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PM73121AAL1gator II
PMC-Sierra, Inc.
L
PMC-980620
,VVXH
AAL1 SAR Processor
Data Sheet
35235,(7$5<$1'&21),'(17,$/7230&6,(55$,1&$1')25,76&86720(56,17(51$/86(
sor of 128 (for E1) or 96 (for T1). For these configurations the queues will always be sched-
uled in the same frame. Therefore, even if these queues are added at different times they will
still be scheduled at the same time.
Staggering clocks of the different lines can also help. Since cells are scheduled when a frame
completes, staggering lines can offset the frame completion point for the different lines with
respect to each other.
3. The actual build time of a cell depends on microprocessor activity and contention with other
internal state machines for the AAL1gator II memory bus. Therefore there will be some minor
CDV that is added on a per cell basis, based on current microprocessor/memory traffic. This
CDV is usually less than 4 μs and is not very noticeable.
4. If there is backpressure on the UTOPIA bus, cells will not be able to be sent which also causes
CDV.
3.3
Transmit Adaptation Layer Processor (TALP)
3.3.1
OAM Cell Generation
When an OAM cell transmission is requested, it is sent at the first available opportunity. Transmit
OAM cells have higher priority than cells scheduled by the CSD circuit. Because of this, care
should be taken to ensure that OAM cells do not overwhelm the transmitter to such an extent that
data cells are starved of adequate opportunities. The rate of OAM cells must be limited for the
AAL1gator II to maintain its maximum CSD data rate.
To send an OAM cell, the Supervisory Processor (SP) writes supervisory cells into one of two
dedicated cell buffers located in external memory. When the cell is assembled in the buffer, the
SP must set the appropriate bit in the command register (refer to
section 7.9 “CMDREG (Com-
mand Register)” on page 165
). The TALP sends the cell as soon as possible, then clears the
appropriate attention bit to indicate the requested cell has been sent. If requests for both OAM
cells are active at the time the command register is read by the AAL1gator II, OAM cell 0 will
always be sent because it is assigned a higher priority. Therefore, to control the order of OAM cell
transmission, the SP should set only one OAM attention bit at a time and wait until it is cleared
before setting the other attention bit.
OAM cells can optionally have the 48-byte OAM payload CRC-10 protected. This is accom-
plished by a CRC circuit that monitors the OAM cell as it is sent to the TUTOPIA and computes
the CRC on the fly. It then substitutes the 10-bit resultant CRC, preceded by six 0s, for the last
two bytes of the cell.