Circuits for efficient detection of vector signaling codes for chip-to-chip communication
09819522 ยท 2017-11-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04L25/08
ELECTRICITY
H04L25/02
ELECTRICITY
H04L25/14
ELECTRICITY
H04L2025/03426
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04L25/49
ELECTRICITY
H04L25/03
ELECTRICITY
H04L25/08
ELECTRICITY
H04L25/14
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
In a detection circuit, inputs correspond to received indications of vector signaling code words received by a first integrated circuit from a second integrated circuit. With four inputs, the circuit compares a first pair to obtain a first difference result and compares a second pair, disjoint from the first pair, to obtain a second difference result. The first and second difference results are then summed to form an output function. A system might use a plurality of such detection circuits to arrive at an input word. The circuit can include amplification, equalization, and input selection with efficient code word detection. The vector signaling code can be a Hadamard matrix code encoding for three input bits. The circuit might also have frequency-dependent gain, a selection function that directs one of the summation function result or the first difference result to the output function, variable gain, and/or a slicer.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising: a termination network configured to receive symbols of a balanced codeword via a multi-wire bus, the termination network comprising a plurality of termination impedances, each termination impedance coupled to a respective wire of the multi-wire bus and configured to receive a corresponding symbol of the balanced codeword, the termination network further comprising a common mode biasing source coupled to the plurality of termination impedances, the common mode biasing source configured to form a set of biased symbols by biasing the received symbols of the balanced codeword; a first pair of transistors arranged in a differential amplifier configuration, each transistor in the first pair configured to receive corresponding biased symbols of a first pair of the set of biased symbols, the first pair of transistors configured to generate a first difference signal; a second pair of transistors arranged in a differential amplifier configuration, each transistor in the second pair configured to receive corresponding biased symbols of a second pair of the set of biased symbols, the second pair of transistors configured to generate a second difference signal, the second pair of the set of biased symbols disjoint from the first pair of the set of biased symbols; and a summation node connected to the first and second differential amplifiers, the summation node configured to receive the first and second difference signals, and to generate a sum-of-differences signal by performing an analog summation of the first and second difference signals, the sum-of-difference signal used in part in identifying an output bit of a set of output bits.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the first and second pairs of transistors comprise NMOS transistors.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the first and second pairs of transistors comprise PMOS transistors.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a filter capacitor configured to couple the plurality of termination impedances to a system ground.
5. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the common mode biasing source is a voltage source coupled to the termination impedances and the filter capacitor, and wherein the symbols of the balanced codeword are received at the termination impedances via blocking capacitors.
6. The apparatus of claim 4, wherein the common mode biasing source comprises a plurality of current sources, each current source coupled to a respective termination impedance via a corresponding resistor.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the received symbols of the balanced codeword sum to zero.
8. The apparatus of claim 7, wherein each balanced codeword is permutation of [+1, /13, 1/3, 1/3] or [1, +1/3, +1/3, +1/3].
9. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a slicer configured to generate the output bit by slicing the sum-of-differences signal.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a decoder, the decoder configured to receive a plurality of sum-of-differences signals and to generate the set of output bits.
11. A method comprising: receiving symbols of a balanced codeword via a multi-wire bus, each symbol received at a corresponding termination impedance of a plurality of termination impedances, and responsively forming, using a common mode biasing source coupled to the plurality of termination impedances, a set of biased symbols by providing a bias to the received symbols of the balanced codeword; receiving, at a first pair of transistors arranged in a differential amplifier configuration, corresponding biased symbols of a first pair of the set of biased symbols, and responsively generating a first difference signal; receiving, at a second pair of transistors arranged in a differential amplifier configuration, corresponding biased symbols of a second pair of the set of biased symbols, and responsively generating a second difference signal, the second pair of the set of biased symbols disjoint from the first pair of the set of biased symbols; and generating a sum-of-differences signal by performing an analog summation of the first and second difference signals, the sum-of-difference signal used in part in identifying an output bit of a set of output bits.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the first and second pairs of transistors comprise NMOS transistors.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein the first and second pairs of transistors comprise PMOS transistors.
14. The method of claim 11, wherein the plurality of termination impedances is coupled to a system ground via a filter capacitor.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the biasing of the received symbols of the balanced codeword comprises applying a bias voltage using a voltage source coupled to the termination impedances and the filter capacitor, and wherein the symbols of the balanced codeword are received at the termination impedances via blocking capacitors.
16. The method of claim 14, wherein the biasing of the received symbols of the codeword comprises providing currents to the plurality of termination impedances using a plurality of current sources, each current source coupled to a respective termination impedance via a corresponding resistor.
17. The method of claim 11, wherein the received symbols of the balanced codeword sum to zero.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein each balanced codeword is permutation of [+1, /13, 1/3, 1/3] or [1, +1/3, +1/3, +1/3].
19. The method of claim 11, further comprising slicing the sum-of-differences signal to form the output bit.
20. The method of claim 11, further comprising generating the set of output bits based on a plurality of sum-of-differences signals.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Various embodiments in accordance with the present disclosure will be described with reference to the drawings. Same numbers are used throughout the disclosure and figures to reference like components and features.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) Conventional communications systems receivers operate on individual wires or communications channels (i.e., single-ended signaling) or on pairs of wires or communications channels (i.e., differential signaling). In either case, a received signal is detected by comparison of a received value against a reference; for single-ended signaling, the reference may be a known voltage level such as ground or a calculated or predetermined offset voltage, while a differential receiver detects the signal of one wire in the pair in comparison to the signal of the other wire in the pair.
(11) Such communications channels may be extended to groups of wires carrying signals that collectively represent an encoded value.
(12) Holden I describes an enhancement to the vector signaling code technique that makes use of the observation that the balance between complementary signals in a differential signaling channel need not be held exactly to zero. Thus, a vector signaling code may comprise the union of subcodes, each subcode being distinguishable by its unique nonzero code word sum.
(13) Vector signaling code receivers may perform a first operation similar to that of a conventional receiver, by making a first determination of the symbol represented by the particular received signal of each wire or communications channel. However, complete detection of the vector signaling code can require identification not merely of the individual symbols of that code, but of the particular code word represented by the set of symbols communicated as a group. A vector signaling code receiver is said to detect vector signaling code C if for each code word c, the receiver produces a valid and unique result Sc, which may directly correspond to receive result R, or may produce R via a mapping operation.
(14) Holden II describes the use of weighted multi-input comparators for detection of vector signaling codes. A weighted multi-input comparator with coefficients a0, a1, . . . , am1 is a circuit that accepts as its input a vector (x0, x1, . . . , xm1) and outputs the signals indicated in Equation 1, with the definition of the sign-function being sign(x)=+1 if x>0, sign(x)=1 if x<0, and sign(x) is undefined if x=0.
Output=sign(a0*x0+ . . . +am1*xm1)(Eqn. 1)
(15) A collection of such comparators each having distinct sets of input weights may serve as a detector for a vector signaling code.
(16) Efficient Computational Element
(17) In a detection circuit, inputs correspond to received indications of vector signaling code words received by a first integrated circuit from a second integrated circuit. In a preferred embodiment, the number of inputs is four and the detection circuit compares a first pair of the inputs to obtain a first difference result and compares a second pair of inputs, disjoint from the first pair of inputs, to obtain a second difference result. The first difference result and the second difference result are then summed to form an output function. A system might use a plurality of such detection circuits to arrive at an input word.
(18) In one embodiment, each input is from the set {1, 1/3, 1/3, 1}, the vector signaling code comprises the union of all permutations of the symbol set {1, 1/3, 1/3, 1/3} and all permutations of the symbol set {1, 1/3, 1/3, 1/3}, the system uses three of the detection circuits, and the eight possible vector signaling code words encode for three input bits.
(19) With the detection circuit performing differences ahead of performing summation, it becomes possible to provide for lowered distributed impedance and better high frequency response. In part, this is a result of capacitance appearing at lower impedance points rather than higher impedance points.
(20) In accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention, a code herein referred to as H4 is described. H4 is a balanced, non-sparse vector signaling code of four symbols, comprising the union of all permutations of the symbol set {1, 1/3, 1/3, 1/3} and all permutations of the symbol set {1, 1/3, 1/3, 1/3}.
(21) An efficient component of a detector for H4 code performs calculations of the form shown in Equation 2 where J, K, L, M are variables representing the symbol values of the four input signals values.
R=(J+L)(K+M)(Eqn. 2)
(22) It may be noted that applying three instances of Equation 2 with different permutations of receive signal input values to the four variables is sufficient to detect each code word of H4. As one example and without limitation, the input permutations producing the three results R0, R1, R2 based on Equations 3, 4 and 5 are sufficient to unambiguously identify each code word of vector signaling code H4 as represented by receive signal input values A, B, C, D.
R0=(A+C)(B+D)(Eqn. 3)
R1=(C+D)(A+B)(Eqn. 4)
R2=(C+B)(D+A)(Eqn. 5)
(23) Architecturally, it is convenient to perform such detection operations at or near the receiver input, and high speed capability requires an efficient, high performance embodiment.
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R0=(AB)+(CD)(Eqn. 6)
R1=(CA)+(DB)(Eqn. 7)
R2=(CD)+(BA)(Eqn. 8)
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(26) The four circuit inputs of
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(29) It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the functional equivalent of Equation 2, including specific examples such as illustrated by Equations. 6, 7, and 8, may be embodied by any of the circuits of
(30) In at least one embodiment of the invention as represented in each schematic of
(31) On-Chip Receive Signal Termination
(32) At contemplated signal rates, conventional best practice might be to provide matched transmission line termination for current mode logic (CML) receive input signals. Examples in accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention are shown in
(33) In
(34) In at least one embodiment, the same circuitry used for vector signaling code detection over example inputs a, b, c, d, also provides legacy mode support for, as an example, differential signal reception on the same inputs. Such selection of legacy mode may require support for greater signal level inputs (as those signals may be provided by different or earlier-generation components), and this extended-range input support may be obtained by attenuating large signal inputs before subsequent processing, as examples ah, bh, ch, dh at 335.
(35) To provide this attenuation function, the termination resistance 320 is shown comprising components 321 and 322; as one example, they represent identical resistive values summing to the required termination impedance while also providing an attenuated output within allowable on-chip signal levels. Thus, signals 330 labeled a, b, c, d represent the full input signal level, while signals 335 labeled ah, bh, ch, dh represent, continuing the example, the same values attenuated to half amplitude. Subsequent processing circuits may select either full input signals or attenuated signals using, as an example, an analog multiplexer. The values of 321 and 322 need not be identical, and in some embodiments may be adjustable or trimmable, as illustrated by 322 of
(36) Other embodiments in accordance with the invention utilize equivalent attenuator topologies known in the art, including so-called T and PI configurations, or eschew attenuation and combine elements 321 and 322 into a single resistive termination. One alternative embodiment of termination resistance 320 is shown in
(37) In
(38) Another embodiment is illustrated in
(39) Combined Multiplexer and Computation Element
(40) A described computational circuit of
(41) This staged topology has been found to minimize loading effects, thus providing optimum performance for the given process technology. The results allow embodiment of legacy mode operation with either attenuated input signals or full level input signals, an internal signal test mode, and/or vector signaling code detection.
(42) Selectively enabling or disabling pairs of current sinks using the control signals Enab1 through Enab6 controls the multiplexer. As examples, inputs a and b may be selected instead of inputs ah and bh by enabling current sinks using Enab1 and disabling current sinks using Enab2, and then further selected by enabling current sinks using Enab5 and disabling current sinks using Enab6 to, as an example, support a legacy mode differential receiver behavior. Conversely, selection of the computed function based on inputs a, b, c, d may be selected by enabling current sinks using Enab3 and Enab4, and further selected by disabling current sinks using Enab5 and enabling current sinks using Enab6.
(43) One embodiment incorporates a test mode loopback of local transmit signals, which may be obtained by enabling pass transistors 470 using control signal Enab7. It will be apparent to a practitioner of the art that this multiplexer may also be used for other input selections, including alternative mappings of wire signals to computed function inputs and/or a different computed function.
(44) Inputs to an element 400 of
(45) An alternative embodiment of 400 is shown in
(46) Receive Input System for Vector Signaling Code
(47) The previously described circuits may be combined to produce a complete receive input system, as shown in the block diagram of
(48) Three instances of combined multiplexer and computation element 400 are used, each operating as previously described, e.g., for
(49) In one embodiment, the outputs of instance 530 are used only in non-legacy, non-loopback modes, thus the unused signal inputs of 530 are connected to a passive signal level such as ground. Although one familiar with the art would note that the instance of 530 could be simplified by removing unnecessary components associated with the unused functions, the amount of chip area wasted by not doing so is extremely small, while maintaining identical layouts for all instances provides consistent loading and delay characteristics throughout.
(50) Other Variations
(51) In at least one embodiment, all active transistor stages (e.g., of the circuit of
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(53) For purposes of illustration, the previously-described components of the receive detection system are shown in
(54) Other embodiments in accordance with the invention may interface to voltage-mode or high-impedance unterminated signal inputs, and/or communicate internal signals as voltage rather than current levels. Such embodiments may incorporate the known practice of using transmission gates as multiplexing elements.
(55) The examples illustrate the use of vector signaling codes for point-to-point wire communications. However, this should not been seen in any way as limiting the scope of the described invention. The methods disclosed in this application are equally applicable to other communication media including optical and wireless communications. Thus, descriptive terms such as voltage or signal level should be considered to include equivalents in other measurement systems, such as optical intensity, RF modulation, etc. Similarly, specific examples provided herein are for purposes of description, and do not imply a limitation.
(56) As used herein, physical signal includes any suitable behavior and/or attribute of a physical phenomenon capable of conveying information. In accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention, physical signals may be tangible and non-transitory. In accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention, interpreting a set of signals as selecting an object (e.g., a data object) includes selecting the object based at least in part on the set of signals and/or one or more attributes of the set of signals. In accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention, interpreting a set of signals as representing an object (e.g., a data object) includes determining and/or selecting the object based at least in part on a representation corresponding to the set of signals. In accordance with at least one embodiment of the invention, a same set of signals may be used to select and/or determine multiple distinct objects (e.g., data objects).