XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
2020/10/05
Document Number: X007789
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Table of Contents
1
xCORE Multicore Microcontrollers . . . .
2
XUF212-512-TQ128 Features . . . . . . .
3
Pin Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4
Signal Description . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5
Example Application Diagram . . . . . .
6
Product Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7
PLL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
8
Boot Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9
Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10 USB PHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
11 JTAG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
12 Board Integration . . . . . . . . . . . . .
13 Electrical Characteristics . . . . . . . . .
14 Package Information . . . . . . . . . . .
15 Ordering Information . . . . . . . . . . .
Appendices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
A
Configuration of the XUF212-512-TQ128
B
Processor Status Configuration . . . . .
C
Tile Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . .
D
Node Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . .
E
USB Node Configuration . . . . . . . . .
F
USB PHY Configuration . . . . . . . . . .
G
JTAG, xSCOPE and Debugging . . . . . .
H
Schematics Design Check List . . . . . .
I
PCB Layout Design Check List . . . . . .
J
Associated Design Documentation . . .
K
Related Documentation . . . . . . . . . .
L
Revision History . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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2
4
5
6
10
11
14
15
16
17
18
19
24
29
30
31
31
34
45
52
60
62
69
71
73
74
74
75
TO OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS
It is our intention to provide you with accurate and comprehensive documentation for the hardware and software
components used in this product. To subscribe to receive updates, visit http://www.xmos.com/.
XMOS Ltd.is the owner or licensee of the information in this document and is providing it to you “AS IS” with no warranty
of any kind, express or implied and shall have no liability in relation to its use. XMOS Ltd. makes no representation that
the information, or any particular implementation thereof, is or will be free from any claims of infringement and again,
shall have no liability in relation to any such claims.
XMOS and the XMOS logo are registered trademarks of XMOS Ltd in the United Kingdom and other countries, and may
not be used without written permission. Company and product names mentioned in this document are the trademarks
or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
1
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
1
xCORE Multicore Microcontrollers
The xCORE-200 Series is a comprehensive range of 32-bit multicore microcontrollers
that brings the low latency and timing determinism of the xCORE architecture to mainstream embedded applications. Unlike conventional microcontrollers, xCORE multicore
microcontrollers execute multiple real-time tasks simultaneously and communicate between tasks using a high speed network. Because xCORE multicore microcontrollers are
completely deterministic, you can write software to implement functions that traditionally require dedicated hardware.
X0Dxx
I/O pins
xTIME
scheduler
Hardware response ports
PLL
JTAG
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
USB
SRAM
OTP
xCONNECT Switch
xCORE logical core
Hardware response ports
xCORE logical core
Link 8
xCORE logical core
Figure 1:
XUF212-512TQ128 block
diagram
X1Dxx
I/O pins
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
xTIME
scheduler
xCORE logical core
FLASH
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
OTP
SRAM
Key features of the XUF212-512-TQ128 include:
· Tiles: Devices consist of one or more xCORE tiles. Each tile contains between five and
eight 32-bit xCOREs with highly integrated I/O and on-chip memory.
· Logical cores Each logical core can execute tasks such as computational code, DSP
code, control software (including logic decisions and executing a state machine) or
software that handles I/O. Section 6.1
· xTIME scheduler The xTIME scheduler performs functions similar to an RTOS, in hardware. It services and synchronizes events in a core, so there is no requirement for interrupt handler routines. The xTIME scheduler triggers cores on events generated by
hardware resources such as the I/O pins, communication channels and timers. Once
triggered, a core runs independently and concurrently to other cores, until it pauses to
wait for more events. Section 6.2
· Channels and channel ends Tasks running on logical cores communicate using channels formed between two channel ends. Data can be passed synchronously or asynchronously between the channel ends assigned to the communicating tasks. Section
6.5
· xCONNECT Switch and Links Between tiles, channel communications are implemented
over a high performance network of xCONNECT Links and routed through a hardware
xCONNECT Switch. Section 6.6
2
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
· Ports The I/O pins are connected to the processing cores by Hardware Response
ports. The port logic can drive its pins high and low, or it can sample the value on
its pins optionally waiting for a particular condition. Section 6.3
· Clock blocks xCORE devices include a set of programmable clock blocks that can be
used to govern the rate at which ports execute. Section 6.4
· Memory Each xCORE Tile integrates a bank of SRAM for instructions and data, and
a block of one-time programmable (OTP) memory that can be configured for system
wide security features. Section 9
· PLL The PLL is used to create a high-speed processor clock given a low speed external
oscillator. Section 7
· USB The USB PHY provides High-Speed and Full-Speed, device, host, and on-the-go
functionality. Data is communicated through ports on the digital node. A library is
provided to implement USB device functionality. Section 10
· Flash The device has a built-in 2MBflash. Section 8
· JTAG The JTAG module can be used for loading programs, boundary scan testing,
in-circuit source-level debugging and programming the OTP memory. Section 11
1.1
Software
Devices are programmed using C, C++ or xC (C with multicore extensions). XMOS provides tested and proven software libraries, which allow you to quickly add interface and
processor functionality such as USB, Ethernet, PWM, graphics driver, and audio EQ to
your applications.
1.2
xTIMEcomposer Studio
The xTIMEcomposer Studio development environment provides all the tools you need to
write and debug your programs, profile your application, and write images into flash memory or OTP memory on the device. Because xCORE devices operate deterministically,
they can be simulated like hardware within xTIMEcomposer: uniquely in the embedded
world, xTIMEcomposer Studio therefore includes a static timing analyzer, cycle-accurate
simulator, and high-speed in-circuit instrumentation.
xTIMEcomposer can be driven from either a graphical development environment, or the
command line. The tools are supported on Windows, Linux and MacOS X and available
at no cost from xmos.ai/software-tools.
3
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
2
XUF212-512-TQ128 Features
· Multicore Microcontroller with Advanced Multi-Core RISC Architecture
• 12 real-time logical cores on 2 xCORE tiles
• Cores share up to 1000 MIPS
— Up to 2000 MIPS in dual issue mode
• Each logical core has:
— Guaranteed throughput of between 1/5 and 1/6 of tile MIPS
— 16x32bit dedicated registers
• 167 high-density 16/32-bit instructions
— All have single clock-cycle execution (except for divide)
— 32x32→64-bit MAC instructions for DSP, arithmetic and user-definable cryptographic functions
· USB PHY, fully compliant with USB 2.0 specification
· Programmable I/O
• 81 general-purpose I/O pins, configurable as input or output
— Up to 25 x 1bit port, 12 x 4bit port, 8 x 8bit port, 4 x 16bit port
— 4 xCONNECT links
• Port sampling rates of up to 60 MHz with respect to an external clock
• 64 channel ends (32 per tile) for communication with other cores, on or off-chip
· Memory
• 512KB internal single-cycle SRAM (max 256KB per tile) for code and data storage
• 16KB internal OTP (max 8KB per tile) for application boot code
• 2MB internal flash for application code and overlays
· Hardware resources
• 12 clock blocks (6 per tile)
• 20 timers (10 per tile)
• 8 locks (4 per tile)
· JTAG Module for On-Chip Debug
· Security Features
• Programming lock disables debug and prevents read-back of memory contents
• AES bootloader ensures secrecy of IP held on external flash memory
· Ambient Temperature Range
• -40 °C to 85 °C
· Speed Grade
• 24: 1200 MIPS
• 20: 1000 MIPS
· Power Consumption
• 570 mA (typical)
· 128-pin TQFP package 0.4 mm pitch
4
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
4E
97
X0D33
4F
98
X0D29
4F
99
X0D30
VDD
X0D31
4F
VDD
102
100
PLL_AVDD
103
101
PLL_AGND
104
X1D40
OTP_VCC
8D
106
tx3
105
8D
107
tx2
X1D41
X1D43
8D
108
tx1
X1D42
VDDIOT
8D
110
109
tx0
X1D26
VDDIOT
4E
112
tx_clk
111
4E
113
tx_ctl
X1D27
4F
114
rx_clk
X1D28
4F
115
rx_ctl
X1D29
4F
116
rx0
X1D30
4F
117
rx1
X1D31
4E
118
rx2
X1D32
VDD
X1D33
4E
X1D11
1C
121
X1D10
TRST_N
1D
123
122
CLK
RST_N
124
VDD
126
125
TCK
TMS
119
2
rx3
1
TDI
120
TDO
128
Pin Configuration
127
3
96
4F
X0D28
95
4E
X0D32
X0D27
X0D36
1M
3
X 0 Lo4
7
94
4E
X0D37
1N
4
X 0 Lo3
7
93
4E
X0D38
1O
5
92
X0D26
VDDIOR
6
X 0 Lo2
7
91
1L
X0D35
X0D39
1P
7
X 0 Lo1
7
90
1K
X0D34
X0D40
8D
8
X 0 L i1
0
X 0 Lo0
7
89
1J
X0D25
X0D41
8D
9
X 0 L i0
0
X 0 L i0
7
88
1I
X0D24
X0D42
8D
10
X 0 Lo0
0
VDDIOL
VDD
11
X0D43
8D
12
X1D35
1L
13
VDDIOL
X1D36
X 0 Lo1
0
1M
86
1B
X1D01
X 0 L i2
7
85
1A
X1D00
X 0 L i3
7
84
4A
VDD
17
1N
VDDIOL
83
X 0 L i4
7
15
16
VDD
X 0 L i1
7
14
VDD
X1D37
87
82
4A
81
PADDLE
GND
X 0 Lo4
4
79
19
X1D08
VDD
80
18
X1D09
VDDIOR
VDD
4B
78
X1D07
VDDIOR
X1D38
1O
20
X 0 Lo3
4
77
4B
X1D06
X1D39
1P
21
X 0 Lo2
4
76
4B
X1D05
X1D16
4D
22
X 0 L i1
3
X 0 Lo1
4
75
4B
X1D04
X1D17
4D
23
X 0 L i0
3
X 0 Lo0
4
74
4A
X1D03
VDD
24
73
VDD
X1D18
4D
25
X 0 Lo0
3
X 0 L i0
4
72
4A
X1D02
X1D19
4D
26
X 0 Lo1
3
X 0 L i1
4
71
4D
X0D19
X0D01
1B
27
X 0 L i2
4
70
4D
X0D18
X0D10
1C
28
X 0 L i3
4
69
4D
X0D17
29
X 0 L i4
4
68
4D
VDDIOL
5
1F
1G
X0D13
X0D22
64
1E
X0D12
63
61
4C
X0D21
62
60
4C
X0D20
VDD
4C
X0D15
59
57
4C
X0D14
58
56
VDD
4C
X1D21
55
4C
X1D20
54
53
4C
X1D15
51
52
X1D14
4C
50
NC
VDDIOR
49
47
USB_DM
USB_VDD
46
USB_DP
USB_RTUNE 48
45
43
USB_ID
USB_VBUS
42
VDDIOL
USB_VDD33 44
41
VDD
40
4A
X0D09
39
38
4A
4B
X0D07
4A
4B
X0D06
X0D08
4B
X0D05
X0D03
65
37
66
32
4A
31
1D
X0D02
4B
X0D11
35
X0D04
36
67
VDD
30
34
1A
33
X0D00
X0D16
VDDIOR
1H
X0D23
NC
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
4
Signal Description
This section lists the signals and I/O pins available on the XUF212-512-TQ128. The device
provides a combination of 1bit, 4bit, 8bit and 16bit ports, as well as wider ports that are
fully or partially (gray) bonded out. All pins of a port provide either output or input, but
signals in different directions cannot be mapped onto the same port.
Pins may have one or more of the following properties:
· PD/PU: The IO pin has a weak pull-down or pull-up resistor. The resistor is enabled
during and after reset. Enabling a link or port that uses the pin disables the resistor.
Thereafter, the resistor can be enabled or disabled under software control. The resistor
is designed to ensure defined logic input state for unconnected pins. It should not be
used to pull external circuitry. Note that the resistors are highly non-linear and only a
maximum pull current is specified in Section 13.3.
· ST: The IO pin has a Schmitt Trigger on its input.
· IOL/IOT/IOR: The IO pin is powered from VDDIOL, VDDIOT, and VDDIOR respectively
Power pins (10)
Signal
Function
Type
GND
Digital ground
GND
OTP_VCC
OTP power supply
PWR
PLL_AGND
Analog ground for PLL
PWR
PLL_AVDD
Analog power for PLL
PWR
USB_VDD
Digital tile power
PWR
USB_VDD33
USB Analog power
PWR
VDD
Digital tile power
PWR
VDDIOL
Digital I/O power (left)
PWR
VDDIOR
Digital I/O power (right)
PWR
VDDIOT
Digital I/O power (top)
PWR
Properties
JTAG pins (6)
6
Signal
Function
Type
Properties
RST_N
Global reset input, active low
Input
IOL, PU, ST
TCK
Test clock
Input
IOL, PD, ST
TDI
Test data input
Input
IOL, PU
TDO
Test data output
Output
IOL, PD
TMS
Test mode select
Input
IOL, PU
TRST_N
Test reset input, active low
Input
IOL, PU, ST
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
I/O pins (81)
Signal
Function
Type
Properties
X0D00
1A0
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D01
1B0
I/O—
IOL, PD
X0D02
4A0 8A0 16A0
32A20
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D03
4A1
16A1
32A21
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D04
4B0 8A2 16A2
32A22
I/O—
IOL, PD
X0D05
4B1
8A3 16A3
32A23
I/O—
IOL, PD
X0D06
4B2 8A4 16A4
32A24
I/O—
IOL, PD
X0D07
4B3 8A5 16A5
32A25
I/O—
IOL, PD
X0D08
4A2 8A6 16A6
32A26
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D09
4A3 8A7
32A27
I/O
IOL, PD
8A1
16A7
X0D10
1C0
I/O—
IOL, PD
X0D11
1D0
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D12
1E0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D13
1F0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D14
4C0 8B0 16A8
32A28
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D15
4C1
32A29
I/O
IOR, PD
8B1
16A9
X0D16
X0 L44in
4D0 8B2 16A10
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D17
X0 L43in
4D1
8B3 16A11
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D18
X0 L42in
4D2 8B4 16A12
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D19
X0 L41in
4D3 8B5 16A13
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D20
4C2 8B6 16A14 32A30
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D21
4C3 8B7
I/O
IOR, PD
16A15 32A31
X0D22
1G0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D23
1H0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D24
X0 L70in
1I0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D25
X0 L70out
1J0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D26
X0 L73out
4E0
8C0 16B0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D27
X0 L74out
4E1
8C1
16B1
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D28
4F0
8C2 16B2
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D29
4F1
8C3 16B3
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D30
4F2
8C4 16B4
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D31
4F3
8C5 16B5
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D32
4E2
8C6 16B6
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D33
4E3
8C7
I/O
IOR, PD
16B7
X0D34
X0 L71out
1K0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D35
X0 L72out
1L0
I/O
IOR, PD
X0D36
1M0
8D0 16B8
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D37
1N0
8D1
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D38
1O0
8D2 16B10
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D39
1P0
8D3 16B11
I/O
IOL, PD
8D4 16B12
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D40
X0 L01in
16B9
(continued)
7
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
8
Signal
Function
Type
Properties
X0D41
X0 L00in
8D5 16B13
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D42
X0 L00out
8D6 16B14
I/O
IOL, PD
X0D43
X0 L01out
8D7 16B15
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D00
X0 L72in
1A0
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D01
X0 L71in
1B0
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D02
X0 L40in
4A0 8A0 16A0
32A20
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D03
X0 L40out
4A1
16A1
32A21
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D04
X0 L41out
4B0 8A2 16A2
32A22
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D05
X0 L42out
4B1
8A3 16A3
32A23
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D06
X0 L43out
4B2 8A4 16A4
32A24
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D07
X0 L44out
4B3 8A5 16A5
32A25
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D08
X0 L74in
4A2 8A6 16A6
32A26
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D09
X0 L73in
4A3 8A7
32A27
I/O
IOR, PD
8A1
16A7
X1D10
1C0
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D11
1D0
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D14
4C0 8B0 16A8
32A28
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D15
4C1
32A29
I/O
IOR, PD
8B1
16A9
X1D16
X0 L31in
4D0 8B2 16A10
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D17
X0 L30in
4D1
8B3 16A11
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D18
X0 L30out
4D2 8B4 16A12
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D19
X0 L31out
4D3 8B5 16A13
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D20
4C2 8B6 16A14 32A30
I/O
IOR, PD
X1D21
4C3 8B7
I/O
IOR, PD
16A15 32A31
X1D26
tx_clk (rgmii)
4E0
8C0 16B0
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D27
tx_ctl (rgmii)
4E1
8C1
16B1
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D28
rx_clk (rgmii)
4F0
8C2 16B2
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D29
rx_ctl (rgmii)
4F1
8C3 16B3
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D30
rx0 (rgmii)
4F2
8C4 16B4
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D31
rx1 (rgmii)
4F3
8C5 16B5
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D32
rx2 (rgmii)
4E2
8C6 16B6
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D33
rx3 (rgmii)
4E3
8C7
I/O
IOT, PD
I/O
IOL, PD
16B7
X1D35
1L0
X1D36
1M0
8D0 16B8
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D37
1N0
8D1
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D38
1O0
8D2 16B10
I/O
IOL, PD
X1D39
1P0
8D3 16B11
I/O
IOL, PD
16B9
X1D40
tx3 (rgmii)
8D4 16B12
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D41
tx2 (rgmii)
8D5 16B13
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D42
tx1 (rgmii)
8D6 16B14
I/O
IOT, PD
X1D43
tx0 (rgmii)
8D7 16B15
I/O
IOT, PD
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
usb pins (5)
Signal
Function
Type
USB_DM
USB Data-
I/O
Properties
USB_DP
USB Data+
I/O
USB_ID
USB Identification
I/O
USB_RTUNE
USB resistor
I/O
USB_VBUS
USB Power Detect Pin
I/O
Signal
Function
Type
Properties
CLK
PLL reference clock
Input
IOL, PD, ST
System pins (1)
9
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
5
Example Application Diagram
IN
IN
1V0
OUT
3V3
PLL_AGND
VDD
PLL_AVDD
RESET
SUPERVISOR
USB_VDD
OUT
RST_N
TRST_N
OSCILLATOR
25
24 MHz
CLK
X0D01
OTP_VCC
XnDnn
xCORE200
VDDIOT
Figure 2:
Simplified
Reference
Schematic
USB
· see Section 10 for details on the USB PHY
· see Section 12 for details on the power supplies and PCB design
10
GND
USB_VDD33
USB_RTUNE
VDDIOR
USB_VBUS
USB_DP
USB_DM
USB_ID
VDDIOL
GPIO
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
6
Product Overview
The XUF212-512-TQ128 is a powerful device that consists of two xCORE Tiles, each comprising a flexible logical processing cores with tightly integrated I/O and on-chip memory.
6.1
Logical cores
Each tile has 6 active logical cores, which issue instructions down a shared five-stage
pipeline. Instructions from the active cores are issued round-robin. If up to five logical
cores are active, each core is allocated a fifth of the processing cycles. If more than five
logical cores are active, each core is allocated at least 1/n cycles (for n cores). Figure 3
shows the guaranteed core performance depending on the number of cores used.
Figure 3:
Logical core
performance
Speed
grade
MIPS
10
1000 MIPS
Frequency
1
500 MHz
100
Minimum MIPS per core (for n cores)
2
3
4
5
6
100
100
100
100
83
There is no way that the performance of a logical core can be reduced below these predicted levels (unless priority threads are used: in this case the guaranteed minimum performance is computed based on the number of priority threads as defined in the architecture manual). Because cores may be delayed on I/O, however, their unused processing
cycles can be taken by other cores. This means that for more than five logical cores,
the performance of each core is often higher than the predicted minimum but cannot be
guaranteed.
The logical cores are triggered by events instead of interrupts and run to completion. A
logical core can be paused to wait for an event.
6.2
xTIME scheduler
The xTIME scheduler handles the events generated by xCORE Tile resources, such as
channel ends, timers and I/O pins. It ensures that all events are serviced and synchronized, without the need for an RTOS. Events that occur at the I/O pins are handled by the
Hardware-Response ports and fed directly to the appropriate xCORE Tile. An xCORE Tile
can also choose to wait for a specified time to elapse, or for data to become available on
a channel.
Tasks do not need to be prioritised as each of them runs on their own logical xCORE. It
is possible to share a set of low priority tasks on a single core using cooperative multitasking.
6.3
Hardware Response Ports
Hardware Response ports connect an xCORE tile to one or more physical pins and as
such define the interface between hardware attached to the XUF212-512-TQ128, and the
software running on it. A combination of 1bit, 4bit, 8bit, 16bit and 32bit ports are available.
All pins of a port provide either output or input. Signals in different directions cannot be
mapped onto the same port.
11
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
reference clock
readyOut
conditional
value
clock
block
clock port
readyIn port
port counter
port
logic
stamp/time
PORT
FIFO
PINS
Figure 4:
Port block
diagram
port
value
output (drive)
SERDES
transfer
register
CORE
input (sample)
The port logic can drive its pins high or low, or it can sample the value on its pins, optionally waiting for a particular condition. Ports are accessed using dedicated instructions
that are executed in a single processor cycle. xCORE-200 IO pins can be used as open
collector outputs, where signals are driven low if a zero is output, but left high impedance
if a one is output. This option is set on a per-port basis.
Data is transferred between the pins and core using a FIFO that comprises a SERDES
and transfer register, providing options for serialization and buffered data.
Each port has a 16-bit counter that can be used to control the time at which data is transferred between the port value and transfer register. The counter values can be obtained
at any time to find out when data was obtained, or used to delay I/O until some time in
the future. The port counter value is automatically saved as a timestamp, that can be
used to provide precise control of response times.
The ports and xCONNECT links are multiplexed onto the physical pins. If an xConnect
Link is enabled, the pins of the underlying ports are disabled. If a port is enabled, it
overrules ports with higher widths that share the same pins. The pins on the wider port
that are not shared remain available for use when the narrower port is enabled. Ports
always operate at their specified width, even if they share pins with another port.
6.4
Clock blocks
xCORE devices include a set of programmable clocks called clock blocks that can be
used to govern the rate at which ports execute. Each xCORE tile has six clock blocks:
the first clock block provides the tile reference clock and runs at a default frequency of
100MHz; the remaining clock blocks can be set to run at different frequencies.
A clock block can use a 1-bit port as its clock source allowing external application clocks
to be used to drive the input and output interfaces. xCORE-200 clock blocks optionally
divide the clock input from a 1-bit port.
12
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
100MHz
reference
clock
1-bit port
...
...
divider
readyIn
clock block
Figure 5:
Clock block
diagram
port counter
In many cases I/O signals are accompanied by strobing signals. The xCORE ports can
input and interpret strobe (known as readyIn and readyOut) signals generated by external
sources, and ports can generate strobe signals to accompany output data.
On reset, each port is connected to clock block 0, which runs from the xCORE Tile reference clock.
6.5
Channels and Channel Ends
Logical cores communicate using point-to-point connections, formed between two channel ends. A channel-end is a resource on an xCORE tile, that is allocated by the program.
Each channel-end has a unique system-wide identifier that comprises a unique number
and their tile identifier. Data is transmitted to a channel-end by an output-instruction;
and the other side executes an input-instruction. Data can be passed synchronously or
asynchronously between the channel ends.
6.6
xCONNECT Switch and Links
XMOS devices provide a scalable architecture, where multiple xCORE devices can be connected together to form one system. Each xCORE device has an xCONNECT interconnect
that provides a communication infrastructure for all tasks that run on the various xCORE
tiles on the system.
The interconnect relies on a collection of switches and XMOS links. Each xCORE device
has an on-chip switch that can set up circuits or route data. The switches are connected
by xConnect Links. An XMOS link provides a physical connection between two switches.
The switch has a routing algorithm that supports many different topologies, including
lines, meshes, trees, and hypercubes.
The links operate in either 2 wires per direction or 5 wires per direction mode, depending
on the amount of bandwidth required. Circuit switched, streaming and packet switched
data can both be supported efficiently. Streams provide the fastest possible data rates
between xCORE Tiles (up to 250 MBit/s), but each stream requires a single link to be
reserved between switches on two tiles. All packet communications can be multiplexed
onto a single link.
13
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
xCONNECT Link to another device switch
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
xCONNECT
switch
CORE
CORE
Figure 6:
Switch, links
and channel
ends
CORE
CORE
CORE
CORE
xCORE Tile
xCORE Tile
Information on the supported routing topologies that can be used to connect multiple
devices together can be found in the XS1-UF Link Performance and Design Guide, X2999.
7
PLL
The PLL creates a high-speed clock that is used for the switch, tile, and reference clock.
The initial PLL multiplication value is shown in Figure 7:
Figure 7:
The initial PLL
multiplier
values
Oscillator
Frequency
9-25 MHz
Tile Boot
Frequency
144-400 MHz
PLL Ratio
16
PLL settings
OD
F
R
1 63
0
Figure 7 also lists the values of OD, F and R, which are the registers that define the ratio
of the tile frequency to the oscillator frequency:
Fcore = Fosc ×
F +1
1
1
×
×
2
R+1
OD + 1
OD, F and R must be chosen so that 0 ≤ R ≤ 63, 0 ≤ F ≤ 4095, 0 ≤ OD ≤ 7, and
1
260M Hz ≤ Fosc × F 2+1 × R+1
≤ 1.3GHz. The OD, F , and R values can be modified
by writing to the digital node PLL configuration register.
If the USB PHY is used, then either a 24 MHz or 12 MHz oscillator must be used.
If a different tile frequency is required (eg, 500 MHz), then the PLL must be reprogrammed
after boot to provide the required tile frequency. The XMOS tools perform this operation
by default. Further details on configuring the clock can be found in the xCORE-200 Clock
Frequency Control document.
14
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
8
Boot Procedure
The device is kept in reset by driving RST_N low. When in reset, all GPIO pins have a pulldown enabled. The processor must be held in reset until VDDIOL is in spec for at least
1 ms. When the device is taken out of reset by releasing RST_N the processor starts
its internal reset process. After 15-150 µs (depending on the input clock) the processor
boots.
The device boots from a QSPI flash (IS25LP016D) that is embedded in the device. The
QSPI flash is connected to the ports on Tile 0 as shown in Figure 8. An external 1K
resistor must connect X0D01 to VDDIOL. X0D10 should ideally not be connected. If
X0D10 is connected, then a 150 ohm series resistor close to the device is recommended.
X0D04..X0D07 should be not connected.
VDDIOL
X0D04..7
X0D01
X0D10
PORT_4B
PORT_1B
PORT_1C
CS_N
CLK
D[0..3]
1K
xCORE
Figure 8:
QSPI port
connectivity
QSPI Flash
The xCORE Tile boot procedure is illustrated in Figure 9. If bit 5 of the security register
(see §9.1) is set, the device boots from OTP. Otherwise, the device boots from the internal
flash.
Start
Boot ROM
Primary boot
Security Register
Bit [5] set
No
Yes
OTP
Figure 9:
Boot
procedure
Copy OTP contents
to base of SRAM
Copy flash contents
to base of SRAM
Execute program
Execute program
The boot image has the following format:
· A 32-bit program size s in words.
15
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
· Program consisting of s × 4 bytes.
· A 32-bit CRC, or the value 0x0D15AB1E to indicate that no CRC check should be performed.
The program size and CRC are stored least significant byte first. The program is loaded
into the lowest memory address of RAM, and the program is started from that address.
The CRC is calculated over the byte stream represented by the program size and the
program itself. The polynomial used is 0xEDB88320 (IEEE 802.3); the CRC register is
initialized with 0xFFFFFFFF and the residue is inverted to produce the CRC.
8.1
Security register
The security register enables security features on the xCORE tile. The features shown in
Figure 10 provide a strong level of protection and are sufficient for providing strong IP
security.
Feature
Bit
Description
0
The JTAG interface is disabled, making it impossible for the
tile state or memory content to be accessed via the JTAG interface.
Disable Link access
1
Other tiles are forbidden access to the processor state via the
system switch. Disabling both JTAG and Link access transforms an xCORE Tile into a “secure island” with other tiles free
for non-secure user application code.
Secure Boot
5
The xCORE Tile is forced to boot from address 0 of the OTP,
allowing the xCORE Tile boot ROM to be bypassed (see §8).
Redundant rows
7
Enables redundant rows in OTP.
Sector Lock 0
8
Disable programming of OTP sector 0.
Sector Lock 1
9
Disable programming of OTP sector 1.
Sector Lock 2
10
Disable programming of OTP sector 2.
Sector Lock 3
11
Disable programming of OTP sector 3.
OTP Master Lock
12
Disable OTP programming completely: disables updates to all
sectors and security register.
Disable JTAG-OTP
13
Disable all (read & write) access from the JTAG interface to this
OTP.
21..15
General purpose software accessable security register available to end-users.
31..22
General purpose user programmable JTAG UserID code extension.
Disable JTAG
Figure 10:
Security
register
features
9
Memory
9.1
OTP
Each xCORE Tile integrates 8 KB one-time programmable (OTP) memory along with a
security register that configures system wide security features. The OTP holds data in
four sectors each containing 512 rows of 32 bits which can be used to implement secure bootloaders and store encryption keys. Data for the security register is loaded from
16
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
the OTP on power up. All additional data in OTP is copied from the OTP to SRAM and
executed first on the processor.
The OTP memory is programmed using three special I/O ports: the OTP address port
is a 16-bit port with resource ID 0x100200, the OTP data is written via a 32-bit port with
resource ID 0x200100, and the OTP control is on a 16-bit port with ID 0x100300. Programming is performed through libotp and xburn.
9.2
SRAM
Each xCORE Tile integrates a single 256KB SRAM bank for both instructions and data. All
internal memory is 32 bits wide, and instructions are either 16-bit or 32-bit. Byte (8-bit),
half-word (16-bit) or word (32-bit) accesses are supported and are executed within one
tile clock cycle. There is no dedicated external memory interface, although data memory
can be expanded through appropriate use of the ports.
10
USB PHY
The USB PHY provides High-Speed and Full-Speed, device, host, and on-the-go functionality. The PHY is configured through a set of peripheral registers (Appendix F), and data is
communicated through ports on the digital node. A library, XUD, is provided to implement
USB-device functionality.
The USB PHY is connected to the ports on Tile 0 and Tile 1 as shown in Figure 11. When
the USB PHY is enabled on Tile 0, the ports shown can on Tile 0 only be used with the
USB PHY. When the USB PHY is enabled on Tile 1, then the ports shown can on Tile 1
only be used with the USB PHY. All other IO pins and ports are unaffected. The USB PHY
should not be enabled on both tiles. Two clock blocks can be used to clock the USB
ports. One clock block for the TXDATA path, and one clock block for the RXDATA path.
Details on how to connect those ports are documented in an application note on USB for
xCORE-200.
3V3 1V0
Regulators
USB_VDD
USB_VDD33
USB
connector
VBUS
DP
DM
ID
GND
Figure 11:
Bus powered
USB-device
3V3 1V0
1-10uF
USB_VBUS
USB_DP
USB_DM
USB_ID
USB_RTUNE
43R2
Please note:
ID connection is optional
DM may be marked as DN
USB
PHY
xCORE
TXD[0..7]
TXRDYOUT
TXRDYIN
PORT_8A
PORT_1K
PORT_1H
CLK
PORT_1J
RXRDY
RXD[0..7]
FLAG0
FLAG1
FLAG2
PORT_1I
PORT_8B
PORT_1E
PORT_1F
PORT_1G
TXDATA
CLKBLK
CLKBLK
RXDATA
FLAG0
FLAG1
FLAG2
An external resistor of 43.2 ohm (1% tolerance) should connect USB_RTUNE to ground,
as close as possible to the device.
17
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
10.1
USB VBUS
USB_VBUS need not be connected if the device is wholly powered by USB, and the device
is used to implement a USB-device.
If you use the USB PHY to design a self-powered USB-device, then the device must be
able detect the presence of VBus on the USB connector (so the device can disconnect its
pull-up resistors from D+/D- to ensure the device does not have any voltage on the D+/Dpins when VBus is not present, “USB Back Voltage Test”). This requires USB_VBUS to be
connected to the VBUS pin of the USB connector as is shown in Figure 12.
3V3 1V0
External Supply
Regulators
USB
connector
Figure 12:
Self powered
USB-device
3V3 1V0
10K
1-10 uF
47K
VBUS
DP
DM
ID
GND
0.1 uF
USB_VDD
USB_VDD33
USB
PHY
xCORE
USB_VBUS
USB_DP
USB_DM
USB_ID
USB_RTUNE
43R2
When connecting a USB cable to the device it is possible an overvoltage transient will be
present on VBus due to the inductance of the USB cable combined with the required input
capacitor on VBus. The circuit in Figure 12 ensures that the transient does not damage
the device. The 10k series resistor and 0.1uF capacitor ensure than any input transient
is filtered and does not reach the device. The 47k resistor to ground is a bleeder resistor
to discharge the input capacitor when VBus is not present. The 1-10uF input capacitor is
required as part of the USB specification. A typical value would be 2.2uF to ensure the
1uF minimum requirement is met even under voltage bias conditions.
In any case, extra components (such as a ferrite bead and diodes) may be required for
EMC compliance and ESD protection. Different wiring is required for USB-host and USBOTG.
10.2
Logical Core Requirements
The XMOS XUD software component runs in a single logical core with endpoint and application cores communicating with it via a combination of channel communication and
shared memory variables.
Each IN (host requests data from device) or OUT (data transferred from host to device)
endpoint requires one logical core.
11
JTAG
The JTAG module can be used for loading programs, boundary scan testing, in-circuit
source-level debugging and programming the OTP memory.
The JTAG chain structure is illustrated in Figure 13. It comprises a single 1149.1 compliant
TAP that can be used for boundary scan of the I/O pins. It has a 4-bit IR and 32-bit DR.
18
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
TDI
TDI
BS TAP
TDO
TDO
TCK
TMS
Figure 13:
JTAG chain
structure
TRST_N
It also provides access to a chip TAP that in turn can access the xCORE Tile for loading
code and debugging.
The TRST_N pin must be asserted low during and after power up for 100 ns. If JTAG is
not required, the TRST_N pin can be tied to ground to hold the JTAG module in reset.
The JTAG device identification register can be read by using the IDCODE instruction. Its
contents are specified in Figure 14.
Figure 14:
IDCODE return
value
Bit31
Device Identification Register
Version
0
0
0
Bit0
Part Number
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Manufacturer Identity
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
5
1
0
0
0
6
1
1
1
0
3
0
1
1
3
The JTAG usercode register can be read by using the USERCODE instruction. Its contents
are specified in Figure 15. The OTP User ID field is read from bits [22:31] of the security
register on xCORE Tile 0, see §9.1 (all zero on unprogrammed devices).
Figure 15:
USERCODE
return value
12
Bit31
Usercode Register
OTP User ID
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bit0
Unused
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Silicon Revision
0
1
2
0
1
0
0
8
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Board Integration
The device has the following power supply pins:
· VDD pins for the xCORE Tile, including a USB_VDD pin that powers the USB PHY
· VDDIO pins for the I/O lines. Separate I/O supplies are provided for the left, top, and
right side of the package; different I/O voltages may be supplied on those. The signal
description (Section 4) specifies which I/O is powered from which power-supply
· PLL_AVDD pins for the PLL
19
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
· OTP_VCC pins for the OTP
· A USB_VDD33 pin for the analogue supply to the USB-PHY
Several pins of each type are provided to minimize the effect of inductance within the
package, all of which must be connected. The power supplies must be brought up monotonically and input voltages must not exceed specification at any time.
VDDIO/OTP_VCC and VDD can ramp up independently. In order to reduce stresses on
the device, it is preferable to make them ramp up in a short time frame of each other, no
more than 50 ms apart. RST_N and TRST_N should be kept low until all power supplies
are stable and within tolerances of their final voltage. If your design is powered by VBUS,
then RST_N should go high within 10 ms of attaching to VBUS in order to ensure that USB
timings are met. RST_N should be at least 1 ms after VDDIO good to enable the built-in
flash to settle. Power sequencing is summarised in Figure 16
Bring up
in short
succession
System
dependent
timing
1.0
VDD
0
3.3
VDDIO,
OTP_VCC
V
Figure 16:
Sequencing of
power
supplies and
RST_N
0
3.3
RST_N
0
Time
The PLL_AVDD supply should be separated from the other noisier supplies on the board.
The PLL requires a very clean power supply, and a low pass filter (for example, a 4.7 Ω
resistor and 100 nF multi-layer ceramic capacitor) is recommended on this pin.
The following ground pins are provided:
· PLL_AGND for PLL_AVDD
· GND for all other supplies
All ground pins must be connected directly to the board ground.
The VDD and VDDIO supplies should be decoupled close to the chip by several 100 nF low
inductance multi-layer ceramic capacitors between the supplies and GND (for example,
100nF 0402 for each supply pin). The ground side of the decoupling capacitors should
have as short a path back to the GND pins as possible. A bulk decoupling capacitor of at
least 10 uF should be placed on each of these supplies.
RST_N is an active-low asynchronous-assertion global reset signal. Following a reset,
the PLL re-establishes lock after which the device boots up according to the boot mode
(see §8). RST_N and must be asserted low during and after power up for 100 ns.
20
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
12.1
USB connections
USB_VBUS should be connected to the VBUS pin of the USB connector. A 2.2 uF capacitor
to ground is required on the VBUS pin. A ferrite bead may be used to reduce HF noise.
For self-powered systems, a bleeder resistor may be required to stop VBUS from floating
when no USB cable is attached.
USB_DP and USB_DN should be connected to the USB connector. USB_ID does not need
to be connected.
12.2
USB signal routing and placement
The USB_DP and USB_DN lines are the positive and negative data polarities of a high
speed USB signal respectively. Their high-speed differential nature implies that they must
be coupled and properly isolated. The board design must ensure that the board traces
for USB_DP and USB_DN are tightly matched. In addition, according to the USB 2.0 specification, the USB_DP and USB_DN differential impedance must be 90 Ω.
Figure 17:
USB trace
separation
showing a low
speed signal,
two
differential
pairs and a
high-speed
clock
Low-speed
non-periodic
signal
20 mils
(0.51mm)
12.2.1
USB_DP0
USB_DN0
3.9 mils
(0.10mm)
USB_DP1
20 mils
(0.51mm)
High-speed
periodic
signal
USB_DN1
3.9 mils
(0.10mm - calculated
on the stack up)
50 mils
(1.27mm)
General routing and placement guidelines
The following guidelines will help to avoid signal quality and EMI problems on high speed
USB designs. They relate to a four-layer (Signal, GND, Power, Signal) PCB.
0.12 mm
0.10 mm
USB_DP
0.12 mm
USB_DN
0.1 mm
GND
FR4 Dielectric
1.0 mm
Power
Figure 18:
Example USB
board stack
21
0.1 mm
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
For best results, most of the routing should be done on the top layer (assuming the
USB connector and XUF212-512-TQ128 are on the top layer) closest to GND. Reference
planes should be below the transmission lines in order to maintain control of the trace
impedance.
We recommend that the high-speed clock and high-speed USB differential pairs are routed
first before any other routing. When routing high speed USB signals, the following guidelines should be followed:
· High speed differential pairs should be routed together.
· High-speed USB signal pair traces should be trace-length matched. Maximum tracelength mismatch should be no greater than 4mm.
· Ensure that high speed signals (clocks, USB differential pairs) are routed as far away
from off-board connectors as possible.
· High-speed clock and periodic signal traces that run parallel should be at least 1.27mm
away from USB_DP/USB_DN (see Figure 17).
· Low-speed and non-periodic signal traces that run parallel should be at least 0.5mm
away from USB_DP/USB_DN (see Figure 17).
· Route high speed USB signals on the top of the PCB wherever possible.
· Route high speed USB traces over continuous power planes, with no breaks. If a tradeoff must be made, changing signal layers is preferable to crossing plane splits.
· Follow the 20 × h rule; keep traces 20 × h (the height above the power plane) away
from the edge of the power plane.
· Use a minimum of vias in high speed USB traces.
· Avoid corners in the trace. Where necessary, rather than turning through a 90 degree
angle, use two 45 degree turns or an arc.
· DO NOT route USB traces near clock sources, clocked circuits or magnetic devices.
· Avoid stubs on high speed USB signals.
12.3
Land patterns and solder stencils
The package is a 128 pin Thin Quad Flat Package (TQFP) with exposed ground paddle/heat slug on a 0.4mm pitch.
The land patterns and solder stencils will depend on the PCB manufacturing process. We
recommend you design them with using the IPC specifications “Generic Requirements
for Surface Mount Design and Land Pattern Standards” IPC-7351B. This standard aims
to achieve desired targets of heel, toe and side fillets for solder-joints. The mechanical
drawings in Section 14 specify the dimensions and tolerances.
22
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
12.4
Ground and Thermal Vias
Vias under the heat slug into the ground plane of the PCB are recommended for a low
inductance ground connection and good thermal performance. Typical designs could
use 16 vias in a 4 x 4 grid, equally spaced across the heat slug.
12.5
Moisture Sensitivity
XMOS devices are, like all semiconductor devices, susceptible to moisture absorption.
When removed from the sealed packaging, the devices slowly absorb moisture from the
surrounding environment. If the level of moisture present in the device is too high during
reflow, damage can occur due to the increased internal vapour pressure of moisture.
Example damage can include bond wire damage, die lifting, internal or external package
cracks and/or delamination.
All XMOS devices are Moisture Sensitivity Level (MSL) 3 - devices have a shelf life of
168 hours between removal from the packaging and reflow, provided they are stored
below 30C and 60% RH. If devices have exceeded these values or an included moisture
indicator card shows excessive levels of moisture, then the parts should be baked as
appropriate before use. This is based on information from Joint IPC/JEDEC Standard
For Moisture/Reflow Sensitivity Classification For Nonhermetic Solid State Surface-Mount
Devices J-STD-020 Revision D.
23
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
13
Electrical Characteristics
13.1
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent
damage to the device. Exposure to any Absolute Maximum Rating condition for extended
periods may affect device reliability and lifetime.
Figure 19:
Absolute
maximum
ratings
Symbol
VDD
PLL_AVDD
VDDIO
OTP_VCC
Tj
Tstg
V(Vin)
I(XxDxx)
V(X0D03-8)
I(VDDIOL)
I(VDDIOR)
I(VDDIOT)
USB_VDD
USB_VDD33
USB_VBUS
USB_DP
USB_DM
USB_ID
Parameter
Tile DC supply voltage
PLL analog supply
I/O supply voltage
OTP supply voltage
Junction temperature
Storage temperature
Voltage applied to any IO pin
GPIO current
Voltage applied to flash pins
Current for VDDIOL domain
Current for VDDIOR domain
Current for VDDIOT domain
USB tile DC supply voltage
USB tile analog supply voltage
USB VBUS voltage
USB DP voltage
USB DM voltage
USB ID voltage
MIN
-0.2
-0.2
-0.3
-0.3
-65
-0.3
-30
-0.3
-0.2
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3
-0.3
MAX
1.1
1.1
3.75
3.75
125
150
3.75
30
VDDIO+0.5
490
490
98
1.1
3.75
5.75
5.5
5.5
2.75
A Exceeding these current limits will result in premature aging and reduced lifetime.
B This current consumption must be evenly distributed over all VDDIO pins.
C All main power (VDD, VDDIO) and ground (VSS) pins must always be connected.
24
UNITS
V
V
V
V
°C
°C
V
mA
V
mA
mA
mA
V
V
V
V
V
V
Notes
A, B, C
A, B, C
A, C
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
13.2
Operating Conditions
Symbol
VDD
VDDIOL
VDDIOR
VDDIOT 3v3
VDDIOT 2v5
USB_VDD
VDD33
PLL_AVDD
Cl
Figure 20:
Operating
conditions
Ta
Tj
13.3
Figure 21:
DC characteristics
Parameter
Tile DC supply voltage
I/O supply voltage
I/O supply voltage
I/O supply voltage
I/O supply voltage
USB tile DC supply voltage
Peripheral supply
PLL analog supply
xCORE Tile I/O load capacitance
Ambient operating temperature
()
Ambient operating temperature
()
Junction temperature
MIN
0.95
3.135
3.135
3.135
2.375
0.95
3.135
0.95
TYP
1.00
3.30
3.30
3.30
2.50
1.00
3.30
1.00
MAX
1.05
3.465
3.465
3.465
2.625
1.05
3.465
1.05
25
UNITS
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
pF
0
70
°C
-40
85
125
°C
°C
Notes
DC Characteristics, VDDIO=3V3
Symbol
V(IH)
V(IL)
V(OH)
V(OL)
I(PU)
I(PD)
I(LC)
Parameter
Input high voltage
Input low voltage
Output high voltage
Output low voltage
Internal pull-up current (Vin=0V)
Internal pull-down current (Vin=3.3V)
Input leakage current
MIN
2.00
-0.30
2.20
TYP
MAX
3.60
0.70
0.40
-100
100
10
-10
UNITS
V
V
V
V
µA
µA
µA
Notes
A
A
B, C
B, C
D
D
25
3.0
3.0
2.0
2.0
1.0
1.0
0.0
0
20
40
60
80
I(PD) current, uA
100
-100
-80
-60
-40
-20
I(PU) current, uA
0
0.0
IO Pin Voltage, V
Figure 22:
Typical
internal
pull-down and
pull-up
currents
IO Pin Voltage, V
A All pins except power supply pins.
Pins X1D40, X1D41, X1D42, X1D43, X1D26, and X1D27 are nominal 8 mA drivers, the remainder of the
B general-purpose I/Os are 4 mA.
C Measured with 4 mA drivers sourcing 4 mA, 8 mA drivers sourcing 8 mA.
Used to guarantee logic state for an I/O when high impedance. The internal pull-ups/pull-downs should not be
used to pull external circuitry. In order to pull the pin to the opposite state, a 4K7 resistor is recommended to
D overome the internal pull current.
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
13.4
Figure 23:
ESD stress
voltage
ESD Stress Voltage
Symbol
HBM
CDM
13.5
MIN
-2.00
-500
TYP
MAX
2.00
500
UNITS
KV
V
Notes
MIN
5
TYP
MAX
UNITS
µs
µs
Notes
Reset Timing
Symbol
T(RST)
T(INIT)
Figure 24:
Reset timing
Parameter
Human body model
Charged Device Model
Parameters
Reset pulse width
Initialization time
150
A
A Shows the time taken to start booting after RST_N has gone high.
13.6
Figure 25:
xCORE Tile
currents
Power Consumption
Symbol
Parameter
UNITS
Notes
I(DDCQ)
Quiescent VDD current
MIN TYP MAX
45
mA
A, B, C
PD
Tile power dissipation
325
µW/MIPS
A, D, E, F
IDD
Active VDD current
570 700
mA
A, G
I(ADDPLL)
PLL_AVDD current
5
mA
H
I(VDD33)
VDD33 current
26.7
mA
I
I(USB_VDD)
USB_VDD current
8.27
mA
J
7
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
Use for budgetary purposes only.
Assumes typical tile and I/O voltages with no switching activity.
Includes PLL current.
Assumes typical tile and I/O voltages with nominal switching activity.
Assumes 1 MHz = 1 MIPS.
PD(TYP) value is the usage power consumption under typical operating conditions.
Measurement conditions: VDD = 1.0 V, VDDIO = 3.3 V, 25 °C, 500 MHz, average device resource usage.
PLL_AVDD = 1.0 V
HS mode transmitting while driving all 0’s data (constant JKJK on DP/DM). Loading of 10 pF. Transfers do not
I include any interpacket delay.
J HS receive mode; no traffic.
The tile power consumption of the device is highly application dependent and should be
used for budgetary purposes only.
More detailed power analysis can be found in the xCORE-200 Power Consumption document,
26
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
13.7
Figure 26:
Clock
Clock
Symbol
f
SR
TJ(LT)
f(MAX)
Parameter
Frequency
Slew rate
Long term jitter (pk-pk)
Processor clock frequency
MIN
9
0.10
TYP
24
MAX
25
2
500
UNITS
MHz
V/ns
%
MHz
Notes
A
B
A Percentage of CLK period.
B Assumes typical tile and I/O voltages with nominal activity.
Further details can be found in the xCORE-200 Clock Frequency Control document,
13.8
Figure 27:
I/O AC characteristics
xCORE Tile I/O AC Characteristics
Symbol
T(XOVALID)
T(XOINVALID)
T(XIFMAX)
Parameter
Input data valid window
Output data invalid window
Rate at which data can be sampled with
respect to an external clock
MIN TYP MAX UNITS
8
ns
9
ns
60
Notes
MHz
The input valid window parameter relates to the capability of the device to capture data
input to the chip with respect to an external clock source. It is calculated as the sum of
the input setup time and input hold time with respect to the external clock as measured
at the pins. The output invalid window specifies the time for which an output is invalid
with respect to the external clock. Note that these parameters are specified as a window rather than absolute numbers since the device provides functionality to delay the
incoming clock with respect to the incoming data.
Information on interfacing to high-speed synchronous interfaces can be found in the Port
I/O Timing document, X5821.
13.9
Figure 28:
Link
performance
xConnect Link Performance
Symbol
B(2blinkP)
B(5blinkP)
B(2blinkS)
B(5blinkS)
Parameter
2b link bandwidth (packetized)
5b link bandwidth (packetized)
2b link bandwidth (streaming)
5b link bandwidth (streaming)
MIN
TYP
MAX
87
217
100
250
UNITS
MBit/s
MBit/s
MBit/s
MBit/s
Notes
A, B
A, B
B
B
Assumes 32-byte packet in 3-byte header mode. Actual performance depends on size of the header and
A payload.
B 7.5 ns symbol time.
The asynchronous nature of links means that the relative phasing of CLK clocks is not
important in a multi-clock system, providing each meets the required stability criteria.
27
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
13.10
Figure 29:
JTAG timing
JTAG Timing
Symbol
f(TCK_D)
f(TCK_B)
T(SETUP)
T(HOLD)
T(DELAY)
Parameter
TCK frequency (debug)
TCK frequency (boundary scan)
TDO to TCK setup time
TDO to TCK hold time
TCK to output delay
MIN
TYP
MAX
18
10
5
5
15
UNITS
MHz
MHz
ns
ns
ns
Notes
A
A
B
A Timing applies to TMS and TDI inputs.
B Timing applies to TDO output from negative edge of TCK.
All JTAG operations are synchronous to TCK apart from the global asynchronous reset
TRST_N.
28
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
14
29
Package Information
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
14.1
Part Marking
FXCCRNTMM
MCYYWWXX
Figure 30:
Part marking
scheme
15
MC - Manufacturer
YYWW - Date
XX - Reserved [variable length]
Wafer lot code
Ordering Information
Figure 31:
Orderable part
numbers
30
LLLLLL.LL
F - Product family
X - Reserved
CC - Number of logical cores
R - RAM [in log2(kbytes)]
N - Flash size [in log2(Mbytes)+1]
T - Temperature grade
MM - Speed grade
Product Code
XUF212-512-TQ128-C20A
XUF212-512-TQ128-I20A
Marking
U11292C20
U11292I20
Qualification
Commercial
Industrial
Speed Grade
1000 MIPS
1000 MIPS
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Appendices
A
Configuration of the XUF212-512-TQ128
The device is configured through banks of registers, as shown in Figure 32.
xTIME
scheduler
Hardware response ports
xTIME
scheduler
PLL
JTAG
Hardware response ports
Figure 32:
Registers
xCORE logical core
USB
USB
SRAM
OTP
config
Tile configuration
xCORE logical core
Node configuration
xCONNECT
Switch
xCORE logical core
Link 8
Processor status
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
Tile configuration
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
X1Dxx
I/O pins
xCORE logical core
Processor status
X0Dxx
I/O pins
FLASH
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
xCORE logical core
OTP
SRAM
The following communication sequences specify how to access those registers. Any
messages transmitted contain the most significant 24 bits of the channel-end to which
a response is to be sent. This comprises the node-identifier and the channel number
within the node. if no response is required on a write operation, supply 24-bits with the
last 8-bits set, which suppresses the reply message. Any multi-byte data is sent most
significant byte first.
A.1
Accessing a processor status register
The processor status registers are accessed directly from the processor instruction set.
The instructions GETPS and SETPS read and write a word. The register number should
be translated into a processor-status resource identifier by shifting the register number
left 8 places, and ORing it with 0x0B. Alternatively, the functions getps(reg) and setps(
,→ reg,value) can be used from XC.
A.2
Accessing an xCORE Tile configuration register
xCORE Tile configuration registers can be accessed through the interconnect using the
functions write_tile_config_reg(tileref, ...) and read_tile_config_reg(tile ref,
,→ ...), where tileref is the name of the xCORE Tile, e.g. tile[1]. These functions
implement the protocols described below.
Instead of using the functions above, a channel-end can be allocated to communicate
with the xCORE tile configuration registers. The destination of the channel-end should
be set to 0xnnnnC20C where nnnnnn is the tile-identifier.
A write message comprises the following:
31
control-token
24-bit response
16-bit
32-bit
control-token
192
channel-end identifier
register number
data
1
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
The response to a write message comprises either control tokens 3 and 1 (for success),
or control tokens 4 and 1 (for failure).
A read message comprises the following:
control-token
24-bit response
16-bit
control-token
193
channel-end identifier
register number
1
The response to the read message comprises either control token 3, 32-bit of data, and
control-token 1 (for success), or control tokens 4 and 1 (for failure).
A.3
Accessing node configuration
Node configuration registers can be accessed through the interconnect using the functions write_node_config_reg(device, ...) and read_node_config_reg(device, ...), where
device is the name of the node. These functions implement the protocols described below.
Instead of using the functions above, a channel-end can be allocated to communicate
with the node configuration registers. The destination of the channel-end should be set
to 0xnnnnC30C where nnnn is the node-identifier.
A write message comprises the following:
control-token
24-bit response
16-bit
32-bit
control-token
192
channel-end identifier
register number
data
1
The response to a write message comprises either control tokens 3 and 1 (for success),
or control tokens 4 and 1 (for failure).
A read message comprises the following:
control-token
24-bit response
16-bit
control-token
193
channel-end identifier
register number
1
The response to a read message comprises either control token 3, 32-bit of data, and
control-token 1 (for success), or control tokens 4 and 1 (for failure).
A.4
Accessing a register of an analogue peripheral
Peripheral registers can be accessed through the interconnect using the functions write_periph_32
,→ (device, peripheral, ...), read_periph_32(device, peripheral, ...), write_periph_8
,→ (device, peripheral, ...), and read_periph_8(device, peripheral, ...); where device is the name of the analogue device, and peripheral is the number of the peripheral.
These functions implement the protocols described below.
A channel-end should be allocated to communicate with the configuration registers. The
destination of the channel-end should be set to 0xnnnnpp02 where nnnn is the node-identifier
and pp is the peripheral identifier.
A write message comprises the following:
32
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
control-token
24-bit response
8-bit
8-bit
36
channel-end identifier
register number
size
data
control-token
1
The response to a write message comprises either control tokens 3 and 1 (for success),
or control tokens 4 and 1 (for failure).
A read message comprises the following:
control-token
24-bit response
8-bit
8-bit
control-token
37
channel-end identifier
register number
size
1
The response to the read message comprises either control token 3, data, and controltoken 1 (for success), or control tokens 4 and 1 (for failure).
33
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
B
Processor Status Configuration
The processor status control registers can be accessed directly by the processor using
processor status reads and writes (use getps(reg) and setps(reg,value) for reads and
writes).
The identifiers for the registers needs a prefix “XS1_PS_” and a postfix “_NUM”, and are
declared in “xs1.h”
Number
Figure 33:
Summary
34
Perm
Description
Register identifier
0x00
RW
RAM base address
RAM_BASE
0x01
RW
Vector base address
VECTOR_BASE
0x02
RW
xCORE Tile control
XCORE_CTRL0
0x03
RO
xCORE Tile boot status
BOOT_CONFIG
0x05
RW
Security configuration
SECURITY_CONFIG
0x06
RW
Ring Oscillator Control
RING_OSC_CTRL
0x07
RO
Ring Oscillator Value
RING_OSC_DATA0
0x08
RO
Ring Oscillator Value
RING_OSC_DATA1
0x09
RO
Ring Oscillator Value
RING_OSC_DATA2
0x0A
RO
Ring Oscillator Value
RING_OSC_DATA3
0x0C
RO
RAM size
RAM_SIZE
0x10
DRW
Debug SSR
DBG_SSR
0x11
DRW
Debug SPC
DBG_SPC
0x12
DRW
Debug SSP
DBG_SSP
0x13
DRW
DGETREG operand 1
DBG_T_NUM
0x14
DRW
DGETREG operand 2
DBG_T_REG
0x15
DRW
Debug interrupt type
DBG_TYPE
0x16
DRW
Debug interrupt data
DBG_DATA
0x18
DRW
Debug core control
DBG_RUN_CTRL
0x20 .. 0x27
DRW
Debug scratch
DBG_SCRATCH
0x30 .. 0x33
DRW
Instruction breakpoint address
DBG_IBREAK_ADDR
0x40 .. 0x43
DRW
Instruction breakpoint control
DBG_IBREAK_CTRL
0x50 .. 0x53
DRW
Data watchpoint address 1
DBG_DWATCH_ADDR1
0x60 .. 0x63
DRW
Data watchpoint address 2
DBG_DWATCH_ADDR2
0x70 .. 0x73
DRW
Data breakpoint control register
DBG_DWATCH_CTRL
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Figure 34:
Summary
(continued)
Number
Perm
Description
Register identifier
0x80 .. 0x83
DRW
Resources breakpoint mask
DBG_RWATCH_ADDR1
0x90 .. 0x93
DRW
Resources breakpoint value
DBG_RWATCH_ADDR2
0x9C .. 0x9F
DRW
Resources breakpoint control register
DBG_RWATCH_CTRL
B.1
RAM base address
RAM_BASE 0x00
This register contains the base address of the RAM. It is initialized to 0x00040000.
0x00:
RAM base
address
Bits
Perm
31:2
RW
1:0
RO
B.2
Init
Description
Most significant 16 bits of all addresses.
-
Identifier
WORD_ADDRESS_BITS
Reserved
Vector base address
VECTOR_BASE 0x01
Base address of event vectors in each resource. On an interrupt or event, the 16 most significant bits of the destination address are provided by this register; the least significant
16 bits come from the event vector.
0x01:
Vector base
address
Bits
Perm
31:18
RW
17:0
RO
B.3
Init
Description
The event and interrupt vectors.
-
VECTOR_BASE
Reserved
xCORE Tile control
Register to control features in the xCORE tile
35
Identifier
XCORE_CTRL0 0x02
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
Perm
Init
31:26
RO
-
25:18
RW
0
Description
Identifier
Reserved
RGMII TX data delay value (in PLL output cycle increments)
XCORE_CTRL0_RGMII_DELAY
17:9
RW
0
RGMII TX clock divider value. TX clk rises when counter (clocked
by PLL output) reaches this value and falls when counter reaches
(value»1). Value programmed into this field should be actual divide
value required minus 1
XCORE_CTRL0_RGMII_DIVIDE
8
RW
0
Enable RGMII interface periph ports
7:6
RO
-
Reserved
0x02:
xCORE Tile
control
B.4
XCORE_CTRL0_RGMII_ENABLE
5
RW
0
Select the dynamic mode (1) for the clock divider when the clock divider
is enabled. In dynamic mode the clock divider is only activated when
all active threads are paused. In static mode the clock divider is always
enabled.
XCORE_CTRL0_CLK_DIVIDER_DYN
4
RW
0
Enable the clock divider. This divides the output of the PLL to facilitate
one of the low power modes.
XCORE_CTRL0_CLK_DIVIDER_EN
3
RO
-
Reserved
2
RW
1
RW
0
RO
Select between UTMI (1) and ULPI (0) mode.
XCORE_CTRL0_USB_MODE
Enable the ULPI Hardware support module
-
XCORE_CTRL0_USB_ENABLE
Reserved
BOOT_CONFIG 0x03
xCORE Tile boot status
This read-only register describes the boot status of the xCORE tile.
0x03:
xCORE Tile
boot status
36
Bits
Perm
31:24
RO
23:16
RO
15:9
RO
Init
-
Description
Reserved
Processor number.
-
Identifier
BOOT_CONFIG_PROCESSOR
Reserved
8
RO
7:6
RO
Overwrite BOOT_MODE.
5
RO
4
RO
3
RO
Boot ROM boots from RAM
BOOT_CONFIG_BOOT_FROM_RAM
2
RO
Boot ROM boots from JTAG
BOOT_CONFIG_BOOT_FROM_JTAG
1:0
RO
The boot PLL mode pin value.
-
BOOT_CONFIG_SECURE_BOOT
Reserved
Indicates if core1 has been powered off
BOOT_CONFIG_CORE1_POWER_DOWN_N
Cause the ROM to not poll the OTP for correct read levels
BOOT_CONFIG_DISABLE_OTP_POLL
BOOT_CONFIG_PLL_MODE_PINS
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
B.5
Security configuration
SECURITY_CONFIG 0x05
Copy of the security register as read from OTP.
Bits
Perm
31
RW
30:15
RO
14
RW
13
RO
Init
Description
Disables write permission on this register
-
Reserved
Disable access to XCore’s global debug
-
Identifier
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_ACCESS
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_GLOBAL_DEBUG
Reserved
12
RW
lock all OTP sectors
SECUR_CFG_OTP_MASTER_LOCK
11:8
RW
lock bit for each OTP sector
SECUR_CFG_OTP_SECTOR_LOCK
7
RW
Enable OTP reduanacy
0x05:
Security
configuration
6
RO
5
RW
4
RW
3:1
RO
0
RW
B.6
-
SECUR_CFG_OTP_REDUANACY_ENABLE
Reserved
Override boot mode and read boot image from OTP
SECUR_CFG_SECURE_BOOT
Disable JTAG access to the PLL/BOOT configuration registers
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_PLL_JTAG
-
Reserved
Disable access to XCore’s JTAG debug TAP
Ring Oscillator Control
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_XCORE_JTAG
RING_OSC_CTRL 0x06
There are four free-running oscillators that clock four counters. The oscillators can be
started and stopped using this register. The counters should only be read when the ring
oscillator has been stopped for at least 10 core clock cycles (this can be achieved by
inserting two nop instructions between the SETPS and GETPS). The counter values can
be read using four subsequent registers. The ring oscillators are asynchronous to the
xCORE tile clock and can be used as a source of random bits.
0x06:
Ring Oscillator
Control
Bits
Perm
31:2
RO
-
Reserved
1
RW
0
Core ring oscillator enable.
0
RW
0
Peripheral ring oscillator enable.
B.7
Init
Description
Ring Oscillator Value
Identifier
RING_OSC_CORE_ENABLE
RING_OSC_PERPH_ENABLE
RING_OSC_DATA0 0x07
This register contains the current count of the xCORE Tile Cell ring oscillator. This value
is not reset on a system reset.
37
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x07:
Ring Oscillator
Value
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RO
0
Ring oscillator Counter data.
B.8
Init
Description
Ring Oscillator Value
Identifier
RING_OSC_DATA
RING_OSC_DATA1 0x08
This register contains the current count of the xCORE Tile Wire ring oscillator. This value
is not reset on a system reset.
0x08:
Ring Oscillator
Value
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RO
0
Ring oscillator Counter data.
B.9
Init
Description
Ring Oscillator Value
Identifier
RING_OSC_DATA
RING_OSC_DATA2 0x09
This register contains the current count of the Peripheral Cell ring oscillator. This value
is not reset on a system reset.
0x09:
Ring Oscillator
Value
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RO
0
Ring oscillator Counter data.
B.10
Init
Description
Ring Oscillator Value
Identifier
RING_OSC_DATA
RING_OSC_DATA3 0x0A
This register contains the current count of the Peripheral Wire ring oscillator. This value
is not reset on a system reset.
0x0A:
Ring Oscillator
Value
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RO
0
Ring oscillator Counter data.
B.11
Init
Description
Identifier
RING_OSC_DATA
RAM_SIZE 0x0C
RAM size
The size of the RAM in bytes
0x0C:
RAM size
38
Bits
Perm
31:2
RO
1:0
RO
Init
Description
Most significant 16 bits of all addresses.
-
Reserved
Identifier
WORD_ADDRESS_BITS
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
B.12
DBG_SSR 0x10
Debug SSR
This register contains the value of the SSR register when the debugger was called.
Bits
Perm
31:11
RO
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
10
DRW
Address space indentifier
9
DRW
Determines the issue mode (DI bit) upon Kernel Entry after Exception
or Interrupt.
SR_KEDI
0x10:
Debug SSR
SR_QUEUE
8
RO
7
DRW
When 1 the thread is in fast mode and will continually issue.
6
DRW
When 1 the thread is paused waiting for events, a lock or another
resource.
SR_WAITING
5
RO
4
DRW
1 when in kernel mode.
3
DRW
1 when in an interrupt handler.
SR_ININT
2
DRW
1 when in an event enabling sequence.
SR_INENB
1
DRW
When 1 interrupts are enabled for the thread.
SR_IEBLE
0
DRW
When 1 events are enabled for the thread.
SR_EEBLE
B.13
Determines the issue mode (DI bit).
-
SR_DI
SR_FAST
Reserved
SR_INK
DBG_SPC 0x11
Debug SPC
This register contains the value of the SPC register when the debugger was called.
0x11:
Debug SPC
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.14
Init
Description
Value.
Identifier
ALL_BITS
DBG_SSP 0x12
Debug SSP
This register contains the value of the SSP register when the debugger was called.
0x12:
Debug SSP
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.15
Init
Description
Value.
DGETREG operand 1
The resource ID of the logical core whose state is to be read.
39
Identifier
ALL_BITS
DBG_T_NUM 0x13
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x13:
DGETREG
operand 1
Bits
Perm
31:8
RO
7:0
DRW
B.16
Init
Description
-
Identifier
Reserved
Thread number to be read
DGETREG operand 2
DBG_T_NUM_NUM
DBG_T_REG 0x14
Register number to be read by DGETREG
0x14:
DGETREG
operand 2
Bits
Perm
31:5
RO
4:0
DRW
B.17
Init
Description
-
Identifier
Reserved
Register number to be read
Debug interrupt type
DBG_T_REG_REG
DBG_TYPE 0x15
Register that specifies what activated the debug interrupt.
0x15:
Debug
interrupt type
Bits
Perm
31:18
RO
17:16
DRW
15:8
DRW
7:3
RO
2:0
B.18
DRW
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
Number of the hardware breakpoint/watchpoint which caused the
interrupt (always 0 for =HOST= and =DCALL=). If multiple breakpoints/watchpoints trigger at once, the lowest number is taken.
DBG_TYPE_HW_NUM
Number of thread which caused the debug interrupt (always 0 in the
case of =HOST=).
DBG_TYPE_T_NUM
-
Reserved
0
Indicates the cause of the debug interrupt
1: Host initiated a debug interrupt through JTAG
2: Program executed a DCALL instruction
3: Instruction breakpoint
4: Data watch point
5: Resource watch point
Debug interrupt data
DBG_TYPE_CAUSE
DBG_DATA 0x16
On a data watchpoint, this register contains the effective address of the memory operation that triggered the debugger. On a resource watchpoint, it countains the resource
identifier.
0x16:
Debug
interrupt data
40
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
Init
Description
Value.
Identifier
ALL_BITS
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
B.19
Debug core control
DBG_RUN_CTRL 0x18
This register enables the debugger to temporarily disable logical cores. When returning
from the debug interrupts, the cores set in this register will not execute. This enables
single stepping to be implemented.
0x18:
Debug core
control
Bits
Perm
31:8
RO
7:0
B.20
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
1-hot vector defining which threads are stopped when not in debug
mode. Every bit which is set prevents the respective thread from
running.
DBG_RUN_CTRL_STOP
DRW
Debug scratch
DBG_SCRATCH 0x20 .. 0x27
A set of registers used by the debug ROM to communicate with an external debugger,
for example over JTAG. This is the same set of registers as the Debug Scratch registers
in the xCORE tile configuration.
0x20 .. 0x27:
Debug scratch
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.21
Init
Description
Identifier
Value.
Instruction breakpoint address
ALL_BITS
DBG_IBREAK_ADDR 0x30 ..
0x33
This register contains the address of the instruction breakpoint. If the PC matches this
address, then a debug interrupt will be taken. There are four instruction breakpoints that
are controlled individually.
0x30 .. 0x33:
Instruction
breakpoint
address
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.22
Init
Description
Identifier
Value.
Instruction breakpoint control
ALL_BITS
DBG_IBREAK_CTRL 0x40 ..
0x43
This register controls which logical cores may take an instruction breakpoint, and under
which condition.
41
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x40 .. 0x43:
Instruction
breakpoint
control
Bits
Perm
31:24
RO
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
A bit for each thread in the machine allowing the breakpoint to be enabled individually for each thread.
23:16
DRW
0
15:2
RO
-
Reserved
1
DRW
0
When 0 break when PC == IBREAK_ADDR. When 1 = break when PC !=
IBREAK_ADDR.
IBRK_CONDITION
0
DRW
0
When 1 the instruction breakpoint is enabled.
B.23
BRK_THREADS
Data watchpoint address 1
BRK_ENABLE
DBG_DWATCH_ADDR1 0x50 ..
0x53
This set of registers contains the first address for the four data watchpoints.
0x50 .. 0x53:
Data
watchpoint
address 1
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.24
Init
Description
Identifier
Value.
Data watchpoint address 2
ALL_BITS
DBG_DWATCH_ADDR2 0x60 ..
0x63
This set of registers contains the second address for the four data watchpoints.
0x60 .. 0x63:
Data
watchpoint
address 2
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.25
Init
Description
Identifier
Value.
Data breakpoint control register
ALL_BITS
DBG_DWATCH_CTRL 0x70 ..
This set of registers controls each of the four data watchpoints.
42
0x73
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
Perm
31:24
RO
23:16
0x70 .. 0x73:
Data
breakpoint
control
register
15:3
DRW
Init
-
0
Description
Identifier
Reserved
A bit for each thread in the machine allowing the breakpoint to be enabled individually for each thread.
BRK_THREADS
RO
-
Reserved
2
DRW
0
When 1 the breakpoints will be be triggered on loads.
1
DRW
0
Determines the break condition: 0 = A AND B, 1 = A OR B.
0
DRW
0
When 1 the instruction breakpoint is enabled.
B.26
Resources breakpoint mask
BRK_LOAD
DBRK_CONDITION
BRK_ENABLE
DBG_RWATCH_ADDR1 0x80 ..
0x83
This set of registers contains the mask for the four resource watchpoints.
0x80 .. 0x83:
Resources
breakpoint
mask
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.27
Init
Description
Identifier
Value.
Resources breakpoint value
ALL_BITS
DBG_RWATCH_ADDR2 0x90 ..
0x93
This set of registers contains the value for the four resource watchpoints.
0x90 .. 0x93:
Resources
breakpoint
value
Bits
Perm
31:0
DRW
B.28
Init
Description
Identifier
Value.
Resources breakpoint control register
0x9F
ALL_BITS
DBG_RWATCH_CTRL 0x9C ..
This set of registers controls each of the four resource watchpoints.
43
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x9C .. 0x9F:
Resources
breakpoint
control
register
44
Bits
Perm
31:24
RO
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
A bit for each thread in the machine allowing the breakpoint to be enabled individually for each thread.
23:16
DRW
0
15:2
RO
-
Reserved
1
DRW
0
When 0 break when condition A is met. When 1 = break when condition
B is met.
RBRK_CONDITION
0
DRW
0
When 1 the instruction breakpoint is enabled.
BRK_THREADS
BRK_ENABLE
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
C
Tile Configuration
The xCORE Tile control registers can be accessed using configuration reads and writes
(use write_tile_config_reg(tileref, ...) and read_tile_config_reg(tileref, ...) for
reads and writes).
The identifiers for the registers needs a prefix “XS1_PSWITCH_” and a postfix “_NUM”, and
are declared in “xs1.h”
Number
Perm
Description
Register identifier
0x00
CRO
Device identification
DEVICE_ID0
0x01
CRO
xCORE Tile description 1
DEVICE_ID1
0x02
CRO
xCORE Tile description 2
DEVICE_ID2
0x04
CRW
Control PSwitch permissions to debug registers
DBG_CTRL
0x05
CRW
Cause debug interrupts
DBG_INT
0x06
CRW
xCORE Tile clock divider
PLL_CLK_DIVIDER
0x07
CRO
Security configuration
SECU_CONFIG
0x20 .. 0x27
CRW
Debug scratch
DBG_SCRATCH
0x40
CRO
PC of logical core 0
T0_PC
0x41
CRO
PC of logical core 1
T1_PC
0x42
CRO
PC of logical core 2
T2_PC
0x43
CRO
PC of logical core 3
T3_PC
0x44
CRO
PC of logical core 4
T4_PC
0x45
CRO
PC of logical core 5
T5_PC
0x46
CRO
PC of logical core 6
T6_PC
0x47
CRO
PC of logical core 7
T7_PC
0x60
CRO
SR of logical core 0
T0_SR
0x61
CRO
SR of logical core 1
T1_SR
0x62
CRO
SR of logical core 2
T2_SR
0x63
CRO
SR of logical core 3
T3_SR
0x64
CRO
SR of logical core 4
T4_SR
0x65
CRO
SR of logical core 5
T5_SR
0x66
CRO
SR of logical core 6
T6_SR
0x67
CRO
SR of logical core 7
T7_SR
Figure 35:
Summary
C.1
Device identification
This register identifies the xCORE Tile
45
DEVICE_ID0 0x00
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x00:
Device
identification
Bits
Perm
31:24
CRO
Processor ID of this XCore.
23:16
CRO
Number of the node in which this XCore is located.
15:8
CRO
XCore revision.
DEVICE_ID0_REVISION
7:0
CRO
XCore version.
DEVICE_ID0_VERSION
C.2
Init
Description
xCORE Tile description 1
Identifier
DEVICE_ID0_PID
DEVICE_ID0_NODE
DEVICE_ID1 0x01
This register describes the number of logical cores, synchronisers, locks and channel
ends available on this xCORE tile.
0x01:
xCORE Tile
description 1
Bits
Perm
31:24
CRO
Number of channel ends.
23:16
CRO
Number of the locks.
DEVICE_ID1_NUM_LOCKS
15:8
CRO
Number of synchronisers.
DEVICE_ID1_NUM_SYNCS
7:0
RO
C.3
Init
-
Description
Identifier
DEVICE_ID1_NUM_CHANENDS
Reserved
xCORE Tile description 2
DEVICE_ID2 0x02
This register describes the number of timers and clock blocks available on this xCORE
tile.
0x02:
xCORE Tile
description 2
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
15:8
CRO
Number of clock blocks.
7:0
CRO
Number of timers.
C.4
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
Control PSwitch permissions to debug registers
DEVICE_ID2_NUM_CLKBLKS
DEVICE_ID2_NUM_TIMERS
DBG_CTRL 0x04
This register can be used to control whether the debug registers (marked with permission
CRW) are accessible through the tile configuration registers. When this bit is set, write
-access to those registers is disabled, preventing debugging of the xCORE tile over the
interconnect.
46
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x04:
Control
PSwitch
permissions
to debug
registers
Bits
Perm
Init
31
CRW
0
When 1 the PSwitch is restricted to RO access to all CRW registers from
SSwitch, XCore(PS_DBG_Scratch) and JTAG
DBG_CTRL_PSWITCH_RO
RO
-
Reserved
CRW
0
When 1 the PSwitch is restricted to RO access to all CRW registers from
SSwitch
DBG_CTRL_PSWITCH_RO_EXT
30:1
0
C.5
Description
Identifier
DBG_INT 0x05
Cause debug interrupts
This register can be used to raise a debug interrupt in this xCORE tile.
0x05:
Cause debug
interrupts
Bits
Perm
31:2
RO
-
Reserved
1
CRW
0
1 when the processor is in debug mode.
0
CRW
0
Request a debug interrupt on the processor.
C.6
Init
Description
xCORE Tile clock divider
Identifier
DBG_INT_IN_DBG
DBG_INT_REQ_DBG
PLL_CLK_DIVIDER 0x06
This register contains the value used to divide the PLL clock to create the xCORE tile
clock. The divider is enabled under control of the tile control register
0x06:
xCORE Tile
clock divider
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
31
CRW
0
Clock disable. Writing ’1’ will remove the clock to the tile.
30:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
CRW
0
Clock divider.
C.7
Security configuration
Copy of the security register as read from OTP.
47
Identifier
PLL_CLK_DISABLE
PLL_CLK_DIVIDER
SECU_CONFIG 0x07
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
Perm
31
CRO
30:15
14
Init
Description
Identifier
Disables write permission on this register
RO
-
CRO
Disable access to XCore’s global debug
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_GLOBAL_DEBUG
13
RO
12
CRO
lock all OTP sectors
SECUR_CFG_OTP_MASTER_LOCK
11:8
CRO
lock bit for each OTP sector
SECUR_CFG_OTP_SECTOR_LOCK
0x07:
Security
configuration
7
CRO
6
RO
5
CRO
4
CRO
3:1
0
C.8
-
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_ACCESS
Reserved
Reserved
Enable OTP reduanacy
-
SECUR_CFG_OTP_REDUANACY_ENABLE
Reserved
Override boot mode and read boot image from OTP
SECUR_CFG_SECURE_BOOT
Disable JTAG access to the PLL/BOOT configuration registers
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_PLL_JTAG
RO
-
CRO
Reserved
Disable access to XCore’s JTAG debug TAP
SECUR_CFG_DISABLE_XCORE_JTAG
DBG_SCRATCH 0x20 .. 0x27
Debug scratch
A set of registers used by the debug ROM to communicate with an external debugger, for
example over the switch. This is the same set of registers as the Debug Scratch registers
in the processor status.
0x20 .. 0x27:
Debug scratch
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRW
C.9
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 0
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T0_PC 0x40
Value of the PC of logical core 0.
0x40:
PC of logical
core 0
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.10
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 1
Value of the PC of logical core 1.
48
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T1_PC 0x41
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x41:
PC of logical
core 1
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.11
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 2
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T2_PC 0x42
Value of the PC of logical core 2.
0x42:
PC of logical
core 2
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.12
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 3
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T3_PC 0x43
Value of the PC of logical core 3.
0x43:
PC of logical
core 3
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.13
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 4
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T4_PC 0x44
Value of the PC of logical core 4.
0x44:
PC of logical
core 4
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.14
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 5
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T5_PC 0x45
Value of the PC of logical core 5.
0x45:
PC of logical
core 5
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.15
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 6
Value of the PC of logical core 6.
49
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T6_PC 0x46
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x46:
PC of logical
core 6
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.16
Init
Description
Value.
PC of logical core 7
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T7_PC 0x47
Value of the PC of logical core 7.
0x47:
PC of logical
core 7
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.17
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 0
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T0_SR 0x60
Value of the SR of logical core 0
0x60:
SR of logical
core 0
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.18
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 1
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T1_SR 0x61
Value of the SR of logical core 1
0x61:
SR of logical
core 1
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.19
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 2
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T2_SR 0x62
Value of the SR of logical core 2
0x62:
SR of logical
core 2
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.20
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 3
Value of the SR of logical core 3
50
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T3_SR 0x63
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x63:
SR of logical
core 3
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.21
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 4
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T4_SR 0x64
Value of the SR of logical core 4
0x64:
SR of logical
core 4
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.22
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 5
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T5_SR 0x65
Value of the SR of logical core 5
0x65:
SR of logical
core 5
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.23
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 6
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T6_SR 0x66
Value of the SR of logical core 6
0x66:
SR of logical
core 6
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
C.24
Init
Description
Value.
SR of logical core 7
Identifier
ALL_BITS
T7_SR 0x67
Value of the SR of logical core 7
0x67:
SR of logical
core 7
51
Bits
Perm
31:0
CRO
Init
Description
Value.
Identifier
ALL_BITS
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
D
Node Configuration
The digital node control registers can be accessed using configuration reads and writes
(use write_node_config_reg(device, ...) and read_node_config_reg(device, ...) for
reads and writes).
The identifiers for the registers needs a prefix “XS1_SSWITCH_” and a postfix “_NUM”, and
are declared in “xs1.h”
Number
0x00
Figure 36:
Summary
Perm
Description
Register identifier
RO
Device identification
DEVICE_ID0
0x01
RO
System switch description
DEVICE_ID1
0x04
RW
Switch configuration
NODE_CONFIG
0x05
RW
Switch node identifier
NODE_ID
0x06
RW
PLL settings
PLL_CTL
0x07
RW
System switch clock divider
CLK_DIVIDER
0x08
RW
Reference clock
REF_CLK_DIVIDER
0x09
R
System JTAG device ID register
JTAG_DEVICE_ID
0x0A
R
System USERCODE register
JTAG_USERCODE
0x0C
RW
Directions 0-7
DIMENSION_DIRECTION0
0x0D
RW
Directions 8-15
DIMENSION_DIRECTION1
0x10
RW
Reserved
XCORE0_GLOBAL_DEBUG_CONFIG
0x11
RW
Reserved.
XCORE1_GLOBAL_DEBUG_CONFIG
0x1F
RO
Debug source
GLOBAL_DEBUG_SOURCE
0x20 .. 0x28
RW
Link status, direction, and network
SLINK
0x40 .. 0x47
RO
PLink status and network
PLINK
0x80 .. 0x88
RW
Link configuration and initialization
XLINK
0xA0 .. 0xA7
RW
Static link configuration
XSTATIC
D.1
Device identification
DEVICE_ID0 0x00
This register contains version and revision identifiers and the mode-pins as sampled at
boot-time.
0x00:
Device
identification
52
Bits
Perm
Init
31:24
RO
23:16
RO
Sampled values of BootCtl pins on Power On Reset. SS_DEVICE_ID0_BOOT_CTRL
15:8
RO
SSwitch revision.
SS_DEVICE_ID0_REVISION
7:0
RO
SSwitch version.
SS_DEVICE_ID0_VERSION
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
D.2
DEVICE_ID1 0x01
System switch description
This register specifies the number of processors and links that are connected to this
switch.
0x01:
System switch
description
Bits
Perm
31:24
RO
23:16
RO
Number of SLinks on the SSwitch.
15:8
RO
Number of processors on the SSwitch.
7:0
RO
Number of processors on the device.
D.3
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
Switch configuration
SS_DEVICE_ID1_NUM_SLINKS
SS_DEVICE_ID1_NUM_PROCESSORS
SS_DEVICE_ID1_NUM_PLINKS_PER_PROC
NODE_CONFIG 0x04
This register enables the setting of two security modes (that disable updates to the PLL
or any other registers) and the header-mode.
Bits
0x04:
Switch
configuration
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31
RW
0
0 = SSCTL registers have write access. 1 = SSCTL registers can not be
written to.
SS_NODE_CONFIG_DISABLE_SSCTL_UPDATE
30:9
RO
-
Reserved
0 = PLL_CTL_REG has write access. 1 = PLL_CTL_REG can not be written to.
8
RW
0
7:1
RO
-
Reserved
0
RW
0
0 = 2-byte headers, 1 = 1-byte headers (reset as 0).
D.4
SS_NODE_CONFIG_DISABLE_PLL_CTL_REG
Switch node identifier
SS_NODE_CONFIG_HEADERS
NODE_ID 0x05
This register contains the node identifier.
0x05:
Switch node
identifier
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RW
0
The unique ID of this node.
D.5
PLL settings
Identifier
SS_NODE_ID_ID
PLL_CTL 0x06
An on-chip PLL multiplies the input clock up to a higher frequency clock, used to clock
the I/O, processor, and switch, see Oscillator. Note: a write to this register will cause the
tile to be reset.
53
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
31
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
RW
If set to 1, the chip will not be reset
30
RW
If set to 1, the chip will not wait for the PLL to re-lock. Only use this if a
gradual change is made to the PLL
SS_PLL_CTL_NLOCK
29
DW
If set to 1, set the PLL to be bypassed
28
DW
If set to 1, set the boot mode to boot from JTAG
27:26
RO
25:23
RW
22:21
RO
20:8
RW
7
RO
6:0
RW
0x06:
PLL settings
D.6
-
SS_PLL_CTL_NRESET
SS_TEST_MODE_PLL_BYPASS
SS_TEST_MODE_BOOT_JTAG
Reserved
Output divider value range from 0 (8’h0) to 7 (8’h7). OD value.
SS_PLL_CTL_POST_DIVISOR
-
Reserved
Feedback multiplication ratio, range from 0 (8’h0) to 4095 (8’h3FF). F
value.
SS_PLL_CTL_FEEDBACK_MUL
-
Reserved
Oscilator input divider value range from 0 (8’h0) to 63 (8’h3F). R value.
SS_PLL_CTL_INPUT_DIVISOR
System switch clock divider
CLK_DIVIDER 0x07
Sets the ratio of the PLL clock and the switch clock.
0x07:
System switch
clock divider
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RW
0
SSwitch clock generation
D.7
Init
Description
Reference clock
Identifier
SS_CLK_DIVIDER_CLK_DIV
REF_CLK_DIVIDER 0x08
Sets the ratio of the PLL clock and the reference clock used by the node.
0x08:
Reference
clock
54
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RW
3
Software ref. clock divider
Identifier
SS_SSWITCH_REF_CLK_DIV
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
D.8
0x09:
System JTAG
device ID
register
System JTAG device ID register
Bits
Perm
31:28
RO
SS_JTAG_DEVICE_ID_VERSION
27:12
RO
SS_JTAG_DEVICE_ID_PART_NUM
11:1
RO
SS_JTAG_DEVICE_ID_MANU_ID
0
RO
SS_JTAG_DEVICE_ID_CONST_VAL
D.9
0x0A:
System
USERCODE
register
Init
JTAG_DEVICE_ID 0x09
Description
System USERCODE register
JTAG_USERCODE 0x0A
Bits
Perm
31:18
RO
JTAG USERCODE value programmed into OTP SR
17:0
RO
metal fixable ID code
D.10
Init
Identifier
Description
Identifier
SS_JTAG_USERCODE_OTP
SS_JTAG_USERCODE_MASKID
DIMENSION_DIRECTION0 0x0C
Directions 0-7
This register contains eight directions, for packets with a mismatch in bits 7..0 of the
node-identifier. The direction in which a packet will be routed is goverened by the most
significant mismatching bit.
0x0C:
Directions 0-7
Bits
Perm
31:28
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 7.
DIM7_DIR
27:24
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 6.
DIM6_DIR
23:20
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 5.
DIM5_DIR
19:16
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 4.
DIM4_DIR
15:12
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 3.
DIM3_DIR
11:8
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 2.
DIM2_DIR
7:4
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 1.
DIM1_DIR
3:0
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 0.
DIM0_DIR
D.11
Init
Directions 8-15
Description
Identifier
DIMENSION_DIRECTION1 0x0D
This register contains eight directions, for packets with a mismatch in bits 15..8 of the
node-identifier. The direction in which a packet will be routed is goverened by the most
significant mismatching bit.
55
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x0D:
Directions
8-15
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31:28
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is F.
DIMF_DIR
27:24
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is E.
DIME_DIR
23:20
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is D.
DIMD_DIR
19:16
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is C.
DIMC_DIR
15:12
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is B.
DIMB_DIR
11:8
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is A.
DIMA_DIR
7:4
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 9.
DIM9_DIR
3:0
RW
0
The direction for packets whose dimension is 8.
DIM8_DIR
D.12
XCORE0_GLOBAL_DEBUG_CONFIG 0x10
Reserved
Reserved.
Bits
0x10:
Reserved
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31:2
RO
-
Reserved
1
RW
0
Reserved.
GLOBAL_DEBUG_ENABLE_GLOBAL_DEBUG_REQ
0
RW
0
Reserved.
GLOBAL_DEBUG_ENABLE_INDEBUG
D.13
XCORE1_GLOBAL_DEBUG_CONFIG 0x11
Reserved.
Reserved.
0x11:
Reserved.
Bits
Perm
31:2
RO
-
Reserved
1
RW
0
Reserved.
GLOBAL_DEBUG_ENABLE_GLOBAL_DEBUG_REQ
0
RW
0
Reserved.
GLOBAL_DEBUG_ENABLE_INDEBUG
D.14
Init
Description
Debug source
Contains the source of the most recent debug event.
56
Identifier
GLOBAL_DEBUG_SOURCE 0x1F
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
0x1F:
Debug source
Perm
31:5
RO
4
RW
3:2
RO
1
RW
0
RW
D.15
Init
Description
-
Identifier
Reserved
Reserved.
-
GLOBAL_DEBUG_SOURCE_EXTERNAL_PAD_INDEBUG
Reserved
If set, XCore1 is the source of last GlobalDebug event.
GLOBAL_DEBUG_SOURCE_XCORE1_INDEBUG
If set, XCore0 is the source of last GlobalDebug event.
GLOBAL_DEBUG_SOURCE_XCORE0_INDEBUG
Link status, direction, and network
SLINK 0x20 ..
0x28
These registers contain status information for low level debugging (read-only), the network number that each link belongs to, and the direction that each link is part of. The
registers control links 0..7.
Bits
Perm
31:26
RO
25:24
RO
Identify the SRC_TARGET type 0 - SLink, 1 - PLink, 2 - SSCTL, 3 Undefine.
SLINK_SRC_TARGET_TYPE
23:16
RO
When the link is in use, this is the destination link number to which all
packets are sent.
SLINK_SRC_TARGET_ID
15:12
RO
-
Reserved
11:8
RW
0
The direction that this link operates in.
7:6
RO
-
Reserved
5:4
RW
0
3
RO
-
2
RO
1
RO
1 when the dest side of the link is in use.
LINK_DST_INUSE
0
RO
1 when the source side of the link is in use.
LINK_SRC_INUSE
0x20 .. 0x28:
Link status,
direction, and
network
D.16
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
LINK_DIRECTION
Determines the network to which this link belongs, reset as 0.
LINK_NETWORK
Reserved
1 when the current packet is considered junk and will be thrown away.
LINK_JUNK
PLink status and network
PLINK 0x40 ..
0x47
These registers contain status information and the network number that each processorlink belongs to.
57
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
Perm
31:26
RO
25:24
RO
Identify the SRC_TARGET type 0 - SLink, 1 - PLink, 2 - SSCTL, 3 Undefine.
PLINK_SRC_TARGET_TYPE
23:16
RO
When the link is in use, this is the destination link number to which all
packets are sent.
PLINK_SRC_TARGET_ID
15:6
RO
-
5:4
RW
0
3
RO
-
2
RO
1
RO
1 when the dest side of the link is in use.
LINK_DST_INUSE
0
RO
1 when the source side of the link is in use.
LINK_SRC_INUSE
0x40 .. 0x47:
PLink status
and network
D.17
Init
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
Reserved
Determines the network to which this link belongs, reset as 0.
LINK_NETWORK
Reserved
1 when the current packet is considered junk and will be thrown away.
LINK_JUNK
Link configuration and initialization
XLINK 0x80 ..
0x88
These registers contain configuration and debugging information specific to external
links. The link speed and width can be set, the link can be initialized, and the link status can be monitored. The registers control links 0..7.
Bits
0x80 .. 0x88:
Link
configuration
and
initialization
58
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
Write to this bit with ’1’ will enable the XLink, writing ’0’ will disable it.
This bit controls the muxing of ports with overlapping xlinks.
31
RW
30
RW
0
0: operate in 2 wire mode; 1: operate in 5 wire mode
29:28
RO
-
Reserved
27
RO
Rx buffer overflow or illegal token encoding received.
26
RO
0
This end of the xlink has issued credit to allow the remote end to
transmit
RX_CREDIT
25
RO
0
This end of the xlink has credit to allow it to transmit.
24
WO
Clear this end of the xlink’s credit and issue a HELLO token.
23
WO
Reset the receiver. The next symbol that is detected will be the first
symbol in a token.
XLINK_RX_RESET
22
RO
-
Reserved
21:11
RW
0
Specify min. number of idle system clocks between two continuous
symbols witin a transmit token -1.
XLINK_INTRA_TOKEN_DELAY
10:0
RW
0
Specify min. number of idle system clocks between two continuous
transmit tokens -1.
XLINK_INTER_TOKEN_DELAY
XLINK_ENABLE
XLINK_WIDE
XLINK_RX_ERROR
TX_CREDIT
XLINK_HELLO
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
D.18
Static link configuration
XSTATIC 0xA0 ..
0xA7
These registers are used for static (ie, non-routed) links. When a link is made static, all
traffic is forwarded to the designated channel end and no routing is attempted. The
registers control links C, D, A, B, G, H, E, and F in that order.
Bits
0xA0 .. 0xA7:
Static link
configuration
59
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31
RW
0
Enable static forwarding.
30:9
RO
-
Reserved
8
RW
0
The destination processor on this node that packets received in static
mode are forwarded to.
XSTATIC_DEST_PROC
7:5
RO
-
Reserved
4:0
RW
0
The destination channel end on this node that packets received in static
mode are forwarded to.
XSTATIC_DEST_CHAN_END
XSTATIC_ENABLE
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
E
USB Node Configuration
The USB node control registers can be accessed using configuration reads and writes
(use write_node_config_reg(device, ...) and read_node_config_reg(device, ...) for
reads and writes).
Number
Figure 37:
Summary
Perm
Description
Register identifier
0x00
RO
Device identification register
DEV_ID
0x04
RW
Node configuration register
NODE_CFG
0x05
RW
Node identifier
NODE_ID_SCTH
0x51
RW
System clock frequency
SYS_CLK_FREQ
0x80
RW
Link Control and Status
LINK_CTRL
E.1
Device identification register
DEV_ID 0x00
This register contains version information, and information on power-on behavior.
0x00:
Device
identification
register
Bits
Perm
31:24
RO
0x0F
23:16
RO
-
15:8
RO
0x02
Revision number of the USB block
7:0
RO
0x00
Version number of the USB block
E.2
Init
Description
Chip identifier
Identifier
GLX_CFG_CHIP_ID
Reserved
Node configuration register
GLX_CFG_REVISION
GLX_CFG_VERSION
NODE_CFG 0x04
This register is used to set the communication model to use (1 or 3 byte headers), and
to prevent any further updates.
Bits
0x04:
Node
configuration
register
60
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31
RW
0
Set to 1 to disable further updates to the node configuration and link
control and status registers.
GLX_CFG_DISABLE_UPDATES
30:1
RO
-
Reserved
0
RW
0
Header mode. 0: 3-byte headers; 1: 1-byte headers.
GLX_CFG_HDR_MODE
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
E.3
0x05:
Node identifier
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
-
Reserved
15:0
RW
0
16-bit node identifier. This does not need to be set, and is present for
compatibility with XS1-switches.
GLX_CFG_NODE_ID_SCTH
E.4
0x51:
System clock
frequency
61
Init
Description
System clock frequency
Bits
Perm
31:7
RO
6:0
E.5
0x80:
Link Control
and Status
NODE_ID_SCTH 0x05
Node identifier
RW
Init
Identifier
SYS_CLK_FREQ 0x51
Description
-
Identifier
Reserved
Oscillator clock frequency in MHz rounded up to the nearest integer
value. Only values between 5 and 100 MHz are valid - writes outside
this range are ignored and will be NACKed.
This field must be set on start up of the device and any time that the
input oscillator clock frequency is changed. It must contain the system
clock frequency in MHz rounded up to the nearest integer value.
25
GLX_CFG_SYS_CLK_FREQ
Link Control and Status
Init
LINK_CTRL 0x80
Bits
Perm
31:28
RO
27
RO
26
RO
0
This end of the xlink has issued credit to allow the remote end to
transmit
RX_CREDIT
25
RO
0
This end of the xlink has credit to allow it to transmit.
24
WO
Clear this end of the xlink’s credit and issue a HELLO token.
23
WO
Reset the receiver. The next symbol that is detected will be the first
symbol in a token.
XLINK_RX_RESET
22
RO
-
Reserved
21:11
RW
1
Specify min. number of idle system clocks between two continuous
symbols witin a transmit token -1.
XLINK_INTRA_TOKEN_DELAY
10:0
RW
1
Specify min. number of idle system clocks between two continuous
transmit tokens -1.
XLINK_INTER_TOKEN_DELAY
-
Description
Identifier
Reserved
Rx buffer overflow or illegal token encoding received.
XLINK_RX_ERROR
TX_CREDIT
XLINK_HELLO
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
F
USB PHY Configuration
The USB PHY is connected to the ports shown in section 10.
The USB PHY is peripheral 1. The control registers are accessed using 32-bit reads and
writes (use write_periph_32(device, 1, ...) and read_periph_32(device, 1, ...) for
reads and writes).
Number
Figure 38:
Summary
Perm
Description
Register identifier
0x00
WO
UIFM reset
GLX_PER_UIFM_RESET
0x04
RW
UIFM IFM control
GLX_PER_UIFM_CONTROL
0x08
RW
UIFM Device Address
GLX_PER_UIFM_DEVICE_ADDRESS
0x0C
RW
UIFM functional control
GLX_PER_UIFM_FUNC_CONTROL
0x10
RW
UIFM on-the-go control
GLX_PER_UIFM_OTG_CONTROL
0x14
RO
UIFM on-the-go flags
GLX_PER_UIFM_OTG_FLAGS
0x18
RW
UIFM Serial Control
GLX_PER_UIFM_SERIAL_MODE
0x1C
RW
UIFM signal flags
GLX_PER_UIFM_IFM_FLAGS
0x20
RW
UIFM Sticky flags
GLX_PER_UIFM_FLAGS_STICKY
0x24
RW
UIFM port masks
GLX_PER_UIFM_MASK
0x28
RW
UIFM SOF value
GLX_PER_UIFM_SOFCOUNT
0x2C
RO
UIFM PID
GLX_PER_UIFM_PID
0x30
RO
UIFM Endpoint
GLX_PER_UIFM_ENDPOINT
0x34
RW
UIFM Endpoint match
GLX_PER_UIFM_ENDPOINT_MATCH
0x38
RW
OTG Flags mask
GLX_PER_UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_MASK
0x3C
RW
UIFM power signalling
GLX_PER_UIFM_PWRSIG
0x40
RW
UIFM PHY control
GLX_PER_UIFM_PHY_CONTROL
F.1
GLX_PER_UIFM_RESET 0x00
UIFM reset
A write to this register with any data resets all UIFM state, but does not otherwise affect
the phy.
0x00:
UIFM reset
Bits
Perm
31:0
WO
F.2
Init
Description
Value.
UIFM IFM control
General settings of the UIFM IFM state machine.
62
Identifier
ALL_BITS
GLX_PER_UIFM_CONTROL 0x04
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31:8
RO
-
Reserved
7
RW
0
Set to 1 to enable XEVACKMODE mode.
UIFM_IFM_CONTROL_XEVACKMODE
6
RW
0
Set to 1 to enable SOFISTOKEN mode.
UIFM_IFM_CONTROL_SOFISTOKEN
5
RW
0
Set to 1 to enable UIFM power signalling mode.
4
RW
0
Set to 1 to enable IF timing mode.
3
RO
-
Reserved
2
RW
0
Set to 1 to enable UIFM linestate decoder.
1
RW
0
Set to 1 to enable UIFM CHECKTOKENS mode.
0
RW
0
Set to 1 to enable UIFM DOTOKENS mode.
0x04:
UIFM IFM
control
F.3
UIFM Device Address
UIFM_IFM_CONTROL_PWRSIGMODE
UIFM_IFM_CONTROL_IFTIMINGMODE
UIFM_IFM_CONTROL_DECODELINESTATE
UIFM_IFM_CONTROL_CHECKTOKENS
UIFM_IFM_CONTROL_DOTOKENS
GLX_PER_UIFM_DEVICE_ADDRESS 0x08
The device address whose packets should be received. 0 until enumeration, it should be
set to the assigned value after enumeration.
0x08:
UIFM Device
Address
Bits
Perm
31:7
RO
-
Reserved
6:0
RW
0
The enumerated USB device address must be stored here. Only packets
to this address are passed on.
UIFM_DEVICE_ADDRESS_ADDRESS
F.4
Init
Description
UIFM functional control
GLX_PER_UIFM_FUNC_CONTROL 0x0C
Bits
Perm
31:5
RO
-
Reserved
4:2
RW
1
Set to 0 to disable UIFM to UTMI+ OPMODE mode.
0x0C:
UIFM
functional
control
1
0
F.5
RW
RW
Init
Identifier
1
1
Description
Identifier
UIFM_FUNC_CONTROL_TERMSELECT
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ XCVRSELECT mode.
UIFM on-the-go control
UIFM_FUNC_CONTROL_XCVRSELECT
GLX_PER_UIFM_OTG_CONTROL 0x10
This register is used to negotiate an on-the-go connection.
63
UIFM_FUNC_CONTROL_OPMODE
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ TERMSELECT mode.
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31:8
RO
-
Reserved
7
RW
0
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to EXTVBUSIND mode.
UIFM_OTG_CONTROL_EXTVBUSIND
6
RW
0
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to DRVVBUSEXT mode.
UIFM_OTG_CONTROL_DRVVBUSEXT
5
RO
-
Reserved
4
RW
0
3
2
0x10:
UIFM
on-the-go
control
RW
RW
0
0
1
RW
0
0
RW
0
F.6
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ CHRGVBUS mode.
UIFM_OTG_CONTROL_CHRGVBUS
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ DISCHRGVBUS mode.
UIFM_OTG_CONTROL_DISCHRGVBUS
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ DMPULLDOWN mode.
UIFM_OTG_CONTROL_DMPULLDOWN
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ DPPULLDOWN mode.
UIFM_OTG_CONTROL_DPPULLDOWN
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to IDPULLUP mode.
UIFM on-the-go flags
UIFM_OTG_CONTROL_IDPULLUP
GLX_PER_UIFM_OTG_FLAGS 0x14
Status flags used for on-the-go negotiation
0x14:
UIFM
on-the-go
flags
64
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31:6
RO
-
Reserved
5
RO
0
Value of UTMI+ Bvalid flag.
4
RO
0
Value of UTMI+ IDGND flag.
3
RO
0
Value of UTMI+ HOSTDIS flag.
UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_HOSTDIS
2
RO
0
Value of UTMI+ VBUSVLD flag.
UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_VBUSVLD
1
RO
0
Value of UTMI+ SESSVLD flag.
UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_SESSVLD
0
RO
0
Value of UTMI+ SESSEND flag.
UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_SESSEND
UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_SESSVLDB
UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_NIDGND
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
F.7
UIFM Serial Control
Bits
Perm
31:7
RO
-
Reserved
6
RO
0
1 if UIFM is in UTMI+ RXRCV mode.
UIFM_SERIAL_MODE_RXRCV
5
RO
0
1 if UIFM is in UTMI+ RXDM mode.
UIFM_SERIAL_MODE_RXDM
4
RO
0
1 if UIFM is in UTMI+ RXDP mode.
UIFM_SERIAL_MODE_RXDP
3
RW
0
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ TXSE0 mode.
UIFM_SERIAL_MODE_TXSE0
2
RW
0
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ TXDATA mode.
UIFM_SERIAL_MODE_TXDAT
1
RW
1
Set to 0 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ TXENABLE mode.
UIFM_SERIAL_MODE_TXENN
0
RW
0
0x18:
UIFM Serial
Control
F.8
Init
GLX_PER_UIFM_SERIAL_MODE 0x18
Description
Identifier
Set to 1 to switch UIFM to UTMI+ FSLSSERIAL mode.
UIFM_SERIAL_MODE_FSLSMODE
UIFM signal flags
GLX_PER_UIFM_IFM_FLAGS 0x1C
Set of flags that monitor line and error states. These flags normally clear on the next
packet, but they may be made sticky by using PER_UIFM_FLAGS_STICKY, in which they
must be cleared explicitly.
Bits
Perm
31:7
RO
-
Reserved
6
RW
0
Set to 1 when the UIFM decodes a token successfully (e.g. it passes
CRC5, PID check and has matching device address). UIFM_IFM_FLAGS_NEWTOKEN
5
RW
0
Set to 1 when linestate indicates an SE0 symbol.
4
RW
0
Set to 1 when linestate indicates a K symbol.
UIFM_IFM_FLAGS_K
3
RW
0
Set to 1 when linestate indicates a J symbol.
UIFM_IFM_FLAGS_J
2
RW
0
1
RW
0
Set to the value of the UTMI_RXACTIVE input signal.
UIFM_IFM_FLAGS_RXACTIVE
0
RW
0
Set to the value of the UTMI_RXERROR input signal
UIFM_IFM_FLAGS_RXERROR
0x1C:
UIFM signal
flags
F.9
Init
Description
Identifier
UIFM_IFM_FLAGS_SE0
Set to 1 if an incoming datapacket fails the CRC16 check.
UIFM_IFM_FLAGS_CRC16FAIL
UIFM Sticky flags
GLX_PER_UIFM_FLAGS_STICKY 0x20
These bits define the sticky-ness of the bits in the UIFM IFM FLAGS register. A 1 means
that bit will be sticky (hold its value until a 1 is written to that bitfield), or normal, in which
case signal updates to the UIFM IFM FLAGS bits may be over-written by subsequent
changes in those signals.
65
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
0x20:
UIFM Sticky
flags
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
31:7
RO
-
Reserved
6:0
RW
0
Stickyness for each flag.
F.10
Identifier
UIFM_FLAGS_STICKY_STICKY
GLX_PER_UIFM_MASK 0x24
UIFM port masks
Set of masks that identify how port 1N, port 1O and port 1P are affected by changes to
the flags in FLAGS
Bits
31:24
23:16
15:8
0x24:
UIFM port
masks
7:0
F.11
Perm
Init
RW
RW
RW
RW
Description
Identifier
0
Bit mask that determines which flags in UIFM_IFM_FLAG[6:0] contribute to port 1?. If any flag listed in this bitmask is high, port 1? will be
high.
UIFM_FLAGS_MASK_MASK3
0
Bit mask that determines which flags in UIFM_IFM_FLAG[6:0] contribute to port 1P. If any flag listed in this bitmask is high, port 1P will be
high.
UIFM_FLAGS_MASK_MASK2
0
Bit mask that determines which flags in UIFM_IFM_FLAG[6:0] contribute to port 1O. If any flag listed in this bitmask is high, port 1O will
be high.
UIFM_FLAGS_MASK_MASK1
0
Bit mask that determines which flags in UIFM_IFM_FLAG[6:0] contribute to port 1N. If any flag listed in this bitmask is high, port 1N will
be high.
UIFM_FLAGS_MASK_MASK0
UIFM SOF value
GLX_PER_UIFM_SOFCOUNT 0x28
USB Start-Of-Frame counter
Bits
0x28:
UIFM SOF
value
Perm
Init
Description
Identifier
31:11
RO
-
Reserved
10:8
RW
0
Most significant 3 bits of SOF counter
UIFM_SOFCOUNT_COUNT2
7:0
RW
0
Least significant 8 bits of SOF counter
UIFM_SOFCOUNT_COUNT1
F.12
GLX_PER_UIFM_PID 0x2C
UIFM PID
The last USB packet identifier received
0x2C:
UIFM PID
66
Bits
Perm
Init
Description
31:4
RO
-
Reserved
3:0
RO
0
Value of the last received PID.
Identifier
UIFM_PID_PID
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
F.13
GLX_PER_UIFM_ENDPOINT 0x30
UIFM Endpoint
The last endpoint seen
0x30:
UIFM
Endpoint
Bits
Perm
31:5
RO
-
Reserved
4
RO
0
1 if endpoint contains a valid value.
3:0
RO
0
A copy of the last received endpoint.
F.14
Init
Description
UIFM Endpoint match
Identifier
UIFM_ENDPOINT_MATCH
UIFM_ENDPOINT_ENDPOINT
GLX_PER_UIFM_ENDPOINT_MATCH 0x34
This register can be used to mark UIFM endpoints as special.
0x34:
UIFM
Endpoint
match
Bits
Perm
31:16
RO
15:0
F.15
0x38:
OTG Flags
mask
67
-
0
Description
Bits
Perm
RW
Init
0
This register contains a bit for each endpoint. If its bit is set, the endpoint will be supplied on the RX port when ORed with 0x10.
UIFM_ENDPOINT_MATCH_MATCH
Description
Data
UIFM power signalling
Init
Identifier
Reserved
OTG Flags mask
31:0
F.16
0x3C:
UIFM power
signalling
RW
Init
Description
GLX_PER_UIFM_OTG_FLAGS_MASK 0x38
Identifier
OTG_FLAGS_MASK_DEFINED
GLX_PER_UIFM_PWRSIG 0x3C
Bits
Perm
31:9
RO
-
Reserved
Identifier
8
RW
0
Valid
UIFM_PWRSIG_VALID
7:0
RW
0
Data
UIFM_PWRSIG_DATA
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
F.17
UIFM PHY control
Bits
Perm
31:19
RO
-
18
RW
0
17:14
RO
-
13
12
11:8
0x40:
UIFM PHY
control
68
RW
RW
RW
Init
0
0
0
GLX_PER_UIFM_PHY_CONTROL 0x40
Description
Identifier
Reserved
Set to 1 to disable pulldowns on ports 8A and 8B.
UIFM_PHY_CONTROL_PULLDOWN_DISABLE
Reserved
After an auto-resume, this bit is set to indicate that the resume signalling was for reset (se0). Set to 0 to clear.
UIFM_PHY_CONTROL_RESUMESE0
After an auto-resume, this bit is set to indicate that the resume signalling was for resume (K). Set to 0 to clear.
UIFM_PHY_CONTROL_RESUMEK
Log-2 number of clocks before any linestate change is propagated.
UIFM_PHY_CONTROL_SE0FILTVAL
7
RW
0
Set to 1 to use the suspend controller handle to resume from suspend. Otherwise, the program has to poll the linestate_filt field in
phy_teststatus.
UIFM_PHY_CONTROL_AUTORESUME
6:4
RW
0
Control the the conf1,2,3 input pins of the PHY.
3:0
RO
-
Reserved
UIFM_PHY_CONTROL_PHYCONF
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
G
JTAG, xSCOPE and Debugging
If you intend to design a board that can be used with the XMOS toolchain and xTAG debugger, you will need an xSYS header on your board. Figure 39 shows a decision diagram
which explains what type of xSYS connectivity you need. The three subsections below
explain the options in detail.
YES
YES
Figure 39:
Decision
diagram for
the xSYS
header
NO
Is xSCOPE
required
YES
Is fast printf
required ?
Use full xSYS header
See section 3
G.1
Is debugging
required?
NO
YES
Does the SPI
flash need to be
programmed?
NO
NO
Use JTAG xSYS header
See section 2
No xSYS header required
See section 1
No xSYS header
The use of an xSYS header is optional, and may not be required for volume production
designs. However, the XMOS toolchain expects the xSYS header; if you do not have an
xSYS header then you must provide your own method for writing to flash/OTP and for
debugging.
G.2
JTAG-only xSYS header
The xSYS header connects to an xTAG debugger, which has a 20-pin 0.1" female IDC
header. The design will hence need a male IDC header. We advise to use a boxed header
to guard against incorrect plug-ins. If you use a 90 degree angled header, make sure that
pins 2, 4, 6, ..., 20 are along the edge of the PCB.
Connect pins 4, 8, 12, 16, 20 of the xSYS header to ground, and then connect:
· TDI to pin 5 of the xSYS header
· TMS to pin 7 of the xSYS header
· TCK to pin 9 of the xSYS header
· TDO to pin 13 of the xSYS header
The RST_N net should be open-drain, active-low, and have a pull-up to VDDIO.
69
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
G.3
Full xSYS header
For a full xSYS header you will need to connect the pins as discussed in Section G.2, and
then connect a 2-wire xCONNECT Link to the xSYS header. The links can be found in
the Signal description table (Section 4): they are labelled XL0, XL1, etc in the function
column. The 2-wire link comprises two inputs and outputs, labelled 1out , 0out , 0in , and 1in .
For example, if you choose to use XL0 for xSCOPE I/O, you need to connect up XL01out ,
XL00out , XL00in , XL01in as follows:
· XL01out (X0D43) to pin 6 of the xSYS header with a 33R series resistor close to the
device.
· XL00out (X0D42) to pin 10 of the xSYS header with a 33R series resistor close to the
device.
· XL00in (X0D41) to pin 14 of the xSYS header.
· XL01in (X0D40) to pin 18 of the xSYS header.
70
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
H
Schematics Design Check List
This section is a checklist for use by schematics designers using the
XUF212-512-TQ128. Each of the following sections contains items to check
for each design.
H.1
Power supplies
The VDD (core) supply ramps monotonically (rises constantly) from 0V to
its final value (0.95V - 1.05V) within 10ms (Section 12).
The VDD (core) supply is capable of supplying 700 mA (Section 12 and Figure 21).
PLL_AVDD is filtered with a low pass filter, for example an RC filter, see Sec- .
tion 12
H.2
Power supply decoupling
The design has multiple decoupling capacitors per supply, for example at
least four0402 or 0603 size surface mount capacitors of 100nF in value, per
supply (Section 12).
A bulk decoupling capacitor of at least 10uF is placed on each supply (Section 12).
H.3
Power on reset
The RST_N and TRST_N pins are asserted (low) until all supplies are good.
There is enough time between VDDIO power good and RST_N to allow any
boot flash to settle. RST_N is fast enough to meet USB timings.
H.4
Clock
The CLK input pin is supplied with a clock with monotonic rising edges and
low jitter.
You have chosen an input clock frequency that is supported by the device
(Section 7).
H.5
Boot
X0D01 has a 1K pull-up to VDDIOL (Section 8).
71
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
The device is kept in reset for at least 1 ms after VDDIOL has reached its
minimum level (Section 8).
H.6
JTAG, XScope, and debugging
You have decided as to whether you need an XSYS header or not (Section G)
If you have not included an XSYS header, you have devised a method to
program the SPI-flash or OTP (Section G).
H.7
GPIO
You have not mapped both inputs and outputs to the same multi-bit port.
Pins X0D04, X0D05, X0D06, and X0D07 are output only and are, during and
after reset, pulled low or not connected (Section 8)
H.8
Multi device designs
Skip this section if your design only includes a single XMOS device.
One device is connected to a QSPI or SPI flash for booting.
Devices that boot from link have, for example, X0D06 pulled high and have
link XL0 connected to a device to boot from (Section 8).
72
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
I
PCB Layout Design Check List
This section is a checklist for use by PCB designers using the XS2-UF12B512-TQ128. Each of the following sections contains items to check for each
design.
I.1
Ground Plane
Multiple vias (eg, 9) have been used to connect the center pad to the PCB
ground plane. These minimize impedance and conduct heat away from the
device. (Section 12.4).
Other than ground vias, there are no (or only a few) vias underneath or
closely around the device. This create a good, solid, ground plane.
I.2
Power supply decoupling
The decoupling capacitors are all placed close to a supply pin (Section 12).
The decoupling capacitors are spaced around the device (Section 12).
The ground side of each decoupling capacitor has a direct path back to the
center ground of the device.
I.3
PLL_AVDD
The PLL_AVDD filter (especially the capacitor) is placed close to the
PLL_AVDD pin (Section 12).
73
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
J
Associated Design Documentation
Document Title
Information
Document
Estimating Power Consumption For
XS1-UF Devices
Power consumption
XMOS Programming Guide
Timers, ports, clocks, cores and
channels
Link
xTIMEcomposer User Guide
Compilers, assembler and
linker/mapper
Link
Timing analyzer, xScope, debugger
Flash and OTP programming utilities
K
Related Documentation
Document Title
Information
Document
xCORE200: the XMOS XS2 Architecture
ISA manual
Link
I/O timings for xCORE200
Port timings
Link
xCONNECT Architecture
Link, switch and system information
Link
XS1-UF Link Performance and Design
Guidelines
Link timings
xCORE-200 Clock Frequency Control
Advanced clock control
74
Link
XUF212-512-TQ128 Datasheet
L
Revision History
Date
Description
2015-03-20
Preliminary release
2015-04-14
Added RST to pins to be pulled hard, and removed reference to TCK from Errata
Removed TRST_N references in packages that have no TRST_N
New diagram for boot from embedded flash showing ports
Pull up requirements for shared clock and external resistor for QSPI
2015-05-06
Removed references to DEBUG_N
2015-07-09
Updated electrical characteristics - Section 13
2015-08-19
Added I(USB_VDD) - Section 13
Added USB layout guidelines - Section 12
2015-08-27
Updated part marking - Section 15
2016-04-20
Typical internal pull-up and pull down current diagrams added - Section 13
2017-02-02
Updated USB VBUS wiring description with bus-powered usb-device instructions - Section 10
Clarified available boot modes/source pins - Section 8
2017-09-19
Added Absolute Maximum Ratings - Section 13.1
Reference document links updated - Section J
2018-03-23
Incorrect IDCODE return value updated - Section 11
Incorrect VBUS signal name updated to GND in USB diagrams - Section 10
Updated package information - Section 14
2020-10-05
Released documentation for A revision that uses different flash - Section 8
Copyright © 2020, All Rights Reserved.
Xmos Ltd. is the owner or licensee of this design, code, or Information (collectively, the “Information”) and is providing
it to you “AS IS” with no warranty of any kind, express or implied and shall have no liability in relation to its use. Xmos
Ltd. makes no representation that the Information, or any particular implementation thereof, is or will be free from any
claims of infringement and again, shall have no liability in relation to any such claims.
XMOS, xCore, xcore.ai, and the XMOS logo are registered trademarks of XMOS Ltd in the United Kingdom and other
countries and may not be used without written permission. Company and product names mentioned in this document
are the trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.
75