eTSEC1-RGMII and eTSEC2-MII in MPC8308

cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

eTSEC1-RGMII and eTSEC2-MII in MPC8308

1,198 Views
venkateshn
Contributor II

Hi,

In MPC8308 processor i am using eTSEC1 in RGMII mode and eTSEC2 in MII mode,

In MII mode i have two clarifications,

1) i have connected TSEC2_GTX_CLK pin to ground through 1K resistor but in datasheet it is mentioned like This signal feeds back the uninverted transmit clock in MII mode in Detailed Signal Descriptionsso and i gone through the Design Checklist there it is clearly mentioned like it is not used in MII mode.

2) TSECn_TX_ER this pin in eTSEC1 used as a configuration ECC pin where as in MII mode it suggested to connect to PHY but this pin is not there in the PHY having Part Number KSZ8041NL from MIcrel so kindly check the need of this signal and kindly share me any reference design which has got MII mode in this series of processors(eTSEC).

3) TSEC2_TX_CLK i have connected this pin to TX_CLK pin of PHY.

Labels (3)
0 Kudos
Reply
4 Replies

825 Views
r8070z
NXP Employee
NXP Employee


Have a great day,

1) Yes TSEC2_GTX_CLK is not required for MII interface.

2) According to MII specifications TX_ER (MAC to PHY Transmit error) is an optional signal. PHY’s TX_ER input allows the system MAC to force PHY to deliberately corrupt the transmitted packet. A similar function can be accomplished by having the MAC signal the PHY to stop transmission mid-packet. Since the function of aborting a transmit packet is more easily attained with the latter method, the TX_ER pin may be not implement by PHY.

3) Yes in MII mode TSEC2_TX_CLK pin is input for transmit clock that provides a timing reference for the TSECn_TX_EN, TSECn_TXD signals.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: If this post answers your question, please click the Correct Answer button. Thank you!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

0 Kudos
Reply

825 Views
venkateshn
Contributor II

0 Kudos
Reply

825 Views
r8070z
NXP Employee
NXP Employee

I do not know why they wrote that. I think just for information. In any case because in MII mode this pin is an output and do not required for MII so it can be left open.

0 Kudos
Reply

825 Views
venkateshn
Contributor II

Hi,

Thanks for your kind replay,

I have following clarification on layer stack up for MPC8308 processor,

I am going for 8 layer PCB and the stack up is as shown below,

Layer Number

Layer Name

Material Type

1

Top

Dielectric

Conductive

2

GND1

Dielectric

Conductive

3

Sig1

Dielectric

Conductive

4

Sig2

Dielectric

Conductive

5

PWR

Dielectric

Conductive

6

Sig3

Dielectric

Conductive

7

GND2

Dielectric

Conductive

8

Bottom

Dielectric

Conductive

Kindly check the reference which I considered is ok r not, waiting for your early replay.

Regards,

Venkatesh N

0 Kudos
Reply