cse464 digital systems engineering l0: logistics and introduction david m. zar computer science and...
TRANSCRIPT
CSE464 Digital Systems
EngineeringL0: Logistics and Introduction
David M. ZarComputer Science and Engineering
Washington [email protected]
(Based on Original Work of Fred Rosenberger)
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Logistics EE464, Spring 2011Lectures: MW 2:30-4:00 in Urbauer 116Textbook: Dally and Poulton, Digital Systems
EngineeringGrading: Approximate weighting for grade
determination25% Homework (exams based on homework)35% First midterm exam 45% Final exam
Collaboration: Academic integrity will be taken seriously. You may collaborate on homework with other students, use solutions from last year, or get help from anyone but you are to state who you worked with or got help from, and give an estimate of contribution from other sources to what you submit. This is just acknowledgement of source of material, and recognition of the work contributed by others, it has no effect on your grade. Exceptions to this rule will be specified in the assignments. Tests and projects are to be entirely your own work.
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More LogisticsExams: Closed book. One handwritten (no photocopies)
sheet (bothsides) allowed on first exam, two sheets final
exam.
Homework: Usually due in class (2:30 p.m.) on assigned date.
Instructor: David M. ZarBryan 307C GPS: N38 38.979' W90 18.360' Elevation: 550' Office Hours: by [email protected] (best contact method)http://www.cse.wustl.edu/~dzarhttp://tinyurl.com/wucse464
Attendance: Class attendance is important, material willcovered in class that is not in text. You willwish to get copies of notes from classmate ifyou miss class.
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Discussion Topics
Class attendance Class participation (please!) Dally (Dally, not Daily) lecture notes Textbook cost, errata, etc. Homework length and style EE314: Engineering Electromagnetics 1:
Fundamentals Goal: Extremely practical backed up by
theory and analysis
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Interesting Links and Sources– Links
http://www.signalintegrity.com/ http://www.nesa.com/ http://www.sigrity.com/ http://www.ultracad.com/ (careful here) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/si-list (this is the signal integrity
mailing list archive; lots here, good and bad)– Books
– High-Speed Digital Design, A Handbook of Black Magic, Howard W. Johnson and Martin Graham, Prentice Hall, ISBN 0-13-395724-1, 1993.
– High-Speed Signal Propagation, Advanced Black Magic, Howard W. Johnson and Martin Graham, ISBN 0-13-084408-X, 2003
– Brooks, Bogatin, Ritchey, Granberg, ...– Transmission Lines with Pulse Excitation, Georges Metzger and
Jean-Paul Vabre, Academic Press, New York, NY, 1969. (Bergeron Diagrams)
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Today’s Assignment Reading
»Complete before Wednesday, Jan 24 class– Preface, Chapter 1
»Complete before Wednesday, Jan 26 class– Chapter 2
»Complete before Monday, Jan 31 class– Chapter 3, Sections 3.1 through 3.3.3
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Digital Systems Engineering From Dally
» noise management– keeping signals clean
» signaling– moving bits from here to there
» timing– how we know when a new bit is
here» power distribution
– DC voltage with AC current
» Signal integrity– High-Speed signals– low speed signals– reset– …– All Signals
» Signaling (electrical representation of signals)
» Timing/Clocking» Power distribution» Cooling/Packaging as part of
aboveRules of Thumb (e.g.: C/inch, L/inch)
Analytical/Calculation
Simulation (HSPICE)
Measurement
Tools (don’t be a “tool driver”):
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Wires Advanced components: Wires Care and feeding of wires Wires can be expensive, even if it’s a scam
»http://www.monstercable.com»http://www.jpslabs.com/aluminata.shtml (they claim
“Pricing- If you have to ask.”)– "The shear mass of the particle shield alone proves that JPS
has the transfer of noise taken care of- Nothing gets through this cable's shield and into the conductors beneath- NOTHING... “
»The truth about Monster Cables
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Why is Digital Systems Engineering/Design Harder Now Than Previously?
Wires are not ideal (never were, but valid approximation sometimes) !!!
Gross Simplification here: Long wires or High-Speed Design (delay ~> 0.1 Clock Period)» 1968 1 MHz; >40 ft» 1978 10 Mhz; >4 ft» 1988 100 Mhz; >5 inches» 1998 1 GHz; >0.5 inch» 2008 10 GHz??? >0.05 inch» 2018 ????? » Overall size of system? approximately constant
Ad hoc methods that worked in the past now fail To paraphrase Roy Jewell, President of TMA: “The rules of physics
don’t change for high-speed design, they are just more strictly enforced”.
The fact that long wires are harder to deal with does not imply short ones are easy, nor that they can be ignored.
The fact that high-speed signals are harder to deal with does not imply that slow ones are easy, nor that they can be ignored (e.g. Reset).
EMI: Even harder, we will not deal with this in CSE464.
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Outrageous Statements Propagation delay to closer device is longer Slower is better (and faster) A capacitor is an inductor unless you want
inductor»Converse for inductor (or resistor)
Short wire is worse than long one (e.g. probe) Negative characteristic impedance? Square corners on PC traces are bad? Vias on PC traces are bad? Resistor networks: Bad? We could not use perfect logic (Midas touch)! Tune your absurdity detector!!!
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Thoughts to Remember (Models)
A model is an artifice to make you think you understand a problem better than you actually do.
All models are wrong, but some models are useful. Make everything as simple as possible, but no
simpler (A. Einstein). In theory there is no difference between practice
and theory, but in practice there is! An approximate answer to the right question is
worth a good deal more than the exact answer to an approximate problem. John Tukey (FFT Fame)
Models are a really dangerous (and necessary) tool Example: ground, ideal ground, logic ground, safety
ground, …
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Ground is Fiction At low frequency and low accuracy ground is a
convenient model Be very careful What is “ideal ground” (see si-list)?: “What
you draw with chalk on a blackboard!”
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Lots!!!
Try to avoid surprises!!!
What worked last time may not work this time!
What is Wrong Here?
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Surprises Invalid Assumptions Individual effects don’t add linearly Consider effects one at a time, not the sum
»Coupling from multiple sources (lines)»PS noise»Reflection noise»Component tolerances»Temperature»Process»PC board noise»Package noise»Connectors»Vias
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More Surprises Multiple backward xtalk coupling, increased V Unaccounted for parasitics
»Inductance»Resistance»Capacitance»ESR, ESL
Nonlinearities»Series termination with Capacitance load»Driver resistance when switching (1/4 wave)
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Still More Transmission line Manufacturer data sheets Stubs Split load and standing wave Layout rules/communication/slip-up Tolerances T-line traces, return currents R and C functions of frequency
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Last of Surprises? System cost
Vs. Design timeVs. Manufacturing timeVs. Reliability
Metastability
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Digital Systems Engineering Designing systems that work by design, not
by trial and error, with reasonable cost (dollars, time, effort, …). Using appropriate tools (analysis, simulation, measurement) to insure correct operation. Avoiding surprises.
Question: which is better?»Guess/Estimate?»Analysis (e.g. equations and calculation)?»Simulation (e.g. HSPICE)?»Measurement (e.g. oscilloscope, TDR)?