Sequential Logic. Handouts: Lecture Slides Spring /27/01. L06 Sequential Logic 1
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1 Sequential Logic Handouts: Lecture Slides Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic
2 Roadmap so far Fets & voltages Logic gates Combinational logic circuits Sequential Logic Voltage-based encoding V OL, V IL, V IH, V OH Combinational contract: discrete-valued inputs complete in/out spec. static discipline t CD and t PD Acyclic connections Composable blocks Design: truth tables sum-of-products simplification muxes, ROMs, PLAs Storage & state Dynamic discipline Finite-state machines Metastability Throughput & latency Pipelining Our motto: Spare me the details! Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 2
3 Why Sequential Logic? We ll use sequential logic when we need organize the solution to some design problem as a sequence of steps: How to open digital combination lock w/ 3 buttons ( start, and ): Step : press start button Step 2: press button Step 3: press button Step 4: press button Step 5: press button Information remembered between steps is called state. Might be just what step we re on, or might include results from earlier steps we ll need to complete a later step Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 3
4 Implementing a State Machine Current state start Next state unlock start start digit start error start start digit digit2 digit error digit digit digit2 digit3 digit3 unlock unlock error unlock error unlock unlock error error 6 different states encode using 3 bits Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 4
5 Now do it in Hardware! start button button button Current state ROM 64x4 6 inputs 2 6 locations each location supplies 4 bits unlock Next state 3 3 State State memory memory Trigger update periodically ( clock ) Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 5
6 Abstraction du jour: Finite State Machines m Clocked FSM n A FINITE STATE MACHINE has k STATES S... S k (one is "initial state) m INPUTS I... I m n OUTPUTS O... O n Transition Rules S'(s,i) for each state s and input i Output Rules Out(s) for each state s Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 6
7 Discrete State, Time inputs STATE s ROM NEXT s outputs Two design choices: () outputs only depend on state (Moore) (2) outputs depend on inputs + state (Mealy) s state bits 2 s possible states Clock STATE NEXT Clock Period Clock Period 2 Clock Period 3 Clock Period 4 Clock Period Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 7
8 State Transition Diagrams S S U= D U= S S S S D2 U= D3 U=, U U= S E U= State name S = no buttons pressed S Outputs when in this state (Moore) Heavy border for initial state U= Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 8
9 Valid State Diagrams in/out S3 -/ S / / S8 / / / / / S9 / S2 / / -/ S4 Can you spot the problems? S5 / -/ / / Arcs leaving a state must be: () mutually exclusive can t have two choices for a given input value (2) collectively exhaustive S7 S6 input/output (Mealy) every state must specify what happens for each possible input combination. Nothing happens means arc back to itself Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 9
10 FSM Party ames. What can you say about the number of states? k ROM k 2. Same question: m States x y z n States 3. Here's an FSM. Can you discover its rules? Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic
11 What s My Transition Diagram? =OFF, =ON? vs. "" = Surprise! If you know NOTHIN about the FSM, you re never sure! If you have a BOUND on the number of states, you can discover its behavior: K-state FSM: Every (reachable) state can be reached in < k steps. BUT... states may be equivalent! Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic
12 FSM Equivalence vs. ARE THEY DIFFERENT? NOT in any practical sense! They are EXTERNALLY INDISTINUISHABLE, hence interchangeable. FSMs EQUIVALENT iff every input sequence yields identical output sequences. ENINEERIN OAL: HAVE an FSM which works... WANT simplest (ergo cheapest) equivalent FSM Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 2
13 Housekeeping issues. Initialization? Clear the memory? inputs STATE s ROM or gates outputs NEXT s 2. Unused state encodings? - waste ROM (use PLA or gates) - meaning? 3. Synchronizing input changes with state update? That symbol doesn t register 4. Choosing encoding for state? 5. How do we implement memory? Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 3
14 Storage: Using Capacitors We ve chosen to encode information using voltages and we know from 6.2 that we can store a voltage as charge on a capacitor: bit line word line N-channel fet serves as access switch V REF To write: Drive bit line, turn on access fet, force storage cap to new voltage To read: precharge bit line, turn on access fet, detect (small) change in bit line voltage Pros: compact! Cons: it leaks! refresh complex interface stable? (noise, ) Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 4
15 Dynamic Memory TiN top electrode (V REF ) Ta 2 O 5 dielectric poly word line access fet Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 5
16 Storage: Using Feedback BI IDEA: use positive feedback to maintain storage indefinitely. Our logic gates are built to restore marginal signal levels, so noise shouldn t be a problem! V IN V OUT Result: a bistable storage element V OUT VTC for inverter pair Feedback constraint: V IN = V OUT Not affected by noise Three solutions: two end-points are stable middle point is unstable V IN We ll get back to this! Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 6
17 Settable storage element It s easy to build a settable storage element (called a latch) using a MUX: Here s a feedback path, so it s no longer a combinational circuit. state signal appears as both input and output A D Q IN Q OUT BD S YQ Q stable Q follows D Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 7
18 Static D Latch D Q Positive latch Q follows D D Q Q stable static means latch will hold data (i.e., value of Q) while is inactive, however long that may be. Q: Does this take static power? Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 8
19 Potential hazard D P2 P Q Let D = and consider : P = P2 = Q = P P P P2 P2 P2 Q Q Q Scenario : fast inverter slow AND, OR Scenario 2: slow inverter fast AND, OR Scenario 3: fast inverter fast AND, OR Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 9
20 Hazards in perspective Two possible fixes:. Adjust gate timings 2. Add AND gate to cover P:P2 transition D Q Q: When should we worry about hazards? A. Whenever we build combinational circuits. B. When driving in Cambridge C. On 6.4 quizzes D. Only in special circumstances, eg, when using feedback to build static storage elements. A. D : Common digital engineering approaches do not depend on combinational outputs during propagation, hence tolerate combinational hazards Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 2
21 More serious problems D P2 P Q D P Short pulse on : how long is enough to set the latch?? D P D changes about the same time as latch closes. What value is saved?? Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 2
22 A Dynamic Discipline Design of sequential circuits MUST guarantee that inputs to sequential devices are valid and stable during periods when they may influence state changes. >t PULSE D Spring 2 2/27/ >t SETUP >t HOLD t PULSE : minimum pulse width guarantee is active for long enough for latch to capture data t SETUP : setup time guarantee that D value has propagated through feedback path before latch closes t HOLD : hold time guarantee latch is closed and Q is stable before allowing D to change L6 Sequential Logic 22
23 Does this work yet? start button button button Current state ROM 64x4 unlock Next state 3 3 Q D Hmm. Hard to get pulse width exactly right! Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 23
24 Summary sequential logic = combinational logic + memory new abstraction: finite state machines transition diagrams showing states, outputs, and transition arcs: mutually exclusive, collectively exhaustive memory elements dynamic memory: compact, only reliable short-term static memory: controlled use of positive feedback level-sensitive D-latches dynamic discipline (setup and hold times) To do list: how to generate correct size pulse for input to latch? what about 3 rd solution point in bistable storage element? input synchronization to avoid violating dynamic discipline? Spring 2 2/27/ L6 Sequential Logic 24
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