SPRACL9 May   2019 66AK2E05 , 66AK2H06 , 66AK2H12 , 66AK2H14 , AM5K2E02 , AM5K2E04 , TMS320C6652 , TMS320C6654 , TMS320C6655 , TMS320C6657 , TMS320C6670 , TMS320C6671 , TMS320C6672 , TMS320C6674 , TMS320C6678

 

  1.   KeyStone Multicore Device Family Schematic Checklist
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Introduction
    3. 2 Hardware Design Guide
    4. 3 Device Comparison
      1. 3.1 KeyStone II Devices
      2. 3.2 KeyStone I Devices
    5. 4 Power Management Solutions
    6. 5 Recommendations Specific to all KeyStone Devices
      1. 5.1 EVM vs Data Sheet
      2. 5.2 Critical Connections
        1. 5.2.1 Power
        2. 5.2.2 Clocking
        3. 5.2.3 LJCB Differential Clock Inputs
        4. 5.2.4 Clock Termination
        5. 5.2.5 Unused Clock Inputs
        6. 5.2.6 Reset
        7. 5.2.7 GPIO/Boot Configuration
        8. 5.2.8 JTAG and EMU
    7. 6 Peripherals
      1. 6.1 DDR3 Interface
        1. 6.1.1  EMIF16
        2. 6.1.2  SerDes
        3. 6.1.3  HyperLink
        4. 6.1.4  PCIe
        5. 6.1.5  SRIO
        6. 6.1.6  SGMII
        7. 6.1.7  MDIO
        8. 6.1.8  TSIP
        9. 6.1.9  I2C
        10. 6.1.10 SPI
        11. 6.1.11 UART
        12. 6.1.12 I/O Buffers and Termination
    8. 7 Recommendations Specific to KeyStone II Devices
      1. 7.1 Peripherals
        1. 7.1.1 USB
    9. 8 General Recommendations
      1. 8.1 Before You Begin
        1. 8.1.1 Documentation
        2. 8.1.2 Pinout
    10. 9 References

TSIP

  • Series resistors should be used on clock sources because the TSIP clock inputs are edge-sensitive. These resistors need to be placed near the signal source.
  • If any of the TSIP inputs are not used, they can be left floating because all TSIP pins have internal pull-down resistors.