Optimization on fixed low latency implementation of GBT protocol in FPGA
Kai Chen, Hucheng Chen, Weihao Wu, Hao Xu, Lin Yao

TL;DR
This paper presents optimized FPGA implementations of the GBT protocol to achieve fixed, low latency data transmission for the ATLAS experiment's upgraded electronics system, supporting mode switching without reprogramming.
Contribution
The paper introduces several FPGA-based optimizations for the GBT protocol, enabling fixed low latency and mode switching without reprogramming in the ATLAS upgrade system.
Findings
Achieved lower fixed latency in GBT-FPGA IP core.
Supported mode switching without FPGA reprogramming.
Enhanced system clock distribution for multi-channel FELIX.
Abstract
In the upgrade of ATLAS experiment, the front-end electronics components are subjected to a large radiation background. Meanwhile high speed optical links are required for the data transmission between the on-detector and off-detector electronics. The GBT architecture and the Versatile Link (VL) project are designed by CERN to support the 4.8 Gbps line rate bidirectional high-speed data transmission which is called GBT link. In the ATLAS upgrade, besides the link with on-detector, the GBT link is also used between different off-detector systems. The GBTX ASIC is designed for the on-detector front-end, correspondingly for the off-detector electronics, the GBT architecture is implemented in Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA). CERN launches the GBT-FPGA project to provide examples in different types of FPGA. In the ATLAS upgrade framework, the Front-End LInk eXchange (FELIX) system is…
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