Address Frame; Sas Data Pattern; Sata Data Pattern - Teledyne Sierra M6-2 User Manual

Sas/sata protocol analyzer
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When you create a DWORD match, keep the following in mind:
4.7.2

Address Frame

With Infusion, you must enter all values in reverse MSB, LSB order.
For example: a SAS Address in the viewer "5000C50056B8C829" should be entered like
this in Infusion: "29C8B85600C50050".
4.7.3

SAS Data Pattern

When you create a SAS data pattern, keep the following in mind:
For example, for an SMP Request:
Pattern: 0x40000000
Mask: 0xFF000000
Offset: 0
SOF Type: SOF
4.7.4

SATA Data Pattern

When you create a SATA data pattern, keep the following in mind:
388
The pattern can be inside or outside of frames (it does not matter if the pattern
is inside a frame or not).
Because the pattern can be inside or outside of frames, there is no offset.
You can make user‐defined primitives. (This is the reason this feature was cre‐
ated.)
You can use any K/D pattern.
The pattern must be defined inside a frame that starts with a SOF or SOAF.
The pattern must be data only (no K‐codes/primitives).
The pattern must be defined at a specific offset in the frame.
The pattern and mask must be specified in the same format as specified in the
SAS standard:
0x12345678 (hex)
where "1" is the first digit on the cable and is the MSB as given in the SAS Stan‐
dard.
The pattern must be defined inside a frame that starts with a SATA_SOF.
The pattern must be data only (no K‐codes/primitives).
The pattern must be defined at a specific offset in the frame.
The pattern and mask must be specified in the same format as specified in the
SATA Standard.
Sierra M6‐2 SAS/SATA Protocol Analyzer User Manual
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