Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. HC11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... MC68HC11D3 Technical Data For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Paragraph Number TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Number Section 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1 1.2 Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Section 2 PIN DESCRIPTIONS 2.1 VDD, VSS, and EVSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2 Reset (RESET) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3 Crystal Driver and External Clock Input (XTAL, EXTAL) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.4 E-Clock Output (E) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5 Interrupt Request (IRQ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.6 Non-Maskable Interrupt (XIRQ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.7 MODA and MODB (MODA/LIR,and MODB/VSTBY) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.8 PD6/AS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.9 PD7/R/W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.10 Port Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.10.1 Port A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.10.2 Port B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.10.3 Port C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.10.4 Port D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2 2-2 2-3 2-4 2-4 2-4 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-6 2-7 2-7 2-7 2-8 Section 3 CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3.1 CPU Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.1 Accumulators A, B, and D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.2 Index Register X (IX) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.3 Index Register Y (IY) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.4 Stack Pointer (SP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.5 Program Counter (PC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6 Condition Code Register (CCR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.1 Carry/Borrow (C) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.2 Overflow (V) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.3 Zero (Z). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.4 Negative (N) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.5 Interrupt Mask (I) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.6 Half Carry (H) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.7 X Interrupt Mask (X) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.6.8 Stop Disable (S) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2 Data Types. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3 Opcodes and Operands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4 Addressing Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.1 Immediate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.2 Direct . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.2.1 Extended . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.2.2 Indexed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.2.3 Inherent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4.2.4 Relative. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5 Instruction Set . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-1 3-2 3-2 3-2 3-2 3-4 3-4 3-4 3-5 3-5 3-5 3-5 3-5 3-5 3-6 3-6 3-6 3-6 3-7 3-7 3-7 3-7 3-7 3-7 3-8 iii Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Paragraph Number Table of Contents (Cont.) Page Number Section 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY 4.1 Operating Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1 4.1.1 Single-Chip Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1 4.1.2 Expanded Multiplexed Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-1 4.1.3 Special Test Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2 4.1.4 Bootstrap Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2 4.2 Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-3 4.2.1 Priority and Mode Select Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-6 4.2.2 System Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-8 4.2.2.1 CONFIG Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-8 4.2.2.2 INIT Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-9 4.2.2.3 OPTION Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-10 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Section 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5.1 Resets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-1 5.1.1 Power-On Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-1 5.1.2 External Reset (RESET). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-1 5.1.3 COP Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-1 5.1.4 Clock Monitor Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-2 5.1.5 Option Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-3 5.1.6 CONFIG Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-4 5.2 Effects of Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-4 5.2.1 CPU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-4 5.2.2 Memory Map. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-4 5.2.3 Parallel I/O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5 5.2.4 Timer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5 5.2.5 Real-Time Interrupt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5 5.2.6 Pulse Accumulator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-5 5.2.7 COP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6 5.2.8 SCI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6 5.2.9 SPI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6 5.2.10 System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6 5.3 Reset and Interrupt Priority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6 5.3.1 Highest Priority Interrupt and Miscellaneous Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-7 5.4 Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-8 5.4.1 Interrupt Recognition and Register Stacking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-9 5.4.2 Non-Maskable Interrupt Request XIRQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-10 5.4.3 Illegal Opcode Trap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-10 5.4.4 Software Interrupt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11 5.4.5 Maskable Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11 5.4.6 Reset and Interrupt Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-11 5.5 Low-Power Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-16 5.5.1 WAIT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-16 5.5.2 STOP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-17 Section 6 PARALLEL I/O 6.1 Port A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-1 6.2 Port B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-1 6.3 Port C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-2 iv For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Paragraph Number Table of Contents (Cont.) Page Number 6.4 Port D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-2 6.5 Parallel I/O Control Register (PIOC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6-4 Section 7 SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Data Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-1 Transmit Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-1 Receive Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-2 Wake-up Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-4 7.4.1 Idle-Line Wakeup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-4 7.4.2 Address-Mark Wakeup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-4 7.5 SCI Error Detection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-5 7.6 SCI Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-5 7.6.1 Serial Communications Data Register (SCDR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-5 7.6.2 Serial Communications Control Register 1 (SCCR1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-5 7.6.3 Serial Communications Control Register 2 (SCCR2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-6 7.6.4 Serial Communication Status Register (SCSR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-7 7.6.5 Baud Rate Register (BAUD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-8 7.7 Status Flags and Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-10 Section 8 SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE 8.1 Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.2 SPI Transfer Formats. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.2.1 Clock Phase and Polarity Controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.3 SPI Signals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.3.1 Master In Slave Out . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.3.2 Master Out Slave In . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.3.3 Serial Clock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.3.4 Slave Select . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.4 SPI System Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.5 SPI Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.5.1 Serial Peripheral Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.5.2 Serial Peripheral Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.5.3 Serial Peripheral Data I/O. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-1 8-2 8-3 8-3 8-4 8-4 8-4 8-4 8-4 8-5 8-6 8-7 8-7 Section 9 TIMING SYSTEM 9.1 Timer Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-3 9.2 Input Capture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-4 9.2.1 Timer Control 2 Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-5 9.2.2 Timer Input Capture Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-6 9.2.3 Timer Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-6 9.3 Output Compare. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-6 9.3.1 Timer Output Compare Registers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-7 9.3.2 Timer Compare Force Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-8 9.3.3 Output Compare Mask Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-8 9.3.4 Output Compare 1 Data Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-9 9.3.5 Timer Counter Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-9 9.3.6 Timer Control 1 Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-9 9.3.7 Timer Interrupt Mask 1 Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-10 9.3.8 Timer Interrupt Flag 1 Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-10 TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com v Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Paragraph Number Page Number Table of Contents (Cont.) 9.3.9 Timer Interrupt Mask 2 Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.3.10 Timer Interrupt Flag 2 Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.4 Real-Time Interrupt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.4.1 Timer Interrupt Flag 2 Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.4.2 Pulse Accumulator Control Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.5 Computer Operating Properly Watchdog Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.6 Pulse Accumulator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.6.1 Pulse Accumulator Control Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.6.2 Pulse Accumulator Count Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.6.3 Pulse Accumulator Status and Interrupt Bits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-11 9-12 9-12 9-13 9-14 9-15 9-15 9-17 9-17 9-18 Appendix A ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Appendix B MECHANICAL DATA AND ORDERING INFORMATION B.1 Pin Assignments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B-1 B.2 Package Dimensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B-3 B.3 Ordering Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B-3 Appendix C DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT C.1 Development System Tools. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C-1 C.2 MC68HC11D3 Development Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C-1 INDEX vi For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Figure Title Page 1-1 MC68HC11D3 Block Diagram ........................................................................ 1-2 2-1 2-2 2-3 2-4 2-5 2-6 Pin Assignments for 44-Pin PLCC ................................................................. 2-1 Pin Assignments for 40-Pin DIP ..................................................................... 2-2 External Reset Circuit ..................................................................................... 2-3 Common Crystal Connections ........................................................................ 2-3 External Oscillator Connections ..................................................................... 2-4 One Crystal Driving Two MCUs ..................................................................... 2-4 3-1 3-2 Programming Model ....................................................................................... 3-1 Stacking Operations ....................................................................................... 3-3 4-1 4-2 4-3 Address/Data Demultiplexing ......................................................................... 4-2 MC68HC11D3 Memory Map .......................................................................... 4-3 RAM Standby MODB/VSTBY Connections ...................................................... 4-6 5-1 5-2 5-3 Processing Flow out of Reset (1 of 2) .......................................................... 5-12 Interrupt Priority Resolution (1 of 2) ............................................................. 5-14 Interrupt Source Resolution within SCI ........................................................ 5-16 7-1 7-2 7-3 7-4 SCI Transmitter Block Diagram ...................................................................... 7-2 SCI Receiver Block Diagram .......................................................................... 7-3 SCI Baud Rate Diagram ............................................................................... 7-10 Interrupt Source Resolution within SCI ........................................................ 7-12 8-1 8-2 SPI Block Diagram ......................................................................................... 8-2 SPI Transfer Format ....................................................................................... 8-3 9-1 9-2 9-3 Timer Clock Divider Chains ............................................................................ 9-2 Capture/Compare Block Diagram .................................................................. 9-4 Pulse Accumulator ....................................................................................... 9-16 A-1 A-2 A-3 A-4 A-5 A-6 A-7 A-8 A-9 Test Methods .................................................................................................. A-3 Timer Inputs ................................................................................................... A-4 POR and External Reset Timing Diagram ...................................................... A-5 STOP Recovery Timing Diagram ................................................................... A-6 WAIT Recovery Timing Diagram .................................................................... A-7 Port Write Timing Diagram ............................................................................. A-8 Port Read Timing Diagram ............................................................................. A-8 Multiplexed Expansion Bus Timing Diagram ................................................ A-10 SPI Master Timing (CPHA = 0) .................................................................... A-12 MC68HC11D3 TA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Figure (Continued) Title Page SPI Master Timing (CPHA = 1) .................................................................... A-12 SPI Slave Timing (CPHA = 0) ...................................................................... A-13 SPI Slave Timing (CPHA = 1) ...................................................................... A-13 B-1 B-2 B-3 40-Pin DIP ...................................................................................................... B-1 44-Pin PLCC .................................................................................................. B-2 44-Pin QFP ..................................................................................................... B-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... A-10 A-11 A-12 TECHNI For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. LIST OF TABLES Table Title Page 2-1 Port Signal Functions............................................................................................. 2-6 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 3-2 Instruction Set........................................................................................................ 3-8 4-1 4-2 4-3 4-4 Register and Control Bit Assignments ................................................................. 4-4 Hardware Mode Select Summary.......................................................................... 4-6 RAM Mapping ........................................................................................................ 4-9 Register Mapping................................................................................................... 4-9 5-1 5-2 5-3 5-4 5-5 COP Time-out........................................................................................................ 5-2 Reset Cause, Reset Vector, and Operating Mode ................................................ 5-4 Highest Priority Interrupt Selection ........................................................................ 5-8 Interrupt and Reset Vector Assignments ............................................................... 5-9 Stacking Order on Entry to Interrupts .................................................................. 5-10 7-1 Baud Rate Prescale Selects .................................................................................. 7-8 7-2 Baud Rate Selects ................................................................................................ 7-9 9-1 Timer Summary ..................................................................................................... 9-3 9-2 Timer Control Configuration................................................................................... 9-5 9-3 Pulse Accumulator Timing ................................................................................... 9-16 A-1 A-2 A-3 A-4 A-5 A-6 A-7 Maximum Ratings.................................................................................................. A-1 Thermal Characteristics ........................................................................................ A-1 DC Electrical Characteristics................................................................................. A-2 Control Timing .......................................................................................................A-4 Peripheral Port Timing........................................................................................... A-8 Expansion Bus Timing........................................................................................... A-9 Serial Peripheral Interface Timing ....................................................................... A-11 B-1 Ordering Information ............................................................................................. B-3 MC68HC11D3 TA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The MC68HC11D3 and MC68HC11D0 are ROM-based high-performance microcontrollers (MCUs) based on the MC68HC11E9 design. Members of the Dx series are derived from the same mask and feature a high speed multiplexed bus capable of running at up to 3 MHz, and a fully static design that allows operations at frequencies to dc. The only difference between the MCUs in the Dx series is whether or not the ROM has been tested and guaranteed. 1.1 Features • MC68HC11 CPU • Power Saving STOP and WAIT Modes • 4 Kbytes of On-Chip ROM • 192 Bytes of On-Chip RAM (All Saved During Standby) • 16-Bit Timer System — 3 Input Capture (IC) Channels — 4 Output Compare (OC) Channels — One IC or OC Channel (Software Selectable) • 8-Bit Pulse Accumulator • Real-Time Interrupt Circuit • Computer Operating Properly (COP) Watchdog System • Synchronous Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) • Asynchronous Nonreturn to Zero (NRZ) Serial Communications Interface (SCI) • 26 Input/Output (I/O) Pins — 16 Bidirectional I/O Pins — 3 Input Only Pins — 3 Output Only Pins (One Output Only Pin in the 40-Pin Package) • Available in a 44-Pin Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier (PLCC) and 40-Pin Dual In-Line Package (DIP) 1.2 Structure Refer to Figure 1-1, which shows the structure of the MC68HC11D3 MCU. INTRODUCTION TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 1-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. XIRQ RESET 4 KBYTES ROM INTERRUPT LOGIC CPU STROBE AND HANDSHAKE PARALLEL I/O SCI CONTROL PORT C PORT D PD7/R/W PD6/AS CONTROL PORT B PC7/A7/D7 PC6/A6/D6 PC5/A5/D5 PC4/A4/D4 PC3/A3/D3 PC2/A2/D2 PC1/A1/D1 PC0/A0/D0 CONTROL PB7/A15 PB6/A14 PB5/A13 PB4/A12 PB3/A11 PB2/A10 PB1/A9 PB0/A8 PA7/PAI/OC1 PA6/OC2/OC1 PA5/OC3/OC1 PA4/OC4/OC1 PA3/OC5/OC1 PA2/IC1 PA1/IC2 PA0/IC3 SPI TxD RxD ADDRESS/DATA VSS PD1/TxD PD0/RxD BUS EXPANSION ADDRESS TIMER SYSTEM PORT A VDD 192 BYTES RAM SS SCK MOSI MISO PERIODIC INTERRUPT COP PULSE ACCUMULATOR IRQ/ E OSCILLATOR CLOCK LOGIC MODE CONTROL Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... XTAL EXTAL PD5/SS PD4/SCK PD3/MOSI PD2/MISO MODB/ VSTBY R/W AS MODA/ LIR Figure 1-1 MC68HC11D3 Block Diagram INTRODUCTION 1-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA SECTION 2 PIN DESCRIPTIONS E MODA/LIR MODB/VSTBY 42 41 40 EXTAL VSS 2 43 PC0/ADDR0 3 XTAL PC1/ADDR1 4 44 PC2/ADDR2 5 EVSS PC3/ADDR3 6 The MC68HC11D3 is available packaged as a 40-pin dual in-line package (DIP), a 44pin plastic leaded chip carrier (PLCC), or a 44-pin quad flat pack (QFP). Most pins on this MCU serve two or more functions, as described in the following paragraphs. Refer to Figure 2-1 and Figure 2-2, which shows the MC68HC11D3 pin assignments. 7 39 PB0/ADDR8 PC5/ADDR5 8 38 PB1/ADDR9 PC6/ADDR6 9 37 PB2/ADDR10 PC7/ADDR7 10 36 PB3/ADDR11 XIRQ/VPP 11 35 PB4/ADDR12 PD7/R/W 12 34 PB5/ADDR13 PD6/AS 13 33 PB6/ADDR14 RESET 14 32 PB7/ADDR15 1 PC4/ADDR4 MC68HC(7)11D3 24 25 26 27 28 PA6/OC2/OC1 PA5/OC3/OC1 PA4/OC4/OC1 PA3/IC4/OC5/OC1 PA2/IC1 23 22 VDD PA7/PAI/OC1 21 PD5/SS PA1/IC2 20 PD1/TxD 29 19 PA0/IC3 17 PD4/SCK NC 30 PD3/MOSI 31 16 18 15 PD2/MISO IRQ PD0/RxD Figure 2-1 Pin Assignments for 44-Pin PLCC Freescale Semiconductor, nc... I PIN DESCRIPTIONS TECHNICAL DATA 2-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. VSS 1 40 XTAL PC0/ADDR0 2 39 EXTAL PC1/ADDR1 3 38 E PC2/ADDR2 4 37 MODA/LIR PC3/ADDR3 5 36 MODB/VSTBY PC4/ADDR4 6 35 PB0/ADDR8 PC5/ADDR5 7 34 PB1/ADDR9 PC6/ADDR6 8 33 PB2/ADDR10 PC7/ADDR7 9 32 PB3/ADDR11 XIRQ/VPP 10 31 PB4/ADDR12 PD7/R/W 11 30 PB5/ADDR13 PD6/AS 12 29 PB6/ADDR14 RESET 13 28 PB7/ADDR15 IRQ 14 27 PA0/IC3 PD0/RxD 15 26 PA1/IC2 PD1/TxD 16 25 PA2/IC1 17 24 PA3/IC4/OC5/OC1 PD3/MOSI 18 23 PA5/OC3/OC1 PD4/SCK 19 22 PA7/PAI/OC1 20 21 VDD PD2/MISO PD5/SS MC68HC(7)11D3 D3 40-PIN DIP Figure 2-2 Pin Assignments for 40-Pin DIP 2.1 VDD, VSS, and EVSS Power is supplied to the MCU through VDD and VSS. VSS is the power supply, and VSS is ground. EVSS, available on the 44-pin PLCC, is an additional ground pin that must be grounded with VSS. The MCU operates from a single 5-volt (nominal) power supply. Very fast signal transitions occur on the MCU pins. The short rise and fall times place high, short duration current demands on the power supply. To prevent noise problems, provide good power supply bypassing at the MCU. Also, use bypass capacitors that have good high-frequency characteristics and situate them as close to the MCU as possible. Bypass requirements vary, depending on how heavily the MCU pins are loaded. 2.2 Reset (RESET) An active low bidirectional control signal, RESET, acts as an input to initialize the MCU to a known startup state. It also acts as an open-drain output to indicate that an internal failure has been detected in either the clock monitor or COP watchdog circuit. The CPU distinguishes between internal and external reset conditions by sensing whether the reset pin rises to a logic one in less than two E-clock cycles after a reset has occurred. It is not advisable to connect an external resistor-capacitor (RC) power-up delay circuit to the reset pin of M68HC11 devices because the circuit charge time PIN DESCRIPTIONS 2-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. constant can cause the device to misinterpret the type of reset that occurred. Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS for further information. Figure 2-3 illustrates a reset circuit that uses an external switch. Use a low voltage interrupt circuit, however, to prevent corruption of RAM. VDD VDD 4.7 k Ω 2 IN Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... RESET MC34(0/1)64 1 TO RESET OF M68HC11 GND 3 EXT RESET CIRCUIT Figure 2-3 External Reset Circuit 2.3 Crystal Driver and External Clock Input (XTAL, EXTAL) These two pins provide the interface for either a crystal or a CMOS compatible clock to control the internal clock generator circuitry. The frequency applied to these pins is four times higher than the desired E-clock rate. The XTAL pin is normally left unterminated when an external CMOS compatible clock input is connected to the EXTAL pin. However, a 10 kΩ to 100 kΩ load resistor connected from XTAL to ground can be used to reduce RFI noise emission. The XTAL output is normally intended to drive only a crystal. The XTAL output can be buffered with a high impedance buffer, or it can be used to drive the EXTAL input of another M68HC11. In all cases, use caution around the oscillator pins. Load capacitances shown in the oscillator circuits include all stray layout capacitances. Refer to Figure 2-4, Figure 25, and Figure 2-6. 25 pF * EXTAL 10 MΩ MCU 4xE CRYSTAL 25 pF * XTAL * THIS VALUE INCLUDES ALL STRAY CAPACITANCES. COMMON XTAL CONN Figure 2-4 Common Crystal Connections PIN DESCRIPTIONS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 2-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 4xE CMOS-COMPATIBLE EXTERNAL OSCILLATOR EXTAL MCU XTAL NC EXT EXTAL CONN Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Figure 2-5 External Oscillator Connections 25 pF * 220 Ω EXTAL EXTAL FIRST MCU 10 MΩ SECOND MCU 4xE CRYSTAL 25 pF * XTAL NC XTAL * THIS VALUE INCLUDES ALL STRAY CAPACITANCES. DUAL-MCU XTAL CONN Figure 2-6 One Crystal Driving Two MCUs 2.4 E-Clock Output (E) E is the output connection for the internally generated E clock. The signal from E is used as a timing reference. The frequency of the E-clock output is one fourth that of the input frequency at the XTAL and EXTAL pins. When E-clock output is low, an internal process is taking place. When it is high, data is being accessed. All clocks, including the E clock, are halted when the MCU is in STOP mode. The E clock can be turned off in single-chip modes to reduce the effects of radio frequency interference (RFI). 2.5 Interrupt Request (IRQ) The IRQ input provides a means of applying asynchronous interrupt requests to the MCU. Either negative edge-sensitive triggering or level-sensitive triggering is program selectable (OPTION register). IRQ is always configured to level-sensitive triggering at reset. Connect an external pullup resistor, typically 4.7 kΩ, to VDD when IRQ is used in a level sensitive wired-OR configuration. 2.6 Non-Maskable Interrupt (XIRQ) The XIRQ input provides a means of requesting a nonmaskable interrupt after reset initialization. During reset, the X bit in the condition code register (CCR) is set and any interrupt is masked until MCU software enables it. Because the XIRQ input is levelPIN DESCRIPTIONS 2-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. sensitive, it can be connected to a multiple-source wired-OR network with an external pullup resistor to VDD. XIRQ is often used as a power loss detect interrupt. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Whenever XIRQ or IRQ are used with multiple interrupt sources (IRQ must be configured for level-sensitive operation if there is more than one source of IRQ interrupt), each source must drive the interrupt input with an open-drain type of driver to avoid contention between outputs. There should be a single pullup resistor near the MCU interrupt input pin (typically 4.7 kΩ). There must also be an interlock mechanism at each interrupt source so that the source holds the interrupt line low until the MCU recognizes and acknowledges the interrupt request. If one or more interrupt sources are still pending after the MCU services a request, the interrupt line will still be held low and the MCU will be interrupted again as soon as the interrupt mask bit in the MCU is cleared (normally upon return from an interrupt). Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS. 2.7 MODA and MODB (MODA/LIR,and MODB/VSTBY) During reset, MODA and MODB select one of the four operating modes. Refer to SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY. After the operating mode has been selected, the LIR pin provides an open-drain output to indicate that execution of an instruction has begun. A series of E-clock cycles occurs during execution of each instruction. The LIR signal goes low during the first E-clock cycle of each instruction (opcode fetch). This output is provided for assistance in program debugging. The VSTBY pin is used to input RAM standby power. When the voltage on this pin is more than one MOS threshold (about 0.7 volts) above the VDD voltage, the internal 192-byte RAM and part of the reset logic are powered from this signal rather than the VDD input. This allows RAM contents to be retained without VDD power applied to the MCU. Reset must be driven low before VDD is removed and must remain low until VDD has been restored to a valid level. 2.8 PD6/AS This pin performs either of two separate functions, depending on the operating mode. In single-chip and bootstrap modes, the pin functions as input/output port D bit 6. In the expanded multiplexed and test modes, it provides an address strobe (AS) function. The AS can demultiplex the address and data signals at port C. Refer to SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY for further information. 2.9 PD7/R/W This pin provides two separate functions, depending on the operating mode. In singlechip and bootstrap modes, PD7/R/W acts as input/output port D bit 7. Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O for further information. In expanded multiplexed and test modes, PD7/R/W performs a read/write function. PD7/R/W controls the direction of transfers on the external data bus. A high on this pin indicates that a read cycle is in progress. PIN DESCRIPTIONS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 2-5 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2.10 Port Signals In the 44-pin PLCC package, 32 input/output lines are arranged into four 8-bit ports: A, B, C, and D. The lines of ports B, C, and D are fully bidirectional. Each of these four ports serves a purpose other than I/O, depending on the operating mode or peripheral functions selected. Note that ports B, C, and two bits of port D are available for I/O functions only in single-chip and bootstrap modes. Refer to Table 2-1 for details about the 32 port signals' functions within different operating modes. Table 2-1 Port Signal Functions Port/Bit Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4* PA5 PA6* PA7 PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 PD0 PD1 PD2 PD3 PD4 PD5 PD6 PD7 Single-Chip and Bootstrap Mode PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 PD6 PD7 Expanded Multiplexed and Special Test Mode PA0/IC3 PA1/IC2 PA2/IC1 PA3/OC5/IC4/OC1 PA4/OC4/OC1 PA5/OC3/OC1 PA6/OC2/OC1 PA7/PAI/OC1 ADDR8 ADDR9 ADDR10 ADDR11 ADDR12 ADDR13 ADDR14 ADDR15 ADDR0/DATA0 ADDR1/DATA1 ADDR2/DATA2 ADDR3/DATA3 ADDR4/DATA4 ADDR5/DATA5 ADDR6/DATA6 ADDR7/DATA7 PD0/RxD PD1/TxD PD2/MISO PD3/MOSI PD4/SCK PD5/SS AS R/W *In the 40-pin package, pins PA4 and PA6 are not bonded. Their associated I/O and output compare functions are not available externally. They can still be used as internal software timers, however. PIN DESCRIPTIONS 2-6 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2.10.1 Port A Port A can be read at any time. Inputs return the pin level; outputs return the pin driver input level. If written, port A stores the data in an internal latch. It drives the pins only if they are configured as outputs. Writes to port A do not change the pin state when the pins are configured for timer output compares. Out of reset, port A bits 7 and [3:0] are general high impedance inputs, while bits [6:4] are outputs, driving low. Bidirectional lines PA7 and PA3 in PACTL are not changed and do not have any effect on those bits. When the output compare functions associated with these pins are disabled, the DDR bits in PACTL govern the I/O state. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O. 2.10.2 Port B Port B is an 8-bit general-purpose I/O port with a data register (PORTB) and a data direction register (DDRB). In single-chip mode, port B pins are general-purpose I/O pins (PB[7:0]). In the expanded multiplexed mode, all of the port B pins act as the highorder address bits (ADDR[15:8]) of the address bus. Port B can be read at any time. Inputs return the sensed levels at the pin, while outputs return the input level of the port B pin drivers. If port B is written, the data is stored in an internal latch and can be driven only if port B is configured as general-purpose outputs in single-chip or bootstrap modes. Port B pins are general-purpose inputs out of reset in single-chip and bootstrap modes. These pins are outputs (the high order address bits) out of reset in expanded multiplexed and test modes. Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O. 2.10.3 Port C Port C is an 8-bit general-purpose I/O port with a data register (PORTC) and a data direction register (DDRC). In the single-chip mode, port C pins are general-purpose I/ O pins (PC[7:0]). In the expanded multiplexed mode, port C pins are configured as multiplexed address/data pins. During the address cycle, bits [7:0] of the address are output on PC[7:0]. During the data cycle, bits [7:0] (PC[7:0]) are bidirectional data pins controlled by the R/W signal. Port C can be read at any time. Inputs return the sensed levels at the pin, while outputs return the input level of the port C pin drivers. If port C is written, the data is stored in an internal latch and can be driven only if port C is configured for general-purpose outputs in single-chip or bootstrap mode. Port C pins are general-purpose inputs out of reset in single-chip and bootstrap modes. These pins are multiplexed low-order address and data bus lines out of reset in expanded multiplexed and test modes. The CWOM control bit in the PIOC register disables port C's P-channel output driver. CWOM simultaneously affects all eight bits of port C. Because the N-channel driver is not affected by CWOM, setting CWOM causes port C to become an open-drain-type PIN DESCRIPTIONS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 2-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. output port suitable for wired-OR operation. In wired-OR mode (a port C bit is at logic level zero), it is actively driven low by the N-channel driver. When a port C bit is at logic level one, the associated pin has high impedance, as neither the N- nor the P-channel devices are active. It is customary to have an external pullup resistor on lines that are driven by open-drain devices. Port C can only be configured for wired-OR operation when the MCU is in single-chip mode. Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O for additional information about port C functions. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 2.10.4 Port D Port D, an 8-bit, general-purpose I/O port has a data register (PORTD) and a data direction register (DDRD). The eight port D bits (D[7:0]) can be used for general-purpose I/O, for the serial communications interface (SCI) and serial peripheral interface (SPI) subsystems, or for bus data direction control. Port D can be read at any time and inputs return the sensed levels at the pin; whereas, the outputs return the input level of the port D pin drivers. If PORTD is written, the data is stored in an internal latch, and can be driven only if port D is configured for generalpurpose output. This port shares functions with the on-chip SCI and SPI subsystems, while bits 6 and 7 control the direction of data flow on the bus in expanded and special test modes. Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O. PIN DESCRIPTIONS 2-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SECTION 3 CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... This section presents information on M68HC11 central processing unit (CPU) architecture, data types, addressing modes, the instruction set, and special operations, such as subroutine calls and interrupts. The CPU is designed to treat all peripheral, I/O, and memory locations identically as addresses in the 64 Kbyte memory map. This is referred to as memory-mapped I/O. There are no special instructions for I/O that are separate from those used for memory. This architecture also allows accessing an operand from an external memory location with no execution-time penalty. 3.1 CPU Registers M68HC11 CPU registers are an integral part of the CPU and are not addressed as if they were memory locations. The seven registers, discussed in the following paragraphs, are shown in Figure 3-1. 7 15 A 0 7 0 0 B D 8-BIT ACCUMULATORS A & B OR 16-BIT DOUBLE ACCUMULATOR D IX INDEX REGISTER X IY INDEX REGISTER Y SP STACK POINTER PROGRAM COUNTER PC 7 S 0 X H I N Z V C CONDITION CODES CARRY/BORROW FROM MSB OVERFLOW ZERO NEGATIVE I-INTERRUPT MASK HALF CARRY (FROM BIT 3) X-INTERRUPT MASK STOP DISABLE HC11 PROG MODEL Figure 3-1 Programming Model CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 3.1.1 Accumulators A, B, and D Accumulators A and B are general-purpose 8-bit registers that hold operands and results of arithmetic calculations or data manipulations. For some instructions, these two accumulators are treated as a single double-byte (16-bit) accumulator called accumulator D. Although most operations can use accumulators A or B interchangeably, the following exceptions apply: The ABX and ABY instructions add the contents of 8-bit accumulator B to the contents of 16-bit register X or Y, but there are no equivalent instructions that use A instead of B. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The TAP and TPA instructions transfer data from accumulator A to the condition code register, or from the condition code register to accumulator A, however there are no equivalent instructions that use B rather than A. The decimal adjust accumulator (DAA) instruction is used after binary-coded decimal (BCD) arithmetic operations, but there is no equivalent BCD instruction to adjust accumulator B. The add, subtract, and compare instructions associated with both A and B (ABA, SBA, and CBA) only operate in one direction, making it important to plan ahead to ensure the correct operand is in the correct accumulator. 3.1.2 Index Register X (IX) The IX register provides a 16-bit indexing value that can be added to the 8-bit offset provided in an instruction to create an effective address. The IX register can also be used as a counter or as a temporary storage register. 3.1.3 Index Register Y (IY) The 16-bit IY register performs an indexed mode function similar to that of the IX register. However, most instructions using the IY register require an extra byte of machine code and an extra cycle of execution time because of the way the opcode map is implemented. Refer to 3.3 Opcodes and Operands for further information. 3.1.4 Stack Pointer (SP) The M68HC11 CPU has an automatic program stack. This stack can be located anywhere in the address space and can be any size up to the amount of memory available in the system. Normally the SP is initialized by one of the first instructions in an application program. The stack is configured as a data structure that grows downward from high memory to low memory. Each time a new byte is pushed onto the stack, the SP is decremented. Each time a byte is pulled from the stack, the SP is incremented. At any given time, the SP holds the 16-bit address of the next free location in the stack. Figure 3-2 is a summary of SP operations. CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. WAI, WAIT FOR INTERRUPT JSR, JUMP TO SUBROUTINE 7 MAIN PROGRAM PC $9D = JSR $3E = WAI CCR SP+1 CCR ACCB SP+2 ACCB SP+3 ACCA SP+3 ACCA MAIN PROGRAM SP+4 IXH SP+4 IXH $AD = JSR SP+5 IXL SP+5 IXL ff SP+6 IYH SP+6 IYH NEXT MAIN INSTR. SP+7 IYL SP+7 IYL SP+8 RTNH SP+8 RTNH ➩ SP+9 RTNL ➩ SP+9 RTNL PC $18 = PRE INDEXED, Y $AD = JSR RTN SWI, SOFTWARE INTERRUPT ff NEXT MAIN INSTR. PC $3F = SWI $BD = PRE hh INDEXED, Y RTN ll 7 MAIN PROGRAM MAIN PROGRAM PC WAI, WAIT FOR INTERRUPT PC SP–8 CCR SP–7 ACCB SP–6 ACCA SP–5 IXH IXL SP–3 IYH $3E = WAI SP–2 IYL SP–1 RTNH SP RTNL MAIN PROGRAM $6E = JMP ff BSR, BRANCH TO SUBROUTINE INDEXED, X 7 MAIN PROGRAM NEXT MAIN INSTR. PC $8D = BSR MAIN PROGRAM $6E = JMP ff SP–1 RTNH SP RTNL RTS, RETURN FROM SUBROUTINE PC $39 = RTS NEXT MAIN INSTR. MAIN PROGRAM 7 STACK 0 SP SP+1 RTNH ➩ SP+2 RTNL $7E = JMP hh ll EXTENDED hh ll 0 ➩ SP–2 MAIN PROGRAM PC STACK $18 = PRE INDEXED, Y X + ff 0 ➩ SP–9 MAIN PROGRAM JMP, JUMP PC STACK SP–4 NEXT MAIN INSTR. X + ff 0 SP SP+2 MAIN PROGRAM Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... PC STACK SP+1 INDEXED, X PC 7 INTERRUPT ROUTINE dd PC RTN SP 0 NEXT MAIN INSTR. DIRECT RTN STACK NEXT MAIN INSTR. LEGEND: RTN = ADDRESS OF NEXT INSTRUCTION IN MAIN PROGRAM TO BE EXECUTED UPON RETURN FROM SUBROUTINE RTNH = MOST SIGNIFICANT BYTE OF RETURN ADDRESS RTNL = LEAST SIGNIFICANT BYTE OF RETURN ADDRESS ➩ = STACK POINTER POSITION AFTER OPERATION IS COMPLETE dd = 8-BIT DIRECT ADDRESS ($0000–$00FF) (HIGH BYTE ASSUMED TO BE $00) ff = 8-BIT POSITIVE OFFSET $00 (0) TO $FF (256) IS ADDED TO INDEX hh = HIGH-ORDER BYTE OF 16-BIT EXTENDED ADDRESS ll = LOW-ORDER BYTE OF 16-BIT EXTENDED ADDRESS rr= SIGNED RELATIVE OFFSET $80 (–128) TO $7F (+127) (OFFSET RELATIVE TO THE ADDRESS FOLLOWING THE MACHINE CODE OFFSET BYTE) HC11 STACK OPERATIONS Figure 3-2 Stacking Operations CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. When a subroutine is called by a jump to subroutine (JSR) or branch to subroutine (BSR) instruction, the address of the instruction after the JSR or BSR is automatically pushed onto the stack, least significant byte first. When the subroutine is finished, a return from subroutine (RTS) instruction is executed. The RTS pulls the previously stacked return address from the stack, and loads it into the program counter. Execution then continues at this recovered return address. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... When an interrupt is recognized, the current instruction finishes normally, the return address (the current value in the program counter) is pushed onto the stack, all of the CPU registers are pushed onto the stack, and execution continues at the address specified by the vector for the interrupt. At the end of the interrupt service routine, an RTI instruction is executed. The RTI instruction causes the saved registers to be pulled off the stack in reverse order. Program execution resumes at the return address. There are instructions that push and pull the A and B accumulators and the X and Y index registers. These instructions are often used to preserve program context. For example, pushing accumulator A onto the stack when entering a subroutine that uses accumulator A, and then pulling accumulator A off the stack just before leaving the subroutine, ensures that the contents of a register will be the same after returning from the subroutine as it was before starting the subroutine. 3.1.5 Program Counter (PC) The program counter, a 16-bit register, contains the address of the next instruction to be executed. After reset, the program counter is initialized from one of six possible vectors, depending on operating mode and the cause of reset. Table 3-1 Reset Vector Comparison Normal Test or Boot POR or Pin $FFFE, F $BFFE, F Clock Monitor $FFFC, D $BFFC, D COP Watchdog $FFFA, B $BFFA, B 3.1.6 Condition Code Register (CCR) This 8-bit register contains five condition code indicators (C, V, Z, N, and H), two interrupt masking bits, (IRQ and XIRQ) and a stop disable bit (S). In the M68HC11 CPU, condition codes are automatically updated by most instructions. For example, load accumulator A (LDAA) and store accumulator A (STAA) instructions automatically set or clear the N, Z, and V condition code flags. Pushes, pulls, add B to X (ABX), add B to Y (ABY), and transfer/exchange instructions do not affect the condition codes. Refer to Table 3-2, which shows what condition codes are affected by a particular instruction. 3.1.6.1 Carry/Borrow (C) The C bit is set if the arithmetic logic unit (ALU) performs a carry or borrow during an arithmetic operation. The C bit also acts as an error flag for multiply and divide opera- CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. tions. Shift and rotate instructions operate with and through the carry bit to facilitate multiple-word shift operations. 3.1.6.2 Overflow (V) The overflow bit is set if an operation causes an arithmetic overflow. Otherwise, the V bit is cleared. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 3.1.6.3 Zero (Z) The Z bit is set if the result of an arithmetic, logic, or data manipulation operation is zero. Otherwise, the Z bit is cleared. Compare instructions do an internal implied subtraction and the condition codes, including Z, reflect the results of that subtraction. A few operations (INX, DEX, INY, and DEY) affect the Z bit and no other condition flags. For these operations, only = and - conditions can be determined. 3.1.6.4 Negative (N) The N bit is set if the result of an arithmetic, logic, or data manipulation operation is negative (MSB = 1). Otherwise, the N bit is cleared. A result is said to be negative if its most significant bit (MSB) is a one. A quick way to test whether the contents of a memory location has the MSB set is to load it into an accumulator and then check the status of the N bit. 3.1.6.5 Interrupt Mask (I) The interrupt request (IRQ) mask (I bit) is a global mask that disables all maskable interrupt sources. While the I bit is set, interrupts can become pending, but the operation of the CPU continues uninterrupted until the I bit is cleared. After any reset, the I bit is set by default and can only be cleared by a software instruction. When an interrupt is recognized, the I bit is set after the registers are stacked, but before the interrupt vector is fetched. After the interrupt has been serviced, a return from interrupt instruction is normally executed, restoring the registers to the values that were present before the interrupt occurred. Normally, the I bit is zero after a return from interrupt is executed. Although the I bit can be cleared within an interrupt service routine, “nesting” interrupts in this way should only be done when there is a clear understanding of latency and of the arbitration mechanism. Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS. 3.1.6.6 Half Carry (H) The H bit is set when a carry occurs between bits 3 and 4 of the arithmetic logic unit during an ADD, ABA, or ADC instruction. Otherwise, the H bit is cleared. Half carry is used during BCD operations. 3.1.6.7 X Interrupt Mask (X) The XIRQ mask (X) bit disables interrupts from the pin. After any reset, X is set by default and must be cleared by a software instruction. When an interrupt is recognized, the X and I bits are set after the registers are stacked, but before the interrupt vector is fetched. After the interrupt has been serviced, an RTI instruction is normally executed, causing the registers to be restored to the values that were present before the inCENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-5 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. terrupt occurred. The X interrupt mask bit is set only by hardware (or acknowledge). X is cleared only by program instruction (TAP, where the associated bit of A is 0; or RTI, where bit 6 of the value loaded into the CCR from the stack has been cleared). There is no hardware action for clearing X. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 3.1.6.8 Stop Disable (S) Setting the STOP disable (S) bit prevents the STOP instruction from putting the M68HC11 into a low-power stop condition. If the STOP instruction is encountered by the CPU while the S bit is set, it is treated as a no-operation (NOP) instruction, and processing continues to the next instruction. S is set by reset —STOP disabled by default. 3.2 Data Types The M68HC11 CPU supports the following data types: • Bit data • 8-bit and 16-bit signed and unsigned integers • 16-bit unsigned fractions • 16-bit addresses A byte is eight bits wide and can be accessed at any byte location. A word is composed of two consecutive bytes with the most significant byte at the lower value address. Because the M68HC11 is an 8-bit CPU, there are no special requirements for alignment of instructions or operands. 3.3 Opcodes and Operands The M68HC11 family of microcontrollers uses 8-bit opcodes. Each opcode identifies a particular instruction and associated addressing mode to the CPU. Several opcodes are required to provide each instruction with a range of addressing capabilities. Only 256 opcodes would be available if the range of values were restricted to the number able to be expressed in 8-bit binary numbers. A four-page opcode map has been implemented to expand the number of instructions. An additional byte, called a prebyte, directs the processor from page 0 of the opcode map to one of the other three pages. As its name implies, the additional byte precedes the opcode. A complete instruction consists of a prebyte, if any, an opcode, and zero, one, two, or three operands. The operands contain information the CPU needs for executing the instruction. Complete instructions can be from one to five bytes long. 3.4 Addressing Modes Six addressing modes; immediate, direct, extended, indexed, inherent, and relative, detailed in the following paragraphs, can be used to access memory. All modes except inherent mode use an effective address. The effective address is the memory address from which the argument is fetched or stored, or the address from which execution is CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3-6 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. to proceed. The effective address can be specified within an instruction, or it can be calculated. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 3.4.1 Immediate In the immediate addressing mode an argument is contained in the byte(s) immediately following the opcode. The number of bytes following the opcode matches the size of the register or memory location being operated on. There are two-, three-, and four(if prebyte is required) byte immediate instructions. The effective address is the address of the byte following the instruction. 3.4.2 Direct In the direct addressing mode, the low-order byte of the operand address is contained in a single byte following the opcode, and the high-order byte of the address is assumed to be $00. Addresses $00–$FF are thus accessed directly, using two-byte instructions. Execution time is reduced by eliminating the additional memory access required for the high-order address byte. In most applications, this 256-byte area is reserved for frequently referenced data. In M68HC11 MCUs, the memory map can be configured for combinations of internal registers, RAM or external memory to occupy these addresses. 3.4.2.1 Extended In the extended addressing mode, the effective address of the argument is contained in two bytes following the opcode byte. These are three-byte instructions (or four-byte instructions if a prebyte is required). One or two bytes are needed for the opcode and two for the effective address. 3.4.2.2 Indexed In the indexed addressing mode, an 8-bit unsigned offset contained in the instruction is added to the value contained in an index register (IX or IY) — the sum is the effective address. This addressing mode allows referencing any memory location in the 64 Kbyte address space. These are from two- to five-byte instructions, depending on whether or not a prebyte is required. 3.4.2.3 Inherent In the inherent addressing mode, all the information necessary to execute the instruction is contained in the opcode. Operations that use only the index registers or accumulators, as well as control instructions with no arguments, are included in this addressing mode. These are one- or two-byte instructions. 3.4.2.4 Relative The relative addressing mode is used only for branch instructions. If the branch condition is true, an 8-bit signed offset included in the instruction is added to the contents of the program counter to form the effective branch address. Otherwise, control proceeds to the next instruction. These are usually two-byte instructions. CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 3.5 Instruction Set Refer to Table 3-2, which shows all the M68HC11 instructions in all possible addressing modes. For each instruction, the table shows the operand construction, the number of machine code bytes, and execution time in CPU E-clock cycles. Table 3-2 Instruction Set (Sheet 1 of 7) Mnemonic ABA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... ABX ABY ADCA (opr) Operation Add Accumulators Add B to X Add B to Y Add with Carry to A Description Addressing Mode INH A+B⇒A IX + (00 : B) ⇒ IX IY + (00 : B) ⇒ IY A+M+C⇒A ADCB (opr) Add with Carry to B B+M+C⇒B ADDA (opr) Add Memory to A A+M⇒A ADDB (opr) Add Memory to B B+M⇒B ADDD (opr) Add 16-Bit to D D + (M : M + 1) ⇒ D ANDA (opr) AND A with Memory A•M⇒A ANDB (opr) AND B with Memory B•M⇒B ASL (opr) Arithmetic Shift Left C ASLA b0 b7 b0 Arithmetic Shift Left B C ASLD b7 Arithmetic Shift Left A C ASLB A A A A A B B B B B A A A A A B B B B B b7 b0 A A A A A B B B B B 0 INH INH IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y EXT IND,X IND,Y Instruction Opcode Operand Cycles 1B — 2 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 3A 3A 89 99 B9 A9 A9 C9 D9 F9 E9 E9 8B 9B BB AB AB CB DB FB EB EB C3 D3 F3 E3 E3 84 94 B4 A4 A4 C4 D4 F4 E4 E4 78 68 68 — — ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff hh ll ff ff S — X — Condition Codes H I N Z ∆ ∆ ∆ — V ∆ C ∆ 3 4 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 4 5 6 6 7 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 6 6 7 — — — — — — — — ∆ — — — — — ∆ — — ∆ — — ∆ — — ∆ — — ∆ — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — ∆ — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — ∆ — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ A INH 48 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ B INH 58 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ INH 05 — 3 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ 77 67 67 47 hh ll ff ff — 6 6 7 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ A EXT IND,X IND,Y INH — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ B INH 57 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ REL 24 3 — — — — — — — — 0 0 Arithmetic Shift Left D 0 C b7 A b0 b7 B b0 ASR Arithmetic Shift Right ASRA Arithmetic Shift Right A ASRB Arithmetic Shift Right B BCC (rel) Branch if Carry Clear b7 b7 b7 b0 C 18 b0 C b0 C ?C=0 rr CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 3-2 Instruction Set (Sheet 2 of 7) Mnemonic Description BCLR (opr) (msk) Clear Bit(s) M • (mm) ⇒ M BCS (rel) Branch if Carry Set Branch if = Zero Branch if ∆ Zero Branch if > Zero Branch if Higher Branch if Higher or Same Bit(s) Test A with Memory ?C=1 BEQ (rel) BGE (rel) BGT (rel) BHI (rel) BHS (rel) Addressing Mode DIR IND,X IND,Y REL Instruction Opcode Operand Cycles 6 15 dd mm 7 1D ff mm 8 18 1D ff mm 25 rr 3 S — X — Condition Codes H I N Z ∆ ∆ — — V 0 C — — — — — — — — — ?Z=1 REL 27 rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?N⊕V=0 REL 2C rr 3 — — — — — — — — ? Z + (N ⊕ V) = 0 REL 2E rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?C+Z=0 REL 22 rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?C=0 REL 24 rr 3 — — — — — — — — A A A A A IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y ii dd hh ll ff ff — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — 18 85 95 B5 A5 A5 B B B B B IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y ii dd hh ll ff ff — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — 18 C5 D5 F5 E5 E5 — — — — — — — — ? Z + (N ⊕ V) = 1 REL 2F rr ?C=1 REL 25 rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?C+Z=1 REL 23 rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?N⊕V=1 REL 2D rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?N=1 REL 2B rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?Z=0 REL 26 rr 3 — — — — — — — — BPL (rel) Branch if ∆ Zero Branch if Lower Branch if Lower or Same Branch if < Zero Branch if Minus Branch if not = Zero Branch if Plus 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 3 ?N=0 REL 2A rr — — — — — — — — BRA (rel) Branch Always ?1=1 REL 20 rr — — — — — — — — BRCLR(opr) (msk) (rel) Branch if Bit(s) Clear ? M • mm = 0 DIR IND,X IND,Y dd mm rr ff mm rr ff mm rr — — — — — — — — 18 13 1F 1F BRN (rel) Branch Never REL 21 rr — — — — — — — — DIR IND,X IND,Y dd mm rr ff mm rr ff mm rr — — — — — — — — 18 12 1E 1E dd mm ff mm ff mm — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — 18 14 1C 1C — — — — — — — — BITA (opr) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Operation BITB (opr) BLE (rel) BLO (rel) BLS (rel) BLT (rel) BMI (rel) BNE (rel) Bit(s) Test B with Memory Branch if Bit(s) BRSET(opr) Set (msk) (rel) BSET (opr) (msk) BSR (rel) BVC (rel) BVS (rel) CBA CLC CLI CLR (opr) Set Bit(s) Branch to Subroutine Branch if Overflow Clear Branch if Overflow Set Compare A to B Clear Carry Bit Clear Interrupt Mask Clear Memory Byte A•M B•M See Figure 3–2 REL 8D rr 3 3 6 7 8 3 6 7 8 6 7 8 6 ?V=0 REL 28 rr 3 — — — — — — — — ?V=1 REL 29 rr 3 — — — — — — — — A–B INH 11 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ 0⇒C 0⇒I INH 0C — — — — — — — 0 0E — 2 2 — INH — — — 0 — — — — 0⇒M EXT IND,X IND,Y 7F 6F 6F 6 6 7 — — — — 0 1 0 0 ?1=0 ? (M) • mm = 0 M + mm ⇒ M DIR IND,X IND,Y 18 hh ll ff ff CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 3-2 Instruction Set (Sheet 3 of 7) Mnemonic CLRA CLRB CLV Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... CMPA (opr) Operation Clear Accumulator A Clear Accumulator B Clear Overflow Flag Compare A to Memory Description 0⇒A Addressing Mode A INH 0⇒B B 0⇒V A–M COMA COMB CPD (opr) — — — 0 1 0 0 INH 0A — 2 — — — — — — 0 — 81 91 B1 A1 A1 C1 D1 F1 E1 E1 73 63 63 43 ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff hh ll ff ff — 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 6 6 7 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 1 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 1 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 1 83 93 B3 A3 A3 8C 9C BC AC AC 8C 9C BC AC AC 19 jj kk dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff — 5 6 7 7 7 4 5 6 6 7 5 6 7 7 7 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ 7A 6A 6A 4A hh ll ff ff — 6 6 7 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ — INH $FF – M ⇒ M D–M:M +1 C 0 — B Ones Complement Memory Byte Ones Complement A Ones Complement B Compare D to Memory 16-Bit V 0 2 $FF – B ⇒ B COM (opr) Condition Codes H I N Z — — 0 1 — A B–M X — 5F $FF – A ⇒ A Compare B to Memory S — INH IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y EXT IND,X IND,Y INH CMPB (opr) A A A A A B B B B B Instruction Opcode Operand Cycles 4F — 2 IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y INH 18 18 18 53 1A 1A 1A 1A CD CPX (opr) Compare X to Memory 16-Bit IX – M : M + 1 CPY (opr) Compare Y to Memory 16-Bit IY – M : M + 1 DAA Decimal Adjust A Decrement Memory Byte Adjust Sum to BCD Decrement Accumulator A Decrement Accumulator B Decrement Stack Pointer Decrement Index Register X Decrement Index Register Y Exclusive OR A with Memory A–1⇒A A EXT IND,X IND,Y INH B–1⇒B B INH 5A — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ — SP – 1 ⇒ SP INH 34 — 3 — — — — — — — — IX – 1 ⇒ IX INH 09 — 3 — — — — — ∆ — — IY – 1 ⇒ IY INH 09 — 4 — — — — — ∆ — — ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff — 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 41 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ — 41 — — — — — ∆ 0 ∆ DEC (opr) DECA DECB DES DEX DEY EORA (opr) M–1⇒M A⊕M⇒A EORB (opr) Exclusive OR B with Memory B⊕M⇒B FDIV Fractional Divide 16 by 16 Integer Divide 16 by 16 D / IX ⇒ IX; r ⇒ D IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y INH D / IX ⇒ IX; r ⇒ D INH IDIV A A A A A B B B B B CD 18 18 18 1A 18 18 18 18 18 88 98 B8 A8 A8 C8 D8 F8 E8 E8 03 02 CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3-10 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 3-2 Instruction Set (Sheet 4 of 7) Mnemonic INC (opr) Increment Memory Byte M+1⇒M INCA Increment Accumulator A Increment Accumulator B Increment Stack Pointer Increment Index Register X Increment Index Register Y Jump A+1⇒A Addressing Mode EXT IND,X IND,Y A INH B+1⇒B B INCB INS INX INY Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... JMP (opr) Operation Description — ∆ — SP + 1 ⇒ SP INH 31 — 3 — — — — — — — — IX + 1 ⇒ IX INH 08 — 3 — — — — — ∆ — — IY + 1 ⇒ IY INH 08 — 4 — — — — — ∆ — — hh ll ff ff dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff hh ll ff ff — 3 3 4 5 6 6 7 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 3 4 5 5 6 3 4 5 5 6 3 4 5 5 6 4 5 6 6 6 6 6 7 2 — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ LDD (opr) Load Double Accumulator D M ⇒ A,M + 1 ⇒ B LDS (opr) Load Stack Pointer M : M + 1 ⇒ SP LDX (opr) Load Index Register X M : M + 1 ⇒ IX LDY (opr) Load Index Register Y M : M + 1 ⇒ IY LSL (opr) Logical Shift Left C b7 C b7 C b7 b0 b0 b0 B INH 58 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ INH 05 — 3 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ EXT IND,X IND,Y INH 74 64 64 44 hh ll ff ff — 6 6 7 2 — — — — 0 ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — 0 ∆ ∆ ∆ 18 18 18 18 18 18 CD 18 18 18 1A 18 18 0 0 0 b0 C A b7 7E 6E 6E 9D BD AD AD 86 96 B6 A6 A6 C6 D6 F6 E6 E6 CC DC FC EC EC 8E 9E BE AE AE CE DE FE EE EE CE DE FE EE EE 78 68 68 48 A 0 C b7 A b0 b7 B b0 b7 18 EXT IND,X IND,Y DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y EXT IND,X IND,Y INH A A A A A B B B B B Logical Shift Left Double 0 ∆ ∆ M⇒B Logical Shift Right A ∆ ∆ Load Accumulator B LSRA ∆ — See Figure 3–2 0 — — LDAB (opr) Logical Shift Right — — M⇒A LSR (opr) — C — — Load Accumulator A LSLD — V ∆ 2 LDAA (opr) Logical Shift Left B Condition Codes H I N Z ∆ ∆ — — — See Figure 3–2 LSLB X — 5C Jump to Subroutine Logical Shift Left A S — INH JSR (opr) LSLA Instruction Opcode Operand Cycles 6 7C hh ll 6 6C ff 7 18 6C ff 4C — 2 18 b0 C CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 3-2 Instruction Set (Sheet 5 of 7) Mnemonic LSRB Logical Shift Right B LSRD Logical Shift Right Double MUL NEG (opr) NEGA NEGB Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Operation NOP ORAA (opr) Multiply 8 by 8 Two’s Complement Memory Byte Two’s Complement A Two’s Complement B No operation OR Accumulator A (Inclusive) ORAB (opr) OR Accumulator B (Inclusive) PSHA ROL (opr) Push A onto Stack Push B onto Stack Push X onto Stack (Lo First) Push Y onto Stack (Lo First) Pull A from Stack Pull B from Stack Pull X From Stack (Hi First) Pull Y from Stack (Hi First) Rotate Left ROLA Rotate Left A ROLB Rotate Left B ROR (opr) Rotate Right RORA Rotate Right A RORB Rotate Right B RTI Return from Interrupt Return from Subroutine Subtract B from A PSHB PSHX PSHY PULA PULB PULX PULY Description 0 0 b7 S — X — Condition Codes H I N Z ∆ — — 0 V ∆ C ∆ INH 04 — 3 — — — — 0 ∆ ∆ ∆ 3D 70 60 60 40 — hh ll ff ff — 10 6 6 7 2 — — — — — — — — — ∆ — ∆ — ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff — 2 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 3 — — — — — — — — — ∆ — ∆ — 0 — — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — — — — — b7 A b0 b7 B b0 C A∗B⇒D 0–M⇒M 0–A⇒A A INH EXT IND,X IND,Y INH 0–B⇒B B INH 50 A A A A A B+M⇒B B B B B B A ⇒ Stk,SP = SP – 1 A INH IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y INH 01 8A 9A BA AA AA CA DA FA EA EA 36 B ⇒ Stk,SP = SP – 1 B INH 37 — 3 — — — — — — — — IX ⇒ Stk,SP = SP – 2 INH 3C — 4 — — — — — — — — IY ⇒ Stk,SP = SP – 2 INH 3C — 5 — — — — — — — — SP = SP + 1, A ⇐ Stk A INH 32 — 4 — — — — — — — — SP = SP + 1, B ⇐ Stk B INH 33 — 4 — — — — — — — — SP = SP + 2, IX ⇐ Stk INH 38 — 5 — — — — — — — — SP = SP + 2, IY ⇐ Stk INH 18 38 — 6 — — — — — — — — hh ll ff ff — 6 6 7 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ 18 79 69 69 49 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ No Operation A+M⇒A 18 18 18 18 A EXT IND,X IND,Y INH B INH 59 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ 76 66 66 46 hh ll ff ff — 6 6 7 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ A EXT IND,X IND,Y INH — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ B INH 56 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ See Figure 3–2 INH 3B — 12 ∆ ↓ ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ See Figure 3–2 INH 39 — 5 — — — — — — — — A–B⇒A INH 10 — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ b0 C b7 b0 C b7 b7 b7 b7 SBA Instruction Opcode Operand Cycles 54 — 2 b0 C C b7 RTS Addressing Mode B INH b0 b0 C 18 b0 C b0 C CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3-12 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 3-2 Instruction Set (Sheet 6 of 7) Mnemonic Description SBCA (opr) Subtract with Carry from A A–M–C⇒A SBCB (opr) Subtract with Carry from B B–M–C⇒B SEC SEI Set Carry Set Interrupt Mask Set Overflow Flag Store Accumulator A 1⇒C 1⇒I SEV STAA (opr) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Operation 1⇒V A⇒M STAB (opr) Store Accumulator B B⇒M STD (opr) Store Accumulator D A ⇒ M, B ⇒ M + 1 STOP Stop Internal Clocks Store Stack Pointer — STS (opr) Store Index Register X IX ⇒ M : M + 1 STY (opr) Store Index Register Y IY ⇒ M : M + 1 SUBA (opr) Subtract Memory from A A–M⇒A SUBB (opr) Subtract Memory from B B–M⇒B SUBD (opr) Subtract Memory from D D–M:M+1⇒D TAB TAP TBA TEST TPA TST (opr) TSTA TSTB A A A A B B B B SP ⇒ M : M + 1 STX (opr) SWI A A A A A B B B B B A A A A A A A A A A Software See Figure 3–2 Interrupt Transfer A to B A⇒B Transfer A to A ⇒ CCR CC Register Transfer B to A B⇒A TEST (Only in Address Bus Counts Test Modes) Transfer CC CCR ⇒ A Register to A Test for Zero M–0 or Minus Test A for Zero or Minus Test B for Zero or Minus Addressing Mode IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y INH INH Instruction Opcode Operand Cycles 2 82 ii 3 92 dd 4 B2 hh ll 4 A2 ff 5 18 A2 ff 2 C2 ii 3 D2 dd 4 F2 hh ll 4 E2 ff 5 18 E2 ff 0D — 2 0F — 2 INH 0B DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y INH DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y IMM DIR EXT IND,X IND,Y INH 18 18 18 18 CD 18 18 1A 18 18 18 18 S — X — Condition Codes H I N Z ∆ ∆ — — — — — — ∆ — — — — — — — 1 V ∆ C ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — — — 1 — — 2 — — — — — — 1 — 97 B7 A7 A7 D7 F7 E7 E7 DD FD ED ED CF dd hh ll ff ff dd hh ll ff ff dd hh ll ff ff — 3 4 4 5 3 4 4 5 4 5 5 6 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — — — — — 9F BF AF AF DF FF EF EF DF FF EF EF 80 90 B0 A0 A0 C0 D0 F0 E0 E0 83 93 B3 A3 A3 3F dd hh ll ff ff dd hh ll ff ff dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff ii dd hh ll ff ff jj kk dd hh ll ff ff — 4 5 5 6 4 5 5 6 5 6 6 6 2 3 4 4 5 2 3 4 4 5 4 5 6 6 7 14 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 — — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ — — — 1 — — — — INH INH 16 06 — — 2 2 — ∆ — ↓ — ∆ — ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ 0 ∆ — ∆ INH INH 17 00 — — 2 * — — — — — — — — ∆ — ∆ — 0 — — — INH 07 — 2 — — — — — — — — 7D 6D 6D 4D hh ll ff ff — 6 6 7 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 0 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 0 5D — 2 — — — — ∆ ∆ 0 0 A–0 A EXT IND,X IND,Y INH B–0 B INH 18 CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 3-13 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 3-2 Instruction Set (Sheet 7 of 7) Mnemonic TSX TSY TXS TYS WAI XGDX Transfer Stack Pointer to X Transfer Stack Pointer to Y Transfer X to Stack Pointer Transfer Y to Stack Pointer Wait for Interrupt Exchange D with X Exchange D with Y Description SP + 1 ⇒ IX Addressing Mode INH SP + 1 ⇒ IY INH IX – 1 ⇒ SP INH IY – 1 ⇒ SP INH Stack Regs & WAIT Instruction Opcode Operand Cycles 30 — 3 18 S — X — Condition Codes H I N Z — — — — V — C — 30 — 4 — — — — — — — — 35 — 3 — — — — — — — — 35 — 4 — — — — — — — — INH 3E — ** — — — — — — — — IX ⇒ D, D ⇒ IX INH 8F — 3 — — — — — — — — IY ⇒ D, D ⇒ IY INH 8F — 4 — — — — — — — — 18 18 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... XGDY Operation CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT 3-14 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... This section contains information about the modes that define MC68HC11D3 operating conditions, and about the on-chip memory that allows the MCU to be configured for various applications. 4.1 Operating Modes The values of the mode select inputs MODB and MODA during reset determine the operating mode. Single chip and expanded multiplexed are the normal modes. With single-chip mode only on-board memory is available. Expanded multiplexed mode, however, allows access to external memory. Each of these two normal modes is paired with a special mode. Bootstrap, a variation of the single-chip mode, is a special mode that executes a bootloader program in an internal bootstrap ROM. Test is a special mode that allows privileged access to internal resources. 4.1.1 Single-Chip Mode In single-chip mode, ports B and C are available for general-purpose parallel I/O. In expanded multiplexed mode the MCU can access a 64 Kbyte address space. The total address space includes the same on-chip memory addresses used for single-chip mode plus external memory and peripheral devices. 4.1.2 Expanded Multiplexed Mode Expanded memory access is achieved by providing multiplexed external data and address buses on two of the M68HC11 ports; therefore only 18 pins are needed for an 8-bit data bus, a 16-bit address bus and two bus control lines. Port B is designated for ADDR[15:8], while port C is multiplexed ADDR[7:0]/DATA[7:0]. The address, R/W, and AS signals are active and valid for all bus cycles including accesses to internal memory locations. Refer to Figure 4-1, which illustrates a recommended method of demultiplexing low order addresses from data at port C. OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 4-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 PB3 PB2 PB1 PB0 ADDR15 ADDR14 ADDR13 ADDR12 ADDR11 ADDR10 ADDR9 ADDR8 HC373 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 AS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... R/W E D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 D8 LE Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 OE ADDR7 ADDR6 ADDR5 ADDR4 ADDR3 ADDR2 ADDR1 ADDR0 WE OE MCU DATA7 DATA6 DATA5 DATA4 DATA3 DATA2 DATA1 DATA0 ADDR/DATA DEMUX Figure 4-1 Address/Data Demultiplexing 4.1.3 Special Test Mode Special test, a variation of the expanded multiplexed mode, is primarily used during Motorola's internal production testing; however, it is accessible for programming the CONFIG register, and supporting emulation and debugging during development. 4.1.4 Bootstrap Mode When the MCU is reset in special bootstrap mode, a small amount of on-chip ROM is enabled at address $BF00–$BFFF. The ROM contains a bootloader program and a special set of interrupt and reset vectors. The MCU fetches the reset vector, then executes the bootloader. For normal use of the bootloader program, send $FF to the SCI receiver at either E clock ÷16, or E clock ÷104 (1200 baud for E clock equals 2 MHz). Then download up to 192 bytes of program data, which is put into RAM starting at $0040. These characters are echoed through the transmitter. When loading is complete, the program jumps to location $0040 and begins executing the code. The bootloader program ends the download after 192 bytes, or when the received data line is idle for at least four character times. Use of an external pullup resistor is required when using the SCI transmitter pin because port D pins are configured for wired-OR operation by the bootloader. In bootstrap mode, the interrupt vectors are directed to RAM. This allows the use of interrupts through a jump table. Refer to Freescale application note AN1060, MC68HC11 Bootstrap Mode. OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY 4-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 4.2 Memory Map The operating mode determines memory mapping and whether memory is addressed on- or off-chip. Refer to Figure 4-2, which illustrates the memory maps for each of the four modes of operation. Memory locations for on-chip resources are the same for both expanded multiplexed and single-chip modes. 192-byte RAM is mapped to $0040 after reset. It can be placed at any other 4K boundary ($x040) by writing an appropriate value to the INIT register. The 64-byte register block is mapped to $0000 after reset and can also be placed at any 4K boundary ($x000) by writing an appropriate value to the INIT register. Refer to Table 4-1, which details the MCU register and control bit assignments. $0000 0000 64-BYTE REGISTER BLOCK 003F 0040 192 BYTES STATIC RAM Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... $0040 00FF EXT EXT $7000 7000 4 KBYTES ROM 7FFF EXT BF00 BOOT ROM BFFF BFC0 BFFF SPECIAL MODES INTERRUPT VECTORS 4 KBYTES ROM FFC0 $F000 F000 FFFF FFFF $FFFF SINGLE CHIP EXPANDED BOOTSTRAP SPECIAL TEST FFFF NORMAL MODES INTERRUPT VECTORS D3 MEM MAP Figure 4-2 MC68HC11D3 Memory Map OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 4-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 4-1 Register and Control Bit Assignments $0000 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 PA7 PA6 PA5 PA4 PA3 PA2 PA1 PA0 $0001 Reserved $0002 CWOM PIOC $0003 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PORTC $0004 PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 PB3 PB2 PB1 PB0 PORTB $0005 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... PORTA Reserved $0006 DDB7 DDB6 DDB5 DDB4 DDB3 DDB2 DDB1 DDB0 DDRB $0007 DDC7 DDC6 DDC5 DDC4 DDC3 DDC2 DDC1 DDC0 DDRC $0008 PD7 PD6 PD5 PD4 PD3 PD2 PD1 PD0 PORTD $0009 DDD7 DDD6 DDD5 DDD4 DDD3 DDD2 DDD1 DDD0 DDRD $000A Reserved $000B FOC1 FOC2 FOC3 FOC4 FOC5 0 0 0 CFORC $000C OC1M7 OC1M6 OC1M5 OC1M4 OC1M3 0 0 0 OC1M $000D OC1D7 OC1D6 OC1D5 OC1D4 OC1D3 0 0 0 OC1D $000E Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TCNT (High) $000F Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TCNT (Low) $0010 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TIC1 (High) $0011 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TIC1 (Low) $0012 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TIC2 (High) $0013 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TIC2 (Low) $0014 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TIC3 (High) $0015 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TIC3 (Low) $0016 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC1(High) $0017 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC1 (Low) $0018 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC2 (High) $0019 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC2 (Low) $001A Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC3 (High) $001B Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC3 (Low) $001C Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC4 (High) $001D Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC4 (Low) $0023 OC1F OC2F OC3F OC4F I4/O5F IC1F IC2F IC3F TFLG1 $0024 TOI RTII PAOVI PAII 0 0 PR1 PR0 TMSK2 $0025 TOF RTIF PAOVF PAIF 0 0 0 0 TFLG2 $0026 DDRA7 PAEN PAMOD PEDGE DDRA3 I4/O5 RTR1 RTR0 PACTL $0027 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 PACNT $0028 SPIE SPE DWOM MSTR CPOL CPHA SPR1 SPR0 SPCR $0029 SPIF WCOL 0 MODF 0 0 0 0 SPSR $002A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 SPDR OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY 4-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 4-1 Register and Control Bit Assignments (Continued) Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 $002B TCLR 0 SCP1 SCP0 RCKB SCR2 SCR1 SCR0 BAUD $002C R8 T8 0 M WAKE 0 0 0 SCCR1 $002D TIE TCIE RIE ILIE TE RE RWU SBK SCCR2 $002E TDRE TC RDRF IDLE OR NF FE 0 SCSR $002F R7/T7 R6/T6 R5/T5 R4/T4 R3/T3 R2/T2 R1/T1 R0/T0 SCDR $0030 Reserved to Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... $0038 Reserved $0039 0 0 IRQE DLY CME 0 CR1 CR0 OPTION $003A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 COPRST $003B Reserved $003C RBOOT SMOD MDA IRVNE PSEL3 PSEL2 PSEL1 PSEL0 HPRIO $003D RAM3 RAM2 RAM1 RAM0 REG3 REG2 REG1 REG0 INIT $003E TILOP 0 OCCR CBYP DISR FCM FCOP 0 TEST1 $003F 0 0 0 0 0 NOCOP ROMON 0 CONFIG The bootloader program is contained in the 192-byte bootstrap ROM. This ROM, which appears as internal memory space at locations $BF40–$BFFF, is enabled only if the MCU is reset in special bootstrap mode. Memory locations are the same for expanded multiplexed and single-chip modes, except for ROM in expanded mode and the bootloader ROM in special bootstrap mode. The on-board 192-byte RAM is initially located at $0040 after reset, but can be placed at any other 4K boundary ($x040) by writing an appropriate value to the INIT register. The 4 Kbyte ROM is located at $F000 through $FFFF in all modes except expanded multiplexed, in which it is located at $7000. ROM can be located at $F000 in expanded multiplexed by entering single-chip mode out of reset and setting the MDA bit in the HPRIO register to 1, thereby entering expanded mode from internal ROM. Disable ROM by clearing the ROMON bit in the CONFIG register. Hardware priority is built into RAM and I/O remapping. Registers and RAM have priority over ROM. In the event of conflicts, the higher priority resource takes precedence. The 192 bytes of fully static RAM store instructions, variables, and temporary data. The direct addressing mode can access RAM locations using a one-byte address operand, saving program memory space and execution time, depending on the application. RAM contents are preserved during periods of processor inactivity by two methods, both of which reduce power consumption. In the software-based STOP mode, the clocks are stopped while VDD powers the MCU. Because power supply current is directly related to operating frequency in CMOS integrated circuits, only a very small amount of leakage exists when the clocks are stopped. OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 4-5 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. In the second method, the MODB/VSTBY pin can supply RAM power from a battery backup or from a second power supply, as shown in Figure 4-3. Using the MODB/ VSTBY pin may require external hardware, but can be justified when a significant amount of external circuitry is operating from VDD. If VSTBY is used to maintain RAM contents, reset must be held low whenever VDD is below normal operating level. Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS. VDD MAX 690 VDD 4.7k TO MODB/VSTBY OF M68HC11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... VOUT 4.8 V NiCd VBATT + MODB/VSTBY CONN Figure 4-3 RAM Standby MODB/VSTBY Connections 4.2.1 Priority and Mode Select Register The four operating modes are selected with the logic states of the mode A (MODA) and mode B (MODB) pins during reset. The MODA and MODB logic levels determine the logic state of the special mode (SMOD) and mode A (MDA) control bits in the HPRIO register. After reset is released, the mode select pins no longer influence the MCU operating mode. For single-chip mode, the MODA pin is connected to a logic zero. For expanded mode, MODA is normally connected to VDD through a pull-up resistor of 4.7 kΩ. The MODA pin also functions as the load instruction register (LIR) pin when the MCU is not in reset. The open drain active low LIR output pin drives low during the first E cycle of each instruction. The MODB pin also functions as standby power input, VSTBY, which maintains RAM contents in the absence of VDD. Refer to Table 4-2 for information about hardware mode selection. Table 4-2 Hardware Mode Select Summary Inputs MODB 1 1 0 0 Mode MODA 0 1 0 1 Single-Chip Expanded Multiplexed Special Bootstrap Special Test Latched at Reset RBOOT SMOD MDA 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY 4-6 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. HPRIO — Highest Priority I-Bit Interrupt and Miscellaneous RESET: Bit 7 RBOOT — 6 SMOD — 5 MDA — 4 IRVNE — 3 PSEL3 0 $003C 2 PSEL2 1 1 PSEL1 0 Bit 0 PSEL0 1 The values of the RBOOT, SMOD, IRVNE, and MDA at reset depend on the mode during initialization. Refer to Table 4-2. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... RBOOT — Read Bootstrap ROM Has meaning only when the SMOD bit is a one (special bootstrap mode or special test mode). At all other times this bit is clear and cannot be written. 0 = Bootloader ROM disabled and not in map 1 = Bootloader ROM enabled and located in map at $BF40–$BFFF SMOD — Special Mode Select This bit reflects the inverse of the MODB input pin at the rising edge of reset. It is set if the MODB input pin is low during reset. If MODB is high during reset, it is cleared. SMOD can be cleared under software control from the special modes, thus changing the operating mode of the MCU. SMOD can never be set by software. 0 = Normal mode variation in effect 1 = Special mode variation in effect MDA — Mode Select A The mode select A bit reflects the status of the MODA input pin at the rising edge of reset. While the SMOD bit is set (special bootstrap or special test mode in effect), the MDA bit can be written, thus changing the operating mode of the MCU. When the SMOD bit is clear, the MODA bit is read-only and the operating mode cannot be changed without going through a reset sequence. 0 = Normal single-chip or special bootstrap mode in effect 1 = Normal expanded or special test mode in effect IRVNE — Internal Read Visibility/Not E The IRVNE control bit allows internal read accesses to be available on the external data bus during factory testing or emulation. If this capability is used for other purposes, bus conflicts can occur because the bidirectional data bus is driven out during a read of internal addresses, even though the R/W line suggests a high impedance read mode. 0 = No internal read visibility on external bus 1 = Internal read data driven out data bus In single-chip modes, this bit determines whether the E clock drives out of the chip. 0 = E driven out 1 = E pin driven low OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 4-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Mode IRVNE Out of Reset 0 0 0 1 Single-Chip Expanded Boot Special Test E Clock Out of Reset On On On On IRV Out of Reset Off Off Off On IRVNE Affects Only E IRV E IRV Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... PSEL[3:0] — Priority Select Bits Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS. 4.2.2 System Initialization Registers and bits that control initialization and the basic configuration of the MCU are protected against writes except under special circumstances. The protection mechanism, overridden in special operating modes, permits writing these bits only within the first 64 bus cycles after any reset, and then only once after each reset. If the MCU is going to be changed to a normal mode after being reset in a special mode, write to the protected registers before writing the SMOD control bit to zero. 4.2.2.1 CONFIG Register The CONFIG register consists of static latches that control the startup configuration of the MCU. CONFIG is writable only once in expanded and single-chip modes (SMOD = 0). In these modes, the COP watchdog timer is enabled out of reset. CONFIG — System Configuration RESET: Bit 7 0 0 6 0 0 5 0 0 $003F 4 0 0 3 0 0 2 NOCOP — 1 ROMON — Bit 0 0 0 Bits [7:3] and 0 — Not implemented Always read zero NOCOP — COP System Disable This bit is cleared out of reset in normal modes (COP enabled). Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS. 0 = COP system enabled 1 = COP system disabled ROMON — ROM Enable In all modes, ROMON is forced to one out of reset. Writable once in normal modes and writable at any time in special modes. 0 = ROM removed from the memory map 1 = ROM present in the memory map OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY 4-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. NOTE In expanded mode, ROM is located at $7000–$7FFF out of reset. In all other modes, ROM is located at $F000–$FFFF. 4.2.2.2 INIT Register The internal registers used to control the operation of the MCU can be relocated on 4K boundaries within the memory space with the use of INIT. This 8-bit special-purpose register can change the default locations of the RAM and control registers within the MCU memory map. It can be written to only once within the first 64 E-clock cycles after a reset, and then it becomes a read-only register. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... INIT — RAM and I/O Mapping Register RESET: Bit 7 RAM3 0 6 RAM2 0 5 RAM1 0 $003D 4 RAM0 0 3 REG3 0 2 REG2 0 1 REG1 0 Bit 0 REG0 1 RAM[3:0] — RAM Map Position These four bits, which specify the upper hexadecimal digit of the RAM address, control position of RAM in the memory map. RAM can be positioned at the beginning of any 4K page in the memory map. It is initialized to address $0040 out of reset. Refer to Table 4-3. REG[3:0] — 64-Byte Register Block Position These four bits specify the upper hexadecimal digit of the address for the 64-byte block of internal registers. The register block, positioned at the beginning of any 4K page in the memory map, is initialized to address $0000 out of reset. Refer to Table 4-4. Table 4-3 RAM Mapping RAM[3:0] 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 Address $0040–$00FF $1040–$10FF $2040–$20FF $3040–$30FF $4040–$40FF $5040–$50FF $6040–$60FF $7040–$70FF $8040–$80FF $9040–$90FF $A040–$A0FF $B040–$B0FF $C040–$C0FF $D040–$D0FF $E040–$E0FF $F040–$F0FF Table 4-4 Register Mapping REG[3:0] 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 Address $0000–$003F $1000–$103F $2000–$203F $3000–$303F $4000–$403F $5000–$503F $6000–$603F $7000–$703F $8000–$803F $9000–$903F $A000–$A03F $B000–$B03F $C000–$C03F $D000–$D03F $E000–$E03F $F000–$F03F OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 4-9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 4.2.2.3 OPTION Register The 8-bit special-purpose OPTION register sets internal system configuration options during initialization. The time protected control bits, IRQE, DLY, and CR[1:0] can be written to only once after a reset and then they become read-only. This minimizes the possibility of any accidental changes to the system configuration. OPTION — System Configuration Options RESET: Bit 7 0 0 6 0 0 5 IRQE* 0 4 DLY* 1 $0039 3 CME 0 2 0 0 1 CR1* 0 Bit 0 CR0* 0 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... *Can be written only once in first 64 cycles out of reset in normal modes, or at any time in special modes Bits [7:6] and 2 — Not implemented Always read zero IRQE — IRQ Select Edge Sensitive only 0 = IRQ is configured for level sensitive operation 1 = IRQ is configured for edge sensitive only operation DLY — Enable Oscillator Startup Delay 0 = The oscillator startup delay coming out of STOP is bypassed and the MCU resumes processing within about four bus cycles. 1 = A delay of approximately 4000 E-clock cycles is imposed as the MCU is started up from the STOP power-saving mode. This delay allows the crystal oscillator to stabilize. CME — Clock Monitor Enable Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS. CR[1:0] — COP Timer Rate Select Bits The internal E clock is first divided by 215 before it enters the COP watchdog system. These control bits determine a scaling factor for the watchdog timer. Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS. OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY 4-10 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Resets and interrupt operations load the program counter with a vector that points to a new location from which instructions are to be fetched. A reset immediately stops execution of the current instruction and forces the program counter to a known starting address. Internal registers and control bits are initialized so the MCU can resume executing instructions. An interrupt temporarily suspends normal program execution while an interrupt service routine is being executed. After an interrupt has been serviced, the main program resumes as if there had been no interruption. 5.1 Resets There are four possible sources of reset. Power-on reset (POR) and external reset share the normal reset vector. The computer operating properly (COP) system and the clock monitor each has its own vector. 5.1.1 Power-On Reset A positive transition on VDD generates a power-on reset (POR), which is used only for power-up conditions. POR cannot be used to detect drops in power supply voltages. A 4064 tCYC (internal clock cycle) delay after the oscillator becomes active allows the clock generator to stabilize. If RESET is at logical zero at the end of 4064 tCYC, the CPU remains in the reset condition until goes to logical one. It is important to protect the MCU during power transitions. Most M68HC11 systems need an external circuit that holds the RESET pin low whenever VDD is below the minimum operating level. This external voltage level detector, or other external reset circuits, are the usual source of reset in a system. The POR circuit only initializes internal circuitry during cold starts. Refer to Figure 2-3. 5.1.2 External Reset (RESET) The CPU distinguishes between internal and external reset conditions by sensing whether the reset pin rises to a logic one in less than two E-clock cycles after an internal device releases reset. When a reset condition is sensed, the RESET pin is driven low by an internal device for four E-clock cycles, then released. Two E-clock cycles later it is sampled. If the pin is still held low, the CPU assumes that an external reset has occurred. If the pin is high, it indicates that the reset was initiated internally by either the COP system or the clock monitor. It is not advisable to connect an external resistor capacitor (RC) power-up delay circuit to the reset pin of M68HC11 devices because the circuit charge time constant can cause the device to misinterpret the type of reset that occurred. 5.1.3 COP Reset The MCU includes a COP system to help protect against software failures. When the RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. COP is enabled, the software is responsible for keeping a free-running watchdog timer from timing out. When the software is no longer being executed in the intended sequence, a system reset is initiated. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The state of the NOCOP bit in the CONFIG register determines whether the COP system is enabled or disabled. In normal modes, COP is enabled out of reset and does not depend on software action. To disable the COP system, set the NOCOP bit in the CONFIG register. In the special test and bootstrap operating modes, the COP system is initially inhibited by the disable resets (DISR) control bit in the TEST1 register. The DISR bit can subsequently be written to zero to enable COP resets. The COP timer rate control bits CR[1:0] in the OPTION register determine the COP time-out period. The system E clock is divided by 215 and then further scaled by a factor shown in Table 5-1. After reset, these bits are zero, which selects the fastest timeout period. In normal operating modes, these bits can only be written once within 64 bus cycles after reset. Table 5-1 COP Time-out CR[1:0] Divide E/215 By XTAL = 4.0 MHz Time-out –0/+32.8 ms XTAL = 8.0 MHz Time-out –0/+16.4 ms XTAL = 12.0 MHz Time-out –0/+10.9 ms 00 1 32.768 ms 16.384 ms 10.923 ms 01 4 131.072 ms 65.536 ms 43.691 ms 10 16 524.288 ms 262.140 ms 174.76 ms 64 2.097 sec 1.049 sec 699.05 ms E= 1.0 MHz 2.0 MHz 3.0 MHz 11 COPRST — Am/Reset COP Timer Circuitry RESET: Bit 7 7 0 6 6 0 5 5 0 4 4 0 $003A 3 3 0 2 2 0 1 1 0 Bit 0 0 0 Complete the following reset sequence to service the COP timer. Write $55 to COPRST to arm the COP timer clearing mechanism. Then write $AA to COPRST to clear the COP timer. Performing instructions between these two steps is possible as long as both steps are completed in the correct sequence before the timer times out. 5.1.4 Clock Monitor Reset The clock monitor circuit is based on an internal RC time delay. If no MCU clock edges are detected within this RC time delay, the clock monitor can optionally generate a system reset. The clock monitor function is enabled or disabled by the CME control bit in the OPTION register. The presence of a time-out is determined by the RC delay, which allows the clock monitor to operate without any MCU clocks. Clock monitor is used as a backup for the COP system. Because the COP needs a clock to function, it is disabled when the clocks stop. Therefore, the clock monitor system can detect clock failures not detected by the COP system. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Semiconductor wafer processing causes variations of the RC time-out values between individual devices. An E-clock frequency below 10 kHz is detected as a clock monitor error. An E-clock frequency of 200 kHz or more prevents clock monitor errors. Using the clock monitor function when the E clock is below 200 kHz is not recommended. Special considerations are needed when a STOP instruction is executed and the clock monitor is enabled. Because the STOP function causes the clocks to be halted, the clock monitor function generates a reset sequence if it is enabled at the time the STOP mode was initiated. Before executing a STOP instruction, clear the CME bit in the OPTION register to zero to disable the clock monitor. After recovery from STOP, set the CME bit to logic one to enable the clock monitor. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 5.1.5 Option Register OPTION — System Configuration Options RESET: Bit 7 0 0 6 0 0 5 IRQE* 0 4 DLY* 1 $0039 3 CME 0 2 0 0 1 CR1* 0 Bit 0 CR0* 0 *Can be written only once in first 64 cycles out of reset in normal modes, or at any time in special modes. Bits [7:6] and 2 — Not implemented Always read zero IRQE — Configure IRQ for Edge Sensitive Only Operation This bit can be written only once during the first 64 E-clock cycles after reset in normal modes. 0 = Low level recognition 1 = Falling edge recognition DLY — Enable Oscillator Startup Delay This bit is set during reset and can be written only once during the first 64 E-clock cycles after reset in normal modes. If an external clock source rather than a crystal is used, the stabilization delay can be inhibited because the clock source is assumed to be stable. 0 = No stabilization delay on exit from STOP 1 = Stabilization delay enabled on exit from STOP CME — Clock Monitor Enable This control bit can be read or written at any time and controls whether or not the internal clock monitor circuit triggers a reset sequence when the system clock is slow or absent. When it is clear, the clock monitor circuit is disabled. When it is set, the clock monitor circuit is enabled. Reset clears the CME bit. CR[1:0] — COP Timer Rate Select These control bits determine a scaling factor for the watchdog timer. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 5.1.6 CONFIG Register CONFIG — Configuration Control Register RESET: Bit 7 0 0 6 0 0 5 0 0 $003F 4 0 0 3 0 0 2 NOCOP — 1 ROMON — Bit 0 0 0 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Bits [7:4] and 0 — Not implemented Always read zero NOCOP — COP System Disable This bit is cleared out of reset in normal modes, enabling the COP system. It is set out of reset in special modes. NOCOP is writable once in normal modes and at any time in special modes. 0 = The COP system is enabled as the MCU comes out of reset. 1 = The COP system is disabled and does not generate system resets. ROMON — Enable On-Chip ROM Refer to SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY. 5.2 Effects of Reset When a reset condition is recognized, the internal registers and control bits are forced to an initial state. Depending on the cause of the reset and the operating mode, the reset vector can be fetched from any of six possible locations. Refer to Table 5-2. Table 5-2 Reset Cause, Reset Vector, and Operating Mode Cause of Reset Normal Mode Vector Special Test or Bootstrap POR or RESET Pin $FFFE, FFFF $BFFE, BFFF Clock Monitor Failure $FFFC, FFFD $BFFC, $BFFD COP Watchdog Time-out $FFFA, FFFB $BFFA, BFFB These initial states then control on-chip peripheral systems to force them to known startup states, as follows: 5.2.1 CPU After reset, the CPU fetches the restart vector from the appropriate address during the first three cycles, and begins executing instructions. The stack pointer and other CPU registers are indeterminate immediately after reset; however, the X and I interrupt mask bits in the condition code register (CCR) are set to mask any interrupt requests. Also, the S bit in the CCR is set to inhibit the STOP mode. 5.2.2 Memory Map After reset, the INIT register is initialized to $00, putting the 192 bytes of RAM at locations $0040 through $00FF, and the control registers at locations $0000 through $003F. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 5.2.3 Parallel I/O When a reset occurs in expanded multiplexed operating modes, the pins used for parallel I/O are dedicated to the expansion bus. In single-chip and bootstrap modes, all ports are parallel I/O data ports. In expanded multiplexed and test modes, ports B, C, and lines DATA6/AS and DATA7/R/W are a memory expansion bus with port B as a high-order address bus, port C as a multiplexed address and data bus, AS as the demultiplexing signal, and R/as the data bus direction control. The CWOM bit in PIOC is cleared so that port C is not in wired-OR mode. Port A, bits [0:3] and 7; and ports B, C, and D are general-purpose I/O at reset and set for input. For this reason the pins are configured as high impedance upon reset. Port A bits [4:6] are outputs, so high impedance protection is not necessary. NOTE Do not confuse pin function with the electrical state of the pin at reset. All general-purpose I/O pins configured as inputs at reset are in a high impedance state. Port data registers reflect the port's functional state at reset. The pin function is mode dependent. 5.2.4 Timer During reset, the timing system is initialized to a count of $0000. The prescaler bits are cleared, and all output compare registers are initialized to $FFFF. All input capture registers are indeterminate after reset. The output compare 1 mask (OC1M) register is cleared so that successful OC1 compares do not affect any I/O pins. The other four output compares are configured so that they do not affect any I/O pins on successful compares. All input capture edge-detector circuits are configured for capture disabled operation. The timer overflow interrupt flag and all eight timer function interrupt flags are cleared. All nine timer interrupts are disabled because their mask bits have been cleared. The I4/O5 bit in the PACTL register is cleared to configure the I4/O5 function as OC5; however, the OM5:OL5 control bits in the TCTL1 register are clear so OC5 does not control the PA3 pin. 5.2.5 Real-Time Interrupt The real-time interrupt flag (RTIF) is cleared and automatic hardware interrupts are masked. The rate control bits are cleared after reset and can be initialized by software before the real-time interrupt (RTI) system is used. After reset, a full RTI period elapses before the first RTI interrupt. 5.2.6 Pulse Accumulator The pulse accumulator system is disabled at reset so that the PAI input pin defaults to being a general-purpose input pin (PA7). RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-5 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 5.2.7 COP The COP watchdog system is enabled if the NOCOP control bit in the CONFIG register is clear, and disabled if NOCOP is set. The COP rate is set for the shortest duration time-out. 5.2.8 SCI The reset condition of the SCI system is independent of the operating mode. At reset, the SCI baud rate is indeterminate and must be established by a software write to the BAUD register. All transmit and receive interrupts are masked and both the transmitter and receiver are disabled so the port pins default to being general-purpose I/O lines. The SCI frame format is initialized to an 8-bit character size. The send break and receiver wake-up functions are disabled. The TDRE and TC status bits in the SCI status register are both set, indicating that there is no transmit data in either the transmit data register or the transmit serial shift register. The RDRF, IDLE, OR, NF, and FE receiverelated status bits are cleared. 5.2.9 SPI The SPI system is disabled by reset. The port pins associated with this function default to being general-purpose I/O lines. 5.2.10 System The memory system is configured for normal read operation. PSEL[3:0] are initialized with the value $0101, causing the external IRQ pin to have the highest I-bit interrupt priority. The IRQ pin is configured for level sensitive operation (for wired-OR systems). The RBOOT, SMOD, and MDA bits in the HPRIO register reflect the status of the MODB and MODA inputs at the rising edge of reset. The DLY control bit in OPTION is set to specify that an oscillator start-up delay is imposed upon recovery from STOP. The clock monitor system is disabled by CME equals zero. 5.3 Reset and Interrupt Priority Resets and interrupts have a hardware priority that determines which reset or interrupt is serviced first when simultaneous requests occur. Any maskable interrupt can be given priority over other maskable interrupts. The first six interrupt sources are not maskable. The priority arrangement for these sources is as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. POR or RESET pin Clock monitor reset COP watchdog reset XIRQ interrupt Illegal opcode interrupt Software interrupt (SWI) RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-6 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The maskable interrupt sources have the following priority arrangement: 1. IRQ 2. Real-time interrupt 3. Timer input capture 1 4. Timer input capture 2 5. Timer input capture 3 6. Timer output compare 1 7. Timer output compare 2 8. Timer output compare 3 9. Timer output compare 4 10. Timer input capture 4/output compare 5 11. Timer overflow 12. Pulse accumulator overflow 13. Pulse accumulator input edge 14. SPI transfer complete 15. SCI system Any one of these interrupts can be assigned the highest maskable interrupt priority by writing the appropriate value to the PSEL bits in the HPRIO register. Otherwise, the priority arrangement remains the same. An interrupt that is assigned highest priority is still subject to global masking by the I bit in the CCR, or by any associated local bits. Interrupt vectors are not affected by priority assignment. To avoid race conditions, HPRIO can be written only while I-bit interrupts are inhibited. 5.3.1 Highest Priority Interrupt and Miscellaneous Register HPRIO — Highest Priority I-Bit Interrupt and Miscellaneous RESET: Bit 7 RBOOT — 6 SMOD — 5 MDA — 4 IRVNE — 3 PSEL3 0 $003C 2 PSEL2 1 1 PSEL1 0 Bit 0 PSEL0 1 The values of the RBOOT, SMOD, IRVNE, and MDA reset bits depend on the mode during initialization. Refer to Table 5-3. RBOOT — Read Bootstrap ROM Has meaning only when the SMOD bit is a one (special bootstrap mode or special test mode). At all other times this bit is clear and cannot be written. Refer to SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY for more information. SMOD — Special Mode Select This bit reflects the inverse of the MODB input pin at the rising edge of reset. Refer to SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY for more information. MDA — Mode Select A The mode select A bit reflects the status of the MODA input pin at the rising edge of reset. Refer to SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY for more information. IRVNE — Internal Read Visibility Enable/Not E RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. The IRVNE control bit allows internal read accesses to be available on the external data bus during factory testing or emulation. Refer to SECTION 4 OPERATING MODES AND ON-CHIP MEMORY for more information. PSEL[3:0] — Priority Select Bits These bits select one interrupt source to be elevated above all other I-bit-related sources and can be written to only while the I bit in the CCR is set (interrupts disabled). Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Table 5-3 Highest Priority Interrupt Selection PSEL[3:0] 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 Interrupt Source Promoted Timer Overflow Pulse Accumulator Overflow Pulse Accumulator Input Edge SPI Serial Transfer Complete SCI Serial System Reserved (Default to IRQ) IRQ (External Pin) Real-Time Interrupt Timer Input Capture 1 Timer Input Capture 2 Timer Input Capture 3 Timer Output Compare 1 Timer Output Compare 2 Timer Output Compare 3 Timer Output Compare 4 Timer Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 5.4 Interrupts The MCU has 18 interrupt vectors that support 22 interrupt sources. The 19 maskable interrupts are generated by on-chip peripheral systems. These interrupts are recognized when the global interrupt mask bit (I) in the condition code register (CCR) is clear. The three non-maskable interrupt sources are illegal opcode trap, software interrupt, and XIRQ pin. Refer to Table 5-4, which shows the interrupt sources and vector assignments for each source. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 5-4 Interrupt and Reset Vector Assignments Vector Address Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... FFC0, C1 — FFD4, D5 FFD6, D7 FFD8, D9 FFDA, DB FFDC, DD FFDE, DF FFE0, E1 FFE2, E3 FFE4, E5 FFE6, E7 FFE8, E9 FFEA, EB FFEC, ED FFEE, EF FFF0, F1 FFF2, F3 FFF4, F5 FFF6, F7 FFF8, F9 FFFA, FB FFFC, FD FFFE, FF Interrupt Source Reserved SCI Serial System • SCI Transmit Complete • SCI Transmit Data Register Empty • SCI Idle Line Detect • SCI Receiver Overrun • SCI Receive Data Register Full SPI Serial Transfer Complete Pulse Accumulator Input Edge Pulse Accumulator Overflow Timer Overflow Timer Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 Timer Output Compare 4 Timer Output Compare 3 Timer Output Compare 2 Timer Output Compare 1 Timer Input Capture 3 Timer Input Capture 2 Timer Input Capture 1 Real Time Interrupt IRQ (External Pin) XIRQ Pin Software Interrupt Illegal Opcode Trap COP Failure Clock Monitor Fail RESET CCR Mask — I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit I Bit X Bit None None None None None Local Mask — — TCIE TIE ILIE RIE RIE SPIE PAII PAOVI TOI I4/O5I OC4I OC3I OC2I OC1I IC3I IC2I IC1I RTII None None None None NOCOP CME None 5.4.1 Interrupt Recognition and Register Stacking An interrupt can be recognized at any time after it is enabled by its local mask, if any, and by the global mask bit in the CCR. Once an interrupt source is recognized, the CPU responds at the completion of the instruction being executed. Interrupt latency varies according to the number of cycles required to complete the current instruction. When the CPU begins to service an interrupt, the contents of the CPU registers are pushed onto the stack in the order shown in Table 5-5. After the CCR value is stacked, the I bit and the X bit, if XIRQ is pending, are set to inhibit further interrupts. The interrupt vector for the highest priority pending source is fetched, and execution continues at the address specified by the vector. At the end of the interrupt service routine, the return from interrupt instruction is executed and the saved registers are pulled from the stack in reverse order so that normal program execution can resume. Refer to SECTION 3 CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT for further information. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 5-5 Stacking Order on Entry to Interrupts Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Memory Location SP SP – 1 SP –2 SP – 3 SP – 4 SP – 5 SP – 6 SP – 7 SP – 8 CPU Registers PCL PCH IYL IYH IXL IXH ACCA ACCB CCR 5.4.2 Non-Maskable Interrupt Request XIRQ Non-maskable interrupts are useful because they can always interrupt CPU operations. The most common use for such an interrupt is for serious system problems, such as program runaway or power failure. The XIRQ input is an updated version of the nonmaskable NMI input of earlier MCUs. Upon reset, both the X bit and I bits of the CCR are set to inhibit all maskable interrupts and XIRQ. After minimum system initialization, software can clear the X bit by a TAP instruction, enabling XIRQ interrupts. Thereafter, software cannot set the X bit. Thus, an XIRQ interrupt is a nonmaskable interrupt. Because the operation of the I-bit-related interrupt structure has no effect on the X bit, the internal XIRQ pin remains nonmasked. In the interrupt priority logic, the XIRQ interrupt has a higher priority than any source that is maskable by the I bit. All I-bit-related interrupts operate normally with their own priority relationship. When an I-bit-related interrupt occurs, the I bit is automatically set by hardware after stacking the CCR byte. The X bit is not affected. When an X-bit-related interrupt occurs, both the X and I bits are automatically set by hardware after stacking the CCR. A return from interrupt instruction restores the X and I bits to their pre-interrupt request state. 5.4.3 Illegal Opcode Trap Because not all possible opcodes or opcode sequences are defined, the MCU includes an illegal opcode detection circuit, which generates an interrupt request. When an illegal opcode is detected and the interrupt is recognized, the current value of the program counter is stacked. After interrupt service is complete, reinitialize the stack pointer so repeated execution of illegal opcodes does not cause stack underflow. Left uninitialized, the illegal opcode vector can point to a memory location that contains an illegal opcode. This condition causes an infinite loop that causes stack underflow. The stack grows until the system crashes. The illegal opcode trap mechanism works for all unimplemented opcodes on all four opcode map pages. The address stacked as the return address for the illegal opcode interrupt is the address of the first byte of the illegal opcode. Otherwise, it would be almost impossible to determine whether the illegal opcode had been one or two bytes. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-10 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. The stacked return address can be used as a pointer to the illegal opcode so the illegal opcode service routine can evaluate the offending opcode. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 5.4.4 Software Interrupt SWI is an instruction, and thus cannot be interrupted until complete. SWI is not inhibited by the global mask bits in the CCR. Because execution of SWI sets the I mask bit, once an SWI interrupt begins, other interrupts are inhibited until SWI is complete, or until user software clears the I bit in the CCR. 5.4.5 Maskable Interrupts The maskable interrupt structure of the MCU can be extended to include additional external interrupt sources through the IRQ pin. The default configuration of this pin is a low-level sensitive wired-OR network. When an event triggers an interrupt, a software accessible interrupt flag is set. When enabled, this flag causes a constant request for interrupt service. After the flag is cleared, the service request is released. 5.4.6 Reset and Interrupt Processing Figure 5-1 and Figure 5-1 illustrate the reset and interrupt process. Figure 5-1 illustrates how the CPU begins from a reset and how interrupt detection relates to normal opcode fetches. Figure 5-1 is an expansion of a block in Figure 5-1 and illustrates interrupt priorities. Figure 5-2 shows the resolution of interrupt sources within the SCI subsystem. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. HIGHEST PRIORITY POWER-ON RESET (POR) DELAY 4064 E CYCLES EXTERNAL RESET CLOCK MONITOR FAIL (WITH CME = 1) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... LOWEST PRIORITY COP WATCHDOG TIMEOUT (WITH NOCOP = 0) LOAD PROGRAM COUNTER WITH CONTENTS OF $FFFE, $FFFF (VECTOR FETCH) LOAD PROGRAM COUNTER WITH CONTENTS OF $FFFC, $FFFD (VECTOR FETCH) LOAD PROGRAM COUNTER WITH CONTENTS OF $FFFA, $FFFB (VECTOR FETCH) SET BITS S, I, AND X RESET MCU HARDWARE 1A BEGIN INSTRUCTION SEQUENCE Y BIT X IN CCR = 1? N XIRQ PIN LOW? Y N 2A STACK CPU REGISTERS SET BITS I AND X FETCH VECTOR $FFF4, $FFF5 FLOW OUT OF RESET P1 Figure 5-1 Processing Flow out of Reset (1 of 2) RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-12 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2A Y BIT I IN CCR = 1? N ANY I-BIT INTERRUPT PENDING? Y STACK CPU REGISTERS N Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... FETCH OPCODE Y STACK CPU REGISTERS ILLEGAL OPCODE? SET BIT I IN CCR N FETCH VECTOR $FFF8, $FFF9 WAI Y INSTRUCTION? STACK CPU REGISTERS N Y STACK CPU REGISTERS SWI INSTRUCTION? N N SET BIT I IN CCR FETCH VECTOR $FFF6, $FFF7 Y RESTORE CPU REGISTERS FROM STACK Y SET BIT I IN CCR RTI INSTRUCTION? N EXECUTE THIS INSTRUCTION ANY INTERRUPT PENDING? RESOLVE INTERRUPT PRIORITY AND FETCH VECTOR FOR HIGHEST PENDING SOURCE SEE FIGURE 5–2 1A FLOW OUT OF RESET P2 Figure 5-1 Processing Flow out of Reset (2 of 2) RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-13 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. BEGIN X BIT IN CCR SET ? YES NO HIGHEST PRIORITY INTERRUPT ? NO Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... IRQ ? XIRQ PIN LOW ? YES SET X BIT IN CCR FETCH VECTOR $FFF4, FFF5 NO YES FETCH VECTOR YES FETCH VECTOR $FFF2, FFF3 NO RTII = 1 ? YES NO YES NO FETCH VECTOR $FFF0, FFF1 TIMER IC1F ? YES FETCH VECTOR $FFEE, FFEF YES FETCH VECTOR $FFEC, FFED YES FETCH VECTOR $FFEA, FFEB YES FETCH VECTOR $FFE8, FFE9 NO YES IC2I = 1 ? NO TIMER IC2F ? NO YES IC3I = 1 ? NO TIMER IC3F ? NO YES NO YES NO IC1I = 1 ? OC1I = 1 ? REAL-TIME INTERRUPT ? TIMER OC1F ? NO 2A 2B INT PRIORITY RES P1 Figure 5-2 Interrupt Priority Resolution (1 of 2) RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-14 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 2A 2B Y OC2I = 1? Y OC3I = 1? Y OC4I = 1? Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... FETCH VECTOR $FFE6, $FFE7 FLAG OC3F = 1 Y FETCH VECTOR $FFE4, $FFE5 Y FETCH VECTOR $FFE2, $FFE3 Y FETCH VECTOR $FFE0, $FFE1 Y FETCH VECTOR $FFDE, $FFDF Y FETCH VECTOR $FFDC, $FFDD Y FETCH VECTOR $FFDA, $FFDB Y FETCH VECTOR $FFD8, $FFD9 N N FLAG OC4F = 1? N N Y OC5I = 1? FLAG OC5F = 1? N N Y TOI = 1? FLAG TOF = 1? N N Y PAOVI = 1? FLAG PAOVF = 1 N N Y PAII = 1? FLAG PAIF = 1? N N Y SPIE = 1? FLAGS SPIF = 1? OR MODF = 1? N N N Y N N SCI INTERRUPT? SEE FIGURE 9–7 FLAG OC2F = 1? Y FETCH VECTOR $FFD6, $FFD7 FETCH VECTOR $FFF2, $FFF3 END INT PRI RES P2 Figure 5-2 Interrupt Priority Resolution (2 of 2) RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-15 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. BEGIN FLAG RDRF = 1? Y N OR = 1? Y RIE = 1? N N Y Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Y TDRE = 1? Y N Y Y TE = 1? TIE = 1? N N RE = 1? N Y Y TCIE = 1? TC = 1? N N Y IDLE = 1? Y ILIE = 1? N N Y RE = 1? N NO VALID SCI REQUEST VALID SCI REQUEST INT SOURCE RES Figure 5-3 Interrupt Source Resolution within SCI 5.5 Low-Power Operation Both STOP and WAIT suspend CPU operation until a reset or interrupt occurs. The WAIT condition suspends processing and reduces power consumption to an intermediate level. The STOP condition turns off all on-chip clocks and reduces power consumption to an absolute minimum while retaining the contents of all 192 bytes of RAM. 5.5.1 WAIT The WAI opcode places the MCU in the WAIT condition, during which the CPU registers are stacked and CPU processing is suspended until a qualified interrupt is detected. The interrupt can be an external IRQ, an XIRQ, or any of the internally generated interrupts, such as the timer or serial interrupts. The on-chip crystal oscillator remains active throughout the WAIT standby period. The reduction of power in the WAIT condition depends on how many internal clock sigRESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-16 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. nals driving on-chip peripheral functions can be shut down. The CPU is always shut down during WAIT. While in the wait state, the address/data bus repeatedly runs read cycles to the address where the CCR contents were stacked. The MPU leaves the wait state when it senses any interrupt that has not been masked. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The free-running timer system is shut down only if the I bit is set to one and the COP system is disabled by NOCOP being set to one. Several other systems can also be in a reduced power consumption state depending on the state of software-controlled configuration control bits. The SPI system is enabled or disabled by the SPE control bit. The SCI transmitter is enabled or disabled by the TE bit, and the SCI receiver is enabled or disabled by the RE bit. Therefore the power consumption in WAIT is dependent on the particular application. 5.5.2 STOP Executing the STOP instruction while the S bit in the CCR is equal to zero places the MCU in the STOP condition. If the S bit is not zero, the STOP opcode is treated as a no-op (NOP). The STOP condition offers minimum power consumption because all clocks, including the crystal oscillator, are stopped while in this mode. To exit STOP and resume normal processing, a logic low level must be applied to one of the external interrupts (IRQ or XIRQ), or to the RESET pin. A pending edge-triggered IRQ can also bring the CPU out of STOP. Because all clocks are stopped in this mode, all internal peripheral functions also stop. The data in the internal RAM is retained as long as VDD power is maintained. The CPU state and I/O pin levels are static and are unchanged by STOP. Therefore, when an interrupt comes to restart the system, the MCU resumes processing as if there were no interruption. If reset is used to restart the system a normal reset sequence results where all I/O pins and functions are also restored to their initial states. To use the IRQ pin as a means of recovering from STOP, the I bit in the CCR must be clear (IRQ not masked). The XIRQ pin can be used to wake up the MCU from STOP regardless of the state of the X bit in the CCR, although the recovery sequence depends on the state of the X bit. If X is set to zero (XIRQ not masked), the MCU starts up, beginning with the stacking sequence leading to normal service of the XIRQ request. If X is set to one (XIRQ masked or inhibited), then processing continues with the instruction that immediately follows the STOP instruction, and no XIRQ interrupt service is requested or pending. Because the oscillator is stopped in STOP mode, a restart delay may be imposed to allow oscillator stabilization upon leaving STOP. If the internal oscillator is being used, this delay is required; however, if a stable external oscillator is being used, the DLY control bit can be used to bypass this startup delay. The DLY control bit is set by reset and can be optionally cleared during initialization. If the DLY equal to zero option is used to avoid startup delay on recovery from STOP, then reset should not be used as the means of recovering from STOP, as this causes DLY to be set again by reset, imposing the restart delay. This same delay also applies to power-on-reset, regardless of the state of the DLY control bit, but does not apply to a reset while the clocks are running. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 5-17 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. RESETS AND INTERRUPTS 5-18 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O The MC68HC11D3 has four 8-bit I/O ports; A, B, C, and D. In single-chip and bootstrap modes, all ports are parallel I/O data ports. In expanded multiplexed and test modes, ports B and C, and lines DATA6/AS and DATA7/R/W are a memory expansion bus with port B as the high order address bus, port C as the multiplexed address and data bus, AS as the demultiplexing signal, and R/W as the data bus direction control. Refer to Table 6-1, which is a summary of the ports and their shared functions: Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Table 6-1 I/O Ports Port Port A Port B Port C Port D Input Pins 3 — — — Output Pins 3 — — — Bidirectional Pins 2 8 8 8 Shared Functions TImer High Order Address Low Order Address and Data Bus SCI, SPI, AS, and R/ 6.1 Port A Port A bits handle the timer functions and can also be used as general-purpose I/O. In both the normal operating modes, port A can be configured for four timer input capture (IC) and three timer output compare (OC) functions, or four OC and three IC functions with either a pulse accumulator input (PAI) or a fifth OC function. PORTA — Port A Data RESET: Alt. Func: And/or: $0000 Bit 7 PA7 HiZ 6 PA6* 0 5 PA5 0 4 PA4* 0 3 PA3 HiZ 2 PA2 HiZ 1 PA1 HiZ Bit 0 PA0 HiZ PAI OC1 OC2 OC1 OC3 OC1 OC4 OC1 IC4/OC5 OC1 IC1 — IC2 — IC3 — *This pin is not bonded in the 40-pin version. 6.2 Port B In single-chip mode, all port B pins are general-purpose I/O (PB[7:0]). In expanded multiplexed mode, all port B pins act as high-order address bits (ADDR[15:8]). PORTB — Port B Data S. Chip or Boot: RESET: Expan. or Test: RESET: $0004 Bit 7 PB7 6 PB6 5 PB5 4 PB4 3 PB3 2 PB2 1 PB1 Bit 0 PB0 PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 PB3 PB2 Reset configures pins as HiZ inputs PB1 PB0 ADDR15 ADDR14 ADDR13 ADDR12 ADDR11 ADDR10 Reset configures pins as high-order address outputs ADDR9 ADDR8 PARALLEL I/O TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 6-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. DDRB — Data Direction Register for Port B RESET: Bit 7 DDB7 0 6 DDB6 0 5 DDB5 0 4 DDC4 0 $0006 3 DDB3 0 2 DDB2 0 1 DDB1 0 Bit 0 DDB0 0 DDB[7:0] — Data Direction for Port B 0 = Corresponding port B pin configured for input only 1 = Corresponding port B pin configured as output Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 6.3 Port C Port C pins are general-purpose I/O (PC[7:0]) in single-chip mode. In expanded multiplexed mode, port C pins are configured as multiplexed address/data pins. During the data cycle, bits [7:0] (PC[7:0]) are bidirectional data pins controlled by the R/W signal. PORTC — Port C Data S. Chip or Boot: RESET: Expan. or Test: RESET: $0003 Bit 7 PC7 6 PC6 PC7 PC6 ADDR7/ DATA7 5 PC5 4 PC4 3 PC3 2 PC2 1 PC1 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 Reset configures pins as HiZ inputs ADDR6/ ADDR5/ ADDR4/ ADDR3/ ADDR2/ ADDR1/ DATA6 DATA5 DATA4 DATA3 DATA2 DATA1 Reset configures pins as multiplexed, low-order address/data I/O DDRC — Data Direction Register for Port C RESET: Bit 7 DDC7 0 6 DDC6 0 5 DDC5 0 4 DDC4 0 Bit 0 PC0 PC0 ADDR0/ DATA0 $0007 3 DDC3 0 2 DDC2 0 1 DDC1 0 Bit 0 DDC0 0 DDC[7:0] — Data Direction for Port C 0 = Input 1 = Output 6.4 Port D The eight port D bits (PD[7:0]) can be used for general-purpose I/O, for the SCI and SPI subsystems, or for bus data direction control. Port D can be read at any time. Inputs return the sensed levels at the pin; outputs return the input level of the port D pin drivers. If port D is written, the data is stored in an internal latch, and can be driven only if port D is configured for general-purpose output. This port shares functions with the on-chip SCI and SPI subsystems, while bits 6 and 7 control the direction of data flow on the bus in expanded and special test modes. PARALLEL I/O 6-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. PORTD — Port D Data RESET: Alt. Func.: Bit 7 PD7 0 R/W $0008 6 PD6 0 AS 5 PD5 0 4 PD4 0 SCK 3 PD3 0 MOSI 2 PD2 0 MISO 1 PD1 0 TxD DDRD — Data Direction Register for Port D Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... RESET: Bit 7 DDD7 0 6 DDD6 0 5 DDD5 0 4 DDD4 0 Bit 0 PD0 0 RxD $0009 3 DDD3 0 2 DDD2 0 1 DDD1 0 Bit 0 DDD0 0 DDD[7:0] — Data Direction for Port D When port D is a general-purpose I/O port, the DDRD register controls the direction of the I/O pins as follows: 0 = Configures the corresponding port D pin for input 1 = Configures the corresponding port D pin for output In expanded and test modes, bits 6 and 7 are dedicated AS and R/W outputs. When port D is functioning with the SPI system enabled, bit 5 is dedicated as the slave select (SS) input. In SPI slave mode, DDD5 has no meaning or effect. In SPI master mode, DDD5 affects port D bit 5 as follows: 0 = Port D bit 5 is an error-detect input to the SPI. 1 = Port D bit 5 is configured as a general-purpose output line. If the SPI is enabled and expects port D bits 2, 3, and 4 (MISO, MOSI, and SCK) to be inputs, then they are inputs, regardless of the state of DDRD bits 2, 3, and 4. If the SPI expects port D bits 2, 3, and 4 to be outputs, they are outputs only if DDRD bits 2, 3, and 4 are set. PACTL — Pulse Accumulator Control RESET: Bit 7 DDRA7 0 6 PAEN 0 5 PAMOD 0 $0026 4 PEDGE 0 3 DDRA3 0 2 I4/O5 0 1 RTR1 0 Bit 0 RTR0 0 DDRA7 — Data Direction Control for Port A Bit 7 Refer to SECTION 9 TIMING SYSTEM. PAEN — Pulse Accumulator System Enable Refer to SECTION 9 TIMING SYSTEM. PAMOD — Pulse Accumulator Mode Refer to SECTION 9 TIMING SYSTEM. PEDGE — Pulse Accumulator Edge Control Refer to SECTION 9 TIMING SYSTEM. DDRA3 — Data Direction for Port A Bit 3 Overridden if an output compare function is configured to control the PA3 pin. 0 = Input only 1 = Output PARALLEL I/O TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 6-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. I4/O5 — Configure TI4/O5 register for IC4 or OC5 0 = OC5 function enabled 1 = IC4 function enabled RTR[1:0] — Real-Time Interrupt (RTI) Rate Refer to SECTION 9 TIMING SYSTEM. 6.5 Parallel I/O Control Register (PIOC) PIOC configures and controls handshake I/O functions in MCUs where this function is available. In the MC68HC11D3, however, only the CWOM bit in the PIOC register is usable. The CWOM bit is cleared so that port C is not in wired-OR mode. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... PIOC— Parallel I/O Control RESET: Bit 7 0 0 6 0 0 $0002 5 CWOM 0 4 0 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 CWOM — Port C Wired-OR Mode (affects all eight port C pins) 0 = Port C outputs are normal CMOS outputs 1 = Port C outputs are open-drain outputs PARALLEL I/O 6-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SECTION 7 SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The serial communications interface (SCI) is a universal asynchronous receiver transmitter (UART), one of two independent serial I/O subsystems in the MC68HC11D3. It has a standard nonreturn to zero (NRZ) format (one start, eight or nine data, and one stop bit). Several baud rates are available. The SCI transmitter and receiver are independent, but use the same data format and bit rate. 7.1 Data Format The serial data format requires the following conditions: 1. An idle line in the high state before transmission or reception of a message 2. A start bit, logic zero, transmitted or received, that indicates the start of each character 3. Data that is transmitted and received least significant bit (LSB) first 4. A stop bit, logic one, used to indicate the end of a frame (A frame consists of a start bit, a character of eight or nine data bits, and a stop bit.) 5. A break (defined as the transmission or reception of a logic zero for some multiple number of frames). Selection of the word length is controlled by the M bit of SCI control register SCCR1. 7.2 Transmit Operation The SCI transmitter includes a parallel transmit data register (SCDR) and a serial shift register. The contents of the serial shift register can only be written through the SCDR. This double buffered operation allows a character to be shifted out serially while another character is waiting in the SCDR to be transferred into the serial shift register. The output of the serial shift register is applied to TxD as long as transmission is in progress or the transmit enable (TE) bit of serial communication control register 2 (SCCR2) is set. The block diagram, Figure 7-1, shows the transmit serial shift register, and the buffer logic at the top of the figure. SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 7-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. TRANSMITTER BAUD RATE CLOCK (WRITE ONLY) SCDR Tx BUFFER DDD1 10 (11) - BIT Tx SHIFT REGISTER 2 1 0 PIN BUFFER AND CONTROL L BREAK—JAM 0s 3 JAM ENABLE 4 PREAMBLE—JAM 1s 5 SHIFT ENABLE SIZE 8/9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 6 TRANSFER Tx BUFFER H (8) 7 PD1 TxD 8 FORCE PIN DIRECTION (OUT) TRANSMITTER CONTROL LOGIC SCCR1 SCI CONTROL 1 FE NF OR IDLE RDRF TC TDRE WAKE M T8 R8 8 SCSR INTERRUPT STATUS 8 TDRE TIE TC SBK RWU RE TE ILIE RIE TCIE TIE TCIE SCCR2 SCI CONTROL 2 SCI Rx REQUESTS SCI INTERRUPT REQUEST INTERNAL DATA BUS 11 SCI TX BLOCK Figure 7-1 SCI Transmitter Block Diagram 7.3 Receive Operation During receive operations, the transmit sequence is reversed. The serial shift register receives data and transfers it to a parallel receive data register (SCDR) as a complete word. Refer to Figure 7-2. This double buffered operation allows a character to be shifted in serially while another character is already in the SCDR. An advanced data SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE 7-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. recovery scheme distinguishes valid data from noise in the serial data stream. The data input is selectively sampled to detect receive data, and a majority voting circuit determines the value and integrity of each bit. RECEIVER BAUD RATE CLOCK 10 (11) - BIT Rx SHIFT REGISTER DATA RECOVERY PIN BUFFER AND CONTROL PD0 RxD STOP ÷16 (8) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MSB DISABLE DRIVER ALL ONES RE M WAKEUP LOGIC RWU FE NF OR IDLE RDRF TC TDRE WAKE M T8 8 R8 SCSR SCI STATUS 1 SCCR1 SCI CONTROL 1 SCDR Rx BUFFER (READ ONLY) 8 RDRF RIE IDLE ILIE OR SBK RWU RE TE ILIE RIE TCIE RIE TIE Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... START DDD0 8 SCCR2 SCI CONTROL 2 SCI Tx REQUESTS SCI INTERRUPT REQUEST INTERNAL DATA BUS 11 SCI RX BLOCK Figure 7-2 SCI Receiver Block Diagram SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 7-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 7.4 Wake-up Feature The wake-up feature reduces SCI service overhead in multiple receiver systems. Software for each receiver evaluates the first character of each message. The receiver is placed in wakeup mode by writing a one to the RWU bit in the SCCR2 register. While RWU is one, all of the receiver-related status flags (RDRF, IDLE, OR, NF, and FE) are inhibited (cannot become set). Although RWU can be cleared by a software write to SCCR2, to do so would be unusual. Normally RWU is set by software and is cleared automatically with hardware. Whenever a new message begins, logic alerts the sleeping receivers to wake up and evaluate the initial character of the new message. Two methods of wake-up are available: idle line wake-up and address mark wake-up. During idle line wake-up, a sleeping receiver awakens as soon as the RxD line becomes idle. In the address mark wake-up, logic one in the most significant bit (MSB) of a character wakes up all sleeping receivers. 7.4.1 Idle-Line Wakeup To use the receiver wake-up method, establish a software addressing scheme to allow the transmitting devices to direct a message to individual receivers or to groups of receivers. This addressing scheme can take any form as long as all transmitting and receiving devices are programmed to understand the same scheme. Because the addressing information is usually the first frame(s) in a message, receivers that are not part of the current task do not become burdened with the entire set of addressing frames. All receivers are awake (RWU = 0) when each message begins. As soon as a receiver determines that the message is not intended for it, software sets the RWU bit (RWU = 1), which inhibits further flag setting until the RxD line goes idle at the end of the message. As soon as an idle line is detected by receiver logic, hardware automatically clears the RWU bit so that the first frame of the next message can be received. This type of receiver wakeup requires a minimum of one idle-line frame time between messages, and no idle time between frames in a message. 7.4.2 Address-Mark Wakeup The serial characters in this type of wakeup consist of seven (eight if M = 1) information bits and an MSB, which indicates an address character (when set to one — mark). The first character of each message is an addressing character (MSB = 1). All receivers in the system evaluate this character to determine if the remainder of the message is directed toward this particular receiver. As soon as a receiver determines that a message is not intended for it, the receiver activates the RWU function by using a software write to set the RWU bit. Because setting RWU inhibits receiver-related flags, there is no further software overhead for the rest of this message. When the next message begins, its first character has its MSB set, which automatically clears the RWU bit and enables normal character reception. The first character whose MSB is set is also the first character to be received after wakeup because RWU gets cleared before the stop bit for that frame is serially received. This type of wakeup allows messages to include gaps of idle time, unlike the idle-line method, but there is a loss of efficiency because of the extra bit time for each character (address bit) required for all characters. SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE 7-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 7.5 SCI Error Detection Three error conditions, SCDR overrun, received bit noise, and framing can occur during generation of SCI system interrupts. Three bits (OR, NF, and FE) in the serial communications status register (SCSR) indicate if one of these error conditions exists. The overrun error (OR) bit is set when the next byte is ready to be transferred from the receive shift register to the SCDR and the SCDR is already full (RDRF bit is set). When an overrun error occurs, the data that caused the overrun is lost and the data that was already in SCDR is not disturbed. The OR is cleared when the SCSR is read (with OR set), followed by a read of the SCDR. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The noise flag (NF) bit is set if there is noise on any of the received bits, including the start and stop bits. The NF bit is not set until the RDRF flag is set. The NF bit is cleared when the SCSR is read (with FE equal to one) followed by a read of the SCDR. When no stop bit is detected in the received data character, the framing error (FE) bit is set. FE is set at the same time as the RDRF. If the byte received causes both framing and overrun errors, the processor only recognizes the overrun error. The framing error flag inhibits further transfer of data into the SCDR until it is cleared. The FE bit is cleared when the SCSR is read (with FE equal to one) followed by a read of the SCDR. 7.6 SCI Registers There are five addressable registers in the SCI. 7.6.1 Serial Communications Data Register (SCDR) SCDR is a parallel register that performs two functions. It is the receive data register when it is read, and the transmit data register when it is written. Reads access the receive data buffer and writes access the transmit data buffer. Receive and transmit are double buffered. SCDR — SCI Data Register RESET: Bit 7 R7/T7 U* 6 R6/T6 U $002F 5 R5/T5 U 4 R4/T4 U 3 R3/T3 U 2 R2/T2 U 1 R1/T1 U Bit 0 R0/T0 U *U = Unaffected 7.6.2 Serial Communications Control Register 1 (SCCR1) The SCCR1 register provides the control bits that determine word length and select the method used for the wake-up feature. SCCR1 — SCI Control Register 1 RESET: Bit 7 R8 U 6 T8 U 5 0 0 $002C 4 M 0 3 WAKE 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 R8 — Receive Data Bit 8 If M bit is set, R8 stores the ninth bit in the receive data character. SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 7-5 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. T8 — Transmit Data bit 8 If M bit is set, T8 stores ninth bit in transmit data character. M — Mode (Select Character Format) 0 = Start bit, 8 data bits, 1 stop bit 1 = Start bit, 9 data bits, 1 stop bit WAKE — Wake-up by Address Mark/Idle 0 = Wake-up by IDLE line recognition 1 = Wake-up by address mark (most significant data bit set) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 7.6.3 Serial Communications Control Register 2 (SCCR2) The SCCR2 register provides the control bits that enable or disable individual SCI functions. SCCR2 — SCI Control Register 2 RESET: Bit 7 TIE 0 6 TCIE 0 5 RIE 0 $002D 4 ILIE 0 3 TE 0 2 RE 0 1 RWU 0 Bit 0 SBK 0 TIE — Transmit Interrupt Enable 0 = TDRE interrupts disabled 1 = SCI interrupt requested when TDRE status flag is set TCIE — Transmit Complete Interrupt Enable 0 = TC interrupts disabled 1 = SCI interrupt requested when TC status flag is set RIE — Receiver Interrupt Enable 0 = RDRF and OR interrupts disabled 1 = SCI interrupt requested when RDRF flag or the OR status flag is set ILIE — Idle Line Interrupt Enable 0 = IDLE interrupts disabled 1 = SCI interrupt requested when IDLE status flag is set TE — Transmitter Enable When TE goes from zero to one, one unit of idle character time (logic one) is queued as a preamble. 0 = Transmitter disabled 1 = Transmitter enabled RE — Receiver Enable 0 = Receiver disabled 1 = Receiver enabled RWU — Receiver Wake-Up Control 0 = Normal SCI receiver 1 = Wake-up enabled and receiver interrupts inhibited SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE 7-6 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SBK — Send Break At least one character time of break is queued and sent each time SBK is written to one. More than one break may be sent if the transmitter is idle at the time the SBK bit is toggled on and off, as the baud rate clock edge could occur between writing the one and writing the zero to SBK. 0 = Break generator off 1 = Break codes generated as long as SBK = 1 7.6.4 Serial Communication Status Register (SCSR) The SCSR provides inputs to the interrupt logic circuits for generation of the SCI system interrupt. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SCSR — SCI Status Register RESET: Bit 7 TDRE 1 6 TC 1 $002E 5 RDRF 0 4 IDLE 0 3 OR 0 2 NF 0 1 FE 0 Bit 0 0 0 TDRE — Transmit Data Register Empty Flag This flag is set when SCDR is empty. Clear the TDRE flag by reading SCSR with TDRE set and then writing to SCDR. 0 = SCDR busy 1 = SCDR empty TC — Transmit Complete Flag This flag is set when the transmitter is idle (no data, preamble, or break transmission in progress). Clear the TC flag by reading SCSR with TC set and then writing to SCDR. 0 = Transmitter busy 1 = Transmitter idle RDRF — Receive Data Register Full Flag This flag is set if a received character is ready to be read from SCDR. Clear the RDRF flag by reading SCSR with RDRF set and then reading SCDR. 0 = SCDR empty 1 = SCDR full IDLE — Idle Line Detected Flag This flag is set if the RxD line is idle. Once cleared, IDLE is not set again until the RxD line has been active and becomes idle again. The IDLE flag is inhibited when RWU = 1. Clear IDLE by reading SCSR with IDLE set and then reading SCDR. 0 = RxD line is active 1 = RxD line is idle OR — Overrun Error Flag OR is set if a new character is received before a previously received character is read from SCDR. Clear the OR flag by reading SCSR with OR set and then reading SCDR. 0 = No overrun 1 = Overrun detected SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 7-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. NF — Noise Error Flag NF is set if majority sample logic detects anything other than a unanimous decision. Clear NF by reading SCSR with NF set and then reading SCDR. 0 = Unanimous decision 1 = Noise detected Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... FE — Framing Error FE is set when a 0 is detected where a stop bit was expected. Clear the FE flag by reading SCSR with FE set and then reading SCDR. 0 = Stop bit detected 1 = 0 detected 7.6.5 Baud Rate Register (BAUD) Use this register to select different baud rates for the SCI system. The SCP[1:0] bits function as a prescaler for the SCR[2:0] bits. Together, these five bits provide multiple baud rate combinations for a given crystal frequency. Normally, this register is written once during initialization. The prescaler is set to its fastest rate by default out of reset, and can be changed at any time. Refer to Table 7-1 and Table 7-2 for normal baud rate selections. BAUD — Baud Rate RESET: Bit 7 TCLR 0 $002B 6 0 0 5 SCP1 0 4 SCP0 0 3 RCKB 0 2 SCR2 U 1 SCR1 U Bit 0 SCR0 U TCLR — Clear Baud Rate Counters (Test) RCKB — SCI Baud Rate Clock Check (Test) SCP1, SCP0 — SCI Baud Rate Prescaler Selects These two bits select a prescale factor for the SCI baud rate generator that determines the highest possible baud rate. Table 7-1 Baud Rate Prescale Selects SCP[1:0] 00 01 10 11 Divide Internal Clock By 1 3 4 13 Crystal Frequency in MHz 4.0 MHz 8.0 MHz 10.0 MHz 12.0 MHz (Baud) (Baud) (Baud) (Baud) 62.50 K 125.0 K 156.25 K 187.5 K 20.83 K 41.67 K 52.08 K 62.5 K 15.625 K 31.25 K 38.4 K 46.88 K 4800 9600 12.02 K 14.42 K SCR[2:0] — SCI Baud Rate Selects These three bits select receiver and transmitter bit rate based on output from baud rate prescaler stage. SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE 7-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table 7-2 Baud Rate Selects SCR[2:0] Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111 Divide Prescaler By 1 2 4 8 16 32 64 128 Highest Baud Rate (Prescaler Output from Previous Table) 4800 9600 38.4 K 4800 9600 38.4 K 2400 4800 19.2 K 1200 2400 9600 600 1200 4800 300 600 2400 150 300 1200 — 150 600 — — 300 The prescale bits, SCP[1:0], determine the highest baud rate and the SCR[2:0] bits select an additional binary submultiple (≥1, ≥2, ≥4, through ≥128) of this highest baud rate. The result of these two dividers in series is the 16 X receiver baud rate clock. The SCR[2:0] bits are not affected by reset and can be changed at any time, although they should not be changed when any SCI transfer is in progress. Figure 7-3 illustrates the SCI baud rate timing chain. The prescale select bits determine the highest baud rate. The rate select bits determine additional divide by two stages to arrive at the receiver timing (RT) clock rate. The baud rate clock is the result of dividing the RT clock by 16. SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 7-9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. EXTAL XTAL INTERNAL BUS CLOCK (PH2) OSCILLATOR AND CLOCK GENERATOR ÷3 (÷ 4) ÷4 ÷ 13 SCP[1:0] 0:0 E 0:1 1:0 1:1 AS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SCR[2:0] 0:0:0 ÷2 0:0:1 ÷2 0:1:0 ÷2 0:1:1 ÷ 16 ÷2 1:0:0 ÷2 1:0:1 ÷2 1:1:0 ÷2 1:1:1 SCI TRANSMIT BAUD RATE (1X) SCI RECEIVE BAUD RATE (16X) SCI BAUD GENERATOR Figure 7-3 SCI Baud Rate Diagram 7.7 Status Flags and Interrupts The SCI transmitter has two status flags. These status flags can be read by software (polled) to tell when the corresponding condition exists. Alternatively, a local interrupt enable bit can be set to enable each of these status conditions to generate interrupt requests when the corresponding condition is present. Status flags are automatically set by hardware logic conditions, but must be cleared by software, which provides an interlock mechanism that enables logic to know when software has noticed the status indication. The software clearing sequence for these flags is automatic — functions that are normally performed in response to the status flags also satisfy the conditions of the clearing sequence. SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE 7-10 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. TDRE and TC flags are normally set when the transmitter is first enabled (TE set to one). The TDRE flag indicates there is room in the transmit queue to store another data character in the TDR. The TIE bit is the local interrupt mask for TDRE. When TIE is zero, TDRE must be polled. When TIE and TDRE are one, an interrupt is requested. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The TC flag indicates the transmitter has completed the queue. The TCIE bit is the local interrupt mask for TC. When TCIE is zero, TC must be polled; when TCIE is one and TC is one, an interrupt is requested. Writing a zero to TE requests that the transmitter stop when it can. The transmitter completes any transmission in progress before actually shutting down. Only an MCU reset can cause the transmitter to stop and shut down immediately. If TE is written to zero when the transmitter is already idle, the pin reverts to its general-purpose I/O function (synchronized to the bit-rate clock). If anything is being transmitted when TE is written to zero, that character is completed before the pin reverts to general-purpose I/O, but any other characters waiting in the transmit queue are lost. The TC and TDRE flags are set at the completion of this last character, even though TE has been disabled. The SCI receiver has five status flags, three of which can generate interrupt requests. The status flags are set by the SCI logic in response to specific conditions in the receiver. These flags can be read (polled) at any time by software. Refer to Figure 7-4, which shows SCI interrupt arbitration. When an overrun takes place, the new character is lost, and the character that was in its way in the parallel RDR is undisturbed. RDRF is set when a character has been received and transferred into the parallel RDR. The OR flag is set instead of RDRF if overrun occurs. A new character is ready to be transferred into RDR before a previous character is read from RDR. The NF and FE flags provide additional information about the character in the RDR, but do not generate interrupt requests. The last receiver status flag and interrupt source come from the IDLE flag. The RxD line is idle if it has constantly been at logic one for a full character time. The IDLE flag is set only after the RxD line has been busy and becomes idle, which prevents repeated interrupts for the whole time RxD remains idle. SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 7-11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. BEGIN FLAG RDRF = 1? Y N OR = 1? Y RIE = 1? N N Y TDRE = 1? Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Y Y N Y Y TE = 1? TIE = 1? N N RE = 1? N Y Y TCIE = 1? TC = 1? N N Y IDLE = 1? Y ILIE = 1? N N Y RE = 1? N NO VALID SCI REQUEST VALID SCI REQUEST INT SOURCE RES Figure 7-4 Interrupt Source Resolution within SCI SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS INTERFACE 7-12 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SECTION 8 SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE The serial peripheral interface (SPI), an independent serial communications subsystem, allows the MCU to communicate synchronously with peripheral devices, such as transistor-transistor logic (TTL) shift registers, liquid crystal diode (LCD) display drivers, analog-to-digital converter subsystems, and other microprocessors. The SPI is also capable of inter-processor communication in a multiple master system. The SPI system can be configured as either a master or a slave device with data rates as high as one half of the E-clock rate when configured as master, and as fast as the E-clock rate when configured as slave. 8.1 Functional Description The central element in the SPI system is the block containing the shift register and the read data buffer. The system is single buffered in the transmit direction and double buffered in the receive direction. This means that new data for transmission cannot be written to the shifter until the previous transfer is complete; however, received data is transferred into a parallel read data buffer so the shifter is free to accept a second serial character. As long as the first character is read out of the read data buffer before the next serial character is ready to be transferred, no overrun condition occurs. A single MCU register address is used for reading data from the read data buffer, and for writing data to the shifter. The SPI status block represents the SPI status functions (transfer complete, write collision, and mode fault) performed by the serial peripheral status register (SPSR). The SPI control block represents those functions that control the SPI system through the serial peripheral control register (SPCR). Refer to Figure 8-1, which shows the SPI block diagram. SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 8-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. INTERNAL MCU CLOCK MISO PD2 S M LSB M S 8/16-BIT SHIFT REGISTER ÷16 ÷32 READ DATA BUFFER CLOCK S CLOCK LOGIC SCK PD4 M SPR0 DWOM SS PD5 MSTR SPR1 MOSI PD3 MSTR SPR0 SPR1 CPHA CPOL MSTR DWOM SPIE MODF WCOL SPE SPE SPI CONTROL SPIF Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SELECT SPI CLOCK (MASTER) SPE ÷4 PIN CONTROL LOGIC MSB DIVIDER ÷2 8 SPI STATUS REGISTER SPI CONTROL REGISTER 8 SPI INTERRUPT REQUEST 8 INTERNAL DATA BUS 11 SPI BLOCK Figure 8-1 SPI Block Diagram 8.2 SPI Transfer Formats During an SPI transfer, data is simultaneously transmitted and received. A serial clock line synchronizes shifting and sampling of the information on the two serial data lines. A slave select line allows individual selection of a slave SPI device; slave devices that are not selected do not interfere with SPI bus activities. On a master SPI device, the select line can optionally be used to indicate a multiple master bus contention. Refer to Figure 8-2. SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE 8-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 1 SCK CYCLE # 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 SCK (CPOL = 0) SCK (CPOL = 1) SAMPLE INPUT MSB (CPHA = 0) DATA OUT 6 5 4 3 2 1 LSB SAMPLE INPUT MSB (CPHA = 1) DATA OUT 6 5 4 3 2 1 LSB SS (TO SLAVE) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SLAVE CPHA=1 TRANSFER IN PROGRESS 3 MASTER TRANSFER IN PROGRESS 2 4 SLAVE CPHA=0 TRANSFER IN PROGRESS 1 5 1. SS ASSERTED 2. MASTER WRITES TO SPDR 3. FIRST SCK EDGE 4. SPIF SET 5. SS NEGATED SPI TRANSFER FORMAT 1 Figure 8-2 SPI Transfer Format 8.2.1 Clock Phase and Polarity Controls Software can select one of four combinations of serial clock phase and polarity using two bits in the SPI control register (SPCR). The clock polarity is specified by the CPOL control bit, which selects an active high or active low clock, and has no significant effect on the transfer format. The clock phase (CPHA) control bit selects one of two different transfer formats. The clock phase and polarity should be identical for the master SPI device and the communicating slave device. In some cases, the phase and polarity are changed between transfers to allow a master device to communicate with peripheral slaves having different requirements. When CPHA equals zero, the slave select (SS) line must be negated and reasserted between each successive serial byte. Also, if the slave writes data to the SPI data register (SPDR) while SS is active low, a write collision error results. When CPHA equals one, the SS line can remain low between successive transfers. 8.3 SPI Signals The following paragraphs contain descriptions of the four SPI signals: master in slave out (MISO), master out slave in (MOSI), serial clock (SCK), and SS. SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 8-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 8.3.1 Master In Slave Out MISO is one of two unidirectional serial data signals. It is an input to a master device and an output from a slave device. The MISO line of a slave device is placed in the high impedance state if the slave device is not selected. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 8.3.2 Master Out Slave In The MOSI line is the second of the two unidirectional serial data signals. It is an output from a master device and an input to a slave device. The master device places data on the MOSI line a half-cycle before the clock edge that the slave device uses to latch the data. 8.3.3 Serial Clock SCK, an input to a slave device, is generated by the master device and synchronizes data movement in and out of the device through the MOSI and MISO lines. Master and slave devices are capable of exchanging a byte of information during a sequence of eight clock cycles. There are four possible timing relationships that can be chosen by using control bits CPOL and CPHA in the serial peripheral control register (SPCR). Both master and slave devices must operate with the same timing. The SPI clock rate select bits, SPR[1:0], in the SPCR of the master device, select the clock rate. In a slave device, SPR[1:0] have no effect on the operation of the SPI. 8.3.4 Slave Select The SS input of a slave device must be externally asserted before a master device can exchange data with the slave device. must be low before data transactions and must stay low for the duration of the transaction. The SS line of the master must be held high. If it goes low, a mode fault error flag (MODF) is set in the serial peripheral status register (SPSR). To disable the mode fault circuit, write a one in bit 5 of the port D data direction register. This sets the SS pin to act as a general-purpose output. The other three lines are dedicated to the SPI whenever the serial peripheral interface is on. The state of the master and slave CPHA bits affects the operation of SS. CPHA settings should be identical for master and slave. When CPHA = 0, the shift clock is the OR of SS with SCK. In this clock phase mode, SS must go high between successive characters in an SPI message. When CPHA = 1, SS can be left low between successive SPI characters. In cases where there is only one SPI slave MCU, its SS line can be tied to VSS as long as only CPHA = 1 clock mode is used. 8.4 SPI System Errors Two system errors can be detected by the SPI system. The first type of error arises in a multiple-master system when more than one SPI device simultaneously tries to be a master. This error is called a mode fault. The second type of error, write collision, SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE 8-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. indicates that an attempt was made to write data to the SPDR while a transfer was in progress. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... When the SPI system is configured as a master and the SS input line goes to active low, a mode fault error has occurred — usually because two devices have attempted to act as master at the same time. In cases where more than one device is concurrently configured as a master, there is a chance of contention between two pin drivers. For push-pull CMOS drivers, this contention can cause permanent damage. The mode fault attempts to protect the device by disabling the drivers. The MSTR control bit in the SPCR and all four DDRD control bits associated with the SPI are cleared. An interrupt is generated subject to masking by the SPIE control bit and the I bit in the CCR. Other precautions may need to be taken to prevent driver damage. If two devices are made masters at the same time, mode fault does not help protect either one unless one of them selects the other as slave. The amount of damage possible depends on the length of time both devices attempt to act as master. A write collision error occurs if the SPDR is written while a transfer is in progress. Because the SPDR is not double buffered in the transmit direction, writes to SPDR cause data to be written directly into the SPI shift register. Because this write corrupts any transfer in progress, a write collision error is generated. The transfer continues undisturbed, and the write data that caused the error is not written to the shifter. A write collision is normally a slave error because a slave has no control over when a master initiates a transfer. A master knows when a transfer is in progress, so there is no reason for a master to generate a write-collision error, although the SPI logic can detect write collisions in both master and slave devices. The SPI configuration determines the characteristics of a transfer in progress. For a master, a transfer begins when data is written to SPDR and ends when SPIF is set. For a slave with CPHA equal to zero, a transfer starts when SS goes low and ends when SS returns high. In this case, SPIF is set at the middle of the eighth SCK cycle when data is transferred from the shifter to the parallel data register, but the transfer is still in progress until SS goes high. For a slave with CPHA equal to one, transfer begins when the SCK line goes to its active level, which is the edge at the beginning of the first SCK cycle. The transfer ends in a slave in which CPHA equals one when SPIF is set. For a slave, after a byte transfer, SCK must be in inactive state for at least 2 Eclock cycles before the next byte transfer begins. 8.5 SPI Registers The three SPI registers, SPCR, SPSR, and SPDR, provide control, status, and data storage functions. Refer to the following information for a description of how these registers are organized. SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 8-5 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 8.5.1 Serial Peripheral Control SPCR — Serial Peripheral Control Register RESET: Bit 7 SPIE 0 6 SPE 0 5 DWOM 0 4 MSTR 0 $0028 3 CPOL 0 2 CPHA 1 1 SPR1 U Bit 0 SPR0 U SPIE — Serial Peripheral Interrupt Enable 0 = SPI interrupt disabled 1 = SPI interrupt enabled Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SPE — Serial Peripheral System Enable 0 = SPI off 1 = SPI on DWOM — Port D Wired-OR Mode DWOM affects all six port D pins. 0 = Normal CMOS outputs 1 = Open-drain outputs MSTR — Master Mode Select 0 = Slave mode 1 = Master mode CPOL — Clock Polarity When the clock polarity bit is cleared and data is not being transferred, the SCK pin of the master device has a steady state low value. When CPOL is set, SCK idles high. Refer to Figure 8-2 and 8.2.1 Clock Phase and Polarity Controls. CPHA — Clock Phase The clock phase bit, in conjunction with the CPOL bit, controls the clock-data relationship between master and slave. The CPHA bit selects one of two different clocking protocols. Refer to Figure 8-2 and 8.2.1 Clock Phase and Polarity Controls. SPR1 and SPR0 — SPI Clock Rate Selects These two serial peripheral rate bits select one of four baud rates to be used as SCK if the device is a master; however, they have no effect in the slave mode. SPR[1:0] 00 01 10 11 E Clock Divide By 2 4 16 32 Frequency at E = 2 MHz (Baud) 1.0 MHz 500 kHz 125 kHz 62.5 kHz SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE 8-6 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 8.5.2 Serial Peripheral Status SPSR — Serial Peripheral Status Register RESET: Bit 7 SPIF 0 6 WCOL 0 5 0 0 $0029 4 MODF 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SPIF — SPI Transfer Complete Flag SPIF is set upon completion of data transfer between the processor and the external device. If SPIF goes high, and if SPIE is set, a serial peripheral interrupt is generated. To clear the SPIF bit, read the SPSR with SPIF set, then access the SPDR. Unless SPSR is read (with SPIF set) first, attempts to write SPDR are inhibited. WCOL — Write Collision Clearing the WCOL bit is accomplished by reading the SPSR (with WCOL set) followed by an access of SPDR. Refer to 8.3.4 Slave Select and 8.4 SPI System Errors. 0 = No write collision 1 = Write collision Bit 5 — Not implemented Always reads zero MODF — Mode Fault To clear the MODF bit, read the SPSR (with MODF set), then write to the SPCR. Refer to 8.3.4 Slave Select and 8.4 SPI System Errors. 0 = No mode fault 1 = Mode fault Bits [3:0] — Not implemented Always read zero 8.5.3 Serial Peripheral Data I/O The SPDR is used when transmitting or receiving data on the serial bus. Only a write to this register initiates transmission or reception of a byte, and this only occurs in the master device. At the completion of transferring a byte of data, the SPIF status bit is set in both the master and slave devices. A read of the SPDR is actually a read of a buffer. To prevent an overrun and the loss of the byte that caused the overrun, the first SPIF must be cleared by the time a second transfer of data from the shift register to the read buffer is initiated. SPDR — SPI Data Register Bit 7 Bit 7 6 6 $002A 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 Bit 0 Bit 0 NOTE SPI is double buffered in and single buffered out. SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 8-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE 8-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SECTION 9 TIMING SYSTEM Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The M68HC11 timing system is composed of five clock divider chains. The main clock divider chain includes a 16-bit free-running counter, which is driven by a programmable prescaler. The main timer's programmable prescaler provides one of the four clocking rates to drive the 16-bit counter. Two prescaler control bits select the prescale rate. The prescaler output divides the system clock by 1, 4, 8, or 16. Taps off of this main clocking chain drive circuitry that generates the slower clocks used by the pulse accumulator, the real-time interrupt (RTI), and the computer operating properly (COP) watchdog subsystems, also described in this section. Refer to Figure 9-1. All main timer system activities are referenced to this free-running counter. The counter begins incrementing from $0000 as the MCU comes out of reset, and continues to the maximum count, $FFFF. At the maximum count, the counter rolls over to $0000, sets an overflow flag, and continues to increment. As long as the MCU is running in a normal operating mode, there is no way to reset, change, or interrupt the counting. The capture/compare subsystem features three input capture channels, four output compare channels, and one channel that can be selected to perform either input capture or output compare. Each of the three input capture functions has its own 16-bit input capture register (time capture latch) and each of the output compare functions has its own 16-bit compare register. All timer functions, including the timer overflow and RTI have their own interrupt controls and separate interrupt vectors. The pulse accumulator contains an 8-bit counter and edge select logic. The pulse accumulator can operate in either event counting or gated time accumulation modes. During event counting mode, the pulse accumulator's 8-bit counter increments when a specified edge is detected on an input signal. During gated time accumulation mode, an internal clock source increments the 8-bit counter while an input signal has a predetermined logic level. RTI is a programmable periodic interrupt circuit that permits pacing the execution of software routines by selecting one of four interrupt rates. The COP watchdog clock input (E÷215) is tapped off of the free-running counter chain. The COP automatically times out unless it is serviced within a specific time by a program reset sequence. If the COP is allowed to time out, a reset is generated, which drives the RESET pin low to reset the MCU and the external system. Refer to Table 9-1 for crystal related frequencies and periods. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. OSCILLATOR AND CLOCK GENERATOR (DIVIDE BY FOUR) AS E CLOCK INTERNAL BUS CLOCK (PH2) PRESCALER (÷ 2, 4, 16, 32) SPR[1:0] SPI PRESCALER (÷ 1, 2, 4,....128) SCR[2:0] PRESCALER (÷ 1, 3, 4, 13) SCP[1:0] SCI RECEIVER CLOCK ÷16 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... E÷26 SCI TRANSMIT CLOCK PULSE ACCUMULATOR PRESCALER (÷ 1, 2, 4, 8) RTR[1:0] E÷213 REAL-TIME INTERRUPT ÷4 E÷2 15 PRESCALER (÷ 1, 4, 8, 16) PR[1:0] PRESCALER (÷1, 4, 16, 64) CR[1:0] TOF TCNT FF1 S Q R Q FF2 S Q R Q FORCE COP RESET IC/OC CLEAR COP TIMER SYSTEM RESET TIMER DIV CHAIN Figure 9-1 Timer Clock Divider Chains TIMING SYSTEM 9-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Table 9-1 Timer Summary 4.0 MHz 1.0 MHz 1000 ns XTAL Frequencies 8.0 MHz 12.0 MHz 2.0 MHz 3.0 MHz 500 ns 333 ns Main Timer Count Rates Other Rates (E) (1/E) Control Bits PR[1:0] 00 1 count — overflow — 1.0 µs 65.536 ms 500 ns 32.768 ms 333 ns 21.845 ms (E/1) (E/216) 01 1 count — overflow — 4.0 µs 262.14 ms 2.0 µs 131.07 ms 1.333 µs 87.381 ms (E/4) (E/218) 10 1 count — overflow — 8.0 µs 524.29 ms 4.0 µs 262.14 ms 2.667 µs 174.76 ms (E/8) (E/219) 11 1 count — overflow — 16.0 µs 1.049 s 8.0 µs 524.29 ms 5.333 µs 349.52 ms (E/16) (E/220) 9.1 Timer Structure Figure 9-1 shows the capture/compare system block diagram. The port A pin control block includes logic for timer functions and for general-purpose I/O. For pins PA2, PA1, and PA0, this block contains both the edge-detection logic and the control logic that enables the selection of which edge triggers an input capture. The digital level on PA[2:0] can be read at any time (read PORTA register), even if the pin is being used for the input capture function. Pins PA[6:4] are used for either general-purpose output, or as output compare pins. Pin PA3 can be used for general-purpose I/O, input capture 4, output compare 5, or output compare 1. When one of these pins is being used for an output compare function, it cannot be written directly as if it were a general-purpose output. Each of the output compare functions (OC5–OC2) is related to one of the port A output pins. Output compare one (OC1) has extra control logic, allowing it optional control of any combination of the PA[7:3] pins. The PA7 pin can be used as a generalpurpose I/O pin, as an input to the pulse accumulator, or as an OC1 output pin. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SYSTEM CLOCK PRESCALER — DIVIDE BY 1, 4, 8, 16 PR1 TCNT (HI) TCNT (LO) 16-BIT FREE RUNNING PR0 TOI 9 TOF COUNTER INTERRUPT REQUESTS 16-BIT TIMER BUS OC1I 16-BIT COMPARATOR = TOC1 (HI) OC1F TOC1 (LO) FOC1 OC2I 16-BIT COMPARATOR = Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... TOC2 (HI) TOC2 (LO) TOC3 (LO) TOC4 (LO) OC5 TI4/O5 (LO) I4/O5F 16-BIT LATCH CLK TIC3 (HI) PA4 OC4/OC1 BIT 3 PA3 IC4/OC5 OC1 BIT 2 PA2 IC1 BIT 1 PA1 IC2 BIT 3 PA0 IC3 IC4 IC1I CLK CLK IC2I 2 IC2F TIC2 (LO) CLK 3 IC1F TIC1 (LO) 16-BIT LATCH BIT 4 4 FOC5 I4/O5 TIC2 (HI) PA5 OC3/OC1 5 FOC4 16-BIT COMPARATOR = 16-BIT LATCH BIT 5 OC4F I4/O5I TIC1 (HI) PA6 OC2/OC1 6 FOC3 16-BIT COMPARATOR = 16-BIT LATCH BIT 6 OC3F OC4I TI4/O5 (HI) PA7 OC1 7 FOC2 16-BIT COMPARATOR = TOC4 (HI) BIT 7 OC2F OC3I TOC3 (HI) PIN FUNCTIONS 8 IC3I IC3F 1 TIC3 (LO) TFLG 1 STATUS FLAGS TMSK 1 CFORC FORCE OUTPUT INTERRUPT ENABLES COMPARE PARALLEL PORT PIN CONTROL 11 CC BLOCK Figure 9-2 Capture/Compare Block Diagram 9.2 Input Capture The input capture function records the time an external event occurs by latching the value of the free-running counter when a selected edge is detected at the associated timer input pin. Software can store latched values and use them to compute the periodicity and duration of events. For example, by storing the times of successive edges of an incoming signal, software can determine the period and pulse width of a signal. To measure period, two successive edges of the same polarity are captured. To measure pulse width, two alternate polarity edges are captured. TIMING SYSTEM 9-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. In most cases, input capture edges are asynchronous to the internal timer counter, which is clocked relative to the PH2 clock. These asynchronous capture requests are synchronized to PH2 so that the latching occurs on the opposite half cycle of PH2 from when the timer counter is being incremented. This synchronization process introduces a delay from when the edge occurs to when the counter value is detected. Because these delays offset each other when the time between two edges is being measured, the delay can be ignored. When an input capture is being used with an output compare, there is a similar delay between the actual compare point and when the output pin changes state. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The control and status bits that implement the input capture functions are contained in the PACTL, TCTL2, TMSK1, and TFLG1 registers. To configure port A bit 3 as an input capture, clear the DDRA3 bit of the PACTL register. Note that this bit is cleared out of reset. To enable PA3 as the fourth input capture, set the I4/O5 bit in the PACTL register. Otherwise, PA3 is configured as a fifth output compare out of reset, with bit I4/O5 being cleared. If the DDRA3 bit is set (configuring PA3 as an output), and IC4 is enabled, then writes to PA3 cause edges on the pin to result in input captures. Writing to TI4/O5 has no effect when the TI4/O5 register is acting as IC4. 9.2.1 Timer Control 2 Register Use the control bits of this register to program input capture functions to detect a particular edge polarity on the corresponding timer input pin. Each of the input capture functions can be independently configured to detect rising edges only, falling edges only, any edge (rising or falling), or to disable the input capture function. The input capture functions operate independently of each other and can capture the same TCNT value if the input edges are detected within the same timer count cycle. TCTL2 — Timer Control 2 RESET: Bit 7 EDG4B 0 6 EDG4A 0 $0021 5 EDG1B 0 4 EDG1A 0 3 EDG2B 0 2 EDG2A 0 1 EDG3B 0 Bit 0 EDG3A 0 EDGxB and EDGxA — Input Capture Edge Control There are four pairs of these bits. Each pair is cleared to zero by reset and must be encoded to configure the corresponding input capture edge detector circuit. IC4 functions only if the I4/O5 bit in the PACTL register is set. Refer to Table 9-2 for timer control configuration. Table 9-2 Timer Control Configuration EDGxB 0 0 1 1 EDGxA 0 1 0 1 Configuration Capture disabled Capture on rising edges only Capture on falling edges only Capture on any edge TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-5 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 9.2.2 Timer Input Capture Registers When an edge has been detected and synchronized, the 16-bit free-running counter value is transferred into the input capture register pair as a single 16-bit parallel transfer. Timer counter value captures and timer counter incrementing occur on opposite half-cycles of the phase two clock so that the count value is stable whenever a capture occurs. The TICx registers are not affected by reset. Input capture values can be read from a pair of 8-bit read-only registers. A read of the high-order byte of an input capture register pair inhibits a new capture transfer for one bus cycle. If a double-byte read instruction, such as LDD, is used to read the captured value, coherency is assured. When a new input capture occurs immediately after a high-order byte read, transfer is delayed for an additional cycle but the value is not lost. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... TIC1–TIC3 — Timer Input Capture $0010–$0015 $0010 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TIC1 (High) $0011 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TIC1 (Low) $0012 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TIC2 (High) $0013 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TIC2 (Low) $0014 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TIC3 (High) $0015 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TIC3 (Low) RESET: Input capture registers not affected by reset. 9.2.3 Timer Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 Register Use TI4/O5 as either an input capture register or an output compare register, depending on the function chosen for the I4/O5 pin. To enable it as an input capture pin, set the I4/O5 bit in the pulse accumulator control register (PACTL) to logic level one. To use it as an output compare register, set the I4/O5 bit to a logic level zero. Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. TI4/O5 — Timer Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 $001E $001F RESET: Bit 15 Bit 7 14 6 13 12 11 10 9 5 4 3 2 1 All I4/O5 register pairs reset to ones ($FFFF). $001E, $001F Bit 8 Bit 0 TI4/O5 (High) TI4/O5 (Low) 9.3 Output Compare Use the output compare (OC) function to program an action to occur at a specific time — when the 16-bit counter reaches a specified value. For each of the five output compare functions, there is a separate 16-bit compare register and a dedicated 16-bit comparator. The value in the compare register is compared to the value of the free-running counter on every bus cycle. When the compare register matches the counter value, an output compare status flag is set. The flag can be used to initiate the automatic actions for that output compare function. To produce a pulse of a specific duration, write to the output compare register a value representing the time the leading edge of the pulse is to occur. The output compare circuit is configured to set the appropriate output either high or low, depending on the TIMING SYSTEM 9-6 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... polarity of the pulse being produced. After a match occurs, the output compare register is reprogrammed to change the output pin back to its inactive level at the next match. A value representing the width of the pulse is added to the original value, and then written to the output compare register. Because the pin state changes occur at specific values of the free-running counter, the pulse width can be controlled accurately at the resolution of the free-running counter, independent of software latencies. To generate an output signal of a specific frequency and duty cycle, repeat this pulse-generating procedure. There are four 16-bit read/write output compare registers: TOC1, TOC2, TOC3, and TOC4, and the TI4/O5 register, which functions under software control as either IC4 or OC5. Each of the OC registers is set to $FFFF on reset. A value written to an OC register is compared to the free-running counter value during each E-clock cycle. If a match is found, the particular output compare flag is set in timer interrupt flag register 1 (TFLG1). If that particular interrupt is enabled in the timer interrupt mask register 1 (TMSK1), an interrupt is generated. In addition to an interrupt, a specified action can be initiated at one or more timer output pins. For OC5–OC2, the pin action is controlled by pairs of bits (OMx and OLx) in the TCTL1 register. The output action is taken on each successful compare, regardless of whether or not the OCxF flag in the TFLG1 register was previously cleared. OC1 is different from the other output compares in that a successful OC1 compare can affect any or all five of the OC pins. The OC1 output action taken when a match is found is controlled by two 8-bit registers with three bits unimplemented: the output compare 1 mask register, OC1M, and the output compare 1 data register, OC1D. OC1M specifies which port A outputs are to be used, and OC1D specifies what data is placed on these port pins. 9.3.1 Timer Output Compare Registers All output compare registers are 16-bit read-write. Each is initialized to $FFFF at reset. If an output compare register is not used for an output compare function, it can be used as a storage location. A write to the high-order byte of an output compare register pair inhibits the output compare function for one bus cycle. This inhibition prevents inappropriate subsequent comparisons. Coherency requires a complete 16-bit read or write. However, if coherency is not needed, byte accesses can be used. For output compare functions, write a comparison value to output compare registers TOC1–TOC4 and TI4/O5. When TCNT value matches the comparison value, specified pin actions occur. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. TOC1–TOC4 — Timer Output Compare $0016–$001D $0016 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC1 (High) $0017 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC1 (Low) $0018 Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC2 (High) $0019 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC2 (Low) $001A Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC3 (High) $001B Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC3 (Low) $001C Bit 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 Bit 8 TOC4 (High) $001D Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Bit 0 TOC4 (Low) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... All TOCx register pairs reset to ones ($FFFF) TI4/O5 — Timer Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 $001E, $001F Refer to 9.2.3 Timer Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 Register. 9.3.2 Timer Compare Force Register The CFORC register allows forced early compares. FOC[1:5] correspond to the five output compares. These bits are set for each output compare that is to be forced. The action taken as a result of a forced compare is the same as if there were a match between the OCx register and the free-running counter, except that the corresponding interrupt status flag bits are not set. The forced channels trigger their programmed pin actions to occur at the next timer count transition after the write to CFORC. The CFORC bits should not be used on an output compare function that is programmed to toggle its output on a successful compare because a normal compare that occurs immediately before or after the force can result in an undesirable operation. CFORC — Timer Compare Force RESET: Bit 7 FOC1 0 6 FOC2 0 5 FOC3 0 $000B 4 FOC4 0 3 FOC5 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 FOC1–FOC5 — Write Ones to Force Compare(s) 0 = Not affected 1 = Output x action occurs Bits [2:0] — Not implemented, always read zero 9.3.3 Output Compare Mask Registers Use OC1M with OC1 to specify the bits of port A that are affected by a successful OC1 compare. The bits of the OC1M register correspond to PA[7:3]. TIMING SYSTEM 9-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. OC1M — Output Compare 1 Mask RESET: Bit 7 OC1M7 0 6 OC1M6 0 $000C 5 OC1M5 0 4 OC1M4 0 3 OC1M3 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 OC1M7–OC1M3 — Output Compare Masks 0 = OC1 is disabled 1 = OC1 is enabled to control the corresponding pin of port A Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Bits [2:0] — Not implemented; always read zero Set bit(s) to enable OC1 to control corresponding pin(s) of port A. 9.3.4 Output Compare 1 Data Register Use this register with OC1 to specify the data that is to be stored on the affected pin of port A after a successful OC1 compare. When a successful OC1 compare occurs, a data bit in OC1D is stored in the corresponding bit of port A for each bit that is set in OC1M. OC1D — Output Compare 1 Data RESET: Bit 7 OC1D7 0 6 OC1D6 0 $000D 5 OC1D5 0 4 OC1D4 0 3 OC1D3 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 If OC1Mx is set, data in OC1Dx is output to port A bit x on successful OC1 compares. Bits [2:0] — Not implemented; always read zero 9.3.5 Timer Counter Register The 16-bit read-only TCNT register contains the prescaled value of the 16-bit timer. A full counter read addresses the most significant byte (MSB) first. A read of this address causes the least significant byte (LSB) to be latched into a buffer for the next CPU cycle so that a double-byte read returns the full 16-bit state of the counter at the time of the MSB read cycle. TCNT — Timer Counter $000E $000F Bit 15 Bit 7 14 6 $000E, $000F 13 5 12 4 11 3 10 2 9 1 Bit 8 Bit 0 TCNT (High) TCNT (Low) TCNT resets to $0000. In normal modes, TCNT is read-only. 9.3.6 Timer Control 1 Register The bits of this register specify the action taken as a result of a successful OCx compare. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. TCTL1 — Timer Control 1 RESET: Bit 7 OM2 0 6 OL2 0 $0020 5 OM3 0 4 OL3 0 3 OM4 0 2 OL4 0 1 OM5 0 Bit 0 OL5 0 OM[2:5] — Output Mode Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... OL[2:5] — Output Level These control bit pairs are encoded to specify the action taken after a successful OCx compare. OC5 functions only if the I4/O5 bit in the PACTL register is clear. Refer to the following table for the coding. OMx 0 0 1 1 OLx 0 1 0 1 Action Taken on Successful Compare Timer disconnected from output pin logic Toggle OCx output line Clear OCx output line to 0 Set OCx output line to 1 9.3.7 Timer Interrupt Mask 1 Register Use this 8-bit register to enable or inhibit the timer input capture and output compare interrupts. TMSK1 — Timer Interrupt Mask 1 RESET: Bit 7 OC1I 0 6 OC2I 0 5 OC3I 0 $0022 4 OC4I 0 3 I4/O5I 0 2 IC1I 0 1 IC2I 0 Bit 0 IC3I 0 OC1I–OC4I — Output Compare x Interrupt Enable If the OCxI enable bit is set when the OCxF flag bit is set, a hardware interrupt sequence is requested. I4/O5I — Input Capture 4 or Output Compare 5 Interrupt Enable When I4/O5 in PACTL is one, I4/O5I is the input capture 4 interrupt enable bit. When I4/O5 in PACTL is zero, I4/O5I is the output compare 5 interrupt enable bit. IC1I–IC3I — Input Capture x Interrupt Enable If the ICxI enable bit is set when the ICxF flag bit is set, a hardware interrupt sequence is requested. NOTE Bits in TMSK1 correspond bit for bit with flag bits in TFLG1. Ones in TMSK1 enable the corresponding interrupt sources. 9.3.8 Timer Interrupt Flag 1 Register Bits in this register indicate when timer system events have occurred. Coupled with the bits of TMSK1, the bits of TFLG1 allow the timer subsystem to operate in either a TIMING SYSTEM 9-10 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. polled or interrupt driven system. Each bit of TFLG1 corresponds to a bit in TMSK1 in the same position. TFLG1 — Timer Interrupt Flag 1 RESET: Bit 7 OC1F 0 6 OC2F 0 $0023 5 OC3F 0 4 OC4F 0 3 I4/O5F 0 2 IC1F 0 1 IC2F 0 Bit 0 IC3F 0 Clear flags by writing a one to the corresponding bit position(s). Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... OC1F–OC5F — Output Compare x Flag Set each time the counter matches output compare x value I4/O5F — Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 Flag Set by IC4 or OC5, depending on the function enabled by I4/O5 bit in PACTL IC1F–IC3F — Input Capture x Flag Set each time a selected active edge is detected on the ICx input line 9.3.9 Timer Interrupt Mask 2 Register Use this 8-bit register to enable or inhibit timer overflow and real-time interrupts. The timer prescaler control bits are included in this register. TMSK2 — Timer Interrupt Mask 2 RESET: Bit 7 TOI 0 6 RTII 0 $0024 5 PAOVI 0 4 PAII 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 PR1 0 Bit 0 PR0 0 TOI — Timer Overflow Interrupt Enable 0 = TOF interrupts disabled 1 = Interrupt requested when TOF is set to one RTII — Real-time Interrupt Enable Refer to 9.4 Real-Time Interrupt. PAOVI — Pulse Accumulator Overflow Interrupt Enable Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. PAII — Pulse Accumulator Input Edge Interrupt Enable Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. NOTE Bits in TMSK2 correspond bit for bit with flag bits in TFLG2. Ones in TMSK2 enable the corresponding interrupt sources. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. PR[1:0] — Timer Prescaler Select These bits are used to select the prescaler divide-by ratio. In normal modes, PR[1:0] can only be written once, and the write must be within 64 cycles after reset. Refer to Table 9-1 for specific timing values. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... PR[1:0] 00 01 10 11 Prescaler 1 4 8 16 9.3.10 Timer Interrupt Flag 2 Register Bits in this register indicate when certain timer system events have occurred. Coupled with the four high-order bits of TMSK2, the bits of TFLG2 allow the timer subsystem to operate in either a polled or interrupt driven system. Each bit of TFLG2 corresponds to a bit in TMSK2 in the same position. TFLG2 — Timer Interrupt Flag 2 RESET: Bit 7 TOF 0 6 RTIF 0 $0025 5 PAOVF 0 4 PAIF 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 Clear flags by writing a one to the corresponding bit position(s). TOF — Timer Overflow Interrupt Flag Set when TCNT changes from $FFFF to $0000 RTIF — Real-Time (Periodic) Interrupt Flag Refer to 9.4 Real-Time Interrupt. PAOVF — Pulse Accumulator Overflow Interrupt Flag Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. PAIF — Pulse Accumulator Input Edge Interrupt Flag Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. Bits [3:0]— Not implemented Always read zero 9.4 Real-Time Interrupt The real-time interrupt feature, used to generate hardware interrupts at a fixed periodic rate, is controlled and configured by two bits (RTR1 and RTR0) in the pulse accumulator control (PACTL) register. The RTII bit in the TMSK2 register enables the interrupt capability. The four different rates available are a product of the MCU oscillator frequency and the value of bits RTR[1:0]. Refer to the following table, which shows the periodic real-time interrupt rates. TIMING SYSTEM 9-12 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. RTR[1:0] 00 01 10 11 E = 1 MHz 2.731 ms 5.461 ms 10.923 ms 21.845 ms E = 2 MHz 4.096 ms 8.192 ms 16.384 ms 32.768 ms E = 3 MHz 8.192 ms 16.384 ms 32.768 ms 65.536 ms E = X MHz (E/213) (E/214) (E/215) (E/216) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... The clock source for the RTI function is a free-running clock that cannot be stopped or interrupted except by reset. This clock causes the time between successive RTI timeouts to be a constant that is independent of the software latencies associated with flag clearing and service. For this reason, an RTI period starts from the previous time-out, not from when RTIF is cleared. Every time-out causes the RTIF bit in TFLG2 to be set, and if RTII is set, an interrupt request is generated. After reset, one entire real-time interrupt period elapses before the RTIF flag is set for the first time. Refer to the TMSK2, TFLG2, and PACTL registers. 9.4.1 Timer Interrupt Mask 2 Register This register contains the real-time interrupt enable bits. TMSK2 — Timer Interrupt Mask 2 RESET: Bit 7 TOI 0 6 RTII 0 $0024 5 PAOVI 0 4 PAII 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 PR1 0 Bit 0 PR0 0 TOI — Timer Overflow Interrupt Enable Refer to 9.3 Output Compare. RTII — Real-time Interrupt Enable 0 = RTIF interrupts disabled 1 = Interrupt requested when RTIF is set to one PAOVI — Pulse Accumulator Overflow Interrupt Enable Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. PAII — Pulse Accumulator Input Edge Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. NOTE Bits in TMSK2 correspond bit for bit with flag bits in TFLG2. Ones in TMSK2 enable the corresponding interrupt sources. 9.4.1 Timer Interrupt Flag 2 Register Bits of this register indicate the occurrence of timer system events. Coupled with the four high-order bits of TMSK2, the bits of TFLG2 allow the timer subsystem to operate in either a polled or interrupt driven system. Each bit of TFLG2 corresponds to a bit in TMSK2 in the same position. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-13 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. TFLG2 — Timer Interrupt Flag 2 RESET: Bit 7 TOF 0 6 RTIF 0 $0025 5 PAOVF 0 4 PAIF 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 Clear flags by writing a one to the corresponding bit position(s). TOF — Timer Overflow Interrupt Flag Set when TCNT changes from $FFFF to $0000 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... RTIF — Real-Time Interrupt Flag The RTIF status bit is automatically set to one at the end of every RTI period. To clear RTIF, write a byte to TFLG2 with bit 6 set. PAOVF — Pulse Accumulator Overflow Interrupt Flag Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. PAIF — Pulse Accumulator Input Edge Interrupt Flag Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. Bits [3:0] — Not implemented Always read zero 9.4.2 Pulse Accumulator Control Register Bits RTR[1:0] of this register select the rate for the real-time interrupt system. Bit DDRA3 determines whether Port A bit three is an input or an output when used for general-purpose I/O. The remaining bits control the pulse accumulator. PACTL — Pulse Accumulator Control RESET: Bit 7 DDRA7 0 6 PAEN 0 5 PAMOD 0 $0026 4 PEDGE 0 3 DDRA3 0 2 I4/O5 0 1 RTR1 0 Bit 0 RTR0 0 DDRA7 — Data Direction Control for Port A Bit 7 Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. PAEN — Pulse Accumulator System Enable Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. PAMOD — Pulse Accumulator Mode Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. PEDGE — Pulse Accumulator Edge Control Refer to 9.6 Pulse Accumulator. DDRA3 — Data Direction Register for Port A Bit 3 Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O. I4/O5 — Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 Refer to 9.2 Input Capture. TIMING SYSTEM 9-14 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. RTR[1:0] — RTI Interrupt Rate Select These two bits determine the rate at which the RTI system requests interrupts. The RTI system is driven by an E divided by 213 rate clock that is compensated so it is independent of the timer prescaler. These two control bits select an additional division factor. Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... RTR[1:0] 00 01 10 11 E = 1 MHz 2.731 ms 5.461 ms 10.923 ms 21.845 ms E = 2 MHz 4.096 ms 8.192 ms 16.384 ms 32.768 ms E = 3 MHz 8.192 ms 16.384 ms 32.768 ms 65.536 ms E = X MHz (E/213) (E/214) (E/215) (E/216) 9.5 Computer Operating Properly Watchdog Function The clocking chain for the COP function, tapped off of the main timer divider chain, is only superficially related to the main timer system. The CR[1:0] bits in the OPTION register and the NOCOP bit in the CONFIG register determine the status of the COP function. Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS for a more detailed discussion of the COP function. 9.6 Pulse Accumulator The MC68HC11D3 has an 8-bit counter that can be configured to operate either as a simple event counter, or for gated time accumulation, depending on the state of the PAMOD bit in the PACTL register. Refer to the pulse accumulator block diagram, Figure 9-3. In the event counting mode, the 8-bit counter is clocked to increasing values by an external pin. The maximum clocking rate for the external event counting mode is the E clock divided by two. In gated time accumulation mode, a free-running E-clock ÷ 64 signal drives the 8-bit counter, but only while the external PAI pin is activated. Refer to Table 9-3. The pulse accumulator counter can be read or written at any time. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-15 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 1 INTERRUPT REQUESTS TMSK2 PAIF PAOVF PAII PAOVI 2 TFLG2 PAI EDGE DISABLE FLAG SETTING INPUT BUFFER & EDGE DETECTION PA7/ PAI/OC1 OVERFLOW 2:1 MUX PACNT 8-BIT COUNTER ENABLE OUTPUT BUFFER PEDGE PAMOD PAEN PAEN FROM MAIN TIMER OC1 DDRA7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... E ÷ 64 CLOCK (FROM MAIN TIMER) PACTL INTERNAL DATA BUS 11 PULSE ACC BLOCK Figure 9-3 Pulse Accumulator Table 9-3 Pulse Accumulator Timing Common XTAL Frequencies Selected Crystal CPU Clock (E) Cycle Time (1/E) Pulse Accumulator (in Gated Mode) 1 count (E/26) overflow (E/214) 4.0 MHz 1.0 MHz 1000 ns 8.0 MHz 2.0 MHz 500 ns 12.0 MHz 3.0 MHz 333 ns 64.0 µs 16.384 ms 32.0 µs 8.192 ms 21.33 µs 5.461 ms Pulse accumulator control bits are also located within two timer registers, TMSK2 and TFLG2, as described in the following paragraphs. TIMING SYSTEM 9-16 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 9.6.1 Pulse Accumulator Control Register Four of this register's bits control an 8-bit pulse accumulator system. Another bit enables either the OC5 function or the IC4 function, while two other bits select the rate for the real-time interrupt system. PACTL — Pulse Accumulator Control Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... RESET: Bit 7 DDRA7 0 6 PAEN 0 5 PAMOD 0 $0026 4 PEDGE 0 3 DDRA3 0 2 I4/O5 0 1 RTR1 0 Bit 0 RTR0 0 DDRA7 — Data Direction Control for Port A Bit 7 The pulse accumulator uses port A bit 7 as the PAI input, but the pin can also be used as general-purpose I/O or as an output compare. Note that even when port A bit 7 is configured as an output, the pin still drives the input to the pulse accumulator. Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O for more information. PAEN — Pulse Accumulator System Enable 0 = Pulse accumulator disabled 1 = Pulse accumulator enabled PAMOD — Pulse Accumulator Mode 0 = Event counter 1 = Gated time accumulation PEDGE — Pulse Accumulator Edge Control This bit has different meanings depending on the state of the PAMOD bit, as shown in the following table: PAMOD 0 0 1 1 PEDGE 0 1 0 1 Action on Clock PAI Falling Edge Increments the Counter. PAI Rising Edge Increments the Counter. A Zero on PAI Inhibits Counting. A One on PAI Inhibits Counting. DDRA3 — Data Direction Register for Port A Bit 3 Refer to SECTION 6 PARALLEL I/O. I4/O5 — Input Capture 4/Output Compare 5 Refer to 9.2 Input Capture. RTR[1:0] — RTI Interrupt Rate Selects Refer to 9.4 Real-Time Interrupt. 9.6.2 Pulse Accumulator Count Register This 8-bit read/write register contains the count of external input events at the PAI input, or the accumulated count. The counter is not affected by reset and can be read or written at any time. Counting is synchronized to the internal PH2 clock so that incrementing and reading occur during opposite half cycles. TIMING SYSTEM TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 9-17 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. PACNT — Pulse Accumulator Count Bit 7 Bit 7 6 6 5 5 $0027 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 Bit 0 Bit 0 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 9.6.3 Pulse Accumulator Status and Interrupt Bits The pulse accumulator control bits, PAOVI and PAII, PAOVF, and PAIF are located within timer registers TMSK2 and TFLG2. PAOVI and PAOVF — Pulse Accumulator Interrupt Enable and Overflow Flag The PAOVF status bit is set each time the pulse accumulator count rolls over from $FF to $00. To clear this status bit, write a one in the corresponding data bit position (bit 5) of the TFLG2 register. The PAOVI control bit allows configuring the pulse accumulator overflow for polled or interrupt-driven operation and does not affect the state of PAOVF. When PAOVI is zero, pulse accumulator overflow interrupts are inhibited, and the system operates in a polled mode, which requires PAOVF to be polled by user software to determine when an overflow has occurred. When the PAOVI control bit is set, a hardware interrupt request is generated each time PAOVF is set. Before leaving the interrupt service routine, software must clear PAOVF by writing to the TFLG2 register. PAII and PAIF — Pulse Accumulator Input Edge Interrupt Enable and Flag The PAIF status bit is automatically set each time a selected edge is detected at the PA7/PAI/OC1 pin. To clear this status bit, write to the TFLG2 register with a one in the corresponding data bit position (bit 4). The PAII control bit allows configuring the pulse accumulator input edge detect for polled or interrupt-driven operation but does not affect setting or clearing the PAIF bit. When PAII is zero, pulse accumulator input interrupts are inhibited, and the system operates in a polled mode. In this mode, the PAIF bit must be polled by user software to determine when an edge has occurred. When the PAII control bit is set, a hardware interrupt request is generated each time PAIF is set. Before leaving the interrupt service routine, software must clear PAIF by writing to the TFLG register. TMSK2 — Timer Interrupt Mask 2 RESET: Bit 7 TOI 0 6 RTII 0 $0024 5 PAOVI 0 4 PAII 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 PR1 0 TFLG2 — Timer Interrupt Flag 2 RESET: Bit 7 TOF 0 6 RTIF 0 Bit 0 PR0 0 $0025 5 PAOVF 0 4 PAIF 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 Bit 0 0 0 TIMING SYSTEM 9-18 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. APPENDIX A ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS Table A-1 Maximum Ratings Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Rating Symbol Value Unit Supply Voltage VDD – 0.3 to + 7.0 V Input Voltage Vin – 0.3 to + 7.0 V Operating Temperature Range MC6811D3 MC6811D3C MC6811D3V MC6811D3M TA TL to TH °C 0 to + 70 – 40 to + 85 – 40 to + 105 – 40 to + 125 Storage Temperature Range Tstg – 55 to + 150 °C ID 25 mA Current Drain per Pin* Excluding VDD and VSS *One pin at a time, observing maximum power dissipation limits. Internal circuitry protects the inputs against damage caused by high static voltages or electric fields; however, normal precautions are necessary to avoid application of any voltage higher than maximum-rated voltages to this high-impedance circuit. Extended operation at the maximum ratings can adversely affect device reliability. Tying unused inputs to an appropriate logic voltage level (either GND or VDD) enhances reliability of operation. Table A-2 Thermal Characteristics Symbol Value Unit Average Junction Temperature Characteristic TJ TA + (PD x ΘJA) °C Ambient Temperature TA User-determined °C Package Thermal Resistance (Junction-to-Ambient) 44-Pin Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier (PLCC) 44-Pin Plastic Quad Flat Pack (QFP) 52-Pin Plastic Dip (P) ΘJA Total Power Dissipation PD (Note 1) °C/W 50 50 50 PINT + PI/O K / (TJ + 273°C) W PINT IDD x VDD W I/O Pin Power Dissipation (Note 2) PI/O User-determined W A Constant (Note 3) K PD x (TA + 273°C) + ΘJA x PD2 W < °C Device Internal Power Dissipation NOTES: 1. This is an approximate value, neglecting PI/O. 2. For most applications PI/O « PINT and can be neglected. 3. K is a constant pertaining to the device. Solve for K with a known TA and a measured PD (at equilibrium). Use this value of K to solve for P D and TJ iteratively for any value of TA. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com A-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table A-3 DC Electrical Characteristics Characteristic Symbol Min Max Unit All Outputs except XTAL All Outputs Except XTAL, RESET, and MODA VOL VOH — VDD – 0.1 0.1 — V V All Outputs Except XTAL, RESET, and MODA VOH VDD – 0.8 — V Output Low Voltage ILOAD = 1.6 mA, VDD = 5.0 V All Outputs Except XTAL VOL — 0.4 V Input High Voltage All Inputs Except RESET RESET VIH 0.7 x VDD 0.8 x VDD VDD + 0.3 VDD + 0.3 V V Input Low Voltage All Inputs VIL VSS – 0.3 0.2 x VDD V I/O Ports, Three-State Leakage PA7, PA3, PB[7:0], PC[7:0], PD[7:0], MODA/LIR, RESET Vin = VIH or VIL IOZ — ±10 µA Input Leakage Current Vin = VDD or VSS Vin = VDD or VSS PA[2:0], IRQ, XIRQ MODB/VSTBY Iin — — ±1 ±10 µA µA RAM Standby Voltage Power down VSB 4.0 VDD V RAM Standby Current Power down ISB — 10 µA Input Capacitance PA[2:0], IRQ, XIRQ, EXTAL PA7, PA3, PB[7:0], PC[7:0], PD[7:0], MODA/LIR, RESET Cin — — 8 12 pF pF Output Load Capacitance All Outputs Except PD[4:1] CL — — 90 100 pF pF Symbol 1 MHz 2 MHz Unit 8 14 15 27 mA mA 3 5 6 10 mA mA 50 50 µA 44 77 85 150 mW mW Output Voltage (Note 1) ILOAD = ± 10.0 µA Output High Voltage (Note 1) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... ILOAD = – 0.8 mA, VDD = 4.5 V PD[4:1] Characteristic Maximum Total Supply Current (Note 2) RUN: Single-Chip Mode VDD = 5.5 V Expanded Multiplexed Mode VDD = 5.5 V (All Peripheral Functions Shut Down) WAIT: Single-Chip Mode VDD = 5.5 V Expanded Multiplexed Mode VDD = 5.5 V STOP: Single-Chip Mode, No Clocks VDD = 5.5 V Maximum Power Dissipation Single-Chip Mode Expanded Multiplexed Mode VDD = 5.5 V VDD = 5.5 V IDD WIDD SIDD PD NOTES: 1. VOH specification for RESET and MODA is not applicable because they are open-drain pins. VOH specification not applicable to ports C and D in wired-OR mode. 2. EXTAL is driven with a square wave, and tcyc = 1000 ns for 1 MHz rating; tcyc = 500 ns for 2 MHz rating; tcyc = 333 ns for 3 MHz rating; VIL ≤ 0.2 V;VIH ≥ VDD - 0.2 V; No dc loads. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS A-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. ~ VDD CLOCKS, STROBES VDD– 0.8 Volts 0.4 Volts 0.4 Volts ~ V SS NOM. NOM. 70% of VDD INPUTS 20% of VDD NOMINAL TIMING ~ VDD VDD– 0.8 Volts OUTPUTS 0.4 Volts ~ VSS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... DC TESTING ~ VDD CLOCKS, STROBES 70% of VDD 20% of VDD ~ V SS 20% of VDD SPEC SPEC 70% of VDD INPUTS 20% of VDD (NOTE 2) VDD – 0.8 Volts 0.4 Volts SPEC TIMING ~ VDD OUTPUTS ~ VSS 70% of VDD 20% of VDD AC TESTING NOTES: 1. Full test loads are applied during all DC electrical tests and AC timing measurements. 2. During AC timing measurements, inputs are driven to 0.4 volts and VDD – 0.8 volts while timing measurements are taken at the 20% and 70% of VDD points. TEST METHODS Figure A-1 Test Methods ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com A-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table A-4 Control Timing Characteristic Symbol Frequency of Operation E-Clock Period Crystal Frequency 2.0 MHz 3.0 MHz Unit Min Max Min Max Min Max fo dc 1.0 dc 2.0 dc 3.0 MHz tcyc 1000 — 500 — 333 — ns fXTAL — 4.0 — 8.0 — 12.0 MHz External Oscillator Frequency 4 fo dc 4.0 dc 8.0 dc 12.0 MHz Processor Control SetupTime tPCSU = 1/4 tcyc + 50 ns tPCSU 300 — 175 — 133 — ns 8 1 — — 8 1 — — 8 1 — — tcyc tcyc Reset Input Pulse Width To Guarantee External Reset Vector Minimum Input Time (Can Be Preempted by Internal Reset) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 1.0 MHz PWRSTL Mode Programming Setup Time tMPS 2 — 2 — 2 — tcyc Mode Programming Hold Time tMPH 10 — 10 — 10 — ns Interrupt Pulse Width, IRQ Edge-Sensitive Mode PWIRQ = tcyc + 20 ns PWIRQ 1020 — 520 — 353 — ns Wait Recovery Startup Time tWRS — 4 — 4 — 4 tcyc PWTIM 1020 — 520 — 353 — ns Timer Pulse Width, Input Capture Pulse Accumulator Input PWTIM = tcyc + 20 ns NOTES: 1. RESET is recognized during the first clock cycle it is held low. Internal circuitry then drives the pin low for four clock cycles, releases the pin, and samples the pin level two cycles later to determine the source of the interrupt. Refer to SECTION 5 RESETS AND INTERRUPTS for further detail. 2. All timing is shown with respect to 20% V DD and 70% VDD, unless otherwise noted. PA[2:0] PA[2:0] PA7 1 2 1,3 PWTIM PA7 2,3 NOTES: 1. Rising edge sensitive input 2. Falling edge sensitive input 3. Maximum pulse accumulator clocking rate is E-clock frequency divided by 2. TIMER INPUTS TIM Figure A-2 Timer Inputs ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS A-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA POR EXT RESET TIM FFFE ADDRESS MODA, MODB RESET E EXTAL VDD 4064 tCYC FFFE FFFE FFFE FFFE FFFF tPCSU NEW PC FFFE PWRSTL tMPS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... FFFE tMPH FFFE FFFE FFFF NEW PC Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Figure A-3 POR and External Reset Timing Diagram ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com A-5 A-6 STOP ADDR + 1 STOP ADDR ADDRESS5 PWIRQ tSTOPDELAY3 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com 4. XIRQ with X bit in CCR = 1. 5. IRQ or (XIRQ with X bit in CCR = 0). 1. Edge Sensitive IRQ pin (IRQE bit = 1) 2. Level sensitive IRQ pin (IRQE bit = 0) 3. tSTOPDELAY = 4064 tCYC if DLY bit = 1 or 4 tCYC if DLY = 0. NOTES: STOP ADDR + 1 STOP ADDR ADDRESS4 E IRQ or XIRQ IRQ1 INTERNAL CLOCKS STOP STOP SP…SP–7 ADDR + 1 ADDR + 2 SP – 8 SP – 8 FFF2 (FFF4) FFF3 (FFF5) STOP RECOVERY TIM NEW PC Resume program with instruction which follows the STOP instruction. STOP OPCODE ADDR + 1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Figure A-4 STOP Recovery Timing Diagram ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS TECHNICAL DATA TECHNICAL DATA WAIT ADDR WAIT ADDR + 1 PCL SP SP – 2…SP – 8 STACK REGISTERS PCH, YL, YH, XL, XH, A, B, CCR SP – 1 NOTE: RESET also causes recovery from WAIT. R/W ADDRESS IRQ, XIRQ, OR INTERNAL INTERRUPTS E SP – 8 SP – 8…SP – 8 SP – 8 tPCSU SP – 8 tWRS Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... SP – 8 VECTOR ADDR VECTOR ADDR + 1 WAIT RECOVERY TIM NEW PC Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Figure A-5 WAIT Recovery Timing Diagram ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com A-7 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table A-5 Peripheral Port Timing Characteristic Symbol 2.0 MHz 3.0 MHz Unit Min Max Min Max Min Max fo dc 1.0 dc 2.0 dc 3.0 MHz tcyc 1000 — 500 — 333 — ns Peripheral Data Setup Time MCU Read of Ports A, B, C, and D tPDSU 100 — 100 — 100 — ns Peripheral Data Hold Time MCU Read of Ports A, B, C, and D tPDH 50 — 50 — 50 — ns Delay Time, Peripheral Data Write tPWD — — 200 350 — — 200 225 — — 200 183 ns ns Frequency of Operation (E-Clock Frequency) E-Clock Period Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 1.0 MHz MCU Write to Port A MCU Writes to Ports B, C, and D tPWD = 1/4 tcyc + 150 ns NOTES: 1. Port C and D timing is valid for active drive (CWOM and DWOM bits not set in PIOC and SPCR registers respectively). 2. All timing is shown with respect to 20% VDD and 70% VDD, unless otherwise noted. MCU WRITE TO PORT E t PWD PORTS B, C, D PREVIOUS PORT DATA NEW DATA VALID tPWD PORT A PREVIOUS PORT DATA NEW DATA VALID D3 PORT WRITE TIM Figure A-6 Port Write Timing Diagram MCU READ OF PORT E tPDSU tPDH PORTS A, B, C, D D3 PORT READ TIM Figure A-7 Port Read Timing Diagram ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS A-8 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table A-6 Expansion Bus Timing Num Characteristic Symbol Frequency of Operation (E-Clock Frequency) 2.0 MHz 3.0 MHz Unit Min Max Min Max Min Max fo dc 1.0 dc 2.0 dc 3.0 MHz tcyc 1000 — 500 — 333 — ns 1 Cycle Time 2 Pulse Width, E Low PWEL = 1/2 tcyc - 23ns PWEL 477 — 227 — 146 — ns 3 Pulse Width, E High PWEH = 1/2 tcyc - 28 ns PWEH 472 — 222 — 141 — ns tr tf — — 20 20 — — 20 20 — — 20 15 ns ns tAH 95.5 — 33 — 26 — ns tAV 281.5 — 94 — 54 — ns 4A 4B 9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 1.0 MHz E and AS Rise Time E and AS Fall Time Address Hold Time tAH = 1/8 tcyc - 29.5 ns (Note 1a) 12 Non-Muxed Address Valid Time to E Rise tAV = PWEL - (tASD + 80 ns) (Note 1a) 17 Read Data Setup Time tDSR 30 — 30 — 30 — ns 18 Read Data Hold Time (Max = tMAD) tDHR 0 145.5 0 83 0 51 ns 19 Write Data Delay Time tDDW = 1/8 tcyc + 65.5 ns tDDW — 190.5 — 128 — 71 ns (Note 1a) Write Data Hold Time tDHW = 1/8 tcyc - 30 ns tDHW 95.5 — 33 — 26 — ns (Note 1a) 21 22 Muxed Address Valid Time to E Rise tAVM = PWEL - (tASD + 90 ns) (Note 1a) tAVM 271.5 — 84 — 54 — ns 24 Muxed Address Valid Time to AS Fall tASL = PWASH - 70 ns tASL 151 — 26 — 13 — ns 25 Muxed Address Hold Time tAHL = 1/8 tcyc - 30 ns tAHL 95.5 — 33 — 31 — ns (Note 1b) Delay Time, E to AS Rise tASD = 1/8 tcyc - 5 ns tASD 115.5 — 53 — 31 — ns (Note 1a) PWASH 221 — 96 — 63 — ns tASED 115.5 — 53 — 31 — ns 26 27 Pulse Width, AS High PWASH = 1/4 tcyc - 30 ns 28 Delay Time, AS to E Rise tASED = 1/8 tcyc - 5 ns (Note 1b) 29 MPU Address Access Time (Note 1a) tACCA = tcyc – (PWEL– tAVM) – tDSR–tf tACCA 744.5 — 307 — 196 — ns 35 MPU Access Time tACCE = PWEH - tDSR tACCE — 442 — 192 — 111 ns 36 Muxed Address Delay (Previous Cycle MPU Read) tMAD = tASD + 30 ns(Note 1a) tMAD 145.5 — 83 — 51 — ns NOTES: 1. Input clocks with duty cycles other than 50% affect bus performance. Timing parameters affected by input clock duty cycle are identified by (a) and (b). To recalculate the approximate bus timing values, substitute the following expressions in place of 1/8 tcyc in the above formulas, where applicable: (a) (1-DC) × 1/4 tcyc (b) DC × 1/4 tcyc Where: DC is the decimal value of duty cycle percentage (high time). 2. All timing is shown with respect to 20% VDD and 70% VDD, unless otherwise noted. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com A-9 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. 1 2 3 E 4a 4b 12 9 R/W, ADDRESS (NON-MUX) 22 35 17 36 29 READ ADDRESS DATA ADDRESS/DATA (MULTIPLEXED) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 18 19 WRITE ADDRESS 21 DATA 25 24 4a 4b AS 26 27 28 NOTE: Measurement points shown are 20% and 70% of VDD. MUX BUS TIM Figure A-8 Multiplexed Expansion Bus Timing Diagram ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS A-10 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Table A-7 Serial Peripheral Interface Timing Num Characteristic 2.0 MHz 3.0 MHz Unit Min Max Min Max fop(m) fop(s) dc dc 0.5 2.0 dc dc 0.5 3.0 fop MHz Cycle Time Master Slave tcyc(m) tcyc(s) 2.0 500 — — 2.0 333 — — tcyc ns Enable Lead Time Master (Note 2) Slave tlead(m) tlead(s) — 250 — — — 240 — — ns ns Enable Lag Time Master (Note 2) Slave tlag(m) tlag(s) — 250 — — — 240 — — ns ns Clock (SCK) High Time Master Slave tw(SCKH)m tw(SCKH)s 340 190 — — 340 190 — — ns ns Clock (SCK) Low Time Master Slave tw(SCKL)m tw(SCKL)s 340 190 — — 340 190 — — ns ns Data Setup Time (Inputs) Master Slave tsu(m) tsu(s) 100 100 — — 100 100 — — ns ns Data Hold Time (Inputs) Master Slave th(m) th(s) 100 100 — — 100 100 — — ns ns Access Time (Time to Data Active from High-Imp. State) Slave ta 0 120 0 120 ns Disable Time (Hold Time to High-Impedance State) Slave tdis — 240 — 167 ns 10 Data Valid (After Enable Edge) (Note 3) tv(s) — 240 — 167 ns 11 Data Hold Time (Outputs) (After Enable Edge) tho 0 — 0 — ns 12 Rise Time (20% VDD to 70% VDD, CL = 200 pF) SPI Outputs (SCK, MOSI, and MISO) SPI Inputs (SCK, MOSI, MISO, and SS) trm trs — — 100 2.0 — — 100 2.0 ns µs Fall Time (70% VDD to 20% VDD, CL = 200 pF) SPI Outputs (SCK, MOSI, and MISO) SPI Inputs (SCK, MOSI, MISO, and SS) tfm tfs — — 100 2.0 — — 100 2.0 ns µs Operating Frequency Master Slave 1 2 3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Symbol 4 5 6 7 8 9 13 NOTES: 1. All timing is shown with respect to 20% VDD and 70% VDD, unless otherwise noted. 2. Signal production depends on software. 3. Assumes 100 pF load on all SPI pins. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com A-11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SS (INPUT) SS is held high on master. 1 12 13 13 12 5 SCK (CPOL = 0) (OUTPUT) SEE NOTE 4 5 SCK (CPOL = 1) (OUTPUT) SEE NOTE 4 6 MISO (INPUT) 7 MSB IN BIT 6 - - - -1 11 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 10 (ref) MOSI (OUTPUT) MASTER MSB OUT LSB IN 11 (ref) 10 BIT 6 - - - -1 MASTER LSB OUT 13 12 NOTE: This first clock edge is generated internally but is not seen at the SCK pin. SPI MASTER CPHA0 TIM Figure A-9 SPI Master Timing (CPHA = 0) SS (INPUT) SS is held high on master. 1 12 13 5 SEE NOTE SCK (CPOL = 0) (OUTPUT) 4 13 5 SCK (CPOL = 1) (OUTPUT) SEE NOTE 4 MISO (INPUT) MSB IN 10 (ref) MOSI (OUTPUT) 12 BIT 6 - - - -1 LSB IN 11 (ref) 10 11 MASTER MSB OUT 7 6 BIT 6 - - - -1 MASTER LSB OUT 13 NOTE: This last clock edge is generated internally but is not seen at the SCK pin. 12 SPI MASTER CPHA1 TIM Figure A-10 SPI Master Timing (CPHA = 1) ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS A-12 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. SS (INPUT) 1 13 12 12 13 3 5 SCK (CPOL = 0) (INPUT) 4 2 5 SCK (CPOL = 1) (INPUT) 4 8 MISO (OUTPUT) Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... 6 MOSI (INPUT) BIT 6 - - - -1 MSB OUT SLAVE 7 10 SEE NOTE SLAVE LSB OUT 11 11 BIT 6 - - - -1 MSB IN 9 LSB IN NOTE: Not defined but normally MSB of character just received. SPI SLAVE CPHA0 TIM Figure A-11 SPI Slave Timing (CPHA = 0) SS (INPUT) 1 12 13 5 SCK (CPOL = 0) (INPUT) 4 2 3 5 SCK (CPOL = 1) (INPUT) 4 8 MISO (OUTPUT) SEE NOTE SLAVE MSB OUT 6 MOSI (INPUT) 13 10 7 MSB IN 12 BIT 6 - - - -1 10 9 SLAVE LSB OUT 11 BIT 6 - - - -1 LSB IN NOTE: Not defined but normally LSB of character previously transmitted. SPI SLAVE CPHA1 TIM Figure A-12 SPI Slave Timing (CPHA = 1) ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com A-13 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS A-14 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. APPENDIX B MECHANICAL DATA AND ORDERING INFORMATION Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... B.1 Pin Assignments The MC68HC11D3 is available in the 40-pin DIP, shown in Figure B-1, the 44-pin PLCC, shown in Figure B-2, or the 44-pin quad flat pack (QFP), as shown in Figure B-3. Refer to Table B-1 for ordering information. VSS 1 40 XTAL PC0/ADDR0 2 39 EXTAL PC1/ADDR1 3 38 E PC2/ADDR2 4 37 MODA/LIR PC3/ADDR3 5 36 MODB/VSTBY PC4/ADDR4 6 35 PB0/ADDR8 PC5/ADDR5 7 34 PB1/ADDR9 PC6/ADDR6 8 33 PB2/ADDR10 PC7/ADDR7 MC68HC(7)11D3 9 32 PB3/ADDR11 XIRQ/VPP 10 31 PB4/ADDR12 PD7/R/W 11 30 PB5/ADDR13 PD6/AS 12 29 PB6/ADDR14 RESET 13 28 PB7/ADDR15 IRQ 14 27 PA0/IC3 PD0/RxD 15 26 PA1/IC2 PD1/TxD 16 25 PA2/IC1 PD2/MISO 17 24 PA3/IC4/OC5/OC1 PD3/MOSI 18 23 PA5/OC3/OC1 PD4/SCK 19 22 PA7/PAI/OC1 PD5/SS 20 21 VDD D3 40-PIN DIP Figure B-1 40-Pin DIP MECHANICAL DATA AND ORDERING INFORMATION TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com B-1 E MODA/LIR MODB/VSTBY 42 41 40 EXTAL VSS 2 43 PC0/ADDR0 3 XTAL PC1/ADDR1 4 44 PC2/ADDR2 5 EVSS PC3/ADDR3 6 1 39 PB0/ADDR8 PC4/ADDR4 7 PC5/ADDR5 8 38 PB1/ADDR9 PC6/ADDR6 9 37 PB2/ADDR10 PC7/ADDR7 10 36 PB3/ADDR11 XIRQ/VPP 11 35 PB4/ADDR12 PD7/R/W 12 34 PB5/ADDR13 PD6/AS 13 33 PB6/ADDR14 RESET 14 32 PB7/ADDR15 IRQ 15 31 NC PD0/RxD 16 30 PA0/IC3 PD1/TxD 17 29 PA1/IC2 25 26 27 28 PA5/OC3/OC1 PA4/OC4/OC1 PA3/IC4/OC5/OC1 PA2/IC1 22 VDD 24 21 PD5/SS PA6/OC2/OC1 20 PD4/SCK 23 19 PD3/MOSI PA7/PAI/OC1 18 PD2/MISO MC68HC(7)11D3 Figure B-2 44-Pin PLCC Freescale Semiconductor, nc... I MC68HC11D3 B-2 TECHNICAL DATA PC0/ADDR0 VSS EVSS XTAL EXTAL E MODA/LIR 40 39 38 36 35 34 MODB/VSTBY PC1/ADDR1 41 37 PC2/ADDR2 42 PC3/ADDR3 44 43 PC4/ADDR4 PB0/ADDR8 PC5/ADDR5 1 2 33 32 PC6/ADDR6 3 31 PB2/ADDR10 PC7/ADDR7 4 30 PB3/ADDR11 XIRQ/VPP 5 29 PB4/ADDR12 PD7/R/W 6 28 PB5/ADDR13 PD6/AS 7 27 PB6/ADDR14 RESET 8 26 PB7/ADDR15 IRQ 9 25 NC PD0/RxD 10 PA0/IC3 PD1/TxD 11 24 23 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 PD3/MOSI PD4/SCK PD5/SS VDD PA7/PAI/OC1 PA6/OC2/OC1 PA5/OC3/OC1 PA4/OC4/OC1 PA3/IC4/OC5/OC1 PA1/IC2 PA2/IC1 12 PD2/MISO MC68HC(7)11D3 PB1/ADDR9 Figure B-3 44-Pin QFP B.2 Package Dimensions For case outline information check our web site at http://www.motsps.com. B.3 Ordering Information Add the proper suffix, from Table B-1, to the M68HC11- (or 711-) MCU number to specify the appropriate device when placing an order. Figure B-4 identifies the codes used to identify specific MCU options. Table B-1 Ordering Information Package 40-Pin DIP 44-Pin PLCC 44-Pin Quad Flat Pack 40-Pin DIP 44-Pin PLCC 44-Pin Quad Flat Pack MCU D3 D0 Temperature – 40 to +85°C – 40 to +85°C – 40 to +85°C – 40 to +85°C – 40 to +85°C – 40 to +85°C Description BUFFALO ROM BUFFALO ROM BUFFALO ROM No ROM No ROM No ROM Suffix CP1 CFN1 CFBL CP CFN CFB Freescale Semiconductor, nc... I TECHNICAL DATA B-3 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Figure B-4 M68HC11 Part Number Options MECHANICAL DATA AND ORDERING INFORMATION B-4 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. APPENDIX C DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... C.1 Development System Tools Freescale has developed tools for use in debugging and evaluating M68HC11 equipment. Refer to the following list for those development tools that are available for use with the MC68HC11D3. For information about Freescale and third party development system hardware and software, contact your Freescale sales representative. C.2 MC68HC11D3 Development Tools • M68HC11D3EVS Evaluation System • M68HC711D3PGMR Programmer Board • M68HC711D3EVB Evaluation Board DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT TECHNICAL DATA For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com C-1 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc... Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Home Page: www.freescale.com email: [email protected] USA/Europe or Locations Not Listed: Freescale Semiconductor Technical Information Center, CH370 1300 N. Alma School Road Chandler, Arizona 85224 (800) 521-6274 480-768-2130 [email protected] Europe, Middle East, and Africa: Freescale Halbleiter Deutschland GmbH Technical Information Center Schatzbogen 7 81829 Muenchen, Germany +44 1296 380 456 (English) +46 8 52200080 (English) +49 89 92103 559 (German) +33 1 69 35 48 48 (French) [email protected] Japan: Freescale Semiconductor Japan Ltd. Headquarters ARCO Tower 15F 1-8-1, Shimo-Meguro, Meguro-ku Tokyo 153-0064, Japan 0120 191014 +81 2666 8080 [email protected] Asia/Pacific: Freescale Semiconductor Hong Kong Ltd. Technical Information Center 2 Dai King Street Tai Po Industrial Estate, Tai Po, N.T., Hong Kong +800 2666 8080 [email protected] For Literature Requests Only: Freescale Semiconductor Literature Distribution Center P.O. Box 5405 Denver, Colorado 80217 (800) 441-2447 303-675-2140 Fax: 303-675-2150 LDCForFreescaleSemiconductor @hibbertgroup.com RoHS-compliant and/or Pb- free versions of Freescale products have the functionality and electrical characteristics of their non-RoHS-compliant and/or non-Pb- free counterparts. For further information, see http://www.freescale.com or contact your Freescale sales representative. For information on Freescale.s Environmental Products program, go to http://www.freescale.com/epp. Information in this document is provided solely to enable system and software implementers to use Freescale Semiconductor products. There are no express or implied copyright licenses granted hereunder to design or fabricate any integrated circuits or integrated circuits based on the information in this document. Freescale Semiconductor reserves the right to make changes without further notice to any products herein. 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DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT C-2 For More Information On This Product, Go to: www.freescale.com TECHNICAL DATA