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MicroTCA A look at different options...

MicroTCA A look at different options. My personal opinion from a CMS Trigger perspective. Greg Iles 12 October 2010. Considerations. MicroTCA – Very Flexible Mixed blessing Fixed decisions Double width card is a nice size 149mm x 183.5mm Space for CPU/FPGA + RAM + PSU

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MicroTCA A look at different options...

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  1. MicroTCAA look at different options... My personal opinion from a CMS Trigger perspective Greg Iles 12 October 2010

  2. Considerations • MicroTCA – Very Flexible • Mixed blessing • Fixed decisions • Double width card is a nice size • 149mm x 183.5mm • Space for CPU/FPGA + RAM + PSU • Almost fixed decisions..... • Number of slots: 12 • UDP v TCP: Not discussed in this talk • RTM: Not discussed in this talk • Mid or Full size? • Connectivity? • Cooling? Height Width Which crate shall I buy? Greg Iles, Imperial College

  3. Size – Part A: Component Height Full-Size: Inside = 22.85 Env = 22.45 Mid-Size: Inside = 12.86 Env = 13.28 / 11.85 / 10.85 Notch = 13.61 FMC = 12.4mm (9.5/8.0 2.9/4.4) SFP+ = 9.1 Avago POD = 12.9(On the limit, Inc heat sink) Reflex SNAP12 = 11.0 (no heat sink), 15.0 QFSP = 9.7 (no heat sink), 16.0 or 23.0 BGA = 3.5 => 7.55 for heatsink (MS Env2) Not a problem in the future? Is it pluggable? Requires reliable optics... All dimensions in mm Greg Iles, Imperial College

  4. Size – Part B: Heat Dissipation Commercial Card Mid & Full Size Typical: 25-45W Worst: 32-50W • Large FPGA - 48 links at 10G • Large amount of processing • 20W - 30W? • Air temp 20 deg C • Max temp 60 deg C • If 20W => Require < 2 C/W External Width:40 (42) Height:7.5 (19..5) Length:57 (73) Mid Full FT/MIN M/S C/W C/W 200 1 4.5 1.9 300 1.5 3.4 1.5 400 2 2.9 1.3 500 2.5 2.6 1.2 600 3 2.3 1.1 700 3.5 2.2 1.0 800 4 2.0 0.9 Greg Iles, Imperial College

  5. Tongue 1 Fabric A (GbE) + IPMI Tongue 2 Multiple options: Fabric B (SATA) 12 slots + 2 clocks Fabric B (SATA) 6 slots + 3 clocks 4 clocks Tongues 3&4 Fabric DEFG (PCIe, SRIO, 10GbE) Connectivity: The basics Important Differences Greg Iles, Imperial College

  6. Connectivity: Redundant Telecom – Dual Star DAQ 6.4Gb/s GbE T1 Fast Control NOT SerDes 400Mb/s TTC/TTS SATA or SAS T2 FatPipe x4 lanes e.g. PCIe SRIO T3-T4 Custom e.g. Switch T2 LHC 40MHz Clk Clk Out T2 Clk In Not shown:8 spare ports2 spare clks Greg Iles, Imperial College

  7. Connectivity: Physics Profile Greg Iles, Imperial College

  8. Towards a CMS system • DTC by Eric Hazen, • Boston University • Purpose • Distribute Clock • Distribute Fast Control • Receive Fast Feedback • DAQ funnel • Fixed Latency, NOT Serdes, 400Mb/s • Prototype built on MCH from NAT, but not required. • Vendor independent Greg Iles, Imperial College

  9. Decisions • Decided to use MCH2 as AMC13 • i.e. Crate NOT used in redundant mode • Redundant system could be built, but it would lock experiments into a particular MCH vendor that would supply Tongue 1 • Route TTC/TTS on port 3 • Decided to use LVDS. Simple, fixed latency and low power (ideal for tongue 2) • Route DAQ on port 1 • Port 1 allows protocol agnostic switch on ports 8-11 Greg Iles, Imperial College

  10. Dual Star, Telecom Clocks MCH2: LHC-CLK, TTC & TTS and DAQ Concentrator MCH2 or AMC13 12 full size AMC slots MCH1 MCH1 providing GbE and standard functionality Vadatech VT891 Greg Iles, Imperial College

  11. Pro: JSM Slot possible in all crates 12 Mid Size AMC slots Pro: Basic design more widely available.. Pro: Allows RTM Schroff Part 11850-015 Greg Iles, Imperial College

  12. Cooling • By default front to back cooling • Failure does not lead to water dripping over electronics • Easy access for maintenance of cooling units • Can mix and match computers, crates and opto patch panels in same rack • Cannot double stack a rack unless designed for it • We need flexibility • Request hardware modification kit to convert from front/back to vertical Greg Iles, Imperial College

  13. Conclusions • Mid or Full size? • Mid Size would make us compatible with the mechanics of multiple vendors • Very little room for heatsinks • Connectivity? • Redundant Telecom crate with port 2/3 routed to MCH allows us to separate DAQ and TTC/TTS into dedicated channels (SerDes CML & fixed latency LVDS) • Cooling? • Front-2-Back cooling probably better, but infrastructure is vertical • Require crates to be capable of both Greg Iles, Imperial College

  14. Questions ? DRAFT document on MicroTCA in physics: http://giles.web.cern.ch/giles/projects/slhc/The_CMS_uTCA_Crate_v0.6.pdf

  15. Communication PHY • Protocol format for register read/write capability over large latency communication medium • i.e GbE in this case • Single data packet, multiple transactions • UDP/IP can be implemented in VHDL • Two versions already exist • TCP/IP usually implemented with processor • PowerPC hardcore • MicroBlaze soft-core • If hardware accelerated > 500Mb/s EMAC UDP, or TCP Transaction Engine I2C Core GTX Core DAQ Core Greg Iles, Imperial College

  16. Hardware controller PC separates the Control LAN and the User code from the Hardware LAN and the devices Unlike current TS architecture, all network traffic hidden from end user Made possible by common interface layer within the firmware and mirrored within the software Control LAN Fabric Hardware LAN Fabric User code User code User code Software: Architecture Single Multicore host Network Interface Multiplexer layer Transport Adapter Kernel Async. IO services Greg Iles, Imperial College

  17. Physics xTCA working group Interested parties seem to be DESY and Schroff Rear Transition Module Greg Iles, Imperial College

  18. Greg Iles, Imperial College

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