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Challenges of USB 3.1 IP Certification

By Steve Haskell, Sr. Hardware Eng./ Tri Nguyen, Sr. ASIC Dig. Design Eng./ Fuqiang Yan, Sr. ASIC Dig. Design Eng. /Dr. Antonio Salazar, Sr. ASIC Dig. Design Eng.

 

USB 3.1 Gen 2 significantly increases the effective data rate to 10 Gbps for the ubiquitous USB protocol, while maintaining backward compatibility with USB 3.0 and 2.0. USB 3.1, in combination with USB Type-C and Power Delivery, brings the potential to break paradigms regarding device communication and electrical dependencies, and in a nutshell opens the door to a new generation of designs and products from medical instrumentation, virtual/augmented reality and everyday electronics. That said, the first step to accessing USB 3.1 features and capabilities is for the associated controllers and PHY to pass USB 3.1 Gen 2 certification. Passing certification guarantees proper interoperability among billions of USB-enabled devices around the world.

Although USB is a well-established protocol and one would be hard pressed to find an electronic device that does not have a USB port, the compliance process for USB 3.1 Gen 2 is complex and represents the hardest challenge that USB adopters have to surpass to offer users its high performance. Moreover, early IP implementers have the added challenge of having few devices available in the market for interoperability testing. It is through true industry collaboration and an agile, aggressive approach to compliance that Synopsys was the first IP provider to achieve USB 3.1 Gen 2 compliance. For our experienced engineers, first-time success was quite an accomplishment, but not unexpected.

Synopsys uses an effective prototyping methodology that works hand-in-hand with design and hardware efforts to get our IP certified as early as possible, helping to ensure that our customers achieve certification every time a product with Synopsys IP is taken to a certified test-house. This is of particular importance in the early stages of any standard, when the specification is in its stabilization phase. Synopsys has collaborated with the USB Implementers Forum from the origin of the USB 3.1 standard, participating consistently and continuously in workgroups to develop the standard and address the challenges the standard faces. This constant vigilance is a key factor in Synopsys' success in consistently achieving IP certified earlier than other IP vendors. It also leads to a deep understanding of the issues facing products at certification, empowering Synopsys to ease the possible obstacles that our customers might encounter.

Synopsys' global hardware/design/prototyping/software teams of engineers are active around the clock and the world to address the different roadblocks that are naturally encountered during the initial stages of verification and corresponding compliance, and it is thanks to the in-place methodologies, accumulated knowledge, experience and multipronged collaborative approach that enables Synopsys to adapt and surpass the challenges encountered along the way.

Synopsys¡¯ Multipronged Compliance Approach

Compliance is an objective from day one of IP development, and a network of measures and interworking mechanisms have been set in place with this objective in mind. Although the Synopsys methodology minimizes roadblocks and accelerates processes, it is Synopsys¡¯ array of industry-tested tools and prototyping environments, along with its experienced team, that results in IP validation, verification, and compliance (Figure 1). 

Figure 1: Synopsys' USB 3.1 Certification Process

Controller Development for Certification Success

The preparation for compliance testing applies to every phase of the controller development, helping to drive the schedule and collaboration process with the engineering teams involved in deliverables such as the PHY, simulation verification IP (VIP) models and software drivers. The process insures continuous feedback and systematically adds redundant checks. Team efforts are not limited to interaction between Synopsys engineers, as considerable effort is allocated to participating and contributing to the specification process itself. In-depth participation in the specification process helps to ensure that the engineering teams thoroughly understand the requirements of the tools, test equipment, and associated test specifications. This includes collaboration with the USB Peripheral Interoperability Lab (PIL), used for early compliance testing until certified test-houses are ready.

Synopsys' compliance focus serves to drive several aspects at the architecture phase, where configurability and programmability play a key factor in responding to the possible changes to test specification and interoperability issues with devices/host that may or may not have reached specification maturity. The compliance-driven design approach can even be observed within the implementation stage, where ASIC design engineers are well aware of the associated compliance test applicable to his/her block, as well as the inter-dependencies that exist between them.

The verification phase of a complex protocol such as USB 3.1 Gen 2 represents a paramount effort where constrained random regression approaches can take considerable time to go through thousands upon thousands of coverage points. Parallel efforts focused on direct test scenarios that address compliance test simulation environments are actively sought after to improve the process. For example, the link layer compliance test is a perfect candidate for writing direct test cases. Each test case is generally short and tests a specific reference in chapter 7 of the USB 3.1 specification. The test descriptions provide details to the packet level and define clear assertions for passing or failing criteria. Those direct tests help us run compliance tests early and continuously throughout the design cycle.

PHY IP for Silicon Success

Synopsys PHY IP is designed to be robust and to meet the requirements of the USB 3.1 Gen 2 specification, while providing the power and area benefits expected from the industry leader.

The PHY testchip silicon is exhaustively verified within Synopsys laboratories, thanks to the PHY architecture which allows for the transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) of the PHY to be operated standalone, with pattern generators and pattern matchers incorporated into the PHY itself. When combined with the PHY prototyping board, the PHY can transition through power states as well as transmit and receive a wide range of standardized test patterns. This allows for verification of the electrical performance of the PHY across process, voltage and temperature. Figure 2 shows compliance testing in the lab, where we subject the PHYs to temperatures ranging from -40C to +125C and with varying voltages.

Figure 2: Synopsys PHY IP producing clean eyes even in a -40C block of ice

Prototyping ¨C A Critical Key to Success

Preparing the PHY for certification starts long before silicon arrives in the lab. As process nodes become smaller and transistor models more complex, there is a direct impact on the complexity and processing time for simulation. Fast time to tape out is achieved by leveraging Synopsys tools and expertise in this area. The same hardware used for PHY validation is also used for prototyping, both to support compliance testing and to allow customer evaluation of the IP, resulting in our IP Prototyping Kits. The prototyping platform is critical to demonstrating full USB functionality.

The hardened portion of the PHY IP is incorporated into a testchip wrapper and implemented in silicon. The USB 3.1 PHY IP prototyping board supports the test chip silicon for the PHY as well as FPGAs that implement the PHY Physical Coding Sublayer (PCS). When connected to a Synopsys HAPS FPGA-based development system that integrates the Synopsys USB 3.1 PHY IP, the result is a complete IP Prototyping Kit. This IP Prototyping Kit shown in Figure 3, behaves like a thumb drive during testing, allowing for files to be transferred across the USB 3.1 interface and stored.

Figure 3: DesignWare? USB 3.1 Gen2 IP Prototyping Kit

The USB 3.1 Gen 2 specification requires high clock frequency for certain logic regions of the controller. Using the prototyping system, Synopsys engineers applied their knowledge of the protocol and the clock frequency requirement to design a configurable datapath that can be synthesized for either ASIC and FPGA modes.

As USB PHY speeds increase, the physical requirements of IP prototyping boards become more demanding. For instance, the move from USB 3.0 to USB 3.1 Gen2 requires an order of magnitude change in the complexity of the transmission line design. Synopsys has considerable expertise in the area of high-speed PHY board design, which our customers benefit from in the form of reference designs and support. In addition, the Synopsys controller provides powerful debug methods to accurately locate root cause of failures, such as different levels loopback mode. Together with Synopsys RTL instrumentor and Deep Trace Debug, the controllers greatly accelerate the prototyping process.

Combined with the full IP Prototyping Kit, pre-compliance testing can begin. The compliance tests evaluate TX signal quality, adaptive RX equalization and RX jitter tolerance. For the PHY, the most complex of these tests is the jitter tolerance testing of the receiver. Jitter Tolerance Testing (JTOL) requires careful calibration, and during the early years of compliance certification, the calibration procedure for JTOL can change from week to week. Having detailed knowledge of the JTOL calibration procedure allows Synopsys engineers to ensure that our IP will pass with margin to spare, as well as to quickly diagnose test setup and calibration issues at the test house.

Bring it all together

In the early stages of its implementation, a protocol like USB 3.1 Gen2 is constantly evolving. The specification, test requirements, and design required all change dynamically. To succeed in attaining certification in this kind of environment, every resource, from hardware and software engineering, to system architects and protocol specialists, must be leveraged for efficiency and quality. Companies must respond with agility and speed when confronted with specification and design iterations, hardware issues, and other challenges arising from the integration of multiple blocks of IP. Synopsys has proven its methodology by being the first IP company to achieve certification for USB 3.1 Gen2, in the most challenging USB certification environment in the history of the standard.