This application is related to the following copending applications, all of which are incorporated herein by reference: Ser. No. 09/996,113, filed Nov. 28, 2001, for “Unified Digital Architecture”; Ser. No. 09/996,053, filed Nov. 28, 2001, for “Analog Unidirectional Serial Link Architecture”; and Ser. No. 09/997,587, filed Nov. 28, 2001, for “Apparatus And Method For Oversampling With Evenly Spaced Samples”.
This invention relates generally to the transfer of data in serial form from a register on one ASIC (application specific integrated circuit) chip on a card to a register on another ASIC chip on a card and, more particularly, to the serial transfer of such data wherein the data is converted from parallel digital form to serial analog form for transfer from one ASIC to the second ASIC and is then reconverted to parallel digital form in the second ASIC, after it has been transferred, in serial analog form.
Serial data must be transmitted across wired media. The transmit and receive sections include chips wired to one another and card-to-card interconnects. The transmission media can be a combination of printed circuit boards, connectors, back plane wiring, fiber or cable. The interconnect can include its own power, data and clocking sources or may derive these functions from a host module. Such data has typically been transmitted through a parallel data bus, such as ISA, PCI, PCI-X and the like. One drawback of such parallel links is the moderate rate of data transmission due to improved microprocessor performance, resulting in data transfer bandwidths that typically outpace I/O transfer rates. Also, the ASIC I/O count is high. In addition, the system integration I/O count using a parallel data bus is high. Finally, the overall system cost associated with the use of the parallel data bus tends to be high.
Related art shows attempts to overcome these difficulties and drawbacks by utilizing serial communication systems involving a variety of schemes. For example, some have used a carrierless amplitude/phase (CAP) modulation scheme. Others have used linear compression/decompression and digital signal processing techniques for frequency modulation. Still others use a linear (analog) phase rotator to recover only the carrier of an incoming signal. Some transmit using a pass band which limits the bandwidth of the frequencies being passed, rather than a baseband channel wherein the signals are not shared and the frequencies are not restricted.
The present invention comprises a global architecture for a serial link connection between two cards which must transmit data across wired media. The architecture comprises a transmitter and a receiver. The transmitter includes circuitry and a structure to take digital bits from a bit register, such as for example, an eight-bit register or a ten-bit register, and convert these bits into serial analog transmission to the receiver. The receiver includes a structure and circuitry to sample edges of the data on analog transmission of the original digital bits and reconvert the analog serial signal of the digital bits to the original digital bits and store them in a register comparable to the data stored in the original register from which they were selected.
Referring now to the drawings and, for the present, to
As can be seen in
Briefly, each transmitter 16 has stored therein parallel digital data in a register 24 (
Thus, the function of the serial link herein is to take parallel data in a register in an efficient manner, transmit it in an asynchronous serial analog form and reconvert it to synchronous, parallel, digital data.
Referring now to
Each of the two bits selected by the selector 26 from the register 24 is provided to a bit latch 28a or 28b. This selection and delivery is also under the synchronous control of counter 38. The bits are then delivered from the latches 28a and 28b to a multiplexor 30, also under the synchronous control of counter 38, and then to a one-bit latch 32. From the one-bit latch 32, the bits are delivered to a driver equalizer 34, which will convert the received digital bits from the latch 32 to a serial analog signal output 35 containing the converted digital bits.
A single phase, full rate, phase lock loop 36 is provided which will clock the action of the latch 32 and driver equalizer 34, and also will actuate the counter 38 which, in turn, has inputs to the multiplexor 30, the latches 28a and 28b, the select 26 and the ten-bit register 24. The phase lock loop 36 has as an input thereto a clock signal, which can be internal or external from clock 40, as shown. The counter 38 functions to provide synchronous operation of the extraction of the bits from the register 24 by the selector 26 for delivery to the latches 28a and 28b. Also, the counter operates to form a synchronous delivery of the bits from the latches 28a and 28b to the multiplexor 30 and therefrom to the latch 32. It is at the driver equalizer 34 that the digital bits synchronously received are converted to a serial analog signal 35. The functioning and more detailed description of the various parts of the transmitter 16, such as the bit register 24, selector 26, the latches 28a and 28b, the multiplexor 30, the latch 32, the single phase, full rate, phase lock loop 36 and the counter 38 are all described in more detail in application Ser. No. 09/996,113, filed Nov. 28, 2001, for “Unified Digital Architecture” and application Ser. No. 09/996,053, filed Nov. 28, 2001, for “Analog Unidirectional Serial Link Architecture”, which applications are incorporated herein by reference. The analog output 35 is placed on the serial bus 20. It is transmitted in an asynchronous form to the receiver 18 attached to the other end of the serial bus 20. As indicated above, the receiver 18 receives the asynchronous analog signal and converts it to a synchronous digital parallel signal corresponding to the digital bits in register 24 for storage in the receiver 18.
Referring now to
Thus, the ten-bit digital bits stored as parallel data in the ten-bit register 24 are converted by the transmitter 16 to an asynchronous analog serial signal 35 which is to be transported asynchronously on bus 20, which asynchronous analog signal 35 is then reconstituted by the receiver 18 to the original ten-bit parallel digital bit in register 68.
While the invention has been described in combination with embodiments thereof, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing teachings. Accordingly, the invention is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variations as fall within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefits of provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/262,358, filed Jan. 16, 2001, for “Global Architecture for Advanced Serial Link”.
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