Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6272193
-
Patent Number
6,272,193
-
Date Filed
Monday, September 27, 199925 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, August 7, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Law Firm of Naren Thappeta
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 375 355
- 375 324
- 375 354
- 375 316
- 370 503
- 329 304
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A receiver to recover data encoded at high speed in a signal over a serial communication channel. A static phase determination circuit indicates whether the signal is early, late or neutral relative to a sampling clock. The sampling clock is used to oversample the signal to generate multiple samples. A token analyzer examines the transitions around a current symbol to determine any short term phase shifts of the boundaries between symbols. The short term phase shifts and the static phase together may be used to accurately select the samples representing the symbols without requiring extensive processing.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to data communications, and more specifically to a receiver which can efficiently recover the data encoded in a high speed serial communication channel. The invention has particular application in digital display units such as flat-panel monitors.
2. Related Art
Receivers are often used to recover data received on a serial communication channel. In a typical scenario, an encoder encodes information (data) in the form of a sequence of symbols and a modulator generates a signal encoding the sequence of symbols in a serial communication channel. The receiver receives the signal and recovers the encoded symbols. Once the symbols are recovered, the information represented by the symbols may then be easily generated.
To recover the symbols encoded in a received signal, receivers often oversample the received signal to generate multiple samples per each symbol. Oversampling generally refers to sampling a signal more number of times than the number of symbols encoded in the signal. Typical receivers include a phase picker to select from among the samples, with the selected samples representing the symbols encoded in the received signal. Assuming for illustration that an input signal is oversampled by a factor of L (L being a positive integer), phase pickers are generally designed to select one out of L samples.
A prior receiver may determine an optimal sampling phase for a group of successive symbols, and select samples according to the optimal sampling phase. For example, an average sampling phase may be determined and be used as the optimal sampling phase. Such an approach is generally simple to implement, and may therefore be suitable in many situations.
However, such approaches may not be suitable in some environments. For example, due to conditions such as noise and channel mis-equalization, the symbol boundaries may get shifted. If the selection of samples is based solely on an optimal sampling phase (for a group of successive symbols), the selected samples may not accurately represent the encoded symbols due to the shifts.
The probability of such inaccuracies generally increases as the ratio of frequency of encoding to the bandwidth of the transmission medium is higher. Thus, in many media having limited bandwidth, when the symbols are encoded at high frequency, short shifts in the boundaries may lead to a symbol being skipped or more than one sample of a symbol being selected. In other words, if the boundaries shift to make the corresponding symbol period (the duration in which a symbol is encoded) short, the samples from a corresponding symbol may be skipped altogether. On the other hand if the symbol period is long, more than one sample may be selected for a corresponding symbol. Both the cases may be unacceptable at least in some situations.
One prior approach may increase the oversampling factor and examine the samples to determine the optimal samples representing the encoded data. However, receivers based on such high oversampling factor may require additional electrical power and also may result in increased overall cost to design and manufacture. At least in markets targeted for consumer markets, the increased costs and power requirements may not be acceptable.
Therefore, what is needed is a method and apparatus which enables a receiver to accurately recover data encoded in a serial communication channel at least while minimizing the cost and power requirements.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention enables a receiver to accurately recover the information encoded in a symbol stream received over a serial communication channel. The present invention is particularly useful in environments in which the samples are encoded at high baud rate. A receiver in accordance with the present invention may include an ADC (or multiple ADCs viewed logically as a single ADC) to oversample a received signal according to sampling clock signal to generate multiple samples.
A transition detector may generate transition indicators, with each transition indicator indicating the presence of a change in values of two successive samples. A static phase determination circuit may determine a static phase representing a long term phase shift of the signal relative to a sampling clock signal, wherein the long term phase shift of the signal is determined based on many prior samples corresponding to prior symbols.
A tokens analyzer may examine the transition indicators corresponding to a few symbols including a current symbol to determine any short term phase shift of boundaries between symbols around the present symbol on a per symbol basis. The token analyzer may determine which sample represents the current symbol according to the long term phase shift and the short term phase shift. A samples selector may select the sample determined by the token analyzer as representing the current symbol.
By considering the short term phase shifts, the present invention enables the samples to be selected accurately even in the presence of symbol period changes for individual symbols. Potentially, the samples selection may be made on a per symbol basis.
The receiver may further contain a token assembler for dividing the transition indicators into multiple tokens, with each token containing a number of transition indicators equal to a oversampling factor. Each token is associated with with a symbol and the token corresponding to the current symbol is determined by the sampling clock signal.
The tokens analyzer and the static phase determination circuit are designed to examine the tokens corresponding to the few symbols to determine any phase shift in boundaries relative to the sampling clock signal, and use the determination as to shift in boundaries in computing the static phase. The static phase determination circuit may indicate whether the signal is early, late or neutral relative to the determination of the sampling clock signal.
The static phase determination circuit is designed to generate “hard identifiers” if the examination of tokens corresponding to the few symbols indicates that the signal is early, late or neutral relative to the sampling clock signal, and to generate “soft identifiers” if the examination of tokens corresponding to the few symbols indicates that the signal is not early, not late or not neutral. As the hard identifiers generally provide more deterministic information on the relative phase shift, the hard identifiers are given more weight than the soft identifiers in determining the static phase. In one embodiment, the soft identifiers may be ignored.
A receiver in accordance with the present invention may be used in a digital display unit, which the symbols are encoded with an alphabet containing two elements (0 and 1). The transition detector may contains multiple XOR gates to generate an XOR of two successive samples. The signal may be oversampled by a factor of 3, and the present invention allows the samples to be selected accurately even if only a single sample is generated for a symbol due to, for example, jitter in the sampling clock or noise otherwise. In general, the present invention allows accurate recovery of a symbol even if the sampling clock is shifted 0 to L−1 samples.
In addition, the tokens analyzer may be implemented to determine the specific sample to select for a symbol by examining a single token (corresponding to the current symbol) and the static phase. Due to the minimal processing required, the present invention is particularly suited for environments in which the symbols are encoded at high baud rates.
Therefore, the present invention provides a receiver which can accurately recover the symbols received in a serial communication channel as the specific sample to be selected may be determined potentially on a per-symbol basis.
The present invention is particularly suitable for environments encoding symbols at high baud rates as the specific samples to be selected can be determined without requiring extensive processing.
The present invention allows for speedy recovery of the symbols as the static phase status may be computed in parallel to the selection of samples on a per-symbol basis.
The present invention allows for speedy recovery of the symbols as the computation of the status phase may enable the samples to be selected with minimal lookup and/or processing, for example, in the case of oversampling of 3, only the comparison points related to the present symbol may need to be examined.
The present invention is particularly useful in display units which receive signals encoded with pixel data elements at high frequencies as the encoded data can be recovered accurately in accordance with the present invention.
The present invention allows for accurate recovery of the symbols encoded in a serial communication channel as the boundary information around a current symbol is considered in determining the specific sample to be selected.
Further features and advantages of the invention, as well as the structure and operation of various embodiments of the invention, are described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference numbers generally indicate identical, functionally similar, and/or structurally similar elements. The drawing in which an element first appears is indicated by the leftmost digit(s) in the corresponding reference number.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The present invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1
is a block diagram illustrating a typical environment in which a receiver may be implemented in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 2
is a block diagram illustrating a receiver in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 3A
is a flow-chart illustrating a method of recovering symbols encoded in a serial communication channel in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 3B
is a flow-chart illustrating an alternative method of recovering symbols encoded in a serial communication channel in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 4
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of phase picker implemented in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 5
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of transitions detector in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 6
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of tokens analyzer in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 7
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of static phase determination circuit in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 8
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of score calculator in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 9
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of decision maker in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 10
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of quality signal assessor in accordance with the present invention;
FIG. 11
is a block diagram of a computer system illustrating an example environment in which the present invention can be implemented;
FIG. 12
is a block diagram of a digital display monitor in accordance with the present invention; and
FIG. 13
is a timing diagram illustrating the neutral, late and early phases as used in the description of the present application.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
1. Overview and Discussion of the Invention
A phase picker in accordance with the present invention may select samples potentially on a per-symbol basis while minimizing the overall cost and electrical power requirements. To accomplish such selection, the phase picker may determine a static phase shift representing an average shift of symbols based on several prior samples, and then determine the specific sample to be selected for each symbol by examining the samples representing the symbol.
As the samples are selected on a per symbol basis, a receiver may accurately recover the data received in a serial communication channel. The static phase status may account for the long term phase shifts in the symbol boundaries while the short term phase shifts may be accounted for by the examination of the samples potentially representing the symbol.
The present invention is described below in further detail with reference to several examples for illustration. A typical configuration in which the present invention may be implemented is described first.
2. Example Configuration
FIG. 1
is a block diagram illustrating a typical configuration in which the present invention can be implemented. Encoder
110
receives data on path
101
and encodes the data into symbols. Each symbol typically contains a pre-specified number of bits. Encoder
110
sends the symbols to modulator
120
on link
112
. Encoder
110
may be implemented in a known way.
Modulator
120
may encode the symbols received on link
112
in a signal, and transmit the signal on serial communication channel
127
. Communication channel
127
may contain synchronization signals also. Modulator
120
and encoder may be implemented in a known way.
Receiver
170
receives a signal over serial communication channel
127
, and recovers the symbols encoded in the signal in accordance with the present invention. Receiver
170
may send the recovered symbols to decoder
190
, which decodes the symbols to generate data on path
191
. If the recovery of the symbols is accurate, the data on path
191
equals the data received on path
101
. The operation and implementation of receiver
170
which enables such accurate recovery is described below in further detail.
3. Receiver
FIG. 2
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of receiver
170
in accordance with the present invention. Receiver
170
may contain an analog to digital converter (ADC)
210
, clock generator
230
and phase picker
250
. Each component is described below in further detail.
Clock generator
230
may receive any synchronization signals contained in serial communication path
127
, and generate sampling clock signal
231
based on the synchronization signals. Sampling clock signal
231
may have a frequency equal to the oversampling factor times the frequency of encoding of symbols in the signal received on serial communication path
127
. Clock generator
230
may be implemented in a known way.
ADC
210
oversamples the signal received on serial communication channel
127
under the control of sampling clock
231
. The number of samples approximately equals the number of symbols times the oversampling factor. ADC
210
may also be implemented in a known way to produce discrete data samples represented by one or more bits. Phase picker
250
implemented in accordance with the present invention receives the samples on path
215
and selects the samples representing the symbols encoded in serial communication channel
127
.
In some environments, it may be desirable to operate at a lower clock frequency than that described above with respect to clock generator
230
. Accordingly, in an alternative embodiment, equally spaced multi-phase clock signals may be generated from clock generator
230
, and each phase may be provided to one of multiple ADCs. The samples generated by the ADCs may be processed by phase picker
250
.
In a specific implementation described below with reference to
FIG. 4
, 12 ADCs may be employed to provide 60 samples related to 20 symbols (oversampling factor of 3) every five clock cycles. The sixty samples may be referred to as a “word” in the description here. This implementation may require a clock with only {fraction (1/60)} the frequency of the clock operating with a single ADC. Phase picker
250
may process the 20 symbols potentially in parallel while minimizing latencies and buffering requirements.
However, the present invention may be implemented with a different level of parallelism (including with just one ADC) as will be apparent to one skilled in the relevant arts based on the disclosure herein. A method illustrating the operation of phase picker
250
operating in conjunction with the implementations of above is described first. An example implementation of phase picker
250
is then described.
4. Method
FIG. 3A
is a flow-chart illustrating a method of recovering symbols encoded in a serial communication channel in accordance with the present invention. The flow-chart is described with reference to
FIG. 2
for illustration. The method begins in step
301
, in which control passes to step
310
. In step
310
, phase picker
250
may receive samples generated by oversampling a signal received on a serial communication channel. Phase picker
250
may recover the symbols in accordance with the present invention as described below in further detail.
In step
320
, phase picker
250
may receive a sampling clock generated, for example, by clock generator
230
. In step
330
, phase picker
250
may determine the transition in the values of the samples. The transitions are generally indicative of the boundary between successive symbols assuming that the successive symbols have different values.
In step
350
, phase picker
250
may determine a static phase shift representing the average boundary shift of the symbol boundaries relative to the sampling clock by examining many samples corresponding to previous symbols. The static phase shift may only determine the approximate samples representing a presently examined symbol due to the short term phase shifts which may not be factored into the static phase shift.
In step
370
, phase picker
250
determines a dynamic phase shift representing such short term phase shifts of boundaries. The dynamic phase shifts may be determined by examining the samples corresponding to very few symbols (potentially the current symbol alone) as described below in further detail.
In step
380
, phase picker
250
may select one of the samples having the maximum probability of representing the current symbol based on the determined static and dynamic phase shifts. Steps
350
and
370
of
FIG. 3
may be repeated each time for selecting a sample in representing each symbol. The static phase status may be updated in the process. The manner in which static phase and dynamic phase may be determined, and the manner in which a sample can be selected as representing a symbol is described in further detail below.
It should be noted that the sequence of steps is merely representative and the steps can be executed in a different order without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention. In addition, the steps may be executed in parallel, particularly when the symbols are received at a high baud rate. The flow-chart of
FIG. 3B
illustrates an example implementation making use of such parallelism.
The method of
FIG. 3B
begins in step
302
, in which control passes to step
310
. Some of the steps of
FIG. 3B
may be implemented similar to those in FIG.
3
A. In such cases, similar numerals are used for the steps of FIG.
3
B. The description of the steps is not repeated in substantial respects in the interest of conciseness.
Thus, samples generated by oversampling are received in step
310
, a sampling clock is received in step
320
, and the transitions in sample values are detected in step
330
. As described in further detail below, the determination of static phase and the per-symbol selection may be implemented in parallel. As a result, the present invention is particularly suited in high speed environments in which the symbols are encoded at a high baud rate.
In step
345
, the phase shift information may be extracted from the transitions (detected in step
330
) present in a small number of samples, potentially from each pair of symbols. Based on the phase information extracted in step
345
, the likelihood of per-state static phase shift may be determined. As the static phase status may be in one of three states (early, late, and neutral), the probability of the static phase being in one of the three states may be detected. Determining such probabilities may be important, for example, because some of the determinations of step
345
may be erroneous or not otherwise reflecting the long-term phase shifts represented by the static phase indicator.
In step
365
, the status of the static phase status may be determined based on the per-state probability. Appropriate weights may be assigned to the per-state probabilities and the information extracted in step
345
to achieve a desired level of responsiveness (loop bandwidth) for the static phase indicator. The static phase indicator is used in the selection of the samples on a per-symbol basis.
In step
375
, the dynamic phase shifts may be determined by examining the transition information of a few samples. In step
385
, the samples are selected on a per-symbol basis using the static phase indicator computed in step
365
and the dynamic phase shift determined in step
375
. Fairly complex computational approaches can be implemented in the determination of the static phase as the samples selection and the static phase indicator determination are performed in parallel. An example embodiment implementing the flow-chart of
FIG. 3B
is described below in further detail.
5. Static and Dynamic Phases
The manner in which the static and dynamic phases may be used conveniently in the selection of the samples as representing the corresponding symbols is described with an example in which the symbol alphabet containing two elements (designated as 0 and 1), and with a oversampling factor (L) of 3. However, it should be understood that the present invention may be implemented with a different oversampling factor (greater than or less than 3) and with symbols having more states as will be apparent to one skilled in the relevant arts based on the disclosure herein.
As noted above with reference to step
330
of
FIG. 3
, phase picker
250
may first need to detect the transitions in the samples. A transition may be determined to be present if two successive samples have different values. Thus, in the case of symbols with alphabet containing two states, a transition may be deemed to be present if a pattern of 01 or 10 is detected. The transitions may be examined to determine the appropriate sample representing a symbol as described below with reference to the entries in Appendix A also.
Appendix A includes sequences resulting from comparison of successive samples corresponding to three consecutive symbols. There are 64 sequences corresponding to the 64 (4
3
) possible cases. The 4 possibilities correspond to Run (R), early (E), late (L) and neutral (N) for each of the three (3) symbols. When the symbol is shown with a Run, no transitions are present, and thus the corresponding comparison points are shown with a sequence of 000. When early, the comparison points are shown as 100, when neutral as 010, and when late as 010. The first line of each of the sequences depicts the specific case. For example, sequence numbered 44 showing LRE, indicates a case when the previous symbol is late, the present symbol has a run, and the next symbol is early.
The manner in which a sample would need to be selected when the static phase is early (PE), neutral (PN), or late (PL) is described in the below paragraphs. As depicted in
FIG. 13
, in a neutral state, the symbol boundaries are consistent with the sampling clock (CLOCK). In the late state, the signal arrives later than that determined by the sampling clock. In the early state, the signal arrives earlier than that determined by the sampling clock.
Continuing with reference to Appendix A, sequences 0-63 are described with example reference to comparison pattern 0 (EEN status for the three symbols) containing ‘X100100100XXX’, wherein 0 indicates that there is no change and 1 indicates that there is a change. The samples corresponding to three symbols are shown as ‘PPPCCCNNNNNNN’, with PPP representing the three samples for a previous token, CCC representing the samples for a current token, and NNN representing samples for a next token.
The stream of samples are assigned to three tokens. Each token contains three samples, corresponding to oversampling factor of 3. The middle token corresponds to the current symbol from which a sample is to be selected. The X mark at either end indicates that the value is not relevant to the analysis.
Three lines marked PE (phase early), PN (phase neutral), and PL (phase late) are shown for each of the sequences. In the case of PN, pattern 0 is interpreted as having three tokens, T001, T001, T00X, with each token having data points representing three (equal to oversampling factor) comparisons. In this case (line), either A or B (one of the first two samples corresponding to the current symbol) represents the symbol.
In the case of PE (early static phase) for pattern 0, tokens of T100, T100, T100 are generated and any of the samples A, B, C (three samples) corresponding to the current token would represent the current symbol. In the case of PL for pattern 0, only the first sample would accurately represent the current symbol.
It should be noted that due to conditions such as phase jitter, more than or less than three samples may be generated for a symbol. For example, in the case of pattern 1, four samples (designated as Cs) are shown for the current symbol. In the case of pattern 8, only one sample is shown for the current symbol.
The result of the examination of Appendix A may be summarized as shown in Table I contained in Appendix B. The results are described in further detail now.
When the current token equals T000, any of the three samples (A, B or C) may be selected irrespective of the state of the static phase. Intuitively, when no transitions are detected for the current token, any of the samples appropriately represents the current symbol (corresponding to the current token). Similar result is observed for token T100, in which case the transition is appropriately detected between the previous symbol and the current symbol and no other transitions are detected with respect to the present token.
In case the current token equals T011, the second sample B would be the appropriate sample for selection irrespective of the state of the static phase. In this case, a static phase of early or late would be characterized as an error because such a sequence should not occur in late or early states. In general, the entry ‘None’ in the columns related to Early, Neutral and Late, indicate that the corresponding sequence should not occur or is invalid. Similarly, if current token equals T101, either of the first two samples A or B represents the current symbol. If current token equals T110, the first sample A would represent the current symbol.
However, when the present token equals T001 or T010, the specific sample to be selected depends on the static phase. In case of T001, sample C (third sample) is to be selected if the static phase is early, and sample A or B may be selected otherwise. In case of T010, sample A is to be selected if the static phase is late, and sample B or C otherwise.
The other token T111 generally represent an error condition, and any approach may be used in generating a sample representing the current symbol. It should be noted that the embodiment implementing Table I may support any degree of static phase shift and dynamic phase shift equal to one sample in either direction (early or late).
From the above description it may be noted that the specific sample for a symbol may be selected based on minimal processing. For many of the tokens (e.g., T000 and T101), the sample may be selected without any additional considerations. For two tokens T001 and T010, the static phase status may be used to select from among the samples. Even in such a case, the selection may be performed immediately upon the availability of the samples.
Accordingly, the present invention is particularly useful in systems operating in high speed environments in which the processing is to be limited. The manner in which the static phase status may be computed is described with an example implementation of phase picker
250
below.
6. Phase Picker
FIG. 4
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of phase picker
250
in accordance with the present invention. Phase picker
250
may contain transition detector
410
, token assembler
420
, signal quality assessor
440
, tokens analyzer
450
, samples selector
480
, and static phase determination circuit
490
. Each block is described in further detail below.
Transition detector
410
receives samples representing the symbols encoded in a serial communication channel, and generates transition indicators indicating whether transitions are present between any two samples. Transition detector
410
can be implemented in one of several ways. An example embodiment of transition detector
410
is described below with reference to FIG.
5
.
Token assembler
420
may generate tokens containing multiple transition indicators. In one embodiment, each token contains a number of transition indicators equal to the oversampling factor employed in sampling a received signal. The tokens are passed to tokens analyzer
450
and signal quality assessor
440
on bus
425
.
Tokens analyzer
450
may examine the token and generate a number on path
458
indicating which of the L (L being the oversampling factor) samples is to be selected for a given sample. In general, the present invention allows a sample to be selected with minimal examination of the prior history by basing the selection on both dynamic and static phase shifts.
In the examples above of Table I, for many tokens, the specific sample to be selected may be based on mere examination of the transition indicators in the token. However, for some tokens, the status of the static phase may be necessary. The status of the static phase may be indicated on path
495
. Thus, based on status information available on path
495
and by examining the transition indicators in a token (or a few tokens), tokens analyzer
450
determines the specific sample to be selected, and indicates the same to samples selector
480
.
In addition, tokens analyzer may provide any information on the phase shifts by examining the tokens. In general the phase shifts are based on the specific sequence of tokens received on path
425
. Accordingly, the data sent on path
459
may be referred to as ‘sequence identifiers’. Alternatively, only the phase information may be sent on path
459
, in which case the information may be referred to as ‘phase identifiers’. In the present application, the two terms are used interchangeably. This information may be used by static phase determination circuit
490
in determining the present static phase status. An embodiment of tokens analyzer
450
is described below in further detail.
Samples selector
480
selects one of the samples corresponding to each symbol as specified by tokens analyzer. In one embodiment, samples selector
480
may be implemented as a multiplexor which accepts three (equal to oversampling factor) inputs, and selects one of the three inputs determined by tokens analyzer
450
. As the determination by tokens analyzer
450
may be performed quickly in accordance with the present invention, substantial pipelines may be avoided in samples selector
480
. In an implementation, the determination may be performed within a clock cycle so that samples selector
480
may be implemented without any memory elements (pipelines).
Signal quality assessor
440
may examine the samples and/or tokens to determine the quality of the signal received on a serial communication channel. In one embodiment, several counters may be maintained, with each counter counting the occurrences of specific unusual events. For example, one counter may count the number of occurrences of symbols determined to contain only one sample. Another counter may count the number of error situations, for example, receiving a token T110 when the static phase indicates early in the example of Table I. Based on the counters, the quality of the signal may be assessed and corrective action (such as receiver adaption well known in the relevant arts) may be initiated by sending any desired signals on path
449
.
Static phase determination circuit
490
may examine the sequence identifiers received on path
459
, and determine the status of the static phase. The status of the static phase (early, neutral or late) may be indicated on path
495
. An embodiment of static phase determination circuit
490
is described below in further detail. First, an embodiment of transition detector
410
is described below.
7. Transition Detector
An embodiment of transition detector
410
is depicted in FIG.
5
. The embodiment is implemented to receive 60 samples corresponding to 20 symbols, with each symbol being either logical 0 or logical 1. It should be noted that the present invention can be used with symbol alphabets having more elements (than two). Transition detector
410
may contain 60 XOR gates
501
-
560
, and flip-flop
570
.
Each XOR gate receives two samples (from two corresponding ADCs) and generates a 1 as an output if only one of the inputs is a one, thereby being indicative of a transition. Flip-flop
570
may store the 60
th
sample as an input for the first XOR gate
501
. Accordingly, each output (transition indicator) of the XOR gates
501
-
560
contain a 1 to indicate the presence of a transition and a 0 to indicate the absence of a transition.
Token assembler
450
generates each token containing three successive transition indicators, and passes the token to tokens analyzer
450
. In general, token assembler
450
may be viewed as logical ‘bussing’ of the transition indicators. An embodiment of tokens analyzer
450
which processes the output of token assembler
420
is described in detail below.
8. Tokens Analyzer
FIG. 6
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of tokens analyzer
450
in accordance with the present invention. Tokens analyzer
450
may contain 20 token examiners
601
-
620
, each generating two outputs. The token examiners are described with example reference to token examiner
601
below.
Token examiner
601
may receive two tokens T
P
(previous token) and T
C
(current token), and static phase status
495
, and generate two outputs
691
and
692
. Output
691
may indicate the specific sample to be selected corresponding to the current token, and may thus be contained in path
458
. As noted above with reference to Table I, token examiner
601
may determine the specific sample to be selected by examining only the current token and the current status of the static phase. In general, the present invention minimizes the examination of the number of prior tokens by considering both the static phase and the boundary information.
Output
692
contains sequence identifiers (SIDs) which are used to determine the status of the static phase. Accordingly, output
692
may be contained in path
459
. The manner in which SIDs may be determined and used in an example environment is described in further detail below.
9. Sequence Identifiers
In the embodiment(s) of
FIG. 6
, tokens examiner
601
examines a current token and a previous token to determine a sequence identifier, which indicates the static phase information available from examining the two tokens. Table II contained in Appendix C summarizes the phase information that may be derived from different token sequences.
The entries of Table II may be derived from the information in Appendix A. For example, in entry
1
of Table II, a token sequence of T000 and T101 is shown indicating that the phase identifier is ‘Not E’ (not early). The conclusion is based on examination of the following patterns in Appendix A:
Pattern 4 (PN): 1.000.101.00X.X-T000, T101, T00X
Pattern 9 (PL): 0.000.101.0XX.X-T000, T101, T0XX
Pattern 25 (PL): 1.000.101.0XX.X-T000, T101, T0XX
Pattern 52 (PN): 0.000.101.00X.X-T000, T101, T00X
Pattern 57 (PL): 0.000.101.0XX.X-T000, T101, T0XX
Thus, tokens examiner
601
may generate a phase identifier based on examination of the two tokens. As may be readily noted from Table II, the phase identifier may some times indicate what the phase is (i.e., neutral, late or early), and some times may indicate what the phase is not (i.e., not neutral, not late or non early). Some other token sequences may be invalid or not provide any phase information. Tokens examiner
601
sends the phase identifier to static phase determination circuit
490
, which may generate static phase status
495
as described below.
10. Static Phase Determination Circuit
As the speed of static phase deviation is usually slow compared to the symbol rate, the effective control loop bandwidth of the static phase determination circuit may need to be relatively narrow. In some environments, bandwidth of {fraction (1/100)} to {fraction (1/1000)} of baud rate (encoding rate of symbols) provides satisfactory results. The low bandwidth typically enables the implementation of elaborate approaches compared to the tokens analyzer
450
which may need to operate at the symbol rate.
With respect to tokens examiner
601
described above, phase identifiers which indicate what the phase is (e.g., items 8-13 in Table II above), will be referred to as hard identifiers. Phase identifiers which indicate what the phase is not (e.g., items 3-5 of Table II), will be referred to as soft identifiers. As may be readily observed, the hard identifiers provide more unambiguous information regarding the boundaries of the symbols in comparison to the soft identifiers.
The hard and soft identifiers may be used in various ways to determine the static phase. According to one feature, if a soft identifier is detected up to 40 symbols ago indicates that the state is either late or neutral (e.g., as in item 1, not early), and the current soft sequence indicates the state is early or late (e.g. as in item 7, not neutral), there is a high likelihood the current static phase state is late (by taking set intersection). Similarly, if a hard identifier received recently was showing the state as neutral and a current soft identifier indicates that the phase is either neutral or late, then there may be good probability that the current state is still neutral. In this case, the soft identifier reinforces the indication provided by the previous hard identifier.
If a soft identifier cannot be resolved over some number of symbols (e.g., 80 symbols), the soft identifier may be determined to be ‘stale’ and removed from the history. Thus, unless resolved, soft identifier may not contribute to the calculation of the per phase likelihood scores. It may be appreciated that this is a conservative approach which prevents high speed fluctuation of the static phase state, thus limiting the static phase tracking bandwidth. The length of the sequence identifiers history determines the noise immunity and effective bandwidth of the tracker.
An example implementation of static phase determination circuit
490
is now described with reference to FIG.
7
. Static phase determination circuit
490
may contain two blocks, score calculator
710
and decision maker
750
. Score calculator
710
may examine the phase identifiers (or sequence identifiers) generated by tokens examiners
601
-
620
, and determine a likelihood score (probability) for each possible static phase state: Early, Neutral and Late.
Decision maker
720
may then check scores associated with each possible static phase, and make a determination of the static phase that has the maximum probability. Data indicating the determination may be provided on current static phase
495
. Example embodiments of score calculator
710
and decision maker
720
are described below in further detail.
11. Score Calculator
An embodiment of score calculator
710
is depicted in FIG.
8
. Score calculator
850
may contain hard scores calculator
810
, soft flags generator
820
, soft flags analyzer
830
, and score accumulator
850
. Hard scores calculator
810
generates scores based on hard identifiers. Soft flags generator
820
and soft flags calculator together generate scores based on soft identifiers. As described in further detail below, the scores are generated for each phase identifiers word, i.e., the identifiers generated by the 20 token examiners
601
-
620
of FIG.
6
.
Hard scores calculator
810
may receive the sequence identifiers from the tokens examiners, and determine whether a received phase identifier is a hard identifier. Hard scores calculator
810
may maintain a score (or history in general) corresponding to each of the three possible phases (early, late and neutral) and modify the counters based on the type of hard identifier received. As an illustration, if a hard identifier indicating a late state is received, the score for the late phase may be incremented by some constant weight HW (say, equal to 4) and the other two scores corresponding to early and neutral states may be decremented by half of this weight (i.e. HW/2; say, by 2).
Thus, in effect, the detection of a hard identifier shifts the likelihood (probability) of the static phase toward the detected state, and away from the other two states. For example, if a hard identifier indicates the presence of a late phase, the likelihood moves toward the late state and away from early and neutral states. The scores corresponding to the three states may be sent to score calculator
850
on path
815
.
Soft flags generator
820
may maintain a history of the previous phase identifiers and provide two sets of flags: current flags
823
and persistent flags
824
. Current flags
823
may identify whether each of the three possible state indicators is present in the current identifiers word. Current flags
823
may also contain error flags.
Persistent flags
824
may also contain multiple flags. Persistent flags
82
may be derived from the history and in effect provide persistence to the current flags over several symbol periods (e.g., 80). Once set, a persistent flag remains set for certain number of symbols. Soft flags generator
820
also detects invalid sequences (such as T001, T101) and sets the corresponding current and persistent error flags.
Also, soft flags generator
820
may not add the flags to the history if an invalid sequence has been detected. Thus, the persistent flags are generally not affected by potentially erroneous sequences possibly arising from amplitude or phase noise in excess of receiver tolerance levels. Such a feature provides improved noise immunity and robustness of receiver
170
.
Soft flags analyzer
830
examines current flags
823
and persistent flags
824
and calculates corresponding per phase soft scores deltas. For example, if current flags (for a word) indicate the phase is N or L (by raising NL flag) and no other flags are set in the current word, soft flags analyzer
830
may examine the persistent flags. If the persistent EL flag is set, this means the ambiguity may be resolved as a late state.
Accordingly, the soft delta score corresponding to the late state may be incremented by some constant weight SSW (soft single weight, e.g., 1) and two other deltas (Early and Neutral) may be decremented by the same weight SSW. Thus, in effect, the likelihood (probability) shifts away from state excluded by current soft identifier unconditionally; however, it is steered away from states excluded by previous soft IDs in the history. Thus, the likelihood shifts toward resolved state (Late in our example).
If more than one flag is set for the current word, soft flags analyzer
830
may generate the soft scores based merely on current flags, thus ignoring the history. Such an approach improves state acquisition speed and robustness. For example, if both current NL and LE flags are set, the likelihood shifts away from E and N because such a states are excluded by the flags; thus, in effect, the likelihood shifts toward Late state which is resolved state for the current flags. In out example, the Late delta will be incremented by MSW constant (multiple soft weight; say, 2) and other deltas will be decremented by SSW (single soft weight, see above).
Hard flags can also indirectly participate in the process of likelihood shifting by aiding in the soft IDs resolution. The selection of delta weights and persistent length determines the dynamic response of the system and the robustness. The lower the relative weights, the higher robustness and the slower the static phase state acquisition. For possible phase picker adaptation support, delta weights may be made programmable or selectable by the software and hardware adaptation mechanism. This will provide a great deal of flexibility in tuning the dynamic response of the phase picker.
Score accumulator
850
may receive hard deltas (
815
) and soft deltas (
835
), and add the received scores to the currently accumulated per phase scores. The accumulators may be clamped on both positive and negative sides. The possible accumulator range determines the dynamic properties of the system. The wider the range, the slower the tracking (i.e. the narrower bandwidth) for the fixed set of delta weights (see above). In an embodiment with the weights in the range of 1 to 4 and N=20 (as in FIG.
6
), a range of −128 to 127 is used for the accumulator. However; more optimal range suited for specific environments may be selected based on experiments.
The accumulation range may also be made adjustable under control of the software, etc. This provides a way for dynamic adaptation of the tracker bandwidth to the current system conditions. For example, during an initial synchronization period, the control software may select wide bandwidth by reducing the accumulation range (say, down to −16 to 15), which may provide fast convergence toward maximum likelihood phase state.
Once the synchronization is completed, the bandwidth may be reduced by increasing the accumulation range to −1024 to +1023 thus improving the receiver robustness. To improve the acquisition speed, the accumulators are reset to 0 at the beginning of the synchronization process and any time the receiver synchronization is deemed to be lost. Per phase scores
715
are provided to decision maker
750
to determine the current static phase state having maximum likelihood.
12. Decision Maker
FIG. 9
is a block diagram illustrating an embodiment of decision maker
750
in accordance with the present invention. Decision maker
750
may include a three-way comparator
910
and 3-2 encoder
920
. As described below in further detail, the two components may operate to generate the following results:
if ES>NS and ES>LS then selected state=EARLY;
else if NS>ES and NS>LS then selected state=NEUTRAL;
else selected state=LATE, wherein ES, LS, and NS represent the scores corresponding to the early, late and neutral states respectively; and ‘<’, ‘>’ and ‘=’ represent the logical less than, greater than, and equal to signs.
Comparator
910
may receive per phase scores corresponding to the three states on path
715
. The inputs (ES, NS, and LS) corresponding to the early, neutral and late scores may be received on inputs A, B, and C respectively. Line
912
is asserted (to a logical 1) if C<A>B, line
913
is asserted if A<B>C, and line
914
is asserted if B≦C≧A. Encoder
920
encodes the three bits into a two bit output on path
495
.
For example, if scores are ES=−3, NS=12 and LS=6, the Neutral phase will be selected. In case of ambiguity (e.g., ES=−3, NS=0, LS=0), current phase state remains unchanged. Alternatively, one comparison may be done for greater or equal and all other for strictly greater; thus, ambiguity will be resolved toward the former state as described above.
More elaborate approaches can be used for making a decision. For example, one might examine the speed of change of the corresponding scores (i.e. look on the difference). If there is a steady shift of likelihood toward some particular state, this state may be selected speculatively so the phase picker recovery time will be minimized. However, in many cases simple three way comparison works well.
Thus, the static phase information generated by decision maker
750
may be used by tokens analyzer
450
in determining which of the samples to select to represent the symbols encoded in a serial communication channel. The description of receiver
170
is continued with reference to signal quality assessor
440
.
13. Signal Quality Assessor
Signal quality assessor
260
may provide some indication about the signal quality received on serial communication channel
127
. Such an indication may be used to perform receiver adaptation strategy such as equalizer control and channel termination control in ADC
210
. One approach is based on the calculations of the percentage of the narrow symbols (i.e. symbols with the width of only one sample as compared to the nominal width of L=3 samples). The narrow symbols may indicate mis-equalization and mis-termination of the channel. The adaptation strategy may be based on selecting the receiver parameters which will yield the lowest average rate of narrow symbols.
One embodiment for implementing such an approach is depicted in FIG.
10
. Signal quality assessor may contain
58
AND gates
1001
-
1058
, totalizer
1070
, accumulator
1080
, and register
1090
. Each AND gate may receive a pair of successive transition indicators. The output of each AND gate is a 1 if a symbol is present with only one sample. Thus, the number of ones in the output of AND gates
1001
-
1058
represents the number of narrow symbols in the current word.
Totalizer
1070
may count the number of ones in a received transition word. Accumulator
1080
adds the number received from totalizer
1070
to an internally stored aggregate sum. Signal
1081
resets the value in accumulator
1080
. In one embodiment, the clearing operation may be performed every 1024 clock cycles (i.e. 20K symbols) if the receiver is applied in the data communication environment. On other hand, for the video or graphics interfaces, such as DVI or DFP digital monitor interfaces, the clearing operation may be performed every image frame because frame to frame image contents may change very little if any thus allowing the quasi stationarity assumption about the input signal.
Register
1090
receives the accumulated number, and provides the data for further analysis. Signal
1081
also enables transfer of the value stored in accumulator
1080
into register
1090
. The output of register
1090
is held until the end of the next accumulation period. The data may be examined to determine any necessary corrective action, for example, in adjustments to ADC
210
as noted above. The description is continued with reference to some example environments in which the present invention may be used.
14. Example Environment
Receiver
170
may be used in several environments in accordance with the present invention. Such environments include, among others, fibre channel, universal serial bus (USB), data storage equipment, display units, etc. In general, the present invention may be used to recover the samples encoded in any serial communication channel. Further, even though the embodiments here are described substantially with reference to a symbol alphabet containing two elements (i.e., binary numbers), the present invention can be implemented with symbol alphabets containing more elements (e.g., having 64 levels encoding 6 bits into each symbol) as will be apparent to one skilled in the relevant arts by reading the disclosure herein. Such embodiments are contemplated to be within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
FIG. 11
is a block diagram of computer system
1100
illustrating an example environment in which the present invention can be implemented. Computer system
1100
includes central processing unit (CPU)
1110
, random access memory (RAM)
1120
, one or more peripherals
1130
, graphics controller
1160
, and digital display unit
1170
. CPU
1110
, RAM
1120
and graphics controller
1160
are typically packaged in a single unit, and such a unit is referred to as source
1199
as the unit generates and transmits a sequence of symbols on a serial communication channel. All the components in graphics source
1199
of computer system
1100
communicate over bus
1150
, which can in reality include several physical buses connected by appropriate interfaces.
RAM
1120
stores data representing commands and possibly pixel data elements representing a source image. CPU
1110
executes commands stored in RAM
1120
, and causes different commands and pixel data elements to be transferred to graphics controller
1160
. Peripherals
1130
can include storage components such as hard-drives or removable drives (e.g., floppy-drives). Peripherals
1130
can be used to store commands and/or data which enable computer system
1100
to operate in accordance with the present invention. By executing the stored commands, CPU
1110
provides the electrical and control signals to coordinate and control the operation of various components in graphics source
1199
.
Graphics controller
1160
receives data/commands from CPU
1110
, and generates pixel data elements representative of source images to be displayed on digital display unit. Graphics controller
1160
then encodes the data as symbols in a serial communication channel. The resulting signal (“display signal”) may contain synchronization signals also in addition to the data. The display signal may be transferred according to standards such as Digital Flat Panel (DFP) and Digital Video Interface (DVI) well known in the relevant arts.
Digital display unit
1170
receives a display signal from graphics controller
1160
, and displays the source images encoded in the display signal. Digital display unit
1170
recovers pixel data elements representing a source image in accordance with the present invention. The corresponding source images are then displayed. An example embodiment of digital display unit
1170
is described in further detail below.
15. Digital Display Unit
FIG. 12
is a block diagram of illustrating an embodiment of digital display unit
1170
in accordance with the present invention. Digital display unit
1170
may contain receiver
1210
, decoder
1220
, panel interface
1280
and digital display screen
1290
. Each component is described below in further detail.
Digital display screen
1290
is characterized by discrete points commonly termed as pixels. Each pixel can generally be controlled individually, and all the pixels may be activated to various degrees to display an image on display screen
1290
. In general, the image is determined by the data received on serial communication channel
1167
.
Panel interface
1280
receives digital pixel data elements representing an image from decoder
1220
, and generates electrical signals compatible with the implementation of display screen
1290
to display images represented by the pixel data elements. Panel interface
1280
may be implemented in a known way.
Receiver
1210
and decoder
1220
may be implemented akin to receiver
170
and decoder
190
described above. Receiver
1210
operates to recover the symbols encoded in serial communication channel
1167
. Even though not shown, the clock signal contained in receiver
1210
may be provided to other components of digital display unit
1170
.
Decoder
1220
recovers the pixel data elements represented by the recovered symbols, and forwards the pixel data elements to panel interface
1280
, which causes the source images to be displayed on digital display screen
1290
.
Thus, the present invention can be used in conjunction with computer systems, and specifically with display units. As the symbols are recovered accurately without substantial processing, the present invention is particularly suited for consumer markets where cost is of particular concern.
16. Conclusion
While various embodiments of the present invention have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only, and not limitation. Thus, the breadth and scope of the present invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents.
APPENDIX A
|
|
0:
{EEE}
X100100100XXX
[.PPPCCCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.100.100.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 1.001.001.00X.X
T001, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.010.010.0XX.X
T010, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
1:
{EEN}
X100100010XXX
[.PPPCCCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.100.010.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 1.001.000.10X.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.010.001.0XX.X
T010, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
2:
{EEL}
X100100001XXX
[.PPPCCCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.100.001.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 1.001.000.01X.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.010.000.1XX.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
3:
{EER}
X100100000XXX
[.PPPCCCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.100.100.000.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 1.001.000.00X.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.010.000.0XX.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
4:
{ENE}
X100010100XXX
[.PPPPCCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.010.100.X
T100, T010,
.BC
|
T100
|
PN: 1.000.101.00X.X
T000, T101,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.001.010.0XX.X
T001, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
5:
{ENN}
X100010010XXX
[.PPPPCCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.010.010.X
T100, T010,
.BC
|
T010
|
PN: 1.000.100.10X.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.001.001.0XX.X
T001, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
6:
{ENL}
X100010001XXX
[.PPPPCCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.010.001.X
T100, T010,
.BC
|
T001
|
PN: 1.000.100.01X.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.001.000.1XX.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
7:
{ENR}
X100010000XXX
[.PPPPCCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.100.010.000.X
T100, T010,
.BC
|
T000
|
PN: 1.000.100.00X.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.001.000.0XX.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
8:
{ELE}
X100001100XXX
[.PPPPPCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.001.100.X
T100, T001,
..C
|
T100
|
PN: 1.000.011.00X.X
T000, T011,
.B.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.110.0XX.X
T000, T110,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
9:
{ELN}
X100001010XXX
[.PPPPPCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.001.010.X
T100, T001,
..C
|
T010
|
PN: 1.000.010.10X.X
T000, T010,
.BC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.000.101.0XX.X
T000, T101,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
10:
{ELL}
X100001001XXX
[.PPPPPCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.001.001.X
T100, T001,
..C
|
T001
|
PN: 1.000.010.01X.X
T000, T010,
.BC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.000.100.1XX.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
11:
{ELR}
X100001000XXX
[.PPPPPCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.100.001.000.X
T100, T001,
..C
|
T000
|
PN: 1.000.010.00X.X
T000, T010,
.BC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.100.0XX.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
12:
{ERE}
X100000100XXX
[.PPPPPPNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.000.100.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 1.000.001.00X.X
T000, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.010.0XX.X
T000, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
13:
{ERN}
X100000010XXX
[.PPPPPPPNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.000.010.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 1.000.000.10X.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.000.001.0XX.X
T000, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
14:
{ERL}
X100000001XXX
[.PPPPPPPPNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.100.000.001.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 1.000.000.01X.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.000.000.1XX.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
15:
{ERR}
X100000000XXX
[.PPPPPPPPPPPPP]
|
|
PE: X.100.000.000.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 1.000.000.00X.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.000.0XX.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
16:
{NEE}
X010100100XXX
[..PPCCCNNNNNNN]
|
|
: X.010.100.100.X
T010, T100,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.101.001.00X.X
T101, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 1.010.010.0XX.X
T010, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
17:
{NEN}
X010100010XXX
[..PPCCCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.100.010.X
T010, T100,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.101.000.10X.X
T101, T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 1.010.001.0XX.X
T010, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
18:
{NEL}
X010100001XXX
[..PPCCCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.100.001.X
T010, T100,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.101.000.01X.X
T101, T000,
ABC
|
T01X
|
: 1.010.000.1XX.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
19:
{NER}
X010100000XXX
[..PPCCCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.010.100.000.X
T010, T100,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.101.000.00X.X
T101, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 1.010.000.0XX.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
20:
{NNE}
X010010100XXX
[..PPPCCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.010.100.X
T010, T010,
.BC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.100.101.00X.X
T100, T101,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 1.001.010.0XX.X
T001, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
21:
{NNN}
X010010010XXX
[..PPPCCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.010.010.X
T010, T010,
.BC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.100.100.10X.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 1.001.001.0XX.X
T001, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
22:
{NNL}
X010010001XXX
[..PPPCCCCNNNNN]
|
|
T0XX
|
|
PE: X.010.010.001.X
T010, T010,
.BC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.100.100.01X.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 1.001.000.1XX.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
23:
{NNR}
X010010000XXX
[..PPPCCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.010.010.000.X
T010, T010,
.BC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.100.100.00X.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 1.001.000.0XX.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
24:
{NLE}
X010001100XXX
[..PPPPCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.001.100.X
T010, T001,
..C
|
T100
|
PN: 0.100.011.00X.X
T100, T011,
.B.
|
T00X
|
PL: 1.000.110.0XX.X
T000, T110,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
25:
{NLN}
X010001010XXX
[..PPPPCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.001.010.X
T010, T001,
..C
|
T010
|
PN: 0.100.010.10X.X
T100, T010,
.BC
|
T10X
|
PL: 1.000.101.0XX.X
T000, T101,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
26
{NLL}
X010001001XXX
[..PPPPCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.001.001.X
T010, T001,
..C
|
T001
|
PN: 0.100.010.01X.X
T100, T010,
.BC
|
T01X
|
PL: 1.000.100.1XX.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
27
{NLR}
X010001000XXX
[..PPPPCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.010.001.000.X
T010, T001,
..C
|
T000
|
PN: 0.100.010.00X.X
T100, T010,
.BC
|
T00x
|
PL: 1.000.100.0XX.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
28:
{NRE}
X010000100XXX
[..PPPPPNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.000.100.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.100.001.00X.X
T100, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 1.000.010.0XX.X
T000, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
29:
{NRN}
X010000010XXX
[..PPPPPPNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.000.010.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.100.000.10X.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 1.000.001.0XX.X
T000, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
30:
{NRL}
X010000001XXX
[..PPPPPPPNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.010.000.001.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.100.000.01X.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 1.000.000.1XX.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
31:
{NRR}
X010000000XXX
[..PPPPPPPPPPPP]
|
|
PE: X.010.000.000.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.100.000.00X.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 1.000.000.0XX.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
32:
{LEE}
X001100100XXX
[...PCCCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.100.100.X
T001, T100,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.011.001.00X.X
T011, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.110.010.0XX.X
T110, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
33:
{LEN}
X001100010XXX
[...PCCCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.100.010.X
T001, T100,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.011.000.10X.X
T011 ,T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.110.001.0XX.X
T110, T001,
AB.
|
10XX
|
|
34:
{LEL}
X001100001XXX
[...PCCCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.100.001.X
T001, T100,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.011.000.01X.X
T011, T600,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.110.000.1XX.X
T110, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
35:
{LER}
X001100000XXX
[...PCCCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.001.100.000.X
T001, T100,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.011.000.00X.X
T011, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.110.000.0XX.X
T110, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
36:
{LNE}
X001010100XXX
[...PPCCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.010.100.X
T001, T010,
.BC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.010.101.00X.X
T010, T101,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.101.010.0XX.X
T101, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
37:
{LNN}
X001010010XXX
[...PPCCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.010.010.X
T001, T010,
.BC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.010.100.10X.X
T010, T100,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.101.001.0XX.X
T101, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
38:
{LNL}
X001010001XXX
[...PPCCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.010.001.X
T001, T010,
.BC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.010.100.01X.X
T010, T100,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.101.000.1XX.X
T101, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
39:
{LNR}
X001010000XXX
[...PPCCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.001.010.000.X
T001, T010,
.BC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.010.100.00X.X
T010, T100,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.101.000.0XX.X
T101, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
40:
{LLE}
X001001100XXX
[...PPPCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.001.100.X
T001, T001,
..C
|
T100
|
PN: 0.010.011.00X.X
T010, T011,
.B.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.100.110.0XX.X
T100, T110,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
41:
{LLN}
X001001010XXX
[...PPPCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.001.010.X
T001, T001,
..C
|
T010
|
PN: 0.010.010.10X.X
T010, T010,
.BC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.100.101.0XX.X
T100, T101,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
42:
{LLL}
X001001001XXX
[...PPPCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.001.001.X
T001, T001,
..C
|
T001
|
PN: 0.010.010.01X.X
T010, T010,
.BC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.100.100.1XX.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
43:
{LLR}
X001001000XXX
[...PPPCCCCCCCC]
|
|
: X.001.001.000.X
T001, T001,
..C
|
T000
|
PN: 0.010.010.00X.X
T010, T010,
.BC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.100.100.0XX.X
T100, T100,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
44:
{LRE}
X001000100XXX
[...PPPPNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.000.100.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.010.001.00X.X
T010, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.100.010.0XX.X
T100, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
45:
{LRN}
X001000010XXX
[...PPPPPNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.000.010.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.010.000.10X.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.100.001.0XX.X
T100, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
46:
{LRL}
X001000001XXX
[...PPPPPPNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.001.000.001.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.010.000.01X.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.100.000.1XX.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
47:
{LRR}
X001000000XXX
[...PPPPPPPPPPP]
|
|
PE: X.001.000.000.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.010.000.00X.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.100.000.0XX.X
T100, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
48:
{REE}
X000100100XXX
[....CCCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.100.100.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.001.001.00X.X
T001, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.010.010.0XX.X
T010, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
49:
{REN}
X000100010XXX
[....CCCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.100.010.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.001.000.10X.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.010.001.0XX.X
T010, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
50:
{REL}
X000100001XXX
[....CCCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.100.001.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.001.000.01X.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.010.000.1XX.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
51:
{RER}
X000100000XXX
[....CCCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.000.100.000.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.00 .000.00X.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.010.000.0XX.X
T010, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
52:
{RNE}
X000010100XXX
[.....CCNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.010.100.X
T000, T010,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.000.101.00X.X
T000, T101,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.001.010.0XX.X
T001, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
53:
{RNN}
X000010010XXX
[.....CCCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.010.010.X
T000, T010,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.000.100.10X.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.001.001.0XX.X
T001, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
54:
{RNL}
X000010001XXX
[.....CCCCNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.010.001.X
T000, T010,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.000.100.01X.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.001.000.1XX.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
55:
{RNR}
X000010000XXX
[.....CCCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.000.010.000.X
T000, T010,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.000.100.00X.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.001.000.0XX.X
T001, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
56:
{RLE}
X000001100XXX
[......CNNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.001.100.X
T000, T001,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.000.011.00X.X
T000, T011,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.110.0XX.X
T000, T110,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
57:
{RLN}
X000001010XXX
[......CCNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.001.0 0.X
T000, T001,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.000.010.10X.X
T000, T010,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.000.101.0XX.X
T000, T101,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
58:
{RLL}
X000001001XXX
[......CCCNNNNN]
|
|
PB: X.000.001.001.X
T000, T001,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.000.010.01X.X
T000, T010,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.000.100. XX.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
59:
{RLR}
X000001000XXX
[......CCCCCCCC]
|
|
PE: X.000.001.000.X
T000, T001,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.000.010.00X.X
T000, T010,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.100.0XX.X
T000, T100,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
60:
{RRE}
X000000100XXX
[.......NNNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.000.100.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T100
|
PN: 0.000.001.00X.X
T000, T001,
AB.
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.010.0XX.X
T000, T010,
A..
|
T0XX
|
|
61:
{RRN}
X000000010XXX
[........NNNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.000.010.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T010
|
PN: 0.000.000.10X.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T10X
|
PL: 0.000.001.0XX.X
T000, T001,
AB.
|
T0XX
|
|
62:
{RRL}
X000000001XXX
[.........NNNNN]
|
|
PE: X.000.000.001.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T001
|
PN: 0.000.000.01X.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T01X
|
PL: 0.000.000. XX.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T1XX
|
|
63:
{RRR}
X000000000XXX
[.............]
|
|
PE: X.000.000.000.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T000
|
PN: 0.000.000.00X.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T00X
|
PL: 0.000.000.0XX.X
T000, T000,
ABC
|
T0XX
|
|
TABLE I
|
|
Appendix B
|
Current
Early
Neutral
Late
Unconditional
|
Token
Phase
Phase
Phase
selection
|
|
T000
ABC
ABC
ABC
ABC
|
T001
C
AB
AB
none
|
T010
BC
BC
A
none
|
T011
none
B
none
B
|
T100
ABC
ABC
ABC
ABC
|
T101
none
AB
AB
AB
|
T110
none
none
A
A
|
|
TABLE II
|
|
Appendix C
|
Early
Neutral
|
Previous
Current
Phase
Phase
State Late
State Phase
|
Number
Token
Token
State
State
Phase
ID
|
|
1.
T000
T101
X
X
Not E
|
2.
T001
T100
X
E
|
3.
T100
T101
X
X
Not E
|
4.
T101
T000
X
X
Not E
|
5.
T101
T001
X
X
Not E
|
6.
T000
T011
X
N
|
7.
T001
T010
X
X
Not N
|
8.
T010
T011
X
N
|
9.
T010
T101
X
N
|
10.
T011
T000
X
N
|
11.
T011
T001
X
N
|
12.
T100
T011
X
N
|
13.
T000
T110
X
L
|
14.
T010
T100
X
X
Not L
|
15.
T100
T110
X
L
|
16.
T101
T010
X
L
|
17.
T110
T000
X
L
|
18.
T110
T001
X
L
|
19.
T110
T010
X
L
|
|
Claims
- 1. A method of recovering a plurality of symbols transmitted over a serial communication channel in the form of a signal, said method comprising:(a) receiving said signal; (b) over sampling said signal to generate a plurality of samples corresponding to each of said plurality of symbols; (c) generating a sampling clock signal, wherein said sampling clock signal controls said over sampling of (b); (d) generating a plurality of transition indicators, wherein each transition indicator indicates the presence of a transition in value between two successive samples; (e) determining a static phase status representing a long term phase shift of said signal relative to said sampling clock signal, wherein said long term phase shift of said signal is determined based on many prior samples corresponding to a plurality of prior symbols; (f) examining a plurality of transition indicators corresponding to a few symbols including a current symbol to determine any short term phase shift of boundaries between symbols around said current symbol; and (g) selecting a sample corresponding to said current symbol according to said static phase status and said short term phase shift, wherein the selection based on said short term phase shift enables the sample corresponding to said current symbol to be selected accurately, and wherein the selection based on said static phase status enables th processing to be minimized in said selection.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein steps (e) and (g) are performed in parallel.
- 3. The method of claim 2, wherein said plurality of symbols are encoded with an alphabet containing two elements.
- 4. The method of claim 2, wherein step (d) comprises generating an XOR of two consecutive samples.
- 5. The method of claim 1, wherein (f) comprises:(h) examining transitions corresponding to only said current symbol, and wherein said sample corresponding to said current symbol is selected according to the transitions corresponding to said current symbol and said static phase status.
- 6. The method of claim 5, and wherein said method further comprises:(i) dividing said plurality of transition indicators into a plurality of tokens, with each token containing a number of transition indicators equal to said factor.
- 7. The method of claim 6, wherein each token is associated with a symbol, and wherein the token corresponding to said current symbol is determined by said sampling clock signal.
- 8. The method of claim 7, further comprising(j) examining the tokens corresponding to said few symbols to determine any shift in boundaries relative to said sampling clock signal, wherein the determination as to shift in boundaries is used in computing said static phase status.
- 9. The method of claim 8, wherein said static phase status indicates whether said signal is early, late or neutral relative to the determination of said sampling clock signal.
- 10. The method of claim 9, further comprising:(k) generating hard identifiers when the examination of (j) indicates that said signal is early, late or neutral relative to said sampling clock signal; and (l) generating soft identifiers when the indication examination of (j) indicates that said signal is not early, not late or not neutral.
- 11. The method of claim 10, wherein said hard identifiers are given more weight than said soft identifiers in determining said static phase status.
- 12. The method of claim 1, wherein said signal is oversampled by a factor of 3.
- 13. The method of claim 1, wherein said method is implemented in a display unit to recover pixel data elements encoded in a display signal.
- 14. A circuit to recover a plurality of symbols encoded in a signal on a serial communication channel, said circuit comprising:a clock generator to generate a sampling clock signal; an analog to digital converter (ADC) to oversample said signal to generate a plurality of samples corresponding to each of said plurality of symbols, wherein said ADC over samples under the control of said sampling clock signal; a transition detector to generate a plurality of transition indicators, wherein each transition indicator indicates the presence of a transition in value between two successive samples; a static phase determination circuit to determine a static phase status representing a long term phase shift of said signal relative to said sampling clock signal, wherein said long term phase shift of said signal is determined based on many prior samples corresponding to a plurality of prior symbols; and a tokens analyzer to examine a plurality of transition indicators corresponding to a few symbols including a current symbol to determine any short term phase shift of boundaries between symbols around said current symbol, said token analyzer to determine which sample represents said current symbol according to said long term phase shift and said short term phase shift; and a samples selector to select said sample determined by said token analyzer as representing said current symbol, wherein the selection based on said term phase shift enables the sample representing said current symbol to be selected accurately, and wherein the selection based on said static phase status enables the processing to be minimized in said selection.
- 15. The circuit of claim 14, wherein said plurality of symbols are encoded with an alphabet containing two elements, and wherein said transition detector comprises a plurality of XOR gates to generate an XOR of two successive samples.
- 16. The circuit of claim 15, further comprises:a token assembler for dividing said plurality of transition indicators into a plurality of tokens, with each token containing a number of transition indicators equal to a oversampling factor, wherein each token is associated with a symbol, and wherein the token corresponding to said current symbol is determined by said sampling clock signal.
- 17. The circuit of claim 16, wherein said tokens analyzer and said static phase determination circuit are designed to examine the tokens corresponding to said few symbols to determine any shift in boundaries relative to said sampling clock signal, wherein the determination as to shift in boundaries is used in computing said static phase status.
- 18. The circuit of claim 17, wherein said static phase determination circuit indicates whether said signal is early, late or neutral relative to the determination of said sampling clock signal.
- 19. The circuit of claim 18, wherein said static phase determination circuit is designed to generate hard identifiers if the examination of tokens corresponding to said few symbols indicates that said signal is early, late or neutral relative to said sampling clock signal, and to generate soft identifiers if the examination of tokens corresponding to said few symbols indicates that said signal is not early, not late or not neutral.
- 20. The circuit of claim 19, wherein said hard identifiers are given more weight than said soft identifiers in determining said static phase status.
- 21. The circuit of claim 14, wherein said signal is oversampled by a factor of 3.
- 22. The circuit of claim 21, wherein said tokens analyzer is designed to examine transition indicators corresponding to only said current symbol, and wherein said sample corresponding to said current symbol is selected according to the transitions corresponding to said current symbol and said static phase status.
- 23. The circuit of claim 14, wherein said static phase determination circuit and said samples selector are designed to operate in parallel.
- 24. A circuit to recover a plurality of symbols encoded in a signal on a serial communication channel, said circuit comprising:receiving means for receiving said signal; over sampling means for over sampling said signal to generate a plurality of samples corresponding to each of said plurality of symbols; first generating means for generating a sampling clock signal, wherein said sampling clock signal controls said over sampling means; second generating means for generating a plurality of transition indicators, wherein each transition indicator indicates the presence of a transition in value between two successive samples; determination means for determining a static phase status representing a long term phase shift of said signal relative to said sampling clock signal, wherein said long term phase shift of said signal is determined based on many prior samples corresponding to a plurality of prior symbols; examination means for examining a plurality of transition indicators corresponding to a few symbols including a current symbol to determine any short term phase shift of boundaries between symbols around said current symbol; and selection means for selecting a sample from the samples corresponding to said current symbol according to said status and said short term phase shift, wherein the selection based on said term phase shift enables the sample corresponding to said current symbol to be selected accurately, and wherein the selection based on said phase status enables the processing to be minimized in said selection.
- 25. The circuit of claim 24, wherein said plurality of symbols are encoded with an alphabet containing two elements, and wherein said transition detector comprises a plurality of XOR gates to generate an XOR of two successive samples.
- 26. The circuit of claim 25, further comprises:a token assembler means for dividing said plurality of transition indicators into a plurality of tokens, with each token containing a number of transition indicators equal to a oversampling factor, wherein each token is associated with a symbol, and wherein the token corresponding to said current symbol is determined by said sampling clock signal.
- 27. The circuit of claim 26, wherein said examination means and said determination means are designed to examine the tokens corresponding to said few symbols to determine any shift in boundaries relative to said sampling clock signal, wherein the determination as to shift in boundaries is used in computing said static phase status.
- 28. The circuit of claim 27, wherein said determination means indicates whether said signal is early, late or neutral relative to the determination of said sampling clock signal.
- 29. The circuit of claim 28, wherein said determination means is designed to generate hard identifiers if the examination of tokens corresponding to said few symbols indicates that said signal is early, late or neutral relative to said sampling clock signal, and to generate soft identifiers if the examination of tokens corresponding to said few symbols indicates that said signal is not early, not late or not neutral.
- 30. The circuit of claim 29, wherein said hard identifiers are given more weight than said soft identifiers in determining said static phase status.
- 31. The circuit of claim 24, wherein said signal is oversampled by a factor of 3.
- 32. The circuit of claim 24, wherein said examination means is designed to examine transition indicators corresponding to only said current symbol, and wherein said sample corresponding to said symbol is selected according to the transitions corresponding to said symbol and said phase status.
- 33. The circuit of claim 24, wherein said determination means and said selection means are designed to operate in parallel.
US Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
5313496 |
DeGoede |
May 1994 |
|
5892803 |
Saunders et al. |
Apr 1999 |
|