Recent Content
Quartus Dark Theme on Linux - Solution
I have a solution for setting up a dark theme for Quartus Prime 25 on Linux (Mint) and setup a Github repo. The program modifies the stylesheet using a Rust program. https://github.com/saturn77/quartus-dark-linux This repo allows running Altera Quartus on Linux with a dark theme, providing a modern look while being easy on the eyes for Linux users. There are some dark stylesheets for Windows, but those simply will not work on Linux. Quartus's argument parser intercepts -stylesheet before Qt can process it on Linux. This project uses a small Rust LD_PRELOAD library to hook QApplication::exec() and inject the stylesheet directly via Qt's setStyleSheet() API. Tested with Quartus Prime Pro 25.3.1 (Qt 6.5.7) on Linux Mint 22.3 Cinnamon.Duplicate_hierarchy_depth / duplicate_register
According to timing recommendations I am trying to manually duplicate logic using either set_instance_assignment -name duplicate_hierarchy_depth reg level or set_instance_assignment -name duplicate_register reg level according to AN-1016 section 4.2.4.2. But, Quartus Prime 25.1 Lite complains that duplicate_hierarchy_depth is an illegal assignment. duplicate_register seems to be ignored by Quartus and I cannot find either of them in the Assignment Editor. Any suggestions to what I am doing wrong?1View0likes0CommentsHPS f2sdram read/write errors
I'm using the Agilex 5 devlopment board and trying to write to the HPS SDRAM with custom logic. I'm already able to write to the other SDRAM (DDR4) on the board with my custom logic going through the AXI4 bus on the hps_subsys, I exported the f2sdram (AXI4 Subordinate) and connected to my custom logic. I can perform read and write cycles and everything flows correctly. I get appropriate response from the f2sdram. however, on both read and write cycles, the f2sdram responds with the RRESP/BRESP of b11, decode error. i have tried to read/write to addresses of 0x0000000000, 0x8800000000, and 0xffff000000 and still get the same response error code. Anything common that I might have missed in my setup?143Views0likes14CommentsIs Quartus Prime Pro 22.4 Compatible with Stratix 10 NX Series Device 1SN21CEU2F55E2VG?
Hello everyone, I'm wondering if Quartus 22.4 supports the Stratix 10 NX series devices. My chip model is 1SN21CEU2FF55E2VG. I've installed Quartus 22.4 along with the Stratix 10 device library, but I can't seem to find any options related to this chip. Has anyone else encountered this issue or knows if this version supports the Stratix 10 NX series? Any help or guidance would be greatly appreciated! Thank you!2Views0likes0CommentsUnable to download Quartus
Trying to download Quartus 25.3.1 Pro, but installed throws this every time Tried for several days now with the same result. Also tried another installed ( 25.3) and the Lite (25.1) installed with the same result. My internet connection is working fine.4Views0likes0CommentsWhy does the TX Throughput value shown in Ethernet Toolkit for the F‑Tile Ethernet FPGA Hard IP Design Example not match the expected data rate?
Description In F‑Tile Ethernet FPGA Hard IP Design Example, you may notice that the TX Throughput reported by the Ethernet Toolkit appears lower than the expected line rate. This behavior is expected. The ROM‑based packet generator included in the design example has the following characteristics: It defaults to a 64‑byte packet size, and It inserts non‑zero inter‑packet gaps (IPG) These factors inherently reduce the measured throughput compared to the theoretical maximum line rate. Resolution To accurately validate the TX Throughput of the design, Altera recommends to use a standard Ethernet traffic tester capable of running in client loopback mode. This allows to measure the actual TX throughput without limitations imposed by the built‑in ROM packet generator. There is no plan to fix this problem.Preloader/U-Boot Compilation Failure
General Background: I'm working with a custom board that has an Altera/Intel Cyclone V, SoC FPGA (5CSEBA6U23, similar to the DE10-Nano development kit). The board is already equipped with all the necessary files for a successful boot sequence from a uSD card (FPGA and the ARM processor (HPS)). The Objective: I want to reconfigure the HPS functionality (Mux) for pins 53 and 54 from their current GPIO to CAN BUS. I need to ensure a successful boot from the uSD card with the updated hardware definition and Device Tree. Issue Description: Preloader/U-Boot Compilation Failure After successfully implementing the changes in Quartus and Platform Designer and after successfully generating the BSP files (bsp-editor), I'm attempting to run the "make" command to build the Preloader/U-Boot image. The process starts and creates the uboot-socfpga directory, but the compilation consistently fails with several errors, and the final boot image is not updated. Extension of the successfully completed steps: I've modified the Platform Designer (Qsys) mux functionality to reconfigure the HPS peripheral pins (GPIO53-GPIO54) for CAN BUS functionality. I've integrated the new HPS component into the top-level VHDL project. I've Generate a full VHDL compilation in Quartus. Using the "SoC EDS Command Shell", I launched the BSP-Editor and loaded the updated "settings.bsp" file. After generation, the "hps_isw_handoff" and "generated" directories were updated. I have manually verified the output files (pinmux_config.h) to confirms that CAN1 is now correctly configured in the pin multiplexing settings. What should I do?18Views0likes3Commentshow to reduce clock skew between synchronous clock
I am working on Agilex 7 FPGA with quartus 25.3 software. In my project, there is 2 synchronous clocks that fast_clock is 416M and slow_clock is 208M. the clock scheme is ref_clk_100m -> IOPLL -> 416M -> clk_ctrl_div_ip -> 416M/208M. And there is data transfer between clk_fast and clk_slow. after compiling the whole design, I found there is large timing violation in the path that from clk_fast to clk_slow by timing report. from the clk_fast-clk_slow timing path, the clock skew has -700ps from clk_fast-clk_fast or clk_slow-clk_slow timing path, the clock skew is -5ps that is expected. so how to reduce clock skew between synchronous clock? and could you provide more suggestions about how to implement data transfer clk_2x to clk_1x?19Views0likes4Comments
Featured Places
Community Resources
Check out the support articles on personalizing your community account, contributing to the community, and providing community feedback directly to the admin team!Tags
- troubleshooting10,311 Topics
- fpga dev tools quartus® prime software pro4,197 Topics
- FPGA Dev Tools Quartus II Software3,160 Topics
- stratix® 10 fpgas and socs1,525 Topics
- agilex™ 7 fpgas and socs1,404 Topics
- arria® 10 fpgas and socs1,344 Topics
- stratix® v fpgas1,312 Topics
- arria® v fpgas and socs1,224 Topics
- cyclone® v fpgas and socs1,051 Topics
- Configuration959 Topics
Recent Blogs
As the industry accelerates its transition from DDR4 to DDR5 and LPDDR5, memory choices are becoming a defining factor in system longevity, performance, and supply continuity. Altera is uniquely positioned to help customers navigate this shift with production-ready DDR5 and LPDDR5 solutions available today across a broad FPGA portfolio. DDR5 Is the New Standard Major memory vendors have announced plans for DDR4 end-of-life plans or significant production reductions, with full transitions to DDR5, LPDDR5, and next-generation memory already underway. While DDR4 will remain available for long lifecycle segments through multiple suppliers, new design starts today are increasingly looking to DDR5 and LPDDR5. Altera’s Head Start in DDR5 and LPDDR5 While DDR5 and LPDDR5 support is emerging across the industry, Altera stands apart with the broadest set of production devices supporting these standards across high-performance, mid-range, and power-optimized platforms: Agilex™ 7 M-Series and Agilex™ 5 devices support DDR5 and LPDDR5 for high-performance and embedded applications Altera is also planning to add LPDDR5 support within Agilex™ 3 devices, reinforcing its long-term design scalability. Competitive Advantage Across Every Market Tier Altera’s memory leadership spans across a range of design requirements: - High-Performance designs: Agilex™ 7 AGM032 and AGM039 support: DDR5 up to 5,600 MT/s LPDDR5 up to 5,500 MT/s - Mid-Range designs: Agilex™ 5 D-Series support: DDR5 up to 5,600 MT/s LPDDR5 up to 5,500 MT/s - Power/Cost-optimized designs: Agilex™ 3 support: LPDDR5 up to 2133 MT/s Unlike FPGA-only devices, Agilex integrates an optional HPS that allows DDR5 and LPDDR5 to function as a shared memory resource for both processing and acceleration, delivering higher effective bandwidth and system efficiency. Key Takeaway With DDR5 and LPDDR5 moving from ‘next-generation’ to ‘now,’ Altera offers customers a clear advantage: production-ready memory leadership, a broad and scalable FPGA portfolio, and a smooth transition path from DDR4 to DDR5—without waiting for future silicon. Download the The Agilex™ 5 SoC Memory Advantage with DDR5 and LPDDR5 White Paper
20 hours ago0likes
3 MIN READ
At Embedded World 2026, Altera and Pantherun announced a collaboration to deliver flexible, secure, and high-performance networking solutions using FPGA technology. By combining Altera’s programmable platforms with Pantherun’s networking and security IP, the partnership enables scalable, future-ready architectures for industrial, telecom, and mission-critical systems.
1 day ago1like
In a world where technological complexity is rising, standards are evolving, and differentiation is critical, customers need partners who can move fast, stay focused, and innovate without compromise. At Altera™, operating as an independent pure play FPGA solutions provider is more than a corporate structure. It’s a strategic advantage. For more than four decades, Altera has been at the forefront of FPGA innovation, helping customers push the boundaries of what’s possible across the most demanding applications. With our recent operational independence and singular focus on pioneering FPGA innovations, we are uniquely positioned to deliver FPGA solutions that enable customers to differentiate, innovate, and grow in rapidly changing markets. Why Demand for FPGAs is Accelerating The FPGA industry is entering a period of strong, sustained growth, driven by powerful forces across cloud, networking, and edge applications. As enterprises race to process and monetize exploding volumes of data, FPGAs have become a critical enabling technology, uniquely suited for workloads where flexibility, re-programmability, and real-time performance matter most. Over the next five years, the market is expected to grow at roughly 10% CAGR, expanding from an estimated ~$7B in 2025 to more than $13B by 20301. Demand is accelerating across data center and networking, telecom, aerospace and government, industrial automation, robotics, medical, and beyond. Growth is being driven by AI infrastructure modernization, 5G-Advanced and early 6G deployments, and the rise of physical AI and real-time, low-latency edge computing. At the same time, escalating development costs for ASIC and ASSPs, longer development cycles, and the need for post-deployment flexibility are pushing more customers toward programmable solutions that reduce risk while maintaining performance and differentiation. Altera is uniquely positioned to help drive this next phase of growth. As the largest independent, pure-play FPGA solutions provider, our agility and focus allow us to move faster, invest deeply in a thriving ecosystem, and deliver differentiated, end-to-end solutions backed by strong customer support. By partnering closely with customers, we enable them to seize opportunities across AI, cloud, networking, and edge applications. While at the same time allowing customers to stay ahead as new technology inflection points emerge. Let’s take a closer look at how Altera’s independence strengthens the five strategic pillars that matter most to our customers: Innovation, Quality, Ecosystem Partnerships, Solutions, and Community Support. Faster Decisions Enable Faster FPGA Innovation Altera’s independence means customers benefit from faster decisions, quicker execution, and a partner that can adapt as requirements evolve. Free from competing priorities or broader corporate agendas, we respond rapidly to market shifts, delivering new capabilities sooner, resolving challenges faster, and helping customers stay on track with demanding development timelines. This momentum is reflected in Altera’s renewed commitment to the broad-based FPGA market and the launch of our power- and cost-optimized Agilex® 3 FPGAs, supported by an expanding ecosystem of partner boards. Altera’s first power- and cost-optimized FPGA since the launch of Cyclone 10, Agilex 3 enables industrial, automotive, and edge AI customers to accelerate differentiation and reduce time-to-market. Our investments are not stopping here. We are advancing a next-generation FPGA roadmap that delivers new levels of performance while introducing the next wave of power- and cost-optimized devices, providing a clear and scalable path forward across the Agilex portfolio. A Relentless Focus on FPGA Quality Because Altera is singularly focused on FPGAs, our priority is to ensure our programmable solutions meet the industry’s most demanding quality and lifecycle requirements. Every investment, engineering decision, and roadmap commitment is dedicated to delivering rigorously validated silicon, dependable software tools, long-term product availability, and sustained support that customers designing mission-critical systems require, including long-term supply commitments extending to 2035 and 2040 for select product families. This unwavering focus allows us to provide the stability, reliability, and multi-decade lifecycle assurance FPGA customers depend on, with no competing agendas and no compromise. Additional information about Altera’s quality and reliability can be found at: https://www.altera.com/quality/overview Accelerating FPGA Innovations Through a Robust Ecosystem FPGA value is unlocked faster through a strong, connected ecosystem. Altera supports a global network of more than 300 validated FPGA partners delivering over 1,400 proven solutions spanning IP, development tools, system integration, and turnkey platforms. By leveraging these pre-validated solutions, customers can reduce development time by up to 50%, lower risk, and accelerate time-to-market. Through deep ecosystem investments, we extend the power and usability of Altera FPGAs, enabling faster system-level innovation and helping customers move from concept to deployment with greater speed and confidence. Learn more about the Altera Solution Acceleration Program at: https://www.altera.com/asap Purpose-built Investments Across the FPGA Stack Every dollar we invest is directed toward advancing FPGA innovation. A recent example includes expanding our MAX® 10 FPGA family with new high-I/O density Variable Pitch BGA (VPBGA) packages, which deliver up to 485 I/Os in a compact 19 x 19 mm footprint, reducing board size by 50% compared to traditional 27 x 27 mm packages and enabling more space-efficient Type III PCB designs. We are also accelerating productivity through tools like Visual Designer Studio, which dramatically reduces development cycles by reducing system creation time from five days to as little as two hours. In parallel, we continue to invest in a broad portfolio of FPGA IP, spanning interfaces, memory, DSP, embedded processing, and connectivity. An extensive portfolio of Altera and parter IP provide pre-validated building blocks that reduce design complexity and speed integration. Together, these investments across silicon, packaging, software, and IP ensure continuous gains in performance, power efficiency, programmability, and ease of use. Customer Support Focused Exclusively on Solving FPGA Challenges Support is another area where independence makes a meaningful difference. Altera’s teams are entirely dedicated to solving the real-world challenges customers face. Our commitment to our customers is reinforced by the recently launched Altera Premier Support (APS) and Altera Community portals. These platforms provide streamlined access to engineering assistance, service request tracking, technical resources, and peer collaboration, ensuring customers have both direct expert support and 24/7 self-service capabilities. This deep specialization enables faster issue resolution, more relevant guidance, and a true partnership mindset. Whether optimizing designs, debugging complex systems, or scaling into production, customers can rely on experts who live and breathe FPGA solutions. Learn more about Altera communities, visit https://community.altera.com/ Enabling Innovators to Shape What’s Next As the largest independent, pure-play FPGA solutions provider, Altera is entering a new era defined by agility, focus, and the freedom to innovate at the pace of change. Our independence allows us to invest with intention, strengthen our ecosystem, and deliver complete solutions backed by deep customer engagement. By working side-by-side with our customers, we’re not just responding to technology inflection points across AI, cloud, networking, security and the edge… We’re helping customers shape what’s next. Visit Altera at www.altera.com (1) Source: Based on Altera and 3rd-party data
1 day ago0likes
3 MIN READ
Altera®, Texas Instruments®, and Hitek Systems Collaborate on Macro Cell Enablement Package
14 days ago0likes
Using FPGAs and MCUs Collaboratively FPGAs and microcontrollers can be used alternatively in some applications, but they can also be used cooperatively. FPGAs provide ultimate flexibility, but microcontrollers often include peripherals like USB or wireless interfaces that may be more convenient for communications and updates. Both devices require supporting circuitry such as power, reference clocks, and storage. Fortunately, these can often be shared when using FPGAs and microcontrollers together. This blog introduces an open-source tool that enables microcontrollers to load a programming file into a programmable device, and the practical application of this with the Raspberry Pi RP2350 MCU. An Open Standard for Loading Programmable Devices Loading programmable devices from embedded processors is a common task. The Jam Standard Test and Programming Language (STAPL) was originally developed by Altera engineers to address challenges in programming programmable logic devices (PLDs) in-system, such as proprietary file formats, vendor-specific algorithms, large file sizes, and long programming times. It provides a software-level standard for in-system programming (ISP), enabling flexibility and platform independence. Figure 1. In-system programming using the Jam File & Jam Player via an embedded processor. In August 1999, JAM/STAPL was adopted as JEDEC standard JESD-71, making it an industry-recognized solution for JTAG-based programming. The language introduced features like compact file formats, branching, and looping, which reduced programming time and file size—ideal for embedded systems. JAM/STAPL consists of two main components: Jam Composer: Generates Jam Files (.jam) containing programming algorithms and user data. Jam Player: Interprets these files and applies JTAG vectors for programming and testing devices. Over time, JAM/STAPL gained widespread support from PLD vendors, programming equipment makers, and test equipment manufacturers, becoming a cornerstone for in-field upgrades, prototyping, and production programming. Its evolution also included a byte-code format (.jbc) for even smaller files, making it suitable for resource-constrained embedded processors. Recently, Altera updated the license terms of the JAM and JBC players source code to MIT-0, to better clarify the usage rights. A Practical Example The CycloMod board is an example of an FPGA and microcontroller working cooperatively. The board combines a Raspberry Pi RP2350 MCU with a Cyclone® 10 LP FPGA in the SparkFun MicroMod form factor. In this board, the FPGA is connected to some of the edge connector I/O, while the RP2350 is used to provide a flexible USB interface. The boot ROM in the RP2350 is leveraged extensively for firmware and FPGA image updates. Figure 2. CycloMod Board At 22mm x 22mm (including the card-edge connector), the MicroMod form factor is quite compact. This necessitates sharing resources, as there is not much room for multiple oscillators or flash devices. The 12 MHz crystal oscillator in the RP2350 is easily shared by routing it to one of the GPIO clock outputs. Both the Cyclone 10 LP device and RP2350 rely on external storage, but this can also be shared. On this board, the flash is connected to the RP2350 to take advantage of the UF2 loading provided in the boot ROM, and the RP2350 loads the Cyclone FPGA. The Cyclone 10 LP device supports active configuration with an external SPI flash device, but it can also be configured/programmed passively through JTAG. Figure 3. CycloMod Block Diagram The STAPL byte code format (sometimes referred to as JBC) is compact enough to be used with microcontrollers like the RP2350. Altera provides source code for implementing the “players” to process these files in embedded systems. They offer players for the ASCII (JAM) and bytecode (JBC) versions of the files. Altera’s Quartus® software provides the option to generate JAM and JBC files. Since STAPL is a JEDEC standard, other FPGA vendors also support generating these files. Using the open-source code provided by Altera, the RP2350 is able to read a JBC file from flash and load the Cyclone 10 LP FPGA through the JTAG interface. A Python script is provided to convert the JBC files to the UF2 format, which the RP2350 uses for drag-n-drop programming. The script also adds a header with the file length and other details. Thanks to the ingenuity of the UF2 format created by Microsoft, this enables cross platform field updates with zero software to install. Results and Link to Source Porting Altera’s JBC player to the RP2350 eliminated the need for a second flash device and enabled user-friendly drag-n-drop FPGA updates. The port is available on GitHub if you want to use this in your system. https://github.com/steieio/pico-jbc
2 months ago0likes