FPGA Mezzanine Card

FPGA Mezzanine Card (FMC) is an ANSI/VITA standard that defines I/O mezzanine modules with connection to an FPGA or other device with re-configurable I/O capability.[1][2] It specifies a low profile connector and compact board size for compatibility with several industry standard slot card, blade, low profile motherboard, and mezzanine form factors.

The FMC specification defines:[3]

The FMC specification has two defined sizes: single width (69 mm) and double width (139 mm). The depth of both is 76.5 mm. The FMC mezzanine module uses a high-pin count 400 pin high-speed array connector. A mechanically compatible low pin count connector with 160 pins can also be used with any of the form factors in the standard.

LPC vs. HPC

FMC allows for two sizes of connector, Low Pin Count (LPC) and High Pin Count (HPC), each offering different (maximum) levels of connectivity, analogous to how some PMC boards have a 32-bit interface while others have a 64-bit interface by using an additional connector. "The LPC connector provides 68 user-defined, single-ended signals or 34 user-defined, differential pairs. The HPC connector provides 160 user-defined, single-ended signals (or 80 user-defined, differential pairs), 10 serial transceiver pairs, and additional clocks. The HPC and LPC connectors use the same mechanical connector. The only difference is which signals are actually populated. Thus, cards with LPC connectors can be plugged into HPC sites, and if properly designed, HPC cards can offer a subset of functionality when plugged into an LPC site."[4]

FMC Geographical Address Feature

FMC provides a Geographical Address using two pins (GA1:GA0) that are typically used by a mezzanine device to determine which FMC connector on a carrier it is attached to. For cards that have only one FMC connector, the default geographical address is 00.

Some FMC mezzanine cards may attach other devices to the I2C bus and address them through a system controller, using the geographical address as a chip-select. This is not strictly in adherence with the FMC specification.

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/5/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.