CYPRESS CY7C66113C

CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
Full-Speed USB (12 Mbps) Peripheral
Controller with Integrated Hub
Full-Speed USB (12 Mbps) Peripheral
Controller with Integrated Hub
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
•
198 Champion Court
•
San Jose, CA 95134-1709
•
408-943-2600
Revised January 2, 2006
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.0 FEATURES ......................................................................................................................................6
2.0 FUNCTIONAL OVERVIEW .............................................................................................................7
2.1 GPIO ..........................................................................................................................................7
2.2 DAC ............................................................................................................................................7
2.3 Clock ..........................................................................................................................................7
2.4 Memory ......................................................................................................................................7
2.5 Power-on Reset, Watchdog, and Free-running Timer ...............................................................7
2.6 I2C and HAPI Interface ..............................................................................................................7
2.7 Timer ..........................................................................................................................................7
2.8 Interrupts ....................................................................................................................................8
2.9 USB ............................................................................................................................................8
3.0 PIN CONFIGURATIONS ...............................................................................................................10
4.0 PRODUCT SUMMARY TABLES ..................................................................................................14
4.1 Pin Assignments ......................................................................................................................14
4.2 I/O Register Summary ..............................................................................................................14
4.3 Instruction Set Summary ..........................................................................................................16
5.0 PROGRAMMING MODEL .............................................................................................................17
5.1 14-bit Program Counter (PC) ...................................................................................................17
5.1.1 Program Memory Organization
....................................................................................................18
5.2 8-bit Accumulator (A) ...............................................................................................................19
5.3 8-bit Temporary Register (X) ....................................................................................................19
5.4 8-bit Program Stack Pointer (PSP) ..........................................................................................19
5.4.1 Data Memory Organization ............................................................................................................19
5.5 8-bit Data Stack Pointer (DSP) ................................................................................................19
5.6 Address Modes ........................................................................................................................20
5.6.1 Data (Immediate) ............................................................................................................................20
5.6.2 Direct ..............................................................................................................................................20
5.6.3 Indexed ..........................................................................................................................................20
6.0 CLOCKING ....................................................................................................................................20
7.0 RESET ...........................................................................................................................................21
7.1 Power-on Reset .......................................................................................................................21
7.2 Watchdog Reset .......................................................................................................................21
8.0 SUSPEND MODE ..........................................................................................................................22
9.0 GENERAL-PURPOSE I/O (GPIO) PORTS ...................................................................................22
9.1 GPIO Configuration Port ..........................................................................................................23
9.2 GPIO Interrupt Enable Ports ....................................................................................................24
10.0 DAC PORT ..................................................................................................................................25
10.1 DAC Isink Registers ...............................................................................................................26
10.2 DAC Port Interrupts ................................................................................................................26
11.0 12-BIT FREE-RUNNING TIMER .................................................................................................27
12.0 I2C AND HAPI CONFIGURATION REGISTER ...........................................................................27
13.0 I2C-COMPATIBLE CONTROLLER .............................................................................................28
14.0 HARDWARE ASSISTED PARALLEL INTERFACE (HAPI) .......................................................30
15.0 PROCESSOR STATUS AND CONTROL REGISTER ................................................................31
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 2 of 61
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16.0 INTERRUPTS ..............................................................................................................................31
16.1 Interrupt Vectors .....................................................................................................................33
16.2 Interrupt Latency ....................................................................................................................34
16.3 USB Bus Reset Interrupt ........................................................................................................34
16.4 Timer Interrupt ........................................................................................................................34
16.5 USB Endpoint Interrupts ........................................................................................................34
16.6 USB Hub Interrupt ..................................................................................................................35
16.7 DAC Interrupt .........................................................................................................................35
16.8 GPIO/HAPI Interrupt ..............................................................................................................35
16.9 I2C Interrupt ............................................................................................................................36
17.0 USB OVERVIEW .........................................................................................................................36
17.1 USB Serial Interface Engine ..................................................................................................36
17.2 USB Enumeration ..................................................................................................................36
18.0 USB HUB .....................................................................................................................................37
18.1 Connecting/Disconnecting a USB Device ..............................................................................37
18.2 Enabling/Disabling a USB Device ..........................................................................................38
18.3 Hub Downstream Ports Status and Control ...........................................................................39
18.4 Downstream Port Suspend and Resume ...............................................................................40
18.5 USB Upstream Port Status and Control .................................................................................41
19.0 USB SIE OPERATION ................................................................................................................42
19.1 USB Device Addresses ..........................................................................................................42
19.2 USB Device Endpoints ...........................................................................................................42
19.3 USB Control Endpoint Mode Registers ..................................................................................43
19.4 USB Non-Control Endpoint Mode Registers ..........................................................................44
19.5 USB Endpoint Counter Registers ...........................................................................................44
19.6 Endpoint Mode/Count Registers Update and Locking Mechanism ........................................44
20.0 USB MODE TABLES ..................................................................................................................47
21.0 REGISTER SUMMARY ...............................................................................................................51
22.0 SAMPLE SCHEMATIC ................................................................................................................53
23.0 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS ..............................................................................................54
24.0 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS ...........................................................................................54
25.0 SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS .............................................................................................55
26.0 ORDERING INFORMATION .......................................................................................................57
27.0 PACKAGE DIAGRAMS ...............................................................................................................58
28.0 QUAD FLAT PACKAGE NO LEADS (QFN) PACKAGE DESIGN NOTES ................................59
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 3 of 61
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LIST OF FIGURES
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3-1. CY7C66113C 56-pin QFN Pin Assignment .......................................................................11
3-2. CY7C66113C DIE ..............................................................................................................12
5-1. Program Memory Space with Interrupt Vector Table .........................................................18
6-1. Clock Oscillator On-Chip Circuit ........................................................................................20
7-1. Watchdog Reset ................................................................................................................21
9-1. Block Diagram of a GPIO Pin ............................................................................................22
9-2. Port 0 Data ........................................................................................................................23
9-3. Port1 Data .........................................................................................................................23
9-4. Port 2 Data ........................................................................................................................23
9-5. Port 3 Data ........................................................................................................................23
9-6. GPIO Configuration Register .............................................................................................23
9-7. Port 0 Interrupt Enable .......................................................................................................24
9-8. Port 1 Interrupt Enable .......................................................................................................25
9-9. Port 2 Interrupt Enable .......................................................................................................25
9-10. Port 3 Interrupt Enable .....................................................................................................25
10-1. Block Diagram of a DAC Pin ............................................................................................25
10-2. DAC Port Data .................................................................................................................26
10-3. DAC Sink Register ...........................................................................................................26
10-4. DAC Port Interrupt Enable ...............................................................................................26
10-5. DAC Port Interrupt Polarity ..............................................................................................26
11-3. Timer Block Diagram .......................................................................................................27
11-1. Timer LSB Register .........................................................................................................27
11-2. Timer MSB Register ........................................................................................................27
12-1. HAPI/I2C Configuration Register ......................................................................................27
13-1. I2C Data Register .............................................................................................................28
13-2. I2C Status and Control Register .......................................................................................28
15-1. Processor Status and Control Register ...........................................................................31
16-1. Global Interrupt Enable Register .....................................................................................32
16-2. USB Endpoint Interrupt Enable Register .........................................................................32
16-3. Interrupt Controller Function Diagram .............................................................................33
16-4. GPIO Interrupt Structure ..................................................................................................35
18-1. Hub Ports Connect Status ...............................................................................................38
18-2. Hub Ports Speed .............................................................................................................38
18-3. Hub Ports Enable Register ..............................................................................................38
18-4. Hub Downstream Ports Control Register .........................................................................39
18-5. Hub Ports Force Low Register .........................................................................................39
18-6. Hub Ports SE0 Status Register .......................................................................................39
18-7. Hub Ports Data Register ..................................................................................................40
18-8. Hub Ports Suspend Register ...........................................................................................40
18-9. Hub Ports Resume Status Register .................................................................................40
18-10. USB Status and Control Register ..................................................................................41
19-1. USB Device Address Registers .......................................................................................42
19-2. USB Endpoint 0 Mode Registers .....................................................................................43
19-3. USB Non-Control Endpoint Mode Registers ....................................................................44
19-4. USB Endpoint Counter Registers ....................................................................................44
19-5. Token/Data Packet Flow Diagram ...................................................................................46
22-1. Sample Schematic ...........................................................................................................53
25-1. Clock Timing ....................................................................................................................56
25-2. USB Data Signal Timing ..................................................................................................56
25-3. HAPI Read by External Interface from USB Microcontroller ............................................56
25-4. HAPI Write by External Device to USB Microcontroller ...................................................57
28-1. Cross-section of the Area Underneath the QFN Package ...............................................60
28-2. Plot of the Solder Mask (White Area) ..............................................................................60
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 4 of 61
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LIST OF TABLES
Table 3-1. Pad Coordinates in microns (0,0) to bond pad centers .......................................................13
Table 4-1. Pin Assignments .................................................................................................................14
Table 4-2. I/O Register Summary ........................................................................................................14
Table 4-3. Instruction Set Summary .....................................................................................................16
Table 9-1. GPIO Port Output Control Truth Table and Interrupt Polarity .............................................24
Table 12-1. HAPI Port Configuration ....................................................................................................28
Table 12-2. I2C Port Configuration .......................................................................................................28
Table 13-1. I2C Status and Control Register Bit Definitions .................................................................29
Table 14-1. Port 2 Pin and HAPI Configuration Bit Definitions ............................................................30
Table 16-1. Interrupt Vector Assignments ............................................................................................34
Table 18-1. Control Bit Definition for Downstream Ports .....................................................................39
Table 18-2. Control Bit Definition for Upstream Port ............................................................................41
Table 19-1. Memory Allocation for Endpoints ......................................................................................42
Table 20-1. USB Register Mode Encoding ..........................................................................................47
Table 20-2. Decode Table for Table 20-3: “Details of Modes for Differing Traffic Conditions” ............48
Table 20-3. Details of Modes for Differing Traffic Conditions ...............................................................49
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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CY7C66113C
1.0
Features
• Full-speed USB peripheral microcontroller with an integrated USB hub
— Well-suited for USB compound devices such as a keyboard hub function
• 8-bit USB optimized microcontroller
— Harvard architecture
— 6-MHz external clock source
— 12-MHz internal CPU clock
— 48-MHz internal Hub clock
• Internal memory
— 256 bytes of RAM
— 8 KB of PROM
• Integrated Master/Slave I2C-compatible controller (100 kHz) enabled through General-purpose I/O (GPIO) pins
• Hardware-assisted Parallel Interface (HAPI) for data transfer to external devices
• I/O ports
— Three GPIO ports (Port 0 to 2) capable of sinking 8 mA per pin (typical)
— An additional GPIO port (Port 3) capable of sinking 12 mA per pin (typical) for high current requirements: LEDs
— Higher current drive achievable by connecting multiple GPIO pins together to drive a common output
— Each GPIO port can be configured as inputs with internal pull-ups or open drain outputs or traditional CMOS outputs
— A Digital-to-Analog Conversion (DAC) port with programmable current sink outputs is available on the CY7C66113C
device
— Maskable interrupts on all I/O pins
•
•
•
•
12-bit free-running timer with one microsecond clock ticks
Watchdog Timer (WDT)
Internal Power-on Reset (POR)
USB Specification compliance
— Conforms to USB Specification, Version 1.1
— Conforms to USB HID Specification, Version 1.1
— Supports one or two device addresses with up to five user-configured endpoints
• Up to two 8-byte control endpoints
• Up to four 8-byte data endpoints
• Up to two 32-byte data endpoints
— Integrated USB transceivers
— Supports four downstream USB ports
— GPIO pins can provide individual power control outputs for each downstream USB port
— GPIO pins can provide individual port over current inputs for each downstream USB port
•
•
•
•
•
•
Improved output drivers to reduce electromagnetic interference (EMI)
Operating voltage from 4.0V–5.5V DC
Operating temperature from 0°–70°C
CY7C66013C available in 48-pin SSOP (-PVC) packages
CY7C66113C available in 56-pin QFN or 56-pin SSOP (-PVC) packages
Industry-standard programmer support
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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2.0
Functional Overview
The CY7C66013C and CY7C66113C are compound devices with a full-speed USB microcontroller in combination with a USB
hub. Each device is well-suited for combination peripheral functions with hubs, such as a keyboard hub function. The eight-bit
one-time-programmable microcontroller with a 12-Mbps USB Hub supports as many as four downstream ports.
2.1
GPIO
The CY7C66013C features 29 GPIO pins to support USB and other applications. The I/O pins are grouped into four ports (P0[7:0],
P1[7:0], P2[7:0], P3[4:0]) where each port can be configured as inputs with internal pull-ups, open drain outputs, or traditional
CMOS outputs. Ports 0 to 2 are rated at 8 mA per pin (typical) sink current. Port 3 pins are rated at 12 mA per pin (typical) sink
current, which allows these pins to drive LEDs. Multiple GPIO pins can be connected together to drive a single output for more
drive current capacity. Additionally, each I/O pin can be used to generate a GPIO interrupt to the microcontroller. All of the GPIO
interrupts all share the same “GPIO” interrupt vector.
The CY7C66113C has 31 GPIO pins (P0[7:0], P1[7:0], P2[7:0], P3[6:0]).
2.2
DAC
The CY7C66113C has an additional port P4[7:0] that features an additional eight programmable sink current I/O pins (DAC).
Every DAC pin includes an integrated 14-kΩ pull-up resistor. When a ‘1’ is written to a DAC I/O pin, the output current sink is
disabled and the output pin is driven HIGH by the internal pull-up resistor. When a ‘0’ is written to a DAC I/O pin, the internal
pull-up is disabled and the output pin provides the programmed amount of sink current. A DAC I/O pin can be used as an input
with an internal pull-up by writing a ‘1’ to the pin.
The sink current for each DAC I/O pin can be individually programmed to one of sixteen values using dedicated Isink registers.
DAC bits DAC[1:0] can be used as high current outputs with a programmable sink current range of 3.2 to 16 mA (typical). DAC
bits DAC[7:2] have a programmable current sink range of 0.2 to 1.0 mA (typical). Multiple DAC pins can be connected together
to drive a single output that requires more sink current capacity. Each I/O pin can be used to generate a DAC interrupt to the
microcontroller. Also, the interrupt polarity for each DAC I/O pin is individually programmable.
2.3
Clock
The microcontroller uses an external 6-MHz crystal and an internal oscillator to provide a reference to an internal PLL-based
clock generator. This technology allows the customer application to use an inexpensive 6-MHz fundamental crystal that reduces
the clock-related noise emissions (EMI). A PLL clock generator provides the 6-, 12-, and 48-MHz clock signals for distribution
within the microcontroller.
2.4
Memory
The CY7C66013C and CY7C66113C have 8 KB of PROM.
2.5
Power-on Reset, Watchdog, and Free-running Timer
These parts include POR logic, a WDT, and a 12-bit free-running timer. The POR logic detects when power is applied to the
device, resets the logic to a known state, and begins executing instructions at PROM address 0x0000. The WDT is used to ensure
that the microcontroller recovers after a period of inactivity. The firmware may become inactive for a variety of reasons, including
errors in the code or a hardware failure such as waiting for an interrupt that never occurs.
2.6
I2C and HAPI Interface
The microcontroller can communicate with external electronics through the GPIO pins. An I2C-compatible interface accommodates a 100-kHz serial link with an external device. There is also a Hardware-assisted Parallel Interface (HAPI) which can be
used to transfer data to an external device.
2.7
Timer
The free-running 12-bit timer clocked at 1 MHz provides two interrupt sources, 128-µs and 1.024-ms. The timer can be used to
measure the duration of an event under firmware control by reading the timer at the start of the event and after the event is
complete. The difference between the two readings indicates the duration of the event in microseconds. The upper four bits of
the timer are latched into an internal register when the firmware reads the lower eight bits. A read from the upper four bits actually
reads data from the internal register, instead of the timer. This feature eliminates the need for firmware to try to compensate if the
upper four bits increment immediately after the lower eight bits are read.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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2.8
Interrupts
The microcontroller supports eleven maskable interrupts in the vectored interrupt controller. Interrupt sources include the 128-µs
(bit 6) and 1.024-ms (bit 9) outputs from the free-running timer, five USB endpoints, the USB hub, the DAC port, the GPIO ports,
and the I2C-compatible master mode interface. The timer bits cause an interrupt (if enabled) when the bit toggles from LOW ‘0’
to HIGH ‘1.’ The USB endpoints interrupt after the USB host has written data to the endpoint FIFO or after the USB controller
sends a packet to the USB host. The DAC ports have an additional level of masking that allows the user to select which DAC
inputs can cause a DAC interrupt. The GPIO ports also have a level of masking to select which GPIO inputs can cause a GPIO
interrupt. For additional flexibility, the input transition polarity that causes an interrupt is programmable for each pin of the DAC
port. Input transition polarity can be programmed for each GPIO port as part of the port configuration. The interrupt polarity can
be rising edge (‘0’ to ‘1’) or falling edge (‘1’ to ‘0’).
2.9
USB
The CY7C66013C and CY7C66113C include an integrated USB Serial Interface Engine (SIE) that supports the integrated
peripherals and the hub controller function. The hardware supports up to two USB device addresses with one device address for
the hub (two endpoints) and a device address for a compound device (three endpoints). The SIE allows the USB host to communicate with the hub and functions integrated into the microcontroller. The part includes a 1:4 hub repeater with one upstream port
and four downstream ports. The USB Hub allows power-management control of the downstream ports by using GPIO pins
assigned by the user firmware. The user has the option of ganging the downstream ports together with a single pair of
power-management pins, or providing power management for each port with four pairs of power-management pins.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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Logic Block Diagram
External 6-MHz crystal
USB
Transceiver
D+[0] Upstream
D–[0] USB Port
PLL
USB
Transceiver
D+[1]
D–[1]
USB
Transceiver
D+[2]
D–[2]
USB
SIE
USB
Transceiver
D+[3]
D–[3]
Interrupt
Controller
USB
Transceiver
D+[4]
D–[4]
48 MHz
Clock
Divider
12-MHz
8-bit
CPU
12 MHz
Repeater
RAM
256 byte
8-bit Bus
PROM
8 KB
Downstream USB Ports
6 MHz
12-bit
Timer
Watchdog
Timer
Power-On
Reset
GPIO
PORT 0
P0[0]
GPIO
PORT 1
P1[0]
GPIO/
HAPI
PORT 2
Power management under firmware
control using GPIO pins
P0[7]
P1[7]
P2[0:1,7]
P2[2]; Latch_Empty
P2[3]; Data_Ready
P2[4]; STB
P2[5]; OE
P2[6]; CS
GPIO
PORT 3
P3[0]
GPIO
PORT 3
P3[5] Additional
High Current
P3[6]
Outputs
DAC
PORT
I2C
Interface
High Current
Outputs
P3[4]
DAC[0]
DAC[7]
CY7C66113C only
SCLK
SDATA
*I2C-compatible interface enabled by firmware through
P2[1:0] or P1[1:0]
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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3.0
Pin Configurations
TOP VIEW
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
48-pin SSOP
56-pin SSOP
XTALOUT
1
48
VCC
XTALOUT
1
56
VCC
XTALIN
2
47
P1[1]
XTALIN
2
55
P1[1]
VREF
3
46
P1[0]
VREF
3
54
P1[0]
P1[3]
4
45
P1[2]
P1[3]
4
53
P1[2]
P1[5]
5
44
P1[4]
P1[5]
5
52
P1[4]
P1[7]
6
43
P1[6]
P1[7]
6
51
P1[6]
P3[1]
7
42
P3[0]
P3[1]
7
50
P3[0]
D+[0]
8
41
D–[3]
D+[0]
8
49
D–[3]
D–[0]
9
40
D+[3]
D–[0]
9
48
D+[3]
P3[3]
10
39
P3[2]
P3[3]
10
47
P3[2]
GND
11
38
GND
GND
11
46
P3[4]
D+[1]
12
37
P3[4]
P3[5]
12
45
D–[4]
D–[1]
13
36
D–[4]
D+[1]
13
44
D+[4]
P2[1]
14
35
D+[4]
D–[1]
14
43
P3[6]
D+[2]
15
34
P2[0]
P2[1]
15
42
P2[0]
D–[2]
16
33
P2[2]
D+[2]
16
41
P2[2]
P2[3]
17
32
GND
D–[2]
17
40
GND
P2[5]
18
31
P2[4]
P2[3]
18
39
P2[4]
P2[7]
19
30
P2[6]
P2[5]
19
38
P2[6]
GND
20
29
VPP
P2[7]
20
37
DAC[0]
P0[7]
21
28
P0[0]
DAC[7]
21
36
VPP
P0[5]
22
27
P0[2]
P0[7]
22
35
P0[0]
P0[3]
23
26
P0[4]
P0[5]
23
34
P0[2]
P0[1]
24
25
P0[6]
P0[3]
24
33
P0[4]
P0[1]
25
32
P0[6]
DAC[5]
26
31
DAC[2]
DAC[3]
27
30
DAC[4]
DAC[1]
28
29
DAC[6]
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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D+[0]
P3[1]
P1[7]
P1[5]
P1[3]
Vref
XTALIN
XTALOUT
Vcc
P1[1]
P1[0]
P1[2]
P1[4]
P1[6]
56
55
54
53
52
51
50
49
48
47
46
45
44
43
D-[0]
1
42
P3[0]
P3[3]
2
41
D–[3]
GND
3
40
D+[3]
P3[5]
4
39
P3[2]
D+[1]
5
38
P3[4]
D–[1]
6
37
D–[4]
P2[1]
7
36
D+[4]
D+[2]
8
35
P3[6]
D–[2]
9
34
P2[0]
P2[3]
10
33
P2[2]
P2[5]
11
32
GND
P2[7]
12
31
P2[4]
DAC[7]
13
30
P2[6]
P0[7]
14
29
DAC[0]
CY7C66113C
56-pin QFN
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
P0[5]
P0[3]
P0[1]
DAC[5]
DAC[3]
DAC[1]
DAC[6]
DAC[4]
DAC[2]
P0[6]
P0[4]
P0[2]
P0[0]
Vpp
Figure 3-1. CY7C66113C 56-pin QFN Pin Assignment
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 11 of 61
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
(3398, 4194)
Cypress Logo
Pin 1
Pin 60
Pin 15
Pin 30
Pin 45
(0,0)
DIE STEP: 3398 x 4194 microns
Die Size: 3322 x 4129 microns
Die Thickness: 14 mils = 355.6 microns
Pad Size: 80 x 80 microns
Figure 3-2. CY7C66113C DIE
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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Table 3-1. Pad Coordinates in microns (0,0) to bond pad centers
Pad #
Pin Name
X
Y
Pad #
Pin Name
X
Y
1
XtalOut
1274.2
3588.8
37
DAC6
2000.6
210.6
2
XtalIn
1132.8
3588.8
38
DAC4
2103.6
210.6
3
Vref
889.85
3588.8
39
DAC2
2206.6
210.6
4
Port11b
684.65
3588.8
40
Port06
2308.4
210.6
5
Port13
581.65
3588.8
41
Port04
2411.4
210.6
6
Port15
478.65
3588.8
42
Port02
2514.4
210.6
7
Vss
375.65
3588.8
43
Port00
2617.4
210.6
8
Port17
0
3408.35
44
Vpp
2992.4
25.4
9
Port31
0
3162.05
45
DAC0
2992.4
151.75
10
Du+
0
3060.55
46
Port26
2992.4
306.15
11
Du–
0
2752.4
47
DD+6
2992.4
407.65
12
Port33
0
2650.95
48
DD–6
2992.4
715.75
13
Vss
0
2474.6
49
Port24
2992.4
817.25
14
Port35
0
2368.45
50
Vss
2992.4
923.4
15
DD+1
0
2266.95
51
Port22
2992.4
1086.75
16
DD–1
0
1958.85
52
DD+5
2992.4
1188.25
17
Port37
0
1857.35
53
DD–5
2992.4
1496.35
18
Vref
0
1680.4
54
Port20
2992.4
1597.85
19
Port21
0
1567.4
55
Vref
2992.4
1710.8
20
DD+2
0
1465.95
56
Port36
2992.4
1874.75
21
DD–2
0
1157.85
57
DD+4
2992.4
1976.25
22
Port23
0
1056.35
58
DD–4
2992.4
2284.35
23
Vss
0
880
59
Port34
2992.4
2385.85
24
Port25
0
773.85
60
Vss
2992.4
2492
25
DD+7
0
672.35
61
Port32
2992.4
2655.35
26
DD–7
0
364.25
62
DD+3
2992.4
2756.85
27
Port27
0
262.75
63
DD–3
2992.4
3064.95
28
DAC7
0
100.75
64
Port30
2992.4
3166.45
29
Vss
0
0
65
Port16
2992.4
3412.25
30
Port07
375.2
210.6
66
Port14
2634.2
3588.8
31
Port05
478.2
210.6
67
Port12
2531.2
3588.8
32
Port03
581.2
210.6
68
Port10
2428.2
3588.8
33
Port01
684.2
210.6
69
Port11
2325.2
3588.8
34
DAC5
788.4
210.6
70
VCC
2221.75
3588.8
35
DAC3
891.4
210.6
71
PadOpt
2121.75
3588.8
36
DAC1
994.4
210.6
72
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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CY7C66113C
4.0
Product Summary Tables
4.1
Pin Assignments
Table 4-1. Pin Assignments
Name
I/O
D+[0], D–[0]
I/O
8, 9
56, 1
8, 9
Upstream port, USB differential data.
D+[1], D–[1]
I/O
12, 13
5, 6
13, 14
Downstream port 1, USB differential data.
D+[2], D–[2]
I/O
15, 16
8, 9
16, 17
Downstream port 2, USB differential data.
D+[3], D–[3]
I/O
40, 41
40, 41
48, 49
Downstream port 3, USB differential data.
D+[4], D–[4]
I/O
35, 36
36, 37
44, 45
Downstream port 4, USB differential data.
P0[7:0]
I/O
21, 25, 22, 26, 14, 15, 16, 17, 22, 32, 23, 33, GPIO Port 0.
23, 27, 24, 28 24, 25, 26, 27 24, 34, 25, 35
P1[7:0]
I/O
6, 43, 5, 44, 4, 52, 53, 54, 43, 6, 51, 5, 52, 4, GPIO Port 1.
45, 47, 46
44, 45, 46, 47 53, 55, 54
P2[7:0]
I/O
19, 30, 18, 31, 7, 10, 11, 12, 20, 38, 19, 39, GPIO Port 2.
17, 33, 14, 34 30, 31, 33, 34 18, 41, 15, 42
P3[6:0]
I/O
37, 10, 39, 7,
42
55, 2, 4, 35,
38, 39, 42,
DAC[7:0]
I/O
n/a
13, 18, 19, 20, 21, 29, 26, 30, Digital to Analog Converter (DAC) Port with program21, 22, 23, 29 27, 31, 28, 37 mable current sink outputs. DAC[1:0] offer a programmable
range of 3.2 to 16 mA typical. DAC[7:2] have a programmable sink current range of 0.2 to 1.0 mA typical.
IN
2
50
2
6-MHz crystal or external clock input.
OUT 1
49
1
6-MHz crystal out.
XTALIN
XTALOUT
48-Pin
56-Pin QFN 56-Pin SSOP
Description
43, 12, 46, 10, GPIO Port 3, capable of sinking 12 mA (typical).
47, 7, 50
VPP
29
28
36
Programming voltage supply, tie to ground during
normal operation.
VCC
48
48
56
Voltage supply.
GND
IN
VREF
4.2
11, 20, 32, 38
3, 32
11, 40
Ground.
3
51
3
External 3.3V supply voltage for the differential data
output buffers and the D+ pull-up.
I/O Register Summary
I/O registers are accessed via the I/O Read (IORD) and I/O Write (IOWR, IOWX) instructions. IORD reads data from the selected
port into the accumulator. IOWR performs the reverse; it writes data from the accumulator to the selected port. Indexed I/O Write
(IOWX) adds the contents of X to the address in the instruction to form the port address and writes data from the accumulator to
the specified port. Specifying address 0 (e.g., IOWX 0h) means the I/O register is selected solely by the contents of X.
All undefined registers are reserved. It is important not to write to reserved registers as this may cause an undefined operation
or increased current consumption during operation. When writing to registers with reserved bits, the reserved bits must be written
with ‘0.’
Table 4-2. I/O Register Summary
Register Name
I/O Address
Read/Write
Port 0 Data
0x00
R/W
GPIO Port 0 Data
23
Port 1 Data
0x01
R/W
GPIO Port 1 Data
23
Port 2 Data
0x02
R/W
GPIO Port 2 Data
23
Port 3 Data
0x03
R/W
GPIO Port 3 Data
23
Port 0 Interrupt Enable
0x04
W
Interrupt Enable for Pins in Port 0
24
Port 1 Interrupt Enable
0x05
W
Interrupt Enable for Pins in Port 1
25
Port 2 Interrupt Enable
0x06
W
Interrupt Enable for Pins in Port 2
25
Port 3 Interrupt Enable
0x07
W
Interrupt Enable for Pins in Port 3
25
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Function
Page
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
Table 4-2. I/O Register Summary (continued)
Register Name
GPIO Configuration
2C
Read/Write
0x08
R/W
Function
Page
GPIO Port Configurations
I2C
23
0x09
R/W
HAPI Width and
USB Device Address A
0x10
R/W
USB Device Address A
42
EP A0 Counter Register
0x11
R/W
USB Address A, Endpoint 0 Counter
44
EP A0 Mode Register
0x12
R/W
USB Address A, Endpoint 0 Configuration
43
HAPI and I
Configuration
I/O Address
Position Configuration
27
EP A1 Counter Register
0x13
R/W
USB Address A, Endpoint 1 Counter
44
EP A1 Mode Register
0x14
R/W
USB Address A, Endpoint 1 Configuration
44
44
EP A2 Counter Register
0x15
R/W
USB Address A, Endpoint 2 Counter
EP A2 Mode Register
0x16
R/W
USB Address A, Endpoint 2 Configuration
44
USB Status & Control
0x1F
R/W
USB Upstream Port Traffic Status and Control
41
Global Interrupt Enable
0x20
R/W
Global Interrupt Enable
32
Endpoint Interrupt Enable
0x21
R/W
USB Endpoint Interrupt Enables
32
Interrupt Vector
0x23
R
Pending Interrupt Vector Read/Clear
34
Timer (LSB)
0x24
R
Lower 8 Bits of Free-running Timer (1 MHz)
27
Timer (MSB)
0x25
R
Upper 4 Bits of Free-running Timer
27
WDT Clear
0x26
W
Watchdog Timer Clear
21
I2C Control & Status
0x28
R/W
I2C Status and Control
28
I2C Data
0x29
R/W
I2C Data
28
DAC Data
0x30
R/W
DAC Data
26
DAC Interrupt Enable
0x31
W
Interrupt Enable for each DAC Pin
26
DAC Interrupt Polarity
0x32
W
Interrupt Polarity for each DAC Pin
26
0x38-0x3F
W
Input Sink Current Control for each DAC Pin
26
0x40
R/W
USB Device Address B (not used in 5-endpoint mode)
42
DAC Isink
USB Device Address B
EP B0 Counter Register
0x41
R/W
USB Address B, Endpoint 0 Counter
44
EP B0 Mode Register
0x42
R/W
USB Address B, Endpoint 0 Configuration, or
USB Address A, Endpoint 3 in 5-endpoint mode
43
EP B1 Counter Register
0x43
R/W
USB Address B, Endpoint 1 Counter
44
EP B1 Mode Register
0x44
R/W
USB Address B, Endpoint 1 Configuration, or
USB Address A, Endpoint 4 in 5-endpoint mode
44
Hub Port Connect Status
0x48
R/W
Hub Downstream Port Connect Status
38
Hub Port Enable
0x49
R/W
Hub Downstream Ports Enable
38
Hub Port Speed
0x4A
R/W
Hub Downstream Ports Speed
38
Hub Port Control (Ports [4:1])
0x4B
R/W
Hub Downstream Ports Control
39
Hub Port Suspend
0x4D
R/W
Hub Downstream Port Suspend Control
40
Hub Port Resume Status
0x4E
R
Hub Downstream Ports Resume Status
40
Hub Ports SE0 Status
0x4F
R
Hub Downstream Ports SE0 Status
39
Hub Ports Data
0x50
R
Hub Downstream Ports Differential data
40
Hub Downstream Force Low
0x51
R/W
Hub Downstream Ports Force LOW
39
Processor Status & Control
0xFF
R/W
Microprocessor Status and Control Register
31
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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CY7C66113C
4.3
Instruction Set Summary
Refer to the CYASM Assembler User’s Guide for more details.
Table 4-3. Instruction Set Summary
MNEMONIC
operand
HALT
opcode
cycles
MNEMONIC
operand
opcode
cycles
00
7
NOP
20
4
ADD A,expr
data
01
4
INC A
acc
21
4
ADD A,[expr]
direct
02
6
INC X
x
22
4
ADD A,[X+expr]
index
03
7
INC [expr]
direct
23
7
ADC A,expr
data
04
4
INC [X+expr]
index
24
8
ADC A,[expr]
direct
05
6
DEC A
acc
25
4
ADC A,[X+expr]
index
06
7
DEC X
x
26
4
SUB A,expr
data
07
4
DEC [expr]
direct
27
7
SUB A,[expr]
direct
08
6
DEC [X+expr]
index
28
8
SUB A,[X+expr]
index
09
7
IORD expr
address
29
5
SBB A,expr
data
0A
4
IOWR expr
address
2A
5
SBB A,[expr]
direct
0B
6
POP A
2B
4
SBB A,[X+expr]
index
0C
7
POP X
2C
4
OR A,expr
data
0D
4
PUSH A
2D
5
OR A,[expr]
direct
0E
6
PUSH X
2E
5
OR A,[X+expr]
index
0F
7
SWAP A,X
2F
5
AND A,expr
data
10
4
SWAP A,DSP
30
5
AND A,[expr]
direct
11
6
MOV [expr],A
direct
31
5
AND A,[X+expr]
index
12
7
MOV [X+expr],A
index
32
6
XOR A,expr
data
13
4
OR [expr],A
direct
33
7
XOR A,[expr]
direct
14
6
OR [X+expr],A
index
34
8
XOR A,[X+expr]
index
15
7
AND [expr],A
direct
35
7
CMP A,expr
data
16
5
AND [X+expr],A
index
36
8
CMP A,[expr]
direct
17
7
XOR [expr],A
direct
37
7
CMP A,[X+expr]
index
18
8
XOR [X+expr],A
index
38
8
index
MOV A,expr
data
19
4
IOWX [X+expr]
39
6
MOV A,[expr]
direct
1A
5
CPL
3A
4
MOV A,[X+expr]
index
1B
6
ASL
3B
4
MOV X,expr
data
1C
4
ASR
3C
4
MOV X,[expr]
direct
1D
5
RLC
3D
4
RRC
3E
4
reserved
1E
XPAGE
1F
4
RET
3F
8
MOV A,X
40
4
DI
70
4
MOV X,A
41
4
EI
72
4
MOV PSP,A
60
4
RETI
73
8
CALL
addr
50 - 5F
10
JC
addr
C0-CF
5
JMP
addr
80-8F
5
JNC
addr
D0-DF
5
CALL
addr
90-9F
10
JACC
addr
E0-EF
7
JZ
addr
A0-AF
5
INDEX
addr
F0-FF
14
JNZ
addr
B0-BF
5
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
5.0
5.1
Programming Model
14-bit Program Counter (PC)
The 14-bit Program Counter (PC) allows access to up to 8 KB of PROM available with the CY7C66x13C architecture. The top
32 bytes of the ROM in the 8K part are reserved for testing purposes. The program counter is cleared during reset, such that the
first instruction executed after a reset is at address 0x0000h. Typically, this is a jump instruction to a reset handler that initializes
the application (see Section 16.1, Interrupt Vectors, on page 33).
The lower eight bits of the program counter are incremented as instructions are loaded and executed. The upper six bits of the
program counter are incremented by executing an XPAGE instruction. As a result, the last instruction executed within a 256-byte
“page” of sequential code should be an XPAGE instruction. The assembler directive “XPAGEON” causes the assembler to insert
XPAGE instructions automatically. Because instructions can be either one or two bytes long, the assembler may occasionally
need to insert a NOP followed by an XPAGE to execute correctly.
The address of the next instruction to be executed, the carry flag, and the zero flag are saved as two bytes on the program stack
during an interrupt acknowledge or a CALL instruction. The program counter, carry flag, and zero flag are restored from the
program stack during a RETI instruction. Only the program counter is restored during a RET instruction.
The program counter cannot be accessed directly by the firmware. The program stack can be examined by reading SRAM from
location 0x00 and up.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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CY7C66113C
5.1.1
Program Memory Organization
after reset
Address
14-bit PC
0x0000
Program execution begins here after a reset
0x0002
USB Bus Reset interrupt vector
0x0004
128-µs timer interrupt vector
0x0006
1.024-ms timer interrupt vector
0x0008
USB address A endpoint 0 interrupt vector
0x000A
USB address A endpoint 1 interrupt vector
0x000C
USB address A endpoint 2 interrupt vector
0x000E
USB address B endpoint 0 interrupt vector
0x0010
USB address B endpoint 1 interrupt vector
0x0012
Hub interrupt vector
0x0014
DAC interrupt vector
0x0016
GPIO/HAPI interrupt vector
0x0018
I2C interrupt vector
0x001A
Program Memory begins here
0x1FDF
8 KB (-32) PROM ends here.
Figure 5-1. Program Memory Space with Interrupt Vector Table
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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5.2
8-bit Accumulator (A)
The accumulator is the general-purpose register for the microcontroller.
5.3
8-bit Temporary Register (X)
The “X” register is available to the firmware for temporary storage of intermediate results. The microcontroller can perform indexed
operations based on the value in X. Refer to Section 5.6.3 for additional information.
5.4
8-bit Program Stack Pointer (PSP)
During a reset, the Program Stack Pointer (PSP) is set to 0x00 and “grows” upward from this address. The PSP may be set by
firmware, using the MOV PSP,A instruction. The PSP supports interrupt service under hardware control and CALL, RET, and
RETI instructions under firmware control. The PSP is not readable by the firmware.
During an interrupt acknowledge, interrupts are disabled and the 14-bit program counter, carry flag, and zero flag are written as
two bytes of data memory. The first byte is stored in the memory addressed by the PSP, then the PSP is incremented. The second
byte is stored in memory addressed by the PSP, and the PSP is incremented again. The overall effect is to store the program
counter and flags on the program “stack” and increment the PSP by two.
The Return From Interrupt (RETI) instruction decrements the PSP, then restores the second byte from memory addressed by the
PSP. The PSP is decremented again and the first byte is restored from memory addressed by the PSP. After the program counter
and flags have been restored from stack, the interrupts are enabled. The overall effect is to restore the program counter and flags
from the program stack, decrement the PSP by two, and re-enable interrupts.
The Call Subroutine (CALL) instruction stores the program counter and flags on the program stack and increments the PSP by
two.
The Return From Subroutine (RET) instruction restores the program counter but not the flags from the program stack and
decrements the PSP by two.
5.4.1
Data Memory Organization
The CY7C66x13C microcontrollers provide 256 bytes of data RAM. Normally, the SRAM is partitioned into four areas: program
stack, user variables, data stack, and USB endpoint FIFOs. The following is one example of where the program stack, data stack,
and user variables areas could be located.
After reset
8-bit DSP
Address
8-bit PSP
Program Stack Growth
0x00
(Move DSP[1])
8-bit DSP
user selected
Data Stack Growth
User variables
USB FIFO space for up to two Addresses and five endpoints[2]
0xFF
5.5
8-bit Data Stack Pointer (DSP)
The Data Stack Pointer (DSP) supports PUSH and POP instructions that use the data stack for temporary storage. A PUSH
instruction pre-decrements the DSP, then writes data to the memory location addressed by the DSP. A POP instruction reads
data from the memory location addressed by the DSP, then post-increments the DSP.
During a reset, the DSP is reset to 0x00. A PUSH instruction when DSP equals 0x00 writes data at the top of the data RAM
(address 0xFF). This writes data to the memory area reserved for USB endpoint FIFOs. Therefore, the DSP should be indexed
at an appropriate memory location that does not compromise the Program Stack, user-defined memory (variables), or the USB
endpoint FIFOs.
Notes:
1. Refer to Section 5.5 for a description of DSP.
2. Endpoint sizes are fixed by the Endpoint Size Bit (I/O register 0x1F, Bit 7), see Table 19-1.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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CY7C66113C
For USB applications, the firmware should set the DSP to an appropriate location to avoid a memory conflict with RAM dedicated
to USB FIFOs. The memory requirements for the USB endpoints are described in Section 19.2. Example assembly instructions
to do this with two device addresses (FIFOs begin at 0xD8) are shown below:
MOV A,20h; Move 20 hex into Accumulator (must be D8h or less)
SWAP A,DSP; swap accumulator value into DSP register.
5.6
Address Modes
The CY7C66013C and CY7C66113C microcontrollers support three addressing modes for instructions that require data
operands: data, direct, and indexed.
5.6.1
Data (Immediate)
“Data” address mode refers to a data operand that is actually a constant encoded in the instruction. As an example, consider the
instruction that loads A with the constant 0xD8:
• MOV A, 0D8h.
This instruction requires two bytes of code where the first byte identifies the “MOV A” instruction with a data operand as the
second byte. The second byte of the instruction is the constant “0xD8”. A constant may be referred to by name if a prior “EQU”
statement assigns the constant value to the name. For example, the following code is equivalent to the example shown above:
• DSPINIT: EQU 0D8h
• MOV A, DSPINIT.
5.6.2
Direct
“Direct” address mode is used when the data operand is a variable stored in SRAM. In that case, the one byte address of the
variable is encoded in the instruction. As an example, consider an instruction that loads A with the contents of memory address
location 0x10:
• MOV A, [10h].
Normally, variable names are assigned to variable addresses using “EQU” statements to improve the readability of the assembler
source code. As an example, the following code is equivalent to the example shown above:
• buttons: EQU 10h
• MOV A, [buttons].
5.6.3
Indexed
“Indexed” address mode allows the firmware to manipulate arrays of data stored in SRAM. The address of the data operand is
the sum of a constant encoded in the instruction and the contents of the “X” register. Normally, the constant is the “base” address
of an array of data and the X register contains an index that indicates which element of the array is actually addressed:
• array: EQU 10h
• MOV X, 3
• MOV A, [X+array].
This would have the effect of loading A with the fourth element of the SRAM “array” that begins at address 0x10. The fourth
element would be at address 0x13.
6.0
Clocking
XTALOUT
(pin 1)
XTALIN
(pin 2)
To Internal PLL
30 pF
30 pF
Figure 6-1. Clock Oscillator On-Chip Circuit
The XTALIN and XTALOUT are the clock pins to the microcontroller. The user can connect an external oscillator or a crystal to
these pins. When using an external crystal, keep PCB traces between the chip leads and crystal as short as possible (less than
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
2 cm). A 6-MHz fundamental frequency parallel resonant crystal can be connected to these pins to provide a reference frequency
for the internal PLL. The two internal 30-pF load caps appear in series to the external crystal and would be equivalent to a 15-pF
load. Therefore, the crystal must have a required load capacitance of about 15–18 pF. A ceramic resonator does not allow the
microcontroller to meet the timing specifications of full speed USB and therefore a ceramic resonator is not recommended with
these parts.
An external 6-MHz clock can be applied to the XTALIN pin if the XTALOUT pin is left open. Grounding the XTALOUT pin when
driving XTALIN with an oscillator does not work because the internal clock is effectively shorted to ground.
7.0
Reset
The CY7C66x13C supports two resets: POR and a Watchdog Reset (WDR). Each of these resets causes:
• all registers to be restored to their default states
• the USB device addresses to be set to 0
• all interrupts to be disabled
• the PSP and DSP to be set to memory address 0x00.
The occurrence of a reset is recorded in the Processor Status and Control Register, as described in Section 15.0. Bits 4 and 6
are used to record the occurrence of POR and WDR, respectively. Firmware can interrogate these bits to determine the cause
of a reset.
Program execution starts at ROM address 0x0000 after a reset. Although this looks like interrupt vector 0, there is an important
difference. Reset processing does NOT push the program counter, carry flag, and zero flag onto program stack. The firmware
reset handler should configure the hardware before the “main” loop of code. Attempting to execute a RET or RETI in the firmware
reset handler causes unpredictable execution results.
7.1
Power-on Reset
When VCC is first applied to the chip, the POR signal is asserted and the CY7C66x13C enters a “semi-suspend” state. During
the semi-suspend state, which is different from the suspend state defined in the USB specification, the oscillator and all other
blocks of the part are functional, except for the CPU. This semi-suspend time ensures that both a valid VCC level is reached and
that the internal PLL has time to stabilize before full operation begins. When the VCC has risen above approximately 2.5V, and
the oscillator is stable, the POR is deasserted and the on-chip timer starts counting. The first 1 ms of suspend time is not
interruptible, and the semi-suspend state continues for an additional 95 ms unless the count is bypassed by a USB Bus Reset
on the upstream port. The 95 ms provides time for V CC to stabilize at a valid operating voltage before the chip executes code.
If a USB Bus Reset occurs on the upstream port during the 95 ms semi-suspend time, the semi-suspend state is aborted and
program execution begins immediately from address 0x0000. In this case, the Bus Reset interrupt is pending but not serviced
until firmware sets the USB Bus Reset Interrupt Enable bit (bit 0 of register 0x20) and enables interrupts with the EI command.
The POR signal is asserted whenever VCC drops below approximately 2.5V, and remains asserted until VCC rises above this level
again. Behavior is the same as described above.
7.2
Watchdog Reset
The WDR occurs when the internal WDT rolls over. Writing any value to the write-only Watchdog Restart Register at address
0x26 clears the timer. The timer rolls over and WDR occurs if it is not cleared within tWATCH (8 ms minimum) of the last clear. Bit
6 of the Processor Status and Control Register is set to record this event (the register contents are set to 010X0001 by the WDR).
A WDT Reset lasts for 2 ms, after which the microcontroller begins execution at ROM address 0x0000.
tWATCH
Last write to
WDT
Register
2 ms
No write to WDT
register, so WDR
goes HIGH
Execution begins at
Reset Vector 0x0000
Figure 7-1. Watchdog Reset
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CY7C66113C
The USB transmitter is disabled by a WDR because the USB Device Address Registers are cleared (see Section 19.1).
Otherwise, the USB Controller would respond to all address 0 transactions.
It is possible for the WDR bit of the Processor Status and Control Register (0xFF) to be set following a POR event. If a firmware
interrogates the Processor Status and Control Register for a set condition on the WDR bit, the WDR bit should be ignored if the
POR (bit 3 of register 0xFF) bit is set.
8.0
Suspend Mode
The CY7C66x13C can be placed into a low-power state by setting the Suspend bit of the Processor Status and Control register.
All logic blocks in the device are turned off except the GPIO interrupt logic and the USB receiver. The clock oscillator and PLL,
as well as the free-running and WDTs, are shut down. Only the occurrence of an enabled GPIO interrupt or non-idle bus activity
at a USB upstream or downstream port wakes the part from suspend. The Run bit in the Processor Status and Control Register
must be set to resume a part out of suspend.
The clock oscillator restarts immediately after exiting suspend mode. The microcontroller returns to a fully functional state 1 ms
after the oscillator is stable. The microcontroller executes the instruction following the I/O write that placed the device into suspend
mode before servicing any interrupt requests.
The GPIO interrupt allows the controller to wake-up periodically and poll system components while maintaining a very low average
power consumption. To achieve the lowest possible current during suspend mode, all I/O should be held at VCC or Gnd. This also
applies to internal port pins that may not be bonded in a particular package.
Typical code for entering suspend is shown below:
...
...
mov a, 09h
iowr FFh
nop
...
9.0
; All GPIO set to low-power state (no floating pins)
; Enable GPIO interrupts if desired for wake-up
; Set suspend and run bits
; Write to Status and Control Register – Enter suspend, wait for USB activity (or GPIO Interrupt)
; This executes before any ISR
; Remaining code for exiting suspend routine.
General-purpose I/O (GPIO) Ports
VCC
GPIO
CFG
mode
2-bits
OE
Data
Out
Latch
Control
Internal
Data Bus
Q1
Q2
14 kΩ
GPIO
PIN
Port Write
Q3*
Port Read
Data
In
Latch
STRB
(Latch is Transparent
except in HAPI mode)
Data
Interrupt
Latch
Control
Reg_Bit
Interrupt
Enable
Interrupt
Controller
*Port 0,1,2: Low Isink
Port 3: High Isink
Figure 9-1. Block Diagram of a GPIO Pin
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There are up to 31 GPIO pins (P0[7:0], P1[7:0], P2[7:0], and P3[6:0]) for the hardware interface. The number of GPIO pins
changes based on the package type of the chip. Each port can be configured as inputs with internal pull-ups, open drain outputs,
or traditional CMOS outputs. Port 3 offers a higher current drive, with typical current sink capability of 12 mA. The data for each
GPIO port is accessible through the data registers. Port data registers are shown in Figure 9-2 through Figure 9-5, and are set
to 1 on reset.
Port 0 Data
ADDRESS 0x00
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
P0.7
P0.6
P0.5
P0.4
P0.3
P0.2
P0.1
P0.0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
ADDRESS 0x01
0
Figure 9-2. Port 0 Data
Port 1 Data
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
Bit Name
P1.7
P1.6
P1.5
P1.4
P1.3
P1.2
P1.1
P1.0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
ADDRESS 0x02
0
Figure 9-3. Port1 Data
Port 2 Data
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
Bit Name
P2.7
P2.6
P2.5
P2.4
P2.3
P2.2
P2.1
P2.0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Figure 9-4. Port 2 Data
Port 3 Data
Bit #
ADDRESS 0x03
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Bit Name
Reserved
P3.6
CY7C66113C
only
P3.5
CY7C66113C
only
P3.4
P3.3
P3.2
P3.1
P3.0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
-
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Figure 9-5. Port 3 Data
Special care should be taken with any unused GPIO data bits. An unused GPIO data bit, either a pin on the chip or a port bit that
is not bonded on a particular package, must not be left floating when the device enters the suspend state. If a GPIO data bit is
left floating, the leakage current caused by the floating bit may violate the suspend current limitation specified by the USB
specifications. If a ‘1’ is written to the unused data bit and the port is configured with open drain outputs, the unused data bit
remains in an indeterminate state. Therefore, if an unused port bit is programmed in open-drain mode, it must be written with a
‘0.’ Notice that the CY7C66013C always requires that P3[7:5] be written with a ‘0.’ When the CY7C66113C is used the P3[7]
should be written with a ‘0.’
In normal non-HAPI mode, reads from a GPIO port always return the present state of the voltage at the pin, independent of the
settings in the Port Data Registers. If HAPI mode is activated for a port, reads of that port return latched data as controlled by the
HAPI signals (see Section 14.0). During reset, all of the GPIO pins are set to a high impedance input state (‘1’ in open drain
mode). Writing a ‘0’ to a GPIO pin drives the pin LOW. In this state, a ‘0’ is always read on that GPIO pin unless an external source
overdrives the internal pull-down device.
9.1
GPIO Configuration Port
Every GPIO port can be programmed as inputs with internal pull-ups, outputs LOW or HIGH, or Hi-Z (floating, the pin is not driven
internally). In addition, the interrupt polarity for each port can be programmed. The Port Configuration bits (Figure 9-6) and the
Interrupt Enable bit (Figure 9-7 through Figure 9-10) determine the interrupt polarity of the port pins.
GPIO Configuration
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x08
0
Bit Name
Port 3
Config Bit 1
Port 3
Config Bit 0
Port 2
Config Bit 1
Port 2
Config Bit 0
Port 1
Config Bit 1
Port 1
Config Bit 0
Port 0
Config Bit 1
Port 0
Config Bit 0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 9-6. GPIO Configuration Register
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As shown in Table 9-1 below, a positive polarity on an input pin represents a rising edge interrupt (LOW to HIGH), and a negative
polarity on an input pin represents a falling edge interrupt (HIGH to LOW).
The GPIO interrupt is generated when all of the following conditions are met: the Interrupt Enable bit of the associated Port
Interrupt Enable Register is enabled, the GPIO Interrupt Enable bit of the Global Interrupt Enable Register (Figure 16-1) is
enabled, the Interrupt Enable Sense (bit 2, Figure 15-1) is set, and the GPIO pin of the port sees an event matching the interrupt
polarity.
The driving state of each GPIO pin is determined by the value written to the pin’s Data Register (Figure 9-2 through Figure 9-5)
and by its associated Port Configuration bits as shown in the GPIO Configuration Register (Figure 9-6). These ports are
configured on a per-port basis, so all pins in a given port are configured together. The possible port configurations are detailed
in Table 9-1. As shown in this table below, when a GPIO port is configured with CMOS outputs, interrupts from that port are
disabled.
During reset, all of the bits in the GPIO Configuration Register are written with ‘0’ to select Hi-Z mode for all GPIO ports as the
default configuration.
Table 9-1. GPIO Port Output Control Truth Table and Interrupt Polarity
Port Config Bit 1 Port Config Bit 0 Data Register Output Drive Strength Interrupt Enable Bit
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
Interrupt Polarity
0
Output LOW
0
Disabled
1
Resistive
1
– (Falling Edge)
0
Output LOW
0
Disabled
1
Output HIGH
1
Disabled
0
Output LOW
0
Disabled
1
Hi-Z
1
– (Falling Edge)
0
Output LOW
0
Disabled
1
Hi-Z
1
+ (Rising Edge)
Q1, Q2, and Q3 discussed below are the transistors referenced in Figure 9-1. The available GPIO drive strength are:
• Output LOW Mode: The pin’s Data Register is set to ‘0’
Writing ‘0’ to the pin’s Data Register puts the pin in output LOW mode, regardless of the contents of the Port Configuration
Bits[1:0]. In this mode, Q1 and Q2 are OFF. Q3 is ON. The GPIO pin is driven LOW through Q3.
• Output HIGH Mode: The pin’s Data Register is set to 1 and the Port Configuration Bits[1:0] is set to ‘10’
In this mode, Q1 and Q3 are OFF. Q2 is ON. The GPIO is pulled up through Q2. The GPIO pin is capable of sourcing ... of
current.
• Resistive Mode: The pin’s Data Register is set to 1 and the Port Configuration Bits[1:0] is set to ‘11’
Q2 and Q3 are OFF. Q1 is ON. The GPIO pin is pulled up with an internal 14kΩ resistor. In resistive mode, the pin may serve
as an input. Reading the pin’s Data Register returns a logic HIGH if the pin is not driven LOW by an external source.
• Hi-Z Mode: The pin’s Data Register is set to1 and Port Configuration Bits[1:0] is set either ‘00’ or ‘01’
Q1, Q2, and Q3 are all OFF. The GPIO pin is not driven internally. In this mode, the pin may serve as an input. Reading the
Port Data Register returns the actual logic value on the port pins.
9.2
GPIO Interrupt Enable Ports
Each GPIO pin can be individually enabled or disabled as an interrupt source. The Port 0–3 Interrupt Enable registers provide
this feature with an interrupt enable bit for each GPIO pin. When HAPI mode (Section 14.0) is enabled the GPIO interrupts are
blocked, including ports not used by HAPI, so GPIO pins cannot be used as interrupt sources.
During a reset, GPIO interrupts are disabled by clearing all of the GPIO interrupt enable ports. Writing a ‘1’ to a GPIO Interrupt
Enable bit enables GPIO interrupts from the corresponding input pin. All GPIO pins share a common interrupt, as discussed in
Section 16.8.
Port 0 Interrupt Enable
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x04
0
P0.6 Intr
Enable
P0.5 Intr
Enable
P0.4 Intr
Enable
P0.3 Intr
Enable
P0.2 Intr
Enable
P0.1 Intr
Enable
P0.0 Intr
Enable
Bit Name
P0.7 Intr
Enable
Read/Write
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 9-7. Port 0 Interrupt Enable
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Port 1 Interrupt Enable
ADDRESS 0x05
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
P1.7 Intr
Enable
P1.6 Intr
Enable
P1.5 Intr
Enable
P1.4 Intr
Enable
P1.3 Intr
Enable
P1.2 Intr
Enable
P1.1 Intr
Enable
P1.0 Intr
Enable
Read/Write
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 9-8. Port 1 Interrupt Enable
Port 2 Interrupt Enable
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x06
0
P2.6 Intr
Enable
P2.5 Intr
Enable
P2.4 Intr
Enable
P2.3 Intr
Enable
P2.2 Intr
Enable
P2.1 Intr
Enable
P2.0 Intr
Enable
Bit Name
P2.7 Intr
Enable
Read/Write
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 9-9. Port 2 Interrupt Enable
Port 3 Interrupt Enable
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x07
0
Bit Name
Reserved
P3.6 Intr Enable
CY7C66113C
only
P3.5 Intr Enable
CY7C66113C
only
P3.4 Intr
Enable
P3.3 Intr
Enable
P3.2 Intr
Enable
P3.1 Intr
Enable
P3.0 Intr
Enable
Read/Write
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 9-10. Port 3 Interrupt Enable
10.0
DAC Port
The CY7C66113CC features a programmable sink current 8 bit port which is also known as DAC port. Each of these port I/O pins
have a programmable current sink. Writing a ‘1’ to a DAC I/O pin disables the output current sink (Isink DAC) and drives the I/O
pin HIGH through an integrated 14-kΩ resistor. When a ‘0’ is written to a DAC I/O pin, the Isink DAC is enabled and the pull-up
resistor is disabled. This causes the Isink DAC to sink current to drive the output LOW. Figure 10-1 shows a block diagram of the
DAC port pin.
VCC
Data
Out
Latch
Internal
Data Bus
Q1
Suspend
(Bit 3 of Register 0xFF)
14 kΩ
DAC
I/O Pin
DAC Write
Isink
Register
Internal
Buffer
4 bits
Isink
DAC
Interrupt
Enable
Interrupt
Polarity
Interrupt Logic
DAC Read
to Interrupt
Controller
Figure 10-1. Block Diagram of a DAC Pin
The amount of sink current for the DAC I/O pin is programmable over 16 values based on the contents of the DAC Isink Register
(Figure 10-3) for that output pin. DAC[1:0] are high current outputs that are programmable from 3.2 mA to 16 mA (typical).
DAC[7:2] are low current outputs, programmable from 0.2 mA to 1.0 mA (typical).
When the suspend bit in Processor Status and Control Register (Figure 15-1) is set, the Isink DAC block of the DAC circuitry is
disabled. Special care should be taken when the CY7C66113C device is placed in the suspend. The DAC Port Data
Register(Figure 10-2) should normally be loaded with all ‘1’s (Figure 15-1) before setting the suspend bit. If any of the DAC bits
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are set to ‘0’ when the device is suspended, that DAC input will float. The floating pin could result in excessive current consumption
by the device, unless an external load places the pin in a deterministic state.
DAC Port Data
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
ADDRESS 0x30
0
1
Bit Name
DAC[7]
DAC[6]
DAC[5]
DAC[4]
DAC[3]
DAC[2]
DAC[1]
DAC[0]
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
Figure 10-2. DAC Port Data
Bit [1..0]: High Current Output 3.2 mA to 16 mA typical
1= I/O pin is an output pulled HGH through the 14-kΩ resistor. 0 = I/O pin is an input with an internal 14-kΩ pull-up resistor.
Bit [7..2]: Low Current Output 0.2 mA to 1 mA typical
1= I/O pin is an output pulled HGH through the 14-kΩ resistor. 0 = I/O pin is an input with an internal 14-kΩ pull-up resistor.
10.1
DAC Isink Registers
Each DAC I/O pin has an associated DAC Isink register to program the output sink current when the output is driven LOW. The
first Isink register (0x38) controls the current for DAC[0], the second (0x39) for DAC[1], and so on until the Isink register at 0x3F,
controls the current to DAC[7].
DAC Sink Register
Bit #
7
6
5
4
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Read/Write
Reset
-
-
-
-
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x38 –0x3F
0
Isink[3]
Isink[2]
Isink[1]
W
W
W
Isink[0]
W
0
0
0
0
Figure 10-3. DAC Sink Register
Bit [3..0]: Isink [x] (x= 0..3)
Writing all ‘0’s to the Isink register causes 1/5 of the max current to flow through the DAC I/O pin. Writing all ‘1’s to the Isink
register provides the maximum current flow through the pin. The other 14 states of the DAC sink current are evenly spaced
between these two values.
Bit [7..4]: Reserved
10.2
DAC Port Interrupts
A DAC port interrupt can be enabled/disabled for each pin individually. The DAC Port Interrupt Enable register provides this
feature with an interrupt enable bit for each DAC I/O pin. All of the DAC Port Interrupt Enable register bits are cleared to ‘0’ during
a reset. All DAC pins share a common interrupt, as explained in Section 16.7.
DAC Port Interrupt
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x31
0
Bit Name
Enable Bit 7
Enable Bit 6
Enable Bit 5
Enable Bit 4
Enable Bit 3
Enable Bit 2
Enable Bit 1
Enable Bit 0
Read/Write
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 10-4. DAC Port Interrupt Enable
Bit [7..0]: Enable bit x (x= 0..7)
1 = Enables interrupts from the corresponding bit position; 0= Disables interrupts from the corresponding bit position
As an additional benefit, the interrupt polarity for each DAC pin is programmable with the DAC Port Interrupt Polarity register.
Writing a ‘0’ to a bit selects negative polarity (falling edge) that causes an interrupt (if enabled) if a falling edge transition occurs
on the corresponding input pin. Writing a ‘1’ to a bit in this register selects positive polarity (rising edge) that causes an interrupt
(if enabled) if a rising edge transition occurs on the corresponding input pin. All of the DAC Port Interrupt Polarity register bits are
cleared during a reset.
DAC IO Interrupt Polarity
Bit #
7
6
Bit Name
Polarity Bit 7
Polarity Bit 6
Polarity Bit 5
Polarity Bit 4
Polarity Bit 3
Polarity Bit 2
Polarity Bit 1
Polarity Bit 0
Read/Write
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x32
0
Figure 10-5. DAC Port Interrupt Polarity
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Bit [7..0]: Polarity bit x (x= 0..7)
1= Selects positive polarity (rising edge) that causes an interrupt (if enabled);
0 = Selects negative polarity (falling edge) that causes an interrupt (if enabled).
11.0
12-bit Free-running Timer
The 12-bit timer operates with a 1-µs tick, provides two interrupts (128 µs and 1.024 ms) and allows the firmware to directly time
events that are up to 4 ms in duration. The lower eight bits of the timer can be read directly by the firmware. Reading the lower
8 bits latches the upper four bits into a temporary register. When the firmware reads the upper four bits of the timer, it is actually
reading the count stored in the temporary register. The effect of this is to ensure a stable 12-bit timer value can be read, even
when the two reads are separated in time.
Timer LSB
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x24
0
Bit Name
Timer Bit 7
Timer Bit 6
Timer Bit 5
Timer Bit 4
Timer Bit 3
Timer Bit 2
Timer Bit 1
Timer Bit 0
Read/Write
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 11-1. Timer LSB Register
Bit [7:0]: Timer lower eight bits
Timer MSB
ADDRESS 0x25
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Timer Bit 11
Timer Bit 10
Timer Bit 9
Timer Bit 8
Read/Write
-
-
-
-
R
R
R
R
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 11-2. Timer MSB Register
Bit [3:0]: Timer higher nibble
Bit [7:4]: Reserved
1.024-ms interrupt
128-µs interrupt
11 10 9
L
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1-MHz clock
L2 L1 L0
D3 D2 D1 D0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
To Timer Registers
8
Figure 11-3. Timer Block Diagram
12.0
I2C and HAPI Configuration Register
Internal hardware supports communication with external devices through two interfaces: a two-wire I2C-compatible, and a HAPI
for 1, 2, or 3 byte transfers. The I2C-compatible and HAPI functions, discussed in detail in Sections 13.0 and 14.0, share a
common configuration register (see Figure 12-1)[3]. All bits of this register are cleared on reset.
I2C Configuration
ADDRESS 0x09
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
I2C Position
Reserved
LEMPTY
Polarity
DRDY
Polarity
Latch
Empty
Data
Ready
HAPI Port
Width Bit 1
HAPI Port
Width Bit 0
Read/Write
R/W
-
R/W
R/W
R
R
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 12-1. HAPI/I2C Configuration Register
Note:
3.
I2C-compatible function must be separately enabled, as described in Section 13.0.
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Bits [7,1:0] of the HAPI/I2C Configuration Register control the pin out configuration of the HAPI and I2C-compatible interfaces.
Bits [5:2] are used in HAPI mode only, and are described in Section 14.0. Table 12-1 shows the HAPI port configurations, and
Table 12-2 shows I2C pin location configuration options. These I2C-compatible options exist due to pin limitations in certain
packages, and to allow simultaneous HAPI and I2C-compatible operation.
HAPI operation is enabled whenever either HAPI Port Width Bit (Bit 1 or 0) is non-zero. This affects GPIO operation as described
in Section 14.0. The I2C-compatible interface must be separately enabled as described in Section13.0.
Table 12-1. HAPI Port Configuration
Port Width (Bit 0 and 1, Figure 12-1)
HAPI Port Width
11
24 Bits: P3[7:0], P1[7:0], P0[7:0]
10
16 Bits: P1[7:0], P0[7:0]
01
8 Bits: P0[7:0]
00
No HAPI Interface
Table 12-2. I2C Port Configuration
I2C Position (Bit 7, Figure 12-1)
I2C Port Width (Bit 1, Figure 12-1)
Don’t Care
1
I2C on P2[1:0], 0:SCL, 1:SDA
0
0
I2C on P1[1:0], 0:SCL, 1:SDA
1
0
I2C on P2[1:0], 0:SCL, 1:SDA
13.0
I2C Position
I2C-compatible Controller
The I2C-compatible block provides a versatile two-wire communication with external devices, supporting master, slave, and
multi-master modes of operation. The I2C-compatible block functions by handling the low-level signaling in hardware, and issuing
interrupts as needed to allow firmware to take appropriate action during transactions. While waiting for firmware response, the
hardware keeps the I2C-compatible bus idle if necessary.
The I2C-compatible interface generates an interrupt to the microcontroller at the end of each received or transmitted byte, when
a stop bit is detected by the slave when in receive mode, or when arbitration is lost. Details of the interrupt responses are given
in Section 16.9.
The I2C-compatible interface consists of two registers, an I2C Data Register (Figure 13-1) and an I2C Status and Control Register
(Figure 13-2). The Data Register is implemented as separate read and write registers. Generally, the I2C Status and Control
Register should only be monitored after the I2C interrupt, as all bits are valid at that time. Polling this register at other times could
read misleading bit status if a transaction is underway.
The I2C SCL clock is connected to bit 0 of GPIO port 1 or GPIO port 2, and the I2C SDA data is connected to bit 1 of GPIO port
1 or GPIO port 2. Refer to Section 12.0 for the bit definitions and functionality of the HAPI/I2C Configuration Register, which is
used to set the locations of the configurable I2C pins. Once the I2C-compatible functionality is enabled by setting bit 0 of the I2C
Status & Control Register, the two LSB ([1:0]) of the corresponding GPIO port is placed in Open Drain mode, regardless of the
settings of the GPIO Configuration Register. The electrical characteristics of the I2C-compatible interface is the same as that of
GPIO ports 1 and 2. Note that the IOL (max) is 2 mA @ V OL = 2.0V for ports 1 and 2.
All control of the I2C clock and data lines is performed by the I2C-compatible block.
I2C Data
Bit #
ADDRESS 0x29
0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Bit Name
I2C Data 7
I2C Data 6
I2C Data 5
I2C Data 4
I2C Data 3
I2C Data 2
I2C Data 1
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
I2C Data 0
Figure 13-1. I2C Data Register
Bits [7..0]: I2C Data
Contains 8-bit data on the I2C Bus.
I2C Status and Control
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x28
0
Bit Name
MSTR Mode
Continue/Busy Xmit Mode
ACK
Addr
ARB
Lost/Restart
Received Stop
I2C Enable
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 13-2. I2C Status and Control Register
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The I2C Status and Control register bits are defined in Table 13-1, with a more detailed description following.
Table 13-1. I2C Status and Control Register Bit Definitions
Bit
Name
Description
0
I2C Enable
When set to ‘1’, the I2C-compatible function is enabled. When cleared, I2C GPIO pins operate
normally.
1
Received Stop
Reads 1 only in slave receive mode, when I2C Stop bit detected (unless firmware did not ACK the
last transaction).
2
ARB Lost/Restart Reads 1 to indicate master has lost arbitration. Reads 0 otherwise.
Write to 1 in master mode to perform a restart sequence (also set Continue bit).
3
Addr
Reads 1 during first byte after start/restart in slave mode, or if master loses arbitration.
Reads 0 otherwise. This bit should always be written as 0.
4
ACK
In receive mode, write 1 to generate ACK, 0 for no ACK.
In transmit mode, reads 1 if ACK was received, 0 if no ACK received.
5
Xmit Mode
Write to 1 for transmit mode, 0 for receive mode.
6
Continue/Busy
Write 1 to indicate ready for next transaction.
Reads 1 when I2C-compatible block is busy with a transaction, 0 when transaction is complete.
7
MSTR Mode
Write to 1 for master mode, 0 for slave mode. This bit is cleared if master loses arbitration.
Clearing from 1 to 0 generates Stop bit.
Bit 7: MSTR Mode
Setting this bit to 1 causes the I2C-compatible block to initiate a master mode transaction by sending a start bit and
transmitting the first data byte from the data register (this typically holds the target address and R/W bit). Subsequent bytes
are initiated by setting the Continue bit, as described below.
Clearing this bit (set to 0) causes the GPIO pins to operate normally
In master mode, the I2C-compatible block generates the clock (SCK), and drives the data line as required depending on
transmit or receive state. The I2C-compatible block performs any required arbitration and clock synchronization. IN the
event of a loss of arbitration, this MSTR bit is cleared, the ARB Lost bit is set, and an interrupt is generated by the
microcontroller. If the chip is the target of an external master that wins arbitration, then the interrupt is held off until the
transaction from the external master is completed.
When MSTR Mode is cleared from 1 to 0 by a firmware write, an I2C Stop bit is generated.
Bit 6: Continue/Busy
This bit is written by the firmware to indicate that the firmware is ready for the next byte transaction to begin. In other words,
the bit has responded to an interrupt request and has completed the required update or read of the data register. During a
read this bit indicates if the hardware is busy and is locking out additional writes to the I2C Status and Control register. This
locking allows the hardware to complete certain operations that may require an extended period of time. Following an I2C
interrupt, the I2C-compatible block does not return to the Busy state until firmware sets the Continue bit. This allows the
firmware to make one control register write without the need to check the Busy bit.
Bit 5: Xmit Mode
This bit is set by firmware to enter transmit mode and perform a data transmit in master or slave mode. Clearing this bit
sets the part in receive mode. Firmware generally determines the value of this bit from the R/W bit associated with the I2C
address packet. The Xmit Mode bit state is ignored when initially writing the MSTR Mode or the Restart bits, as these cases
always cause transmit mode for the first byte.
Bit 4: ACK
This bit is set or cleared by firmware during receive operation to indicate if the hardware should generate an ACK signal
on the I2C-compatible bus. Writing a 1 to this bit generates an ACK (SDA LOW) on the I2C-compatible bus at the ACK bit
time. During transmits (Xmit Mode = 1), this bit should be cleared.
Bit 3: Addr
This bit is set by the I2C-compatible block during the first byte of a slave receive transaction, after an I2C start or restart.
The Addr bit is cleared when the firmware sets the Continue bit. This bit allows the firmware to recognize when the master
has lost arbitration, and in slave mode it allows the firmware to recognize that a start or restart has occurred.
Bit 2: ARB Lost/Restart
This bit is valid as a status bit (ARB Lost) after master mode transactions. In master mode, set this bit (along with the
Continue and MSTR Mode bits) to perform an I2C restart sequence. The I2C target address for the restart must be written
to the data register before setting the Continue bit. To prevent false ARB Lost signals, the Restart bit is cleared by hardware
during the restart sequence.
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Bit 1: Receive Stop
This bit is set when the slave is in receive mode and detects a stop bit on the bus. The Receive Stop bit is not set if the
firmware terminates the I2C transaction by not acknowledging the previous byte transmitted on the I2C-compatible bus,
e.g. in receive mode if firmware sets the Continue bit and clears the ACK bit.
Bit 0: I2C Enable
Set this bit to override GPIO definition with I2C-compatible function on the two I2C-compatible pins. When this bit is cleared,
these pins are free to function as GPIOs. In I2C-compatible mode, the two pins operate in open drain mode, independent
of the GPIO configuration setting.
14.0
Hardware Assisted Parallel Interface (HAPI)
The CY7C66x13C processor provides a hardware assisted parallel interface for bus widths of 8, 16, or 24 bits, to accommodate
data transfer with an external microcontroller or similar device. Control bits for selecting the byte width are in the HAPI/I2C
Configuration Register (Figure 12-1), bits 1 and 0.
Signals are provided on Port 2 to control the HAPI interface. Table 14-1 describes these signals and the HAPI control bits in the
HAPI/I2C Configuration Register. Enabling HAPI causes the GPIO setting in the GPIO Configuration Register (Figure 9-6) to be
overridden. The Port 2 output pins are in CMOS output mode and Port 2 input pins are in input mode (open drain mode with Q3
OFF in Figure 9-1).
Table 14-1. Port 2 Pin and HAPI Configuration Bit Definitions
Pin
Name
Direction
Description (Port 2 Pin)
P2[2]
LatEmptyPin
Out
Ready for more input data from external interface.
P2[3]
DReadyPin
Out
Output data ready for external interface.
P2[4]
STB
In
Strobe signal for latching incoming data.
P2[5]
OE
In
Output Enable, causes chip to output data.
P2[6]
CS
In
Chip Select (Gates STB and OE).
Bit
Name
R/W
Description (HAPI/I2C Configuration Register)
2
Data Ready
R
Asserted after firmware writes data to Port 0, until OE driven LOW.
3
Latch Empty
R
Asserted after firmware reads data from Port 0, until STB driven LOW.
4
DRDY Polarity
R/W
Determines polarity of Data Ready bit and DReadyPin:
If 0, Data Ready is active LOW, DReadyPin is active HIGH.
If 1, Data Ready is active HIGH, DReadyPin is active LOW.
5
LEMPTY Polarity
R/W
Determines polarity of Latch Empty bit and LatEmptyPin:
If 0, Latch Empty is active LOW, LatEmptyPin is active HIGH.
If 1, Latch Empty is active HIGH, LatEmptyPin is active LOW.
HAPI Read by External Device from CY7C66x13C:
In this case (see Figure 25-3), firmware writes data to the GPIO ports. If 16-bit or 24-bit transfers are being made, Port 0 should
be written last, since writes to Port 0 asserts the Data Ready bit and the DReadyPin to signal the external device that data is
available.
The external device then drives the OE and CS pins active (LOW), which causes the HAPI data to be output on the port pins.
When OE is returned HIGH (inactive), the HAPI/GPIO interrupt is generated. At that point, firmware can reload the HAPI latches
for the next output, again writing Port 0 last.
The Data Ready bit reads the opposite state from the external DReadyPin on pin P2[3]. If the DRDY Polarity bit is 0, DReadyPin
is active HIGH, and the Data Ready bit is active LOW.
HAPI Write by External Device to CY7C66x13C:
In this case (see Figure 25-4), the external device drives the STB and CS pins active (LOW) when it drives new data onto the
port pins. When this happens, the internal latches become full, which causes the Latch Empty bit to be deasserted. When STB
is returned HIGH (inactive), the HAPI/GPIO interrupt is generated. Firmware then reads the parallel ports to empty the HAPI
latches. If 16-bit or 24-bit transfers are being made, Port 0 should be read last because reads from Port 0 assert the Latch Empty
bit and the LatEmptyPin to signal the external device for more data.
The Latch Empty bit reads the opposite state from the external LatEmptyPin on pin P2[2]. If the LEMPTY Polarity bit is 0,
LatEmptyPin is active HIGH, and the Latch Empty bit is active LOW.
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15.0
Processor Status and Control Register
Processor Status and Control
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0xFF
0
Bit Name
IRQ
Pending
Watchdog
Reset
USB Bus Reset
Interrupt
Power-On
Reset
Suspend
Interrupt
Enable Sense
Reserved
Run
Read/Write
R
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
Figure 15-1. Processor Status and Control Register
Bit 0: Run
This bit is manipulated by the HALT instruction. When Halt is executed, all the bits of the Processor Status and Control
Register are cleared to 0. Since the run bit is cleared, the processor stops at the end of the current instruction. The processor
remains halted until an appropriate reset occurs (power-on or Watchdog). This bit should normally be written as a ‘1.’
Bit 1: Reserved
Bit 1 is reserved and must be written as a zero.
Bit 2: Interrupt Enable Sense
This bit indicates whether interrupts are enabled or disabled. Firmware has no direct control over this bit as writing a zero
or one to this bit position has no effect on interrupts. A ‘0’ indicates that interrupts are masked off and a ‘1’ indicates that
the interrupts are enabled. This bit is further gated with the bit settings of the Global Interrupt Enable Register (Figure 16-1)
and USB End Point Interrupt Enable Register (Figure 16-2). Instructions DI, EI, and RETI manipulate the state of this bit.
Bit 3: Suspend
Writing a ‘1’ to the Suspend bit halts the processor and cause the microcontroller to enter the suspend mode that significantly reduces power consumption. A pending, enabled interrupt or USB bus activity causes the device to come out of
suspend. After coming out of suspend, the device resumes firmware execution at the instruction following the IOWR which
put the part into suspend. An IOWR attempting to put the part into suspend is ignored if USB bus activity is present. See
Section 8.0 for more details on suspend mode operation.
Bit 4: Power-on Reset
The Power-on Reset is set to ‘1’ during a power-on reset. The firmware can check bits 4 and 6 in the reset handler to
determine whether a reset was caused by a power-on condition or a Watchdog timeout. A POR event may be followed by
a WDR before firmware begins executing, as explained below.
Bit 5: USB Bus Reset Interrupt
The USB Bus Reset Interrupt bit is set when the USB Bus Reset is detected on receiving a USB Bus Reset signal on the
upstream port. The USB Bus Reset signal is a single-ended zero (SE0) that lasts from 12 to 16 µs. An SE0 is defined as
the condition in which both the D+ line and the D– line are LOW at the same time.
Bit 6: WDR
The WDR is set during a reset initiated by the WDT. This indicates the WDT went for more than tWATCH (8 ms minimum)
between Watchdog clears. This can occur with a POR event, as noted below.
Bit 7: IRQ Pending
The IRQ pending, when set, indicates that one or more of the interrupts has been recognized as active. An interrupt remains
pending until its interrupt enable bit is set (Figure 16-1, Figure 16-2) and interrupts are globally enabled. At that point, the
internal interrupt handling sequence clears this bit until another interrupt is detected as pending.
During power-up, the Processor Status and Control Register is set to 00010001, which indicates a POR (bit 4 set) has occurred
and no interrupts are pending (bit 7 clear). During the 96 ms suspend at start-up (explained in Section 7.1), a WDR also occurs
unless this suspend is aborted by an upstream SE0 before 8 ms. If a WDR occurs during the power-up suspend interval, firmware
reads 01010001 from the Status and Control Register after power-up. Normally, the POR bit should be cleared so a subsequent
WDR can be clearly identified. If an upstream bus reset is received before firmware examines this register, the Bus Reset bit may
also be set.
During a WDR, the Processor Status and Control Register is set to 01XX0001, which indicates a WDR (bit 6 set) has occurred
and no interrupts are pending (bit 7 clear). The WDR does not effect the state of the POR and the Bus Reset Interrupt bits.
16.0
Interrupts
Interrupts are generated by the GPIO/DAC pins, the internal timers, I2C-compatible or HAPI operation, the internal USB hub, or
on various USB traffic conditions. All interrupts are maskable by the Global Interrupt Enable Register and the USB End Point
Interrupt Enable Register. Writing a ‘1’ to a bit position enables the interrupt associated with that bit position.
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Global Interrupt Enable Register
Bit #
Bit Name
ADDRESS 0X20
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
I2C
GPIO Interrupt
Enable
DAC Interrupt
Enable
USB Hub
Interrupt
Enable
1.024-ms
Interrupt
Enable
128-µs
Interrupt
Enable
USB Bus RST
Interrupt
Enable
Interrupt
Enable
Read/Write
-
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
-
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 16-1. Global Interrupt Enable Register
Bit 0: USB Bus RST Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on a USB Bus Reset; 0 = Disable interrupt on a USB Bus Reset (refer to section 16.3).
Bit 1: 128-µs Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Timer interrupt every 128 µs; 0 = Disable Timer Interrupt for every 128 µs.
Bit 2: 1.024-ms Interrupt Enable
1= Enable Timer interrupt every 1.024 ms; 0 = Disable Timer Interrupt every 1.024 ms.
Bit 3: USB Hub Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on a Hub status change; 0 = Disable interrupt due to hub status change. (Refer to section 16.6.)
Bit 4: DAC Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable DAC Interrupt; 0 = Disable DAC interrupt.
Bit 5: GPIO Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on falling/rising edge on any GPIO; 0 = Disable Interrupt on falling/rising edge on any GPIO. (Refer to
sections 16.8, 9.1, and 9.2.)
Bit 6: I2C Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on I2C related activity; 0 = Disable I2C related activity interrupt. (Refer to section 16.9.)
Bit 7: Reserved.
USB Endpoint Interrupt Enable
ADDRESS 0X21
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
EPB1 Interrupt
Enable
EPB0 Interrupt
Enable
EPA2 Interrupt
Enable
EPA1 Interrupt
Enable
EPA0 Interrupt
Enable
Read/Write
-
-
-
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
-
-
-
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 16-2. USB Endpoint Interrupt Enable Register
Bit 0: EPA0 Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint A0; 0 = Disable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint A0.
Bit 1: EPA1 Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint A1; 0 = Disable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint A1.
Bit 2: EPA2 Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint A2; 0 = Disable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint A2.
Bit 3: EPB0 Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint B0; 0 = Disable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint B0.
Bit 4: EPB1 Interrupt Enable
1 = Enable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint B1; 0 = Disable Interrupt on data activity through endpoint B1.
Bit [7..5]: Reserved
During a reset, the contents the Global Interrupt Enable Register and USB End Point Interrupt Enable Register are cleared,
effectively, disabling all interrupts.
The interrupt controller contains a separate flip-flop for each interrupt. See Figure 16-3 for the logic block diagram of the interrupt
controller. When an interrupt is generated, it is first registered as a pending interrupt. It stays pending until it is serviced or a reset
occurs. A pending interrupt only generates an interrupt request if it is enabled by the corresponding bit in the interrupt enable
registers. The highest priority interrupt request is serviced following the completion of the currently executing instruction.
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When servicing an interrupt, the hardware does the following:
1. Disables all interrupts by clearing the Global Interrupt Enable bit in the CPU (the state of this bit can be read at Bit 2 of the
Processor Status and Control Register, Figure 15-1).
2. Clears the flip-flop of the current interrupt.
3. Generates an automatic CALL instruction to the ROM address associated with the interrupt being serviced (i.e., the Interrupt
Vector, see Section 16.1).
The instruction in the interrupt table is typically a JMP instruction to the address of the Interrupt Service Routine (ISR). The user
can re-enable interrupts in the interrupt service routine by executing an EI instruction. Interrupts can be nested to a level limited
only by the available stack space.
The Program Counter value as well as the Carry and Zero flags (CF, ZF) are stored onto the Program Stack by the automatic
CALL instruction generated as part of the interrupt acknowledge process. The user firmware is responsible for ensuring that the
processor state is preserved and restored during an interrupt. The PUSH A instruction should typically be used as the first
command in the ISR to save the accumulator value and the POP A instruction should be used to restore the accumulator value
just before the RETI instruction. The program counter CF and ZF are restored and interrupts are enabled when the RETI
instruction is executed.
The DI and EI instructions can be used to disable and enable interrupts, respectively. These instructions affect only the Global
Interrupt Enable bit of the CPU. If desired, EI can be used to re-enable interrupts while inside an ISR, instead of waiting for the
RETI that exists the ISR. While the global interrupt enable bit is cleared, the presence of a pending interrupt can be detected by
examining the IRQ Sense bit (Bit 7 in the Processor Status and Control Register).
16.1
Interrupt Vectors
The Interrupt Vectors supported by the USB Controller are listed in Table 16-1. The lowest-numbered interrupt (USB Bus Reset
interrupt) has the highest priority, and the highest-numbered interrupt (I2C interrupt) has the lowest priority.
CLR
1
D
USB Reset Int
Q
CLK
Enable [0]
(Reg 0x20)
CLR
1
Q
D
AddrA ENP2 Int
Enable [2]
(Reg 0x21)
CLK
USB Reset Clear Interrupt
Vector
USB Reset IRQ
128-µs CLR
128-µs IRQ
1-ms CLR
1-ms IRQ
IRQout
AddrA EP0 CLR
AddrA EP0 IRQ
AddrA EP1 CLR
AddrA EP1 IRQ
AddrA EP2 CLR
AddrA EP2 IRQ
AddrB EP0 CLR
AddrB EP0 IRQ
AddrB EP1 CLR
AddrB EP1 IRQ
Hub CLR
Hub IRQ
DAC CLR
DAC IRQ
To CPU
CPU
IRQ Sense
IRQ
Global
Interrupt
Enable
Bit
CLR
Int Enable
Sense
Controlled by DI, EI, and
RETI Instructions
Interrupt
Acknowledge
GPIO/HAPI CLR
GPIO/HAPI IRQ
I2C CLR
CLR
1
I2C Int
D
Q
Enable [6]
(Reg 0x20)
I2C IRQ
Interrupt Priority Encoder
CLK
Figure 16-3. Interrupt Controller Function Diagram
Although Reset is not an interrupt, the first instruction executed after a reset is at PROM address 0x0000h—which corresponds
to the first entry in the Interrupt Vector Table. Because the JMP instruction is two bytes long, the interrupt vectors occupy two bytes.
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Table 16-1. Interrupt Vector Assignments
Interrupt Vector Number
ROM Address
Function
Not Applicable
0x0000
Execution after Reset begins here
1
0x0002
USB Bus Reset interrupt
2
0x0004
128-µs timer interrupt
3
0x0006
1.024-ms timer interrupt
4
0x0008
USB Address A Endpoint 0 interrupt
5
0x000A
USB Address A Endpoint 1 interrupt
6
0x000C
USB Address A Endpoint 2 interrupt
7
0x000E
USB Address B Endpoint 0 interrupt
8
0x0010
USB Address B Endpoint 1 interrupt
9
0x0012
USB Hub interrupt
10
0x0014
DAC interrupt
11
0x0016
GPIO/HAPI interrupt
12
0x0018
I2C interrupt
16.2
Interrupt Latency
Interrupt latency can be calculated from the following equation:
Interrupt latency =
(Number of clock cycles remaining in the current instruction) + (10 clock cycles for the CALL instruction) +
(5 clock cycles for the JMP instruction).
For example, if a five-clock cycle instruction such as JC is being executed when an interrupt occurs, the first instruction of the
Interrupt Service Routine executes a minimum of 16 clocks (1+10+5) or a maximum of 20 clocks (5+10+5) after the interrupt is
issued. For a 12-MHz internal clock (6-MHz crystal), 20 clock periods is 20/12 MHz = 1.667 µs.
16.3
USB Bus Reset Interrupt
The USB Controller recognizes a USB Reset when a Single Ended Zero (SE0) condition persists on the upstream USB port for
12–16 µs. SE0 is defined as the condition in which both the D+ line and the D– line are LOW. A USB Bus Reset may be recognized
for an SE0 as short as 12 µs, but is always recognized for an SE0 longer than 16 µs. When a USB Bus Reset is detected, bit 5
of the Processor Status and Control Register (Figure 15-1) is set to record this event. In addition, the controller clears the following
registers:
SIE Section:
Hub Section:
USB Device Address Registers (0x10, 0x40)
Hub Ports Connect Status (0x48)
Hub Ports Enable (0x49)
Hub Ports Speed (0x4A)
Hub Ports Suspend (0x4D)
Hub Ports Resume Status (0x4E)
Hub Ports SE0 Status (0x4F)
Hub Ports Data (0x50)
Hub Downstream Force (0x51).
A USB Bus Reset Interrupt is generated at the end of the USB Bus Reset condition when the SE0 state is deasserted. If the USB
reset occurs during the start-up delay following a POR, the delay is aborted as described in Section 7.1.
16.4
Timer Interrupt
There are two periodic timer interrupts: the 128-µs interrupt and the 1.024-ms interrupt. The user should disable both timer
interrupts before going into the suspend mode to avoid possible conflicts between servicing the timer interrupts first or the suspend
request first.
16.5
USB Endpoint Interrupts
There are five USB endpoint interrupts, one per endpoint. A USB endpoint interrupt is generated after the USB host writes to a
USB endpoint FIFO or after the USB controller sends a packet to the USB host. The interrupt is generated on the last packet of
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the transaction (e.g., on the host’s ACK during an IN, or on the device ACK during on OUT). If no ACK is received during an IN
transaction, no interrupt is generated.
16.6
USB Hub Interrupt
A USB hub interrupt is generated by the hardware after a connect/disconnect change, babble, or a resume event is detected by
the USB repeater hardware. The babble and resume events are additionally gated by the corresponding bits of the Hub Port
Enable Register (Figure 18-3). The connect/disconnect event on a port does not generate an interrupt if the SIE does not drive
the port (i.e., the port is being forced).
16.7
DAC Interrupt
Each DAC I/O pin can generate an interrupt, if enabled. The interrupt polarity for each DAC I/O pin is programmable. A positive
polarity is a rising edge input while a negative polarity is a falling edge input. All of the DAC pins share a single interrupt vector,
which means the firmware needs to read the DAC port to determine which pin or pins caused an interrupt.
If one DAC pin has triggered an interrupt, no other DAC pins can cause a DAC interrupt until that pin has returned to its inactive
(non-trigger) state or the corresponding interrupt enable bit is cleared. The USB Controller does not assign interrupt priority to
different DAC pins and the DAC Interrupt Enable Register is not cleared during the interrupt acknowledge process.
16.8
GPIO/HAPI Interrupt
Each of the GPIO pins can generate an interrupt, if enabled. The interrupt polarity can be programmed for each GPIO port as
part of the GPIO configuration. All of the GPIO pins share a single interrupt vector, which means the firmware needs to read the
GPIO ports with enabled interrupts to determine which pin or pins caused an interrupt. A block diagram of the GPIO interrupt
logic is shown in Figure 16-4. Refer to Sections 9.1 and 9.2 for more information about setting GPIO interrupt polarity and enabling
individual GPIO interrupts.
Port
Configuration
Register
M
U
X
GPIO
Pin
1 = Enable
0 = Disable
OR Gate
(1 input per
GPIO pin)
GPIO Interrupt
Flip Flop
1
D
Q
CLR
Interrupt
Priority
Encoder
IRQout
Interrupt
Vector
Port Interrupt
Enable Register
IRA
1 = Enable
0 = Disable
Global
GPIO Interrupt
Enable
(Bit 5, Register 0x20)
Figure 16-4. GPIO Interrupt Structure
If one port pin has triggered an interrupt, no other port pins can cause a GPIO interrupt until that port pin has returned to its inactive
(non-trigger) state or its corresponding port interrupt enable bit is cleared. The USB Controller does not assign interrupt priority
to different port pins and the Port Interrupt Enable Registers are not cleared during the interrupt acknowledge process.
When HAPI is enabled, the HAPI logic takes over the interrupt vector and blocks any interrupt from the GPIO bits, including
ports/bits not being used by HAPI. Operation of the HAPI interrupt is independent of the GPIO specific bit interrupt enables, and
is enabled or disabled only by bit 5 of the Global Interrupt Enable Register (0x20) when HAPI is enabled. The settings of the
GPIO bit interrupt enables on ports/bits not used by HAPI still effect the CMOS mode operation of those ports/bits. The effect of
modifying the interrupt bits while the Port Config bits are set to “10” is shown in Table 9-1. The events that generate HAPI interrupts
are described in Section 14.0.
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I2C Interrupt
16.9
2
The I C interrupt occurs after various events on the I2C-compatible bus to signal the need for firmware interaction. This generally
involves reading the I2C Status and Control Register (Figure 13-2) to determine the cause of the interrupt, loading/reading the
I2C Data Register as appropriate, and finally writing the Processor Status and Control Register (Figure 15-1) to initiate the
subsequent transaction. The interrupt indicates that status bits are stable and it is safe to read and write the I2C registers. Refer
to Section 13.0 for details on the I2C registers.
When enabled, the I2C-compatible state machines generate interrupts on completion of the following conditions. The referenced
bits are in the I2C Status and Control Register.
1. In slave receive mode, after the slave receives a byte of data: The Addr bit is set, if this is the first byte since a start or restart
signal was sent by the external master. Firmware must read or write the data register as necessary, then set the ACK, Xmit
MODE, and Continue/Busy bits appropriately for the next byte.
2. In slave receive mode, after a stop bit is detected: The Received Stop bit is set, if the stop bit follows a slave receive transaction
where the ACK bit was cleared to 0, no stop bit detection occurs.
3. In slave transmit mode, after the slave transmits a byte of data: The ACK bit indicates if the master that requested the byte
acknowledged the byte. If more bytes are to be sent, firmware writes the next byte into the Data Register and then sets the
Xmit MODE and Continue/Busy bits as required.
4. In master transmit mode, after the master sends a byte of data. Firmware should load the Data Register if necessary, and
set the Xmit MODE, MSTR MODE, and Continue/Busy bits appropriately. Clearing the MSTR MODE bit issues a stop signal
to the I2C-compatible bus and return to the idle state.
5. In master receive mode, after the master receives a byte of data: Firmware should read the data and set the ACK and
Continue/Busy bits appropriately for the next byte. Clearing the MSTR MODE bit at the same time causes the master state
machine to issue a stop signal to the I2C-compatible bus and leave the I2C-compatible hardware in the idle state.
6. When the master loses arbitration: This condition clears the MSTR MODE bit and sets the ARB Lost/Restart bit immediately
and then waits for a stop signal on the I2C-compatible bus to generate the interrupt.
The Continue/Busy bit is cleared by hardware prior to interrupt conditions 1 to 4. Once the Data Register has been read or written,
firmware should configure the other control bits and set the Continue/Busy bit for subsequent transactions. Following an interrupt
from master mode, firmware should perform only one write to the Status and Control Register that sets the Continue/Busy bit,
without checking the value of the Continue/Busy bit. The Busy bit may otherwise be active and I2C register contents may be
changed by the hardware during the transaction, until the I2C interrupt occurs.
17.0
USB Overview
The USB hardware includes a USB Hub repeater with one upstream and four downstream ports. The USB Hub repeater interfaces
to the microcontroller through a full-speed Serial Interface Engine. An external series resistor of R ext must be placed in series
with all upstream and downstream USB outputs in order to meet the USB driver requirements of the USB specification. The
CY7C66x13C microcontroller can provide the functionality of a compound device consisting of a USB hub and permanently
attached functions.
17.1
USB Serial Interface Engine
The SIE allows the CY7C66x13C microcontroller to communicate with the USB host through the USB repeater portion of the hub.
The SIE simplifies the interface between the microcontroller and USB by incorporating hardware that handles the following USB
bus activity independently of the microcontroller:
• Bit stuffing/unstuffing
• Checksum generation/checking
• ACK/NAK/STALL
• Token type identification
• Address checking.
Firmware is required to handle the following USB interface tasks:
•
•
•
•
Coordinate enumeration by responding to SETUP packets
Fill and empty the FIFOs
Suspend/Resume coordination
Verify and select DATA toggle values.
17.2
USB Enumeration
The internal hub and any compound device function are enumerated under firmware control. The hub is enumerated first, followed
by any integrated compound function. After the hub is enumerated, the USB host can read hub connection status to determine
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which (if any) of the downstream ports need to be enumerated. The following is a brief summary of the typical enumeration
process of the CY7C66x13C by the USB host. For a detailed description of the enumeration process, refer to the USB specification.
In this description, “Firmware” refers to embedded firmware in the CY7C66x13C controller.
1. The host computer sends a SETUP packet followed by a DATA packet to USB address 0 requesting the Device descriptor.
2. Firmware decodes the request and retrieves its Device descriptor from the program memory tables.
3. The host computer performs a control read sequence and Firmware responds by sending the Device descriptor over the USB
bus, via the on-chip FIFOs.
4. After receiving the descriptor, the host sends a SETUP packet followed by a DATA packet to address 0 assigning a new USB
address to the device.
5. Firmware stores the new address in its USB Device Address Register (for example, as Address B) after the no-data control
sequence completes.
6. The host sends a request for the Device descriptor using the new USB address.
7. Firmware decodes the request and retrieves the Device descriptor from program memory tables.
8. The host performs a control read sequence and Firmware responds by sending its Device descriptor over the USB bus.
9. The host generates control reads from the device to request the Configuration and Report descriptors.
10.Once the device receives a Set Configuration request, its functions may now be used.
11.Following enumeration as a hub, Firmware can optionally indicate to the host that a compound device exists (for example, the
keyboard in a keyboard/hub device).
12.The host carries out the enumeration process with this additional function as though it were attached downstream from the hub.
13.When the host assigns an address to this device, it is stored as the other USB address (for example, Address A).
18.0
USB Hub
A USB hub is required to support:
• Connectivity behavior: service connect/disconnect detection
• Bus fault detection and recovery
• Full-/low-speed device support.
These features are mapped onto a hub repeater and a hub controller. The hub controller is supported by the processor integrated
into the CY7C66013C and CY7C66113C microcontrollers. The hardware in the hub repeater detects whether a USB device is
connected to a downstream port and the interface speed of the downstream device. The connection to a downstream port is
through a differential signal pair (D+ and D–). Each downstream port provided by the hub requires external RUDN resistors from
each signal line to ground, so that when a downstream port has no device connected, the hub reads a LOW (zero) on both D+
and D–. This condition is used to identify the “no connect” state.
The hub must have a resistor RUUP connected between its upstream D+ line and VREG to indicate it is a full speed USB device.
The hub generates an EOP at EOF1, in accordance with the USB 1.1 Specification, Section 11.2.2.
18.1
Connecting/Disconnecting a USB Device
A low-speed (1.5 Mbps) USB device has a pull-up resistor on the D– pin. At connect time, the bias resistors set the signal levels
on the D+ and D– lines. When a low-speed device is connected to a hub port, the hub sees a LOW on D+ and a HIGH on D–.
This causes the hub repeater to set a connect bit in the Hub Ports Connect Status register for the downstream port. Then the hub
repeater generates a Hub Interrupt to notify the microcontroller that there has been a change in the Hub downstream status.
A full-speed (12 Mbps) USB device has a pull-up resistor from the D+ pin, so the hub sees a HIGH on D+ and a LOW on D–. In
this case, the hub repeater sets a connect bit in the Hub Ports Connect Status register, clears a bit in the Hub Ports Speed register
(for full-speed), and generates a Hub Interrupt to notify the microcontroller of the change in Hub status. The firmware sets the
speed of this port in the Hub Ports Speed Register (see Figure 18-2)
Connects are recorded by the time a non-SE0 state lasts for more than 2.5 µs on a downstream port.
When a USB device is disconnected from the Hub, the downstream signal pair eventually floats to a single-ended zero state. The
hub repeater recognizes a disconnect once the SE0 state on a downstream port lasts from 2.0 to 2.5 µs. On a disconnect, the
corresponding bit in the Hub Ports Connect Status register is cleared, and the Hub Interrupt is generated.
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Hub Ports Connect Status
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Port 4 Connect
Status
Port 3 Connect
Status
Port 2 Connect
Status
Port 1 Connect
Status
Reserved
ADDRESS 0x48
0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-1. Hub Ports Connect Status
Bit [0..3]: Port x Connect Status (where x = 1..4)
When set to 1, Port x is connected; When set to 0, Port x is disconnected.
Bit [7..4]: Reserved.
The Hub Ports Connect Status register is cleared to zero by reset or USB bus reset, then set to match the hardware configuration
by the hub repeater hardware. The Reserved bits [7..4] should always read as ‘0’ to indicate no connection.
Hub Ports Speed
ADDRESS
4
3
2
1
0x4A
Bit #
7
6
5
0
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Port 4 Speed
Port 3 Speed
Port 2 Speed
Port 1 Speed
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-2. Hub Ports Speed
Bit [0..3]: Port x Speed (where x = 1..4)
Set to 1 if the device plugged in to Port x is Low-speed; Set to 0 if the device plugged in to Port x is Full-speed.
Bit [7..4]: Reserved.
The Hub Ports Speed register is cleared to zero by reset or bus reset. This must be set by the firmware on issuing a port reset.
The Reserved bits [7..4] should always read as ‘0.’
18.2
Enabling/Disabling a USB Device
After a USB device connection has been detected, firmware must update status change bits in the hub status change data
structure that is polled periodically by the USB host. The host responds by sending a packet that instructs the hub to reset and
enable the downstream port. Firmware then sets the bit in the Hub Ports Enable register, Figure 18-3, for the downstream port.
The hub repeater hardware responds to an enable bit in the Hub Ports Enable register by enabling the downstream port, so that
USB traffic can flow to and from that port.
If a port is marked enabled and is not suspended, it receives all USB traffic from the upstream port, and USB traffic from the
downstream port is passed to the upstream port (unless babble is detected). Low-speed ports do not receive full-speed traffic
from the upstream port.
When firmware writes to the Hub Ports Enable register to enable a port, the port is not enabled until the end of any packet currently
being transmitted. If there is no USB traffic, the port is enabled immediately.
When a USB device disconnection has been detected, firmware must update status bits in the hub change status data structure
that is polled periodically by the USB host. In suspend, a connect or disconnect event generates an interrupt (if the hub interrupt
is enabled) even if the port is disabled.
Hub Ports Enable Register
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x49
0
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Port 4 Enable
Port 3 Enable
Port 2 Enable
Port 1 Enable
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-3. Hub Ports Enable Register
Bit [0..3]: Port x Enable (where x = 1..4)
Set to 1 if Port x is enabled; Set to 0 if Port x is disabled.
Bit [7..4]: Reserved.
The Hub Ports Enable register is cleared to zero by reset or bus reset to disable all downstream ports as the default condition.
A port is also disabled by internal hub hardware (enable bit cleared) if babble is detected on that downstream port. Babble is
defined as:
• Any non-idle downstream traffic on an enabled downstream port at EOF2
• Any downstream port with upstream connectivity established at EOF2 (i.e., no EOP received by EOF2).
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18.3
Hub Downstream Ports Status and Control
Data transfer on hub downstream ports is controlled according to the bit settings of the Hub Downstream Ports Control Register
(Figure 18-4). Each downstream port is controlled by two bits, as defined in Table 18-1 below. The Hub Downstream Ports Control
Register is cleared upon reset or bus reset, and the reset state is the state for normal USB traffic. Any downstream port being
forced must be marked as disabled (Figure 18-3) for proper operation of the hub repeater.
Firmware should use this register for driving bus reset and resume signaling to downstream ports. Controlling the port pins through
this register uses standard USB edge rate control according to the speed of the port, set in the Hub Port Speed Register.
The downstream USB ports are designed for connection of USB devices, but can also serve as output ports under firmware
control. This allows unused USB ports to be used for functions such as driving LEDs or providing additional input signals. Pulling
up these pins to voltages above VREF may cause current flow into the pin.
This register is not reset by bus reset. These bits must be cleared before going into suspend.
Hub Downstream Ports Control Register
ADDRESS
0x4B
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
Port 4
Control Bit 1
Port 4
Control Bit 0
Port 3
Control Bit 1
Port 3
Control Bit 0
Port 2
Control Bit 1
Port 2
Control Bit 0
Port 1
Control Bit 1
Port 1
Control Bit 0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-4. Hub Downstream Ports Control Register
Table 18-1. Control Bit Definition for Downstream Ports
Control Bits
Bit1
Bit 0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
Control Action
Not Forcing (Normal USB Function)
Force Differential ‘1’ (D+ HIGH, D– LOW)
Force Differential ‘0’ (D+ LOW, D– HIGH)
Force SE0 state
An alternate means of forcing the downstream ports is through the Hub Ports Force Low Register (Figure 18-5). With these
registers the pins of the downstream ports can be individually forced LOW, or left unforced. Unlike the Hub Downstream Ports
Control Register, above, the Force Low Register does not produce standard USB edge rate control on the forced pins. However,
this register allows downstream port pins to be held LOW in suspend. This register can be used to drive SE0 on all downstream
ports when unconfigured, as required in the USB 1.1 specification.
Hub Ports Force Low
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x51
0
Bit Name
Force Low
D+[4]
Force Low
D-[4]
Force Low
D+[3]
Force Low
D–[3]
Force Low
D+[2]
Force Low
D–[2]
Force Low
D+[1]
Force Low
D–[1]
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-5. Hub Ports Force Low Register
The data state of downstream ports can be read through the HUB Ports SE0 Status Register (Figure 18-6) and the Hub Ports
Data Register (Figure 18-7). The data read from the Hub Ports Data Register is the differential data only and is independent of
the settings of the Hub Ports Speed Register (Figure 18-2). When the SE0 condition is sensed on a downstream port, the
corresponding bits of the Hub Ports Data Register hold the last differential data state before the SE0. Hub Ports SE0 Status
Register and Hub Ports Data Register are cleared upon reset or bus reset.
Hub Ports SE0 Status
ADDRESS
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Port 4
SE0 Status
Port 3
SE0 Status
Port 2
SE0 Status
Port 1
SE0 Status
Read/Write
-
-
-
-
R
R
R
R
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0x4F
Figure 18-6. Hub Ports SE0 Status Register
Bit [0..3]: Port x SE0 Status (where x = 1..4)
Set to 1 if a SE0 is output on the Port x bus; Set to 0 if a Non-SE0 is output on the Port x bus.
Bit [7..4]: Reserved.
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Hub Ports Data
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
ADDRESS 0x50
0
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Port 4 Diff. Data Port 3 Diff. Data Port 2 Diff. Data Port 1 Diff. Data
Read/Write
-
-
-
-
R
R
R
R
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-7. Hub Ports Data Register
Bit [0..3]: Port x Diff Data (where x = 1..4)
Set to 1 if D+ > D– (forced differential 1, if signal is differential, i.e. not a SE0 or SE1). Set to 0 if D– > D+ (forced differential
0, if signal is differential, i.e., not a SE0 or SE1);
Bit [7..4]: Reserved.
18.4
Downstream Port Suspend and Resume
The Hub Ports Suspend Register (Figure 18-8) and Hub Ports Resume Status Register (Figure 18-9) indicate the suspend and
resume conditions on downstream ports. The suspend register must be set by firmware for any ports that are selectively
suspended. Also, this register is only valid for ports that are selectively suspended.
If a port is marked as selectively suspended, normal USB traffic is not sent to that port. Resume traffic is also prevented from
going to that port, unless the Resume comes from the selectively suspended port. If a resume condition is detected on the port,
hardware reflects a Resume back to the port, sets the Resume bit in the Hub Ports Resume Register, and generates a hub
interrupt.
If a disconnect occurs on a port marked as selectively suspended, the suspend bit is cleared.
The Device Remote Wakeup bit (bit 7) of the Hub Ports Suspend Register controls whether or not the resume signal is propagated
by the hub after a connect or a disconnect event. If the Device Remote Wakeup bit is set, the hub will automatically propagate
the resume signal after a connect or a disconnect event. If the Device Remote Wakeup bit is cleared, the hub will not propagate
the resume signal. The setting of the Device Remote Wakeup flag has no impact on the propagation of the resume signal after
a downstream remote wakeup event. The hub will automatically propagate the resume signal after a remote wakeup event,
regardless of the state of the Device Remote wakeup bit. The state of this bit has no impact on the generation of the hub interrupt.
These registers are cleared on reset or USB bus reset.
Hub Ports Suspend
ADDRESS
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
Device Remote
Wakeup
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Port 4
Selective
Suspend
Port 3
Selective
Suspend
Port 2
Selective
Suspend
Port 1
Selective
Suspend
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0x4D
Figure 18-8. Hub Ports Suspend Register
Bit [0..3]: Port x Selective Suspend (where x = 1..4)
Set to 1 if Port x is Selectively Suspended; Set to 0 if Port x Do not suspend.
Bit 7: Device Remote Wakeup.
When set to 1, Enable hardware upstream resume signaling for connect/disconnect events during global resume.
When set to 0, Disable hardware upstream resume signaling for connect/disconnect events during global resume.
Hub Ports Resume
ADDRESS 0x4E
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Bit Name
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Resume 4
Resume 3
Resume 2
0
Resume 1
Read/Write
-
-
-
-
R
R
R
R
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-9. Hub Ports Resume Status Register
Bit [0..3]: Resume x (where x = 1..4)
When set to 1 Port x requesting to be resumed (set by hardware); default state is 0;
Bit [7..4]: Reserved.
The Reserved bits [7..4] should always read as ‘0’.
Resume from a selectively suspended port, with the hub not in suspend, typically involves these actions:
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1. Hardware detects the Resume, drives a K to the port, and generates the hub interrupt. The corresponding bit in the Resume
Status Register (0x4E) reads ‘1’ in this case.
2. Firmware responds to hub interrupt, and reads register 0x4E to determine the source of the Resume.
3. Firmware begins driving K on the port for 10 ms or more through register 0x4B.
4. Firmware clears the Selective Suspend bit for the port (0x4D), which clears the Resume bit (0x4E). This ends the hardware-driven Resume, but the firmware-driven Resume continues. To prevent traffic being fed by the hub repeater to the port during or
just after the Resume, firmware should disable this port.
5. Firmware drives a timed SE0 on the port for two low-speed bit times as appropriate. Note: Firmware must disable interrupts
during this SE0 so the SE0 pulse isn’t inadvertently lengthened and appears as a bus reset to the downstream device.
6. Firmware drives a J on the port for one low-speed bit time, then it idles the port.
7. Firmware re-enables the port.
Resume when the hub is suspended typically involves these actions:
1. Hardware detects the Resume, drives a K on the upstream (which is then reflected to all downstream enabled ports), and
generates the hub interrupt.
2. The part comes out of suspend and the clocks start.
3. Once the clocks are stable, firmware execution resumes. An internal counter ensures that this takes at least 1 ms. Firmware
should check for Resume from any selectively suspended ports. If found, the Selective Suspend bit for the port should be
cleared; no other action is necessary.
4. The Resume ends when the host stops sending K from upstream. Firmware should check for changes to the Enable and
Connect Registers. If a port has become disabled but is still connected, an SE0 has been detected on the port. The port should
be treated as having been reset, and should be reported to the host as newly connected.
Firmware can choose to clear the Device Remote Wake-up bit (if set) to implement firmware timed states for port changes. All
allowed port changes wake the part. Then, the part can use internal timing to determine whether to take action or return to
suspend. If Device Remote Wake-up is set, automatic hardware assertions take place on Resume events.
18.5
USB Upstream Port Status and Control
USB status and control is regulated by the USB Status and Control Register, as shown in Figure 18-10. All bits in the register are
cleared during reset.
USB Status and Control
Bit #
7
6
Bit Name
Endpoint Size
Endpoint Mode D+ Upstream
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R
Reset
0
0
0
5
ADDRESS
0
0x1F
4
3
2
1
D– Upstream
Bus Activity
Control Action
Bit 2
Control Action
Bit 1
Control Action
Bit 0
R
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 18-10. USB Status and Control Register
Bits[2..0]: Control Action
Set to control action as per Table 18-2.The three control bits allow the upstream port to be driven manually by firmware.
For normal USB operation, all of these bits must be cleared. Table 18-2 shows how the control bits affect the upstream port.
Table 18-2. Control Bit Definition for Upstream Port
Control Bits
Control Action
000
Not Forcing (SIE Controls Driver)
001
Force D+[0] HIGH, D–[0] LOW
010
Force D+[0] LOW, D–[0] HIGH
011
Force SE0; D+[0] LOW, D–[0] LOW
100
Force D+[0] LOW, D–[0] LOW
101
Force D+[0] HiZ, D–[0] LOW
110
Force D+[0] LOW, D–[0] HiZ
111
Force D+[0] HiZ, D–[0] HiZ
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Bit 3: Bus Activity
This is a “sticky” bit that indicates if any non-idle USB event has occurred on the upstream USB port. Firmware should
check and clear this bit periodically to detect any loss of bus activity. Writing a ‘0’ to the Bus Activity bit clears it, while writing
a ‘1’ preserves the current value. In other words, the firmware can clear the Bus Activity bit, but only the SIE can set it.
Bits 4 and 5: D– Upstream and D+ Upstream
These bits give the state of each upstream port pin individually: 1 = HIGH, 0 = LOW.
Bit 6: Endpoint Mode
This bit used to configure the number of USB endpoints. See Section 19.2 for a detailed description.
Bit 7: Endpoint Size
This bit used to configure the number of USB endpoints. See Section 19.2 for a detailed description.
The hub generates an EOP at EOF1 in accordance with the USB 1.1 Specification, Section 11.2.2.
19.0
USB SIE Operation
The CY7C66x13C SIE supports operation as a single device or a compound device. This section describes the two device
addresses, the configurable endpoints, and the endpoint function.
19.1
USB Device Addresses
The USB Controller provides two USB Device Address Registers: A (addressed at 0x10)and B (addressed at 0x40). Upon reset
and under default conditions, Device A has three endpoints and Device B has two endpoints. The USB Device Address Register
contents are cleared during a reset, setting the USB device addresses to zero and disabling these addresses. Figure 19-1 shows
the format of the USB Address Registers.
USB Device Address (Device A, B)
Bit #
7
6
Bit Name
Device
Address
Enable
Device
Address
Bit 6
ADDRESSES
1
0x10(A) and 0x40(B)
0
5
4
3
2
Device
Address
Bit 5
Device
Address
Bit 4
Device
Address
Bit 3
Device
Address
Bit 2
Device
Address
Bit 1
Device
Address
Bit 0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 19-1. USB Device Address Registers
Bits[6..0]: Device Address
Firmware writes this bits during the USB enumeration process to the non-zero address assigned by the USB host.
Bit 7: Device Address Enable
Must be set by firmware before the SIE can respond to USB traffic to the Device Address.
19.2
USB Device Endpoints
The CY7C66x13C controller supports up to two addresses and five endpoints for communication with the host. The configuration
of these endpoints, and associated FIFOs, is controlled by bits [7,6] of the USB Status and Control Register (see Figure 18-10).
Bit 7 controls the size of the endpoints and bit 6 controls the number of addresses. These configuration options are detailed in
Table 19-1. Endpoint FIFOs are part of user RAM (as shown in Section 5.4.1).
Table 19-1. Memory Allocation for Endpoints
USB Status And Control Register (0x1F) Bits [7, 6]
[0,0]
[1,0]
Two USB Addresses: A (3
Two USB Addresses: A (3
Endpoints) & B (2 Endpoints) Endpoints) &B (2 Endpoints)
Label
Start
Address
EPB1
0xD8
8
EPB0
0xA8
EPB0
0xE0
8
EPB1
0xB0
EPA2
0xE8
8
EPA0
0xB8
EPA1
0xF0
8
EPA1
0xC0
EPA0
0xF8
8
EPA2
0xE0
32
Size
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Label
Start
Address
[0,1]
[1,1]
One USB Address:
A (5 Endpoints)
One USB Address:
A (5 Endpoints)
Label
Start
Address
8
EPA4
0xD8
8
EPA3
0xA8
8
8
EPA3
0xE0
8
EPA4
0xB0
8
8
EPA2
0xE8
8
EPA0
0xB8
8
32
EPA1
0xF0
8
EPA1
0xC0
32
EPA0
0xF8
8
EPA2
0xE0
32
Size
Size
Label
Start
Address
Size
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When the SIE writes data to a FIFO, the internal data bus is driven by the SIE; not the CPU. This causes a short delay in the
CPU operation. The delay is three clock cycles per byte. For example, an 8-byte data write by the SIE to the FIFO generates a
delay of 2 µs (3 cycles/byte * 83.33 ns/cycle * 8 bytes).
19.3
USB Control Endpoint Mode Registers
All USB devices are required to have a control endpoint 0 (EPA0 and EPB0) that is used to initialize and control each USB address.
Endpoint 0 provides access to the device configuration information and allows generic USB status and control accesses. Endpoint
0 is bidirectional to both receive and transmit data. The other endpoints are unidirectional, but selectable by the user as IN or
OUT endpoints.
The endpoint mode registers are cleared during reset. When USB Status And Control Register Bits [6,7] are set to [0,0] or [1,0],
the endpoint 0 EPA0 and EPB0 mode registers use the format shown in Figure 19-2.
USB Device Endpoint Zero Mode (A0, B0)
ADDRESSES
Bit #
7
6
5
Bit Name
Endpoint 0 SETUP Endpoint 0 IN
Received
Received
Read/Write
R/W
Reset
0
4
0x12(A0) and 0x42(B0)
3
2
1
0
Endpoint 0 OUT ACK
Received
Mode Bit 3
Mode Bit 2
Mode Bit 1
Mode Bit 0
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 19-2. USB Endpoint 0 Mode Registers
Bits[3..0]: Mode
These sets the mode which control how the control endpoint responds to traffic.
Bit 4: ACK
This bit is set whenever the SIE engages in a transaction to the register’s endpoint that completes with an ACK packet.
Bit 5: Endpoint 0 OUT Received
1 = Token received is an OUT token. 0 = Token received is not an OUT token. This bit is set by the SIE to report the type
of token received by the corresponding device address is an OUT token. The bit must be cleared by firmware as part of
the USB processing.
Bit 6: Endpoint 0 IN Received
1 = Token received is an IN token. 0 = Token received is not an IN token. This bit is set by the SIE to report the type of
token received by the corresponding device address is an IN token. The bit must be cleared by firmware as part of the USB
processing.
Bit 7: Endpoint 0 SETUP Received
1 = Token received is a SETUP token. 0 = Token received is not a SETUP token. This bit is set ONLY by the SIE to report
the type of token received by the corresponding device address is a SETUP token. Any write to this bit by the CPU will
clear it (set it to 0). The bit is forced HIGH from the start of the data packet phase of the SETUP transaction until the start
of the ACK packet returned by the SIE. The CPU should not clear this bit during this interval, and subsequently, until the
CPU first does an IORD to this endpoint 0 mode register. The bit must be cleared by firmware as part of the USB processing.
Note: In 5-endpoint mode (USB Status And Control Register Bits [7,6] are set to [0,1] or [1,1]), Register 0x42 serves as
non-control endpoint 3, and has the format for non-control endpoints shown in Figure 19-3.
Bits[6:0] of the endpoint 0 mode register are locked from CPU write operations whenever the SIE has updated one of these bits,
which the SIE does only at the end of the token phase of a transaction (SETUP... Data... ACK, OUT... Data... ACK, or IN... Data...
ACK). The CPU can unlock these bits by doing a subsequent read of this register. Only endpoint 0 mode registers are locked
when updated. The locking mechanism does not apply to the mode registers of other endpoints.
Because of these hardware locking features, firmware must perform an IORD after an IOWR to an endpoint 0 register. This verifies
that the contents have changed as desired, and that the SIE has not updated these values.
While the SETUP bit is set, the CPU cannot write to the endpoint zero FIFOs. This prevents firmware from overwriting an incoming
SETUP transaction before firmware has a chance to read the SETUP data. Refer to Table 19-1 for the appropriate endpoint zero
memory locations.
The Mode bits (bits [3:0]) control how the endpoint responds to USB bus traffic. The mode bit encoding is shown in Table 18-1.
Additional information on the mode bits can be found in Table 20-2 and Table 20-1.
Note: The SIE offers an “Ack out - Status in” mode and not an “Ack out - Nak in” mode. Therefore, if following the status stage
of a Control Write transfer a USB host were to immediately start the next transfer, the new Setup packet could override the data
payload of the data stage of the previous Control Write.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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19.4
USB Non-Control Endpoint Mode Registers
The format of the non-control endpoint mode registers is shown in Figure 19-3.
USB Non-Control Device Endpoint Mode
ADDRESSES 0x14, 0x16, 0x44
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Bit Name
STALL
Reserved
Reserved
ACK
Mode Bit 3
Mode Bit 2
Mode Bit 1
Mode Bit 0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Figure 19-3. USB Non-Control Endpoint Mode Registers
Bits[3..0]: Mode
These sets the mode which control how the control endpoint responds to traffic. The mode bit encoding is shown in
Table 18-1.
Bit 4: ACK
This bit is set whenever the SIE engages in a transaction to the register’s endpoint that completes with an ACK packet.
Bits[6..5]: Reserved
Must be written zero during register writes.
Bit 7: STALL
If this STALL is set, the SIE stalls an OUT packet if the mode bits are set to ACK-IN, and the SIE stalls an IN packet if the
mode bits are set to ACK-OUT. For all other modes, the STALL bit must be a LOW.
19.5
USB Endpoint Counter Registers
There are five Endpoint Counter registers, with identical formats for both control and non-control endpoints. These registers
contain byte count information for USB transactions, as well as bits for data packet status. The format of these registers is shown
in Figure 19-4.
USB Endpoint Counter
Bit #
7
ADDRESSES
1
0x11, 0x13, 0x15, 0x41, 0x43
0
5
4
3
2
Data 0/1 Toggle Data Valid
Byte Count Bit
5
Byte Count Bit
4
Byte Count Bit
3
Byte Count Bit
2
Byte Count Bit
1
Byte Count Bit
0
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Reset
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bit Name
6
Figure 19-4. USB Endpoint Counter Registers
Bits[5..0]: Byte Count
These counter bits indicate the number of data bytes in a transaction. For IN transactions, firmware loads the count with
the number of bytes to be transmitted to the host from the endpoint FIFO. Valid values are 0 to 32, inclusive. For OUT or
SETUP transactions, the count is updated by hardware to the number of data bytes received, plus two for the CRC bytes.
Valid values are 2 to 34, inclusive.
Bit 6: Data Valid
This bit is set on receiving a proper CRC when the endpoint FIFO buffer is loaded with data during transactions. This bit is
used OUT and SETUP tokens only. If the CRC is not correct, the endpoint interrupt occurs, but Data Valid is cleared to a
zero.
Bit 7: Data 0/1 Toggle
This bit selects the DATA packet’s toggle state: 0 for DATA0, 1 for DATA1. For IN transactions, firmware must set this bit to
the desired state. For OUT or SETUP transactions, the hardware sets this bit to the state of the received Data Toggle bit.
Whenever the count updates from a SETUP or OUT transaction on endpoint 0, the counter register locks and cannot be written
by the CPU. Reading the register unlocks it. This prevents firmware from overwriting a status update on incoming SETUP or OUT
transactions before firmware has a chance to read the data. Only endpoint 0 counter register is locked when updated. The locking
mechanism does not apply to the count registers of other endpoints.
19.6
Endpoint Mode/Count Registers Update and Locking Mechanism
The contents of the endpoint mode and counter registers are updated, based on the packet flow diagram in Figure 19-5. Two
time points, UPDATE and SETUP, are shown in the same figure. The following activities occur at each time point:
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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SETUP:
The SETUP bit of the endpoint 0 mode register is forced HIGH at this time. This bit is forced HIGH by the SIE until the end of the
data phase of a control write transfer. The SETUP bit can not be cleared by firmware during this time.
The affected mode and counter registers of endpoint 0 are locked from any CPU writes once they are updated. These registers
can be unlocked by a CPU read, only if the read operation occurs after the UPDATE. The firmware needs to perform a register
read as a part of the endpoint ISR processing to unlock the effected registers. The locking mechanism on mode and counter
registers ensures that the firmware recognizes the changes that the SIE might have made since the previous IO read of that
register.
UPDATE:
1. Endpoint Mode Register – All the bits are updated (except the SETUP bit of the endpoint 0 mode register).
2. Counter Registers – All bits are updated.
3. Interrupt – If an interrupt is to be generated as a result of the transaction, the interrupt flag for the corresponding endpoint is
set at this time. For details on what conditions are required to generate an endpoint interrupt, refer to Table 20-2.
4. The contents of the updated endpoint 0 mode and counter registers are locked, except the SETUP bit of the endpoint 0 mode
register which was locked earlier.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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1. IN Token
Host To Device
S
Y
N
C
IN
A
D
D
R
E
N
D
P
Device To Host
C
R
C
5
D
A
T
A
1/0
S
Y
N
C
Token Packet
H
O
S
T
IN
A
D
D
R
E
N
D
P
C
R
C
16
S
Y
N
C
A
C
K
Hand
Shake
Packet
Data Packet
Host To Device
S
Y
N
C
Data
Host To Device
UPDATE
Device To Host
C
R
C
5
S
Y
N
C
Token Packet
NAK/STALL
Data Packet
UPDATE
2. OUT or SETUP Token without CRC error
Host To Device
S
Y
N
C
O
U
T
/
Set
up
A
D
D
R
E
N
D
P
Device To Host
Host To Device
C
R
C
5
S
Y
N
C
Token Packet
D
A
T
A
1/0
Data
C
R
C
16
Data Packet
UPDATE
SETUP
S
Y
N
C
D
E
V
I
C
E
ACK,
NAK,
STAL
Hand
Shake
Packet
3. OUT or SETUP Token with CRC error
Host To Device
S
Y
N
C
O
U
T
/
Set
up
A
D
D
R
E
N
D
P
Token Packet
Host To Device
C
R
C
5
S
Y
N
C
D
A
T
A
1/0
Data
C
R
C
16
Data Packet
UPDATE only if FIFO is
written
Figure 19-5. Token/Data Packet Flow Diagram
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
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20.0
USB Mode Tables
Table 20-1. USB Register Mode Encoding
Mode
Bits
SETUP
Mode
IN
ignore
OUT
Comments
Disable
0000
ignore
Nak In/Out
0001
accept NAK
NAK
Status Out Only
0010
accept stall
check For Control endpoints
Stall In/Out
0011
accept stall
stall
Ignore In/Out
0100
accept ignore
ignore For Control endpoints
always For Isochronous endpoints
Forced from Setup on Control endpoint, from modes other than 0000
For Control endpoints
Isochronous Out
0101
ignore
Status In Only
0110
accept TX 0 Byte stall
Isochronous In
0111
ignore
TX count ignore For Isochronous endpoints
Nak Out
1000
ignore
ignore
NAK
Is set by SIE on an ACK from mode 1001 (Ack Out)
1001
=1) 1001
ignore
ignore
ignore
ignore
ACK
stall
On issuance of an ACK this mode is changed by SIE to 1000 (NAK Out)
Ack Out(STALL[4]=0)
Ack Out(STALL[4]
ignore
ignore Ignore all USB traffic to this endpoint
For Control Endpoints
Nak Out - Status In
1010
accept TX 0 Byte NAK
Is set by SIE on an ACK from mode 1011 (Ack Out- Status In)
Ack Out - Status In
1011
accept TX 0 Byte ACK
On issuance of an ACK this mode is changed by SIE to 1010 (NAK Out
– Status In)
Nak In
1100
ignore
NAK
IN(STALL[4]=0)
IN(STALL[4]=1)
1101
1101
ignore
ignore
TX count ignore On issuance of an ACK this mode is changed by SIE to 1100 (NAK In)
stall
ignore
Nak In – Status Out
1110
accept NAK
Ack In – Status Out
1111
accept TX Count check On issuance of an ACK this mode is changed by SIE to 1110 (NAK In
– Status Out)
Ack
Ack
ignore Is set by SIE on an ACK from mode 1101 (Ack In)
check Is set by SIE on an ACK from mode 1111 (Ack In – Status Out)
Mode
This lists the mnemonic given to the different modes that can be set in the Endpoint Mode Register by writing to the lower nibble
(bits 0..3). The bit settings for different modes are covered in the column marked “Mode Bits.” The Status IN and Status OUT
represent the Status stage in the IN or OUT transfer involving the control endpoint.
Mode Bits
These column lists the encoding for different modes by setting Bits[3..0] of the Endpoint Mode register. This modes represents
how the SIE responds to different tokens sent by the host to an endpoint. For instance, if the mode bits are set to “0001” (NAK
IN/OUT), the SIE will respond with an
• ACK on receiving a SETUP token from the host
• NAK on receiving an OUT token from the host
• NAK on receiving an IN token from the host
Refer to section 13.0 for more information on SIE functioning.
SETUP, IN, and OUT
These columns shows the SIE’s response to the host on receiving a SETUP, IN and OUT token depending on the mode set in
the Endpoint Mode Register.
A “Check” on the OUT token column, implies that on receiving an OUT token the SIE checks to see whether the OUT packet is
of zero length and has a Data Toggle (DTOG) set to ‘1.’ If the DTOG bit is set and the received OUT Packet has zero length, the
OUT is ACKed to complete the transaction. If either of this condition is not met the SIE will respond with a STALLL or just ignore
the transaction.
A “TX Count” entry in the IN column implies that the SIE transmit the number of bytes specified in the Byte Count (bits 3..0 of the
Endpoint Count Register) to the host in response to the IN token received.
A “TX0 Byte” entry in the IN column implies that the SIE transmit a zero length byte packet in response to the IN token received
from the host.
An “Ignore” in any of the columns means that the device will not send any handshake tokens (no ACK) to the host.
An “Accept” in any of the columns means that the device will respond with an ACK to a valid SETUP transaction to the host.
Note:
4. STALL bit is bit 7 of the USB Non-Control Device Endpoint Mode registers. For more information, refer to section 19.4.
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Comments
Some Mode Bits are automatically changed by the SIE in response to certain USB transactions. For example, if the Mode Bits
[3:0] are set to '1111' which is ACK IN-Status OUT mode as shown in Table 19-1, the SIE will change the endpoint Mode Bits [3:0]
to NAK IN-Status OUT mode (1110) after ACK’ing a valid status stage OUT token. The firmware needs to update the mode for
the SIE to respond appropriately. See Table 18-1 for more details on what modes will be changed by the SIE. A disabled endpoint
will remain disabled until changed by firmware, and all endpoints reset to the disabled mode (0000). Firmware normally enables
the endpoint mode after a SetConfiguration request.
Any SETUP packet to an enabled endpoint with mode set to accept SETUPs will be changed by the SIE to 0001 (NAKing INs
and OUTs). Any mode set to accept a SETUP will send an ACK handshake to a valid SETUP token.
The control endpoint has three status bits for identifying the token type received (SETUP, IN, or OUT), but the endpoint must be
placed in the correct mode to function as such. Non-Control endpoints should not be placed into modes that accept SETUPs.
Note that most modes that control transactions involving an ending ACK, are changed by the SIE to a corresponding mode which
NAKs subsequent packets following the ACK. Exceptions are modes 1010 and 1110.
Table 20-2. Decode Table for Table 20-3: “Details of Modes for Differing Traffic Conditions”
Properties of
Incoming Packets
3
2
1
0
Token
count
buffer
Changes to the Internal Register made by the SIE on receiving an incoming
packet from the host
dval
DTOG
DVAL
COUNT
Setup
In
Out
ACK
3
2 1
Interrupt
0 Response
Int
Byte Count (bits 0..5, Figure 17-4)
Endpoint Mode
encoding
Data Valid (bit 6, Figure 17-4)
Received Token
(SETUP/IN/OUT)
SIE’s Response
to the Host
Data0/1 (bit7 Figure 17-4)
The validity of the received data
PID Status Bits
(Bit[7..5], Figure
17-2)
Endpoint Mode bits
Changed by the SIE
The quality status of the DMA buffer
The number of received bytes
Legend:
TX: transmit
UC : unchanged
RX: receive
TX0:Transmit 0 length packet
Acknowledge phase completed
available for Control endpoint only
x: don’t care
The response of the SIE can be summarized as follows:
1. The SIE will only respond to valid transactions, and will ignore non-valid ones.
2. The SIE will generate an interrupt when a valid transaction is completed or when the FIFO is corrupted. FIFO corruption occurs
during an OUT or SETUP transaction to a valid internal address, that ends with a non-valid CRC.
3. An incoming Data packet is valid if the count is < Endpoint Size + 2 (includes CRC) and passes all error checking;
4. An IN will be ignored by an OUT configured endpoint and visa versa.
5. The IN and OUT PID status is updated at the end of a transaction.
6. The SETUP PID status is updated at the beginning of the Data packet phase.
7. The entire Endpoint 0 mode register and the Count register are locked to CPU writes at the end of any transaction to that
endpoint in which an ACK is transferred. These registers are only unlocked by a CPU read of the register, which should be
done by the firmware only after the transaction is complete. This represents about a 1-µs window in which the CPU is locked
from register writes to these USB registers. Normally the firmware should perform a register read at the beginning of the
Endpoint ISRs to unlock and get the mode register information. The interlock on the Mode and Count registers ensures that
the firmware recognizes the changes that the SIE might have made during the previous transaction. Note that the setup bit of
the mode register is NOT locked. This means that before writing to the mode register, firmware must first read the register to
make sure that the setup bit is not set (which indicates a setup was received, while processing the current USB request). This
read will of course unlock the register. So care must be taken not to overwrite the register elsewhere.
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Table 20-3. Details of Modes for Differing Traffic Conditions (see Table 20-2 for the decode legend)
Properties of Incoming Packet
Mode Bits token count buffer
dval
See
Setup <= 10 data
valid
Table 16-1
See
Setup > 10 junk
x
Table 16-1
See
Setup x
junk
invalid
Table 16-1
Properties of Incoming Packet
Mode Bits token count buffer
dval
DISABLED
0 0 0 0 x
x
UC
x
Nak In/Out
0 0 0 1 Out
x
UC
x
0 0 0 1 In
x
UC
x
Ignore In/Out
0 1 0 0 Out
x
UC
x
0 1 0 0 In
x
UC
x
Stall In/Out
0 0 1 1 Out
x
UC
x
0 0 1 1 In
x
UC
x
Properties of Incoming Packet
Mode Bits token count buffer
dval
Normal Out/premature status In
1 0 1 1 Out
<= 10 data
valid
1 0 1 1 Out
> 10 junk
x
1 0 1 1 Out
x
junk
invalid
1 0 1 1 In
x
UC
x
NAK Out/premature status In
1 0 1 0 Out
<= 10 UC
valid
1 0 1 0 Out
> 10 UC
x
1 0 1 0 Out
x
UC
invalid
1 0 1 0 In
x
UC
x
Status In/extra Out
0 1 1 0 Out
<= 10 UC
valid
0 1 1 0 Out
> 10 UC
x
0 1 1 0 Out
x
UC
invalid
0 1 1 0 In
x
UC
x
Properties of Incoming Packet
Mode Bits token count buffer
dval
Normal In/premature status Out
1 1 1 1 Out
2
UC
valid
1 1 1 1 Out
2
UC
valid
1 1 1 1 Out
!=2
UC
valid
1 1 1 1 Out
> 10 UC
x
1 1 1 1 Out
x
UC
invalid
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
SETUP (if accepting SETUPs)
Changes made by SIE to Internal Registers and Mode Bits
DTOG DVAL COUNT Setup In Out ACK Mode Bits Response Intr
updates 1
updates 1
UC UC 1
0 0 0 1 ACK
yes
updates updates updates 1
UC UC
UC
No Changeignore
yes
updates 0
UC UC
UC
No Changeignore
yes
DTOG
updates 1
Changes made by SIE to Internal Registers and Mode Bits
DVAL COUNT Setup In Out ACK Mode Bits Response Intr
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC
UC
No Changeignore
no
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC 1
1
UC
UC
UC
No ChangeNAK
No ChangeNAK
yes
yes
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC
UC UC
UC
UC
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
no
no
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC 1
UC No ChangeStall
yes
UC
UC
UC
1
UC UC No ChangeStall
yes
CONTROL WRITE
Changes made by SIE to Internal Registers and Mode Bits
DTOG DVAL COUNT Setup In Out ACK Mode Bits Response Intr
updates
updates
updates
UC
1
updates UC
updates updates UC
0
updates UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
1
1
1
UC
1
UC
UC 1
1 0 1 0 ACK
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
No ChangeTX 0
yes
yes
yes
yes
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
1
UC
UC
UC
No ChangeNAK
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
No ChangeTX 0
yes
no
no
yes
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC 1
UC 0 0 1 1 Stall
UC
UC
UC
UC UC UC No Changeignore
UC
UC
UC
UC UC UC No Changeignore
UC
UC
UC
1
UC 1
No ChangeTX 0
CONTROL READ
Changes made by SIE to Internal Registers and Mode Bits
DTOG DVAL COUNT Setup In Out ACK Mode Bits Response
1
0
updates
UC
UC
1
1
1
UC
UC
updates UC
updates UC
updates UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
1
1
UC
1
UC
UC UC
UC UC
No ChangeACK
0 0 1 1 Stall
0 0 1 1 Stall
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
yes
no
no
yes
Intr
yes
yes
yes
no
no
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Table 20-3. Details of Modes for Differing Traffic Conditions (see Table 20-2 for the decode legend) (continued)
1 1 1 1 In
x
UC
Nak In/premature status Out
1 1 1 0 Out
2
UC
1 1 1 0 Out
2
UC
1 1 1 0 Out
!=2
UC
1 1 1 0 Out
> 10 UC
1 1 1 0 Out
x
UC
1 1 1 0 In
x
UC
Status Out/extra In
0 0 1 0 Out
2
UC
0 0 1 0 Out
2
UC
0 0 1 0 Out
!=2
UC
0 0 1 0 Out
> 10 UC
0 0 1 0 Out
x
UC
0 0 1 0 In
x
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
valid
valid
valid
x
invalid
x
1
0
updates
UC
UC
UC
1
1
1
UC
UC
UC
updates UC
updates UC
updates UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
valid
valid
valid
x
invalid
x
1
0
updates
UC
UC
UC
1
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
1
1
1
UC
1
UC
UC UC
UC UC
UC UC
updates
updates
updates
UC
1
updates UC
updates updates UC
0
updates UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
0 1
In
x
NAK Out/erroneous In
1 0 0 0 Out
<= 10
1 0 0 0 Out
> 10
1 0 0 0 Out
x
1 0 0 0 In
x
Isochronous endpoint (Out)
0 1 0 1 Out
x
0 1 0 1 In
x
1 1 1 0 ACK (back) yes
No ChangeACK
0 0 1 1 Stall
0 0 1 1 Stall
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
No ChangeNAK
1
updates UC
UC 1
1
No ChangeACK
1
updates UC
UC 1
UC 0 0 1 1 Stall
1
updates UC
UC 1
UC 0 0 1 1 Stall
UC
UC
UC
UC UC UC No Changeignore
UC
UC
UC
1
UC UC No Changeignore
UC
UC
UC
1
UC UC 0 0 1 1 Stall
OUT ENDPOINT
Changes made by SIE to Internal Registers and Mode Bits
DTOG DVAL COUNT Setup In Out ACK Mode Bits Response
Properties of Incoming Packet
Mode Bits token count buffer
dval
Normal Out/erroneous In
1 0 0 1 Out
<= 10 data
valid
1 0 0 1 Out
> 10 junk
x
1 0 0 1 Out
x
junk
invalid
1 0 0 1 In
x
UC
x
0
1
1
1
1
UC
1
UC
UC UC
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
valid
x
invalid
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
UC
UC UC
UC UC
UC UC
yes
yes
yes
no
no
yes
Intr
1 0 0 0 ACK
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
(STALL[4] =
0)
No ChangeStall
(STALL[4] =
1)
yes
yes
yes
no
No ChangeNAK
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
No Changeignore
yes
no
no
no
updates updates updates updates updates UC
UC 1
1
No ChangeRX
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC UC No Changeignore
IN ENDPOINT
Properties of Incoming Packet
Changes made by SIE to Internal Registers and Mode Bits
Mode Bits token count buffer
dval
DTOG DVAL COUNT Setup In Out ACK Mode Bits Response
Normal In/erroneous Out
1 1 0 1 Out
x
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC UC No Changeignore
(STALL[4] =
0)
1 1 0 1 Out
x
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC UC No Changestall
(STALL[4] =
1)
1 1 0 1 In
x
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
UC 1
1 1 0 0 ACK (back)
NAK In/erroneous Out
1 1 0 0 Out
x
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC UC No Changeignore
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
yes
yes
yes
no
no
yes
no
yes
no
Intr
no
no
yes
no
Page 50 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
Table 20-3. Details of Modes for Differing Traffic Conditions (see Table 20-2 for the decode legend) (continued)
1 1 0 0
Isochronous
0 1 1 1
0 1 1 1
21.0
In
x
endpoint (In)
Out
x
In
x
UC
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
1
UC
UC
No ChangeNAK
yes
UC
UC
x
x
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC
UC UC
1
UC
UC
UC
No Changeignore
No ChangeTX
no
yes
Register Summary
USB- Endpoint A0, AI AND A2 Configuration Endpoint A0, AI
HAPI GPIO CONFIGURATION PORTS 0, 1, 2 AND 3
CS
and A2 Configuration I2C
Addr
ess Register Name
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Read/Write Default/
/Both[5, 6, 7] Reset [8]
0x00
Port 0 Data
P0.7
P0.6
P0.5
P0.4
P0.3
P0.2
P0.1
P0.0
bbbbbbbb
11111111
0x01
Port 1 Data
P1.7
P1.6
P1.5
P1.4
P1.3
P1.2
P1.1
P1.0
bbbbbbbb
11111111
0x02
Port 2 Data
P2.7
P2.6
P2.5
P2.4
P2.3
P2.2
P2.1
P2.0
bbbbbbbb
11111111
0x03
Port 3 Data
Reserved P3.6
P3.5
P3.4
P3.3
P3.2
P3.1
P3.0
bbbbbbbb
-1111111
CY7C66113C CY7C66113C
only
only
0x04
Port 0 Interrupt
Enable
P0.7 Intr P0.6 Intr P0.5 Intr P0.4 Intr
Enable
Enable
Enable
Enable
P0.3 Intr P0.2 Intr P0.1 Intr
Enable
Enable
Enable
P0.0 Intr
Enable
wwwwwwww 00000000
0x05
Port 1 Interrupt
Enable
P1.7 Intr P1.6 Intr P1.5 Intr P1.4 Intr
Enable
Enable
Enable
Enable
P1.3 Intr P1.2 Intr P1.1 Intr
Enable
Enable
Enable
P1.0 Intr
Enable
wwwwwwww 00000000
0x06
Port 2 Interrupt
Enable
P2.0 Intr
Enable
wwwwwwww 00000000
Port 3 Interrupt
Enable
P2.3 Intr
Enable
P3.3 Intr
Enable
P2.1 Intr
Enable
0x07
P2.7 Intr P2.6 Intr
Enable
Enable
Reserved P3.6 Intr
Enable
P3.1 Intr
Enable
P3.0 Intr
Enable
wwwwwwww 00000000
P2.5 Intr
Enable
P3.5 Intr
Enable
P2.4 Intr
Enable
P3.4 Intr
Enable
P2.2 Intr
Enable
P3.2 Intr
Enable
CY7C66113C CY7C66113C
only
only
0x08
GPIO
Configuration
Port 3
Port 3
Port 2
Port 2
Port 1
Port 1
Port 0
Port 0
bbbbbbbb
Config Bit Config Bit Config Bit Config Bit Config Bit Config Bit Config Bit Config Bit
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
00000000
0x09
HAPI/I2C
Configuration
I2C
Position
0x10
USB Device
Address A
Device
Device
Address A Address
Enable
A Bit 6
Device
Address
A Bit 5
0x11
EP A0 Counter
Register
Data 0/1 Data
Toggle
Valid
Byte
Count
Bit 5
0x12
EP A0 Mode
Register
0x13
Reserved LEMPTY DRDY
Polarity Polarity
Latch
Empty
Data
Ready
Port Width Port Width b-bbrrbb
bit 1
bit 0
00000000
Device
Address
A Bit 4
Device
Address
A Bit 3
Device
Address
A Bit 2
Device
Address
A Bit 1
Device
Address
A Bit 0
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Byte
Count
Bit 4
Byte
Count
Bit 3
Byte
Count
Bit 2
Byte
Count
Bit 1
Byte
Count
Bit 0
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Endpoint0 Endpoint0 Endpoint0 ACK
SETUP IN
OUT
Received Received Received
Mode Bit 3 Mode Bit 2 Mode Bit 1 Mode Bit 0 bbbbbbbb
00000000
EP A1 Counter
Register
Data 0/1 Data Valid Byte
Toggle
Count
Bit 5
Byte
Count
Bit 4
Byte
Count
Bit 3
bbbbbbbb
00000000
0x14
EP A1 Mode
Register
STALL
ACK
Mode Bit 3 Mode Bit 2 Mode Bit 1 Mode Bit 0 bbbbbbbb
00000000
0x15
EP A2 Counter
Register
Data 0/1 Data Valid Byte
Toggle
Count
Bit 5
Byte
Count
Bit 4
Byte
Count
Bit 3
bbbbbbbb
00000000
0x16
EP A2 Mode
Register
STALL
ACK
Mode Bit 3 Mode Bit 2 Mode Bit 1 Mode Bit 0 bbbbbbbb
00000000
0x1F
USB Status and
Control
Endpoint Endpoint D+
D–
Bus
Size
Mode
Upstream Upstream Activity
-
-
-
-
Byte
Count
Bit 2
Byte
Count
Bit 2
Control
Bit 2
Byte
Count
Bit 1
Byte
Count
Bit 1
Control
Bit 1
Byte
Count
Bit 0
Byte
Count
Bit 0
Control
Bit 0
bbrrbbbb
-0xx0000
Notes:
5. B: Read and Write.
6. W: Write.
7. R: Read.
8. X: Unknown
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 51 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
21.0
Register Summary (continued)
HUB PORT CONTROL, STATUS, SUSPEND RESUME, SE0, FORCE LOW ENDPOINT B0, B1 CONFIGURATION I2C
TIMER
INTERRUPT
Addr
ess Register Name
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Reserved I2C
Interrupt
Enable
GPIO
Interrupt
Enable
DAC
Interrupt
Enable
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Read/Write Default/
/Both[5, 6, 7] Reset [8]
0x20
Global Interrupt
Enable
0x21
Endpoint Interrupt Reserved Reserved Reserved EPB1
Enable
Interrupt
Enable
0x24
Timer (LSB)
Timer Bit Timer Bit 6 Timer Bit 5 Timer Bit 4 Timer Bit 3 Timer Bit 2 Timer Bit 1 Timer Bit 0 rrrrrrrr
7
00000000
0x25
Timer (MSB)
Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Timer Bit Timer Bit Time Bit 9 Timer Bit 8 ----rrrr
11
10
----0000
0x28
I2C Control and
Status
MSTR
Mode
0x29
I2C Data
I2C Data I2C Data I2C Data I2C Data I2C Data I2C Data I2C Data 1 I2C Data bbbbbbbb
7
6
5
4
3
2
0
xxxxxxxx
0x40
USB Device
Address B
Device
Device
Device
Device
Device
Device
Device
Device
bbbbbbbb
Address B Address B Address B Address B Address B Address B Address B Address B
Enable
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
00000000
0x41
EP B0 Counter
Register
Data 0/1 Data Valid Byte
Byte
Byte
Byte
Byte
Byte
bbbbbbbb
Toggle
Count Bit Count Bit Count Bit Count Bit Count Bit Count Bit
5
4
3
2
1
0
00000000
0x42
EP B0 Mode
Register
Endpoint Endpoint Endpoint ACK
0 SETUP 0 IN
0 OUT
Received Received Received
Mode Bit 3 Mode Bit 2 Mode Bit 1 Mode Bit 0 bbbbbbbb
00000000
0x43
EP B1 Counter
Register
Data 0/1 Data Valid Byte
Toggle
Count
Bit 5
Byte
Count
Bit 4
Byte
Count
Bit 3
00000000
0x44
EP B1 Mode Regis- STALL
ter
ACK
Mode Bit 3 Mode Bit 2 Mode Bit 1 Mode Bit 0 b--bbbbb
0x48
Hub Port Connect Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Port 4
Status
Connect
Status
Port 3
Connect
Status
Port 2
Connect
Status
Port 1
Connect
Status
----bbbb
00000000
0x49
Hub Port Enable
Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Port 4
Enable
Port 3
Enable
Port 2
Enable
Port 1
Enable
----bbbb
00000000
0x4A
Hub Port Speed
Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Port 4
Speed
Port 3
Speed
Port 2
Speed
Port 1
Speed
----bbbb
00000000
0x4B
Hub Port Control
(Ports 4:1)
Port 4
Control
Bit 1
0x4D
Hub Port Suspend Device
Remote
Wakeup
0x4E
Hub Port Resume Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Resume 4 Resume 3 Resume 2 Resume 1 ----rrrr
Status
00000000
0x4F
Hub Port SE0 Sta- Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Port 4
Port 3
Port 2
Port 1
----rrrr
tus
SE0 Sta- SE0 Sta- SE0 Sta- SE0 Status
tus
tus
tus
00000000
0x50
Hub Ports Data
00000000
0x51
Hub Port Force Low Force
(Ports 4:1)
Low
D+[4]
0xFF
Process Status &
Control
Continue/ Xmit
Busy
Mode
-
-
ACK
USB Hub 1.024-ms 128-µs
Interrupt Interrupt Interrupt
Enable
Enable
Enable
USB Bus -bbbbbbb
RESET
Interrupt
Enable
-0000000
EPB0
Interrupt
Enable
EPA0
Interrupt
Enable
---00000
Addr
EPA2
Interrupt
Enable
EPA1
Interrupt
Enable
ARB Lost/ Received I2C
Restart
Stop
Enable
Byte
Count
Bit 2
Byte
Count
Bit 1
Byte
Count
Bit 0
---bbbbb
bbbbbbbb
bbbbbbbb
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
00000000
Port 4
Port 3
Port 3
Port 2
Port 2
Port 1
Port 1
bbbbbbbb
Control Bit Control Bit Control Bit Control Bit Control Bit Control Bit Control Bit
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
00000000
Reserved Reserved Reserved Port 4
Port 3
Port 2
Port 1
b---bbbb
Selective Selective Selective Selective
Suspend Suspend Suspend Suspend
00000000
Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Port 4
Port 3
Port 2
Port 1
----rrrr
Diff. Data Diff. Data Diff. Data Diff. Data
IRQ
Pending
00000000
Force Low Force Low Force Low Force Low Force Low Force Low Force Low bbbbbbbb
D–[4]
D+[3]
D–[3]
D+[2]
D–[2]
D+[1]
D–[1]
WDR
USB Bus Power-on Suspend Interrupt
Reset In- Reset
Enable
terrupt
Sense
Reserved Run
rbbbbrbb
00000000
00010001
Page 52 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
22.0
Sample Schematic
3.3v Regulator
OUT
IN
GND
2.2 µF
USB-A
Vbus
D–
D+
GND
Vref
2.2 µF
Vref
1.5K
(RUUP)
USB-B
Vbus
DD+
GND
0.01 µF
Vbus
D0–
D0+
Vref
Vcc
SHELL
Optional
0.01 µF
22x2(Rext)
22x8(Rext)
D1–
D1+
4.7 nF
250 VAC
USB-A
Vbus
D–
D+
GND
D2–
XTALO
10M
6.000 MHz
D2+
XTALI
D3–
GND
GND
Vpp
D3+
D4–
D4+
15K(x8)
(R UDN)
POWER
MANAGEMENT
USB-A
Vbus
D–
D+
GND
USB-A
Vbus
D–
D+
GND
Figure 22-1. Sample Schematic
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 53 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
23.0
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Storage Temperature .......................................................................................................................................... –65°C to +150°C
Ambient Temperature with Power Applied ................................................................................................................. 0°C to +70°C
Supply Voltage on VCC relative to VSS .................................................................................................................... –0.5V to +7.0V
DC Input Voltage.......................................................................................................................................... –0.5V to +VCC + 0.5V
DC Voltage Applied to Outputs in High-Z State............................................................................................ –0.5V to +VCC + 0.5V
Power Dissipation ..............................................................................................................................................................500 mW
Static Discharge Voltage ...................................................................................................................................................> 2000V
Latch-up Current ............................................................................................................................................................ > 200 mA
Max Output Sink Current into Port 0, 1, 2, 3, and DAC[1:0] Pins ....................................................................................... 60 mA
Max Output Sink Current into DAC[7:2] Pins ....................................................................................................................... 10 mA
Max Output Source Current from Port 1, 2, 3, 4 ................................................................................................................. 30 mA
24.0
Electrical Characteristics
Electrical Characteristics (Fosc = 6 MHz; Operating Temperature = 0 to 70°C, VCC = 4.0V to 5.25V)
Parameter
Description
Conditions
Min.
Max.
Unit
3.15
3.45
V
–0.4
0.4
V
50
mA
General
VREF
Reference Voltage
3.3V ±5%
Vpp
Programming Voltage (disabled)
ICC
VCC Operating Current
ISB1
Supply Current—Suspend Mode
50
µA
Iref
Vref Operating Current
No USB Traffic[9]
10
mA
Iil
Input Leakage Current
Any pin
1
µA
No GPIO source current
USB Interface
Vdi
Differential Input Sensitivity
Vcm
Differential Input Common Mode Range
| (D+)–(D–) |
0.2
0.8
2.5
V
Vse
Single Ended Receiver Threshold
0.8
2.0
V
Cin
Transceiver Capacitance
20
pF
V
Ilo
Hi-Z State Data Line Leakage
0V < Vin < 3.3V
–10
10
µA
Rext
External USB Series Resistor
In series with each USB pin
19
21
Ω
RUUP
External Upstream USB Pull-up Resistor
1.5 kΩ ±5%, D+ to VREG
1.425
1.575
kΩ
RUDN
External Downstream Pull-down Resistors 15 kΩ ±5%, downstream USB pins
14.25
15.75
kΩ
0
100
ms
2.8
3.6
V
Power-on Reset
tvccs
VCC Ramp Rate
Linear ramp 0V to VCC[10]
USB Upstream/Downstream Port
VUOH
Static Output High
15 kΩ ±5% to Gnd
VUOL
Static Output Low
1.5 kΩ ±5% to VREF
ZO
USB Driver Output Impedance
Including R ext Resistor
0.3
V
28
44
Ω
8.0
24.0
kΩ
General Purpose I/O (GPIO)
Rup
Pull-up Resistance (typical 14 kΩ)
VITH
Input Threshold Voltage
All ports, LOW to HIGH edge
20%
40%
VCC
VH
Input Hysteresis Voltage
All ports, HIGH to LOW edge
2%
8%
VCC
VOL
Port 0,1,2,3 Output Low Voltage
IOL = 3 mA
IOL = 8 mA
0.4
2.0
V
V
Notes:
9. Add 18 mA per driven USB cable (upstream or downstream). This is based on transitions every two full-speed bit times on average.
10. Power-on Reset occurs whenever the voltage on VCC is below approximately 2.5V.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 54 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
Electrical Characteristics (Fosc = 6 MHz; Operating Temperature = 0 to 70°C, VCC = 4.0V to 5.25V) (continued)
Parameter
VOH
Description
Conditions
Output High Voltage
Min.
IOH = 1.9 mA (all ports 0,1,2,3)
Max.
Unit
2.4
V
DAC Interface
Rup
DAC Pull-up Resistance (typical 14 kΩ)
Isink0(0)
DAC[7:2] Sink Current (0)
Vout = 2.0V DC
Isink0(F)
DAC[7:2] Sink Current (F)
Vout = 2.0V DC
0.5
1.5
mA
Isink1(0)
DAC[1:0] Sink Current (0)
Vout = 2.0V DC
1.6
4.8
mA
Isink1(F)
DAC[1:0] Sink Current (F)
Vout = 2.0V DC
8
24
mA
[11]
8.0
24.0
kΩ
0.1
0.3
mA
Irange
Programmed Isink Ratio: max/min
Vout = 2.0V DC
4
6
Tratio
Tracking Ratio DAC[1:0] to DAC[7:2]
Vout = 2.0V[12]
14
22
IsinkDAC
DAC Sink Current
Vout = 2.0V DC
1.6
4.8
mA
0.6
LSB
Differential Nonlinearity
Ilin
25.0
DAC
Port[13]
Switching Characteristics (FOSC = 6.0 MHz)
Parameter
Description
Min.
Max.
Unit
Clock Source
fOSC
Clock Rate
tcyc
Clock Period
tCH
Clock HIGH time
0.45 tCYC
ns
tCL
Clock LOW time
0.45 tCYC
ns
USB Full-speed
6 ±0.25%
166.25
MHz
167.08
ns
Signaling[14]
trfs
Transition Rise Time
4
tffs
Transition Fall Time
trfmfs
Rise / Fall Time Matching; (tr/tf)
tdratefs
Full Speed Date Rate
20
ns
4
20
ns
90
111
%
12 ±0.25%
Mb/s
DAC Interface
tsink
Current Sink Response Time
0.8
µs
HAPI Read Cycle Timing
tRD
Read Pulse Width
tOED
OE LOW to Data Valid[15, 16]
15
tOEZ
OE HIGH to Data
High-Z[16]
tOEDR
OE LOW to Data_Ready Deasserted[15, 16]
0
ns
40
ns
20
ns
60
ns
HAPI Write Cycle Timing
tWR
15
ns
tDSTB
Data Valid to STB HIGH (Data Set-up
Time)[16]
5
ns
tSTBZ
STB HIGH to Data High-Z (Data Hold Time)[16]
15
ns
tSTBLE
Write Strobe Width
STB LOW to Latch_Empty
Deasserted [15, 16]
0
50
ns
8.192
14.336
ms
Timer Signals
twatch
WDT Period
Notes:
11. Irange: Isinkn(15)/ Isinkn(0) for the same pin.
12. Tratio = Isink1[1:0](n)/Isink0[7:2](n) for the same n, programmed.
13. Ilin measured as largest step size vs. nominal according to measured full scale and zero programmed values.
14. Per Table 7-6 of revision 1.1 of USB specification.
15. For 25-pF load.
16. Assumes chip select CS is asserted (LOW).
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 55 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
tCYC
tCH
CLOCK
tCL
Figure 25-1. Clock Timing
tr
tr
D+
90%
90%
10%
10%
D−
Figure 25-2. USB Data Signal Timing
Interrupt Generated
Int
CS (P2.6, input)
tRD
OE (P2.5, input)
DATA (output)
D[23:0]
tOED
STB (P2.4, input)
tOEZ
tOEDR
(Ready)
DReadyPin (P2.3, output)
(Shown for DRDY Polarity=0)
Internal Write
Internal Addr
Port0
Figure 25-3. HAPI Read by External Interface from USB Microcontroller
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 56 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
Interrupt Generated
Int
CS (P2.6, input)
tWR
STB (P2.4, input)
tSTBZ
DATA (input)
D[23:0]
tDSTB
OE (P2.5, input)
tSTBLE
LEmptyPin (P2.2, output)
(Shown for LEMPTY Polarity=0)
(not empty)
Internal Read
Internal Addr
Port0
Figure 25-4. HAPI Write by External Device to USB Microcontroller
26.0
Ordering Information
Ordering Code
PROM Size
Package Type
Operating Range
CY7C66013C-PVXC
8 KB
48-pin (300-Mil) SSOP
Commercial
CY7C66113C-PVXC
8 KB
56-pin (300-Mil) SSOP
Commercial
CY7C66113C-LFXC
8 KB
56-pin QFN
Commercial
CY7C66113C-PVXCT
8 KB
56-pin (300-Mil) SSOP
Commercial
CY7C66113C-XC
8 KB
Die
Commercial
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 57 of 61
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
27.0
Package Diagrams
48-pin Shrunk Small Outline Package O48
51-85061-*C
56-pin Shrunk Small Outline Package O56
51-85062-*C
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 58 of 61
[+] Feedback
CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
27.0
Package Diagrams (continued)
56-Lead QFN 8 x 8 MM LF56A
TOP VIEW
BOTTOM VIEW
SIDE VIEW
0.08[0.003]
A
C
1.00[0.039] MAX.
7.90[0.311]
8.10[0.319]
0.05[0.002] MAX.
0.80[0.031] MAX.
7.70[0.303]
7.80[0.307]
0.18[0.007]
0.28[0.011]
0.20[0.008] REF.
0.80[0.031]
DIA.
PIN1 ID
0.20[0.008] R.
N
N
1
1
2
2
0.45[0.018]
6.45[0.254]
6.55[0.258]
7.90[0.311]
8.10[0.319]
7.70[0.303]
7.80[0.307]
E-PAD
(PAD SIZE VARY
BY DEVICE TYPE)
0.30[0.012]
0.50[0.020]
0°-12°
0.50[0.020]
C
Board Pad 4.7mm x 5.2 mm minimum
6.63mm x 6.63mm maximum
28.0
SEATING
PLANE
0.24[0.009]
0.60[0.024]
(4X)
6.45[0.254]
6.55[0.258]
51-85144-*D
Quad Flat Package No Leads (QFN) Package Design Notes
Electrical contact of the part to the Printed Circuit Board (PCB) is made by soldering the leads on the bottom surface of the
package to the PCB. Hence, special attention is required to the heat transfer area below the package to provide a good thermal
bond to the circuit board. A Copper (Cu) fill is to be designed into the PCB as a thermal pad under the package. Heat is transferred
from the FX1 through the device’s metal paddle on the bottom side of the package. Heat from here, is conducted to the PCB at
the thermal pad. It is then conducted from the thermal pad to the PCB inner ground plane by a 5 x 5 array of via. A via is a plated
through hole in the PCB with a finished diameter of 13 mil. The QFN’s metal die paddle must be soldered to the PCB’s thermal
pad. Solder mask is placed on the board top side over each via to resist solder flow into the via. The mask on the top side also
minimizes outgassing during the solder reflow process.
For further information on this package design please refer to the application note Surface Mount Assembly of AMKOR’s
MicroLeadFrame (MLF) Technology. This application note can be downloaded from AMKOR’s website from the following URL
http://www.amkor.com/products/notes_papers/MLF_AppNote_0902.pdf. The application note provides detailed information on
board mounting guidelines, soldering flow, rework process, etc.
Figure 28-1 below displays a cross-sectional area underneath the package. The cross section is of only one via. The thickness
of the solder paste template should be 5 mil. It is recommended that “No Clean” type 3 solder paste is used for mounting the part.
Nitrogen purge is recommended during reflow.
Figure 28-2 is a plot of the solder mask pattern. This pad is thermally connected and is not electrically connected inside the chip.
To minimize EMI, this pad should be connected to the ground plane of the circuit board.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 59 of 61
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
0.017” dia
Solder Mask
Cu Fill
Cu Fill
PCB Material
Via hole for thermally connecting the
QFN to the circuit board ground plane.
0.013” dia
PCB Material
This figure only shows the top three layers of the
circuit board: Top Solder, PCB Dielectric, and
the Ground Plane
Figure 28-1. Cross-section of the Area Underneath the QFN Package
Figure 28-2. Plot of the Solder Mask (White Area)
Purchase of I2C components from Cypress, or one of its sublicensed Associated Companies, conveys a license under the Philips
I2C Patent Rights to use these components in an I2C system, provided that the system conforms to the I2C Standard Specification
as defined by Philips.
All product and company names mentioned in this document are the trademarks of their respective holders.
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 60 of 61
© Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, 2006. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. Cypress Semiconductor Corporation assumes no responsibility for the use
of any circuitry other than circuitry embodied in a Cypress product. Nor does it convey or imply any license under patent or other rights. Cypress products are not warranted nor intended to be
used for medical, life support, life saving, critical control or safety applications, unless pursuant to an express written agreement with Cypress. Furthermore, Cypress does not authorize its
products for use as critical components in life-support systems where a malfunction or failure may reasonably be expected to result in significant injury to the user. The inclusion of Cypress
products in life-support systems application implies that the manufacturer assumes all risk of such use and in doing so indemnifies Cypress against all charges.
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CY7C66013C
CY7C66113C
Document History Page
Document Title: CY7C66013C, CY7C66113C Full-Speed USB (12 Mbps) Peripheral Controller with Integrated Hub
Document Number: 38-08024
REV.
ECN NO.
Issue
Date
Orig. of
Change
Description of Change
**
114525
3/27/02
DSG
Change from Spec number: 38-00591 to 38-08024
*A
124768
03/20/03
MON
Added register bit definitions.
Added default bit state of each register.
Corrected the Schematic (location of the pull-up on D+).
Added register summary.
Removed information on the availability of the part in PDIP package.
Modified Table 20-1 and provided more explanation regarding
locking/unlocking mechanism of the mode register.
Removed any information regarding the speed detect bit in Hub Port Speed
register being set by hardware.
*B
417632
See ECN
BHA
Updated part number and ordering information.
Added QFN Package Drawing and Design Notes.
Corrected bit names in Figures 9-3, 9-4, 9-5, 9-8, 9-9, 9-10, 10-5, 16-1, 18-1,
18-2, 18-3, 18-6, 18-7, 18-9, 18-10.
Removed Hub Ports Force Low register address 0x52.
Added HAPI to Interrupt Vector Number 11 in Table 16-1.
Corrected bit names in Section 21.0.
Corrected Units in Table 24.0 for RUUP, RUDN, REXT, and ZO.
Added DIE diagram and related information.
Added HAPI to GPIO interrupt vector in Table 5-1 and figure 16-3
Document #: 38-08024 Rev. *B
Page 61 of 61
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