May 2005
19
M9999-051305
KS8995XA
Micrel, Inc.
Introduction
The KS8995XA contains five 10/100 physical layer transceivers and five media access control (MAC) units with an integrated
Layer 2 switch. The device runs in three modes. The first mode is as a five-port integrated switch. The second is as a five-port
switch with the fifth port decoupled from the physical port. In this mode access to the fifth MAC is provided through a media
independent interface (MII) . This is useful for implementing an integrated broadband router. The third mode uses the dual MII
feature to recover the use of the fifth PHY. This allows the additional broadband gateway configuration, where the fifth PHY
may be accessed through the MII-P5 port.
The KS8995XA is optimized for an unmanaged design in which the configuration is achieved through I/O strapping or EEPROM
programming at system reset time.
On the media side, the KS8995XA supports IEEE 802.3 10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX on all ports, and 100BASE-FX on ports 4
and 5. The KS8995XA can be used as two separate media converters.
Physical signal transmission and reception are enhanced through the use of patented analog circuitry that makes the design
more efficient and allows for lower power consumption and smaller chip die size.
The major enhancements from the KS8995E to the KS8995XA are support for programmable rate limiting, a dual MII interface,
MDC/MDIO control interface for IEEE 802.3-defined register configuration (not all the registers), per-port broadcast storm
protection, local loopback and lower power consumption.
The KS8995XA is pin-compatible to the managed switch, the KS8995M.
Functional Overview: Physical Layer Transceiver
100BASE-TX Transmit
The 100BASE-TX transmit function performs parallel-to-serial conversion, 4B/5B coding, scrambling, NRZ-to-NRZI conver-
sion, MLT3 encoding and transmission. The circuit starts with a parallel-to-serial conversion, which converts the MII data from
the MAC into a 125MHz serial bit stream. The data and control stream is then converted into 4B/5B coding followed by a
scrambler. The serialized data is further converted from NRZ to NRZI format, and then transmitted in MLT3 current output. The
output current is set by an external 1% 3.01k resistor for the 1:1 transformer ratio. It has a typical rise/fall time of 4ns and
complies with the ANSI TP-PMD standard regarding amplitude balance, overshoot and timing jitter. The wave-shaped
10BASE-T output is also incorporated into the 100BASE-TX transmitter.
100BASE-TX Receive
The 100BASE-TX receiver function performs adaptive equalization, DC restoration, MLT3-to-NRZI conversion, data and clock
recovery, NRZI-to-NRZ conversion, de-scrambling, 4B/5B decoding and serial-to-parallel conversion. The receiving side
starts with the equalization filter to compensate for inter-symbol interference (ISI) over the twisted pair cable. Since the
amplitude loss and phase distortion is a function of the length of the cable, the equalizer has to adjust its characteristics to
optimize the performance. In this design, the variable equalizer will make an initial estimation based on comparisons of
incoming signal strength against some known cable characteristics, then it tunes itself for optimization. This is an ongoing
process and can self-adjust against environmental changes such as temperature variations.
The equalized signal then goes through a DC restoration and data conversion block. The DC restoration circuit is used to
compensate for the effect of baseline wander and improve the dynamic range. The differential data conversion circuit converts
the MLT3 format back to NRZI. The slicing threshold is also adaptive.
The clock recovery circuit extracts the 125MHz clock from the edges of the NRZI signal. This recovered clock is then used to
convert the NRZI signal into the NRZ format. The signal is then sent through the de-scrambler followed by the 4B/5B decoder.
Finally, the NRZ serial data is converted to the MII format and provided as the input data to the MAC.
PLL Clock Synthesizer
The KS8995XA generates 125MHz, 42MHz, 25MHz, and 10MHz clocks for system timing. Internal clocks are generated from
an external 25MHz crystal.
Scrambler/De-Scrambler (100BASE-TX only)
The purpose of the scrambler is to spread the power spectrum of the signal in order to reduce EMI and baseline wander. The
data is scrambled through the use of an 11-bit wide linear feedback shift register (LFSR). This can generate a 2047-bit non-
repetitive sequence. The receiver will then de-scramble the incoming data stream with the same sequence at the transmitter.
100BASE-FX Operation
100BASE-FX operation is very similar to 100BASE-TX operation except that the scrambler/de-scrambler and MLT3 encoder/
decoder are bypassed on transmission and reception. In this mode the auto-negotiation feature is bypassed since there is no
standard that supports fiber auto-negotiation.