The present disclosure relates to a data transmission method that has DisplayPort (DP) and Universal Serial Bus Universal Serial Bus (USB) on USB Type-C connector.
DP Alt Mode on USB Type-C enables concurrent transport of USB traffic (both USB3.x SS and USB2) and DP traffic over a standard USB Type-C connector. The USB Type-C connector supports 4 pairs of high-speed differential signaling with a bit rate up to 10 Gbps/pair and 2 pairs of pins for a USB2 differential signal (up to 480 Mbps), as depicted in
DP Alt Mode on USB Type-C specification enables either (1) 2 lanes of DP Main Link concurrent with USB3.x SS and USB2 or (2) 4 lanes of DP Main Link concurrent with USB2 without USB3.x SS.
For applications such as AR (augmented reality) and VR (virtual reality), there is a growing desire to have the maximum-bandwidth DP transport of 4-lane Main Link at the highest DP link rate of 8.1 Gbps/lane (called HBR3 link rate) concurrent with USB3.1 SS transport. There is one approach that enables this concurrency by routing USB3.1 SS traffic to 2 pairs of USB2 pins on a USB Type-C connector while routing all 4 lanes of DP Main Link to the 4 pairs of high-speed differential signal pins. This approach, however, has the drawbacks as below:
The present disclosure describes technology enabling the concurrent transport of USB traffic and DP 4 Lane equivalent traffic over USB Type-C connector without drawbacks such as requirements of more complex signal multiplexing/routing.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a data transmission system includes a transmitter having a first switching re-timer and a receiver having a second switching re-timer. The first switching re-timer is configured to double a link rate per lane and halve the number of lanes, and the second switching re-timer is configured to halve the doubled link rate and double the halved number of lanes.
According to another aspect of the disclosure, a data transmission system includes a transmitter having a first switching re-timer and a receiver having a second switching re-timer. The first switching re-timer is configured to multiply a link rate per lane by M where M denotes an integer of 2 or more, and multiply the number of lanes by 1/M, and the second switching re-timer is configured to multiply the M-multiplied link rate by 1/M and multiply the 1/M-multiplied number of lanes by M.
USB Type-C devices include switches to support a plug connector orientation flip-ability feature. The switches for DP Alt Mode on USB Type-C devices also have the ability to select either USB3.x SS signals or DP signals for Main Link Lane 2 and Lane 3 as shown in
As depicted in
With the disclosure described in this document, the Switching Re-timers are substituted with the Switching Re-timer with DP Link Rate Doubling/Lane Count Halving capability (“DP Link Rate Doubling re-timer”) on the USB Host/DP Source side and Switching Re-timer with DP Link Rate Halving/Lane Count Doubling capability (“DP Link Rate Halving re-timer”) on the USB Device/DP Sink side as shown
DP Link Rate Doubling/Halving Operations
Internal paths of DP Link Rate Doubling re-timer and DP Link Rate Halving re-timer are shown in
The DP Link Rate Doubling re-timer recovers the link symbol clock (1×_LSCLK) from a RX CDR (Clock to Data Recovery) circuit. The clock doubling circuit generates 2×_LSCLK that is used by 2-lanes-to-1-lane multiplexing circuit that multiplexes 9-bit link symbols from Lane 0 and Lane 1 (or Lane 2 and Lane 3). The 2×_LSCLK is also used both by ANSI8b/10b encoders and by TX PLL that generates 2× serial bit clock for the serializer circuit.
The DP Link Rate Halving re-timer recovers the 2× link symbol clock (2×_LSCLK) from RX CDR circuit. This recovered clock (2×_LSCLK clock) is used to decode the doubled ANSI8b/10b incoming stream and initiate the 1-lane-to-2-lanes de-multiplexing function. Following this, the 1×_LSCLK generated by the clock divider circuit, is used by 1-lane-to-2-lanes de-multiplexing circuit to de-multiplexe the 9-bit link symbols to Lane 0 and Lane 1 (or Lane 2 and Lane 3). This 1×_LSCLK is also used both by ANSI8b/10b encoders and by the TX PLL that generates 1× serial bit clock for the serializer circuit to regenerate a standard DP bit stream.
The DP Standard protocol mandates the periodic transmission of ANSI8b/10b K28.5 character (known as comma character) in the same link symbol clock cycles across all the lanes.
Both the multiplexing circuit and the de-multiplexing circuit in the above re-timers use link symbol corresponding to ANSI8b/10b K28.5 (“K28.5 link symbol”) as a marker for multiplexing from/de-multiplexing to proper lanes as described below and shown in
As per the DP Alt Mode on USB Type-C specification, a switching re-timer has a companion USB PD controller that manages the DP Alt Mode capability discovery and configuration through USB PD communication over CC line on a USB Type-C connector pin. A USB PD controller controls the companion switching re-timer through an embedded communication channel such as I2C that is not exposed to USB Type-C connector pins as shown in
The DP Link Rate Doubling/Halving re-timers discover each other through their companion USB PD controllers using USB PD VDM (Vendor Defined Message).
Link Establishment Between DP Link Rate Doubling/Halving Re-Timers
The DP Link Rate Doubling/Halving re-timers declare themselves as LTTPR (Link Training Tunable PHY Repeater) as defined in DisplayPort Standard Ver.1.4. They both declare the support of up to 4 Main Link lanes at up to HBR3 link rate (that is, up to 8.1 Gbps/lane).
When the DP Source initiates DP Link Training over 4 lanes of Main Link, DP Link Rate Doubling re-timer on the DP Source side indicates the training at the 2× serial bit rate over 2 lanes to the DP Link Rate Halving re-timer on the DP Sink side by setting Bit 4 of TRAINING PATTERN SET DPCD register (a debug mode enable bit that does not get set during a normal operation) in the AUX write transaction to that DPCD register at the beginning of DP Link Training.
As the DP Link Rate Halving re-timer on the DP Sink side converts it back to 1× serial bit rate over 4 Main Link lanes, the conversion to 2× serial bit rate over 2 lanes between the DP Link Rate Doubling re-timer and the DP Link Rate halving re-timer is transparent to both DP Source and DP Sink.
In case the DP Source initiates DP Link Training over either 2 lanes (Lanes 0 and 1) or 1 lane (Lane 0) of the Main Link, the DP Link Rate Doubling re-timer clears Bit 4 of TRAINING PATTERN SET DPCD register to 0 via the AUX write transaction to that DPCD register at the beginning of DP Link Training. With Bit 4 cleared to 0, the DP Link Rate Doubling re-timer disables the DP link rate doubling/lane count halving operation and the DP Link Rate Halving re-timer disables DP link rate halving/lane count doubling operation as shown in
The present invention has been described in connection with the above description, it is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular form set forth, but on the contrary, it is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the inventions as defined by the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Patent Provisional Application No. 62/570,879, filed Oct. 11, 2017, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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10169286 | Hundal | Jan 2019 | B2 |
Entry |
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“Universal Serial Bus 3.1 Specification,” Hewlett-Packard Company, Revision 1.0, Jul. 26, 2013. |
Jim Choate, “VESA DisplayPort Alternate Mode on USB-C Technical Overview,” USB Implementers Forum, Nov. 17-18, 2015. |
“Expansion of Direct Connect Alt Mode Remappable Signals to Include A6 and A7,” Applied to USB Type-C Cable and Connector Specification Revision 1.3, USB Implementers Forum, Jul. 14, 2017. |
“Universal Serial Bus 3.2 Specification,” Apple Inc., Revision 1.0, Sep. 22, 2017. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190108148 A1 | Apr 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62570879 | Oct 2017 | US |