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Invalid license key (inconsistent authentication code)
Hi Team, Getting below error. Kindly help to resolve it. 15:19:33 (alterad) Using options file: "port" 15:19:33 (alterad) Invalid license key (inconsistent authentication code) 15:19:33 (alterad) ==>FEATURE ip_video_image_suite alterad 2026.07 14-jul-2026 1 \49Views0likes10CommentsAXC3000 Agilex 3 board
Hi, for a new design I'm starting to use an evaluation board from Arrow Electronics, (but designed by trenz electronics) with Agilex 3 https://github.com/ArrowElectronics/Agilex-3/wiki/Agilex-3-AXC3000-Development-Platform This board has an Hyperam W957D8NBRA4I installed but the Nios V example design uses only internal RAM. Anyone knows if the IP to use this ram is free into quartus or is necessary to acquire a license? Thanks25Views0likes2CommentsRegarding the issue of UFM not starting
I am trying to implement a remote system update feature using Quartus version 23.1 on an FPGA (MAX10 10M16SA). I have set the configuration mode to Dual Compressed Images, and writing to CFM0 and CFM1 of the on-chip flash is working correctly. However, I am having trouble starting the Nios II software that I stored in the UFM. There are no errors reported. I have already performed the following steps: ・Configured the HEX file in the On-Chip Flash settings in Platform Designer ・Added the HEX file when generating the .pof file using Convert Programming File ・Added the meminit.qip file to the project ・Verified that the BSP Editor settings are correct I have also confirmed that the software itself runs correctly when executed in other environments. Are there any other possible reasons why the software stored in UFM would not start correctly? I would greatly appreciate any advice or suggestions.15Views0likes3CommentsCyclone 5 SoC FPGA Bank Supply Prerequisite
Dear Altera Support Team, I am not sure this is correct and did not found much info on Handbook. Device 5CSXF6C6U23 CASE 1: BANK 5A 5B only supplied VCCPD to 2.5V and VCCIO is floated. JTAG scan chain shows both HPS and FPGA devices. JTAG program shows failed with wrong device address. CASE 2: BANK 5A 5B supplied 2.5V or 1.8V VCCIO. JTAG scan chain shows both HPS and FPGA devices. JTAG program shows successful result. Based on the above situation: do BANK 5 must supplied VCCIO in order FPGA to work? I don't understand, other brand FPGA do not have such requirement while VCCPD must be powered which is understandable. Please confirm this for best and safe device HW configuration. Thanks, BrianAGILEX 5 Migration issue
Based upon Agilex device overview the A5E 008B, A5E 013B & A5E 028B are meant to be compatible and "migratable" as shown here However when I tried to choose A5EC008BM16AI4S as my current device the only compatible device for migration available was A5EC013BM16AI4S however A5EC028BM16AI4S was not ? I am currently using Quartus Prime 25.1.0 Build 129 03/26/2025 SC Pro Edition !25Views0likes2CommentsTo INTEL - Request for Compliance Data from Analog Devices, Inc
Dear Sir/Madam, I'm Grayson, representing the client Analog Devices, Inc. to collect compliance data. During our previous communication, I obtained some compliance data from you, but now there are some issues that require your assistance: Regarding the three products mentioned in the attachment, it is indicated in the SVHC that there are substances exceeding the limit, but no specific details are provided. Please specify. For 5M160ZT100C5 and EP5358LUI, the 1,3-Isobenzofurandione, hexahydro-5-methyl- (CAS 19438-60-9 ) content in the FMD file exceeds the limit. However, it is not mentioned in the SVHC file. Please confirm whether the FMD data is correct. Please respond by May 04, 2026 or provide an expected date of completion and we will follow up. We may contact you if any clarification is needed. If you have any questions, please visit our suppliers' page at https://www.greensofttech.com/suppliers/. You may contact us by phone at +1 323-254-5961 x 2, and our Support Engineers will help you with your questions. If no one is available, please leave a voice mail with your name, company's name, questions about the request, and the best number to reach you. If you need to contact me directly, please email me at the email address listed below. Best Regards, Grayson Wang Project Engineer grayson@greensoft-usa.com GreenSoft Technology, Inc. 155 S. El Molino Ave, Suite 100, Pasadena, CA 91101, USA Ph: 323.254.5961 www.greensofttech.com DISCLAIMER: The information transmitted by this email is intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed. This email may contain proprietary, business-confidential and/or privileged material. If you are not the intended recipient of this message, then any use, review, retransmission, distribution, reproduction or any action taken in reliance upon this message is strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please immediately notify the sender and delete or destroy any copy of this message. Emails directly from GreenSoft Technology Inc. are limited to the @greensofttech.com and @greensoft-usa.com email domains. Do not reply to emails identifying as GreenSoft Technology Inc. without reviewing the sender's email address for the beforementioned email domains.Agilex® 7 F-Tile at 200G: High-Speed Ethernet in Action
2 MIN READ This post demonstrates a 200G-4 Ethernet link running on Agilex 7 FPGAs using F-Tile transceivers. It walks through the full link bring-up process, including Auto-Negotiation and Link Training, followed by stable high-speed data transmission using 53.125G PAM4 lanes over QSFP-DD. The demo provides real-time visibility into link status, signal integrity, and error metrics, and evaluates performance across loopback configurations and varying cable lengths. The result highlights reliable link initialization, consistent throughput, and robust operation under practical system conditions.123Views0likes0CommentsSpatial Architecture Boosts Edge AI Inference on Altera FPGAs
4 MIN READ Edge AI needs to meet stringent size, weight, and power requirements while also satisfying deterministic latency for high levels of safety needed by physical AI systems that interact with humans and machines alike. Validation of accuracy and flexible placement of highly optimized inference pipelines needs multiple approaches. Altera addresses this need with its latest release of FPGA AI Suite software (2026.1.1), that introduces a spatial compilation mode. This mode generates dedicated per-model RTL through which the AI inference inputs streams, lowering latency, significantly reducing the delays, and improving safety in the physical AI chain; sense-think-act. Release 2026.1.1 also unlocks further improvements: Scales the AI IP to handle more complex/larger sequential mode inferencing (up to 500k ALMs) for overlay instances Increases memory bandwidth by utilizing multiple memory interfaces Easily explore more design options with architecture optimizer support for two new modes: multi-lane (achieving higher performance) and DDR-free (reducing latency by keeping all memory use within the FPGA). Reminder: Sequential mode is where a fixed overlay with precompiled microcode sequentially processes the inference model layers Other key highlights in software-based model evaluation include multi-core software emulation and RTL simulation for both IP types. Models targeting the FPGA’s Arm Hard Processor SoC Subsystem (HPS)-based host can now be compiled directly from an x86 machine via a Docker-based Arm emulator, with no physical Arm processor required. This further accelerates time to market with pre-silicon validation earlier in the design cycle. Spatial IP Compiler: AI Inference for the Physical AI Era Prior FPGA AI Suite releases compiled models into sequential IP, a configurable overlay architecture, analogous to a soft processor, where control logic orchestrates a parameterized datapath through microcode delivered via a configuration network. The overlay is flexible: one bitstream can run different models by loading new microcode and weights. This generality carries overhead; the microcode control layer, configuration decoding, and runtime scheduling all consume more FPGA resources and impact latency that a fixed-function design would not need. The spatial compiler takes a different approach. Instead of programming a general-purpose overlay, it generates dedicated RTL where individual model layers map to optimized library blocks and inter-layer connections become physical communication channels in the FPGA’s logic fabric. There is no microcode, no overlay control layer. For suitable workloads, especially smaller networks, this yields higher throughput at lower power with deterministic per-layer latency. For example, an internal MLP benchmark (two fully connected layers with batch normalization, tanh on a hidden layer, linear on the output, 8,000 trainable parameters, total of 52 neurons) shows the advantage of spatial: Targeting spatial results in the FPGA IP using 6K ALMs operating at 3.09 million Inferences per second with 28x lower latency versus Targeting sequential results in 28K ALMs, running at 0.11 million inferences per second. More new features include: Weights can be embedded in an FPGA’s logic fabric as part of the configuration bitstream via .mif initialization to achieve lower latency operation or streamed to the IP at runtime if model switching is required. A hostless DDR-free design example on Altera’s Agilex® 5 E-Series Modular Dev. Kit demonstrates the full flow from compilation through JTAG-based inference on hardware, with bit-accurate simulation for pre-silicon validation. Architecture Optimizer: Multi-Lane and DDR-Free Search Two deployment modes that previously required manual configuration are now searchable by the optimizer. Multi-lane execution and DDR-free architectures (all weights stored in on-chip M20K FPGA memory blocks) can now be swept automatically alongside other parameters, eliminating manual architecture exploration for these modes. Performance: 500k ALMs, Multi-External Memory, Burst Optimization FPGA AI Suite IP is now validated to 500,000 Adaptive Logic Modules (ALMs), up from 225k, unlocking larger Agilex 7 and Stratix 10 devices for maximum-throughput overlay configurations. Multi-External memory interface support lets a single FPGA AI Suite IP instance use two or more memory interfaces for higher aggregate DDR bandwidth. AXI burst size optimization improves effective throughput when multiple IP modules share memory, reducing latency and power with no RTL changes. Emulation, Simulation, and ARM Cross-Compilation Multi-core software emulation parallelizes the bit-accurate emulation kernel across CPU cores, making regression testing and quantization sweeps practical before hardware is available. The emulation model remains bit-exact with hardware output. RTL simulation now supports both sequential and spatial IP via Questa*-Altera FPGA Edition and VCS simulation software, enabling pre-silicon verification for both architecture types. A new --arm compiler flag enables ARM HPS model compilation from x86 via a Docker-based Arm emulator. The compilation targets SoC deployments where subgraph layers execute on the Arm CPU, no physical Arm hardware or Yocto cross-compilation required. Try It Now Once downloaded, no license or purchase is required for up to 100,000 consecutive inferences. Download the software or browse the handbook at FPGA AI Suite - AI Inference Development Platform | Altera76Views0likes0CommentsAgilex 5E - PCIE PERST# pin - failing compilation
Hello! I'm using Critical Link MytiSom Dev Kit. It has the same FPGA as the Altera Dev Kit - A5ED065BB32AE6SR0. I'm adapting the PCIe Root Port example from Altera - I have assigned the PCIe Gen3x4 lanes to bank 4B. I have checked the pin assignments several times but I keep getting failed compilation with the error attached bellow. Any suggestions on what can cause the issue. I have also attached the pin assignments. Thank you55Views0likes3Comments
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Recent Blogs
This post demonstrates a 200G-4 Ethernet link running on Agilex 7 FPGAs using F-Tile transceivers. It walks through the full link bring-up process, including Auto-Negotiation and Link Training, followed by stable high-speed data transmission using 53.125G PAM4 lanes over QSFP-DD. The demo provides real-time visibility into link status, signal integrity, and error metrics, and evaluates performance across loopback configurations and varying cable lengths. The result highlights reliable link initialization, consistent throughput, and robust operation under practical system conditions.
17 hours ago0likes
Edge AI needs to meet stringent size, weight, and power requirements while also satisfying deterministic latency for high levels of safety needed by physical AI systems that interact with humans and machines alike. Validation of accuracy and flexible placement of highly optimized inference pipelines needs multiple approaches. Altera addresses this need with its latest release of FPGA AI Suite software (2026.1.1), that introduces a spatial compilation mode. This mode generates dedicated per-model RTL through which the AI inference inputs streams, lowering latency, significantly reducing the delays, and improving safety in the physical AI chain; sense-think-act. Release 2026.1.1 also unlocks further improvements: Scales the AI IP to handle more complex/larger sequential mode inferencing (up to 500k ALMs) for overlay instances Increases memory bandwidth by utilizing multiple memory interfaces Easily explore more design options with architecture optimizer support for two new modes: multi-lane (achieving higher performance) and DDR-free (reducing latency by keeping all memory use within the FPGA). Reminder: Sequential mode is where a fixed overlay with precompiled microcode sequentially processes the inference model layers Other key highlights in software-based model evaluation include multi-core software emulation and RTL simulation for both IP types. Models targeting the FPGA’s Arm Hard Processor SoC Subsystem (HPS)-based host can now be compiled directly from an x86 machine via a Docker-based Arm emulator, with no physical Arm processor required. This further accelerates time to market with pre-silicon validation earlier in the design cycle. Spatial IP Compiler: AI Inference for the Physical AI Era Prior FPGA AI Suite releases compiled models into sequential IP, a configurable overlay architecture, analogous to a soft processor, where control logic orchestrates a parameterized datapath through microcode delivered via a configuration network. The overlay is flexible: one bitstream can run different models by loading new microcode and weights. This generality carries overhead; the microcode control layer, configuration decoding, and runtime scheduling all consume more FPGA resources and impact latency that a fixed-function design would not need. The spatial compiler takes a different approach. Instead of programming a general-purpose overlay, it generates dedicated RTL where individual model layers map to optimized library blocks and inter-layer connections become physical communication channels in the FPGA’s logic fabric. There is no microcode, no overlay control layer. For suitable workloads, especially smaller networks, this yields higher throughput at lower power with deterministic per-layer latency. For example, an internal MLP benchmark (two fully connected layers with batch normalization, tanh on a hidden layer, linear on the output, 8,000 trainable parameters, total of 52 neurons) shows the advantage of spatial: Targeting spatial results in the FPGA IP using 6K ALMs operating at 3.09 million Inferences per second with 28x lower latency versus Targeting sequential results in 28K ALMs, running at 0.11 million inferences per second. More new features include: Weights can be embedded in an FPGA’s logic fabric as part of the configuration bitstream via .mif initialization to achieve lower latency operation or streamed to the IP at runtime if model switching is required. A hostless DDR-free design example on Altera’s Agilex® 5 E-Series Modular Dev. Kit demonstrates the full flow from compilation through JTAG-based inference on hardware, with bit-accurate simulation for pre-silicon validation. Architecture Optimizer: Multi-Lane and DDR-Free Search Two deployment modes that previously required manual configuration are now searchable by the optimizer. Multi-lane execution and DDR-free architectures (all weights stored in on-chip M20K FPGA memory blocks) can now be swept automatically alongside other parameters, eliminating manual architecture exploration for these modes. Performance: 500k ALMs, Multi-External Memory, Burst Optimization FPGA AI Suite IP is now validated to 500,000 Adaptive Logic Modules (ALMs), up from 225k, unlocking larger Agilex 7 and Stratix 10 devices for maximum-throughput overlay configurations. Multi-External memory interface support lets a single FPGA AI Suite IP instance use two or more memory interfaces for higher aggregate DDR bandwidth. AXI burst size optimization improves effective throughput when multiple IP modules share memory, reducing latency and power with no RTL changes. Emulation, Simulation, and ARM Cross-Compilation Multi-core software emulation parallelizes the bit-accurate emulation kernel across CPU cores, making regression testing and quantization sweeps practical before hardware is available. The emulation model remains bit-exact with hardware output. RTL simulation now supports both sequential and spatial IP via Questa*-Altera FPGA Edition and VCS simulation software, enabling pre-silicon verification for both architecture types. A new --arm compiler flag enables ARM HPS model compilation from x86 via a Docker-based Arm emulator. The compilation targets SoC deployments where subgraph layers execute on the Arm CPU, no physical Arm hardware or Yocto cross-compilation required. Try It Now Once downloaded, no license or purchase is required for up to 100,000 consecutive inferences. Download the software or browse the handbook at FPGA AI Suite - AI Inference Development Platform | Altera
19 hours ago0likes
This post explains how the definition of mid-range FPGAs has evolved from logic density to system-level capability. It highlights how Agilex 5 FPGAs address modern embedded and edge requirements by integrating compute, AI acceleration, memory, connectivity, and security into a single platform. The article also covers how Agilex 5 D-Series extends mid-range performance with higher logic density, increased bandwidth, and enhanced AI capabilities, enabling more complex and data-intensive workloads while maintaining efficiency and design simplicity.
1 day ago0likes
This post explores a practical shift from a fixed-function ASSP to a programmable FPGA platform in response to evolving system requirements. As bandwidth demands, protocol diversity, and feature complexity increased, limitations in a 400G optical transport ASSP and uncertainty in vendor roadmap made continued reliance difficult. The team transitioned to an FPGA-based approach, enabling customization of protocols and features while aligning the system more closely with real usage needs. The article also highlights benefits such as design reuse, reduced hardware variants, simplified inventory management, and greater control over long-term system evolution.
1 day ago0likes
This post demonstrates how F-Tile Dynamic Reconfiguration in Agilex 7 FPGAs enables real-time switching between 400G and 4×100G Ethernet without system downtime. It explains how predefined configuration profiles, system-level data path reconfiguration (MAC, PCS, FEC, PMA), and software control enable predictable, production-ready transitions. The article also highlights support for multi-rate Ethernet, protocol flexibility, and continuous traffic validation, showing how FPGA-based systems can adapt dynamically to changing network conditions.
9 days ago0likes