Retiming USB4 over USB-C
Brian Holden, Kandou Bus
embedded.com (January 15, 2021)
The USB-C connector is the one connector to rule them all. It has wonderful flexibility in its definition and has been widely adopted across different interconnects. That flexibility and diversity of use are also the source of many difficulties when trying to retime the signals that run over it, particularly in active cables. A key source of those difficulties for retimers are the many interactions between all of the options and modes that USB-C supports.
USB-C supports USB, Thunderbolt, DisplayPort, HDMI and MHL as well as other emerging protocols via a series of alternative or “Alt” modes. Each has its own protocol and physical and layers that have to be dealt with separately by a retimer. They were defined by different groups at different times and for strongly different purposes. The protocol layers are different from each other. The physical layers were also defined in disparate ways with differing rates and significant backward compatibility modes and constraints. It is a feat of clever engineering that they could be fit together and operate over one connector definition.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- USB-C Interface
- USB-C 3.2 DP/TX PHY ebdaux for TSMC N5, North/South poly orientation
- USB-C 3.2 DP/TX PHY for TSMC N3P, North/South poly orientation
- USB-C 3.2 DP/TX PHY, AR - TSMC N3P 1.2V , North/South poly orientation
- USB-C 3.2 DP/TX PHY ebdaux for SS SF4E, North/South poly orientation
Related White Papers
- MEMS market to grow 75-87% over five-year period, says report
- SoCs: DSP World, Cores -> Multiservices over broadband cable
- Embedded Systems : Voice over IP
- At Last: Wait Is Over For Bluetooth
Latest White Papers
- Breaking the Memory Bandwidth Boundary. GDDR7 IP Design Challenges & Solutions
- Automating NoC Design to Tackle Rising SoC Complexity
- Memory Prefetching Evaluation of Scientific Applications on a Modern HPC Arm-Based Processor
- Nine Compelling Reasons Why Menta eFPGA Is Essential for Achieving True Crypto Agility in Your ASIC or SoC
- CSR Management: Life Beyond Spreadsheets