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[/] [mips_enhanced/] [trunk/] [grlib-gpl-1.0.19-b3188/] [designs/] [leon3-actel-proasic3/] [config.help] - Blame information for rev 2

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1 2 dimamali
 
2
 
3
Prompt for target technology
4
CONFIG_SYN_INFERRED
5
  Selects the target technology for memory and pads.
6
  The following are available:
7
 
8
  - Inferred: Generic FPGA or ASIC targets if your synthesis tool
9
    is capable of inferring RAMs and pads automatically.
10
 
11
  - Actel ProAsic/P/3 and Axellerator FPGAs
12
  - Aeroflex UT25CRH Rad-Hard 0.25 um CMOS
13
  - Altera: Most Altera FPGA families
14
  - Altera-Stratix: Altera Stratix FPGA family
15
  - Altera-StratixII: Altera Stratix-II FPGA family
16
  - ATC18: Atmel-Nantes 0.18 um rad-hard CMOS
17
  - IHP25: IHP 0.25 um CMOS
18
  - IHP25RH: IHP Rad-Hard 0.25 um CMOS
19
  - Lattice : EC/ECP/XP FPGAs
20
  - Quicklogic : Eclipse/E/II FPGAs
21
  - UMC-0.18 : UMC 0.18 um CMOS with Virtual Silicon libraries
22
  - Xilinx-Spartan/2/3: Xilinx Spartan/2/3 libraries
23
  - Xilinx-Spartan3E: Xilinx Spartan3E libraries
24
  - Xilinx-Virtex/E: Xilinx Virtex/E libraries
25
  - Xilinx-Virtex2/4/5: Xilinx Virtex2/4/5 libraries
26
 
27
 
28
Ram library
29
CONFIG_MEM_VIRAGE
30
  Select RAM generators for ASIC targets.
31
 
32
Infer ram
33
CONFIG_SYN_INFER_RAM
34
  Say Y here if you want the synthesis tool to infer your
35
  RAM automatically. Say N to directly instantiate technology-
36
  specific RAM cells for the selected target technology package.
37
 
38
Infer pads
39
CONFIG_SYN_INFER_PADS
40
  Say Y here if you want the synthesis tool to infer pads.
41
  Say N to directly instantiate technology-specific pads from
42
  the selected target technology package.
43
 
44
No async reset
45
CONFIG_SYN_NO_ASYNC
46
  Say Y here if you disable asynchronous reset in some of the IP cores.
47
  Might be necessary if the target library does not have cells with
48
  asynchronous set/reset.
49
 
50
Scan support
51
CONFIG_SYN_SCAN
52
  Say Y here to enable scan support in some cores. This will enable
53
  the scan support generics where available and add logic to make
54
  the design testable using full-scan.
55
 
56
Use Virtex CLKDLL for clock synchronisation
57
CONFIG_CLK_INFERRED
58
  Certain target technologies include clock generators to scale or
59
  phase-adjust the system and SDRAM clocks. This is currently supported
60
  for Xilinx, Altera and Proasic3 FPGAs. Depending on technology, you
61
  can select to use the Xilinx CKLDLL macro (Virtex, VirtexE, Spartan1/2),
62
  the Xilinx DCM (Virtex-2, Spartan3, Virtex-4), the Altera ALTDLL
63
  (Stratix, Cyclone), or the Proasic3 PLL. Choose the 'inferred'
64
  option to skip a clock generator.
65
 
66
Clock multiplier
67
CONFIG_CLK_MUL
68
  When using the Xilinx DCM or Altera ALTPLL, the system clock can
69
  be multiplied with a factor of 2 - 32, and divided by a factor of
70
  1 - 32. This makes it possible to generate almost any desired
71
  processor frequency. When using the Xilinx CLKDLL generator,
72
  the resulting frequency scale factor (mul/div) must be one of
73
  1/2, 1 or 2. On Proasic3, the factor can be 1 - 128.
74
 
75
  WARNING: The resulting clock must be within the limits specified
76
  by the target FPGA family.
77
 
78
Clock divider
79
CONFIG_CLK_DIV
80
  When using the Xilinx DCM or Altera ALTPLL, the system clock can
81
  be multiplied with a factor of 2 - 32, and divided by a factor of
82
  1 - 32. This makes it possible to generate almost any desired
83
  processor frequency. When using the Xilinx CLKDLL generator,
84
  the resulting frequency scale factor (mul/div) must be one of
85
  1/2, 1 or 2. On Proasic3, the factor can be 1 - 128.
86
 
87
  WARNING: The resulting clock must be within the limits specified
88
  by the target FPGA family.
89
 
90
Output clock divider
91
CONFIG_OCLK_DIV
92
  When using the Proasic3 PLL, the system clock is generated by three
93
  parameters: input clock multiplication, input clock division and
94
  output clock division. Only certain values of these parameters
95
  are allowed, but unfortunately this is not documented by Actel.
96
  To find the correct values, run the Libero Smartgen tool and
97
  insert you desired input and output clock frequencies in the
98
  Static PLL configurator. The mul/div factors can then be read
99
  out from tool.
100
 
101
System clock multiplier
102
CONFIG_CLKDLL_1_2
103
  The Xilinx CLKDLL can scale the input clock with a factor of 0.5, 1.0,
104
  or 2.0. Useful when the target board has an oscillator with a too high
105
  (or low) frequency for your design. The divided clock will be used as the
106
  main clock for the whole processor (except PCI and ethernet clocks).
107
 
108
System clock multiplier
109
CONFIG_DCM_2_3
110
  The Xilinx DCM and Altera ALTDLL can scale the input clock with a large
111
  range of factors. Useful when the target board has an oscillator with a
112
  too high (or low) frequency for your design. The divided clock will
113
  be used as the main clock for the whole processor (except PCI and
114
  ethernet clocks). NOTE: the resulting frequency must be at least
115
  24 MHz or the DCM and ALTDLL might not work.
116
 
117
Enable CLKDLL for PCI clock
118
CONFIG_PCI_CLKDLL
119
  Say Y here to re-synchronize the PCI clock using a
120
  Virtex BUFGDLL macro. Will improve PCI clock-to-output
121
  delays on the expense of input-setup requirements.
122
 
123
Use PCI clock system clock
124
CONFIG_PCI_SYSCLK
125
  Say Y here to the PCI clock to generate the system clock.
126
  The PCI clock can be scaled using the DCM or CLKDLL to
127
  generate a suitable processor clock.
128
 
129
External SDRAM clock feedback
130
CONFIG_CLK_NOFB
131
  Say Y here to disable the external clock feedback to synchronize the
132
  SDRAM clock. This option is necessary if your board or design does not
133
  have an external clock feedback that is connected to the pllref input
134
  of the clock generator.
135
 
136
Number of processors
137
CONFIG_PROC_NUM
138
  The number of processor cores. The LEON3MP design can accomodate
139
  up to 4 LEON3 processor cores. Use 1 unless you know what you are
140
  doing ...
141
 
142
Number of SPARC register windows
143
CONFIG_IU_NWINDOWS
144
  The SPARC architecture (and LEON) allows 2 - 32 register windows.
145
  However, any number except 8 will require that you modify and
146
  recompile your run-time system or kernel. Unless you know what
147
  you are doing, use 8.
148
 
149
SPARC V8 multiply and divide instruction
150
CONFIG_IU_V8MULDIV
151
  If you say Y here, the SPARC V8 multiply and divide instructions
152
  will be implemented. The instructions are: UMUL, UMULCC, SMUL,
153
  SMULCC, UDIV, UDIVCC, SDIV, SDIVCC. In code containing frequent
154
  integer multiplications and divisions, significant performance
155
  increase can be achieved. Emulated floating-point operations will
156
  also benefit from this option.
157
 
158
  By default, the gcc compiler does not emit multiply or divide
159
  instructions and your code must be compiled with -mv8 to see any
160
  performance increase. On the other hand, code compiled with -mv8
161
  will generate an illegal instruction trap when executed on processors
162
  with this option disabled.
163
 
164
  The divider consumes approximately 2 kgates, the multiplier 6 kgates.
165
 
166
Multiplier latency
167
CONFIG_IU_MUL_LATENCY_4
168
  The multiplier used for UMUL/SMUL instructions is implemented
169
  with a 16x16 multiplier which is iterated 4 times. This leads
170
  to a 4-cycle latency for multiply operations. To improve timing,
171
  a pipeline stage can be inserted into the 16x16 multiplier which
172
  will lead to a 5-cycle latency for the multiply oprations.
173
 
174
Multiplier latency
175
CONFIG_IU_MUL_MAC
176
  If you say Y here, the SPARC V8e UMAC/SMAC (multiply-accumulate)
177
  instructions will be enabled. The instructions implement a
178
  single-cycle 16x16->32 bits multiply with a 40-bits accumulator.
179
  The details of these instructions can be found in the LEON manual,
180
 
181
Single vector trapping
182
CONFIG_IU_SVT
183
  Single-vector trapping is a SPARC V8e option to reduce code-size
184
  in small applications. If enabled, the processor will jump to
185
  the address of trap 0 (tt = 0x00) for all traps. No trap table
186
  is then needed. The trap type is present in %psr.tt and must
187
  be decoded by the O/S. Saves 4 Kbyte of code, but increases
188
  trap and interrupt overhead. Currently, the only O/S supporting
189
  this option is eCos. To enable SVT, the O/S must also set bit 13
190
  in %asr17.
191
 
192
Load latency
193
CONFIG_IU_LDELAY
194
  Defines the pipeline load delay (= pipeline cycles before the data
195
  from a load instruction is available for the next instruction).
196
  One cycle gives best performance, but might create a critical path
197
  on targets with slow (data) cache memories. A 2-cycle delay can
198
  improve timing but will reduce performance with about 5%.
199
 
200
Reset address
201
CONFIG_IU_RSTADDR
202
  By default, a SPARC processor starts execution at address 0.
203
  With this option, any 4-kbyte aligned reset start address can be
204
  choosen. Keep at 0 unless you really know what you are doing.
205
 
206
Power-down
207
CONFIG_PWD
208
  Say Y here to enable the power-down feature of the processor.
209
  Might reduce the maximum frequency slightly on FPGA targets.
210
  For details on the power-down operation, see the LEON3 manual.
211
 
212
Hardware watchpoints
213
CONFIG_IU_WATCHPOINTS
214
  The processor can have up to 4 hardware watchpoints, allowing to
215
  create both data and instruction breakpoints at any memory location,
216
  also in PROM. Each watchpoint will use approximately 500 gates.
217
  Use 0 to disable the watchpoint function.
218
 
219
Floating-point enable
220
CONFIG_FPU_ENABLE
221
  Say Y here to enable the floating-point interface for the MEIKO
222
  or GRFPU. Note that no FPU's are provided with the GPL version
223
  of GRLIB. Both the Gaisler GRFPU and the Meiko FPU are commercial
224
  cores and must be obtained separately.
225
 
226
FPU selection
227
CONFIG_FPU_GRFPU
228
  Select between Gaisler Research's GRFPU and GRFPU-lite FPUs or the Sun
229
  Meiko FPU core. All cores  are fully IEEE-754 compatible and support
230
  all SPARC FPU instructions.
231
 
232
GRFPU Multiplier
233
CONFIG_FPU_GRFPU_INFMUL
234
  On FPGA targets choose inferred multiplier. For ASIC implementations
235
  choose between Synopsys Design Ware (DW) multiplier or Module
236
  Generator (ModGen) multiplier. DW multiplier gives better results
237
  (smaller area  and better timing) but requires DW license. ModGen
238
  multiplier is part of GRLIB and does not require license.
239
 
240
Shared GRFPU
241
CONFIG_FPU_GRFPU_SH
242
  If enabled multiple CPU cores will share one GRFPU.
243
 
244
GRFPC Configuration
245
CONFIG_FPU_GRFPC0
246
  Configures the GRFPU-LITE controller.
247
 
248
  In simple configuration controller executes FP instructions
249
  in parallel with  integer instructions. FP operands are fetched
250
  in the register file stage and the result is written in the write
251
  stage. This option uses least area resources.
252
 
253
  Data forwarding configuration gives ~ 10 % higher FP performance than
254
  the simple configuration by adding data forwarding between the pipeline
255
  stages.
256
 
257
  Non-blocking controller allows FP load and store instructions to
258
  execute in parallel with FP instructions. The performance increase is
259
  ~ 20 % for FP applications. This option uses most logic resources and
260
  is suitable for ASIC implementations.
261
 
262
Floating-point netlist
263
CONFIG_FPU_NETLIST
264
  Say Y here to use a VHDL netlist of the GRFPU-Lite. This is
265
  only available in certain versions of grlib.
266
 
267
Enable Instruction cache
268
CONFIG_ICACHE_ENABLE
269
  The instruction cache should always be enabled to allow
270
  maximum performance. Some low-end system might want to
271
  save area and disable the cache, but this will reduce
272
  the performance with a factor of 2 - 3.
273
 
274
Enable Data cache
275
CONFIG_DCACHE_ENABLE
276
  The data cache should always be enabled to allow
277
  maximum performance. Some low-end system might want to
278
  save area and disable the cache, but this will reduce
279
  the performance with a factor of 2 at least.
280
 
281
Instruction cache associativity
282
CONFIG_ICACHE_ASSO1
283
  The instruction cache can be implemented as a multi-set cache with
284
  1 - 4 sets. Higher associativity usually increases the cache hit
285
  rate and thereby the performance. The downside is higher power
286
  consumption and increased gate-count for tag comparators.
287
 
288
  Note that a 1-set cache is effectively a direct-mapped cache.
289
 
290
Instruction cache set size
291
CONFIG_ICACHE_SZ1
292
  The size of each set in the instuction cache (kbytes). Valid values
293
  are 1 - 64 in binary steps. Note that the full range is only supported
294
  by the generic and virtex2 targets. Most target packages are limited
295
  to 2 - 16 kbyte. Large set size gives higher performance but might
296
  affect the maximum frequency (on ASIC targets). The total instruction
297
  cache size is the number of set multiplied with the set size.
298
 
299
Instruction cache line size
300
CONFIG_ICACHE_LZ16
301
  The instruction cache line size. Can be set to either 16 or 32
302
  bytes per line. Instruction caches typically benefit from larger
303
  line sizes, but on small caches it migh be better with 16 bytes/line
304
  to limit eviction miss rate.
305
 
306
Instruction cache replacement algorithm
307
CONFIG_ICACHE_ALGORND
308
  Cache replacement algorithm for caches with 2 - 4 sets. The 'random'
309
  algorithm selects the set to evict randomly. The least-recently-used
310
  (LRR) algorithm evicts the set least recently replaced. The least-
311
  recently-used (LRU) algorithm evicts the set least recently accessed.
312
  The random algorithm uses a simple 1- or 2-bit counter to select
313
  the eviction set and has low area overhead. The LRR scheme uses one
314
  extra bit in the tag ram and has therefore also low area overhead.
315
  However, the LRR scheme can only be used with 2-set caches. The LRU
316
  scheme has typically the best performance but also highest area overhead.
317
  A 2-set LRU uses 1 flip-flop per line, a 3-set LRU uses 3 flip-flops
318
  per line, and a 4-set LRU uses 5 flip-flops per line to store the access
319
  history.
320
 
321
Instruction cache locking
322
CONFIG_ICACHE_LOCK
323
  Say Y here to enable cache locking in the instruction cache.
324
  Locking can be done on cache-line level, but will increase the
325
  width of the tag ram with one bit. If you don't know what
326
  locking is good for, it is safe to say N.
327
 
328
Data cache associativity
329
CONFIG_DCACHE_ASSO1
330
  The data cache can be implemented as a multi-set cache with
331
  1 - 4 sets. Higher associativity usually increases the cache hit
332
  rate and thereby the performance. The downside is higher power
333
  consumption and increased gate-count for tag comparators.
334
 
335
  Note that a 1-set cache is effectively a direct-mapped cache.
336
 
337
Data cache set size
338
CONFIG_DCACHE_SZ1
339
  The size of each set in the data cache (kbytes). Valid values are
340
  1 - 64 in binary steps. Note that the full range is only supported
341
  by the generic and virtex2 targets. Most target packages are limited
342
  to 2 - 16 kbyte. A large cache gives higher performance but the
343
  data cache is timing critical an a too large setting might affect
344
  the maximum frequency (on ASIC targets). The total data cache size
345
  is the number of set multiplied with the set size.
346
 
347
Data cache line size
348
CONFIG_DCACHE_LZ16
349
  The data cache line size. Can be set to either 16 or 32 bytes per
350
  line. A smaller line size gives better associativity and higher
351
  cache hit rate, but requires a larger tag memory.
352
 
353
Data cache replacement algorithm
354
CONFIG_DCACHE_ALGORND
355
  See the explanation for instruction cache replacement algorithm.
356
 
357
Data cache locking
358
CONFIG_DCACHE_LOCK
359
  Say Y here to enable cache locking in the data cache.
360
  Locking can be done on cache-line level, but will increase the
361
  width of the tag ram with one bit. If you don't know what
362
  locking is good for, it is safe to say N.
363
 
364
Data cache snooping
365
CONFIG_DCACHE_SNOOP
366
  Say Y here to enable data cache snooping on the AHB bus. Is only
367
  useful if you have additional AHB masters such as the DSU or a
368
  target PCI interface. Note that the target technology must support
369
  dual-port RAMs for this option to be enabled. Dual-port RAMS are
370
  currently supported on Virtex/2, Virage and Actel targets.
371
 
372
Data cache snooping implementation
373
CONFIG_DCACHE_SNOOP_FAST
374
  The default snooping implementation is 'slow', which works if you
375
  don't have AHB slaves in cacheable areas capable of zero-waitstates
376
  non-sequential write accesses. Otherwise use 'fast' and suffer a
377
  few kgates extra area. This option is currently only needed in
378
  multi-master systems with the SSRAM or DDR memory controllers.
379
 
380
Separate snoop tags
381
CONFIG_DCACHE_SNOOP_SEPTAG
382
  Enable a separate memory to store the data tags used for snooping.
383
  This is necessary when snooping support is wanted in systems
384
  with MMU, typically for SMP systems. In this case, the snoop
385
  tags will contain the physical tag address while the normal
386
  tags contain the virtual tag address. This option can also be
387
  together with the 'fast snooping' option to enable snooping
388
  support on technologies without dual-port RAMs. In such case,
389
  the snoop tag RAM will be implemented using a two-port RAM.
390
 
391
Fixed cacheability map
392
CONFIG_CACHE_FIXED
393
  If this variable is 0, the cacheable memory regions are defined
394
  by the AHB plug&play information (default). To overriden the
395
  plug&play settings, this variable can be set to indicate which
396
  areas should be cached. The value is treated as a 16-bit hex value
397
  with each bit defining if a 256 Mbyte segment should be cached or not.
398
  The right-most (LSB) bit defines the cacheability of AHB address
399
 
400
  3840 - 4096 MByte. If the bit is set, the corresponding area is
401
  cacheable. A value of 00F3 defines address 0 - 0x20000000 and
402
  0x40000000 - 0x80000000 as cacheable.
403
 
404
Local data ram
405
CONFIG_DCACHE_LRAM
406
  Say Y here to add a local ram to the data cache controller.
407
  Accesses to the ram (load/store) will be performed at 0 waitstates
408
  and store data will never be written back to the AHB bus.
409
 
410
Size of local data ram
411
CONFIG_DCACHE_LRAM_SZ1
412
  Defines the size of the local data ram in Kbytes. Note that most
413
  technology libraries do not support larger rams than 16 Kbyte.
414
 
415
Start address of local data ram
416
CONFIG_DCACHE_LRSTART
417
  Defines the 8 MSB bits of start address of the local data ram.
418
  By default set to 8f (start address = 0x8f000000), but any value
419
  (except 0) is possible. Note that the local data ram 'shadows'
420
  a 16 Mbyte block of the address space.
421
 
422
MMU enable
423
CONFIG_MMU_ENABLE
424
  Say Y here to enable the Memory Management Unit.
425
 
426
MMU split icache/dcache table lookaside buffer
427
CONFIG_MMU_COMBINED
428
  Select "combined" for a combined icache/dcache table lookaside buffer,
429
  "split" for a split icache/dcache table lookaside buffer
430
 
431
MMU tlb replacement scheme
432
CONFIG_MMU_REPARRAY
433
  Select "LRU" to use the "least recently used" algorithm for TLB
434
  replacement, or "Increment" for a simple incremental replacement
435
  scheme.
436
 
437
Combined i/dcache tlb
438
CONFIG_MMU_I2
439
  Select the number of entries for the instruction TLB, or the
440
  combined icache/dcache TLB if such is used.
441
 
442
Split tlb, dcache
443
CONFIG_MMU_D2
444
  Select the number of entries for the dcache TLB.
445
 
446
Fast writebuffer
447
CONFIG_MMU_FASTWB
448
  Only selectable if split tlb is enabled. In case fast writebuffer is
449
  enabled the tlb hit will be made concurrent to the cache hit. This
450
  leads to higher store performance, but increased power and area.
451
 
452
DSU enable
453
CONFIG_DSU_ENABLE
454
  The debug support unit (DSU) allows non-intrusive debugging and tracing
455
  of both executed instructions and AHB transfers. If you want to enable
456
  the DSU, say Y here and select the configuration below.
457
 
458
Trace buffer enable
459
CONFIG_DSU_TRACEBUF
460
  Say Y to enable the trace buffer. The buffer is not necessary for
461
  debugging, only for tracing instructions and data transfers.
462
 
463
Enable instruction tracing
464
CONFIG_DSU_ITRACE
465
  If you say Y here, an instruction trace buffer will be implemented
466
  in each processor. The trace buffer will trace executed instructions
467
  and their results, and place them in a circular buffer. The buffer
468
  can be read out by any AHB master, and in particular by the debug
469
  communication link.
470
 
471
Size of trace buffer
472
CONFIG_DSU_ITRACESZ1
473
  Select the buffer size (in kbytes) for the instruction trace buffer.
474
  Each line in the buffer needs 16 bytes. A 128-entry buffer will thus
475
  need 2 kbyte.
476
 
477
Enable AHB tracing
478
CONFIG_DSU_ATRACE
479
  If you say Y here, an AHB trace buffer will be implemented in the
480
  debug support unit processor. The AHB buffer will trace all transfers
481
  on the AHB bus and save them in a circular buffer. The trace buffer
482
  can be read out by any AHB master, and in particular by the debug
483
  communication link.
484
 
485
Size of trace buffer
486
CONFIG_DSU_ATRACESZ1
487
  Select the buffer size (in kbytes) for the AHB trace buffer.
488
  Each line in the buffer needs 16 bytes. A 128-entry buffer will thus
489
  need 2 kbyte.
490
 
491
 
492
LEON3FT enable
493
CONFIG_LEON3FT_EN
494
  Say Y here to use the fault-tolerant LEON3FT core instead of the
495
  standard non-FT LEON3.
496
 
497
IU Register file protection
498
CONFIG_IUFT_NONE
499
  Select the FT implementation in the LEON3FT integer unit
500
  register file. The options include parity, parity with
501
  sparing, 7-bit BCH and TMR.
502
 
503
FPU Register file protection
504
CONFIG_FPUFT_EN
505
  Say Y to enable SEU protection of the FPU register file.
506
  The GRFPU will be protected using 8-bit parity without restart, while
507
  the GRFPU-Lite will be protected with 4-bit parity with restart. If
508
  disabled the FPU register file will be implemented using flip-flops.
509
 
510
Cache memory error injection
511
CONFIG_RF_ERRINJ
512
  Say Y here to enable error injection in to the IU/FPU regfiles.
513
  Affects only simulation.
514
 
515
Cache memory protection
516
CONFIG_CACHE_FT_EN
517
  Enable SEU error-correction in the cache memories.
518
 
519
Cache memory error injection
520
CONFIG_CACHE_ERRINJ
521
  Say Y here to enable error injection in to the cache memories.
522
  Affects only simulation.
523
 
524
Leon3ft netlist
525
CONFIG_LEON3_NETLIST
526
  Say Y here to use a VHDL netlist of the LEON3FT. This is
527
  only available in certain versions of grlib.
528
 
529
IU assembly printing
530
CONFIG_IU_DISAS
531
  Enable printing of executed instructions to the console.
532
 
533
IU assembly printing in netlist
534
CONFIG_IU_DISAS_NET
535
  Enable printing of executed instructions to the console also
536
  when simulating a netlist. NOTE: with this option enabled, it
537
  will not be possible to pass place&route.
538
 
539
32-bit program counters
540
CONFIG_DEBUG_PC32
541
  Since the LSB 2 bits of the program counters always are zero, they are
542
  normally not implemented. If you say Y here, the program counters will
543
  be implemented with full 32 bits, making debugging of the VHDL model
544
  much easier. Turn of this option for synthesis or you will be wasting
545
  area.
546
 
547
 
548
CONFIG_AHB_DEFMST
549
  Sets the default AHB master (see AMBA 2.0 specification for definition).
550
  Should not be set to a value larger than the number of AHB masters - 1.
551
  For highest processor performance, leave it at 0.
552
 
553
Default AHB master
554
CONFIG_AHB_RROBIN
555
  Say Y here to enable round-robin arbitration of the AHB bus. A N will
556
  select fixed priority, with the master with the highest bus index having
557
  the highest priority.
558
 
559
Support AHB split-transactions
560
CONFIG_AHB_SPLIT
561
  Say Y here to enable AHB split-transaction support in the AHB arbiter.
562
  Unless you actually have an AHB slave that can generate AHB split
563
  responses, say N and save some gates.
564
 
565
Default AHB master
566
CONFIG_AHB_IOADDR
567
  Selects the MSB adddress (HADDR[31:20]) of the AHB IO area, as defined
568
  in the plug&play extentions of the AMBA bus. Should be kept to FFF
569
  unless you really know what you are doing.
570
 
571
APB bridge address
572
CONFIG_APB_HADDR
573
  Selects the MSB adddress (HADDR[31:20]) of the APB bridge. Should be
574
  kept at 800 for software compatibility.
575
 
576
AHB monitor
577
CONFIG_AHB_MON
578
  Say Y to enable the AHB bus monitor. The monitor will check for
579
  illegal AHB transactions during simulation. It has no impact on
580
  synthesis.
581
 
582
Report AHB errors
583
CONFIG_AHB_MONERR
584
  Print out detected AHB violations on console.
585
 
586
Report AHB warnings
587
CONFIG_AHB_MONWAR
588
  Print out detected AHB warnings on console.
589
 
590
 
591
DSU enable
592
CONFIG_DSU_UART
593
  Say Y to enable the AHB uart (serial-to-AHB). This is the most
594
  commonly used debug communication link.
595
 
596
JTAG Enable
597
CONFIG_DSU_JTAG
598
  Say Y to enable the JTAG debug link (JTAG-to-AHB). Debugging is done
599
  with GRMON through the boards JTAG chain at speed of 300 kbits/s.
600
  Supported JTAG cables are Xilinx Parallel Cable III and IV.
601
 
602
Ethernet DSU enable
603
CONFIG_DSU_ETH
604
  Say Y to enable the Ethernet Debug Communication Link (EDCL). The link
605
  provides a DSU gateway between ethernet and the AHB bus. Debugging is
606
  done at 10 or 100 Mbit/s, using the GRMON debug monitor. You must
607
  enable the GRETH Ethernet MAC for this option to become active.
608
 
609
Size of EDCL trace buffer
610
CONFIG_DSU_ETHSZ1
611
  Select the buffer size (in kbytes) for the EDCL. 1 or 2 kbyte is
612
  usually enough, while a larger buffer will increase the transfer rate.
613
  When operating at 100 Mbit, use a buffer size of at least 8 kbyte for
614
  maximum throughput.
615
 
616
MSB IP address
617
CONFIG_DSU_IPMSB
618
  Set the MSB 16 bits of the IP address of the EDCL.
619
 
620
LSB IP address
621
CONFIG_DSU_IPLSB
622
  Set the LSB 16 bits of the IP address of the EDCL.
623
 
624
MSB ethernet address
625
CONFIG_DSU_ETHMSB
626
  Set the MSB 24 bits of the ethernet address of the EDCL.
627
 
628
LSB ethernet address
629
CONFIG_DSU_ETHLSB
630
  Set the LSB 24 bits of the ethernet address of the EDCL.
631
 
632
Programmable MAC/IP address
633
CONFIG_DSU_ETH_PROG
634
  Say Y to make the LSB 4 bits of the EDCL MAC and IP address
635
  configurable using the ethi.edcladdr inputs.
636
Leon2 memory controller
637
CONFIG_MCTRL_LEON2
638
  Say Y here to enable the LEON2 memory controller. The controller
639
  can access PROM, I/O, SRAM and SDRAM. The bus width for PROM
640
  and SRAM is programmable to 8-, 16- or 32-bits.
641
 
642
8-bit memory support
643
CONFIG_MCTRL_8BIT
644
  If you say Y here, the PROM/SRAM memory controller will support
645
  8-bit mode, i.e. operate from 8-bit devices as if they were 32-bit.
646
  Say N to save a few hundred gates.
647
 
648
16-bit memory support
649
CONFIG_MCTRL_16BIT
650
  If you say Y here, the PROM/SRAM memory controller will support
651
  16-bit mode, i.e. operate from 16-bit devices as if they were 32-bit.
652
  Say N to save a few hundred gates.
653
 
654
Write strobe feedback
655
CONFIG_MCTRL_WFB
656
  If you say Y here, the PROM/SRAM write strobes (WRITEN, WEN) will
657
  be used to enable the data bus drivers during write cycles. This
658
  will guarantee that the data is still valid on the rising edge of
659
  the write strobe. If you say N, the write strobes and the data bus
660
  drivers will be clocked on the rising edge, potentially creating
661
  a hold time problem in external memory or I/O. However, in all
662
  practical cases, there is enough capacitance in the data bus lines
663
  to keep the value stable for a few (many?) nano-seconds after the
664
  buffers have been disabled, making it safe to say N and remove a
665
  combinational path in the netlist that might be difficult to
666
  analyze.
667
 
668
Write strobe feedback
669
CONFIG_MCTRL_5CS
670
  If you say Y here, the 5th (RAMSN[4]) SRAM chip select signal will
671
  be enabled. If you don't intend to use it, say N and save some gates.
672
 
673
SDRAM controller enable
674
CONFIG_MCTRL_SDRAM
675
  Say Y here to enabled the PC100/PC133 SDRAM controller. If you don't
676
  intend to use SDRAM, say N and save about 1 kgates.
677
 
678
SDRAM controller inverted clock
679
CONFIG_MCTRL_SDRAM_INVCLK
680
  If you say Y here, the SDRAM controller output signals will be delayed
681
  with 1/2 clock in respect to the SDRAM clock. This will allow the used
682
  of an SDRAM clock which in not strictly in phase with the internal
683
  clock. This option will limit the SDRAM frequency to 40 - 50 MHz.
684
 
685
  On FPGA targets without SDRAM clock synchronizations through PLL/DLL,
686
  say Y. On ASIC targets, say N and tell your foundry to balance the
687
  SDRAM clock output.
688
 
689
SDRAM separate address buses
690
CONFIG_MCTRL_SDRAM_SEPBUS
691
  Say Y here if your SDRAM is connected through separate address
692
  and data buses (SA & SD). This is the case on the GR-CPCI-XC2V6000
693
  board, but not on the GR-PCI-XC2V3000 or Avnet XCV1500E boards.
694
 
695
64-bit data bus
696
CONFIG_MCTRL_SDRAM_BUS64
697
  Say Y here to enable 64-bit SDRAM data bus.
698
 
699
Page burst enable
700
CONFIG_MCTRL_PAGE
701
  Say Y here to enable SDRAM page burst operation. This will implement
702
  read operations using page bursts rather than 8-word bursts and save
703
  about 500 gates (100 LUTs). Note that not all SDRAM supports page
704
  burst, so use this option with care.
705
 
706
Programmable page burst enable
707
CONFIG_MCTRL_PROGPAGE
708
  Say Y here to enable programmable SDRAM page burst operation. This
709
  will allow to dynamically enable/disable page burst by setting
710
  bit 17 in MCFG2.
711
 
712
SDRAM controller enable
713
CONFIG_SSCTRL
714
  Say Y here to enabled a 32-bit synchronous SRAM (SSRAM) controller.
715
  The controller is designed for piplined ZBT SSRAM.
716
 
717
CONFIG_SSCTRL_PROM16
718
  Say Y here to enabled a 16-bit PROM support. The PROM should be
719
  connected to D[31:16] of the data bus.
720
 
721
On-chip rom
722
CONFIG_AHBROM_ENABLE
723
  Say Y here to add a block on on-chip rom to the AHB bus. The ram
724
  provides 0-waitstates read access,  burst support, and 8-, 16-
725
  and 32-bit data size. The rom will be syntheised into block rams
726
  on Xilinx and Altera FPGA devices, and into gates on ASIC
727
  technologies. GRLIB includes a utility to automatically create
728
  the rom VHDL model (ahbrom.vhd) from an ELF file. Refer to the GRLIB
729
  documentation for details.
730
 
731
On-chip rom address
732
CONFIG_AHBROM_START
733
  Set the start address of AHB ROM (HADDR[31:20]). The ROM will occupy
734
  a 1 Mbyte slot at the selected address. Default is 000, corresponding
735
  to AHB address 0x00000000. When address 0x0 is selected, the rom area
736
  of any other memory controller is set to 0x10000000 to avoid conflicts.
737
 
738
Enable pipeline register for on-chip rom
739
CONFIG_AHBROM_PIPE
740
  Say Y here to add a data pipeline register to the on-chip rom.
741
  This should be done when the rom is implemenented in (ASIC) gates,
742
  or in logic cells on FPGAs. Do not use this option when the rom is
743
  implemented in block rams. If enabled, the rom will operate with
744
  one waitstate.
745
 
746
On-chip ram
747
CONFIG_AHBRAM_ENABLE
748
  Say Y here to add a block on on-chip ram to the AHB bus. The ram
749
  provides 0-waitstates read access and 0/1 waitstates write access.
750
  All AHB burst types are supported, as well as 8-, 16- and 32-bit
751
  data size.
752
 
753
On-chip ram size
754
CONFIG_AHBRAM_SZ1
755
  Set the size of the on-chip AHB ram. The ram is infered/instantiated
756
  as four byte-wide ram slices to allow byte and half-word write
757
  accesses. It is therefore essential that the target package can
758
  infer byte-wide rams. This is currently supported on the generic,
759
  virtex, virtex2, proasic and axellerator targets.
760
 
761
On-chip ram address
762
CONFIG_AHBRAM_START
763
  Set the start address of AHB RAM (HADDR[31:20]). The RAM will occupy
764
  a 1 Mbyte slot at the selected address. Default is A00, corresponding
765
  to AHB address 0xA0000000.
766
 
767
Gaisler Ethernet MAC enable
768
CONFIG_GRETH_ENABLE
769
  Say Y here to enable the Gaisler Research Ethernet MAC . The MAC has
770
  one AHB master interface to read and write packets to memory, and one
771
  APB slave interface for accessing the control registers.
772
 
773
Gaisler Ethernet 1G MAC enable
774
CONFIG_GRETH_GIGA
775
  Say Y here to enable the Gaisler Research 1000 Mbit Ethernet MAC .
776
  The 1G MAC is only available in the commercial version of GRLIB,
777
  so do NOT enable it if you are using the GPL version.
778
 
779
CONFIG_GRETH_FIFO4
780
  Set the depth of the receive and transmit FIFOs in the MAC core.
781
  The MAC core will perform AHB burst read/writes with half the
782
  size of the FIFO depth.
783
 
784
 
785
CAN interface enable
786
CONFIG_CAN_ENABLE
787
  Say Y here to enable the CAN interace from OpenCores. The core has one
788
  AHB slave interface for accessing the control registers. The CAN core
789
  ir register-compatible with the SAJ1000 core from Philips.
790
 
791
CAN register address
792
CONFIG_CANIO
793
  The control registers of the CAN core occupy 4 kbyte, and are
794
  mapped in the AHB bus I/O area (0xFFF00000 - 0xFFFFF000). This setting
795
  defines at which address in the I/O area the registers appear (HADDR[19:8]).
796
 
797
CAN interrupt
798
CONFIG_CANIRQ
799
  Defines which interrupt number the CAN core will generate.
800
 
801
CAN loob-back testing
802
CONFIG_CANLOOP
803
  If you say Y here, the receiver and trasmitter of the CAN core will
804
  be connected together in a loop-back fashion. This will make it
805
  possible to perform loop-back test, but not data will be sent
806
  or received from the outside. ONLY for testing!
807
 
808
CAN Synchronous reset
809
CONFIG_CAN_SYNCRST
810
  If you say Y here, the CAN core will be implemented with
811
  synchronous reset rather than asynchronous. This is needed
812
  when the target library does not implement registers with
813
  async reset. Unless you know what you are doing, say N.
814
 
815
CAN FT memories
816
CONFIG_CAN_FT
817
  If you say Y here, the CAN FIFOs will be implemented using
818
  SEU protected RAM blocks. Only applicable to the FT version
819
  of grlib.
820
UART1 enable
821
CONFIG_UART1_ENABLE
822
  Say Y here to enable UART1, or the console UART. This is needed to
823
  get any print-out from LEON3 systems regardless of operating system.
824
 
825
UART1 FIFO
826
CONFIG_UA1_FIFO1
827
  The UART has configurable transmitt and receive FIFO's, which can
828
  be set to 1 - 32 bytes. Use 1 for minimum area, or 8 - 32 for
829
  maximum throughput.
830
 
831
 
832
LEON3 interrupt controller
833
CONFIG_IRQ3_ENABLE
834
  Say Y here to enable the LEON3 interrupt controller. This is needed
835
  if you want to be able to receive interrupts. Operating systems like
836
  Linux, RTEMS and eCos needs this option to be enabled. If you intend
837
  to use the Bare-C run-time and not use interrupts, you could disable
838
  the interrupt controller and save about 500 gates.
839
 
840
LEON3 interrupt controller broadcast
841
CONFIG_IRQ3_BROADCAST_ENABLE
842
  If enabled the broadcast register is used to determine which
843
  interrupt should be sent to all cpus instead of just the first
844
  one that consumes it.
845
Timer module enable
846
CONFIG_GPT_ENABLE
847
  Say Y here to enable the Modular Timer Unit. The timer unit consists
848
  of one common scaler and up to 7 independent timers. The timer unit
849
  is needed for Linux, RTEMS, eCos and the Bare-C run-times.
850
 
851
Timer module enable
852
CONFIG_GPT_NTIM
853
  Set the number of timers in the timer unit (1 - 7).
854
 
855
Scaler width
856
CONFIG_GPT_SW
857
  Set the width if the common pre-scaler (2 - 16 bits). The scaler
858
  is used to divide the system clock down to 1 MHz, so 8 bits should
859
  be sufficient for most implementations (allows clocks up to 256 MHz).
860
 
861
Timer width
862
CONFIG_GPT_TW
863
  Set the width if the timers (2 - 32 bits). 32 bits is recommended
864
  for the Bare-C run-time, lower values (e.g. 16 bits) can work with
865
  RTEMS and Linux.
866
 
867
Timer Interrupt
868
CONFIG_GPT_IRQ
869
  Set the interrupt number for the first timer. Remaining timers will
870
  have incrementing interrupts, unless the separate-interrupts option
871
  below is disabled.
872
 
873
Watchdog enable
874
CONFIG_GPT_WDOGEN
875
  Say Y here to enable the watchdog functionality in the timer unit.
876
 
877
Watchdog time-out value
878
CONFIG_GPT_WDOG
879
  This value will be loaded in the watchdog timer at reset.
880
 
881
GPIO port
882
CONFIG_GRGPIO_ENABLE
883
  Say Y here to enable a general purpose I/O port. The port can be
884
  configured from 1 - 32 bits, whith each port signal individually
885
  programmable as input or output. The port signals can also serve
886
  as interrupt inputs.
887
 
888
GPIO port witdth
889
CONFIG_GRGPIO_WIDTH
890
  Number of bits in the I/O port. Must be in the range of 1 - 32.
891
 
892
GPIO interrupt mask
893
CONFIG_GRGPIO_IMASK
894
  The I/O port interrupt mask defines which bits in the I/O port
895
  should be able to create an interrupt.
896
 
897
UART debugging
898
CONFIG_DEBUG_UART
899
  During simulation, the output from the UARTs is printed on the
900
  simulator console. Since the ratio between the system clock and
901
  UART baud-rate is quite high, simulating UART output will be very
902
  slow. If you say Y here, the UARTs will print a character as soon
903
  as it is stored in the transmitter data register. The transmitter
904
  ready flag will be permanently set, speeding up simulation. However,
905
  the output on the UART tx line will be garbled.  Has not impact on
906
  synthesis, but will cause the LEON test bench to fail.
907
 
908
FPU register tracing
909
CONFIG_DEBUG_FPURF
910
  If you say Y here, all writes to the floating-point unit register file
911
  will be printed on the simulator console.
912
 

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