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Introduction to Programmable Logic Devices. Aleksandra Kovacevic ksandra@sezampro.yu Veljko Milutinovic vm@etf.bg.ac.yu. 0/13. Introduction Comparison of Standard Logic Circuits and Programmable Logic Circuits Evolution and Overview of PLC: PROM, PLA, PAL CPLD FPGA. 1/13.

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  1. Introduction to Programmable Logic Devices Aleksandra Kovacevic ksandra@sezampro.yu Veljko Milutinovic vm@etf.bg.ac.yu 0/13

  2. Introduction • Comparison of Standard Logic Circuits and Programmable Logic Circuits • Evolution and Overview of PLC: • PROM, PLA, PAL • CPLD • FPGA 1/13

  3. Logic Circuits 2/13

  4. Standard Logic Circuits • Appropriate for many applications because of possibility of realization in mass production for relative low cost. • Standard logic circuits are sometimes the best choice in high-performance devices. • Disadvantage:Not permitting design updates (function changes) with no hardware replacement necessary. 3/13

  5. Field- Programmable Logic Devices • Component function is defined by users program. • Logic Cells Fields are interconnected by programming. • Advantages: • Flexible design that changes by reprogramming, ease of design changes • Reduce prototype-product time • Large scale integration (over 100 000 gates) • Reliability increased, low financial risk • Smaller device, low start-up cost 4/13

  6. FPLDs Representatives • PLA - Programmable Logic Arrays • PAL - Programmable Array Logic • CPLD - Complex Programmable Logic Devices • FPGA - Field Programmable Gate Arrays Programmable logic device PLD 5/13

  7. Evolution of PLD: Why not PROM? • A special device (called a burner), used to put the information, supplies an electrical current to specific cells in the ROM that effectively blows a fuse in them = burning the PROM. From that point on, chip is read-only. • PROM was the first type of user-programmable chip; address lines = logic circuit inputs data lines = logic circuit outputs • PROMs are inefficient architecture for realizing logic circuit: Logic functions rarely require more than few product terms PROM contains a full decoder for its address inputs. 6/13

  8. Evolution of PLD: PLA • PLA was the first device developed for implementing • Consist of two levels of logic gates - programmable “wired” AND-plane & OR-plane • Drawbacks: • Expensive to manufacture • Offered somewhat poor speed-performance Note: 7/13

  9. Evolution of PLD: PAL™ • Overcame weaknesses of PLA • Single level of programmability - consists of a programmable “wired” AND-plane & fixed OR-gates • Simpler to program and cheaper implementation • Limited numbers of terms in each output 8/13 Note: PALis a trademark of Advanced Micro Devices

  10. sequential circuits can be realized Evolution of PLD: RegisterPLA • Contain flip flops connected to the OR gate outputs • Importance: • Profound effect ondigital hardware design • Basis for more sophisticated architectures 9/13

  11. Evolution of PLD: CPLD Programmable Interconnect Array - Capable of connecting any LAB input or output to any other LAB possibility to produce devices with higher capacity than SPLDs. • Technology advanced • Structure grows too quickly in size as the number of inputs is increased • Integrating multiple SPLDs onto a single chip - the only feasible way to provide large capacity devices based on SPLD • Programmably connect the SPLD blocks together • Logic capacity up to the equivalent of about 50 typical SPLD devices Logic Array Blocks - Complex SPLD-like structure 10/13

  12. ... and finally... 11/13

  13. Evolution of PLD: FPGA contains a set of basic functions (gates, FFs, memory cells) • Difficult extending CPLDs architectures to higher densities - adifferent approach is needed • FPGAs comprise an array of uncommited circuit elements, called logic blocks, and interconnect resources • FPGA configuration is performed through programming by the end user. Xilinx FPGA Configuration 12/13

  14. Introduction to Programmable Logic Devices Aleksandra Kovacevic ksandra@sezampro.yu Veljko Milutinovic vm@etf.bg.ac.yu 13/13

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