RELEASED
PM7380 FREEDM-32P672
DATA SHEET
PMC-1990262
ISSUE 5
FRAME ENGINE AND DATA LINK MANAGER 32P672
9.4.1 HDLC Processor
The HDLC processor is a time-slice state machine which can process up to 672
independent channels. The state vector and provisioning information for each
channel is stored in a RAM. Whenever new channel data arrives, the
appropriate state vector is read from the RAM, processed and written back to the
RAM. The HDLC state-machine can be configured to perform flag delineation,
bit de-stuffing, CRC verification and length monitoring. The resulting HDLC data
and status information is passed to the partial packet buffer processor to be
stored in the appropriate channel FIFO buffer.
The configuration of the HDLC processor is accessed using indirect channel
read and write operations. When an indirect operation is performed, the
information is accessed from RAM during a null clock cycle generated by the
upstream Receive Channel Assigner block (RCAS672). Writing new provisioning
data to a channel resets the channel's entire state vector.
9.4.2 Partial Packet Buffer Processor
The partial packet buffer processor controls the 32 Kbyte partial packet RAM
which is divided into 16 byte blocks. A block pointer RAM is used to chain the
partial packet blocks into circular channel FIFO buffers. Thus, non-contiguous
sections of the RAM can be allocated in the partial packet buffer RAM to create a
channel FIFO. System software is responsible for the assignment of blocks to
individual channel FIFOs. Figure 4 shows an example of three blocks (blocks 1,
3, and 200) linked together to form a 48 byte channel FIFO.
The partial packet buffer processor is divided into three sections: writer, reader
and roamer. The writer is a time-sliced state machine which writes the HDLC
data and status information from the HDLC processor into a channel FIFO in the
packet buffer RAM. The reader transfers channel FIFO data from the packet
buffer RAM to the downstream Receive DMA Controller block (RMAC672). The
roamer is a time-sliced state machine which tracks channel FIFO buffer depths
and signals the reader to service a particular channel. If a buffer over-run
occurs, the writer ends the current packet from the HDLC processor in the
channel FIFO with an over-run flag and ignores the rest of the packet.
PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL TO PMC-SIERRA,INC., AND FOR ITS CUSTOMERS’ INTERNAL USE
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