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XDR DRAM

 
Wikipedia: XDR DRAM
 
XDR DRAM.

XDR DRAM or extreme data rate dynamic random access memory is a high-performance RAM interface and successor to the Rambus RDRAM it is based on, competing with the rival DDR2 SDRAM and GDDR4 technology. XDR was designed to be effective in small, high-bandwidth consumer systems, high-performance memory applications, and high-end GPUs. It eliminates the unusually high latency problems that plagued early forms of RDRAM. Also, the XDR DRAM have heavy emphasis on per pin bandwidth, which can benefit further cost control on PCB production. This is because fewer lanes are needed for the same amount of bandwidth. Rambus owns the rights to the technology. XDR is used by Sony in the PlayStation 3 console.[1]

Contents

Parameters

Performance

  • Initial clock rate at 400 MHz. 600 MHz, 800 MHz with 1066 MHz planned for the future.
  • Octal Data Rate (ODR): Eight bits per clock cycle per lane.
  • Each chip provides 8, 16, or 32 programmable lanes, providing up to 230.4 Gbit/s (28.8 GB/s) [2]

Features

  • Bi-directional differential Rambus Signalling Levels (DRSL)
  • Programmable on-chip termination
  • Adaptive impedance matching
  • Eight bank memory architecture
  • Up to four bank-interleaved transactions at full bandwidth
  • Point-to-point data interconnect
  • Chip scale package packaging
  • Dynamic request scheduling
  • Early-read-after-write support for maximum efficiency
  • Zero overhead refresh

Power requirements

  • 1.8 V Vdd
  • Programmable ultra-low-voltage DRSL 200 mV swing
  • Low-power PLL/DLL design
  • Power-down self-refresh support
  • Dynamic data width support with dynamic clock gating
  • Per-pin I/O power-down
  • Sub-page activation support

Ease of system design

  • Per-bit FlexPhase circuits compensate to a 2.5 ps resolution
  • XDR Interconnect uses minimum pin count

Latency

  • 1.25/2.0/2.5/3.33 ns request packets

Protocol

An XDR RAM chip's high-speed signals are a differential clock input (clock from master, CFM/CFMN), a 12-bit single-ended request/command bus (RQ11..0), and a bidirectional differential data bus up to 16 bits wide (DQ15..0/DQN15..0). The request bus may be connected to several memory chips is parallel, but the data bus is point to point; only one RAM chip may be connected to it. To support different amounts of memory with a fixed-width memory controller, the chips have a programmable interface width. A 32-bit-wide DRAM controller may support 2 16-bit chips, or be connected to 4 memory chips each of which supplies 8 bits of data, or up to 16 chips configured with 2-bit interfaces.

In addition, each chip has a low-speed serial bus used to determine its capabilities and configure its interface. This consists of three shared inputs: a reset line (RST), a serial command input (CMD) and a serial clock (SCK), and serial data in/out lines (SDI and SDO) that are daisy-chained together and eventually connect to a single pin on the memory controller.

All single-ended lines are active-low; an asserted signal or logical 1 is represented by a low voltage.

The request bus operates at double data rate relative to the clock input. Two consecutive 12-bit transfers (beginning with the falling edge of CFM) make a 24-bit command packet.

The data bus operates at 8x the speed of the clock; a 400 MHz clock generates 3200 MT/s. All data reads and writes operate in 16-transfer bursts lasting 2 clock cycles.

Request packet formats are as follows:

XDR DRAM request packet formats
Beat Bit Generic NOP Column read/write Calibrate/power-down Precharge/refresh Row Activate Masked write
Bit Bit Description Bit Description Bit Description Bit Description Bit Description
1 RQ11 OP3 0 0 COL opcode 0 COLX opcode 0 ROWP opcode 0 ROWA opcode 1 COLM opcode
1 RQ10 OP2 0 0 0 0 1 M3 Write mask low bits
1 RQ9 OP1 0 0 1 1 R9 Row address high bits M2
1 RQ8 OP0 0 1 0 1 R10 M1
1 RQ7 x WRX Write/Read bit x reserved POP1 Precharge delay (0..3) R11 M0
1 RQ6 C8 x C8 Column address high bits x POP0 x reserved C8 Column address high bits
1 RQ5 C9 x C9 x x reserved x C9
1 RQ4 x x reserved x x x x reserved
1 RQ3 x x XOP3 subopcode x x x
1 RQ2 BA2 x BC2 Bank address XOP2 BP2 Precharge bank BA2 Bank address BC2 Bank address
1 RQ1 BA1 x BC1 XOP1 BP1 BA1 BC1
1 RQ0 BA0 x BC0 XOP0 BP0 BA0 BC0
2 RQ11 x DELC Command delay (0..1) x reserved POP2 Precharge enable DELA Command delay (0..1) M7 Write mask high bits
2 RQ10 x x reserved x ROP2 Refresh command R8 Row address low bits M6
2 RQ9 x x x ROP1 R7 M5
2 RQ8 x x x ROP0 R6 M4
2 RQ7 x C7 Column address low bits x DELR1 Refresh delay (0..3) R5 C7 Column address low bits
2 RQ6 x C6 x DELR0 R4 C6
2 RQ5 x C5 x x reserved R3 C5
2 RQ4 x C4 x x R2 C4
2 RQ3 x SC3 Sub-column adddress x x R1 SC3 Sub-column address
2 RQ2 x SC2 x BR2 Refresh bank R0 SC2
2 RQ1 x SC1 x BR1 SR1 Sub-row address SC1
2 RQ0 x SC0 x BR0 SR0 SC0

There are a large number of timing constraints giving minimum times that must elapse between various commands (see Dynamic random access memory: Memory timing); the DRAM controller sending them must ensure they are all met.

Some commands contain delay fields. These delay the effect of the command by the given number of clock cycles. This permits multiple commands (to different banks) to take effect on the same clock cycle.

Row activate command

This operates equivalently to standard SDRAM's activate command, specifying a row address to be loaded into the bank's sense amplifier array. To save power, a chip may be configured to only activate a portion of the sense amplifier array. In this case, the SR1..0 bits specify the half or quarter of the row to activate, and following read/write commands' column addresses are required to be limited to that portion. (Refresh operations always use the full row.)

Read/write commands

These operate analogously to a standard SDRAM's read or write commands, specifying a column address. Data is provided to the chip a few cycles after a write command (typically 3), and is output by the chip several cycles after a read command (typically 6). Just as with other forms of SDRAM, the DRAM controller is responsible for ensuring that the data bus is not scheduled for use in both directions at the same time. Data is always transferred in 16-transfer bursts, lasting 2 clock cycles. Thus, for a ×16 device, 256 bits (32 bytes) are transferred per burst.

If the chip is using a data bus less than 16 bits wide, one or more of the sub-column address bits are used to select the portion of the column to be presented on the data bus. If the data bus is 8 bits wide, SC3 is used to identify which half of the read data to access; if the data bus is 4 bits wide, SC3 and SC2 are used, etc.

Unlike conventional DRAM, there is no provision for choosing the order in which the data is supplied within a burst. Thus, it is not possible to perform critical-word-first reads.

Masked write command

The masked write command is similar to a normal write, but no command delay is permitted and a mask byte is supplied, which permits controlling which 8-bit field . This is not a bitmap indicating which bytes are to be written; it would not be large enough for the 32 bytes in a write burst. Rather, it is a bit pattern which the DRAM controller fills unwritten bytes with. The DRAM controller is responsible for finding a pattern which does not appear in the other bytes that are to be written. Because there are 256 possible patterns and only 32 bytes in the burst, it is straightforward to find one. Even when multiple devices are connected in parallel, a mask byte can always be found when the bus is at most 128 bits wide. (This would produce 256 bytes per burst, but a masked write command is only used if at least one of them is not to be written.)

Each byte is the 8 consecutive bits transferred across one data line during a particular clock cycle. M0 is matched to the first data bit transferred during a clock cycle, and M7 is matched to the last bit.

This convention also interferes with performing critical-word-first reads; and word must include bits from at least the first 8 bits transferred.

Precharge/refresh command

This command is similar to a combination of a conventional SDRAM's precharge and refresh commands. The POPx and BPx bits specify a precharge operation, while the ROPx, DELRx, and BRx bits specify a refresh operation. Each may be separately enabled. If enabled, each may have a different command delay and must be addressed to a different bank.

Precharge commands may only be sent to one bank at a time; unlike a conventional SDRAM, there is no "precharge all banks" command.

Refresh commands are also different from a conventional SDRAM. There is no "refresh all banks" command, and the refresh operation is divided into separate activate and precharge operations so the timing is determined by the memory controller. The refresh counter is also programmable by the controller.

Calibrate/powerdown command

This command performs a number of miscellaneous functions, as determined by the XOPx field. Although there are 16 possibilities, only 4 are actually used. Three subcommands start and stop output driver calibration (which must be performed periodically (every 100 ms).

The fourth subcommand places the chip in power-down mode. In this mode, it performs internal refresh and ignores the high-speed data lines. It must be woken up using the low-speed serial bus.

Low-speed serial bus

XDR DRAMs are probed and configured using a low-speed serial bus. The RST, SCK, and CMD signals are driven by the controller to every chip in parallel. The SDI and SDO lines are daisy-chained together, with the last SDO output connected to the controller, and the first SDI input tied high (logic 0).

On reset, each chip drives its SDO pin low (1). When reset is released, a series of SCK pulses are sent to the chips. Each chip drives its SDO output high (0) one cycle after seeing its SDI input high (0). Further, it counts the number of cycles that elapse between releasing reset and seeing its SDI input high, and copies that count to an internal chip ID register. Commands sent by the controller over the CMD line include an address which must match the chip ID field.

General structure of commands

Each command either reads or writes a single 8-bit register, using an 8-bit address. This allows up to 256 registers, but only the range 1–31 is currently assigned.

Normally, the CMD line is left high (logic 0) and SCK pulses have no effect. To send a command, a sequence of 32 bits is clocked out over the CMD lines:

  • 4 bits of 1100, a command start signal.
  • A read/write bit. If 0, this is a read, if 1 this is a write.
  • A single/broadcast bit. If 0, only the device with the matching ID is selected. If 1, all devices execute the command.
  • 6 bits of serial device ID. Device IDs are automatically assigned, starting with 0, on device reset.
  • 8 bits of register address
  • A single bit of "0". This provides time to process read requests, and enable the SDO output in case of a read,
  • 8 bits of data. If this is a read command, the bits provided must be 0, and the register's value is produced on the SDO pin of the selected chip. All non-selected chips connnect their SDI inputs to their SDO outputs, so the controller will see the value.
  • A single bit of "0". This ends the command and provides time to disable the SDO output.

See also

References

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "XDR DRAM" Read more