Actel Fusion Mixed-Signal FPGAs
Pr el iminar y v1 .7
2-11
(AFS600 and AFS1500), the west and the east CCCs each contain a PLL. The PLLs include delay lines,
a phase shifter (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°), and clock multipliers/dividers. Each CCC has all the circuitry
needed for the selection and interconnection of inputs to the VersaNet global network. The east
and west CCCs each have access to three VersaNet global lines on each side of the chip (six lines
total). The CCCs at the four corners each have access to three quadrant global lines on each
quadrant of the chip.
Advantages of the VersaNet Approach
One of the architectural benefits of Fusion is the set of powerful and low-delay VersaNet global
networks. Fusion offers six chip (main) global networks that are distributed from the center of the
FPGA array (
Figure 2-11). In addition, Fusion devices have three regional globals (quadrant globals)
in each of the four chip quadrants. Each core VersaTile has access to nine global network resources:
three quadrant and six chip (main) global networks. There are a total of 18 global networks on the
device. Each of these networks contains spines and ribs that reach all VersaTiles in all quadrants
up to 180 different internal/external clocks in a Fusion device. Details on the VersaNet networks are
designer to address several design requirements. User applications that are clock-resource-intensive
can easily route external or gated internal clocks using VersaNet global routing networks.
Designers can also drastically reduce delay penalties and minimize resource usage by mapping
critical, high-fanout nets to the VersaNet global network.
Figure 2-9 Efficient Long-Line Resources
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Spans One VersaTile
Spans Two VersaTiles
Spans Four VersaTiles
Spans One VersaTile
Spans Two VersaTiles
Spans Four VersaTiles
VersaTile