In digital signaling, the voltage swing of the signal often encounters significant noise. This is especially the case with low voltage signals at a high speed interface. In such applications, problems such as power noise or ground noise can be the result of simultaneous switching of input/output (I/O) buffers, signal reflections, or signal cross-talk. Noise can also result from a weakened physical interconnection caused by a bad solder joint, an improper connection, etc. The result of such noise is the reduction of signal voltage margin as well as degradation of signal performance and reliability.
In
In general, electrical characterization of noise related problems require proper software support in generating data patterns and robust hardware support to determine the transient voltage. A common method of debugging a system involves pin by pin testing to find signal voltage errors. This is a very costly and time-consuming operation whether in the laboratory, in the production facility, or in the field.
In some aspects the invention relates to an apparatus for detecting a noise error of a signal comprising: a high comparator that references a high voltage limit with the signal and generates an output; a low comparator that references a low voltage limit with the signal and generates an output; and a circuit that processes the high comparator output and the low comparator output, wherein the circuit generates an alarm if a noise error is detected.
In an alternative embodiment, the invention relates to an apparatus for detecting a noise error of a signal comprising: means for detecting a high voltage noise error; means for detecting a low voltage noise error; and means for activating an alarm signal upon detection of the high voltage or the low voltage noise error.
In an alternative embodiment, the invention relates to a method for detecting a noise error of a signal comprising: comparing a high signal voltage with a high reference voltage; activating an alarm if the high signal voltage is less than the high reference voltage; comparing a low signal voltage with a low reference voltage; and activating an alarm if the low signal voltage is greater than the low reference voltage.
The advantages of the invention include, at least, the ability of a digital circuit to perform a self-diagnosis of signal noise error without pin-by-pin or other time intensive debugging methods. Another advantage of the disclosed invention includes the ability for the circuit to perform self-diagnosis of signal noise error in the test lab, at production quality control, or during actual usage.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. Like items in the drawings are shown with the same reference numbers.
In this embodiment, the data comparator 52 is a normal single ended data receiver. The comparator 52 itself may be a differential amplifier or a sense amplifier. The output of the comparator 52 is determined by whether the voltage of the data input signal 54 is higher or lower than the VREF. The comparison is made within an offset range. In some embodiments, the offset range may be ±30 mV. The other comparators 58, 60 function in the same manner, with the same physical characteristics as the data comparator with the exception of their reference voltage. The high comparator (COMP_H) 58 references the data input signal 54 to a pre-determined high voltage limit (VREF_H). Conversely, the low comparator (COMP_L) 60 references the data input signal 54 to a predetermined low voltage limit (VREF_L).
The output from each comparator feeds into the clock inputs of two separate flip-flop circuits 62a–62d. Specifically in the embodiment shown, the output of COMP_H 58 feeds into the clock input of first flip-flop 62a and the clock input of the third flip-flop 62c. The output of COMP_H 58 first passes through a delay buffer 68b before being input into the third flip-flop 62c. The output of COMP_L 60 feeds into the clock input of second flip-flop 62b and the clock input of the fourth flip-flop 62d. The output of COMP_L 60 first passes through a delay buffer 68a before being input into the second flip-flop 62b. In summary, the outputs of COMP_H 58 and COMP_L 60 provide the clock signal for the flip-flops 62a–62d.
In this embodiment, each flip-flop 62a–62d has an initial data bit value of “0”. This is accomplished by use of a “power on reset” for each flip-flop 62a–62d which automatically resets the data value to “0” when the circuit 50 is powered up. Upon receipt of a clock signal from COMP_H 58 or COMP_L 60, each flip-flop 62a–62d will output a “1” to one of the XOR gates 64a, 64b. The output of these gates is then input into the NOR gate 66 and displayed as a flag on the alarm output 70. The value of the flag will then indicate if signal performance is normal or if a noise error has occurred.
As shown in
As shown in
Conversely, the low-to-high section includes the flip-flop 62c, the flip-flop 62d with delay buffer 68b and an XOR gate 64b. This section measures the transition of a signal voltage as it increases in value through VREF_L, VREF, and VREF_H, respectively. The delay buffer 68b serves to delay the input from CMP_H 58 to flip-flop 62c in order to prevent an error from too large a transition signal being received.
During a signal transition, CMP_H 58 and CMP_L 60 will check the nature of the monotonous signal transition against the pre-set voltage boundaries of VREF_H and VREF_L, respectively. If the transition is normal as shown in
The advantages of the disclosed invention includes the ability of a digital circuit to perform a self-diagnosis of signal noise error without pin-by-pin or other time intensive debugging methods. Another advantage of the disclosed invention includes the ability for the circuit to perform self-diagnosis of signal noise error in the test lab, at production quality control, or during actual usage.
While the invention has been disclosed with reference to specific examples of embodiments, numerous variations and modifications are possible. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited by the description in the specification, but rather the claims that follow.
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