MDDR Subsystem
Microsemi Proprietary UG0446 User Guide Revision 7.0
99
[7:0]
DDRC_REG_ECC_SYNDROMES 0×0
72 bits are split into five registers.
[71:64] bits of DDRC_REG_ECC_SYNDROMES.
First data which has SECDED error in it. 72 bits consists of
the following
SECDED:
[71:64] – SECDED
[63:00] – Data
In the same clock cycle, if one lane has a correctable error
and the other lane has an uncorrectable error, the syndrome
for the uncorrectable error is sent on this bus. If more than
one data lane has an error in it, the lower data lane is
selected. The priority applied when there are multiple errors
in the same cycle is as follows:
Uncorrectable error, lower lane
Uncorrectable error, upper lane
Correctable error, lower lane
Correctable error, upper lane
Only present in designs that support SECDED.
This is cleared after DDRC_ECC_INT_CLR_REG is written
over by the system.
Table 93 •
DDRC_LCE_ADDRESS_1_SR
Bit
Number Name
Reset
Value
Description
[31:15]
Reserved
0×0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To
provide compatibility with future products, the value of a
reserved bit should be preserved across a read-modify-write
operation.
[14:12]
DDRC_REG_ECC_BANK
0×0
Bank where the SECDED error occurred.
[11:0]
DDRC_REG_ECC_COL
0×0
Column where the SECDED error occurred.
Col[0] is always set to 0 coming out of the controller. This bit is
overwritten by the register module and indicates whether the
error came from upper or lower lane.
Table 94 •
DDRC_LCE_ADDRESS_2_SR
Bit
Number Name
Reset
Value
Description
[31:16]
Reserved
0×0
Software should not rely on the value of a reserved bit. To provide
compatibility with future products, the value of a reserved bit
should be preserved across a read-modify-write operation.
[15:0]
DDRC_REG_ECC_ROW
0×0
Row where the SECDED error occurred.
Table 95 •
DDRC_LCB_NUMBER_SR
Bit
Number Name
Reset
Value
Description
Table 92 •
DDRC_LCE_SYNDROME_5_SR