On 24/07/2017 23:49, Florian Fainelli wrote: > On 07/24/2017 02:21 PM, Mason wrote: >> On 20/07/2017 14:33, Mason wrote: >> >>> As [Florian] pointed out, the spec states that the >>> "Data to Clock input Skew (at Receiver)" >>> must be within [ 1.0, 2.6 ] ns. >>> >>> I understand that 2 ns is 1/4 of a 125 MHz period, >>> but it's not clear to me why the above interval is >>> centered at 1.8 instead of 2.0 ns. >>> >>> Also, the AR8035 PHY offers 4 possible TX clock delays: >>> { 0.25, 1.3, 2.4, 3.4 } according to their doc. >>> The two extremes are outside the interval, when would >>> they be useful? In case the transmitter adds "bad" skew? >>> >>> Why doesn't the PHY support 1.8/2.0? Is it perhaps >>> unable to, because of PLL limitations? >> >> I haven't yet found answers for these questions. >> >> - Why is the interval centered at 1.8 instead of 2.0 ns? > > Presumably because this is almost the middle of the available range and > it still provides a value that is within the specification...
I was talking about the RGMII spec. If - theoretically - the best results are achieved by having a 2 ns skew between clock and data, it seems odd for the RGMII spec to define an interval of [ 1.0, 2.6 ] ns for acceptable values. I would have expected [ 1.2, 2.8 ] ns. >> - What use are 0.25 ns and 3.4 ns skew? > > Accounting for extreme PCB traces lengths possibly, or just exposing the > raw values that the HW supports by increments of 0.25 ns, just because > the HW supports it. The AR8035 doesn't support increments of 0.25 ns, it supports just 4 values: 0.25, 1.3, 2.4, 3.4 Two of which are outside the acceptable range defined in the RGMII spec. Odd. Giving it more thought, I don't think trace length factors in, unless the data and clock lines have very different length (signal propagation). >> - Why doesn't the PHY support a "recommended" value like 1.8 ns? >> >> Does anyone have pointers to good resources? > > The PHY datasheet and the RGMII specification really ought to be the > starting points, there is not much more to it. Maybe go ask your support > person at Qualcomm/Atheros about their PHY design? Sadly, I rarely have access to support for the blocks we use. I had to download the datasheet off the internet. But I was only asking out of personal curiosity, since this is outside my field. I don't think any customer has complained about the default settings. Regards.