This invention relates in general to the field of electronics and more specifically to a method for asynchronous clock retiming.
Retiming a lower frequency timing signal (or clock) by a higher frequency clock, when both signals are asynchronous to each other, is typically done by passing the lower frequency signal through a series of registers (e.g., flip-flops) that are clocked using the higher frequency clock. There is however, a certain probability of a metastability condition per register stage and the overall probability of metastability at the system output increases exponentially with each register stage used. The number of registers is established such that the Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) rate is acceptably small. Unfortunately, the metastability condition brings with it the timing uncertainty of one high speed clock (possibly higher) since, during metastability, the output could be resolved at a given clock period or at the next. Although the output levels are defined, this timing error is unacceptable in some applications. A need thus exist in the art for a method for asynchronous clock retiming that can overcome some of the problems mentioned above.
The features of the present invention, which are believed to be novel, are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The invention, may best be understood by reference to the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in the several figures of which like reference numerals identify like elements, and in which:
While the specification concludes with claims defining the features of the invention that are regarded as novel, it is believed that the invention will be better understood from a consideration of the following description in conjunction with the drawing figures.
The method described herein is a general solution to the problem of retiming a lower frequency timing signal (or clock) by a higher frequency clock when both signals are asynchronous to each other. In the following described embodiment, the timing signal is a Frequency-Reference clock (FREF), the oversampling clock is a Digitally-Controlled Oscillator (DCO) clock output. Obviously, both of these signals are completely asynchronous to each other. The preferred embodiment will describe the invention in association with a frequency synthesizer based on a phase-domain All-Digital-Phase-Lock-Loop (ADPLL) structure although the invention can be used in any application where an asynchronous clock retiming is required. A block diagram of an ADPLL synthesizer 100 that can use the present invention is shown in
A more detailed discussion of the synthesizer section can be found in a U.S. patent application entitled “Digital Phase-Domain PLL Frequency Synthesizer”, by Staszewski, et al., having Ser. No. 09/603,023, filed on Jun. 26, 2000, this application is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein. A more detailed discussion of the fractional phase detector used in synthesizer 100 can be found in a U.S. patent application entitled “Digital Fractional Phase Detector”, by Staszewski, et al., having Ser. No. 09/608,317, filed on Jun. 30, 2000, this application is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein.
In the ADPLL 100 the reference phase, variable (DCO) phase, phase error, and all other phase signals need to be represented as fixed-point digital word signals that are synchronous to each other and cannot be corrupted by noise. If this is accomplished, then the phase error can be simply an output of a synchronous arithmetic subtractor used as a phase detector. Thus retimed FREF clock (CKR) is used as a synchronous clock.
The ADPLL 100 uses a selection control circuit such as a time-to-digital converter (TDC) 202 to measure the fractional (sub-Tv) delay difference between both edges of the DCO clock and the reference clock with a time quantization and resolution of Δtres. This difference is represented by a digital word, the timing diagram for a negative phase error are shown in
The digital fractional phase is determined by passing the DCO clock through a chain of inverters as shown in
The time lag between the reference edge and the following rising edge of the CKV must be calculated based on the available information of the delay between the preceeding rising edge of CKV and the reference edge and the clock half-period, which is the difference Tv/2 =Δtr−Δtf. In general,
Tv/2 =Δtr−Δtf if Δtr≧Δtf, otherwise Δtf−Δtr.
The above analysis can be summarized in equation in the following equation, where Δtfrac is the digital fractional phase detector output:
Δtfrac=−Δtr if Δtr≧Δtf, otherwise Δtr−2Δtf.
The period-normalized fractional phase is described by:
In this implementation, the fractional phase is not needed. Instead, Δtr is used as the ε(k) correction that is positive and ε∈(0, 1), in the following equation: θr (k)=k·N +θ0+ε(k), where θr (k) is the reference phase, k is an index, the θv (k) is the high-rate DCO phase, and ε(k)=Δtr (k)Tv.
In practice, it is preferred to obtain the clock period through longer-term averaging in order to ease the calculation burden and linearize the transfer function of 1/Tv. The averaging time constant can be as slow as the expected drift of the inverter delay.
The actual fractional output of the error correction “ε” needs one extra bit due to the fact that the whole CKV cycle has to be skipped, if the rising edge of FREF transitions is too close before the rising edge of CKV and, as a safety precaution, the falling CKV edge has to be used. This scenario is illustrated in
The clock retiming solution in accordance with the invention uses the previously-described TDC circuit to determine which edge of the higher frequency clock (oversampling clock) is -farther away, or far enough based on the design criteria, from the edge of the lower frequency timing signal. Alternatively, in another design, the circuit only needs to find an edge that is far enough to guarantee a low probability of metastability. In this case, it could well be that either edge meets a “far enough” threshold. This predetermined threshold can be determined on a design by design case, and it is usually acceptable for timing values larger than several inverter delays. At the same time, the oversampling clock performs sampling of the timing signal by two registers, one on the rising edge and the other on the falling edge. Then the register of “better quality” retiming, as determined by the fractional phase detector decision, is selected to provide the retimed output.
In
A high degree of redundancy in the thermometer-encoded TDC output vector could be exploited to obtain extra error correction and metastability resolution. However, in the preferred embodiment we have chosen a simple extraction of the selection control. In
The asynchronous retiming method of the present invention begins by sampling the frequency reference clock (FREF) using both edges of an oversampling clock (CKV) that is derived from a controllable oscillator, such as a DCO. The sampling is preferably performed by a pair of clocked memory elements, such as flip-flops or registers, one operating on the positive or rising transition of the CKV clock, and the other operating on the negative or falling transition of the CKV clock. The effect of sampling the FREF clock by the CKV clock is to retime the FREF to either the rising or falling edge of the CKV clock.
By using a circuit like a time-to-digital converter to determine which edge of a higher frequency clock (e.g., oversampling clock) is farther away from the significant edge of the lower frequency timing signal, provides for improved asynchronous clock retiming. When the retiming method of the present invention is used in an all-digital PLL synthesizer, as one example, the retimed FREF can be used as a synchronous clock for the synthesizer. The retimed frequency reference (CKR) can be generated using a digitally-controlled oscillator (DCO) output as the oversampling clock. Thus providing for an improved and lower cost design.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/242,577, entitled “Asynchronous Clock Retiming Method”, filed on Oct. 23, 2000.
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