Programmable Devices
CPLDs, FPGAs, SoC FPGAs, Configuration, and Transceivers
21582 Discussões

Critical Warning (169085): No exact pin location assignment(s) for 108 pins of 108 total pins.....

sth125
Novo colaborador I
3.497 Visualizações

Hello,

Part # 5M1270ZT144.

There are 114 available I/O pins and the design is only using 108 of those pins.  The Pin planner shows a separate pin for all of the I/O signals (see image below).

 

Therefore, why am I getting the following error:

Critical Warning (169085): No exact pin location assignment(s) for 108 pins of 108 total pins. For the list of pins please refer to the I/O Assignment Warnings table in the fitter report.

 

Steven

 

 

Etiquetas (1)
0 Kudos
1 Solução
sstrell
Colaborador honorário III
3.488 Visualizações

It's not an error, it's a warning (as it says) and can be safely ignored.

However, you're getting it because you didn't manually set exact pin locations (Location column is all empty from your screenshot).  The Fitter picked locations for you that don't get written into the .qsf file as formal assignments unless you back-annotate them.  Either back-annotate the Fitter selected locations (Assignments menu) or manually select locations in the Assignment Editor, or better yet, the Pin Planner.

Ver solução na publicação original

5 Respostas
sstrell
Colaborador honorário III
3.489 Visualizações

It's not an error, it's a warning (as it says) and can be safely ignored.

However, you're getting it because you didn't manually set exact pin locations (Location column is all empty from your screenshot).  The Fitter picked locations for you that don't get written into the .qsf file as formal assignments unless you back-annotate them.  Either back-annotate the Fitter selected locations (Assignments menu) or manually select locations in the Assignment Editor, or better yet, the Pin Planner.

sth125
Novo colaborador I
3.476 Visualizações

Fantastic!

Is it best to keep the pins the fitter selected, i.e. are they the most optimum?

sstrell
Colaborador honorário III
3.475 Visualizações

It depends on your board.  Obviously, you can't use the Fitter selected pins if they don't match your board design.  If you haven't created a board yet, you could use the Fitter-selected pins as a guide.  It's up to you (and your board designer).

sth125
Novo colaborador I
3.474 Visualizações
AqidAyman_Intel
Funcionário
3.442 Visualizações

I’m glad that your question has been addressed, I now transition this thread to community support. If you have a new question, Please login to ‘https://supporttickets.intel.com’, view details of the desire request, and post a feed/response within the next 15 days to allow me to continue to support you. After 15 days, this thread will be transitioned to community support. The community users will be able to help you on your follow-up questions.


Responder