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How to Simulate the ADC IP from MAX 10
Hi, I want to simulate the ADC IP. I have generated a qsys file and then I have generated the Synthesis and Simulations files (both VHDL) in Quartus Prime Lite I have set the simulator to Questa Intel FPGA and also VHDL, and added my test Bench (also VHDL) then i start the simulation: Tools--> Run Simulation Tool--> RTL Simulation Its compiling, but then I get these errors. it seems that either some settings are wrong in the Simulation files from the ADC IP, or an library include is missing. I have no idea how to fix it. The ADC block works in the synthesis on the Hardware. I also get 2 warnings in the IP files during compilation: ** Warning: (vlog-2083) d:/quartus/tb_adc_to_parallel_vhdl/db/ip/adc_to_parallel/submodules/fiftyfivenm_adcblock_top_wrapper.v(11): Carriage return (0x0D) is not followed by a newline (0x0A). ** Warning: d:/quartus/tb_adc_to_parallel_vhdl/db/ip/adc_to_parallel/submodules/altera_merlin_master_translator.sv(536): (vlog-13528) Extra Parentheses after time system function. I have tried to simalate a none qsys IP block (FIFO) and this worked as expected. Used Software: Quartus Prime Lite 24.1 (because the 25.1 has problems with the PLL IP, but the same error message during Simulation) Questa Intel Starter FPGA Edition 2024.3 Kind Regrards Jonas9Views0likes1CommentUSB Blaster II Problem
Hello, I’m having a persistent issue with my USB-Blaster II programmer. No matter what I try, the programmer is detected only as a USB-Blaster variant, without the TCK speed option, and it does not work ... Occasionally, I can get it working by removing the installed driver and reinstalling it. However, after unplugging the programmer or restarting the computer, it reverts back to being detected as the USB-Blaster variant. Then I have to repeat the process: remove the driver, reinstall it, restart the JTAG server, or sometimes restart the whole computer. Even when it works, it only lasts for a single session. I have tried several Quartus Programmer versions, but the issue remains the same. The strange part is that I do not have this problem on my personal laptop or on my colleagues’ computers, so it seems specific to this machine. IT Helpdesk was also was not able to solve this problem Has anyone encountered this issue before or found the root cause? This is especially frustrating because I need to program a Cyclone GX device, and other programmers do not work for this use case. Any suggestions would be appreciated. Thank you!11Views0likes1CommentAI Suite - Custom model in the FPGA building process
Hello Altera Community. My question is: Where in the FPGA building process do I incorporate my costum neural network into the design? This is my current understanding of the FPGA building process: The IP block is generated with the dla create ip script, which takes arch file as input. The IP block is placed in platform designer, and then is connected to memory and signals. After compiling, the data is send to the design using runtime, (JTAG being the slowest) Where does the NN Model I made with PyTorch gets incorporated into all this?4Views0likes0CommentsMailbox Client IP - SEND_CERTIFICATE command through FPGA fabric
Hi colleagues, under Agilex3C (A3CY135BM16A) Non-HPS with Quartus 26.1 (latest SDM, latest IPs) how one can send compact certificates to SDM through the internal FPGA fabric? I tried it with Mailbox Client (1024/1024 FIFO depth, AXI accelerator path disabled) + SPI slave/JTAG Avalon Master, all other SDM commands (incl. the complicated ones like SPI programming with larger payloads) are working fine except this one. The error I get back all the time is 0xF00000FF (which appears as 0x3FF in SDM level1 log), so generic error, no explanation. When I load the same certificate over JTAG (external JTAG not via JTAG Avalon bridge to Mailbox Client), then it is working fine (so signature and certificate content is right). I tried both burning fuse or just loading virtual fuse with/without test bit. All gives back this same answer if it has been sent over FPGA Fabric SDM mailbox. Does anyone know any example project for this? (I tried to make it work based on ATF-A mailbox driver's VAB certificate loading command implementation (which theoretically should accept other certificates too). I believe this is something supposed to work without HPS. (otherwise you should leave JTAG enabled in your system). Links: arm-trusted-firmware/plat/altera/soc/common/include/socfpga_mailbox.h at socfpga_v2.14.0 · altera-fpga/arm-trusted-firmware arm-trusted-firmware/plat/altera/soc/common/soc/socfpga_mailbox.c at socfpga_v2.14.0 · altera-fpga/arm-trusted-firmware Thanks, Peter13Views0likes0CommentsNIOS II "Verify failed" for on-chip memory 128k
Hello! I'm using a Cyclone 10LP FPGA 10CL055YU484I7G FPGA. I have a 11k size program for NIOS II. I have a large on chip RAM (because I have a larger program which I want to use later) of 128k. Everything compiles and links OK. But when I try to download the program I get a "Verify failed between address 0x20000 and 0x2FFFF". The 128K memory is located 0x20000 to 0x3FFFF If I reduce the RAM to 32K, for example, everything works great!!. The initialize memory content option is turned on for the memory The BOOT RAM starts at 0x00000 If I download a bigger program (117k), I still get the same error. ThanksCyclone V CAN triple sampling
Does anyone know if the CAN controller on the Cyclone V implements the optional CAN feature of triple sampling? There is no mention of it in the handbook or in the register definitions, so I am assuming that it just does the standard CAN functionality of single sampling. But I wasn't sure if under the hood it was doing anything more complicated as some CAN controllers automatically do triple sampling at lower baud rates.Solved42Views0likes4CommentsR_Tile PCIE
I am using Quartus 26.1 and Questa 2024.1 to simulate the PCIe IP example. The selected IP is R-Tile Avalon Streaming IP for PCI Express. The example design is generated in PIPE mode. I slightly modified the example driver to make the EP transmit 100 MWr TLPs with 128-byte payload each and 100 MRd TLPs with 128-byte payload each. Currently issues occur with the CplD responses from the RP. In the 100-packet test, 96 out of 100 CplD packets have correct payload data, while 4 packets show data mismatch. The faulty packets are not fully corrupted. Their first three payload beats are valid, yet the final 256-bit beat turns into all zeros. There is another issue. When modifying the EP to send MWr TLPs longer than 128 bytes to the RP in the example design, no CplD frames will be responded by the RP after transmitting subsequent MRd TLPs.18Views0likes1CommentNeed Step-by-Step Guide: Configuring Arria 10 HPS for UART0 Access (Tools & Workflow)
Hello Altera Community, I am starting a new project using the Intel/Altera Arria 10 SoC FPGA. My immediate goal is to successfully configure the Hard Processor System (HPS) side of the chip and enable HPS UART0 access so I can view the boot messages and interact via a serial console terminal. Since I am new to the Arria 10 HPS ecosystem, could someone provide a detailed, step-by-step workflow of the procedure? Specifically, I would appreciate guidance on: 1. Required Tools: Which exact software versions (Quartus Prime Pro, SoC EDS, Arm DS, etc.) are recommended for a stable Arria 10 HPS development pipeline? 2. Platform Designer (Qsys) Setup: What are the specific steps to route and configure UART0 pins, clocks, and DDR parameters inside Platform Designer? 3. Bootloader Generation: How do I correctly handle the hardware handoff files to generate the U-Boot/SPL bootloader using the SoC EDS utilities? 4. Target OS: I intend to use Bare-Metal . What are the final steps to write these images to a boot medium (like an SD card / QSPI flash) to verify that UART0 is transmitting successfully? If there are any updated Golden System Reference Designs (GSRD), specific user guides, or community tutorials that outline this exact UART0 baseline setup, please share the links. Thank you in advance for your time and guidance! Best regards, Team D&D ESSEN12Views0likes0CommentsWhy does the example design fail to generate when "Dual Simplex Applied on JESD204B PHY" is selected with "Enable Manual F" enabled and the F value greater than 4?
Description Due to a problem in the Quartus® Prime Pro Edition software version 25.1, you may observe the Dual Simplex (DS) PHY wrapper example design for GTS JESD204B IP fails to generate when the JESD204B DS Wrapper option is used with "Dual Simplex applied on JESD204B PHY" selected in the IP GUI, "Enable Manual F" is enabled, and the F value is set greater than 4. Resolution This problem is fixed beginning with the Quartus® Prime Pro Edition version 25.3.1.
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Recent Blogs
4 MIN READ
Runtime flexibility is only valuable when it is reliable High-speed systems are being asked to do more with the same hardware. A data-center platform may need to operate as a single 400G Ethernet link in one deployment, then support multiple 100G links in another. A front-haul or edge system may need to adapt to different rates, protocol roles, or customer configurations over the life of the product. The promise is simple: deploy one platform, then adapt it as requirements change. But in high-speed design, changing a configuration is not the hardest part. Changing it correctly is. A live transition is not just a speed change. It can require coordinated updates across the the various networking layers, along with clocking, lane mapping, reset behavior, and link recovery. If those layers do not move together and in the right order, the result can be an unstable link, silent data corruption, or a system that hangs indefinitely waiting for CDR lock. That is the real value of Altera Dynamic Reconfiguration: it gives designers confidence that runtime transitions are clean, verified, and repeatable. The Altera difference: clean, verified transitions Altera Dynamic Reconfiguration is built around a profile-driven, silicon-aware flow. Designers define the target operating modes in Quartus Prime, and the system generates validated profiles for each supported state. At runtime, the Dynamic Reconfiguration Controller applies the selected profile through a managed, hardware-driven sequence. It orchestrates the transition across the full protocol stack, ensuring MAC, FEC, PCS, and PMA layers are updated in a coordinated and deterministic order, rather than leaving the designer to manually manage each step. The result: clean, verified transitions - no partial configurations, no unsequenced resets, and no user-managed state machines to debug at 2 a.m. This matters because the transition itself is often where risk appears. A system may appear to support multiple modes on paper, but if each layer must be independently controlled, reset, and validated by user logic, the design team carries the burden of proving that every edge case works under real operating conditions. Altera reduces that risk by turning reconfiguration into a controlled system operation. The selected profile is known, and the transition is repeatable. Silicon-driven confidence The assurance comes from the architecture. Agilex devices use hardened transceiver and protocol IP designed for high-speed operation. Rather than treating reconfiguration as a collection of ad hoc register writes, Altera Dynamic Reconfiguration works with hardened IP and validated profiles to help ensure that runtime switching happens in a controlled, silicon-driven way. That silicon foundation is especially important at 100G and 400G data rates, where small sequencing mistakes can lead to difficult debug cycles. When designers hand-craft transceiver reset state machines, getting the order right, the timing right, and the edge cases right can take weeks. With Altera, those critical sequencing responsibilities are built into the reconfiguration flow. The benefit is not just ease of use. Ease of use is a result. The primary benefit is trust: designers can enable live switching with greater confidence that the system will move from one valid state to another without glitches. A practical advantage for real systems In real deployments, flexibility has business value only if it does not create operational risk. Altera Dynamic Reconfiguration helps a single hardware platform support multiple configurations while avoiding the disruption of a full FPGA reprogramming cycle or duplicate hardware paths for every possible mode. For networking platforms, this can mean supporting different Ethernet configurations on the same physical transceiver resources. For multi-protocol systems, it can mean adapting a port role as requirements evolve. For platform owners, it means more deployment options from the same hardware design. This is where Altera has a practical positioning advantage: customers get runtime flexibility with more of the critical transition behavior handled by the platform. Instead of asking designers to manually manage every reconfiguration step, Altera provides a structured flow designed to produce predictable, verified results. What the demo proves The Agilex 7 400G Dynamic Reconfiguration demo turns this story into proof. In the demo, two Agilex 7 FPGA boards are connected over QSFP-DD, and the system dynamically switches between a 400G Ethernet configuration and multiple 100G Ethernet links using the same setup. The demonstration shows more than a mode change. It shows live traffic validation, link status, packet counters, error status, and FEC behavior during the transition. That is the point: the feature is not theoretical. It is running on silicon, switching in real time, and validating the kind of clean transition designers need before they trust the feature in production systems. Why this matters now As data-center, telecom, edge, and industrial systems become more configurable, customers increasingly need hardware platforms that can support multiple roles over time. The question is no longer whether a system can support more than one mode. The question is whether it can switch modes cleanly, predictably, and with confidence. Altera Dynamic Reconfiguration is designed for that moment. It combines hardened IP performance, profile-driven control, and coordinated sequencing to deliver runtime flexibility without compromising reliability. Dynamic reconfiguration is valuable because it enables flexibility. Altera makes it compelling because it makes that flexibility trustworthy. Watch the Runtime Reconfiguration You Can Trust demo video
7 days ago1like
Agilex® 9 Direct RF-Series FPGAs help system designers address two critical RF system priorities: lower latency and improved SWaP (size, weight, and power). By integrating high-performance RF data converters directly with FPGA fabric, Agilex 9 Direct RF-Series FPGAs can reduce RF-to-baseband latency, simplify the signal chain, lower system power, and free up valuable board space for future capabilities addition. In a draft comparison of discrete JESD-based architectures versus an Agilex 9 integrated Direct RF approach, the integrated solution showed up to 78% lower latency versus a JESD204C discrete solution and up to 86% lower latency versus a JESD204B discrete solution. The comparison also showed approximately 40% lower power consumption and up to 48% board-area reduction. These gains support both primary value propositions: faster system response through lower latency, and better SWaP through fewer external components, lower power, and a smaller, more efficient RF design. Digital radio frequency memory (DRFM), electronic attack, and electronic protection are good examples of applications where latency improvements can make a meaningful difference. In these types of RF systems, lower RF-to-baseband latency helps systems act on complex signals faster, improving responsiveness, timing precision, and mission effectiveness in contested electromagnetic environments. The SWaP benefit is also critical in long-lifecycle aerospace and defense platforms which may remain operational for decades, yet have limited space, weight, power, and cooling capacity for new hardware. As signal environments evolve, these platforms need room to add or upgrade capabilities without major system redesigns. By integrating RF data conversion with FPGA processing, Agilex 9 Direct RF-Series FPGAs can help system designers improve responsiveness, reduce board area, simplify the RF signal chain, and create more headroom for future upgrades. Learn more about Agilex 9 Direct RF-Series FPGAs and the benefits of integrated data converters. Discover how Agilex 9 Direct RF-Series FPGAs enable lower-latency and more power-efficient RF system designs Download the Altera® Direct RF-Series FPGA Wideband Product Brief Source for draft proof points: Agilex 9 Direct RF-Series integrated data converter app note draft, version 0.1, last updated March 31, 2026.
8 days ago0likes
2 MIN READ
New DDR5-6400 support delivers a 14% increase in maximum DDR5 data rate, strengthening Agilex® 7 M-Series device’s memory leadership on a production device family. This effort reflects Altera’s continued investment to improve features on platforms already in volume production. For customers building high-performance FPGA-based systems, memory capability is a core platform requirement, and the level of memory performance increasingly shapes overall system differentiation. That is why this latest Agilex 7 M-Series enhancement matters. With DDR5 support increasing from 5600 MT/s to 6400 MT/s, Agilex 7 M-Series devices support a 14% increase in maximum DDR5 performance on a device family already shipping in production. The significance of this update goes beyond speed alone. It reinforces a broader story about platform value: more usable bandwidth, better system efficiency, and continued innovation on a platform customers can design around today. More bandwidth, better system efficiency DDR5-6400 is not just a higher interface number. It enables more memory bandwidth from the same platform, helping customers move more data through bandwidth-intensive designs. That added bandwidth can also improve bandwidth density at the system level. In practical terms, it can help designers reach target throughput with a more optimized memory subsystem, potentially reducing DIMM or channel requirements in some designs and improving overall platform efficiency. Those advantages become increasingly important in the kinds of applications Agilex 7 M-Series devices are built to address. Across AI, networking, video processing, and data center infrastructure, system performance depends not only on compute capability, but also on how efficiently data can be moved and sustained through the platform. A broader production-ready platform advantage This update also says something important about the platform itself. Agilex 7 M-Series devices already offer production-ready support for advanced external memory technologies, and DDR5-6400 extends that advantage further. As next-generation infrastructure platforms evolve for AI, scale-out networking, and data-intensive acceleration, advanced memory capability is becoming an increasingly important platform differentiator. DDR5 support is now emerging across a broader range of FPGA segments, including mid-range devices such as Agilex 5 and even power- and cost-optimized devices such as Agilex 3 (with LPDDR5 support). Agilex 7 M-Series devicesbrings DDR5-6400 to a high-end FPGA platform tier built for larger, more data-intensive AI, networking, and infrastructure applications. By combining advanced memory performance with substantially greater logic capacity, it delivers differentiation at the platform level. This enhancement is enabled through an upcoming release of Quartus® Prime Pro Edition and is designed to be backward compatible with previously shipped silicon and boards. Customers interested in enabling DDR5-6400 should contact Altera for additional guidance on supported configurations, applicable speed grades, and implementation details. Conclusion The move to DDR5-6400 on Agilex 7 FPGAs and SoCs M-Series delivers a 14% improvement in maximum DDR5 data rate, improving bandwidth density and system-level efficiency while extending the value of a production-ready platform for evolving customer requirements. Watch the DDR5-6400 Demo Performance Video
8 days ago0likes
2 MIN READ
Altera introduced three new Agilex® 7 M-Series FPGA package options, R31G, R47C, and R47D, to give customers more flexibility in balancing bandwidth, connectivity, and performance for AI, networking, video, embedded, and acceleration applications. The new options support DDR5-6400, up to 204.8 GB/s memory bandwidth, and expanded transceiver configurations, enabling designers to optimize systems for PCIe connectivity, maximum data throughput, or efficient right-sized scaling.
13 days ago0likes
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.
27 days ago0likes