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SRIO Functional Description
The physical layer buffers act like a FIFO unless there is a retry of a packet from the connected device, in which case a
0 0 1 2 3 3 1 0
where the leftmost 0 represents the packet that was the first in, or the head of the queue. If this packet is retried, the next packet to be sent is the earliest packet with priority 3 (the lefthand 3). If that packet is sent successfully, the physical layer attempts to send the original retried packet again; otherwise, the physical layer repeats the
2.3.12.2Single Port With 1x or 4x Operation
In the case when only one portis used, logical layer buffers are grouped per priority. Each priority is 8 buffers deep. A counter is maintained for each priority to track available buffer credit across the UDI. The count is initialized to 8 credits per port. The count is decremented each time a packet is sent across the UDI for a port. Each port buffer group has a buffer release signal which indicates the release of a packet from the logical layer buffer to the port'sphysical buffer, thus indicating the freeing up of space in the port'slogical buffer.
A priority arbiter empties the logical layer buffer with the highest priority available first. For example, it empties all available priority 3 buffers before priority 2, 1, or 0.
The physical layer buffers act like a FIFO unless there is a retry of a packet from the connected device, in which case a
0 0 1 2 3 3 1 0
where the leftmost 0 represents the packet that was the first in, or head of the queue. If this packet is retried, the next packet to be sent is the earliest packet with priority 3 (the lefthand 3). If that packet is sent successfully, the physical layer attempts to send the original retried packet again; otherwise, the physical layer repeats the
2.3.12.3Unavailable Outbound Credit
At any time, if one of the credit counters reaches 0, no more buffer credit is available. The following describes how the protocol units deal with this case.
MAU or RXU.In the case of the MAU or the RXU, all outbound packets are response packets. As a result, the MAU or RXU is free to promote a packet’s priority level until priority 3 is reached. If priority 3 cannot warrant a credit, the MAU or RXU keeps retrying on priority 3 until credit is available. The assumption is that if all priority levels become backed up, the physical layer
LSUs. For
For transfers (with up to
TXU. The TXU cannot change state to handle inbound responses while it is requesting outbound credit. To avoid deadlock situations, the TXU tries for outbound credit in the following manner.
For
76 | Serial RapidIO (SRIO) | SPRUE13A |