TI V6212615-01XE-R

DP83848-EP
PHYTER™ MILITARY TEMPERATURE SINGLE PORT
10/100 MB/S ETHERNET PHYSICAL LAYER
TRANSCEIVER
Data Manual
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date.
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
Literature Number: SLLSEC6D
September 2012 – Revised June 2013
DP83848-EP
www.ti.com
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
Contents
1
INTRODUCTION
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
2
OVERVIEW
2.1
2.2
2.3
2.4
3
3.5
2
......................................................................................................................... 9
.......................................................................................... 17
Absolute Maximum Ratings ..............................................................................................
Recommended Operating Conditions ..................................................................................
Thermal Information .......................................................................................................
DC Specifications ..........................................................................................................
3.4.1
Electrical Characteristics ......................................................................................
AC Specifications ..........................................................................................................
3.5.1
Power Up Timing ...............................................................................................
3.5.2
Reset Timing ....................................................................................................
3.5.3
MII Serial Management Timing ...............................................................................
3.5.4
100 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing ................................................................................
3.5.5
100 Mb/s MII Receive Timing .................................................................................
3.5.6
100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Latency Timing .............................................................
3.5.7
100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Deassertion Timing ........................................................
3.5.8
100BASE-TX Transmit Timing (tR/F & Jitter) ................................................................
3.5.9
100BASE-TX Receive Packet Latency Timing .............................................................
3.5.10 100BASE-TX Receive Packet Deassertion Timing ........................................................
3.5.11 10 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing ..................................................................................
3.5.12 10 Mb/s MII Receive Timing ..................................................................................
3.5.13 10 Mb/s Serial Mode Transmit Timing .......................................................................
3.5.14 10 Mb/s Serial Mode Receive Timing ........................................................................
3.5.15 10BASE-T Transmit Timing (Start of Packet) ...............................................................
3.5.16 10BASE-T Transmit Timing (End of Packet) ................................................................
3.5.17 10BASE-T Receive Timing (Start of Packet) ...............................................................
3.5.18 10BASE-T Receive Timing (End of Packet) ................................................................
3.5.19 10 Mb/s Heartbeat Timing .....................................................................................
3.5.20 10 Mb/s Jabber Timing ........................................................................................
3.5.21 10BASE-T Normal Link Pulse Timing ........................................................................
3.5.22 Auto-Negotiation Fast Link Pulse (FLP) Timing ............................................................
3.5.23 100BASE-TX Signal Detect Timing ..........................................................................
3.5.24 100 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing ..........................................................................
3.5.25 10 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing ...........................................................................
3.5.26 RMII Transmit Timing ..........................................................................................
3.5.27 RMII Receive Timing ...........................................................................................
3.5.28 Isolation Timing .................................................................................................
3.5.29 25 MHz_OUT Timing ...........................................................................................
CONFIGURATION
4.1
7
7
7
8
Description ................................................................................................................... 9
Ordering Information ........................................................................................................ 9
Device Information ........................................................................................................ 10
Terminal Descriptions ..................................................................................................... 12
ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
4
.................................................................................................................. 7
Features ......................................................................................................................
Applications ..................................................................................................................
Supports Defense, Aerospace, and Medical Applications .............................................................
Typical System Diagram ...................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................. 37
Auto-Negotiation ...........................................................................................................
4.1.1
Auto-Negotiation Pin Control ..................................................................................
4.1.2
Auto-Negotiation Register Control ............................................................................
4.1.3
Auto-Negotiation Parallel Detection ..........................................................................
Contents
17
17
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18
18
19
19
20
21
21
22
22
23
24
25
25
26
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Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
DP83848-EP
www.ti.com
4.2
4.3
4.4
4.5
4.6
4.7
5
4.1.4
Auto-Negotiation Restart ......................................................................................
4.1.5
Enabling Auto-Negotiation via Software .....................................................................
4.1.6
Auto-Negotiation Complete Time .............................................................................
Auto-MDIX ..................................................................................................................
PHY Address ...............................................................................................................
4.3.1
MII Isolate Mode ................................................................................................
LED Interface ..............................................................................................................
4.4.1
LEDs .............................................................................................................
4.4.2
LED Direct Control .............................................................................................
Half Duplex vs Full Duplex ...............................................................................................
Internal Loopback .........................................................................................................
BIST .........................................................................................................................
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
6
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
6.1
6.2
6.3
............................................................................................... 44
MII Interface ................................................................................................................
5.1.1
Nibble-Wide MII Data Interface ...............................................................................
5.1.2
Collision Detect .................................................................................................
5.1.3
Carrier Sense ...................................................................................................
Reduced MII Interface ....................................................................................................
10 Mb Serial Network Interface (SNI) ..................................................................................
802.3u MII Serial Management Interface ...............................................................................
5.4.1
Serial Management Register Access ........................................................................
5.4.2
Serial Management Access Protocol ........................................................................
5.4.3
Serial Management Preamble Suppression ................................................................
ARCHITECTURE
38
39
39
39
39
40
40
41
42
42
42
43
44
44
44
45
45
46
46
46
46
47
................................................................................................................ 48
100BASE-TX Transmitter ................................................................................................
6.1.1
Code-Group Encoding and Injection .........................................................................
6.1.2
Scrambler ........................................................................................................
6.1.3
NRZ to NRZI Encoder ..........................................................................................
6.1.4
Binary to MLT-3 Convertor ....................................................................................
100BASE-TX Receiver ...................................................................................................
6.2.1
Analog Front End ...............................................................................................
6.2.2
Digital Signal Processor .......................................................................................
6.2.2.1
Digital Adaptive Equalization and Gain Control ................................................
6.2.2.2
Base Line Wander Compensation ...............................................................
6.2.3
Signal Detect ....................................................................................................
6.2.4
MLT-3 to NRZI Decoder .......................................................................................
6.2.5
NRZI to NRZ ....................................................................................................
6.2.6
Serial to Parallel ................................................................................................
6.2.7
Descrambler .....................................................................................................
6.2.8
Code-Group Alignment ........................................................................................
6.2.9
4B/5B Decoder ..................................................................................................
6.2.10 100BASE-TX Link Integrity Monitor ..........................................................................
6.2.11 Bad SSD Detection .............................................................................................
10BASE-T Transceiver Module ..........................................................................................
6.3.1
Operational Modes .............................................................................................
6.3.1.1
Half Duplex Mode ..................................................................................
6.3.1.2
Full Duplex Mode ..................................................................................
6.3.2
Smart Squelch ..................................................................................................
6.3.3
Collision Detection and SQE ..................................................................................
6.3.4
Carrier Sense ...................................................................................................
6.3.5
Normal Link Pulse Detection/Generation ....................................................................
6.3.6
Jabber Function .................................................................................................
6.3.7
Automatic Link Polarity Detection and Correction ..........................................................
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Contents
48
49
50
50
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3
DP83848-EP
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
6.3.8
6.3.9
6.3.10
7
7.4
7.5
7.6
7.7
8
58
58
58
58
59
60
60
60
60
61
61
........................................................................................................... 63
Hardware Reset ........................................................................................................... 63
Software Reset ............................................................................................................ 63
............................................................................................................. 64
................................................................................................................................ 64
Register Definition ......................................................................................................... 68
9.2.1
Basic Mode Control Register (BMCR) ....................................................................... 68
9.2.2
Basic Mode Status Register (BMSR) ........................................................................ 69
9.2.3
PHY Identifier Register #1 (PHYIDR1) ...................................................................... 70
9.2.4
PHY Identifier Register #2 (PHYIDR2) ...................................................................... 70
9.2.5
Auto-Negotiation Advertisement Register (ANAR) ......................................................... 71
9.2.6
Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (BASE Page) ............................... 72
9.2.7
Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (Next Page) ................................. 72
9.2.8
Auto-Negotiate Expansion Register (ANER) ................................................................ 73
9.2.9
Auto-Negotiation Next Page Transmit Register (ANNPTR) ............................................... 74
Extended Registers ....................................................................................................... 74
9.3.1
PHY Status Register (PHYSTS) .............................................................................. 74
9.3.2
MII Interrupt Control Register (MICR) ........................................................................ 76
9.3.3
MII Interrupt Status and Miscellaneous Control Register (MISR) ........................................ 77
9.3.4
False Carrier Sense Counter Register (FCSCR) ........................................................... 78
9.3.5
Receiver Error Counter Register (RECR) ................................................................... 78
9.3.6
100 Mb/s PCS Configuration and Status Register (PCSR) ............................................... 78
9.3.7
RMII and Bypass Register (RBR) ............................................................................ 79
9.3.8
LED Direct Control Register (LEDCR) ....................................................................... 80
9.3.9
PHY Control Register (PHYCR) .............................................................................. 80
9.3.10 10Base-T Status/Control Register (10BTSCR) ............................................................. 82
9.3.11 CD Test and BIST Extensions Register (CDCTRL1) ...................................................... 83
9.3.12 Energy Detect Control (EDCR) ............................................................................... 83
REGISTER BLOCK
9.1
9.2
9.3
4
......................................................................................................... 58
TPI Network Circuit ........................................................................................................
ESD Protection ............................................................................................................
Clock In (X1) Requirements ..............................................................................................
7.3.1
Oscillator .........................................................................................................
7.3.2
Crystal ............................................................................................................
Power Feedback Circuit ..................................................................................................
Power Down and Interrupt ...............................................................................................
7.5.1
Power Down Control Mode ....................................................................................
7.5.2
Interrupt Mechanisms ..........................................................................................
Energy Detect Mode ......................................................................................................
Thermal Vias Recommendation .........................................................................................
RESET OPERATION
8.1
8.2
9
Transmit and Receive Filtering ............................................................................... 57
Transmitter ...................................................................................................... 57
Receiver ......................................................................................................... 57
DESIGN GUIDELINES
7.1
7.2
7.3
www.ti.com
Contents
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
DP83848-EP
www.ti.com
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
List of Figures
2-1
Device Block Diagram ........................................................................................................... 10
3-1
DP83848-EP Operating Life Derating Chart .................................................................................. 19
3-2
Power Up Timing ................................................................................................................. 19
3-3
Reset Timing ...................................................................................................................... 20
3-4
MII Serial Management Timing ................................................................................................. 21
3-5
100 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing .................................................................................................. 21
3-6
100 Mb/s MII Receive Timing ................................................................................................... 22
3-7
100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Latency Timing .............................................................................. 22
3-8
100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Deassertion Timing ......................................................................... 23
3-9
100BASE-TX Transmit Timing (tR/F & Jitter) .................................................................................. 24
3-10
100BASE-TX Receive Packet Latency Timing ............................................................................... 25
3-11
100BASE-TX Receive Packet Deassertion Timing .......................................................................... 25
3-12
10 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing
3-13
10 Mb/s MII Receive Timing .................................................................................................... 26
3-14
10 Mb/s Serial Mode Transmit Timing ......................................................................................... 27
3-15
.........................................................................................
................................................................................
10BASE-T Transmit Timing (End of Packet) .................................................................................
10BASE-T Receive Timing (Start of Packet) .................................................................................
10BASE-T Receive Timing (End of Packet) ..................................................................................
10 Mb/s Heartbeat Timing.......................................................................................................
10 Mb/s Jabber Timing ..........................................................................................................
10BASE-T Normal Link Pulse Timing .........................................................................................
Auto-Negotiation Fast Link Pulse (FLP) Timing ..............................................................................
100BASE-TX Signal Detect Timing ............................................................................................
100 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing ...........................................................................................
10 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing .............................................................................................
RMII Transmit Timing ............................................................................................................
RMII Receive Timing .............................................................................................................
Isolation Timing ...................................................................................................................
25 MHz_OUT Timing ............................................................................................................
PHYAD Strapping Example .....................................................................................................
AN Strapping and LED Loading Example.....................................................................................
Typical MDC/MDIO Read Operation...........................................................................................
Typical MDC/MDIO Write Operation ...........................................................................................
100BASE-TX Transmit Block Diagram ........................................................................................
100BASE-TX Receive Block Diagram .........................................................................................
EIA/TIA Attenuation vs. Frequency for 0, 50, 100, 130 and 150 meters of CAT 5 cable ...............................
100BASE-TX BLW Event .......................................................................................................
10BASE-T Twisted Pair Smart Squelch Operation ..........................................................................
10/100 Mb/s Twisted Pair Interface ............................................................................................
Crystal Oscillator Circuit .........................................................................................................
Power Feedback Connection ...................................................................................................
Top View, Thermal Vias for GNDPAD, Pin 49 ...............................................................................
3-16
3-17
3-18
3-19
3-20
3-21
3-22
3-23
3-24
3-25
3-26
3-27
3-28
3-29
3-30
4-1
4-2
5-1
5-2
6-1
6-2
6-3
6-4
6-5
7-1
7-2
7-3
7-4
...................................................................................................
26
10 Mb/s Serial Mode Receive Timing
27
10BASE-T Transmit Timing (Start of Packet)
28
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
List of Figures
28
29
29
30
30
30
31
31
32
33
34
35
36
36
40
42
47
47
48
51
53
53
56
58
59
60
62
5
DP83848-EP
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
www.ti.com
List of Tables
2-1
Serial Management Interface ................................................................................................... 12
2-2
MAC Data Interface .............................................................................................................. 12
2-3
Clock Interface .................................................................................................................... 13
2-4
LED Interface ..................................................................................................................... 14
2-5
JTAG Interface.................................................................................................................... 14
2-6
Reset and Power Down ......................................................................................................... 14
2-7
Strap Options ..................................................................................................................... 15
2-8
10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s PMD Interface ......................................................................................... 16
2-9
Special Connections ............................................................................................................. 16
2-10
Power Supply Pins ............................................................................................................... 16
4-1
Auto-Negotiation Modes ......................................................................................................... 37
4-2
PHY Address Mapping
4-3
5-1
5-2
6-1
7-1
7-2
7-3
9-1
9-2
9-3
9-4
9-5
9-6
9-7
9-8
9-9
9-10
9-11
9-12
9-13
9-14
9-15
9-16
9-17
9-18
9-19
9-20
9-21
9-22
9-23
6
..........................................................................................................
LED Mode Select .................................................................................................................
Supported Packet Sizes at ±50ppm and ±100ppm for Each Clock .......................................................
Typical MDIO Frame Format ...................................................................................................
4B5B Code-Group Encoding or Decoding ....................................................................................
25 MHz Oscillator Specification ................................................................................................
50 MHz Oscillator Specification ................................................................................................
25 MHz Crystal Specification ...................................................................................................
Register Map ......................................................................................................................
Register Table ....................................................................................................................
Basic Mode Control Register (BMCR), Address 0x00 .......................................................................
Basic Mode Status Register (BMSR), Address 0x01 ........................................................................
PHY Identifier Register #1 (PHYIDR1), Address 0x02 ......................................................................
PHY Identifier Register #2 (PHYIDR2), Address 0x03 ......................................................................
Negotiation Advertisement Register (ANAR), Address 0x04 ...............................................................
Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (BASE Page), Address 0x05 ...............................
Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (Next Page), Address 0x05 .................................
Auto-Negotiate Expansion Register (ANER), Address 0x06 ...............................................................
Auto-Negotiation Next Page Transmit Register (ANNPTR), Address 0x07 ..............................................
PHY Status Register (PHYSTS), Address 0x10 .............................................................................
MII Interrupt Control Register (MICR), Address 0x11 .......................................................................
MII Interrupt Status and Miscellaneous Control Register (MISR), Address 0x12 ........................................
False Carrier Sense Counter Register (FCSCR), Address 0x14 ..........................................................
Receiver Error Counter Register (RECR), Address 0x15 ...................................................................
100 Mb/s PCS Configuration and Status Register (PCSR), Address 0x16 ...............................................
RMII and Bypass Register (RBR), Addresses 0x17 .........................................................................
LED Direct Control Register (LEDCR), Address 0x18 ......................................................................
PHY Control Register (PHYCR), Address 0x19 ..............................................................................
10Base-T Status/Control Register (10BTSCR), Address 0x1A ............................................................
CD Test and BIST Extensions Register (CDCTRL1), Address 0x1B .....................................................
Energy Detect Control (EDCR), Address 0x1D ..............................................................................
List of Tables
39
41
45
47
49
59
59
60
64
65
68
69
70
70
71
72
72
73
74
74
76
77
78
78
78
79
80
80
82
83
83
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
DP83848-EP
www.ti.com
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
PHYTER™ MILITARY TEMPERATURE SINGLE PORT 10/100 MB/S ETHERNET PHYSICAL
LAYER TRANSCEIVER
Check for Samples: DP83848-EP
1
INTRODUCTION
1.1
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
12
•
•
•
•
•
1.2
•
•
•
Applications
Automotive and Transportation
Industrial Controls and Factory Automation
General Embedded Applications
1.3
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Features
Low-Power 3.3-V, 0.18-μm CMOS Technology
Low Power Consumption < 270 mW Typical
3.3-V MAC Interface
Auto-MDIX for 10/100 Mb/s
Energy Detection Mode
25-MHz Clock Out
SNI Interface (Configurable)
RMII Rev. 1.2 Interface (Configurable)
MII Serial Management Interface (MDC and MDIO)
IEEE 802.3u MII
IEEE 802.3u Auto-Negotiation and Parallel Detection
IEEE 802.3u ENDEC, 10BASE-T Transceivers and Filters
IEEE 802.3u PCS, 100BASE-TX Transceivers and Filters
IEEE 1149.1 JTAG
Integrated ANSI X3.263 Compliant TP-PMD Physical Sublayer with Adaptive Equalization and Baseline
Wander Compensation
Error-Free Operation up to 150 meters
Programmable LED Support Link, 10 /100 Mb/s Mode, Activity, and Collision Detect
Single Register Access for Complete PHY Status
10/100 Mb/s Packet BIST (Built in Self Test)
Lead Free 48-Pin PQFP Package (7mm) x (7mm)
Supports Defense, Aerospace, and Medical Applications
Controlled Baseline
One Assembly and Test Site
One Fabrication Site
Military Temperature Range (-55°C to 125°C)
Extended Product Life Cycle
Extended Product-Change Notification
Product Traceability
1
2
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of
Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
PHYTER is a trademark of Texas Instruments.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Products conform to
specifications per the terms of the Texas Instruments standard warranty. Production
processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters.
Copyright © 2012–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
DP83848-EP
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
MII/RMII/SNI
DP83848
10/100 MB/S
25-MHZ
Clock
Source
RJ-45
MPU/CPU
Magnetics
Typical System Diagram
Media Access Controller
1.4
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10Base-T
or
100Base-T
Status
LEDs
Typical Application
8
INTRODUCTION
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SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
2
OVERVIEW
2.1
Description
The number of applications requiring ethernet connectivity continues to increase. Along with this increased
market demand is a change in application requirements. The DP83848 was designed to allow ethernet
connectivity in the harshest environments. Our device meets IEEE 802.3u standards over a military
temperature range of -55°C to 125°C. This device is ideally suited for harsh environments for example
wireless remote base stations, automotive, transportation and industrial control applications.
The DP83848 is a highly reliable, feature rich robust device which includes enhanced ESD protection, MII
and RMII for maximum flexibility in MPU selection all in a 48 pin PQFP package.
The DP83848 features integrated sublayers to support both 10BASE-T and 100BASE-TX Ethernet
protocols, which ensures compatibility and interoperability with all other standards based Ethernet
solutions.
2.2
Ordering Information (1)
TA
–55°C to
125°C
(1)
PACKAGE
PQFP-PHP
ORDERABLE PART NUMBER
DP83848MPHPREP
Tape and Reel, 1000
DP83848MPHPEP
Tray, 1250
TOP-SIDE MARKING
DP83848EP
VID NUMBER
V62/12615-01XE
V62/12615-01XE-R
For the most current package and ordering information, see the Package Option Addendum at the end of this document, or see the TI
website at www.ti.com.
OVERVIEW
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DP83848-EP
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
2.3
www.ti.com
Device Information
RX_CLK
RXD[3:0]
RX_DV
RX_ER
COL
MDC
MDIO
TX_EN
TX_CLK
TXD[3:0]
Serial
Management
CRS/CRS_DV
MII/RMII/SNI
MII/RMII/SNI Interfaces
TX_DATA
TX_CLK
MI
Registers
10Base-T and
100Base-TX
Auto-Negotiation
State Machine
Transmit
Block
RX_DATA
RX_CLK
10Base-T and
100Base-TX
Receive
Block
Clock
Generation
DAC
ADC
Boundary
Scan
Auto-MDIX
JTAG
TD± RD±
LED
Drivers
LEDs
REFERENCE CLOCK
Figure 2-1. Device Block Diagram
10
OVERVIEW
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SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
PFBIN2
DGND
IOGND
X1
X2
IOVDD33
MDC
MDIO
RESET_N
LED_LINK/AN0
LED_SPEED/AN1
LED_ACT/COL/AN_EN
25MHz_OUT
36
35
34
33
32
31
30
29
28
27
26
25
PHP PACKAGE
(TOP VIEW)
37
24
RBIAS
RX_CLK
38
23
PFBOUT
RX_DV/MII_MODE
39
22
AVDD33
CRS/CRS_DV/LED_CFG
40
21
RESERVED
RX_ER/MDIX_EN
41
20
RESERVED
COL/PHYAD0
42
RXD_0/PHYAD1
43
Thermal Pad
19
AGND
18
PFBIN1
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
TCK
TDO
TMS
TRST
TDI
RD –
PWR_DOWN/INT
13
TXD_3/SNI_MODE
48
5
IOVDD33
4
RD +
TXD_1
AGND
14
TXD_2
15
47
3
46
IOGND
2
TD –
RXD_3/PHYAD4
TXD_0
TD +
16
TX_EN
17
45
1
44
RXD_2/PHYAD3
TX_CLK
RXD_1/PHYAD2
OVERVIEW
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11
DP83848-EP
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
2.4
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Terminal Descriptions
All DP83848 signal pins are I/O cells regardless of the particular use. The definitions below define the
functionality of the I/O cells for each pin.
Type: I - Input
Type: O - Output
Type: I/O - Input/Output
Type OD - Open Drain
Type: PD, PU - Internal Pulldown/Pullup
Type: S - Strapping Pin (All strap pins have weak internal pull-ups or pull-downs. If the default strap value
is needed to be changed then an external 2.2 kΩ resistor should be used.)
Table 2-1. Serial Management Interface
TERMINAL
NAME
NO.
I/O
DESCRIPTION
MDC
31
I
MANAGEMENT DATA CLOCK: Synchronous clock to the MDIO management data input/output serial interface
which may be asynchronous to transmit and receive clocks. The maximum clock rate is 25 MHz with no minimum
clock rate.
MDIO
30
I/O
MANAGEMENT DATA I/O: Bi-directional management instruction/ data signal that may be sourced by the station
management entity or the PHY. This pin requires a 1.5 kΩ pullup resistor.
Table 2-2. MAC Data Interface
TERMINAL
NAME
NO.
I/O
DESCRIPTION
MII TRANSMIT CLOCK: 25 MHz Transmit clock output in 100 Mb/s mode or 2.5 MHz in 10 Mb/s mode derived
from the 25 MHz reference clock.
TX_CLK
1
O
Unused in RMII mode. The device uses the X1 reference clock input as the 50 MHz reference for both transmit
and receive.
SNI TRANSMIT CLOCK: 10 MHz Transmit clock output in 10 Mb SNI mode. The MAC should source TX_EN
and TXD_0 using this clock.
MII TRANSMIT ENABLE: Active high input indicates the presence of valid data inputs on TXD[3:0].
TX_EN
2
I, PD
RMII TRANSMIT ENABLE: Active high input indicates the presence of valid data on TXD[1:0].
SNI TRANSMIT ENABLE: Active high input indicates the presence of valid data on TXD_0.
TXD_0
3
TXD_1
4
TXD_2
5
TXD_3
6
I
MII TRANSMIT DATA: Transmit data MII input pins, TXD[3:0], that accept data synchronous to the TX_CLK
(2.5 MHz in 10 Mb/s mode or 25 MHz in 100 Mb/s mode).
RMII TRANSMIT DATA: Transmit data RMII input pins, TXD[1:0], that accept data synchronous to the 50 MHz
reference clock.
S, I, PD
SNI TRANSMIT DATA: Transmit data SNI input pin, TXD_0, that accept data synchronous to the TX_CLK
(10 MHz in 10 Mb/s SNI mode).
MII RECEIVE CLOCK: Provides the 25 MHz recovered receive clocks for 100 Mb/s mode and 2.5 MHz for
10 Mb/s mode.
RX_CLK
38
O
Unused in RMII mode. The device uses the X1 reference clock input as the 50 MHz reference for both transmit
and receive.
SNI RECEIVE CLOCK: Provides the 10 MHz recovered receive clocks for 10 Mb/s SNI mode.
MII RECEIVE DATA VALID: Asserted high to indicate that valid data is present on the corresponding RXD[3:0].
MII mode by default with internal pulldown.
RX_DV
39
S, O, PD
RMII Synchronous Receive Data Valid: This signal provides the RMII Receive Data Valid indication
independent of Carrier Sense.
This pin is not used in SNI mode.
12
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Table 2-2. MAC Data Interface (continued)
TERMINAL
NAME
NO.
I/O
DESCRIPTION
MII RECEIVE ERROR: Asserted high synchronously to RX_CLK to indicate that an invalid symbol has been
detected within a received packet in 100 Mb/s mode.
RX_ER
41
S, O, PU
RMII RECEIVE ERROR: Assert high synchronously to X1 whenever it detects a media error and RXDV is
asserted in 100 Mb/s mode.
This pin is not required to be used by a MAC, in either MII or RMII mode, since the Phy is required to corrupt
data on a receive error.
This pin is not used in SNI mode.
S, O, PD
MII RECEIVE DATA: Nibble wide receive data signals driven synchronously to the RX_CLK, 25 MHz for
100 Mb/s mode, 2.5 MHz for 10 Mb/s mode). RXD[3:0] signals contain valid data when RX_DV is asserted.
RXD_0
43
RXD_1
44
RMII RECEIVE DATA: 2-bits receive data signals, RXD[1:0], driven synchronously to the X1 clock, 50 MHz.
RXD_2
45
RXD_3
46
SNI RECEIVE DATA: Receive data signal, RXD_0, driven synchronously to the RX_CLK. RXD_0 contains valid
data when CRS is asserted. RXD[3:1] are not used in this mode.
MII CARRIER SENSE: Asserted high to indicate the receive medium is non-idle.
CRS/CRS_DV
40
S, O, PU
RMII CARRIER SENSE/RECEIVE DATA VALID: This signal combines the RMII Carrier and Receive Data Valid
indications. For a detailed description of this signal, see the RMII Specification.
SNI CARRIER SENSE: Asserted high to indicate the receive medium is non-idle. It is used to frame valid
receive data on the RXD_0 signal.
MII COLLISION DETECT: Asserted high to indicate detection of a collision condition (simultaneous transmit
and receive activity) in 10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s Half Duplex Modes.
While in 10BASE-T Half Duplex mode with heartbeat enabled this pin is also asserted for a duration of
approximately 1μs at the end of transmission to indicate heartbeat (SQE test).
COL
42
S, O, PU
In Full Duplex Mode, for 10 Mb/s or 100 Mb/s operation, this signal is always logic 0. There is no heartbeat
function during 10 Mb/s full duplex operation.
RMII COLLISION DETECT: Per the RMII Specification, no COL signal is required. The MAC will recover CRS
from the CRS_DV signal and use that along with its TX_EN signal to determine collision.
SNI COLLISION DETECT: Asserted high to indicate detection of a collision condition (simultaneous transmit
and receive activity) in 10 Mb/s SNI mode.
Table 2-3. Clock Interface
TERMINAL
NAME
X1
NO.
34
I/O
I
DESCRIPTION
CRYSTAL/OSCILLATOR INPUT: This pin is the primary clock reference input for the DP83848 and must be
connected to a 25 MHz 0.005% (±50 ppm) clock source. The DP83848 supports either an external crystal
resonator connected across pins X1 and X2, or an external CMOS-level oscillator source connected to pin X1
only.
RMII REFERENCE CLOCK: This pin is the primary clock reference input for the RMII mode and must be
connected to a 50 MHz 0.005% (±50 ppm) CMOS-level oscillator source.
X2
33
O
CRYSTAL OUTPUT: This pin is the primary clock reference output to connect to an external 25 MHz crystal
resonator device. This pin must be left unconnected if an external CMOS oscillator clock source is used.
25 MHz CLOCK OUTPUT:
In MII mode, this pin provides a 25 MHz clock output to the system.
25MHz_OUT
25
O
In RMII mode, this pin provides a 50 MHz clock output to the system.
This allows other devices to use the reference clock from the DP83848 without requiring additional clock
sources.
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Table 2-4. LED Interface
TERMINAL
NAME
NO.
I/O
DESCRIPTION
LINK LED: In Mode 1, this pin indicates the status of the LINK. The LED will be ON when Link is good.
LED_LINK
28
S, O, PU
LED_SPEED
27
S, O, PU
LED_ACT/COL
26
S, O, PU
LINK/ACT LED: In Mode 2 and Mode 3, this pin indicates transmit and receive activity in addition to the status of
the Link. The LED will be ON when Link is good. It will blink when the transmitter or receiver is active.
SPEED LED: The LED is ON when device is in 100 Mb/s and OFF when in 10 Mb/s. Functionality of this LED is
independent of mode selected.
ACTIVITY LED: In Mode 1, this pin is the Activity LED which is ON when activity is present on either Transmit or
Receive.
COLLISION/DUPLEX LED: In Mode 2, this pin by default indicates Collision detection. For Mode 3, this LED
output may be programmed to indicate Full-duplex status instead of Collision.
Table 2-5. JTAG Interface
TERMINAL
NAME
No.
I/O
DESCRIPTION
TCK
8
I, PU
TEST CLOCK: This pin has a weak internal pullup
TDI
12
I, PU
TEST DATA INPUT: This pin has a weak internal pullup
TDO
9
O
TMS
10
I, PU
TEST MODE SELECT: This pin has a weak internal pullup
TRST#
11
I, PU
TEST RESET: Active low asynchronous test reset. This pin has a weak internal pullup.
TEST OUTPUT
Table 2-6. Reset and Power Down
TERMINAL
NAME
RESET_N
NO.
29
I/O
I, PU
DESCRIPTION
RESET: Active Low input that initializes or re-initializes the DP83848. Asserting this pin low for at least 1 μs will
force a reset process to occur. All internal registers will re-initialize to their default states as specified for each bit
in the Register Block section. All strap options are re-initialized as well.
The default function of this pin is POWER DOWN.
POWER DOWN: The pin is an active low input in this mode and should be asserted low to put the device in a
Power Down mode.
PWR_DOWN/INT
14
7
I, OD, PU
INTERRUPT: The pin is an open drain output in this mode and will be asserted low when an interrupt condition
occurs. Although the pin has a weak internal pull-up, some applications may require an external pull-up resister.
Register access is required for the pin to be used as an interrupt mechanism. See Section 7.5.2 for more details
on the interrupt mechanisms.
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Table 2-7. Strap Options (1) (2)
TERMINAL
NAME
NO.
I/O
DESCRIPTION
PHYAD0 (COL)
42
S, O, PU
PHY ADDRESS [4:0]: The DP83848 provides five PHY address pins, the state of which are latched into the
PHYCTRL register at system Hardware-Reset.
PHYAD1 (RXD_0)
43
S, O, PD
The DP83848 supports PHY Address strapping values 0 (<00000>) through 31 (<11111>). A PHY Address of 0 puts
the part into the MII Isolate Mode. The MII isolate mode must be selected by strapping Phy Address 0; changing to
Address 0 by register write will not put the Phy in the MII isolate mode. Please refer to section 2.3 for additional
information.
PHYAD2 (RXD_1)
44
PHYAD0 pin has weak internal pull-up resistor.
PHYAD3 (RXD_2)
45
PHYAD[4:1] pins have weak internal pull-down resistors.
PHYAD4 (RXD_3)
46
AN_EN
(LED_ACT/COL)
26
AN_1
(LED_SPEED)
27
AN0 / AN1: These input pins control the forced or advertised operating mode of the DP83848 according to the
following table. The value on these pins is set by connecting the input pins to GND (0) or VCC (1) through 2.2 kΩ
resistors. These pins should NEVER be connected directly to GND or VCC.
AN_0 (LED_LINK)
28
The value set at this input is latched into the DP83848 at Hardware-Reset.
S, O, PU
Auto-Negotiation Enable: When high, this enables Auto-Negotiation with the capability set by ANO and AN1 pins.
When low, this puts the part into Forced Mode with the capability set by AN0 and AN1 pins.
The float/pull-down status of these pins are latched into the Basic Mode Control Register and the Auto_Negotiation
Advertisement Register during Hardware-Reset.
The default is 111 since these pins have internal pull-ups.
MII_MODE
(RX_DV)
39
SNI_MODE
(TXD_3)
6
LED_CFG (CRS)
40
S, O, PD
AN_EN
AN1
AN0
0
0
0
10BASE-T, Half-Duplex
Forced Mode
0
0
1
10BASE-T, Full-Duplex
0
1
0
100BASE-TX, Half-Duplex
0
1
1
100BASE-TX, Full-Duplex
AN_EN
AN1
AN0
1
0
0
10BASE-T, Half/Full-Duplex
1
0
1
100BASE-TX, Half/Full-Duplex
1
1
0
1
1
1
Advertised Mode
10BASE-T Half-Duplex
100BASE-TX, Half-Duplex
10BASE-T, Half/Full-Duplex
100BASE-TX, Half/Full-Duplex
MII MODE SELECT: This strapping option pair determines the operating mode of the MAC Data Interface. Default
operation (No pull-ups) will enable normal MII Mode of operation. Strapping MII_MODE high will cause the device to
be in RMII or SNI mode of operation, determined by the status of the SNI_MODE strap. Since the pins include
internal pull-downs, the default values are 0.
The following table details the configurations:
S, O, PU
MII_MODE
SNI_MODE
MAC Interface Mode
0
X
MII Mode
1
0
RMII Mode
1
1
10 Mb SNI Mode
LED CONFIGURATION: This strapping option determines the mode of operation of the LED pins. Default is Mode 1.
Mode 1 and Mode 2 can be controlled via the strap option. All modes are configurable via register access.
See Table 4-3 for LED Mode Selection.
MDIX_EN (RX_ER)
(1)
(2)
41
S, O, PU
MDIX ENABLE: Default is to enable MDIX. This strapping option disables Auto-MDIX. An external pull-down will
disable Auto- MDIX mode.
The DP83848 uses many of the functional pins as strap options. The values of these pins are sampled during reset and used to strap
the device into specific modes of operation. The functional pin name is indicated in parentheses.
A 2.2 kΩ resistor should be used for pull-down or pull-up to change the default strap option. If the default option is required, then there is
no need for external pull-up or pull down resistors. Since these pins may have alternate functions after reset is deasserted, they should
not be connected directly to VCC or GND.
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Table 2-8. 10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s PMD Interface
TERMINAL
NAME
I/O
NO.
DESCRIPTION
Differential common driver transmit output (PMD Output Pair). These differential outputs are automatically
configured to either 10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX signaling.
TD-, TD+
16, 17
I/O
In Auto-MDIX mode of operation, this pair can be used as the Receive Input pair.
These pins require 3.3V bias for operation.
Differential receive input (PMD Input Pair). These differential inputs are automatically configured to accept either
100BASE-TX or 10BASE-T signaling.
RD-, RD+
13, 14
I/O
In Auto-MDIX mode of operation, this pair can be used as the Transmit Output pair.
These pins require 3.3V bias for operation.
Table 2-9. Special Connections
TERMINAL
NAME
I/O
NO.
DESCRIPTION
RBIAS
24
I
Bias Resistor Connection. A 4.87 kΩ 1% resistor should be connected from RBIAS to GND.
PFBOUT
23
O
Power Feedback Output. Parallel caps, 10μ F (Tantalum preferred) and 0.1μF, should be placed close to the
PFBOUT. Connect this pin to PFBIN1 (pin 18) and PFBIN2 (pin 37). See Section 5.4 for proper placement pin.
PFBIN1
18
I
Power Feedback Input. These pins are fed with power from PFBOUT pin. A small capacitor of 0.1μF should be
connected close to each pin.
PFBIN2
37
RESERVED
Note: Do not supply power to these pins other than from PFBOUT.
20, 21
I/O
RESERVED: These pins must be pulled-up through 2.2 kΩ resistors to AVDD33 supply.
Table 2-10. Power Supply Pins
TERMINAL
NAME
DESCRIPTION
NO.
IOVDD33
32, 48
I/O 3.3V Supply
IOGND
35, 47
I/O Ground
DGND
36
Digital Ground
AVDD33
22
Analog 3.3V Supply
AGND
15, 19
GNDPAD
16
Analog Ground
Thermal Pad
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3
ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
3.1
Absolute Maximum Ratings
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted)
VALUE
UNIT
VCC
Supply voltage
-0.5 to 4.2
V
VIN
DC input voltage
-0.5 to VCC + 0.5
V
VOUT
DC output voltage
-0.5 to VCC + 0.5
V
TSTG
Storage temperature
-65 to 150
°C
TJ
Operating junction temperature
-55 to 150
°C
TL
Lead temperature (soldering, 10 seconds)
260
°C
ESD rating (RZAP = 1.5 kΩ, CZAP = 100 pF)
4
kV
Recommended Operating Conditions (1)
3.2
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted)
MIN
VCC
Supply voltage
TA
Operating free-air temperature (2)
PD
(1)
(2)
Power dissipation
NOM
MAX
UNIT
3
3.6
V
-55
125
°C
267
mW
Absolute maximum ratings are those values beyond which the safety of the device cannot be guaranteed. They are not meant to imply
that the device should be operated at these limits.
Provided that Thermal Pad is soldered down.
3.3
Thermal Information
DP83848
THERMAL METRIC
PHP
UNITS
48 PINS
θJA
Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance (1)
35.74
θJCtop
Junction-to-case (top) thermal resistance (2)
21.8
θJB
Junction-to-board thermal resistance (3)
19.5
(4)
ψJT
Junction-to-top characterization parameter
ψJB
Junction-to-board characterization parameter (5)
19.4
θJCbot
Junction-to-case (bottom) thermal resistance (6)
3.2
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
1.2
°C/W
The junction-to-ambient thermal resistance under natural convection is obtained in a simulation on a JEDEC-standard, high-K board, as
specified in JESD51-7, in an environment described in JESD51-2a.
The junction-to-case (top) thermal resistance is obtained by simulating a cold plate test on the package top. No specific JEDECstandard test exists, but a close description can be found in the ANSI SEMI standard G30-88.
The junction-to-board thermal resistance is obtained by simulating in an environment with a ring cold plate fixture to control the PCB
temperature, as described in JESD51-8.
The junction-to-top characterization parameter, ψJT, estimates the junction temperature of a device in a real system and is extracted
from the simulation data for obtaining θJA, using a procedure described in JESD51-2a (sections 6 and 7).
The junction-to-board characterization parameter, ψJB, estimates the junction temperature of a device in a real system and is extracted
from the simulation data for obtaining θJA , using a procedure described in JESD51-2a (sections 6 and 7).
The junction-to-case (bottom) thermal resistance is obtained by simulating a cold plate test on the exposed (power) pad. No specific
JEDEC standard test exists, but a close description can be found in the ANSI SEMI standard G30-88.
Spacer
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DC Specifications
3.4.1
Electrical Characteristics
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted)
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
Nominal VCC
TYP
MAX
UNIT
VIH
Input High Voltage
2
V
VIL
Input Low Voltage
IIH
Input High Current
VIN = VCC
IIL
Input Low Current
VOL
Output Low Voltage
VOH
Output High Voltage
IOH = -4 mA
IOZ
TRI-STATE Leakage
VOUT = VCC
VOUT = GND
VTPTD_100
100M Transmit Voltage
VTPTDsym
100M Transmit Voltage Symmetry
VTPTD_10
10M Transmit Voltage
CIN1
CMOS Input Capacitance
5
pF
COUT1
CMOS Output Capacitance
5
pF
SDTHon
100BASE-TX Signal detect turnon
threshold
SDTHoff
100BASE-TX Signal detect turnoff
threshold
VTH1
10BASE-T Receive Threshold
Idd100
100BASE-TX (Full Duplex)
81
mA
Idd10
10BASE-T (Full Duplex)
92
mA
Idd
Power Down Mode
14
mA
0.8
V
10
µA
VIN = GND
10
µA
IOL = 4 mA
0.4
V
VCC - 0.5
V
±10
0.89
1
2.17
µA
1.15
V
±2
%
2.8
V
2.5
1000
200
mV diff pk-pk
mV diff pk-pk
585
mV
Estimated Life (Hours)
1000000.00
100000.00
10000.00
1000.00
80
90
100
110
120
130
140
150
160
Continuous T J (°C)
(1)
(2)
(3)
See datasheet for absolute maximum and minimum recommended operating conditions.
Silicon operating life design goal is 10 years at 105°C junction temperature (does not include package interconnect life).
Enhanced plastic product disclaimer applies.
Figure 3-1. DP83848-EP Operating Life Derating Chart
18
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3.5
3.5.1
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
AC Specifications
Power Up Timing
VCC
X1 clock
T2.1.1
Hardware
RESET_N
32 clocks
MDC
T2.1.2
Latch-in of hardware
configuration pins
T2.1.3
Dual function pins
become enabled as outputs
Input
Output
Figure 3-2. Power Up Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.1.1
Post Power Up Stabilization time prior MDIO is pulled high for 32-bit serial
to MDC preamble for register
management initialization
accesses
X1 Clock must be stable for a min. of 167ms
at power up.
167
ms
T2.1.2
Hardware Configuration Latchin Time
from power up
167
ms
Hardware Configuration Pins are described
in the Pin Description section
X1 Clock must be stable for a min. of 167ms
at power up.
T2.1.3
Hardware Configuration pins
transition to output drivers
50
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Reset Timing
VCC
X1 clock
T2.2.1
T2.2.4
Hardware
RESET_N
32 clocks
MDC
T2.2.2
Latch-in of hardware
configuration pins
T2.2.3
Dual function pins
become enabled as outputs
Input
Output
Figure 3-3. Reset Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
NOTES (1)
DESCRIPTION
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.2.1
Post RESET Stabilization time prior to
MDC preamble for register accesses
MDIO is pulled high for 32-bit serial
management initialization
3
µs
T2.2.2
Hardware Configuration Latchin Time
from the Deassertion of RESET (either
soft or hard)
Hardware Configuration Pins are described
in the Pin Description section
3
µs
T2.2.3
Hardware Configuration pins transition
to output drivers
50
ns
T2.2.4
RESET pulse width
(1)
20
X1 Clock must be stable for at min. of 1µs
during RESET pulse low time
1
µs
It is important to choose pull-up and/or pull-down resistors for each of the hardware configuration pins that provide fast RC time
constants in order to latch-in the proper value prior to the pin transitioning to an output driver.
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3.5.3
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
MII Serial Management Timing
MDC
T2.3.1
T2.3.4
MDIO (output)
MDC
T2.3.2
MDIO (input)
T2.3.3
Valid data
Figure 3-4. MII Serial Management Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
MIN
T2.3.1
MDC to MDIO (Output) Delay Time
T2.3.2
MDIO (Input) to MDC Setup Time
10
T2.3.3
MDIO (Input) to MDC Hold Time
10
T2.3.4
MDC Frequency
3.5.4
TYP
0
MAX
30
UNIT
ns
ns
ns
2.5
25
MHz
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
20
24
100 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing
T2.4.1
T2.4.1
TX_CLK
T2.4.2
TXD[3:0]
TX_EN
T2.4.3
Valid data
Figure 3-5. 100 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
T2.4.1
TX_CLK High/Low Time
100 Mb/s Normal mode
16
T2.4.2
TXD[3:0], TX_EN Data Setup to
TX_CLK
100 Mb/s Normal mode
9.70
ns
T2.4.3
TXD[3:0], TX_EN Data Hold from
TX_CLK
100 Mb/s Normal mode
0
ns
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100 Mb/s MII Receive Timing
T2.5.1
T2.5.1
RX_CLK
T2.5.2
RXD[3:0]
RX_DV
RX_ER
Valid data
Figure 3-6. 100 Mb/s MII Receive Timing
xxx
MIN
TYP
MAX
T2.5.1
PARAMETER
RX_CLK High/Low Time
100 Mb/s Normal mode
16
20
24
ns
T2.5.2
RX_CLK to RXD[3:0], RX_DV,
RX_ER Delay
100 Mb/s Normal mode
10
30
ns
3.5.6
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
UNIT
100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Latency Timing
TX_CLK
TX_EN
TXD
T2.6.1
PMD output pair
(J/K)
IDLE
DATA
Figure 3-7. 100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Latency Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
T2.6.1
(1)
22
DESCRIPTION
TX_CLK to PMD Output Pair
Latency
NOTES (1)
100 Mb/s Normal mode
MIN
TYP
6
MAX
UNIT
bits
For Normal mode, latency is determined by measuring the time from the first rising edge of TX_CLK occurring after the assertion of
TX_EN to the first bit of the “J” code group as output from the PMD Output Pair. 1 bit time = 10 ns in 100 Mb/s mode.
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100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Deassertion Timing
TX_CLK
TX_EN
TXD
T2.7.1
PMD output pair
(T/R)
DATA
IDLE
Figure 3-8. 100BASE-TX Transmit Packet Deassertion Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
T2.7.1
(1)
DESCRIPTION
TX_CLK to PMD Output Pair
Deassertion
NOTES (1)
100 Mb/s Normal mode
MIN
TYP
MAX
6
UNIT
bits
For Normal mode, latency is determined by measuring the time from the first rising edge of TX_CLK occurring after the assertion of
TX_EN to the first bit of the “J” code group as output from the PMD Output Pair. 1 bit time = 10 ns in 100 Mb/s mode.
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100BASE-TX Transmit Timing (tR/F & Jitter)
T2.8.1
+1 rise
90%
10%
PMD output pair
10%
+1 fall
90%
T2.8.1
–1 rise
–1 fall
T2.8.1
T2.8.1
T2.8.2
PMD output pair
eye pattern
T2.8.2
Figure 3-9. 100BASE-TX Transmit Timing (tR/F & Jitter)
xxx
PARAMETER
T2.8.1
24
(2)
MIN
TYP
MAX
2.6
4
5.5
ns
100 Mb/s tR and tF Mismatch
500
ps
100 Mb/s PMD Output Pair Transmit
Jitter
1.4
ns
100 Mb/s PMD Output Pair tR and tF
T2.8.2 (3)
(1)
(2)
(3)
NOTES (1)
DESCRIPTION
UNIT
Normal Mismatch is the difference between the maximum and minimum of all rise and fall times.
Rise and fall times taken at 10% and 90% of the +1 or -1 amplitude.
Specified from -40°C to 125°C.
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3.5.9
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
100BASE-TX Receive Packet Latency Timing
PMD input pair
IDLE
(J/K)
DATA
T2.9.1
CRS
T2.9.2
RXD[3:0]
RX_DV
RX_ER
Figure 3-10. 100BASE-TX Receive Packet Latency Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION (1)
NOTES (2)
(3)
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.9.1
Carrier Sense ON Delay
100 Mb/s Normal mode
20
bits
T2.9.2
Receive Data Latency
100 Mb/s Normal mode
24
bits
(1)
(2)
(3)
Carrier Sense On Delay is determined by measuring the time from the first bit of the “J” code group to the assertion of Carrier Sense.
1 bit time = 10 ns in 100 Mb/s mode.
PMD Input Pair voltage amplitude is greater than the Signal Detect Turn-On Threshold Value.
3.5.10 100BASE-TX Receive Packet Deassertion Timing
PMD input pair
DATA
(T/R)
IDLE
T2.10.1
CRS
Figure 3-11. 100BASE-TX Receive Packet Deassertion Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
T2.10.1
(1)
(2)
DESCRIPTION
Carrier Sense OFF Delay
NOTES (1)
(2)
100 Mb/s Normal mode
MIN
TYP
MAX
24
UNIT
bits
Carrier Sense Off Delay is determined by measuring the time from the first bit of the “T” code group to the deassertion of Carrier Sense.
1 bit time = 10 ns in 100 Mb/s mode
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3.5.11 10 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing
T2.11.1
T2.11.1
TX_CLK
T211.3
T2.11.2
TXD[3:0]
TX_EN
Valid data
Figure 3-12. 10 Mb/s MII Transmit Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
NOTES (1)
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.11.1
TX_CLK High/Low Time
10 Mb/s MII mode
190
200
210
ns
T2.11.2
TXD[3:0], TX_EN Data Setup to
TX_CLK fall
10 Mb/s MII mode
24.70
ns
T2.11.3
TXD[3:0], TX_EN Data Hold from 10 Mb/s MII mode
TX_CLK rise
0
ns
(1)
DESCRIPTION
An attached Mac should drive the transmit signals using the positive edge of TX_CLK. As shown above, the MII signals are sampled on
the falling edge of TX_CLK.
3.5.12 10 Mb/s MII Receive Timing
T2.12.1
T2.12.1
RX_CLK
T2.12.3
T2.12.2
RXD[3:0]
RX_DV
Valid data
Figure 3-13. 10 Mb/s MII Receive Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
NOTES (1)
DESCRIPTION
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
160
200
240
ns
T2.12.1
RX_CLK High/Low Time
T2.12.2
RX_CLK to RXD[3:0], RX_DV
Delay
10 Mb/s MII mode
100
ns
T2.12.3
RX_CLK rising edge delay from
RXD[3:0], RX_DV Valid
10 Mb/s MII mode
100
ns
(1)
26
RX_CLK may be held low for a longer period of time during transition between reference and recovered clocks. Minimum high and low
times will not be violated.
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3.5.13 10 Mb/s Serial Mode Transmit Timing
T2.13.1
T2.13.2
TX_CLK
T2.13.3
TXD[0]
TX_EN
T2.13.4
Valid data
Figure 3-14. 10 Mb/s Serial Mode Transmit Timing
xxx
NOTES
MIN
TYP
MAX
T2.13.1
PARAMETER
TX_CLK High Time
DESCRIPTION
10 Mb/s Serial mode
20
25
30
UNIT
ns
T2.13.2
TX_CLK Low Time
10 Mb/s Serial mode
70
75
80
ns
T2.13.3
TXD_0, TX_EN Data Setup to
TX_CLK rise
10 Mb/s Serial mode
24.70
ns
T2.13.4
TXD_0, TX_EN Data Hold from
TX_CLK rise
10 Mb/s Serial mode
0
ns
3.5.14 10 Mb/s Serial Mode Receive Timing
T2.14.1
T2.14.1
RX_CLK
T2.14.2
RXD[0]
RX_DV
Valid data
Figure 3-15. 10 Mb/s Serial Mode Receive Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
NOTES (1)
DESCRIPTION
T2.14.1
RX_CLK High/Low Time
T2.14.2
RX_CLK fall to RXD_0, RX_DV
Delay
(1)
10 Mb/s Serial mode
MIN
TYP
MAX
35
50
65
ns
10
ns
-10
UNIT
RX_CLK may be held high for a longer period of time during transition between reference and recovered clocks. Minimum high and low
times will not be violated.
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3.5.15 10BASE-T Transmit Timing (Start of Packet)
TX_CLK
TX_EN
TXD
T2.15.2
PMD output pair
T2.15.1
Figure 3-16. 10BASE-T Transmit Timing (Start of Packet)
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.15.1
Transmit Output Delay from the
Falling Edge of TX_CLK
10 Mb/s MII mode
3.5
bits
T2.15.2
Transmit Output Delay from the
Rising Edge of TX_CLK
10 Mb/s Serial mode
3.5
bits
3.5.16 10BASE-T Transmit Timing (End of Packet)
TX_CLK
TX_EN
0
T2.16.1
0
PWD output pair
T2.16.2
1
1
PMD output pair
Figure 3-17. 10BASE-T Transmit Timing (End of Packet)
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.16.1
End of Packet High Time (with ‘0’
ending bit)
250
300
ns
T2.16.2
End of Packet High Time (with ‘1’
ending bit)
250
300
ns
28
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3.5.17 10BASE-T Receive Timing (Start of Packet)
First SFD bit decoded
1
0
1
0
1
0
101011
TPRD±
T2.17.1
CRS
RX_CLK
RX_DV
T2.17.2
T2.17.3
RXD[3:0]
Preamble
0000
Data
SFD
Figure 3-18. 10BASE-T Receive Timing (Start of Packet)
xxx
PARAMETER
NOTES (1)
DESCRIPTION
T2.17.1
Carrier Sense Turn On Delay (PMD
Input Pair to CRS)
T2.17.2
RX_DV Latency
T2.17.3
Receive Data Latency
(1)
(2)
(2)
MIN
Measurement shown from SFD
TYP
MAX
UNIT
630
1000
ns
10
bits
8
bits
10BASE-T RX_DV Latency is measured from first bit of preamble on the wire to the assertion of RX_DV
1 bit time = 100 ns in 10 Mb/s mode.
3.5.18 10BASE-T Receive Timing (End of Packet)
1
0
1
IDLE
PMD input pair
RX_CLK
T2.18.1
CRS
Figure 3-19. 10BASE-T Receive Timing (End of Packet)
xxx
PARAMETER
T2.18.1
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
Carrier Sense Turn Off Delay
MIN
TYP
MAX
1
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µs
29
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3.5.19 10 Mb/s Heartbeat Timing
TX_EN
TX_CLK
T2.19.1
T2.19.2
COL
Figure 3-20. 10 Mb/s Heartbeat Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.19.1
CD Heartbeat Delay
All 10 Mb/s modes
1200
ns
T2.19.2
CD Heartbeat Duration
All 10 Mb/s modes
1000
ns
3.5.20 10 Mb/s Jabber Timing
TXE
T2.20.1
T2.20.2
PMD output pair
COL
Figure 3-21. 10 Mb/s Jabber Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
T2.20.1
Jabber Activation Time
T2.20.2
Jabber Deactivation Time
NOTES
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
85
ms
500
ms
3.5.21 10BASE-T Normal Link Pulse Timing
T2.21.2
T2.21.1
Normal link pulses
Figure 3-22. 10BASE-T Normal Link Pulse Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES (1)
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.21.1
Pulse Width
100
ns
T2.21.2
Pulse Period
16
ms
(1)
30
These specifications represent transmit timings.
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3.5.22 Auto-Negotiation Fast Link Pulse (FLP) Timing
T2.22.2
T2.22.3
T2.22.1
T2.22.1
Fast link pulses
data
pulse
clock
pulse
clock
pulse
T2.22.5
T2.22.4
FLP burst
FLP burst
Figure 3-23. Auto-Negotiation Fast Link Pulse (FLP) Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
T2.22.1
Clock, Data Pulse Width
T2.22.2
Clock Pulse to Clock Pulse Period
T2.22.3
Clock Pulse to Data Pulse Period
T2.22.4
Burst Width
T2.22.5
FLP Burst to FLP Burst Period
MIN
Data = 1
TYP
MAX
UNIT
100
ns
125
μs
62
μs
2
ms
16
ms
3.5.23 100BASE-TX Signal Detect Timing
PMD Input Pair
T2.23.1
T2.23.2
SD+ internal
Figure 3-24. 100BASE-TX Signal Detect Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES (1)
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
T2.23.1
SD Internal Turn-on Time
1
ms
T2.23.2
SD Internal Turn-off Time
350
µs
(1)
The signal amplitude on PMD Input Pair must be TP-PMD compliant.
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3.5.24 100 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing
TX_CLK
TX_EN
TXD[3:0]
CRS
T2.24.1
RX_CLK
RX_DV
RXD[3:0]
Figure 3-25. 100 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
T2.24.1
(1)
(2)
32
DESCRIPTION
TX_EN to RX_DV Loopback
NOTES (1)
(2)
100 Mb/s internal loopback mode
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
240
ns
Due to the nature of the descrambler function, all 100BASE-TX Loopback modes will cause an initial “dead-time” of up to 550 μs during
which time no data will be present at the receive MII outputs. The 100BASE-TX timing specified is based on device delays after the
initial 550μs “dead-time”.
Measurement is made from the first rising edge of TX_CLK after assertion of TX_EN.
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3.5.25 10 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing
TX_CLK
TX_EN
TXD[3:0]
CRS
T2.25.1
RX_CLK
RX_DV
RXD[3:0]
Figure 3-26. 10 Mb/s Internal Loopback Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
T2.25.1
(1)
DESCRIPTION
TX_EN to RX_DV Loopback
NOTES (1)
10 Mb/s internal loopback mode
MIN
TYP
MAX
2
UNIT
µs
Measurement is made from the first rising edge of TX_CLK after assertion of TX_EN.
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3.5.26 RMII Transmit Timing
T2.26.1
X1
T2.26.2
TXD[1:0]
TX_EN
T2.26.3
Valid data
T2.26.4
Symbol
PMD output pair
Figure 3-27. RMII Transmit Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
MIN
20
MAX
UNIT
T2.26.1
X1 Clock Period
T2.26.2
TXD[1:0], TX_EN, Data Setup to
X1 rising
3.70
ns
T2.26.3
TXD[1:0], TX_EN, Data Hold from
X1 rising
1.70
ns
T2.26.4
X1 Clock to PMD Output Pair
Latency
34
50 MHz Reference Clock
TYP
From X1 Rising edge to first bit of
symbol
ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
17
ns
bits
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3.5.27 RMII Receive Timing
PMD Input Pair
IDLE
(J/K)
(TR)
Data
Data
T2.27.4
T2.27.5
X1
T2.27.1
T2.27.2
T2.27.2
T2.27.2
T2.27.3
RX_DV
CRS_DV
T2.27.2
RXD[1:0]
RX_ER
Figure 3-28. RMII Receive Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
NOTES (1)
DESCRIPTION
(2) (3)
T2.27.1
X1 Clock Period
T2.27.2
RXD[1:0], CRS_DV, RX_DV and
RX_ER output delay from X1 rising
T2.27.3
CRS ON delay
From JK symbol on PMD
Receive Pair to initial assertion
of CRS_DV
T2.27.4
CRS OFF delay
T2.27.5
RXD[1:0] and RX_ER latency
(1)
(2)
(3)
MIN
50 MHz Reference Clock
TYP
MAX
UNIT
20
2
ns
14
ns
18.5
bits
From TR symbol on PMD
Receive Pair to initial
deassertion of CRS_DV
27
bits
From symbol on Receive Pair.
Elasticity buffer set to default
value (01).
38
bits
Per the RMII Specification, output delays assume a 25pF load.
CRS_DV is asserted asynchronously in order to minimize latency of control signals through the why. CRS_DV may toggle
synchronously at the end of the packet to indicate CRS deassertion.
RX_DV is synchronous to X1. While not part of the RMII specification, this signal is provided to simplify recovery of receive data.
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3.5.28 Isolation Timing
Clear bit 10 of BMCR
(return to normal operation
from Isolate mode)
T2.28.1
Hardware or Software Reset
(with PHYAD ¹ 00000)
T2.28.2
MODE
ISOLATE
NORMAL
Figure 3-29. Isolation Timing
xxx
MAX
UNIT
T2.28.1
PARAMETER
From software clear of bit 10 in the
BMCR register to the transition from
Isolate to Normal Mode
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
MIN
TYP
100
µs
T2.28.2
From Deassertion of S/W or H/W Reset
to transition from Isolate to Normal
mode
500
µs
3.5.29 25 MHz_OUT Timing
X1
T2.29.2
T2.29.1
T2.29.1
25 MHz_OUT
Figure 3-30. 25 MHz_OUT Timing
xxx
PARAMETER
NOTES (1)
DESCRIPTION
T2.29.1
25 MHz_OUT High/Low Time
T2.29.2
25 MHz_OUT propagation delay
(1)
36
MIN
TYP
MII mode
20
RMII mode
10
Relative to X1
MAX
UNIT
ns
8
ns
25 MHz_OUT characteristics are dependent upon the X1 input characteristics.
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4
CONFIGURATION
4.1
Auto-Negotiation
The auto-negotiation function provides a mechanism for exchanging configuration information between
two ends of a link segment and automatically selecting the highest performance mode of operation
supported by both devices. Fast link pulse (FLP) bursts provide the signalling used to communicate autonegotiation abilities between two devices at each end of a link segment. For further detail regarding autonegotiation, refer to Clause 28 of the IEEE 802.3u specification. The DP83848 supports four different
ethernet protocols (10 Mb/s half duplex, 10 Mb/s full duplex, 100 Mb/s half duplex, and 100 Mb/s full
duplex), so the inclusion of auto-negotiation ensures that the highest performance protocol will be selected
based on the advertised ability of the link partner. The auto-negotiation function within the DP83848 can
be controlled either by internal register access or by the use of the AN_EN, AN1 and AN0 pins.
4.1.1
Auto-Negotiation Pin Control
The state of AN_EN, AN0 and AN1 determines whether the DP83848 is forced into a specific mode or
auto-negotiation will advertise a specific ability (or set of abilities) as given in Table 4-1. These pins allow
configuration options to be selected without requiring internal register access.
The state of AN_EN, AN0 and AN1, upon power-up/reset, determines the state of bits [8:5] of the ANAR
register.
The auto-negotiation function selected at power-up or reset can be changed at any time by writing to the
basic mode control register (BMCR) at address 0x00h.
Table 4-1. Auto-Negotiation Modes
AN_EN
AN1
AN0
0
0
0
10BASE-T, Half Duplex
Forced Mode
0
0
1
10BASE-T, Full Duplex
0
1
0
100BASE-TX, Half Duplex
100BASE-TX, Full Duplex
0
1
1
AN_EN
AN1
AN0
1
0
0
10BASE-T, Half or Full Duplex
1
0
1
100BASE-TX, Half or Full Duplex
1
1
0
10BASE-T Half Duplex
100BASE-TX, Half Duplex
1
1
1
10BASE-T, Half/Full Duplex
100BASE-TX, Half/Full Duplex
4.1.2
Advertised Mode
Auto-Negotiation Register Control
When auto-negotiation is enabled, the DP83848 transmits the abilities programmed into the autonegotiation advertisement register (ANAR) at address 04h via FLP Bursts. Any combination of 10 Mb/s,
100 Mb/s, half duplex, and full duplex modes may be selected.
Auto-negotiation priority resolution:
1. 100BASE-TX Full Duplex (Highest Priority)
2. 100BASE-TX Half Duplex
3. 10BASE-T Full Duplex
4. 10BASE-T Half Duplex (Lowest Priority)
CONFIGURATION
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The basic mode control register (BMCR) at address 00h provides control for enabling, disabling, and
restarting the auto-negotiation process. When auto-negotiation is disabled, the speed selection bit in the
BMCR controls switching between 10 Mb/s or 100 Mb/s operation, and the duplex mode bit controls
switching between full duplex operation and half duplex operation. The speed selection and duplex mode
bits have no effect on the mode of operation when the auto-negotiation enable bit is set.
The link speed can be examined through the PHY status register (PHYSTS) at address 10h after a Link is
achieved.
The BMSR indicates the set of available abilities for technology types, auto-negotiation ability, and
extended register capability. These bits are permanently set to indicate the full functionality of the
DP83848 (only the 100BASE-T4 bit is not set since the DP83848 does not support that function).
The BMSR also provides status on:
• Whether or not auto-negotiation is complete
• Whether or not the Link Partner is advertising that a remote fault has occurred
• Whether or not valid link has been established
• Support for management frame preamble suppression
The ANAR indicates the auto-negotiation abilities to be advertised by the DP83848. All available abilities
are transmitted by default, but any ability can be suppressed by writing to the ANAR. Updating the ANAR
to suppress an ability is one way for a management agent to change (restrict) the technology that is used.
The auto-negotiation link partner ability register (ANLPAR) at address 05h is used to receive the base link
code word as well as all next page code words during the negotiation. Furthermore, the ANLPAR will be
updated to either 0081h or 0021h for parallel detection to either 100 Mb/s or 10 Mb/s respectively.
The auto-negotiation expansion register (ANER) indicates additional auto-negotiation status. The ANER
provides status on:
• Whether or not a parallel detect fault has occurred
• Whether or not the link partner supports the next page function
• Whether or not the DP83848 supports the next page function
• Whether or not the current page being exchanged by auto-negotiation has been received
• Whether or not the link partner supports auto negotiation
4.1.3
Auto-Negotiation Parallel Detection
The DP83848 supports the parallel detection function as defined in the IEEE 802.3u specification. Parallel
detection requires both the 10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s receivers to monitor the receive signal and report link
status to the auto-negotiation function. Auto-negotiation uses this information to configure the correct
technology in the event that the link partner does not support auto-negotiation but is transmitting link
signals that the 100BASE-TX or 10BASET PMAs recognize as valid link signals.
If the DP83848 completes auto-negotiation as a result of parallel detection, bits 5 and 7 within the
ANLPAR register will be set to reflect the mode of operation present in the link partner. Note that bits 4:0
of the ANLPAR will also be set to 00001 based on a successful parallel detection to indicate a valid 802.3
selector field. Software may determine that negotiation completed via parallel detection by reading a zero
in the link partner auto-negotiation able bit once the auto-negotiation complete bit is set. If configured for
parallel detect mode and any condition other than a single good link occurs then the parallel detect fault
bit will be set.
4.1.4
Auto-Negotiation Restart
Once auto-negotiation has completed, it may be restarted at any time by setting bit 9 (restart autonegotiation) of the BMCR to one. If the mode configured by a successful auto-negotiation loses a valid
link, then the auto-negotiation process will resume and attempt to determine the configuration for the link.
This function ensures that a valid configuration is maintained if the cable becomes disconnected.
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A renegotiation request from any entity, such as a management agent, will cause the DP83848 to halt any
transmit data and link pulse activity until the break_link_timer expires (~1500 ms). Consequently, the link
partner will go into link fail and normal auto-negotiation resumes. The DP83848 will resume autonegotiation after the break_link_timer has expired by issuing FLP bursts.
4.1.5
Enabling Auto-Negotiation via Software
It is important to note that if the DP83848 has been initialized upon power-up as a non-auto-negotiating
device (forced technology), and it is then required that auto-negotiation or re-auto-negotiation be initiated
via software, bit 12 (auto-negotiation enable) of the BMCR must first be cleared and then set for any autonegotiation function to take effect.
4.1.6
Auto-Negotiation Complete Time
Parallel detection and auto-negotiation take approximately 2-3 seconds to complete. In addition, autonegotiation with next page should take approximately 2-3 seconds to complete, depending on the number
of next pages sent.
Refer to Clause 28 of the IEEE 802.3u standard for a full description of the individual timers related to
auto-negotiation.
4.2
Auto-MDIX
When enabled, this function utilizes auto-negotiation to determine the proper configuration for transmission
and reception of data and subsequently selects the appropriate MDI pair for MDI/MDIX operation. The
function uses a random seed to control switching of the crossover circuitry. This implementation complies
with the corresponding IEEE 802.3 auto-negotiation and crossover specifications.
Auto-MDIX is enabled by default and can be configured via strap or via PHYCR (0x19h) register, bits
[15:14].
Neither auto-negotiation nor auto-MDIX is required to be enabled in forcing crossover of the MDI pairs.
Forced crossover can be achieved through the FORCE_MDIX bit, bit 14 of PHYCR (0x19h) register.
NOTE
Auto-MDIX will not work in a forced mode of operation.
4.3
PHY Address
The 5 PHY address inputs pins are shared with the RXD[3:0] pins and COL pin as shown below.
Table 4-2. PHY Address Mapping
PIN NUMBER
PHYAD FUNCTION
RXD FUNCTION
42
PHYAD0
COL
43
PHYAD1
RXD_0
44
PHYAD2
RXD_1
45
PHYAD3
RXD_2
46
PHYAD4
RXD_3
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The DP83848 can be set to respond to any of 32 possible PHY addresses via strap pins. The information
is latched into the PHYCR (address 19h, bits [4:0]) at device power-up and hardware reset. The PHY
address pins are shared with the RXD and COL pins. Each DP83848 or port sharing an MDIO bus in a
system must have a unique physical address.
The DP83848 supports PHY address strapping values 0 (<00000>) through 31 (<11111>). Strapping PHY
address 0 puts the part into isolate mode. It should also be noted that selecting PHY address 0 via an
MDIO write to PHYCR will not put the device in isolate mode.
For further detail relating to the latch-in timing requirements of the PHY address pins, as well as the other
hardware configuration pins, refer to the Reset summary in Section 8.
Since the PHYAD[0] pin has weak internal pull-up resistor and PHYAD[4:1] pins have weak internal pulldown resistors, the default setting for the PHY address is 00001 (01h).
PHYAD3 = 0
COL
RXD_0
PHYAD2 = 0
PHYAD1 = 1
2.2 kΩ
PHYAD4 = 0
RXD_1
RXD_3
RXD_2
Refer to Figure 4-1 for an example of a PHYAD connection to external components. In this example, the
PHYAD strapping results in address 00011 (03h).
PHYAD0 = 1
VCC
Figure 4-1. PHYAD Strapping Example
4.3.1
MII Isolate Mode
The DP83848 can be put into MII isolate mode by writing to bit 10 of the BMCR register or by strapping in
physical address 0. It should be noted that selecting physical address 0 via an MDIO write to PHYCR will
not put the device in the MII isolate mode.
When in the MII isolate mode, the DP83848 does not respond to packet data present at TXD[3:0], TX_EN
inputs and presents a high impedance on the TX_CLK, RX_CLK, RX_DV, RX_ER, RXD[3:0], COL, and
CRS outputs. When in Isolate mode, the DP83848 will continue to respond to all management
transactions.
While in Isolate mode, the PMD output pair will not transmit packet data but will continue to source
100BASE-TX scrambled idles or 10BASE-T normal link pulses.
The DP83848 can auto-negotiate or parallel detect to a specific technology depending on the receive
signal at the PMD input pair. A valid link can be established for the receiver even when the DP83848 is in
Isolate mode.
4.4
LED Interface
The DP83848 supports three configurable light emitting diode (LED) pins. The device supports three LED
configurations: Link, Speed, Activity and Collision. Functions are multiplexed among the LEDs. The
PHYCR for the LEDs can also be selected through address 19h, bits [6:5].
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Table 4-3. LED Mode Select
MODE
LED_CGF[1]
(BIT 6)
LED_CFG[0]
(BIT 5)
or (PIN 40)
1
don't care
1
ON for Good Link
OFF for No Link
ON in 100 Mb/s
OFF in 10 Mb/s
ON for Activity
OFF for No Activity
2
0
0
ON for Good Link
BLINK for Activity
ON in 100 Mb/s
OFF in 10 Mb/s
ON for Collision
OFF for No Collision
3
1
0
ON for Good Link
BLINK for Activity
ON in 100 Mb/s
OFF in 10 Mb/s
ON for Full Duplex
OFF for Half Duplex
LED_LINK
LED_SPEED
LED_ACT/COL
The LED_LINK pin in Mode 1 indicates the link status of the port. In 100BASE-T mode, link is established
as a result of input receive amplitude compliant with the TPPMD specifications which will result in internal
generation of signal detect. A 10 Mb/s Link is established as a result of the reception of at least seven
consecutive normal link pulses or the reception of a valid 10BASE-T packet. This will cause the assertion
of LED_LINK. LED_LINK will deassert in accordance with the Link Loss Timer as specified in the IEEE
802.3 specification.
The LED_LINK pin in Mode 1 will be OFF when no LINK is present.
The LED_LINK pin in Mode 2 and Mode 3 will be ON to indicate Link is good and BLINK to indicate
activity is present on either transmit or receive activity.
The LED_SPEED pin indicates 10 or 100 Mb/s data rate of the port. The standard CMOS driver goes high
when operating in 100 Mb/s operation. The functionality of this LED is independent of mode selected.
The LED_ACT/COL pin in Mode 1 indicates the presence of either transmit or receive activity. The LED
will be ON for Activity and OFF for No Activity. In Mode 2, this pin indicates the Collision status of the port.
The LED will be ON for Collision and OFF for No Collision.
The LED_ACT/COL pin in Mode 3 indicates the presence of duplex status for 10 Mb/s or 100 Mb/s
operation. The LED will be ON for full duplex and OFF for half duplex.
In 10 Mb/s half duplex mode, the collision LED is based on the COL signal.
Since these LED pins are also used as strap options, the polarity of the LED is dependent on whether the
pin is pulled up or down.
4.4.1
LEDs
Since the auto-negotiation (AN) strap options share the LED output pins, the external components
required for strapping and LED usage must be considered in order to avoid contention.
Specifically, when the LED outputs are used to drive LEDs directly, the active state of each output driver is
dependent on the logic level sampled by the corresponding AN input upon power-up/reset. For example, if
a given AN input is resistively pulled low then the corresponding output will be configured as an active
high driver. Conversely, if a given AN input is resistively pulled high, then the corresponding output will be
configured as an active low driver.
Refer to Figure 4-2 for an example of AN connections to external components. In this example, the AN
strapping results in auto-negotiation with 10/100 half or full duplex advertised.
The adaptive nature of the LED outputs helps to simplify potential implementation issues of these dual
purpose pins.
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AN1 = 1
110 Ω
AN0 = 1
2.2 kΩ
110 Ω
2.2 kΩ
110 Ω
2.2 kΩ
AN_EN = 1
LED_LINK
LED_SPEED
LED_ACT/COL
SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
VCC
Figure 4-2. AN Strapping and LED Loading Example
4.4.2
LED Direct Control
The DP83848 provides another option to directly control any or all LED outputs through the LED direct
control register (LEDCR), address 18h. The register does not provide read access to LEDs.
4.5
Half Duplex vs Full Duplex
The DP83848 supports both half and full duplex operation at both 10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s speeds.
Half duplex relies on the CSMA/CD protocol to handle collisions and network access. In half duplex mode,
CRS responds to both transmit and receive activity in order to maintain compliance with the IEEE 802.3
specification.
Since the DP83848 is designed to support simultaneous transmit and receive activity it is capable of
supporting fullduplex switched applications with a throughput of up to 200 Mb/s per port when operating in
100BASE-TX mode. Because the CSMA/CD protocol does not apply to fullduplex operation, the DP83848
disables its own internal collision sensing and reporting functions and modifies the behavior of carrier
sense (CRS) such that it indicates only receive activity. This allows a full duplex capable MAC to operate
properly.
All modes of operation (100BASE-TX and 10BASE-T) can run either half duplex or full duplex.
Additionally, other than CRS and collision reporting, all remaining MII signaling remains the same
regardless of the selected duplex mode.
It is important to understand that while auto-negotiation with the use of fast link pulse code words can
interpret and configure to full duplex operation, parallel detection can not recognize the difference between
full and half duplex from a fixed 10 Mb/s or 100 Mb/s link partner over twisted pair. As specified in the
802.3u specification, if a far-end link partner is configured to a forced full duplex 100BASE-TX ability, the
parallel detection state machine in the partner would be unable to detect the full duplex capability of the
far-end link partner. This link segment would negotiate to a half duplex 100BASE-TX configuration (same
scenario for 10 Mb/s).
4.6
Internal Loopback
The DP83848 includes a loopback test mode for facilitating system diagnostics. The loopback mode is
selected through bit 14 (loopback) of the BMCR. Writing 1 to this bit enables MII transmit data to be routed
to the MII receive outputs. Loopback status may be checked in bit 3 of PHYSTS. While in Loopback mode
the data will not be transmitted onto the media. To ensure that the desired operating mode is maintained,
Auto-Negotiation should be disabled before selecting the loopback mode.
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BIST
The DP83848 incorporates an internal built-in self test (BIST) circuit to accommodate in-circuit testing or
diagnostics. The BIST circuit can be utilized to test the integrity of the transmit and receive data paths.
BIST testing can be performed with the part in the internal loopback mode or externally looped back using
a loopback cable fixture.
The BIST is implemented with independent transmit and receive paths, with the transmit block generating
a continuous stream of a pseudo random sequence. The user can select a 9 bit or 15 bit pseudo random
sequence from the PSR_15 bit in the PHYCR. The received data is compared to the generated pseudorandom data by the BIST linear feedback shift register (LFSR) to determine the BIST pass or fail status.
The pass or fail status of the BIST is stored in the BIST status bit in the PHYCR register. The status bit
defaults to 0 (BIST fail) and will transition on a successful comparison. If an error (mis-compare) occurs,
the status bit is latched and is cleared upon a subsequent write to the Start/Stop bit.
For transmit VOD testing, the packet BIST continuous mode can be used to allow continuous data
transmission, setting BIST_CONT_MODE, bit 5, of CDCTRL1 (0x1Bh).
The number of BIST errors can be monitored through the BIST error count in the CDCTRL1 (0x1Bh), bits
[15:8].
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FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The DP83848 supports several modes of operation using the MII interface pins. The options are defined in
the following sections and include:
• MII mode
• RMII mode
• 10 Mb serial network interface (SNI)
The modes of operation can be selected by strap options or register control. For RMII mode, it is required
to use the strap option, since it requires a 50 MHz clock instead of the normal 25 MHz.
In each of these modes, the IEEE 802.3 serial management interface is operational for device
configuration and status. The serial management interface of the MII allows for the configuration and
control of multiple PHY devices, gathering of status, error information, and the determination of the type
and capabilities of the attached PHY(s).
5.1
MII Interface
The DP83848 incorporates the media independent interface (MII) as specified in Clause 22 of the IEEE
802.3u standard. This interface may be used to connect PHY devices to a MAC in 10/100 Mb/s systems.
This section describes the nibble wide MII data interface.
The nibble wide MII data interface consists of a receive bus and a transmit bus each with control signals
to facilitate data transfer between the PHY and the upper layer (MAC).
5.1.1
Nibble-Wide MII Data Interface
Clause 22 of the IEEE 802.3u specification defines the media independent Interface. This interface
includes a dedicated receive bus and a dedicated transmit bus. These two data buses, along with various
control and status signals, allow for the simultaneous exchange of data between the DP83848 and the
upper layer agent (MAC).
The receive interface consists of a nibble wide data bus RXD[3:0], a receive error signal RX_ER, a receive
data valid flag RX_DV, and a receive clock RX_CLK for synchronous transfer of the data. The receive
clock operates at either 2.5 MHz to support 10 Mb/s operation modes or at 25 MHz to support 100 Mb/s
operational modes.
The transmit interface consists of a nibble wide data bus TXD[3:0], a transmit enable control signal
TX_EN, and a transmit clock TX_CLK which runs at either 2.5 MHz or 25 MHz.
Additionally, the MII includes the carrier sense signal CRS, as well as a collision detect signal COL. The
CRS signal asserts to indicate the reception of data from the network or as a function of transmit data in
half duplex mode. The COL signal asserts as an indication of a collision which can occur during half
duplex operation when both a transmit and receive operation occur simultaneously.
5.1.2
Collision Detect
For half duplex, a 10BASE-T or 100BASE-TX collision is detected when the receive and transmit channels
are active simultaneously. Collisions are reported by the COL signal on the MII.
If the DP83848 is transmitting in 10 Mb/s mode when a collision is detected, the collision is not reported
until seven bits have been received while in the collision state. This prevents a collision being reported
incorrectly due to noise on the network. The COL signal remains set for the duration of the collision.
If a collision occurs during a receive operation, it is immediately reported by the COL signal.
When heartbeat is enabled (only applicable to 10 Mb/s operation), approximately 1μs after the
transmission of each packet, a signal quality error (SQE) signal of approximately 10 bit times is generated
(internally) to indicate successful transmission. SQE is reported as a pulse on the COL signal of the MII.
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Carrier Sense
Carrier sense (CRS) is asserted due to receive activity, once valid data is detected via the squelch
function during 10 Mb/s operation. During 100 Mb/s operation CRS is asserted when a valid link (SD) and
two non-contiguous zeros are detected on the line.
For 10 or 100 Mb/s half duplex operation, CRS is asserted during either packet transmission or reception.
For 10 or 100 Mb/s full duplex operation, CRS is asserted only due to receive activity.
CRS is deasserted following an end of packet.
5.2
Reduced MII Interface
The DP83848 incorporates the reduced media independent interface (RMII) as specified in the RMII
specification (rev1.2) from the RMII Consortium. This interface may be used to connect PHY devices to a
MAC in 10/100 Mb/s systems using a reduced number of pins. In this mode, data is transferred 2-bits at a
time using the 50 MHz RMII_REF clock for both transmit and receive. The following pins are used in RMII
mode:
• TX_EN
• TXD[1:0]
• RX_ER (optional for Mac)
• CRS_DV
• RXD[1:0]
• X1 (RMII Reference clock is 50 MHz)
In addition, the RMII mode supplies an RX_DV signal which allows for a simpler method of recovering
receive data without having to separate RX_DV from the CRS_DV indication. This is especially useful for
systems which do not require CRS, such as systems that only support fullduplex operation. This signal is
also useful for diagnostic testing where it may be desirable to loop Receive RMII data directly to the
transmitter.
Since the reference clock operates at 10 times the data rate for 10 Mb/s operation, transmit data is
sampled every 10 clocks. Likewise, receive data will be generated every 10th clock so that an attached
device can sample the data every 10 clocks.
RMII mode requires a 50 MHz oscillator be connected to the device X1 pin. A 50 MHz crystal is not
supported.
To tolerate potential frequency differences between the 50 MHz reference clock and the recovered receive
clock, the receive RMII function includes a programmable elasticity buffer. The elasticity buffer is
programmable to minimize propagation delay based on expected packet size and clock accuracy. This
allows for supporting a range of packet sizes including jumbo frames.
The elasticity buffer will force frame check sequence errors for packets which overrun or underrun the
FIFO. Underrun and Overrun conditions can be reported in the RMII and bypass register (RBR). The
following table indicates how to program the elasticity buffer fifo (in 4-bit increments) based on expected
max packet size and clock accuracy. It assumes both clocks (RMII reference clock and far-end transmitter
clock) have the same accuracy.
Table 5-1. Supported Packet Sizes at ±50ppm and ±100ppm for Each Clock
START THRESHOLD
RBR[1:0]
LATENCY TOLERANCE
RECOMMENDED PACKET SIZE
at ±50ppm
RECOMMENDED PACKET SIZE
at ±100ppm
1 (4-bits)
2 bits
2400 bytes
1200 bytes
2 (8-bits)
6 bits
7200 bytes
3600 bytes
3 (12-bits)
10 bits
12000 bytes
6000 bytes
0 (16-bits)
14 bits
16800 bytes
8400 bytes
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10 Mb Serial Network Interface (SNI)
The DP83848 incorporates a 10 Mb serial network interface (SNI) which allows a simple serial data
interface for 10 Mb only devices. This is also referred to as a 7-wire interface. While there is no defined
standard for this interface, it is based on early 10 Mb physical layer devices. Data is clocked serially at
10 MHz using separate transmit and receive paths. The following pins are used in SNI mode:
• TX_CLK
• TX_EN
• TXD[0]
• RX_CLK
• RXD[0]
• CRS
• COL
5.4
5.4.1
802.3u MII Serial Management Interface
Serial Management Register Access
The serial management MII specification defines a set of thirty-two 16-bit status and control registers that
are accessible through the management interface pins MDC and MDIO. The DP83848 implements all the
required MII registers as well as several optional registers. A description of the serial management access
protocol follows.
5.4.2
Serial Management Access Protocol
The serial control interface consists of two pins, management data clock (MDC) and management data
input/output (MDIO). MDC has a maximum clock rate of 25 MHz and no minimum rate. The MDIO line is
bi-directional and may be shared by up to 32 devices. The MDIO frame format is shown below in
Table 5-2.
The MDIO pin requires a pull-up resistor (1.5 kΩ) which, during IDLE and turnaround, will pull MDIO high.
In order to initialize the MDIO interface, the station management entity sends a sequence of 32 contiguous
logic ones on MDIO to provide the DP83848 with a sequence that can be used to establish
synchronization. This preamble may be generated either by driving MDIO high for 32 consecutive MDC
clock cycles, or by simply allowing the MDIO pull-up resistor to pull the MDIO pin high during which time
32 MDC clock cycles are provided. In addition 32 MDC clock cycles should be used to re-sync the device
if an invalid start, opcode, or turnaround bit is detected.
The DP83848 waits until it has received this preamble sequence before responding to any other
transaction. Once the DP83848 serial management port has been initialized no further preamble
sequencing is required until after a power-on/reset, invalid start, invalid opcode, or invalid turnaround bit
has occurred.
The start code is indicated by a <01> pattern. This assures the MDIO line transitions from the default idle
line state.
Turnaround is defined as an idle bit time inserted between the register address field and the data field. To
avoid contention during a read transaction, no device shall actively drive the MDIO signal during the first
bit of turnaround. The addressed DP83848 drives the MDIO with a zero for the second bit of turnaround
and follows this with the required data. Figure 5-1 shows the timing relationship between MDC and the
MDIO as driven or received by the station (STA) and the DP83848 (PHY) for a typical register read
access.
For write transactions, the station management entity writes data to the addressed DP83848 thus
eliminating the requirement for MDIO turnaround. The turnaround time is filled by the management entity
by inserting <10>. Figure 5-2 shows the timing relationship for a typical MII register write access.
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Table 5-2. Typical MDIO Frame Format
MII MANAGEMENT SERIAL
PROTOCOL
<idle><start><op code><device addr><reg addr><turnaround><data><idle>
Read Operation
<idle><01><10><AAAAA><RRRRR><Z0><xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx><idle>
Write Operation
<idle><01><01><AAAAA><RRRRR><10><xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx><idle>
MDC
MDIO
z
z
(STA)
z
MDIO
z
(PHY)
z
0
Idle
1
Start
1
0
0
Opcode
(Read)
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0 z 0
0
Register Address
(00h = BMCR)
PHY Address
(PHYAD = 0Ch)
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Idle
Register Data
TA
0 z
Figure 5-1. Typical MDC/MDIO Read Operation
MDC
MDIO
z
z
(STA)
z
0
Idle
Start
1
0
1
Opcode
(Write)
0
1
1
0
0
PHY Address
(PHYAD = 0Ch)
0
0
0
0
0
Register Address
(00h = BMCR)
1
0
0
0
0
0
TA
0
0
0
0
0
0
Register Data
0
0
0
0
0
0 z
Idle
Figure 5-2. Typical MDC/MDIO Write Operation
5.4.3
Serial Management Preamble Suppression
The DP83848 supports a preamble suppression mode as indicated by a one in bit 6 of the basic mode
status register (BMSR, address 01h.) If the station management entity (i.e. MAC or other management
controller) determines that all PHYs in the system support preamble suppression by returning a one in this
bit, then the station management entity need not generate preamble for each management transaction.
The DP83848 requires a single initialization sequence of 32 bits of preamble following hardware/software
reset.
This requirement is generally met by the mandatory pull-up resistor on MDIO in conjunction with a
continuous MDC, or the management access made to determine whether preamble suppression is
supported.
While the DP83848 requires an initial preamble sequence of 32 bits for management initialization, it does
not require a full 32-bit sequence between each subsequent transaction. A minimum of one idle bit
between management transactions is required as specified in the IEEE 802.3u specification.
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6.1
100BASE-TX Transmitter
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The 100BASE-TX transmitter consists of several functional blocks which convert synchronous 4-bit nibble
data, as provided by the MII, to a scrambled MLT-3 125 Mb/s serial data stream. Because the 100BASETX TP-PMD is integrated, the differential output pins, PMD output pair, can be directly routed to the
magnetics.
The block diagram in Figure 6-1 provides an overview of each functional block within the 100BASE-TX
transmit section.
The transmitter section consists of the following functional blocks:
• Code-group encoder and injection block
• Scrambler block (bypass option)
• NRZ to NRZI encoder block
• Binary to MLT-3 converter or common driver
The bypass option for the functional blocks within the 100BASE-TX transmitter provides flexibility for
applications where data conversion is not always required. The DP83848 implements the 100BASE-TX
transmit state machine diagram as specified in the IEEE 802.3u Standard, Clause 24.
TX_CLK
Divide by 5
TXD[3:0] /
TX_EN
4B5B Code
Croup Encoder
5B Parallel
to Serial
125-MHZ Clock
Scrambler
BP_SCR
100Base-TX
Loopback
MUX
MLT[1:0]
NRZ to NRZI
Encoder
Binary to MLT-3 /
Common Driver
PMD OUTPUT PAIR
Figure 6-1. 100BASE-TX Transmit Block Diagram
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Table 6-1. 4B5B Code-Group Encoding or Decoding
DATA CODES
0
11110
0000
1
01001
0001
2
10100
0010
3
10101
0011
4
01010
0100
5
01011
0101
6
01110
0110
7
01111
0111
8
10010
1000
9
10011
1001
A
10110
1010
B
10111
1011
C
11010
1100
D
11011
1101
E
11100
1110
F
11101
1111
H
00100
HALT code-group - Error code
I
11111
Inter-Packet IDLE - 0000 (1)
J
11000
First Start of Packet - 0101 (1)
K
10001
Second Start of Packet - 0101 (1)
T
01101
First End of Packet - 0000 (1)
R
00111
Second End of Packet - 0000 (1)
IDLE AND CONTROL CODES
INVALID CODES
(1)
V
00000
V
00001
V
00010
V
00011
V
00101
V
00110
V
01000
V
01100
Control code-groups I, J, K, T and R in data fields will be mapped as invalid codes, together with RX_ER asserted.
6.1.1
Code-Group Encoding and Injection
The code-group encoder converts 4-bit (4B) nibble data generated by the MAC into 5-bit (5B) code-groups
for transmission. This conversion is required to allow control data to be combined with packet data codegroups.
The code-group encoder substitutes the first 8-bits of the MAC preamble with a J/K code-group pair
(11000 10001) upon transmission. The code-group encoder continues to replace subsequent 4B preamble
and data nibbles with corresponding 5B code-groups. At the end of the transmit packet, upon the
deassertion of transmit enable signal from the MAC, the code-group encoder injects the T/R code-group
pair (01101 00111) indicating the end of the frame.
After the T/R code-group pair, the code-group encoder continuously injects IDLEs into the transmit data
stream until the next transmit packet is detected (reassertion of transmit enable).
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6.1.2
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Scrambler
The scrambler is required to control the radiated emissions at the media connector and on the twisted pair
cable (for 100BASE-TX applications). By scrambling the data, the total energy launched onto the cable is
randomly distributed over a wide frequency range. Without the scrambler, energy levels at the PMD and
on the cable could peak beyond FCC limitations at frequencies related to repeating 5B sequences (i.e.,
continuous transmission of IDLEs).
The scrambler is configured as a closed loop linear feedback shift register (LFSR) with an 11-bit
polynomial. The output of the closed loop LFSR is X-ORd with the serial NRZ data from the code-group
encoder. The result is a scrambled data stream with sufficient randomization to decrease radiated
emissions at certain frequencies by as much as 20 dB. The DP83848 uses the PHY_ID (pins PHYAD
[4:0]) to set a unique seed value.
6.1.3
NRZ to NRZI Encoder
After the transmit data stream has been serialized and scrambled, the data must be NRZI encoded in
order to comply with the TP-PMD standard for 100BASE-TX transmission over Category-5 Unshielded
twisted pair cable.
6.1.4
Binary to MLT-3 Convertor
The binary to MLT-3 conversion is accomplished by converting the serial binary data stream output from
the NRZI encoder into two binary data streams with alternately phased logic one events. These two binary
streams are then fed to the twisted pair output driver which converts the voltage to current and alternately
drives either side of the transmit transformer primary winding, resulting in a MLT-3 signal.
The 100BASE-TX MLT-3 signal sourced by the PMD output pair common driver is slew rate controlled.
This should be considered when selecting AC coupling magnetics to ensure TP-PMD standard compliant
transition times (3 ns < Tr < 5 ns).
The 100BASE-TX transmit TP-PMD function within the DP83848 is capable of sourcing only MLT-3
encoded data. Binary output from the PMD output pair is not possible in 100 Mb/s mode.
6.2
100BASE-TX Receiver
The 100BASE-TX receiver consists of several functional blocks which convert the scrambled MLT-3 125
Mb/s serial data stream to synchronous 4-bit nibble data that is provided to the MII. Because the
100BASE-TX TP-PMD is integrated, the differential input pins, RD±, can be directly routed from the AC
coupling magnetics.
See Figure 6-2 for a block diagram of the 100BASE-TX receive function. This provides an overview of
each functional block within the 100BASE-TX receive section.
The receive section consists of the following functional blocks:
• Analog front end
• Digital signal processor
• Signal detect
• MLT-3 to binary decoder
• NRZI to NRZ decoder
• Serial to parallel
• Descrambler
• Code group alignment
• 4B/5B decoder
• Link integrity monitor
• Bad SSD detection
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6.2.1
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Analog Front End
In addition to the digital equalization and gain control, the DP83848 includes analog equalization and gain
control in the analog front end. The analog equalization reduces the amount of digital equalization
required in the DSP.
6.2.2
Digital Signal Processor
The digital signal processor includes adaptive equalization with gain control and base line wander
compensation.
RX_DV/CRS
RX_CLK
RXD[3:0] / RX_ER
4B/5B Decoder
Serial to Parallel
Link
Integrity
Monitor
RX_DATA
Valid SSD
Detect
Code Group
Alignment
Descrambler
NRZI-to-NRZ
Decoder
MLT-3 to Binary
Decoder
Signal Detect
Digital
Signal
Processor
Analog
Front
End
RD ±
Figure 6-2. 100BASE-TX Receive Block Diagram
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Digital Adaptive Equalization and Gain Control
When transmitting data at high speeds over copper twisted pair cable, frequency dependent attenuation
becomes a concern. In high-speed twisted pair signalling, the frequency content of the transmitted signal
can vary greatly during normal operation based primarily on the randomness of the scrambled data
stream. This variation in signal attenuation caused by frequency variations must be compensated to
ensure the integrity of the transmission.
In order to ensure quality transmission when employing MLT-3 encoding, the compensation must be able
to adapt to various cable lengths and cable types depending on the installed environment. The selection of
long cable lengths for a given implementation, requires significant compensation which will overcompensate for shorter, less attenuating lengths. Conversely, the selection of short or intermediate cable
lengths requiring less compensation will cause serious under-compensation for longer length cables. The
compensation or equalization must be adaptive to ensure proper conditioning of the received signal
independent of the cable length.
The DP83848 utilizes an extremely robust equalization scheme referred as ‘digital adaptive equalization’.
The digital equalizer removes inter symbol interference (ISI) from the receive data stream by continuously
adapting to provide a filter with the inverse frequency response of the channel. Equalization is combined
with an adaptive gain control stage. This enables the receive 'eye pattern' to be opened sufficiently to
allow very reliable data recovery.
The curves given in Figure 6-3 illustrate attenuation at certain frequencies for given cable lengths. This is
derived from the worst case frequency vs. attenuation figures as specified in the EIA/TIA Bulletin TSB-36.
These curves indicate the significant variations in signal attenuation that must be compensated for by the
receive adaptive equalization circuit.
Attenuation versus Frequency
35
150m
30
130m
Attenuation (dB)
25
100m
20
15
50m
10
5
0m
0
0
20
40
60
80
Frequency (MHz)
100
120
Figure 6-3. EIA/TIA Attenuation vs. Frequency for 0, 50, 100, 130 and 150 meters of CAT 5 cable
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Base Line Wander Compensation
Figure 6-4. 100BASE-TX BLW Event
The DP83848 is completely ANSI TP-PMD compliant and includes base line wander (BLW)
compensation. The BLW compensation block can successfully recover the TPPMD defined “killer” pattern.
BLW can generally be defined as the change in the average DC content, relatively short period over time,
of an AC coupled digital transmission over a given transmission medium. (i.e., copper wire).
BLW results from the interaction between the low frequency components of a transmitted bit stream and
the frequency response of the AC coupling components within the transmission system. If the low
frequency content of the digital bit stream goes below the low frequency pole of the AC coupling
transformers then the droop characteristics of the transformers will dominate resulting in potentially
serious BLW.
The digital oscilloscope plot provided in Figure 6-4 illustrates the severity of the BLW event that can
theoretically be generated during 100BASE-TX packet transmission. This event consists of approximately
800 mV of DC offset for a period of 120 μs. Left uncompensated, events such as this can cause packet
loss.
6.2.3
Signal Detect
The signal detect function of the DP83848 is incorporated to meet the specifications mandated by the
ANSI FDDI TP-PMD Standard as well as the IEEE 802.3 100BASE-TX Standard for both voltage
thresholds and timing parameters.
Note that the reception of normal 10BASE-T link pulses and fast link pulses per IEEE 802.3u autonegotiation by the 100BASE-TX receiver do not cause the DP83848 to assert signal detect.
6.2.4
MLT-3 to NRZI Decoder
The DP83848 decodes the MLT-3 information from the Digital Adaptive Equalizer block to binary NRZI
data.
6.2.5
NRZI to NRZ
In a typical application, the NRZI to NRZ decoder is required in order to present NRZ formatted data to the
descrambler.
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6.2.6
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Serial to Parallel
The 100BASE-TX receiver includes a serial to parallel converter which supplies 5-bit wide data symbols to
the PCS Rx state machine.
6.2.7
Descrambler
A serial descrambler is used to de-scramble the received NRZ data. The descrambler has to generate an
identical data scrambling sequence (N) in order to recover the original unscrambled data (UD) from the
scrambled data (SD) as represented in the equations:
SD = (UD ⊕ N)
UD = (SD ⊕ N)
(1)
(2)
Synchronization of the descrambler to the original scrambling sequence (N) is achieved based on the
knowledge that the incoming scrambled data stream consists of scrambled IDLE data. After the
descrambler has recognized 12 consecutive IDLE code-groups, where an unscrambled IDLE code-group
in 5B NRZ is equal to five consecutive ones (11111), it will synchronize to the receive data stream and
generate unscrambled data in the form of unaligned 5B code-groups.
In order to maintain synchronization, the descrambler must continuously monitor the validity of the
unscrambled data that it generates. To ensure this, a line state monitor and a hold timer are used to
constantly monitor the synchronization status. Upon synchronization of the descrambler the hold timer
starts a 722 μs countdown. Upon detection of sufficient IDLE code-groups (58 bit times) within the 722 μs
period, the hold timer will reset and begin a new countdown. This monitoring operation will continue
indefinitely given a properly operating network connection with good signal integrity. If the line state
monitor does not recognize sufficient unscrambled IDLE code-groups within the 722 μs period, the entire
descrambler will be forced out of the current state of synchronization and reset in order to reacquire
synchronization.
6.2.8
Code-Group Alignment
The code-group alignment module operates on unaligned 5-bit data from the descrambler (or, if the
descrambler is bypassed, directly from the NRZI/NRZ decoder) and converts it into 5B code-group data (5
bits). Code-group alignment occurs after the J/K code-group pair is detected. Once the J/K code-group
pair (11000 10001) is detected, subsequent data is aligned on a fixed boundary.
6.2.9
4B/5B Decoder
The code-group decoder functions as a look up table that translates incoming 5B code-groups into 4B
nibbles. The code-group decoder first detects the J/K code-group pair preceded by IDLE code-groups and
replaces the J/K with MAC preamble. Specifically, the J/K 10-bit code-group pair is replaced by the nibble
pair (0101 0101). All subsequent 5B code-groups are converted to the corresponding 4B nibbles for the
duration of the entire packet. This conversion ceases upon the detection of the T/R code-group pair
denoting the end of stream delimiter (ESD) or with the reception of a minimum of two IDLE code-groups.
6.2.10 100BASE-TX Link Integrity Monitor
The 100 Base TX Link monitor ensures that a valid and stable link is established before enabling both the
transmit and receive PCS layer.
Signal detect must be valid for 395 µs to allow the link monitor to enter the link up state, and enable the
transmit and receive functions.
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6.2.11 Bad SSD Detection
A bad start of stream delimiter (Bad SSD) is any transition from consecutive idle code-groups to non-idle
code-groups which is not prefixed by the code-group pair /J/K.
If this condition is detected, the DP83848 will assert RX_ER and present RXD[3:0] = 1110 to the MII for
the cycles that correspond to received 5B code-groups until at least two IDLE code groups are detected.
In addition, the false carrier sense counter register (FCSCR) will be incremented by one.
Once at least two IDLE code groups are detected, RX_ER and CRS become de-asserted.
6.3
10BASE-T Transceiver Module
The 10BASE-T transceiver module is IEEE 802.3 compliant. It includes the receiver, transmitter, collision,
heartbeat, loopback, jabber, and link integrity functions, as defined in the standard. An external filter is not
required on the 10BASE-T interface since this is integrated inside the DP83848. This section focuses on
the general 10BASET system level operation.
6.3.1
Operational Modes
6.3.1.1
Half Duplex Mode
In half duplex mode the DP83848 functions as a standard IEEE 802.3 10BASE-T transceiver supporting
the CSMA/CD protocol.
6.3.1.2
Full Duplex Mode
In full duplex mode the DP83848 is capable of simultaneously transmitting and receiving without asserting
the collision signal. The DP83848's 10 Mb/s ENDEC is designed to encode and decode simultaneously.
6.3.2
Smart Squelch
The smart squelch is responsible for determining when valid data is present on the differential receive
inputs. The DP83848 implements an intelligent receive squelch to ensure that impulse noise on the
receive inputs will not be mistaken for a valid signal. Smart squelch operation is independent of the
10BASE-T operational mode.
The squelch circuitry employs a combination of amplitude and timing measurements (as specified in the
IEEE 802.3 10BSE-T standard) to determine the validity of data on the twisted pair inputs (refer to
Figure 6-5).
The signal at the start of a packet is checked by the smart squelch and any pulses not exceeding the
squelch level (either positive or negative, depending upon polarity) will be rejected. Once this first squelch
level is overcome correctly, the opposite squelch level must then be exceeded within 150 ns. Finally the
signal must again exceed the original squelch level within a 150 ns to ensure that the input waveform will
not be rejected. This checking procedure results in the loss of typically three preamble bits at the
beginning of each packet.
Only after all these conditions have been satisfied will a control signal be generated to indicate to the
remainder of the circuitry that valid data is present. At this time, the smart squelch circuitry is reset.
Valid data is considered to be present until the squelch level has not been generated for a time longer
than 150 ns, indicating the end of packet. Once good data has been detected, the squelch levels are
reduced to minimize the effect of noise causing premature end of packet detection.
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<150 ns
>150 ns
VSQ+
VSQ+(reduced)
VSQ–(reduced)
VSQ–
Start of packet
End of packet
Figure 6-5. 10BASE-T Twisted Pair Smart Squelch Operation
6.3.3
Collision Detection and SQE
When in half duplex, a 10BASE-T collision is detected when the receive and transmit channels are active
simultaneously. Collisions are reported by the COL signal on the MII. Collisions are also reported when a
jabber condition is detected.
The COL signal remains set for the duration of the collision. If the PHY is receiving when a collision is
detected it is reported immediately (through the COL pin).
When heartbeat is enabled, approximately 1 μs after the transmission of each packet, a signal quality
error (SQE) signal of approximately 10-bit times is generated to indicate successful transmission. SQE is
reported as a pulse on the COL signal of the MII.
The SQE test is inhibited when the PHY is set in full duplex mode. SQE can also be inhibited by setting
the HEARTBEAT_DIS bit in the 10BTSCR register.
6.3.4
Carrier Sense
Carrier sense (CRS) may be asserted due to receive activity once valid data is detected via the squelch
function.
For 10 Mb/s half Dduplex operation, CRS is asserted during either packet transmission or reception.
For 10 Mb/s full duplex operation, CRS is asserted only during receive activity.
CRS is deasserted following an end of packet.
6.3.5
Normal Link Pulse Detection/Generation
The link pulse generator produces pulses as defined in the IEEE 802.3 10BASE-T standard. Each link
pulse is nominally 100 ns in duration and transmitted every 16 ms in the absence of transmit data.
Link pulses are used to check the integrity of the connection with the remote end. If valid link pulses are
not received, the link detector disables the 10BASE-T twisted pair transmitter, receiver and collision
detection functions.
When the link integrity function is disabled (FORCE_LINK_10 of the 10BTSCR register), a good link is
forced and the 10BASE-T transceiver will operate regardless of the presence of link pulses.
6.3.6
Jabber Function
The jabber function monitors the DP83848's output and disables the transmitter if it attempts to transmit a
packet of longer than legal size. A jabber timer monitors the transmitter and disables the transmission if
the transmitter is active for approximately 85 ms.
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Once disabled by the Jabber function, the transmitter stays disabled for the entire time that the ENDEC
module's internal transmit enable is asserted. This signal has to be deasserted for approximately 500 ms
(the “unjab” time) before the Jabber function re-enables the transmit outputs.
The Jabber function is only relevant in 10BASE-T mode.
6.3.7
Automatic Link Polarity Detection and Correction
The DP83848's 10BASE-T transceiver module incorporates an automatic link polarity detection circuit.
When three consecutive inverted link pulses are received, bad polarity is reported.
A polarity reversal can be caused by a wiring error at either end of the cable, usually at the main
distribution frame (MDF) or patch panel in the wiring closet.
The bad polarity condition is latched in the 10BTSCR register. The DP83848's 10BASE-T transceiver
module corrects for this error internally and will continue to decode received data correctly. This eliminates
the need to correct the wiring error immediately.
6.3.8
Transmit and Receive Filtering
External 10BASE-T filters are not required when using the DP83848, as the required signal conditioning is
integrated into the device.
Only isolation transformers and impedance matching resistors are required for the 10BASE-T transmit and
receive interface. The internal transmit filtering ensures that all the harmonics in the transmit signal are
attenuated by at least 30 dB.
6.3.9
Transmitter
The encoder begins operation when the transmit enable input (TX_EN) goes high and converts NRZ data
to preemphasized Manchester data for the transceiver. For the duration of TX_EN, the serialized transmit
data (TXD) is encoded for the transmit-driver pair (PMD Output Pair). TXD must be valid on the rising
edge of transmit clock (TX_CLK). Transmission ends when TX_EN deasserts. The last transition is always
positive; it occurs at the center of the bit cell if the last bit is a one, or at the end of the bit cell if the last bit
is a zero.
6.3.10 Receiver
The decoder detects the end of a frame when no additional mid-bit transitions are detected. Within one
and a half bit times after the last bit, carrier sense is de-asserted. Receive clock stays active for five more
bit times after CRS goes low, to guarantee the receive timings of the controller.
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7
DESIGN GUIDELINES
7.1
TPI Network Circuit
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Figure 7-1 shows the recommended circuit for a 10/100 Mb/s twisted pair interface. To the right is a partial
list of recommended transformers. It is important that the user realize that variations with PCB and
component characteristics requires that the application be tested to ensure that the circuit meets the
requirements of the intended application.
Vdd
RD–
Common mode chokes
may be required.
Vdd
49.9Ω
0.1µF
1:1
49.9Ω
RD+
RD-
0.1μF*
RD+
TD-
TD–
49.9Ω
TD+
Place resistors and
capacitors close to
the device.
RJ45
1:1
0.1µF
49.9Ω
TD+
0.1μF*
Vdd
T1
NOTE: Center tap is pulled to VDD.
*Place capacitors close to the
transformer center taps.
All values are typical and are +/- 1%
Figure 7-1. 10/100 Mb/s Twisted Pair Interface
7.2
ESD Protection
Typically, ESD precautions are predominantly in effect when handling the devices or board before being
installed in a system. In those cases, strict handling procedures need be implemented during the
manufacturing process to greatly reduce the occurrences of catastrophic ESD events. After the system is
assembled, internal components are less sensitive from ESD events.
See for ESD rating.
7.3
Clock In (X1) Requirements
The DP83848 supports an external CMOS level oscillator source or a crystal resonator device.
7.3.1
Oscillator
If an external clock source is used, X1 should be tied to the clock source and X2 should be left floating.
Specifications for CMOS oscillators: 25 MHz in MII Mode and 50 MHz in RMII Mode are listed in Table 7-1
and Table 7-2.
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Crystal
A 25 MHz, parallel, 20 pF load crystal resonator should be used if a crystal source is desired. Figure 7-2
shows a typical connection for a crystal resonator circuit. The load capacitor values will vary with the
crystal vendors; check with the vendor for the recommended loads.
The oscillator circuit is designed to drive a parallel resonance at cut crystal with a minimum drive level of
100 μW and a maximum of 500 μW. If a crystal is specified for a lower drive level, a current limiting
resistor should be placed in series between X2 and the crystal.
As a starting point for evaluating an oscillator circuit, if the requirements for the crystal are not known, CL1
and CL2 should be set at 33 pF, and R1 should be set at 0 Ω.
Specification for 25 MHz crystal are listed in Table 7-3.
X2
X1
R1
CL1
CL2
Figure 7-2. Crystal Oscillator Circuit
Table 7-1. 25 MHz Oscillator Specification
PARAMETER
MIN
TYP
Frequency
UNIT
CONDITION
MHz
Frequency tolerance
±50
ppm
Operational temperature
Frequency stability
±50
ppm
1 year aging
Rise/Fall time
6
ns
20% - 80%
Jitter
800 (1)
ps
Short term
Jitter
800 (1)
ps
Long term
Symmetry
(1)
MAX
25
40%
60%
Duty cycle
This limit is provided as a guideline for component selection and to guaranteed by production testing. Refer to AN-1548, “PHYTER 100
Base-TX Reference Clock Jitter Tolerance,“ for details on jitter performance.
Table 7-2. 50 MHz Oscillator Specification
PARAMETER
MIN
Frequency
MAX
50
UNIT
CONDITION
MHz
Frequency tolerance
±50
ppm
Operational temperature
Frequency stability
±50
ppm
Operational temperature
Rise/Fall time
6
ns
20% - 80%
Jitter
800
(1)
ps
Short term
Jitter
800 (1)
ps
Symmetry
(1)
TYP
40%
60%
Long term
Duty cycle
This limit is provided as a guideline for component selection and to guaranteed by production testing. Refer to AN-1548, “PHYTER 100
Base-TX Reference Clock Jitter Tolerance,“ for details on jitter performance.
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Table 7-3. 25 MHz Crystal Specification
PARAMETER
MIN
TYP
Frequency
MAX
25
UNIT
CONDITION
MHz
Frequency tolerance
±50
ppm
Operational temperature
Frequency stability
±50
ppm
1 year aging
40
pF
Load capacitance
7.4
25
Power Feedback Circuit
To ensure correct operation for the DP83848, parallel caps with values of 10 μF (Tantalum) and 0.1 μF
should be placed close to pin 23 (PFBOUT) of the device.
Pin 18 (PFBIN1) and pin 37 (PFBIN2) must be connected to pin 23 (PFBOUT), each pin requires a small
capacitor (.1 μF). See Figure 7-3 for proper connections.
Pin 23 (PFBOUT)
10 µF +
.1 µF
Pin 18 (PFBIN1)
Pin 37 (PFBIN2)
.1 µF
.1 µF
Figure 7-3. Power Feedback Connection
7.5
Power Down and Interrupt
The power down and interrupt functions are multiplexed on pin 7 of the device. By default, this pin
functions as a power down input and the interrupt function is disabled. Setting bit 0 (INT_OE) of MICR
(0x11h) will configure the pin as an active low interrupt output.
7.5.1
Power Down Control Mode
The PWR_DOWN/INT pin can be asserted low to put the device in a power down mode. This is equivalent
to setting bit 11 (power down) in the basic mode control register, BMCR (0x00h). An external control
signal can be used to drive the pin low, overcoming the weak internal pull-up resistor. Alternatively, the
device can be configured to initialize into a power down state by use of an external pulldown resistor on
the PWR_DOWN/INT pin. Since the device will still respond to management register accesses, setting the
INT_OE bit in the MICR register will disable the PWR_DOWN/INT input, allowing the device to exit the
power down state.
7.5.2
Interrupt Mechanisms
The interrupt function is controlled via register access. All interrupt sources are disabled by default. Setting
bit 1 (INTEN) of MICR (0x11h) will enable interrupts to be output, dependent on the interrupt mask set in
the lower byte of the MISR (0x12h). The PWR_DOWN/INT pin is asynchronously asserted low when an
interrupt condition occurs. The source of the interrupt can be determined by reading the upper byte of the
MISR. One or more bits in the MISR will be set, denoting all currently pending interrupts. Reading of the
MISR clears ALL pending interrupts.
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Example: To generate an interrupt on a change of link status or on a change of energy detect power state,
the steps would be:
• Write 0003h to MICR to set INTEN and INT_OE
• Write 0060h to MISR to set ED_INT_EN and LINK_INT_EN
• Monitor PWR_DOWN/INT pin
When PWR_DOWN/INT pin asserts low, user would read the MISR register to see if the ED_INT or
LINK_INT bits are set, i.e. which source caused the interrupt. After reading the MISR, the interrupt bits
should clear and the PWR_DOWN/INT pin will deassert.
7.6
Energy Detect Mode
When energy detect is enabled and there is no activity on the cable, the DP83848 will remain in a low
power mode while monitoring the transmission line. Activity on the line will cause the DP83848 to go
through a normal power up sequence. Regardless of cable activity, the DP83848 will occasionally wake
up the transmitter to put ED pulses on the line, but will otherwise draw as little power as possible. Energy
detect functionality is controlled via register energy detect control (EDCR), address 0x1Dh.
7.7
Thermal Vias Recommendation
The following thermal via guidelines apply to GNDPAD, pin 49:
1. Thermal via size = 0.2 mm
2. Recommend 4 vias
3. Vias have a center to center separation of 2 mm
Adherence to this guideline is required to achieve the intended operating temperature range of the device.
Figure 7-4 illustrates an example layout.
Figure 7-4. Top View, Thermal Vias for GNDPAD, Pin 49
DESIGN GUIDELINES
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DESIGN GUIDELINES
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SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
RESET OPERATION
The DP83848 includes an internal power-on reset (POR) function and does not need to be explicitly reset
for normal operation after power up. If required during normal operation, the device can be reset by a
hardware or software reset.
8.1
Hardware Reset
A hardware reset is accomplished by applying a low pulse (TTL level), with a duration of at least 1 μs, to
the RESET_N. This will reset the device such that all registers will be reinitialized to default values and the
hardware configuration values will be re-latched into the device (similar to the power-up/reset operation).
8.2
Software Reset
A software reset is accomplished by setting the reset bit (bit 15) of the basic mode control register
(BMCR). The period from the point in time when the reset bit is set to the point in time when software
reset has concluded is approximately 1 μs.
The software reset will reset the device such that all registers will be reset to default values and the
hardware configuration values will be maintained. Software driver code must wait 3 μs following a software
reset before allowing further serial MII operations with the DP83848.
RESET OPERATION
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9
REGISTER BLOCK
9.1
Table 9-1. Register Map
OFFSET
www.ti.com
ACCESS
TAG
0
RW
BMCR
Basic Mode Control Register
1
RO
BMSR
Basic Mode Status Register
02h
2
RO
PHYIDR1
PHY Identifier Register #1
03h
3
RO
PHYIDR2
PHY Identifier Register #2
04h
4
RW
ANAR
05h
5
RW
ANLPAR
Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (Base
Page)
05h
5
RW
ANLPARNP
Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (Next
Page)
06h
6
RW
ANER
07h
7
RW
ANNPTR
08h-Fh
15-Aug
RW
RESERVED
HEX
DECIMAL
00h
01h
DESCRIPTION
Auto-Negotiation Advertisement Register
Auto-Negotiation Expansion Register
Auto-Negotiation Next Page TX
RESERVED
EXTENDED REGISTERS
64
10h
16
RO
PHYSTS
11h
17
RW
MICR
PHY Status Register
MII Interrupt Control Register
12h
18
RO
MISR
MII Interrupt Status Register
13h
19
RW
RESERVED
14h
20
RO
FCSCR
15h
21
RO
RECR
Receive Error Counter Register
16h
22
RW
PCSR
PCS Sub-Layer Configuration and Status Register
17h
23
RW
RBR
18h
24
RW
LEDCR
LED Direct Control Register
19h
25
RW
PHYCR
PHY Control Register
1Ah
26
RW
10BTSCR
10Base-T Status/Control Register
1Bh
27
RW
CDCTRL1
CD Test Control Register and BIST Extensions
Register
1Ch
28
RW
RESERVED
1Dh
29
RW
EDCR
1Eh-1Fh
30-31
RW
RESERVED
RESERVED
False Carrier Sense Counter Register
RMII and Bypass Register
RESERVED
Energy Detect Control Register
RESERVED
REGISTER BLOCK
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Table 9-2. Register Table
REGISTER
NAME
ADDRESS
TAG
BIT 15
BIT 14
Basic Mode
Control
Register
00h
BMCR
Reset
Loopback
Basic Mode
Status
Register
01h
BMSR
100Base
-T4
PHY
Identifier
Register 1
02h
PHYIDR
1
OUI
MSB
PHY
Identifier
Register 2
03h
PHYIDR
2
OUI LSB
AutoNegotiation
Advertisement
Register
04h
ANAR
Next
Page Ind
Reserved
AutoNegotiation
Link Partner
Ability
Register
(Base Page)
05h
ANLPAR
Next
Page Ind
AutoNegotiation
Link Partner
Ability
Register Next
Page
05h
ANNext
LPARNP Page Ind
AutoNegotiation
Expansion
Register
06h
ANER
Reserved
AutoNegotiation
Next Page
TX Register
07h
ANNPTR
Reserved
08-0fh
Reserved
BIT 13
BIT 12
AutoSpeed
Neg
Selection
Enable
BIT 11
BIT 10
BIT 9
BIT 8
BIT 7
BIT 6
BIT 5
BIT 4
BIT 3
BIT 2
BIT 1
BIT0
Power
Down
Isolate
Restart
AutoNeg
Duplex
Mode
Collision
Test
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
10BaseT HDX
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
MF Preamble
Suppress
AutoNeg
Complete
Remote
Fault
AutoNeg
Ability
Link
Status
Jabber
Detect
Extended
Capability
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI LSB
OUI LSB
OUI LSB
VNDR_
MDL
VNDR_
MDL
VNDR_
MDL
VNDR_
MDL
VNDR_
MDL
VNDR_
MDL
MDL_
REV
MDL_
REV
MDL_
REV
MDL_
REV
Remote
Fault
Reserved
ASM_
DIR
PAUSE
T4
TX_FD
TX
10_FD
10
Protocol Protocol Protocol Protocol Protocol
Selection Selection Selection Selection Selection
ACK
Remote
Fault
Reserved
ASM_
DIR
PAUSE
T4
TX_FD
TX
10_FD
10
Protocol Protocol Protocol Protocol Protocol
Selection Selection Selection Selection Selection
ACK
Message
Page
ACK2
Toggle
Code
Code
Code
Code
Code
Code
Code
Code
Code
Code
Code
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
PDF
LP_NP_
ABLE
NP_
ABLE
PAGE_
RX
LP_AN_
ABLE
Next
Page Ind
Reserved
Message
ACK2
Page
TOG_TX CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
CODE
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
100Base 100Base 10Base-TX FDX -TX HDX T FDX
OUI
MSB
OUI
MSB
OUI LSB OUI LSB
Reserved
Reserved
REGISTER BLOCK
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Table 9-2. Register Table (continued)
REGISTER
NAME
ADDRESS
TAG
BIT 15
BIT 14
BIT 13
BIT 12
BIT 11
BIT 10
BIT 9
BIT 8
BIT 7
BIT 6
BIT 5
BIT 4
BIT 3
BIT 2
BIT 1
BIT0
EXTENDED REGISTERS
PHY Status
Register
10h
PHYSTS
Reserved
MDI-X
mode
Rx Err
Latch
Polarity
Status
False
Carrier
Sense
Signal
Detect
Descram Page
Lock
Receive
MII Inter- Remote
rupt
Fault
Jabber
Detect
AutoNeg
Complete
Loopback
Status
Duplex
Status
Speed
Status
Link
Status
MII Interrupt
Control
Register
11h
MICR
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
TINT
INTEN
INT_OE
MII Interrupt
Status and
Misc. Control
Register
12h
MISR
Reserved
ED_INT
LINK_
INT
SPD_
INT
DUP_
INT
ANC_
INT
FHF_
INT
RHF_
INT
Reserved
UNMSK
_ ED
UNMSK
_ LINK
UNMSK
_ JAB
UNMSK
_ RF
UNMSK
_ ANC
UNMSK
_ FHF
UNMSK
_ RHF
Reserved
13h
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
False Carrier
Sense
Counter
Register
14h
FCSCR
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
FCSCNT FCSCNT FCSCNT FCSCNT FCSCNT FCSCNT FCSCNT FCSCNT
Receive
Error Counter
Register
15h
RECR
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
RXERCNT
RXERCNT
RXERCNT
RXERCNT
RXERCNT
RXERCNT
PCS SubLayer
Configuration and
Status
Register
16h
PCSR
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
BYP_4B
5B
Reserved
TQ_EN
SD_FOR SD_
CE_PMA OPTION
DESC_
TIME
Reserved
FORCE_ Re100_OK served
Reserved
DE
SCRAM
NRZI_
SCRAM
_
BYPASS
_
BYPASS
BYPASS
RMII and
Bypass
Register
17h
RBR
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
RMII_
MODE
RMII_
REV1_0
RX_OVF RX_UNF RX_RD_
_STS
_STS
PTR[1]
RX_RD_
PTR[0]
LED Direct
Control
Register
18h
LEDCR
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
DRV_SP DRV_LN
DLED
KLED
DRV_AC
SPDLED LNKLED
TLED
ACTLED
PHY Control
Register
19h
PHYCR
MDIX_E
N
FORCE_ PAUSE_
MDIX
RX
PAUSE_
TX
BIST_fe
PSR_15
BIST_
STATUS
BIST_
START
BP_
STRETCH
LED_
CNFG[1]
LED_
CNFG[0]
PHY
ADDR
PHY
ADDR
PHY
ADDR
PHY
ADDR
PHY
ADDR
10Base-T
Status/
Control
Register
1Ah
10BT_S
ERIAL
10BT_S
ERIAL
REJECT
ERROR
100
RANGE
BASE T
ERROR
RANGE
SQUELCH
SQUELCH
SQUELCH
LOOPBA
CK_10_ LP_DIS
DIS
FORC_
LINK_10
Reserved
POLARI- ReTY
served
Reserved
HEART_
DIS
JABBER
_DIS
CD Test
Control and
BIST
Extensions
Register
1Bh
CDCTRL
1
BIST_
BIST_
BIST_
BIST_
BIST_
BIST_
BIST_
BIST_
ReERROR ERROR ERROR ERROR ERROR ERROR ERROR ERROR
served
_COUNT _COUNT _COUNT _COUNT _COUNT _COUNT _COUNT _COUNT
Reserved
BIST_
CONT_
MODE
CDPattE
N_10
Reserved
10Meg_
Patt_
Gap
CDPattSel
CDPattSel
Reserved
1Ch
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
66
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
REGISTER BLOCK
Reserved
RXERCNT
RXERCNT
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Table 9-2. Register Table (continued)
REGISTER
NAME
ADDRESS
TAG
BIT 15
BIT 14
BIT 13
Energy
Detect
Control
Register
1Dh
EDCR
ED_EN
ED_
AUTO_
UP
ED_
AUTO_
DOWN
ED_
MAN
ED_
BURST_
DIS
ED_
PWR_
STATE
Reserved
1Eh-1Fh
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
BIT 12
BIT 11
BIT 10
BIT 9
BIT 8
BIT 3
BIT 2
BIT 1
BIT0
ED_
ED_ERR
DATA_
_MET
MET
ED_
ED_ERR ED_ERR ED_ERR ED_ERR
DATA_
_COUNT _COUNT _COUNT _COUNT
COUNT
ED_
DATA_
COUNT
ED_
DATA_
COUNT
ED_
DATA_
COUNT
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
BIT 7
BIT 6
Reserved
BIT 5
Reserved
BIT 4
Reserved
Reserved
REGISTER BLOCK
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9.2
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Register Definition
In
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
9.2.1
the register definitions under the ‘Default’ heading, the following definitions hold true:
RW = Read Write access
SC = Register sets on event occurrence and Self-Clears when event ends
RW/SC = Read Write access/Self Clearing bit
RO = Read Only access
COR = Clear on Read
RO/COR = Read Only, Clear on Read
RO/P = Read Only, Permanently set to a default value
LL = Latched Low and held until read, based upon the occurrence of the corresponding event
LH = Latched High and held until read, based upon the occurrence of the corresponding event
Basic Mode Control Register (BMCR)
Table 9-3. Basic Mode Control Register (BMCR), Address 0x00
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Reset:
1 = Initiate software Reset/Reset in Process
15
Reset
0, RW/SC
0 = Normal operation
This bit, which is self-clearing, returns a value of one until the reset
process is complete. The configuration is re-strapped.
Loopback:
1 = Loopback enabled
0 = Normal operation
14
Loopback
0, RW
The loopback function enables MII transmit data to be routed to the MII
receive data path.
Setting this bit may cause the descrambler to lose synchronization and
produce a 500 μs “dead time” before any valid data will appear at the MII
receive outputs.
Speed Select:
13
Speed Selection
Strap, RW
When auto-negotiation is disabled writing to this bit allows the port speed
to be selected.
1 = 100 Mb/s
0 = 10 Mb/s
Auto-Negotiation Enable:
Strap controls initial value at reset
12
Auto-Negotiation Enable
Strap, RW
1 = Auto-Negotiation Enabled - bits 8 and 13 of this register are ignored
when this bit is set.
0 = Auto-Negotiation Disabled - bits 8 and 13 determine the port speed
and duplex mode.
Power Down:
1 = Power down
11
Power Down
0, RW
0 = Normal opeation.
Setting this bit powers down the PHY. Only the register block is enabled
during a power down condition. This bit is OR’d with the input from the
PWR_DOWN/INT pin. When the active low PWR_DOWN/INT pin is
asserted, this bit will be set.
Isolate:
10
Isolate
0, RW
1 = Isolates the Port from the MII with the exception of the serial management.
0 = Normal operation
68
REGISTER BLOCK
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Table 9-3. Basic Mode Control Register (BMCR), Address 0x00 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Restart Auto-Negotiation:
9
Restart Auto- Negotiation
0, RW/SC
1 = Restart Auto-Negotiation. Re-initiates the Auto-Negotiation pro- cess.
If Auto-Negotiation is disabled (bit 12 = 0), this bit is ignored. This bit is
self-clearing and will return a value of 1 until Auto-Negotiation is initiated,
whereupon it will self-clear. Operation of the Auto-Negotiation process is
not affected by the management entity clearing this bit.
0 = Normal operation
Duplex Mode:
8
Duplex Mode
Strap, RW
When auto-negotiation is disabled writing to this bit allows the port
Duplex capability to be selected.
1 = Full Duplex operation
0 = Half Duplex operatio.
Collision Test:
1 = Collision test enabled
7
Collision Test
0, RW
0 = Normal operation
When set, this bit will cause the COL signal to be asserted in response
to the assertion of TX_EN within 512-bit times. The COL signal will be
de-asserted within 4-bit times in response to the de-assertion of TX_EN.
6:00
9.2.2
RESERVED
0, RO
RESERVED: Write ignored, read as 0
Basic Mode Status Register (BMSR)
Table 9-4. Basic Mode Status Register (BMSR), Address 0x01
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15
100BASE-T4
0, RO/P
14
100BASE-T Full Duplex
1, RO/P
13
100BASE-T Half Duplex
1, RO/P
12
10BASE-T Full Duplex
1, RO/P
11
10BASE-T Half Duplex
1, RO/P
10:07
RESERVED
0, RO
DESCRIPTION
100BASE-T4 Capable:
0 = Device not able to perform 100BASE-T4 mode
100BASE-TX Full Duplex Capable:
1 = Device able to perform 100BASE-TX in full duplex mode
100BASE-TX Half Duplex Capable:
1 = Device able to perform 100BASE-TX in half duplex mode
10BASE-T Full Duplex Capable:
1 = Device able to perform 10BASE-T in full duplex mode
10BASE-T Half Duplex Capable:
1 = Device able to perform 10BASE-T in half duplex mode
RESERVED: Write as 0, read as 0
Preamble suppression Capable:
6
MF Preamble Suppression
1, RO/P
1 = Device able to perform management transaction with preamble
suppressed, 32-bits of preamble needed only once after reset, invalid
opcode or invalid turnaround.
0 = Normal management operation
Auto-Negotiation Complete:
5
Auto-Negotiation Com- plete
0, RO
1 = Auto-Negotiation process complete
0 = Auto-Negotiation process not complete
Remote Fault:
4
Remote Fault
0, RO/LH
1 = Remote Fault condition detected (cleared on read or by reset). Fault
criteria: Far End Fault Indication or notification from Link Partner of
Remote Fault.
0 = No remote fault condition detected
REGISTER BLOCK
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Table 9-4. Basic Mode Status Register (BMSR), Address 0x01 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Auto Negotiation Ability:
3
Auto-Negotiation Ability
1, RO/P
1 = Device is able to perform Auto-Negotiation
0 = Device is not able to perform Auto-Negotiation
Link Status:
1 = Valid link established (for either 10 or 100 Mb/s operation)
2
Link Status
0, RO/LL
0 = Link not established
The criteria for link validity is implementation specific. The occurrence of
a link failure condition will causes the Link Status bit to clear. Once
cleared, this bit may only be set by establishing a good link condition and
a read via the management interface.
Jabber Detect: This bit only has meaning in 10 Mb/s mode
1 = Jabber condition detected
1
Jabber Detect
0, RO/LH
0 = No Jabber
This bit is implemented with a latching function, such that the occurrence
of a jabber condition causes it to set until it is cleared by a read to this
register by the management interface or by a reset.
Extended Capability:
0
Extended Capability
1, RO/P
1 = Extended register capabilities
0 = Basic register set capabilities only
9.2.3
PHY Identifier Register #1 (PHYIDR1)
The PHY Identifier Registers #1 and #2 together form a unique identifier for the DP83848. The Identifier
consists of a concatenation of the Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI), the vendor's model number
and the model revision number. A PHY may return a value of zero in each of the 32 bits of the PHY
Identifier if desired. The PHY Identifier is intended to support network management. National's IEEE
assigned OUI is 080017h.
Table 9-5. PHY Identifier Register #1 (PHYIDR1), Address 0x02
BIT
BIT NAME
15:0
9.2.4
OUI_MSB
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
<0010 0000 0000 0000>,
RO/P
OUI Most Significant Bits: Bits 3 to 18 of the OUI (080017h) are stored
in bits 15 to 0 of this register. The most significant two bits of the OUI
are ignored (the IEEE standard refers to these as bits 1 and 2).
PHY Identifier Register #2 (PHYIDR2)
Table 9-6. PHY Identifier Register #2 (PHYIDR2), Address 0x03
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
OUI Least Significant Bits:
15:10
OUI_LSB
<0101 11>, RO/P
9:4
VNDR_MDL
<00 1001 >, RO/P
Bits 19 to 24 of the OUI (080017h) are mapped from bits 15 to 10 of
this register respectively.
Vendor Model Number:
The six bits of vendor model number are mapped from bits 9 to 4
(most significant bit to bit 9).
Model Revision Number:
3:0
70
MDL_REV
<0000>, RO/P
Four bits of the vendor model revision number are mapped from bits 3
to 0 (most significant bit to bit 3). This field will be incremented for all
major device changes.
REGISTER BLOCK
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Auto-Negotiation Advertisement Register (ANAR)
This register contains the advertised abilities of this device as they will be transmitted to its link partner
during Auto-Negotiation.
Table 9-7. Negotiation Advertisement Register (ANAR), Address 0x04
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Next Page Indication:
15
NP
0, RW
0 = Next Page Transfer not desired
1 = Next Page Transfer desired
14
RESERVED
0, RO/P
13
RF
0, RW
12
RESERVED
0, RW
RESERVED by IEEE: Writes ignored, Read as 0
Remote Fault:
1 = Advertises that this device has detected a Remote Fault
0 = No Remote Fault detected
RESERVED for Future IEEE use: Write as 0, Read as 0
Asymmetric PAUSE Support for Full Duplex Links:
The ASM_DIR bit indicates that asymmetric PAUSE is supported.
11
ASM_DIR
0, RW
Encoding and resolution of PAUSE bits is defined in IEEE 802.3
Annex 28B, Tables 28B-2 and 28B-3, respectively. Pause resolution
status is reported in PHYCR[13:12].
1 = Advertise that the DTE (MAC) has implemented both the optional
MAC control sublayer and the pause function as specified in clause 31
and annex 31B of 802.3u.
0 = No MAC based full duplex flow control
PAUSE Support for Full Duplex Links:
The PAUSE bit indicates that the device is capable of providing the
symmetric PAUSE functions as defined in Annex 31B.
10
PAUSE
0, RW
Encoding and resolution of PAUSE bits is defined in IEEE 802.3
Annex 28B, Tables 28B-2 and 28B-3, respectively. Pause resolution
status is reported in PHYCR[13:12].
1 = Advertise that the DTE (MAC) has implemented both the optional
MAC control sublayer and the pause function as specified in clause 31
and annex 31B of 802.3u.
0= No MAC based full duplex flow control
100BASE-T4 Support:
9
T4
0, RO/P
1 = 100BASE-T4 is supported by the local device
0 = 100BASE-T4 not supported
100BASE-TX Full Duplex Support:
8
TX_FD
Strap, RW
1 = 100BASE-TX Full Duplex is supported by the local device
0 = 100BASE-TX Full Duplex not supported
100BASE-TX Support:
7
TX
Strap, RW
1 = 100BASE-TX is supported by the local device
0 = 100BASE-TX not supported
10BASE-T Full Duplex Support:
6
10_FD
Strap, RW
1 = 10BASE-T Full Duplex is supported by the local device
0 = 10BASE-T Full Duplex not supported
10BASE-T Support:
5
10
Strap, RW
1 = 10BASE-T is supported by the local device
0 = 10BASE-T not supported
Protocol Selection Bits:
4:0
Selector
<00001>, RW
These bits contain the binary encoded protocol selector supported by
this port. <00001> indicates that this device supports IEEE 802.3u.
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Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (BASE Page)
This register contains the advertised abilities of the link partner as received during auto-negotiation. The
content changes after the successful auto-negotiation if next-pages are supported.
Table 9-8. Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (BASE Page), Address 0x05
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Next Page Indication:
15
NP
0, RO
0 = Link Partner does not desire Next Page Transfer
1 = Link Partner desires Next Page Transfer
Acknowledge:
1 = Link Partner acknowledges reception of the ability data word
14
ACK
0, RO
0 = Not acknowledged
The Auto-Negotiation state machine will automatically control the this
bit based on the incoming FLP bursts.
Remote Fault:
13
RF
0, RO
12
RESERVED
0, RO
1 = Remote Fault indicated by Link Partner
0 = No Remote Fault indicated by Link Partner
RESERVED for Future IEEE use: Write as 0, read as 0
ASYMMETRIC PAUSE:
11
ASM_DIR
0, RO
1 = Asymmetric pause is supported by the Link Partner
0 = Asymmetric pause is not supported by the Link Partner
PAUSE:
10
PAUSE
0, RO
1 = Pause function is supported by the Link Partner
0 = Pause function is not supported by the Link Partner
100BASE-T4 Support:
9
T4
0, RO
1 = 100BASE-T4 is supported by the Link Partner
0 = 100BASE-T4 not supported by the Link Partner
100BASE-TX Full Duplex Support:
8
TX_FD
0, RO
1 = 100BASE-TX Full Duplex is supported by the Link Partner
0 = 100BASE-TX Full Duplex not supported by the Link Partner
100BASE-TX Support:
7
TX
0, RO
1 = 100BASE-TX is supported by the Link Partner
0 = 100BASE-TX not supported by the Link Partner
10BASE-T Full Duplex Support:
6
10_FD
0, RO
1 = 10BASE-T Full Duplex is supported by the Link Partner
0 = 10BASE-T Full Duplex not supported by the Link Partner
10BASE-T Support:
5
10
0, RO
1 = 10BASE-T is supported by the Link Partner
0 = 10BASE-T not supported by the Link Partner
4:0
9.2.7
Selector
<0 0000>, RO
Protocol Selection Bits:
Link Partner’s binary encoded protocol selector
Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (Next Page)
Table 9-9. Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (Next Page), Address 0x05
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15
NP
0, RO
DESCRIPTION
Next Page Indication:
1 = Link Partner desires Next Page Transfer
0 = Link Partner does not desire Next Page Transfer
72
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Table 9-9. Auto-Negotiation Link Partner Ability Register (ANLPAR) (Next Page), Address
0x05 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Acknowledge:
1 = Link Partner acknowledges reception of the ability data word
14
ACK
0, RO
0 = Not acknowledged
The Auto-Negotiation state machine will automatically control the this
bit based on the incoming FLP bursts. Software should not attempt to
write to this bit.
Message Page:
13
MP
0, RO
1 = Message Page
0 = Unformatted Page
Acknowledge 2:
12
ACK2
0, RO
1 = Link Partner does have the ability to comply to next page
message
0 = Link Partner does not have the ability to comply to next page
message
Toggle:
11
Toggle
0, RO
1 = Previous value of the transmitted Link Code word equalled 0
0 = Previous value of the transmitted Link Code word equalled 1
Code:
10:0
9.2.8
CODE
<000 0000 0000>, RO
This field represents the code field of the next page transmission. If
the MP bit is set (bit 13 of this register), then the code shall be
interpreted as a “Message Page,” as defined in annex 28C of Clause
28. Otherwise, the code shall be interpreted as an “Unformatted
Page,” and the interpretation is application specific.
Auto-Negotiate Expansion Register (ANER)
This register contains additional local device and link partner status information.
Table 9-10. Auto-Negotiate Expansion Register (ANER), Address 0x06
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15:5
RESERVED
0, RO
4
PDF
0, RO
DESCRIPTION
RESERVED: Writes ignored, Read as 0
Parallel Detection Fault:
1 = A fault has been detected via the Parallel Detection function
0 = A fault has not been detected
Link Partner Next Page Able:
3
LP_NP_ABLE
0, RO
1 = Link Partner does support Next Page
0 = Link Partner does not support Next Page
2
NP_ABLE
1, RO/P
Next Page Able:
1 = Indicates local device is able to send additional “Next Pages”
Link Code Word Page Received:
1
PAGE_RX
0, RO/COR
1 = Link Code Word has been received, cleared on a read
0 = Link Code Word has not been received
Link Partner Auto-Negotiation Able:
0
LP_AN_ABLE
0, RO
1 = indicates that the Link Partner supports Auto-Negotiation
0 = indicates that the Link Partner does not support Auto-Negotiation
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Auto-Negotiation Next Page Transmit Register (ANNPTR)
This register contains the next page information sent by this device to its link partner during autonegotiation.
Table 9-11. Auto-Negotiation Next Page Transmit Register (ANNPTR), Address 0x07
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Next Page Indication:
15
NP
0, RW
0 = No other Next Page Transfer desired
1 = Another Next Page desired
14
RESERVED
0, RO
13
MP
1, RW
RESERVED: Writes ignored, read as 0
Message Page:
1 = Message Page
0 = Unformatted Page
Acknowledge2:
1 = Will comply with message
12
ACK2
0, RW
0 = Cannot comply with message
Acknowledge2 is used by the next page function to indicate that Local
Device has the ability to comply with the message received.
Toggle:
1 = Value of toggle bit in previously transmitted Link Code Word was 0
11
10:0
TOG_TX
CODE
0, RO
<000 0000 0001>, RW
0 = Value of toggle bit in previously transmitted Link Code Word was 1
Toggle is used by the Arbitration function within Auto-Negotiation to
ensure synchronization with the Link Partner during Next Page
exchange. This bit shall always take the opposite value of the Toggle
bit in the previously exchanged Link Code Word.
This field represents the code field of the next page transmission. If the
MP bit is set (bit 13 of this register), then the code shall be interpreted
as a "Message Page”, as defined in annex 28C of IEEE 802.3u.
Otherwise, the code shall be interpreted as an "Unformatted Page”, and
the interpretation is application specific.
The default value of the CODE represents a Null Page as defined in
Annex 28C of IEEE 802.3u.
9.3
Extended Registers
9.3.1
PHY Status Register (PHYSTS)
This register provides a single location within the register set for quick access to commonly accessed
information.
Table 9-12. PHY Status Register (PHYSTS), Address 0x10
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15
RESERVED
0, RO
DESCRIPTION
RESERVED: Write ignored, read as 0
MDI-X mode as reported by the Auto-Negotiation logic:
14
MDI-X Mode
0, RO
This bit will be affected by the settings of the MDIX_EN and
FORCE_MDIX bits in the PHYCR register. When MDIX is enabled,
but not forced, this bit will update dynamically as the Auto-MDIX
algorithm swaps between MDI and MDI-X configurations.
1 = MDI pairs swapped
(Receive on TPTD pair, Transmit on TPRD pair)
0 = MDI pairs normal
(Receive on TRD pair, Transmit on TPTD pair)
74
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Table 9-12. PHY Status Register (PHYSTS), Address 0x10 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Receive Error Latch:
This bit will be cleared upon a read of the RECR register.
13
Receive Error Latch
0, RO/LH
1 = Receive error event has occurred since last read of RXERCNT
(address 0x15, Page 0)
0 = No receive error event has occurred
Polarity Status:
12
Polarity Status
0, RO
This bit is a duplication of bit 4 in the 10BTSCR register. This bit will
be cleared upon a read of the 10BTSCR register, but not upon a read
of the PHYSTS register.
1 = Inverted Polarity detected
0 = Correct Polarity detected
False Carrier Sense Latch:
This bit will be cleared upon a read of the FCSR register.
11
False Carrier Sense
Latch
0, RO/LH
10
Signal Detect
0, RO/LL
100Base-TX unconditional Signal Detect from PMD
9
Descrambler Lock
0, RO/LL
100Base-TX Descrambler Lock from PMD
1 = False Carrier event has occurred since last read of FCSCR
(address 0x14)
0 = No False Carrier event has occurred
Link Code Word Page Received:
8
Page Received
0, RO
This is a duplicate of the Page Received bit in the ANER register, but
this bit will not be cleared upon a read of the PHYSTS register.
1 = A new Link Code Word Page has been received. Cleared on read
of the ANER (address 0x06, bit 1)
0 = Link Code Word Page has not been received
MII Interrupt Pending:
7
MII Interrupt
0, RO
1 = Indicates that an internal interrupt is pending. Interrupt source can
be determined by reading the MISR Register (0x12h). Reading the
MISR will clear the Interrupt.
0= No interrupt pending
Remote Fault:
6
Remote Fault
0, RO
1 = Remote Fault condition detected (cleared on read of BMSR
(address 01h) register or by reset). Fault criteria: notification from Link
Partner of Remote Fault via Auto-Negotiation.
0 = No remote fault condition detected
Jabber Detect: This bit only has meaning in 10 Mb/s mode
5
Jabber Detect
0, RO
This bit is a duplicate of the Jabber Detect bit in the BMSR register,
except that it is not cleared upon a read of the PHYSTS register.
1 = Jabber condition detected
0 = No Jabber
Auto-Negotiation Complete:
4
Auto-Neg Complete
0, RO
1 = Auto-Negotiation complete
0 = Auto-Negotiation not complete
Loopback:
3
Loopback Status
0, RO
1 = Loopback enabled
0 = Normal operation
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Table 9-12. PHY Status Register (PHYSTS), Address 0x10 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Duplex:
This bit indicates duplex status and is determined from AutoNegotiation or Forced Modes.
2
Duplex Status
0, RO
1 = Full duplex mode
0 = Half duplex mode
Note: This bit is only valid if Auto-Negotiation is enabled and complete
and there is a valid link or if Auto-Negotiation is disabled and there is
a valid link.
Speed10:
This bit indicates the status of the speed and is determined from AutoNegotiation or Forced Modes.
1
Speed Status
0, RO
1 = 10 Mb/s mode
0 = 100 Mb/s mode
Note: This bit is only valid if Auto-Negotiation is enabled and complete
and there is a valid link or if Auto-Negotiation is disabled and there is
a valid link.
Link Status:
0
Link Status
0, RO
This bit is a duplicate of the Link Status bit in the BMSR register,
except that it will not be cleared upon a read of the PHYSTS register.
1 = Valid link established (for either 10 or 100 Mb/s operation)
0 = Link not established
9.3.2
MII Interrupt Control Register (MICR)
This register implements the MII interrupt PHY specific control register. Sources for interrupt generation
include: energy detect state change, link state change, speed status change, duplex status change, autonegotiation complete or any of the counters becoming half-full. The individual interrupt events must be
enabled by setting bits in the MII interrupt status and event control register (MISR).
Table 9-13. MII Interrupt Control Register (MICR), Address 0x11
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15:3
RESERVED
0, RO
DESCRIPTION
Reserved: Write ignored, Read as 0
Test Interrupt:
2
TINT
0, RW
Forces the PHY to generate an interrupt to facilitate interrupt testing.
Interrupts will continue to be generated as long as this bit remains set.
1 = Generate an interrupt
0 = Do not generate interrupt
Interrupt Enable:
1
INTEN
0, RW
Enable interrupt dependent on the event enables in the MISR register.
1 = Enable event based interrupts
0 = Disable event based interrupts
Interrupt Output Enable:
0
INT_OE
0, RW
Enable interrupt events to signal via the PWR_DOWN/INT pin by
configuring the PWR_DOWN/INT pin as an output.
1 = PWR_DOWN/INT is an Interrupt Output
0 = PWR_DOWN/INT is a Power Down Input
76
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9.3.3
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MII Interrupt Status and Miscellaneous Control Register (MISR)
This register contains event status and enables for the interrupt function. If an event has occurred since
the last read of this register, the corresponding status bit will be set. If the corresponding enable bit in the
register is set, an interrupt will be generated if the event occurs. The MICR register controls must also be
set to allow interrupts. The status indications in this register will be set even if the interrupt is not enabled.
Table 9-14. MII Interrupt Status and Miscellaneous Control Register (MISR), Address 0x12
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15
RESERVED
0, RO
DESCRIPTION
RESERVED: Writes ignored, Read as 0
Energy Detect interrupt:
14
ED_INT
0, RO/COR
1 = Energy detect interrupt is pending and is cleared by the current
read
0 = No energy detect interrupt pending
Change of Link Status interrupt:
13
LINK_INT
0, RO/COR
1 = Change of link status interrupt is pending and is cleared by the
current read
0 = No change of link status interrupt pending
Change of speed status interrupt:
12
SPD_INT
0, RO/COR
1 = Speed status change interrupt is pending and is cleared by the
current read
0 = No speed status change interrupt pending
Change of duplex status interrupt:
11
DUP_INT
0, RO/COR
1 = Duplex status change interrupt is pending and is cleared by the
current read
0 = No duplex status change interrupt pending
Auto-Negotiation Complete interrupt:
10
ANC_INT
0, RO/COR
1 = Auto-negotiation complete interrupt is pending and is cleared by
the current read
0 = No Auto-negotiation complete interrupt pending
False Carrier Counter half-full interrupt:
9
FHF_INT
0, RO/COR
1 = False carrier counter half-full interrupt is pending and is cleared by
the current read
0 = No false carrier counter half-full interrupt pending
Receive Error Counter half-full interrupt:
1 = Receive error counter half-full interrupt is pending and is cleared
by the current read
8
RHF_INT
0, RO/COR
7
RESERVED
0, RO
RESERVED: Writes ignored, Read as 0
6
ED_INT_EN
0, RW
Enable Interrupt on energy detect event
5
LINK_INT_EN
0, RW
Enable Interrupt on change of link status
4
SPD_INT_EN
0, RW
Enable Interrupt on change of speed status
3
DUP_INT_EN
0, RW
Enable Interrupt on change of duplex status
2
ANC_INT_EN
0, RW
Enable Interrupt on Auto-negotiation complete event
1
FHF_INT_EN
0, RW
Enable Interrupt on False Carrier Counter Register half-full event
0
RHF_INT_EN
0, RW
Enable Interrupt on Receive Error Counter Register half-full event
0 = No receive error carrier counter half-full interrupt pending
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False Carrier Sense Counter Register (FCSCR)
This counter provides information required to implement the “False Carriers” attribute within the MAU
managed object class of Clause 30 of the IEEE 802.3u specification.
Table 9-15. False Carrier Sense Counter Register (FCSCR), Address 0x14
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15:8
RESERVED
0, RO
7:0
FCSCNT[7:0]
0, RO/COR
DESCRIPTION
RESERVED: Writes ignored, Read as 0
False Carrier Event Counter:
9.3.5
This 8-bit counter increments on every false carrier event. This
counter sticks when it reaches its max count (FFh).
Receiver Error Counter Register (RECR)
This counter provides information required to implement the “Symbol Error During Carrier” attribute within
the PHY managed object class of Clause 30 of the IEEE 802.3u specification.
Table 9-16. Receiver Error Counter Register (RECR), Address 0x15
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15:8
RESERVED
0, RO
DESCRIPTION
RESERVED: Writes ignored, Read as 0
RX_ER Counter:
7:0
9.3.6
RXERCNT[7:0]
0, RO/COR
When a valid carrier is present and there is at least one occurrence of
an invalid data symbol, this 8-bit counter increments for each receive
error detected. This event can increment only once per valid carrier
event. If a collision is present, the attribute will not increment. The
counter sticks when it reaches its max count.
100 Mb/s PCS Configuration and Status Register (PCSR)
This register contains event status and enables for the interrupt function. If an event has occurred since
the last read of this register, the corresponding status bit will be set. If the corresponding enable bit in the
register is set, an interrupt will be generated if the event occurs. The MICR register controls must also be
set to allow interrupts. The status indications in this register will be set even if the interrupt is not enabled.
Table 9-17. 100 Mb/s PCS Configuration and Status Register (PCSR), Address 0x16
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
15:13
RESERVED
<00>, RO
12
RESERVED
0
RESERVED: Must be zero
11
RESERVED
0
RESERVED: Must be zero
10
TQ_EN
0, RW
RESERVED: Writes ignored, Read as 0
100Mbs True Quiet Mode Enable:
1 = Transmit True Quiet Mode
0 = Normal Transmit Mode
Signal Detect Force PMA:
9
SD FORCE PMA
0, RW
1 = Forces Signal Detection in PMA
0 = Normal SD operation
Signal Detect Option:
8
SD_OPTION
1, RW
1 = Enhanced signal detect algorithm
0 = Reduced signal detect algorithm
78
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Table 9-17. 100 Mb/s PCS Configuration and Status Register (PCSR), Address 0x16 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Descrambler Timeout:
7
DESC_TIME
0, RW
Increase the descrambler timeout. When set this should allow the
device to receive larger packets (>9k bytes) without loss of
synchronization.
1 = 2 ms
0 = 722 µs (per ANSI X3.263: 1995 (TP-PMD) 7.2.3.3e)
6
RESERVED
0
RESERVED: Must be zero
Force 100Mb/s Good Link:
5
FORCE_100_OK
0, RW
1 = Forces 100Mb/s Good Link
4
RESERVED
0
RESERVED: Must be zero
3
RESERVED
0
RESERVED: Must be zero
2
NRZI_BYPASS
0, RW
1
RESERVED
0
RESERVED: Must be zero
0
RESERVED
0
RESERVED: Must be zero
0 = Normal 100Mb/s operation
NRZI Bypass Enable:
1 = NRZI Bypass Enabled
0 = NRZI Bypass Disabled
9.3.7
RMII and Bypass Register (RBR)
This register configures the RMII Mode of operation. When RMII mode is disabled, the RMII functionality is
bypassed.
Table 9-18. RMII and Bypass Register (RBR), Addresses 0x17
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15:6
RESERVED
0, RO
5
RMII_MODE
Strap, RW
DESCRIPTION
Reserved: Writes ignored, Read as 0
Reduced MII Mode:
0 = Standard MII Mode
1 = Reduced MII Mode
Reduce MII Revision 1.0:
4
RMII_REV1_0
0, RW
0 = (RMII revision 1.2) CRS_DV will toggle at the end of a packet to
indicate deassertion of CRS.
1 = (RMII revision 1.0) CRS_DV will remain asserted until final data is
transferred. CRS_DV will not toggle at the end of a packet.
RX FIFO Over Flow Status:
3
RX_OVF_STS
0, RO
0 = Normal
1 = Overflow detected
RX FIFO Under Flow Status:
2
RX_UNF_STS
0, RO
0 = Normal
1 = Underflow detected
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Table 9-18. RMII and Bypass Register (RBR), Addresses 0x17 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Receive Elasticity Buffer:
1:0
ELAST_BUF[1:0]
01, RW
This field controls the Receive Elasticity Buffer which allows for
frequency variation tolerance between the 50MHz RMII clock and the
recovered data. The following values indicate the tolerance in bits for
a single packet. The minimum setting allows for standard Ethernet
frame sizes at ±50ppm accuracy for both RMII and Receive clocks.
For greater frequency tolerance the packet lengths may be scaled (i.e.
for ±100ppm, the packet lengths need to be divided by 2).
00 = 14 bit tolerance (up to 16800 byte packets)
01 = 2 bit tolerance (up to 2400 byte packets)
10 = 6 bit tolerance (up to 7200 byte packets)
11 = 10 bit tolerance (up to 12000 byte packets)
9.3.8
LED Direct Control Register (LEDCR)
This register provides the ability to directly control any or all LED outputs. It does not provide read access
to LEDs.
Table 9-19. LED Direct Control Register (LEDCR), Address 0x18
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
15:6
RESERVED
0, RO
5
DRV_SPDLED
0, RW
4
DRV_LNKLED
0, RW
3
DRV_ACTLED
0, RW
2
SPDLED
0, RW
Value to force on LED_SPD output
1
LNKLED
0, RW
Value to force on LED_LNK output
0
ACTLED
0, RW
Value to force on LED_ACT/COL output
9.3.9
DESCRIPTION
Reserved: Writes ignored, Read as 0
1 = Drive value of SPDLED bit onto LED_SPD output
0 = Normal operation
1 = Drive value of LNKLED bit onto LED_LNK output
0 = Normal operation
1 = Drive value of ACTLED bit onto LED_ACT/COL output
0 = Normal operation
PHY Control Register (PHYCR)
Table 9-20. PHY Control Register (PHYCR), Address 0x19
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Auto-MDIX Enable:
1 = Enable Auto-neg Auto-MDIX capability
15
MDIX_EN
Strap, RW
0 = Disable Auto-neg Auto-MDIX capability
The Auto-MDIX algorithm requires that the Auto-Negotiation Enable bit
in the BMCR register to be set. If Auto-Negotiation is not enabled, AutoMDIX should be disabled as well.
Force MDIX:
14
FORCE_MDIX
0, RW
1 = Force MDI pairs to cross
(Receive on TPTD pair, Transmit on TPRD pair)
0 = Normal operation
Pause Receive Negotiated:
13
PAUSE_RX
0, RO
Indicates that pause receive should be enabled in the MAC. Based on
ANAR[11:10] and ANLPAR[11:10] settings.
This function shall be enabled according to IEEE 802.3 Annex 28B
Table 28B-3, “Pause Resolution”, only if the Auto-Negotiated Highest
Common Denominator is a full duplex technology.
80
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Table 9-20. PHY Control Register (PHYCR), Address 0x19 (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Pause Transmit Negotiated:
12
PAUSE_TX
0, RO
Indicates that pause transmit should be enabled in the MAC. Based on
ANAR[11:10] and ANLPAR[11:10] settings.
This function shall be enabled according to IEEE 802.3 Annex 28B
Table 28B-3, “Pause Resolution”, only if the Auto-Negotiated Highest
Common Denominator is a full duplex technology.
BIST Force Error:
11
BIST_FE
0, RW/SC
1 = Force BIST Error
0 = Normal operation
This bit forces a single error, and is self clearing
BIST Sequence select:
10
PSR_15
0, RW
1 = PSR15 selected
0 = PSR9 selected
BIST Test Status:
1 = BIST pass
9
BIST_STATUS
0, LL/RO
0 = BIST fail. Latched, cleared when BIST is stopped
For a count number of BIST errors, see the BIST Error Count in the
CDCTRL1 register.
BIST Start:
8
BIST_START
0, RW
1 = BIST start
0 = BIST stop
Bypass LED Stretching:
7
BP_STRETCH
0, RW
This will bypass the LED stretching and the LEDs will reflect the internal
value.
1 = Bypass LED stretching
0 = Normal operation
6
LED_CNFG[1]
0, RW
5
LED_CNFG[0]
Strap, RW
LEDs Configuration:
LED_CNFG
[1]
LED_
CNFG[0]
Mode
Description
Don’t care
1
Mode 1
0
0
Mode 2
1
0
Mode 3
In Mode 1, LEDs are configured as follows:
LED_LINK = ON for Good Link, OFF for No Link
LED_SPEED = ON in 100 Mb/s, OFF in 10 Mb/s
LED_ACT/COL = ON for Activity, OFF for No Activity
In Mode 2, LEDs are configured as follows:
LED_LINK = ON for good Link, BLINK for Activity
LED_SPEED = ON in 100 Mb/s, OFF in 10 Mb/s
LED_ACT/COL = ON for Collision, OFF for No Collision
Full Duplex, OFF for Half Duplex
In Mode 3, LEDs are configured as follows:
LED_LINK = ON for Good Link, BLINK for Activity
LED_SPEED = ON in 100 Mb/s, OFF in 10 Mb/s
LED_ACT/COL = ON for Full Duplex, OFF for Half Duplex
4:0
PHYADDR[4:0]
Strap, RW
PHY Address: PHY address for port
REGISTER BLOCK
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9.3.10 10Base-T Status/Control Register (10BTSCR)
Table 9-21. 10Base-T Status/Control Register (10BTSCR), Address 0x1A
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
10Base-T Serial Mode (SNI):
1 = Enables 10Base-T Serial Mode
15
10BT_SERIAL
Strap, RW
0 = Normal Operation
Places 10 Mb/s transmit and receive functions in Serial Network
Interface (SNI) Mode of operation. Has no effect on 100 Mb/s
operation.
14:12
RESERVED
0, RW
RESERVED: Must be zero
Squelch Configuration:
11:9
SQUELCH
100, RW
Used to set the Squelch ‘ON’ threshold for the receiver
Default Squelch ON is 330mV peak
8
LOOPBACK_10_D IS
0, RW
In half-duplex mode, default 10BASE-T operation loops Transmit data
to the Receive data in addition to transmitting the data on the physical
medium. This is for consistency with earlier 10BASE2 and 10BASE5
implementations which used a shared medium. Setting this bit
disables the loopback function.
This bit does not affect loopback due to setting BMCR[14].
Normal Link Pulse Disable:
7
LP_DIS
0, RW
1 = Transmission of NLPs is disabled
0 = Transmission of NLPs is enabled
Force 10Mb Good Link:
6
FORCE_LINK_10
0, RW
1 = Forced Good 10Mb Link
0 = Normal Link Status
5
RESERVED
0, RW
RESERVED: Must be zero
10Mb Polarity Status:
4
POLARITY
RO/LH
This bit is a duplication of bit 12 in the PHYSTS register. Both bits will
be cleared upon a read of 10BTSCR register, but not upon a read of
the PHYSTS register.
1 = Inverted Polarity detected
0 = Correct Polarity detected
3
RESERVED
0, RW
RESERVED: Must be zero
2
RESERVED
1, RW
RESERVED: Must be zero
Heartbeat Disable: This bit only has influence in half-duplex 10Mb
mode.
1
HEARTBEAT_DIS
0, RW
1 = Heartbeat function disabled
0 = Heartbeat function enabled
When the device is operating at 100Mb or configured for full duplex
operation, this bit will be ignored - the heartbeat function is disabled.
Jabber Disable:
0
JABBER_DIS
0, RW
Applicable only in 10BASE-T.
1 = Jabber function disabled
0 = Jabber function enabled
82
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SLLSEC6D – SEPTEMBER 2012 – REVISED JUNE 2013
9.3.11 CD Test and BIST Extensions Register (CDCTRL1)
Table 9-22. CD Test and BIST Extensions Register (CDCTRL1), Address 0x1B
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
BIST ERROR Counter:
15:8
BIST_ERROR_CO
UNT
0, RO
Counts number of errored data nibbles during Packet BIST. This value
will reset when Packet BIST is restarted. The counter sticks when it
reaches its max count.
7:6
RESERVED
0, RW
RESERVED: Must be zero
Packet BIST Continuous Mode:
5
BIST_CONT_MOD E
0, RW
Allows continuous pseudo random data transmission without any
break in transmission. This can be used for transmit VOD testing. This
is used in conjunction with the BIST controls in the PHYCR Register
(0x19h). For 10Mb operation, jabber function must be disabled, bit 0
of the 10BTSCR (0x1Ah), JABBER_DIS = 1.
CD Pattern Enable for 10Mb:
4
CDPATTEN_10
0, RW
3
RESERVED
0, RW
2
10MEG_PATT_GA P
0, RW
1 = Enabled
0 = Disabled
RESERVED: Must be zero
Defines gap between data or NLP test sequences:
1 = 15 μs
0 = 10 μs
CD Pattern Select[1:0]:
If CDPATTEN_10 = 1:
00 = Data, EOP0 sequence
1:0
CDPATTSEL[1:0]
00, RW
01 = Data, EOP1 sequence
10 = NLPs
11 = Constant Manchester 1s (10MHz sine wave) for harmonic
distortion testing
9.3.12 Energy Detect Control (EDCR)
Table 9-23. Energy Detect Control (EDCR), Address 0x1D
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Energy Detect Enable:
Allow Energy Detect Mode.
15
ED_EN
0, RW
When Energy Detect is enabled and Auto-Negotiation is disabled via
the BMCR register, Auto-MDIX should be disabled via the PHYCR
register.
Energy Detect Automatic Power Up:
14
ED_AUTO_UP
1, RW
Automatically begin power up sequence when Energy Detect Data
Threshold value (EDCR[3:0]) is reached. Alternatively, device could
be powered up manually using the ED_MAN bit (ECDR[12]).
Energy Detect Automatic Power Down:
13
ED_AUTO_DOWN
1, RW
Automatically begin power down sequence when no energy is
detected. Alternatively, device could be powered down using the
ED_MAN bit (EDCR[12]).
Energy Detect Manual Power Up/Down:
12
ED_MAN
0, RW/SC
Begin power up/down sequence when this bit is asserted. When set,
the Energy Detect algorithm will initiate a change of Energy Detect
state regardless of threshold (error or data) and timer values. In
managed applications, this bit can be set after clearing the Energy
Detect interrupt to control the timing of changing the power state.
REGISTER BLOCK
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Table 9-23. Energy Detect Control (EDCR), Address 0x1D (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
DEFAULT
DESCRIPTION
Energy Detect Bust Disable:
11
ED_BURST_DIS
0, RW
Disable bursting of energy detect data pulses. By default, Energy
Detect (ED) transmits a burst of 4 ED data pulses each time the CD is
powered up. When bursting is disabled, only a single ED data pulse
will be send each time the CD is powered up.
Energy Detect Power State:
10
ED_PWR_STATE
0, RO
9
ED_ERR_MET
0, RO/COR
8
ED_DATA_MET
0, RO/COR
Indicates current Energy Detect Power state. When set, Energy
Detect is in the powered up state. When cleared, Energy Detect is in
the powered down state. This bit is invalid when Energy Detect is not
enabled.
Energy Detect Error Threshold Met:
No action is automatically taken upon receipt of error events. This bit
is informational only and would be cleared on a read.
Energy Detect Data Threshold Met:
The number of data events that occurred met or surpassed the
Energy Detect Data Threshold. This bit is cleared on a read.
Energy Detect Error Threshold:
7:4
ED_ERR_COUNT
0001, RW
Threshold to determine the number of energy detect error events that
should cause the device to take action. Intended to allow averaging of
noise that may be on the line. Counter will reset after approximately 2
seconds without any energy detect data events.
Energy Detect Data Threshold:
3:0
84
ED_DATA_COUNT
0001, RW
Threshold to determine the number of energy detect events that
should cause the device to take actions. Intended to allow averaging
of noise that may be on the line. Counter will reset after approximately
2 seconds without any energy detect data events.
REGISTER BLOCK
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PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
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3-May-2013
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device
Status
(1)
Package Type Package Pins Package
Drawing
Qty
Eco Plan
Lead/Ball Finish
(2)
MSL Peak Temp
Op Temp (°C)
Top-Side Markings
(3)
(4)
DP83848MPHPEP
ACTIVE
HTQFP
PHP
48
250
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-4-260C-72 HR
-55 to 125
DP83848EP
DP83848MPHPREP
ACTIVE
HTQFP
PHP
48
1000
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-4-260C-72 HR
-55 to 125
DP83848EP
V62/12615-01XE
ACTIVE
HTQFP
PHP
48
1000
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-4-260C-72 HR
-55 to 125
DP83848EP
V62/12615-01XE-R
ACTIVE
HTQFP
PHP
48
250
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU
Level-4-260C-72 HR
-55 to 125
DP83848EP
(1)
The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2)
Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability
information and additional product content details.
TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined.
Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that
lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes.
Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between
the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above.
Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight
in homogeneous material)
(3)
MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.
(4)
Multiple Top-Side Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Top-Side Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. If a line is indented then it is a
continuation of the previous line and the two combined represent the entire Top-Side Marking for that device.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.
Addendum-Page 1
Samples
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com
3-May-2013
Addendum-Page 2
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
13-Jul-2013
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
DP83848MPHPREP
Package Package Pins
Type Drawing
HTQFP
PHP
48
SPQ
Reel
Reel
A0
Diameter Width (mm)
(mm) W1 (mm)
1000
330.0
16.4
Pack Materials-Page 1
9.3
B0
(mm)
K0
(mm)
P1
(mm)
W
Pin1
(mm) Quadrant
9.3
2.2
12.0
16.0
Q2
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
13-Jul-2013
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Type
Package Drawing
Pins
SPQ
Length (mm)
Width (mm)
Height (mm)
DP83848MPHPREP
HTQFP
PHP
48
1000
367.0
367.0
38.0
Pack Materials-Page 2
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