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diff --git a/util/spd_tools/intel/lp4x/README.md b/util/spd_tools/intel/lp4x/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e614f259cf --- /dev/null +++ b/util/spd_tools/intel/lp4x/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,265 @@ +# LPDDR4x SPD tools README + +Tools for generating SPD files for LPDDR4x memory used in memory down +configurations on Intel Tiger Lake (TGL) and Jasper Lake (JSL) based +platforms. These tools generate SPDs following JESD209-4C +specification and Intel recommendations (doc #616599, #610202) for +LPDDR4x SPD. + +There are two tools provided that assist TGL and JSL based mainboards +to generate SPDs and Makefile to integrate these SPDs in coreboot +build. These tools can also be used to allocate DRAM IDs (configure +DRAM hardware straps) for any LPDDR4x memory part used by the board. + +* gen_spd.go: Generates de-duplicated SPD files using a global memory + part list provided by the mainboard in JSON format. Additionally, + generates a SPD manifest file(in CSV format) with information about + what memory part from the global list uses which of the generated + SPD files. + +* gen_part_id.go: Allocates DRAM strap IDs for different LPDDR4x + memory parts used by the board. Takes as input list of memory parts + used by the board (with one memory part on each line) and the SPD + manifest file generated by gen_spd.go. Generates Makefile.inc for + integrating the generated SPD files in the coreboot build. + +## Tool 1 - gen_spd.go + +This program takes as input: +* Pointer to directory where the generated SPD files and manifest will + be placed. +* JSON file containing a global list of memory parts with their + attributes as per the datasheet. This is the list of all known + LPDDR4x memory parts irrespective of their usage on the board. +* SoC platform name for which the SPDs are being generated. Currently + supported platform names are `TGL` and `JSL`. + +Input JSON file requires the following two fields for every memory part: +* `name`: Name of the memory part +* `attribs`: List of attributes of the memory part as per its + datasheet. These attributes match the part specifications and are + independent of any SoC expectations. Tool takes care of translating + the physical attributes of the memory part to match JEDEC and Intel + MRC expectations. + +`attribs` field further contains two types of sub-fields: +* Mandatory: These attributes have to be provided for a memory part. +* Optional: These attributes can be provided by memory part if it wants + to override the defaults. + +### Mandatory `attribs` + +* `densityPerChannelGb`: Density in Gb of the physical channel. + +* `banks`: Number of banks per physical channel. This is typically 8 + for LPDDR4x memory parts. + +* `channelsPerDie`: Number of physical channels per die. Valid values: + `1, 2, 4`. For a part with x16 bit width, number of channels per die + is 1 or 2. For a part with x8 bit width, number of channels can be + 2 or 4 (4 is basically when two dual-channel byte mode devices are + combined as shown in Figure 3 in JESD209-4C). + +* `diesPerPackage`: Number of physical dies in each SDRAM + package. As per JESD209-4C, "Standard LPDDR4 package ballmaps + allocate one ZQ ball per die." Thus, number of diesPerPackage is the + number of ZQ balls on the package. + +* `bitWidthPerChannel`: Width of each physical channel. Valid values: + `8, 16` bits. + +* `ranksPerChannel`: Number of ranks per physical channel. Valid + values: `1, 2`. If the channels across multiple dies share the same + DQ/DQS pins but use a separate CS, then ranks is 2 else it is 1. + +* `speedMbps`: Maximum data rate supported by the part in Mbps. Valid + values: `3200, 3733, 4267` Mbps. + +### Optional `attribs` + +* `trfcabNs`: Minimum Refresh Recovery Delay Time (tRFCab) for all + banks in nanoseconds. As per JESD209-4C, this is dependent on the + density per channel. Default values used: + * 6Gb : 280ns + * 8Gb : 280ns + * 12Gb: 380ns + * 16Gb: 380ns + +* `trfcpbNs`: Minimum Refresh Recovery Delay Time (tRFCab) per + bank in nanoseconds. As per JESD209-4C, this is dependent on the + density per channel. Default values used: + * 6Gb : 140ns + * 8Gb : 140ns + * 12Gb: 190ns + * 16Gb: 190ns + +* `trpabMinNs`: Minimum Row Precharge Delay Time (tRPab) for all banks + in nanoseconds. As per JESD209-4C, this is max(21ns, 4nck) which + defaults to `21ns`. + +* `trppbMinNs`: Minimum Row Precharge Delay Time (tRPpb) per bank in + nanoseconds. As per JESD209-4C, this is max(18ns, 4nck) which + defaults to `18ns`. + +* `tckMinPs`: SDRAM minimum cycle time (tckMin) value in + picoseconds. This is typically calculated based on the `speedMbps` + attribute. `(1 / speedMbps) * 2`. Default values used(taken from + JESD209-4C): + * 4267 Mbps: 468ps + * 3733 Mbps: 535ps + * 3200 Mbps: 625ps + +* `tckMaxPs`: SDRAM maximum cycle time (tckMax) value in + picoseconds. Default value used: `31875ps`. As per JESD209-4C, + TCKmax should be 100ns (100000ps) for all speed grades. But the SPD + byte to encode this field is only 1 byte. Hence, the maximum value + that can be encoded is 31875ps. + +* `taaMinPs`: Minimum CAS Latency Time(taaMin) in picoseconds. This + value defaults to nck * tckMin, where nck is minimum CAS latency. + +* `trcdMinNs`: Minimum RAS# to CAS# Delay Time (tRCDmin) in + nanoseconds. As per JESD209-4C, this is max(18ns, 4nck) which + defaults to `18ns`. + +* `casLatencies`: List of CAS latencies supported by the + part. This is dependent on the attrib `speedMbps`. Default values + used: + * 4267: `"6 10 14 20 24 28 32 36"`. + * 3733: `"6 10 14 20 24 28 32"`. + * 3200: `"6 10 14 20 24 28"`. + +### Example JSON file +``` +{ + "parts": [ + { + "name": "MEMORY_PART_A", + "attribs": { + "densityPerChannelGb": 8, + "banks": 8, + "channelsPerDie": 2, + "diesPerPackage": 2, + "bitWidthPerChannel": 16, + "ranksPerChannel": 1, + "speedMbps": 4267 + } + }, + { + "name": "MEMORY_PART_B", + "attribs": { + "densityPerChannelGb": 8, + "banks": 8, + "channelsPerDie": 1, + "diesPerPackage": 2, + "bitWidthPerChannel": 16, + "ranksPerChannel": 1, + "speedMbps": 3733, + "casLatencies": "14 20 24 28 32", + "tckMaxPs": "1250" + } + } + ] +} +``` + +### Output + +This tool generates the following files using the global list of +memory parts in JSON format as described above: + * De-duplicated SPDs required for the different memory parts. These + SPD files are named (spd_1.hex, spd_2.hex, spd_3.hex and so on) + and placed in the directory provided as an input to the tool. + * CSV file representing which of the deduplicated SPD files is used + by which memory part. This file is named as + `spd_manifest.generated.txt` and placed in the directory provided + as an input to the tool along with the generated SPD + files. Example CSV file: + ``` + MEMORY_PART_A, spd_1.hex + MEMORY_PART_B, spd_2.hex + MEMORY_PART_C, spd_3.hex + MEMORY_PART_D, spd_2.hex + MEMORY_PART_E, spd_2.hex + ``` + +## Tool 2 - gen_part_id.go + +This program takes as input: +* Pointer to directory where the SPD files and the manifest file + `spd_manifest.generated.txt` (in CSV format) are placed by + gen_spd.go +* File containing list of memory parts used by the board. Each line of + the file is supposed to contain one memory part `name` as present in + the global list of memory parts provided to gen_spd.go +* Pointer to directory where the generated Makefile.inc should be + placed by the tool. + +### Output + +This program provides the following: + +* Prints out the list of DRAM hardware strap IDs that should be + allocated to each memory part listed in the input file. +* Makefile.inc is generated in the provided directory to integrate + SPDs generated by gen_spd.go with the coreboot build for the board. +* dram_id.generated.txt is generated in the same directory as + Makefile. This contains the part IDs assigned to the different + memory parts. (Useful to integrate in board schematics). + +Sample output (dram_id.generated.txt): +``` +DRAM Part Name ID to assign +MEMORY_PART_A 0 (0000) +MEMORY_PART_B 1 (0001) +MEMORY_PART_C 2 (0010) +MEMORY_PART_D 1 (0001) +``` + +Sample Makefile.inc: +``` +## SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later +## This is an auto-generated file. Do not edit!! + +SPD_SOURCES = +SPD_SOURCES += spd_1.hex # ID = 0(0b0000) Parts = MEMORY_PART_A +SPD_SOURCES += spd_2.hex # ID = 1(0b0001) Parts = MEMORY_PART_B, MEMORY_PART_D +SPD_SOURCES += spd_3.hex # ID = 2(0b0010) Parts = MEMORY_PART_C +``` + +### Note of caution + +This program assigns DRAM IDs using the order of DRAM part names +provided in the input file. Thus, when adding a new memory part to the +list, it should always go to the end of the input text file. This +guarantees that the memory parts that were already assigned IDs do not +change. + +## How to build the tools? +``` +# go build gen_spd.go +# go build gen_part_id.go +``` + +## How to use the tools? +``` +# ./gen_spd <spd_dir> <mem_parts_list_json> <platform> +# ./gen_part_id <spd_dir> <makefile_dir> <mem_parts_used_file> +``` + +### Need to add a new memory part for a board? + +* If the memory part is not present in the global list of memory + parts, then add the memory part name and attributes as per the + datasheet to the file containing the global list. + * Use `gen_spd.go` with input as the file containing the global list + of memory parts to generate de-duplicated SPDs. + * If a new SPD file is generated, use `git add` to add it to the + tree and push a CL for review. +* Update the file containing memory parts used by board (variant) to + add the new memory part name at the end of the file. + * Use gen_part_id.go providing it pointer to the location where SPD + files are stored and file containing the list of memory parts used + by the board(variant). + * Use `git add` to add `Makefile.inc` and `dram_id.generated.txt` + with updated changes and push a CL for review. |