AMD
of the internal byte clock (CLK) and the rising edge of
strobe does not violate tBB specification shown in the
SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS Section.
data) from having clocks which are too narrow, the out-
put logic will stretch an output pulse when the pulse
would have been less than a byte-time long. The data
being processed just prior to this re-acquisition of sync
will be lost. The Sync symbol, and all subsequent data
will be processed correctly.
The internal byte clock controls the flow of data from the
input register through the shift register. The falling edge
of the internal byte clock delineates the end of one byte
from the start of the next. Due to various tolerances in
the PLL, the period of the internal byte clock may vary
slightly. This effect may cause a shift in the location of
the byte boundary with respect to the falling edge of the
clock. This variation may move the byte boundary and
therefore creates a window during which the part should
not be strobed. This window called the t6 window, is
shown in the figure below. If the part is strobed during
the t6 window data will not be lost however, a sync may
be added and the transmitter latency will be increased
by one byte time.
TAXI User Test Modes
TLS input can be used to force the Am7968 Transmitter
into either of the two Test modes. If TLS is open or termi-
natedtoapproximatelyVCC/2(TestMode2), theinternal
VCO is switched out and everything is clocked directly
from the CLK input. The serial output data rate will be at
the CLK bit rate and not at 10X, 11X, or 12X, as is the
case in normal operation. Test Mode 2 will allow testing
of the logic in the Latches, Encoder, and Shifter without
having to first stabilize the PLL clock multiplier. In Test
Mode 1 (TLS wired to VCC), the PLL is enabled and the
chip operates normally, except that the output is an NRZ
stream (CLK is an input & ACK function is slightly modi-
fied). This will allow testing of all functions at full rate
without needing to perform match loop tests to accom-
modate the data inversion characteristics of NRZI.
Strobe Stayout Area
(t6 window)
Differential SERIN+/SERIN– inputs can be used to
force the Am7969 Receiver into its Test mode. This will
allow testing of the logic in the Latches, Decoder, and
Shifter without having to first stabilize the the PLL. If
SERIN– is tied to ground, the internal VCO is switched
out and X1 becomes the internal bit rate clock. The serial
data rate will be at the CLK bit rate, not at 10X, 11X, or
12X, as is the case in normal operation. In this mode,
SERIN+ becomes a single-ended serial data input with
nominal 100K ECL threshold voltages (Referenced to
+5 volts).
CLK
–9/8(t1/n) + 9 ns
20 ns
07370F-9
Nominal Byte
Boundary
Sync Acquisition
These Test Mode switches make the parts determinate,
synchronous systems, instead of statistical, asynchro-
nous ones. An automatic test system will be able to
clock each part through the functional test patterns at
any rate or sequence that is convenient. After the logic
has been verified, the part can be put back into the nor-
mal mode, and the PLL functions verified knowing that
the rest of the chip is functional.
In case of errors which cause Am7969 Receivers to lose
byte/symbol sync, and on power-up, internal logic de-
tects this loss-re-acquisition of sync and modifies the
CLK output. CLK output is actually a buffered version of
the signal which controls Data transfers inside the
Am7969 Receiver on byte boundaries. Byte boundaries
move when the Am7969 Receiver loses, and re-
acquiressync. Toprotectslavesystems(whichmayuse
this output as a clock synchronous with the incoming
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Am7968/Am7969