You have to install the driver manually for the board. Don't let windows install it for you. The driver you need is in Altera's Driver folder. The path on my machine is C:/altera/11.1sp2/quartus/drivers/
The system includes a powerful built-in synthesis engine, which is used by default. It also supports use of the Altera Quartus II synthesizer within the design environment. To enable an FPGA project to utilize this synthesis tool the project synthesis option must be set to Altera Quartus II. This is done by selecting Project Project Options from the menus, clicking on the Synthesis tab and choosing Altera Quartus II from the dropdown Synthesizer list. Once this is selected, you must indicate the folder where the quartus_map binary executable file resides, using the dropdown's associated browse button (...). The Options region of the Synthesis tab will become populated with Altera Quatus II-related options. Configure these to best suit your design.
Once Quartus opens you will see this screen. Go to the New Project Wizard located in the File tab.
Create a parent folder on your flash drive. You want this on your flash drive because anything saved on the colleges hard-drives may not be there next class.
Create a parent folder where you want to keep all of your Labs! i.e. G:\Joe_Schmo_jumpdrive\EECT122\
Next:
Create a child folder this particular lab will be stored. i.e. G:\Joe_Schmo\EECT122\Lab_1-1\
You can do this either in windows explorer or directly in the program Quartus.
IMPORTANT!!!!:
VERY IMPORTANT!!!!!!!!!:
For quartus to work right, your build files(.bdf/.vhd/.etc) need to be in a folder(your child folder) that has the same name as the projects.
Hello, we have a an electronic print used altera cyclone 2 ep2c5t144c8n on, we need to upload the programme included and download this programme to another altera cyclone 2 processor,can you help on this please?
You may want to adjust your $PATH variable to include the quartus/bin subdirectory of the installation directory (although I use aliases with absolute paths as described below) and try running Quartus
An installation of Quartus Pro contains both quartus.exe and qpro.exe executable files. When both tools are added to the path by using hdlsetuptoolpath, HDL Coder checks the tool availability before running the HDL Workflow Advisor.
Start by unpacking the Quartus installer, e.g. to /tmp/quartus, and then run the following command (replace $DOWNLOADDIR, and $INSTALLDIR and $VER with sutitable values, e.g. /tmp/quartus, /intelFPGA_lite/17.1 and 17.1.0.590):
Hi, I get the message below when I try to run Quartus, any idea about how to solve this problem?
home/intelFPGA_pro/18.0/quartus/linux64/liblzma.so.5: no version information available (required by /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libsystemd.so.0)
General Information Two Altera applications are available, either or both of which can be installed onyour PC using copies of the CD's on the X: drive:
Quartus II, version 3.0 Max Plus II, version 10.2 There is also a set of VHDL simulation libs for ModelSim which can be installed Setting up a client PC: Install on local drive from the X: (pub) drive Install Quartus II, version 3.0 The contents of the CD's are on the Pub 'X:' drive. Begin with folder: X:\Applications\Supported\Altera\QuartusII\3.0\CD.
Quartus Prime Lite and Questa can be installed with the quartus-freeAUR meta-package. This meta-package will also install device support for every supported device family. To save on disk space once the package is built, you can install only the necessary components. For example:
quartus-free-quartus requires quartus-free-devinfo, which is provided by any one of the packages with a quartus-free-devinfo- prefix. For example, install the quartus-free-devinfo-cyclonevAUR dependency if you have a Cyclone V FPGA.
Quartus II 13.0 Web Edition is "the last version to support Cyclone II and earlier FPGAs", so install quartus-free-130AUR instead of quartus-free if support for such devices is needed. See also quartus-130AUR for the SP1 Subscription Edition.
Another possible cause may be a missing 32-bit version of libudev.so [2]. lib32-systemd provides this shared object, so make sure it is installed. (This should already be the case since it is a transitive dependency of quartus-free-quartusAUR.)
The device should now be recognized inside your virtual Windows 7 installation and you can install the drivers for it. There is no separate download for the USB Blaster drivers for Windows 7. They are provided with the Quartus II installation files and you will need install them manually. The default location of the drivers is C:\altera\13.0sp1\quartus\drivers. Go to your device manager, right click on the recognized device and select Update driver software. Select this folder, click on Next and the drivers should get installed on your virtual Windows 7 system.
Qsys uses a NoC-based interconnect to deliver higher performance systems compared to conventional bus and switch fabric architectures. To demonstrate the capabilities of the high-performance interconnect in version 11.0, Altera offers a PCIe to DDR3 reference design built using Qsys. The reference design achieves throughput of over 1,400MB/s between a memory-mapped PCIe Gen2 x4 Endpoint and an external DDR3 memory. The design uses an automatically pipelined, NoC-based interconnect to packetize data for easier and faster transport. The reference design demonstrates how an Altera-provided PCIe IP core saves months of development time by eliminating the need to develop Transaction Layer Packet (TLP) encoding/decoding logic and by simplifying PCIe protocol interface complexity. Customers can download the reference design from the Qsys page of Altera's Web site at www.altera.com/qsys.
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