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SC28L194A1BE,551

SC28L194A1BE,551

  • 厂商:

    NXP(恩智浦)

  • 封装:

    80-LQFP

  • 描述:

    IC UART QUAD W/FIFO 80-LQFP

  • 数据手册
  • 价格&库存
SC28L194A1BE,551 数据手册
INTEGRATED CIRCUITS SC28L194 Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage Product data sheet Supersedes data of 2001 Feb 13 IC19 Data Handbook    2006 Aug 15 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage DESCRIPTION SC28L194 FEATURES • Single 3.3V and 5.0V power supply • Four Philips industry standard full duplex UART channels • Sixteen byte receiver FIFOs for each UART • Sixteen byte transmit FIFOs for each UART • In band flow control using programmable Xon/Xoff characters • Flow control using CTSN RTSN hardware handshaking • Automatic address detection in multi-drop mode • Three byte general purpose character recognition • Fast data bus, 15 ns data bus release time, 125 ns bus cycle time • Programmable interrupt priorities • Automatic identification of highest priority interrupt pending • Global interrupt and control registers ease setup and interrupt The Philips 28L194 Quad UART is a single chip CMOS-LSI communications device that provides 4 full-duplex asynchronous channels with significantly deeper 16 byte FIFOs, Automatic in-band flow control using Xon/Xoff characters defined by the user and address recognition in the Wake-up mode. Synchronous bus interface is used for all communication between host and QUART. It is fabricated in Philips state of the art CMOS technology that combines the benefits of low cost, high density and low power consumption. The operating speed of each receiver and transmitter can be selected independently from one of 22 fixed baud rates, a 16X clock derived from one of two programmable baud rate counters or one of three external 16X clocks (1 available at 1x clock rate). The baud rate generator and counter can operate directly from a crystal or from seven other external or internal clock inputs. The ability to independently program the operating speed of the receiver and transmitter makes the Quad UART particularly attractive for dual speed full duplex channel applications such as clustered terminal systems. The receivers and transmitters are buffered with FIFOs of 16 characters to minimize the potential for receiver overrun and to reduce interrupt overhead. In addition, a handshaking capability and in-band flow control are provided to disable a remote UART transmitter when the receiver buffer is full or nearly so. handling • Vectored interrupts with programmable interrupt vector formats – Interrupt vector modified with channel number – Interrupt vector modified with channel number and channel type – Interrupt vector not modified • IACKN and DACKN signal pins • Watch dog timer for each receiver (64 receive clock counts) • Programmable Data Formats: To minimize interrupt overhead an interrupt arbitration system is included which reports the context of the interrupting UART via direct access or through the modification of the interrupt vector. The context of the interrupt is reported as channel number, type of device interrupting (receiver COS etc.) and, for transmitters or receivers, the fill level of the FIFO. – 5 to 8 data bits plus parity – Odd, even force or no parity – 1, 1.5 or 2 stop bits • Flexible baud rate selection for receivers and transmitters: The Quad UART provides a power down mode in which the oscillator is stopped but the register contents are maintained. This results in reduced power consumption of several orders of magnitudes. The Quad UART is fully TTL compatible when operating from a single +5V or 3.3V power supply. Operation at 3.3V or 5.0V is maintained with CMOS interface levels. – 22 fixed rates; 50 - 230.4K baud or 100 to 460.8K baud Uses – Simplified baud rate selection – Additional non-standard rates to 500K baud with internal generators – Two reload-counters provide additional programmable baud rate generation – External 1x or 16x clock inputs • 1 MHz 1x and 16x data rates full duplex all channels. • Parity, framing and overrun error detection • False start bit detection • Line break detection and generation • Programmable channel mode • Statistical Multiplexers • Data Concentrators – Packet-switching networks – Process Control – Building or Plant Control – Laboratory data gathering – Normal(full duplex) – ISDN front ends – Diagnostic modes – Computer Networks automatic echo – Point-of-Sale terminals local loop back • Automotive, cab and engine controls • Entertainment systems remote loop back • Four I/O ports per UART for modem controls, clocks, RTSN, I/O, – MIDDI keyboard control music systems etc. – All I/O ports equipped with “Change of State Detectors” – Theater lighting control • Two global inputs and two global outputs for general purpose I/O • Power down mode • On chip crystal oscillator, 2-8 MHz • TTL input levels. Outputs switch between full VCC and VSS • High speed CMOS technology • 80-pin Low Profile Quad Flat Pack LQFP and 68-pin PLCC • Terminal Servers – Computer-Printer/Plotter links 2006 Aug 15 2 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ORDERING CODE PACKAGES 68-Pin Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier (PLCC) 80-Pin Plastic Low Profile Quad Flat Pack (LQFP) VCC = 3.3 V ± 10 % VCC = 5 V ± 10 % Industrial –40°C to +85°C Industrial –40°C to +85°C DWG # SC28L194A1A SC28L194A1A SOT188-2 SC28L194A1BE SC28L194A1BE SOT315-1 PIN CONFIGURATIONS 9 1 80 61 10 61 1 60 60 68-Pin PLCC 80-Pin LQFP TOP VIEW TOP VIEW 44 26 27 41 20 43 21 40 SD00544 Figure 1. Pin Configurations PINOUT - 68 PIN PACKAGE PINOUT - 80 PIN THIN PACKAGE ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ Á ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ Pin Assignments Pin Assignments 4 Vss_ic, 4 Vcc_i, 4 Vss_o, 2 Vcc_o, 2Vcc_c 4 Vss_ic, 4 Vcc_i, 4 Vss_o, 2 Vcc_o, 2Vcc_c 1 Vss_ic 24 I/O0c 47 D1 1 I/O1a 28 TxDd 54 D6 2 Vcc_c 25 I/O1c 48 D2 2 I/O2a 29 Vcc_c 55 D7 3 Vcc_i 26 Vss_o 49 D3 3 I/O3a 30 Vcc_i 56 IRQN 4 W_RN 27 I/O2c 50 VCC_O 4 Vss_o 31 Vss_ic 57 IACKN 5 A0 28 I/O3c 51 D4 5 RxDa 32 RESETN 58 Vss_o 6 CEN 29 RxDc 52 D5 6 TxDa 33 Gin0 59 X1 7 DACKN 30 TxDc 53 VSS_IC 7 I/O0b 34 Gin1 60 X2 8 I/O0a 31 RxDd 54 VCC_I 8 I/O1b 35 I/O0d 61-62 nc 9 I/O1a 32 TxDd 55 D6 9 Vcc_o 36 I/O1d 63 A7 10 I/O2a 33 Vcc_c 56 D7 10 Vcc_i 37 I/O2d 64 A5 11 I/O3a 34 Vcc_i 57 IRQN 11 Vss_ic 38 Gout0 65 A4 12 Vss_o 35 Vss_ic 58 IACKN 12 I/O2b 39-41 nc 66 A3 13 RxDa 36 RESETN 59 VSS_O 13 I/O3b 42 I/O3d 67 A2 14 TxDa 37 Gin0 60 X1 14 RxDb 43 Gout1 68 A1 15 I/O0b 38 Gin1 61 X2 15 TxDb 44 Vss_o 69 SClk 16 I/O1b 39 I/O0d 62 A7 16 I/O0c 45 D0 70 Vss_ic 17 Vcc_o 40 I/O1d 63 A5 17 I/O1c 46 D1 71 Vcc_c 18 Vcc_i 41 I/O2d 64 A4 18 Vss_o 47 D2 72 Vcc_i 19 Vss_ic 42 Gout0 65 A3 19 I/O2c 48 D3 73 W_RN 20 I/O2b 43 I/O3d 66 A2 20-23 nc 49 Vcc_o 74 A0 21 I/O3b 44 Gout1 67 A1 24 I/O3c 50 D4 75 CEN 22 RxDb 45 Vss_o 68 SClk 25 RxDc 51 D5 76 DACKN 23 TxDb 46 D0 26 TxDc 52 Vss_ic 77 I/O0a 27 RxDd 53 Vcc_i 78-80 nc NOTE: The Vss-ic and Vcc_i are for input and noise sensitive circuits. Sclk signals in the range of 3 to 6 ns and within TTL input levels may alter expected read or write functions. The Vss _o and Vcc _o pins are used for the high current drivers. De-coupling capacitors should be used as close to the device power pins as possible. Address bit A6 is not used. See “Host Interface” section. 2006 Aug 15 3 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Pin Description TYPE DESCRIPTION SClk MNEMONIC I Host system clock. Used to time operations in the Host Interface and clock internal logic. Must be greater than twice the frequency of highest X1, Counter/Timer, TxC (1x) or RxC (1x) input frequency. CEN I Chip select: Active low. When asserted, allows I/O access to QUART registers by host CPU. W_RN signal indicates direction. (Must not be active in IACKN cycle) A(7:0) I Address lines (A[6] is NOT used. See “Host Interface” ) D(7:0) I/O W_RN I Write Read not control: When high indicates that the host CPU will write to a 28L194 register or transmit FIFO. When low, indicates a read cycle. 0 = Read; 1 = Write DACKN O Data Acknowledge: Active low. When asserted, it signals that the last transfer of the D lines is complete. Open drain requires a pull-up device. IRQN O Interrupt Request: Active low. When asserted, indicates that the 28L194 requires service for pending interrupt(s). Open drain requires a pull-up device. IACKN I Interrupt Acknowledge: Active low. When asserted, indicates that the host CPU has initiated an interrupt acknowledge cycle. (Do not use CEN in an IACKN cycle) TD(a-d) O Transmit Data: Serial outputs from the 4 UARTs. RD(a-d) I Receive Data: Serial inputs to the 4 UARTs I/O0(a-d) I/O Input/Output 0: Multi-use input or output pin for the UART. I/O1(a-d) I/O Input/Output 1: Multi-use input or output pin for the UART. I/O2(a-d) I/O Input/Output 2: Multi-use input or output pin for the UART. I/O3(a-d) I/O Input/Output 3: Multi-use input or output pin for the UART. Gin(1:0) I Global general purpose inputs, available to any/all channels. Gout(1:0) O Global general purpose outputs, available from any channel. RESETN I Master reset: Active Low. Must be asserted at power up and may be asserted at other times to reset and restart the system. See “Reset Conditions” at end of register map. Minimum width 10 SCLK. X1/CCLK I Crystal 1 or Communication Clock: This pin may be connected to one side of a 2-8 MHz crystal. It may alternatively be driven by an external clock in this frequency range. Standard frequency = 3.6864 MHz X2 O Crystal 2: If a crystal is used, this is the connection to the second terminal. If a clock signal drives X1, this pin must be left unconnected. Power Supplies I 16 pins total 8 pins for Vss, 8 pins for Vcc 8-bit bi-directional data bus. Carries command and status information between 28L194 and the host CPU. Used to convey parallel data for serial I/O between the host CPU and the 28L194 NOTE: 1. Many output pins will have very fast edges, especially when lightly loaded (less than 20 pf). These edges may move as fast as 1 to 3 ns fall or rise time. The user must be aware of the possible generation of ringing and reflections on improperly terminated interconnections. See previous note on Sclk noise under pin assignments. ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS1 SYMBOL RATING UNIT Tamb Operating ambient temperature range2 PARAMETER See Note 3 °C Tstg Storage temperature range -65 to +150 °C VCC Voltage from VDD to VSS4 -0.5 to +7.0 V VSS Voltage from any pin to VSS PD Package Power Dissipation (PLCC) PD Package Power Dissipation (LQFP) -0.5 to VCC + 0.5 V 2.87 W 2 W Derating factor above 25°C (PLCC package) 23 mW/°C Derating factor above 25°C (LQFP package) 16 mW/°C NOTES: 1. Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only and the functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the Operation Section of this specification is not implied. 2. For operating at elevated temperatures, the device must be derated based on +150°C maximum junction temperature. 3. Parameters are valid over specified temperature range. See Ordering Information table for applicable temperature range and operating supply range. 4. This product includes circuitry specifically designed for the protewction of its internal devices from damaging effects of excessive static charge. 2006 Aug 15 4 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 I/O PORT TIMING AND INTERFACE INTERRUPT ARBITRATION TIMING AND BAUD RATE GENERATOR HOST INTERFACE FULL DUPLEX UART CHANNEL FULL DUPLEX UART CHANNEL FULL DUPLEX UART CHANNEL FULL DUPLEX UART CHANNEL DATA DRIVERS AND MODEM INTERFACE BLOCK DIAGRAM INPUT BUFFERS AND OUTPUT DRIVERS Block Diagram SC28L194 SD00524 Figure 2. Block Diagram Asynchronous bus cycle The asynchronous mode requires one bus cycle of the chip select (CEN) for each read or write to the chip. No more action will occur on the bus after the C4 time until CEN is returned high. As shown in the block diagram, the Quad UART consists of an interrupt arbiter, host interface, timing blocks and four UART channel blocks. The four channels blocks operate independently, interacting only with the timing, host I/F and interrupt blocks. Synchronous bus cycle In the synchronous mode a read or write will be done every four cycles of the Sclk. CEN does not require cycling but must remain low to keep the synchronous accesses active. This provides a burst mode of access to the chip. FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION The SC28L194 is composed of several functional blocks: • Synchronous host interface block • A timing block consisting of a common baud rate generator making 22 industry standard baud rates and 2 16-bit counters used for non-standard baud rate generation In both cases each read or write operation(s) will be completed in four (4) Sclk cycles. The difference in the two modes is only that the asynchronous mode will not begin another bus cycle if the CEN remains active after the four internal Sclk have completed. Internally the asynchronous cycle will terminate after the four periods of Sclk regardless of how long CEN is held active • 4 identical independent full duplex UART channel blocks • Interrupt arbitration system evaluating 24 contenders • I/O port control section and change of state detectors. In all cases the internal action will terminate at the withdrawal of CEN. Synchronous CEN cycles shorter than multiples of four Sclk cycles minus 1 Sclk and asynchronous CEN cycles shorter than four Sclk cycles may cause short read or write cycles and produce corrupted data transfers. CONCEPTUAL OVERVIEW Host Interface The Host interface is comprised of the signal pins CEN, W/RN, IACKN, DACKN, IRQN Sclk and provides all the control for data transfer between the external and internal data buses of the host and the QUART. The host interface operates in a synchronous mode with the system (Sclk) which has been designed for a nominal operating frequency of 33 MHz. The interface operates in either of two modes; synchronous or asynchronous to the Sclk However the bus cycle within the QUART always takes place in four Sclk cycles after CEN is recognized. These four cycles are the C1, C2, C3, C4 periods shown in the timing diagrams. DACKN always occurs in the C4 time and occurs approximately 18 ns after the rising edge of C4. Timing Circuits The timing block consists of a crystal oscillator, a fixed baud rate generator (BRG), a pair of programmable 16 bit register based counters. A buffer for the System Clock generates internal timing for processes not directly concerned with serial data flow. Crystal Oscillator The crystal oscillator operates directly from a crystal, tuned between 1.0 and 8.0 MHz, connected across the X1/CCLK and X2 inputs with a minimum of external components. BRG values listed for the clock select registers correspond to a 3.6864 MHz crystal frequency. Use of a 7.3728 MHz crystal will double the Communication Clock frequencies. Addressing of the various functions of the QUART is through the address bus A(7:0). To maintain upward compatibility with the SC28L/C198 Octart the 8 bit address is still defined as such. However A(6) is NOT used and is internally connected to Vss (ground). The pin is, therefore, not included in the pin diagram. The address space is controlled by A(5:0) and A(7). A[7], in a general sense, is used to separate the data portion of the circuit from the control portion. 2006 Aug 15 An external clock in the 100 KHz to 10 MHz frequency range may be connected to X1/CCLK. If an external clock is used instead of a crystal, X1/CCLK must be driven and X2 left floating. The X1 clock serves as the basic timing reference for the baud rate generator (BRG) and is available to the BRG timers. The X1 oscillator input 5 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage was the result of the division then 27 would be chosen. This gives a baud rate error of 0.3/26.3 or 0.3/26.7. which yields a percentage error of 1.14% or 1.12% respectively; well within the ability of the asynchronous mode of operation. may be left unused if the internal BRG is not used and the X1 signal is not selected for any counter input. Sclk - System Clock A clock frequency, within the limits specified in the electrical specifications, must be supplied for the system clock Sclk. To ensure the proper operation of internal controllers, the Sclk frequency provided, must be strictly greater than twice the frequency of X1 crystal clock, or any external 1x data clock input. The system clock serves as the basic timing reference for the host interface and other internal circuits. One should be cautious about the assumed benign effects of small errors since the other receiver or transmitter with which one is communicating may also have a small error in the precise baud rate. In a “clean” communications environment using one start bit, eight data bits and one stop bit the total difference allowed between the transmitter and receiver frequency is approximately 4.6%. Less than eight data bits will increase this percentage. Baud Rate Generator BRG The baud rate generator operates from the oscillator or external X1/CCLK clock input and is capable of generating 22 commonly used data communications baud rates ranging from 50 to 230.4K baud. These common rates may be doubled (up to 460.8 and 500K baud) when faster clocks are used on the X1/X2 clock inputs. (See Receiver and Transmitter Clock Select Register descriptions.) All of these are available simultaneously for use by any receiver or transmitter. The clock outputs from the BRG are at 16X the actual baud rate. Channel Blocks There are four channel blocks, each containing an I/O port control, a data format control, and a single full duplex UART channel consisting of a receiver and a transmitter with their associated 16 byte FIFOs. Each block has its own status register, interrupt status and interrupt mask registers and their interface to the interrupt arbitration system. A highly programmable character recognition system is also included in each block. This system is used for the Xon/Xoff flow control and the multi-drop (”9 bit mode”) address character recognition. It may also be used for general purpose character recognition. BRG Counters (Used for random baud rate generation) The two BRG Timers are programmable 16 bit dividers that are used for generating miscellaneous clocks. These clocks may be used by any or all of the receivers and transmitters in the Octart or output on the general purpose output pin GPO. Four I/O pins are provided for each channel. These pins are configured individually to be inputs or outputs. As inputs they may be used to bring external data to the bus, as clocks for internal functions or external control signals. Each I/O pin has a “Change of State” detector. The change detectors are used to signal a change in the signal level at the pin (Either 0 to 1 or 1 to 0) The level change on these pins must be stable for 25 to 50 Us (two edges of the 38.4 KHz baud rate clock) before the detectors will signal a valid change. These are typically used for interface signals from modems to the QUART and from there to the host. See the description of the “UART channel” under detailed descriptions below. Each timer unit has eight different clock sources available to it as described in the BRG Timer Control Register. (BRGTCR). Note that the timer run and stop controls are also contained in this register. The BRG Timers generate a symmetrical square wave whose half period is equal in time to the division of the selected BRG Timer clock source by the number loaded to the BRG Timer Reload Registers ( BRGTRU and BRGTRL). Thus, the output frequency will be the clock source frequency divided by twice the value loaded to the BRGTRU and BRGTRL registers. This is the result of counting down once for the high portion of the output wave and once for the low portion. Character Recognition Character recognition is specific to each of the four UARTs. Three programmable characters are provided for the character recognition for each channel. The three are general purpose in nature and may be set to only cause an interrupt or to initiate some rather complex operations specific to “Multi-drop” address recognition or in-band Xon/Xoff flow control. Whenever the these timers are selected via the receiver or transmitter Clock Select register their output will be configured as a 16x clock for the respective receiver or transmitter. Therefore one needs to program the timers to generate a clock 16 times faster than the data rate. The formula for calculating ’n’, the number loaded to the BRGTRU and BRGTRL registers, is shown below. Character recognition is accomplished via CAM memory. The Content Addressable Memory continually examines the incoming data stream. Upon the recognition of a control character appropriate bits are set in the Xon/Xoff Interrupt Status Register (XISR) and Interrupt Status Register (ISR). The setting of these bit(s) will initiate any of the automatic sequences or and/or an interrupt that may have enabled via the MR0 register. BRG Timer Input frequency Ǔ–1 n + ǒ 2 @ 16 @ desired baud rate Note: ’n’ may assume values of 0 and 1. In previous Philips data communications controllers these values were not allowed. The BRG timer input frequency is controlled by the BRG Timer control register (BRGTCR) The characters of the recognition system are not controlled by the software or hardware reset. They do not have a pre-defined “reset value”. They may, however, be loaded by a “Gang White” or “Gang Load” command as described in the “Xon Xoff Characters” paragraph. The frequency generated from the above formula will be at a rate 16 times faster than the desired baud rate. The transmitter and receiver state machines include divide by 16 circuits which provide the final frequency and provide various timing edges used in the qualifying the serial data bit stream. Often this division will result in a non-integer value; 26.3 for example. One may only program integer numbers to a digital divider. There for 26 would be chosen. If 26.7 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 Note: Character recognition is further described in the Minor Modes of Operation. 6 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage Each of the four pins has a change of state detector which will signal a change (0 to 1 or 1 to 0) at the pin. The change of state detectors are individually enabled and may be set to cause and interrupt. Interrupt Control The interrupt system determines when an interrupt should be asserted thorough an arbitration (or bidding) system. This arbitration is exercised over the several systems within the QUART that may generate an interrupt. These will be referred to as “interrupt sources”. There are 64 in all. In general the arbitration is based on the fill level of the receiver FIFO or the empty level of the transmitter FIFO. The FIFO levels are encoded into a four bit number which is concatenated to the channel number and source identification code. All of this is compared (via the bidding or arbitration process) to a user defined “threshold”. When ever a source exceeds the numerical value of the threshold the interrupt will be generated. These pins will normally be used for flow control hand-shaking and the interface to a modem. Their control is further described in I/O Ports section and the I/OPCR register. DETAILED DESCRIPTIONS RECEIVER AND TRANSMITTER The Quad UART has four full duplex asynchronous receiver/transmitters. The operating frequency for the receiver and transmitter can be selected independently from the baud rate generator, the counter , or from an external input. Registers that are central to basic full-duplex operation are the mode registers (MR0, MR1 and MR2), the clock select registers (RxCSR and TxCSR), the command register (CR), the status register (SR), the transmit holding register (TxFIFO), and the receive holding register (RxFIFO). At the time of interrupt acknowledge (IACKN) the source which has the highest bid (not necessarily the source that caused the interrupt to be generated) will be captured in a “Current Interrupt Register” (CIR). This register will contain the complete definition of the interrupting source: channel, type of interrupt (receiver, transmitter, change of state, etc.), and FIFO fill level. The value of the bits in the CIR are used to drive the interrupt vector and global registers such that controlling processor may be steered directly to the proper service routine. A single read operation to the CIR provides all the information needed to qualify and quantify the most common interrupt sources. Transmitter The transmitter accepts parallel data from the CPU and converts it to a serial bit stream on the TxD output pin. It automatically sends a start bit followed by the programmed number of data bits, an optional parity bit, and the programmed number of stop bits. The least significant bit is sent first. Each character is always “framed” by a single start bit and a stop bit that is 9/16 bit time or longer. If a new character is not available in the TxFIFO, the TxD output remains high, the “marking” position, and the TxEMT bit in the SR is set to 1. The interrupt sources for each channel are listed below. • Transmit FIFO empty level for each channel • Receive FIFO Fill level for each channel • Change in break received status for each channel • Receiver with error for each channel • Change of state on channel input pins • Receiver Watch-dog Time out Event • Xon/Xoff character recognition • Address character recognition Transmitter Status Bits The SR (Status Register, one per UART) contains two bits that show the condition of the transmitter FIFO. These bits are TxRDY and TxEMT. TxRDY means the TxFIFO has space available for one or more bytes; TxEMT means The TxFIFO is completely empty and the last stop bit has been completed. TxEMT can not be active without TxRDY also being active. These two bits will go active upon initial enabling of the transmitter. They will extinguish on the disable or reset of the transmitter. Associated with the interrupt system are the interrupt mask register (IMR) and the interrupt status register (ISR) resident in each UART. Programming of the IMR selects which of the above sources may enter the arbitration process. Only the bidders in the ISR whose associated bit in the IMR is set to one (1) will be permitted to enter the arbitration process. The ISR can be read by the host CPU to determine all currently active interrupting conditions. For convenience the bits of the ISR may be masked by the bits of the IMR. Whether the ISR is read unmasked or masked is controlled by the setting of bit 6 in MR1. Transmission resumes and the TxEMT bit is cleared when the CPU loads at least one new character into the TxFIFO. The TxRDY will not extinguish until the TxFIFO is completely full. The TxRDY bit will always be active when the transmitter is enabled and there is at lease one open position in the TxFIFO. The transmitter is disabled by reset or by a bit in the command register (CR). The transmitter must be explicitly enabled via the CR before transmission can begin. Note that characters cannot be loaded into the TxFIFO while the transmitter is disabled, hence it is necessary to enable the transmitter and then load the TxFIFO. It is not possible to load the TxFIFO and then enable the transmission. Global Registers The “Global Registers”, 19 in all, are driven by the interrupt system. These are not real hardware devices. They are defined by the content of the CIR (Current Interrupt Register) as a result of an interrupt arbitration. In other words they are indirect registers contained in the Current Interrupt Register (CIR) which the CIR uses to point to the source and context of the QUART sub circuit presently causing an interrupt. The principle purpose of these “registers” is improving the efficiency of the interrupt service. Note the difference between transmitter disable and transmitter reset. The reset is affected by either software or hardware. When reset, the transmitter stops transmission immediately. The transmit data output will be driven high, transmitter status bits set to zero and any data remaining in the TxFIFO will be discarded. The global registers and the CIR update procedure are further described in the Interrupt Arbitration system The transmitter disable is controlled by the Tx Enable bit in the command register. Setting this bit to zero will not stop the transmitter immediately, but will allow it to complete any tasks presently underway. It is only when the last character in the TxFIFO and its stop bit(s) have been transmitted that the transmitter will go to its disabled state. While the transmitter enable/disable bit in the command register is at zero, the TxFIFO will not accept any additional characters. I/O Ports Each of the four UART blocks contains an I/O section of four ports. These ports function as a general purpose post section which services the particular UART they are associated with. External clocks are input and internal clocks are output through these ports. 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 7 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage note that receiver logic considers the entire message to be contained within the start bit to the stop bit. It is not aware that a message may contain many characters. The receiver returns to its idle mode at the end of each stop bit! As described below it immediately begins to search for another start bit which is normally, of course, immediately forth coming. Transmission of “Break” Transmission of a break character is often needed as a synchronizing condition in a data stream. The “break” is defined as a start bit followed by all zero data bits by a zero parity bit (if parity is enabled) and a zero in the stop bit position. The forgoing is the minimum time to define a break. The transmitter can be forced to send a break (continuous low condition) by issuing a start break command via the CR. This command does not have any timing associated with it. Once issued the TxD output will be driven low (the spacing condition) and remain there until the host issues a command to “stop break” via the CR or the transmitter is issued a software or hardware reset. In normal operation the break is usually much longer than one character time. 1x and 16x Mode, Receiver The receiver operates in one of two modes; 1x and 16x. Of the two, the 16x is more robust and the preferred mode. Although the 1x mode may allow a faster data rate is does not provide for the alignment of the receiver 1x data clock to that of the transmitter. This strongly implies that the 1x clock of the remote transmitter is available to the receiver; the two devices are physically close to each other. 1x and 16x modes, Transmitter The transmitter clocking has two modes: 16x and 1x. Data is always sent at the 1x rate. However the logic of the transmitter may be operated with a clock that is 16 times faster than the data rate or at the same rate as the data i.e. 1x. All clocks selected internally for the transmitter (and the receiver) will be 16x clocks. Only when an external clock is selected may the transmitter logic and state machine operate in the 1x mode. The 1x or 16x clocking makes little difference in transmitter operation. (this is not true in the receiver) In the 16X clock mode the transmitter will recognize a byte in the TxFIFO within 1/16 to 2/16 bit time and thus begin transmission of the start bit; in the 1x mode this delay may be up to 2 bit times. The 16x mode operates the receiver logic at a rate 16 times faster than the 1x data rate. This allows for validation of the start bit, validation of level changes at the receiver serial data input (RxD), and a stop bit length as short as 9/16 bit time. Of most importance in the 16x mode is the ability of the receiver logic to align the phase of the receiver 1x data clock to that of the transmitter with an accuracy of less than 1/16 bit time. When the receiver is enabled ( via the CR register) it begins looking for a high to low (mark to space) transition on the RxD input pin. If a transition is detected, an internal counter running at 16 times the data rate is reset to zero. If the RxD remains low and is still low when the counter reaches a count of 7 the receiver will consider this a valid start bit and begin assembling the character. If the RxD input returns to a high state the receiver will reject the previous high to low (mark to space) transition on the RxD input pin. This action is the “validation” of the start bit and also establishes the phase of the receiver 1x clock to that of the transmitter The counter operating at 16x the data rate is the generator for the 1x data rate clock. With the phase of the receiver 1x clock aligned to the falling of the start bit (and thus aligned to the transmitter clock) AND with a valid start bit having been verified the receiver will continue receiving bits by sampling the RxD input on the rising edge of the 1x clock that is being generated by the above mentioned counter running 16 times the data rate. Since the falling edge of the 1x clock was aligned to falling edge of the start bit then the rising of the clock will be in the “center” of the bit cell. Transmitter FIFO The transmitter buffer memory is a 16 byte by 8 bit ripple FIFO. The host writes characters to this buffer. This buffer accepts data only when the transmitter is enabled. The transmitter state machine reads them out in the order they were received and presents them to the transmitter shift register for serialization. The transmitter adds the required start, parity and stop bits as required the MR2 register programming. The start bit (always one bit time in length) is sent first followed by the least significant bit (LSB) to the most significant bit (MSB) of the character, the parity bit (if used) and the required stop bit(s). Logic associated with the FIFO encodes the number of empty positions available in a four bit value.. This value is concatenated with the channel number and type interrupt type identifier and presented to the interrupt arbitration system. The encoding of the “positions empty” value is always 1 less than the number of available positions. Thus, an empty TxFIFO will bid with the value or 15; when full it will not bid at all; one position empty bids with the value 0. A full FIFO will not bid since a character written to it will be lost This action will continue until a full character has been assembled. Parity, framing, and stop bit , and break status is then assembled and the character and its status bits are loaded to the RxFIFO At this point the receiver has finished its task for that character and will immediately begin the search for another start bit. Receiver Status Bits There are five (5) status bits that are evaluated with each byte (or character) received: received break, framing error, parity error, overrun error, and change of break. The first three are appended to each byte and stored in the RxFIFO. The last two are not necessarily related to the a byte being received or a byte that is in the RxFIFO. They are however developed by the receiver state machine. Normally a TxFIFO will present a bid to the arbitration system when ever it has one or more empty positions. The MR0[5:4] allow the user to modify this characteristic so that bidding will not start until one of four levels (empty, 3/4 empty, 1/2 empty, not full) have been reached. As will be shown later this feature may be used to make slight improvements in the interrupt service efficiency. A similar system exists in the receiver. Receiver The “received break” will always be associated with a zero byte in the RxFIFO. It means that zero character was a break character and not a zero data byte. The reception of a break condition will always set the “change of break” (see below) status bit in the Interrupt Status Register(ISR). The receiver accepts serial data on the RxD pin, converts the serial input to parallel format, checks for start bit, stop bit, parity bit (if any),framing error or break condition, and presents the assembled character and its status condition to the CPU via the RxFIFO. Three status bits are FIFOed with each character received. The RxFIFO is really 11 bits wide; eight data and 3 status. Unused FIFO bits for character lengths less than 8 bits are set to zero. It is important to 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 A framing error occurs when a non zero character was seen and that character has a zero in the stop bit position. 8 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage programmed by the error mode control bit in the mode register: “Character mode” or the “Block Mode”. The block mode may be further modified (via a CR command) to set the status bits as the characters enter the FIFO or as they are read from the FIFO. The parity error indicates that the receiver generated parity was not the same as that sent by the transmitter. The overrun error occurs when the RxFIFO is full, the receiver shift register is full and another start bit is detected. At this moment the receiver has 17 valid characters and the start bit of the 18th has been seen. At this point the host has approximately 7/16 bit time to read a byte from the RxFIFO or the overrun condition will be set and the 18th character will overrun the 17th and the 19th the 18th and so on until an open position in the RxFIFO is seen. The meaning of the overrun is that data has been lost. Data in the RxFIFO remains valid. The receiver will begin placing characters in the RxFIFO as soon as a position becomes vacant. In the ’character’ mode, status is provided on a character by character basis as the characters are read from the RxFIFO: the “status” applies only to the character at the top of the RxFIFO - The next character to be read. In the ’block’ mode, the status provided in the SR for these three bits is the logical OR of the status for all characters coming to the top of the RxFIFO, since the last reset error command was issued. In this mode each of the status bits stored in the RxFIFO are passed through a latch as they are sequentially read. If any of the characters has an error bit set then that latch will set and remain set until reset with an “Reset Error” command from the command register or a receiver reset. The purpose of this mode is indicating an error in the data block as opposed to an error in a character Note: Precaution must be taken when reading an overrun FIFO. There will be 16 valid characters. Data will begin loading as soon as the first character is read. The 17th. character will have been received as valid but it will not be known how many characters were lost between the two characters of the 16th. and 17th. reads of the RxFIFO The latch used in the block mode to indicate “problem data” is usually set as the characters are read out of the RxFIFO. Via a command in the CR the latch may be configured to set the latch as the characters are pushed (loaded to) the RxFIFO. This gives the advantage of indicating “problem data” 16 characters earlier. The “Change of break” means that either a break has been detected or that the break condition has been cleared. This bit is available in the ISR. The beginning of a break will be signaled by the break change bit being set in the ISR AND the received break bit being set in the SR. At the termination of the break condition only the change of break in the ISR will be set. After the break condition is detected the termination of the break will only be recognized when the RxD input has returned to the high state for two successive edges of the 1x clock; 1/2 to 1 bit time. In either mode, reading the SR does not affect the RxFIFO. The RxFIFO is ’popped’ only when the RxFIFO is read. Therefore, the SR should be read prior to reading the corresponding data character. If the RxFIFO is full when a new character is received, that character is held in the receive shift register until a RxFIFO position is available. At this time there are 17 valid characters in the RxFIFO. If an additional character is received while this state exists, the contents of the RxFIFO are not affected: the character previously in the shift register is lost and the overrun error status bit, SR[4], will be set upon receipt of the start bit of the new (overrunning) character. The receiver is disabled by reset or via CR commands. A disabled receiver will not interrupt the host CPU under any circumstance in the normal mode of operation. If the receiver is in the multi-drop or special mode, it will be partially enabled and thus may cause an interrupt. Refer to section on Wake-Up and minor modes and the register description for MR1 for more information. I/O Ports Receiver FIFO The receiver buffer memory is a 16 byte ripple FIFO with three status bits appended to each data byte. (The FIFO is then 16 11 bit “words”). The receiver state machine gathers the bits from the receiver shift register and the status bits from the receiver logic and writes the assembled byte and status bits to the RxFIFO. Logic associated with the FIFO encodes the number of filled positions for presentation to the interrupt arbitration system. The encoding is always 1 less than the number of filled positions. Thus, a full RxFIFO will bid with the value or 15; when empty it will not bit at all; one position occupied bids with the value 0. An empty FIFO will not bid since no character is available. Normally RxFIFO will present a bid to the arbitration system when ever it has one or more filled positions. The MR2[3:2 bits allow the user to modify this characteristic so that bidding will not start until one of four levels (one or more filled, 1/2 filled, 3/4 filled, full) have been reached. As will be shown later this feature may be used to make slight improvements in the interrupt service efficiency. A similar system exists in the transmitter. Each of the four UARTs includes four I/O ports equipped with “change of state” detectors. The pins are individually programmable for an input only function or one of three output functions. These functions are controlled by the “I/O Port Configuration Register (I/OPCR)) They will normally be used for the RTSN-CTSN, DTR hardware signals, RxD or TxD input or output clocks or switch inputs as well as data out put from the I/OPIOR register. It is important to note that the input circuits are always active. That is the signal on a port, whether it is derived from an internal or external source is always available to the internal circuits associated with an input on that port. The “Change of State” (COS) detectors are sensitive to both a 1 to 0 or a 0 to 1 transition. The detectors are controlled by the internal 38.4 KHz baud rate and will signal a change when a transition has been stable for two rising edges of this clock. Thus a level on the I/O ports must be stable for 26 s to 52 s. Defining a port as an output will disable the COS detector at that port. The condition of the four I/O pins and their COS detectors is available at any time in the IPR (Input Port Register) RxFIFO Status: Status Reporting Modes The description below applies to the upper three bits in the “Status Register” These three bits are not “in the status register”; They are part of the RxFIFO. The three status bits at the top of the RxFIFO are presented as the upper three bits of the status register included in each UART. The control of data and COS enable for these ports is through the I/OPIOR register. This is a read/write register and gives individual control to the enabling of the change of state detectors and also to the level driven by I/O pins when programmed to drive the logic level written to the four lower bits of the I/OPIOR. A read of this register will indicate the data on the pin at the time of the read and the state of the enabled COS detectors. The error status of a character , as reported by a read of the SR (status register upper three bits) can be provided in two ways, as 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 9 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage Note: Care should be taken in the programming of the character recognition registers. Programming x’00, for example, may result in a break condition being recognized as a control character. This will be further complicated when binary data is being processed. General Purpose Pins In addition to the I/O ports for each UART four other ports are provided which service the entire chip. Two are dedicated as inputs and two are as outputs. The Gin1 and Gin0 are the input pins; Gout0 and Gout1 the outputs. These ports are multiplexed to nearly every functional unit in the chip. See the registers which describe the multitude of connections available for these pins. The Gout0 and Gout1 pins are highly multiplexed outputs and are controlled by four (4) registers: GPOSR, GPOR, GPOC and GPOD. The Gin0 and Gin1 pins are available to the receivers and transmitters, BRG counters and the Gout0 and Gout1 pins. Character Stripping The MR0 register provides for stripping the characters used for character recognition. Recall that the character recognition may be conditioned to control several aspects of the communication. However this system is first a character recognition system. The status of the various states of this system are reported in the XISR and ISR registers. The character stripping of this system allows for the removal of the specified control characters from the data stream: two for the Xon /Xoff and one for the Wake-up. Via control in the MR0 register these characters may be discarded (stripped) from the data stream when the recognition system “sees” them or they may be sent on the RxFIFO. Whether they are stripped or not the recognition will process them according to the action requested: flow control, Wake-up, interrupt generation, etc. Care should be exercised in programming the stripping option if noisy environments are encountered. If a normal character was corrupted to an Xoff character turned off the transmitter and it was then stripped, then the stripping action could make it difficult to determine the cause of transmitter stopping. Global Registers The “Global Registers”, 19 in all, are driven by the interrupt system. These are not real hardware devices. They are defined by the content of the CIR (Current Interrupt Register) as a result of an interrupt arbitration. In other words they are indirect registers pointed to by the content of the CIR. The list of global register follows: GIBCR The byte count of the interrupting FIFO GICR Channel number of the interrupting channel GITR Type identification of interrupting channel GRxFIFO Pointer to the interrupting receiver FIFO GTxFIFO Pointer to the interrupting transmitter FIFO A read of the GRxFIFO will give the content of the RxFIFO that presently has the highest bid value. The purpose of this system is to enhance the efficiency of the interrupt system. The global registers and the CIR update procedure are further described in the Interrupt Arbitration system Interrupt Arbitration and IRQN Generation Interrupt arbitration is the process used to determine that an interrupt request should be presented to the host. The arbitration is carried out between the “Interrupt Threshold” and the “sources” whose interrupt bidding is enabled by the IMR. The interrupt threshold is part of the ICR (Interrupt Control Register) and is a value programmed by the user. The “sources” present a value to the interrupt arbiter. That value is derived from four fields: the channel number, type of interrupt source, FIFO fill level, and programmable value. Only when one or more of these values exceeds the threshold value in the interrupt control register will the interrupt request (IRQN) be asserted. Character Recognition The character recognition circuits are basically designed to provide general purpose character recognition. Additional control logic has been added to allow for Xon/Xoff flow control and for recognition of the address character in the multi-drop or “wake-up” mode. This logic also allows for the generation of an interrupts in either the general purpose recognition mode or the specific conditions mentioned above. Following assertion of the IRQN the host will either assert IACKN(Interrupt Acknowledge) or will use the command to “Update the CIR”. At the time either action is taken the CIR will capture the value of the source that is prevailing in the arbitration process. (Call this value the winning bid) Xon Xoff Characters The programming of these characters is usually done individually. However a method has been provided to write to all of registers in one operation. There are “Gang Load” and a “Gang Write” commands provided in the channel A Command Register. When these commands are executed all registers are programmed with the same characters. The “write” command loads a used defined character; the ’load” command loads the standard Xon/Xoff characters. Xon is x’11; Xoff x’13’. Any enabling of the Xon/Xoff functions will use the contents of the Xon and Xoff character registers as the basis on which recognition is predicated. The value in the CIR is the central quantity that results from the arbitration. It contains the identity of the interrupting channel, the type of interrupt in that channel (RxD, TxD, COS etc.) the fill levels of the RxD or TxD FIFOs and , in the case of an RxD interrupt an indicator of error data or good data. It also drives the Global Registers associated with the interrupt. Most importantly it drives the modification of the Interrupt Vector. Multi-drop or Wake-up or 9-bit Mode This mode is used to address a particular UART among a group connected to the same serial data source. Normally it is accomplished by redefining the meaning of the parity bit such that it indicates a character as address or data. While this method is fully supported in the SC28L194 it also supports recognition of the character itself. Upon recognition of its address the receiver will be enabled and data pushed onto the RxFIFO. The arbitration process is driven by the Sclk. It scans the 10 bits of the arbitration bus at the Sclk rate developing a value for the CIR every 22 Sclk cycles. New arbitration values presented to the arbitration block during an arbitration cycle will be evaluated in the next arbitration cycle. For sources other than receiver and transmitters the user may set the high order bits of an interrupt source’s bid value, thus tailoring the relative priority of the interrupt sources. The priority of the receivers and transmitters is controlled by the fill level of their respective FIFOs. The more filled spaces in the RxFIFO the higher the bid value; the more empty spaces in the TxFIFO the higher its priority. Channels whose programmable high order bits are set will Further the Address recognition has the ability, if so programmed, to disable (not reset) the receiver when an address is seen that is not recognized as its own. The particular features of “Auto Wake and Auto Doze” are described in the detail descriptions below. 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 10 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage CPU occurs. The CIR loads with x’00 if Update CIR is asserted when the arbitration circuit has NOT detected arbitration value that exceeds the threshold value. be given interrupt priority higher than those with zeros in their high order bits , thus allowing increased flexibility. The transmitter and receiver bid values contain the character counts of the associated FIFOs as high order bits in the bid value. Thus, as a receiver’s RxFIFO fills, it bids with a progressively higher priority for interrupt service. Similarly, as empty space in a transmitter’s TxFIFO increases, its interrupt arbitration priority increases. Traditional methods of polling status registers may also be used. They of course are less efficient but give the most variable and quickest method of changing the order in which interrupt sources are evaluated and interrogated. IACKN Cycle, Update CIR When the host CPU responds to the interrupt, it will usually assert the IACKN signal low. This will cause the QUART to generate an IACKN cycle in which the condition of the interrupting device is determined. When IACKN asserts, the last valid interrupt number is captured in the CIR. The value captured presents most of the important details of the highest priority interrupt at the moment the IACKN (or the “Update CIR” command) was asserted. Enabling and Activating Interrupt Sources An interrupt source becomes enabled when its interrupt capability is set by writing to the Interrupt Mask Register, IMR. An interrupt source can never generate an IRQN or have its “bid” or interrupt number appear in the CIR unless the source has been enabled by the appropriate bit in an IMR. An interrupt source is active if it is presenting its bid to the interrupt arbiter for evaluation. Most sources have simple activation requirements. The watch-dog timer, break received, Xon/Xoff or Address Recognition and change of state interrupts become active when the associated events occur and the arbitration value generated thereby exceeds the threshold value programmed in the ICR (Interrupt Control Register). The Quad UART will respond to the IACKN cycle with an interrupt vector. The interrupt vector may be a fixed value, the content of the Interrupt Vector Register, or ,when “Interrupt Vector Modification is enabled via ICR, it may contain codes for the interrupt type and/or interrupting channel. This allows the interrupt vector to steer the interrupt service directly to the proper service routine. The interrupt value captured in the CIR remains until another IACKN cycle occurs or until an “Update CIR” command is given to the QUART. The interrupting channel and interrupt type fields of the CIR set the current “interrupt context” of the QUART. The channel component of the interrupt context allows the use of Global Interrupt Information registers that appear at fixed positions in the register address map. For example, a read of the Global RxFIFO will read the channel B RxFIFO if the CIR interrupt context is channel b receiver. At another time read of the GRxFIFO may read the channel D RxFIFO (CIR holds a channel D receiver interrupt) and so on. Global registers exist to facilitate qualifying the interrupt parameters and for writing to and reading from FIFOs without explicitly addressing them. The transmitter and receiver functions have additional controls to modify the condition upon which the initiation of interrupt “bidding” begins: the TxINT and RxINT fields of the MR0 and MR2 registers. These fields can be used to start bidding or arbitration when the RxFIFO is not empty, 50% full, 75% full or 100% full. For the transmitter it is not full, 50% empty, 75% empty and empty. Example: To increase the probability of transferring the contents of a nearly full RxFIFO, do not allow it to start bidding until 50% or 75% full. This will prevent its relatively high priority from winning the arbitration process at low fill levels. A high threshold level could accomplish the same thing, but may also mask out low priority interrupt sources that must be serviced. Note that for fast channels and/or long interrupt latency times using this feature should be used with caution since it reduces the time the host CPU has to respond to the interrupt request before receiver overrun occurs. The CIR will load with x’00 if IACKN or Update CIR is asserted when the arbitration circuit is NOT asserting an interrupt. In this condition there is no arbitration value that exceeds the threshold value. Polling Many users prefer polled to interrupt driven service where there are a large number of fast data channels and/or the host CPU’s other interrupt overhead is low. The Quad UART is functional in this environment. Setting Interrupt Priorities The bid or interrupt number presented to the interrupt arbiter is composed of character counts, channel codes, fixed and programmable bit fields. The interrupt values are generated for various interrupt sources as shown in the table below: The value represented by the bits 9 to 3 in the table below are compared against the value represented by the “Threshold. The “Threshold” ,bits 6 to 0 of the ICR (Interrupt Control Register), is aligned such that bit 6 of the threshold is compared to bit 9 of the interrupt value generated by any of the sources. When ever the value of the interrupt source is greater than the threshold the interrupt will be generated. The most efficient method of polling is the use of the “update CIR” command (with the interrupt threshold set to zero) followed by a read of the CIR. This dummy write cycle will perform the same CIR capture function that an IACKN falling edge would accomplish in an interrupt driven system. A subsequent read of the CIR, at the same address, will give information about an interrupt, if any. If the CIR contains 0s, no interrupt is awaiting service. If the value is non-zero, the fields of the CIR may be decoded for type, channel and character count information. Optionally, the global interrupt registers may be read for particular information about the interrupt status or use of the global RxD and TxD registers for data transfer as appropriate. The interrupt context will remain in the CIR until another update CIR command or an IACKN cycle is initiated by the host 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 The channel number arbitrates only against other channels. The threshold is not used for the channel arbitration. This results in channel D having the highest arbitration number. The decreasing order is D-to-A. If all other parts of an arbitration are equal then the channel number will determine which channel will dominate in the arbitration process. 11 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 1. Interrupt Arbitration Priority Type B9 B8 B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 Bits 2:0 Receiver w/o error RxFIFO Byte Count -1 0 0 1 Channel No Receiver w/ error RxFIFO Byte Count -1 1 0 1 Channel No Transmitter 0 0 0 Channel No Change of Break Programmed Field 0 0 1 0 Channel No Change of State Programmed Field 0 1 1 0 Channel No Xon/Xoff Programmed Field 0 1 1 1 Channel No Address Recognition Programmed Field 0 0 1 1 Channel No Receiver Watch-dog RxFIFO Byte Count -1 Threshold Bits 6:0 of Interrupt Control Register TxFIFO Byte Count -1 As RxFIFO Above Channel No 000 the DSR (Data Set Ready) signal from the modem. In this case its arbitration value should be high. Once the DSR is recognized then its arbitration value could be reduced or turned off. Note several characteristics of the above table in bits 6:3. These bits contain the identification of the bidding source as indicated below: x001 Receiver without error x101 Receiver with error xx00 Transmitter 0010 Change of Break 0110 Change of State on I/O Ports 0111 Xon/Xoff Event 0011 Address Recognition There is a single arbiter interrupt number that is not associated with any of the UART channels. It is the “Threshold Value” and is comprised of 7 bits from the Interrupt Control Register, ICR, and three zeros in the channel field. It is only when one or more of the enabled interrupt sources generates a arbitration value larger than the threshold value that the IRQN will be asserted. When the threshold bidding value is larger than any other bidding value then the IRQN will be withdrawn. In this condition, when nothing is interrupting, the CIR will be loaded with zeros if the IRQN is asserted or “Update CIR” command is issued. Because the channels are numbered from 0 to 3 ( A to D) channel 3 will win the bid when all other parts of the bid are equal. The codes form bits 6:3 drive part of the interrupt vector modification and the Global Interrupt Type Register. The codes are unique to each source type and Identify them completely. The channel numbering progresses from “a” to “d” as the binary numbers 000 to 011 and identify the interrupting channel uniquely. As the channels arbitrate “d” will have the highest bidding value and “a” the lowest Note that the transmitter byte count is off-set from that of the receiver by one bit. This is to give the receiver more authority in the arbitration since and over-run receiver corrupts the message but an under-run transmitter is not harmful. This puts some constraints on how the threshold value is selected. If a threshold is chosen that has its MSB set to one then a transmitter can never generate an interrupt! Of course the counter point to this is the desire to set the interrupt threshold high so interrupts occur only when a maximum or near maximum number of characters may be transferred. Note: Based on the xx00 coding for the transmitter (as shown in Table 1 above), a transmitter will not win a bid in the situation where the Count Field = 0 unless the threshold value is equal to or less than 0000011. A single empty slot is left in the TxFIFO, or a single filled slot in the RxFIFO will bid with a byte count value of zero. To give some control over this dilemma control bits have been provided in the MR0 and MR2 registers of each channel to individually control when a receiver or transmitter may interrupt. The use of these bits will prevent a receiver or a transmitter from entering the arbitration process even though its FIFO fill level is above that indicated by the threshold value set. The bits in the MR0 and MR2 register are named TxINT (MR0[5:4]) and RxINT (MR2[3:2]) Four major modes of operation (normal, auto echo, local loop back and remote loop back) are provided and are controlled by MR2[7:6]. Three of these may be considered diagnostic. See the MR2 register description. MODES OF OPERATION Major Modes The normal mode is the usual mode for data I/O operation. Most reception and transmission will use the normal mode. In the auto echo mode, the transmitter automatically re-transmits any character captured by the channel’s receiver. The receiver 1x clock is used for the transmitter. This mode returns the received data back to the sending station one bit time delayed from its departure. Receiver to host communication is normal. Host to transmitter communication has no meaning. Watch-Dog Timer The watch-dog is included in the table above to show that it affects the arbitration. It does not have an identity of its own. A barking watch-dog will prevent any other source type from entering the arbitration process except enabled receivers. The threshold is effectively set to zero when any watch-dog times out. The receivers arbitrate among them selves and the one with the highest fill level will win the process. Note that the receiver wining the bid may not be the one that caused the watch-dog to bark. In the local loop back mode (used for diagnostic purposes) the transmitter is internally connected to the receiver input. The transmitter 1x clock used for the receiver. The RxD input pin is ignored and the transmitter TxD output pin is held high. This configuration allows the transmitter to send data to the receiver without any external parameters to affect the transmission of data. All status bits, interrupt conditions and processor interface operate normally. It is recommended that this mode be used when initially verifying processor to UART interface. The The fields labeled “Programmed Field” are the contents of the Bidding Control Registers, BCRs, for these sources. Setting these bits to high values can elevate the interrupt importance of the sources they represent to values almost as high as a full receiver. For example a COS event may be very important when it represents 2006 Aug 15 12 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage communication between the transmitter and receiver is entirely within the UART - it is essentially “talking to itself”. associated with address recognition, data handling, receiver enables and disables. In both modes the meaning of the parity bit is changed. It is often referred to as the A/D bit or the address/data bit. It is used to indicate whether the byte presently in the receiver shift register is an “address” byte or a “data” byte. “1” usually means address; “0” data. The remote loop back mode (also used for diagnostic purposes) is similar to auto echo except that the characters are not sent to the local CPU, nor is the receiver status updated. The received data is sent directly to the transmitter where it is sent out on the TxD output. The received data is not sent to the receive FIFO and hence the host will not normally be participating in any diagnostics. Its purpose is to allow several receivers connected to the same data source to be individually addressed. Of course addressing could be by group also. Normally the “Master” would send an address byte to all receivers “listening” The receiver would then recognize its address and enable itself receiving the following data stream. Upon receipt of an address not its own it would then disable itself. As descried below appropriate status bits are available to describe the operation. Minor Modes The minor modes provide additional features within the major modes. In general the minor modes provide a reduction in the control burden and a less stringent interrupt latency time for the host processor. These modes could be invoked in all of the major modes.. However it may not be reasonable in many situations. Enabling the Wake-up mode This mode is selected by programming bits MR1[4:3] to ’11’. The sub modes are controlled by bits 6, 1, 0 in the MR0 register. Bit 6 controls the loading of the address byte to the RxFIFO and MR0[1:0] determines the sub mode as shown in the following table. Watch-dog Timer Time-out Mode Each receiver in the Quad UART is equipped with a watch-dog timer that is enabled by the “Watch-dog Timer Enable Register (WTER). The watch-dog “barks” (times out) if 64 counts of the receiver clock (64 bit times) elapse with no RxFIFO activity. RxFIFO events are a read of the RxFIFO or GRxFIFO, or the push of a received character into the RxFIFO. The timer resets when the (G)RxFIFO is read or if another character is pushed into the RxFIFO. The receiver watch-dog timer is included to allow detection of the very last character(s) of a received message that may be waiting in the RxFIFO, but are too few in number to successfully initiate an interrupt. The watch-dog timer is enabled for counting if the channel’s bit in the Watch Dog Timer Control Register (WDTCR) is set. Note: a read of the GRxFIFO will reset the watch-dog timer of only the channel specified in the current interrupt context. Other watch-dogs are unaffected. The watch-dog timer may generate an input to the interrupt arbiter if IMR[6] is set. The status of the Watch-dog timer can be seen as Bit 6 of the Interrupt Status Register, ISR[6]. When a Watch-dog timer that is programmed to generate an interrupt times out it enters the arbitration process. It will then only allow receivers to enter the enter the arbitration. All other sources are bidding sources are disabled. The receivers arbitrate only amongst themselves.. The receiver only interrupt mode of the interrupt arbiter continues until the last watch-dog timer event has been serviced. While in the receiver only interrupt mode, the control of the interrupt threshold level is also disabled. The receivers arbitrate only between themselves. The threshold value is ignored. The receiver with the most FIFO positions filled will win the bid. Hence the user need not reduce the bidding threshold level in the ICR to see the interrupt from a nearly empty RxFIFO that may have caused the watch-dog time-out. MR0[1:0] = 00 Normal Wake-up Mode (default). Host controls operation via interrupts and commands written to the command register (CR). MR0[1:0] = 01 Auto wake. Enable receiver on address recognition for this station. Upon recognition of its assigned address, in the Auto Wake mode, the local receiver will be enabled and normal receiver communications with the host will be established. MR0[1:0] = 10 Auto Doze. Disable receiver on address recognition, not for this station. Upon recognition of an address character that is not its own, in the Auto Doze mode, the receiver will be disabled and the address just received either discarded or pushed to the RxFIFO depending on the programming of MR0[6]. MR0[1:0] = 11 Auto wake and doze. Both modes above. The programming of MR0[1:0] to 11 will enable both the auto wake and auto doze features. The enabling of the wake-up mode executes a partial enabling of the receiver state machine. Even though the receiver has been reset the Wake-up mode will over ride the disable and reset condition. Normal Wake-up (The default configuration) In the default configuration for this mode of operation, a ’master’ station transmits an address character followed by data characters for the addressed ’slave’ station. The slave stations, whose receivers are normally disabled (not reset), examine the received data stream and interrupts the CPU (by setting RxRDY) only upon receipt of an address character. The CPU (host) compares the received address to its station address and enables the receiver if it wishes to receive the subsequent data characters. Upon receipt of another address character, the CPU may disable the receiver to initiate the process again. Note: When any watch-dog times our only the receivers arbitrate. There is no increase in the probability of receiver being serviced causing the overrun of another receiver since they will still have priority based upon received character count. The interrupt will be cleared automatically upon the push of the next character received or when the RxFIFO or GRxFIFO is read. The ICR is unaffected by the watch-dog time-out interrupt and normal interrupt threshold level sensing resumes after the last watch-dog timer event has been processed. If other interrupt sources are active, the IRQN pin may remain low. A transmitted character consists of a start bit, the programmed number of data bits, an address/data (A/D) bit, and the programmed number of stop bits. The polarity of the transmitted A/D bit is selected by the CPU by programming bit MR1[2]. MR1[2] = 0 transmits a zero in the A/D bit position which identifies the corresponding data bits as data. MR1[2] = 1 transmits a one in the A/D bit position which identifies the corresponding data bits as an address. The CPU should program the mode register prior to loading the corresponding data bytes into the TxFIFO. Wake-up Mode The SC28L194 provides two modes of this common asynchronous “party line” protocol: the new automatic mode with 3 sub modes and the default Host operated mode. The automatic mode has several sub modes (see below). In the full automatic the internal state machine devoted to this function will handle all operations 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 13 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage While in this mode, the receiver continuously looks at the received data stream, whether it is enabled or disabled. If disabled, it sets the RxRDY status bit and loads the character into the RxFIFO if the received A/D bit is a one, but discards the received character if the received A/D bit is a zero. If the receiver is enabled, all received characters are transferred to the CPU via the RxFIFO. In either case, the data bits are loaded into the data FIFO while the A/D bit is loaded into the status FIFO position normally used for parity error (SR[5]). Framing error, overrun error, and break detect operate normally whether or not the receiver is enabled. In-band flow control is a protocol for controlling a remote transmitter by embedding special characters within the message stream, itself. Two characters, Xon and Xoff, which do not represent normal printable characters take on flow control definitions when the Xon/Xoff capability is enabled. Flow control characters received may be used to gate the channel transmitter on and off. This activity is referred to as Auto-transmitter mode. To protect the channel receiver from overrun, fixed fill levels (hardware set at 12 characters) of the RxFIFO may be employed to automatically insert Xon/Xoff characters in the transmitter’s data stream. This mode of operation is referred to as auto-receiver mode. Commands issued by the host CPU via the CR can simulate all these conditions. Automatic Operation, Wake-up and Doze The automatic configuration for this mode uses onboard comparators to examine incoming address characters. Each UART channel may be assigned a unique address character. See the address register map and the description of the Address Recognition Character Register (ARCR). The device may be programmed to automatically awaken a sleeping receiver and/or disable an active receiver based upon address characters received. The operation of the basic receiver is the same as described above for the default mode of wake-up operation except that the CPU need not be interrupted to make a change in the receiver status. Auto-Transmitter Mode When a channel receiver pushes an Xoff character into the RxFIFO, the channel transmitter will finish transmission of the current character and then stop transmitting. A transmitter so idled can be restarted by the receipt of an Xon character by the receiver, or by a hardware or software reset. The last option results in the loss of the un-transmitted contents of the TxFIFO. When operating in this mode the Command Register commands for the transmitter are not effective. Three bits in the Mode Register 0, (MR0), control the address recognition operation. MR0[6] controls the RxFIFO operation of the received character; MR0[1:0] controls the Wake-up mode options. If MR0[6] is set the address character will be pushed onto the RxFIFO, otherwise the character will be discarded. (The charter is stripped from the data stream) The MR0[1:0] bits set the options as follows: A b’00 in this field, the default or power-on condition, puts the device in the default (CPU controlled) Wake-up mode of operation as described above. The auto-wake mode, enabled if MR0[0] is set, will cause the dedicated comparators to examine each address character presented by the receiver. If the received character matches the reference character in ARCR, the receiver will be enabled and all subsequent characters will be FIFOed until another address event occurs or the host CPU disables the receiver explicitly. The auto doze mode, enabled if MR0[1] is set, will automatically disable the receiver if an address is received that does not match the reference character in the ARCR. While idle data may be written to the TxFIFO and it continues to present its fill level to the interrupt arbiter and maintains the integrity of its status registers. Use of ’00’ as an Xon/Xoff character is complicated by the Receiver break operation which pushes a ’00’ character on the RxFIFO. The Xon/Xoff character detectors do not discriminate this case from an Xon/Xoff character received through the RxD pin. Note: To be recognized as an Xon or Xoff character, the receiver must have room in the RxFIFO to accommodate the character. An Xon/Xoff character that is received resulting in a receiver overrun does not effect the transmitter nor is it pushed into the RxFIFO, regardless of the state of the Xon/Xoff transparency bit, MR0(7). Note: Xon /Xoff Characters The Xon/Xoff characters with errors will be accepted as valid. The user has the option sending or not sending these characters to the FIFO. Error bits associated with Xon/Xoff will be stored normally to the receiver FIFO. The UART channel can present the address recognition event to the interrupt arbiter for IRQN generation. The IRQN generation may be masked by setting bit 5 of the Interrupt Mask Register, IMR. The bid level of an address recognition event is controlled by the Bidding Control Register, BCRA, of the channel. The channel’s transmitter may be programmed to automatically transmit an Xoff character without host CPU intervention when the RxFIFO fill level exceeds a fixed limit (12). In this mode, it will conversely transmit an Xon character when the RxFIFO level drops below a second fixed limit (8). A character from the TxFIFO that has been loaded into the TxD shift register will continue to transmit. Character(s) in the TxFIFO that have not been popped are unaffected by the Xon or Xoff transmission. They will be transmitted after the Xon/Xoff activity concludes. Note: To ensure proper operation, the host CPU must clear any pending Address Recognition interrupt before enabling a disabled receiver operating in the Special or Wake-up mode. This may be accomplished via the CR commands (or a read of the XISR) to clear the Address Interrupt or by resetting the receiver. If the fill level condition that initiates Xon activity negates before the flow control character can begin transmission, the transmission of the flow control character will not occur, i.e. either of the following sequences may be transmitted depending on the timing of the FIFO level changes with respect to the normal character times: Character Xoff Xon Character Character Character Xon/Xoff Operation Receiver Mode Since the receiving FIFO resources in the Quad UART are limited, some means of controlling a remote transmitter is desirable in order to lessen the probability of receiver overrun. The Quad UART provides two methods of controlling the data flow. A hardware assisted means of accomplishing control, the so-called out-of-band flow control, and an in-band flow control method. Hardware keeps track of Xoff characters sent that are not rescinded by an Xon. This logic is reset by writing MR0(3) to ’0’. If the user drops out of Auto-receiver mode while the XISR shows Xon as the last character sent, the Xon/Xoff logic will not automatically send the negating Xon. The out-of-band flow control is implemented through the CTSN-RTSN signaling via the I/O ports. The operation of these hardware handshake signals is described in the receiver and transmitter discussions. 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 14 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage The character comparators operate regardless of the value in MR0(3:2). Hence the comparators may be used as general purpose character detectors by setting MR0(3:2)=’00’ and enabling the Xon/Xoff interrupt in the IMR. Host mode When neither the auto-receiver nor auto-transmitter modes are set, the Xon/Xoff logic is operating in the host mode. In host mode, all activity of the Xon/Xoff logic is initiated by commands to the CRx command forces the transmitter to disable exactly as though an Xoff character had been received by the RxFIFO. The transmitter will remain disabled until the chip is reset or the CR(7:3) = 10110 (Xoff resume) command is given. In particular, reception of an Xon or disabling or re-enabling the transmitter will NOT cause resumption of transmission. Redundant CRTX-- commands, i.e. CRTXon CRTXon, are harmless, although they waste time. A CRTXon may be used to cancel a CRTXoff (and vice versa) but both may be transmitted depending on the timing with the transmit state machine. The kill CRTX command can be used to cleanly terminate any CRTX commands pending with the minimum impact on the transmitter. The Quad UART can present the Xon/Xoff recognition event to the interrupt arbiter for IRQN generation. The IRQN generation may be masked by setting bit 4 of the Interrupt Mask Register, IMR. The bid level of an Xon/Xoff recognition event is controlled by the Bidding Control Register X, BCRX, of the channel. The interrupt status can be examined in ISR[4]. If cleared, no Xon/Xoff recognition event is interrupting. If set, an Xon or Xoff recognition event has been detected. The X Interrupt Status Register, XISR, can be read for details of the interrupt and to examine other, non-interrupting, status of the Xon/Xoff logic. Refer to the XISR in the Register Descriptions. The character recognition function and the associated interrupt generation is disabled on hardware or software reset. Note: In no case will an Xon/Xoff character transmission be aborted. Once the character is loaded into the TX Shift Register, transmission continues until completion or a chip reset is encountered. REGISTER DEFINITIONS The kill CRTX command has no effect in either of the Auto modes. The operation of the Quad UART is programmed by writing control words into the appropriate registers. Operational feedback is provided via status registers which can be read by the host CPU. The Quad UART addressing is loosely divided, by the address bit A(7), into two parts: 1. That part which is concerned with the configuration of the chip interface and communication modes. Mode Control Xon/Xoff mode control is accomplished via the MR0. Bits 3 and 2 reset to zero resulting in all Xon/Xoff processing being disabled. If MR0[2] is set, the transmitter may be gated by Xon/Xoff characters received. If MR0[3] is set, the transmitter will transmit Xon and Xoff when triggered by attainment of fixed fill levels in the channel RxFIFO. The MR0[7] bit also has an Xon/Xoff function control. If this bit is set, a received Xon or Xoff character is not pushed into the RxFIFO. If cleared, the power-on and reset default, the received Xon or Xoff character is pushed onto the RxFIFO for examination by the host CPU. The MR0(7) function operates regardless of the value in MR0(3:2) This part controls the elements of host interface setup, interrupt arbitration, I/O Port Configuration that part of the UART channel definitions that do not change in normal data handling. This section is listed in the “Register Map, Control”. 2. That part concerned with the transmission and reception of the bit streams. Xon/Xoff Interrupts The Xon/Xoff logic generates interrupts only in response to recognizing either of the characters in the XonCR or XoffCR (Xon or Xoff Character Registers). The transmitter activity initiated by the Xon/Xoff logic or any CR command does not generate an interrupt. 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 This part concerns the data status, FIFO fill levels, data error conditions, channel status, data flow control (hand shaking). This section is listed in the “Register Map, Data”. 15 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 Table 2. GCCR - Global Configuration Control Register THIS IS A VERY IMPORTANT REGISTER! IT SHOULD BE THE FIRST REGISTER ADDRESSED DURING INITIALIZATION. This register has two addresses: x‘0F and x‘8F. The Global Configuration Control Register (GCCR) sets the type of bus cycle, interrupt vector modification and the power-up or -down mode. ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5:3 Bit 2:1 Bit 0 Reserved Sync bus cycles Reserved IVC, Interrupt Vector Control Power Down Mode Reserved 0 - async cycles 1 - Sync, non-pipe-lined cycle Reserved 00 - no interrupt vector 01 - IVR 10 - IVR + channel code 11 - IVR + interrupt type + channel code 0 - Device enabled 1 - Power down Must be set to 0 Set to 0 transmission/reception activities cease, and all processing for input change detection, BRG counter/timers and Address/Xon./Xoff recognition is disabled. GCCR(7): This bit is reserved for future versions of this device. If not set to zero most internal addressing will be disabled! GCCR(6): Bus cycle selection Controls the operation of the host interface logic. If reset, the power on/reset default, the host interface can accommodate arbitrarily long bus I/O cycles. If the bit is set, the Quad UART expects four Sclk cycle bus I/O operations similar to those produced by an i80386 processor in non-pipelined mode. The major differences in these modes are observed in the DACKN pin function. In Sync mode, no negation of CEN is required between cycles. Note: For maximum power savings it is recommended that all switching inputs be stopped and all input voltage levels be within 0.5 volt of the Vcc and Vss power supply levels. To switch from the asynchronous to the synchronous bus cycle mode, a single write operation to the GCCR, terminated by a negation of the CEN pin, is required. This cycle may be 4 cycles long if the setup time of the CEN edge to Sclk can be guaranteed. The host CPU must ensure that a minimum of two Sclk cycles elapse before the initiation of the next (synchronous) bus cycle(s). GCCR(2:1): Interrupt vector configuration The IVC field controls if and how the assertion of IACKN (the interrupt acknowledge pin) will form the interrupt vector for the Quad UART. If b’00, no vector will be presented during an IACKN cycle. The bus will be driven high (xFF). If the field contains a b’01, the contents of the IVR, Interrupt Vector Register, will be presented as the interrupt vector without modification. If IVC = b’10, the channel code will replace the 3 LSBs of the IVR; if IVC = b’11 then a modified interrupt type and channel code replace the 5 LSBs of the IVR. A hardware or software reset is recommended for the unlikely requirement of returning to the asynchronous bus cycling mode. MR - Mode Registers The user must exercise caution when changing the mode of running receivers, transmitters or BRG counter/timers. The selected mode will be activated immediately upon selection, even if this occurs during the reception or transmission of a character. It is also possible to disrupt internal controllers by changing modes at critical times, thus rendering later transmission or reception faulty or impossible. An exception to this policy is switching from auto-echo or remote loop back modes to normal mode. If the deselection occurs just after the receiver has sampled the stop bit (in most cases indicated by the assertion of the channel’s RxRDY bit) and the transmitter is enabled, the transmitter will remain in auto-echo mode until the end of the transmission of the stop bit. Note: The modified type field IVR(4:3) is: 10 Receiver w/o error 11 Receiver with error 01 Transmitter 00 All remaining sources GCCR(0): Power down control Controls the power down function. During power down the internal oscillator is disabled, interrupt arbitration and all data 2006 Aug 15 16 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 3. MR0- Mode Register 0 See “XISR” for more descriptions of MR0 Xon/Xoff functions Bit 7 * Bit 6 Bit 5:4 Bit 3:2 Bit 1:0 Xon/Xoff * transparency Address Recognition * transparency TxINT In-band flow control mode Address Recognition control 1 - flow control characters received are pushed onto the RxFIFO 1 - Address characters received are pushed to RxFIFO 0 - flow control characters received are not pushed onto the RxFIFO 0 - Address characters received are not pushed onto the RxFIFO TxFIFO interrupt level control 00 - empty 01 - 3/4 empty 10 - 1/2 empty 11 - not full 00 - host mode, only the host CPU may initiate flow control actions through the CR 01 - Auto Transmitter flow control 10 - Auto Receiver flow control 11 - Auto Rx and Tx flow control 00 - none 01 - Auto wake 10 - Auto doze 11 - Auto wake and auto doze If these bits are not 0 the characters will be stripped regardless of bits (3:2) or (1:0) RxFIFO to a level of 8 or less causes the Transmitter to emit an Xon character. All transmissions require no host involvement. A setting other than b’00 in this field precludes the use of the command register to transmit Xon/Xoff characters. MR0[7 & 6] - Control the handling of recognized Xon/Xoff or Address characters. If set, the character codes are placed on the RxFIFO along with their status bits just as ordinary characters are. If the character is not pushed onto the RxFIFO, its received status will be lost unless the receiver is operating in the block error mode (see MR1[5] and the general discussion on receiver error handling). Interrupt processing is not effected by the setting of these bits. See Character recognition section. Note: Interrupt generation in Xon/Xoff processing is controlled by the IMR (Interrupt Mask Register) of the individual channels. The interrupt may be cleared by a read of the XISR, the Xon/Xoff Interrupt Status Register. Receipt of a flow control character will always generate an interrupt if the IMR is so programmed. The MR0[3:2] bits have effect on the automatic aspects of flow control only, not the interrupt generation. MR0[5:4] - Controls the fill level at which a transmitter begins to present its interrupt number to the interrupt arbitration logic. Use of a low fill level minimizes the number of interrupts generated and maximizes the number of transmit characters per interrupt cycle. It also increases the probability that the transmitter will go idle for lack of characters in the TxFIFO. MR0[1:0] - This field controls the operation of the Address recognition logic. If the device is not operating in the special or “wake-up” mode, this hardware may be used as a general purpose character detector by choosing any combination except b’00. Interrupt generation is controlled by the channel IMR. The XISR interrupt and the XISR status bits may be cleared by a read of the XISR. See further description in the section on the Wake-up mode. MR0[3:2] - Controls the Xon/Xoff processing logic. Auto Transmitter flow control allows the gating of Transmitter activity by Xon/Xoff characters received by the Channel’s receiver. Auto Receiver flow control causes the Transmitter to emit an Xoff character when the RxFIFO has loaded to a depth of 12 characters. Draining the 2006 Aug 15 17 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 4. MR1 - Mode Register 1 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4:3 Bit 2 Bit 1:0 RxRTS Control ISR Read Mode Error Mode Parity Mode Parity Type Bits per Character 0 - off 1 - on 0 - ISR unmasked 1 - ISR masked 0 = Character 1 = Block 00 - With Parity 01 - Force parity 10 - No parity 11 - Special Mode 0 = Even 1 = Odd 00 - 5 01 - 6 10 - 7 11 - 8 MR1[7]: Receiver Request to Send Control This bit controls the deactivation of the RTSN output (I/O2) by the receiver. This output is asserted and negated by commands applied via the command register. MR1[7] = 1 causes RTSN to be automatically negated upon receipt of a valid start bit if the receiver FIFO is 3/4 full or greater. RTSN is reasserted when an the FIFO fill level falls below 3/4 full. This constitutes a change from previous members of Philips (Signets)’ UART families where the RTSN function triggered on FIFO full. This behavior caused problems with PC UARTs that could not stop transmission at the proper time. The RTSN feature can be used to prevent overrun in the receiver, by using the RTSN output signal, to control the CTSN input of the transmitting device. on a character by character basis; the status applies only to the character at. the bottom of the FIFO. In the block mode, the status provided in the SR for these bits is the accumulation (logical OR) of the status for all characters coming to the top of the FIFO, since the last reset error command was issued. MR1[4:3]: Parity Mode Select If ‘with parity’ or ’force parity’ is selected, a parity bit is added to the transmitted character and the receiver performs a parity check on incoming data. MR1[4:3] = 11 selects the channel to operate in the special Wake-up mode. MR1[2]: Parity Type Select This bit sets the parity type (odd or even) if the ’with parity’ mode is programmed by MR1[4:3], and the polarity of the forced parity bit if the ’force parity’ mode is programmed. It has no effect if the ’no parity’ mode is programmed. In the special ’Wake-up’ mode, it selects the polarity of the A/D bit. The parity bit is used to an address or data byte in the ’Wake-up’ mode. MR1[6]: Interrupt Status Masking This bit controls the readout mode of the Interrupt Status Register, ISR. If set, the ISR reads the current status masked by the IMR, i.e. only interrupt sources enabled in the IMR can ever show a ‘1’ in the ISR. If cleared, the ISR shows the current status of the interrupt source without regard to the Interrupt Mask setting. MR1[1:0]: Bits per Character Select This field selects the number of data bits per character to be transmitted and received. This number does not include the start, parity, or stop bits. MR1[5]: Error Mode Select This bit selects the operating mode of the three FIFOed status bits (FE, PE, received break). In the character mode, status is provided 2006 Aug 15 18 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 5. MR2 - Mode Register 2 The MR2 register provides basic channel setup control that may need more frequent updating. Bits 7:6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3:2 Bit 1:0 Channel Mode TxRTS Control CTSN Enable Tx RxINT Stop Length 00 = normal 01 = Auto echo 10 = Local loop 11 = Remote loop 0 = No 1 = Yes 0 = No 1 = Yes 00 = RRDY 01 = Half Full 10 = 3/4 Full 11 = Full 00 = 1.0 01 = 1.5 10 = 2.0 11 = 9/16 causes RTSN to be reset automatically one bit time after the characters in the transmit shift register and in the TxFIFO (if any) are completely transmitted (includes the programmed number of stop bits if the transmitter is not enabled). This feature can be used to automatically terminate the transmission of a message as follows: Program auto reset mode: MR2[5]= 1. Enable transmitter. Assert RTSN via command. Send message. After the last character of the message is loaded to the TxFIFO, disable the transmitter. Before disabling the transmitter be sure the Status Register TxEMT bit is NOT set (i.e., the transmitter is not underrun). The underrun condition is indicated by the TxEMT bit in the SR being set. The codition occurs immediately upon enabling the transmitter and persists until a character is loaded to the TxFIFO. The Underrun condition will not be a problem as long as the controlling processor keeps up with the transmitter data flow. The proper operation of this feature assumes that the transmitter is busy (not underrun) when the disable is issued. The last character will be transmitted and RTSN will be reset one bit time after the last stop bit. MR2[7:6] - Mode Select The Quad UART can operate in one of four modes: MR2[7:6] = b’00 is the normal mode, with the transmitter and receiver operating independently. MR2[7:6] = b’01 places the channel in the automatic echo mode, which automatically re transmits the received data. The following conditions are true while in automatic echo mode: Received data is re-clocked and re-transmitted on the TxD output. The receive clock is used for the transmitter. The receiver must be enabled, but the transmitter need not be enabled. The TxRDY and TxEMT status bits are inactive. The received parity is checked, but is not regenerated for transmission, i.e., transmitted parity bit is as received. Character framing is checked, but the stop bits are retransmitted as received. A received break is echoed as received until the next valid start bit is detected. CPU to receiver communication continues normally, but the CPU to transmitter link is disabled. NOTE: When the transmitter controls the RTSN pin, the meaning of the pin is COMPLETELY changed. It has nothing to do with the normal RTSN/CTSN “handshaking”. It is usually used to mean “end of message” and to “turn the line around” in simplex communications. Two diagnostic modes can also be selected. MR2[7:6] = b’10 selects local loop back mode. In this mode: The transmitter output is internally connected to the receiver input. The transmit clock is used for the receiver. The TxD output is held high. The RxD input is ignored. The transmitter must be enabled, but the receiver need not be enabled. CPU to transmitter and receiver communications continue normally. MR2[4] - Clear to Send Control The state of this bit determines if the CTSN input (I/O0) controls the operation of the transmitter. If this bit is 0, CTSN has no effect on the transmitter. If this bit is a 1, the transmitter checks the state of CTSN each time it is ready to begin sending a character. If it is asserted (low), the character is transmitted. If it is negated (high), the TxD output remains in the marking state and the transmission is delayed until CTSN goes low. Changes in CTSN, while a character is being transmitted, do not affect the transmission of that character. This feature can be used to prevent overrun of a remote receiver. The second diagnostic mode is the remote loop back mode, selected by MR2[7:6] = b’11. In this mode: Received data is re-clocked and re-transmitted on the TxD output. The receive clock is used for the transmitter. Received data is not sent to the local CPU, and the error status conditions are inactive. The received parity is not checked and is not regenerated for transmission, i.e., the transmitted parity bit is as received. The receiver must be enabled, but the transmitter need not be enabled. Character framing is not checked, and the stop bits are retransmitted as received. A received break is echoed as received until the next valid start bit is detected. MR2[3:2] - RxINT control field Controls when interrupt arbitration for a receiver begins based on RxFIFO fill level. This field allows interrupt arbitration to begin when the RxFIFO is full, 3/4 full, 1/2 full or when it contains at least 1 character. MR2[1:0] - Stop Bit Length Select This field programs the length of the stop bit appended to the transmitted character. Stop bit lengths of 9/16, 1, 1.5 and 2 bits can be programmed for character lengths of 6, 7, and 8 bits. For a character length of 5 bits, 1, 1.5 and 2 stop bits can be programmed. In all cases, the receiver only checks for a mark condition at the center of the first stop bit position (one bit time after the last data bit, or after the parity bit if parity is enabled). If an external 1X clock is used for the transmitter, MR2[1] = 0 selects one stop bit and MR2[1] = 1 selects two stop bits to be transmitted. MR2[5] - Transmitter Request to Send Control This bit controls the deactivation of the RTSN output (I/O2) by the transmitter. This output is manually asserted and negated by appropriate commands issued via the command register. MR2[5] = 1 2006 Aug 15 19 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 Table 6. RxCSR and TxCSR - Receiver and Transmitter Clock Select Registers Both registers consist of single 5 bit field that selects the clock source for the receiver and transmitter, respectively. The unused bits in this register read b’000. The baud rates shown in the table below are based on the x1 crystal frequency of 3.6864MHz. The baud rates shown below will vary as the X1 crystal clock varies. For example, if the X1 rate is changed to 7.3728 MHz all the rates below will double. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Bits 7:5 Bits 4:0 Reserved Transmitter/Receiver Clock select code, (see Clock Mux Table below) Table 7. Data Clock Mux CCLK maximum rate is 8MHz. Data clock rates will follow exactly the ratio of CCLK to 3.6864MHz. Clock Select Code Bits 4:0 Clock selection, CCLK = 3.6864 MHz Clock Select Code Clock selection, CCLK = 3.6864 MHz 00000 BRG - 50 10000 BRG - 19.2K 00001 BRG - 75 10001 BRG - 28.8K 00010 BRG - 150 10010 BRG - 38.4K 00011 BRG - 200 10011 BRG - 57.6K 00100 BRG - 300 10100 BRG - 115.2K 00101 BRG - 450 10101 BRG - 230.4K 00110 BRG - 600 10110 Gin0 00111 BRG - 900 10111 Gin1 01000 BRG - 1200 11000 BRG C/T 0 01001 BRG - 1800 11001 BRG C/T 1 01010 BRG - 2400 11010 Reserved 01011 BRG - 3600 11011 I/O2 rcvr, I/O3 xmit -16x 01100 BRG - 4800 11100 I/O2 rcvr, I/O3 xmit-1x 01101 BRG - 7200 11101 Reserved 01110 BRG - 9600 11110 Reserved 01111 BRG - 14.4K 11111 Reserved Table 8. CR - Command Register ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ CR is used to write commands to the Quad UART. Bits 7:3 Channel Command codes see “Command Register Table” Bit 2 1 = Hold present condition of Tx & Rx Enables 0 = Change Tx & Rx enable conditions Bit 0 1 = Enable Rx 0 = Disable Rx received will be lost. The command has no effect on the receiver status bits or any other control registers. If the special wake-up mode is programmed, the receiver operates even if it is disabled (see Wake-up Mode). CR[2] - Lock TxD and RxFIFO enables If set, the transmitter and receiver enable bits, CR[1:0] are not significant. The enabled/disabled state of a receiver or transmitter can be changed only if this bit is at zero during the time of the write to the command register. WRITES TO THE UPPER BITS OF THE CR WOULD USUALLY HAVE CR[2] AT 1 to maintain the condition of the receiver and transmitter. The bit provides a mechanism for writing commands to a channel, via CR[7:3], without the necessity of keeping track of or reading the current enable status of the receiver and transmitter. CR[7:3] - Miscellaneous Commands (See Table below) The encoded value of this field can be used to specify a single command as follows: 00000 No command. 00001 Reserved. 00010 Reset receiver. Resets the receiver as if a hardware reset had been applied. The receiver is disabled and the FIFO pointer is reset to the first location effectively discarding all unread characters in the FIFO. 00011 Reset transmitter. Resets the transmitter as if a hardware reset had been applied. 00100 Reset error status. Clears the received break, parity error, framing error, and overrun error bits in the status register (SR[7:4]). Used in character mode to clear overrun error status (although RB, PE and FE bits will also be cleared), and in block mode to clear all error status after a block of data has been received. 00101 Reset break change interrupt. Causes the break detect change bit in the interrupt status register (ISR[2]) to be cleared to zero. CR[1] - Enable Transmitter A one written to this bit enables operation of the transmitter. The TxRDY status bit will be asserted. When disabled by writing a zero to this bit, the command terminates transmitter operation and resets the TxRDY and TxEMT status bits. However, if a character is being transmitted or if characters are loaded in the TxFIFO when the transmitter is disabled, the transmission of the all character(s) is completed before assuming the inactive state. CR[0] - Enable Receiver A one written to this bit enables operation of the receiver. If not in the special Wake-up mode, this also forces the receiver into the search for start bit state. If a zero is written, this command terminates operation of the receiver immediately - a character being 2006 Aug 15 Bit 1 1 = Enable Tx 0 = Disable Tx 20 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage 00110 00111 01000 01001 01010 01011 01100 01101 01111 10000 10001 10010 10011 Note: Gang writing of Xon/Xoff Character Commands: Issuing command causes the next write to Xon/Xoff Character Register A to effect a simultaneous write into the other 3 Xon/Xoff character registers. After the Xon/Xoff Character Register A is written, the 28L194 returns to individual write mode for the Xon/Xoff Character Registers. Other intervening reads and writes are ignored. The device resets to individual write mode. 10100 Reserved for channels b-d, for channel a: executes a Gang Load of Xon Character Registers. Executing this command causes a write of the value x’11 to all channel’s Xon character registers. This command provides a mechanism to initialize all the Xon Character registers to a default value with one write. Execution of this command is immediate and does not effect the timing of subsequent host I/O operations. 10101 Reserved for channels b-d, for channel a: executes a Gang Load of Xoff Character Registers. Executing this command causes a write of the value x’13 to all channel’s Xoff character registers. This command provides a mechanism to initialize all the Xoff Character registers to a default value with one write. Execution of this command is immediate and does not effect the timing of subsequent host I/O operations. 10110 Xoff resume command (CRXoffre; not active in “Auto-Transmit Mode”). A command to cancel a previous Host Xoff command. Upon receipt, the channel’s transmitter will transfer a character, if any, from the TxFIFO and begin transmission. 10111 Host Xoff command (CRXoff). This command allows tight host CPU control of the flow control of the channel transmitter. When interrupted for receipt of an Xoff character by the receiver, the host may stop transmission of further characters by the channel transmitter by issuing the Host Xoff command. Any character that has been transferred to the TxD shift register will complete its transmission, including the stop bit. 11000 Cancel Host transmit flow control command. Issuing this command will cancel a previous transmit command if the flow control character is not yet loaded into the TxD Shift Register. If there is no character waiting for transmission or if its transmission has already begun, then this command has no effect. 11001-11011 Reserved. 11011 Reset Address Recognition Status. This command clears the interrupt status that was set when an address character was recognized by a disabled receiver operating in the special mode. 11100-11101 Reserved. 11110 Resets all UART channel registers. This command provides a means to zero all the UART channels that are not reset to x’00 by a reset command or a hardware reset. 11111 Reserved for channels b-d, for channel a: executes a chip wide reset. Executing this command in channel a is equivalent to a hardware reset with the RESETN pin. Executing command register reset in channel b-d, has no effect. Start break. Forces the TxD output low (spacing). If the transmitter is empty, the start of the break condition will be delayed up to two bit times. If the transmitter is active, the break begins when transmission of the current character is completed. If there are characters in the TxFIFO, the start of break is delayed until those characters, or any others loaded after it have been transmitted (TxEMT must be true before break begins). The transmitter must be enabled to start a break. Stop break. The TxD line will go high (marking) within two bit times. TxD will remain high for one bit time before the next character, if any, is transmitted. Assert RTSN. Causes the RTSN output to be asserted (low). Negate RTSN. Causes the RTSN output to be negated (high). Note: The two commands above actually reset and set, respectively, the I/O2 or I/O1 pin associated with the I/OPIOR register. Reserved. Reserved. Reserved. Block error status mode. Upon reset of the device or an individual receiver, the block mode of receiver error status accumulates as each character moves to the bottom of the RxFIFO, the position from which it will be read. In this mode of operation, the RxFIFO may contain a character with non-zero error status for some time. The status will not reflect the error character’s presence until it is ready to be popped from the RxFIFO. Command 01101 allows the error status to be updated as each character is pushed into the RxFIFO. This allows the earliest detection of a problem character, but complicates the determination of exactly which character is causing the error. This mode of block error accumulation may be exited only by resetting the chip or the individual receiver. Reserved. Transmit an Xon Character Transmit an Xoff Character Reserved for channels b-d, for channel a: enables a Gang Write of Xon Character Registers. After this command is issued, a write to the channel A Xon Character Register will result in a write to all channel’s Xon character registers. This command provides a mechanism to initialize all the Xon Character registers with one write. A write to channel A Xon Character Register returns the Quad UART to the individual Xon write mode. Reserved for channels b-d, for channel a: enables Gang Write of Xoff Character Registers. After this command is issued, a write to the channel A Xoff Character Register will result in a write to all channel’s Xoff character registers. This command provides a mechanism to initialize all the Xoff Character registers with one write. A write to channel A Xoff Character Register returns the Quad UART to the individual Xoff write mode. 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 21 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ Table 9. Command Register Code Commands x’12, x13, x’14, x’15, x’1f (marked with*) are global and exist only in channel A’s register space. Channel Command Code Channel Command Channel Command Code Channel Command CR[7:3] Description CR[7:3] Description 00000 NOP 10000 Transmit Xon 00001 Reserved 10001 Transmit Xoff 00010 Reset Receiver 10010 Gang Write Xon Character Registers * 00011 Reset Transmitter 10011 Gang Write Xoff Character Registers * 00100 Reset Error Status 10100 Gang Load Xon Character Registers DC1 * 00101 Reset Break Change Interrupt 10101 Gang Load Xoff Character Registers DC3 * 00110 Begin Transmit Break 10110 Xoff Resume Command 00111 End Transmit Break 10111 Host Xoff Command 01000 Assert RTSN (I/O2 or I/O1) 11000 Cancel Transmit X Char command 01001 Negate RTSN (I/O2 or I/O1) 11001 Reserved 01010 Set time-out mode on 11010 Reserved 01011 Reserved 11011 Reset Address Recognition Status 01100 Set time-out mode off 11100 Reserved 01101 Block Error Status configure 11101 Reserved 01110 Reserved 11110 Reset All UART channel registers 01111 Reserved 11111 Reset Device * Table 10. SR - Channel Status Register Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Received Break Framing Error Parity Error Overrun Error TxEMT TxRDY RxFULL RxRDY 0 - No 1 - Yes 0 - No 1 - Yes 0 - No 1 - Yes 0 - No 1 - Yes 0 - No 1 - Yes 0 - No 1 - Yes 0 - No 1 - Yes 0 - No 1 - Yes SR[7] - Received Break This bit indicates that an all zero character of the programmed length has been received without a stop bit. Only a single FIFO position is occupied when a break is received; further entries to the FIFO are inhibited until the RxD line returns to the marking state for at least one half bit time (two successive edges of the internal or external 1x clock). When this bit is set, the change in break bit in the ISR (ISR[2]) is set. ISR[2] is also set when the end of the break condition, as defined above, is detected. The break detect circuitry is capable of detecting breaks that originate in the middle of a received character. However, if a break begins in the middle of a character, it must last until the end of the next character in order for it to be detected. SR[3] - Transmitter Empty (TxEMT) This bit is set when the transmitter underruns, i.e., both the TxFIFO and the transmit shift register are empty. It is set after transmission of the last stop bit of a character, if no character is in the TxFIFO awaiting transmission. It is reset when the TxFIFO is loaded by the CPU, or when the transmitter is disabled. SR[2] - Transmitter Ready (TxRDY) This bit, when set, indicates that the TxFIFO is ready to be loaded with a character. This bit is cleared when the TxFIFO is loaded by the CPU and is set when the last character is transferred to the transmit shift register. TxRDY is reset when the transmitter is disabled and is set when the transmitter is first enabled, e.g., characters loaded in the TxFIFO while the transmitter is disabled will not be transmitted. SR[6] - Framing Error (FE) This bit, when set, indicates that a stop bit was not detected when the corresponding data character in the FIFO was received. The stop bit check is made in the middle of the first stop bit position. SR[1] - RxFIFO Full (RxFULL) This bit is set when a character is transferred from the receive shift register to the receive FIFO and the transfer causes the FIFO to become full, i.e., all sixteen RxFIFO positions are occupied. It is reset when the CPU reads the RxFIFO and that read leaves one empty byte position. If a character is waiting in the receive shift register because the RxFIFO is full, RxFULL is not reset until the second read of the RxFIFO since the waiting character is immediately loaded to the RxFIFO. SR[5] - Parity Error (PE) This bit is set when the ’with parity’ or ’force parity’ mode is programmed and the corresponding character in the FIFO was received with incorrect parity. In the special ’Wake-up mode’, the parity error bit stores the received A/D bit. SR[4] - Overrun Error (OE) This bit, when set, indicates that one or more characters in the received data stream have been lost. It is set upon receipt of a new character when the RxFIFO is full and a character is already in the receive shift register waiting for an empty FIFO position. When this occurs, the character in the receive shift register (and its break detect, parity error and framing error status, if any) is lost. This bit is cleared by a reset error status command. 2006 Aug 15 SR[0] - Receiver Ready (RxRDY) This bit indicates that a character has been received and is waiting in the RxFIFO to be read by the CPU. It is set when the character is transferred from the receive shift register to the RxFIFO and reset when the CPU reads the RxFIFO, and no more characters are in the RxFIFO. 22 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 11. ISR - Interrupt Status Register Bit 7 I/O Port change of state Bit 6 Receiver Watch-dog Time-out Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Address recognition event Xon/off event Always 0 Bit 2 Bit 1 RxRDY Receiver has entered arbitration process Bit 0 TxRDY Transmitter has entered arbitration process ISR[1] - Receiver Ready The general function of this bit is to indicate that the RxFIFO has data available. The particular meaning of this bit is programmed by MR2[3:2]. If programmed as receiver ready(MR2[3:2] = 00), it indicates that at least one character has been received and is waiting in the RxFIFO to be read by the host CPU. It is set when the character is transferred from the receive shift register to the RxFIFO and reset when the CPU reads the last character from the RxFIFO. This register provides the status of all potential interrupt sources for a UART channel. When generating an interrupt arbitration value, the contents of this register are masked by the interrupt mask register (IMR). If a bit in the ISR is a ’1’ and the corresponding bit in the IMR is also a ’1’, interrupt arbitration for this source will begin. If the corresponding bit in the IMR is a zero, the state of the bit in the ISR can have no affect on the IRQN output. Note that the IMR may or may not mask the reading of the ISR as determined by MR1[6]. If MR1[6] is cleared, the reset and power on default, the ISR is read without modification. If MR1[6] is set, the a read of the ISR gives a value of the ISR ANDed with the IMR. If MR2[3:2] is programmed as FIFO full, ISR[1] is set when a character is transferred from the receive holding register to the RxFIFO and the transfer causes the RxFIFO to become full, i.e. all sixteen FIFO positions are occupied. It is reset when ever RxFIFO is not full. If there is a character waiting in the receive shift register because the FIFO is full, the bit is set again when the waiting character is transferred into the FIFO. ISR[7] - Input Change of State This bit is set when a change of state occurs at the I/O1 or I/O0 input pins. It is reset when the CPU reads the Input Port Register, IPR. The other two conditions of these bits, 3/4 and half full operate in a similar manner. The ISR[1] bit is set when the RxFIFO fill level meets or exceeds the value; it is reset when the fill level is less. See the description of the MR2 register. ISR[6] Watch-dog Time-out This bit is set when the receiver’s watch-dog timer has counted more than 64 bit times since the last RxFIFO event. RxFIFO events are a read of the RxFIFO or GRxFIFO, or the push of a received character into the FIFO. The interrupt will be cleared automatically upon the push of the next character received or when the RxFIFO or GRxFIFO is read. The receiver watch-dog timer is included to allow detection of the very last characters of a received message that may be waiting in the RxFIFO, but are too few in number to successfully initiate an interrupt. Refer to the watch-dog timer description for details of how the interrupt system works after a watch-dog time-out. Note: This bit must be at a one (1) for the receiver to enter the arbitration process. It is the fact that this bit is zero (0) when the RxFIFO is empty that stops an empty FIFO from entering the interrupt arbitration. Also note that the meaning if this bit is not quite the same as the similar bit in the status register (SR). ISR[0] - Transmitter Ready The general function of this bit is to indicate that the TxFIFO has an at least one empty space for data. The particular meaning of the bit is controlled by MR0[5:4] indicates the TxFIFO may be loaded with one or more characters. If MR0[5:4] = 00 (the default condition) this bit will not set until the TxFIFO is empty - sixteen bytes available. If the fill level of the TxFIFO is below the trigger level programmed by the TxINT field of the Mode Register 0, this bit will be set. A one in this position indicates that at least one character can be sent to the TxFIFO. It is turned off as the TxFIFO is filled above the level programmed by MR0[5:4. This bit turns on as the FIFO empties; the RxFIFO bit turns on as the FIFO fills. This often a point of confusion in programming interrupt functions for the receiver and transmitter FIFOs. ISR[5] - Address Recognition Status Change This bit is set when a change in receiver state has occurred due to an Address character being received from an external source and comparing to the reference address in ARCR. The bit and interrupt is negated by a write to the CR with command x11011, Reset Address Recognition Status. ISR[4] - Xon/Xoff Status Change This bit is set when an Xon/Xoff character being received from an external source. The bit is negated by a read of the channel Xon Interrupt Status Register, XISR. ISR[3] - Reserved Always reads a 0 ISR[2] - Change in Channel Break Status This bit, when set, indicates that the receiver has detected the beginning or the end of a received break. It is reset when the CPU issues a reset break change interrupt command via the CR. 2006 Aug 15 Change of Break State Note: This bit must be at a one (1) for the transmitter to enter the arbitration process. It is the fact that this bit is zero (0) when the RxFIFO is full that stops a full FIFO from entering the interrupt arbitration. Also note that the meaning if this bit is not quite the same as the similar bit in the status register (SR). 23 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 12. IMR - Interrupt Mask Register Bit 7 Bit 6 I/O Port change of state Receiver Watch-dog Time-out Bit 5 Address recognition event Bit 4 Bit 3 Xon/off event Set to 0 The programming of this register selects which bits in the ISR cause an interrupt output. If a bit in the ISR is a ’1’ and the corresponding bit in the IMR is a ’1’, the interrupt source is presented to the internal interrupt arbitration circuits, eventually resulting in the IRQN output being asserted (low). If the corresponding bit in the IMR is a zero, the state of the bit in the ISR has no affect on the IRQN output. IMR[7] - Controls if a change of state in the inputs equipped with input change detectors will cause an interrupt. IMR[6] - Controls the generation of an interrupt by the watch-dog timer event. If set, a count of 64 idle bit times in the receiver will begin interrupt arbitration. IMR[5] - Enables the generation of an interrupt in response to changes in the Address Recognition circuitry of the Special Mode (multi-drop or wake-up mode). IMR[4] - Enables the generation of an interrupt in response to recognition of an in-band flow control character. IMR[3] - Reserved IMR[2] - Enables the generation of an interrupt when a Break condition has been detected by the channel receiver. IMR[1] - Enables the generation of an interrupt when servicing for the RxFIFO is desired. IMR[0] - Enables the generation of an interrupt when servicing for the TxFIFO is desired. Bit 2 Bit 1 Change of Break State RxRDY interrupt Bit 0 TxRDY interrupt Table 15. BCRBRK - Bidding Control Register Break Change Bits 7:3 Bits 2:0 Reserved MSB of break change interrupt bid This register provides the 3 MSBs of the Interrupt Arbitration number for a break change interrupt. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 16. BCRCOS - Bidding Control Register Change of State Bits 7:3 Reserved Bits 2:0 MSB of a COS interrupt bid Read as x’0 This register provides the 3 MSBs of the Interrupt Arbitration number for a Change of State, COS, interrupt. Table 17. BCRx - Bidding Control Register Xon/Xoff Bits 7:3 Reserved Bits 2:0 MSB of an Xon/Xoff interrupt bid This register provides the 3 MSBs of the Interrupt Arbitration number for an Xon/Xoff interrupt. Table 18. BCRA - Bidding Control Register Address ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 13. RxFIFO Receiver FIFO Bit[10] Bit[9] Bit[8] Bits [7:0] Break Received Status Framing Error Status Parity Error Status 8 data bits MSBs =0 for 7,6,5 bit data Bits 7:3 Reserved Bits 2:0 MSB of an address recognition event interrupt bid This register provides the 3 MSBs of the Interrupt Arbitration number for an address recognition event interrupt. The FIFO for the receiver is 11 bits wide and 16 “words” deep. The status of each byte received is stored with that byte and is moved along with the byte as the characters are read from the FIFO. The upper three bits are presented in the STATUS register and they change in the status register each time a data byte is read from the FIFO. Therefor the status register should be read BEFORE the byte is read from the RxFIFO if one wishes to ascertain the quality of the byte Table 19. XonCR - Xon Character Register Bits 7:0 8 Bits of the Xon Character Recognition An 8 bit character register that contains the compare value for an Xon character. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ The forgoing applies to the “character error” mode of status reporting. See MR1[5] and “RxFIFO Status” descriptions for “block error” status reporting. Briefly “Block Error” gives the accumulated error of all bytes received in the RxFIFO since the last “Reset Error” command was issued. (CR = x’04) Table 20. XoffCR - Xoff Character Register Bits 7:0 8 Bits of the Xoff Character Recognition An 8 bit character register that contains the compare value for an Xoff character. Table 14. TxFIFO - Transmitter FIFO Bits 7:0 Table 21. ARCR - Address Recognition Character Register 8 data bits. MSBs set to 0 for 7, 6, 5 bit data The FIFO for the transmitter is 8 bits wide by 16 bytes deep. For character lengths less than 8 bits the upper bits will be ignored by the transmitter state machine and thus are effectively discarded. Bits 7:0 8 Bits of the Multi-Drop Address Character Recognition An 8 bit character register that contains the compare value for the wake-up address character. 2006 Aug 15 24 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ Table 22. XISR - Xon-Xoff Interrupt Status Register See MR0 for a description of enabling these functions Bits 7:6 Bits 5:4 Bits 3:2 Bits 1:0 Received X Character Status Automatic X Character transmission status TxD flow status TxD character status 00 - none 01 - Xoff received 10 - Xon received 11 - both received 00 - none 01 - Xon transmitted 10 - Xoff transmitted 11 - Illegal, does not occur 00 - normal 01 - TxD halt pending 10 - re-enabled 11 - flow disabled 00 - normal TxD data 01 - wait on normal data 10 - Xoff in pending 11 - Xon in pending NOTE: Bits of this register may be cleared by a read of the register. XISR[7:6] - Received X Character Status. This field can be read to determine if the receiver has encountered an Xon or Xoff character in the incoming data stream. These bits are maintained until a read of the XISR. The field is updated by X character reception regardless of the state of MR0(7, 3:2) or IMR(4). The field can therefore be used as a character detector for the bit patterns stored in the Xon and Xoff Character Registers. Table 23. WDTRCR - Watch-dog Run Control Register XISR[5:4] - Automatic transmission Status. This field indicates the last flow control character sent in the Auto Receiver flow control mode. If Auto Receiver mode has not been enabled, this field will always read b’00. It will likewise reset to b’00 if MR0(3) is reset. If the Auto Receiver mode is exited while this field reads b’10, it is the user’s responsibility to transmit an Xon, when appropriate. This register enables the watch-dog Timer for each of the 4 receivers on the Quad UART XISR[3:2] - TxD flow Status. This field tracks the transmitter’s flow status as follows: 00 - normal. The flow control is under host control. 01 - TxD halt pending. After the current character finishes the transmitter will stop. The status will then change to b’00. 10 - re-enabled. The transmitter had been halted and restarted. It is sending data characters. After a read of the XISR, it will return to “normal” status. 11 - disabled. The transmitter is flow controlled. XISR[1:0] - TxD character Status. This field allows determination of the type of character being transmitted. If XISR(1:0) is b’01, the channel is waiting for a data character to transfer from the TxFIFO. This condition will only occur for a bit time after an Xon or Xoff character transmission unless the TxFIFO is empty. 2006 Aug 15 Bits 7:4 Reserved Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 WDT d WDT c WDT b WDT a 1 on 0 off 1 on 0 off 1 on 0 off 1 on 0 off Table 24. BRGTRU - BRG Timer Reload Registers, Upper (Timers A & B) ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Bits 7:0 8 MSB of the BRG Timer divisor. This is the upper byte of the 16 bit value used by the BRG timer in generating a baud rate clock Table 25. BRGTRL - BRG Timer Reload Registers, Lower (Timers A & B) ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Bits 7:0 8 LSB of the BRG Timer divisor. This is the lower byte of the 16 bit value used by the BRG timer in generating a baud rate clock. 25 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 26. BRGTCR - BRG Timer Control Register (BRGTCR) Bit 7 Bit 6:4 Bit 3 Bit 2:0 BRGTCR b, Register control BRGTCR b, Clock selection BRGTCR a, Register control BRGTCR a, Clock selection 0 - Resets the timer register and holds it stopped 1 - Allows the timer register to run. 000 - Sclk / 16 001 - Sclk / 32 010 - Sclk/ 64 011 - Sclk / 128 100 - X1 101 - X1 / 2 110 - I/O1b 111 - Gin(1) 0 - Resets the timer register and holds it stopped. 1 - Allows the timer register to run. Start/Stop control and clock select register for the two BRG counters. The clock selection is for the input to the counters. It is that clock divided by the number represented by the BRGTU and BRGTL the will be used as the 16x clock for the receivers and transmitters. When the BRG timer Clock is selected for the receiver(s) or transmitter(s) the receivers and transmitters will consider it as a 16x clock and further device it by 16. In other words the receivers and transmitters will always be in the 16x mode of operation when the internal BRG timer is selected for their clock. (See equation on page 6.) Table 28. CIR - Current Interrupt Register Bits 7:6 Table 27. ICR - Interrupt Control Register Bit 7 Bits 6:0 Reserved. Set to 0 Upper seven bits of the Arbitration Threshold 000 - Sclk / 16 001 - Sclk / 32 010 - Sclk / 64 011 - Sclk / 128 100 - X1 101 - X1 / 2 110 - I/O1a 111 - Gin(0) This register provides a single 7 bit field called the interrupt threshold for use by the interrupt arbiter. The field is interpreted as a single unsigned integer. The interrupt arbiter will not generate an external interrupt request, by asserting IRQN, unless the value of the highest priority interrupt exceeds the value of the interrupt threshold. If the highest bidder in the interrupt arbitration is lower than the threshold level set by the ICR, the Current Interrupt Register, CIR, will contain x’00. Refer to the functional description of interrupt generation for details on how the various interrupt source bid values are calculated. Bits 5:3 Bits 2:0 Type Current byte count/type Channel number 00 - other 000 - no interrupt 001 - Change of State 010 - Address Recognition 011 - Xon/Xoff status 100 - Not used 101 - Break change 110, 111 do not occur 000 = a 001 = b 010 = c 011 = d . 01 - Transmit 11- Receive w/ errors 10 - Receive w/o errors Current count code 0 => 9 or less characters 1 => 10 characters . . 5 => 14 characters 6 => 15 characters 7 => 16 (See also GIBCR) 000 = a 001 = b 010 = c 011 = d. . The Current Interrupt Register is provided to speed up the specification of the interrupting condition in the Quad UART. The CIR is updated at the beginning of an interrupt acknowledge bus cycle or in response to an Update CIR command. (see immediately above) Although interrupt arbitration continues in the background, the current interrupt information remains frozen in the CIR until another IACKN cycle or Update CIR command occurs. The LSBs of the CIR provide part of the addressing for various Global Interrupt registers including the GIBCR, GICR, GITR and the Global RxFIFO and TxFIFO FIFO. The host CPU need not generate individual addresses for this information since the interrupt context will remain stable at the fixed addresses of the Global Interrupt registers until the CIR is updated. For most interrupting sources, the data available in the CIR alone will be sufficient to set up a service routine. Note: While a watch-dog Timer interrupt is pending, the ICR is not used and only receiver codes are presented for interrupt arbitration. This allows receivers with very low count values (perhaps below the threshold value) to win interrupt arbitration without requiring the user to explicitly lower the threshold level in the ICR. These bits are the upper seven (7) bits of the interrupt arbitration system. The lower three (3) bits represent the channel number. UCIR - Update CIR The CIR may be processed as follows: A command based upon a decode of address x’8C. (UCIR is not a register!) A write (the write data is not important; a “don’t care”) to this ’register’ causes the Current Interrupt Register to be updated with the value that is winning interrupt arbitration. The register would be used in systems that poll the interrupt status registers rather than wait for interrupts. Alternatively, the CIR is normally updated during an Interrupt Acknowledge Bus cycle in interrupt driven systems. If CIR[7] = 1, then a receiver interrupt is pending and the count is CIR[5:3], channel is CIR[2:0] Else If CIR[6] = 1 then a transmitter interrupt is pending and the count is CIR[5:3], channel is CIR[2:0] Else the interrupt is another type, specified in CIR[5:3] Note: The GIBCR, Global Interrupting Byte Count Register, may be read to determine an exact character count if 9 or less characters are indicated in the count field of the CIR. 2006 Aug 15 26 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 29. IVR - Interrupt Vector Register Table 32. GIBCR - Global Interrupting Byte Count Register Bits 7:0 Bits 7:4 8 data bits of the Interrupt Vector (IVR) Reserved The IVR contains the byte that will be placed on the data bus during an IACKN cycle when the GCCR bits (2:1) are set to binary ‘01’. This is the unmodified form of the interrupt vector. 0000 = 1 AND RxRDY status set for RxFIFO 0000 = 1 AND TxRDY status set for TxD 0001 = 2 0010 = 3 . 1111 = 16 Table 30. Modification of the IVR Bits 7:5 Bits 4:3 Bits 2:0 Always contains bits (7:5) of the IVR Will be replaced with current interrupt type if IVC field of GCCR = 3 Replaced with interrupting channel number if IVC field of GCCR > 1 Bits 3:0 Channel byte count code A register associated with the interrupting channel as defined in the CIR. Its numerical value equals the number of bytes minus 1 (count - 1) ready for transfer to the transmitter or transfer from the receiver. It is undefined for other types of interrupts The table above indicates how the IVR may be modified by the interrupting source. The modification of the IVR as it is presented to the data bus during an IACK cycle is controlled by the setting of the bits (2:1) in the GCCR (Global Chip Configuration Register) ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 31. GICR - Global Interrupting Channel Register Bits 7:3 Bits 2:0 Reserved Channel code 000 = a 001 = b 010 = c 011 = d A register associated with the interrupting channel as defined in the CIR. It contains the interrupting channel code for all interrupts. Table 33. Global Interrupting Type Register Bit 7:6 Bit 5 Bit 4:3 Bit 2:0 Receiver Interrupt Transmitter Interrupt Reserved Other types 0x - not receiver 10 - with receive errors 11 - w/o receive errors 0 - not transmitter 1 - transmitter interrupt read b’00 000 - not “other” type 001 - Change of State 010 - Address Recognition Event 011 - Xon/Xoff status 100 - Not used 101 - Break Change 11x - do not occur A register associated with the interrupting channel as defined in the CIR. It contains the type of interrupt code for all interrupts. 2006 Aug 15 27 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 34. GRxFIFO - Global RxFIFO Register Table 35. GTxFIFO - Global TxFIFO Register Bits 7:0 Bits 7:0 8 data bits of RxFIFO. MSBs set to 0 for 7, 6, 5 bit data 8 data bits of TxFIFO. MSBs not used for 7, 6, 5 bit data The RxFIFO of the channel indicated in the CIR channel field. Undefined when the CIR interrupt context is not a receiver interrupt. Global TxFIFO Register The TxFIFO of the channel indicated in the CIR channel field. Undefined when the CIR interrupt context is not a transmitter interrupt. Writing to the GTxFIFO when the current interrupt is not a transmitter event may result in the characters being transmitted on a different channel than intended. ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 36. IPR - Input Port Register Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 7 Bit 6 I/O3 change I/O2 change I/O1 change I/O0 change 0 - no change 1 - change 0 - no change 1 - change 0 - no change 1 - change Bit 3 I/O3 state 0 - no change 1 - change Bit 2 I/O2 state Bit 1 I/O1 state Bit 0 I/O0 state The actual logic level at the I/O pin. 1 = high level; 0 =- low level. This register may be read to determine the current level of the I/O pins and examine the output of the change detectors assigned to each pin. If the change detection is not enabled or if the pin is configured as an output, the associated change field will read b’0. ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ Table 37. I/OPIOR - I/O Port Interrupt and Output Register Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 I/O3 enable I/O2 enable I/O1 enable I/O0 enable I/O3 output I/O2 output I/O1 output I/O0 output 0 - disable 1 - enable 0 - disable 1 - enable 0 - disable 1 - enable 0 - disable 1 - enable OPR[3] OPR[2] OPR[1] OPR[0] I/OPIOR[7:4] bits activate the input change of state detectors. If a pin is configured as an output, a b’1 value written to a I/O field has no effect. I/OPIOR[3:0] bits hold the datum which is the inverse of the datum driven to its associated I/O pin when the I/OPCR control bits for that pin are programmed to b’01. ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 38. I/OPCR - I/O Port Configuration Register Bits 7:6 Bits 5:4 Bits 3:2 Bits 1:0 I/O3 control I/O2 control I/O1 control I/O0 control 00 - GPI/TxC input 01 - I/OPIOR[3] output 10 - TxC16x output 11 - TxC1x output 00 - GPI/RxC input 01 - I/OPIOR[2]/RTSN * 10 - RxC1x output 11 - RxC16x output 00 - GPI input 01 - I/OPIOR[1]/RTSN * 10 - Reserved 11 - RxC1x output 00 - GPI/CTSN input 01 - I/OPIOR[0]output 10 - TxC1x output 11 - TxC16x output * If I/OPCR(5:4) is programmed as ’01’ then the RTSN functionality is assigned to I/O2, otherwise, this function can be implemented on I/O1. (This allows for a lower pin count package option.) This register contains 4, 2 bit fields that set the direction and source for each of the I/O pins associated with the channel. The I/O2 output may be RTSN if MR1[7] is set, or may signal “end of transmission” if MR2[5] is set.(Please see the descriptions of these functions under the MR1 and MR2 register descriptions) If this control bit is cleared, the pin will use the OPR[2] as a source if I/OPCR[5:4] is b’01. The b’00 combinations are always inputs. This register resets to x’0, effectively configuring all I/O pins as inputs on power up or reset. Inputs may be used as RxC, TxC inputs or CTSN and General Purpose Inputs simultaneously. All I/O ports are equipped with change detectors that may be used to generate interrupts or can be polled, as required. NOTE: To ensure that CTSN, RTSN and an external RxC are always available, if I/O2 is not selected as the RTSN output, the RTSN function is automatically provided on I/O1. 2006 Aug 15 28 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage GENERAL PURPOSE OUTPUT PIN CONTROL SC28L194 Table 41. GPOC- General Purpose Output Clk Register The following four registers control the function of the Gout0 and Gout1 pins. These output pins have a unique control matrix which includes a clocking mechanism that will allow the pin to change synchronously with an internal or external stimulus. See diagram below. This controls the clock source for GPOR that will clock and/or toggle the data from the selected GPOD source. When code b’00 is selected, no clock will be provided, thereby preventing any change through the D port. ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ Bits 7:6 Table 39. GPOSR- General Purpose Output Select Register GPOSR selects the signal or data source for the Gout pins. The Tx and Rx clock selection is straight forward. The selection of the GPOR allows a more flexible timing control of when the Gout pins change. Bits 7:4 Bits 3:0 Global General Purpose Output 1 Selection Global General Purpose Output 0 Selection 0000 - 0111 reserved 1000 = TxC1x a 1001 = TxC16x a 1010 = RxC16x a 1011 = TxC16x b 1100 = GGPOR(3) 1101 = GGPOR(2) 1110 = GGPOR(1) 1111 = GGPOR(0) 0000 - 0111 reserved 1000 = TxC1x a 1001 = TxC16x a 1010 = RxC16x a 1011 = TxC16x b 1100 = GGPOR(3) 1101 = GGPOR(2) 1110 = GGPOR(1) 1111 = GGPOR(0) Bits 5:4 Bits 3:2 Bits 1:0 Clk Sel GPOR(3) Clk Sel GPOR(2) Clk Sel GPOR(1) Clk Sel GPOR(0) 00 = none 01 = GIN0 10 = GIN1 11 = reserved 00 = none 01 = GIN0 10 = GIN1 11 = reserved 00 = none 01 = GIN0 10 = GIN1 11 = I/O3c 00 = none 01 = GIN0 10 = GIN1 11 = I/O3a Table 42. GPOD- General Purpose Output Data Register This register selects the data that will be presented to the GPOR “D” input. Note that selection b’10 selects the inverted GPOR data as the input. In this case, the GPOR output will toggle synchronously with the clock selected in the GPOC. Bits 7:6 Table 40. GPOR- General Purpose Output Register Bits 5:4 Bits 3:2 Bits 1:0 Data Sel GPOR(3) Data Sel GPOR(2) Data Sel GPOR(1) Data Sel GPOR(0) 00 = ’1’ 01 = ’0’ 10 = GPOR3N 11 = reserved 00 = ’1’ 01 = ’0’ 10 = GPOR2N 11 = reserved 00 = ’1’ 01 = ’0’ 10 = GPOR1N 11 = I/O3d 00 = ’1’ 01 = ’0’ 10 = GPOR0N 11 = I/O3b This register is a read/write register. Its contents may be altered by a GPOR Write or by the GPOC and GPOD registers shown below. The GPOD and GPOC may be programmed to cause the individual bits of the GPOR to change synchronously with internal or external events. The cells of this register may be thought of as a “Two Port flip-flop”; one port is controlled by a D input and clock, the other by a data load strobe. A read of the GPOR always returns its current value regardless of the port from which it was loaded. ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ Bits 7:4 Reserved Bit 3 GPOR(3) Bit 2 Bit 1 GPOR(2) GPOD GPOR(0) GPOR DATA BUS 3:0 4:1 MULTIPLEX “1” “0” Bit 0 GPOR(1) DATA IN/OUT GPOR R/W DATA READ/WRITE 4 TxC1Xa TxC16Xa RxC16Xa TxC16Xb GPOSR GPO PIN GPORQN 4 1/O3b D INPUT GPOR(0) GPOR(1) GPOR(2) GPOR(3) QN GPOC 4:1 MULTIPLEX D CLOCK NONE GIN0 4 8:1 MULTIPLEX GIN1 1/O3a SD00526 Figure 3. General Purpose Pin Control Logic 2006 Aug 15 29 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 addresses for the several in the address space of UART A and UART B that apply to the total chip configuration. The “Register Map Detail” shows the use of every address in the 8-bit address space. NOTE: The register maps for channels A and B (UARTs A and B) contain some control registers that configure the entire chip. These are denoted by a ♣ symbol REGISTER MAPS The registers of the SC28L194 are partitioned into two groups: those used in controlling data channels and those used in handling the actual data flow and status. Below is shown the general configuration of all the register addressed. The “Register Map Summary” shows the configuration of the lower four bits of the address that is the same for the individual UARTs. It also shows the REGISTER MAP SUMMARY ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ Á ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ Table 43. Summary Register Map, Control Acronym Read / Write Page 0ccc 0000 (x00) Address (hex) ccc = channel Mode Register 0 MR0a MR0 R/W 17 0ccc 0001 (x01) Mode Register 1 MR1a MR1 R/W 18 0ccc 0010 (x02) I/O Port Configuration Reg a I/OPCRa IOPCR R/W 28 0ccc 0011 (x03) Bid Control, Break Change BCRBRK R/W 24 0ccc 0100 (x04) Bid Control, Change of State BCRCOS R/W 24 0ccc 0110 (x06) Bid Control, Xon/Xoff BCRX R/W 24 0ccc 0111 (x07) Bid Control, Address recognition BCRA R/W 24 0ccc 1000 (x08) Xon Character Register XonCR R/W 24 0ccc 1001 (x09) Xoff Character Register XoffCR R/W 24 0ccc 1010 (x0A) Address Recognition Character ARCR R/W 24 0ccc 1100 (x0C) Receiver Clock Select Register RxCSR R/W 20 0000 1101 (x0D) ♣ Test Register 0ccc 1110 (x0E) Transmitter Clock Select Register TxCSR R/W 20 0000 1111 (x0F) ♣ Global Chip Configuration Register GCCR R/W 16 0001 1011 (x1B) ♣ Interrupt Control Register ICR R/W 26 0001 1101 (x1D) ♣ Watch-dog Timer Run Control WDTRCR R/W 25 0001 1111 (x1F) ♣ Interrupt Vector Register IVR R/W 27 2006 Aug 15 Register Name Reserved, set to 0 30 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ Table 44. Summary Register Map, Data Address (hex) ccc = Channel Acronym Read/Write Page 1ccc 0000 (x80) Mode Register 2 MR2 R/W 19 1ccc 0001 (x81) Status Register SR R 22 1ccc 0001 (x81) Command Register CR W 20 1ccc 0010 (x82) Interrupt Status Register ISR R 23 1ccc 0010 (x82) Interrupt Mask Register IMR W 24 1ccc 0011 (x83) Transmitter FIFO Register TxFIFO W 24 1ccc 0011 (x83) Receiver FIFO Reg RxFIFO R 24 1ccc 0100 (x84) Input Port Reg IPR R 28 1000 0100 (x84) ♣ BRG Timer Reg Upper a BRGTRUa W 25 1ccc 0101 (x85) I/O Port Interrupt and Output I/OPIOR R/W 28 1ccc 0110 (x86) Xon/Xoff Interrupt Status Reg XISR R 25 1000 0111 (x87) ♣ GP Out Select Reg GPOSR R/W 29 1000 1011 (x8B) ♣ GP Out Clk Reg GPOC R/W 29 1000 1100 (x8C) ♣ Update Current Interrupt Reg UCIR W 26 1000 1100 (x8C) ♣ Current Interrupt Reg CIR R 26 1000 1101 (x8D) ♣ BRG Timer Reg Upper b BRGTRUb W 25 1000 1110 (x8E) ♣ Global Receive FIFO Reg GRxFIFO R 28 1000 1110 (x8E) ♣ Global Transmit FIFO Reg GTxFIFO W 28 1000 1111 (x8F) ♣ Global Chip Configuration Reg GCCR R/W 16 1001 0100 (x94) ♣ BRG Timer Reg Lower a BRGTRLa W 25 1001 0111 (x97) ♣ GP Output Reg GPOR R/W 29 1001 1011 (x9B) ♣ GP Out Data Reg GPOD R/W 29 1001 1100 (x9C) ♣ BRG Timer Control Reg BRGTCR W 26 1001 1100 (x9C) ♣ Global Interrupt Channel Reg GICR R 27 1001 1101 (x9D) ♣ BRG Timer Reg Lower b BRGTRLb W 25 1001 1101 (x9D) ♣ Global Interrupt Byte Count GIBCR R 27 1001 1111 (x9F) ♣ Global Interrupt Type Register GITR R 27 2006 Aug 15 Register Name 31 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 REGISTER MAP DETAIL Table 45. Register Map, Control NOTE: The register maps for channels A and B (UARTs A and B) contain some control registers that configure the entire chip. These are denoted by a ♣ symbol ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ A(7:0) 0000 0000 (x00) UART A Read Write Mode Register 0 MR0a Mode Register 0 MR0a 0000 0001 (x01) Mode Register 1 MR1a Mode Register 1 MR1a 0000 0010 (x02) I/O Port Configuration Reg a I/OPCRa I/O Port Configuration Reg a I/OPCRa 0000 0011 (x03) BCRBRKa BCRBRKa 0000 0100 (x04) BCRCOSa BCRCOSa 0000 0101 (x05) Reserved Reserved 0000 0110 (x06) BCRXa BCRXa 0000 0111 (x07) BCRAa BCRAa 0000 1000 (x08) Xon Character Reg a (XonCRa) Xon Character Reg a (XonCRa) 0000 1001 (x09) Xoff Character Reg a (XoffCRa) Xoff Character Reg a (XoffCRa) 0000 1010 (x0A) Address Recognition Character a (ARCRa) Address Recognition Character a (ARCRa) 0000 1011 (x0B) Reserved Reserved 0000 1100 (x0C) Receiver Clock Select Register a (RxCSRa) Receiver Clock Select Register a (RxCSRa) 0000 1101 (x0D) ♣ Test Register Test Register 0000 1110 (x0E) Xmit Clock Select Register a TxCSRa) Xmit Clock Select Register a TxCSRa) 0000 1111 (x0F) ♣ Global Chip Configuration Reg(GCCR) Global Chip Configuration Reg GCCR) A(7:0) 0001 0000 (x10) UART B Read Write Mode Register 0 MR0b Mode Register 0 MR0b 0001 0001 (x11) Mode Register 1 MR1b Mode Register 1 MR1b 0001 0010 (x12) I/O Port Configuration Reg b I/OPCRb I/O Port Configuration Reg b I/OPCRb 0001 0011 (x13) BCRBRKb BCRBRKb 0001 0100 (x14) BCRCOSb BCRCOSb 0001 0101 (x15) Reserved Reserved 0001 0110 (x16) BCRXb BCRXb 0001 0111 (x17) BCRAb BCRAb 0001 1000 (x18) Xon Character Reg b (XonCRb) Xon Character Reg b (XonCRb) 0001 1001 (x19) Xoff Character Reg b (XoffCRb) Xoff Character Reg b (XoffCRb) 0001 1010 (x1A) Address Recognition Character b (ARCRb) Address Recognition Character b (ARCRb) 0001 1011 (x1B) ♣ Interrupt Control Register (ICR) Interrupt Control Register (ICR) 0001 1100 (x1C) Receiver Clock Select Register b (RxCSRb) Receiver Clock Select Register b (RxCSRb) 0001 1101 (x1D) ♣ Watch-dog Timer Run Control (WDTRCR) Watch-dog Timer Run Control (WDTRCR) 0001 1110 (x1E) Xmit Clock Select Register b (TxCSRb) Xmit Clock Select Register b (TxCSRb) 0001 1111 (x1F) ♣ Interrupt Vector Register (IVR) Interrupt Vector Register (IVR) 2006 Aug 15 32 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ A(7:0) 0010 0000 (x20) UART C Read Write Mode Register 0 MR0c Mode Register 0 MR0c 0010 0001 (x21) Mode Register 1 Mode Register 1 MR1c 0010 0010 (x22) I/O Port Configuration Reg c I/OPCRc I/O Port Configuration Reg c I/OPCRc 0010 0011 (x23) BCRBRKc BCRBRKc 0010 0100 (x24) BCRCOSc BCRCOSc 0010 0101 (x25) Reserved Reserved 0010 0110 (x26) BCRXc BCRXc 0010 0111 (x27) BCRAc BCRAc 0010 1000 (x28) Xon Character Reg c (XonCRc) Xon Character Reg c (XonCRc) 0010 1001 (x29) Xoff Character Reg c (XoffCRc) Xoff Character Reg c (XoffCRc) 0010 1010 (x2A) Address Recognition Character c (ARCRc) Address Recognition Character c (ARCRc) 0010 1011 (x2B) Reserved Reserved 0010 1100 (x2C) Receiver Clock Select Register c (RxCSRc) Receiver Clock Select Register c (RxCSRc) 0010 1101 (x2D) Reserved Reserved 0010 1110 (x2E) Xmit Clock Select Register c (TxCSRc) Xmit Clock Select Register c (TxCSRc) 0010 1111 (x2F) Reserved Reserved A(7:0) 0011 0000 (x30) UART D Read Write Mode Register 0 MR0d Mode Register 0 MR0d 0011 0001 (x31) Mode Register 1 MR1d Mode Register 1 MR1d 0011 0010 (x32) I/O Port Configuration Reg d I/OPCRd I/O Port Configuration Reg d I/OPCRd 0011 0011 (x33) BCRBRKd BCRBRKd 0011 0100 (x34) BCRCOSd BCRCOSd 0011 0101 (x35) Reserved Reserved 0011 0110 (x36) BCRXd BCRXd 0011 0111 (x37) BCRAd BCRAd 0011 1000 (x38) Xon Character Reg d (XonCRd) Xon Character Reg d (XonCRd) 0011 1001 (x39) Xoff Character Reg d (XoffCRd) Xoff Character Reg d (XoffCRd) 0011 1010 (x3A) Address Recognition Character d (ARCRd) Address Recognition Character d (ARCRd) 0011 1011 (x3B) Reserved Reserved 0011 1100 (x3C) Receiver Clock Select Register d (RxCSRd) Receiver Clock Select Register d (RxCSRd) 0011 1101 (x3D) Reserved Reserved 0011 1110 (x3E) Xmit Clock Select Register d (TxCSRd) Xmit Clock Select Register d (TxCSRd) 0011 1111 (x3F) Reserved Reserved 2006 Aug 15 33 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ Table 46. Register Map, Data A(7:0) UART A Read Write 1000 0000 (x80) Mode Register a (MR2a) Mode Register a (MR2a) 1000 0001 (x81) Status Register a (SRa) Command Register a (CRa) 1000 0010 (x82) Interrupt Status Register a (ISRa) Interrupt Mask Register a (IMRa) 1000 0011 (x83) Receiver FIFO Reg a (RxFIFOa) Transmitter FIFO Reg a (TxFIFOa) 1000 0100 (x84) Reserved ♣ BRG Timer Reg Upper a (BRGTRUa) 1000 0100 (x84) Input Port Reg a (IPRa) Reserved 1000 0101 (x85) I/O Port Interrupt and Output a I/OPIORa) I/O Port Interrupt and Output a (I/OPIORa) 1000 0110 (x86) Xon/Xoff Interrupt Status Reg a (XISRa) Reserved 1000 0111 (x87) ♣ GP Out Select Reg (GPOSR) GP Out Select Reg (GPOSR) 1000 1011 (x8B) ♣ GP Out Clk Reg (GPOC) GP Out Clk Reg (GPOC) 1000 1100 (x8C) ♣ Current Interrupt Reg (CIR) ♣ Update CIR 1000 1101 (x8D) Reserved ♣ BRG Timer Reg Upper b (BRGTRUb) 1000 1110 (x8E) ♣ Global Receive FIFO Reg (GRxFIFO) ♣ Global Transmit FIFO Reg (GTxFIFO) 1000 1111 (x8F) ♣ Global Chip Configuration Reg (GCCR) ♣ Global Chip Configuration Reg (GCCR) A(7:0) UART B Read Write 1001 0000 (x90) Mode Register b (MR2b) Mode Register b (MR2b) 1001 0001 (x91) Status Register b (SRb) Command Register b (CRb) 1001 0010 (x92) Interrupt Status Register b (ISRb) Interrupt Mask Register b (IMRb) 1001 0011 (x93) Receiver FIFO Reg b (RxFIFOb) Transmitter FIFO Reg b (TxFIFOb) 1001 0100 (x94) Reserved ♣ BRG Timer Reg Lower a (BRGTRLa) 1001 0100 (x94) Input Port Reg b (IPRb) Reserved 1001 0101 (x95) I/O Port Interrupt and Output b (I/OPIORb) I/O Port Interrupt and Output b (I/OPIORb) 1001 0110 (x96) Xon/Xoff Interrupt Status Reg b (XISRb) Reserved 1001 0111 (x97) ♣ GP Output Reg (GPOR) ♣ GP Output Reg (GPOR) 1001 1010 (x9A) Reserved Reserved 1001 1011 (x9B) ♣ GP Out Data Reg (GPOD) ♣ GP Out Data Reg (GPOD) 1001 1100 (x9C) Reserved ♣ BRG Timer Control Reg (BRGCTCR) 1001 1100 (x9C) ♣ Global Interrupt Channel Reg (GICR) Reserved 1001 1101 (x9D) Reserved ♣ BRG Timer Reg Lower b (BRGTRLb) 1001 1101 (x9D) ♣ Global Interrupt Byte Count (GIBCR) Reserved 1001 1110 (x9E) Reserved Reserved 1001 1111 (x9F) ♣ Global Interrupt Type Register (GITR) Reserved 2006 Aug 15 34 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ A(7:0) UART C Read Write 1010 0000 (xA0) Mode Register c (MR2c) Mode Register c (MR2c) 1010 0001 (xA1) Status Register c (SRc) Command Register c (CRc) 1010 0010 (xA2) Interrupt Status Register c (ISRc) Interrupt Mask Register c (IMRc) 1010 0011 (xA3) Receiver FIFO Reg c (RxFIFOc) Transmitter FIFO Reg c (TxFIFOc) 1010 0100 (xA4) Input Port Reg c (IPRc) Reserved 1010 0101 (xA5) I/O Port Interrupt and Output c (I/OPIORc) I/O Port Interrupt and Output c (I/OPIORc) 1010 0110 (xA6) Xon/Xoff Interrupt Status Reg c (XISRc) Reserved 1010 0111 (xA7) Reserved Reserved 1010 1000 (xA8) Reserved Reserved 1010 1001 (xA9) Reserved Reserved 1010 1010 (xAA) Reserved Reserved 1010 1011 (xAB) Reserved Reserved 1010 1100 (xAC) Reserved Reserved 1010 1101 (xAD) Reserved Reserved 1010 1110 (xAE) Reserved Reserved 1010 1111 (xAF) Reserved Reserved A(7:0) 1011 0000 (xB0) UART D Read Write Mode Register d (MR2d) Mode Register d (MR2d) 1011 0001 (xB1) Status Register d (SRd) Command Register d (CRd) 1011 0010 (xB2) Interrupt Status Register d (ISRd) Interrupt Mask Register d (IMRd) Transmitter FIFO Reg d (TxFIFOd) 1011 0011 (xB3) Receiver FIFO Reg d (RxFIFOd) 1011 0100 (xB4) Input Port Reg d (IPRd) Reserved 1011 0101 (xB5) I/O Port Interrupt and Output d (I/OPIORd) I/O Port Interrupt and Output d (I/OPIORd) 1011 0110 (xB6) Xon/Xoff Interrupt Status Reg d (XISRd) Reserved 1011 0111 (xB7) Reserved Reserved 1011 1000 (xBB) Reserved Reserved 1011 1001 (xB9) Reserved Reserved 1011 1010 (xBA) Reserved Reserved 1011 1011 (xBB) Reserved Reserved 1011 1100 (xBC) Reserved Reserved 1011 1101 (xBD) Reserved Reserved 1011 1110 (xBE) Reserved Reserved 1011 1111 (xBF) Reserved Reserved 2006 Aug 15 35 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage RESET CONDITIONS Clears Modes for: Power down Test modes Input Port Changed bits Gang write to Xon or Xoff Xon/Xoff/Address detection Receiver error status Device Configuration after Hardware Reset or CRa cmd=x1F Cleared registers: Channel Status Registers (SR) Channel Interrupt Status Registers (ISR) Channel Interrupt Mask Registers (IMR) Channel Interrupt Xon Status Register (XISR) Interrupt Control Register (ICR) Global Configuration Control Register (GCCR) Hence the device enters the asynchronous bus cycling mode. Current Interrupt Register (CIR) BRG Timer Run Control Register (BRGTCR) Watch-dog Timer Run Control Register (WDTRCR) Channel Input/Output Port Configuration Registers (I/OPCR) Hence all I/O pins have direction = Input after reset BRG Counter/Timer Registers 2006 Aug 15 SC28L194 Disables: Transmitters Receivers Interrupts, current and future Halts: BRG Counters Bus cycle in progress (hardware RESET only) Limitations: Minimum RESETN pin pulse width is 10 SClk cycles after Vcc reaches operational range The user must allow a minimum of 6 SClk cycles to elapse after a reset (RESETN pin or CRa initiated) of the device terminates before initiating a new bus cycle. 36 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Quad UART for 3.3 V and 5 V supply voltage SC28L194 DC ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS FOR COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL (3.3V) VCC = 3.3V ± 10%; –40 to +85°C SYMBOL VIL VIH VOL 3 VOH O VOL 3 PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS Input low voltage2 LIMITS MIN. TYP.1 UNIT VSS 0.2 VCC V Input high voltage (except X1/CLK) 0.8 VCC VCC V Input high voltage (X1/CLK) 0.8VCC VCC V 0.4 V Output low voltage4 Output high voltage (except OD outputs) IOL = 3.2mA 0.15 IOH = –400µA 0.8VCC V IOH = –100µA 0.9VCC V Open-drain low voltage IOL = 10.0mA IIL Input current low, I/O pins VIN = 0 IIH Input current high, I/O pins VIN = VCC IL Input leakage current VIN = 0 to VCC IILCKX1 X1/CLK input low current VIN = VSS, X2 = Open IIHCKX1
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