO[0]
0
DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 LHI CYNSE70032 #2
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6543 2 LHI CYNSE70032 #3 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
654 3 CYNSE70032 #4 LHI LHO[0]
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
65 4 CYNSE70032 LHI #5 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 54 LHI CYNSE70032 #6 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
5 4 LHI CYNSE70032 #7
6
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 13-48. Hardware Diagram for a Table with Eight Devices
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] z z z z z z z 1 1 z z A1 0 0 1 z z z z 0 A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (This device (Miss on (Miss on is the global this device.)this device.) winner.)
Figure 13-49. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search Device Number 0
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF z z z A2 0 0 1 z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
z z z z
z
1 1
z z
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 (Miss on this device.)
Search2 (This device is global winner.)
Search3 (Miss on this device.)
Figure 13-50. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search Device Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] SADR[21:0] z CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 z 0 1 0 0 0 z 0 z 0 CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal. z 0 z 0 1 0 1 z z z 0 1 z 0 A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1
Search1 01
Search2 01
Search3 01
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on (Global this device.)this device.) miss.) Figure 13-51. Timing Diagram for 272-bit Search Device Number 7 (Last Device)
The following is the sequence of operation for a single 272-bit Search command (also see "Commands and Command Parameters" on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair used for bits [271:136] of the data being searched in this operation. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([271:204]) to be compared against all locations 0 in the four-word 68-bit page. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 1. Note. CMD[2] = 1 signals that the search is a x272 bit search. CMD[8:3] in this cycle is ignored. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. The DQ[67:0] is driven with the 68-bit data ([203:136]) to be compared against all locations 1 in the four 68-bits-word page. * Cycle C: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair used for bits [135:0] of the data being searched. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] by this device if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([135:68]) to be compared against all locations 2 in the four 68-bits-word page. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. * Cycle D: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and the hit flag (see page 14 for the description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] is driven with the 68-bit data ([67:0]) to be compared to all locations 3 in the four 68-bits-word page. CMD[5:2] is ignored because the Learn instruction is not supported for x272 tables.
Note. For 272-bit searches, the host ASIC must supply four distinct 68-bit data words on DQ[67:0] during cycles A, B, C, and D.
The GMR index in cycle A selects a pair of GMRs in each of the eight devices that apply to DQ data in cycles A and B. The GMR index in cycle C selects a pair of GMRs in each of the eight devices that apply to DQ data in cycles C and D.
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The logical 272-bit Search operation is shown in Figure 13-52. The entire table of 272-bit entries is compared to a 272-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A, B, C, and D of the command using the GMR and the local mask bits. The GMR is the 272-bit word specified by the two pairs of GMRs selected by the GMR Indexes in the command's cycles A and C in each of the eight devices. The 272-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A, B, C, and D of the command is compared to each entry in the table starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on the SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). Note. The matching address is always going to be a location 0 in a four-entry page for 272-bit Search (two LSBs of the matching index will be 00). 271 GMR K Location 271 address 0 4 8 12 0 A 1 B 2 C 3 D 0 0 Must be same in each of the eight devices
L (First matching entry) 131068 CFG = 10101010 (272-bit configuration) Figure 13-52. x272 Table with Eight Devices
The Search command is a pipelined operation and executes a Search at one-fourth the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 272-bit searches in x272-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 272-bit Search command (measured in CLK cycles) from the CLK2X cycle that contains the C and D cycles is shown in Table 13-20. Table 13-20. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 4K x 272 bits 32K x 272 bits 124K x 272 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 5 for only a single device in the table and TLSZ = 01. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT, as specified in Table 13-21. Table 13-21. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
13.9
272-bit Search on Tables Configured as x272 using up to 31 CYNSE70032 Devices
The hardware diagram of the search subsystem of 31 devices is shown in Figure 13-53. Each of the four blocks in the diagram represents a block of eight CYNSE70032 devices, except the last which has seven devices. The diagram for a block of eight devices is shown in Figure 13-54. The following are the parameters programmed into the 31 devices. * First thirty devices (devices 0-29): CFG = 10101010, TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 0, and LDEV = 0. * Thirty-first device (device 30): CFG = 10101010, TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1.
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Note. All 31 devices must be programmed with the same value of TLSZ and HLAT. Only the last device in the table must be
programmed with LRAM = 1 and LDEV = 1 (device number 30 in this case). All other upstream devices must be programmed with LRAM = 0 and LDEV = 0 (devices 0 through 29 in this case). The timing diagrams referred to in this paragraph reference the HIT/MISS assumptions defined in Table 13-22. For the purpose of illustrating the timings, it is further assumed that there is only one device with the matching entry in each block. Figure 13-55 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 272-bit-configured table consisting of 31 devices for each of the eight devices in block number 0. Figure 13-56 shows the timing diagram for a Search command in the 272-bit-configured table of 31 devices for all devices above the winning device in block number 1. Figure 13-57 shows the timing diagram for the globally winning device (the final winner within its own and all blocks) in block number 1. Figure 13-58 shows the timing diagram for all the devices below the globally winning device in block number 1. Figure 13-59, Figure 13-60, and Figure 13-61, respectively, show the timing diagrams of the devices above the globally winning device, the globally winning device, and the devices below the globally winning device for block number 2. Figure 13-62, Figure 13-63, Figure 13-64, and Figure 13-65, respectively, show the timing diagrams of the device above the globally winning device, the globally winning device, the devices below the globally winning device (except device 30), and last device (device 30) for block number 3. The 272-bit Search operation is pipelined and executes as follows. Four cycles from the last cycle of the Search command each of the devices knows the outcome internal to it for that operation. In the fifth cycle from the Search command, the devices in a block (less than or equal to eight devices resolving the winner within them using an LHI[6:0] and LHO[1:0] signalling mechanism) arbitrate for a winner. In the sixth cycle after the Search command, the blocks of devices resolve the winning block through a BHI[2:0] and BHO[2:0] signalling mechanism. The winning device within the winning block is the global winning device for the Search operation. Table 13-22. Hit/Miss Assumptions Search Number Block 0 Block 1 Block 2 Block 3 1 Miss Miss Miss Hit 2 Miss Miss Hit Hit 3 Miss Hit Hit Miss
BHI[2] SSF, SSV
BHI[1]
BHI[0] GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s block 0 (devices 0-7) BHO[1] BHO[0] BHO[2]
SRAM
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] GND Block of 8 CYNSE70032s block 1 (devices 8-15) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s block 2 (devices 16-23) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] Block of 7 CYNSE70032s block 3 (devices 24-30) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0] CMD[8:0], CMDV DQ[67:0] Figure 13-53. Hardware Diagram for a Table with 31 Devices
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SRAM BHI[2:0] LHO[1] 6 5 4
CYNSE70032 #0
BHI[2:0] 3 LHI 2 1 0 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0] SSV, SSF LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #1
3 LHI
2
1 LHO[0]
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #2
3 LHI
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #3
3 2 LHI LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
6
5
CYNSE70032 #4
3 LHI LHO[0]
4
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
6
5 LHO[0]
4
LHI CYNSE70032 #5
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 LHO[0]
CYNSE70032 #6
54 LHI
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
54 LHI CYNSE70032 #7
6
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 13-54. Hardware Diagram for a Block of up to Eight Devices
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B C D A BC DA BC D D2 D1 D3 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search2 Search3 Search1 (Miss on (Miss on (Miss on this device.) device.) this this device.)
Figure 13-55. Timing Diagram for Each Device in Block Number 0 (Miss on Each Device)
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-56. Timing Diagram for Each Device Above the Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z 1 A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
A3 0 0 1
z 1 SSF CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Search1 Search2 Search3 Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. (Miss on (Miss on (This device is this device.) this device.) lobal winner.) g Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal. Figure 13-57. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D1 D2 D3 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.) this device.)
Figure 13-58. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 1
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BCDA BCD D1 D2 D3 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) this device.) hit in block 0 or block 1.)
Figure 13-59. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF z z z z 1 1 z z z 0 0 0 0 z z z z 0 z 0 1 z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D1 D2 D3 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
A2
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Global (Hit but this device.) winner.) not winner.)
Figure 13-60. Timing Diagram for Globally Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1
Search1 01
Search2 01
Search3 01
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on (Miss on this this this device.) device.) device.)
Figure 13-61. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 2
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on (Miss on this device.)this device.)this device.)
Figure 13-62. Timing Diagram for Devices Above the Winning Device in Block Number 3
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z 1 1 z z z z 0 z 0 1 z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BCDA BCD D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
A1
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0]. Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0]. Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Global (Hit but not (Miss on this winner.) global winner.) device.)
Figure 13-63. Timing Diagram for Globally WInning Device in Block Number 3
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0]) LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 0 0 z z z z z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BCDA BCD D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0] Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0] Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Miss on (Miss on (Miss on this device.) this device.) device.) this
Figure 13-64. Timing Diagram for Devices Below the Winning Device in Block Number 3 Except Device Number 30 (the Last Device)
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cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ |(LHI[6:0)] LHO[1:0] I(BHI[2:0]) BHO[2:0] SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 0 0 1 0 0 0 z z 0 0 z z 0 0 0 0 0 0 z z z z 0 0 1 z z z A B AB A BABA BAB A B CD A BC DA BC D D3 D2 D1 Search1 01 Search2 01 Search3 01
0 0 1
z
CFG = 10101010, HLAT = 000, TLSZ = 10, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Note: |(BHI[2:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' of the entire bus BHI[2:0] Note: |(LHI[6:0]) stands for the boolean `OR' for the entire bus LHI[6:0] Note: Each bit in BHO[2:0] is the same logical signal. Note: Each bit in LHO[1:0] is the same logical signal.
Search1 Search2 Search3 (Hit on some (Hit on some (Hit on some device above.) device above.) device above.)
Figure 13-65. Timing Diagram of the Last Device in Block Number 3 (Device 30 in the Table) The following is the sequence of operation for a single 272-bit Search command (also refer to Subsection 12.2, "Commands and Command Parameters" on page 19). * Cycle A: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair used for bits[271:136] of the data being searched. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([271:204]) to be compared to all locations 0 in the four 68-bits-word page. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 1. Note. CMD[2] = 1 signals that the search is a x272-bit Search. CMD[8:6] is ignored in this cycle. * Cycle B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and applies Search command (10) on CMD[1:0]. The DQ[67:0] is driven with the 68-bit data ([203:136]) to be compared to all locations 1 in the four 68-bits-word page. * Cycle C: The host ASIC drives CMDV high and applies Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0] signals. CMD[5:3] signals must be driven with the index to the GMR pair used for the bits [135:0] of the data being searched. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the bits that will be driven by this device on SADR[21:19] if it has a hit. DQ[67:0] must be driven with the 68-bit data ([135:68]) to be compared to all locations 2 in the four 68-bits-word page. The CMD[2] signal must be driven to logic 0. Document #: 38-02042 Rev. *E Page 89 of 126
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* Cycle D: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV high and to apply Search command code (10) on CMD[1:0]. CMD[8:6] signals must be driven with the index of the SSR that will be used for storing the address of the matching entry and the hit flag (see page 14 for a description of SSR[0:7]). The DQ[67:0] is driven with the 68-bit data ([67:0]) to be compared to all locations 3 in the four 68-bits-word page. CMD[5:2] is ignored because the Learn instruction is not supported for x272 tables.
Note. For 272-bit searches, the host ASIC must supply four distinct 68-bit data words on DQ[67:0] during cycles A, B, C, and D.
The GMR Index in cycle A selects a pair of GMRs in each of the 31 devices that apply to DQ data in cycles A and B. The GMR Index in cycle C selects a pair of GMRs in each of the 31 devices that apply to DQ data in cycles C and D. The logical 272-bit Search operation is as shown in Figure 13-66. The entire table of 272-bit entries is compared to a 272-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A, B, C, and D of the command using the GMR and local mask bits. The GMR is the 272-bit word specified by the two pairs of GMRs selected by the GMR Indexes in the command's cycles A and C in each of the 31 devices. The 272-bit word K that is presented on the DQ bus in cycles A, B, C, and D of the command is compared to each entry in the table starting at location 0. The first matching entry's location address L is the winning address that is driven as part of the SRAM address on the SADR[21:0] lines (see "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). Note. The matching address is always going to be location 0 in a four-entry page for 272-bit search (two LSBs of the matching index will be 00). 0 271 Must be same in each of the 31 devices 2 3 0 1 GMR D C B A K Location 271 address 0 4 8 12 0
L (First matching entry) 507900 CFG = 10101010 (272-bit configuration) Figure 13-66. x272 Table with 31 Devices
The Search command is a pipelined operation that executes a Search at one-fourth the rate of the frequency of CLK2X for 272-bit searches in x272-configured tables. The latency of SADR, CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, SSV, and SSF from the 272-bit Search command (measured in CLK cycles) from the CLK2X cycle containing the C and D cycles is shown in Table 13-23. Table 13-23. Search Latency from Instruction to SRAM Access Cycle Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Max Table Size 4K x 272 bits 32K x 272 bits 124K x 272 bits Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
Search latency from command to SRAM access cycle is 6 only for a single device in the table with TLSZ = 10. In addition, SSV and SSF shift further to the right for different values of HLAT, as specified in Table 13-24. Table 13-24. Shift of SSF and SSV from SADR HLAT 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Number of CLK Cycles 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
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CYNSE70032
13.10 Mixed-Size Searches on Tables Configured with Different Widths Using an CYNSE70032 Device
This subsection will cover mixed searches (x68, x136, and x272) with tables of different widths (x68, x136, x272). The sample operation shown is for a single device with CFG = 10010000 containing three tables of x68, x136, and x272 widths. The operation can be generalized to a block of 8-31 devices using four blocks; the timing and the pipeline operation is the same as described previously for fixed searches on a table of one-width-size. Figure 13-67 shows three sequential searches: first, a 68-bit Search on the table configured as x68, then a 136-bit search on a table configured as x136, and finally a 272-bit search on the table configured as x272 bits. Each results in a hit. Note. The DQ[67:66] will be 00 in each of the two A and B cycles of the x68-bit Search (Search1). DQ[67:66] is 01 in each of the A and B cycles of the x136-bit Search (Search2). DQ[67:66] is 10 in each of the A, B, C, and D cycles of the x272-bit Search (Search3). By having table designation bits, the CYNSE70032 device enables the creation of many tables of different widths in a bank of search engines. Figure 13-68 shows the sample table. Two bits in each 68-bit entry need to designated as table number bits. One example choice might be: the 00 values for the table configured as x68, 01 values for tables configured as x136, and 10 values for tables configured as x272. For the above explanation, it is further assumed that bits[67:66] for each entry will be designed as such table designation bits. cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[2] CMD[8:2] DQ SADR[21:0] CE_L ALE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF 1 1 1 0 0 0 A B AB A BAB A B A B A BCD D3 D1 D2 A1 A2 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 A3 1 1 0 0 1 1 Search1 Search3 01 01 01 Search2
CFG = 1010101010101010, HLAT = 010, TLSZ = 00, LRAM = 1, LDEV = Search1 Search2 Search3 1 x68 hit x136 hit x272 hit Figure 13-67. Timing Diagram for Mixed Search (One Device) 68 8K 136 272
2K 1K
CFG = 10010000 Figure 13-68. Multiwidth Configurations Example
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CYNSE70032
13.11 LRAM and LDEV Description
When search engines are cascaded using multiple CYNSE70032 devices, the SADR, CE_L, and WE_L (three-state signals) are all tied together. To eliminate external pull-up and pull downs, one device in a bank is designated as the default driver. For non-Search or non-Learn cycles (see Subsection 13.12, "Learn Command" on page 92) or Search cycles with a global miss, the SADR, CE_L, and WE_L signals are driven by the device with the LRAM bit set. It is important that only one device in a bank of cascaded search engines have this bit set. Failure to do so will cause contention on SADR, CE_L, and WE_L, and can potentially cause damage to the device(s). Similarly, when search engines using multiple CYNSE70032 devices are cascaded, SSF and SSV (also three-state signals) are tied together. To eliminate external pull-up and pull downs, one device in a bank is designated as the default driver. For nonSearch cycles or Search cycles with a global miss, the SSF and SSV signals are driven by the device with the LDEV bit set. It is important that only one device in a bank of cascaded search engines have this bit set. Failure to do so will cause contention on SSV and SSF and can potentially cause damage to the device(s).
13.12
Learn Command
Bit[0] of each 68-bit data location specifies whether an entry in the database is occupied. If all the entries in a device are occupied, the device asserts FULO signal to inform the downstream devices that it is full. The result of this communication between depth-cascaded devices determines the global FULL signal for the entire table. The FULL signal in the last device determines the fullness of the depth-cascaded table. The device contains sixteen pairs of internal, 68-bit-wide comparand registers that store the comparands as the device executes searches. On a miss by the Search (signalled to ASIC through the SSV and SSF signals [SSV = 1, SSF = 0]), the host ASIC can apply the Learn command to Learn the entry from a comparand register to the next-free location (see Subsection 9.3, "NFA Register" on page 16). The NFA updates to the next-free location following each Write or Learn command. In a depth-cascaded table, only a single device will Learn the entry through the application of a Learn instruction. The determination of the Learn device is based on the FULI and FULO signalling between the devices. The first non-full device learns the entry by storing the contents of the specified comparand registers to the location(s) pointed to by NFA. In a x68-configured table the Learn command writes a single 68-bit location. In a x136-configured table the Learn command writes the next even and odd 68-bit locations. In 136-bit mode, bit[0] of the even and odd 68-bit locations is 0, indicating that they are cascaded empty, or 1, which indicates that they are occupied. The global FULL signal indicates to the table controller (the host ASIC) that all entries within a block are occupied and that no more entries can be learned. The CYNSE70032 device updates the signal to a data array after each Write or Learn command. Also using the NFA register as part of the SRAM address, the Learn command generates a Write cycle to the external SRAM (see Section 15.0, "SRAM Addressing" on page 98). The Learn command is supported on a single block containing up to eight devices if the table is configured as either a x68 or a x136. The Learn command is not supported for x272-configured tables. Learn is a pipelined operation and lasts for two CLK cycles where TLSZ = 00, as shown in Figure 13-69, and TLSZ = 01 as shown in Figure 13-70 and Figure 13-71. Figure 13-70 and Figure 13-71 assume that the device performing the Learn operation is not the last device in the table and has its LRAM bit set to 0. Note. The OE_L for the device with the LRAM bit set goes high for two cycles for each Learn (one during the SRAM Write cycle, and one during the cycle before it). The latency of the SRAM Write cycle from the second cycle of the instruction is shown in Table 13-25.
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L
CMDV
CMD[1:0]
Learn1 X Learn2 X Comp1 Comp2 X 1A 1B X
CMD[8:2]
DQ
z
X
X
X
X
z
SADR[21:0] CE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
z
A1
z
A2
z
1 1 0 0 0 1
0 0
0 0
1 1 0
TLSZ = 00, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Figure 13-69. Learn Timing Diagram (TLSZ = 00)
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X
PHS_L
CMDV
CMD[1:0]
Learn1 X Learn2 X Comp1 Comp2 X 1A 1B X
CMD[8:2]
DQ
z
X
X
X
X
z
SADR[21:0] CE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
z
A1
z
A2
z
z 0 z 0 z z z
0 0
TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Figure 13-70. Learn Timing Diagram (TLSZ = 01 [Except on the Last Device])
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 CLK2X
PHS_L
CMDV
CMD[1:0]
Learn1 X Learn2 X Comp1 Comp2 X 1A 1B X
CMD[8:2]
DQ
z
X
X
X
X
z
SADR[21:0] CE_L WE_L OE_L SSV SSF
z
z
z
z
1 1 0 0 0 1
z z
1 1
z z
1 1 0
TLSZ = 01, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Figure 13-71. Learn Timing Diagram on Device Number 7 (TLSZ = 01) Table 13-25. SRAM Write Cycle Latency from Second Cycle of Learn Instruction Number of Devices 1 (TLSZ = 00) 1-8 (TLSZ = 01) 1-31 (TLSZ = 10) Latency in CLK Cycles 4 5 6
The Learn operation lasts two CLK cycles. The sequence of operation is as follows. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Learn instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The CMD[5:2] field specifies the index of the comparand register pair that will be written to the data array in the 136-bit-configured table. For a Learn in a 68-bit-configured table, the even-numbered comparand specified by this index will be written. CMD[8:6] carries the bits that will be driven on SADR[21:19] in the SRAM Write cycle. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to drive CMDV to 1, CMD[1:0] to 11, and CMD[5:2] with the comparand pair index. CMD[6] must be set to 0 if the Learn is being performed on a 68-bit-configured table, and to 1 if the Learn is being performed on a 136-bit-configured table. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC drives CMDV to 0.
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CYNSE70032
At the end of cycle 2, a new instruction can begin. SRAM Write latency is the same as the Search to the SRAM read cycle (it is measured from the second cycle of the Learn instruction).
14.0
Depth-Cascading
The search engine application can depth-cascade the devices to various table sizes of different widths (68 bits, 136 bits, or 272 bits). The devices perform all the necessary arbitration to decide which device will drive the SRAM bus. Search latency increases as table size increases; the Search rate itself remains constant.
14.1
Depth-Cascading up to Eight Devices (One Block)
Figure 14-1 shows how up to eight devices can be cascaded to form 256K x 68-bit, 128K x 136-bit, or 64K x 272-bit tables. It also shows the interconnection between devices for depth-cascading. Each search engine asserts LHO[1] and LHO[0] signals to inform downstream devices of its results. The LHI[6:0] signals for a device are connected to LHO signals of the upstream devices. The host ASIC must program the TLSZ to 01 for each of up to eight devices in a block. A single device alone drives the SRAM bus in any single cycle. SRAM BHI[2:0] 6543210 CYNSE70032 #0 LHI LHO[1] LHO[0] SSF, SSV BHI[2:0] DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0] LHO[1] 6 5 4
CYNSE70032 #1
3 LHI
2
1 LHO[0]
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
CYNSE70032 #2
6
5
4
3 LHI
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
CYNSE70032 #3
6
5
4
3 2 LHI LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
CYNSE70032 #4
6
5
4 3 LHI LHO[0]
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
LHI CYNSE70032 #5
6
5 4 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
CYNSE70032 #6LHI
6
5
4
LHO[0]
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
CYNSE70032 #7 LHI
6
5
4
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 14-1. Depth-Cascading to Form a Single Block
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CYNSE70032
14.2 Depth-Cascading up to 31 Devices (Four Blocks)
Figure 14-2 shows how to cascade up to four blocks. Each block except the last contains up to eight CYNSE70032 devices. The interconnection within each has been shown in the previous subsection with the cascading of up to eight devices in a block. Note. The interconnection between blocks for depth-cascading is important. For each Search, a block asserts BHO[2], BHO[1], and BHO[0]. The BHO[2:0] signals for a block are taken only from the last device in the block. For all other devices within that block, these signals stay open and floating. The host ASIC must program the TLSZ field to 10 in each of the devices for cascading up to 31 devices (in up to four blocks).
BHI[2] SSF, SSV
BHI[1]
BHI[0] GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 0 (devices 0-7) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
SRAM
GND Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 1 (devices 8-15) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 2 (devices 16-23) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] Block of 7 CYNSE70032s Block 3 (devices 24-30) DQ[67:0] BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0] CMD[8:0], CMDV
Figure 14-2. Depth-Cascading Four Blocks
14.3
Depth-Cascading for a FULL Signal
Bit[0] of each of the 68-bit entries is designated as a special bit (1 = occupied; 0 = empty). For each Learn or PIO Write to the data array, each device asserts FULO[1] and FULO[0] if it does not have any empty locations within it (see Figure 14-3). Each device combines the FULO signals from the devices above it with its own full status to generate a FULL signal, which will then give a full status of the table up to the device asserting the FULL signal. Figure 14-3 shows the hardware connection diagram for generating the FULL signal that goes back to the ASIC. In a depth-cascaded block of up to eight devices, the FULL signal from the last device should be fed back to the ASIC controller to indicate the fullness of the table. The FULL signal of the other devices should be left open. Note. The Learn instruction is supported for up to eight devices, whereas FULL cascading is allowed for one block in tables containing more than eight devices. In tables for which a Learn instruction will not be used, the bit[0] of each 68-bit entry should always be set to 1.
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CYNSE70032
VDDQ 6 FULO[1] 5 43 FULI 2 1 0
DQ[67:0]
CYNSE70032
FULO[0] FULL 6 5 43 FULI 2 1 0 VDDQ
CYNSE70032
FULO[1]
FULO[0] FULL 6 5 43 FULI 2 1 0 VDDQ
CYNSE70032
FULO[1]
FULO[0] FULL 6 5 43 FULI FULO[0] FULL 6 5 43 FULI FULO[0] FULL VDDQ 2 1 0 VDDQ 2 1 0 VDDQ
CYNSE70032
FULO[1]
CYNSE70032
3
21 FULI
0
6
5
4 FULI
CYNSE70032
FULO[0] FULL 3 21 FULI 0 6
CYNSE70032
VDDQ
5
4
FULI FULL
FULO[0]
3
21 FULI
0
6
5
CYNSE70032
4 FULI
FULL FULO[1] FULO[0] Figure 14-3. FULL Generation in a Cascaded Table
15.0
SRAM Addressing
Table 15-1 describes the commands used to generate addresses on the SRAM address bus. The index[13:0] field contains the address of a 68-bit entry that results in a hit in 68-bit-configured partition. It is the address of the 68-bit entry that lies at the 136-bit page, and the 272-bit page boundaries in 136-bit- and 272-bit-configured quadrants, respectively. Section 7.0, "Registers" on page 13 of this specification, describes the NFA and SSR registers. ADR[13:0] contains the address supplied on the DQ bus during PIO access to the CYNSE70032. Command bits 8, and 7 {CMD[8:6]} are passed from the command to the SRAM address bus. See Section 12.0, "Commands" on page 18, for more information. ID[4:0] is the ID of the device driving the SRAM bus (see Section 21.0, "Pinout Descriptions and Package Diagrams" on page 120, for more information).
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CYNSE70032
15.1 Generating an SRAM BUS Address
Table 15-1 details SRAM bus address generation. Table 15-1. SRAM Bus Address Command Search Learn PIO Read PIO Write Indirect Access SRAM Operation Read Write Read Write Write/Read 21 C8 C8 C8 C8 C8 20 C7 C7 C7 C7 C7 19 C6 C6 C6 C6 C6 [18:14] ID[4:0] ID[4:0] ID[4:0] ID[4:0] ID[4:0] [13:0] Index[13:0] NFA[13:0] ADR13:0] ADR[13:0] SSR[13:0]
15.2
SRAM PIO Access
The remainder of Section 15.0 describes SRAM Read and SRAM Write operations. SRAM Read enables Read access to the off-chip SRAM that contains associative data. The latency from the issuance of the Read instruction to the address appearing on the SRAM bus is the same as the latency of the Search instruction, and will depend on the value programmed for the TLSZ parameter in the device configuration register. The latency of the ACK from the Read instruction is the same as the latency of the Search instruction to the SRAM address plus the HLAT programmed into the configuration register. Note. SRAM Read is a blocking operation--no new instruction can begin until the ACK is returned by the selected device performing the access. SRAM Write enables Write access to the off-chip SRAM containing associative data. The latency from the second cycle of the Write instruction to the address appearing on the SRAM bus is the same as the latency of the Search instruction, and will depend on the TLSZ value parameter programmed into the device configuration register. Note. SRAM Write is a pipelined operation--new instruction can begin right after the previous command has ended.
15.3
SRAM Read with a Table of One Device
SRAM Read enables Read access to the off-chip SRAM that contains associative data. The latency from the issuance of the Read instruction to the address appearing on the SRAM bus is the same as the latency of the Search instruction and will depend on the TLSZ value parameter programmed into the device configuration register. The latency of the ACK from the Read instruction is the same as the latency of the Search instruction to the SRAM address plus the HLAT programmed into the configuration register. The following explains the SRAM Read operation in a table with only one device and having the following parameters: TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1. Figure 15-1 shows the associated timing diagram. For the following description, the selected device refers only to the device in the table because it is the only device to be accessed. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Read instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. The host ASIC selects the device for which the ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. During this cycle, the host ASIC also supplies SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6]. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Read instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address with DQ[20:19] set to 10 to select the SRAM address. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC floats DQ[67:0] to a three-state condition. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC keeps DQ[67:0] in a three-state condition. * Cycle 4: The selected device starts to drive DQ[67:0] and drives ACK from High-Z to LOW. * Cycle 5: The selected device drives the Read address on SADR[21:0]; it also drives ACK HIGH, CE_L LOW, and ALE_L LOW. * Cycle 6: The selected device drives CE_L HIGH, ALE_L HIGH, the SADR bus, the DQ bus in a three-state condition, and ACK LOW. At the end of cycle 6, the selected device floats ACK in a three-state condition, and a new command can begin.
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CYNSE70032
cycle 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] Read A B z z cycle 2 cycle 3 cycle 4 cycle 5 cycle 6
DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L SADR 0 1 1 1 z
Address
0 0 Address
1 1 z
ACK SSV SSF
z 0 0 0
1
z 0
DQ driven by CYNSE70032. TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Figure 15-1. SRAM Read ACCESS (TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1)
15.4
SRAM Read with a Table of up to Eight Devices
The following explains the SRAM Read operation completed through a table of up to eight devices using the following parameter: TLSZ = 01. Figure 15-2 diagrams a block of eight devices. The following assumes that SRAM access is successfully achieved through CYNSE70032 device number 0. Figure 15-3 and Figure 15-4 show timing diagrams for device number 0 and device number 7, respectively. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Read instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. The host ASIC selects the device for which ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. During this cycle the host ASIC also supplies SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6]. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Read instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10 to select the SRAM address. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC floats DQ[67:0] to a three-state condition. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC keeps DQ[67:0] in a three-state condition. * Cycle 4: The selected device starts to drive DQ[67:0]. * Cycle 5: The selected device continues to drive DQ[67:0] and drives ACK from high-Z to low. * Cycle 6: The selected device drives the Read address on SADR[21:0]. It also drives ACK high, CE_L low, WE_L high, and ALE_L low. * Cycle 7: The selected device drives CE_L, ALE_L, WE_L, and DQ bus in a three-state condition. It continues to drive ACK low. At the end of cycle 7, the selected device floats ACK in a three-state condition, and a new command can begin.
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CYNSE70032
SRAM BHI[2:0] LHO[1] SSF, SSV 6 5 4
CYNSE70032 #0
3 LHI
2
1
0 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #1
3 LHI
2
1 LHO[0]
0
DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #2
3 LHI
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #3
3 2 LHI LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
6
5
CYNSE70032 #4
3 LHI LHO[0]
4
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
6
5 LHO[0]
4
LHI CYNSE70032 #5
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 LHO[0]
CYNSE70032 #6
54 LHI
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
6
5 LHI
4 BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
CYNSE70032 #7
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 15-2. Table of a Block of Eight Devices
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CYNSE70032
cycle 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L z z z Read A B
cycle 2
cycle 3
cycle 4
cycle 5
cycle 6
cycle 7
Address
z
z
1 0
z z z
z 0 z z 0
SADR
Address 1 0
SSV SSF
z z DQ Driven by Selected CYNSE70032.
TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0.
Figure 15-3. SRAM Read Through Device Number 0 in a Block of Eight Devices
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CYNSE70032
cycle 1 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L SADR ACK SSV SSF 0 1 1 1 z z z z z z z z 1 1 1 Read A B z cycle 2 cycle 3 cycle 4 cycle 5 cycle 6
Address
TLSZ = 01, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Figure 15-4. SRAM Read Timing for Device Number 7 in a Block of Eight Devices
15.5
SRAM Read with a Table of up to 31 Devices
The following explains the SRAM Read operation accomplished through a table of up to 31 devices using the following parameters: TLSZ = 10. The diagram of this table is shown in Figure 15-5. The following assumes that SRAM access is being accomplished through CYNSE70032 device number 0 and that device number 0 is the selected device. Figure 15-6 and Figure 15-7 show the timing diagrams for device number 0 and device number 30, respectively. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Read instruction to CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. The host ASIC selects the device for which the ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. During this cycle, the host ASIC also supplies SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6]. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Read instruction to CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC floats DQ[67:0] to a three-state condition. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC keeps DQ[67:0] in a three-state condition. * Cycle 4: The selected device starts to drive DQ[67:0]. * Cycles 5 to 6: The selected device continues to drive DQ[67:0]. * Cycle 7: The selected device continues to drive DQ[67:0] and drives an SRAM Read cycle. * Cycle 8: The selected device drives ACL from Z to LOW. * Cycle 9: The selected device drives ACK to HIGH. * Cycle 10: The selected device drives ACK from HIGH to LOW. At the end of cycle 10, the selected device floats ACL in a three-state condition.
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CYNSE70032
BHI[2] SSF, SSV
BHI[1]
BHI[0] GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 0 (devices 0-7) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
SRAM
GND Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 1 (devices 8-15) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0] GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 2 (devices 16-23) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
DQ[67:0] CMD[8:0], CMDV
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] Block of 7 CYNSE70032s Block 3 (devices 24-30) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
Figure 15-5. Table of 31 Devices Made of Four Blocks
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L z z z 0 z 0 z Address z 1 z z z Read 00 AB Address
SADR[21:0]
ACK SSV SSF
z z z
0
1
0
z
TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 010, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0.
DQ driven by the selected CYNSE70032
Figure 15-6. SRAM Read Through Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 Devices (Device Number 0 Timing)
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L SADR[21:0] ACK SSV SSF z 0 0 TLSZ = 10, HLAT = 010, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1 Figure 15-7. SRAM Readthrough Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 Devices (Device Number 30 Timing) 0 1 1 1 z z z z 1 1 1 Read 00 AB Address
15.6
SRAM Write with a Table of One Device
SRAM Write enables write access to the off-chip SRAM that contains associative data. The latency from the second cycle of the Write instruction to the address appearing on the SRAM bus is the same as the latency of the Search instruction, and will depend on the TLSZ value parameter programmed into the device configuration register. The following explains the SRAM Write operation accomplished through a table of only one device with the following parameters: TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, and LDEV = 1. Figure 15-8 shows the timing diagram. For the following description, the selected device refers to the only device in the table as this is the only device that will be accessed. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Write instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. The host ASIC selects the device for which the ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. The host ASIC also supplies SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6] in this cycle. Note. CMD[2] must be set to 0 for SRAM Write, because burst Writes into the SRAM are not supported. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Write instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. Note. CMD[2] must be set to 0 for SRAM Write, because burst Writes into the SRAM are not supported. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC continues to drive DQ[67:0]. The data in this cycle is not used by the CYNSE70032. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC continues to drive DQ[67:0]. The data in this cycle is not used by the CYNSE70032. At the end of cycle 3, a new command can begin. The write is a pipelined operation; however, the Write cycle appears at the SRAM bus with the same latency as the Search instruction (as measured from the second cycle of the Write command).
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CYNSE70032
cycle 1 CLK2X cycle 2 cycle 3 cycle 4 cycle 5 cycle 6
PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] Write A B
DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L SADR
Address
x
x x 1 0 0 0 Address
0 1 1 1 z
ACK SSV SSF
z
0 0
TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1
Figure 15-8. SRAM Write Access (TLSZ = 00, HLAT = 000, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1)
15.7
SRAM Write with a Table of up to Eight Devices
The following explains the SRAM Write operation done via a table(s) of up to eight devices with the following parameters: TLSZ = 01. The diagram of this table is shown in Figure 15-9. The following assumes that SRAM access is getting done through CYNSE70032 device number 0. Figure 15-10 and Figure 15-11 show the timing diagram for the device number 0 and device number 7, respectively. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Write instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. The host ASIC selects the device for which the ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. The host ASIC also supplies SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6] in this cycle. Note. CMD[2] must be set to 0 for SRAM Write, because burst Writes into the SRAM are not supported. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Write instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. Note. CMD[2] must be set to 0 for SRAM Write, because burst Writes into the SRAM are not supported. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC continues to drive DQ[67:0]. The data in this cycle is not used by the CYNSE70032. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC continues to drive DQ[67:0]. The data in this cycle is not used by the CYNSE70032. At the end of cycle 3, a new command can begin. The Write is a pipelined operation; however, the Write cycle appears at the SRAM bus with the same latency as the Search instruction (as measured from the second cycle of the Write command).
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CYNSE70032
SRAM BHI[2:0] LHO[1] SSF, SSV 6 5 4
CYNSE70032 #0
3 LHI
2
1
0 LHO[0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #1
3 LHI
2
1 LHO[0]
0
DQ[67:0] CMDV CMD[8:0]
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #2
3 LHI
2 LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0] LHO[1]
6
5
4
CYNSE70032 #3
3 2 LHI LHO[0]
1
0
BHI[2:0]
6
5
CYNSE70032 #4
3 LHI LHO[0]
4
2
1
0
BHI[2:0] 3
21 LHI
0
6
5 LHO[0]
4
LHI CYNSE70032 #5
BHI[2:0] 3
2 1 LHI
0
6 LHO[0]
CYNSE70032 #6
54 LHI
BHI[2:0]3
2
1 LHI
0
6
5 LHI
4 BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
CYNSE70032 #7
BHO[0] BHO[1] BHO[2]
LHO[1] LHO[0] Figure 15-9. Table of a Block of Eight Devices
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L z z 0 z 0 z 0 z Address z z z z Write 01 AB Address x x z
SADR[21:0]
ACK SSV SSF
z z z
TLSZ = 01, HLAT = XXX, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0 Figure 15-10. SRAM Write Through Device Number 0 in a Block of Eight Devices
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L 1 SADR[21:0] z 0 0 z z 1 0 1 1 Write 01 AB Address x x 1 z z 0 1 1
ACK SSV SSF
TLSZ = 01, HLAT = XXX, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1 Figure 15-11. SRAM Write Timing for Device Number 7 in a Block of Eight Devices
15.8
SRAM Write with Table(s) Consisting of up to 31 Devices
The following explains the SRAM Write operation done via a table(s) of up to 31 devices and with the following parameters: TLSZ = 10. The diagram of this table(s) is shown in Figure 15-12. The following assumes that SRAM access is accomplished through CYNSE70032 device number 0 (the selected device). Figure 15-13 and Figure 15-14 show the timing diagram for device number 0 and device number 30, respectively. * Cycle 1A: The host ASIC applies the Write instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. The host ASIC selects the device for which ID[4:0] matches the DQ[25:21] lines. The host ASIC also supplies SADR[21:19] on CMD[8:6] in this cycle. Note. CMD[2] must be set to 0 for SRAM Write, because burst Writes into the SRAM are not supported. * Cycle 1B: The host ASIC continues to apply the Write instruction on CMD[1:0] using CMDV = 1. The DQ bus supplies the address, with DQ[20:19] set to 10, to select the SRAM address. Note. CMD[2] must be set to 0 for SRAM Write, because burst WriteS into the SRAM are not supported. * Cycle 2: The host ASIC continues to drive DQ[67:0]. The data in this cycle is not used by the CYNSE70032. * Cycle 3: The host ASIC continues to drive DQ[67:0]. The data in this cycle is not used by the CYNSE70032. At the end of cycle 3, a new command can begin. The Write is a pipelined operation; however, the Write cycle appears at the SRAM bus with the same latency as the Search instruction (as measured from the second cycle of the Write command).
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CYNSE70032
BHI[2] SSF, SSV
BHI[1]
BHI[0] GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 0 (devices 0-7) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
SRAM
GND Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 1 (devices 8-15) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
BHI[2]
BHI[1]
BHI[0]
GND
Block of 8 CYNSE70032s Block 2 (devices 16-23) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
DQ[67:0] CMD[8:0], CMDV
BHI[2] BHI[1] BHI[0] Block of 7 CYNSE70032s Block 3 (devices 24-30) BHO[2] BHO[1] BHO[0]
Figure 15-12. Table of 31 Devices (Four Blocks)
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L z z z z z 0 0 0 Address Write 01 AB Address x x z z z z z
SADR[21:0]
ACK SSV SSF
z z z
TLSZ = 01, HLAT = XXX, LRAM = 0, LDEV = 0. Figure 15-13. SRAM Write Through Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 Devices (Device 0 Timing)
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CYNSE70032
cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 CLK2X PHS_L CMDV CMD[1:0] CMD[8:2] DQ OE_L WE_L CE_L ALE_L SADR[21:0] z 0 0 0 1 1 1 Write 01 AB Address x x 1 z z z z 1 1 1
ACK SSV SSF
TLSZ = 01, HLAT = XXX, LRAM = 1, LDEV = 1. Figure 15-14. SRAM Write Through Device Number 0 in a Bank of 31 CYNSE70032 Devices (Device Number 30 Timing)
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CYNSE70032
16.0
16.1
Power
The Proper Power-up Sequence
Proper power-up sequence is required to correctly initialize the Cypress Network Search Engines before functional access to the device can begin. RST_L and TRST_L should be held low before the power supplies ramp-up. RST_L must be set low for a duration of time afterward and then set high. The following steps describe the proper power-up sequence. 1. Set RST_L and TRST_L low. 2. Power up VDD, VDDQ and start running CLK2X and PHS_L. The order in which these signals (including VDD and VDDQ) are applied is not critical. 3. Hold RST_L low for a minimum of 64 CLK2X cycles. The counting starts on the first rising edge of CLK2X when PHS_L is high, after both VDD and VDDQ have reached their steady state voltages. Set RST_L high afterward to complete the power-up sequence. For JTAG reset, TRST_L can be brought high after both VDD and VDDQ have reached their steady state voltages. Figure 16-1 illustrates the proper sequences of the power-up operation.
VDD VDDQ CLK2x PHS_L TRST_L RST_L 64 CLK2x cycles
Figure 16-1. Power-up Sequence
17.0
Application
Figure 17-1 shows how a search engine subsystem can be formed using a host ASIC and Cypress's CYNSE70032 bank. It also shows how this search engine subsystem is integrated in a switch or router. The CYNSE70032 can access synchronous as well as asynchronous SRAMs by allowing the host ASIC to set the same HLAT parameter in the all search engines within a bank of search engines.
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CYNSE70032
AM k SR a n B
am gr ry ro m o Pe M
Syst em B us
ch ar ne Se ngi E
t os H SIC A
hr itc so Sw ces o Pr
h itc ic Sw abr F
Net wor k
L in e
Inte
rf a c es
Figure 17-1. Sample Switch/Router Using the CYNSE70032 Device
18.0
JTAG (1149.1) Testing
The CYNSE70032 supports the Test Access Port (TAP) and Boundary Scan Architecture, as specified in the IEEE JTAG standard 1149.1. The pin interface to the chip consists of five signals with the standard definitions: TCK, TMS, TDI, TDO, and TRST_L. Table 18-1 describes the operations that the test access port controller supports, and Table 18-2 describes the TAP Device ID Register. Note. To disable JTAG functionality, connect the TCK, TMS and TDI pins to VDDQ through a pull-up, and TRST_L to ground through a pull-down. Table 18-1. Supported Operations Instruction SAMPLE/PRELOAD Type Mandatory Description Sample/Preload. This operation loads the values of signals going to and from I/O pins into the boundary scan shift register to provide a snapshot of the normal functional operation, and to initialize the boundary scan. External Test. This operation uses boundary scan values shifted in from TAP to test connectivity external to the device. This operation loads a single bit shift register between TDI and TDO and provides a minimum-length serial path when no test operation is required. This operation selects the Identification register between TDI and TDO and allows the "idcode" to be read serially through TDO. This operation drives preset values onto the outputs of devices. This operation leaves the device output pins in a high impedance state.
EXTEST BYPASS IDCODE CLAMP HIghZ
Mandatory Mandatory Optional Optional Optional
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CYNSE70032
Table 18-2. TAP Device ID Register Field Revision Range [31:28] Initial Value 0001 Description Revision Number. This is the current device revision number. Numbers start from 1 and increment by 1 for each revision of the device. This is the part number of the device. Manufacturer ID. This field is the same as the manufacturer ID used in the TAP controller. Least significant bit.
Part Number MFID LSB
[27:12] [11:1] [0]
0000 0000 0000 0001 000_1101_1100 1
19.0
Electrical Specifications
This section describes the electrical specifications, capacitance, operating conditions, DC characteristics, and AC timing parameters for the CYNSE70032, as shown in Table 19-1 and Table 19-2. Operating Conditions for CYNSE70032 Table 19-1. DC Electrical Characteristics for CYNSE70032 Parameter ILI ILO VIL VIL VIH VIH VOL VOL VOH VOH IDD2 IDD2 IDD2 IDD2 IDDl IDDl Description Input leakage current Output leakage current Input LOW voltage (VDDQ = 3.3V) Input LOW voltage (VDDQ = 2.5V) Input HIGH voltage (VDDQ = 3.3V) Input HIGH voltage (VDDQ = 2.5V) Output LOW voltage (VDDQ = 3.3V) Output LOW voltage (VDDQ = 2.5V) Output HIGH voltage (VDDQ = 3.3V) Output HIGH voltage (VDDQ = 2.5V) 3.3V supply current at VDD Max 3.3V supply current at VDD Max 2.5V supply current at VDD Max 2.5V supply current at VDD Max 1.8V supply current at VDD Max 1.8V supply current at VDD Max Test Conditions VDDQ = VDDQ Max., VIN= 0 to VDDQ Max. VDDQ = VDDQ Max., VIN= 0 to VDDQ Max. Min. -10 -10 -0.3 -0.3 2.0 2.0 Max. 10 10 0.8 0.8 VDDQ + 0.3 VDDQ + 0.3 0.4 0.4 Unit
A A
VDDQ = VDDQ Min., IOL = 8 mA VDDQ = VDDQ Min., IOL = 8 mA VDDQ = VDDQ Min., IOH = 8 mA VDDQ = VDDQ Min., IOH = 8.mA 83-MHz search rate, lOUT = 0 mA 66-MHz search rate, lOUT = 0 mA 83-MHz search rate, lOUT = 0 mA 66-MHz search rate, lOUT = 0 mA 83-MHz search rate 66-MHz search rate Description
2.4 2.4 300 240 180 150 1250 1000 Max. 6 6 Unit pF[7] pF[8]
V V V V V V V V mA mA mA mA mA mA
Parameter CIN COUT
Input capacitance Output capacitance
Table 19-2. Operating Conditions for CYNSE70032 Parameter VDDQ VDD VIH VIL Description Operating voltage for IO Operating supply voltage Input HIGH voltage[9] Input LOW voltage[10] Supply voltage tolerance
Notes: 7. f = 1 MHz, VIN = 0V. 8. f = 1 MHz, VOUT = 0V. 9. Maximum allowable applies to overshoot only (VDDQ is 2.5V supply). 10. Minimum allowable applies to undershoot only.
Min. (3.3V) 3.135 1.7 2.0 -0.3 -5%
Max. (3.3V) 3.465 1.9 VDDQ+ 0.3 0.8 +5%
Min. (2.5V) 2.4 1.7 1.7 -0.3 -5%
Max. (2.5V) 2.6 1.9 VDDQ+ 0.3 0.7 +5%
Unit V V V V
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CYNSE70032
Table 19-3. Operating Range for CYNSE70032 Range Commercial Industrial Ambient Temperature 0C to +70C -40C to +85C VCC +2.5V to +3.3V 5% +2.5V to +3.3V 5%
20.0
AC Timing Waveforms
Table 20-1 shows the AC timing parameters for the CYNSE70032 device; Table 20-2 shows the same parameters but for 2.5V. Figure 20-1 shows the device's input wave form, and Figure 20-2 and Figure 20-3 show the device's output load. Figure 20-4 shows a timing waveform diagram. Table 20-1. AC Timing Parameters with CLK2X CYNSE70032-066 CYNSE70032-083 Parameter FCLOCK tCLK TCKHI TCKLO TISCH TIHCH TICSCH TICHCH TCKHOV TCKHDV TCKHDZ TCKHSV TCKHSHZ TCKHSLZ CLK2X frequency CLK2X period CLK2X high pulse[11] edge[11]
[11]
Description
Min. 7.5 3.0 3.0 2.5 0.6 4.2 0.6 valid[12]
Max. 133
Min. 6.0 2.4 2.4 1.8 0.6 3.5 0.6
Max. 166
Unit MHz ns ns ns ns ns ns ns
CLK2X low pulse[11] Input set-up time to CLK2X rising Input hold time to CLK2X rising edge[11] Cascaded input set-up time to CLK2X rising edge Cascaded input hold time to CLK2X rising edge[11] Rising edge of CLK2X to LHO, FULO, BHO, FULL Rising edge of CLK2X to DQ valid[12] Rising edge of CLK2X to DQ High-Z[13]
[13]
8.5 9.0 8.5 9.0 6.5 7.0 6.5
7.0 7.5 7.0 7.5 6.0
ns ns ns ns ns ns
Rising edge of CLK2X to SRAM bus valid[12] Rising edge of CLK2X to SRAM bus High-Z Rising edge of CLK2X to SRAM bus Low-Z[13]
Table 20-2. Test Conditions of CYNSE70032 Conditions Input pulse levels (VDDQ = 3.3V) Input pulse levels (VDDQ = 2.5V) Input rise and fall times measured at 0.3V and 2.7V (VDDQ = 3.3V) Input rise and fall times measured at 0.25V and 2.25V (VDDQ = 2.5V) Input timing reference levels (VDDQ = 3.3V) Input timing reference levels (VDDQ = 2.5V) Output reference levels (VDDQ = 3.3V) Output reference levels (VDDQ = 2.5V) Output load
Notes: 11. Values are based on 50% signal levels. 12. Based on an AC load of CL = 30 pF (see Figure 20-1, Figure 20-2, and Figure 20-3). 13. These parameters are sampled but not 100% tested, and are based on an AC load of 5 pF.
Results GND to 3.0V GND to 2.5V 2 ns (see Figure 20-1) 2 ns (see Figure 20-1) 1.5V 1.25V 1.5V 1.25V See Figure 20-2 and Figure 20-3
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CYNSE70032
+2.5V VDDQ = 2.5V / +3.0V VDDQ = 3.3V 90% 10% GND 90% 10%
Figure 20-1. Input Waveform for CYNSE70032 Z0 = 50 DOUT AC Load CL 50 VL = 1.25V for VCCIO = 2.5V VL = 1.5V for VCCIO = 3.3V
Figure 20-2. Output Load for CYNSE70032 +2.5V or +3.3V 208 (2.5V) 158 (3.3V) Q 192 (2.5V) 175 (3.3V) 5 pF
For HIGH-Z and VOL/VOH[14, 15] Figure 20-3. 2.5 I/O Output Load Equivalent for CYNSE70032
Notes: 14. Output loading is specified with CL = 5 pF, as in Figure 20-3. Transition is measured at 200 mV from steady-state voltage. 15. The load used for VOH, VOL testing is shown in Figure 20-3.
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CYNSE70032
cycle 0 CLK2X CLK tISCH Signal Group 0 tISCH Signal tISCH Group 1 tIHCH tIHCH tICHCH Signal Group 2 tICSCH Signal Group 3 tCKHOV tCKHSHZ Signal Group 4 tCKHSV tCKHSLZ Signal Group 5 Signal Group 0: PHS_L, RST_L. Signal Group 1: DQ, CMD, CMDV. Signal Group 2: LHI, BHI, FULI. Signal Group 3: LHO, BHO, FULO, FULL. Signal Group 4: SADR, CE_L, OE_L, WE_L, ALE_L, SSF, SSV. Signal Group 5: DQ, ACK, EOT. Figure 20-4. AC Timing Waveforms with CLK2X tCKHDV tCKHDZ tCKHOV tIHCH tIHCH cycle 1 cycle 2 cycle cycle 3 4 cycle cycle 5 6 cycle 7 cycle 8 cycle cycle 9 10 cycle 11 cycle 12
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CYNSE70032
21.0
Y 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
NC NC DQ64 DQ62
Pinout Descriptions and Package Diagrams
W
GND NC NC NC
In the following figure and table the CYNSE70032 device pinout diagram and pinout descriptions are shown. V
EOT ACK NC VDD NC
U
NC FULL
T
NC NC
R
P
N
M
L
K
J
BHI0
H
LHI6
G
NC LHI3
F
VDD LHI2
E
ID2 ID3 ID1
D
ID0 TMS TCK
C
TDO TDI NC
B
NC VDD NC
A
NC NC DQ65
VDD FULI5 FULI4 FULI1 BHO0 VDD FULO1 NC NC
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
FULI6 FULI2 BHO1 BHI2 VDDQ LHI5 NC VDDQ BHO2 VDD
VDDQ VDD VDDQ GND RSTL DQ66
LHO1 LHI4 VDDQ LHIO LHO0 GND LHI1
NC FULO0 GND FULI3 FULI0 BHI1
ID4 TRST_L GND DQ63 DQ61 DQ57 DQ67 DQ59 NC DQ53
DQ60 VDDQ VDD NC
TOP
DQ56 DQ58
VDDQ DQ55 DQ49 VDD DQ47 VDDQ DQ51 VDDQ GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND GND NC DQ45 DQ43 VDD DQ37
DQ50 VDDQ DQ52 DQ54 NC DQ46 DQ48 GND
DQ40 DQ42 VDDQ DQ44 VDD NC DQ36 DQ38
DQ41 DQ39
VDDQ DQ35 DQ33 DQ31
LEFT
VDDQ DQ34 DQ32 DQ30 NC DQ28 VDDQ DQ26 GND GND GND GND GND GND
RIGHT
VDDQ NC NC DQ29 VDD
DQ23 DQ25 DQ27
DQ24 VDD DQ20 GND DQ22 DQ16 DQ14 VDDQ VDD DQ18 VDDQ DQ6 NC DQ10 DQ2 NC NC DQ12 NC DQ4 NC NC DQ8 DQ0 NC
GND DQ19 VDDQ DQ21 VDDQ DQ9 NC DQ15 DQ17
DQ11 DQ13 VDD DQ5 NC SAD0 DQ7 NC VDD NC NC VDDQ DQ3 NC NC
BOTTOM
DQ1
VDDQ GND VDD NC
CMD4 CMD2 GND WE_L CLK2X VDD SAD15 GND VDDQ SAD5 VDDQ GND NC
SSF CMD6 CMD3 CMD0 ALE_L OE_L SAD21 SAD18 SAD16 SAD12 SAD9 SAD7 SAD6 SSV CMD5 CMD1 CMDV VDDQ PHS_L VDDQ SAD19 VDDQ NC CE_L NC NC SAD10 SAD11 NC
SAD4 SAD3
CMD8 CMD7 VDDQ VDD
VDD SAD20 SAD17 SAD14 SAD13 VDD
SAD8 VDDQ SAD2 SAD1
Y
W
V
U
T
R
P N M L K J H G Figure 21-1. Pinout Diagram (Top View)
F
E
D
C
B
A
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CYNSE70032
Table 21-1. Pinout Descriptions for Pinout Diagram Package Ball Number A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 A8 A9 A10 A11 A12 A13 A14 A15 A16 A17 A18 A19 A20 B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B9 B10 B11 B12 B13 B14 B15 B16 B17 B18 B19 B20 C1 C2 C3 Signal Name NC NC DQ65 DQ57 DQ53 VDD VDDQ DQ43 DQ37 DQ31 VDD DQ27 DQ21 DQ17 VDD NC VDDQ DQ3 NC NC NC VDD NC DQ61 NC DQ49 DQ51 DQ45 VDD DQ33 DQ29 DQ25 VDDQ DQ15 DQ13 DQ7 NC VDD NC SAD1 TDO TDI NC Output-T Output-T Input 1.8V I/O I/O I/O 1.8V I/O I/O I/O 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O I/O I/O 1.8V 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O I/O I/O 1.8V 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O I/O 1.8V I/O I/O I/O 1.8V Signal Type Package Ball Number C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9 C10 C11 C12 C13 C14 C15 C16 C17 C18 C19 C20 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 D8 D9 D10 D11 D12 D13 D14 D15 D16 D17 D18 D19 D20 E1 E2 E3 E4 E17 E18 Signal Name DQ63 DQ59 DQ55 VDDQ NC DQ39 DQ35 NC DQ23 DQ19 NC DQ11 DQ5 NC SAD0 SAD3 SAD2 ID0 TMS TCK GND DQ67 VDDQ DQ47 GND DQ41 VDDQ VDDQ NC GND VDDQ DQ9 DQ1 GND NC SAD4 VDDQ ID2 ID3 ID1 TRST_L VDDQ SAD6 Output-T 3.3V/2.5V Input Input Input Input 3.3V/2.5V Output-T Ground 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O Ground Output-T Output-T Output-T Input Input Input Ground I/O 3.3V/2.5V I/O Ground I/O 3.3V/2.5V 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O I/O I/O I/O I/O Signal Type I/O I/O I/O 3.3V/2.5V
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CYNSE70032
Table 21-1. Pinout Descriptions for Pinout Diagram (continued) Package Ball Number E19 E20 F1 F2 F3 F4 F17 F18 F19 F20 G1 G2 G3 G4 G17 G18 G19 G20 H1 H2 H3 H4 H17 H18 H19 H20 J1 J2 J3 J4 J17 J18 J19 J20 K1 K2 K3 K4 K17 K18 K19 K20 L1 Signal Name NC SAD8 VDD LHI2 LHI0 ID4 SAD5 SAD7 SAD11 VDD NC LHI3 VDDQ LHI1 VDDQ SAD9 SAD10 SAD13 LHI6 LHI5 LHI4 GND GND SAD12 NC SAD14 BHI0 VDDQ LHO1 LHO0 SAD15 SAD16 VDDQ SAD17 VDD BHI2 VDD BHI1 VDD SAD18 SAD19 SAD20 BHO0 Output-T Input 3.3V/2.5V Output Output Output-T Output-T 3.3V/2.5V Output-T 1.8V Input 1.8V Input 1.8V Output-T Output-T Output-T Output Input 3.3V/2.5V Input 3.3V/2.5V Output-T Output-T Output-T Input Input Input Ground Ground Output-T Output-T 1.8V Input Input Input Output-T Output-T Output-T 1.8V Signal Type Package Ball Number L2 L3 L4 L17 L18 L19 L20 M1 M2 M3 M4 M17 M18 M19 M20 N1 N2 N3 N4 N17 N18 N19 N20 P1 P2 P3 P4 P17 P18 P19 P20 R1 R2 R3 R4 R17 R18 R19 R20 T1 T2 T3 T4 Signal Name BHO1 BHO2 FULI0 CLK2X SAD21 VDDQ VDD FULI1 FULI2 VDDQ FULI3 WE_L OE_L PHS_L NC FULI4 FULI6 NC GND GND ALE_L VDDQ CE_L FULI5 NC NC FULO0 CMD2 CMD0 CMDV NC VDD FULO1 VDDQ NC CMD4 CMD3 CMD1 VDD NC NC VDD RSTL 1.8V Input Input Input Input 1.8V 1.8V Output 3.3V/2.5V Output Input Input Input Ground Ground Output-T 3.3V/2.5V Output-T Input Input Input Signal Type Output Output Input Input Output-T 3.3V/2.5V 1.8V Input Input 3.3V/2.5V Input Output-T Output-T Input
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CYNSE70032
Table 21-1. Pinout Descriptions for Pinout Diagram (continued) Package Ball Number T17 T18 T19 T20 U1 U2 U3 U4 U5 U6 U7 U8 U9 U10 U11 U12 U13 U14 U15 U16 U17 U18 U19 U20 V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9 V10 V11 V12 V13 V14 V15 V16 V17 V18 V19 Signal Name NC CMD6 CMD5 VDDQ NC FULL VDDQ GND DQ66 DQ58 DQ54 GND DQ44 DQ38 DQ30 DQ26 GND VDDQ DQ6 DQ0 GND SSF SSV CMD7 EOT ACK NC VDD NC DQ56 DQ52 DQ48 VDDQ DQ36 DQ32 VDDQ DQ20 DQ14 VDDQ DQ8 VDDQ VDD NC I/O I/O I/O 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O 3.3V/2.5V I/O 3.3V/2.5V 1.8V 1.8V Output 3.3V/2.5V Ground I/O I/O I/O Ground I/O I/O I/O I/O Ground 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O Ground Output-T Output-T Input Output-T Output-T Input Input 3.3V/2.5V Signal Type Package Ball Number V20 W1 W2 W3 W4 W5 W6 W7 W8 W9 W10 W11 W12 W13 W14 W15 W16 W17 W18 W19 W20 Y1 Y2 Y3 Y4 Y5 Y6 Y7 Y8 Y9 Y10 Y11 Y12 Y13 Y14 Y15 Y16 Y17 Y18 Y19 Y20 J9 J10 Signal Name CMD8 GND NC NC NC VDDQ NC VDDQ DQ46 DQ42 NC DQ34 DQ28 VDD DQ16 DQ18 DQ12 NC DQ4 NC NC NC NC DQ64 DQ62 DQ60 VDD DQ50 NC DQ40 VDD VDDQ NC DQ24 DQ22 VDD NC DQ10 DQ2 NC NC GND GND Ground Ground I/O I/O I/O I/O 1.8V I/O 1.8V 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O I/O 1.8V I/O I/O I/O I/O 1.8V I/O I/O I/O 3.3V/2.5V I/O I/O 3.3V/2.5V Signal Type Input Ground
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CYNSE70032
Table 21-1. Pinout Descriptions for Pinout Diagram (continued) Package Ball Number J11 J12 K9 K10 K11 K12 L9 Signal Name GND GND GND GND GND GND GND Signal Type Ground Ground Ground Ground Ground Ground Ground Package Ball Number L10 L11 L12 M9 M10 M11 M12 Signal Name GND GND GND GND GND GND GND Signal Type Ground Ground Ground Ground Ground Ground Ground
22.0
Ordering Information
Table 22-1 provides ordering information. Table 22-1. Ordering Information Part Number CYNSE70032-66BGC CYNSE70032-66BGI CYNSE70032-83BGC Description Search Engine Search Engine Search Engine Frequency 66 MHz 66 MHz 83 MHz Temperature Range Commercial Industrial Commercial
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CYNSE70032
23.0 Package Diagrams
272-Lead Ball Grid Array (27 x 27 x 2.33 mm) BG272
51-85130-*A
Figure 23-1. Package Associative Processing Technology (APT) is a trademark of Cypress Semiconductor. All product and company names mentioned in this document are the trademarks of their respective holders.
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(c) Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, 2003. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. Cypress Semiconductor Corporation assumes no responsibility for the use of any circuitry other than circuitry embodied in a Cypress Semiconductor product. Nor does it convey or imply any license under patent or other rights. Cypress Semiconductor does not authorize its products for use as critical components in life-support systems where a malfunction or failure may reasonably be expected to result in significant injury to the user. The inclusion of Cypress Semiconductor products in life-support systems application implies that the manufacturer assumes all risk of such use and in doing so indemnifies Cypress Semiconductor against all charges.
CYNSE70032
Document History Page
Document Title: CYNSE70032 Network Search Engine Document Number: 38-02042 REV. ** *A *B *C ECN NO. 111441 116611 118152 121027 Issue Date 02/12/02 07/10/02 9/19/02 12/17/02 Orig. of Change AFX OOR OOR ED Description of Change New Data Sheet Added industrial temp parts Added power section that covers the power-up sequence Updating JTAG section with supported operations table Added note to power-up sequence instructions Removed CYNSE70128-/256-specific power-up instructions Removed Alternative power-up sequence from TOC Removed references to Alternative power-up sequence instructions including timing Figure 16-1 Removed TEST from Signal Description Table 5-1 Add Pin A10 to the pinout descriptions Table 21-1 Add "Output-T" in the Signal Type field of the Pin E18 Table 21-1 Change F1 Signal Name and Type from VDDQ to VDD and 3.3V/2.5V to 1.8V Table 21-1 Add "1.8V" in the Signal Type field of Pin F20 Table 21-1 Change U6 Package Ball Number from U6I/O to U6 Table 21-1 Re-order the pinouts list Table 21-1 Updated Figure 16-1 on page 114 to relect the correct waveforms. Also corrected the power-up sequence description above the figure.
*D
123685
02/20/03
KOS
*E
126019
05/07/03
ITL
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