continuous ring of vccd and vssd. The clamp connections for the
vccd1/vssd1 and vccd2/vssd2 pads still need to be done, although
the pads themselves have been changed to the base cell, matching
the new verilog RTL.
incorrectly assigned to the clock on the user side of the managment
protect block, causing it to be undefined when the user area power
supply is down. The "hkspi_power" testbench which tests using the
housekeeping SPI while the user area power is grounded now works
correctly.
around the entire padframe. The vccd1 and vccd2 domains are local
to their respective pads, and any bus routing must be done inside
the padframe. This means that all pads operate on global vddio for
3.3V as before, but also global vccd for 1.8V. The user 1.8V voltage
domain only goes as far as the input to the GPIO control block.
to areas not part of the management SoC, including chip_io,
mgmt_protect, and mprj_ctrl and sysctrl_wb (which are now part of
housekeeping). The two housekeeping tests fail and need to be
debugged.
management SoC to the management protect block, and updated the
documentation to include the new wishbone interface for those
signals, and the additional signals on the management SoC pinout.
an unconnected wishbone bus (unconnected inputs). Added the missing
signals for the user IRQ enables to management protect (which have
to come from the management SoC).
implement the arbitration between SPI and back-door. The back-door
access flags when it is going to do a read or write, and the SPI
can have an invalid read or fail a write if the SPI is too fast,
but the wishbone access should be valid. As long as the SPI is
much slower than the core clock (say, 1MHz) then there should be no
contention, which means that contention can always be avoided simply
by slowing the SPI signaling down.
status) so that between rdstb and wrstb, the SPI signals when it is
about to read or write a byte. The back-door wishbone interface then
stalls the CPU during these periods. That allows the CPU to continue
running while the SPI is being accessed without data collisions and
without having to stall for the entire time CSB is held low.
Because SCK is asynchronous to the clock, rare collisions are still
possible; this is not expected to be an issue but might be worth
investigating.
via programming. The values for each of the GPIOs at power-up are
defined in the "user_defines.v" file. For the verilog, they are
applied as parameters. For the layout, they will need to be
separately defined cells for each of the GPIOs, or at least for
each set of unique default values.
since the original one was folded into the sysctrl testbench, but that
testbench no longer uses the SPI master. Moved the SPI master from being
an overlay of the housekeeping SPI to occupying GPIO pins 32 to 35.
Made GPIO 35 a bidirectional pin like 36 and 37 so that the output enable
from the SPI master can be used.
storage. Not all of these pass simulation checks. Added back the
bit-bang control of the GPIO programming. Added back the read-only
interface between the housekeeping module and the SRAM 2nd port.
Revised the memory map text document to reflect the addition of the
SRAM ports. There is not yet a testbench for the SRAM read-only
interface.
the 26 domain (now dedicated to the housekeeping module), with
2e0... now 261... and 2f0... now 262... Although this is not
strictly backwards-compatible, the addresses in defs.h have been
modified so that C code remains valid with a recompile.