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 MOTOROLA
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
Order this document by MC68CK338TS/D
SEMICONDUCTOR
TECHNICAL DATA
MC68CK338
Technical Summary
32-Bit Modular Microcontroller
1 Introduction
The MC68CK338, a highly-integrated 32-bit microcontroller, combines high-performance data manipulation capabilities with powerful peripheral subsystems. The MCU is built up from standard modules that interface through a common intermodule bus (IMB). Standardization facilitates rapid development of devices tailored for specific applications. The MCU incorporates a low-power 32-bit CPU (CPU32L), a low-power system integration module (SIML), a queued serial module (QSM), and a configurable timer module 6 (CTM6). The MCU clock can either be synthesized from an external reference or input directly. Operation with a 32.768 kHz reference frequency is standard. The maximum system clock speed is 14.4 MHz. System hardware and software allow changes in clock rate during operation. Because MCU operation is fully static, register and memory contents are not affected by clock rate changes. High-density complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (HCMOS) architecture and 3V nominal operation make the basic power consumption of the MCU low. Power consumption can be minimized by either stopping the system clock, or alternatively, stopping the system clock only at the CPU32L, and allowing the other modules to continue operation. The CPU32 instruction set includes a low-power stop (LPSTOP) command that allows either of these power saving modes. The CTM6 includes new features such as a port I/O submodule, a 64-byte RAM submodule and a real time clock submodule. Refer to the Motorola Microcontroller Technologies Group Web page at http://www.mcu.sps.mot.com for the most current listing of device errata and customer information. Table 1 Ordering Information
Package Type Frequency (MHz) 14.4 MHz Voltage Temperature Package Order Quantity 2 pc tray 60 pc tray 300 pc tray Order Number
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
144-Pin TQFP
2.7V to 3.6V
- 40 to + 85 C
SPMC68CK338CPV14 MC68CK338CPV14 MC68CK338CPV14B1
RoHS-compliant and/or Pb- free versions of Freescale products have the functionality and electrical characteristics of their non-RoHS-compliant and/or non-Pb- free counterparts. For further information, see http://www.freescale.com or contact your Freescale sales representative. For information on Freescale.s Environmental Products program, go to http://www.freescale.com/epp.
This document contains information on a new product. Specifications and information herein are subject to change without notice.
(c) MOTOROLA INC., 1996
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Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section Page
1
1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5
Introduction
2
2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5
3
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3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10
4
4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7
5
5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6
6
6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 6.9 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15
7
1 Features ......................................................................................................................................3 Block Diagram .............................................................................................................................4 Pin Assignments ..........................................................................................................................5 Address Map ...............................................................................................................................6 Intermodule Bus ..........................................................................................................................6 Signal Descriptions 7 Pin Characteristics ......................................................................................................................7 MCU Power Connections ............................................................................................................8 MCU Driver Types .......................................................................................................................8 Signal Characteristics ..................................................................................................................9 Signal Function ..........................................................................................................................10 Low-Power System Integration Module 12 Overview ...................................................................................................................................12 System Configuration Block ......................................................................................................14 System Clock ............................................................................................................................16 System Protection Block ...........................................................................................................22 External Bus Interface ...............................................................................................................26 Chip-Selects ..............................................................................................................................30 General-Purpose Input/Output ..................................................................................................38 Resets .......................................................................................................................................41 Interrupts ...................................................................................................................................44 Factory Test Block .....................................................................................................................47 Low-Power Central Processor Unit 48 Overview ...................................................................................................................................48 Programming Model ..................................................................................................................48 Status Register ..........................................................................................................................50 Data Types ................................................................................................................................51 Addressing Modes .....................................................................................................................51 Instruction Set Summary ...........................................................................................................51 Background Debugging Mode ...................................................................................................56 Queued Serial Module 57 Overview ...................................................................................................................................57 Address Map .............................................................................................................................58 Pin Function ..............................................................................................................................59 QSM Registers ..........................................................................................................................59 QSPI Submodule .......................................................................................................................64 SCI Submodule .........................................................................................................................72 Configurable Timer Module 6 78 Overview ...................................................................................................................................78 Address Map .............................................................................................................................80 Time Base Bus System .............................................................................................................82 Bus Interface Unit Submodule (BIUSM) ....................................................................................84 Counter Prescaler Submodule (CPSM) ....................................................................................85 Clock Sources for Counter Submodules ...................................................................................87 Free-Running Counter Submodule (FCSM) ..............................................................................87 Modulus Counter Submodule (MCSM) .....................................................................................90 Single Action Submodule (SASM) .............................................................................................93 Double-Action Submodule (DASM) ...........................................................................................97 Real-Time Clock Submodule (RTCSM) with Low-Power Oscillator ........................................104 Parallel Port I/O Submodule (PIOSM) .....................................................................................107 Static RAM Submodule (RAMSM) ..........................................................................................108 RTCSM and RAMSM Standby Operation ...............................................................................108 CTM6 Interrupts ......................................................................................................................109 Electrical Characteristics 111
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1.1 Features * Modular Architecture * Low-Power Central Processing Unit (CPU32L) -- Virtual memory implementation -- Loop mode of instruction execution -- Improved exception handling for controller applications -- Table lookup and interpolate instruction -- CPU-only LPSTOP operation/normal MCU LPSTOP operation * Low-Power System Integration Module (SIML) -- External bus support -- Twelve programmable chip-select outputs -- System protection logic -- On-chip PLL for system clock -- Watchdog timer, clock monitor, and bus monitor -- Expanded LPSTOP operation * Queued Serial Module (QSM) -- Enhanced serial communication interface (SCI) -- Queued serial peripheral interface (QSPI) -- Dual function I/O ports * Configurable Timer Module 6 (CTM6) -- One bus interface unit submodule (BIUSM) -- One counter prescaler submodule (CPSM) -- Three modulus counter submodules (MCSM) -- One free-running counter submodule (FCSM) -- Eleven double action submodules (DASM) -- Four (eight channels) single action submodules (SASM) -- One real time clock submodule (RTCSM) -- One port I/O submodule (PIOSM) -- Two 32-byte RAM submodules (RAMSM)
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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1.2 Block Diagram
11 DASM FC2 FC1 FC0
PORT CT
CTIO[5:0] CTD[10:4] CTD[29:26]
CTIO[5:0] CTD[10:4] CTD[29:26] CTM31L 1 RTCSM 64 BYTES 2 RAMSM ADDR[23:0]
ADDR[23:19]
CTS14A CTS14B CTS18A CTS18B CTS24A CTS24B
CTS14A CTS14B CTS18A CTS18B CTS24A CTS24B
4 SASM 1 PIOSM
CTM6
CONTROL PORT C
VRTC VSSRTCOSC EXRTC XRTC VSSRTCOSC
VRTC VSSRTCOSC EXRTC XRTC VSSRTCOSC
1 FCSM 3 MCSM
CHIP SELECTS
BR BG BGACK CS[10:0]
CSBOOT ADDR23/CS10 PC6/ADDR22/CS9 PC5/ADDR21/CS8 PC4/ADDR20/CS7 PC3/ADDR19/CS6 PC2/FC2/CS5 PC1/FC1/CS4 PC0/FC0/CS3 BGACK/CS2 BG/CS1 BR/CS0
ADDR[18:0]
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CTM31L
RXD SS TXD PCS3 PCS2 PCS1 PCS0 SCK MOSI MISO
EBI
DATA[15:0] DATA[15:0]
PQS7/TXD PQS6/PCS3 PQS5/PCS2 PQS4/PCS1 PQS3/PCS0/SS PQS2/SCK PQS1/MOSI PQS0/MISO
PORTQS CONTROL
CONTROL PORT E
IMB
SIZ1 SIZ0 AS DS RMC AVEC DSACK1 DSACK0
PE7/SIZ1 PE6/SIZ0 PE5/AS PE4/DS PE3/RMC PE2/AVEC PE1/DSACK1 PE0/DSACK0
QSM
CPU32L
IRQ[7:1]
R/W RESET HALT BERR PF7/IRQ7 PF6/IRQ6 PF5/IRQ5 PF4/IRQ4 PF3/IRQ3 PF2/IRQ2 PF1/IRQ1 PF0/MODCLK CLKOUT XTAL EXTAL XFC VDDSYN
MODCLK
CLOCK
BKPT IFETCH IPIPE DSI DSO DSCLK FREEZE
TEST
CONTROL
BKPT/DSCLK IFETCH/DSI IPIPE/DSO
QUOT
CONTROL
TSC
CONTROL PORT F
TSC
FREEZE/QUOT
338 BLOCK
Figure 1 MC68CK338 Block Diagram
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1.3 Pin Assignments
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VDDE CTD6 CTD7 CTD8 CTD9 CTD10 CTIO1 CTIO0 VRTC MISO MOSI SCK PCS0/SS PCS1 PCS2 PCS3 TXD VSSI RXD ADDR1 ADDR2 ADDR3 ADDR4 ADDR5 ADDR6 ADDR7 ADDR8 ADDR9 ADDR10 ADDR11 ADDR12 ADDR13 ADDR14 ADDR15 ADDR16 VDDE
144 143 142 141 140 139 138 137 136 135 134 133 132 131 130 129 128 127 126 125 124 123 122 121 120 119 118 117 116 115 114 113 112 111 110 109
NC VSSE CTD5 CTD4 VSSRTCOSC XRTC EXRTC VSSRTCOSC CTIO2 CTIO3 CTS14B CTS14A CTIO4 CTIO5 CTS18B CTS18A CTS24B CTS24A VSSI VDDI CTD29 CTD28 CTD27 CTD26 CTM31L ADDR23/CS10 ADDR22/CS9 ADDR21/CS8 ADDR20/CS7 ADDR19/CS6 FC2/CS5 FC1/CS4 VSSE NC NC NC
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36
MC68CK338
108 107 106 104 104 103 102 101 100 99 98 97 96 95 94 93 92 91 90 89 88 87 86 85 84 83 82 81 80 79 78 77 76 75 74 73
VDDE NC NC NC FC0/CS3 BGACK/CS2 BG/CS1 BR/CS0 CSBOOT DATA0 DATA1 DATA2 DATA3 DATA4 DATA5 DATA6 DATA7 VSSI DATA8 DATA9 DATA10 DATA11 DATA12 DATA13 DATA14 DATA15 ADDR0 DSACK0 DSACK1 AVEC RMC DS AS SIZ0 SIZ1 VDDE
NC NC NC VSSE ADDR17 ADDR18 IPIPE/DSO IFETCH/DSI BKPT/DSCLK TSC FREEZE/QUOT VSSI XTAL VDDSYN EXTAL VDDI XFC VDDE CLKOUT VSSE RESET HALT BERR IRQ7 IRQ6 IRQ5 IRQ4 IRQ3 IRQ2 IRQ1 MODCLK R/W VSSE NC NC NC
37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72
338 144-PIN QFP
Figure 2 MC68CK338 Pin Assignments
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1.4 Address Map Figure 3 shows a map of the MCU internal addresses. Unimplemented blocks are mapped externally.
$YFF400
CTM6 512 BYTES
$YFF5FF $YFFA00
SIML 128 BYTES
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$YFFA7F $YFFC00
QSM 512 BYTES
$YFFDFF
Y = M111, WHERE M IS THE STATE OF THE MODULE MAPPING (MM) BIT IN THE SIML CONFIGURATION REGISTER.
338 ADDRESS MAP
Figure 3 MC68CK338 Address Map 1.5 Intermodule Bus The IMB is a standardized bus developed to facilitate design and operation of modular microcontrollers. It contains circuitry that supports exception processing, address space partitioning, multiple interrupt levels, and vectored interrupts. The standardized modules in the MCU communicate with one another and with external components via the IMB. The IMB uses 24 address lines and 16 data lines.
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2 Signal Descriptions
2.1 Pin Characteristics Table 2 shows MCU pins and their characteristics. All inputs detect CMOS logic levels. All inputs can be put in a high-impedance state, but the method of doing this differs depending upon pin function. Refer to Table 4 for a description of output drivers. An entry in the discrete I/O column of Table 2 indicates that a pin has an alternate I/O function. The port designation is given when it applies. Refer to Figure 1 for information about port organization. Table 2 MCU Pin Characteristics
Pin Mnemonic ADDR23/CS10 ADDR[22:19]/CS[9:6] ADDR[18:0] AS AVEC BERR BG/CS1 BGACK/CS2 BKPT/DSCLK BR/CS0 CLKOUT CSBOOT CTD[29:26] CTD[10:4] CTIO[5:0] CTM31L CTS24[B:A] CTS18[B:A] CTS14[B:A] DATA[15:0] DS DSACK[1:0] DSI/IFETCH DSO/IPIPE EXRTC EXTAL FC[2:0]/CS[5:3] FREEZE/QUOT HALT IRQ[7:1] MISO MODCLK MOSI Output Driver A A A B B B B B -- B A B Ao Ao A A A A A Aw B B A A -- -- A A Bo B Bo B Bo Input Synchronized Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes1 -- Yes Yes Yes -- -- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
2
Input Hysteresis No No No No No No -- No Yes No -- -- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes -- Yes Yes No -- No Yes Yes No Yes
Discrete I/O -- O -- I/O I/O -- -- -- -- -- -- -- I/O I/O I/O I I/O I/O I/O -- I/O I/O -- -- -- -- O -- -- I/O I/O I/O I/O
Port Designation -- PC[6:3] -- PE5 PE2 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- PE4 PE[1:0] -- -- -- -- PC[2:0] -- -- PF[7:1] PQS0 PF0 PQS1
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Yes Yes Yes -- -- -- Yes -- Yes1 Yes Yes2 Yes2 Yes2
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Table 2 MCU Pin Characteristics (Continued)
Pin Mnemonic PCS0/SS PCS[3:1] RESET RMC R/W RXD SCK SIZ[1:0] TSC Output Driver Bo Bo Bo A A -- Bo B -- Bo -- -- -- Input Synchronized Yes2 Yes2 Yes Yes Yes No Yes2 Yes Yes Yes -- -- --
2
Input Hysteresis Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes No Yes Yes -- -- --
Discrete I/O I/O I/O -- I/O -- -- I/O I/O -- I/O -- -- --
Port Designation PQS3 PQS[6:4] -- PE3 -- -- PQS2 PE[7:6] -- PQS7 -- -- --
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TXD XFC XRTC XTAL
NOTES: 1. HALT and BERR synchronized only if late HALT or BERR. 2. DATA[15:0] synchronized during reset only. MODCLK and QSM pins synchronized only if used as port I/O pins.
2.2 MCU Power Connections Table 3 MCU Power Connections
VDDSYN VDDE, VSSE VDDI, VSSI VRTC VSSRTCOSC Clock Synthesizer External periphery power (source and drain) Internal module power (source and drain) RTCSM/RAMSM standby power Ground connection for real-time clock oscillator
2.3 MCU Driver Types Table 4 MCU Output Driver Types
Type A Ao Aw B Bw Bo Description Output-only signals that are always driven; no external pull-up required Type A output that can be operated in an open drain mode Type A output with weak P-channel pull-up during reset Three-state output that includes circuitry to pull up output before high impedance is established, to ensure rapid rise time. An external holding resistor is required to maintain logic level while the pin is in the high-impedance state. Type B output with weak P-channel pull-up during reset Type B output that can be operated in an open-drain mode
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2.4 Signal Characteristics Table 5 MCU Signal Characteristics
Signal Name ADDR[23:0] AS AVEC BERR BG BGACK BKPT BR CLKOUT MCU Module SIML SIML SIML SIML SIML SIML CPU32L SIML SIML SIML SIML CTM6 CTM6 CTM6 CTM6 CTM6 CTM6 CTM6 SIML SIML SIML CPU32L CPU32L CPU32L CTM6 SIML SIML SIML SIML CPU32L CPU32L SIML QSM SIML QSM SIML QSM SIML SIML QSM SIML Signal Type Bus Output Input Input Output Input Input Input Output Output Output Input/Output Input/Output Input/Output Input Input/Output Input/Output Input/Output Bus Output Input Input Input Output Input Input Output Output Input/Output Output Output Input Input/Output Input Input/Output Output Input/Output Input/Output Input/Output Input/Output Output Active State -- 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -- 0 0 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 0 0 Serial Clock -- -- -- -- -- 1 0 -- -- 0 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
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CS[10:0] CSBOOT CTD[29:26] CTD[10:4] CTIO[5:0] CTM31L CTS24[B:A] CTS18[B:A] CTS14[B:A] DATA[15:0] DS DSACK[1:0] DSCLK DSI DSO EXRTC EXTAL FC[2:0] FREEZE HALT IFETCH IPIPE IRQ[7:1] MISO MODCLK MOSI PC[6:0] PCS[3:0] PE[7:0] PF[7:0] PQS[7:0] QUOT
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Table 5 MCU Signal Characteristics (Continued)
Signal Name RESET RMC R/W RXD SCK SIZ[1:0] SS TSC TXD XFC XRTC XTAL MCU Module SIML SIML SIML QSM QSM SIML QSM SIML QSM SIML CTM6 SIML Signal Type Input/Output Output Output Input Input/Output Output Input Input Output Input Output Output Active State 0 0 0 -- -- -- 0 -- -- -- -- --
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2.5 Signal Function Table 6 MCU Signal Function
Signal Name Address Bus Address Strobe Autovector Bus Error Bus Grant Bus Grant Acknowledge Breakpoint Bus Request System Clockout Chip Selects Boot Chip Select Configurable Timer Double-Action Configurable Timer Modulus Counter Load RTC Configurable Timer Oscillator Configurable Timer Port Input/Output Configurable Timer Single-Action Crystal Oscillator Data Bus Mnemonic ADDR[23:0] AS AVEC BERR BG BGACK BKPT BR CLKOUT CS[10:0] CSBOOT CTD[29:26], CTD[10:4] CTM31L 24-bit address bus Indicates that a valid address is on the address bus Requests an automatic vector during interrupt acknowledge Signals a bus error to the CPU Indicates that the MCU has relinquished the bus Indicates that an external device has assumed bus mastership Signals a hardware breakpoint to the CPU Indicates that an external device requires bus mastership System clock output Select external devices at programmed addresses Chip select for external boot startup ROM Double-action submodule (DASM) signals. Can also be used as general purpose I/O pins External load for modulus counter. Can also be used as general purpose input CTM real time clock oscillator input/output General-purpose I/O pins Single-action submodule (SASM) signals. Can also be used as general purpose I/O pins Connections for clock synthesizer circuit reference; a crystal or an external oscillator can be used 16-bit data bus Function
EXRTC, XRTC CTIO[5:0] CTS24[B:A] CTS18[B:A] CTS14[B:A] EXTAL, XTAL DATA[15:0]
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Table 6 MCU Signal Function (Continued)
Signal Name Data Strobe Data and Size Acknowledge Development Serial In, Out, Clock Function Codes Freeze Halt Instruction Pipeline Interrupt Request Level Master In Slave Out Clock Mode Select Master Out Slave In Port C Peripheral Chip Select Port E Port F Port QS Quotient Out Reset Read-Modify-Write Cycle Read/Write SCI Receive Data QSPI Serial Clock Size Slave Select Three-State Control SCI Transmit Data External Filter Capacitor Mnemonic DS Function Indicates that an external device should place valid data on the data bus during a read cycle and that valid data has been placed on the bus by the CPU during a write cycle Acknowledges to the SIML that data has been received for a write cycle, or that data is valid on the data bus for a read cycle Serial I/O and clock for background debugging mode Identify processor state and current address space Indicates that the CPU has entered background mode Suspend external bus activity Indicate instruction pipeline activity Request interrupt service from the CPU Serial input to QSPI in master mode; serial output from QSPI in slave mode Selects system clock source Serial output from QSPI in master mode; serial input to QSPI in slave mode SIML digital output signals QSPI peripheral chip selects SIML digital input or output port signals SIML digital input or output port signals QSM digital I/O port signals Provides the quotient bit of the polynomial divider System reset Indicates an indivisible read-modify-write instruction Indicates the direction of data transfer on the bus Serial input to the SCI Clock output from QSPI in master mode; clock input to QSPI in slave mode Indicates the number of bytes to be transferred during a bus cycle Causes serial transmission when QSPI is in slave mode. Causes mode fault in master mode Places all output drivers in a high-impedance state Serial output from the SCI Connection for external phase-locked loop filter capacitor
DSACK[1:0] DSI, DSO, DSCLK FC[2:0] FREEZE HALT IFETCH, IPIPE IRQ[7:1] MISO MODCLK MOSI PC[6:0] PCS[3:0] PE[7:0] PF[7:0] PQS[7:0] QUOT RESET RMC R/W RXD SCK SIZ[1:0] SS TSC TXD XFC
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3 Low-Power System Integration Module
The low-power system integration module (SIML) consists of five functional blocks that control system startup, initialization, configuration, and the external bus. Figure 4 shows the SIML block diagram.
SYSTEM CONFIGURATION
CLOCK SYNTHESIZER
XTAL CLKOUT EXTAL MODCLK
SYSTEM PROTECTION
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CHIP-SELECTS
CHIP-SELECTS
EXTERNAL BUS EXTERNAL BUS INTERFACE RESET
FACTORY TEST
TSC FREEZE/QUOT
338 S(C)IM BLOCK
Figure 4 SIML Block Diagram 3.1 Overview The system configuration block controls MCU configuration and operating mode. The clock synthesizer generates clock signals used by the SIML, other IMB modules, and external devices. In addition, a periodic interrupt generator supports execution of time-critical control routines. The system protection block provides bus and software watchdog monitors. The chip-select block provides eleven general-purpose chip-select signals and a boot ROM chip-select signal. Both general-purpose and boot ROM chip-select signals have associated base address registers and option registers. The external bus interface handles the transfer of information between IMB modules and external address space. The system test block incorporates hardware necessary for testing the MCU. It is used to perform factory tests, and its use in normal applications is not supported. Table 7 shows the SIML address map, which occupies 128 bytes. Unused registers within the 128-byte address space return zeros when read. The "Access" column indicates which registers are accessible only at the supervisor privilege level and which can be assigned to either the supervisor or user privilege level, according to the value of the SUPV bit in the SIMLCR.
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Table 7 SIML Address Map
Access S S S S S -- -- -- S/U S/U Address1 $YFFA00 $YFFA02 $YFFA04 $YFFA06 $YFFA08 $YFFA0A $YFFA0C $YFFA0E $YFFA10 $YFFA12 $YFFA14 $YFFA16 $YFFA18 $YFFA1A $YFFA1C $YFFA1E $YFFA20 $YFFA22 $YFFA24 $YFFA26 $YFFA28 $YFFA2A $YFFA2C $YFFA2E $YFFA30 $YFFA32 $YFFA34 $YFFA36 $YFFA38 $YFFA3A $YFFA3C $YFFA3E $YFFA40 $YFFA42 $YFFA44 $YFFA46 $YFFA48 $YFFA4A $YFFA4C $YFFA4E $YFFA50 Not Used Not Used Chip-Select Pin Assignment (CSPAR0) Chip-Select Pin Assignment (CSPAR1) Chip-Select Base Boot (CSBARBT) Chip-Select Option Boot (CSORBT) Chip-Select Base 0 (CSBAR0) Chip-Select Option 0 (CSOR0) Chip-Select Base 1 (CSBAR1) Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used 15 87 SIML Module Configuration Register (SIMLCR) SIML Test Register (SIMLTR) Clock Synthesizer Control Register (SYNCR) Reset Status Register (RSR) Not Used Not Used Not Used Port E Data (PORTE0) Port E Data (PORTE1) Port E Data Direction (DDRE) Port E Pin Assignment (PEPAR) Port F Data (PORTF0) Port F Data (PORTF1) Port F Data Direction (DDRF) Port F Pin Assignment (PFPAR) System Protection Control (SYPCR) SIML Test Register E (SIMLTRE) 0
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S/U S S/U S/U S/U S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S/U -- -- S/U -- S S S S S S S
Periodic Interrupt Control Register (PICR) Periodic Interrupt Timer Register (PITR) Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used Test Module Master Shift A (TSTMSRA) Test Module Master Shift B (TSTMSRB) Test Module Shift Count (TSTSC) Test Module Repetition Counter (TSTRC) Test Module Control (CREG) Test Module Distributed Register (DREG) Not Used Not Used Port C Data (PORTC) Software Service (SWSR)
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Table 7 SIML Address Map (Continued)
Access S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S -- -- -- -- Address1 $YFFA52 $YFFA54 $YFFA56 $YFFA58 $YFFA5A $YFFA5C $YFFA5E $YFFA60 $YFFA62 $YFFA64 $YFFA66 $YFFA68 $YFFA6A $YFFA6C $YFFA6E $YFFA70 $YFFA72 $YFFA74 $YFFA76 $YFFA78 $YFFA7A $YFFA7C $YFFA7E 15 87 Chip-Select Option 1 (CSOR1) Chip-Select Base 2 (CSBAR2) Chip-Select Option 2 (CSOR2) Chip-Select Base 3 (CSBAR3) Chip-Select Option 3 (CSOR3) Chip-Select Base 4 (CSBAR4) Chip-Select Option 4 (CSOR4) Chip-Select Base 5 (CSBAR5) Chip-Select Option 5 (CSOR5) Chip-Select Base 6 (CSBAR6) Chip-Select Option 6 (CSOR6) Chip-Select Base 7 (CSBAR7) Chip-Select Option 7 (CSOR7) Chip-Select Base 8 (CSBAR8) Chip-Select Option 8 (CSOR8) Chip-Select Base 9 (CSBAR9) Chip-Select Option 9 (CSOR9) Chip-Select Base 10 (CSBAR10) Chip-Select Option 10 (CSOR10) Not Used Not Used Not Used Not Used 0
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NOTES: 1. Y = M111, where M is the logic state of the module mapping (MM) bit in the SIMLCR.
3.2 System Configuration Block This functional block provides configuration control for the entire MCU. It also performs interrupt arbitration, bus monitoring, and system test functions. 3.2.1 MCU Configuration The SIML controls MCU configuration during normal operation and during internal testing. SIMLCR -- SIML Configuration Register
15 14 13 12 0 11 SLVEN 10 0 9 SHEN 8 7 SUPV 6 MM 5 0 4 0 3 2 EXOFF FRZSW FRZBM RESET: 0 0 0 0 DATA11 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1
$YFFA00
1 0 IARB[3:0]
The SIML configuration register controls system configuration. It can be read or written at any time, except for the module mapping (MM) bit, which can be written only once.
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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EXOFF -- External Clock Off 0 = The CLKOUT pin is driven by the MCU system clock. 1 = The CLKOUT pin is placed in a high-impedance state. FRZSW -- Freeze Software Enable 0 = When FREEZE is asserted, the software watchdog and periodic interrupt timer counters continue to run. 1 = When FREEZE is asserted, the software watchdog and periodic interrupt timer counters are disabled, preventing interrupts while the MCU is in background debug mode. FRZBM -- Freeze Bus Monitor Enable 0 = When FREEZE is asserted, the bus monitor continues to operate. 1 = When FREEZE is asserted, the bus monitor is disabled. SLVEN -- Factory Test Mode Enabled This bit is a read-only status bit that reflects the state of DATA11 during reset. 0 = IMB is not available to an external master. 1 = An external bus master has direct access to the IMB. SHEN[1:0] -- Show Cycle Enable This field determines what the EBI does with the external bus during internal transfer operations. A show cycle allows internal transfers to be externally monitored. Table 8 shows whether show cycle data is driven externally, and whether external bus arbitration can occur. To prevent bus conflict, external peripherals must not be enabled during show cycles. Table 8 Show Cycle Enable Bits
SHEN 00 01 10 11 Action Show cycles disabled, external bus arbitration allowed Show cycles enabled, external bus arbitration not allowed Show cycles enabled, external bus arbitration allowed Show cycles enabled, external bus arbitration allowed, internal activity is halted by a bus grant
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SUPV -- Supervisor/Unrestricted Data Space The SUPV bit places the SIML global registers in either supervisor or user data space. 0 = Registers with access controlled by the SUPV bit are accessible in either supervisor or user data space. 1 = Registers with access controlled by the SUPV bit are accessible in supervisor data space only. MM -- Module Mapping 0 = Internal modules are addressed from $7FF000 - $7FFFFF. 1 = Internal modules are addressed from $FFF000 - $FFFFFF. IARB[3:0] -- Interrupt Arbitration Field Each module that can generate interrupt requests has an interrupt arbitration (IARB) field. Arbitration between interrupt requests of the same priority is performed by serial contention between IARB field bit values. Contention must take place whenever an interrupt request is acknowledged, even when there is only a single pending request. An IARB field must have a non-zero value for contention to take place. If an interrupt request from a module with an IARB field value of %0000 is recognized, the CPU processes a spurious interrupt exception. Because the SIML routes external interrupt requests to the CPU, the SIML IARB field value is used for arbitration between internal and external interrupts of the same priority. The reset value of IARB for the SIML is %1111, and the reset value of IARB for all other modules is %0000, which prevents SIML interrupts from being discarded during initialization.
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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3.3 System Clock The system clock in the SIML provides timing signals for the IMB modules and for an external peripheral bus. Because the MCU is a fully static design, register and memory contents are not affected when the clock rate changes. System hardware and software support changes in clock rate during operation. The system clock signal can be generated in one of two ways. An internal phase-locked loop can synthesize the clock from a reference frequency, or the clock signal can be input directly from an external source. Keep these clock sources in mind while reading the rest of this section. Figure 5 is a block diagram of the system clock.
MODCLK
EXTAL
XTAL
XFC
VDDSYN
CLKOUT
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CRYSTAL OSCILLATOR
PHASE COMPARATOR
LOW-PASS FILTER
VCO
FEEDBACK DIVIDER
W Y
SYSTEM CLOCK CONTROL
X
SYSTEM CLOCK
16/32 PLL BLOCK
Figure 5 System Clock Block Diagram 3.3.1 Clock Sources The state of the clock mode (MODCLK) pin during reset determines the system clock source. When MODCLK is held high during reset, the clock synthesizer generates a clock signal from a reference frequency connected to the EXTAL pin. The clock synthesizer control register (SYNCR) determines operating frequency and mode of operation. When MODCLK is held low during reset, the clock synthesizer is disabled and an external system clock signal must be applied. The SYNCR control bits have no effect. The input clock is referred to as "fref", and can be either a crystal or an external clock source. The output of the clock system is referred to as "fsys". Ensure that fref and fsys are within normal operating limits. The reference frequency for this MCU is typically 32.768 kHz, but can range from 25 kHz to 50 kHz. To generate a reference frequency using the crystal oscillator, a reference crystal must be connected between the EXTAL and XTAL pins. Figure 6 shows a recommended circuit.
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
C1 22 pF*
R1 4.7 k* XTAL R2 10M* EXTAL
C2 22 pF* VSSI * RESISTANCE AND CAPACITANCE BASED ON A TEST CIRCUIT CONSTRUCTED WITH A DAISHINKU DMX-38 32.768 kHZ CRYSTAL. SPECIFIC COMPONENTS MUST BE BASED ON CRYSTAL TYPE. CONTACT CRYSTAL VENDOR FOR EXACT CIRCUIT.
338 OSCILLATOR
Figure 6 System Clock Oscillator Circuit
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When an external system clock signal is applied (PLL disabled, MODCLK = 0 during reset), the duty cycle of the input is critical, especially at operating frequencies close to maximum. The relationship between clock signal duty cycle and clock signal period is expressed: Minimum External Clock High/Low Time Minimum External Clock Period = ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------50 % - Percentage Variation of External Clock Input Duty Cycle When the system clock signal is applied directly to the EXTAL pin (PLL is disabled, MODCLK = 0 during reset), or the clock synthesizer reference frequency is supplied by a source other than a crystal (PLL enabled, MODCLK = 1 during reset), the XTAL pin must be left floating. In either case, the frequency of the signal applied to EXTAL may not exceed the maximum system clock frequency (PLL disabled) or the maximum clock synthesizer reference frequency (PLL enabled). 3.3.2 Clock Synthesizer Operation VDDSYN is used to power the clock circuits when the phase-locked loop is used. A separate power source increases MCU noise immunity and can be used to run the clock when the MCU is powered down. A quiet power supply must be used as the VDDSYN source. Adequate external bypass capacitors should be placed as close as possible to the VDDSYN pin to assure stable operating frequency. When an external system clock signal is applied and the PLL is disabled, VDDSYN should be connected to the VDD supply. Refer to the SIM Reference Manual (SIMRM/AD) for more information regarding system clock power supply conditioning. A voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) generates the system clock signal. To maintain a 50% clock duty cycle, the VCO frequency (fVCO) is either two or four times the system clock frequency, depending on the state of the X bit in SYNCR. A portion of the clock signal is fed back to a divider/counter. The divider controls the frequency of one input to a phase comparator. The other phase comparator input is the reference signal connected to the EXTAL pin. The comparator generates a control signal proportional to the difference in phase between the two inputs. The signal is low-pass filtered and used to correct the VCO output frequency. Filter circuit implementation can vary, depending upon the external environment and required clock stability. Figure 7 shows a recommended system clock filter network. XFC pin leakage must be kept within specified limits to maintain optimum stability and PLL performance. An external filter network connected to the XFC pin is not required when an external system clock signal is applied and the PLL is disabled. The XFC pin must be left floating in this case.
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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VDDSYN
C3 0.1F
C1 0.1F XFC * VDDSYN
C4 0.01F VSSI
* MAINTAIN LOW LEAKAGE ON THE XFC NODE.
32 XFC CONN
Figure 7 System Clock Filter Network When the clock synthesizer is used, SYNCR determines the operating frequency of the MCU. The following equation relates the MCU operating frequency to the clock synthesizer reference frequency (fref) and the W, X, and Y fields in the SYNCR: f sys = 4f ref ( Y + 1 ) ( 2
2W + X
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)
The W bit controls a prescaler tap in the feedback divider. Setting W increases VCO speed by a factor of four. The Y field determines the count modulus for a modulo 64 downcounter, causing it to divide by a value of Y+1. When W or Y changes, VCO frequency (fVCO) changes, and the VCO must relock. The X bit controls a divide-by-two circuit that is not in the synthesizer feedback loop. When X=0 (reset state), the divider is enabled, and the system clock is one-fourth the VCO frequency. Setting X=1 disables the divider, doubling the clock speed without changing the VCO frequency. There is no relock delay when clock speed is changed by the X bit. Internal VCO frequency is determined by the following equations: f VCO = 4f sys if X = 0 or f VCO = 2f sys if X = 1 For the MCU to operate correctly, system clock and VCO frequencies selected by the W, X, and Y bits must be within the limits specified for the MCU. Do not use a combination of bit values that selects either an operating frequency or a VCO frequency greater than the maximum specified values. 3.3.3 Clock Synthesizer Control The clock synthesizer control circuits determine system clock frequency and clock operation under special circumstances, such as following loss of synthesizer reference or during low-power operation. Clock source is determined by the logic state of the MODCLK pin during reset. SYNCR -- Clock Synthesizer Control Register
15 W RESET: 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 U 0 0 0 14 X 13 12 11 Y 10 9 8 7 EDIV 6 STCPU 5 0 4 RSVD1 3 2 SLOCK RSVD1
$YFFA04
1 STSIM 0 STEXT
NOTES: 1. Ensure that initialization software does not change the value of this bit (it should always be zero).
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
When the on-chip clock synthesizer is used, system clock frequency is controlled by the bits in the upper byte of SYNCR. Bits in the lower byte show the status of or control the operation of internal and external clocks. SYNCR can be read or written only when the CPU is operating in supervisor mode. W -- Frequency Control (VCO) This bit controls a prescaler tap in the synthesizer feedback loop. Setting it increases the VCO speed by a factor of four. VCO relock delay is required. X -- Frequency Control (Prescaler) This bit controls a divide by two prescaler that is not in the synthesizer feedback loop. Setting it doubles the clock speed without changing the VCO speed. No VCO relock delay is required. Y[5:0] -- Frequency Control (Counter) The Y field controls the modulus down counter in the synthesizer feedback loop, causing it to divide by a value of Y + 1. Values range from 0 to 63. VCO relock delay is required.
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EDIV -- E Clock Divide Rate 0 = ECLK frequency is system clock divided by 8. 1 = ECLK frequency is system clock divided by 16. ECLK is an external M6800 bus clock available on pin ADDR23. Refer to 3.6 Chip-Selects for more information. STCPU -- Stop CPU32L Clock on LPSTOP 0 = When LPSTOP is executed, the intermodule bus clock (IMBCLK) is held low. When a trace, reset exception, or SIML interrupt occurs, the IMBCLK turns back on and the CPU32L begins executing instructions again. 1 = When LPSTOP is executed, the IMBCLK continues to run but is gated off and held low only where it enters the CPU32L. When a trace, reset exception, or interrupt from any module occurs, the IMBCLK is gated back on where it enters the CPU32L, and execution begins again. SLOCK -- Synthesizer Lock Flag 0 = VCO has not locked, but is enabled on the desired frequency. 1 = VCO has locked on the desired frequency, or is disabled. The MCU remains in reset until the synthesizer locks, but SLOCK does not indicate synthesizer lock status until after the user writes to SYNCR. STSIM -- Stop Mode SIML Clock 0 = When LPSTOP is executed, the SIML clock is driven by the crystal oscillator and the VCO is turned off to conserve power. 1 = When LPSTOP is executed, the SIML clock is driven by the VCO. STEXT -- Stop Mode External Clock 0 = When LPSTOP is executed, the CLKOUT signal is held negated to conserve power. 1 = When LPSTOP is executed, the CLKOUT signal is driven by the SIML clock, as determined by the state of the STSIM bit. 3.3.4 External MC6800 Bus Clock The state of the ECLK division rate bit (EDIV) in SYNCR determines clock rate for the ECLK signal available on pin ADDR23. ECLK is a bus clock for MC6800 devices and peripherals. ECLK frequency can be set to system clock frequency divided by eight or system clock frequency divided by sixteen. The clock is enabled by the CS10 field in chip-select pin assignment register 1 (CSPAR1). ECLK operation during low-power stop is described in the following paragraph. Refer to 3.6 Chip-Selects for more information about the external bus clock.
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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3.3.5 Low-Power Operation Low-power operation is initiated by the CPU32L. To reduce power consumption selectively, the CPU32L can enter the following low-power modes: 1. The CPU32L can selectively disable a module by setting the module's STOP bit. 2. The CPU32L can execute the STOP instruction. 3. The CPU32L can execute the LPSTOP instruction to stop the operations of only the CPU32L or the entire MCU, including the CPU32L. If the STOP bit in a module is set, then that module enters a low power mode. Some or all of that module's registers remain accessible. The module can be restarted by asserting RESET or by the CPU32L clearing the module's STOP bit. The CPU32L can enter a low power mode by executing the STOP instruction. It can be reawakened by RESET, trace or interrupt.
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3.3.5.1 Normal LPSTOP mode This low-power stop mode offers the greatest power reduction. To enter normal LPSTOP mode, the CPU32L executes the LPSTOP instruction after clearing the STCPU bit in SYNCR. This causes the SIML to turn off the system clock to most of the MCU. When the CPU executes LPSTOP, a special CPU space bus cycle writes a copy of the current interrupt mask into the clock control logic. The SIML brings the MCU out of normal LPSTOP mode when one of the following exceptions occurs: * RESET * Trace * SIML interrupt of higher priority than the stored interrupt mask During a LPSTOP, unless the system clock signal is supplied by an external source and that source is removed, the SIML clock control logic and the SIML clock signal (SIMCLK) continue to operate. The periodic interrupt timer and input logic for the RESET and IRQ pins are clocked by SIMCLK, and can be used to bring the processor out of LPSTOP. The software watchdog monitor cannot perform this function. Optionally, the SIML can also continue to generate the CLKOUT signal while in LPSTOP. STSIM and STEXT bits in SYNCR determine clock operation during LPSTOP. 3.3.5.2 Modified LPSTOP mode To enter modified LPSTOP mode, the CPU32L first sets the STCPU bit in SYNCR, then executes the LPSTOP instruction. This causes the SIML to turn off the system clock to the CPU32L only. The other MCU modules continue to operate. The SIML brings the MCU out of normal LPSTOP mode when one of the following exceptions occurs: * RESET * Trace * Interrupt of higher priority than the stored interrupt mask from any MCU module This low-power stop mode offers better power reduction than using the STOP instruction since the clock in the CPU32L is held inactive. Also, the STOP bits of individual modules may be set or cleared, leaving some active and others inactive. The flow chart shown in Figure 8 summarizes the effects of the STCPU, STSIM, and STEXT bits when the MCU enters normal or modified LPSTOP mode. NOTE To keep power consumption to a minimum when in LPSTOP mode, do not allow any spurious interrupts to occur. If a spurious interrupt occurs during LPSTOP mode, the device will transition to the STOP mode (which has greater power consumption) until a non-spurious interrupt request is detected by the CPU32L.
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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SETUP INTERRUPT TO WAKE UP MCU FROM LPSTOP
LEAVE IMBCLK1 ON IN LPSTOP? YES SET STOP BITS FOR MODULES THAT WILL NOT BE ACTIVE IN LPSTOP
NO
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SET STCPU2 = 1 fimbclk = fsys IN LPSTOP
SET STCPU2 = 0 fimbclk = 0 Hz IN LPSTOP
USING EXTERNAL CLOCK? YES
NO
USE SYSTEM CLOCK AS SIMCLK IN LPSTOP? YES SET STSIM = 1 fsimclk3 = fsys IN LPSTOP
NO
SET STSIM = 0 fsimclk3 = fref IN LPSTOP
WANT CLKOUT ON IN LPSTOP? YES
NO
WANT CLKOUT ON IN LPSTOP? YES
NO
SET STEXT = 1 fclkout4 = fsys feclk = / fsys IN LPSTOP
SET STEXT = 0 fclkout4 = 0 Hz feclk = / 0 Hz IN LPSTOP
SET STEXT = 1 fclkout4 = fref feclk = / 0 Hz IN LPSTOP
SET STEXT = 0 fclkout4 = 0 Hz feclk = / 0 Hz IN LPSTOP
ENTER LPSTOP NOTES: 1. IMBCLK IS THE CLOCK USED BY THE CPU32L, QSM, CTM6, AND THE SIML. 2. WHEN STCPU = 1, THE CPU32L IS SHUTDOWN IN LPSTOP. ALL OTHER MODULES WILL REMAIN ACTIVE UNLESS THE STOP BITS IN THEIR MODULE CONFIGURATION REGISTERS ARE SET PRIOR TO ENTERING LPSTOP. 3. THE SIMCLK IS USED BY THE PIT, IRQ, AND INPUT BLOCKS OF THE SIML. 4. CLKOUT CONTROL DURING LPSTOP IS OVERRIDDEN BY THE EXOFF BIT IN SIMLCR. IF EXOFF = 1, THE CLKOUT PIN IS ALWAYS IN A HIGH IMPEDANCE STATE AND STEXT HAS NO EFFECT IN LPSTOP. IF EXOFF = 0, CLKOUT IS CONTROLLED BY STEXT IN LPSTOP. WHEN STCPU = 1, THE CPU32L IS DISABLED IN LPSTOP, BUT ALL OTHER MODULES REMAIN ACTIVE OR STOPPED ACCORDING TO THE SETTING.
LPSTOP FLOWCHART
Figure 8 LPSTOP Flowchart
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3.4 System Protection Block System protection includes a bus monitor, a halt monitor, a spurious interrupt monitor, and a software watchdog timer. These functions reduce the number of external components required for complete system control. Figure 9 shows the system protection block.
MODULE CONFIGURATION AND TEST
RESET STATUS
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HALT MONITOR
RESET REQUEST
BUS MONITOR
BERR
SPURIOUS INTERRUPT MONITOR
CLOCK PRESCALER 29
SOFTWARE WATCHDOG TIMER
RESET REQUEST
PERIODIC INTERRUPT TIMER
IRQ[7:1]
SYS PROTECT BLOCK
Figure 9 System Protection Block 3.4.1 System Protection Control Register The system protection control register controls the software watchdog timer, bus monitor, and halt monitor. This register can be written only once following power-on or reset, but can be read at any time. SYPCR -- System Protection Control Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 SWE 6 SWP 5 4 3 HME 2 BME NOT USED RESET: 1 MODCLK 0 0 0 0 0 0 SWT[1:0]
$YFFA21
1 BMT 0
SWE -- Software Watchdog Enable 0 = Software watchdog disabled 1 = Software watchdog enabled
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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SWP -- Software Watchdog Prescaler This bit controls the value of the software watchdog prescaler. 0 = Software watchdog clock not prescaled 1 = Software watchdog clock prescaled by 512 SWT[1:0] -- Software Watchdog Timing This field selects the divide ratio used to establish software watchdog time-out period. Table 9 gives the ratio for each combination of SWP and SWT bits. Table 9 Software Watchdog Timing Field
SWP 0 0 0 SWT[1:0] 00 01 10 11 00 01 10 11 Watchdog Time-Out Period 29 / fsys 211 / fsys 213 / fsys 215 / fsys 218 / fsys 220 / fsys 222 / fsys 224 / fsys
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0 1 1 1 1
HME -- Halt Monitor Enable 0 = Disable halt monitor function 1 = Enable halt monitor function BME -- Bus Monitor Enable 0 = Disable bus monitor function for internal to external bus cycles. 1 = Enable bus monitor function for internal to external bus cycles. BMT[1:0] -- Bus Monitor Timing This bit field selects the time-out period in system clocks for the bus monitor. Refer to Table 10. Table 10 Bus Monitor Time-Out Period
BMT[1:0] 00 01 10 11 Bus Monitor Time-Out Period 64 system clocks 32 system clocks 16 system clocks 8 system clocks
3.4.2 Bus Monitor The internal bus monitor checks for excessively long DSACK response times during normal bus cycles and for excessively long DSACK or AVEC response times during interrupt acknowledge (IACK) cycles. The monitor asserts BERR if the response time exceeds a user-specified time-out period. DSACK and AVEC response times are measured in clock cycles. The maximum allowable response time can be selected by setting the BMT[1:0] field.
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The monitor does not check DSACK response on the external bus unless the CPU initiates the bus cycle. The BME bit in SYPCR enables the internal bus monitor for internal to external bus cycles. If a system contains external bus masters, an external bus monitor must be implemented and the internal to external bus monitor option must be disabled. 3.4.3 Halt Monitor The halt monitor responds to assertion of the HALT signal on the internal bus caused by a double bus fault. A double bus fault occurs when: * Bus error exception processing begins and a second BERR is detected before the first instruction of the first exception handler is executed. * One or more bus errors occur before the first instruction after a reset exception is executed. * A bus error occurs while the CPU is loading information from a bus error stack frame during a return from exception (RTE) instruction.
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If the halt monitor is enabled by setting HME in SYPCR, the MCU will issue a reset when a double bus fault occurs, otherwise the MCU will remain halted. A flag in the reset status register (RSR) indicates that the last reset was caused by the halt monitor. 3.4.4 Spurious Interrupt Monitor The spurious interrupt monitor issues BERR if no interrupt arbitration occurs during an interrupt acknowledge cycle. Leaving IARB[3:0] set to %0000 in the module configuration register of any peripheral that can generate interrupts will cause a spurious interrupt. 3.4.5 Software Watchdog The software watchdog is controlled by SWE in SYPCR. Once enabled, the watchdog requires that a service sequence be written to SWSR on a periodic basis. If servicing does not take place, the watchdog times out and issues a reset. This register can be written at any time, but returns zeros when read. SWSR -- Software Service Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 SWSR 3 2 NOT USED RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
$YFFA27
1 0
Each time the service sequence is written, the software watchdog timer restarts. The servicing sequence consists of the following steps: 1. Write $55 to SWSR. 2. Write $AA to SWSR. Both writes must occur before time-out in the order listed, but any number of instructions can be executed between the two writes. The watchdog clock rate is affected by SWP and SWT[1:0] in SYPCR. When SWT[1:0] are modified, a watchdog service sequence must be performed before the new time-out period takes effect. The reset value of SWP is affected by the state of the MODCLK pin on the rising edge of RESET. Refer to Table 11.
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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Table 11 MODCLK Pin States
MODCLK 0 1 SWP 1 0
3.4.6 Periodic Interrupt Timer The periodic interrupt timer (PIT) generates interrupts at user-programmable intervals. Timing for the PIT is provided by a programmable prescaler driven by the system clock. PICR -- Periodic Interrupt Control Register
15 0 14 0 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 13 0 12 0 11 0 10 9 PIRQL[2:0] 8 7 6 5 4 PIV[7:0] 3 2
$YFFA22
1 0
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This register contains information concerning periodic interrupt priority and vectoring. Bits [10:0] can be read or written at any time. Bits [15:11] are unimplemented and always return zero. PIRQL[2:0] -- Periodic Interrupt Request Level Table 12 shows what interrupt request level is asserted when a periodic interrupt is generated. If a PIT interrupt and an external IRQ signal of the same priority occur simultaneously, the PIT interrupt is serviced first. The periodic timer continues to run when the interrupt is disabled. Table 12 Periodic Interrupt Request Levels
PIRQL[2:0] 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Interrupt Request Level Periodic Interrupt Disabled Interrupt Request Level 1 Interrupt Request Level 2 Interrupt Request Level 3 Interrupt Request Level 4 Interrupt Request Level 5 Interrupt Request Level 6 Interrupt Request Level 7
PIV[7:0] -- Periodic Interrupt Vector This bit field contains the vector generated in response to an interrupt from the periodic timer. When the SIML responds, the periodic interrupt vector is placed on the bus. PITR -- Periodic Interrupt Timer Register
15 0 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 MODCLK 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 0 13 0 12 0 11 0 10 0 9 0 8 PTP 7 6 5 4 3 2 PITM[7:0]
$YFFA24
1 0
PITR contains the count value for the periodic timer. Setting the PITM[7:0] field turns off the periodic timer. This register can be read or written at any time.
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PTP -- Periodic Timer Prescaler Control 0 = Periodic timer clock not prescaled 1 = Periodic timer clock prescaled by 512 The reset state of PTP is the complement of the state of the MODCLK signal at the rising edge of RESET. PITM[7:0] -- Periodic Interrupt Timer Modulus This is an 8-bit timing modulus. The period of the timer can be calculated as follows: 4 ( PITM[7:0] ) ( Prescaler ) PIT Period = ---------------------------------------------------------------f ref where PIT Period = Periodic interrupt timer period PITM[7:0] = Periodic interrupt timer register modulus
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fref = Synthesizer reference of external clock input frequency Prescaler = 1 if PTP = 0 or 512 if PTP = 1 3.5 External Bus Interface The external bus interface (EBI) transfers information between the internal MCU bus and external devices. The external bus has 24 address lines and 16 data lines. The EBI provides dynamic sizing between 8-bit and 16-bit data accesses. It supports byte, word, and long-word transfers. Ports are accessed through the use of asynchronous cycles controlled by the size (SIZ1 and SIZ0) and data size acknowledge (DSACK1 and DSACK0) pins. Multiple bus cycles may be required for dynamically sized transfer. Port width is the maximum number of bits accepted or provided during a bus transfer. External devices must follow the handshake protocol described below. Control signals indicate the beginning of the cycle, the address space, the size of the transfer, and the type of cycle. The selected device controls the length of the cycle. Strobe signals, one for the address bus and another for the data bus, indicate the validity of an address and provide timing information for data. The EBI operates in an asynchronous mode for any port width. To add flexibility and minimize the necessity for external logic, MCU chip-select logic can be synchronized with EBI transfers. Chip-select logic can also provide internally-generated bus control signals for these accesses. Refer to 3.6 Chip-Selects for more information. 3.5.1 Bus Control Signals The CPU initiates a bus cycle by driving the address, size, function code, and read/write outputs. At the beginning of the cycle, size signals SIZ0 and SIZ1 are driven along with the function code signals (FC[2:0]). The size signals indicate the number of bytes remaining to be transferred during an operand cycle. They are valid while the address strobe AS is asserted. Table 13 shows SIZ0 and SIZ1 encoding. The read/write (R/W) signal determines the direction of the transfer during a bus cycle. This signal changes state, when required, at the beginning of a bus cycle, and is valid while AS is asserted. The R/W signal only changes state when a write cycle is preceded by a read cycle or vice versa. The signal can remain low for two consecutive write cycles.
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Table 13 Size Signal Encoding
SIZ1 0 1 1 0 SIZ0 1 0 1 0 Transfer Size Byte Word Three Byte Long Word
3.5.2 Function Codes The CPU32L automatically generates function code signals FC[2:0]. The function codes can be considered address extensions that automatically select one of eight address spaces to which an address applies. These spaces are designated as either user or supervisor, and program or data spaces. Address space seven is designated CPU space. CPU space is used for control information not normally associated with read or write bus cycles. Function codes are valid while AS is asserted. Table 14 displays CPU32L address space encodings. Table 14 CPU32L Address Space Encoding
FC2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 FC1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 FC0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 Address Space Reserved User Data Space User Program Space Reserved Reserved Supervisor Data Space Supervisor Program Space CPU Space
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3.5.3 Address Bus Address bus signals ADDR[23:0] define the address of the most significant byte to be transferred during a bus cycle. The MCU places the address on the bus at the beginning of a bus cycle. The address is valid while AS is asserted. 3.5.4 Address Strobe AS is a timing signal that indicates the validity of an address on the address bus and the validity of many control signals. It is asserted one-half clock after the beginning of a bus cycle. 3.5.5 Data Bus Data bus signals DATA[15:0] make up a bidirectional, non-multiplexed parallel bus that transfers data to or from the MCU. A read or write operation can transfer 8 or 16 bits of data in one bus cycle. During a read cycle, the data is latched by the MCU on the last falling edge of the clock for that bus cycle. For a write cycle, all 16 bits of the data bus are driven, regardless of the port width or operand size. The MCU places the data on the data bus one-half clock cycle after AS is asserted in a write cycle.
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3.5.6 Data Strobe Data strobe (DS) is a timing signal. For a read cycle, the MCU asserts DS to signal an external device to place data on the bus. DS is asserted at the same time as AS during a read cycle. For a write cycle, DS signals an external device that data on the bus is valid. The MCU asserts DS one full clock cycle after the assertion of AS during a write cycle. 3.5.7 Bus Cycle Termination Signals During bus cycles, external devices assert the data size acknowledge signals DSACK1 and DSACK0. During a read cycle, the signals tell the MCU to terminate the bus cycle and to latch data. During a write cycle, the signals indicate that an external device has successfully stored data and that the cycle can end. These signals also indicate to the MCU the size of the port for the bus cycle just completed. Alternately, chip-selects can be used to generate DSACK1 and DSACK0 internally. Refer to 3.5.8 Dynamic Bus Sizing for more information.
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The bus error (BERR) signal is also a bus cycle termination indicator and can be used in the absence of DSACK1 and DSACK0 to indicate a bus error condition. It can also be asserted in conjunction with these signals, provided it meets the appropriate timing requirements. The internal bus monitor can be used to generate the BERR signal for internal-to-external transfers. When BERR and HALT are asserted simultaneously, the CPU takes a bus error exception. The autovector signal (AVEC) can terminate IRQ pin interrupt acknowledge cycles. AVEC indicates that the MCU will internally generate a vector number to locate an interrupt handler routine. If it is continuously asserted, autovectors will be generated for all external interrupt requests. AVEC is ignored during all other bus cycles. 3.5.8 Dynamic Bus Sizing The MCU dynamically interprets the port size of the addressed device during each bus cycle, allowing operand transfers to or from 8- and 16-bit ports. During an operand transfer cycle, the slave device signals its port size and indicates completion of the bus cycle to the MCU through the use of the DSACK1 and DSACK0 inputs, as shown in Table 15. Table 15 Effect of DSACK Signals
DSACK1 1 1 0 0 DSACK0 1 0 1 0 Result Insert Wait States in Current Bus Cycle Complete Cycle -- Data Bus Port Size is 8 Bits Complete Cycle -- Data Bus Port Size is 16 Bits Reserved
For example, if the MCU is executing an instruction that reads a long-word operand from a 16-bit port, the MCU latches the 16 bits of valid data and then runs another bus cycle to obtain the other 16 bits. The operation for an 8-bit port is similar, but requires four read cycles. The addressed device uses the DSACK0 and DSACK1 signals to indicate the port width. For instance, a 16-bit device always returns DSACK0 = 1 and DSACK1 = 0 for a 16-bit port, regardless of whether the bus cycle is a byte or word operation. Dynamic bus sizing requires that the portion of the data bus used for a transfer to or from a particular port size be fixed. A 16-bit port must reside on data bus bits [15:0] and an 8-bit port must reside on data bus bits [15:8]. This minimizes the number of bus cycles needed to transfer data and ensures that the MCU transfers valid data.
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The MCU always attempts to transfer the maximum amount of data on all bus cycles. For a word operation, it is assumed that the port is 16 bits wide when the bus cycle begins. Operand bytes are designated as shown in Figure 10. OP0 is the most significant byte of a long-word operand, and OP3 is the least significant byte. The two bytes of a word-length operand are OP0 (most significant) and OP1. The single byte of a byte-length operand is OP0.
OPERAND 31 LONG WORD THREE BYTE WORD BYTE OP0 24 23 OP1 OP0 BYTE ORDER 16 15 OP2 OP1 OP0 87 OP3 OP2 OP1 OP0
OPERAND BYTE ORDER
0
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Figure 10 Operand Byte Order 3.5.9 Operand Alignment The data multiplexer establishes the necessary connections for different combinations of address and data sizes. The multiplexer takes the two bytes of the 16-bit bus and routes them to their required positions. Positioning of bytes is determined by the size and address outputs. SIZ1 and SIZ0 indicate the remaining number of bytes to be transferred during the current bus cycle. The number of bytes transferred is equal to or less than the size indicated by SIZ1 and SIZ0, depending on port width. ADDR0 also affects the operation of the data multiplexer. During an operand transfer, ADDR[23:1] indicate the word base address of the portion of the operand to be accessed, and ADDR0 indicates the byte offset from the base. 3.5.10 Misaligned Operands CPU32L processor architecture uses a basic operand size of 16 bits. An operand is misaligned when it overlaps a word boundary. This is determined by the value of ADDR0. When ADDR0 = 0 (an even address), the address is on a word and byte boundary. When ADDR0 = 1 (an odd address), the address is on a byte boundary only. A byte operand is aligned at any address; a word or long-word operand is misaligned at an odd address. The CPU32L does not support misaligned operand transfers, and gives an address error exception if one is attempted. The largest amount of data that can be transferred by a single bus cycle is an aligned word. If the MCU transfers a long-word operand via a 16-bit port, the most significant operand word is transferred on the first bus cycle and the least significant operand word on a following bus cycle. 3.5.11 Operand Transfer Cases Table 16 summarizes how operands are aligned for various types of transfers. OPn entries are portions of a requested operand that are read or written during a bus cycle and are defined by SIZ1, SIZ0, and ADDR0 for that bus cycle.
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Table 16 Operand Alignment
Current Cycle 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Transfer Case1 Byte to 8-bit port (even) Byte to 8-bit port (odd) Byte to 16-bit port (even) Byte to 16-bit port (odd) Word to 8-bit port Word to 16-bit port 3-byte to 8-bit port3 Long word to 8-bit port Long word to 16-bit port SIZ1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 SIZ0 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 ADDR0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 DSACK1 DSACK0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 DATA [15:8] OP0 OP0 OP0 (OP0) OP0 OP0 OP0 OP0 OP0 DATA [7:0] (OP0)2 (OP0) (OP0) OP0 (OP1) OP1 (OP0) (OP0) OP1 Next Cycle -- -- -- -- 2 -- 5 7 6
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NOTES: 1. All transfers are aligned. The CPU32L does not support misaligned word or long-word transfers. 2. Operands in parentheses are ignored by the CPU32L during read cycles. 3. 3-Byte transfer cases occur only as a result of a long word to 8-bit port transfer.
3.6 Chip-Selects Typical microcontrollers require additional hardware to provide external chip-select and address decode signals. The MC68338 includes 12 programmable chip-selects that can provide 2 to 16-clock-cycle access to external memory and peripherals. Address block sizes of two Kbytes to one Mbyte can be selected. Figure 11 is a functional diagram of a chip-select circuit. Chip-select assertion can be synchronized with bus control signals to provide output enable, read/write strobe, or interrupt acknowledge signals. Chip-select logic can also generate DSACK and AVEC signals internally. Each signal can also be synchronized with the ECLK signal available on ADDR23.
INTERNAL SIGNALS ADDRESS BUS CONTROL
BASE ADDRESS REGISTER ADDRESS COMPARATOR OPTION COMPARE OPTION REGISTER TIMING AND CONTROL
PIN
AVEC DSACK
AVEC GENERATOR
DSACK GENERATOR
PIN ASSIGNMENT REGISTER
PIN DATA REGISTER
CHIP SEL BLOCK
Figure 11 Chip-Select Circuit Block Diagram
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When a memory access occurs, chip-select logic compares address space type, address, type of access, transfer size, and interrupt priority (in the case of interrupt acknowledge) to parameters stored in chip-select registers. If all parameters match, the appropriate chip-select signal is asserted. Select signals are active low. If a chip-select function is given the same address as a microcontroller module or an internal memory array, an access to that address goes to the module or array, and the chip-select signal is not asserted. The external address and data buses do not reflect the internal access. All chip-select circuits except CSBOOT are disabled out of reset. Chip-select option registers must not be written until base addresses have been written to the proper base address registers. Alternate functions for chip-select pins are enabled if appropriate data bus pins are held low at the release of RESET. Table 17 lists allocation of chip-selects and discrete outputs on the pins of the MCU. Table 17 Chip-Select and Discrete Output Allocation
Pin Chip-Select CSBOOT CS0 CS1 CS2 CS3 CS4 CS5 CS6 CS7 CS8 CS9 CS10 Discrete Outputs -- -- -- -- PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 --
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CSBOOT BR BG BGACK FC0 FC1 FC2 ADDR19 ADDR20 ADDR21 ADDR22 ADDR23
3.6.1 Chip-Select Registers Each chip-select pin can have one or more functions. Chip-select pin assignment registers CSPAR[0:1] determine functions of the pins. Pin assignment registers also determine port size for dynamic bus allocation. A pin data register (PORTC) latches data for chip-select pins that are used for discrete output. Blocks of addresses are assigned to each chip-select function. Block sizes of two Kbytes to one Mbyte can be selected by writing values to the appropriate base address registers CSBARBT and CSBAR[0:10]. Multiple chip-selects assigned to the same block of addresses must have the same number of wait states. Chip-select option registers CSORBT and CSOR[0:10] determine timing of and conditions for assertion of chip-select signals. Eight parameters, including operating mode, access size, synchronization, and wait state insertion can be specified. Initialization software usually resides in a peripheral memory device controlled by the chip-select circuits. CSBOOT and registers CSORBT and CSBARBT are provided to support bootstrap operation. 3.6.2 Pin Assignment Registers The pin assignment registers contain twelve 2-bit fields that determine functions of the chip-select pins. Each pin has two or three possible functions, as shown in Table 18.
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Table 18 Chip-Select Pin Functions
Assignment Register 16-Bit Chip-Select CSBOOT CS0 CS1 CSPAR0 CS2 CS3 CS4 CS5 CS6 CS7 CSPAR1 CS8 CS9 CS10 Alternate Function CSBOOT BR BG BGACK FC0 FC1 FC2 ADDR19 ADDR20 ADDR21 ADDR22 ADDR23 Discrete Output -- -- -- -- PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 ECLK
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Table 19 shows pin assignment field encoding. Pins that have no discrete output function do not use the %00 encoding. Table 19 Pin Assignment Encodings
Bit Field 00 01 10 11 Description Discrete output Alternate function Chip-select (8-bit port) Chip-select (16-bit port)
CSPAR0 -- Chip-Select Pin Assignment Register 0
15 0 RESET: 0 0 DATA2 1 DATA2 1 DATA2 1 DATA1 1 DATA1 1 DATA1 1 14 0 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 CS5PA[1:0] CS4PA[1:0] CS3PA[1:0] CS2PA[1:0] CS1PA[1:0] CS0PA[1:0]
$YFFA44
1 0 CSBTPA[1:0]
1
DATA0
CSPAR0 contains seven 2-bit fields that determine the functions of corresponding chip-select pins. CSPAR0[15:14] are not used. These bits always read zero; writes have no effect. CSPAR0 bit 1 always reads one; writes to CSPAR0 bit 1 have no effect. Table 20 shows CSPAR0 pin assignments.
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Table 20 CSPAR0 Pin Assignments
CSPAR0 Field CS5PA[1:0] CS4PA[1:0] CS3PA[1:0] CS2PA[1:0] CS1PA[1:0] CS0PA[1:0] CSBTPA[1:0] Chip-Select Signal CS5 CS4 CS3 CS2 CS1 CS0 CSBOOT Alternate Signal FC2 FC1 FC0 BGACK BG BR -- Discrete Output PC2 PC1 PC0 -- -- -- --
CSPAR1 -- Chip-Select Pin Assignment Register 1
$YFFA46
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CS9PA[1:0] CS8PA[1:0] CS7PA[1:0] CS6PA[1:0]
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15 0
14 0
13 0
12 0
11 0
10 0
9
8
CS10PA[1:0]
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 DATA71 1 DATA [7:6]1 1 DATA [7:5]1 1 DATA [7:4]1 1 DATA [7:3]1 1
NOTES: 1. Refer to Table 21 for CSPAR1 reset state information.
The reset state of DATA[7:3] determines whether pins controlled by CSPAR1 are initially configured as high-order address lines or chip-selects. Table 21 shows the correspondence between DATA[7:3] and the reset configuration of CS[10:6]/ADDR[23:19]. Table 21 Reset Pin Function of CS[10:6]
Data Bus Pins at Reset DATA7 1 1 1 1 1 0 DATA6 1 1 1 1 0 X DATA5 1 1 1 0 X X DATA4 1 1 0 X X X DATA3 1 0 X X X X Chip-Select/Address Bus Pin Function CS9/ CS8/ CS7/ CS8/ CS10/ ADDR23 ADDR22 ADDR21 ADDR20 ADDR19 CS10 CS10 CS10 CS10 CS10 CS9 CS9 CS9 CS9 CS8 CS8 CS8 CS7 CS7 CS6 ADDR19
ADDR20 ADDR19
ADDR21 ADDR20 ADDR19
ADDR22 ADDR21 ADDR20 ADDR19
ADDR23 ADDR22 ADDR21 ADDR20 ADDR19
CSPAR1 contains five 2-bit fields that determine the functions of corresponding chip-select pins. CSPAR1[15:10] are not used. These bits always read zero; writes have no effect. Table 22 shows CSPAR1 pin assignments.
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Table 22 CSPAR1 Pin Assignments
CSPAR1 Field CS10PA[1:0] CS9PA[1:0] CS8PA[1:0] CS7PA[1:0] CS6PA[1:0] Chip-Select Signal CS10 CS9 CS8 CS7 CS6 Alternate Signal ADDR23 ADDR22 ADDR21 ADDR20 ADDR19 Discrete Output ECLK PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3
Port size determines the way in which bus transfers to external addresses are allocated. Port size of eight bits or sixteen bits can be selected when a pin is assigned as a chip-select. Port size and transfer size affect how the chip-select signal is asserted. Refer to 3.6.4 Option Registers for more information. Out of reset, chip-select pin function is determined by the logic level on a corresponding data bus pin. These pins have weak internal pull-up drivers, but can be held low by external devices. Either 16-bit chip-select function (%11) or alternate function (%01) can be selected during reset. All pins except the boot ROM select pin (CSBOOT) are disabled out of reset. The CSBOOT signal is normally enabled out of reset. The state of the DATA0 line during reset determines what port width CSBOOT uses. If DATA0 is held high (either by the weak internal pull-up driver or by an external pull-up device), 16-bit width is selected. If DATA0 is held low, 8-bit port size is selected. A pin programmed as a discrete output drives an external signal to the value specified in the pin data register. No discrete output function is available on pins CSBOOT, BR, BG, or BGACK. ADDR23 provides ECLK output rather than a discrete output signal. When a pin is programmed for discrete output or alternate function, internal chip-select logic still functions and can be used to generate DSACK or AVEC internally on an address and control signal match. 3.6.3 Base Address Registers Each chip-select has an associated base address register. A base address is the lowest address in the block of addresses enabled by a chip-select. Block size is the extent of the address block above the base address. Block size is determined by the value contained in a BLKSZ field. Multiple chip-selects may be assigned to the same block of addresses so long as each chip-select uses the same number of wait states. The BLKSZ field determines which bits in the base address field are compared to corresponding bits on the address bus during an access. Provided other constraints determined by option register fields are also satisfied, when a match occurs, the associated chip-select signal is asserted. After reset, the MCU fetches the address of the first instruction to be executed from the reset vector, located beginning at address $000000 in program space. To support bootstrap operation from reset, the base address field in CSBARBT has a reset value of all zeros. A memory device containing the reset vector and an initialization routine can be automatically enabled by CSBOOT after a reset. The block size field in CSBARBT has a reset value of one Mbyte. CSBARBT -- Chip-Select Base Address Register Boot ROM
15 ADDR 23 14 ADDR 22 13 ADDR 21 12 ADDR 20 11 ADDR 19 10 ADDR 18 9 ADDR 17 8 ADDR 16 7 ADDR 15 6 ADDR 14 5 ADDR 13 4 ADDR 12 3 ADDR 11 2
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$YFFA48
1 BLKSZ[2:0] 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1
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CSBAR[0:10] -- Chip-Select Base Address Registers
15 ADDR 23 14 ADDR 22 13 ADDR 21 12 ADDR 20 11 ADDR 19 10 ADDR 18 9 ADDR 17 8 ADDR 16 7 ADDR 15 6 ADDR 14 5 ADDR 13 4 ADDR 12 3 ADDR 11
$YFFA4C-$YFFA74
2 1 BLKSZ[2:0] 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
ADDR[23:11] -- Base Address Field This field sets the starting address of a particular chip-select's address space. The address compare logic uses only the most significant bits to match an address within a block. The value of the base address must be a multiple of the block size. The base address register diagrams above show how register bits correspond to CPU address lines. BLKSZ[2:0] -- Block Size Field This field determines the size of the block that must be enabled by the chip-select. Table 23 shows bit encoding for the base address registers block size field. Table 23 Block Size Field Bit Encoding
Block Size Field 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Block Size 2 Kbyte 8 Kbyte 16 Kbyte 64 Kbyte 128 Kbyte 256 Kbyte 512 Kbyte 1 Mbyte Address Lines Compared ADDR[23:11] ADDR[23:13] ADDR[23:14] ADDR[23:16] ADDR[23:17] ADDR[23:18] ADDR[23:19] ADDR[23:20]
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3.6.4 Option Registers The option registers contain eight fields that determine timing of and conditions for assertion of chipselect signals. To assert a chip-select signal, and to provide DSACK or autovector support, other constraints set by fields in the option register and in the base address register must also be satisfied. CSORBT -- Chip-Select Option Register Boot ROM
15 MODE RESET: 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 14 13 12 11 10 STRB 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 IPL[2:0] BYTE[1:0] R/W[1:0] DSACK[3:0] SPACE[1:0]
$YFFA4A
1 0 AVEC
CSOR[0:10] -- Chip-Select Option Registers
15 MODE RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 13 12 11 10 STRB 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 BYTE[1:0] R/W[1:0] DSACK[3:0] SPACE[1:0]
$YFFA4E-YFFA76
2 IPL[2:0] 1 0 AVEC
0
0
0
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CSORBT, the option register for CSBOOT, contains special reset values that support bootstrap operation from peripheral memory devices. The following bit descriptions apply to both CSORBT and CSOR[0:10] option registers. MODE -- Asynchronous/Synchronous Mode 0 = Asynchronous mode (chip-select assertion determined by bus control signals) 1 = Synchronous mode (chip-select assertion synchronized with ECLK signal) In asynchronous mode, the chip-select is asserted synchronized with AS or DS. DSACK[3:0] is not used in synchronous mode because a bus cycle is only performed as a synchronous operation. When a match condition occurs on a chip-select programmed for synchronous operation, the chip-select signals the EBI that an ECLK cycle is pending. BYTE[1:0] -- Upper/Lower Byte Option This field is used only when the chip-select 16-bit port option is selected in the pin assignment register. Table 24 lists upper/lower byte options.
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Table 24 Upper/Lower Byte Options
BYTE[1:0] 00 01 10 11 Description Disable Lower Byte Upper Byte Both Bytes
R/W[1:0] -- Read/Write This field causes a chip-select to be asserted only for reads, only for writes, or for both reads and writes. Refer to Table 25 for options available. Table 25 R/W Encodings
R/W[1:0] 00 01 10 11 Description Reserved Read Only Write Only Read/Write
STRB -- Address Strobe/Data Strobe 0 = Address strobe 1 = Data strobe This bit controls the timing for assertion of a chip-select in asynchronous mode. Selecting address strobe causes chip-select to be asserted synchronized with address strobe. Selecting data strobe causes chip-select to be asserted synchronized with data strobe. DSACK[3:0] -- Data and Size Acknowledge This field specifies the source of DSACK[3:0] in asynchronous mode. It also allows the user to adjust bus timing with internal DSACK[3:0] generation by controlling the number of wait states that are inserted to optimize bus speed in a particular application. Table 26 shows the DSACK[3:0] encoding. The fast termination encoding (%1110) is used for two-cycle access to external memory.
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Table 26 DSACK Field Encoding
DSACK[3:0] 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 Clock Cycles Required Per Access 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 2 -- Wait States Per Access 0 Wait States 1 Wait State 2 Wait States 3 Wait States 4 Wait States 5 Wait States 6 Wait States 7 Wait States 8 Wait States 9 Wait States 10 Wait States 11 Wait States 12 Wait States 13 Wait States Fast Termination External DSACK
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SPACE[1:0] -- Address Space Use this option field to select an address space for the chip-select logic. The CPU32L normally operates in supervisor or user space, but interrupt acknowledge cycles must take place in CPU space. Table 27 shows address space bit encodings. Table 27 Address Space Bit Encodings
SPACE[1:0] 00 01 10 11 Address Space CPU Space User Space Supervisor Space Supervisor/User Space
IPL[2:0] -- Interrupt Priority Level If the space field is set for CPU space, chip-select logic can be used for interrupt acknowledge. During an interrupt acknowledge cycle, the priority level on address lines ADDR[3:1] is compared to the value in IPL[2:0]. If the values are the same, a chip-select is asserted, provided that other option register conditions are met. Table 28 shows IPL[2:0] encoding.
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Table 28 Interrupt Priority Level Field Encoding
IPL[2:0] 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Interrupt Priority Level Any Level 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
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This field only affects the response of chip-selects and does not affect interrupt recognition by the CPU. Any level means that chip-select is asserted regardless of the level of the interrupt acknowledge cycle. AVEC -- Autovector Enable 0 = External interrupt vector enabled 1 = Autovector enabled This field selects one of two methods of acquiring an interrupt vector number during an external interrupt acknowledge cycle. If the chip-select is configured to trigger on an interrupt acknowledge cycle (SPACE[1:0] = %00) and the AVEC field is set to one, the chip-select circuit generates an internal AVEC signal in response to an external interrupt cycle, and the SIML supplies an automatic vector number. Otherwise, the vector number must be supplied by the requesting device. An internal autovector is generated only in response to interrupt requests from the SIML IRQ pins. Interrupt requests from other IMB modules are ignored. The AVEC bit must not be used in synchronous mode, as autovector response timing can vary because of ECLK synchronization. 3.6.5 Port C Data Register Bit values in port C determine the state of chip-select pins used for discrete output. When a pin is assigned as a discrete output, the value in this register appears at the output. This is a read/write register. Bit 7 is not used. Writing to this bit has no effect, and it always returns zero when read. PORTC -- Port C Data Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 0 6 PC6 5 PC5 4 PC4 3 PC3 2 PC2 NOT USED RESET: 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
$YFFA41
1 PC1 0 PC0
3.7 General-Purpose Input/Output SIML pins can be configured as two general-purpose I/O ports, E and F. The following paragraphs describe registers that control the ports.
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PORTE0, PORTE1-- Port E Data Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 PE7 6 PE6 5 PE5 4 PE4 3 PE3 NOT USED RESET: U U U U U U U U
$YFFA11, YFFA13
2 PE2 1 PE1 0 PE0
A write to the port E data register is stored in the internal data latch and, if any port E pin is configured as an output, the value stored for that bit is driven on the pin. A read of the port E data register returns the value at the pin only if the pin is configured as a discrete input. Otherwise, the value read is the value stored in the register. The port E data register is a single register that can be accessed in two locations. When accessed at $YFFA11, the register is referred to as PORTE0; when accessed at $YFFA13, the register is referred to as PORTE1. The register can be read or written at any time. It is unaffected by reset.
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DDRE -- Port E Data Direction Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 DDE7 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 DDE6 5 DDE5 4 DDE4 3 DDE3 2 DDE2
$YFFA15
1 DDE1 0 DDE0
0
0
The bits in this register control the direction of the pin drivers when the pins are configured as I/O. Any bit in this register set to one configures the corresponding pin as an output. Any bit in this register cleared to zero configures the corresponding pin as an input. This register can be read or written at any time. PEPAR -- Port E Pin Assignment
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 PEPA7 RESET: DATA8 DATA8 DATA8 DATA8 DATA8 DATA8 DATA8 DATA8 6 PEPA6 5 PEPA5 4 PEPA4 3 PEPA3 2 PEPA2
$YFFA17
1 PEPA1 0 PEPA0
The bits in this register control the function of each port E pin. Any bit set to one configures the corresponding pin as a bus control signal, with the function shown in Table 29. Any bit cleared to zero defines the corresponding pin to be an I/O pin, controlled by PORTE and DDRE. Data bus bit 8 controls the state of this register following reset. If DATA8 is set to one during reset, the register is set to $FF, which defines all port E pins as bus control signals. If DATA8 is cleared to zero during reset, this register is set to $00, configuring all port E pins as I/O pins.
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Table 29 Port E Pin Assignments
PEPAR Bit PEPA7 PEPA6 PEPA5 PEPA4 PEPA3 PEPA2 PEPA1 PEPA0 Port E Signal PE7 PE6 PE5 PE4 PE3 PE2 PE1 PE0 Bus Control Signal SIZ1 SIZ0 AS DS RMC AVEC DSACK1 DSACK0
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PORTF0, PORTF1 -- Port F Data Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 PF7 6 PF6 5 PF5 4 PF4 3 PF3 NOT USED RESET: U U U U U
$YFFA19, YFFA1B
2 PF2 1 PF1 0 PF0
U
U
U
The write to the port F data register is stored in the internal data latch, and if any port F pin is configured as an output, the value stored for that bit is driven onto the pin. A read of the port F data register returns the value at the pin only if the pin is configured as a discrete input. Otherwise, the value read is the value stored in the register. The port F data register is a single register that can be accessed in two locations. When accessed at $YFFA19, the register is referred to as PORTF0; when accessed at $YFFA1B, the register is referred to as PORTF1. The register can be read or written at any time. It is unaffected by reset. DDRF -- Port F Data Direction Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 DDF7 6 DDF6 5 DDF5 4 DDF4 3 DDF3 2 DDF2 NOT USED RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
$YFFA1D
1 DDF1 0 DDF0
The bits in this register control the direction of the pin drivers when the pins are configured as I/O. Any bit in this register set to one configures the corresponding pin as an output. Any bit in this register cleared to zero configures the corresponding pin as an input. This register can be read or written at any time. PFPAR -- Port F Pin Assignment Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 PFPA7 6 PFPA6 5 PFPA5 4 PFPA4 3 PFPA3 2 PFPA2 NOT USED RESET: DATA9 DATA9 DATA9 DATA9 DATA9 DATA9 DATA9 DATA9
$YFFA1F
1 PFPA1 0 PFPA0
The bits in this register control the function of each port F pin. Any bit cleared to zero defines the corresponding pin to be an I/O pin. Any bit set to one defines the corresponding pin to be an interrupt request signal or MODCLK. The MODCLK signal has no function after reset. Table 30 shows port F pin assignments.
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Table 30 Port F Pin Assignments
PFPAR Field PFPA7 PFPA6 PFPA5 PFPA4 PFPA3 PFPA2 PFPA1 PFPA0 Port F Signal PF7 PF6 PF5 PF4 PF3 PF2 PF1 PF0 Alternate Signal IRQ7 IRQ6 IRQ5 IRQ4 IRQ3 IRQ2 IRQ1 MODCLK
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Data bus pin 9 controls the state of this register following reset. If DATA9 is set to one during reset, the register is set to $FF, which defines all port F pins as interrupt request inputs. If DATA9 is cleared to zero during reset, this register is set to $00, defining all port F pins as I/O pins. 3.8 Resets Reset procedures handle system initialization and recovery from catastrophic failure. The MCU performs resets with a combination of hardware and software. The SIML determines whether a reset is valid, asserts control signals, performs basic system configuration based on hardware mode-select inputs, then passes control to the CPU. Reset occurs when an active low logic level on the RESET pin is clocked into the SIML. Resets are gated by the CLKOUT signal. Asynchronous resets are assumed to be catastrophic. An asynchronous reset can occur on any clock edge. Synchronous resets are timed to occur at the end of bus cycles. If there is no clock when RESET is asserted, reset does not occur until the clock starts. Resets are clocked in order to allow completion of write cycles in progress at the time RESET is asserted. Reset is the highest-priority CPU32L exception. Any processing in progress is aborted by the reset exception, and cannot be restarted. Only essential tasks are performed during reset exception processing. Other initialization tasks must be accomplished by the exception handler routine. 3.8.1 SIML Reset Mode Selection The logic states of certain data bus pins during reset determine SIML operating configuration. In addition, the state of the MODCLK pin determines system clock source and the state of the BKPT pin determines what happens during subsequent breakpoint assertions. Table 31 is a summary of reset mode selection options.
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Table 31 Reset Mode Selection
Mode Select Pin DATA0 DATA1 Default Function (Pin Left High) CSBOOT 16-Bit CS0 CS1 CS2 CS3 CS4 CS5 CS6 CS[7:6] CS[8:6] CS[9:6] CS[10:6] DSACK[1:0] AVEC, DS, AS SIZ[1:0] IRQ[7:1] MODCLK Test Mode Disabled VCO = System Clock Background Mode Disabled Alternate Function (Pin Pulled Low) CSBOOT 8-Bit BR BG BGACK FC0 FC1 FC2 ADDR19 ADDR[20:19] ADDR[21:19] ADDR[22:19] ADDR[23:19] PORTE
DATA2 DATA3 DATA4 DATA5 DATA6 DATA7 DATA8
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DATA9 DATA11 MODCLK BKPT
PORTF Test Mode Enabled EXTAL = System Clock Background Mode Enabled
Data lines have weak internal pull-up drivers. External bus loading can overcome the weak internal pullup drivers on data bus lines, and hold pins low during reset. Use an active device to hold data bus lines low. Data bus configuration logic must release the bus before the first bus cycle after reset to prevent conflict with external memory devices. The first bus cycle occurs ten CLKOUT cycles after RESET is released. If external mode selection logic causes a conflict of this type, an isolation resistor on the driven lines may be required. 3.8.2 Reset States of SIML Pins Generally, while RESET is asserted, SIML pins either go to an inactive high-impedance state or are driven to their inactive states. After RESET is released, mode selection occurs and reset exception processing begins. Pins configured as inputs must be driven to the desired active state. Pull-up or pulldown circuitry may be necessary. Pins configured as outputs begin to function after RESET is released. Table 32 is a summary of SIML pin states during reset.
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Table 32 SIML Pin Reset States
Pin State While RESET Asserted VDD VDD High-Z High-Z High-Z High-Z VDD VDD VDD Output VDD Mode select High-Z High-Z High-Z VDD High-Z High-Z Mode Select High-Z Asserted High-Z High-Z Mode select Pin State After RESET Released Default Function Pin Function CS10 CS[9:6] ADDR[18:0] AS AVEC BERR CS1 CS2 CS0 CLKOUT CSBOOT DATA[15:0] DS DSACK0 DSACK1 CS[5:3] HALT IRQ[7:1] MODCLK R/W RESET RMC SIZ[1:0] TSC Pin State VDD VDD Unknown Output Input Input VDD VDD VDD Output VSS Input Output Input Input VDD Input Input Input Output Input Output Unknown Input Alternate Function Pin Function ADDR23 ADDR[22:19] ADDR[18:0] PE5 PE2 BERR BG BGACK BR CLKOUT CSBOOT DATA[15:0] PE4 PE0 PE1 FC[2:0] HALT PF[7:1] PF0 R/W RESET PE3 PE[7:6] TSC Pin State Unknown Unknown Unknown Input Input Input VDD Input Input Output VSS Input Input Input Input Unknown Input Input Input Output Input Input Input Input
Pin(s)
CS10/ADDR23/ECLK CS[9:6]/ADDR[22:19]/PC[6:3] ADDR[18:0] AS/PE5 AVEC/PE2 BERR CS1/BG
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CS2/BGACK CS0/BR CLKOUT CSBOOT DATA[15:0] DS/PE4 DSACK0/PE0 DSACK1/PE1 CS[5:3]/FC[2:0]/PC[2:0] HALT IRQ[7:1]/PF[7:1] MODCLK/PF0 R/W RESET RMC/PE3 SIZ[1:0]/PE[7:6] TSC
3.8.3 Functions of Pins for Other Modules During Reset Generally, pins associated with modules other than the SIML default to port functions, and input/output ports are set to input state. This is accomplished by disabling pin functions in the appropriate control registers, and by clearing the appropriate port data direction registers. Refer to individual module sections in this manual for more information. 3.8.4 Reset Timing The RESET input must be asserted for a specified minimum period in order for reset to occur. External RESET assertion can be delayed internally for a period equal to the longest bus cycle time (or the bus monitor time-out period) in order to protect write cycles from being aborted by reset. While RESET is asserted, SIML pins are either in a disabled high-impedance state or are driven to their inactive states. When an external device asserts RESET for the proper period, reset control logic clocks the signal into an internal latch. The control logic drives the RESET pin low for an additional 512 CLKOUT cycles after it detects that the RESET signal is no longer being externally driven, to guarantee this length of reset to the entire system.
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If an internal source asserts the reset signal, the reset control logic asserts RESET for a minimum of 512 cycles. If the reset signal is still asserted at the end of 512 cycles, the control logic continues to assert RESET until the internal reset signal is negated. After 512 cycles have elapsed, the reset input pin goes to an inactive, high-impedance state for 10 cycles. At the end of this 10-cycle period, the reset input is tested. When the input is at logic level one, reset exception processing begins. If, however, the reset input is at logic level zero, the reset control logic drives the pin low for another 512 cycles. At the end of this period, the pin again goes to highimpedance state for ten cycles, then it is tested again. The process repeats until RESET is released. 3.8.5 Power-On Reset When the SIML clock synthesizer is used to generate the system clock, power-on reset involves special circumstances related to application of system and clock synthesizer power. Regardless of clock source, voltage must be applied to clock synthesizer power input pin VDDSYN in order for the MCU to operate. The following discussion assumes that VDDSYN is applied before and during reset. This minimizes crystal start-up time. When VDDSYN is applied at power-on, start-up time is affected by specific crystal parameters and by oscillator circuit design. VDD ramp-up time also affects pin state during reset. During power-on reset, an internal circuit in the SIML drives the IMB and external reset lines. The circuit releases the internal reset line as VDD ramps up to the minimum specified value, and SIML pins are initialized. As VDD reaches a specified minimum value, the clock synthesizer VCO begins operation and clock frequency ramps up to specified limp mode frequency. The external RESET line remains asserted until the clock synthesizer PLL locks and 512 CLKOUT cycles elapse. The SIML clock synthesizer provides clock signals to the other MCU modules. After the clock is running and the internal reset signal is asserted for four clock cycles, these modules reset. VDD ramp time and VCO frequency ramp time determine how long these four cycles take. Worst case is approximately 15 milliseconds. During this period, module port pins may be in an indeterminate state. While input-only pins can be put in a known state by means of external pull-up resistors, external logic on input/output or output-only pins must condition the lines during this time. Active drivers require high-impedance buffers or isolation resistors to prevent conflict. 3.8.6 Use of Three-State Control Pin Asserting the three-state control (TSC) input causes the MCU to put all output drivers in an inactive, high-impedance state. The signal must remain asserted for ten clock cycles in order for drivers to change state. There are certain constraints on use of TSC during power-on reset: * When the internal clock synthesizer is used (MODCLK held high during reset), synthesizer rampup time affects how long the ten cycles take. Worst case is approximately 20 ms from TSC assertion. * When an external clock signal is applied (MODCLK held low during reset), pins go to high-impedance state as soon after TSC assertion as ten clock pulses have been applied to the EXTAL pin. * When TSC assertion takes effect, internal signals are forced to values that can cause inadvertent mode selection. Once the output drivers change state, the MCU must be powered down and restarted before normal operation can resume. 3.9 Interrupts Interrupt recognition and servicing involve complex interaction between the CPU32L, the SIML, and a device or module requesting interrupt service.
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The CPU32L provides seven levels of interrupt priority (1-7), seven automatic interrupt vectors, and 200 assignable interrupt vectors. All interrupts with priorities less than seven can be masked by the interrupt priority (IP) field in status register. The CPU32L handles interrupts as a type of asynchronous expression. There are seven interrupt request signals (IRQ[7:1]). These signals are used internally on the IMB, and there are corresponding pins for external interrupt service requests. The CPU treats all interrupt requests as though they come from internal modules -- external interrupt requests are treated as interrupt service requests from the SIML. Each of the interrupt request signals corresponds to an interrupt priority level. IRQ1 has the lowest priority and IRQ7 the highest. Interrupt recognition is determined by interrupt priority level and interrupt priority mask value. The interrupt priority mask consists of three bits in the CPU32L status register. Binary values %000 to %111 provide eight priority masks. Masks prevent an interrupt request of a priority less than or equal to the mask value from being recognized and processed. IRQ7, however, is always recognized, even if the mask value is %111.
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IRQ[7:1] are active-low level-sensitive inputs. The low on the pin must remain asserted until an interrupt acknowledge cycle corresponding to that level is detected. IRQ7 is transition-sensitive as well as level-sensitive: a level 7 interrupt is not detected unless a falling edge transition is detected on the IRQ7 line. This prevents redundant servicing and stack overflow. A non-maskable interrupt is generated each time IRQ7 is asserted as well as each time the priority mask changes from %111 to a lower number while IRQ7 is asserted. Interrupt requests are sampled on consecutive falling edges of the system clock. Interrupt request input circuitry has hysteresis: to be valid, a request signal must be asserted for at least two consecutive clock periods. Valid requests do not cause immediate exception processing, but are left pending. Pending requests are processed at instruction boundaries or when exception processing of higher-priority exceptions is complete. The CPU32L does not latch the priority of a pending interrupt request. If an interrupt source of higher priority makes a service request while a lower priority request is pending, the higher priority request is serviced. If an interrupt request with a priority equal to or lower than the current IP mask value is made, the CPU32L does not recognize the occurrence of the request. If simultaneous interrupt requests of different priorities are made, and both have a priority greater than the mask value, the CPU32L recognizes the higher-level request. 3.9.1 Interrupt Acknowledge and Arbitration When the CPU32L detects one or more interrupt requests of a priority higher than the interrupt priority mask value, it places the interrupt request level on the address bus and initiates a CPU space read cycle. The request level serves two purposes: it is decoded by modules or external devices that have requested interrupt service, to determine whether the current interrupt acknowledge cycle pertains to them, and it is latched into the interrupt priority mask field in the CPU32L status register, to preclude further interrupts of lower priority during interrupt service. Modules or external devices that have requested interrupt service must decode the interrupt priority mask value placed on the address bus during the interrupt acknowledge cycle and respond if the priority of the service request corresponds to the mask value. However, before modules or external devices respond, interrupt arbitration takes place.
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Arbitration is performed by means of serial contention between values stored in individual module interrupt arbitration (IARB) fields. Each module that can make an interrupt service request, including the SIML, has an IARB field in its configuration register. IARB fields can be assigned values from %0000 to %1111. In order to implement an arbitration scheme, each module that can initiate an interrupt service request must be assigned a unique, non-zero IARB field value during system initialization. Arbitration priorities range from %0001 (lowest) to %1111 (highest) -- if the CPU recognizes an interrupt service request from a source that has an IARB field value of %0000, a spurious interrupt exception is processed. WARNING Do not assign the same arbitration priority to more than one module. When two or more IARB fields have the same non-zero value, the CPU32L interprets multiple vector numbers at the same time, with unpredictable consequences. Because the EBI manages external interrupt requests, the SIML IARB value is used for arbitration between internal and external interrupt requests. The reset value of IARB for the SIML is %1111, and the reset IARB value for all other modules is %0000. Although arbitration is intended to deal with simultaneous requests of the same priority, it always takes place, even when a single source is requesting service. This is important for two reasons: the EBI does not transfer the interrupt acknowledge read cycle to the external bus unless the SIML wins contention, and failure to contend causes the interrupt acknowledge bus cycle to be terminated early, by a bus error. When arbitration is complete, the module with the highest arbitration priority must terminate the bus cycle. Internal modules place an interrupt vector number on the data bus and generate appropriate internal cycle termination signals. In the case of an external interrupt request, after the interrupt acknowledge cycle is transferred to the external bus, the appropriate external device must decode the mask value and respond with a vector number, then generate data and size acknowledge (DSACK) termination signals, or it must assert the autovector (AVEC) request signal. If the device does not respond in time, the EBI bus monitor asserts the bus error signal (BERR), and a spurious interrupt exception is taken. Chip-select logic can also be used to generate internal AVEC or DSACK signals in response to interrupt requests from external devices. Chip-select address match logic functions only after the EBI transfers an interrupt acknowledge cycle to the external bus following IARB contention. If a module makes an interrupt request of a certain priority, and the appropriate chip-select registers are programmed to generate AVEC or DSACK signals in response to an interrupt acknowledge cycle for that priority level, chipselect logic does not respond to the interrupt acknowledge cycle, and the internal module supplies a vector number and generates internal cycle termination signals. For periodic timer interrupts, the PIRQL field in the periodic interrupt control register (PICR) determines PIT priority level. A PIRQL value of %000 means that PIT interrupts are inactive. By hardware convention, when the CPU32L receives simultaneous interrupt requests of the same level from more than one SIML source (including external devices), the periodic interrupt timer is given the highest priority, followed by the IRQ pins. Refer to 3.4.6 Periodic Interrupt Timer for more information. 3.9.2 Interrupt Processing Summary A summary of the interrupt processing sequence follows. When the sequence begins, a valid interrupt service request has been detected and is pending.
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A. The CPU finishes higher priority exception processing or reaches an instruction boundary. B. The processor state is stacked. The S bit in the status register is set, establishing supervisor access level, and bits T1 and T0 are cleared, disabling tracing. C. The interrupt acknowledge cycle begins: 1. FC[2:0] are driven to %111 (CPU space) encoding. 2. The address bus is driven as follows: ADDR[23:20] = %1111; ADDR[19:16] = %1111, which indicates that the cycle is an interrupt acknowledge CPU space cycle; ADDR[15:4] = %111111111111; ADDR[3:1] = the priority of the interrupt request being acknowledged; and ADDR0 = %1. 3. The request level is latched from the address bus into the interrupt priority mask field in the status or condition code register. D. Modules that have requested interrupt service decode the priority value on ADDR[3:1]. If request priority is the same as acknowledged priority, arbitration by IARB contention takes place. E. After arbitration, the interrupt acknowledge cycle is completed in one of the following ways: 1. When there is no contention (IARB = %0000), the spurious interrupt monitor asserts BERR, and the CPU generates the spurious interrupt vector number. 2. The dominant interrupt source supplies a vector number and DSACK signals appropriate to the access. The CPU acquires the vector number. 3. The AVEC signal is asserted (the signal can be asserted by the dominant interrupt source or the pin can be tied low), and the CPU generates an autovector number corresponding to interrupt priority. 4. The bus monitor asserts BERR and the CPU32L generates the spurious interrupt vector number. F. The vector number is converted to a vector address. G. The content of the vector address is loaded into the PC, and the processor transfers control to the exception handler routine. 3.10 Factory Test Block The test submodule supports scan-based testing of the various MCU modules. It is integrated into the SIML to support production testing. Test submodule registers are intended for Motorola use. Register names and addresses are provided to indicate that these addresses are occupied. SIMLTR -- System Integration Module Test Register SIMLTRE -- System Integration Module Test Register (E Clock) TSTMSRA -- Master Shift Register A TSTMSRB -- Master Shift Register B TSTSC -- Test Module Shift Count TSTRC -- Test Module Repetition Count CREG -- Test Module Control Register DREG -- Test Module Distributed Register $YFFA02 $YFFA08 $YFFA30 $YFFA32 $YFFA34 $YFFA36 $YFFA38 $YFFA3A
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4 Low-Power Central Processor Unit
Based on the powerful MC68020, the CPU32L processing module provides enhanced system performance and also uses the extensive software base for the Motorola M68000 family. 4.1 Overview The CPU32L is fully object-code compatible with the M68000 family, which excels at processing calculation-intensive algorithms and supporting high-level languages. The CPU32L supports all of the MC68010 and most of the MC68020 enhancements, such as virtual memory support, loop mode operation, instruction pipeline, and 32-bit mathematical operations. Powerful addressing modes provide compatibility with existing software programs and increase the efficiency of high-level language compilers. Special instructions, such as table lookup and interpolate and low-power stop, support the specific requirements of controller applications. Also included is background debug mode, an alternate operating mode that suspends normal operation and allows the CPU to accept debugging commands from the development system.
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Ease of programming is an important consideration in using a microcontroller. The CPU32L instruction set is optimized for high performance. The eight 32-bit general-purpose data registers readily support 8-bit (byte), 16-bit (word), and 32-bit (long word) operations. Ease of program checking and diagnosis is further enhanced by trace and trap capabilities at the instruction level. Use of high-level languages is increasing as controller applications become more complex and control programs become larger. High-level languages aid rapid development of software, with less error, and are readily portable. The CPU32L instruction set supports high-level languages. 4.2 Programming Model The CPU32L has sixteen 32-bit general registers, a 32-bit program counter, one 32-bit supervisor stack pointer, a 16-bit status register, two alternate function code registers, and a 32-bit vector base register. The programming model of the CPU32L consists of a user model shown in Figure 12 and a supervisor model shown in Figure 13, corresponding to the user and supervisor privilege levels. Some instructions available at the supervisor level are not available at the user level, allowing the supervisor to protect system resources from uncontrolled access. Bit S in the status register determines the privilege level. The user programming model remains unchanged from previous M68000 family microprocessors. Application software written to run at the nonprivileged user level migrates without modification to the CPU32L from any M68000 platform. The move from SR instruction, however, is privileged in the CPU32L. It is not privileged in the M68000.
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31 16 15 87 0 D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 31 16 15 0 A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 31 16 15 0 A7 (SSP) 31 0 PC 7 0 CCR CONDITION CODE REGISTER
CPU32 USER PROG MODEL
DATA REGISTERS
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ADDRESS REGISTERS
USER STACK POINTER
PROGRAM COUNTER
Figure 12 User Programming Model
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31 16 15 0 A7' (SSP) SUPERVISOR STACK POINTER 15 87 (CCR) 31 0 VBR 2 0 SFC DFC ALTERNATE FUNCTION CODE REGISTERS
CPU32 SUPV PROG MODEL
0 SR STATUS REGISTER
VECTOR BASE REGISTER
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Figure 13 Supervisor Programming Model Supplement 4.3 Status Register The status register contains the condition codes that reflect the results of a previous operation and can be used for conditional instruction execution in a program. The lower byte containing the condition codes is the only portion of the register available at the user privilege level; it is referenced as the condition code register (CCR) in user programs. At the supervisor privilege level, software can access the full status register, including the interrupt priority mask and additional control bits. SR -- Status Register
15 T1 14 T0 13 S 12 0 11 0 10 9 IP 8 7 0 6 0 5 0 4 X 3 N 2 Z 1 V 0 C
RESET: 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 U U U U U
System Byte T[1:0] -- Trace Enable S -- Supervisor/User State Bits [12:11] -- Unimplemented IP[2:0] -- Interrupt Priority Mask User Byte (Condition Code Register) Bits [7:5] -- Unimplemented X -- Extend N -- Negative Z -- Zero V -- Overflow C -- Carry
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4.4 Data Types Six basic data types are supported: * Bits * Packed Binary Coded Decimal Digits * Byte Integers (8 bits) * Word Integers (16 bits) * Long Word Integers (32 bits) * Quad Word Integers (64 bits) 4.5 Addressing Modes Addressing in the CPU32L is register-oriented. Most instructions allow the results of the specified operation to be placed either in a register or directly in memory. This flexibility eliminates the need for extra instructions to store register contents in memory. The CPU32L supports seven basic addressing modes:
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* Register direct * Register indirect * Register indirect with index * Program counter indirect with displacement * Program counter indirect with index * Absolute * Immediate Included in the register indirect addressing modes are the capabilities to post-increment, predecrement, and offset. The program counter relative mode also has index and offset capabilities. In addition to these addressing modes, many instructions implicitly specify the use of the status register, stack pointer, or program counter. 4.6 Instruction Set Summary Table 33 provides a summary of the CPU32L instruction set.
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Table 33 Instruction Set Summary
Instruction ABCD ADD ADDA ADDI ADDQ ADDX AND Syntax Dn, Dn - (An), - (An) Dn, , Dn , An #, # , Dn, Dn - (An), - (An) , Dn Dn, # , # , CCR # , SR Dn, Dn # , Dn Dn, Dn # , Dn label Dn, # , Dn, # ,
1
Operand Size 8 8 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8 16 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 8, 32 8, 32 8, 32 8, 32
Operation Source10 + Destination10 + X Destination Source + Destination Destination Source + Destination Destination Immediate data + Destination Destination Immediate data + Destination Destination Source + Destination + X Destination Source * Destination Destination Data * Destination Destination Source * CCR CCR Source * SR SR X/C 0
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ANDI ANDI to CCR ANDI to SR1 ASL
ASR
X/C
Bcc BCHG
If condition true, then PC + d PC ( bit number of destination ) Z bit of destination ( bit number of destination ) Z; 0 bit of destination If background mode enabled, then enter background mode, else format/vector - (SSP); PC - (SSP); SR - (SSP); (vector) PC If breakpoint cycle acknowledged, then execute returned operation word, else trap as illegal instruction PC + d PC ( bit number of destination ) Z; 1 bit of destination SP - 4 SP; PC (SP); PC + d PC ( bit number of destination ) Z If Dn < 0 or Dn > (ea), then CHK exception If Rn < lower bound or Rn > upper bound, then CHK exception 0 Destination (Destination - Source), CCR shows results (Destination - Source), CCR shows results (Destination - Data), CCR shows results
BCLR
BGND
none
none
BKPT BRA BSET BSR BTST CHK CHK2 CLR CMP CMPA CMPI
# label Dn, # , label Dn, # , , Dn , Rn , Dn , An # ,
none 8, 16, 32 8, 32 8, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 32 8, 32 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16, 32 8, 16, 32
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Table 33 Instruction Set Summary (Continued)
Instruction CMPM CMP2 DBcc DIVS/DIVU Syntax (An) +, (An) + , Rn Dn, label , Dn , Dr : Dq , Dq , Dr : Dq Dn, # , # , CCR # , SR Rn, Rn Dn Dn Dn
1
Operand Size 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 32/16 16 : 16 64/32 32 : 32 32/32 32 32/32 32 : 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8 16 32 8 16 16 32 8 32 none
Operation (Destination - Source), CCR shows results Lower bound Rn Upper bound, CCR shows result If condition false, then Dn - 1 PC; if Dn (- 1), then PC + d PC Destination / Source Destination (signed or unsigned) Destination / Source Destination (signed or unsigned) Source Destination Destination Data Destination Destination Source CCR CCR Source SR SR Rn Rn Sign extended Destination Destination Sign extended Destination Destination SSP - 2 SSP; vector offset (SSP); SSP - 4 SSP; PC (SSP); SSP - 2 SSP; SR (SSP); Illegal instruction vector address PC Destination PC SP - 4 SP; PC (SP); destination PC An SP - 4 SP, An (SP); SP An, SP + d SP Data SR; interrupt mask EBI; STOP X/C 0
DIVSL/DIVUL EOR EORI EORI to CCR EORI to SR EXG EXT EXTB
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ILLEGAL
none
JMP JSR LEA LINK LPSTOP LSL
1, 2
, An An, # d # Dn, Dn # , Dn Dn, Dn #, Dn , , An USP, An An, USP CCR, , CCR SR, , SR USP, An An, USP Rc, Rn Rn, Rc
none none 32 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 16, 32 32 32 32 16 16 16 16 32 32 32 32
LSR MOVE MOVEA MOVEA1 MOVE from CCR MOVE to CCR MOVE from SR1 MOVE to SR1 MOVE USP1 MOVEC1
0 Source Destination Source Destination USP An An USP CCR Destination Source CCR SR Destination Source SR USP An An USP Rc Rn Rn Rc
X/C
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Table 33 Instruction Set Summary (Continued)
Instruction MOVEM Syntax list, , list Dn, (d16, An) MOVEP (d16, An), Dn MOVEQ MOVES1 MULS/MULU #, Dn Rn, , Rn , Dn , Dl , Dh : Dl none , Dn Dn, #, #, CCR #, SR none Dn, Dn #, Dn Dn, Dn #, Dn Dn, Dn #, Dn Dn, Dn #, Dn #d none
1
Operand Size 16, 32 16, 32 32
Operation Listed registers Destination Source Listed registers Dn [31 : 24] (An + d); Dn [23 : 16] (An + d + 2); Dn [15 : 8] (An + d + 4); Dn [7 : 0] (An + d + 6)
16, 32 (An + d) Dn [31 : 24]; (An + d + 2) Dn [23 : 16]; (An + d + 4) Dn [15 : 8]; (An + d + 6) Dn [7 : 0] 8 32 8, 16, 32 16 16 32 32 32 32 32 32 64 8 8 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 none 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 16 32 none 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 16 16 none Immediate data Destination Rn Destination using DFC Source using SFC Rn Source Destination Destination (signed or unsigned) 0 - Destination10 - X Destination 0 - Destination Destination 0 - Destination - X Destination PC + 2 PC Destination Destination Source + Destination Destination Data + Destination Destination Source + CCR SR Source ; SR SR SP - 4 SP; SP Assert RESET line
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NBCD NEG NEGX NOP NOT OR ORI ORI to CCR ORI to SR PEA RESET1 ROL
C
ROR
C
ROXL
C
X
ROXR RTD RTE1 RTR RTS SBCD
X (SP) PC; SP + 4 + d SP (SP) SR; SP + 2 SP; (SP) PC; SP + 4 SP; Restore stack according to format (SP) CCR; SP + 2 SP; (SP) PC; SP + 4 SP (SP) PC; SP + 4 SP Destination10 - Source10 - X Destination
C
none none Dn, Dn - (An), - (An)
none none 8 8
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Table 33 Instruction Set Summary (Continued)
Instruction Scc STOP1 SUB SUBA SUBI SUBQ SUBX Syntax # , Dn Dn, , An #, #, Dn, Dn - (An), - (An) Operand Size 8 16 8, 16, 32 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 8, 16, 32 Operation If condition true, then destination bits are set to 1; else, destination bits are cleared to 0 Data SR; STOP Destination - Source Destination Destination - Source Destination Destination - Data Destination Destination - Data Destination Destination - Source - X Destination
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SWAP
Dn
16
MSW
LSW
TAS
, Dn Dym : Dyn, Dn , Dn Dym : Dyn, Dn
8
Destination Tested Condition Codes bit 7 of Destination Dyn - Dym Temp (Temp Dn [7 : 0]) Temp (Dym 256) + Temp Dn Dyn - Dym Temp (Temp Dn [7 : 0]) / 256 Temp Dym + Temp Dn SSP - 2 SSP; format/vector offset (SSP); SSP - 4 SSP; PC (SSP); SR (SSP); vector address PC If cc true, then TRAP exception If V set, then overflow TRAP exception Source - 0, to set condition codes An SP; (SP) An, SP + 4 SP
TBLS/TBLU
8, 16, 32
TBLSN/TBLUN
8, 16, 32
TRAP
# none # none An
none none 16, 32 none 8, 16, 32 32
TRAPcc TRAPV TST UNLK
1. Privileged instruction. 2. Two LPSTOP modes are supported. The first LPSTOP mode is the normal LPSTOP in which the system clock on the chip is stopped, shutting down all IMB modules with the exception of some parts of the SIML and CLKOUT. The second LPSTOP mode causes the system clock to be stopped only at the CPU32L, when the LPSTOP instruction is executed by the CPU32L. As with the normal LPSTOP operation, the CPU32L can be restarted by an interrupt, a trace, or a reset exception.
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4.7 Background Debugging Mode The background debugger on the CPU32L is implemented in CPU microcode. The background debugging commands are summarized in Table 34. Table 34 Background Debugging Mode Commands
Command Read D/A Register Write D/A Register Mnemonic RDREG/RAREG WDREG/WAREG Description Read the selected address or data register and return the results through the serial interface. The data operand is written to the specified address or data register. The specified system control register is read. All registers that can be read in supervisor mode can be read in background mode. The operand data is written into the specified system control register. Read the sized data at the memory location specified by the long-word address. The source function code register (SFC) determines the address space accessed. Write the operand data to the memory location specified by the long-word address. The destination function code (DFC) register determines the address space accessed. Used in conjunction with the READ command to dump large blocks of memory. An initial READ is executed to set up the starting address of the block and retrieve the first result. Subsequent operands are retrieved with the DUMP command. Used in conjunction with the WRITE command to fill large blocks of memory. Initially, a WRITE is executed to set up the starting address of the block and supply the first operand. The FILL command writes subsequent operands. The pipe is flushed and refilled before resuming instruction execution at the current PC. Current program counter is stacked at the location of the current stack pointer. Instruction execution begins at user patch code. Asserts RESET for 512 clock cycles. The CPU is not reset by this command. Synonymous with the CPU RESET instruction. NOP performs no operation and can be used as a null command.
Read System Register
RSREG
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Write System Register
WSREG
Read Memory Location
READ
Write Memory Location
WRITE
Dump Memory Block
DUMP
Fill Memory Block
FILL
Resume Execution
GO
Patch User Code
CALL
Reset Peripherals
RST
No Operation
NOP
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5 Queued Serial Module
The QSM contains two serial interfaces, the queued serial peripheral interface (QSPI) and the serial communication interface (SCI). Figure 14 shows the QSM block diagram.
QSPI
MISO/PQS0 MOSI/PQS1 SCK/PQS2 PCS0/SS/PQS3 PCS1/PQS4 PCS2/PQS5 PCS3/PQS6
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INTERFACE LOGIC
PORT QS
IMB
TXD/PQS7 SCI RXD
QSM BLOCK
Figure 14 QSM Block Diagram 5.1 Overview The QSPI provides easy peripheral expansion or interprocessor communication through a full-duplex, synchronous, three-line bus: data in, data out, and a serial clock. Four programmable peripheral chipselect pins provide addressability for up to 16 peripheral devices. A self-contained RAM queue allows up to 16 serial transfers of 8 to 16 bits each, or transmission of a 256-bit data stream without CPU intervention. A special wraparound mode supports continuous sampling of a serial peripheral, with automatic QSPI RAM updating, which makes the interface to A/D converters more efficient. The SCI provides a standard non-return to zero (NRZ) mark/space format. It operates in either full- or half-duplex mode. There are separate transmitter and receiver enable bits and dual data buffers. A modulus-type baud rate generator provides rates from 55 to 451 kbaud with a 14.44-MHz system clock. Word length of either eight or nine bits is software selectable. Optional parity generation and detection provide either even or odd parity check capability. Advanced error detection circuitry catches glitches of up to 1/16 of a bit time in duration. Wakeup functions allow the CPU to run uninterrupted until meaningful data is available. Table 35 shows the address map of the QSM.
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5.2 Address Map The "Access" column in the QSM address map in Table 35 indicates which registers are accessible only at the supervisor privilege level and which can be assigned to either the supervisor or user privilege level, according to the value of the SUPV bit in the QSMCR. Table 35 QSM Address Map
Access S S S S/U S/U Address $YFFC001 $YFFC02 $YFFC04 $YFFC06 $YFFC08 $YFFC0A $YFFC0C $YFFC0E $YFFC10 $YFFC12 $YFFC14 $YFFC16 $YFFC18 $YFFC1A $YFFC1C $YFFC1E $YFFC20 - $YFFCFF $YFFD00 - $YFFD1F $YFFD20 - $YFFD3F $YFFD40 - $YFFD4F Not Used PQS Pin Assignment Register (PQSPAR) 15 87 QSM Module Configuration Register (QSMCR) QSM Test Register (QTEST) QSM Interrupt Level Register (QILR) QSM Interrupt Vector Register (QIVR) 0
Not Used SCI Control 0 Register (SCCR0) SCI Control 1 Register (SCCR1) SCI Status Register (SCSR) SCI Data Register (SCDR) Not Used Not Used PQS Data Register (PORTQS) PQS Data Direction Register (DDRQS)
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S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U S/U
SPI Control Register 0 (SPCR0) SPI Control Register 1 (SPCR1) SPI Control Register 2 (SPCR2) SPI Control Register 3 (SPCR3) Not Used Receive RAM (RR[0:F]) Transmit RAM (TR[0:F]) Command RAM (CR[0:F]) SPI Status Register (SPSR)
NOTES: 1. Y = M111, where M is the logic state of the MM bit in the SIMLCR.
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5.3 Pin Function Table 36 is a summary of the functions of the QSM pins when they are not configured for general-purpose I/O. The QSM data direction register (DDRQS) designates each pin except RXD as an input or output. Table 36 QSM Pin Functions
Pin MISO QSPI Pins MOSI SCK Mode Master Slave Master Slave Master Slave Pin Function Serial data input to QSPI Serial data output from QSPI Serial data output from QSPI Serial data input to QSPI Clock output from QSPI Clock input to QSPI Input: Assertion causes mode fault Output: Selects peripherals Input: Selects the QSPI Output: Selects peripherals None Serial data output from SCI Serial data input to SCI
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PCS0/SS
Master Slave
PCS[3:1] SCI Pins TXD RXD
Master Slave Transmit Receive
5.4 QSM Registers QSM registers are divided into four categories: QSM global registers, QSM pin control registers, QSPI submodule registers, and SCI submodule registers. The QSPI and SCI registers are defined in separate sections below. Writes to unimplemented register bits have no meaning or effect, and reads from unimplemented bits always return a logic zero value. The module mapping bit of the SIML configuration register (SIMLCR) defines the most significant bit (ADDR23) of the address, shown in each register figure as Y (Y = $7 or $F). This bit, concatenated with the rest of the address given, forms the absolute address of each register. Refer to the SIML section of this technical summary for more information about how the state of MM affects the system. 5.4.1 Global Registers The QSM global registers contain system parameters used by both the QSPI and the SCI submodules. These registers contain the bits and fields used to configure the QSM. QSMCR -- QSM Configuration Register
15 STOP 14 FRZ1 13 FRZ0 12 0 11 0 10 0 9 0 8 0 7 SUPV 6 0 5 0 4 0 3 2 IARB
$YFFC00
1 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
The QSMCR contains parameters for the QSM/CPU/intermodule bus (IMB) interface.
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STOP -- Stop Enable 0 = Normal QSM clock operation 1 = QSM clock operation stopped STOP places the QSM in a low-power state by disabling the system clock in most parts of the module. The QSMCR is the only register guaranteed to be readable while STOP is asserted. The QSPI RAM is not readable. However, writes to RAM or any register are guaranteed to be valid while STOP is asserted. STOP can be negated by the CPU and by reset. The system software must stop each submodule before asserting STOP to avoid complications at restart and to avoid data corruption. The SCI submodule receiver and transmitter should be disabled, and the operation should be verified for completion before asserting STOP. The QSPI submodule should be stopped by asserting the HALT bit in SPCR3 and by asserting STOP after the HALTA flag is set. FRZ1 -- Freeze 1 0 = Ignore the FREEZE signal on the IMB 1 = Halt the QSPI (on a transfer boundary) FRZ1 determines what action is taken by the QSPI when the FREEZE signal of the IMB is asserted. FREEZE is asserted whenever the CPU enters the background mode. FRZ0 -- Freeze 0 Reserved Bits [12:8] -- Not Implemented SUPV -- Supervisor/Unrestricted 0 = User access 1 = Supervisor access SUPV defines the assignable QSM registers as either supervisor-only data space or unrestricted data space. IARB -- Interrupt Arbitration Identification Number The IARB field is used to arbitrate between simultaneous interrupt requests of the same priority. Each module that can generate interrupt requests must be assigned a unique, non-zero IARB field value. Refer to 3.9 Interrupts for more information. QTEST -- QSM Test Register $YFFC02
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QTEST is used during factory testing of the QSM. Accesses to QTEST must be made while the MCU is in test mode. QILR -- QSM Interrupt Levels Register
15 0 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 0 13 12 ILQSPI 11 10 9 ILSCI 8 7 6 5 4 QIVR 3 2
$YFFC04
1 0
QILR determines the priority level of interrupts requested by the QSM and the vector used when an interrupt is acknowledged. ILQSPI -- Interrupt Level for QSPI ILQSPI determines the priority of QSPI interrupts. This field must be given a value between $0 (interrupts disabled) to $7 (highest priority).
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ILSCI -- Interrupt Level of SCI ILSCI determines the priority of SCI interrupts. This field must be given a value between $0 (interrupts disabled) to $7 (highest priority). If ILQSPI and ILSCI are the same nonzero value, and both submodules simultaneously request interrupt service, QSPI has priority. QIVR -- QSM Interrupt Vector Register
15 14 13 12 QILR RESET: 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 INTV 3 2
$YFFC05
1 0
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At reset, QIVR is initialized to $0F, which corresponds to the uninitialized interrupt vector in the exception table. This vector is selected until QIVR is written. A user-defined vector ($40-$FF) should be written to QIVR during QSM initialization. After initialization, QIVR determines which two vectors in the exception vector table are to be used for QSM interrupts. The QSPI and SCI submodules have separate interrupt vectors adjacent to each other. Both submodules use the same interrupt vector with the least significant bit (LSB) determined by the submodule causing the interrupt. The value of INTV0 used during an interrupt-acknowledge cycle is supplied by the QSM. During an interrupt-acknowledge cycle, INTV[7:1] are driven on DATA[7:1] IMB lines. DATA0 is negated for an SCI interrupt and asserted for a QSPI interrupt. Writes to INTV0 have no meaning or effect. Reads of INTV0 return a value of one. 5.4.2 Pin Control Registers The QSM uses nine pins, eight of which form a parallel port (PORTQS) on the MCU. Although these pins are used by the serial subsystems, any pin can alternately be assigned as general-purpose I/O on a pin-by-pin basis. Pins used for general-purpose I/O must not be assigned to the QSPI by register PQSPAR. To avoid driving incorrect data, the first byte to be output must be written before DDRQS is configured. DDRQS must then be written to determine the direction of data flow and to output the value contained in register PORTQS. Subsequent data for output is written to PORTQS. PORTQS -- Port QS Data Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 PQS7 6 PQS6 5 PQS5 4 PQS4 3 PQS3 2 PQS2 RESERVED RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
$YFFC14
1 PQS1 0 PQS0
PORTQS latches I/O data. Writes drive pins defined as outputs. Reads return data present on the pins. To avoid driving undefined data, first write a byte to PORTQS, then configure DDRQS.
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PQSPAR -- PORT QS Pin Assignment Register DDRQS -- PORT QS Data Direction Register
15 0 14 13 12 11 10 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 PQSPA6 PQSPA5 PQSPA4 PQSPA3 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
$YFFC16 $YFFC17
1 0
PQSPA1 PQSPA0 DDQS7 DDQS6 DDQS5 DDQS4 DDQS3 DDQS2 DDQS1 DDQS0
Clearing a bit in the PQSPAR assigns the corresponding pin to general-purpose I/O; setting a bit assigns the pin to the QSPI. The PQSPAR does not affect operation of the SCI. Table 37 displays PQSPAR pin assignments. Table 37 PQSPAR Pin Assignments
PQSPAR Field PQSPAR Bit 0 1 PQSPA1 PQSPA2 PQSPA3 PQSPA4 PQSPA5 PQSPA6 PQSPA7 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 Pin Function PQS0 MISO PQS1 MOSI PQS21 SCK PQS3 PCS0/SS PQS4 PCS1 PQS5 PCS2 PQS6 PCS3 PQS72 TXD
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PQSPA0
NOTES: 1. PQS2 is a digital I/O pin unless the SPI is enabled (SPE in SPCR1 set), in which case it becomes SPI serial clock SCK. 2. PQS7 is a digital I/O pin unless the SCI transmitter is enabled (TE in SCCR1 = 1), in which case it becomes SCI serial output TXD.
DDRQS determines whether pins are inputs or outputs. Clearing a bit makes the corresponding pin an input; setting a bit makes the pin an output. DDRQS affects both QSPI function and I/O function. Table 38 shows the effect of DDRQS on QSM pin functions.
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Table 38 Effect of DDRQS on QSM Pin Function
QSM Pin MISO Mode Master Slave MOSI Master Slave SCK
1
DDRQS Bit DDQ0
Bit State 0 1 0 1
Pin Function Serial data input to QSPI Disables data input Disables data output Serial data output from QSPI Disables data output Serial data output from QSPI Serial data input to QSPI Disables data input Disables clock output Clock output from QSPI Clock input to QSPI Disables clock Input Assertion causes mode fault Chip-select output QSPI slave select input Disables select input Disables chip-select output Chip-select output Inactive Inactive Serial data output from SCI Serial data input to SCI
DDQ1
0 1 0 1
Master Slave
DDQ2
0 1 0 1
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PCS0/SS
Master Slave
DDQ3
0 1 0 1
PCS[3:1]
Master Slave
DDQ[4:6]
0 1 0 1
TXD
2
Transmit Receive
DDQ7 None
X NA
RXD
NOTES: 1. PQS2 is a digital I/O pin unless the SPI is enabled (SPE in SPCR1 set), in which case it becomes SPI serial clock SCK. 2. PQS7 is a digital I/O pin unless the SCI transmitter is enabled (TE in SCCR1 = 1), in which case it becomes SCI serial output TXD.
DDRQS determines the direction of the TXD pin only when the SCI transmitter is disabled. When the SCI transmitter is enabled, the TXD pin is an output.
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5.5 QSPI Submodule The QSPI submodule communicates with external devices through a synchronous serial bus. The QSPI is fully compatible with the serial peripheral interface (SPI) systems found on other Motorola products. Figure 15 shows a block diagram of the QSPI.
QUEUE CONTROL BLOCK QUEUE POINTER 4
COMPARATOR
DONE
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4 END QUEUE POINTER
A D D R E S S R E G I S T E R
80-BYTE QSPI RAM
CONTROL LOGIC STATUS REGISTER CONTROL REGISTERS 4 DELAY COUNTER 4
CHIP SELECT COMMAND
MSB
LSB
8/16-BIT SHIFT REGISTER PROGRAMMABLE LOGIC ARRAY Rx/Tx DATA REGISTER
M S M S
MOSI
MISO PCS0/SS
2 BAUD RATE GENERATOR
PCS[2:1] SCK
QSPI BLOCK
Figure 15 QSPI Block Diagram
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5.5.1 QSPI Pins Seven pins are associated with the QSPI. When not needed for a QSPI function, they can be configured as general-purpose I/O pins. The PCS0/SS pin can function as a peripheral chip select output, slave select input, or general-purpose I/O. Refer to Table 39 for QSPI input and output pins and their functions. Table 39 QSPI Pins
Pin Name(s) Master In Slave Out Master Out Slave In Serial Clock Mnemonic(s) MISO MOSI SCK PCS[3:1] PCS0 SS Mode Master Slave Master Slave Master Slave Master Master Master Slave Function Serial data input to QSPI Serial data output from QSPI Serial data output from QSPI Serial data input to QSPI Clock output from QSPI Clock input to QSPI Select peripherals Selects peripheral Causes mode fault Initiates serial transfer
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Peripheral Chip Selects Peripheral Chip Select Slave Select
5.5.2 QSPI Registers The programmer's model for the QSPI submodule consists of the QSM global and pin control registers, four QSPI control registers, one status register, and the 80-byte QSPI RAM. The CPU can read and write to registers and RAM. The four control registers must be initialized before the QSPI is enabled to ensure defined operation. SPCR1 should be written last because it contains QSPI enable bit SPE. Asserting this bit starts the QSPI. The QSPI control registers are reset to a defined state and can then be changed by the CPU. Reset values are shown below each register. Table 40 shows a memory map of the QSPI. Table 40 QSPI Memory Map
Address $YFFC18 $YFFC1A $YFFC1C $YFFC1E $YFFC1F $YFFD00 $YFFD20 $YFFD40 Name SPCR0 SPCR1 SPCR2 SPCR3 SPSR RR[0:F] TR[0:F] CR[0:F] Usage QSPI control register 0 QSPI control register 1 QSPI control register 2 QSPI control register 3 QSPI status register QSPI receive data (16 words) QSPI transmit data (16 words) QSPI command control (8 words)
Writing a different value into any control register except SPCR2 while the QSPI is enabled disrupts operation. SPCR2 is buffered to prevent disruption of the current serial transfer. After completion of the current serial transfer, the new SPCR2 values become effective. Writing the same value into any control register except SPCR2 while the QSPI is enabled has no effect on QSPI operation. Rewriting NEWQP[3:0] in SPCR2 causes execution to restart at the designated location.
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SPCR0 -- QSPI Control Register 0
15 MSTR 14 WOMQ 13 12 11 10 9 CPOL 8 CPHA 7 6 5 4 3 2 BITS[3:0] SPBR[7:0]
$YFFC18
1 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0
SPCR0 contains parameters for configuring the QSPI before it is enabled. The CPU can read and write this register. The QSM has read-only access. MSTR -- Master/Slave Mode Select 0 = QSPI is a slave device and only responds to externally generated serial data. 1 = QSPI is system master and can initiate transmission to external SPI devices. MSTR configures the QSPI for either master or slave mode operation. This bit is cleared on reset and may only be written by the CPU.
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WOMQ -- Wired-OR Mode for QSPI Pins 0 = Outputs have normal MOS drivers. 1 = Pins designated for output by DDRQS have open-drain drivers. WOMQ allows the wired-OR function to be used on QSPI pins, regardless of whether they are used as general-purpose outputs or as QSPI outputs. WOMQ affects the QSPI pins regardless of whether the QSPI is enabled or disabled. BITS[3:0] -- Bits Per Transfer In master mode, when BITSE in a command is set, the BITS[3:0] field determines the number of data bits transferred. When BITSE is cleared, eight bits are transferred. Reserved values default to eight bits. In slave mode, the command RAM is not used and the setting of BITSE has no effect on QSPI transfers. Instead, the BITS[3:0] field determines the number of bits the QSPI will receive during each transfer before storing the received data. Table 41 shows the number of bits per transfer. Table 41 Bits Per Transfer
BITS[3:0] 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 Bits Per Transfer 16 Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
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CPOL -- Clock Polarity 0 = The inactive state value of SCK is logic level zero. 1 = The inactive state value of SCK is logic level one. CPOL is used to determine the inactive state value of the serial clock (SCK). It is used with CPHA to produce a desired clock/data relationship between master and slave devices. CPHA -- Clock Phase 0 = Data is captured on the leading edge of SCK and changed on the following edge of SCK. 1 = Data is changed on the leading edge of SCK and captured on the following edge of SCK. CPHA determines which edge of SCK causes data to change and which edge causes data to be captured. CPHA is used with CPOL to produce a desired clock/data relationship between master and slave devices. CPHA is set at reset. SPBR[7:0] -- Serial Clock Baud Rate The QSPI uses a modulus counter to derive SCK baud rate from the MCU system clock. Baud rate is selected by writing a value from 2 to 255 into the SPBR[7:0] field. The following equation determines the SCK baud rate: System Clock SCK Baud Rate = -----------------------------------2 x SPBR[7:0] or System Clock SPBR[7:0] = ------------------------------------------------------------------------2 x SCK Baud Rate Desired Giving SPBR[7:0] a value of zero or one disables the baud rate generator. SCK is disabled and assumes its inactive state value. No serial transfers occur. At reset, baud rate is initialized to one eighth of the system clock frequency. SPRC1 -- QSPI Control Register 1
15 SPE RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 14 13 12 11 DSCKL[6:0] 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 DTL[7:0] 3 2
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$YFFC1A
1 0
SPCR1 contains parameters for configuring the QSPI before it is enabled. The CPU can read and write this register, but the QSM has read access only, except for SPE, which is automatically cleared by the QSPI after completing all serial transfers, or when a mode fault occurs. SPE -- QSPI Enable 0 = QSPI is disabled. QSPI pins can be used for general-purpose I/O. 1 = QSPI is enabled. Pins allocated by PQSPAR are controlled by the QSPI. DSCKL[6:0] -- Delay before SCK When the DSCK bit in command RAM is set, this field determines the length of delay from PCS valid to SCK transition. PCS can be any of the four peripheral chip-select pins. The following equation determines the actual delay before SCK: DSCKL[6:0] PCS to SCK Delay = ----------------------------------System Clock where DSCKL[6:0] equals {1, 2, 3,..., 127}. When the DSCK value of a queue entry equals zero, then DSCKL[6:0] is not used. Instead, the PCS valid-to-SCK transition is one-half SCK period.
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DTL[7:0] -- Length of Delay after Transfer When the DT bit in command RAM is set, this field determines the length of delay after serial transfer. The following equation is used to calculate the delay: 32 x DTL[7:0] Delay after Transfer = ----------------------------------System Clock where DTL equals {1, 2, 3,..., 255}. A zero value for DTL[7:0] causes a delay-after-transfer value of 8192/System Clock. If DT equals zero, a standard delay is inserted. 17 Standard Delay after Transfer = ----------------------------------System Clock Delay after transfer can be used to provide a peripheral deselect interval. A delay can also be inserted between consecutive transfers to allow serial A/D converters to complete conversion.
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SPCR2 -- QSPI Control Register 2
15 SPIFIE 14 WREN 13 WRTO 12 0 11 10 9 8 7 0 6 0 5 0 4 0 3 2 ENDQP[3:0]
$YFFC1C
1 0 NEWQP[3:0]
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
SPCR2 contains QSPI configuration parameters. The CPU can read and write this register; the QSM has read access only. Writes to SPCR2 are buffered. A write to SPCR2 that changes a bit value while the QSPI is operating is ineffective on the current serial transfer, but becomes effective on the next serial transfer. Reads of SPCR2 return the current value of the register, not of the buffer. SPIFIE -- SPI Finished Interrupt Enable 0 = QSPI interrupts disabled 1 = QSPI interrupts enabled SPIFIE enables the QSPI to generate a CPU interrupt upon assertion of the status flag SPIF. WREN -- Wrap Enable 0 = Wraparound mode disabled 1 = Wraparound mode enabled WREN enables or disables wraparound mode. WRTO -- Wrap To When wraparound mode is enabled, after the end of queue has been reached, WRTO determines which address the QSPI executes. Bit 12 -- Not Implemented ENDQP[3:0] -- Ending Queue Pointer This field contains the last QSPI queue address. Bits [7:4] -- Not Implemented NEWQP[3:0] -- New Queue Pointer Value This field contains the first QSPI queue address.
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SPCR3 -- QSPI Control Register
15 0 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 0 13 0 12 0 11 0 10 LOOPQ 9 HMIE 8 HALT 7 6 5 4 SPSR 3 2
$YFFC1E
1 0
SPCR3 contains QSPI configuration parameters. The CPU can read and write SPCR3, but the QSM has read-only access. Bits [15:11] -- Not Implemented LOOPQ -- QSPI Loop Mode 0 = Feedback path disabled 1 = Feedback path enabled LOOPQ controls feedback on the data serializer for testing.
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HMIE -- HALTA and MODF Interrupt Enable 0 = HALTA and MODF interrupts disabled 1 = HALTA and MODF interrupts enabled HMIE controls CPU interrupts caused by the HALTA status flag or the MODF status flag in SPSR. HALT -- Halt 0 = Halt not enabled 1 = Halt enabled When HALT is asserted, the QSPI stops on a queue boundary. It is in a defined state from which it can later be restarted. SPSR -- QSPI Status Register
15 14 13 12 SPCR3 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 10 9 8 7 SPIF 6 MODF 5 HALTA 4 0 3 2
$YFFC1F
1 0 CPTQP[3:0]
SPSR contains QSPI status information. Only the QSPI can assert the bits in this register. The CPU reads this register to obtain status information and writes it to clear status flags. SPIF -- QSPI Finished Flag 0 = QSPI not finished 1 = QSPI finished SPIF is set after execution of the command at the address in ENDQP[3:0]. MODF -- Mode Fault Flag 0 = Normal operation 1 = Another SPI node requested to become the network SPI master while the QSPI was enabled in master mode (SS input taken low). The QSPI asserts MODF when the QSPI is the serial master (MSTR = 1) and the SS input pin is negated by an external driver. HALTA -- Halt Acknowledge Flag 0 = QSPI not halted 1 = QSPI halted HALTA is asserted when the QSPI halts in response to CPU assertion of HALT. Bit 4 -- Not Implemented
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CPTQP[3:0] -- Completed Queue Pointer CPTQP[3:0] points to the last command executed. It is updated when the current command is complete. When the first command in a queue is executing, CPTQP[3:0] contains either the reset value ($0) or a pointer to the last command completed in the previous queue. 5.5.3 QSPI RAM The QSPI contains an 80-byte block of dual-access static RAM that is used by both the QSPI and the CPU. The RAM is divided into three segments: receive data, transmit data, and command control data. Receive data is information received from a serial device external to the MCU. Transmit data is information stored by the CPU for transmission to an external peripheral. Command control data is used to perform the transfer. Figure 16 displays the organization of the RAM.
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500
RR0 RR1 RR2 RECEIVE RAM RRD RRE RRF WORD
520
TR0 TR1 TR2 TRANSMIT RAM TRD TRE TRF WORD
540
CR0 CR1 CR2 COMMAND RAM CRD CRE CRF BYTE
51E
53E
54F
QSPI RAM MAP
Figure 16 QSPI RAM Once the CPU has set up the queue of QSPI commands and enabled the QSPI, the QSPI can operate independently of the CPU. The QSPI executes all of the commands in its queue, sets a flag indicating that it is finished, and then either interrupts the CPU or waits for CPU intervention. It is possible to execute a queue of commands repeatedly without CPU intervention. RR[0:F] -- Receive Data RAM $YFFD00
Data received by the QSPI is stored in this segment. The CPU reads this segment to retrieve data from the QSPI. Data stored in receive RAM is right-justified. Unused bits in a receive queue entry are set to zero by the QSPI upon completion of the individual queue entry. The CPU can access the data using byte, word, or long-word addressing. The CPTQP[3:0] value in SPSR shows which queue entries have been executed. The CPU uses this information to determine which locations in receive RAM contain valid data before reading them. TR[0:F] -- Transmit Data RAM $YFFD20
Data that is to be transmitted by the QSPI is stored in this segment. The CPU usually writes one word of data into this segment for each queue command to be executed.
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Information to be transmitted must be written to transmit data RAM in a right-justified format. The QSPI cannot modify information in the transmit data RAM. The QSPI copies the information to its data serializer for transmission. Information remains in transmit RAM until overwritten. CR[0:F] -- Command RAM $YFFD40
7 CONT
6 BITSE
5 DT
4 DSCK
3 PCS3
2 PCS2
1 PCS1
0 PCS01
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
CONT
BITSE
DT
DSCK
PCS3
PCS2
PCS1
PCS01
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COMMAND CONTROL NOTES: 1. The PCS0 bit represents the dual-function PCS0/SS.
PERIPHERAL CHIP SELECT
Command RAM is used by the QSPI when in master mode. The CPU writes one byte of control information to this segment for each QSPI command to be executed. The QSPI cannot modify information in command RAM. Command RAM consists of 16 bytes. Each byte is divided into two fields. The peripheral chip-select field enables peripherals for transfer. The command control field provides transfer options. A maximum of 16 commands can be in the queue. Queue execution by the QSPI proceeds from the address in NEWQP[3:0] through the address in ENDQP[3:0]. (Both of these fields are in SPCR2). CONT -- Continue 0 = Control of chip selects returned to PORTQS after transfer is complete. 1 = Peripheral chip selects remain asserted after transfer is complete. BITSE -- Bits per Transfer Enable 0 = 8 bits 1 = Number of bits set in BITS[3:0] field of SPCR0 DT -- Delay after Transfer The QSPI provides a variable delay at the end of serial transfer to facilitate the interface with peripherals that have a latency requirement. The delay between transfers is determined by the SPCR1 DTL[6:0] field. DSCK -- PCS to SCK Delay 0 = PCS valid to SCK transition is one-half SCK. 1 = SPCR1 DSCKL[6:0] field specifies delay from PCS valid to SCK. PCS[3:0] -- Peripheral Chip Select Use peripheral chip-select bits to select an external device for serial data transfer. More than one peripheral chip select can be activated at a time, and more than one peripheral chip can be connected to each PCS pin, provided that proper fanout is observed.
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5.5.4 Operating Modes The QSPI operates in either master or slave mode. Master mode is used when the MCU originates data transfers. Slave mode is used when an external device initiates serial transfers to the MCU through the QSPI. Switching between the modes is controlled by MSTR in SPCR0. Before entering either mode, appropriate QSM and QSPI registers must be properly initialized. In master mode, the QSPI executes a queue of commands defined by control bits in each command RAM queue entry. Chip-select pins are activated, data is transmitted from transmit RAM and received into receive RAM. In slave mode, operation proceeds in response to SS pin activation by an external bus master. Operation is similar to master mode, but no peripheral chip selects are generated, and the number of bits transferred is controlled in a different manner. When the QSPI is selected, it automatically executes the next queue transfer to exchange data with the external device correctly.
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Although the QSPI inherently supports multi-master operation, no special arbitration mechanism is provided. A mode fault flag (MODF) indicates a request for SPI master arbitration. System software must provide arbitration. Note that unlike previous SPI systems, MSTR is not cleared by a mode fault being set, nor are the QSPI pin output drivers disabled. The QSPI and associated output drivers must be disabled by clearing SPE in SPCR1. 5.6 SCI Submodule The SCI submodule is used to communicate with external devices through an asynchronous serial bus. The SCI is fully compatible with the SCI systems found on other Motorola MCUs, such as the M68HC11 and M68HC05 Families. 5.6.1 SCI Pins There are two unidirectional pins associated with the SCI. The SCI controls the transmit data (TXD) pin when enabled, whereas the receive data (RXD) pin remains a dedicated input pin to the SCI. TXD is available as a general-purpose I/O pin when the SCI transmitter is disabled. When used for I/O, TXD can be configured either as input or output, as determined by QSM register DDRQS. Table 42 shows SCI pins and their functions. Table 42 SCI Pins
Pin Names Receive data Transmit data Mnemonics RXD TXD Mode Receiver disabled Receiver enabled Transmitter disabled Transmitter enabled Function Not used Serial data input to SCI General-purpose I/O Serial data output from SCI
5.6.2 SCI Registers The SCI programming model includes QSM global and pin control registers, and four SCI registers. There are two SCI control registers, one status register, and one data register. All registers can be read or written at any time by the CPU. Changing the value of SCI control bits during a transfer operation may disrupt operation. Before changing register values, allow the transmitter to complete the current transfer, then disable the receiver and transmitter. Status flags in the SCSR may be cleared at any time.
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SCCR0 -- SCI Control Register 0
15 0 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 14 0 13 0 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 SCBR[12:0] 5 4 3 2
$YFFC08
1 0
SCCR0 contains a baud rate selection parameter. Baud rate must be set before the SCI is enabled. The CPU can read and write this register at any time. Bits [15:13] -- Not Implemented SCBR[12:0] -- Baud Rate SCI baud rate is programmed by writing a 13-bit value to BR. The baud rate is derived from the MCU system clock by a modulus counter.
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The SCI receiver operates asynchronously. An internal clock is necessary to synchronize with an incoming data stream. The SCI baud rate generator produces a receiver sampling clock with a frequency 16 times that of the expected baud rate of the incoming data. The SCI determines the position of bit boundaries from transitions within the received waveform, and adjusts sampling points to the proper positions within the bit period. Receiver sampling rate is always 16 times the frequency of the SCI baud rate, which is calculated as follows: System Clock SCI Baud Rate = ----------------------------------------------( 32 ) ( SCBR[12:0] ) or System Clock SCBR[12:0] = -------------------------------------------------------------------------32 x SCI Baud Rate Desired where SCBR[12:0] is in the range {1, 2, 3, ..., 8191} Writing a value of zero to SCBR[12:0] disables the baud rate generator. Table 43 lists the SCBR[12:0] settings for standard and maximum baud rates using a 14.44 MHz system clock. Table 43 SCI Baud Rates
Nominal Baud Rate 64 110 300 600 1200 2400 4800 9600 19200 38400 76800 Maximum rate Actual Rate with 14.44 MHz Clock 64.0 110.0 300.0 600.1 1200.1 2400.3 4800.5 9601.1 18802.1 37604.2 75208.3 451250.0 SCBR[12:0] Value $1B8B $1006 $05E0 $02F0 $0178 $00BC $005E $002F $0018 $000C $0006 $0001
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SCCR1 -- SCI Control Register 1
15 0 14 13 12 ILT 11 PT 10 PE 9 M 8 WAKE 7 TIE 6 TCIE 5 RIE 4 ILIE 3 TE 2 RE LOOPS WOMS RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
$YFFC0A
1 RWU 0 SBK
SCCR1 contains SCI configuration parameters. The CPU can read and write this register at any time. The SCI can modify RWU in some circumstances. In general, interrupts enabled by these control bits are cleared by reading SCSR, then reading (for receiver status bits) or writing (for transmitter status bits) SCDR. Bit 15 -- Not Implemented LOOPS -- Loop Mode 0 = Normal SCI operation, no looping, feedback path disabled 1 = Test SCI operation, looping, feedback path enabled LOOPS controls a feedback path on the data serial shifter. When loop mode is enabled, SCI transmitter output is fed back into the receive serial shifter. TXD is asserted (idle line). Both transmitter and receiver must be enabled before entering loop mode. WOMS -- Wired-OR Mode for SCI Pins 0 = If configured as an output, TXD is a normal CMOS output. 1 = If configured as an output, TXD is an open-drain output. WOMS determines whether the TXD pin is an open-drain output or a normal CMOS output. This bit is used only when TXD is an output. If TXD is used as a general-purpose input pin, WOMS has no effect. ILT -- Idle-Line Detect Type 0 = Short idle-line detect (start count on first one) 1 = Long idle-line detect (start count on first one after stop bit(s)) PT -- Parity Type 0 = Even parity 1 = Odd parity When parity is enabled, PT determines whether parity is even or odd for both the receiver and the transmitter. PE -- Parity Enable 0 = SCI parity disabled 1 = SCI parity enabled PE determines whether parity is enabled or disabled for both the receiver and the transmitter. If the received parity bit is not correct, the SCI sets the PF error flag in SCSR. When PE is set, the most significant bit (MSB) of the data field is used for the parity function, which results in either seven or eight bits of user data, depending on the condition of M bit. Table 44 lists the available choices. Table 44 Parity Enable Data Bit Selection
M 0 0 1 1 PE 0 1 0 1 Result 8 data bits 7 data bits, 1 parity bit 9 data bits 8 data bits, 1 parity bit
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M -- Mode Select 0 = SCI frame: one start bit, eight data bits, one stop bit (10 bits total) 1 = SCI frame: one start bit, nine data bits, one stop bit (11 bits total) WAKE -- Wakeup by Address Mark 0 = SCI receiver awakened by idle-line detection 1 = SCI receiver awakened by address mark (last bit set) TIE -- Transmit Interrupt Enable 0 = SCI TDRE interrupts inhibited 1 = SCI TDRE interrupts enabled TCIE -- Transmit Complete Interrupt Enable 0 = SCI TC interrupts inhibited 1 = SCI TC interrupts enabled
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RIE -- Receiver Interrupt Enable 0 = SCI RDRF interrupt inhibited 1 = SCI RDRF interrupt enabled ILIE -- Idle-Line Interrupt Enable 0 = SCI IDLE interrupts inhibited 1 = SCI IDLE interrupts enabled TE -- Transmitter Enable 0 = SCI transmitter disabled (TXD pin may be used as I/O) 1 = SCI transmitter enabled (TXD pin dedicated to SCI transmitter) The transmitter retains control of the TXD pin until completion of any character transfer that was in progress when TE is cleared. RE -- Receiver Enable 0 = SCI receiver disabled (status bits inhibited) 1 = SCI receiver enabled RWU -- Receiver Wakeup 0 = Normal receiver operation (received data recognized) 1 = Wakeup mode enabled (received data ignored until awakened) Setting RWU enables the wakeup function, which allows the SCI to ignore received data until awakened by either an idle line or address mark (as determined by WAKE). When in wakeup mode, the receiver status flags are not set, and interrupts are inhibited. This bit is cleared automatically (returned to normal mode) when the receiver is awakened. SBK -- Send Break 0 = Normal operation 1 = Break frame(s) transmitted after completion of current frame SBK provides the ability to transmit a break code from the SCI. If the SCI is transmitting when SBK is set, it will transmit continuous frames of zeros after it completes the current frame, until SBK is cleared. If SBK is toggled (one to zero in less than one frame interval), the transmitter sends only one or two break frames before reverting to idle line or beginning to send data. SCSR -- SCI Status Register
15 14 13 12 NOT USED RESET: 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 10 9 8 TDRE 7 TC 6 RDRF 5 RAF 4 IDLE 3 OR 2 NF
$YFFC0C
1 FE 0 PF
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SCSR contains flags that show SCI operational conditions. These flags can be cleared either by hardware or by a special acknowledgment sequence. The sequence consists of SCSR read with flags set, followed by SCDR read (write in the case of TDRE and TC). A long-word read can consecutively access both SCSR and SCDR. This action clears receive status flag bits that were set at the time of the read, but does not clear TDRE or TC flags. If an internal SCI signal for setting a status bit comes after the CPU has read the asserted status bits, but before the CPU has written or read register SCDR, the newly set status bit is not cleared. SCSR must be read again with the bit set. Also, SCDR must be written or read before the status bit is cleared. Reading either byte of SCSR causes all 16 bits to be accessed. Any status bit already set in either byte will be cleared on a subsequent read or write of register SCDR. TDRE -- Transmit Data Register Empty Flag 0 = Register TDR still contains data to be sent to the transmit serial shifter. 1 = A new character can now be written to the transmit data register. TDRE is set when the byte in the transmit data register is transferred to the transmit serial shifter. If TDRE is zero, transfer has not occurred and a write to the transmit data register will overwrite the previous value. New data is not transmitted if the transmit data register is written without first clearing TDRE. TC -- Transmit Complete Flag 0 = SCI transmitter is busy 1 = SCI transmitter is idle TC is set when the transmitter finishes shifting out all data, queued preambles (mark/idle line), or queued breaks (logic zero). The interrupt can be cleared by reading SCSR when TC is set and then by writing the transmit data register of SCDR. RDRF -- Receive Data Register Full Flag 0 = Receive data register is empty or contains previously read data. 1 = Receive data register contains new data. RDRF is set when the content of the receive serial shifter is transferred to the receive data register. If one or more errors are detected in the received word, flag(s) NF, FE, and/or PF are set within the same clock cycle. RAF -- Receiver Active Flag 0 = SCI receiver is idle 1 = SCI receiver is busy RAF indicates whether the SCI receiver is busy. It is set when the receiver detects a possible start bit and is cleared when the chosen type of idle line is detected. RAF can be used to reduce collisions in systems with multiple masters. IDLE -- Idle-Line Detected Flag 0 = SCI receiver did not detect an idle-line condition. 1 = SCI receiver detected an idle-line condition. IDLE is disabled when RWU in SCCR1 is set. IDLE is set when the SCI receiver detects the idle-line condition specified by ILT in SCCR1. If cleared, IDLE will not set again until after RDRF is set. RDRF is set when a break is received, so that a subsequent idle line can be detected. OR -- Overrun Error Flag 0 = RDRF is cleared before new data arrives. 1 = RDRF is not cleared before new data arrives. OR is set when a new byte is ready to be transferred from the receive serial shifter to the receive data register, and RDRF is still set. Data transfer is inhibited until OR is cleared. Previous data in receive data register remains valid, but data received during overrun condition (including the byte that set OR) is lost.
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NF -- Noise Error Flag 0 = No noise detected on the received data 1 = Noise occurred on the received data NF is set when the SCI receiver detects noise on a valid start bit, on any data bit, or on a stop bit. It is not set by noise on the idle line or on invalid start bits. Each bit is sampled three times. If none of the three samples are the same logic level, the majority value is used for the received data value, and NF is set. NF is not set until an entire frame is received and RDRF is set. FE -- Framing Error Flag 0 = No framing error on the received data. 1 = Framing error or break occurred on the received data. FE is set when the SCI receiver detects a zero where a stop bit was to have occurred. FE is not set until the entire frame is received and RDRF is set. A break can also cause FE to be set. It is possible to miss a framing error if RXD happens to be at logic level one at the time the stop bit is expected.
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PF -- Parity Error Flag 0 = No parity error on the received data 1 = Parity error occurred on the received data PF is set when the SCI receiver detects a parity error. PF is not set until the entire frame is received and RDRF is set. SCDR -- SCI Data Register
15 0 RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 U U U U U U U U U 14 0 13 0 12 0 11 0 10 0 9 0 8 R8/T8 7 R7/T7 6 R6/T6 5 R5/T5 4 R4/T4 3 R3/T3 2 R2/T2
$YFFC0E
1 R1/T1 0 R0/T0
SCDR contains two data registers at the same address. The receive data register is a read-only register that contains data received by the SCI. The data comes into the receive serial shifter and is transferred to the receive data register. The transmit data register is a write-only register that contains data to be transmitted. The data is first written to the transmit data register, then transferred to the transmit serial shifter, where additional format bits are added before transmission. R[7:0]/T[7:0] contain either the first eight data bits received when SCDR is read, or the first eight data bits to be transmitted when SCDR is written. R8/T8 are used when the SCI is configured for 9-bit operation. When it is configured for 8-bit operation, they have no meaning or effect.
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6 Configurable Timer Module 6
The configurable timer module 6 (CTM6) belongs to a family of timer modules for the Motorola Modular Microcontroller Family. The timer architecture is modular relative to the number of time bases (counter submodules) and channels (action submodules or timer I/O pins) that are included. The CTM6 consists of several submodules which are located on either side of the CTM6 internal submodule bus (SMB). All data and control signals within the CTM6 are passed over this bus. The SMB is connected to the outside world via the bus interface unit submodule (BIUSM), which is connected to the intermodule bus (IMB), and subsequently the CPU. This configuration allows the CPU to access the data and control registers in each CTM6 submodule on the SMB. Four local time base buses TBB[1:4], each 16-bits wide, are used to transfer timing information from counters to action submodules. Each CTM6 submodule can be connected to two TBBs. Figure 17 shows a block diagram of the CTM6. 6.1 Overview
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The time base bus system connects the four counter submodules to the eleven double-action submodules (DASMs) and eight single-action submodules (SASM) channels. The bus interface unit submodule (BIUSM) allows all the CTM6 submodules to communicate to the IMB via the submodule bus (SMB). The counter prescaler submodule (CPSM) generates six different clock frequencies which can be used by any counter submodule. This submodule is contained within the BIUSM. The free-running counter submodule (FCSM) has a 16-bit up counter with an associated clock source selector, selectable time-base bus drivers, software writable control registers, software readable status bits, and interrupt logic. One FCSM is contained in the CTM6. The modulus counter submodule (MCSM) is an enhancement of the FCSM. A modulus register gives the additional flexibility of recycling the counter at a count other than 64K clock cycles. Three MCSMs are contained in the CTM6. The single action submodule (SASM) provides an input capture and an output compare for each of two bidirectional pins. A total of four SASMs (eight channels) are contained in the CTM6. The double-action submodule (DASM) provides two 16-bit input captures or two 16-bit output compare functions that can occur automatically without software intervention. Eleven DASMs are contained in the CTM6. The real-time clock submodule (RTCSM) provides a real time clock function independent of other CTM6 submodules. This time counter is driven by a dedicated low frequency oscillator (32.768 kHz) for low power consumption. A parallel port I/O submodule (PIOSM) handles up to eight input/output pins. Each pin of the PIOSM may be programmed as an input or an output under software control. One PIOSM is contained in the CTM6. The static RAM submodule (RAMSM) provides 32 bytes (16 words) of contiguous memory locations and takes the address space of four standard submodules. The RAMSM works as a stand-by memory. Two RAMSMs are contained in the CTM6. The standby power switch changes the power source of the RTCSM prescaler, counters, and oscillator, as well as the two RAMSMs to VRTC when VDD drops below its minimum specified value.
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CIO5 CIO4 PORT I/O SUBMODULE (PIOSM17A) CIO3 CIO2 CIO1 CIO0 EXTERNAL CLOCK
LOAD SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM24A) SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM24B) SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM18A) SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM18B) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM26) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM27) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM28) TIME BASE BUS 1 TIME BASE BUS 2 EXTERNAL CLOCK DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM29) CTD29
MODULUS COUNTER SUBMODULE (MCSM30) LOAD MODULUS COUNTER SUBMODULE (MCSM31)
CTS24A CTS24B
CTM31L
CTS18A CTS18B
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CTD26
BUS INTERFACE UNIT SUBMODULE (BIUSM)
CLOCK PRESCALER SUBMODULE (CPSM)
CTD27
CTD28
LOAD SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM12A) SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM12B) SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM14A) SINGLE ACTION SUBMODULE (SASM14B) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM4) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM5) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM6) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM7) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM8) DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM9) TIME BASE BUS 4 TIME BASE BUS 3 SRAM SUBMODULE (RAMSM32) SRAM SUBMODULE (RAMSM36) VDD VDDSYN DOUBLE ACTION SUBMODULE (DASM10) CTD10 CTS14A CTS14B
MODULUS COUNTER SUBMODULE (MCSM2)
FREE-RUNNING COUNTER SUBMODULE (FCSM3)
CTD4
CTD5
CTD6
CTD7
CTD8
CTD9
STANDBY POWER SWITCH
VRTC
VSSRTCOSC
REAL-TIME CLOCK SUBMODULE (RTCSM16)
EXRTC XRTC
VSSRTCOSC
GLOBAL TIME BASE BUS A GLOBAL TIME BASE BUS B CTM6 BLOCK
Figure 17 CTM6 Block Diagram
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6.2 Address Map The CTM6 address map occupies 512 bytes. All CTM6 registers are addressable in supervisor space only. Table 45 shows the CTM6 register. Table 45 CTM6 Address Map
Address $YFF4001 $YFF402 $YFF404 $YFF406 $YFF408 $YFF40A $YFF40C -$YFF40E $YFF410 $YFF412 $YFF414 $YFF416 $YFF418 $YFF41A $YFF41C - $YFF41E $YFF420 $YFF422 $YFF424 $YFF426 $YFF428 $YFF42A $YFF42C $YFF42E $YFF430 $YFF432 $YFF434 $YFF436 $YFF438 $YFF43A $YFF43C $YFF43E $YFF440 $YFF442 $YFF444 $YFF446 $YFF448 $YFF44A $YFF44C $YFF44E 15 BIUSM Module Configuration Register (BIUMCR) BIUSM Test Register (BIUTEST) BIUSM Time Base Register (BIUTBR) Reserved CPSM Control Register (CPCR) CPSM Test Register (CPTR) Reserved MCSM2 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (MCSM2SICR) MCSM2 Counter Register (MCSM2CNT) MCSM2 Modulus Latch (MCSM2ML) Reserved FCSM3 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (FCSM3SIC) FCSM3 Counter Register (FCSM3CNT) Reserved DASM4 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM4SIC) DASM4 Register A (DASM4A) DASM4 Register B (DASM4B) Reserved DASM5 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM5SIC) DASM5 Register A (DASM5A) DASM5 Register B (DASM5B) Reserved DASM6 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM6SIC) DASM6 Register A (DASM6A) DASM6 Register B (DASM6B) Reserved DASM7 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM7SIC) DASM7 Register A (DASM7A) DASM7 Register B (DASM7B) Reserved DASM8 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM8SIC) DASM8 Register A (DASM8A) DASM8 Register B (DASM8B) Reserved DASM9 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM9SIC) DASM9 Register A (DASM9A) DASM9 Register B (DASM9B) Reserved 0
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Table 45 CTM6 Address Map (Continued)
Address $YFF450 $YFF452 $YFF454 $YFF456 - $YFF45E $YFF460 $YFF462 $YFF464 $YFF466 $YFF468 - $YFF46E $YFF470 $YFF472 $YFF474 $YFF476 $YFF478 - $YFF47E $YFF480 $YFF482 $YFF484 $YFF486 $YFF488 $YFF48A - $YFF48E $YFF490 $YFF492 $YFF494 $YFF496 $YFF498 -$YFF4BE $YFF4C0 $YFF4C2 $YFF4C4 $YFF4C6 $YFF4C8 - $YFF4CE $YFF4D0 $YFF4D2 $YFF4D4 $YFF4D6 $YFF4D8 $YFF4DA $YFF4DC $YFF4DE $YFF4E0 $YFF4E2 $YFF4E4 $YFF4E6 15 DASM10 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM10SIC) DASM10 Register A (DASM10A) DASM10 Register B (DASM10B) Reserved SASM12 Status/Interrupt/Control Register A (SIC12A) SASM12 Data Register A (S12DATA) SASM12 Status/Interrupt/Control Register B (SIC12B) SASM12 Data Register B (S12DATB) Reserved SASM14 Status/Interrupt/Control Register A (SIC14A) SASM14 Data Register A (S14DATA) SASM14 Status/Interrupt/Control Register B (SIC14B) SASM14 Data Register B (S14DATB) Reserved RTCSM16 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (RTC16SIC) RTCSM16 Prescaler Register (R16PRR) RTCSM16 32-Bit Free-Running Counter High (R16FRCH) RTCSM16 32-Bit Free-Running Counter Low (R16FRCL) PIOSM17A I/O Port Register (PIO17A) Reserved SASM18 Status/Interrupt/Control Register A (SIC18A) SASM18 Data Register A (S18DATA) SASM18 Status/Interrupt/Control Register B (SIC18B) SASM18 Data Register B (S18DATB) Reserved SASM24 Status/Interrupt/Control Register A (SIC24A) SASM24 Data Register A (S24DATA) SASM24 Status/Interrupt/Control Register B (SIC24B) SASM24 Data Register B (S24DATB) Reserved DASM26 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM26SIC) DASM26 Register A (DASM26A) DASM26 Register B (DASM26B) Reserved DASM27 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM27SIC) DASM27 Register A (DASM27A) DASM27 Register B (DASM27B) Reserved DASM28 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM28SIC) DASM28 Register A (DASM28A) DASM28 Register B (DASM28B) Reserved 0
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Table 45 CTM6 Address Map (Continued)
Address $YFF4E8 $YFF4EA $YFF4EC $YFF4EE $YFF4F0 $YFF4F2 $YFF4F4 $YFF4F6 $YFF4F8 $YFF4FA $YFF4FC $YFF4FE $YFF500 - $YFF51E $YFF520 - $YFF53E $YFF540 - $YFF5FE 15 DASM29 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (DASM29SIC) DASM29 Register A (DASM29A) DASM29 Register B (DASM29B) Reserved MCSM30 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (MCSM30SIC) MCSM30 Counter Register (MCSM30CNT) MCSM30 Modulus Latch (MCSM30ML) Reserved MCSM31 Status/Interrupt/Control Register (MCSM31SIC) MCSM31 Counter Register (MCSM31CNT) MCSM31 Modulus Latch (MCSM31ML) Reserved RAMSM32 RAM RAMSM36 RAM Reserved 0
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NOTES: 1. Y = M111, where M is the logic state of the module mapping (MM) bit in the SIMLCR.
6.3 Time Base Bus System The time base bus system is composed of four 16-bit buses: TBB1, TBB2, TBB3 and TBB4. They are arranged so that each CTM6 submodule can be connected to two time base buses. Figure 18 shows that CTM6 submodules numbered 1 to M-1 can be connected to TBB3 and TBB4. CTM6 submodules M to N can be connected to TBB1 and TBB2. Control bits within each CTM6 submodule allow the software to connect the submodule to the desired time base bus(es).
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TIME BASE BUS A (TBBA) TIME BASE BUS B (TBBB)
TIME BASE BUS 3 (TBB3)
SUBMODULE M SUBMODULE BUS (SMB)
SUBMODULE M-1 TIME BASE BUS 4 (TBB4)
SUBMODULE M+1 TIME BASE BUS 1 (TBB1) TIME BASE BUS 2 (TBB2)
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SUBMODULE 2
SUBMODULE N
SUBMODULE 1
BUS INTERFACE UNIT SUBMODULE (BIUSM)
INTERMODULE BUS (IMB)
CTM TBB BLOCK
Figure 18 Time Base Bus Configuration As shown in Figure 18, each CTM submodule can access one of two global time base buses. TBB1 and TBB4 are collectively referred to as global time base bus TBBA. Likewise, TBB2 and TBB3 are collectively referred to as global time base bus TBBB. Table 46 shows which time base buses are available for each CTM6 submodule. Table 46 CTM6 Time Base Bus Allocation
Global/Local Time Base Bus Allocation Submodule MCSM2 FCSM3 DASM4 - 10 SASM12 - 14 Global Bus A TBB4 TBB4 TBB4 TBB4 Global Bus B TBB3 TBB3 TBB3 TBB3 Submodule SASM18 SASM24 DASM26 - 29 MCSM30 - 31 Global/Local Time Base Bus Allocation Global Bus A TBB1 TBB1 TBB1 TBB1 Global Bus B TBB2 TBB2 TBB2 TBB2
Time base buses are used to transfer timing information from counters to action submodules. Each CTM6 submodule can either be a clock source module (and drive one or two of the time base buses) or an action submodule (and read and react to the timing information on the time base buses).
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The time base buses are precharge/discharge type buses with wired-OR capability, so that no hardware damage occurs when several counters are driving the same bus at the same time. 6.4 Bus Interface Unit Submodule (BIUSM) The BIUSM connects the SMB to the IMB and allows the CTM6 submodules to communicate with the CPU. The BIUSM also communicates interrupt requests from the CTM6 submodules to the IMB, and transfers the interrupt level, arbitration bit and vector number to the CPU during the interrupt acknowledge cycle. 6.4.1 BIUSM Registers The BIUSM contains a module configuration register, a time base register, and a test register. The BIUSM register block always occupies the first four register locations in the CTM6 register space and cannot be relocated within the CTM6 structure. All unused bits and reserved address locations return zero when read by the software. Writing to unused bits and reserved address locations has no effect.
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BIUMCR -- BIU Module Configuration Register
15 STOP 14 FRZ 13 0 12 11 10 9 IARB[2:0] 8 7 0 6 0 5 TBRS1 4 0 3 0 2 0 VECT[7:6]
$YFF400
1 0 0 TBRS0
RESET: 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
STOP -- Stop Enable The STOP bit, while asserted, completely stops operation of the CTM6. The BIUSM continues to operate to allow the CPU access to submodule registers. The CTM6 remains stopped until reset or until the STOP bit is negated by the CPU. 0 = Allows operation of the CTM6 1 = Stops operation of the CTM6 FRZ -- FREEZE Assertion Response 0 = Ignore IMB FREEZE signal 1 = CTM6 stops when IMB FREEZE signal is asserted NOTE Some submodules may validate this signal with internal enable bits. Bit 13 -- Not Implemented VECT[7:6] -- Interrupt Vector Base Number Field This bit field selects the interrupt vector base number for the CTM6. Of the eight bits necessary for vector number definition, the six least significant bits are programmed by hardware on a submodule basis, while the two remaining bits are provided by VECT[7:6]. This places the CTM6 vectors in one of four possible positions in the interrupt vector table. Refer to Table 47. Table 47 Interrupt Vector Base Number Bit Field
VECT7 0 0 1 1 VECT6 0 1 0 1 Resulting Vector Base Number $00 $40 $80 $C0
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IARB[2:0] -- Interrupt Arbitration Field This bit field and the IARB3 bit within each submodule provide 15 different interrupt arbitration numbers that can be used to arbitrate between interrupt requests occurring on the IMB with the same interrupt priority level. The IARB field defaults to zero on reset, preventing the module from arbitrating during an IACK cycle. If no arbitration takes place during the IACK cycle, the SIML generates a spurious interrupt, indicating to the system that the interrupt arbitration number has not been initialized. The CTM6 allows two different arbitration numbers to be used by providing each submodule with its own IARB3 bit (which can be set or cleared in software). Once IARB[2:0] are assigned in the BIUSM, they apply to all CTM6 interrupt requests. Therefore, CTM6 submodule interrupts can be prioritized with requests from other modules at the same interrupt level. IARB[2:0] are cleared by reset. Bits[7:6], [4:1] -- Not Implemented
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TBRS1, TBRS0 -- Time Base Register Bus Select Bits These bits specify which time base bus is accessed when the time base register (BIUTBR) is read. Refer to Table 48. Table 48 Time Base Register Bus Select Bits
TBRS1 0 0 1 1 TBRS0 0 1 0 1 Time Base Bus TBB1 TBB2 TBB3 TBB4
BIUTEST -- BIUSM Test Register
$YFF402
BIUTEST is used during factory testing of the CTM6. Accesses to BIUTEST must be made while the MCU is in test mode. BIUTBR -- BIUSM Time Base Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
$YFF404
1 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
BIUTBR is a read-only register used to read the value present on one of the time base buses. The time base bus being accessed is determined by TBRS1 and TBRS0 in BIUMCR. Writing to BIUTBR has no effect during normal operation. 6.5 Counter Prescaler Submodule (CPSM) The counter prescaler submodule (CPSM) is a programmable divider system that provides the CTM6 counters with a choice of six clock signals (PCLKx) derived from the sixth frequency MCU system clock (fsys). Five of these frequencies are derived from a fixed divider chain. The divide ratio is software selectable from a choice of four divide ratios. The CPSM is contained within the BIUSM. Figure 19 shows a block diagram of the CPSM.
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fsys
FIRST CPSM PRESCALER /2 or /3 /2 /4 8-BIT /8 PRESCALER /16 /32 /64 /128 /256 SELECT
PCLK1 =
fsys / 2 fsys / 4 fsys / 8 fsys / 16 fsys / 32
fsys / 3 fsys / 6 fsys / 12 fsys / 24 fsys / 48
PCLK2 = PCLK3 = PCLK4 = PCLK5 =
PCLK6 =
fsys / 64 fsys / 128 fsys / 256 fsys / 512
fsys / 96 fsys / 192 fsys / 384 fsys / 768
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DIV23 = / 2 PRUN DIV23 PSEL1 PSEL0 CPCR
DIV23 = / 3
CTM CPSM BLOCK
Figure 19 CPSM Block Diagram 6.5.1 CPSM Registers The CPSM contains a control register and a test register. All unused bits and reserved address locations return zero when read by the software. Writing to unused bits and reserved address locations has no effect. CPCR -- CPSM Control Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 PRUN 2 DIV23 NOT USED RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
$YFF408
1 0 PSEL[1:0]
PRUN -- Prescaler Running The PRUN bit is a read/write control bit that allows the software to switch the prescaler counter on and off. This bit allows the counters in various CTM6 submodules to be synchronized. It is cleared by reset. 0 = Prescaler is held in reset and is not running 1 = Prescaler is running DIV23 -- Divide By 2/Divide By 3 The DIV23 bit is a read/write control bit that selects the division ratio of the first prescaler counter. It may be changed by the software at any time and is cleared by reset. 0 = First prescaler stage divides by two 1 = First prescaler stage divides by three PSEL[1:0] -- Prescaler Division Ratio Select Field This bit field selects the division ratio of the programmable prescaler output signal (PCLK6). Refer to Table 49.
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Table 49 Prescaler Division Ratio Select Field
Prescaler Control Register Bits PRUN 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 DIV23 X 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 X 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 X 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 0 4 4 4 4 6 6 6 6 Prescaler Division Ratio 0 8 8 8 8 12 12 12 12 0 16 16 16 16 24 24 24 24 0 32 32 32 32 48 48 48 48 0 64 128 256 512 96 192 384 768
PSEL1 PSEL0 PCLK1 PCLK2 PCLK3 PCLK4 PCLK5 PCLK6
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CPTR -- CPSM Test Register
$YFF40A
CPTR is used during factory testing of the CTM6. Accesses to CPTR must be made while the MCU is in test mode. 6.6 Clock Sources for Counter Submodules One of seven clock sources can be chosen for each counter submodule. Five of them are fixed prescaler taps derived from the system clock: /2, /4, /8, /16, and /32. A sixth prescaler tap is software selectable as the system clock divided by 64, 128, 256, or 512. An alternate prescaler option provides fixed prescaler taps of the system clock divided by 3, 6, 12, 24, and 48. In this case, the software selectable tap is the system clock divided by 96, 192, 384, or 768. The seventh selectable clock source is an external pin which may trigger on the rising or falling edge of the input signal. The external input allows a clock frequency to be selected that is not based on the MCU system clock. Alternately, the external clock input allows a counter submodule to be used for pulse or event counting. NOTE The external clock inputs for MCSM30 and MCSM31 are tied to the I/O pin CTD5 for DASM5. The external clock inputs for MCSM2 and FCSM3 are tied to the I/O pin CTD27 for DASM27. 6.7 Free-Running Counter Submodule (FCSM) The free-running counter submodule (FCSM) has a 16-bit up counter with an associated clock source selector, selectable time-base bus drivers, software writable control registers, software readable status bits, and interrupt logic. When the 16-bit up counter overflows from $FFFF to $0000, an optional overflow interrupt may be generated. Software selects which, if any, time-base bus is to be driven by the 16-bit counter. A software control register selects whether the clock input to the counter is one of the taps from the prescaler or an input pin. The polarity of the external input pin is also programmable. One FCSM is contained in the CTM6. Figure 20 shows a block diagram of the FCSM.
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NOTE In order to count, the FCSM requires the CPSM clock signals to be present. On coming out of reset, the FCSM does not count internal or external events until the prescaler in the CPSM starts running (when the software sets the PRUN bit). This allows all counters in the CTM6 submodules to be synchronized.
TBBA TIME BASE BUSES TBBB BUS SELECT
DRVA DRVB
6 CLOCKS (PCLKX) FROM PRESCALER
CONTROL REGISTER BITS
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INPUT PIN CTMC
EDGE DETECT
CLOCK SELECT
16-BIT UP COUNTER
OVERFLOW INTERRUPT CONTROL
IN
CLK2 CLK1 CLK0
COF
IL2
IL1
IL0
IARB3
CONTROL REGISTER BITS SUBMODULE BUS
CONTROL REGISTER BITS
CTM FCSM BLOCK
Figure 20 FCSM Block Diagram 6.7.1 FCSM Registers The FCSM contains a status/interrupt/control register and a counter register. All unused bits and reserved address locations return zero when read. Writing to unused bits and reserved address locations has no effect. FCSM3SIC -- FCSM Status/Interrupt/Control Register
15 COF RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 U 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 13 IL[2:0] 12 11 IARB3 10 0 9 DRVA 8 DRVB 7 IN 6 0 5 0 4 0 3 0 2
$YFF418
1 CLK[2:0] 0
COF -- Counter Overflow Flag This status flag indicates whether or not a counter overflow has occurred. An overflow is defined to be the transition of the counter from $FFFF to $0000. If the IL field is non-zero, an interrupt request is generated when the COF bit is set. 0 = Counter overflow has not occurred 1 = Counter overflow has occurred This flag is set only by hardware and cleared only by software or a system reset. To clear the flag, first read the register with COF set to one, then write a zero to the bit. COF is cleared only if no overflow occurs between the read and write operations.
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IL[2:0] -- Interrupt Level Setting IL[2:0] to a non-zero value causes the FCSM to request an interrupt of the selected level when the COF bit sets. If IL[2:0] = %000, no interrupt will be requested when COF sets. These bits can be read or written at any time and are cleared by reset. IARB3 -- Interrupt Arbitration Bit 3 This bit works in conjunction with IARB[2:0] in the BIUMCR. Each module that generates interrupt requests on the IMB must have a unique value in the arbitration field. This interrupt arbitration identification number is used to arbitrate for the IMB when modules generate simultaneous interrupts of the same priority. The IARB3 bit is cleared by reset. Refer to 6.4.1 BIUSM Registers for more information on IARB[2:0]. DRV[A:B] -- Drive Time Base Bus This bit field contains read/write bits that control the connection of the FCSM to the time base buses A and B. These bits are cleared by reset. Refer to Table 52.
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Table 50 Drive Time Base Bus Field
DRVA 0 0 1 1 DRVB 0 1 0 1 Bus Selected No time base bus driven Time base bus B is driven Time base bus A is driven Both time base buses A and B are driven
WARNING Two time base buses should not be driven at the same time. IN -- Input Pin Status Bit This read-only status bit reflects the logic state of the FCSM input pin. Writing to this bit has no effect, nor does reset. NOTE The clock input of FCSM3 is internally connected to I/O pin CTD27 of DASM27 and will read the state of that pin. CLK[2:0] -- Counter Clock Select These read/write control bits select one of six internal clock signals (PCLK[1:6]) or one of two external conditions on the external clock input pin. Maximum frequency of the external clock signals is fsys/4. Refer to Table 54. Table 51 Counter Clock Select Field
CLK2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 CLK1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 CLK0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 Free-Running Counter Clock Source PCLK1 (fsys / 2 or fsys / 3) PCLK2 (fsys / 4 or fsys / 6) PCLK3 (fsys / 8 or fsys / 12) PCLK4 (fsys / 16 or fsys / 24) PCLK5 (fsys / 32 or fsys / 48) PCLK6 (fsys / 64 or fsys / 768) External clock input, falling edge External clock input, rising edge
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FCSM3CNT -- FCSM Counter Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
$YFF41A
1 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
The FCSM counter register is a read/write register. A read returns the current value of the counter. A write loads the counter with the specified value. The counter then begins incrementing from this new value. 6.8 Modulus Counter Submodule (MCSM) The modulus counter submodule (MCSM) is an enhancement of the FCSM. The MCSM contains a 16bit modulus latch, a 16-bit loadable up-counter, counter loading logic, a clock selector, a time base bus driver, and an interrupt interface. A modulus latch gives the additional flexibility of recycling the counter at a count other than 64-Kbyte clock cycles. The state of the modulus latch is transferred to the counter when an overflow occurs or when a user-specified edge transition occurs on an external input pin. In addition, a write to the modulus counter simultaneously loads both the counter and the modulus latch with the specified value. The counter then begins incrementing from this new value. Three MCSMs are contained in the CTM6. Figure 21 shows a block diagram of the MCSM. NOTE In order to count, the MCSM requires the CPSM clock signals to be present. On coming out of reset, the MCSM does not count internal or external events until the prescaler in the CPSM starts running (when the software sets the PRUN bit). This allows all counters in the CTM6 submodules to be synchronized.
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TBBA TIME BASE BUSES TBBB 6 CLOCKS (PCLKX) FROM PRESCALER BUS SELECT CLOCK INPUT PIN CTMC EDGE DETECT CLOCK SELECT
DRVA DRVB
CONTROL REGISTER BITS
IN2 CLK2 CLK1 CLK0
CONTROL REGISTER BIT MODULUS LOAD INPUT PIN CTML
CONTROL REGISTER BITS MODULUS CONTROL EDGE DETECT
16-BIT UP COUNTER
OVERFLOW
INTERRUPT CONTROL
MODULUS LOAD INPUT PIN CTML
MODULUS REGISTER
WRITE BOTH
IN1 EDGEN EDGEP COF IL2 IL1 IL0 IARB3
CONTROL REGISTER BIT
CONTROL REGISTER BITS SUBMODULE BUS
CONTROL REGISTER BITS
CTM MCSM BLOCK
Figure 21 MCSM Block Diagram
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6.8.1 MCSM Registers The MCSM contains a status/interrupt/control register, a counter, and a modulus latch. All unused bits and reserved address locations return zero when read. Writing to unused bits and reserved address locations has no effect. The CTM6 contains three MCSMs, each with its own set of registers. MCSM2SIC -- MCSM2 Status/Interrupt/Control Register MCSM30SIC -- MCSM30 Status/Interrupt/Control Register MCSM31SIC -- MCSM31 Status/Interrupt/Control Register
15 COF RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 13 IL[2:0] 12 11 IARB3 10 0 9 DRVA 8 DRVB 7 IN2 6 IN1 5 4 3 0 2 EDGEN EDGEP
$YFF410 $YFF4F0 $YFF4F8
1 CLK[2:0] 0
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COF -- Counter Overflow Flag This status flag indicates whether or not a counter overflow has occurred. An overflow of the MCSM counter is defined to be the transition of the counter from $FFFF to $xxxx, where $xxxx is the value contained in the modulus latch. If the IL[2:0] field is non-zero, an interrupt request is generated when the COF bit is set. 0 = Counter overflow has not occurred 1 = Counter overflow has occurred This flag is set only by hardware and cleared only by software or by a system reset. To clear the flag, the software must first read the register with COF set to one, then write a zero to the bit. COF is cleared only if no overflow occurs between the read and write operations. IL[2:0] -- Interrupt Level Setting IL[2:0] to a non-zero value causes the MCSM to request an interrupt of the selected level when the COF bit sets. If IL[2:0] = %000, no interrupt will be requested when COF sets. These bits can be read or written at any time and are cleared by reset. IARB3 -- Interrupt Arbitration Bit 3 This bit works in conjunction with IARB[2:0] in the BIUMCR. Each module that generates interrupt requests on the IMB must have a unique value in the arbitration field. This interrupt arbitration identification number is used to arbitrate for the IMB when modules generate simultaneous interrupts of the same priority. The IARB3 bit is cleared by reset. Refer to 6.4.1 BIUSM Registers for more information on IARB[2:0]. DRV[A:B] -- Drive Time Base Bus This bit field contains read/write bits that control the connection of the MCSM to time base buses A and B. These bits are cleared by reset. Refer to Table 52. Table 52 Drive Time Base Bus Field
DRVA 0 0 1 1 DRVB 0 1 0 1 Bus Selected No time base bus is driven Time base bus B is driven Time base bus A is driven Both time base buses A and B are driven
WARNING Two time base buses should not be driven at the same time.
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IN2 -- Clock Input Pin Status This read-only status bit reflects the logic state of the clock input pin. Writing to this bit has no effect, nor does reset. NOTE The clock input of MCSM2 is internally connected to I/O pin CTD27 for DASM27 and will read the state of that pin. The clock inputs of MCSM30 and MCSM31 are internally connected to I/O pin CTD5 for DASM5 and will read the state of that pin. IN1 -- Modulus Load Input Pin Status This read-only status bit reflects the logic state of the modulus load input pin. Writing to this bit has no effect, nor does reset. NOTE The load input of MCSM2 is internally connected to I/O pin CTD29 for DASM29 and will read the state of that pin. The load input of MCSM30 is internally connected to I/O pin CTD4 for DASM4 and will read the state of that pin. The load input of MCSM31 is available externally on the CTM31L pin. EDGEN, EDGEP -- Modulus Load Edge Sensitivity Bits These read/write control bits select the sensitivity of the edge detection circuitry on the modulus load pin CTML. Refer to Table 53. Table 53 Modulus Load Edge Sensitivity
EDGEN 0 0 1 1 EDGEP 0 1 0 1 IN1 Edge Detector Sensitivity None Positive edge only Negative edge only Positive and negative edge
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CLK[2:0] -- Counter Clock Select These read/write control bits select one of six internal clock signals (PCLK[1:6]) or one of two external conditions on the external clock input pin (rising edge or falling edge). The maximum frequency of the external clock signals is fsys/4. Refer to Table 54. Table 54 Counter Clock Select
CLK2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 CLK1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 CLK0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 Free-Running Counter Clock Source PCLK1 (fsys / 2 or fsys / 3) PCLK2 (fsys / 4 or fsys / 6) PCLK3 (fsys / 8 or fsys / 12) PCLK4 (fsys / 16 or fsys / 24) PCLK5 (fsys / 32 or fsys / 48) PCLK6 (fsys / 64 or fsys / 768) External clock input, falling edge External clock input, rising edge
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NOTE The clock input of MCSM2 is internally connected to I/O pin CTD27 for DASM27 and will read the state of that pin. The clock inputs of MCSM30 and MCSM31 are internally connected to I/O pin CTD5 for DASM5 and will read the state of that pin. MCSM2CNT -- MCSM2 Counter Register MCSM30CNT -- MCSM30 Counter Register MCSM31CNT -- MCSM31 Counter Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
$YFF412 $YFF4F2 $YFF4FA
1 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
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The MCSM counter register is a read/write register. A read returns the current value of the counter. A write simultaneously loads both the counter and the MCSM modulus latch with the specified value. The counter then begins incrementing from this new value. MCSM2ML -- MCSM2 Modulus Latch MCSM30ML -- MCSM30 Modulus Latch MCSM31ML -- MCSM31 Modulus Latch
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
$YFF414 $YFF4F4 $YFF4FC
1 0
RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
The MCSM modulus latch register is a read/write register. A read returns the current value of the latch. A write pre-loads the latch with a new value that the modulus counter will begin counting from when the next load condition occurs. 6.9 Single Action Submodule (SASM) The single action submodule (SASM) provides two identical channels, each having its own input/output pin, but sharing the same interrupt logic, priority level, and arbitration number. Each channel can be configured independently to perform either input capture or output compare. Table 55 shows the different operational modes. Table 55 SASM Operational Modes
Mode IC1 OC2 OCT2 OP2 Function Input capture either on a rising or falling edge or as a read-only input port Output compare Output compare and toggle Output port
NOTES: 1. When a channel is operating in IC mode, the IN bit in the SIC register reflects the logic state of the corresponding input pin (after being Schmitt triggered and synchronized). 2. When a channel is operating in OC, OCT, or OP mode, the IN bit in the SIC register reflects the logic state of the output of the output flip-flop.
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NOTE All of the functions associated with one pin are called a SASM channel. The SASM can perform a single timing action (input capture or output compare) before software intervention is required. Each channel includes a 16-bit comparator and one 16-bit register for saving an input capture value or for holding an output compare value. The input edge detector associated with each pin is programmable to cause the capture function to occur on the rising or falling edge. The output flip flop can be set to either toggle when an output compare occurs or to transfer a software-provided bit value to the output pin. In either input capture or output compare mode, each channel can be programmed to generate an interrupt. One of the two incoming time-base buses may be selected for each channel. Each channel can also work as a simple I/O pin. A total of four SASMs (eight channels) are contained in the CTM6. Figure 22 shows a block diagram of the SASM.
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SINGLE ACTION CHANNEL A
I/O PIN
FLAG
IL2
IL1
IL0
IARB3 IEN
INTERRUPT CONTROL
FLAG
SINGLE ACTION CHANNEL B
I/O PIN
SUBMODULE BUS CTM TIME BASE BUSES
CTM SASM BLOCK
Figure 22 SASM Block Diagram 6.9.1 SASM Registers The SASM contains two status/interrupt/control registers (A and B) and two data registers (A and B). All unused bits and reserved address locations return zero when read. Writing to unused bits and reserved address locations has no effect. The CTM6 contains four SASMs, each with its own set of registers. SIC12A, SIC14A -- SASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register A SIC18A, SIC24A -- SASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register A
15 FLAG RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 U 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 13 IL[2:0] 12 11 IARB3 10 IEN 9 0 8 BSL 7 IN 6 0 5 4 3 0 FORCE EDOUT
$YFF460, $YFF470 $YFF490, $YFF4C0
2 0 1 0 MODE[1:0]
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SIC12B, SIC14B -- SASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register B SIC18B, SIC24B -- SASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register B
15 FLAG RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 U 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 0 13 0 12 0 11 0 10 IEN 9 0 8 BSL 7 IN 6 0 5 4 3 0 FORCE EDOUT
$YFF464, $YFF474 $YFF494, $YFF4C4
2 0 1 0 MODE[1:0]
SICA and SICB contain the control and status bits for SASM channels A and B, respectively. SICA also contains the IL[2:0] interrupt level field and IARB3 interrupt arbitration bit 3 for both SASM channels A and B. FLAG -- Event Flag FLAG indicates whether or not an input capture or output compare event has occurred. If the IL[2:0] field is non-zero, and IEN is set, an interrupt request is generated when FLAG is set. 0 = An input capture or output compare event has not occurred 1 = An input capture or output compare event has occurred Table 56 shows the event flag status during different modes. Table 56 Event Flag Status Conditions
Mode IC OC OCT OP Status Description If a subsequent input capture event occurs while FLAG is set, the new value is latched and FLAG remains set. If a subsequent output compare event occurs while FLAG is set, the compare occurs normally and FLAG remains set. If a subsequent output compare event occurs while FLAG is set, the output signal toggles normally and FLAG remains set. If a subsequent internal compare event occurs while FLAG is set, the compare occurs normally and FLAG remains set.
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FLAG is set only by hardware and cleared only by software or by a system reset.To clear this bit, first read the register with FLAG set to one, then write a zero to the bit. NOTE The flag clearing mechanism works only if no flag setting event occurs between the read and write operations. If a FLAG setting event occurs between the read and write operations, the FLAG bit will not cleared. IL[2:0] -- Interrupt Level Setting IP[2:0] to a non-zero value causes the SASM to request an interrupt when the FLAG bit sets. If IL[2:0] = %000, no interrupts will be requested when FLAG sets. NOTE This field affects both SASM channels, not just channel A. IARB3 -- Interrupt Arbitration Bit 3 This bit works in conjunction with IARB[2:0] in the BIUMCR. Each module that generates interrupt requests on the IMB must have a unique value in the arbitration field. This interrupt arbitration identification number is used to arbitrate for the IMB when modules generate simultaneous interrupts of the same priority. The IARB3 bit is cleared by reset. Refer to 6.4.1 BIUSM Registers for more information on IARB[2:0].
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NOTE This bit field affects both SASM channels, not just channel A. IEN -- Interrupt Enable This control bit enables interrupts when FLAG is set and the IL[2:0] field is non-zero. 0 = Interrupts disabled 1 = Interrupts enabled BSL -- Time Base Bus Select This control bit selects the time base bus connected to the SASM. 0 = Time base bus A selected 1 = Time base bus B selected IN -- Input Pin Status In input mode (IC), the IN bit reflects the logic state present on the corresponding input pin after being Schmitt triggered and synchronized.
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In the output modes (OC, OCT and OP), the IN bit value reflects the state of the output flip-flop. The IN bit is a read-only bit. Reset has no effect on this bit. NOTE The input of SASM12A is internally connected to I/O pin CTD29 and will read the state of that pin. The input of SASM12B is internally connected to I/O pin CTD26 and will read the state of that pin. FORCE -- Force Compare Control In the IC and OP modes, FORCE is not used and writing to it has no effect. In the OC and OCT modes, FORCE is used by software to cause the output flip-flop (and the output pin) to behave as though an output compare had occurred. In OC and OCT mode, setting FORCE causes the value of EDOUT to be transferred to the output of the output flip-flop. Internal synchronization ensures that the correct level appears on the output pin when a new value is written to EDOUT and FORCE is set at the same time. 0 = No action 1 = Force output flip-flop to behave as if an output compare has occurred FORCE is cleared by reset and always reads as zero. NOTE FLAG is not affected by the use of the FORCE bit. EDOUT -- Edge Detect and Output Level In IC mode, EDOUT is used to select the edge that triggers the input capture circuitry. 0 = Input capture on falling edge 1 = Input capture on rising edge In OC and OCT mode, the EDOUT bit is used to latch the value to be output to the pin on the next output compare match or when the FORCE is set. Internal synchronization ensures that the correct level appears on the output pin when a new value is written to EDOUT and FORCE is set at the same time. Reading EDOUT returns the previous value written. In OP mode, the value of EDOUT is output to the corresponding pin. Reading EDOUT returns the previous value written. MODE[1:0] -- SASM Operating Mode This bit field selects the mode of operation for the SASM channel. Refer to Table 57.
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Table 57 SASM Operating Mode Select
MODE1 0 0 1 1 MODE2 0 1 0 1 SASM Channel Operating Mode Input capture (IC) Output port (OP) Output compare (OC) Output compare and toggle (OCT)
S12DATA, S14DATA -- SASM Data Register A S18DATA, S24DATA -- SASM Data Register A
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
$YFF462, $YFF472 $YFF492, $YFF4C2
2 1 0
RESET:
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U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
U
S12DATB, S14DATB -- SASM Data Register B S18DATB, S24DATB -- SASM Data Register B
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
$YFF464, $YFF474 $YFF494, $YFF4C4
2 1 0
RESET: U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U
SDATA and SDATB are the data registers associated with SASM channels A and B, respectively. In IC mode, SDATA and SDATB contain the last captured value. In the OC, OCT and OP modes, SDATA and SDATB are loaded with the value of the next output compare. 6.10 Double-Action Submodule (DASM) The double-action submodule (DASM) provides two 16-bit input capture or two 16-bit output compare functions that can occur automatically without software intervention. The input edge detector is programmable to cause the capture function to occur on user-specified edges. The output flip flop is set by one of the output compare signals and reset by the other one. The DASM input capture and the output compare modes may optionally generate interrupts. Software determines which of the two incoming time-base buses is used for input captures or output compares. Six operating modes allow software to use DASM input capture and output compare functions to perform pulse-width measurement, period measurement, single pulse generation, and continuous pulse width modulation, as well as standard input capture and output compare. The DASM can also work as a single I/O pin. DASM operation is determined by the mode select bit field MODE[3:0] in the DASM status/interrupt/control (DASMSIC) register. Table 58 shows the different DASM modes of operation.
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Table 58 DASM Modes of Operation
Mode DIS IPWM IPM IC OCB OCAB OPWM Description of Mode Disabled -- I/O pin is placed in a high impedance state Input pulse width measurement -- Capture on leading and the trailing edges of an input pulse Input period measurement -- Capture on two consecutive rising or falling edges of an input pulse Input capture -- Capture on user-specified edge Output compare, flag set on channel B match -- Generate leading and trailing edges of an output pulse and set flag on second edge Output compare, flag set on channels A and B match -- Generate leading and trailing edges of an output pulse and set flag on both edges Output pulse width modulation -- Generate continuous PWM output with 7, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, or 16 bits of resolution
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The DASM is composed of two timing channels (A and B), an output flip-flop, an input edge detector, some control logic and an interrupt interface. All control and status bits are contained in the DASMSIC register. Channel A consists of one 16-bit data register and one 16-bit comparator. To the user, channel B also appears to consist of one 16-bit data register and one 16-bit comparator, though internally, channel B has two data registers (B1 and B2). The operating mode determines which register is accessed by the software. Refer to Table 59. Table 59 Channel B Data Register Access
Mode IPWM, IPM, IC OCA, OCAB OPWM Data Register Registers A and B2 are used to hold the captured values. In these modes, the B1 register is used as a temporary latch for channel B. Registers A and B2 are used to define the output pulse. Register B1 is not used in these modes. Registers A and B1 are used as primary registers and hidden register B2 is used as a double buffer for channel B.
Register contents are always transferred automatically at the correct time so that the minimum pulse (measurement or generation) is just one time base bus count. The A and B data registers are always read/write registers, accessible via the CTM6 submodule bus. Eleven DASMs are contained in the CTM6. Figure 23 shows a block diagram of the DASM.
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TBBA 2 TIME BASE BUSES TBBB BUS SELECT
FORCA FORCB WOR IN
BSL
16-BIT COMPARATOR A
OUTPUT FLIP-FLOP
OUTPUT BUFFER
I/O PIN
16-BIT REGISTER A
EDPOL
16-BIT REGISTER B1
EDGE DETECT
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REGISTER B 16-BIT REGISTER B2 INTERRUPT CONTROL
16-BIT COMPARATOR B
MODE3 MODE2 MODE1 MODE0
FLAG
IL2
IL1
IL0
IARB3
CONTROL REGISTER BITS SUBMODULE BUS
CONTROL REGISTER BITS
CTM DASM BLOCK
Figure 23 DASM Block Diagram 6.10.1 DASM Registers The DASM contains one status/interrupt/control register and two data registers (A and B). All unused bits and reserved address locations return zero when read. Writing to unused bits and reserved address locations has no effect. The CTM6 contains 11 DASMs, each with its own set of registers. DASM4SIC, DASM5SIC -- DASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register DASM6SIC, DASM7SIC -- DASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register DASM8SIC, DASM9SIC -- DASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register DASM10SIC, DASM26SIC -- DASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register DASM27SIC, DASM28SIC -- DASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register DASM29SIC -- DASM Status/Interrupt/Control Register
15 FLAG RESET: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 13 IL[2:0] 12 11 IARB3 10 0 9 WOR 8 BSL 7 IN 6 5 4 3 FORCA FORCB EDPOL
$YFF420, $YFF428 $YFF430, $YFF438 $YFF440, $YFF448 $YFF450, $YFF4D0 $YFF4D8, $YFF4E0 $YFF4E8
2 1 0 MODE[3:0]
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FLAG -- Event Flag This status bit indicates whether or not an input capture or output compare event has occurred. If the IL[2:0] field is non-zero, an interrupt request is generated when FLAG is set. 0 = An input capture or output compare event has not occurred 1 = An input capture or output compare event has occurred Table 56 shows the event flag status during different modes. Table 60 Event Flag Status Conditions
Mode DIS IPWM IPM IC OCB OCAB OPWM FLAG bit is cleared FLAG bit is set each time there is a capture on channel A FLAG bit is set each time there is a capture on channel A, except for the first time FLAG bit is set each time there is a capture on channel A FLAG bit is set each time there is a successful comparison on channel B FLAG bit is set each time there is a successful comparison on either channel A or B FLAG bit is set each time there is a successful comparison on channel A Status Description
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FLAG is set only by hardware and cleared by software or by a system reset. To clear the bit, first read the register with FLAG set to one, then write a zero to the bit. Placing the DASM in DIS mode will also clear the flag. NOTE The flag clearing mechanism works only if no flag setting event occurs between the read and write operations. If a FLAG setting event occurs between the read and write operations, the FLAG bit will not be cleared. IL[2:0] -- Interrupt Level Setting IL[2:0] to a non-zero value causes the DASM to request an interrupt when the FLAG bit sets. If IL[2:0] = %000, no interrupt will be requested when FLAG sets. IARB3 -- Interrupt Arbitration Bit 3 This bit works in conjunction with IARB[2:0] in the BIUMCR. Each module that generates interrupt requests on the IMB must have a unique value in the arbitration field. This interrupt arbitration identification number is used to arbitrate for the IMB when modules generate simultaneous interrupts of the same priority. The IARB3 bit is cleared by reset. Refer to 6.4.1 BIUSM Registers for more information on IARB[2:0]. WOR -- Wired-OR Mode In the DIS, IPWM, IPM and IC modes, WOR is not used. Reading this bit returns the value that was previously written. In the OCB, OCAB and OPWM modes, WOR selects whether the output buffer is configured for normal or open drain operation. 0 = Output buffer operates in normal mode 1 = Output buffer operates in open drain mode BSL -- Bus Select This bit selects the time base bus connected to the DASM. 0 = DASM is connected to time base bus A. 1 = DASM is connected to time base bus B.
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IN -- Input Pin Status In the DIS, IPWM, IPM and IC modes, this read-only status bit reflects the logic level on the input pin. In the OCB, OCAB and OPWM modes, reading this bit returns the value latched on the output flip-flop, after EDPOL polarity selection. Writing to this bit has no effect. FORCA -- Force A In the OCB, OCAB and OPWM modes, FORCA allows software to force the output flip-flop to behave as if a successful comparison had occurred on channel A (except that the FLAG bit is not set). Writing a one to FORCA sets the output flip-flop; writing a zero has no effect. In the DIS, IPWM, IPM and IC modes, FORCA is not used and writing to it has no effect. FORCA is cleared by reset, and always reads as zero. NOTE Writing a one to both FORCA and FORCB simultaneously resets the output flipflop. FORCB -- Force B In the OCB, OCAB and OPWM modes, FORCB allows software to force the output flip-flop to behave as if a successful comparison had occurred on channel B (except that the FLAG bit is not set). Writing a one to FORCB sets the output flip-flop, writing a zero has no effect. In the DIS, IPWM, IPM and IC modes, FORCB is not used and writing to it has no effect. FORCB is cleared by reset, and always reads as zero. NOTE Writing a one to both FORCA and FORCB simultaneously resets the output flipflop. EDPOL -- Edge Polarity EDPOL selects different options depending on the DASM operating mode. Refer to Table 61. Table 61 Edge Polarity
MODE DIS EDPOL X 0 IPWM 1 IPM, IC 0 1 0 OCB, OCAB, OPWM 1 Function EDPOL is not used in DIS mode Channel A captures on a rising edge Channel B captures on a falling edge Channel A captures on a falling edge Channel B captures on a rising edge Channel A captures on a rising edge Channel A captures on a falling edge A compare on channel A sets the output pin to logic one A compare on channel B clears the output pin to logic zero A compare on channel A clears the output pin to logic zero A compare on channel B sets the output pin to logic one
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MODE[3:0] -- DASM Mode Select This bit field selects the operating mode of the DASM. Refer to Table 62.
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NOTE To avoid spurious interrupts, DASM interrupts should be disabled before changing the operating mode. Table 62 DASM Mode Select Field
MODE[3:0] 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 Bits of Resolution -- 16 16 16 16 16 -- 16 15 14 13 12 11 9 7 Time Base Bits Ignored -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 15 [15:14] [15:13] [15:12] [15:11] [15:9] [15:7] DASM Operating Mode DIS -- Disabled IPWM -- Input pulse width measurement IPM -- Input measurement period IC -- Input capture OCB -- Output compare, flag on B compare OCAB -- Output compare, flag on A and B compare Not used OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation OPWM -- Output pulse-width modulation
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011X 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
DASM4A, DASM5A -- DASM Data Register A DASM6A, DASM7A -- DASM Data Register A DASM8A, DASM9A -- DASM Data Register A DASM10A, DASM26A -- DASM Data Register A DASM27A, DASM28A --DASM Data Register A DASM29A -- DASM Data Register A
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
$YFF422, $YFF42A $YFF432, $YFF43A $YFF442, $YFF44A $YFF452, $YFF4D2 $YFF4DA, $YFF4E2 $YFF4EA
2 1 0
RESET: U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U
DASMA is the data register associated with channel A. Table 63 shows how the DASMA is used with the different operating modes.
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Table 63 DASMA Operations
Mode DIS IPWM IPM IC DASMA Operation DASMA can be accessed to prepare a value for a subsequent mode selection DASMA contains the captured value corresponding to the trailing edge of the measured pulse DASMA contains the captured value corresponding to the most recently detected user-specified rising or falling edge DASMA contains the captured value corresponding to the most recently detected user-specified rising or falling edge DASMA is loaded with the value corresponding to the leading edge of the pulse to be generated. Writing to DASMA in the OCB and OCAB modes also enables the corresponding channel A comparator until the next successful comparison. DASMA is loaded with the value corresponding to the leading edge of the pulse to be generated. Writing to DASMA in the OCB and OCAB modes also enables the corresponding channel A comparator until the next successful comparison. DASMA is loaded with the value corresponding to the leading edge of the PWM pulse to be generated.
OCB
OCAB
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OPWM
DASM4B, DASM5B -- DASM Data Register B DASM6B, DASM7B -- DASM Data Register B DASM8B, DASM9B -- DASM Data Register B DASM10B, DASM26B -- DASM Data Register B DASM27B, DASM28B -- DASM Data Register B DASM29B -- DASM Data Register B
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3
$YFF424, $YFF42C $YFF434, $YFF43C $YFF444, $YFF44C $YFF454, $YFF4D4 $YFF4DC, $YFF4E4 $YFF4EC
2 1 0
RESET: U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U
DASMB is the data register associated with channel B. Table 64 shows how DASMB is used with the different operating modes. Depending on the mode selected, software access is to register B1 or register B2.
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Table 64 DASMB Operations
Mode DIS DASMB Operation DASMB can be accessed to prepare a value for a subsequent mode selection. In this mode, register B1 is accessed in order to prepare a value for the OPWM mode. Unused register B2 is hidden and cannot be read, but is written with the same value when register B1 is written. DASMB contains the captured value corresponding to the trailing edge of the measured pulse. In this mode, register B2 is accessed. Buffer register B1 is hidden and cannot be accessed. DASMB contains the captured value corresponding to the most recently detected user-specified rising or falling edge. In this mode, register B2 is accessed. Buffer register B1 is hidden and cannot be accessed. DASMB contains the captured value corresponding to the most recently detected user-specified rising or falling edge. In this mode, register B2 is accessed. Buffer register B1 is hidden and cannot be accessed. DASMB is loaded with the value corresponding to the trailing edge of the pulse to be generated. Writing to DASMB in the OCB and OCAB modes also enables the corresponding channel B comparator until the next successful comparison. In this mode, register B2 is accessed. Buffer register B1 is hidden and cannot be accessed. DASMB is loaded with the value corresponding to the trailing edge of the pulse to be generated. Writing to DASMB in the OCB and OCAB modes also enables the corresponding channel B comparator until the next successful comparison. In this mode, register B2 is accessed. Buffer register B1 is hidden and cannot be accessed. DASMB is loaded with the value corresponding to the trailing edge of the PWM pulse to be generated. In this mode, register B1 is accessed. Buffer register B2 is hidden and cannot be accessed
IPWM
IPM
IC
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OCB
OCAB
OPWM
6.11 Real-Time Clock Submodule (RTCSM) with Low-Power Oscillator The real -ime clock submodule provides a real-time clock independent of other CTM6 submodules. This time counter is driven by a dedicated low frequency oscillator (32.768 kHz) for low power consumption. The RTCSM contains a 15-bit prescaler and a 32-bit free-running counter, from which seconds, minutes, hours and days can be determined. The RTCSM can also generate interrupts at one second intervals. The low-power oscillator, prescaler, and counter portions of the RTCSM may be sustained by a separate power supply (VRTC) for battery backup when VDD is off. The RTCSM and the low-power oscillator can be disabled for minimum power consumption on VRTC when VDD is powered off. This is useful for maximizing the shelf life of the standby battery. Refer to 6.14 RTCSM and RAMSM Standby Operation for more information. One RTCSM is contained in the CTM6. Figure 24 shows a block diagram of the RTCSM.
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32.768 kHz 10 pF
1
1 pF1 10 k
EXTAL 1 Hz 32-BIT FREE-RUNNING COUNTER 15-BIT PRESCALER
XTAL
LOW POWER OSCILLATOR
32-BIT FREE-RUNNING COUNTER BUFFER
15-BIT PRESCALER BUFFER
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INTERRUPT LOGIC
CONTROL LOGIC WRITE ENABLE ENABLE
STATUS, INTERRUPT, AND CONTROL REGISTER BITS
FLAG (1 Hz)
ARB3
INTERRUPT LEVEL
WEN
EN
SUBMODULE BUS NOTES: 1. RESISTANCE AND CAPACITANCE BASED ON A TEST CIRCUIT CONSTRUCTED WITH A DAISHINKU DMX-38 32.768 kHz CRYSTAL. SPECIFIC COMPONENTS MUST BE BASED ON CRYSTAL TYPE. CONTACT CRYSTAL VENDOR FOR EXACT CIRCUIT.
CTM RTC BLOCK
Figure 24 RTCSM Block Diagram 6.11.1 RTCSM Registers The RTCSM contains one status/interrupt/control register, one 15-bit prescaler register and two 32-bit free-running counter registers (high and low). All unused bits and reserved address locations return zero when read. Writing to unused bits and reserved address locations has no effect. RTC16SIC -- RTCSM Status/Interrupt/Control Register
15 TICKF RESET: U 0 0 0 0 0 0 U 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 13 IL[2:0] 12 11 IARB3 10 0 9 WEN 8 EN 7 6 5 4 3 2 NOT USED
$YFF480
1 0
TICKF -- 1 Hz Clock Tick Flag TICKF is set each time the 32-bit free-running counter is incremented. Software can clear TICKF by reading the bit as a one, then writing a zero to it. If the IL[2:0] field is non-zero, an interrupt request is generated when TICKF is set. TICKF is not affected by reset.
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NOTE TICKF is only cleared if the 32-bit free-running counter does not increment between reading RTC16SIC with TICKF set to one and then writing TICKF to zero. IL[2:0] -- Interrupt Level Field Setting IL[2:0] to a non-zero value causes the RTCSM to request an interrupt of the selected level when the TICKF bit sets. If IL[2:0] = %000, no interrupt will be requested when TICKF sets. IARB3 -- Interrupt Arbitration Bit 3 This bit works in conjunction with IARB[2:0] in the BIUMCR. Each module that generates interrupt requests on the IMB must have a unique value in the arbitration field. This interrupt arbitration identification number is used to arbitrate for the IMB when modules generate simultaneous interrupts of the same priority. The IARB3 bit is cleared by reset. Refer to 6.4.1 BIUSM Registers for more information on IARB[2:0].
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WEN -- Write Enable Control This bit allows the 15-bit prescaler and the 32-bit free-running counter to be updated. Normally, these are read-only registers. Regular write operations have no effect. When the WEN bit is written to one, it sets a latch that allows the 15-bit prescaler and the 32-bit free-running counter to be written. The latch is automatically reset when the prescaler is written. To write a new value to the complete counter chain: * Write a one to the WEN bit. * Execute a long-word write to the 32-bit free-running counter high (R16FRCH) register. * Execute a word write to the 15-bit prescaler (R16PRR) register. WEN cannot be written to one again until the writes to update the prescaler and free-running counter have been completed. The WEN bit always reads as zero. EN -- RTCSM Enable This bit selects whether the RTCSM is running or not. 0 = RTCSM is not running 1 = RTCSM is running The EN bit is not affected by reset. If the RTCSM is not to be used, it is recommended that EN be cleared as soon as the MCU comes out of reset. R16PRR -- RTCSM Prescaler Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
$YFF482
1 0
RESET: U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U 0
R16PRR contains the synchronized value of the 15-bit prescaler or the value to be loaded into the 15bit prescaler. NOTE When the RTCSM is disabled, writing to the 15-bit prescaler and 32-bit freerunning counter may give unpredictable results.
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R16FRCH -- RTCSM Free-Running Counter High Register
15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
$YFF484
1 0
RESET: U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U
R16FRCH contains the synchronized high word value of the 32-bit free-running counter or the value to be loaded into the high word 32-bit free-running counter. NOTE When the RTCSM is disabled, writing to the 15-bit prescaler and 32-bit free-running counter may give unpredictable results. R16FRCL -- RTCSM Free-Running Counter Low Register $YFF486
6 5 4 3 2 1 0
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15
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
7
RESET: U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U
R16FRCL contains the synchronized low word value of the 32-bit free-running counter or the value to be loaded into the low word 32-bit free-running counter. NOTE When the RTCSM is disabled, writing to the 15-bit prescaler and 32-bit free-running counter may give unpredictable results. 6.12 Parallel Port I/O Submodule (PIOSM) The port I/O submodule (PIOSM) provides I/O capability independent of other CTM6 modules. The PIOSM handles up to eight input/output pins. One PIOSM is contained in the CTM6. Figure 25 shows a block diagram of the PIOSM.
DATA DIRECTION REGISTER
OUTPUT DATA REGISTER
I/O PIN OUTPUT DRIVER
OUTPUT DATA BIT
INPUT DATA BIT
INPUT
SUBMODULE BUS
CTM PIOSM BLOCK
Figure 25 PIOSM Block Diagram
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6.12.1 PIOSM Register The PIOSM control register is composed of two 8-bit registers. The upper eight bits contain the data register and the lower eight bits contain the data direction register. Each PIOSM pin may be programmed as an input or an output under software control. The data direction register controls whether the corresponding pins are inputs or outputs. The PIOSM data register can be read or written by the processor. For pins programmed as outputs, a read of the data register actually reads the value of the output data latch and not the I/O pin. PIO17A -- PIOSM Control Register
15 DATA7 14 DATA6 13 DATA5 12 DATA4 11 DATA3 10 DATA2 9 DATA1 8 DATA0 7 DDR7 6 DDR6 5 DDR5 4 DDR4 3 DDR3 2 DDR2
$YFF488
1 DDR1 0 DDR0
RESET: 0 0 U U U U U U 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
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CTIO[7:6] are not bonded to pins on the MC68338. When one of these signals is configured as an input, a read of the corresponding data bit always returns a zero. When one of these signals is configured as an output, a read of the corresponding data bit returns the value stored in the output data latch. NOTE Care should be taken when a single word write cycle is used to modify the data register and data direction register of the PIOSM. Undesired glitches can occur on pins that change from inputs to outputs and vice versa. To avoid this, first use a byte write cycle to modify the data register then use another byte write cycle to modify the data direction register. 6.13 Static RAM Submodule (RAMSM) The static RAM submodule (RAMSM) provides 32 bytes (16 words) of contiguous memory locations and is not relocatable. It is especially useful for storage of variables and system parameters that must be maintained when the rest of the MCU is powered down. Data can be read or written in bytes, words, or long words. RAMSM locations are not affected by reset. The CTM6 has two RAMSMs. Table 65 shows the RAMSM address locations. Table 65 RAMSM Address Locations
Static RAM Submodule 32 36 Address $YFF500-51E $YFF520-53E
6.14 RTCSM and RAMSM Standby Operation The standby power switch in CTM6 monitors VDD and selects either VDD and VDDSYN or VRTC for the power source of the RTCSM and RAMSMs, depending on the level of VDD. When VDD is within the specified operating range, the RTCSM low-power oscillator is powered by VDDSYN and the RAMSMs are powered by VDD. VDD also provides power to the digital logic portion of the RTCSM, therefore both VDD and VDDSYN must be kept equal to each other for normal operation. When VDD and VDDSYN are powered down, the submodules are powered by VRTC and are in standby mode. In standby mode, the RTCSM continues to keep time if enabled. However, updates to the 15-bit prescaler and 32-bit free-running counter buffer registers are halted in order to conserve power. All
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RTCSM registers are write protected in standby mode to prevent loss of data in runaway situations. For the same reason, the RAMSMs are also write protected in standby mode. If the standby mode function is not required in a given application, VRTC should be powered from the VDD and VDDSYN supply. Unpredictable operation of the RAMSMs and RTCSM may result otherwise. 6.15 CTM6 Interrupts The CTM6 is able to request numerous interrupts on the IMB. Each submodule that is able to request interrupts can do so with any of seven levels. Each submodule that is able to request interrupts includes a 3-bit level number and a 1-bit arbitration number that is initialized by software. The 3-bit level number selects which of seven interrupt signals on the IMB are driven by that submodule to create an interrupt request. Of the four priority bits provided on the IMB during arbitration among the modules, one of them comes from the chosen submodule, and the BIUSM provides the other three. Thus, the CTM6 responds to two of the possible 15 arbitration numbers.
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During the IMB arbitration process, the BIUSM manages the separate arbitration among the CTM6 submodules to determine which submodule should respond. Of the submodules which have an interrupt request pending at the level being arbitrated on the IMB, the submodule which has the lowest address is given the highest priority to respond. When the IARB number is not unique for a given module, simultaneous interrupts are prioritized in hardware according to the vector number or the submodule interrupt arbitration sequence number shown in Table 66. Following the interrupt arbitration process, the CTM6 provides an 8-bit vector number. Six of the eight bits are provided by the submodules. A submodule can identify two separate interrupt sources with unique interrupt vectors. The two high-order bits of the 8-bit vector are provided by the BIUSM. The six low-order vector bits identify the highest priority interrupt request pending in the CTM6 at the beginning of the arbitration cycle.
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Table 66 CTM6 Interrupt Priority and Vector/Pin Allocation
Submodule Name BIUSM CPSM MCSM2 FCSM3 DASM4 DASM5 DASM6 DASM7 DASM8 DASM9 DASM10 SASM12 SASM14 RTCSM16 PIOSM17A SASM18 SASM24 DASM26 DASM27 DASM28 DASM29 MCSM30 MCSM31 RAMSM32 RAMSM36 Submodule Base Address1 $YFF400 $YFF408 $YFF410 $YFF418 $YFF420 $YFF428 $YFF430 $YFF438 $YFF440 $YFF448 $YFF450 $YFF460 $YFF470 $YFF480 $YFF488 $YFF490 $YFF4C0 $YFF4D0 $YFF4D8 $YFF4E0 $YFF4E8 $YFF4F0 $YFF4F8 $YFF500 $YFF520 Submodule Interrupt Vector Number2 None None xx000010 xx000011 xx000100 xx000101 xx000110 xx000111 xx001000 xx001001 xx001010 xx001100 xx001110 xx010000 -- xx010010 xx011000 xx011010 xx011011 xx011100 xx011101 xx011110 xx011111 -- -- Submodule Interrupt Arbitration Sequence Number3 None None 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 12 14 16 -- 18 24 26 27 28 29 30 31 -- --
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NOTES: 1. Y = m111, where m is the state of the MM bit in SIMLCR of the SIML (Y = $7 or $F). 2. "xx" represents VECT[7:6], which is located in the BIUSM module configuration register. 3. Submodule interrupt arbitration number 2 is the highest priority; arbitration number 63 is the lowest priority.
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7 Electrical Characteristics
This section contains electrical specification tables and reference timing diagrams. Table 67 Maximum Ratings
Num 1 2 3 Supply Voltage1, 2, 3 Rating Symbol VDD Vin ID Value - 0.3 to + 6.5 - 0.3 to + 6.5 25 Unit V V mA
Input Voltage1, 2, 3, 4 Instantaneous Maximum Current Single pin limit (applies to all pins)1, 3, 5, 6 Operating Maximum Current Digital Input Disruptive Current5, 6, 7 VSS - 0.3 VIN VDD + 0.3 Operating Temperature Range Storage Temperature Range
4
IID
- 500 to + 500
A
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5 6
TA Tstg
TL to TH - 40 to + 85 - 55 to + 150
C C
NOTES: 1. Permanent damage can occur if maximum ratings are exceeded. Exposure to voltages or currents in excess of recommended values affects device reliability. Device modules may not operate normally while being exposed to electrical extremes. 2. Although sections of the device contain circuitry to protect against damage from high static voltages or electrical fields, take normal precautions to avoid exposure to voltages higher than maximum-rated voltages. 3. This parameter is periodically sampled rather than 100% tested. 4. All pins except TSC. 5. All functional non-supply pins are internally clamped to VSS for transitions below VSS. All functional pins except EXTAL and XFC are internally clamped to VDD for transitions below VDD. 6. Power supply must maintain regulation within operating VDD range during instantaneous and operating maximum current conditions. 7. Total input current for all digital input-only and all digital input/output pins must not exceed 10 mA. Exceeding this limit can cause disruption of normal operation.
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Table 68 Thermal Characteristics
Num 1 Characteristic Thermal Resistance Plastic 144-Pin Surface Mount Symbol JA Value 48 Unit C/W
The average chip-junction temperature (TJ) in C can be obtained from:
T J = T A + ( P D x JA ) (1)
where: TA JA PD = Ambient Temperature, C = Package Thermal Resistance, Junction-to-Ambient, C/W = PINT + PI/O = IDD x VDD, Watts -- Chip Internal Power = Power Dissipation on Input and Output Pins -- User Determined
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PINT PI/O
For most applications PI/O < PINT and can be neglected. An approximate relationship between PD and TJ (if PI/O is neglected) is:
P D = K / ( T J + 273C ) (2)
Solving equations 1 and 2 for K gives:
K = P D + ( T A + 273C ) + JA x P D2 (3)
where K is a constant pertaining to the particular part. K can be determined from equation (3) by measuring PD (at equilibrium) for a known TA. Using this value of K, the values of PD and TJ can be obtained by solving equations (1) and (2) iteratively for any value of TA.
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Table 69 Clock Control Timing (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH)
Num 1 2 3 4 5 Characteristic PLL Reference Frequency Range1 System Frequency2 On-Chip PLL System Frequency Range External Clock Operation PLL Lock Time1, 3, 4, 5, 6 VCO Frequency7 Limp Mode Clock Frequency SYNCR X bit = 0 SYNCR X bit = 1 CLKOUT Jitter1, 4, 5, 6, 8 Short term (5 s interval) Long term (500 s interval) Symbol fref fsys tlpll fVCO flimp Min 25 dc 4(fref) dc -- -- -- -- - 0.5 - 0.05 Max 50 14.4 14.4 14.4 20 2 (fsys max) fsys max/2 fsys max 0.5 0.05 Unit kHz MHz ms MHz
MHz
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6
Jclk
%
NOTES: 1. Tested with a 32.768 kHz reference. 2. All internal registers retain data at 0 Hz. 3. Assumes that stable VDDSYN is applied, and that the crystal oscillator is stable. Lock time is measured from the time VDD and VDDSYN are valid until RESET is released. This specification also applies to the period required for PLL lock after changing the W and Y frequency control bits in the synthesizer control register (SYNCR) while the PLL is running, and to the period required for the clock to lock after LPSTOP. 4. This parameter is periodically sampled rather than 100% tested. 5. Assumes that a low-leakage external filter network is used to condition clock synthesizer input voltage. Total external resistance from the XFC pin due to external leakage must be greater than 15 M to guarantee this specification. Filter network geometry can vary depending upon operating environment. 6. Proper layout procedures must be followed to achieve specifications. 7. Internal VCO frequency (fVCO) is determined by SYNCR W and Y bit values. The SYNCR X bit controls a divide-by-two circuit that is not in the synthesizer feedback loop. When X = 0, the divider is enabled, and fsys = fVCO / 4. When X = 1, the divider is disabled, and fsys = fVCO / 2. X must equal one when operating at maximum specified fsys. 8. Jitter is the average deviation from the programmed frequency measured over the specified interval at maximum fsys. Measurements are made with the device powered by filtered supplies and clocked by a stable external clock signal. Noise injected into the PLL circuitry via VDDSYN and VSS and variation in crystal oscillator frequency increase the Jclk percentage for a given interval. When clock jitter is a critical constraint on control system operation, this parameter should be measured during functional testing of the final system.
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Table 70 DC Characteristics (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH)
Num 1 2 3 4 Input High Voltage Input Low Voltage Input Hysteresis1 Characteristic Symbol VIH VIL VHYS IIN IOZ Min Max Unit V V V A A
0.7 (VDD) VDD + 0.3 VSS - 0.3 0.2 (VDD) 0.5 -2.5 -- 2.5
Input Leakage Current2 Vin = VDD or VSS Input-only pins High Impedance (Off-State) Leakage Current2 Vin = VDD or VSS All input/output and output pins CMOS Output High Voltage2, 3 IOH = -10.0 A Group 1, 2, 4 input/output and all output pins CMOS Output Low Voltage2 IOL = 10.0 A Group 1, 2, 4 input/output and all output pins Output High Voltage2, 3 IOH = -0.4 mA Group 1, 2, 4 input/output and all output pins Output Low Voltage2 IOL = 0.8 mA Group 1 I/O Pins, CLKOUT, FREEZE/QUOT, IPIPE/DSO IOL = 2.65 mA Group 2 and Group 4 I/O Pins, CSBOOT, BG/CS1 IOL = 6 mA Group 3 Three State Control Input High Voltage Data Bus Mode Select Pull-up Vin = VIL DATA[15:0] DATA[15:0] Vin = VIH Current4
5
-2.5
2.5
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6
VOH
VDD - 0.2
--
V
7
VOL
--
0.2
V
8
VOH
VDD - 0.5
--
V
9
VOL
-- -- -- 2.7 (VDD) -- -8
0.4 0.4 0.4 9.1 -95 --
V
10 11
VIHTSC IMSP
V A
12
VDD Supply Current5 Run6 LPSTOP, (STCPU = 0, External clock input frequency = max fsys) LPSTOP, (STCPU = 1, External clock input frequency = max fsys) STOP7, (STCPU = 1, External clock input frequency = max fsys) VRTC Voltage VRTC CTM6-RTCSM oscillator enabled, VDD = VSS CTM6-RTCSM oscillator disabled, VDD = VSS VDD = VDDSYN 2.7 V VDDSYN Supply Current5 VCO on, 32.768 kHz crystal reference, maximum fsys External Clock, maximum fsys LPSTOP, 32.768 kHz crystal reference, VCO off (STSIM = 0) Power Dissipation9 Current8
IDD SIDD SIDD SIDD VSB
-- -- -- 2.2
46 2 18 13 3.6
mA mA mA mA V A A A
13
14
ISB
-- -- --
1.0 0.200 0
15
IDDSYN
-- -- -- --
750 1.5 300 171
A mA A mW
16
PD
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Table 70 DC Characteristics (Continued) (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH)
Num 17 Input Capacitance2, 10 All input-only pins All input/output pins Load Capacitance2 Group 1 I/O Pins, CLKOUT, FREEZE/QUOT, IPIPE/DSO Group 2 I/O Pins and CSBOOT, BG/CS1 Group 3 I/O Pins Group 4 I/O Pins Characteristic Symbol CIN Min -- -- Max 10 20 Unit pF
18
CL
-- -- -- --
90 100 130 200
pF
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NOTES: 1. Applies to: CTM6 pins QSM pins IRQ[7:1], RESET, EXTAL, TSC, RMC, BKPT/DSCLK, IFETCH/DSI 2. Input-Only Pins: TSC, BKPT/DSCLK, RXD Output-Only Pins: CSBOOT, BG/CS1, CLKOUT, FREEZE/QUOT, IPIPE/DSO Input/Output Pins: Group 1: DATA[15:0], IFETCH/DSI, all CTM6 pins except CTM31L Group 2: ADDR[23:19]/CS[10:6], FC[2:0]/CS[5:3], DSACK[1:0], AVEC, RMC, DS, AS, SIZ[1:0],IRQ[7:1, MODCLK, ADDR[18:0], R/W, BERR, BR/CS0, BGACK/CS2, PCS[3:1], PCS0/SS, TXD Group 3: HALT, RESET Group 4: MISO, MOSI, SCK 3. Does not apply to HALT and RESET because they are open drain pins. Does not apply to MISO, MOSI, SCK, PCS0/SS, PCS[3:1], and TXD in wired-OR mode. Does not apply to CTD[29:26] and CTD[10:4] in wired-OR mode. 4. Use of an active pulldown device is recommended. 5. Total operating current is the sum of the appropriate VDD supply and VDDSYN supply current. 6. Current measured with system clock frequency of 14.4 MHz, all modules active. 7. LPSTOP with STCPU = 1 (clock turned off at CPU32L but IMB clock active) plus QSM and CTM6 STOP bits set. 8. VRTC current measured when VDD and VDDSYN are equal to VSS and VRTC is equal to VSBMAX. 9. Power dissipation is measured with a system clock frequency of 14.4 MHz, all modules active. Power dissipation is calculated using the following expression: PD = 3.6V (IDDSYN + IDD) 10. Input capacitance is periodically sampled rather than 100% tested.
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Table 71 AC Timing (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH)1
Num F1 1 1A 1B 2, 3 Frequency of Operation Clock Period ECLK Period External Clock Input Period2 Clock Pulse Width Characteristic Symbol f tcyc tEcyc tXcyc tCW tECW tXCHL tCrf trf tCHAV tCHAZx tCHAZn tCLSA tSTSA tCLIA tAVSA tCLSN tCLIN tSNAI tSWA tSWAW tSWDW tSN tCHSZ tSNRN tCHRH tCHRL tRAAA tRASA tCHDO tDVASN tSNDOI tDVSA Min 0 69.4 555 69.4 24.7 277.5 34.7 -- -- 0 0 0 2 -15 2 15 2 2 19 138 44 44 44 -- 19 0 0 19 80 -- 19 19 19 Max 14.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- 10 10 35 69 -- 25 15 31 -- 35 31 -- -- -- -- -- 69 -- 35 35 -- -- 35 -- -- -- Unit MHz ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns
2A, 3A ECLK Pulse Width 2B, 3B External Clock Input High/Low Time2
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4, 5
CLKOUT Rise and Fall Time
4A, 5A Rise and Fall Time -- All Outputs Except CLKOUT 6 7 8 9 9A 9C 11 12 12A 13 14 14A 14B 15 16 17 18 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Clock High to ADDR, FC, SIZE, RMC Valid Clock High to ADDR, DATA, FC, SIZE, RMC High Impedance Clock High to ADDR, FC, SIZE, RMC Invalid Clock Low to AS, DS, CS Asserted AS to DS or CS Asserted (Read)3 Clock Low to IFETCH, IPIPE Asserted ADDR, FC, SIZE, RMC Valid to AS, CS, (and DS Read) Asserted Clock Low to AS, DS, CS Negated Clock Low to IFETCH, IPIPE Negated AS, DS, CS Negated to ADDR, FC SIZE Invalid (Address Hold) AS, CS (and DS Read) Width Asserted DS, CS Width Asserted (Write) AS, CS (and DS Read) Width Asserted (Fast Cycle) AS, DS, CS Width Negated4 Clock High to AS, DS, R/W High Impedance AS, DS, CS Negated to R/W High Clock High to R/W High Clock High to R/W Low R/W High to AS, CS Asserted R/W Low to DS, CS Asserted (Write) Clock High to Data Out Valid Data Out Valid to Negating Edge of AS, CS (Fast Write Cycle) DS, CS Negated to Data Out Invalid (Data Out Hold) Data Out Valid to DS, CS Asserted (Write)
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Table 71 AC Timing (Continued) (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH)1
Num 27 27A 28 29 29A 30 30A Characteristic Data In Valid to Clock Low (Data Setup) Late BERR, HALT Asserted to Clock Low (Setup Time) AS, DS Negated to DSACK[1:0], BERR, HALT, AVEC Negated DS, CS Negated to Data In Invalid (Data In Hold)5 Symbol tDICL tBELCL tSNDN tSNDI tSHDI tCLDI tCLDH tDADI tCLBAN Asserted)8 tBRAGA tGAGN tGH tGA tRWA tRWAS tAIST tAIHT tDABA tDOCH tCHDH tRADC tHRPW tBNHN tSCLDD tSCLDS tSCLDH tBKST tBKHT tMSS tMSH tRSTA tRSTR Min 5 25 0 0 -- 19 -- -- -- 1 1 2 1 174 104 10 19 -- 0 -- 55 512 0 0 19 10 19 13 20 0 4 -- Max -- -- 100 -- 65 -- 100 58 35 -- 2 -- -- -- -- -- -- 35 -- 35 -- -- -- 35 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- 10 Unit ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns tcyc tcyc tcyc tcyc ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns tcyc ns ns ns ns ns ns tcyc ns tcyc tcyc
DS, CS Negated to Data In High Impedance5, 6 CLKOUT Low to Data In Invalid (Fast Cycle Hold)5 CLKOUT Low to Data In High Impedance5 DSACK[1:0] Asserted to Data In Valid7 Clock Low to BG Asserted/Negated BR Asserted to BG Asserted (RMC Not BGACK Asserted to BG Negated BG Width Negated BG Width Asserted R/W Width Asserted (Write or Read) R/W Width Asserted (Fast Write or Read Cycle) Asynchronous Input Setup Time BR, BGACK, DSACK[1:0], BERR, AVEC, HALT Asynchronous Input Hold Time DSACK[1:0] Asserted to BERR, HALT Asserted9 Data Out Hold from Clock High Clock High to Data Out High Impedance R/W Asserted to Data Bus Impedance Change RESET Pulse Width (Reset Instruction) BERR Negated to HALT Negated (Rerun) Clock Low to Data Bus Driven (Show Cycle) Data Setup Time to Clock Low (Show Cycle) Data Hold from Clock Low (Show Cycle) BKPT Input Setup Time BKPT Input Hold Time Mode Select Setup Time (DATA[15:0], MODCLK, BKPT) Mode Select Hold Time (DATA[15:0], MODCLK, BKPT) RESET Assertion Time10
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31 33 35 37 39 39A 46 46A 47A 47B 48 53 54 55 56 57 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78
RESET Rise Time11, 12
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NOTES: 1. All AC timing is shown with respect to 20% VDD and 70% VDD levels unless otherwise noted. 2. When an external clock is used, minimum high and low times are based on a 50% duty cycle. The minimum allowable tXcyc period is reduced when the duty cycle of the external clock varies. The relationship between external clock input duty cycle and minimum tXcyc is expressed: Minimum tXcyc period = minimum tXCHL / (50% - external clock input duty cycle tolerance). 3. Specification 9A is the worst-case skew between AS and DS or CS. The amount of skew depends on the relative loading of these signals. When loads are kept within specified limits, skew will not cause AS and DS to fall outside the limits shown in specification 9. 4. If multiple chip selects are used, CS width negated (specification 15) applies to the time from the negation of a heavily loaded chip select to the assertion of a lightly loaded chip select. The CS width negated specification between multiple chip selects does not apply to chip selects being used for synchronous ECLK cycles. 5. Hold times are specified with respect to DS or CS on asynchronous reads and with respect to CLKOUT on fast cycle reads. The user is free to use either hold time. 6. Maximum value is equal to (tcyc / 2) + 25 ns. 7. If the asynchronous setup time (specification 47A) requirements are satisfied, the DSACK[1:0] low to data setup time (specification 31) and DSACK[1:0] low to BERR low setup time (specification 48) can be ignored. The data must only satisfy the data-in to clock low setup time (specification 27) for the following clock cycle. BERR must satisfy only the late BERR low to clock low setup time (specification 27A) for the following clock cycle. 8. To ensure coherency during every operand transfer, BG is not asserted in response to BR until after all cycles of the current operand transfer are complete. 9. In the absence of DSACK[1:0], BERR is an asynchronous input using the asynchronous setup time (specification 47A). 10. After external RESET negation is detected, a short transition period (approximately 2 tcyc) elapses, then the SIML drives RESET low for 512 tcyc. 11. External assertion of the RESET input can overlap internally-generated resets. To ensure that an external reset is recognized in all cases, RESET must be asserted for at least 590 CLKOUT cycles. 12. External logic must pull RESET high during this period in order for normal MCU operation to begin.
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1 4 CLKOUT 2 3
5 NOTE: TIMING SHOWN WITH RESPECT TO 20% AND 70% VDD.
68300 CLKOUT TIM
Figure 26 CLKOUT Output Timing Diagram
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1B 4B EXTAL 2B 3B
5B
NOTE: TIMING SHOWN WITH RESPECT TO 20% AND 70% VDD. PULSE WIDTH SHOWN WITH RESPECT TO 50% VDD.
68300 EXT CLK INPUT TIM
Figure 27 External Clock Input Timing Diagram
1A 4A ECLK 2A 3A
5A
NOTE: TIMING SHOWN WITH RESPECT TO 20% AND 70% VDD.
68300 ECLK OUTPUT TIM
Figure 28 ECLK Output Timing Diagram
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S0 CLKOUT
S1
S2
S3
S4
S5
6 ADDR[23:20]
8
FC[2:0]
SIZ[1:0] 11 AS 9 13 14 15
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DS 9A CS 17 18 R/W 46 21 20 12
DSACK0 47A DSACK1 31 DATA[15:0] 27 29A BERR 48 HALT 9C 12A 27A 29 28
12A
IFETCH 73 BKPT 47A ASYNCHRONOUS INPUTS 47B 74
68300 RD CYC TIM
Figure 29 Read Cycle Timing Diagram
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S0 CLKOUT 6 ADDR[23:20]
S1
S2
S3
S4
S5
8
FC[2:0]
SIZ[1:0] 11 AS 9 14 15
13
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DS
21 9 12
CS 20 R/W 46 DSACK0 47A DSACK1 55 DATA[15:0] 23 BERR 48 27A HALT 74 73 BKPT 26 54 53 25 28 22 14A 17
68300 WR CYC TIM
Figure 30 Write Cycle Timing Diagram
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S0 CLKOUT 6 ADDR[23:0] 8 S1 S4 S5 S0
FC[2:0]
SIZ[1:0] 14B AS 9 DS 12
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CS 20 18 R/W 46A
27
30 30A
DATA[15:0] 73 29A 29
BKPT 74
68300 FAST RD CYC TIM
Figure 31 Fast Termination Read Cycle Timing Diagram
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S0 CLKOUT 6 ADDR[23:0]
S1
S4
S5
S0
8
FC[2:0]
SIZ[1:0] 14B AS 9 12
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DS
CS 20 R/W 23 DATA[15:0] 73 25 24 18 46A
BKPT 74
68300 FAST WR CYC TIM
Figure 32 Fast Termination Write Cycle Timing Diagram
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S0 CLKOUT
S1
S2
S3
S4
S5
S98
A5
A5
A2
ADDR[23:0] 7 DATA[15:0]
AS 16
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DS
R/W
DSACK0
DSACK1 47A BR 35 BG 33 33 BGACK 37 39A
68300 BUS ARB TIM
Figure 33 Bus Arbitration Timing Diagram -- Active Bus Case
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A0 CLKOUT
A5
A5
A2
A3
A0
ADDR[23:0]
DATA[15:0]
AS 47A 47A
BR
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
35 BG 33
37
33
47A
BGACK
68300 BUS ARB TIM IDLE
Figure 34 Bus Arbitration Timing Diagram -- Idle Bus Case
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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MOTOROLA 125
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
S0 CLKOUT 6 ADDR[23:0] 18 R/W 20 AS
S41
S42
S43
S0
S1
S2
8
9
12 15
DS 71
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
70 DATA[15:0] 73 74 BKPT SHOW CYCLE
72
START OF EXTERNAL CYCLE
NOTE: Show cycles can stretch during clock phase S42 when bus accesses take longer than two cycles due to IMB module wait-state insertion.
68300 SHW CYC TIM
Figure 35 Show Cycle Timing Diagram
MOTOROLA 126
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
S0 CLKOUT 6 ADDR[23:0]
S1
S2
S3
S4
S5
S0
S1
S2
S3
S4
S5
6
8
FC[2:0]
SIZ[1:0] 11 AS 9 14 11 14 13
15 9 9
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
DS 21 CS 18 R/W 46 29 DATA[15:0] 27 12
17 21 12
17
20 46 55
14A
18
25
29A
23
53 54
68300 CHIP SEL TIM
Figure 36 Chip Select Timing Diagram
77 RESET 75
78
DATA[15:0], MODCLK, BKPT
76
68300 RST/MODE SEL TIM
Figure 37 Reset and Mode Select Timing Diagram
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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MOTOROLA 127
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
Table 72 Background Debugging Mode Timing (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH)1
Num B0 B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 DSI Input Setup Time DSI Input Hold Time DSCLK Setup Time DSCLK Hold Time DSO Delay Time DSCLK Cycle Time CLKOUT High to FREEZE Asserted/Negated CLKOUT High to IFETCH High Impedance CLKOUT High to IFETCH Valid DSCLK Low Time Characteristic Symbol tDSISU tDSIH tDSCSU tDSCH tDSOD tDSCCYC tFRZAN tIFZ tIF tDSCLO Min 19 13 19 13 -- 2 -- -- -- 1 Max -- -- -- -- 35 -- 64 64 64 -- Unit ns ns ns ns ns tcyc ns ns ns tcyc
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
B7 B8 B9
NOTES: 1. All AC timing is shown with respect to 20% VDD and 70% VDD levels unless otherwise noted.
CLKOUT
FREEZE B3 B2 BKPT/DSCLK B9 B5 B1 B0 IFETCH/DSI
B4 IPIPE/DSO
68300 BKGD DBM SER COM TIM
Figure 38 Background Debugging Mode Timing Diagram -- Serial Communication
MOTOROLA 128
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
CLKOUT
B6 FREEZE B7 IFETCH/DSI B8 B6
68300 BDM FRZ TIM
Figure 39 Background Debugging Mode Timing Diagram -- Freeze Assertion
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
Table 73 ECLK Bus Timing (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH)1
Num 1A ECLK Period Characteristic Symbol tEcyc tECW tEAD tEAH tECSD tECSH tECSN tEDSR tEDHR tEDHZ tECDH tECDZ tEDDW tEDHW tEACC tEACS tEAS Min 555 277.5 -- 10 -- 10 35 35 5 -- 0 -- -- 10 450 380 1/2 Max -- -- 70 -- 140 -- -- -- -- 130 -- 1 2 -- -- -- -- Unit ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns tcyc tcyc ns ns ns tcyc
2A, 3A ECLK Pulse Width E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6 E7 E8 E9 E10 E11 E12 E13 E14 E15 ECLK Low to Address Valid2 ECLK Low to Address Hold ECLK Low to CS Valid (CS delay) ECLK Low to CS Hold CS Negated Width Read Data Setup Time Read Data Hold Time ECLK Low to Data High Impedance CS Negated to Data Hold (Read) CS Negated to Data High Impedance ECLK Low to Data Valid (Write) ECLK Low to Data Hold (Write) Address Access Time (Read)3
Chip Select Access Time (Read)4 Address Setup Time
NOTES: 1. All AC timing is shown with respect to 20% VDD and 70% VDD levels unless otherwise noted. 2. When the previous bus cycle is not an ECLK cycle, the address may be valid before ECLK goes low. 3. Address access time = tEcyc - tEAD - tEDSR. 4. Chip select access time = tEcyc - tECSD - tEDSR.
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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MOTOROLA 129
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
CLKOUT 2A ECLK 1A 3A
R/W E1 ADDR[23:0] E3 CS E14 E6 E15 E13 DATA[15:0] READ E7 E8 E11 DATA[15:0] WRITE E12
68300 E CYCLE TIM
E2
E4
E5
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
E9 WRITE
E10
Figure 40 ECLK Timing Diagram
MOTOROLA 130
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
Table 74 QSPI Timing (VDD and VDDSYN = 2.7 to 3.6 Vdc, VSS = 0 Vdc, TA = TL to TH 200 pF load on all QSPI pins)1
Num 1 Function Operating Frequency Master Slave Cycle Time Master Slave Enable Lead Time Master Slave Enable Lag Time Master Slave Clock (SCK) High or Low Time Master Slave2 Sequential Transfer Delay Master Slave (Does Not Require Deselect) Data Setup Time (Inputs) Master Slave Data Hold Time (Inputs) Master Slave Slave Access Time Slave MISO Disable Time Data Valid (after SCK Edge) Master Slave Data Hold Time (Outputs) Master Slave Rise Time Input Output Fall Time Input3 Output Symbol fop Min DC DC 4 4 2 2 -- 2 2 tcyc - 60 2 tcyc - n 17 13 45 30 0 30 -- -- -- -- 0 0 -- -- -- -- Max 1/4 1/4 510 -- 128 -- 1/2 -- 255 tcyc -- 8192 -- -- -- -- -- 1 2 75 75 -- -- 2 45 2 45 Unit System Clock Frequency System Clock Frequency tcyc tcyc tcyc tcyc SCK tcyc ns ns tcyc tcyc ns ns ns ns tcyc tcyc ns ns ns ns s ns s ns
2
tqcyc
3
tlead
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
4
tlag
5
tsw
6
ttd
7
tsu
8 9 10 11
thi ta tdis tv
12
tho
13
tri tro tfi tfo
14
NOTES: 1. All AC timing is shown with respect to 20% VDD and 70% VDD levels unless otherwise noted. 2. For high time, n = External SCK rise time; for low time, n = External SCK fall time. 3. Data can be recognized properly with longer transition times as long as MOSI/MISO signals from external sources are at valid VOH/VOL prior to SCK transitioning between valid VOL and VOH. Due to process variation, logic decision point voltages of the data and clock signals can differ, which can corrupt data if slower transition times are used.
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
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MOTOROLA 131
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
3 PCS[3:0] OUTPUT 13 12 SCK CPOL=0 OUTPUT 4 SCK CPOL=1 OUTPUT 6 7 MISO INPUT MSB IN DATA LSB IN 4 12 13 1 5
2
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
MSB IN
11 MOSI OUTPUT
10 DATA LSB OUT PORT DATA 12 MSB OUT
PD 13
MSB OUT
QSPI MAST CPHA0
Figure 41 QSPI Timing -- Master, CPHA = 0
3 PCS[3:0] OUTPUT 13 1 SCK CPOL=0 OUTPUT 4 SCK CPOL=1 OUTPUT 4 12 13 6 MISO INPUT MSB IN DATA LSB IN 1 7 12 5
2
MSB
11 MOSI OUTPUT
10 DATA LSB OUT PORT DATA 12 MSB
PORT DATA 13
MSB OUT
QSPI MAST CPHA1
Figure 42 QSPI Timing -- Master, CPHA = 1
MOTOROLA 132
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MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc.
3 SS INPUT 13 12 SCK CPOL=0 INPUT 4 SCK CPOL=1 INPUT 4 8 11 MSB OUT 7 6 MOSI INPUT MSB IN DATA LSB IN DATA 12 13 10 LSB OUT 11 9 PD 13 1 5
2
Freescale Semiconductor, Inc...
MISO OUTPUT
MSB OUT
MSB IN
QSPI SLV CPHA0
Figure 43 QSPI Timing -- Slave, CPHA = 0
SS INPUT 5 1 4 SCK CPOL=0 INPUT 2 SCK CPOL=1 INPUT 12 10 8 MISO OUTPUT PD MSB OUT 7 6 MOSI INPUT MSB IN DATA LSB IN 10 DATA 13 11 SLAVE LSB OUT 12 9 4 3 12 13
PD
QSPI SLV CPHA1
Figure 44 QSPI Timing -- Slave, CPHA = 1
MC68CK338 MC68CK338TS/D
For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com
MOTOROLA 133


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