DALLAS DS80C390_00

DS80C390
High-Speed Microcontroller
User’s Guide Supplement
www.dalsemi.com
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 1: INTRODUCTION
This document is provided as a supplement to the High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide, covering
new or modified features specific to the DS80C390. This document must be used in conjunction with
the High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide, available from Dallas Semiconductor. Addenda are
arranged by section number, which correspond to sections in the High-Speed Microcontroller User’s
Guide.
The following additions and changes, with respect to the High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide, are
contained in this document. This document is a work in progress, and updates/additions will be added
when available.
Section 1: Introduction
No Changes.
Section 2: Ordering Information
Information on new members of the High-Speed Microcontroller family has been added.
Section 3: Architecture
No Changes. Information containing new architectural features is contained in the DS80C390 Data Sheet.
Section 4: Programming Model
Descriptions of the DS80C390 memory map are included, as well as new/modified Special Function
Registers.
Section 5: CPU Timing
Descriptions of the clock multiply modes have been added.
Section 6: Memory Access
Descriptions of the 22-bit expanded address capability have been added.
Section 7: Power Management
Clarified function of ring oscillator and removal of PMM1.
Section 8: Reset Conditions
TBD
Section 9: Interrupts
TBD
Section 10: Parallel I/O
Descriptions of changes to the I/O characteristics of ports 1, 4, and 5 has been added.
1 of 155
040700
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Section 11: Programmable Timers
Information on the new divide by 13 mode has been added, as well as updated figures showing the effect
of the clock multiplier modes on the timers.
Section 12: Serial I/O
No Changes.
Section 13: Timed Access Protection
Additional/changed Timed Access bits in the DS80C390 are listed.
Section 14: Real Time Clock
No Changes.
Section 15: Battery Backup
No Changes.
Section 16: Instruction Set Details
Modified timing and cycle count of select instructions in paged and contiguous addressing modes is
listed.
Section 17: Troubleshooting
No Changes.
Section 18: Controller Area (CAN) Module
Information on the features and use of the CAN module is provided.
Section 19: Arithmetic Accelerator
Information on the features and use of the DS80C390 arithmetic accelerator is provided.
2 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 2: ORDERING INFORMATION
The High-Speed Microcontroller family follows the part numbering convention shown below. Note that
all combinations of devices are not currently available. Please refer to individual data sheets for the
available versions.
DS80C390-FCR
SPEED:
D
G
L
R
18 MHz
25 MHz
33 MHz
40 MHz
TEMPERATURE:
C
N
0°C to 70°C
-40°C to +85°C
PACKAGE:
M
Q
E
F
W
K
PLASTIC
PLCC
THIN PLASTIC QUAD FLAT PACK (TQFP)
PLASTIC QUAD FLAT PACK (PQFP)
WINDOWED CERDIP
WINDOWED CERQUAD
OPERATING VOLTAGE:
0
3
+5V
+3V OR WIDE VOLTAGE
MEMORY TYPE:
0
3
7
ROMless
ROM
EPROM
3 of 155
SECTION 4: PROGRAMMING MODEL
The DS80C390 microprocessor is based on the industry standard 80C52. The core is an accumulatorbased architecture using internal registers for data storage and peripheral control. It executes the standard
8051 instruction set. This section provides a brief description of each architecture feature. Details
concerning the programming model, instruction set, and register description are provided in Section 4.
The High-Speed Microcontroller, uses several distinct memory areas. These are registers, program
memory, and data memory. Registers serve to control on-chip peripherals and as RAM. Note that
registers (on-chip RAM) are separate from data memory. Registers are divided into three categories
including directly addressed on-chip RAM, indirectly addressed on-chip RAM, and Special Function
Registers. The program and data memory areas are discussed under Memory Map. The Registers are
discussed under Registers Map.
MEMORY MAP
The DS80C390 microprocessor uses a memory addressing scheme that separates program memory
(ROM) from data memory (RAM). Each area is accessed via a 20-bit address bus and 4 chip enables,
allowing a maximum address space of 4 MB of program memory and 4 MB of data memory. The
program and data segments can overlap since they are accessed in different ways. Program memory is
fetched by the microprocessor automatically. These addresses are never written by software. There is one
instruction (MOVC) that is used to explicitly read the program area. This is commonly used to read lookup tables. The data memory area is accessed explicitly using the MOVX instruction. This instruction
provides multiple ways of specifying the target address
REGISTER MAP
The register map is separate from the program and data memory areas mentioned above. A separate class
of instructions is used to access the registers. There are 256 potential register location values. In
practice, the High-Speed Microcontroller has 256 bytes of Scratchpad RAM and up to 128 Special
Function Registers (SFRs). This is possible since the upper 128 Scratchpad RAM locations can only be
accessed indirectly. That is, the contents of a Working Register (described below) will designate the
RAM location. Thus a direct reference to one of the upper 128 locations must be an SFR access. Direct
RAM is reached at locations 0 to 7Fh (0 to 127). SFRs are accessed directly between 80h and FFh (128
to 255). The RAM locations between 128 and 255 can be reached through an indirect reference to those
locations.
Scratchpad RAM is available for general-purpose data storage. It is commonly used in place of off-chip
RAM when the total data contents are small. When off-chip RAM is needed, the Scratchpad area will
still provide the fastest general-purpose access. Within the 256 bytes of RAM, there are several special
purpose areas. These are described as follows:
Bit Addressable Locations
In addition to direct register access, some individual bits in both the RAM and SFR area are also
accessible. In the Scratchpad RAM area, registers 20h to 2Fh are bit addressable. This provides 126 (16 *
8) individual bits available to software. The type of instruction distinguishes a bit access from a full
register access. In the SFR area, any register location ending in a 0 or 8 is bit addressable.
Working Registers
As part of the lower 128 bytes of RAM, there are four banks of general-purpose Working Registers, each
bank containing registers R0 through R7. The bank is selected via bits in the Program Status Word
register. Since there are four banks, the currently selected bank will be used by any instruction using R0R7. This allows software to change context by simply switching banks. The Working Registers also
4 of 155
040700
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
allow their contents to be used for indirect addressing of the upper 128 bytes of RAM. Thus an
instruction can designate the value stored in R0 (for example) to address the upper RAM. This value
might be the result of another calculation.
Stack
Another use of the Scratchpad area is for the programmer’s stack. This area is selected using the Stack
Pointer (SP,81h) SFR. Whenever a call or interrupt is invoked, the return address is placed on the stack.
It also is available to the programmer for variables, etc. The Stack Pointer will default to 07h on reset, but
can be relocated as needed. A convenient location would be the upper RAM area (>7Fh) since this is
only available indirectly. The SP will point to the last used value. Therefore, the next value placed on
the Stack is put at SP + 1. Each PUSH or CALL will increment the SP by the appropriate value. Each
POP or RET will decrement as well.
The DS80C390 supports an optional 10-bit (1 KB) stack. This greatly increases programming efficiency
and allows the device to support large programs. When enabled by setting the Stack Address (SA) bit in
the ACON register, the lower 1 KB of the 4 KB internal SRAM becomes the memory location used by all
instructions that affect the stack. The 10-bit address is formed by concatenating the lower 2 bits of the
Extended Stack Pointer (ESP;9Bh) and the 8-bit Stack Pointer (SP;81h). The exact address of the 1 KB is
dependent on the setting of the IDM1-0 bits. The 10-bit stack feature is not supported when the 4 KB
SRAM is configured as combined program/data memory (IDM1=IDM0=1)
Figure 4- 1
DS80C390 Memory Map (Default Settings)
Program
Memory
Data
Memory
3FFFFFh
100000h
External
MOVX Data
Memory
Internal
memory
Internal
Register/
Scratchpad
00FFFFh
3 KB MOVX
Memory
Indirect RAM2
FFh
Internal
SRAM
Memory
External
Program
Memory
Special
Function
Registers 1
00F400h
1 KB MOVX or
Stack Memory
00F000h
80h
CAN 1
Data Memory
Direct and Bitaddressable
RAM 1
00EF00h
CAN 0
Data Memory
00EE00h
External
MOVX Data
Memory
00EE00h
00h
1
These locations addressible
via direct addressing modes,
i.e., MOV CKCON, #89h
2
000000h
These locations addressible
via direct addressing modes,
i.e., ANL A, @R0
5 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
SPECIAL FUNCTION REGISTERS
Most of the unique features of the High-Speed Microcontroller family are controlled by bits in special
function registers (SFRs) located in unused locations in the 8051 SFR map. This allows for increased
functionality while maintaining complete instruction set compatibility. The SFRs reside in register
locations 80h-FFh and are accessed using direct addressing. SFRs that end in 0 or 8 are bit addressable.
The first table indicates the names and locations of the SFRs used by the DS80C390 and individual bits in
those registers. Bits protected by the Timed Access function are shaded. The second table indicates the
reset state of all SFR bits. Following these tables is a complete description of DS80C390 SFRs that are
new to the 8051 architecture or have new or modified functionality.
SPECIAL FUNCTION REGISTER LOCATION Table 4-1
Register Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
P4
A19/P4.7 A18/P4.6
SP
DPL
DPH
DPL1
DPH1
DPS
ID1
ID0
PCON
SMOD_0
SMOD0
TCON
TF1
TR1
TMOD
GATE
C/ T
TL0
TL1
TH0
TH1
CKCON
WD1
WD0
P1
INT5/P1.7 INT4/P1.6
EXIF
IE5
IE4
P4CNT
SBCAN
DPX
DPX1
C0RMS0
C0RMS1
SCON0 SM0/FE_0
SM1_0
SBUF0
ESP
AP
ACON
C0TMA0
C0TMA1
P2
A15/P2.7 A14/P2.6
P5
PCE3 /P5.7 PCE2 /P5.6
P5CNT
CAN1BA CAN0BA
C0C
ERIE
STIE
C0S
BUSOFF
CECE
C0IR
INTIN7
INTIN6
C0TE
C0RE
IE
EA
ES1
SADDR0
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Address
A17/P4.5
A16/P4.4
CE3 /P4.3
CE2 /P4.2
CE1 /P4.1
CE0 /P4.0
TSL
OFDF
TF0
M1
OFDE
TR0
M0
GF1
IE1
GATE
GF0
IT1
C/ T
STOP
IE0
M1
SEL
IDLE
IT0
M0
80h
81h
82h
83h
84h
85h
86h
87h
88h
89h
8Ah
8Bh
8Ch
8Dh
8Eh
90h
91h
92h
93h
95h
96h
97h
98h
99h
9Bh
9Ch
9Dh
9Eh
9Fh
A0h
A1h
A2h
A3h
A4h
A5h
A6h
A7h
A8h
A9h
T2M
T1M
T0M
MD2
MD1
INT3/P1.5 INT2/P1.4 TXD1/P1.3 RXD1/P1.2 T2EX/P1.1
IE3
IE2
CKRY
RGMD
RGSL
P4CNT.5 P4CNT.4 P4CNT.3 P4CNT.2 P4CNT.1
MD0
T2/P1.0
BGS
P4CNT.0
SM2_0
REN_0
TB8_0
RB8_0
TI_0
RI_0
-
-
-
-
ESP.1
ESP.0
-
-
-
SA
AM1
AM0
A13/P2.5
A12/P2.4
ET2
ES0
A11/P2.3 A10/P2.2
A9/P2.1
A8/P2.0
PCE1 /P5.5 PCE0 /P5.4 C1TX/P5.3 C1RX/P5.2 C0RX/P5.1 C0TX/P5.0
SP1EC
C1_I/O
C0_I/O
P5CNT.2 P5CNT.1 P5CNT.0
PDE
SIESTA
CRST
AUTOB
ERCS
SWINT
WKS
RXS
TXS
ER2
ER1
ER0
INTIN5
INTIN4
INTIN3
INTIN2
INTIN1
INTIN0
6 of 155
ET1
EX1
ET0
EX0
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Register
Bit 7
SADDR1
C0M1C
MSRDY
C0M2C
MSRDY
C0M3C
MSRDY
C0M4C
MSRDY
C0M5C
MSRDY
P3
RD /P3.7
C0M6C
MSRDY
C0M7C
MSRDY
C0M8C
MSRDY
C0M9C
MSRDY
C0M10C MSRDY
IP
SADEN0
SADEN1
C0M11C MSRDY
C0M12C MSRDY
C0M13C MSRDY
C0M14C MSRDY
C0M15C MSRDY
SCON1 SM0/FE_1
SBUF1
PMR
CD1
STATUS
PIP
MCON
IDM1
TA
T2CON
TF2
T2MOD
RCAP2L
RCAP2H
TL2
TH2
COR
IRDACK
PSW
CY
MCNT0
LSHIFT
MCNT1
MST
MA
MB
MC
C1RMS0
C1RMS1
WDCON SMOD_1
C1TMA0
C1TMA1
ACC
C1C
ERIE
C1S
BUSOFF
C1IR
INTIN7
C1TE
C1RE
EIE
CANBIE
MXAX
C1M1C
MSRDY
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
WR /P3.6
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
PS1
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
T1/P3.5
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
PT2
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
T0/P3.4
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
PS0
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
SM1_1
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
SM2_1
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
REN_1
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
TB8_1
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
RB8_1
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
TI_1
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
RI_1
CD0
HIP
IDM0
SWB
LIP
CMA
CTM
-
4X/ 2X
SPTA1
PDCE3
ALEOFF
SPRA1
PDCE2
SPTA0
PDCE1
SPRA0
PDCE0
EXF2
-
RCLK
-
TCLK
D13T1
EXEN2
D13T2
TR2
-
C/ T2
T2OE
CP/ RL2
DCEN
C1BPR7
AC
CSE
MOF
C1BPR6
F0
SCB
-
C0BPR7
RS1
MAS4
CLM
C0BPR6
RS0
MAS3
-
COD1
OV
MAS2
-
COD0
F1
MAS1
-
CLKOE
P
MAS0
-
POR
EPF1
PF1
WDIF
WTRF
EWT
RWT
STIE
CECE
INTIN6
PDE
WKS
INTIN5
SIESTA
RXS
INTIN4
CRST
TXS
INTIN3
AUTOB
ER2
INTIN2
ERCS
ER1
INTIN1
SWINT
ER0
INTIN0
C0IE
C1IE
EWDI
EX5
EX4
EX3
EX2
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
INT1/P3.3 INT0/P3.2 TXD0/P3.1 RXD0/P3.0
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
PT1
PX1
PT0
PX0
7 of 155
Address
AAh
ABh
ACh
ADh
AEh
AFh
B0h
B3h
B4h
B5h
B6h
B7h
B8h
B9h
BAh
BBh
BCh
BDh
BEh
BFh
C0h
C1h
C4h
C5h
C6h
C7h
C8h
C9h
CAh
CBh
CCh
CDh
CEh
D0h
D1h
D2h
D3h
D4h
D5h
D6h
D7h
D8h
DEh
DFh
E0h
E3h
E4h
E5h
E6h
E7h
E8h
EAh
EBh
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Register
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Address
C1M2C
C1M3C
C1M4C
C1M5C
B
C1M6C
C1M7C
C1M8C
C1M9C
C1M10C
EIP
C1M11C
C1M12C
C1M13C
C1M14C
C1M15C
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
CANBIP
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
MSRDY
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
C0IP
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
ETI
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
C1IP
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
ERI
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
PWDI
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
INTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
PX5
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
PX4
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
PX3
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
ROW/TIH
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
PX2
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
DTUP
ECh
EDh
EEh
EFh
F0h
F3h
F4h
F5h
F6h
F7h
F8h
FBh
FCh
FDh
FEh
FFh
Bit 1
Bit 0
Address
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
SPECIAL
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
80h
81h
82h
83h
84h
85h
86h
87h
88h
89h
8Ah
8Bh
8Ch
8Dh
8Eh
90h
91h
92h
93h
95h
96h
97h
98h
99h
9Bh
9Ch
9Dh
9Eh
9Fh
A0h
A1h
SPECIAL FUNCTION REGISTER RESET VALUES Table 4-2
Register Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
P4
SP
DPL
DPH
DPL1
DPH1
DPS
PCON
TCON
TMOD
TL0
TL1
TH0
TH1
CKCON
P1
EXIF
P4CNT
DPX
DPX1
C0RMS0
C0RMS1
SCON0
SBUF0
ESP
AP
ACON
C0TMA0
C0TMA1
P2
P5
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
SPECIAL
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
SPECIAL
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
SPECIAL
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
1
1
8 of 155
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
SPECIAL
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Register
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Address
P5CNT
C0C
C0S
C0IR
C0TE
C0RE
IE
SADDR0
SADDR1
C0M1C
C0M2C
C0M3C
C0M4C
C0M5C
P3
C0M6C
C0M7C
C0M8C
C0M9C
C0M10C
IP
SADEN0
SADEN1
C0M11C
C0M12C
C0M13C
C0M14C
C0M15C
SCON1
SBUF1
PMR
STATUS
MCON
TA
T2CON
T2MOD
RCAP2L
RCAP2H
TL2
TH2
COR
PSW
MCNT0
MCNT1
MA
MB
MC
C1RMS0
C1RMS1
WDCON
C1TMA0
C1TMA1
ACC
C1C
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
SPECIAL
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
SPECIAL
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
SPECIAL
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
SPECIAL
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
A2h
A3h
A4h
A5h
A6h
A7h
A8h
A9h
AAh
ABh
ACh
ADh
AEh
AFh
B0h
B3h
B4h
B5h
B6h
B7h
B8h
B9h
BAh
BBh
BCh
BDh
BEh
BFh
C0h
C1h
C4h
C5h
C6h
C7h
C8h
C9h
CAh
CBh
CCh
CDh
CEh
D0h
D1h
D2h
D3h
D4h
D5h
D6h
D7h
D8h
DEh
DFh
E0h
E3h
9 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Register
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Address
C1S
C1IR
C1TE
C1RE
EIE
MXAX
C1M1C
C1M2C
C1M3C
C1M4C
C1M5C
B
C1M6C
C1M7C
C1M8C
C1M9C
C1M10C
EIP
C1M11C
C1M12C
C1M13C
C1M14C
C1M15C
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
E4h
E5h
E6h
E7h
E8h
EAh
EBh
ECh
EDh
EEh
EFh
F0h
F3h
F4h
F5h
F6h
F7h
F8h
FBh
FCh
FDh
FEh
FFh
10 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Port 4 (P4)
7
SFR 80h
6
5
4
A19/P4.7 A18/P4.6 A17/P4.5 A18/P4.4
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
3
2
1
0
CE3 /P4.3
CE2 /P4.2
CE1 /P4.1
CE0 /P4.0
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
P4.7-0
A19
Bit 7
A18
Bit 6
A17
Bit 5
A16
Bit 4
CE3
Bit 3
CE2
Bit 2
CE1
Bit 1
CE0
Bit 0
Port 4. This port functions as a general-purpose I/O port. In addition, all the pins
have an alternative function associated with the memory interface described
below. The selection of general I/O or memory interface function for the Port 4
pins is controlled via the P4CNT(92h) register. Port pins configured as I/O will
reflect the state of the corresponding port pin. Port pins assigned to memory
interface functions will appear as 1 when read. The associated SFR bit must be
programmed to a logic one before the pin can be used in its alternate function
capacity. The reset state of this register and the P4CNT register will configure the
device to so that A19-A16 function as address lines and CE0 − CE3 are active.
The first opcode fetch following a reset will therefore be at 00000h with CE0
asserted.
Program/Data Memory Address 19. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the A19 memory signal.
Program/Data Memory Address 18. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the A18 memory signal.
Program/Data Memory Address 17. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the A17 memory signal.
Program/Data Memory Address 16. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the A16 memory signal.
Program Memory Chip Enable 3. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the CE3 memory signal.
Program Memory Chip Enable 2. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the CE2 memory signal.
Program Memory Chip Enable 1. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the CE1 memory signal.
Program Memory Chip Enable 0. When this bit is set to a logic one and the
P4CNT register is configured correctly, the corresponding device pin will
represent the CE0 memory signal.
11 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Stack Pointer (SP)
SFR 81h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SP.7
SP.6
SP.5
SP.4
SP.3
SP.2
SP.1
SP.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Stack Pointer. This stack pointer identifies current location of the stack. The
stack pointer is incremented before every PUSH operation. This register defaults
to 07h after reset. When the 10-bit stack is enabled (SA=1), this register will be
combined with the extended stack pointer (ESP;9Bh) to form the 10-bit address.
SP.7-0
Bits 7-0
Data Pointer Low 0 (DPL)
SFR 82h
7
6
5
4
3
PDL.7
PDL.6
PDL.5
PDL.4
PDL.3
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
2
PDL.2
RW-0
1
0
PDL.1
PDL.0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Data Pointer Low 0. This register is the low byte of the standard 80C32 16-bit
data pointer. DPL and DPH are used to point to non-scratchpad data RAM.
DPL.7-0
Bits 7-0
Data Pointer High 0 (DPH)
SFR 83h
7
6
5
4
3
DPH.7
DPH.6
DPH.5
DPH.4
DPH.3
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
2
DPH.2
RW-0
1
0
DPH.1
DPH.0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Data Pointer High 0. This register is the high byte of the standard 80C32 16-bit
data pointer. DPL and DPH are used to point to non-scratchpad data RAM.
DPH.7-0
Bits 7-0
Data Pointer Low 1 (DPL1)
SFR 84h
7
6
5
4
3
DPL1.7
DPL1.6
DPL1.5
DPL1.4
DPL1.3
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
2
DPL1.2
RW-0
1
0
DPL1.1
DL1H.0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
DPL1.7-0
Bits 7-0
Data Pointer Low 1. This register is the low byte of the auxiliary 16-bit data
pointer. When the SEL bit (DPS.0) is set, DPL1 and DPH1 are used in place of
DPL and DPH during DPTR operations.
12 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Data Pointer High 1 (DPH1)
SFR 85h
7
6
5
4
3
DPH1.7
DPH1.6
DPH1.5
DPH1.4
DPH1.3
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
2
DPH1.2
RW-0
1
0
DPH1.1
DPH1.0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Data Pointer High 1. This register is the high byte of the auxiliary 16-bit data
pointer. When the SEL bit (DPS.0) is set, DPL1 and DPH1 are used in place of
DPL and DPH during DPTR operations.
DPH1.7-0
Bits 7-0
Data Pointer Select (DPS)
SFR 86h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ID1
ID0
TSL
0
0
1
0
SEL
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R-0
R-0
R-1
R-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
ID1, ID0
Bits 7-6
Increment/Decrement Function Select. These bits define whether the INC
DTPR instruction will increment or decrement the active data pointer as selected
by the SEL bit.
ID1
ID0
SEL=0
SEL=1
0
0
Increment DPTR
Increment DPTR1
0
1
Decrement DPTR
Increment DPTR1
1
0
Increment DPTR
Decrement DPTR1
1
1
Decrement DPTR
Decrement DPTR1
TSL
Bit 5
Toggle Select Enable. When set, this bit allows the following five DPTRrelated instructions to toggle the SEL bit following execution of the
instruction. When TSL=0, DPTR-related instructions will not affect the state
of the SEL bit. DPTR-related instructions are:
INC
MOV
MOVC
MOVX
MOVX
DPTR
DPTR, #data16
A, @A+DPTR
@DPTR, A
A, @DPTR
Bits 4-1
Reserved.
SEL
Bit 0
Data Pointer Select. This bit selects the active data pointer.
0 = Instructions that use the DPTR will use DPL, DPH, DPX.
1= Instructions that use the DPTR will use DPL1 and DPH1, DPX1.
13 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Power Control (PCON)
SFR 87h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SMOD_0
SMOD0
OFDF
ODFE
FG1
FG0
STOP
IDLE
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0*
RW-0*
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset, *=See description
SMOD_0
Bit 7
Serial Port 0 Baud Rate Doubler Enable. This bit enables/disables the
serial baud rate doubling function for Serial Port 0.
0 = Serial Port 0 baud rate will be that defined by baud rate generation
equation.
1 = Serial Port 0 baud rate will be double that defined by baud rate generation
equation.
SMOD0
Bit 6
Framing Error Detection Enable. This bit selects function of the
SCON0.7 and SCON1.7 bits.
0 = SCON0.7 and SCON1.7 control the SM0 function defined for the
SCON0 and SCON1 registers.
1 = SCON0.7 and SCON1.7 are converted to the Framing Error (FE) flag for the
respective Serial Port.
Oscillator Fail Detect Flag. When set, this bit indicates that the preceding reset
was caused by the detection of the crystal oscillator frequency falling below
approximately 30 kHz while the OFDE bit was set. This bit must be cleared by
software. This bit not altered (and no reset will be generated) under the following
conditions:
1. OFDE=0
2. An oscillator halt associated with entering STOP mode.
3. An oscillator halt associated with running from the internal ring oscillator.
OFDF
Bit 5
OFDE
Bit 4
Oscillator Fail Detect Enable. When the OFDE=1, a system reset will be
generated any time the crystal oscillator frequency falls below approximately 30
kHz. When the OFDE bit is cleared to a logic 0, no reset will be issued when the
crystal falls below 30 kHz. The OFDE is cleared to a logic 0 by any reset source.
GF1
Bit 3
General Purpose User Flag 1. This is a bit-addressable, general-purpose flag
for software control.
GF0
Bit 2
General Purpose User Flag 0. This is a bit-addressable, general-purpose flag
for software control.
STOP
Bit 1
Stop Mode Select. Setting this bit will stop program execution, halt the CPU
oscillator, and internal timers, and place the CPU in a low-power mode. This bit
will always be read as a 0. Setting this bit while the IDLE=1 will place the
device in an undefined state.
IDLE
Idle Mode Select. Setting this bit will stop program execution but leave the CPU
oscillator, timers, serial ports, and interrupts active. This bit will always be read
as a 0.
Bit 0
14 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Timer/Counter Control (TCON)
SFR 88h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TF1
TR1
TF0
TR0
IE1
IT1
IE0
IT0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
TF1
Bit 7
Timer 1 Overflow Flag. This bit indicates when Timer 1 overflows its
maximum count as defined by the current mode. This bit can be cleared by
software and is automatically cleared when the CPU vectors to the Timer 1
interrupt service routine.
0 = No Timer 1 overflow has been detected.
1 = Timer 1 has overflowed its maximum count.
TR1
Bit 6
Timer 1 Run Control. This bit enables/disables the operation of Timer 1.
0 = Timer 1 is halted.
1 = Timer 1 is enabled.
TF0
Bit 5
Timer 0 Overflow Flag. This bit indicates when Timer 0 overflows its
maximum count as defined by the current mode. This bit can be cleared by
software and is automatically cleared when the CPU vectors to the Timer 0
interrupt service routine or by software.
0 = No Timer 0 overflow has been detected.
1 = Timer 0 has overflowed its maximum count.
TR0
Bit 4
Timer 0 Run Control. This bit enables/disables the operation of Timer 0.
0 = Timer 0 is halted.
1 = Timer 0 is enabled.
IE1
Bit 3
Interrupt 1 Edge Detect. This bit is set when an edge/level of the type defined
by IT1 is detected. If IT1=1, this bit will remain set until cleared in software or
the start of the External Interrupt 1 service routine. If IT1=0, this bit will
inversely reflect the state of the INT1 pin.
Interrupt 1 Type Select. This bit selects whether the INT1 pin will detect edge
or level triggered interrupts.
IT1
Bit 2
0 = INT1 is level triggered.
1 = INT1 is edge triggered.
IE0
Bit 1
Interrupt 0 Edge Detect. This bit is set when an edge/level of the type defined
by IT0 is detected. If IT0=1, this bit will remain set until cleared in software or
the start of the External Interrupt 0 service routine. If IT0=0, this bit will
inversely reflect the state of the INT0 pin.
IT0
Bit 0
Interrupt 0 Type Select. This bit selects whether the INT0 pin will detect edge
or level triggered interrupts.
0 = INT0 is level triggered.
1 = INT0 is edge triggered.
15 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Timer Mode Control (TMOD)
SFR 89h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
GATE
C/ T
M1
M0
GATE
C/ T
M1
M0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
GATE
Bit 7
C/ T
Bit 6
M1, M0
Bits 5-4
GATE
Bit 3
C/ T
Bit 2
M1, M0
Bits 1-0
Timer 1 Gate Control. This bit enable/disables the ability of Timer 1 to
increment.
0 = Timer 1 will clock when TR1=1, regardless of the state of INT1 .
1 = Timer 1 will clock only when TR1=1 and INT1 =1.
Timer 1 Counter/Timer Select.
0 = Timer 1 is incremented by internal clocks.
1 = Timer 1 is incremented by pulses on T1 when TR1 (TCON.6) is 1.
Timer 1 Mode Select. These bits select the operating mode of Timer 1.
M1 M0
Mode
0
0
Mode 0: 8 bits with 5-bit prescale
0
1
Mode 1: 16 bits
1
0
Mode 2: 8 bits with auto-reload
1
1
Mode 3: Timer 1 is halted, but holds its count
Timer 0 Gate Control. This bit enables/disables that ability of Timer 0 to
increment.
0 = Timer 0 will clock when TR0=1, regardless of the state of INT0 .
1 = Timer 0 will clock only when TR0=1 and INT0 =1.
Timer 0 Counter/Timer Select.
0 = Timer incremented by internal clocks.
1 = Timer 1 is incremented by pulses on T0 when TR0 (TCON.4) is 1.
Timer 0 Mode Select. These bits select the operating mode of Timer 0.
When Timer 0 is in mode 3, TL0 is started/stopped by TR0 and TH0 is
started/stopped by TR1. Run control from Timer 1 is then provided via the
Timer 1 mode selection.
M1
0
0
1
1
M0
0
1
0
1
Mode
Mode 0: 8 bits with 5-bit prescale
Mode 1: 16 bits
Mode 2: 8 bits with auto-reload
Mode 3: Timer 0 is two 8 bit counters.
16 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Timer 0 LSB (TL0)
SFR 8Ah
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TL0.7
TL0.6
TL0.5
TL0.4
TL0.3
TL0.2
TL0.1
TL0.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Timer 0 LSB. This register contains the least significant byte of Timer 0.
TL0.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 1 LSB (TL1)
SFR 8Bh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TL1.7
TL1.6
TL1.5
TL1.4
TL1.3
TL1.2
TL1.1
TL1.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Timer 1 LSB. This register contains the least significant byte of Timer 1.
TL1.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 0 MSB (TH0)
SFR 8Ch
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TH0.7
TH0.6
TH0.5
TH0.4
TH0.3
TH0.2
TH0.1
TH0.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Timer 0 MSB. This register contains the most significant byte of Timer 0.
TH0.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 1 MSB (TH1)
SFR 8Dh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TH1.7
TH1.6
TH1.5
TH1.4
TH1.3
TH1.2
TH1.1
TH1.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
TH1.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 1 MSB. This register contains the most significant byte of Timer 1.
17 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Clock Control (CKCON)
SFR 8Eh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
WD1
WD0
T2M
T1M
T0M
MD2
MD1
MD0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
WD1, WD0
Bits 7-6
Watchdog Timer Mode Select 1-0. These bits select the watchdog timer timeout period, which determines the timing of the watchdog timer interrupt and the
watchdog timer reset.
WD1
WD0
Interrupt time-out
Reset time-out
0
0
217 system clocks
217 + 512 system clocks
0
1
220 system clocks
220 + 512 system clocks
223 + 512 system clocks
1
0
223 system clocks
26
1
1
2 system clocks
226 + 512 system clocks
The system clock relates to the external clock as follows:
Clock Mode
Frequency Multiplier (4x)
Frequency Multiplier (2x)
Divide by 4
Power Management Mode
External clocks per system clock
0.25
0.5
1
256
T2M
Bit 5
Timer 2 Clock Select. This bit controls the division of the system clock that
drives Timer 2. This bit has no effect when the timer is in baud rate generator or
clock output modes. Clearing this bit to 0 maintains 80C32 compatibility. This bit
has no effect on instruction cycle timing.
0 = Timer 2 uses a divide by 12 of the crystal frequency.
1 = Timer 2 uses a divide by 4 of the crystal frequency.
T1M
Bit 4
Timer 1 Clock Select. This bit controls the division of the system clock that
drives Timer 1. Clearing this bit to 0 maintains 80C32 compatibility. This bit
has no effect on instruction cycle timing.
0 = Timer 1 uses a divide by 12 of the crystal frequency.
1 = Timer 1 uses a divide by 4 of the crystal frequency.
T0M
Bit 3
Timer 0 Clock Select. This bit controls the division of the system clock that
drives Timer 0. Clearing this bit to 0 maintains 80C32 compatibility. This bit
has no effect on instruction cycle timing.
0 = Timer 0 uses a divide by 12 of the crystal frequency.
1 = Timer 0 uses a divide by 4 of the crystal frequency.
18 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
MD2, MD1, MD0
Bits 2-0
Stretch MOVX Select 2-0. These bits select the time by which external MOVX
cycles are to be stretched. This allows slower memory or peripherals to be
accessed without using ports or manual software intervention. The RD or WR
strobe will be stretched by the specified interval, which will be transparent to the
software except for the increased time to execute to MOVX instruction. All
internal MOVX instructions are performed at the 2 machine cycle rate.
MD2
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
MD1
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
MD0
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
Stretch Value
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
19 of 155
MOVX Duration
2 Machine Cycles
3 Machine Cycles (reset default)
4 Machine Cycles
5 Machine Cycles
9 Machine Cycles
10 Machine Cycles
11 Machine Cycles
12 Machine Cycles
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Port 1 (P1)
SFR 90h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
P1.7
INT5
P1.6
INT4
P1.7
INT3
P1.4
INT2
P1.3
TXD1
P1.2
RXD1
P1.1
T2EX
P1.0
T2
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
P1.7-0
Bits 7-0
General Purpose I/O Port 1. This register functions as the A0-A7 of the nonmultiplexed address bus (when the MUX pin=1) or a general purpose I/O port
(when the MUX pin=0). When serving as a general purpose I/O port all the pins
have an alternative function listed below. P1.2-7 contain functions that are new
to the 80C32 architecture. The Timer 2 functions on pins P1.1-0 are available on
the 80C32, but not the 80C31. Each of the functions is controlled by several
other SFRs. The associated Port 1 latch bit must contain a logic one before the
pin can be used in its alternate function capacity.
INT5
Bit 7
External Interrupt 5. A falling edge on this pin will cause an external interrupt
5 if enabled.
INT4
Bit 6
External Interrupt 4. A rising edge on this pin will cause an external interrupt 4
if enabled.
INT3
Bit 5
External Interrupt 3. A falling edge on this pin will cause an external interrupt
3 if enabled.
INT2
Bit 4
External Interrupt 2. A rising edge on this pin will cause an external interrupt 2
if enabled.
TXD1
Bit 3
Serial Port 1 Transmit. This pin transmits the serial port 1 data in serial port
modes 1, 2, 3 and emits the synchronizing clock in serial port mode 0.
RXD1
Bit 2
Serial Port 1 Receive. This pin receives the serial port 1 data in serial port
modes 1, 2, 3 and is a bi-directional data transfer pin in serial port mode 0.
T2EX
Bit 1
Timer 2 Capture/Reload Trigger. A 1 to 0 transition on this pin will cause the
value in the T2 registers to be transferred into the capture registers if enabled by
EXEN2 (T2CON.3). When in auto–reload mode, a 1 to 0 transition on this pin
will reload the timer 2 registers with the value in RCAP2L and RCAP2H if
enabled by EXEN2 (T2CON.3).
T2
Bit 0
Timer 2 External Input. A 1 to 0 transition on this pin will cause timer 2
increment or decrement depending on the timer configuration.
20 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
External Interrupt Flag (EXIF)
SFR 91h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
IE5
IE4
IE3
IE2
CKRY
RGMD
RGSL
BGS
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R-*
R-*
RW-*
RT-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, T=Timed Access Write Only
-n=Value after Reset, *=See description
IE5
Bit 7
External Interrupt 5 Flag. This bit will be set when a falling edge is detected on
INT5 . This bit must be cleared manually by software. Setting this bit in software
will cause an interrupt if enabled.
IE4
Bit 6
External Interrupt 4 Flag. This bit will be set when a rising edge is detected on
INT4. This bit must be cleared manually by software. Setting this bit in software
will cause an interrupt if enabled.
IE3
Bit 5
External Interrupt 3 Flag. This bit will be set when a falling edge is detected
on INT3 This bit must be cleared manually by software. Setting this bit in
software will cause an interrupt if enabled.
IE2
Bit 4
External Interrupt 2 Flag. This bit will be set when a rising edge is detected on
INT2. This bit must be cleared manually by software. Setting this bit in software
will cause an interrupt if enabled.
CKRY
Bit 3
Clock Ready. The CKRY bit indicates the status of the start-up period delay
used by the crystal oscillator and the crystal clock multiplier warm-up period.
CKRY=0 indicates the start-up delay is still counting. When the CKRY=1 the
counter has completed. This bit is cleared each time the CTM bit in the PMR
register is changed from low to high to start the crystal multiplier. Once the
CKRY is set, the lockout is removed on the CD1, CD0 bits to select the
multiplied crystal clock as a system clock source. This status bit is also cleared
each time the crystal oscillator is restarted when exiting Stop mode.
RGMD
Bit 2
Ring Mode Status. This bit indicates the current clock source for the
device. This bit is cleared to 0 after a power-on reset, and unchanged by all
other forms of reset.
0 = Device is operating from the external crystal or oscillator.
1 = Device is operating from the ring oscillator.
21 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
RGSL
Bit 1
Ring Oscillator Select. This bit selects the clock source following a resume from
Stop mode. Using the ring oscillator to resume from Stop mode allows almost
instantaneous start-up. This bit is cleared to 0 after a power-on reset, and
unchanged by all other forms of reset. The state of this bit will be undefined on
devices which do not incorporate a ring oscillator.
0 = The device will hold operation until the crystal oscillator has warmed-up.
1 = The device will begin operating from the ring oscillator, and when the crystal
warm-up is complete, will switch to the clock source indicated by the XT/ RG
bit.
BGS
Bit 0
Band-gap Select. This bit enables/disables the band-gap reference during Stop
mode. Disabling the band-gap reference provides significant power savings in
Stop mode, but sacrifices the ability to perform a power fail interrupt or powerfail reset while stopped. This bit can only be modified with a Timed Access
procedure.
0 =The band-gap reference is disabled in Stop mode but will function during
normal operation.
1 = The band-gap reference will operate in Stop mode.
22 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Port 4 Control Register (P4CNT)
SFR 92h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
SBCAN
P4CNT.5
P4CNT.4
P4CNT.3
P4CNT.2
P4CNT.1
P4CNT.0
R-1
RT-0
RT-1
RT-1
RT-1
RT-1
RT-1
RT-1
R=Unrestricted Read, T=Timed Access Write Only, -n=Value after Reset
P4.7-0
Port 4 Control Register. This register controls the alternate addressing modes
function of Port 4. Programming this register as shown below will assign the
alternate functions of Port 4. The associated Port 4 SFR bit must be programmed to
a logic one before the pin can be used in its alternate function capacity.
Bit 7
Reserved
SBCAN
Bit 6
Single Bus CAN. Setting this bit connects both CAN receive inputs (C0RX and
C1RX) to P5.1 and drives P5.0 with the logical AND of both CAN transmit outputs
(C0TX and C1TX). SBCAN=0 disables the feature and allows the CAN modules to
receive/transmit through their respective bus pins. This can be used to create a
single "super" CAN module with 30 message centers.
P4CNT.5P4CNT.3
Port Pin P4.7-P4.4 Configuration Control Bits
Various settings of bits 5-0 will configure the Chip Enable and A19-A16 address
signals of Port 4. CE0 − CE3 can be individually configured as program or data
memory, via the MCON SFR. When CE0 − CE3 are converted from program to
data memory, the respective PCE0 − PCE3 will be disabled. The number of
external address lines (A19-A16) enabled by the P4CNT.5 - P4CNT.3 control bits
establishes the internally decoded range for each program chip enable
( PCE0 − PCE3 ). When the external address bus is limited to A15-A0, the chip
enables are internally decoded on a 32KB block boundary.
P4CNT.5-3
000
100
101
110
111
P4CNT.2P4CNT.0
P4.7
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
A19
Port 4 Pin Function
P4.6
P4.5
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
A17
A18
A17
A18
A17
P4.4
I/O
A16
A16
A16
A16
Port Pin P4.3-P4.0 Configuration Control Bits
Port 4 Pin Function
P4CNT.2-0
P4.3
P4.2
P4.1
000
I/O
I/O
I/O
100
I/O
I/O
I/O
101
I/O
I/O
CE1
110
I/O
CE2
CE1
111
CE3
CE2
CE1
23 of 155
Max. Memory
Size per CEx
32 kbytes
128 kbytes
256 kbytes
512 kbytes
1 Mbytes
P4.0
I/O
CE0
CE0
CE0
CE0
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Data Pointer Extended Register 0 (DPX)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
SFR 93h
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Data Pointer Extended Register 0. This register contains the high-order byte of
the 22-bit address (or 23-bit address when CMA=1) when performing operations
with Data Pointer 0. This register is ignored when addressing data memory in the
16-bit addressing mode.
DPL.7-0
Bits 7-0
Data Pointer Extended Register 1 (DPX1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
SFR 95h
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
DPL.7-0
Bits 7-0
Data Pointer Extended Register 1. This register contains the high-order byte of
the 22-bit address (or 23-bit address when CMA=1) when performing operations
with Data Pointer 1. This register is ignored when addressing data memory in the
16-bit addressing mode.
24 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Receive Message Stored Register 0 (C0RMS0)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR 96h
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 0 Receive Message Stored Register 0. This register indicates which of
CAN 0 message centers 1-8 have successfully received and stored a message
since the last read of this register. A logic one in a location indicates a message
has been received and stored for that message center. This register is
automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should always be read in
conjunction with the C0RMS1 register to ascertain the status of all message
centers.
C0RMS0.7
Bit 7
Message Center 8, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS0.6
Bit 6
Message Center 7, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS0.5
Bit 5
Message Center 6, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS0.4
Bit 4
Message Center 5, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS0.3
Bit 3
Message Center 4, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS0.2
Bit 2
Message Center 3, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS0.1
Bit 1
Message Center 2, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS0.0
Bit 0
Message Center 1, Message Received and Stored
25 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Receive Message Stored Register 1 (C0RMS1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR 97h
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 0 Receive Message Stored Register 1. This register indicates which of
CAN 0 message centers 9-15 have successfully received and stored a message
since the last read of this register. A logic one in a location indicates a message
has been received and stored for that message center. This register is
automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should always be read in
conjunction with the C0RMS0 register to ascertain the status of all message
centers.
Bit 7
Reserved
C0RMS1.6
Bit 6
Message Center 15, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS1.5
Bit 5
Message Center 14, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS1.4
Bit 4
Message Center 13, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS1.3
Bit 3
Message Center 12, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS1.2
Bit 2
Message Center 11, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS1.1
Bit 1
Message Center 10, Message Received and Stored
C0RMS1.0
Bit 0
Message Center 9, Message Received and Stored
26 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Serial Port 0 Control (SCON0)
SFR 98h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SM0/FE_0
SM1_0
SM2_0
REN_0
TB8_0
RB8_0
T1_0
R1_0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Serial Port Mode These bits control the mode of serial port 0. In addition the
SM0 and SM2_0 bits have secondary functions as shown below.
SM0-2
Bits 7-5
SM0
0
0
SM1
0
0
SM2
0
1
MODE
0
0
FUNCTION
Synchronous
Synchronous
LENGTH
8 bits
8 bits
0
1
X
1
Asynchronous
10 bits
1
0
0
2
Asynchronous
11 bits
1
0
1
1
Asynchronous w/
Multiprocessor communication
11 bits
1
1
0
3
Asynchronous
11 bits
1
1
1
3
Asynchronous w/
Multiprocessor communication
11 bits
PERIOD
12 tCLK
4 tCLK
Timer 1 or 2
baud rate equation
64 tCLK (SMOD=0)
32 tCLK (SMOD=1)
64 tCLK (SMOD=0)
32 tCLK (SMOD=1)
Timer 1 or 2
baud rate equation
Timer 1 or 2
baud rate equation
SM0/FE_0
Bit 7
Framing Error Flag. When SMOD0 (PCON.6)=0, this bit (SM0) is used to
select the mode for serial port 0. When SMOD0 (PCON.6)=1, this bit (FE) will
be set upon detection of an invalid stop bit. When used as FE, this bit must be
cleared in software. Once the SMOD0 bit is set, modifications to this bit will not
affect the serial port mode settings. Although accessed from the same register,
internally the data for bits SM0 and FE are stored in different locations.
SM1_0
Bit 6
No alternate function.
SM2_0
Bit 5
Multiple CPU Communications. The function of this bit is dependent on the
serial port 0 mode.
Mode 0: Selects 12 tCLK or 4 tCLK period for synchronous serial port 0 data
transfers.
Mode 1: When set, reception is ignored (RI_0 is not set) if invalid stop bit
received.
Mode 2/3: When this bit is set, multiprocessor communications are enabled in
modes 2 and 3. This will prevent the RI_0 bit from being set, and an
interrupt being asserted, if the 9th bit received is not 1.
REN_0
Bit 4
Receiver Enable. This bit enable/disables the serial port 0 receiver shift register.
0 = Serial port 0 reception disabled.
1= Serial port 0 receiver enabled (modes 1, 2, 3). Initiate synchronous reception
(mode 0).
27 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
TB8_0
Bit 3
9th Transmission Bit State. This bit defines the state of the 9th transmission bit
in serial port 0 modes 2 and 3.
RB8_0
Bit 2
9th Received Bit State. This bit identifies that state of the 9th reception bit of
received data in serial port 0 modes 2 and 3. In serial port mode 1, when
SM2_0=0, RB8_0 is the state of the stop bit. RB8_0 is not used in mode 0.
TI_0
Bit 1
Transmitter Interrupt Flag. This bit indicates that data in the serial port 0
buffer has been completely shifted out. In serial port mode 0, TI_0 is set at the
end of the 8th data bit. In all other modes, this bit is set at the end of the last data
bit. This bit must be manually cleared by software.
RI_0
Bit 0
Receiver Interrupt Flag. This bit indicates that a byte of data has been received
in the serial port 0 buffer. In serial port mode 0, RI_0 is set at the end of the 8th
bit. In serial port mode 1, RI_0 is set after the last sample of the incoming stop bit
subject to the state of SM2_0. In modes 2 and 3, RI_0 is set after the last sample
of RB8_0. This bit must be manually cleared by software.
Serial Data Buffer 0 (SBUF0)
7
SFR 99h SBUF0.7
RW-0
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SBUF0.6
SBUF0.5
SBUF0.4
SBUF0.3
SBUF0.2
SBUF0.1
SBUF0.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Serial Data Buffer 0. Data for serial port 0 is read from or written to this
location. The serial transmit and receive buffers are separate registers, but both
are addressed at this location.
SBUF0.7-0
Bits 7-0
Extended Stack Pointer Register (ESP)
SFR 9Bh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
ESP1
ESP0
R-1
R-1
R-1
R-1
R-1
R-1
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Bits 7-2
ESP.1-0
Bits 1-0
Reserved
Extended Stack Pointer. This register contains the upper 2 bits of the 10-bit
stack pointer. When the SA bit is set, any overflow of the SP from FFh to 00h
will increment the ESP by 1, and any underflow of the SP from 00h to FFh will
decrement the ESP by 1. The ESP register is ignored when SA = 0, but is still
read/write accessible. Configuring the 4K block of SRAM as program and/or data
memory (IDM1,IDM0=11b) will disable the extended stack mode. Internal logic
will take into consideration the programming conditions imposed by the SA,
IDM1 and IDM0 bits within the MCON register, to allow access to the 1K Stack
Memory. See ACON register for more detail.
28 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Address Page Register (AP)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
SFR 9Ch
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Address Page Register. The AP Register (AP) supports extended program and
data addressing (>64KB) capabilities in the 22-bit paged addressing mode (AM1,
AM0 = 01b), and is fully compatible with the original 8052 16-bit addressing
mode. When executing LJMP, ACALL, or LCALL instructions in paged
addressing mode, the microcontroller automatically loads bits 23:16 of the
program counter with the contents of the AP register to calculate the new CALL
or JMP address. The AP register affects only the previous instruction, and is not
incremented during a program counter rollover from FFFFh to 0000h. This
register is a general purpose SFR when not operating in 22-bit paged mode.
AP.7-0
Bits 7-0
Executing interrupts while in 22-bit paged addressing mode pushes the three
bytes of the program counter onto the stack, but not the AP register itself. The AP
register should be saved at the beginning of the ISR if it will be modified inside
the ISR. Following the execution of a RETI instruction, the processor will
automatically reload the entire 24 value of the PC with the original address from
the stack, again leaving the contents of the AP register unchanged.
Address Control Register (ACON)
SFR 9Dh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
SA
AM1
AM0
R-1
R-1
R-1
R-1
R-1
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
R=Unrestricted Read, T=Timed Access Write Only, -n=Value after Reset
Bits 7-3
Reserved
SA
Bit 2
Extended Stack Address Mode Enable. This bit can only be modified via the
Timed Access procedure.
0 = All instructions will utilize the traditional 8-bit 8051 stack pointer (SP;81h).
1 = All instructions will utilize the 10-bit stack pointer formed by concatenating
the 2 least significant bits of the ESP register with the SP register. Lower 1
KB of internal MOVX memory is used as the stack when this bit is set. This
bit cannot be set while IDM1:IDM0=11b.
AM1, AM0
Bits 1-0
Address Mode Control bits. These bits establish the addressing mode for the
device. These bits can only be modified via the Timed Access procedure.
AM1
AM0
Addressing Mode
0
0
16-bit Addressing Mode
0
1
22-bit Paged Addressing Mode
1
x
22-bit Contiguous Addressing Mode
29 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 0 (C0TMA0)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR 9Eh
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 0 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 0. This register
indicates which of CAN 0 message centers 1-8 have successfully transmitted
a message since the last read of this register. A logic one in a location
indicates a message has been transmitted from that message center. This
register is automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should
always be read in conjunction with the C0TMA1 register to ascertain the
status of all message centers.
C0TMA0.7
Bit 7
Message Center 8, Message Transmitted
C0TMA0.6
Bit 6
Message Center 7, Message Transmitted
C0TMA0.5
Bit 5
Message Center 6, Message Transmitted
C0TMA0.4
Bit 4
Message Center 5, Message Transmitted
C0TMA0.3
Bit 3
Message Center 4, Message Transmitted
C0TMA0.2
Bit 2
Message Center 3, Message Transmitted
C0TMA0.1
Bit 1
Message Center 2, Message Transmitted
C0TMA0.0
Bit 0
Message Center 1, Message Transmitted
30 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 1 (C0TMA1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR 9Fh
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 0 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 1. This register
indicates which of CAN 0 message centers 9-15 have successfully
transmitted a message since the last read of this register. A logic one in a
location indicates a message has been transmitted for that message center.
This register is automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should
always be read in conjunction with the C0TMA0 register to ascertain the
status of all message centers.
Bit 7
Reserved
C0TMA1.6
Bit 6
Message Center 15, Message Transmitted
C0TMA1.5
Bit 5
Message Center 14, Message Transmitted
C0TMA1.4
Bit 4
Message Center 13, Message Transmitted
C0TMA1.3
Bit 3
Message Center 12, Message Transmitted
C0TMA1.2
Bit 2
Message Center 11, Message Transmitted
C0TMA1.1
Bit 1
Message Center 10, Message Transmitted
C0TMA1.0
Bit 0
Message Center 9, Message Transmitted
31 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Port 2 (P2)
7
SFR A0h
6
5
4
3
2
A15/P2.7 A14/P2.6 A13/P2.5 A12/P2.4 A11/P2.3 A10/P2.2
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
1
0
A9/P2.1
A8/P2.0
RW-1
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
P2.7-0
Bits 7-0
Port 2. The Port 2 pins function as an address bus during external memory
accesses, and a general purpose I/O port when executing code memory from the
internal 4KB SRAM (IDM1,IDM0 = 00b). When executing programs from the
internal 4KB SRAM, the contents of this SFR will be driven onto the Port 2 pins.
When executing programs from external memory, writes to P2 will have no effect
on the state of the Port 2 pins (except during register-indirect MOVX operations).
When executing register-indirect instructions such as MOVX A, @R1, this
register supplies the address MSB during data memory operations.
32 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Port 5 (P5)
SFR A1h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
P5.7
PCE3
P5.6
PCE2
P5.5
PCE1
P5.4
PCE0
P5.3
C1TX
P5.2
C1RX
P5.1
C0RX
P5.0
C0TX
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
General Purpose I/O Port 5. This register functions as a general purpose
I/O port. In addition, all the pins have an alternate function listed below.
Each of the alternate functions is controlled by and/or influences other SFRs.
The associated Port 5 latch bit must contain a logic one before the pin can be
used in its alternate function capability.
PCE3
Bit 7
Peripheral Chip Enable 3. When enabled via the P5CNT register, this pin
will assert the fourth chip enable signal.
PCE2
Bit 6
Peripheral Chip Enable 2. When enabled via the P5CNT register, this pin
will assert the third chip enable signal.
PCE1
Bit 5
Peripheral Chip Enable 1. When enabled via the P5CNT register, this pin
will assert the second chip enable signal.
PCE0
Bit 4
Peripheral Chip Enable 0. When enabled via the P5CNT register, this pin
will assert the first chip enable signal.
C1TX/TXD1
Bit 3
CAN 1 Transmit / Serial Port 1 Transmit. This pin is connected to the
transmit data input pin of the CAN 1 transceiver device. Setting the Serial
Port 1 External Connection bit (SP1EC, P5CNT.5) configures this pin as the
Serial Port 1 transmit signal, disabling the corresponding CAN 1 function.
C1RX/RXD1
Bit 2
CAN 1 Receive / Serial Port 1 Receive. This pin is connected to the receive
data output pin of the CAN 1 transceiver device. Setting the Serial Port 1
External Connection bit (SP1EC, P5CNT.5) configures this pin as the Serial
Port 1 receive signal, disabling the corresponding CAN 1 function.
C0RX
Bit 1
CAN 0 Receive. This pin is connected to the receive data output pin of the
CAN 0 transceiver device.
C0TX
Bit 0
CAN 0 Transmit. This pin is connected to the transmit data input pin of the
CAN 0 transceiver device.
33 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Port 5 Control Register (P5CNT)
7
SFR A2h
6
CAN1BA CAN0BA
RW-0
RW-0
5
4
3
SP1EC
C1_I/O
C0_I/O
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
2
1
0
P5CNT.2 P5CNT.1 P5CNT.0
RT-1
RT-1
RT-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, T=Timed Access Write Only, -n=Value after Reset
CAN1BA
Bit 7
CAN 1 Bus Active. The CAN1BA signal is a latched status bit that will be
set if the respective CAN1 I/O Enabled (P5CNT.4) bit is set and bus activity
detected on the CAN 1 bus. Once activity is detected and the bit is set, it will
remain set until cleared via application software or a reset.
CAN0BA
Bit 6
CAN 0 Bus Active. The CAN0BA signal is a latched status bit that will be
set if the respective CAN0 I/O Enabled (P5CNT.3) bit is set and bus activity
detected on the CAN 0 bus. Once activity is detected and the bit is set, it will
remain set until cleared via application software or a reset.
SP1EC
Bit 5
Serial Port 1 External Connections. This bit controls whether the Serial
Port 1 signals are asserted on P1.2/P1.3 or P5.2/P5.3. Rerouting the serial
port signals to Port 5 allows the use of both serial ports (but with the loss of
the CAN 1 interface) when Port 1 becomes a dedicated address bus during
demultiplexed addressing mode. Note that the corresponding port pins must
be set to 1 before they can be used in their serial port or CAN functions.
0 = Serial Port 1 signals are routed to P1.2/P1.3.
Conditions: MUX =0, SFR bit P1.2 =1, SFR bit P1.3 =1
1 = Serial Port 1 signals are routed to P5.2/P5.3
Conditions: MUX =0, SFR bit P5.2 =1, SFR bit P5.3 =1
C1_I/O
Bit 4
CAN 1 I/O Enable. This bit controls the function of port pins P5.2 and P5.3.
0 = Port pins P5.2 and P5.3 function as general-purpose I/O pins. The alternate
Serial Port 1 transmit and receive functions on Port 5 are only possible when
this bit is cleared to 0.
1 = Port pins P5.2 and P5.3 are dedicated to the CAN 1 receive and transmit
functions.
C0_I/O
Bit 3
CAN 0 I/O Enable. This bit controls the function of port pins P5.0 and P5.1.
0 = Port pins P5.0 and P5.1 function as general-purpose I/O pins.
1 = Port pins P5.0 and P5.1 are dedicated to the CAN 0 receive and transmit
functions.
34 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
P5CNT.2P4CNT.0
Port Pin P5.7-P5.4 Configuration Control Bits
These bits, in conjunction with the P4CNT register, control which Port 5 pins (if
any) are used for PCEx decoding as shown in the table below. The memory range
addressable by each PCEx signal is a function of the total number of address lines
(A19-A16) established by the P4CNT register. Note that the chip enable range
when using A0-A15 is 32 KB instead of the expected 64 KB. This is to allow the
use of more common 32 KB memory devices rather than 64 KB devices.
Port 5 Pin Function
P5CNT.2-0
P5.7
P5.6
P5.5
P4.4
000
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
100
I/O
I/O
I/O
PCE0
101
I/O
I/O
PCE1
PCE0
110
I/O
PCE2
PCE1
PCE0
111
PCE3
PCE2
PCE1
PCE0
The memory range addressable by each PCEx signal is a function of the total
number of address lines (A19-A16) established by the P4CNT register. Note that
the chip enable range when using A0-A15 is 32 KB instead of the expected 64
KB. This is to allow the use of more common 32 KB memory devices rather than
64 KB devices.
Port 4 Pin Function
P4CNT.5-3
PCE0
PCE1
PCE2
PCE3
000
100
101
110
111
0 - 32KB
0 - 128KB
0 - 256KB
0 - 512KB
0 - 1MB
32 - 64KB
128 - 256KB
256 - 512KB
512 - 1MB
1 - 2M
35 of 155
64 - 96KB
256 - 384KB
512 - 768KB
1 - 1.5MB
2 - 3MB
96 - 128KB
384 - 512KB
768KB - 1MB
1.5 - 2MB
3 - 4MB
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Control Register (C0C)
SFR A3h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ERIE
STIE
PDE
SIESTA
CRST
AUTOB
ERCS
SWINT
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RT-1
RW-0
RW-0
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, T=Timed Access Write Only, -n=Value after Reset
ERIE
Bit 7
CAN 0 Error Interrupt Enable.
0 = CAN 0 Error Interrupt is disabled.
1 = Setting this bit while the C0IE bit (EIE.6) and Global Interrupt Enable
bits (IE.7) are set will generate an interrupt if the CAN 0 Bus Off
(BUSOFF) or CAN 0 Error Count Exceeded bit (CECE) bits are set.
STIE
Bit 6
CAN 0 Status Interrupt Enable.
0 = CAN 0 Status Interrupt is disabled.
1 = If the C0IE bit (EIE.6) is set, an interrupt will be generated if the CAN 0
Transmit Status bit (TXS), Receive Status bit (RXS) or the Wake-Up
Status bit (WKS) is set. An interrupt will also be generated if the Status
Error bits (ER2-0) changes to a non-000b or non-111b state.
PDE
Bit 5
CAN 0 Power Down Enable. Setting this bit places the CAN 0 module into its
lowest power mode. The module will enter Power Down mode immediately upon
setting this bit, or following the completion of the current reception, transmission,
arbitration failure, or error condition on CAN 0. Software can poll the PDE bit to
ascertain whether the microcontroller has entered Power Down mode (PDE=1) or
is waiting for a current CAN operation to complete (PDE=0) before entering
Power Down Mode.
Power Down mode is exited by clearing the PDE bit or by any reset of the
microcontroller. The CAN 0 module will resume operation after the receipt of 11
consecutive recessive bits.
The Wake-Up Status bit, WKS, is a logical OR of this bit and the SIESTA bit.
SIESTA
Bit 4
CAN 0 Siesta Mode Enable. Setting this bit places the CAN 0 module into a low
power mode. The module will enter Siesta mode immediately upon setting this
bit, or following the completion of the current reception, transmission, arbitration
failure, or error condition on CAN 0. Software can poll the SIESTA bit to
ascertain whether the microcontroller has entered Siesta mode (SIESTA =1) or is
waiting for a current CAN operation to complete (SIESTA =0) before entering
Siesta Mode.
Siesta mode is exited by clearing the Siesta bit, detecting CAN 0 bus activity, or
setting either the CRST or SWINT bits to 1. The CAN 0 module will begin
operation after the receipt of 11 consecutive recessive bits.
The Wake-Up Status bit, WKS, is a logical OR of this bit and the PDE bit.
36 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CRST
Bit 3
CAN 0 Reset. Setting this bit via a Timed Access write will reset all CAN 0
registers in the SFR map to their reset default states. The module will reset the
registers immediately upon setting this bit, or following the completion of the
current reception, transmission, arbitration failure, or error condition on CAN 0.
Software can poll the CRST bit to ascertain whether the microcontroller has
successfully reset the registers (CRST =1) or is waiting for a current CAN
operation to complete (CRST =0) before resetting the registers. Setting the CRST
bit also clears the transmit and receive error counters and sets the SWINT bit.
CRST must be cleared by software to remove the CAN reset. The state of the
SWINT and BUSOFF bits determines the action of the device when the CRST bit
is cleared.
AUTOB
Bit 2
CAN 0 Autobaud. Setting this bit allows the CAN 0 module to establish proper
CAN bus timing without disrupting the normal data flow between other nodes on
the CAN Bus. When in the autobaud mode, incoming data on the C0RX pin is
internally ANDed with transmit data generated by the CAN 0 module. An internal
loop back feeds this combined data stream back into the input of the CAN 0
module. At the same time, C0TX pin is placed into a recessive state to prevent
driving non-synchronized data (creating CAN Bus errors to other nodes) while
attempting to synchronize the processor with the CAN Bus.
With AUTOB = 1, the microcontroller auto-baud algorithm will make use of the
CAN 0 Status Register RXS and error status bits to determine when a message is
successfully received (when AUTOB =1, a successful receive does not require a
store). Each successive baud rate attempt is proceeded by the microcontroller
clearing the transmit and receive error counters via a write of 00h to the Transmit
Error SFR Register and a read of the CAN 0 Status Register to clear the previous
Status Change Interrupt. Note that a write to the Transmit Error SFR Register
automatically resets the CAN fault confinement state machine to an initial (error
active) state if the error counters are cleared to 00h. If, however, the error counters
are programmed to a value greater than 128, the CAN module will be in a error
passive state. Appropriate flags are set when the error counter is written with any
value. A write of the Status Register is also used to remove the previous error
value in the ER2-0 bits. Clearing the error counters will also clear the CECE bit, if
set.
When BUSOFF = 1, software is prohibited from writing to the error counters by
virtue of the fact that the SWINT bit is also forced to a 0 state during the period
that the CAN module performs a bus recovery and power up sequence. Once the
CAN module has removed itself from the Bus Off condition it will also clear
BUSOFF = 0, set SWINT = 1, and will clear both the transmit and receive error
counters to 00h.
ERCS
Bit 1
CAN 0 Error Count Select. This bit selects the number of transmit or receive
errors that will cause the CAN 0 Error Count Exceeded bit, CECE (C0S.6), to be
set.
0 = CECE bit set when the transmit or receive error counters exceed 95 errors.
1 = CECE bit set when the transmit or receive error counters exceed 127 errors.
37 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
SWINT
Bit 0
CAN 0 Software Initialization Enable. This bit enables (SWINT=1) and
disables (SWINT=0) software write access to the first 16 bytes of the CAN 0
MOVX SRAM. These bytes contain the CAN 0 Control/Status/Mask Registers.
Read access to all bytes in the CAN 0 MOVX SRAM is permitted at all times,
regardless of the state of the SWINT bit.
Setting SWINT=1 disables CAN 0 Bus activity, allowing software access to the
CAN 0 Control/Status/Mask Registers without corrupting CAN Bus transmission
or reception. A special lockout procedure delays the internal assertion of the
SWINT bit until all CAN 0 activity has ceased. The following procedure must be
followed when setting the SWINT bit to prevent the accidental corruption of CAN
Bus activity:
1. Write a 1 to the SWINT bit, starting the internal process to enter the software
initialization process.
2. Poll the SWINT bit until it is set. The lockout circuit will hold SWINT=0 if it
detects a reception, transmission, or arbitration in progress. When one of these
conditions ceases, or if an error occurs, the CAN module will set SWINT=1,
indicating that the CAN module is disabled and software can now write to the
first 16 bytes of the CAN 0 MOVX SRAM. Attempts to modify the first 16
bytes of the CAN 0 MOVX SRAM while SWINT=0 will fail, leaving the
bytes unchanged.
The SWINT bit controls access to several other bits and registers. The CAN 0
Transmit Error Register (C0TE;A6h) and CAN 0 Receive Error Register
(C0RE;A7h) are only modifiable while SWINT=1. Setting SWINT=1
automatically clears the SIESTA bit, and attempts to set SWINT=1 and
SIESTA=1 in the same write to the COC register will result in SWINT=1 and
SIESTA=0.
The BUSOFF bit has a direct interaction with the SWINT bit. When a Bus Off
condition is detected (BUSOFF=1), the CAN module will automatically clear
SWINT=0 and initiate a bus recovery and power-up sequence. Write access to the
SWINT bit is prohibited until the Bus Off condition has been cleared and
BUSOFF has been reset to 0.
The SWINT bit is also set automatically following a system reset, the setting of
the CRST bit in the CAN 0 Control Register, or programming the CAN Bus
Timing Registers (C0BT0, C0BT1 in the MOVX SRAM) to 00h (an invalid
state). As a precaution against utilizing the CAN with invalid bus timing, the
SWINT bit cannot be cleared while C0BT0=C0BT1=00h. When this bit is
cleared, the CAN 0 module will initiate a CAN Bus synchronization after the
CAN module executes a power-up sequence (reception of 11 consecutive
recessive bits.)
38 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Status Register (C0S)
SFR A4h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BUSOFF
CECE
WKS
RXS
TXS
ER2
ER1
ER0
R-0
R-0
R-0
RW-0
RW-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
BUSOFF
Bit 7
CAN 0 Bus Off. When BUSOFF = 1, the CAN 0 Bus is disabled and is not
capable of receiving or transmitting messages. This condition is the result of the
transmit error counter reaching a count of 256. When the CAN 0 module detects
an error count of 256 the CAN module will automatically set BUSOFF = 1 and
clear SWINT = 0.
BUSOFF is cleared to a 0 to enable CAN 0 Bus activity when the CAN module
completes both the busoff recovery (128 X 11 consecutive recessive bits) and the
power-up sequence (11 consecutive recessive bits). Once the CAN module has
completed this relationship it will set SWINT = 1 and will enter into the software
initialization state. Once software has cleared SWINT to a 0, the CAN module
will be enabled to transmit and receive messages. When BUSOFF = 0, the CAN 0
Bus is enabled to receive or transmit messages. A change in the state of BUSOFF
from a previous 0 to a 1 will generate an interrupt if the ERIE, C0IE and EA
register bits are set. All microcontroller writes to the SWINT bit are disabled
when BUSOFF = 1. Both the transmit and receive error counters are cleared to
00h when the Bus Off condition is cleared by the CAN module (BUSOFF=0).
CECE
Bit 6
CAN 0 Error Count Exceeded. This bit operates in one of two modes,
depending on the state of the ERCS bit in the CAN 0 Control Register.
ERCS = 0 (Error count limit=96) In this mode when CECE=1, the interrupt
flag indicates that either the CAN 0 Transmit Error Counter or the CAN 0
Receive Error Counter has reached an error count of 96, which represents an
exceptionally high number of errors. CECE=0 indicates that both error
counters have an error count of less than 96. A 0 to 1 transition of CECE will
generate an interrupt if the ERIE, C0IE and IE SFR bits are set.
ERCS = 1 (Error count limit=128) In this mode when CECE=1, the interrupt
flag indicates that either the CAN 0 Transmit Error Counter or the CAN 0
Receive Error Counter has reached an error count of 128, which represents an
exceptionally high number of errors. CECE = 0 indicates that the current
Transmit Error Counter and Receive Error Counter both have an error count
of less than 128. A change in the state of CECE from either a previous 0 to a
1 or from a previous 1 to 0 will generate an interrupt if the ERIE, C0IE and
IE SFR bits are set.
WKS
Bit 5
CAN 0 Wake-up Status. When WKS=1, the CAN 0 module is in either SIESTA
or Power Down mode. Clearing both the SIESTA and PDE bits will force the
WKS=0. A change in the state of WKS from a previous 1 to 0 will generate an
interrupt if the STIE, C0IE and IE SFR bits are set.
39 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
RXS
Bit 4
CAN 0 Receive Status. This bit indicates whether or not messages have been
received since the last read of the CAN 0 Status Register. RXS is only set by the
CAN 0 logic and must be cleared by the Microcontroller software, the CRST bit,
or a system Reset.
1 = The meaning of RXS=1 is dependent on the Autobaud bit, AUTOB.
AUTOB=0, RXS = 1 indicates that a message has been both successfully
received and stored in one of the message centers by CAN 0 since the last
read of the CAN 0 Status Register.
AUTOB=1, RXS = 1 indicates that a message has been successfully received
by CAN 0 since the last read of the CAN 0 Status Register. Note that
messages that are successfully received without errors but do not pass the
arbitration filtering will still set the RXS bit.
0 = No messages have been successfully received since the last read of the CAN 0
Status Register.
When STIE= 1 and the RXS bit transitions from 0 to 1, the CAN Interrupt
Register (C0IR;A5h) will change to 01h to indicate a pending interrupt due to a
change in the CAN Status Register(C0S;A4h). Reading any bit in the C0S register
will clear the pending interrupt, causing the C0IR register to change to 00h if no
interrupts are pending or the appropriate value if a lower priority message center
interrupt is pending. If a second successful reception is detected prior to or after
the clearing of the RXS bit in the Status Register, a second status change interrupt
flag will be set, issuing a second interrupt. Each new successful reception will
generate an interrupt request independent of the previous state of the RXS bit, as
long as the CAN Status Register has been read to clear the previous status change
interrupt flag. Note that if software changes RXS from 0 to 1, an artificial Status
Change Interrupt (STIE=1) will be generated. Thus, if RXS was previously set to
0 and a reception was successful, RXS will be set to 1 and an enabled interrupt
may be asserted. An interrupt may be asserted (if enabled) if software changes
RXS from 0 to 1. If RXS was previously set to 1 and a reception was successful,
RXS remains set and an interrupt may be asserted if enabled. No interrupt will be
asserted if software attempts to set RXS=1 while the bit is already set.
40 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
TXS
Bit 3
CAN 0 Transmit Status. This bit indicates whether or not one or more messages
have been successfully transmitted since the last read of the CAN 0 Status
Register. TXS is only set by the CAN 0 logic and is not cleared by the CAN
controller but is only cleared via software, the CRST bit, or a system Reset.
1 = A message has been successfully transmitted by CAN 0 (error free and
acknowledged) since the last read of the CAN 0 Status Register.
0 = No messages have been successfully transmitted since the last read of the
CAN 0 Status Register.
When STIE= 1 and the TXS bit transitions from 0 to 1, the CAN Interrupt
Register (C0IR;A5h) will change to 01h to indicate a pending interrupt due to a
change in the CAN Status Register. Reading any bit in the C0S register will clear
the pending interrupt, causing C0IR to change to 00h if no interrupts are pending
or the appropriate value if a lower priority message center interrupt is pending. If
a second successful reception is detected prior to or after the clearing of the RXS
bit in the Status Register, a second status change interrupt flag will be set, issuing
a second interrupt. Each new successful reception will generate an interrupt
request independent of the previous state of the RXS bit, as long as the CAN
Status Register has been read to clear the previous status change interrupt flag.
Note that if software changes TXS from 0 to 1, an artificial Status Change
Interrupt (STIE=1) will be generated. Thus, if TXS was previously set to 0 and a
reception was successful, TXS will be set to 1 and an enabled interrupt may be
asserted. An interrupt may be asserted (if enabled) if software changes TXS from
0 to 1. If TXS was previously set to 1 and a reception was successful, TXS
remains set and an interrupt may be asserted if enabled. No interrupt will be
asserted if software attempts to set TXS while it is already set.
41 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ER2-0
Bit 2-0
CAN 0 Bus Error Status. These bits indicate the type of error, if any, detected
in the last CAN 0 Bus Frame. These bits will be reset to the 111b state following
any read of the C0S register (when SWINT=0), allowing software to determine if
a new error has been received since the last read of this register. The ER2-0 bits
are read only.
If enabled, an interrupt will be generated any time the ER2-0 bits change from
000b or 111b to another value. Errors received while the ER2-0 bits are in a non000b or 111b state will be ignored, leaving ER2-0 unchanged and no additional
interrupts will be generated. This ensures that error conditions will not be
lost/overwritten before software has a chance to read the C0S register. Once the
C0S register is read and the ER2-0 bits return to 111b, new errors will be
processed normally. In the case of simultaneous errors in multiple CAN 0
message centers, only the highest priority error is indicated.
ER2 ER1 ER0 Priority
Error Conditions
0
0
0
N/A
No Error in Last Frame
0
0
1
2
Bit Stuff Error
0
1
0
5
Format Error
0
1
1
4
Transmit Not Acknowledged Error
1
0
0
6(lowest)
Bit 1 Error
1
0
1
1(highest)
Bit 0 Error
1
1
0
3
CRC Error
1
1
1
N/A
No change since last C0S read
The following is a description of the different error types:
Bit Stuff Error: Occurs when the CAN controller detects more than 5 consecutive
bits of an identical state are received in an incoming message.
Format Error: Generated when a received message has the wrong format.
Transmit Not Acknowledged Error: Indicates that a data frame was sent and the
requested node did not acknowledged the message.
Bit 1 Error: Indicates that the CAN attempted to transmit a message and that
when a recessive bit was transmitted, the CAN bus was found to have a
dominant bit level. This error is not generated when the bit is a part of the
arbitration field (identifier and remote retransmission request).
Bit 0 Error: Indicates that the CAN attempted to transmit a message and that
when a dominant bit was transmitted, the CAN bus was found to have a
recessive bit level. This error is not generated when the bit is a part of the
arbitration field. The Bit 0 Error is set each time a recessive bit is received
during the Busoff recovery period.
CRC Error: Generated whenever the calculated CRC of a received message does
not match the CRC embedded in the message.
42 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Interrupt Register (C0IR)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR A5h
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
C0IR.7-0
Bit 7-5
CAN 0 Interrupt Indicator 7-0 This register indicates the status of the
interrupt source associated with the CAN 0 module. Reading this register
after the generation of a CAN 0 Interrupt will identify the interrupt source as
shown in the table below. This register is cleared to 00h following a reset.
C0IR.7-0
00h
01h
02h
03h
04h
05h
06h
07h
08h
09h
0Ah
0Bh
0Ch
0Dh
0Eh
0Fh
10h
Priority
N/A
1 (highest)
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16 (lowest)
Interrupt Source
No Pending Interrupt
Change in the CAN 0 Status Register
Message 15
Message 1
Message 2
Message 3
Message 4
Message 5
Message 6
Message 7
Message 8
Message 9
Message 10
Message 11
Message 12
Message 13
Message 14
The C0IR value will not change unless the previous interrupt source has been
acknowledged and removed (i.e., software read of the C0S register or clearing of
the appropriate INTRQ bit), even if the new interrupt has a higher priority. If two
enabled interrupt sources become active simultaneously, the interrupt of higher
priority will be reflected in the C0IR value.
The CAN 0 interrupt source into the interrupt logic is active whenever C0IR is not
equal to 00h. Changes in the C0IR value from 00h to a non-zero state, indicate the
first interrupt source detected by the CAN module following the non-active
interrupt state. The C0IR interrupt values will remain in place until the interrupt
source is removed, independent of other higher (or lower) priority interrupts that
become active prior to clearing the currently displayed interrupt source.
When the current CAN interrupt source is cleared, C0IR will change to
reflect the next active interrupt with the highest priority. The Status Change
interrupt will be asserted if there has been a change in the Can 0 Status
Register (if enabled by the appropriate ERIE and/or STIE bit) and the CAN
Status Interrupt state is set. A message center interrupt will be indicated if the
INTRQ bit in the respective CAN Message Control Register is set.
43 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Transmit Error Register (C0TE)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
SFR A6h
R=Unrestricted Read, *= Write only when SWINT=1 and BUSOFF=0, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 0 Transmit Error Register. This register indicates the number of
accumulated CAN 0 transmit errors. The CAN 0 module responds in different
ways to varying number of errors as shown below.
C0TE.7-0
Bits 7-0
This register can only be modified via software when SWINT=1 and
BUSOFF=0. All software writes to this register simultaneously load the same
value into the CAN 0 Transmit Error Register and the CAN 0 Receive Error
Register. Writing 00h to this register will also clear the CAN 0 Error Count
Exceeded bit, CECE (C0S.6). This register is cleared following all hardware
Resets and software resets enabled via the CRST bit in the CAN 0 Control
Register.
C0TE Value
CAN 0 State
Value < 96
Error active mode, CAN 0 Bus on (BUSOFF=0)
128 > Value ≥ 96
Error active mode, CAN 0 Bus on (BUSOFF=0), warning
level
255 ≥ Value ≥ 128
Error passive mode, CAN 0 Bus on (BUSOFF=0)
Value > 255
CAN 0 Bus off (BUSOFF=1)
CAN 0 Receive Error Register (C0RE)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
SFR A7h
R=Unrestricted Read, *= Write only via C0TE register, -n=Value after Reset
C0RE.7-0
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Receive Error Register. This register indicates the number of
accumulated CAN 0 receive errors. All writes to the C0TE register are
simultaneously loaded into this register. This register is cleared following all
hardware Resets and software resets enabled via the CRST bit in the CAN 0
Control Register.
44 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Interrupt Enable (IE)
SFR A8h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
EA
ES1
ET2
ES0
ET1
EX1
ET0
EX0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
EA
Bit 7
Global Interrupt Enable. This bit controls the global masking of all interrupts
except Power-Fail Interrupt, which is enabled by the EPFI bit (WDCON.5).
0 = Disable all interrupt sources. This bit overrides individual interrupt mask
settings.
1 = Enable all individual interrupt masks. Individual interrupts will occur if
enabled.
ES1
Bit 6
Enable Serial Port 1 Interrupt. This bit controls the masking of the serial port 1
interrupt.
0 = Disable all serial port 1 interrupts.
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the RI_1 (SCON1.0) or TI_1
(SCON1.1) flags.
ET2
Bit 5
Enable Timer 2 Interrupt. This bit controls the masking of the Timer 2 interrupt.
0 = Disable all Timer 2 interrupts.
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the TF2 flag (T2CON.7).
ES0
Bit 4
Enable Serial Port 0 Interrupt. This bit controls the masking of the serial port 0
interrupt.
0 = Disable all serial port 0 interrupts.
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the RI_0 (SCON0.0) or TI_0
(SCON0.1) flags.
ET1
Bit 3
Enable Timer 1 Interrupt. This bit controls the masking of the Timer 1 interrupt.
0 = Disable all Timer 1 interrupts.
1 = Enable all interrupt requests generated by the TF1 flag (TCON.7).
EX1
Bit 2
Enable External Interrupt 1. This bit controls the masking of external interrupt
1.
0 = Disable external interrupt 1.
1 = Enable all interrupt requests generated by the INT1 pin.
ET0
Bit 1
Enable Timer 0 Interrupt. This bit controls the masking of the Timer 0 interrupt.
0 = Disable all Timer 0 interrupts.
1 = Enable all interrupt requests generated by the TF0 flag (TCON.5).
EX0
Bit 0
Enable External Interrupt 0. This bit controls the masking of external interrupt
0.
0 = Disable external interrupt 0.
1 = Enable all interrupt requests generated by the INT0 pin.
45 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Slave Address Register 0 (SADDR0)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SFR A9h SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0 SADDR0
.7
.6
.5
.4
.3
.2
.1
.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Slave Address Register 0. This register is programmed with the given or
broadcast address assigned to serial port 0.
SADDR0.7-0
Bits 7-0
Slave Address Register 1 (SADDR1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SFR AAh SADDR1 SADDR1 SADDR1 SADDR1 SADDR1 SADDR1 SADDR1 SADDR1
.7
.6
.5
.4
.3
.2
.1
.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Slave Address Register 1. This register is programmed with the given or
broadcast address assigned to serial port 1.
SADDR1.7-0
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Control Register (C0M1C)
SFR ABh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
MSRDY
Bit 7
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Ready. This bit is used by the Microcontroller to
prevent the CAN module from accessing message center 1 while the
microcontroller is updating message attributes. These include as identifiers
(arbitration registers 0-3), data byte registers 0-7, data byte count (DTBYC3DTBYC0), direction control (T/R), the extended or standard mode bit
(EX/ST), and the mask enables (MEME and MDME) associated with this
message center. When this bit is 0, the CAN 0 processor will ignore this
message center for transmit, receive, or remote frame request operations.
MSRDY is cleared following a microcontroller hardware reset or a reset
generated by the CRST bit in the CAN 0 Control Register, and must also
remain in a cleared mode until all the CAN 0 initialization has been
completed. Individual message MSRDY controls can be changed after
initialization to reconfigure specific messages, without interrupting the
communication of other messages on the CAN 0 Bus.
46 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ETI
Bit 6
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Enable Transmit Interrupt. Setting ETI to a 1
will enable a successful CAN 0 transmission in message center 1 to set the
INTRQ bit for this message center which in turn will issue an interrupt to the
microcontroller. When ETI is cleared to 0 a successful transmission will not
set INTRQ bit and will not generate an interrupt. Note that the ETI bit located
in Message Center 15 is ignored by the CAN module, since the message
center 15 is a receive only message center.
ERI
Bit 5
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Enable Receive Interrupt. Setting ERI to a 1
will enable a successful CAN 0 reception and storage in message center 1 to
set the INTRQ bit for this message center which in turn will issue an interrupt
to the microcontroller. When ERI is cleared to 0 a successful reception will
not set the INTRQ bit and as such will not generate an interrupt.
INTRQ
Bit 4
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Interrupt Request. This bit serves as a CAN
interrupt flag, indicating the successful transmission or reception of a
message in this message center. INTRQ is automatically set when ERI=1 and
message center 1 successfully receives and stores a message. The INTRQ bit
is also set to a 1 when ETI is set and the CAN 1 logic completes a successful
transmission. The INTRQ interrupt request must be also enabled via the EA
global mask in the IE SFR register if the interrupt is to be acknowledged by
the microcontroller interrupt logic. This flag must be cleared via software.
EXTRQ
Bit 3
CAN 0 Message Center 1 External Transmit Request. When EXTRQ is
cleared to a 0, there are no pending requests by external CAN nodes for this
message. When EXTRQ is set to a 1, a request has been made for this
message by an external CAN node, but the CAN 0 controller has not yet
completed the service request. Following the completion of a requested
transmission by a message center programmed for transmission (T/ R = 1),
the EXTRQ bit will be cleared by the CAN 0 controller. A remote request is
only answered by a message center programmed for transmission (T/ R = 1)
when DTUP = 1 and TIH = 0, i.e. when new data was loaded and is not being
currently modified by the micro. Note that a message center programmed for
a receive mode (T/ R = 0) will also detect a remote frame request and will set
the EXTRQ bit in a similar manner, but will not automatically transmit a data
frame and as such will not automatically clear the EXTRQ bit.
MTRQ
Bit 2
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Microcontroller Transmit Request. When set,
this bit indicates that the message center is requesting that a message be
transmitted. The bit is cleared when the transmission is complete, allowing
this bit to be used to both initiate and monitor the progress of the
transmission. The bit can be set via software or the CAN module, depending
on the state of the Transmit/Receive bit in the CAN 0 Message 1 Format
Register (located in MOVX space). This bit is cleared when the CRST bit is
set, the CAN module experiences a system reset, or the conditions described
below. Note that the MTRQ bit located in Message Center 15 is ignored by
the CAN module, since the Message Center 15 is a receive only message
center.
T/ R =0 (receive)
47 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
When software sets this bit, a remote frame request previously loaded into the
message center will be transmitted. The CAN 0 Module will clear this bit
following the successful transmission of the frame request message.
T/ R =1 (transmit)
When software sets this bit, a data frame previously loaded into the message
center will be transmitted. When T/ R = 1, the MTRQ bit will also be set by the
CAN 0 controller at the same time that the EXTRQ bit is set by a message request
from an external node.
ROW/TIH
Bit 1
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Receive Overwrite/Transmit Inhibit. The
Receive Overwrite (ROW) and Transmit Inhibit (TIH) bits share the same bit
location. When T/ R = 0 the bit has the ROW function, serving as a flag that
an overwrite of incoming data may have occurred. When T/ R = 1 the bit has
the Transmit Inhibit function, allowing software to disable the transmission
of a message while the data contents are being updated.
Receive Overwrite: (T/R = 0, ROW is Read Only)
The CAN 0 controller automatically sets this bit 0 if a new message is received
and stored while the DTUP bit was still set. When set, ROW indicates that the
previous message was potentially lost and may not have been read, since the
microcontroller had not cleared the DTUP bit prior to the new load. When ROW
= 0, no new message has been received and stored while DTUP was set to ‘1’
since this bit was last cleared. Note that the ROW bit will not be set when the
WTOE bit is cleared to a 0, since all overwrites are disabled. This is due to the
fact that even if the incoming message matches the respective message center that
as long as DTUP = 1 in the respective message center, the combination of WTOE
= 0 and DTUP = 1 will force the CAN module to ignore the respective message
center when the CAN is processing the incoming data.
ROW is cleared by the CAN module when software clears the DTUP bit
associated with that message center. INTRQ is automatically set when the
ERI=1 and message center 1 successfully receives and stores a message.
ROW will reflect the actual message center relationships for message centers
1 to 14. Message center 15 utilizes a special shadow message buffer, and the
ROW bit for that message center indicates an overwrite of the buffer as
opposed to the actual message center 15. The ROW bit for message center 15
is cleared once the shadow buffer is loaded into the message center 15, and
the shadow buffer is cleared to allow a new message to be loaded. The
shadow buffer is automatically loaded into message center 15 when the
microcontroller clears the DTUP and EXTRQ bits in message center 15.
Transmit Inhibit: (T/R = 1, TIH is unrestricted Read/Write)
The TIH allows the microcontroller to disable the transmission of the
message when the data contents of the message are being updated. TIH = 1
directs the CAN 0 controller not to transmit the associated message. TIH = 0
enables the CAN 0 controller to transmit the message. If TIH = 1 when a
remote frame request is received by the message center, EXTRQ will be set
to a 1. Following the Remote Frame Request and after the microcontroller
has established the proper data to be sent, the microcontroller will clear the
48 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
TIH bit to a 0, which will allow the CAN module to send the data requested
by the previous Remote Frame Request. Note that the TIH bit associated with
Message Center 15 is ignored because it is a receive only message center.
DTUP
Bit 0
CAN 0 Message Center 1 Data Updated. This bit indicates that new data
has been loaded into the data portion of the message center. The exact
function of the DTUP bit is dependent on whether the message center is
configured in a receive (T/ R = 0) or transmit (T/ R = 1) mode. Some
functions are also dependent on the state of the WTOE bit. The DTUP bit is
only cleared by a software write to the bit, a system reset, or the setting of the
CRST bit.
T/ R =0 (receive)
In this mode (T/ R = 0) the DTUP bit is set when new data has been
successfully received and is ready to be read by the microcontroller. The
exact meaning of the DTUP bit during a message center read is determined
by the WTOE bit in the CAN 0 Control Register.
If WTOE = 1 (message center overwrite enabled), DTUP should be
polled before and after reading the message center to ascertain if an
overwrite of the data occurred during the read. For example, software
should clear DTUP before reading the message center and then again
after the message center read. If DTUP has been set, then a new
message was received and software should read the message center
again to read the new data. If DTUP remained cleared, no additional
data was received and the data is complete.
If WTOE=0 the processor is not permitted to overwrite this message
center, so it is only necessary to clear the DTUP bit after reading the
message center.
The state of the DTUP bit in the receive mode does not inhibit remote frame
request transmission in the receive mode. The only gating item for remote
frame transmission in the receive mode is that the MSRDY and MTRQ bits
must both be set.
T/ R =1 (transmit)
In this mode, software must set TIH =1 and clear DTUP = 0 prior to doing an
update of the associated message center. This prevents the CAN module from
transmitting the data while the microcontroller is updating it. Once the
microcontroller has finished configuring the message center, software must clear
TIH = 0 and set MSRDY=MTRQ =DTUP =1, to enable the CAN module to
transmit the data.
The CAN module will not clear the DTUP after the transmission, but the
microcontroller can verify that the transmission has been completed, by
checking the MTRQ bit, which will be cleared (MTRQ = 0) after the
transmission has been successfully completed.
49 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Message Center 2 Control Register (C0M2C)
SFR ACh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M2C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 3 Control Register (C0M3C)
SFR ADh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M3C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 4 Control Register (C0M4C)
SFR AEh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M4C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 5 Control Register (C0M5C)
SFR AFh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C0M5C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
50 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Port 3 (P3)
SFR B0h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
P3.7
RD
P3.6
WR
P3.5
T1
P3.4
T0
P3.3
INT1
P3.2
INT0
P3.1
TXD0
P3.0
RXD0
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Purpose I/O Port 3. This register functions as a general purpose I/O port. In
addition, all the pins have an alternative function listed below. Each of the
functions is controlled by several other SFRs. The associated Port 1 latch bit must
contain a logic one before the pin can be used in its alternate function capacity.
External Data Memory Read Strobe. This pin provides an active low read
strobe to an external memory device.
External Data Memory Write Strobe. This pin provides an active low write
strobe to an external memory device.
P3.7-0
Bits 7-0
RD
Bit 7
WR
Bit 6
Timer/Counter External Input. A 1 to 0 transition on this pin will increment
Timer 1.
T1
Bit 5
T0
Bit 4
INT1
Bit 3
INT0
Bit 2
TXD0
Bit 1
RXD0
Bit 0
Counter External Input. A 1 to 0 transition on this pin will increment Timer 0.
External Interrupt 1. A falling edge/low level on this pin will cause an external
interrupt 1 if enabled.
External Interrupt 0. A falling edge/low level on this pin will cause an external
interrupt 0 if enabled.
Serial Port 0 Transmit. This pin transmits the serial port 0 data in serial port
modes 1, 2, 3 and emits the synchronizing clock in serial port mode 0.
Serial Port 0 Receive. This pin receives the serial port 0 data in serial port
modes 1, 2, 3 and is a bi-directional data transfer pin in serial port mode 0.
CAN 0 Message Center 6 Control Register (C0M6C)
SFR B3h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C0M6C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
51 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Message Center 7 Control Register (C0M7C)
SFR B4h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M7C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 8 Control Register (C0M8C)
SFR B5h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M8C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 9 Control Register (C0M9C)
SFR B6h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M9C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 10 Control Register (C0M10C)
SFR B7h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C0M10C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
52 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Interrupt Priority (IP)
SFR B8h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
-
PS1
PT2
PS0
PT1
PX1
PT0
PX0
-
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Bit 7
Reserved. Read data is indeterminate.
PS1
Bit 6
Serial Port 1 Interrupt. This bit controls the priority of the serial port 1
interrupt.
0 = Serial port 1 priority is determined by the natural priority order.
1 = Serial port 1 is a high priority interrupt.
PT2
Bit 5
Timer 2 Interrupt. This bit controls the priority of Timer 2 interrupt.
0 = Timer 2 is determined by the natural priority order.
1 = Timer 2 is a high priority interrupt.
PS0
Bit 4
Serial Port 0 Interrupt. This bit controls the priority of the serial port 0
interrupt.
0 = Serial port 0 priority is determined by the natural priority order.
1 = Serial port 0 is a high priority interrupt.
PT1
Bit 3
Timer 1 Interrupt. This bit controls the priority of Timer 1 interrupt.
0 = Timer 1 is determined by the natural priority order.
1 = Timer 1 is a high priority interrupt.
PX1
Bit 2
External Interrupt 1. This bit controls the priority of external interrupt 1.
0 = External interrupt 1 is determined by the natural priority order.
1 = External interrupt 1 is a high priority interrupt.
PT0
Bit 1
Timer 0 Interrupt. This bit controls the priority of Timer 0 interrupt.
0 = Timer 0 is determined by the natural priority order.
1 = Timer 0 is a high priority interrupt.
PX0
Bit 0
External Interrupt 0. This bit controls the priority of external interrupt 0.
0 = External interrupt 0 is determined by the natural priority order.
1 = External interrupt 0 is a high priority interrupt.
53 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Slave Address Mask Enable Register 0 (SADEN0)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SFR B9h SADEN0.7 SADEN0.6
SADEN0.5
SADEN0.4
SADEN0.3
SADEN0.2
SADEN0.1
SADEN0.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Slave Address Mask Enable Register 0. This register functions as a mask when
comparing serial port 0 addresses for automatic address recognition. When a bit
in this register is set, the corresponding bit location in the SADDR0 register will
be exactly compared with the incoming serial port 0 data to determine if a
receiver interrupt should be generated. When a bit in this register is cleared, the
corresponding bit in the SADDR0 register becomes a don‘t care and is not
compared against the incoming data. All incoming data will generate a receiver
interrupt when this register is cleared.
SADEN0.7-0
Bits 7-0
Slave Address Mask Enable Register 1 (SADEN1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SFR BAh SADEN1.7 SADEN1.6
SADEN1.5
SADEN1.4
SADEN1.3
SADEN1.2
SADEN1.1
SADEN1.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Slave Address Mask Enable Register 1. This register functions as a mask when
comparing serial port 1 addresses for automatic address recognition. When a bit
in this register is set, the corresponding bit location in the SADDR1 register will
be exactly compared with the incoming serial port 1 data to determine if a
receiver interrupt should be generated. When a bit in this register is cleared, the
corresponding bit in the SADDR1 register becomes a don’t care and is not
compared against the incoming data. All incoming data will generate a receiver
interrupt when this register is cleared.
SADEN1.7-0
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 11 Control Register (C0M11C)
SFR BBh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C0M11C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
54 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 Message Center 12 Control Register (C0M12C)
SFR BCh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M12C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 13 Control Register (C0M13C)
SFR BDh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M13C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 14 Control Register (C0M14C)
SFR BEh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C0M14C
Bits 7-0
CAN 0 Message Center 15 Control Register (C0M15C)
SFR BFh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C0M15C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 0
Message One Control Register (C0M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
55 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Serial Port Control (SCON1)
7
SFR C0h SM0/FE_1
RW-0
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SM1_1
SM2_1
REN_1
TB8_1
RB8_1
TI_1
RI_1
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Serial Port 1 Mode. These bits control the mode of serial port 1 as shown
below. In addition, the SM0 and SM2 bits have secondary functions as shown
below.
SM0-2
Bits 7-5
SM0
0
0
SM1
0
0
SM2
0
1
MODE
0
0
FUNCTION
Synchronous
Synchronous
LENGTH
8 bits
8 bits
0
1
X
1
Asynchronous
10 bits
1
0
0
2
Asynchronous
11 bits
1
0
1
1
Asynchronous w/
Multiprocessor communication
11 bits
1
1
0
3
Asynchronous
11 bits
1
1
1
3
Asynchronous w/
Multiprocessor communication
11 bits
PERIOD
12 tCLK
4 tCLK
Timer 1 or 2
baud rate equation
64 tCLK (SMOD=0)
32 tCLK (SMOD=1)
64 tCLK (SMOD=0)
32 tCLK (SMOD=1)
Timer 1 or 2
baud rate equation
Timer 1 or 2
baud rate equation
SM0/FE_1
Bit 7
Framing Error Flag. When SMOD0 (PCON.6)=0, this bit (SM0) is used to
select the mode for serial port 1. When SMOD0 (PCON.6)=1, this bit (FE) will
be set upon detection of an invalid stop bit. When used as FE, this bit must be
cleared in software. Once the SMOD0 bit is set, modifications to this bit will not
affect the serial port mode settings. Although accessed from the same register,
internally the data for bits SM0 and FE are stored in different locations.
SM1_1
Bit 6
No alternate function.
SM2-2
Bit 5
Multiple CPU Communications. The function of this bit is dependent on the
serial port 0 mode.
Mode 0: Selects 12 tCLK or 4 tCLK period for synchronous serial port 0 data
transfers.
Mode 1: When set, reception is ignored (RI_1 is not set) if invalid stop bit
received.
Mode 2/3: When this bit is set, multiprocessor communications are enabled in
modes 2 and 3. This will prevent the RI_1 bit from being set, and an
interrupt being asserted, if the 9th bit received is not 1.
REN_1
Bit 4
Receive Enable. This bit enables/disables the serial port 1 receiver shift register.
0 = Serial port 1 reception disabled.
1 = Serial port 1 receiver enabled (modes 1, 2, 3). Initiate synchronous reception
56 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
(mode 0).
TB8_1
Bit 3
9th Transmission Bit State. This bit defines the state of the 9th transmission bit
in serial port 1 modes 2 and 3.
RB8_1
Bit 2
9th Received Bit State. This bit identifies the state for the 9th reception bit
received data in serial pot 1 modes 2 and 3. In serial port mode 1, when
SM2_1=0, RB8_1 is the state of the stop bit. RB8_1 is not used in mode 0.
TI_1
Bit 1
Transmitter Interrupt Flag. This bit indicates that data in the serial port 1
buffer has been completely shifted out. In serial port mode 0, TI_1 is set at the
end of the 8th data bit. In all other modes, this bit is set at the end of the last data
bit. This bit must be manually cleared by software.
RI_1
Bit 0
Transmitter Interrupt Flag. This bit indicates that a byte of data has been
received in the serial port 1 buffer. In serial port mode 1, RI_1 is set at the end of
the 8th bit. In serial port mode 1, RI_1 is set after the last sample of the incoming
stop bit subject to the state of SM2_1. In modes 2 and 3, RI_1 is set after the last
sample of RB8_1. This bit must be manually cleared by software.
Serial Data Buffer 1 (SBUF1)
7
SFR C1h SBUF1.7
RW-0
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SBUF1.6
SBUF1.5
SBUF1.4
SBUF1.3
SBUF1.2
SBUF1.1
SBUF1.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
SBUF1.7-0
Bits 7-0
Serial Data Buffer 1. Data for serial port 1 is read from or written to this
location. The serial transmit and receive buffers are separate registers, but both
are addressed at this location.
57 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Power Management Register (PMR)
SFR C4h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CD1
CD0
SWB
CTM
4X/ 2X
ALEOFF
1
1
R*-1
R*-0
RW-0
R*-0
R*-0
RW-0
R-1
R-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W= Unrestricted Write, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
CD1, CD0
Bits 7-6
CD1:0 4X/ 2X
00
00
01
10
11
SWB
Bit 5
1
0
x
x
x
Clock Divide Control 1-0. These bits select the number of crystal oscillator
clocks required to generate one machine cycle. Switching between modes
requires a transition through the divide by 4 mode (CD1, CD0=01). For example,
to go from 1 to 1024 clocks per machine cycle the device must first go from 1 to
4 clocks per cycle, and then from 4 to 1024 clocks per cycle. Attempts to perform
an invalid transition will be ignored. The setting of these bits will effect the
timers and serial ports as shown below.
Attempts to change these bits to the frequency multiplier (1 or 2 clocks per cycle)
setting will fail when running from the internal ring oscillator. In addition, it is
not possible to change these bits to the 1024 clocks per machine cycle setting
while the switchback enable bit (SWB) is set and any of the switchback sources
(external interrupts or serial port transmit or receive activity) are active.
OSCILLATOR
OSC CYCLES OSC CYCLES OSC CYCLES PER
CYCLES PER PER TIMER 0/1/2 PER TIMER 2 SERIAL PORT CLK,
MODE 0
MACHINE.
CLOCK.
CLK, BAUD
CYCLE
RATE GEN.
TxM=0 TxM=1
SM2=0
SM2=1
1
12
1
2
3
1
2
12
2
2
6
2
Reserved
4
12
4
2
12
4
1024
3072
1024
512
3072
1024
OSC CYCLES PER
SERIAL PORT CLK,
MODE 2
SMOD=0
64
64
SMOD=1
32
32
64
64
32
32
Switchback Enable. This bit allows an enabled external interrupt or serial port
activity to force the Clock Divide Control bits to the divide by 4 state (10) when
the microcontroller is in the divide by 1024 state. Upon internal
acknowledgement of an external interrupt, the device will switch modes at the
start of the jump to the interrupt service routine. Note that this means that an
external interrupt must actually be recognized (i.e., be enabled and not masked by
higher priority interrupts) for the switchback to occur. For serial port reception,
the switch occurs at the start of the instructions following the falling edge of the
start bit.
58 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CTM
Bit 4
Crystal Multiplier Enable. The CTM bit enables/disables the Crystal Clock
Multiplier. The CTM bit can be changed only when the CD1 and CD0 bits are set
to divide by 4 mode and the RGMD is cleared to 0. When cleared this bit disables
the Crystal Clock Multiplier to save energy. Setting this bit enables the Crystal
Clock Multiplier, permitting the use of the 1 or 2 clock per machine cycle speeds.
The following procedure must be performed when setting the CTM bit.
1. Select the desired clock rate via the 4X/ 2X bit. (4X/ 2X =1, 1 clock per cycle,
4X/ 2X =0, 2 clocks per cycle).
2. Set the CTM bit. At this point the CKRY bit (EXIF.3) will be cleared,
indicating the internal clock stabilization period has commenced. Software is
prohibited from modifying the CD1, CD0 bits while the CKRY bit is cleared.
3. Poll the CKRY bit until it is set.
4. Change CD0, CD1 bits to 00b.
CTM cannot be changed from a 1 to a 0 while the Crystal Clock Multiplier option
is selected via the CD1 and CD0 clock control bits. The CTM is also
automatically cleared to a logic 0 when the processor enters into a Stop mode.
4X/ 2X
Bit 3
System Clock Multiplier. This bit selects the internal crystal oscillator
multiplier setting, which in turn establishes a speed of one or two clocks per
machine cycle. This bit can only be altered when the CTM bit is cleared to
prevent the corruption of the system clock.
0 = The device operates at a rate of two clocks per machine cycle.
1 = The device operates at a rate of one clock per machine cycle.
ALEOFF
Bit 2
ALE Disable. This bit disables the expression of the ALE signal on the device
pin during all on-board program and data memory accesses. External memory
accesses will automatically enable ALE independent of the ALEOFF bit.
0 = ALE expression is enabled.
1 = ALE expression is disabled.
Bits 1-0
Reserved. These bits will read 1
59 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Status Register (STATUS)
SFR C5
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
PIP
HIP
LIP
-
SPTA1
SPRA1
SPTA0
SPRA0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-*
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset, *=See description
PIP
Bit 7
Power Fail Priority Interrupt Status. When set, this bit indicates that software
is currently servicing a power-fail interrupt. It is cleared when the program
executes the corresponding RETI instruction.
HP
Bit 6
High Priority Interrupt Status. When set, this bit indicates that software is
currently servicing a high priority interrupt. It is cleared when the program
executes the corresponding RETI instruction.
LIP
Bit 5
Low Priority Interrupt Status. When set, this bit indicates that software is
currently servicing a low priority interrupt. It is cleared when the program
executes the corresponding RETI instruction.
Bit 4
SPTA1
Bit 3
Reserved. Read value will be indeterminate.
Serial Port 1 Transmit Activity Monitor. When set, this bit indicates that data
is currently being transmitted by serial port 1. It is cleared when the internal
hardware sets the TI_1 bit. Do not alter the Clock Divide Control bits (PMR.7-6)
while this bit is set or serial port data may be lost.
SPRA1
Bit 2
Serial Port 1 Receive Activity Monitor. When set, this bit indicates that data is
currently being received by serial port 1. It is cleared when the internal hardware
sets the RI_1 bit. Do not alter the Clock Divide Control bits (PMR.7–6) while this
bit is set or serial port data may be lost.
SPTA0
Bit 1
Serial Port 0 Transmit Activity Monitor. When set, this bit indicates that data
is currently being transmitted by serial port 0. It is cleared when the internal
hardware sets the TI_1 bit. Do not alter the Clock Divide Control bits (PMR.7-6)
while this bit is set or serial port data may be lost.
SPRA0
Bit 0
Serial Port 0 Receive Activity Monitor. When set, this bit indicates that data is
currently being received by serial port 0. It is cleared when the internal hardware
sets the RI_1 bit. Do not alter the Clock Divide Control bits (PMR.7-6) while this
bit is set or serial port data may be lost.
60 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Memory Control Register (MCON)
SFR C6h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
IDM1
IDM0
CMA
1
PDCE3
PDCE2
PDCE1
PDCE0
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
R-1
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
R=Unrestricted Read, T=Timed Access Write Only, -n=Value after Reset
IDM1, IDM0
Bits 7-6
Internal Data Memory Configuration Bits 1-0. These bits establish both the
address and type (data and/or program) of the internal 4 KB internal SRAM as
shown in the table below.
Note that a special lockout feature prevents the use of the Program and/or Data
Memory configuration (IDM1, IDM0 = 11b) and the 10-bit stack pointer (SA=1)
at the same time. The IDM1, IDM0 bits can be set to 11b only when the SA bit
(ACON.2) is cleared, and the SA bit cannot be set while the IDM1, IDM0 bits are
equal to 11b. Attempts to modify the IDMx or SA bits in these situations will fail
and the bit(s) will remain unchanged.
IDM1
0
0
1
1
IDM0
0
1
0
1
4 KB Internal SRAM
Memory Location
00F000h-00FFFFh
000000h-000FFFh
400000h-400FFFh
400000h-400FFFh
Memory Assignment
Data Memory
Data Memory
Data Memory
Program and/or Data Memory
CMA
Bit 5
CAN Data Memory Assignment. This bit selects the address of the 256 byte
blocks of CAN Data Memory associated with both CAN controllers.
CMA
CAN 0 Memory Address
CAN 1 Memory Address
0 (default)
00EE00h-00EEFFh
00EF00h-00EFFFh
1
401000h-4010FFh
401100h-4011FFh
Bit 4
Reserved
PDCE3
Bit 3
Program/Data Chip Enable 3. This bit selects whether the CE3 signal
functions as the chip enable for external program memory only (PDCE=0), or as
a merged chip enable for program and data memory (PDCE=1). When PDCE=1,
the microprocessor will use the PSEN signal instead of the RD signal when
reading from external MOVX memory. The Port 4 Control register (P4CNT)
determines the memory range associated with CE3 . This bit is ignored if CE3
has not been previously enabled via the Port 4 Control register.
PDCE2
Bit 2
Program/Data Chip Enable 2. This bit selects whether the CE2 signal
functions as the chip enable for external program memory only (PDCE=0), or as
a merged chip enable for program and data memory (PDCE=1). When PDCE=1,
the microprocessor will use the PSEN signal instead of the RD signal when
reading from external MOVX memory. The Port 4 Control register (P4CNT)
determines the memory range associated with CE2 . This bit is ignored if CE2
has not been previously enabled via the Port 4 Control register.
61 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
PDCE1
Bit 1
Program/Data Chip Enable 1. This bit selects whether the CE1 signal
functions as the chip enable for external program memory only (PDCE=0), or as
a merged chip enable for program and data memory (PDCE=1). When PDCE=1,
the microprocessor will use the PSEN signal instead of the RD signal when
reading from external MOVX memory. The Port 4 Control register (P4CNT)
determines the memory range associated with CE1 . This bit is ignored if CE1
has not been previously enabled via the Port 4 Control register.
PDCE0
Bit 0
Program/Data Chip Enable 0. This bit selects whether the CE0 signal
functions as the chip enable for external program memory only (PDCE=0), or as
a merged chip enable for program and data memory (PDCE=1). When PDCE=1,
the microprocessor will use the PSEN signal instead of the RD signal when
reading from external MOVX memory. The Port 4 Control register (P4CNT)
determines the memory range associated with CE0 . This bit is ignored if CE0
has not been previously enabled via the Port 4 Control register.
Timed Access Register (TA)
SFR C7h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TA.7
TA.6
TA.5
TA.4
TA.3
TA.2
TA.1
TA.0
W-1
W-1
W-1
W-1
W-1
W-1
W-1
W-1
W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
TA.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timed Access. Correctly accessing this register permits modification of timed
access protected bits. Write AAh to this register first, followed within 3 cycles by
writing 55h. Timed access protected bits can then be modified for a period of 3
cycles measured from the writing of the 55h.
62 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Timer 2 Control (T2CON)
SFR C8h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TF2
EXF2
RCLK
TCLK
EXEN2
TR2
C/ T2
CP/ RL2
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
TF2
Bit 7
Timer 2 Overflow Flag. This flag will be set when Timer 2 overflows from
FFFFh or the count equal to the capture register in down count mode. It must be
cleared by software. TF2 will only be set if RCLK and TCLK are both cleared to
0.
EXF2
Bit 6
Timer 2 External Flag. A negative transition on the T2EX pin (P1.1) or timer 2
underflow/overflow will cause this flag to set based on the CP/RL2 (T2CON.0),
EXEN2 (T2CON.3), and DCEN (T2MOD.0) bits. If set by a negative transition,
this flag must be cleared to 0 by software. Setting this bit in software or detection
of a negative transition on the T2EX pin will force a timer interrupt if enabled.
CP/ RL2
1
1
0
0
0
EXEN2
0
1
0
1
X
DCEN
X
X
0
0
1
RESULT
Negative transitions on P1.1 will not affect this bit.
Negative transitions on P1.1 will set this bit.
Negative transitions on P1.1 will not affect this bit.
Negative transitions on P1.1 will set this bit.
Bit toggles whenever timer 2 underflows/overflows
and can be used as a 17th bit of resolution. In this
mode, EXF2 will not cause an interrupt.
RCLK
Bit 5
Receive Clock Flag. This bit determines the serial port 0 timebase when
receiving data in serial modes 1 or 3.
0 = Timer 1 overflow is used to determine receiver baud rate for serial port 0.
1 = Timer 2 overflow is used to determine receiver baud rate for serial port 0.
Setting this bit will force timer 2 into baud rate generation mode. The timer
will operate from a divide by 2 of the external clock.
TCLK
Bit 4
Transmit Clock Flag. This bit determines the serial port 0 timebase when
transmitting data in serial modes 1 or 3.
0 = Timer 1 overflow is used to determine transmitter baud rate for serial port 0.
1 = Timer 2 overflow is used to determine transmitter baud rate for serial port 0.
Setting this bit will force timer 2 into baud rate generation mode. The timer
will operate from a divide by 2 of the external clock.
63 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
EXEN2
Bit 3
Timer 2 External Enable. This bit enables the capture/ reload function on the
T2EX pin if Timer 2 is not generating baud rates for the serial port.
0 = Timer 2 will ignore all external events at T2EX.
1 = Timer 2 will capture or reload a value if a negative transition is detected on
the T2EX pin.
TR2
Bit 2
Timer 2 Run Control. This bit enables/disables the operation of timer 2. Halting
this timer will preserve the current count in TH2, TL2.
0 = Timer 2 is halted.
1 = Timer 2 is enabled.
C/ T2
Bit 1
Counter/Timer Select. This bit determines whether timer 2 will function as a
timer or counter. Independent of this bit, timer 2 runs at 2 clocks per tick when
used in either baud rate generator or clock output mode.
0 = Timer 2 function as a timer. The speed of timer 2 is determined by the T2M
bit (CKCON.5).
1 = Timer 2 will count negative transitions on the T2 pin (P1.0).
CP/ RL2
Bit 0
Capture/Reload Select. This bit determines whether the capture or reload
function will be used for timer 2. If either RCLK or TCLK is set, this bit will not
function and the timer will function in an auto-reload mode following each
overflow.
0 = Auto-reloads will occur when timer 2 overflows or a falling edge is detected
on T2EX if EXEN2=1.
1 = Timer 2 captures will occur when a falling edge is detected on T2EX if
EXEN2 = 1.
64 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Timer 2 Mode (T2MOD)
SFR C9h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
1
1
D13T1
D13T2
1
T2OE
DCEN
R-1
R-1
R-1
RW-0
RW-0
R-1
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W= Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Bits 7-5
Reserved.
D13T1
Bit 4
Divide by Thirteen Clock Option For Timer 1. The D13T1 bit provides an
alternate clock source to the Timer 1 in place of the normal external T1 input pin.
When D13T1 is cleared to 0 (the default Reset state), the clock source for Timer
1 is supplied through the standard T1 external input pin, the divide by 12 of the
oscillator (T1M = 0) or the divide by 4 of the oscillator (T1M = 1), as controlled
by T1M and C/ T . When D13T1 is set to a 1 the clock source for Timer 1 is
supplied through a separate divide by 13 of the crystal oscillator independent of
T1M. The C/ T bit must also be programmed to a 1 to select the divide by 13
counter.
D13T2
Bit 3
Divide by Thirteen Clock Option For Timer 2. The D13T2 bit provides an
alternate clock source to the Timer 2 in place of the normal external T2 input pin.
When D13T2 is cleared to 0 (the default Reset state), the clock source for Timer
2 is supplied through the standard T2 external input pin, the divide by 12 of the
oscillator (T2M = 0) or the divide by 4 of the oscillator (T2M = 1), as controlled
by T2M and C/ T 2 . When D13T2 is set to a 1 the clock source for Timer 2 is
supplied through a separate divide by 13 of the crystal oscillator independent of
T2M. The C/ T 2 bit must also be programmed to a 1 to select the divide by 13
counter.
Bit 2
Reserved.
T2OE
Bit 1
Timer 2 Output Enable. This bit enables/disables the clock output function of
the T2 pin (P1.0). 0 = The T2 pin functions as either a standard port pin or as a
counter input for timer 2. 1 = Timer 2 will drive the T2 pin with a clock output if
C/T2=0. Also, timer 2 rollovers will not cause interrupts.
DCEN
Bit 0
Down Count Enable. This bit, in conjunction with the T2EX pin, controls the
direction that timer 2 counts in 16-bit auto-reload mode.
DCEN
T2EX
DIRECTION
1
1
Up
1
0
Down
0
X
Up
65 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Timer 2 Capture LSB (RCAP2L)
7
SFR CAh RCAP2L
.7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RCAP2L
.6
RCAP2L
.5
RCAP2L
.4
RCAP2L
.3
RCAP2L
.2
RCAP2L
.1
RCAP2L
.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
RCAP2L.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 2 Capture LSB. This register is used to capture the TL2 value when timer
2 is configured in capture mode. RCAP2L is also used as the LSB of a 16-bit
reload value when timer 2 is configured in auto-reload mode.
Timer 2 Capture MSB (RCAP2H)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SFR CBh RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H RCAP2H
.7
.6
.5
.4
.3
.2
.1
.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
RCAP2H.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 2 Capture MSB. This register is used to capture the TH2 value when
timer 2 is configured in capture mode. RCAP2H is also used as the MSB of a 16bit reload value when timer 2 is configured in auto-reload mode.
Timer 2 LSB (TL2)
SFR CCh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TL2.7
TL2.6
TL2.5
TL2.4
TL2.3
TL2.2
TL2.1
TL2.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
TL2.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 2 LSB. This register contains the least significant byte of Timer 2.
Timer 2 MSB (TH2)
SFR CDh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TH2.7
TH2.6
TH2.5
TH2.4
TH2.3
TH2.2
TH2.1
TH2.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
TL2.7-0
Bits 7-0
Timer 2 MSB. This register contains the least significant byte of Timer 2.
66 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Clock Output Register (COR)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SFR CEh IRDACK C1BPR7
C1BPR6
C0BPR7
C0BPR6
COD1
COD0
CLKOE
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
RT-0
R=Unrestricted Read, T=Timed Access Write Only, -n=Value after Reset
IRDACK
Bit 7
IRDA Clock Output Enable. When IRDACK is set to 1, the Clock Output Pad
will issue a clock that is 16 times the programmed baud rate associated with
Serial Port 0. When IRDACK is cleared to a 0, the Clock Output Pad will be
controlled by the CLKOE bit in COR.0 and the associated clock supplied by the
Clock Output Divide Bits (COR.1 and COR.2) when enabled by the CLKOE bit.
Note that the appropriate baud rate must be established via the use of Timer 1,
programmed for the baud rate generator Mode 2.
C1BPR7, C1BPR6
Bit 6-5
CAN 1 Baud Rate Prescaler Bits. These bits establish bits 7 and 6 of the eightbit CAN 1 Baud Rate Pre-scaler. These bits can not be modified while the
SWINT bit in the CAN1 Control Register is cleared to 0. The remaining six bits
are located in the CAN 1 Bus Timing Register Zero (C1BT0) located in the CAN
MOVX memory.
C0BPR7, C0BPR6
Bit 4-3
CAN 0 Baud Rate Prescaler Bits. These bits establish bits 7 and 6 of the eightbit CAN 0 Baud Rate Pre-scaler. These bits can not be modified while the
SWINT bit in the CAN 0 Control Register is cleared to 0. The remaining six bits
are located in the CAN 0 Bus Timing Register Zero (C0BT0) located in the CAN
MOVX memory.
COD1, COD0
Bit 2-1
Clock Output Divide Select bits. These bits select the output frequency of the
CLKO function on port pin P3.5.
COD1
COD0
P3.5 Output Frequency
0
0
System clock divided by 2
0
1
System clock divided by 4
1
0
System clock divided by 6
1
1
System clock divided by 8
XCLKOE
Bit 0
External Clock Output Enable. When XCLKOE=1, port pin P3.5 asserts a
clock signal of the frequency defined by COD1, COD2. When XCLKOE=0, port
pin P3.5 functions as a general purpose I/O or as the T1 alternate function.
67 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Program Status Word (PSW)
SFR D0h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CY
AC
F0
RS1
RS0
0V
F1
PARITY
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
CY
Bit 7
Carry Flag. This bit is set when if the last arithmetic operation resulted in a carry
(during addition) or a borrow (during subtraction). Otherwise it is cleared to 0 by
all arithmetic operations.
AC
Bit 6
Auxiliary Carry Flag. This bit is set to 1 if the last arithmetic operation resulted
in a carry into (during addition), or a borrow (during subtraction) from the high
order nibble. Otherwise it is cleared to 0 by all arithmetic operations.
F0
Bit 5
User Flag 0. This is a bit-addressable, general-purpose flag for software control.
RS1, RS0
Bits 4-3
Register Bank Select 1–0. These bits select which register bank is addressed
during register accesses.
OV
Bit 2
F1
Bit 1
PARITY
Bit 0
RS1
RS0
REGISTER BANK
ADDRESS
0
0
0
00h – 07h
0
1
1
08h – 0Fh
1
0
2
10h – 17h
1
1
3
18h – 1Fh
Overflow Flag. This bit is set to 1 if the last arithmetic operation resulted in a
carry (addition), borrow (subtraction), or overflow (multiply or divide).
Otherwise it is cleared to 0 by all arithmetic operations.
User Flag 1. This is a bit-addressable, general-purpose flag for software control.
Parity Flag. This bit is set to 1 if the modulo-2 sum of the eight bits of the
accumulator is 1 (odd parity); and cleared to 0 on even parity.
68 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Multiplier Control Register Zero (MCNT0)
SFR D1h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
LSHIFT
CSE
SCE
MAS4
MAS3
MAS2
MAS1
MAS0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
LSHIFT
Bit 7
Left Shift. This bit works in conjunction with the SCE and CSE bits to
determine the direction and path of arithmetic accelerator shift operations as
shown below. When LSHIFT =0, shift operations will shift from the LSb to the
MSb, and vice versa when LSHIFT =1. LSHIFT does not alter any other type of
calculation other than the shift function. The LSHIFT bit is cleared to 0 following
a either a system reset or the initialization of the accelerator.
CSE
Bit 6
Circular Shift Enable. This bit works in conjunction with the SCE and LSHIFT
bits to determine the direction and path of arithmetic accelerator shift operations
as shown below. When CSE=1, shifts of the arithmetic accelerator will wrap bit
31 to bit 0 or vice versa depending on the settings of the LSHIFT bits.
When CSE is cleared to a 0, all left or right shifts will shift cleared bit values into
the most significant bit for a right shift and the least significant bit for a left shift.
When CSE is set to a 1 and SCB is set to a 1, the most significant bit will be
shifted into the 32 Bit Carry Bit when doing a left shift and least most significant
bit will be shifted into the 32 Bit Carry Bit when doing a right shift.
The CSE bit is cleared to 0 following a system reset.
SCE
Bit 5
Shift Carry Enable. This bit works in conjunction with the CSE and LSHIFT
bits to determine the direction and path of arithmetic accelerator shift operations
as shown below.
When SCE=1 the arithmetic accelerator carry bit will be shifted into the LSb for a
left shift and into the MSb for a right shift. When SCE=0, shifts will not
incorporate the arithmetic accelerator carry bit as a part of the shifting process. If
CSE=0 the arithmetic accelerator carry bit will remain unchanged during the shift
process. If CSE=1 the MSb will be shifted into the carry bit on a left shift and the
least most significant bit of the arithmetic accelerator will be shifted into the carry
bit on a right shift. The SCE bit is cleared to 0 following a system reset.
Arithmetic Accelerator Values After Shift
LSHIFT
SCE
CSE
MSb (bit 31)
LSb (bit 0)
Carry bit
0
0
0
Previous bit 30 Previous bit 0
unchanged
0
0
1
0
Previous bit 1
unchanged
0
1
0
Previous bit 30 Previous bit 31
unchanged
0
1
1
Previous bit 0
Previous bit 1
unchanged
1
0
0
Previous bit 30 Previous carry
unchanged
1
0
1
Previous carry Previous bit 1
unchanged
1
1
0
Previous bit 30 Previous carry Previous bit 31
1
1
1
Previous carry Previous bit 1
Previous bit 0
69 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
MAS4-0
Bits 4-0
Multiplier Register Shift Bits. These bits determine the number of shifts
performed when a shift operation is performed with the arithmetic accelerator,
and are also used to indicate how many shifts were performed during a previous
normalization operation. These bits are cleared to 00000b following a system
reset or the initialization of the arithmetic accelerator.
When these bits are cleared to 00000b after loading the arithmetic accelerator, the
device will normalize the 32-bit value loaded into the arithmetic accelerator
Accumulator, rather than shifting it. Following the normalization operation, the
MAS4-0 bits will be modified to indicate how many shifts were performed.
Number of shifts of Arithmetic
MAS4 MAS3 MAS2 MAS1 MAS0
Accelerator Accumulator
0
0
0
0
0
Normalization
0
0
0
0
1
Shift by 1
0
0
0
1
0
Shift by 2
0
0
0
1
1
Shift by 3
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
1
1
1
1
0
Shift by 30
1
1
1
1
1
Shift by 31
70 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Multiplier Control Register One (MCNT1)
SFR D2h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MST
MOF
SCB
CLM
1
1
1
1
RW-0
R-0
RW-0
RW-0
R-1
R-1
R-1
R-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
Multiply/Accumulate Status Flag. The MST bit serves as a busy flag for the
multiplier/accumulate hardware. The bit is set automatically when the processor
begins loading data into the MA or MB register, and will remain set until the
assigned task is completed. MST is automatically cleared by the
multiplier/accumulate hardware once an assigned task is completed and the
results are ready for the processor to read. MST=0 also indicates that the
accelerator has been initialized and can be loaded with new values. Clearing this
bit via software from a previous high state will terminate the current operation
and initialize the multiplier, allowing the immediate loading of new data into MA
and/or MB to perform a new calculation.
Multiply Overflow Flag. The MOF flag bit is cleared following a either a
system reset or the initialization of the accelerator. The MOF bit is automatically
set when the accelerator detects a divide by zero, or when the result of the
calculation is larger than FFFFh.
Shift Carry Bit. The SCB bit is used as a carry bit for shift operation when SCE
bit is set to 1. Note that the SCB will not be cleared at the beginning of a new
operation and must be cleared by a write to this bit or a system reset.
Clear Accelerator Registers. Writing a one to this bit will clear the MA, MB,
and MC registers. Reading this bit will always return a logic 0.
Reserved
MST
Bit 7
MOF
Bit 6
SCB
Bit 5
CLM
Bit 4
Bit 3-0
Multiplier A Register (MA)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
SFR D3h
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
Bits 7-0
Multiplier A Register. The MA Register is used as both a source and result
register for various arithmetic accelerator functions. When in the source mode it
is loaded with the numerator for divide operations and the multiplicand when
performing multiply operations. The MA register also holds the quotient of the
divide operations, multiply product, shift results, and mantissa of the normalize
function.
The MA register can receive or hold up to a 32-bit result, accessed via a series of
sequential writes to or reads from the register. Details of the sequencing are
explained in the arithmetic accelerator section of the User’s Guide.
71 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Multiplier B Register (B)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
SFR D4h
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
Bits 7-0
Multiplier B Register. The MB Register is used as both a source and result
register for various arithmetic accelerator functions. When in the source mode it
is loaded with the dividend for divide operations and the multiplier when
performing multiply operations. The MA register also holds the remainder of the
divide operations.
The MB register can receive or hold up to a 32-bit result, accessed via a series of
sequential writes to or reads from the register. Details of the sequencing are
explained in the arithmetic accelerator section of the User’s Guide.
Multiplier C Register (C)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
SFR D5h
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
Bits 7-0
Multiplier C Register. The MC Register allows access to the 40-bit accumulator
register for the arithmetic accelerator. Each time a multiply or divide (but not
shift or normalization) function is performed with the arithmetic accelerator the
result is added to the previous value in the MC register.
Data is read from the 40-bit accumulator MSB first, and five read operations must
be performed to read the entire value. Writes to the accumulator are performed
LSB first, but software may write as few registers as needed (i.e., 2 in the case of
a 16-bit value) provided the unloaded registers have been previously initialized to
00h. Details of the sequencing are explained in the arithmetic accelerator section
of the User’s Guide.
All 40 bits of the accumulator are cleared by a system reset, the setting of the
CLM bit or the setting of the MST bit in the MCNT1 SFR. The register can also
be cleared by performing five writes of 00h to the MC register.
72 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Receive Message Stored Register 0 (C1RMS0)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR D6h
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
C1RMS0.7
Bit 7
C1RMS0.6
Bit 6
C1RMS0.5
Bit 5
C1RMS0.4
Bit 4
C1RMS0.3
Bit 3
C1RMS0.2
Bit 2
C1RMS0.1
Bit 1
C1RMS0.0
Bit 0
CAN 1 Receive Message Stored Register 0. This register indicates which
of CAN 1 message centers 1-8 have successfully received and stored a
message since the last read of this register. A logic one in a location indicates
a message has been received and stored for that message center. This register
is automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should always be
read in conjunction with the C1RMS1 register to ascertain the status of all
message centers.
Message Center 8, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 7, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 6, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 5, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 4, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 3, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 2, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 1, Message Received and Stored
73 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Receive Message Stored Register 1 (C1RMS1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR D7h
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
Bit 7
C1RMS1.6
Bit 6
C1RMS1.5
Bit 5
C1RMS1.4
Bit 4
C1RMS1.3
Bit 3
C1RMS1.2
Bit 2
C1RMS1.1
Bit 1
C1RMS1.0
Bit 0
CAN 1 Receive Message Stored Register 1. This register indicates which of
CAN 1 message centers 9-15 have successfully received and stored a
message since the last read of this register. A logic one in a location indicates
a message has been received and stored for that message center. This register
is automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should always be
read in conjunction with the C1RMS0 register to ascertain the status of all
message centers.
Reserved
Message Center 15, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 14, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 13, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 12, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 11, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 10, Message Received and Stored
Message Center 9, Message Received and Stored
74 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Watchdog Control (WDCON)
SFR D8h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SMOD
POR
EPF1
PFI
WDIF
WTRF
EWT
RWT
RW-0
RW-*
RW-0
RW-*
RW-0
RW-*
RW-*
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, T=Timed Access Write Only ,
-n=Value after Reset, *=See Description
SMOD
Bit 7
Serial Modification. This bit controls the doubling of the serial port 1 baud rate
in modes 1, 2, and 3.
0 = Serial port 1 baud rate operates at normal speed
1 = Serial port 1 baud rate is doubled.
POR
Bit 6
Power-on Reset Flag. This bit indicates whether the last reset was a power-on
reset. This bit is typically interrogated following a reset to determine if the reset
was caused by a power-on reset. It must be cleared by a Timed Access write
before the next reset of any kind or the software may erroneously determine that
another power-on reset has occurred. This bit is set following a power-on reset
and unaffected by all other resets. Note: This bit is not Timed Access protected
on the DS80C310.
EPFI
Bit 5
PFI
Bit 4
0 = Last reset was from a source other than a power-on reset
1 = Last reset was a power-on reset.
Enable Power fail Interrupt. This bit enables/disables the ability of the internal
band-gap reference to generate a power-fail interrupt when VCC falls below
approximately 4.5 volts. While in Stop mode, both this bit and the Band-gap
Select bit, BGS (EXIF.0), must be set to enable the power-fail interrupt.
0 = Power-fail interrupt disabled.
1 = Power-fail interrupt enabled during normal operation. Power-fail interrupt
enabled in Stop mode if BGS is set.
Power fail Interrupt Flag. When set, this bit indicates that a power-fail interrupt
has occurred. This bit must be cleared in software before exiting the interrupt
service routine, or another interrupt will be generated. Setting this bit in software
will generate a power-fail interrupt, if enabled.
75 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
WDIF
Bit 3
Watchdog Interrupt Flag. This bit, in conjunction with the Watchdog Timer
Interrupt Enable bit, EWDI (EIE.4), and Enable Watchdog Timer Reset bit
(WDCON.1), indicates if a watchdog timer event has occurred and what action
will be taken. This bit must be cleared in software before exiting the interrupt
service routine, or another interrupt will be generated. Setting this bit in software
will generate a watchdog interrupt if enabled. This bit can only be modified using
a Timed Access Procedure.
EWT
EWDI
WDIF
RESULT
X
X
0
No watchdog event has occurred.
0
0
1
Watchdog time-out has expired. No interrupt
has been generated.
0
1
1
Watchdog interrupt has occurred.
1
0
1
Watchdog time-out has expired. No interrupt
has been generated. Watchdog timer reset will
occur in 512 cycles if RWT is not strobed.
1
1
1
Watchdog interrupt has occurred. Watchdog
timer reset will occur in 512 cycles if RWT is
not set using a Timed Access procedure.
WTRF
Bit 2
Watchdog Timer Reset Flag. When set, this bit indicates that a watchdog timer
reset has occurred. It is typically interrogated to determine if a reset was caused
by watchdog timer reset. It is cleared by a power- on reset, but otherwise must be
cleared by software before the next reset of any kind or software may erroneously
determine that a watchdog timer reset has occurred. Setting this bit in software
will not generate a watchdog timer reset. If the EWT bit is cleared, the watchdog
timer will have no effect on this bit.
EWT
Bit 1
Enable Watchdog Timer Reset. This bit enables/disables the ability of the
watchdog timer to reset the device. This bit has no effect on the ability of the
watchdog timer to generate a watchdog interrupt. The time-out period of the
watchdog timer is controlled by the Watchdog Timer Mode Select bits
(CKCON.7-6). Clearing this bit will disable the ability of the watchdog timer to
generate a reset, but have no affect on the timer itself, or its ability to generate a
watchdog timer interrupt. This bit can only be modified using a Timed Access
Procedure. This bit is unaffected by all other resets.
RWT
Bit 0
0 = A timeout of the watchdog timer will not cause the device to reset.
1 = A timeout of the watchdog timer will cause the device to reset.
Reset Watchdog Timer. Setting this bit will reset the watchdog timer count.
This bit must be set using a Timed Access procedure before the watchdog timer
expires, or a watchdog timer reset and/or interrupt will be generated if enabled.
The time-out period is defined by the Watchdog Timer Mode Select bits
(CKCON.7-6). This bit will always be 0 when read.
76 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 0 (C1TMA0)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR DEh
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 1 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 0. This register
indicates which of CAN 1 message centers 1-8 have successfully transmitted
a message since the last read of this register. A logic one in a location
indicates a message has been transmitted from that message center. This
register is automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should
always be read in conjunction with the C1TMA1 register to ascertain the
status of all message centers.
C1TMA0.7
Bit 7
Message Center 8, Message Transmitted
C1TMA0.6
Bit 6
Message Center 7, Message Transmitted
C1TMA0.5
Bit 5
Message Center 6, Message Transmitted
C1TMA0.4
Bit 4
Message Center 5, Message Transmitted
C1TMA0.3
Bit 3
Message Center 4, Message Transmitted
C1TMA0.2
Bit 2
Message Center 3, Message Transmitted
C1TMA0.1
Bit 1
Message Center 2, Message Transmitted
C1TMA0.0
Bit 0
Message Center 1, Message Transmitted
77 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 1 (C1TMA1)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR DFh
R=Unrestricted Read, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 1 Transmit Message Acknowledgement Register 1. This register
indicates which of CAN 1 message centers 9-15 have successfully
transmitted a message since the last read of this register. A logic one in a
location indicates a message has been transmitted for that message center.
This register is automatically cleared to 00h when read. This register should
always be read in conjunction with the C1TMA0 register to ascertain the
status of all message centers.
Bit 7
Reserved
C1TMA1.6
Bit 6
Message Center 15, Message Transmitted
C1TMA1.5
Bit 5
Message Center 14, Message Transmitted
C1TMA1.4
Bit 4
Message Center 13, Message Transmitted
C1TMA1.3
Bit 3
Message Center 12, Message Transmitted
C1TMA1.2
Bit 2
Message Center 11, Message Transmitted
C1TMA1.1
Bit 1
Message Center 10, Message Transmitted
C1TMA1.0
Bit 0
Message Center 9, Message Transmitted
Accumulator (A or ACC)
SFR E0h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ACC.7
ACC.6
ACC.5
ACC.4
ACC.3
ACC.2
ACC.1
ACC.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
ACC.7-0
Bits 7-0
Accumulator. This register serves as the accumulator for arithmetic operations.
It is functionally identical to the accumulator found in the 80C32.
78 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Control Register (C1C)
SFR E3h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ERIE
STIE
PDE
SIESTA
CRST
AUTOB
ERCS
SWINT
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RT-1
RW-0
RW-0
RW-1
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, T=Timed Access Write Only, -n=Value after Reset
ERIE
Bit 7
CAN 1 Error Interrupt Enable.
0 = CAN 1 Error Interrupt is disabled.
1 = Setting this bit while the C1IE bit (EIE.5) and Global Interrupt Enable
bits (IE.7) are set will generate an interrupt if the CAN 1 Bus Off
(BUSOFF) or CAN 1 Error Count Exceeded bit (CECE) bits are set.
STIE
Bit 6
CAN 1 Status Interrupt Enable.
0 = CAN 1 Status Interrupt is disabled.
1 = If the C1IE bit (EIE.5) is set, an interrupt will be generated if the CAN 1
Transmit Status bit (TXS), Receive Status bit (RXS) or the Wake-Up
Status bit (WKS) is set. An interrupt will also be generated if the Status
Error bits (ER2-0) change a non-000b or non-111b state.
PDE
Bit 5
CAN 1 Power Down Enable. Setting this bit places the CAN 1 module into its
lowest power mode. The module will enter Power Down mode immediately upon
setting this bit, or following the completion of the current reception, transmission,
arbitration failure, or error condition on CAN 1. Software can poll the PDE bit to
ascertain whether the microcontroller has entered Power Down mode (PDE=1) or
is waiting for a current CAN operation to complete (PDE=0) before entering
Power Down Mode.
Power Down mode is exited by clearing the PDE bit or by any reset of the
microcontroller. The CAN 1 module will begin operation after the receipt of 11
consecutive recessive bits.
The Wake-Up Status bit, WKS, is a logical OR of this bit and the SIESTA bit.
SIESTA
Bit 4
CAN 1 Siesta Mode Enable. Setting this bit places the CAN 1 module into a low
power mode. The module will enter Siesta mode immediately upon setting this
bit, or following the completion of the current reception, transmission, arbitration
failure, or error condition on CAN 1. Software can poll the SIESTA bit to
ascertain whether the microcontroller has entered Siesta mode (SIESTA =1) or is
waiting for a current CAN operation to complete (SIESTA =0) before entering
Siesta Mode.
Siesta mode is exited by clearing the Siesta bit, detecting CAN 1 bus activity, or
setting either the CRST or SWINT bits to 1. The CAN 1 module will begin
operation after the receipt of 11 consecutive recessive bits.
The Wake-Up Status bit, WKS, is a logical OR of this bit and the PDE bit.
79 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CRST
Bit 3
CAN 1 Reset. Setting this bit via a Timed Access write will reset all CAN 1
registers in the SFR map to their reset default states. The module will reset the
registers immediately upon setting this bit, or following the completion of the
current reception, transmission, arbitration failure, or error condition on CAN 1.
Software can poll the CRST bit to ascertain whether the microcontroller has
successfully reset the registers (CRST =1) or is waiting for a current CAN
operation to complete (CRST =0) before resetting the registers. Setting the CRST
bit also clears the transmit and receive error counters and sets the SWINT bit.
CRST must be cleared by software to remove the CAN reset. The state of the
SWINT and BUSOFF bits determines the action of the device when the CRST bit
is cleared.
AUTOB
Bit 2
CAN 1 Autobaud. Setting this bit allows the CAN 1 module to establish proper
CAN bus timing without disrupting the normal data flow between other nodes on
the CAN Bus. When in the autobaud mode, incoming data on the C1RX pin is
internally ANDed with transmit data generated by the CAN 1 module. An internal
loop back feeds this combined data stream back into the input of the CAN 1
module. At the same time, C1TX pin is placed into a recessive state to prevent
driving non-synchronized data (creating CAN Bus errors to other nodes) while
attempting to synchronize the processor with the CAN Bus.
With AUTOB = 1, the microcontroller auto-baud algorithm will make use of the
CAN 1 Status Register RXS and error status bits to determine when a message is
successfully received (when AUTOB =1, a successful receive does not require a
store). Each successive baud rate attempt is proceeded by the microcontroller
clearing the transmit and receive error counters via a write of 00h to the Transmit
Error SFR Register and a read of the CAN 1 Status Register to clear the previous
Status Change Interrupt. Note that a write to the Transmit Error SFR Register
automatically resets the CAN fault confinement state machine to an initial (error
active) state if the error counters are cleared to 00h. If, however, the error counters
are programmed to a value greater than 128, the CAN module will be in a error
passive state. Appropriate flags are set when the error counter is written with any
value. A write of the Status Register is also used to remove the previous error
value in the ER2-0 bits. Clearing the error counters will also clear the EC96 bit, if
set.
When BUSOFF = 1, software is prohibited from writing to the error counters by
virtue of the fact that the SWINT bit is also forced to a 0 state during the period
that the CAN module performs a bus recovery and power up sequence. Once the
CAN module has removed itself from the Bus Off condition it will also clear
BUSOFF = 0, set SWINT = 1, and will clear both the transmit and receive error
counters to 00h.
ERCS
Bit 1
CAN 1 Error Count Select. This bit selects the number of transmit or receive
errors that will cause the CAN 1 Error Count Exceeded bit, CECE (C1S.6), to be
set.
0 = CECE bit set when the transmit or receive error counters exceed 95 errors.
1 = CECE bit set when the transmit or receive error counters exceed 127 errors.
80 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
SWINT
Bit 0
CAN 1 Software Initialization Enable. This bit enables (SWINT=1) and
disables (SWINT=0) software write access to the first 16 bytes of the CAN 1
MOVX SRAM. These bytes contain the CAN 1 Control/Status/Mask Registers.
Read access to all bytes in the CAN 1 MOVX SRAM is permitted at all times,
regardless of the state of the SWINT bit.
Setting SWINT=1 disables CAN 1 Bus activity, allowing software access to the
CAN 1 Control/Status/Mask Registers without corrupting CAN Bus transmission
or reception. A special lockout procedure delays the internal assertion of the
SWINT bit until all CAN 1 activity has ceased. The following procedure must be
followed when setting the SWINT bit to prevent the accidental corruption of CAN
Bus activity:
3. Write a 1 to the SWINT bit, starting the internal process to enter the software
initialization process.
4. Poll the SWINT bit until it is set. The lockout circuit will hold SWINT=0 if it
detects a reception, transmission, or arbitration in progress. When one of these
conditions ceases, or if an error occurs, the CAN module will set SWINT=1,
indicating that the CAN module is disabled and software can now write to the
first 16 bytes of the CAN 1 MOVX SRAM. Attempts to modify the first 16
bytes of the CAN 1 MOVX SRAM while SWINT=0 will fail, leaving the
bytes unchanged.
The SWINT bit controls access to several other bits and registers. The CAN 1
Transmit Error Register (C1TE;A6h) and CAN 1 Receive Error Register
(C1RE;A7h) are only modifiable while SWINT=1. Setting SWINT=1
automatically clears the SIESTA bit, and attempts to set SWINT=1 and
SIESTA=1 in the same write to the C1C register will result in SWINT=1 and
SIESTA=0.
The BUSOFF bit has a direct interaction with the SWINT bit. When a Bus Off
condition is detected (BUSOFF=1), the CAN module will automatically clear
SWINT=0 and initiate a bus recovery and power-up sequence. Write access to the
SWINT bit is prohibited until the Bus Off condition has been cleared and
BUSOFF has been reset to 0.
The SWINT bit is also set automatically following a system reset, the setting of
the CRST bit in the CAN 1 Control Register, or programming the CAN Bus
Timing Registers (C1BT0, C1BT1 in the MOVX SRAM) to 00h (an invalid
state). As a precaution against utilizing the CAN with invalid bus timing, the
SWINT bit cannot be cleared while C1BT0=C1BT1=00h. When this bit is
cleared, the CAN 1 module will initiate a CAN Bus synchronization after the
CAN module executes a power-up sequence (reception of 11 consecutive
recessive bits.)
81 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Status Register (C1S)
SFR E4h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
BUSOFF
CECE
WKS
RXS
TXS
ER2
ER1
ER0
R-0
R-0
R-0
RW-0
RW-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
BUSOFF
Bit 7
CAN 1 Bus Off. When BUSOFF = 1, the CAN 1 Bus is disabled and is not
capable of receiving or transmitting messages. This condition is the result of the
transmit error counter reaching a count of 256. When the CAN 1 module detects
an error count of 256 the CAN module will automatically set BUSOFF = 1 and
clear SWINT = 0.
BUSOFF is cleared to a 0 to enable CAN 1 Bus activity when the CAN processor
completes both the busoff recovery (128 X 11 consecutive recessive bits) and the
power-up sequence (11 consecutive recessive bits). Once the CAN module has
completed this relationship it will set SWINT = 1 and will enter into the software
initialization state. Once software has cleared SWINT to a 0, the CAN module
will be enabled to transmit and receive messages. When BUSOFF = 0, the CAN 1
Bus is enabled to receive or transmit messages. A change in the state of BUSOFF
from a previous 0 to a 1 will generate an interrupt if the ERIE, C1IE and IE SFR
register bits are set. All microcontroller writes to the SWINT bit are disabled
when BUSOFF = 1. Both the transmit and receive error counters are cleared to 00
hex when the Bus Off condition is cleared by the CAN module and BUSOFF is
cleared to 0.
CECE
Bit 6
CAN 1 Error Count Exceeded. This bit operates in one of two modes,
depending on the state of the ERCS bit in the CAN 1 Control Register.
ERCS = 0 (Error count limit=96) In this mode when CECE=1, the interrupt
flag indicates that either the CAN 1 Transmit Error Counter or the CAN 1
Receive Error Counter has reached an error count of 96, which represents an
exceptionally high number of errors. CECE=0 indicates that both error
counters have an error count of less than 96. A 0 to 1 transition of CECE will
generate an interrupt if the ERIE, C1IE and IE SFR bits are set.
ERCS = 1 (Error count limit=128) In this mode when CECE=1, the interrupt
flag indicates that either the CAN 1 Transmit Error Counter or the CAN 1
Receive Error Counter has reached an error count of 128, which represents an
exceptionally high number of errors. CECE = 0 indicates that the current
Transmit Error Counter and Receive Error Counter both have an error count
of less than 128. A change in the state of CECE from either a previous 0 to a
1 or from a previous 1 to 0 will generate an interrupt if the ERIE, C1IE and
IE SFR bits are set.
WKS
Bit 5
CAN 1 Wake-up Status. When WKS=1, the CAN 1 module is in either SIESTA
or Power Down mode. Clearing both the SIESTA and PDE bits will force the
WKS=0. A change in the state of WKS from a previous 1 to 0 will generate an
interrupt if the STIE, C1IE and IE SFR bits are set.
82 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
RXS
Bit 4
CAN 1 Receive Status. This bit indicates whether or not messages have been
received since the last read of the CAN 1 Status Register. RXS is only set by the
CAN 1 logic and must be cleared by the Microcontroller software, the CRST bit,
or a system Reset.
1 = The meaning of RXS=1 is dependent on the Autobaud bit, AUTOB.
AUTOB=0, RXS = 1 indicates that a message has been both successfully
received and stored in one of the message centers by CAN 1 since the last
read of the CAN 1 Status Register.
AUTOB=1, RXS = 1 indicates that a message has been successfully received
by CAN 1 since the last read of the CAN 1 Status Register. Note that
messages that are successfully received without errors but do not pass the
arbitration filtering will still set the RXS bit.
0 = No messages have been successfully received since the last read of the CAN 1
Status Register.
When STIE= 1 and the RXS bit transitions from 0 to 1, the CAN Interrupt
Register (C1IE;A5h) will change to 01h to indicate a pending interrupt due to a
change in the CAN Status Register. Reading any bit in the C1S register will clear
the pending interrupt, causing the C1IE register to change to 00h if no interrupts
are pending or the appropriate value if a lower priority message center interrupt is
pending. If a second successful reception is detected prior to or after the clearing
of the RXS bit in the Status Register, a second status change interrupt flag will be
set, issuing a second interrupt. Each new successful reception will generate an
interrupt request independent of the previous state of the RXS bit, as long as the
CAN Status Register has been read to clear the previous status change interrupt
flag. Note that if software changes RXS from 0 to 1, an artificial Status Change
Interrupt (STIE=1) will be generated. Thus, if RXS was previously set to 0 and a
reception was successful, RXS will be set to 1 and an enabled interrupt may be
asserted. An interrupt may be asserted (if enabled) if software changes RXS from
0 to 1. If RXS was previously set to 1 and a reception was successful, RXS
remains set and an interrupt may be asserted if enabled. No interrupt will be
asserted if software attempts to set RXS=1 while the bit is already set.
83 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
TXS
Bit 3
CAN 1 Transmit Status. This bit indicates whether or not one or more messages
have been successfully transmitted since the last read of the CAN 1 Status
Register. TXS is only set by the CAN 1 logic and is not cleared by the CAN
controller but is only cleared via software, the CRST bit, or a system Reset.
1 = A message has been successfully transmitted by CAN 1 (error free and
acknowledged) since the last read of the CAN 1 Status Register.
0 = No messages have been successfully transmitted since the last read of the
CAN 1 Status Register.
When STIE= 1 and the TXS bit transitions from 0 to 1, the CAN 1 Interrupt
Register (C1IE;A5h) will change to 01h to indicate a pending interrupt due to a
change in the CAN Status Register. Reading any bit in the C1S register will clear
the pending interrupt, causing the C1IE register to change to 00h if no interrupts
are pending or the appropriate value if a lower priority message center interrupt is
pending. If a second successful reception is detected prior to or after the clearing
of the RXS bit in the Status Register, a second status change interrupt flag will be
set, issuing a second interrupt. Each new successful reception will generate an
interrupt request independent of the previous state of the RXS bit, as long as the
CAN Status Register has been read to clear the previous status change interrupt
flag. Note that if software changes TXS from 0 to 1, an artificial Status Change
Interrupt (STIE=1) will be generated. Thus, if TXS was previously set to 0 and a
reception was successful, TXS will be set to 1 and an enabled interrupt may be
asserted. An interrupt may be asserted (if enabled) if software changes TXS from
0 to 1. If TXS was previously set to 1 and a reception was successful, TXS
remains set and an interrupt may be asserted if enabled. No interrupt will be
asserted if software attempts to set TXS while it is already set.
84 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ER2-0
Bit 2-0
CAN 1 Bus Error Status. These bits indicate the type of error, if any, detected
in the last CAN 1 Bus Frame. These bits will be reset to the 111b state following
any read of the C1S register (when SWINT=0), allowing software to determine if
a new error has been received since the last read of this register. The ER2-0 bits
are read only.
The ER2-0 bits are updated any time they change from 000b or 111b to another
value. If enabled, an interrupt will be generated at this time. Errors received while
the ER2-0 bits are in a non-000b or 111b state will be ignored, leaving ER2-0
unchanged and not generating enabled interrupts. This ensures that error
conditions will not be lost/overwritten before software has a chance to read the
C1S register. Once the C1S register is read and the ER2-0 bits return to 111b, new
errors will be processed normally. In the case of simultaneous errors in multiple
CAN 1 message centers, only the highest priority error is indicated.
ER2 ER1 ER0 Priority
Error Conditions
0
0
0
N/A
No Error in Last Frame
0
0
1
2
Bit Stuff Error
0
1
0
5
Format Error
0
1
1
4
Transmit Not Acknowledged Error
1
0
0
6(lowest)
Bit 1 Error
1
0
1
1(highest)
Bit 0 Error
1
1
0
3
CRC Error
1
1
1
N/A
No change since last C1S read
The following is a description of the different error types:
Bit Stuff Error: Occurs when the CAN controller detects more than 5 consecutive
bits of an identical state are received in an incoming message.
Format Error: Generated when a received message has the wrong format.
Transmit Not Acknowledged Error: Indicates that a data request message was sent
and the requested node did not acknowledged the message.
Bit 1 Error: Indicates that the CAN attempted to transmit a message and that
when a recessive bit was transmitted, the CAN bus was found to have a
dominant bit level. This error is not generated when the bit is a part of the
arbitration field (identifier and remote retransmission request).
Bit 0 Error: Indicates that the CAN attempted to transmit a message and that
when a dominant bit was transmitted, the CAN bus was found to have a
recessive bit level. This error is not generated when the bit is a part of the
arbitration field. The Bit 0 Error is set each time a recessive bit is received
during the Busoff recovery period.
CRC Error: Generated whenever the calculated CRC of a received message does
not match the CRC embedded in the message.
85 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Interrupt Register (C1IR)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
SFR E5h
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
C1IR.7-0
Bit 7-5
CAN 1 Interrupt Indicator 7-0 This register indicates the status of the
interrupt source associated with the CAN 1 module. Reading this register
after the generation of a CAN 1 Interrupt will identify the interrupt source as
shown in the table below. This register is cleared to 00h following a reset.
C1IR.7-0
00h
01h
02h
03h
04h
05h
06h
07h
08h
09h
0Ah
0Bh
0Ch
0Dh
0Eh
0Fh
10h
Priority
N/A
1 (highest)
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16 (lowest)
Interrupt Source
No Pending Interrupt
Change in the CAN 1 Status Register
Message 15
Message 1
Message 2
Message 3
Message 4
Message 5
Message 6
Message 7
Message 8
Message 9
Message 10
Message 11
Message 12
Message 13
Message 14
The C1IR value will not change unless the previous interrupt source has been
acknowledged and removed (i.e., software read of the C1S register or clearing of
the appropriate INTRQ bit), even if the new interrupt has a higher priority. If two
enabled interrupt sources become active simultaneously, the interrupt of higher
priority will be reflected in the C1IR value.
The CAN 1 interrupt source into the interrupt logic is active whenever C1IR is not
equal to 00h. Changes in the C1IR value from 00h to a non-zero state, indicate the
first interrupt source detected by the CAN module following the non-active
interrupt state. The C1IR interrupt values displayed in C1IR will remain in place
until the respective interrupt source is removed, independent of other higher (or
lower) priority interrupts that become active prior to clearing the currently
displayed interrupt source.
When the current CAN interrupt source is cleared, C1IR will change to
reflect the next active interrupt with the highest priority. The Status Change
interrupt will be asserted if there has been a change in the CAN 1 Status
Register (if enabled by the appropriate ERIE and/or STIE bit) and the CAN
Status Interrupt state is set. A message center interrupt will be indicated if the
86 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
INTRQ bit in the respective CAN Message Control Register is set.
CAN 1 Transmit Error Register (C1TE)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
SFR E6h
R=Unrestricted Read, *= Write only when SWINT=1 and BUSOFF=0, -n=Value after Reset
CAN 1 Transmit Error Register. This register indicates the number of
accumulated CAN 1 transmit errors. The CAN 1 module responds in different
ways to varying number of errors as shown below.
C1TE.7-0
Bits 7-0
This register can only be modified via software when SWINT=1 and
BUSOFF=0. All software writes to this register simultaneously load the same
value into the CAN 1 Transmit Error Register and the CAN 1 Receive Error
Register. Writing 00h to this register will also clear the CAN 1 Error Count
Exceeded bit, CECE (C1S.6). This register is cleared following all hardware
Resets and software resets enabled via the CRST bit in the CAN 1 Control
Register.
C1TE Value
CAN 1 State
Value < 96
Error active mode, CAN 1 Bus on (BUSOFF=0)
128 > Value ≥ 96
Error active mode, CAN 1 Bus on (BUSOFF=0), warning
level
255 ≥ Value ≥ 128
Error passive mode, CAN 1 Bus on (BUSOFF=0)
Value > 255
CAN 1 Bus off (BUSOFF=1)
CAN 1 Receive Error Register (C1RE)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
SFR E7h
R=Unrestricted Read, *= Write only via C1TE register, -n=Value after Reset
C1RE.7-0
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Receive Error Register. This register indicates the number of
accumulated CAN 1 receive errors. All writes to the C1TE register are
simultaneously loaded into this register. This register is cleared following all
hardware Resets and software resets enabled via the CRST bit in the CAN 1
Control Register.
87 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Extended Interrupt Enable (EIE)
SFR E8h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CANBIE
C0IE
C1IE
EWDI
EX5
EX4
EX3
EX2
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n = Value after Reset
CANBIE
Bit 7
CAN 0/1 Activity Interrupt Priority. This bit enables/disables the CAN 0/1
Activity Interrupt
0 = Disable the CAN 0/1 Activity Interrupt.
1 = Enable the CAN 0/1 Activity Interrupt.
C0IE
Bit 6
CAN 0 Interrupt Enable. This bit enables/disables the CAN 0 Interrupt
0 = Disable the CAN 0 Interrupt.
1 = Enable the CAN 0 Interrupt.
C1IE
Bit 5
CAN 1 Interrupt Enable. This bit enables/disables the CAN 1 Interrupt
0 = Disable the CAN 1 Interrupt.
1 = Enable the CAN 1 Interrupt.
EWDI
Bit 4
Watchdog Interrupt Enable. This bit enables/disables the watchdog interrupt.
0 = Disable the watchdog interrupt.
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the watchdog timer.
EX5
Bit 3
External Interrupt 5 Enable. This bit enables/disables external interrupt 5.
0 = Disable external interrupt 5.
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the INT5 pin.
External Interrupt 4 Enable. This bit enables/disables external interrupt 4.
0 = Disable external interrupt 4.
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the INT4 pin.
External Interrupt 3 Enable. This bit enables/disables external interrupt 3.
0 = Disable external interrupt 3.
EX4
Bit 2
EX3
Bit 1
EX2
Bit 0
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the INT3 pin.
External Interrupt 2 Enable. This bit enables/disables external interrupt 2.
0 = Disable external interrupt 2.
1 = Enable interrupt requests generated by the INT2 pin.
88 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
MOVX Extended Address Register (MXAX)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
SFR EAh
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
Bits 7-0
MOVX Extended Address Register. This register is concatenated with P2 and
R1 or R0 to form the 22-bit address when executing a MOVX @Ri, A or MOVX
A, @Ri instruction in either the 24-bit paged or 24-bit contiguous modes. The
DPTR related MOVX instructions do not utilize the P2 and MXAX register. Note
that the MXAX register is only used when the processor is operating in either the
paged or contiguous addressing modes.
89 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Control Register (C1M1C)
SFR EBh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
MSRDY
Bit 7
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Ready. This bit is used by the Microcontroller to
prevent the CAN module from accessing message center 1 while the
microcontroller is updating message attributes. These include as identifiers
(arbitration registers 0-3), data byte registers 0-7, data byte count (DTBYC3DTBYC1), direction control (T/ R ), the extended or standard mode bit
(EX/ST), and the mask enables (MEME and MDME) associated with this
message center. When this bit is 0, the CAN 1 processor will ignore this
message center for transmit, receive, or remote frame request operations.
MSRDY is cleared following a microcontroller hardware reset or a reset
generated by the CRST bit in the CAN 1 Control Register, and must also
remain in a cleared mode until all the CAN 1 initialization has been
completed. Individual message MSRDY controls can be changed after
initialization to reconfigure specific messages, without interrupting the
communication of other messages on the CAN 1 Bus.
ETI
Bit 6
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Enable Transmit Interrupt. Setting ETI to a 1
will enable a successful CAN 1 transmission in message center 1 to set the
INTRQ bit for this message center which in turn will issue an interrupt to the
microcontroller. When ETI is cleared to 0 a successful transmission will not
set INTRQ bit and will not generate an interrupt. Note that the ETI bit located
in Message Center 15 is ignored by the CAN module, since the message
center 15 is a receive only message center.
ERI
Bit 5
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Enable Receive Interrupt. Setting ERI to a 1
will enable a successful CAN 1 reception and storage in message center 1 to
set the INTRQ bit for this message center which in turn will issue an interrupt
to the microcontroller. When ERI is cleared to 0 a successful reception will
not set the INTRQ bit and as such will not generate an interrupt.
INTRQ
Bit 4
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Interrupt Request. This bit serves as a CAN
interrupt flag, indicating the successful transmission or reception of a
message in this message center. INTRQ is automatically set when ERI=1 and
message center 1 successfully receives and stores a message. The INTRQ bit
is also set to a 1 when ETI is set and the CAN 1 logic completes a successful
transmission. The INTRQ interrupt request must be also enabled via the EA
global mask in the IE SFR register if the interrupt is to be acknowledged by
the microcontroller interrupt logic. This flag must be cleared via software.
EXTRQ
Bit 3
CAN 1 Message Center 1 External Transmit Request. When EXTRQ is
cleared to a 0, there are no pending requests by external CAN nodes for this
message. When EXTRQ is set to a 1, a request has been made for this
message by an external CAN node, but the CAN 1 controller has not yet
90 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
completed the service request. Following the completion of a requested
transmission by a message center programmed for transmission (T/ R = 1),
the EXTRQ bit will be cleared by the CAN 1 controller. A remote request is
only answered by a message center programmed for transmission (T/ R = 1)
when DTUP = 1 and TIH = 0, i.e. when new data was loaded and is not being
currently modified by the micro. Note that a message center programmed for
a receive mode (T/ R = 0) will also detect a remote frame request and will set
the EXTRQ bit in a similar manner, but will not automatically transmit a data
frame and as such will not automatically clear the EXTRQ bit.
MTRQ
Bit 2
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Microcontroller Transmit Request. When set,
this bit indicates that the message center is requesting that a message be
transmitted. The bit is cleared when the transmission is complete, allowing
this bit to be used to both initiate and monitor the progress of the
transmission. The bit can be set via software or the CAN module, depending
on the state of the Transmit/Receive bit in the CAN 1 Message 1 Format
Register (located in MOVX space). This bit is cleared when the CRST bit is
set, the CAN module experiences a system reset, or the conditions described
below. Note that the MTRQ bit located in Message Center 15 is ignored by
the CAN module, since the Message Center 15 is a receive only message
center.
T/ R =0 (receive)
When software sets this bit, a remote frame request previously loaded into the
message center will be transmitted. The CAN 1 Module will clear this bit
following the successful transmission of the frame request message.
T/ R =1 (transmit)
When software sets this bit, a data frame previously loaded into the message
center will be transmitted. When T/ R = 1, the MTRQ bit will also be set by
the CAN 1 controller at the same time that the EXTRQ bit is set by a message
request from an external node.
ROW/TIH
Bit 1
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Receive Overwrite/Transmit Inhibit. The
Receive Overwrite (ROW) and Transmit Inhibit (TIH) bits share the same bit
location. When T/ R = 0 the bit has the ROW function, serving as a flag that
an overwrite of incoming data may have occurred. When T/ R = 1 the bit has
the Transmit Inhibit function, allowing software to disable the transmission
of a message while the data contents are being updated.
Receive Overwrite: (T/ R = 0, ROW is Read Only)
The CAN 1 controller automatically sets this bit 0 if a new message is received
and stored while the DTUP bit was still set. When set, ROW indicates that the
previous message was potentially lost and may not have been read, since the
microcontroller had not cleared the DTUP bit prior to the new load. When ROW
= 0, no new message has been received and stored while DTUP was set to ‘1’
since this bit was last cleared. Note that the ROW bit will not be set when the
WTOE bit is cleared to a 0, since all overwrites are disabled. This is due to the
fact that even if the incoming message matches the respective message center that
as long as DTUP = 1 in the respective message center, the combination of WTOE
91 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
= 0 and DTUP = 1 will force the CAN module to ignore the respective message
center when the CAN is processing the incoming data.
ROW is cleared by the CAN module when the microcontroller clears the
DTUP bit associated with the same message center. INTRQ is automatically
set when the ERI=1 and message center 1 successfully receives and stores a
message.
ROW will reflect the actual message center relationships for message centers
1 to 14. Message center 15 utilizes a special shadow message buffer, and the
ROW bit for that message center indicates an overwrite of the buffer as
opposed to the actual message center 15. The ROW bit for message center 15
is cleared once the shadow buffer is loaded into the message center 15, and
the shadow buffer is cleared to allow a new message to be loaded. The
shadow buffer is automatically loaded into message center 15 when the
microcontroller clears the DTUP and EXTRQ bits in message center 15.
Transmit Inhibit: (T/ R = 1, TIH is unrestricted Read/Write)
The TIH allows the microcontroller to disable the transmission of the
message when the data contents of the message are being updated. TIH = 1
directs the CAN 1 controller not to transmit the associated message. TIH = 0
enables the CAN 1 controller to transmit the message. If TIH = 1 when a
remote frame request is received by the message center, EXTRQ will be set
to a 1. Following the Remote Frame Request and after the microcontroller
has established the proper data to be sent, the microcontroller will clear the
TIH bit to a 0, which will allow the CAN module to send the data requested
by the previous Remote Frame Request. Note that the TIH bit associated with
Message Center 15 is ignored because it is a receive only message center.
DTUP
Bit 0
CAN 1 Message Center 1 Data Updated. This bit indicates that new data
has been loaded into the data portion of the message center. The exact
function of the DTUP bit is dependent on whether the message center is
configured in a receive (T/ R = 0) or transmit (T/ R = 1) mode. Some
functions are also dependent on the state of the WTOE bit. The DTUP bit is
only cleared by a software write to the bit, a system reset, or the setting of the
CRST bit.
T/ R =0 (receive)
In this mode (T/ R = 0) the DTUP bit is set when new data has been successfully
received and is ready to be read by the microcontroller. The exact meaning of the
DTUP bit during a message center read is determined by the WTOE bit in the
CAN 1 Control Register.
If WTOE = 1 (message center overwrite enabled), DTUP should be
polled before and after reading the message center to ascertain if an
overwrite of the data occurred during the read. For example, software
should clear DTUP before reading the message center and then again
after the message center read. If DTUP has been set, then a new
message was received and software should read the message center
again to read the new data. If DTUP remained cleared, no additional
data was received and the data is complete.
92 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
If WTOE=0 the processor is not permitted to overwrite this message
center, so it is only necessary to clear the DTUP bit after reading the
message center.
The state of the DTUP bit in the receive mode does not inhibit remote frame
request transmission in the receive mode. The only gating item for remote
frame transmission in the receive mode is that the MSRDY and MTRQ bits
must both be set.
T/ R =1 (transmit)
In this mode, software must set TIH =1 and clear DTUP = 0 prior to doing an
update of the associated message center. This prevents the CAN module from
transmitting the data while the microcontroller is updating it. Once the
microcontroller has finished configuring the message center, software must clear
TIH = 0 and set MSRDY=MTRQ =DTUP =1, to enable the CAN module to
transmit the data.
The CAN module will not clear the DTUP after the transmission, but the
microcontroller can verify that the transmission has been completed, by
checking the MTRQ bit, which will be cleared (MTRQ = 0) after the
transmission has been successfully completed.
CAN 1 Message Center 2 Control Register (C1M2C)
SFR ECh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M2C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 3 Control Register (C1M3C)
SFR EDh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C1M3C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
93 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Message Center 4 Control Register (C1M4C)
SFR EEh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M4C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 5 Control Register (C1M5C)
SFR EFh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M5C
Bits 7-0
B Register (B)
SFR F0h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
B.7
B.6
B.5
B.4
B.3
B.2
B.1
B.0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n=Value after Reset
B Register. This register serves as a second accumulator for certain arithmetic
operations. It is functionally identical to the B register found in the 80C32.
B.7-0
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 6 Control Register (C1M6C)
SFR F3h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C1M6C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
94 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Message Center 7 Control Register (C1M7C)
SFR F4h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M7C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 8 Control Register (C1M8C)
SFR F5h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M8C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 9 Control Register (C1M9C)
SFR F6h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M9C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 10 Control Register (C1M10C)
SFR F7h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C1M10C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
95 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Extended Interrupt Priority (EIP)
SFR F8h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CANBIP
C0IP
C1IP
PWDI
PX5
PX4
PX3
PX2
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
R=Unrestricted Read, W=Unrestricted Write, -n = Value after Reset
CANBIP
Bit 7
CAN 0/1 Activity Interrupt Priority. This bit controls the priority of the CAN
0/1 Activity Interrupt
0 = The CAN 0/1 Activity Interrupt is a low priority interrupt.
1 = The CAN 0/1 Activity Interrupt is a high priority interrupt.
C0IP
Bit 6
CAN 0 Interrupt Priority. This bit controls the priority of the CAN 0 Interrupt
0 = The CAN 0 Interrupt is a low priority interrupt.
1 = The CAN 0 Interrupt is a high priority interrupt.
C1IP
Bit 5
CAN 1 Interrupt Priority. This bit controls the priority of the CAN 1 Interrupt
0 = The CAN 1 Interrupt is a low priority interrupt.
1 = The CAN 1 Interrupt is a high priority interrupt.
PWDI
Bit 4
Interrupt Priority. This bit controls the priority of the watchdog interrupt.
0 = The watchdog interrupt is a low priority interrupt.
1 = The watchdog interrupt is a high priority interrupt.
PX5
Bit 3
External Interrupt 5 Priority. This bit controls the priority of external interrupt
5.
0 = External interrupt 5 is a low priority interrupt.
1 = External interrupt 5 is a high priority interrupt.
PX4
Bit 2
External Interrupt 4 Priority. This bit controls the priority of external interrupt
4.
0 = External interrupt 4 is a low priority interrupt.
1 = External interrupt 4 is a high priority interrupt.
PX3
Bit 1
External Interrupt 3 Priority. This bit controls the priority of external interrupt
3.
0 = External interrupt 3 is a low priority interrupt.
1 = External interrupt 3 is a high priority interrupt.
PX2
Bit 0
External Interrupt 2 Priority. This bit controls the priority of external interrupt
2.
0 = External interrupt 2 is a low priority interrupt.
1 = External interrupt 2 is a high priority interrupt.
96 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Message Center 11 Control Register (C1M11C)
SFR FBh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M11C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 12 Control Register (C1M12C)
SFR FCh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M12C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 13 Control Register (C1M13C)
SFR FDh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
C1M13C
Bits 7-0
CAN 1 Message Center 14 Control Register (C1M14C)
SFR FEh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C1M14C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
97 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 Message Center 15 Control Register (C1M14C)
SFR FFh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MSRDY
ETI
ERI
INTRQ
EXTRQ
MTRQ
ROW/TIH
DTUP
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RW-0
RC-0
R*-0
R*-0
R*-0
R=Unrestricted Read, C=Clear Only, *= See description below, -n=Value after Reset
C1M15C
Bits 7-0
Operation of the bits in this register are identical to those found in the CAN 1
Message One Control Register (C1M1C;ABh). Please consult the description
of that register for more information.
98 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 5: CPU TIMING
SYSTEM CLOCK SELECTION
The internal clocking options of the DS80C390 differs slightly from that described in the High-Speed
Microcontroller User's Guide. Most members of the family offer the option of 4, 256, or 1024 clocks per
machine cycle. The DS80C390 can operate at 1, 2, 4 or 1024 clocks per machine cycle. The logical
operation of the system clock divide control function is shown below. A 3:1 multiplexer, controlled by
CD1, CD0 (PMR.7-6), selects one of three sources for the internal system clock:
§
§
§
Crystal oscillator or external clock source
(Crystal oscillator or external clock source) divided by 256
(Crystal oscillator or external clock source) frequency multiplied by 2 or 4 times.
Figure 5- 1
SYSTEM CLOCK CONTROL DIAGRAM
The system clock control circuitry generates two clock signals that are used by the microcontroller. The
internal system clock provides the timebase for timers and internal peripherals. The system clock is run
through a divide by 4 circuit to generate the machine cycle clock that provides the timebase for CPU
operations. All instructions execute in one to five machine cycles. It is important to note the distinction
between these two clock signals, as they are sometimes confused, creating errors in timing calculations.
Setting CD1, CD0 to 0 enables the frequency multiplier, either doubling or quadrupling the frequency of
the crystal oscillator or external clock source. The 4X/ 2X bit controls the multiplying factor, selecting
twice or four times the frequency when set to 0 or 1, respectively. Enabling the frequency multiplier
results in apparent instruction execution speeds of 2 or 1 clocks. Regardless of the configuration of the
frequency multiplier, the system clock of the microcontroller can never be operated faster than 40 MHz.
This means that the maximum crystal oscillator or external clock source is 10 MHz when using the 4X
setting, and 20 MHz when using the 2X setting.
The primary advantage of the clock multiplier is that it allows the microcontroller to use slower crystals
to achieve the same performance level. This reduces EMI and cost, as slower crystals are generally more
available and thus less expensive.
99 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
SYSTEM CLOCK CONFIGURATION Table 5- 1
CD1 CD0 4X/ 2X
Name
0
0
0
Frequency Multiplier (2X)
0
0
1
Frequency Multiplier (4X)
0
1
N/A
Reserved
1
0
N/A
Divide-by-four (Default)
1
1
N/A
Power Management Mode
Clocks/MC
2
1
Max. External Frequency
20 MHz
10 MHz
4
1024
40 MHz
40 MHz
The system clock and machine cycle rate changes one machine cycle after the instruction changing the
control bits. Note that the change will affect all aspects of system operation, including timers and baud
rates. The use of the switchback feature, described later, can eliminate many of the issues associated with
the Power Management Mode's affect on peripherals such as the serial port. Table 5-2 illustrates the
effect of the clock modes on the operation of the timers.
EFFECT OF CLOCK MODES ON TIMER OPERATION Table 5- 2
CD1
CD0
4X/ 2X
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
1
N/A
N/A
N/A
OSC. CYCLES
PER
MACHINE
CYCLE
2
1
Reserved
4
1024
OSC. CYCLES
PER TIMER
0/1/2 CLOCK
OSC. CYCLES
PER TIMER 2
CLOCK, BAUD
RATE GEN.
OSC. CYCLES
PER SERIAL
PORT CLOCK
MODE 0
OSC. CYCLES
PER SERIAL
PORT CLOCK
MODE 2
TxM=1 TxM=0 T2M=1 T2M=0 SM2=0 SM2=1 SMOD=0 SMOD=1
12
2
2
2
6
2
64
32
12
1
2
2
3
1
64
32
12
3072
4
1024
2
512
2
512
12
3072
4
1024
64
16,384
32
8192
Changing the system clock/machine cycle clock frequency
The microcontroller incorporates a special locking sequence to ensure “glitch-free” switching of the
internal clock signals. All changes to the CD1, CD0 bits must pass through the 10 (divide-by-four) state.
For example, to change from 00 (frequency multiplier) to 11 (PMM), the software must change the bits in
the following sequence: 00 Þ 10 Þ 11. Attempts to switch between invalid states will fail, leaving the
CD1, CD0 bits unchanged.
The following sequence must be followed when switching to the frequency multiplier as the internal time
source. This sequence can only be performed when the device is in divide-by-four operation. The steps
must be followed in this order, although it is possible to have other instructions between them. Any
deviation from this order will cause the CD1, CD0 bits to remain unchanged. Switching from frequency
multiplier to non-multiplier mode requires no steps other than the changing of the CD1, CD0 bits.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Ensure that the CD1, CD0 bits are set to 10, and the RGMD (EXIF.2) bit = 0.
Clear the CTM (Crystal Multiplier Enable) bit.
Set the 4X/ 2X bit to the appropriate state.
Set the CTM (Crystal Multiplier Enable) bit.
Poll the CKRDY bit (EXIF.4), waiting until it is set to 1. This will take approximately 65536 cycles
of the external crystal or clock source.
6. Set CD1, CD0 to 00. The frequency multiplier will be engaged on the machine cycle following the
write to these bits.
100 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 6: MEMORY ACCESS
EXTERNAL MEMORY INTERFACING
The DS80C390 follows the memory interface convention established by the industry standard
80C32/80C52, but with many added improvements. Most notably, the device incorporates a 22-bit
addressing capability that supports up to four megabytes of program memory and four megabytes of data
memory. Externally the memory is accessed via a multiplexed or demultiplexed 20-bit address bus/8-bit
data bus and four chip enable (active during program memory access) or four peripheral enable (active
during data memory access) signals. Multiplexed addressing mode mimics the traditional 8051 memory
interface, with the address MSB presented on Port 2 and the address LSB and data multiplexed on Port 0.
The multiplexed mode requires an external latch to demultiplex the address LSB and data. When the
MUX pin is pulled high, the address LSB and data are demultiplexed, with the address MSB presented on
Port 2, address LSB on Port 1, and the data on Port 0. The elimination of the demultiplexing latch
removes a delay element in the memory timing, and can in some cases allow the use of slower, less
expensive memory devices. The following table illustrates the locations of the external memory control
signals.
EXTERNAL MEMORY ADDRESSING PIN ASSIGNMENTS Table 6-1
Address/Data Bus
CE3 - CE0
PCE3 - PCE0 Addr 19-16 Addr 15-8
Multiplexed
P4.3-P4.0
P5.7-P5.4
P4.7-P4.4
P2
Demultiplexed
P4.3-P4.0
P5.7-P5.4
P4.7-P4.4
P2
Addr 7-0
P0
P1
Data Bus
P0
P0
Each upper order address line (A16-A19) and chip or peripheral enable is individually enabled via the
P4CNT and P5CNT registers. Enabling upper order address lines controls the maximum size of the
external memories that can be addressed, and enabling chip or peripheral enables controls the number of
external memories that can be addressed. For example, if P4CNT.5-3 are set to 101b, A17 and A16 will
be enabled (along with A15-0), permitting a maximum memory device size of 218 or 256 KB.
The configurable program/code chip enable ( CEx ) and MOVX chip enable ( PCEx ) signals issued by the
microprocessor are used when accessing multiple external memory devices. External chip enable lines are
only required if more than one physical block of memory will be used. In the standard 8051
configuration, PSEN is used as the output enable for the program memory device, and RD and WR
control the input or output functions of the data (SRAM) device. The chip enables of these devices can be
tied to their active state if only one of each will be used. To support a larger amount of memory, however,
the microprocessor must generate chip or data enables to select one of several memory devices. The
following tables demonstrate how to enable various combinations of high-order address lines and chip
enables.
EXTENDED ADDRESS AND CHIP ENABLE GENERATION Table 6-2
Port 4 Pin Function
Port 4 Pin Function
(A19-A16 Address Pins)
(Code Memory Chip Enables)
P4CNT.5-3 P4.7 P4.6 P4.5 P4.4 P4CNT.2-0
P4.3
P4.2
P4.1
P4.0
000
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
000
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
100
I/O
I/O
I/O
A16
100
I/O
I/O
I/O
CE0
101
I/O
I/O
A17 A16
101
I/O
I/O
CE1
CE0
110
I/O
A18 A17 A16
110
I/O
CE2
CE1
CE0
111(default) A19 A18 A17 A16 111(default)
CE3
CE2
CE1
CE0
101 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
P5CNT.2-0
000(default)
100
101
110
111
Port 5 Pin Function
(MOVX Memory Chip Enables)
P5.7
P5.6
P5.5
P5.4
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
I/O
PCE0
I/O
I/O
PCE1
PCE0
I/O
PCE2
PCE1
PCE0
PCE3
PCE2
PCE1
PCE0
The following table illustrates how memory is segmented based on the setting of the Port 4 P4.7-4
Configuration Control bits (P4CNT.5-3)
PROGRAM MEMORY CHIP ENABLE BOUNDARIES Table 6-3
P4CNT.5-3
CE0
CE1
CE2
CE3
000
100
101
110
111(default)
0h-7FFFh
0h-1FFFFh
0h-3FFFFh
0h-7FFFFh
0-FFFFFh
8000h-FFFFh
20000h-3FFFFh
40000h-7FFFFh
80000h-FFFFFh
100000h-1FFFFFh
10000h-17FFFh
40000h-5FFFFh
80000h-BFFFFh
100000h-17FFFFh
200000h-2FFFFFh
18000h-1FFFFh
60000h-7FFFFh
C0000h-FFFFFh
180000h-1FFFFFh
300000h-3FFFFFh
Maximum Memory
size per Chip Enable
32 kilobytes
128 kilobytes
256 kilobytes
512 kilobytes
1 megabyte
Following any reset, the device defaults to 16-bit mode addressing. In 16-bit addressing mode the device
will be configured with P4.7-P4.4 as address lines and P4.3-P4.0 configured as CE3 - 0 , with the first
program fetch being performed from 00000h with CE0 active (low).
Using the combined chip enable signals
The DS80C390 incorporates a feature allowing PCEx and CEx signals to be combined. This is useful
when incorporating modifiable code memory as part of a bootstrap loader or for in-system
reprogrammability. Setting the one or more PDCE3 − 0 bits (MCON.3-0) causes the corresponding chip
enable signal to be asserted for both MOVC and MOVX operations. Write access to combined program
and data memory blocks is controlled by the WR signal, and read access is controlled by the PSEN
signal. This feature is especially useful if the design achieves in-system reprogrammability via external
Flash memory, in which a single device is accessed via both MOVC instructions (program fetch) and
MOVX write operations (updates to code memory). In this case, the internal SRAM is placed in the
program/data configuration and loaded with a small bootstrap loader program transferred from the
external Flash memory. The device then executes the internal bootstrap loader routine to modify/update
the program memory located in the external Flash memory.
102 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 7: POWER MANAGEMENT
The DS80C390 supports the general power management features of the DS87C520 described in the HighSpeed Microcontroller. Exceptions are noted below.
Power Management Modes
Power management mode 1 (PMM1) is not supported on the DS80C390..
Switching between clock sources
The ring oscillator on the DS80C390 is similar to that on the DS80C320. As such it does not support the
"run from ring" feature which allows the microprocessor to use the ring oscillator as a clock source after
the external crystal has stabilized (CKRY=1).
103 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 10: PARALLEL I/O
Changes to this section primarily involve the additional functionality associated with Port 4 and 5, and the
use of Port 1 as the address LSB in non-multiplexed memory mode. Because the DS80C390 is a
ROMless device, Port 0 and 2 do not support general purpose I/O.
Port 1
General Purpose I/O
When the device is operating in multiplexed memory mode ( MUX pin is tied to a logic low) port 1
serves as a general purpose I/O port. Data written to the port latch serves to set both level and direction of
the data on the pin. More detail on the functions of port 1 pins configured for general purpose I/O is
provided under the description of port 1 and port 3 in the High-Speed Microcontroller User's Guide.
Non-multiplexed Address Bus A0-A7
When the device is operating in non-multiplexed memory mode ( MUX pin is tied to a logic high) port 1
serves LSB of the external address bus. When operating as the LSB of the address bus the port 1 pins
have extremely strong drivers that allow the bus to move 100 pF loads with the timing shown in the
electrical specifications.
When used as an address bus, the A0-7 pins will provide true drive capability for both logic levels. No
pull-ups are needed. In fact, pull-ups will degrade the memory interface timing. Members of the HighSpeed Microcontroller family employ a two-state drive system on A0-7. That is, the pin is driven hard for
a period to allow the greatest possible setup or access time. Then the pin states are held in a weak latch
until forced to the next state or overwritten by an external device. This assures a smooth transition
between logic states and also allows a longer hold time. In general, the data is held (hold time) on A0-7
until another device overwrites the bus. This latch effect is generally transparent to the user.
Current-limited transitions
The DS80C390 does not employ the current-limited transition feature described in the High-Speed
Microcontroller User's Guide.
Ports 4 and 5
Ports 4 and 5 are general purpose I/O ports with optional special functions associated with each pin.
Enabling the special function automatically converts the I/O pin to that function. To insure proper
operation, each alternate function pin should be programmed to a logic 1.
The drive characteristics of these pins may change depending on whether the pin is configured for general
I/O or as the special function associated with that pin. When in I/O mode, the logic 0 is created by a
strong pull-down. The logic 1 is created by a strong transition pull-up that changes to a weak pull-up.
When a pin is configured in its alternate function, and that function concerns memory interfacing (A16A17, PCE0 − 3 , or CE0 − 3 ) the pins will be driven using the stronger memory interface values shown in
the DC electrical characteristics of the data sheet.
OUTPUT FUNCTIONS
Although 8051 I/O ports appear to be true I/O, their output characteristics are dependent on the individual
port and pin conditions. When software writes a logic 0 to the port for output, the port is pulled to ground.
When software writes a logic 1 to the port for output, ports 1, 3, 4, or 5 will drive weak pull-ups (after the
strong transition from 0 to 1). Port 0 will go tri-state. Thus as long as the port is not heavily loaded, true
104 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
logic values will be output. DC drive capability is provided in the electrical specifications. Note that the
DC current available from an I/O port pin is a function of the permissible voltage drop. Transition current
is available to help move the port pin from a 0 to a 1. Since the logic 0 driver is strong, no additional
drive current is needed in the 1 to 0 direction. The transition current is applied when the port latch is
changed from a logic 0 to a logic 1. Simply writing a logic 1 where a 1 was already in place does not
change the strength of the pull-up. This transition current is applied for a one half of a machine cycle. The
absolute current is not guaranteed, but is approximately 2 mA at 5V.
When serving as an I/O port, the drive will vary as follows. For a logic 0, the port will invoke a strong
pull-down. For a logic 1, the port will invoke a strong pull-up for two oscillator cycles to assist with the
logic transition. Then, the port will revert to a weak pull-up. This weak pull-up will be maintained until
the port transitions from a 1 to a 0. The weak pull-up can be overdriven by external circuits. This allows
the output 1 state to serve as the input state as well.
105 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 11: PROGRAMMABLE TIMERS
The timers of the DS80C390 are very similar to the those of described in the High-Speed Microcontroller
User’s Guide. The primary changes concern the removal of the PMM2 option and the inclusion of the
frequency multiplier settings. The following figures replace the corresponding figures in Section 11 of the
High-Speed Microcontroller User's Guide. The effect on the timers is summarized in tabular form in
Section 5, EFFECT OF CLOCK MODES ON TIMER OPERATION Table 5- 2.
TIMER/COUNTER 0 AND 1
MODES 0 AND 1
T0M = CKCON.3
(T1M = CKCON.4)
CD1:0
11
anything else
OSC
CLK OUT
/3,072
/12
C/T = TMOD.2
(C/T = TMOD.6)
0
1
0
x
x
00
00
10
11
/1
/2
/4
/1024
TL0
(TL1)
0
4X/ 2X CD1:0 CLK OUT
1
4
0
/CLK
1
7
MODE 0
00
M1,M0 = TMOD.1, TMOD.0
(M1,M0 = TMOD.5, TMOD.4)
T0 = P3.4
(T1 = P3.5)
MODE 1
01
TR0 = TCON.4
(TR1 = TCON.6)
0
TH0
(TH1)
7
GATE = TMOD.3
(GATE = TMOD.7)
/INT0 = P3.2
(/INT1 = P3.3)
TIMER 1 FUNCTIONS
SHOWN IN PARENTHESIS ()
106 of 155
TF0 = TCON.5
(TF1 = TCON.7)
INTERRUPT
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
TIMER/COUNTER 0 AND 1
MODE 2
T0M = CKCON.3
(T1M = CKCON.4)
CD1:0
11
anything else
OSC
CLK OUT
/3,072
/12
0
1
0
x
x
00
00
10
11
C/T = TMOD.2
(C/T = TMOD.6)
1
4X/ 2X CD1:0 CLK OUT
0
/1
/2
/4
/1024
/CLK
TL0
(TL1)
0
7
1
T0 = P3.4
(T1 = P3.5)
TR0 = TCON.4
(TR1 = TCON.6)
0
7
TH0
(TH1)
GATE = TMOD.3
(GATE = TMOD.7)
/INT0 = P3.2
(/INT1 = P3.3)
TF0 = TCON.5
(TF1 = TCON.7)
TIMER 1 FUNCTIONS
SHOWN IN PARENTHESIS ()
INTERRUPT
TIMER/COUNTER 0
MODE 3
T0M = CKCON.3
CD1:0
11
anything else
OSC
CLK OUT
/3,072
/12
0
4X/ 2X CD1:0 CLK OUT
1
0
x
x
00
00
10
11
/1
/2
/4
/1024
C/T = TMOD.2
0
/CLK
1
0
TL0
7
TF0 = TCON.5
INTERRUPT
TF1 = TCON.7
INTERRUPT
1
T0 = P3.4
TR0 = TCON.4
GATE = TMOD.3
/INT0 = P3.2
TR1 = TCON.6
0
107 of 155
TH0
7
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
TIMER/COUNTER 2
CLOCK-OUT MODE
(/RL2 = 0)
DIVIDE
BY 2
OSC
0
7
8
15
TH2
TL2
C/T2 =
T2CON.1
=0
TR2 =
T2CON.2
T2 = P1.4
RLOADH
RLOADL
F_OUT =
(Ocsillator Frequency) /
(4 * (65536 - RLOADH, RLOADL))
0
7
8
15
DIVIDE
BY 2
T2OE =
T2MOD.1
T2EX = P1.5
EXF2 =
T2CON.6
TIMER 2
INTERRUPT
EXEN2 = T2CON.3
TIMER/COUNTER 2
BAUD RATE GENERATOR MODE
/RL2(T2CON.0) = 0; RCLK(T2CON.5) = 1 or TCLK(T2CON.4) = 1
TIMER 1
OVERFLOW
OSC
DIVIDE
BY 2
SMOD1 =
PCON.7
4X/ 2X CD1:0 CLK OUT
1
0
x
x
00
00
10
11
/2
/2
/2
/512
C/T2 = T2CON.1
0
0
/CLK
0
7
8
15
1
RCLK =
T2CON.5
TH2
TL2
1
1
0
T2 = P1.4
TR2 = T2CON.2
DIVIDE
BY 16
Serial
Port 0 Rx
CLOCK
DIVIDE
BY 16
Serial
Port 0 Tx
CLOCK
TCLK =
T2CON.4
T2EX = P1.5
EXEN2 = T2CON.3
1
RLOADH
RLOADL
0
7
8
EXF2 =
T2CON.6
108 of 155
0
15
TIMER 2
INTERRUPT
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
TIMER/COUNTER 2
AUTO RELOAD MODE (/RL2 = 0)
(a) DCEN = 0
OSC
CD1:0
11
anything else
CLK OUT
/3,072
/12
T2M = CKCON.5
0
C/T2 = T2CON.1
4X/ 2X CD1:0 CLK OUT
1
0
x
x
00
00
10
11
0
/1
/2
/4
/1024
0
/CLK
1
7
8
16
TF2 =
T2CON.7
TH2
TL2
1
T2 = P1.4
TR2 = T2CON.2
T2EX = P1.5
RLOADH
RLOADL
0
7
8
16
EXF2 =
T2CON.6
EXEN2 = T2CON.3
TIMER 2
INTERRUPT
(b) DCEN = 1
(DOWN COUNTING RELOAD VALUE)
OSC
0FFh
CD1:0
11
anything else
CLK OUT
/3,072
/12
T2M = CKCON.5
0
00
00
10
11
/1
/2
/4
/1024
7
8
15
C/T2 = T2CON.1
0
4X/ 2X CD1:0 CLK OUT
1
0
x
x
0
0FFh
CLK
1
TH2
TL2
1
T2 = P1.0
TR2 = T2CON.2
0
7
RCAP2L
COUNT DIRECTION
(1 = UP, 0 = DOWN)
8
15
RCAP2H
(UP COUNTING RELOAD VALUE)
T2EX = P1.1
TF2 =
T2CON.7
TIMER 2
INTERRUPT
EXF2 =
T2CON.6
109 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Divide by 13 option
The other change to the timers associated with the DS80C390 is the inclusion of a divide by 13 option for
Timer 1 and Timer 2. The option in independently enabled for each timer by setting the D13T1 (for timer
1) or D13T2 (for timer 2) bits. When enabled by setting the appropriate bits, the timer input from the T1
or T2 external pins will be replaced by a timebase that is OSC/13. The following figure illustrates the
operation of these bits.
To C/T selector
T1 = P3.5
(T2 = P1.0)
As shown in High-Speed Microcontroller User's Guide
D13T1 = T2MOD.4
(D13T2 = T2MOD.3)
T1 = P3.5
(T2 = P1.0)
0
To C/T selector
1
OSC / 13
INPUT
As implemented in DS80C390 with divide by 13 option
The setting of the divide by 13 bits will affect all operations of timer 1 and all operations of timer except
baud rate generator mode. The baud rate generator mode of Timer 2 will not be affected by any setting of
the D13T2 bit.
110 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 13: TIMED ACCESS PROTECTION
A number of Timed Access protected bits are associated with the new features of the DS80C390. Please
consult the High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide for complete information on the use of the Timed
Access feature.
POR (WDCON.6):
WDIF (WDCON.3):
EWT (WDCON.1):
RWT (WDCON.0):
BGS (EXIF.0):
SA (ACON.2):
AM1-AM0 (ACON.1-ACON.0):
IDM1-IDM0 (MCON.7-MCON.6):
CMA (MCON.5):
PDCE3-PDCE.0 (MCON.3MCON.0)
CRST (C0C.3):
CRST (C1C.3):
SBCAN (P4CNT.6):
P4CNT.5-P4CNT.0:
P5CNT.2-P5CNT.0:
IRDACK (COR.7):
C1BPR7-C1BPR6 (COR.6-COR.5):
C0BPR7-C0BPR6 (COR.4-COR.3):
COD1-COD0 (COR.2-COR.1):
CLKOE (COR.0):
Power-on Reset
Watchdog Interrupt Flag
Watchdog Timer Enable
Watchdog Reset
Bandgap Stop
Stack Address Mode
Address Mode Bit 1 and Bit 0
Internal Memory Configuration and
Location Bit 1 and Bit 0
CAN Data Memory Assignment
Program/Data Chip Enables
CAN 0 Reset
CAN 1 Reset
Single Bus CAN
Port 4 Pin Configuration Control Bits
Port 5 Pin (P5.7-P5.5) Configuration
Control Bits
IRDA Clock Output Enable
CAN 1 Baud Rate Pre-scale Bits
CAN 0 Baud Rate Pre-scale Bits
CAN Clock Output Divide Bit 1 and Bit 0
CAN Clock Output Enable
111 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
ADDENDUM TO SECTION 16: INSTRUCTION SET DETAILS
The DS80C390 supports one of three different address modes, selected via the AM1 and AM0 bits in the
ACON register. The processor operates in either the traditional 16-bit address mode, 22-bit paged address
mode or in a 22-bit contiguous address mode. When operating in the 16-bit addressing mode (AM1, AM0
= 00b), all instruction cycle timing and byte counts will be identical to the 8051 family. Use of the 24-bit
paged address mode is binary code-compliant with the traditional (16-bit) 8051 compilers, but allows for
up to 4M bytes of program and 4M bytes of data memory to be supported via a new Address Page SFR
which supports an internal bank switch mechanism. The 22-bit contiguous mode requires a compiler that
supports contiguous program flow over the entire 22-bit address range via the addition of an operand
and/or cycles to eight basic instructions.
16-BIT (8051 STANDARD) ADDRESSING MODE
This addressing mode is identical to that used by the 8051 family and most members of the High-Speed
Microcontroller. The microcontroller defaults to this mode following a reset. This mode can also be used
to run code compiled or assembled for the 22-bit contiguous mode, as long as the following four
instructions are not executed:
MOV DPTR, #data24,
ACALL addr19
LCALL addr24
LJMP addr24
These four branch instructions are the only instructions that will cause the compiler to generate additional
operands relative to the 16-bit addressing mode. Note that the number of cycles per instruction may
appear different from other instructions, but this is ignored by most assemblers or compilers and as such
does not pose a problem with the binary output.
By selecting the 24-bit contiguous mode prior using any one of these four branch instructions, it is
possible to run 24-bit contiguous compiled code in the default 16-bit address configuration. Once the
AM0 and AM1 bits are set to the 24-bit contiguous address mode, the instructions seen above will
execute properly. When the 24-bit paged address mode is selected, all instructions complied under the
traditional 16-bit address mode will execute normally at any point in code.
22-BIT PAGED ADDRESSING MODE
The DS80C390 incorporates an internal 8-bit Address Page Register (AP), an 8-bit extended DPTR
Register (DPX), and an 8-bit extended DPTR1 Register (DPX1) as hardware support for 22-bit
addressing in the paged address mode (AM1, AM0 = 01b). The only difference found in executing code
in the traditional 16-bit mode and the 22-bit paged mode is the additional of one machine cycle when
executing the ACALL, LCALL, RET and RETI instructions as well as when the hardware processes an
interrupt.
The DS80C390 supports interrupts from any location in the 22-bit address field. When an interrupt
request is acknowledged, the current contents of the 22-bit Program Counter (PC) is pushed onto the
stack, and the page value (00h) and the lower 16-bit address of the interrupt vector is then written to the
PC before the execution of the LCALL. This means that all interrupt vectors are fetched from address
0000xxh, rather than the current page as defined by the AP register. The RETI instruction will pop the
three address bytes from the stack, and will restore these bytes back to the PC at the conclusion of the
interrupt service routine. Interrupt service routines that branch over page boundaries must save the current
contents of AP before altering the AP register, as it is not automatically saved on the stack. This
mechanism will support up to three levels of nesting for interrupts.
112 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
One additional machine cycle is required to handle the 8 bits associated with the extension to 22-bit
addressing. The storage of the 22-bit address during an interrupt, LCALL, or ACALL instruction also
requires three bytes of stack memory as opposed to the traditional two bytes in the 16-bit address mode.
In this mode, the third byte of the PC (PC[22:16]) is not incremented when the lower 16 bits in the lower
two bytes of the PC (PC[15:0]) rolls over from FFFFh to 0000h. In the 22-bit paged address mode
PC[22:16] functions only as a storage register which is loaded by the Address Page (AP) register
whenever the processor executes either a LJMP, ACALL or LCALL instruction. PC[22:16] is stored and
retrieved from the stack with the lower 16-bit of address in PC[15:0] when stack operation is required.
Execution of DPTR-related instructions in the paged address mode is limited to the 64K byte page that is
pointed by the current content of the selected extended DPTR register. The values in the DPX and DPX1
registers are not affected when the lower 16 bits of the selected DPTR overflows or underflowed. The
execution of either the JMP @A+DPTR or the MOVC A, @A+DPTR instruction is limited to the current
64 KB page as specified by the PCX register. The contents of the DPX and DPX1 registers will not affect
the operation of either instruction.
The modification of the instructions in the 22-bit page address mode is summarized in the following
table.
INSTRUCTION CODE
MNEMONIC D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 HEX BYTE CYCLE EXPLANATION
ACALL addr a10 a9 a8 1 0 0 0
1
Byte 1
2
4
(PC15:0)=(PC15:0)+2
11
a7 a6 a5 a8 a3 a2 a1 a0 Byte 2
(SP) = (SP) + 1
((SP)) = (PC7:0)
(SP) = (SP) + 1
((SP)) = (PC15-8)
(SP) = (SP) + 1
((SP))=(PC23:16)
(PC10:0)=addr11
(PC23:16)=(AP7:0)
LCALL addr
16
0 0 0 1 0 0 1
a15 a14 a13 a12 a11 a10 a9
a7 a6 a5 a5 a3 a2 a1
0
a8
a0
12
Byte 2
Byte 3
3
5
(PC15:0)=(PC15:0)+3
(SP) = (SP) + 1
((SP)) = (PC7:0)
(SP) = (SP) + 1
((SP)) = (PC15-8)
(SP) = (SP) + 1
((SP))=(PC23:16)
(PC)=addr16
(PC23:16)=(AP7:0)
RET
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
22
1
5
(PC23:16)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC15-8)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC7:0)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
113 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
RETI
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
32
1
5
(PC23:16)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC15-8)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC7:0)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
22-BIT CONTIGUOUS ADDRESSING MODE
When the AM1 bit is set, the DS80C390 will operate in its 22-bit contiguous addressing mode. This
addressing mode is supported by a full 22-bit Program Counter with eight modified instructions that
operate over the full 22-bit address range. All modified branching instructions will automatically store
and restore the entire contents of the 22-bit Program Counter. The 22-bit DPTR and DPTR1 registers will
function identically to the Program Counter to allow access to the full 22- bit data memory range.
All the DS80C390 instruction opcodes retain binary compatibility to the 8051. Modified instructions are
only different with respect to their cycle/byte/operand count and operate within a contiguous 24-bit
address field. Note that all instructions which utilize the DPTR register now make use of a full 24-bit
register (DPTR=DPX+DPH+DPL and DPTR1=DPX1+DPH1+DPL1). This mode of operation requires
software tools (assembler or compiler) specifically designed to accept the modified length of the new
instructions.
The instructions modified to operate in the 24-bit address mode are summarized in the following table.
114 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
MNEMONIC D7
ACALL addr a18
19
a15
a7
INSTRUCTION CODE
D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
a17 a16 1 0 0 0
1
a14 a13 a12 a11 a10 a9 a8
a6 a5 a8 a3 a2 a1 a0
HEX
Byte 1
Byte 2
Byte 3
BYTE CYCLE EXPLANATION
3
5
(PC)=(PC)+3
(SP)=(SP)+1
((SP))=(PC7:0)
(SP)=(SP)+1
((SP))=(PC15:8)
(SP)=(SP)+1
((SP))=(PC23:16)
(PC18:0)=addr19
AJMP addr 19 a18 a17 a16 0 0 0 0
a15 a14 a13 a12 a11 a10 a9
a7 a6 a5 a8 a3 a2 a1
INC DPTR
1 0 1 0 0 0 1
1
a8
a0
1
Byte 1
Byte 2
Byte 3
A3
3
5
(PC)=(PC)+3
(PC18:0)=addr19
1
4
(DPTR)=(DPTR)+1
(PC18:0)=addr19
LCALL addr24 0 0 0 1 0 0 1
0
a23 a22 a21 a20 a19 a18 a17 a16
a15 a14 a13 a12 a11 a10 a9 a8
a7 a6 a5 a5 a3 a2 a1 a0
LJMP addr24
0
a23
a15
a7
MOV DPTR, 1
#data24
d23
d15
d7
RET
0
0
a22
a14
a6
0
d22
d14
d6
0
0
a21
a13
a5
0
d21
d13
d5
1
0
a20
a12
a5
1
d20
d12
d5
0
0
a19
a11
a3
0
d19
d11
d3
0
0
a18
a10
a2
0
d18
d10
d2
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
a17 a16
a9 a8
a1 a0
0
0
d17 d16
d9 d8
d1 d0
1
0
(PC)=(PC)+4
(SP)=(SP)+1
((SP))=(PC7:0)
(SP)=(SP)+1
((SP))=(PC15:8)
(SP)=(SP)+1
((SP))=(PC23:16)
12
Byte 2
Byte 3
Byte 4
4
6
02
Byte 2
Byte 3
Byte 4
90
Byte 2
Byte 3
Byte 4
22
4
5
4
3
(DPX)=#data23:9
(DPH)=#data15:8
(DPL)=#data7:0
1
5
(PC23:16)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC15-8)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC7:0)=((SP))
32
1
5
(PC23:0)=addr24
(PC23:0)=addr24
(SP)=(SP)-1
RETI
0
1
0
(PC23:16)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC15-8)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
(PC7:0)=((SP))
(SP)=(SP)-1
115 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
SECTION 18: CONTROLLER AREA NETWORK (CAN) MODULE
The DS80C390 incorporates two identical CAN controllers (CAN 0 and CAN 1). Each of these CAN
units provide operating modes which are fully compliant with the CAN 2.0B specification. The
microcontroller interface to the CAN controllers is broken into two groups of registers. To simplify the
software associated with the operation of the CAN controllers, all of the global CAN status and controls
as well as the individual message center control/status registers are located in the Special Function
Register map. The remaining registers associated with the data identification, identification masks, format
and data are located in the MOVX space. Each of the SFR and MOVX registers are configured as dual
port memories to allow both the CAN controller and the microcontroller access to the required functions.
The basic functions covered by the CAN controllers include the use of 11-bit standard or 29-bit extended
acceptance identifiers, as programmed by the microcontroller for each message center. Each CAN unit
provides storage for up to 15 messages, with the standard 8 byte data field, in each message. Each of the
first 14 message centers is programmable in either a transmit or receive mode. Message center 15 is
designed as a receive only message center with a FIFO buffer to prevent the inadvertent loss of data when
the microcontroller is busy and is not allowed time to retrieve the incoming message prior to the
acceptance of a second message into message center 15. Message 15 also utilizes an independent set of
mask registers and Identification registers, which are only applied once an incoming message has not
been accepted by any of the first fourteen message centers. A second filter test is also supported for all
message centers (1 - 15) to allow the CAN controller to use two separate 8 bit media masks and media
arbitration fields to verify the contents of the first two byte of data of each incoming message, before
accepting an incoming message. This feature allows the CAN unit to directly support the use of higher
CAN protocols which make use of the first and/or second byte of data as a part of the acceptance layer for
storing incoming messages. Each message center can also be programmed independently to perform
testing of the incoming data with or without the use of the global masks.
Global controls and status registers in each CAN module allow the microcontroller to evaluate error
messages, validate new data and the location of such data, establish the bus timing for the CAN Bus,
establish the Identification mask bits, and verify the source of individual messages. In addition each
message center is individually equipped with the necessary status and controls to establish directions,
interrupt generation, identification mode (standard or extended), data field size, data status, automatic
remote frame request and acknowledgment, and masked or non-masked identification acceptance testing.
Utilizing the Single Bus CAN mode (SBCAN=1) ties the inputs and outputs of both CAN modules
together, effectively creating a single CAN module with 30 message centers.
The priority order associated with the CAN module transmitting or receiving a message is determined by
the inverse of the number of the message center, and is independent of the arbitration bits assigned to the
message center. Thus message center 2 has a higher priority than message center 14. To avoid a priority
inversion the CAN modules are configured to reload the transmit buffer with the message of the highest
priority (lowest message center number) whenever an arbitration is lost or an error condition occurs.
The following tables illustrate the locations of the MOVX SRAM registers and bits used by the CAN
controllers. Following the tables are descriptions of the function of the bits and registers.
116 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
MOVX MESSAGE CENTERS FOR CAN 0
CAN 0 CONTROL/STATUS/MASK REGISTERS
Register
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MOVX Data
Address1
C0MID0
MID07
MID06
MID05
MID04
MID03
MID02
MID01
MID00
xxxx00h
C0MA0
M0AA7 M0AA6 M0AA5 M0AA4 M0AA3 M0AA2 M0AA1 M0AA0
xxxx01h
C0MID1
MID17
MID10
xxxx02h
C0MA1
M1AA7 M1AA6 M1AA5 M1AA4 M1AA3 M1AA2 M1AA1 M1AA0
xxxx03h
MID16
SJW0
MID15
BPR5
MID14
BPR4
MID13
BPR3
MID12
BPR2
MID11
C0BT0
SJW1
BPR1
BPR0
C0BT1
SMP
C0SGM0
ID28
ID27
ID26
ID25
ID24
ID23
ID22
ID21
xxxx06h
C0SGM1
ID20
ID19
ID18
0
0
0
0
0
xxxx07h
C0EGM0
ID28
ID27
ID26
ID25
ID24
ID23
ID22
ID21
xxxx08h
C0EGM1
ID20
ID19
ID18
ID17
ID16
ID15
ID14
ID13
xxxx09h
C0EGM2
ID12
ID11
ID10
ID9
ID8
ID7
ID6
ID5
xxxx0Ah
C0EGM3
ID4
ID3
ID2
ID1
ID0
0
0
0
xxxx0Bh
C0M15M0
ID28
ID27
ID26
ID25
ID24
ID23
ID22
ID21
xxxx0Ch
C0M15M1
ID20
ID19
ID18
ID17
ID16
ID15
ID14
ID13
xxxx0Dh
C0M15M2
ID12
ID11
ID10
ID9
ID8
ID7
ID6
ID5
xxxx0Eh
C0M15M3
ID4
ID3
ID2
ID1
ID0
0
0
0
xxxx0Fh
TSEG26 TSEG25 TSEG24 TSEG13 TSEG12 TSEG11 TSEG10
xxxx04h
xxxx05h
CAN 0 MESSAGE CENTER 1
Reserved
xxxx10h - 11h
C0M1AR0
CAN 0 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 0
xxxx12h
C0M1AR1
CAN 0 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 1
xxxx13h
C0M1AR2
CAN 0 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 2
xxxx14h
C0M1AR3
C0M1F
C0M1D0-7
CAN 0 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 3
DTBYC3 DTBYC2 DTBYC1 DTBYC0
T/ R
EX/ ST
MEME
WTOE
xxxx15h
MDME
xxxx16h
CAN 0 MESSAGE 1 DATA BYTES 0 - 7
xxxx17h - 1Eh
Reserved
xxxx1Fh
117 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 0 MESSAGE CENTERS 2-14
MESSAGE CENTER 2 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx20h - 2Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 3 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx30h - 3Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 4 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx40h - 4Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 5 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx50h - 5Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 6 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx60h - 6Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 7 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx70h - 7Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 8 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx80h - 8Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 9 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx90h - 9Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 10 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxA0h - AFh
MESSAGE CENTER 11 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxB0h - BFh
MESSAGE CENTER 12 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxC0h - CFh
MESSAGE CENTER 13 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxD0h - DFh
MESSAGE CENTER 14 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxE0h - EFh
CAN 0 MESSAGE CENTER 15
-
Reserved
xxxxF0h - F1h
C0M15AR0
CAN 0 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 0
xxxxF2h
C0M15AR1
CAN 0 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 1
xxxxF3h
C0M15AR2
CAN 0 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 2
xxxxF4h
C0M15AR3
C0M15F
C0M15D0-7
CAN 0 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 3
DTBYC3 DTBYC2 DTBYC1 DTBYC0
0
EX/ ST
MEME
WTOE
xxxxF5h
MDME
xxxxF6h
CAN 0 MESSAGE 15 DATA BYTE 0 - 7
xxxxF7h - FEh
Reserved
xxxxFFh
Notes:
1
The first two bytes of the CAN 0 MOVX memory address are dependent on the setting of the CMA bit
(MCON.5) CMA=0, xxxx=00EE; CMA=1, xxxx=4010.
118 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
MOVX MESSAGE CENTERS FOR CAN 1
CAN 1 CONTROL/STATUS/MASK REGISTERS
6
7
C1MID0
MID07
MID06 MID05 MID04 MID03 MID02 MID01 MID00
xxxx00h
C1MA0
M0AA7 M0AA6 M0AA5 M0AA4 M0AA3 M0AA2 M0AA1 M0AA0
xxxx01h
C1MID1
MID17
MID16 MID15 MID14 MID13 MID12 MID11 MID10
xxxx02h
C1MA1
M1AA7 M1AA6 M1AA5 M1AA4 M1AA3 M1AA2 M1AA1 M1AA0
xxxx03h
SJW0
5
BPR5
4
3
BPR4
BPR3
2
BPR2
1
BPR1
0
MOVX Data
Address1
Register
C1BT0
SJW1
BPR0
C1BT1
SMP
C1SGM0
ID28
ID27
ID26
ID25
ID24
ID23
ID22
ID21
xxxx06h
C1SGM1
ID20
ID19
ID18
0
0
0
0
0
xxxx07h
C1EGM0
ID28
ID27
ID26
ID25
ID24
ID23
ID22
ID21
xxxx08h
C1EGM1
ID20
ID19
ID18
ID17
ID16
ID15
ID14
ID13
xxxx09h
C1EGM2
ID12
ID11
ID10
ID9
ID8
ID7
ID6
ID5
xxxx0Ah
C1EGM3
ID4
ID3
ID2
ID1
ID0
0
0
0
xxxx0Bh
C1M15M0
ID28
ID27
ID26
ID25
ID24
ID23
ID22
ID21
xxxx0Ch
C1M15M1
ID20
ID19
ID18
ID17
ID16
ID15
ID14
ID13
xxxx0Dh
C1M15M2
ID12
ID11
ID10
ID9
ID8
ID7
ID6
ID5
xxxx0Eh
C1M15M3
ID4
ID3
ID2
ID1
ID0
0
0
0
xxxx0Fh
TSEG26 TSEG25 TSEG24 TSEG13 TSEG12 TSEG11 TSEG10
xxxx04h
xxxx05h
CAN 1 MESSAGE CENTER 1
Reserved
xxxx10h - 11h
C1M1AR0
CAN 1 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 0
xxxx12h
C1M1AR1
CAN 1 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 1
xxxx13h
C1M1AR2
CAN 1 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 2
xxxx14h
C1M1AR3
C1M1F
C1M1D0-7
CAN 1 MESSAGE 1 ARBITRATION REGISTER 3
DTBYC3 DTBYC2 DTBYC1 DTBYC0
T/ R
EX/ ST
MEME
WTOE
xxxx15h
MDME
xxxx16h
CAN 1 MESSAGE 1 DATA BYTES 0 - 7
xxxx17h - 1Eh
Reserved
xxxx1Fh
119 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN 1 MESSAGE CENTERS 2-14
MESSAGE CENTER 2 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx20h - 2Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 3 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx30h - 3Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 4 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx40h - 4Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 5 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx50h - 5Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 6 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx60h - 6Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 7 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx70h - 7Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 8 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx80h - 8Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 9 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxx90h - 9Fh
MESSAGE CENTER 10 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxA0h - AFh
MESSAGE CENTER 11 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxB0h - BFh
MESSAGE CENTER 12 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxC0h - CFh
MESSAGE CENTER 13 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxD0h - DFh
MESSAGE CENTER 14 REGISTERS (similar to Message Center 1)
xxxxE0h - EFh
CAN 1 MESSAGE CENTER 15
-
Reserved
xxxxF0h - F1h
C1M15AR0
CAN 1 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 0
xxxxF2h
C1M15AR1
CAN 1 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 1
xxxxF3h
C1M15AR2
CAN 1 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 2
xxxxF4h
C1M15AR3
C1M15F
C1M15D0C1M15D7
CAN 1 MESSAGE 15 ARBITRATION REGISTER 3
DTBYC3 DTBYC2 DTBYC1 DTBYC0
0
EX/ ST
MEME
WTOE
xxxxF5h
MDME
xxxxF6h
CAN 1 MESSAGE 15 DATA BYTE 0 - 7
xxxxF7h - FEh
Reserved
xxxxFFh
Notes:
1
The first two bytes of the CAN 1 MOVX memory address are dependent on the setting of the CMA bit
(MCON.5) CMA=0, xxxx=00EF; CMA=1, xxxx=4011.
120 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN MOVX Register Description
Most of the SRAM control registers, including the message centers proper, are mapped into a special
location in the MOVX SRAM space. The specific location of the registers is a function of the module
number (CAN 0 or CAN 1) and the CMA bit which controls whether the CAN SRAM begins at location
401xxxh or 00Exxxh.
The MOVX CAN Registers consist of a set of one Control/Status/Mask register and 15 message centers.
Write access to the Control/Status/Mask registers is only possible when the SWINT bit is set to 1. All
message centers for a given CAN module are identical with the exception of 15, which has some minor
differences noted in the register descriptions. All of the CAN 1 registers are duplicates of the CAN 0
register set, differing only by address. To simplify the documentation, only one set of registers will be
shown, with the following generic notation used for register names and addresses:
n
CAN number (0 or 1)
xxxx
First four hexadecimal digits of register address
CMA
0
1
y
CAN 0
00EE
4010
CAN 1
00EF
4011
Address based on message center number
y
1
2
.
A
F
Message center number
1
2
.
10
15
121 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Media ID Mask Register 0 (CnMID0)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
xxxx00h
CAN Media ID Mask Register 1 (CnMID1)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
xxxx02h
CAN Media ID Mask Registers 1-0. These registers function as the mask when
performing the Media Identification test. This register can only be modified
during a software initialization (SWINT=1). If MDME=0, the Media
Identification test will not be performed and the contents of these registers is
ignored. If MDME=1, the CAN module will perform an additional qualifying test
on Data Bytes 0 and 1 of the incoming message, regardless of the state of the
EX/ ST bit. Data byte 1 will be compared against CAN Media Byte Arbitration
Register 1 utilizing CnMID1 as a mask, and Data byte 0 will be compared against
CAN Media Byte Arbitration Register 0 utilizing CnMID0 as a mask. Any bit in
the CnMID1, CnMID0 masks programmed to 0 will ignore the state of the
corresponding Data Byte bit when performing the test. Any bit in the CnMID1,
CnMID0 masks programmed to 1 will force the state of the corresponding Data
Byte bit and CAN Media Byte Arbitration Registers 1 and 0 to match before
considering the incoming message a match. Programming either Media ID Mask
Register to 00h effectively disables the Media ID test for that byte. As such the
CnMID1, CnMID0 masks act as a don’t care following a system Reset.
CAN Media Arbitration Register 0 (CnMA0)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
xxxx01h
CAN Media Arbitration Register 1 (CnMA1)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
xxxx03h
CAN Media Arbitration Register 1-0. These registers function as the arbitration
field when performing the Media Identification test. If MDME=0, the Media
Identification test will not be performed and the contents of these registers is
ignored. If MDME=1, the CAN module will perform an additional qualifying test
on Data Bytes 0 and 1 of the incoming message, as mentioned in the description of
the CAN Media ID Mask Registers. This register can only be modified during a
software initialization (SWINT=1).
122 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Bus Timing Register 0 (CnBT0)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx04h
SJW1
SJW0
BPR5
BPR4
BPR3
BPR2
BPR1
BPR0
SJW1, SJW0
Bits 7-6
CAN Synchronization Jump Width Select. These bits specify the maximum
number of time quanta (tqu) cycles that a bit may be lengthened or shortened in
one resynchronization to compensate for Phase Errors detected by the CAN
controller when receiving data. These bits can only be modified during a software
initialization (SWINT=1).
SJW1
SJW0
Synchronization Jump Width
(Number in parenthesis is SJW value used in bit timing calculations)
0
0
1
1
BPR5 - BPR0
Bits 5-0
0
1
0
1
1 tqu (1)
2 tqu (2)
3 tqu (3)
4 tqu (4)
CAN Baud Rate Prescaler. The sixty four states defined by the binary
combinations of the BPR5 - BPR0 bits determine the value of the prescaler,
which in turn defines the cycle time associated with one time quanta. These bits
can only be modified during a software initialization (SWINT=1).
BPR5
BPR4
BPR3
BPR2
BPR1
BPR0
0
0
.
.
1
1
0
0
.
.
1
1
0
0
.
.
1
1
0
0
.
.
1
1
0
0
.
.
1
1
0
1
.
.
0
1
123 of 155
Baud Rate Prescale Value
(BRPV)
1
2
.
.
63
64
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Bus Timing Register 1 (CnBT1)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx05h
SMP
TSEG26
TSEG25
TSEG24
TSEG13
TSEG12
TSEG11
TSEG10
SMP
Bit 7
CAN Sampling Rate. The Sampling Rate (SMP) bit determines the number of
samples to be taken during each receive bit time. Programming SMP = 0 will take
only one sample during each bit time. Programming SMP = 1 will direct the CAN
logic to take three samples during each bit time, and to use a majority voting
circuit to determine the final bit value. When SMP is set to a 1, two additional tqu
clock cycles are be added to Time Segment One. SMP should not be set to one
when the Baud Rate Prescale Value (BRPV) is less than 4. This bit can only be
modified during a software initialization (SWINT=1).
TSEG26-24
Bits 6-4
CAN Time Segment 2 Select. The eight states defined by the TSEG26 TSEG24 bits determine the number of clock cycles in the Phase Segment 2
portion of the nominal bit time, which occurs after the sample time. These bits
can only be modified during a software initialization (SWINT=1).
TSEG26
TSEG25
TSEG24
Time Segment Two Length
(Number in parenthesis is TS2_LEN value used in
bit timing calculations)
0
0
0
.
1
1
TSEG13-10
Bits 3-0
0
0
1
.
1
1
0
1
0
.
0
1
Invalid
2 tqu (2)
3 tqu (3)
.
7 tqu (7)
8 tqu (8)
CAN Time Segment 1 Select. The sixteen states defined by the TSEG13 TSEG10 bits determine the number of clock cycles in the Phase Segment 1
portion of the nominal bit time, which occurs before the sample time. These bits
can only be modified during a software initialization (SWINT=1).
TSEG13
TSEG12
TSEG11
TSEG10
Time Segment One Length
(Number in parenthesis is TS1_LEN
value used in bit timing calculations)
0
0
0
.
1
1
0
0
0
.
1
1
0
0
1
.
1
1
124 of 155
0
1
0
.
0
1
Invalid
2 tqu (2)
3 tqu (3)
.
15 tqu (15)
16 tqu (16)
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Standard Global Mask Register 0 (CnSGM0)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx06h MASK28 MASK27 MASK26 MASK25 MASK24 MASK23 MASK22 MASK21
CAN Standard Global Mask Register 1 (CnSGM1)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
xxxx07h MASK20 MASK19 MASK18
4
3
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
CAN Standard Global Mask Registers 1-0. These registers function as the
mask when performing the 11-bit global identification test on incoming messages
for Message Centers 1-14. If MEME=0, the incoming message ID field must
match the corresponding message center arbitration value exactly, effectively
ignoring the contents of these registers. These registers are only used when
performing the standard identification test, and their contents are ignored when
EX/ ST =1. These registers can only be modified during a software initialization
(SWINT=1).
Any mask bit in the CnSGM1, CnSGM0 mask programmed to a 0 will create a
don’t care condition when the respective bit in the incoming message ID field is
compared with the corresponding arbitration bits in Message Centers 1-14. Any
bit in these masks programmed to a 1 will force the respective bit in the incoming
message ID field to match identically with the corresponding arbitration bits in
Message Centers 1-14, before said message will be loaded into Message Centers
1-14.
The five least significant bits in the CnSGM1 register are not used, and will not
perform any comparison of these bit locations. A read of these bits will produce
the last bit values written to these bit locations by the microcontroller or an
indeterminate value following a power-up.
125 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Extended Global Mask Register 0 (CnEGM0)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx08h MASK28 MASK27 MASK26 MASK25 MASK24 MASK23 MASK22 MASK21
CAN Extended Global Mask Register 1 (CnEGM1)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx09h MASK20 MASK19 MASK18 MASK17 MASK16 MASK15 MASK14 MASK13
CAN Extended Global Mask Register 2 (CnEGM2)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
xxxx0Ah MASK12 MASK11 MASK10
4
3
2
1
0
MASK9
MASK8
MASK7
MASK6
MASK5
CAN Extended Global Mask Register 3 (CnEGM3)
MOVX
Address1
7
xxxx0Bh MASK4
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MASK3
MASK2
MASK1
MASK0
0
0
0
CAN Extended Global Mask Registers 0-3. These registers function as the
mask when performing the Extended Global Identification test (EX/ ST =1) for
Message Centers 1-14. When EX/ ST =0 the contents of this register will be
ignored. These registers can only be modified during a software initialization
(SWINT=1).
When EX/ ST =1, the 29-bits of the message ID will be compared against the 29bits of the CAN Message Center y Arbitration Registers, using the 29 bits of the
CAN Extended Global Mask Registers as a mask. Any bit in the Extended Global
Mask Registers set to 0 will ignore the state of the corresponding bit in the
incoming message ID field when performing the test. Any bit in the Extended
Global Mask Registers set to 1 will force the state of the corresponding bit in the
incoming message ID field and CAN message center arbitration Registers 0-3 to
match before considering the incoming message a match.
The three least significant bits in the CnEGM3 are not used, and will not perform
any comparison of these bit locations. A read of these bits will always return 0,
and writes to these bits will be ignored.
Programming all Mask registers to 00h effectively disables the Global ID test for
that message, accepting all messages. As such the Global mask registers act as a
don’t care following a system Reset.
126 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Message Center 15 Mask Register 0 (CnM15M0)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx0Ch MASK28 MASK27 MASK26 MASK25 MASK24 MASK23 MASK22 MASK21
CAN Message Center 15 Mask Register 1 (CnM15M1)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx0Dh MASK20 MASK19 MASK18 MASK17 MASK16 MASK15 MASK14 MASK13
CAN 0 Message Center 15 Mask Register 2 (CnM15M2)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
xxxx0Eh MASK12 MASK11 MASK10
4
3
2
1
0
MASK9
MASK8
MASK7
MASK6
MASK5
CAN 0 Message Center 15 Mask Register 3 (CnM15M3)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxx0Fh
MASK4
MASK3
MASK2
MASK1
MASK0
0
0
0
MASK28-MASK0
CAN Message Center 15 Mask Registers 0-3. These registers function as the
mask when performing the Extended Global Identification test (EX/ ST =1) for
Message Center 15 only. These registers can only be modified during a software
initialization (SWINT=1).
When EX/ ST =1, the 29 bits of the message ID will be compared against the 29
bits of the CAN Message Center 15 Arbitration Registers, using the 29 bits of the
CAN Message Center 15 Mask Registers as a mask. When EX/ ST =0, the 11 bits
of the message ID will be compared against the most significant 11 bits of the
CAN Message Center 15 Arbitration Registers, using the most significant 11 bits
of the CAN Message Center 15 Mask Registers as a mask. Any bit in the CAN
Message Center 15 Mask Registers set to 0 will ignore the state of the
corresponding bit in the incoming message ID field when performing the test.
Any bit in the CAN Message Center 15 Mask Registers set to 1 will force the
state of the corresponding bit in the incoming message ID field and CAN message
center arbitration Registers 0-3 to match before considering the incoming message
a match.
The three least significant bits in the CnM15M3 register are not used, and will not
perform any comparison of these bit locations. A read of these bits will always
return 0, and writes to these bits will be ignored.
Programming all Mask registers to 00h effectively disables the Message Center 15
ID test, accepting all messages. As such the Message Center 15 mask registers act
as a don’t care following a system Reset.
127 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN MESSAGE CENTER MOVX REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS
CAN Message Center y Arbitration Register 0 (CnMyAR0)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxxy2h
ID28
ID27
ID26
ID25
ID24
ID23
ID22
ID21
CAN Message Center y Arbitration Register 1 (CnMyAR1)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxxy3h
ID20
ID19
ID18
ID17
ID16
ID15
ID14
ID13
CAN Message Center y Arbitration Register 2 (CnMyAR2)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxxy4h
ID12
ID11
ID10
ID9
ID8
ID7
ID6
ID5
CAN Message Center y Arbitration Register 3 (CnMyAR3)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
xxxxy5h
ID4
ID3
ID2
ID1
ID0
0
0
WTOE
ID28-ID0
CAN Message Center y Arbitration Registers 0-3. These bits form the
arbitration value/identification number for the message center y. When the
message center is configured in a transmit mode, these registers will be the source
of the 29-bit ID message field (when EX/ ST =1) or the 11-bit ID message field
(when EX/ ST =0). When EX/ ST =1, the 29 message ID bits will correspond to
ID28-ID0 as shown above. When EX/ ST =0, the message ID bits 10-0 correspond
to ID28-18 in CnMyAR0 and CnMyAR1.
When configured in a receive mode, these registers serve as the arbitration value
for message center y, against which incoming messages are compared to ascertain
if they are valid for that message center. When EX/ ST =1, all 29 bits of the
arbitration are used, but when EX/ ST =0, only the most significant 11 bits are
used.
Bits 2-1
(CnMyAR3 only)
Reserved – Bits 2 and 1 of the CnMyAR3 register are not used in arbitration. A
read of these bits will always return 0, and writes to these bits will be ignored.
WTOE
Bit 0
(CnMxAR3 only)
Write-over Enable. This bit controls the ability of a new message to overwrite
an existing message in the corresponding message center in receive mode. The
DTUP and EXTRQ bits for the message center in question must also be
considered to determine the effect of this bit as shown below. The WTOE bit can
only be programmed when the SWINT bit is set.
128 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
WTOE DTUP EXTRQ Result when new message detected
0
0
0
There is currently no unread message or pending
external frame request in the message center, so the
matching message will be written to appropriate
message center (1-15)
0
1
x
The message center (1-15) has an unread message or
pending external frame request. The incoming matching
message will be ignored and the message center
remains unchanged. The CAN module will proceed to
the next lower priority message center to evaluate the
incoming message ID and arbitration bits and related
masking operations. (No overwrite)
0
x
1
The message center (1-15) has an unread message or
pending external frame request. The incoming matching
message will be ignored and the message center
remains unchanged. The CAN module will proceed to
the next lower priority message center to evaluate the
incoming message ID and arbitration bits and related
masking operations. (No overwrite)
1
0
x
There is currently no unread message or pending
external frame request in the message center, so the
matching message will be written to appropriate
message center (1-15)
1
1
x
The new matching message will be stored, overwriting
the previously stored message. The ROW bit will be set
to indicate the overwrite operation.
Special notes for message center 15
The ROW bit in message center 15 is associated with an overwrite of the shadow
buffer for message center 15. The EXTRQ and DTUP bits are also shadow
buffered to allow the buffered message and the message center 15 value to take on
different relationships. The EXTRQ and DTUP values read by software are the
current message center 15 values, rather than those of the shadow buffer as is the
case with the ROW bit. The shadow buffer is automatically loaded into message
center 15 when both the DTUP bit and EXTRQ bit are cleared. If either DTUP=1
or EXTRQ=1 when clearing the other, any message in the shadow buffer will not
be transferred to the message 15 registers, and any incoming messages for
message 15 will be stored in the shadow buffer if WTOE = 1, or will be lost if
WTOE = 0.
Special notes concerning remote frames
For remote frames, which can be received by transmit message centers (1-14) in
case of a matching identifier, WTOE and EXTRQ are evaluated. If ((WTOE = 1)
OR (WTOE = 0 and EXTRQ = 1)), the respective transmit message center (1-14)
arbitration bits can be overwritten.
129 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Message Center y Format Register (CnMyF)
MOVX
Address1
7
6
xxxxy6h DTBYC3 DTBYC2
5
4
3
2
1
0
DTBYC1
DTBYC0
T/ R
EX/ ST
MEME
MDME
DTBYC3-0
Bits 7-4
Data Byte Count. These bits indicate the number of bytes within the data field of
the message. When performing a transmit, software sets the DTBYC bits to
establish the number of bytes that are to be transmitted. When receiving a
message, the DTBYC bits indicate the (binary) number of bytes of data in the
incoming message; i.e., 0000b = 0 data bytes and 1000b = 8 data bytes.
T/ R
Bit 3
Transmit/Receive Select. This bit is programmed by the application software to
indicate if the message is to be transmitted (T/ R = 1) or received (T/ R = 0). This
bit can only be modified when MSRDY = 0.
This bit does not exist for Message Center 15 and will always return 0 when read
from Message Center 15.
EX/ ST
Bit 2
Extended or Standard Identifier. This bit determines whether the respective
message is to utilize the extended 29-bit Identification format (EX/ ST = 1) or the
standard 11-bit Identification format (EX/ ST = 0). Message centers programmed
for one format will only receive/send extended messages in that format and will
ignore the alternate format. This bit can only be modified when MSRDY = 0.
MEME
Bit 1
Message Identification Mask Enable. The MEME bit enables (MEME = 1) or
disables (MEME = 0) the use of the Message Identification Masking process,
associated with the testing of the Identification field in the incoming message.
This bit can only be modified when MSRDY = 0.
0 = The mask registers are ignored when evaluating the identification bits of the
incoming message, and the identification bits of the incoming message and the
message center arbitration bits must match exactly to allow receipt of the
incoming message. This is equivalent to programming the mask with all zeros.
An exact match is also required before a remote data request is allowed.
1 = The mask registers are enabled, comparing only those bits message
identification and arbitration bits which correspond to a 1 in the mask register.
MDME
Bit 0
Media Identification Mask Enable. The MDME bit enables (MEME = 1) or
disables (MEME = 0) the use of the first two bytes of the data field as a message
qualifier. This bit can only be modified when MSRDY = 0.
0 = The first two bytes of the data field are ignored and not compared.
1 = The first two data bytes are masked by the respective Media Mask ID Register
and then compared with the Media Arbitration Register Zero and One bytes.
Only those bits in the first two data bytes and the arbitration registers
corresponding to a 1 in the mask register are compared. When MDME=1 the
test is also performed before a remote request of data from a remote node is
accepted.
130 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 0 (CnMyD0)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxy7h
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
3
2
1
0
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 1 (CnMyD1)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxy8h
7
6
5
4
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 2 (CnMyD2)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxy9h
7
6
5
4
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 3 (CnMyD3)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxyAh
7
6
5
4
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 4 (CnMyD4)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxyBh
7
6
5
4
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 5 (CnMyD5)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxyCh
7
6
5
4
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 6 (C0MyD6)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxyDh
7
6
5
4
CAN Message Center y Data Byte 7 (C0MyD7)
MOVX
Address1
xxxxyEh
CnMyD0CnMyD7
7
6
5
4
CAN Message Center y Data Bytes 0-7. These bytes hold data to be transmitted
or received data.
131 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Frame Types
The CAN 2.0B protocol specifies two different message formats, the standard 11-bit (CAN 2.0A) and the
extended 29-bit (CAN 2.0 B), and four different Frame Types for CAN Bus communications.
The Standard Format seen below makes use of an 11-bit identifier.
Figure 16- 1 CAN 2.0A Format
Arbitration Field
Control Field
R I r
S
O 11-bit Identifier T D 0
R E
F
DLC
ACK End of
Field Frame INTER
Bus
Idle
ACK End of
Control
Field Data Field CRC Field Field Frame INTER
Bus
Idle
Data Field
CRC Field
0 to 8 Bytes
15-bit CRC
The Extended Format seen below makes use of a 29 bit identifier.
Figure 16- 2 CAN 2.0B Format
Arbitration Field
R r r
S I
S
O 11-bit Identifier R D 18-bit Identifier T 1 0
R
R E
F
DLC
0 to 8 Bytes 15-bit CRC
The four different Frame Types for CAN Bus communications are the Data Frame, the Remote Frame,
the Error Frame and the Overload Frame.
Data Frame:
The Data Frame is formulated to carry data from a transmitter to a receiver. The preceding two figures are
examples of data frames in the standard and extended formats. The Data Frame is composed of seven
fields. These include the Start of Frame, Arbitration Field, Control Field, Data Field, CRC Field,
Acknowledge Field and an End of Frame. A description of these fields follows.
Start of Frame - SOF: (Standard and Extended Format)
The Start of Frame is a dominant bit which signals the start of a Data or Remote Frame. The dominant
forces a hard synchronization, initiating the CAN controller receive mode.
Arbitration Field: (Standard and Extended Format)
The Arbitration Field contains the identifier of the message and a dominant Remote Request (RTR) bit.
The identifier is composed of one field in the standard 11-bit format or two fields in the extended 29-bit
format. Two additional bits, the Substitution Remote Request (SRR) bit and the Identifier Extension
(IDE) bit, separate the two fields in the Extended Format.
132 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Remote Request (RTR) bit: (Standard and Extended Format)
The Remote Request bit is a dominant bit in Data Frames and a recessive bit in Remote Frames.
Substitution Remote Request (SRR) bit: (Extended Format)
The Substitution Remote Request bit is a recessive bit and is substituted for the RTR bit when using the
Extended Format.
Identifier Extension (IDE) bit: (Extended Format)
The Identifier Extension (IDE) bit is a dominant bit in the Standard Format and a recessive bit in the
Extended Format. The IDE bit is located in the Arbitration Field in the Standard Format and is located in
the Control Field in the Extended Format.
Control Field: (Standard and Extended Format)
The Control Field is made up of six bits in two fields. The first field is made up of two reserved bits
which are transmitted as dominant bits. The second field contains four bits which make up the Data
Length Code (DLC). The DLC determines the number of data bytes in the Data Field of the Data Frame
and is programmed through the use of the CAN Message Format Registers, located in each of the 15
message centers.
Figure 16- 3 Control Field
Arbitration
Field
Data Field or
Control Field
Control Field
IDE/r1
r0
DLC3
Reserved Bits
DLC2
DLC1
DLC0
Data Length Code
Data Field: (Standard and Extended Format)
The Data Field is made up of 0 to 8 bytes in a Data Frame and 0 bytes in a Remote Frame. The number of
data bytes associated with a message center is programmed through the use of the CAN Message Format
Registers, located in each of the 15 message centers. The data field contents are saved to the respective
message center if the identifier test is successful, no errors are detected through the last bit of the end of
frame, and an Error Frame does not immediately following the Data or Remote Frame. The data field is
transmitted Least Significant Byte first, with the Msb of each byte transmitted first.
CRC Field: (Standard and Extended Format)
The CRC Field is made up of a 15 bit code which is the computed Cyclic Redundancy Check using the
destuffed bits in the Start of Frame, the Arbitration Field, the Control Filed, and the Data Field (when
present), and a CRC delimiter. The CRC calculation is limited to 127 bit maximum code word (a
shortened BCH Code) with a CRC sequence length of 15 bits.
133 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Figure 16- 4 CRC Field
Data Field or
Control Field
CRC Field
ACK Field
CRC Sequence
CRC Delimiter
Acknowledge Field (ACK): (Standard and Extended Format)
The ACK Field is made up of two bits. The transmitting node will send two recessive bits in the ACK
field. The receiving nodes which have received the message and found the CRC Sequence to be correct
will reply by driving the ACK Slot with a dominant bit. The ACK Delimiter is always a recessive bit.
Figure 16- 5 Acknowledge Field
CRC Field
ACK Field
End of Frame
ACK
Slot
ACK Delimiter
End of Frame: (Standard and Extended Format)
The End of Frame for both the Data and Remote Frame is established by the transmitter by sending seven
recessive bits.
Interframe Spacing (Intermission): (Standard and Extended Format)
Data Frames and Remote Frames are separated from preceding frames by three recessive bits termed the
Intermission. During the Intermission the only allowed signaling to the bus is by an Overload condition.
No node is allowed to start a message transmission of a Data or Remote Frame during this period. If no
node becomes active following the Interframe Space an indeterminate number of recessive bit times will
transpire in the Bus Idle condition until the next transmission of a new Data or Remote Frame by a node.
Figure 16- 6 Intermission
Frame
Interframe Space
Intermisson
134 of 155
Frame
Bus Idle
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Remote Frame: (Standard and Extended Format)
The Remote Frame is transmitted by a CAN controller to request the transmission of the Data Frame with
the same identifier. The Remote Frame is composed of seven fields. These include the Start of Frame,
Arbitration Field, Control Field, Data Field, CRC Field, Acknowledge Field and an End of Frame.
Figure 16- 7 Remote Frame
Interframe
Space
Interframe Space
or Overload Frame
Remote Frame
S
O Arbitration Field Control Field CRC Field
F
End of
Frame
ACK Field
The Remote Frame is used when a CAN processor wishes to request data from another node. Sending a
Remote Frame initiates a transmission of data from a source node with the same identifier (masked
groups included). The primary bit pattern difference between a Data Frame and a Remote Frame is the
RTR bit, which in the Remote Frame is sent as a recessive bit, and in the Data Frame is sent as a
dominant bit. The Remote Frame also does not contain a data field, independent of the programmed
values in the DTBYC3 - DTBYC0 bits in the respective CAN Message Format Register.
Error Frame:
The Error Frame is transmitted by a CAN controller when the CAN processor detects a bus error. The
Error Frame is composed of two different fields. These are 1) the superposition of the Error Flags from
different nodes and 2) the Error Delimiter.
Figure 16- 8 Error Frame
Data Frame
Error Frame
Interframe Space
or Overload Frame
Error Flag
Superposition of Error Flags from other nodes
Error Delimiter
The Error Frame is composed of six dominant bits, which violate the CAN specification bit stuffing rule.
If either of the CAN processors detect an error condition, that CAN processor will transmit an Error
Frame. When this happens all nodes on the bus will detect the bit stuff error condition and will transmit
their own Error Frame. The superpositioning of all of these Error Frames will lead to a total Error Frame
length between 6 and 12 bits, depending on the response time and number of nodes in the system. Any
messages (Data or Remote Frame) received by the CAN processors (successful or not) which are
followed by an Error Frame will be discarded. After the transmission of an Error Flag each CAN
processor will send an error delimiter (eight recessive bits) and will monitor the bus until it detects the
change from the dominant to recessive bit level. The CAN modules will issue an Error Frame each time
an Error Frame is detected. Following a series of Error Frames the CAN modules will enter into an Error
Passive Mode. In the Error Passive Mode the CAN processors will transmit six recessive bits, and wait
135 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
until six equal bits of the same polarity have been detected. At this point the CAN processor will begin
the next internal receive or transmission operation.
Overload Frame:
The Overload Frame provides an extra delay between Data or Remote Frames. The Overload Frame is
composed of two different fields: the Overload Flag and the Overload Delimiter.
Figure 16- 9 Overload Frame
End of Frame or
Error Delimiter or
Overload Delimiter
Overload Frame
Interframe Space
or Overload Frame
Overload Flag
Superposition of Overload Flags from other nodes
Overload Delimiter
There are three conditions which lead to the transmission of an Overload Flag:
1) The internal conditions of a CAN receiver require a delay before the next Data or Remote Frame is
sent. The DS80C390 CAN controllers are designed to prevent this condition for data rates at or below
the 1 Mbit per second data rate.
2) The CAN processor detects a dominant bit at the first and second bit position of the Intermission.
3) If the CAN processor detects a dominant bit at the eighth bit of an Error Delimiter or Overload
Delimiter, it will start transmitting an Overload Frame.
The error counters will not be incremented as a result of number 3. The CAN processor will only start an
Overload Frame at the first bit of an expected Intermission if initiated by condition 1. Conditions 2 and 3
will result in the CAN processor transmitting an Overload Frame starting one bit after detecting the
dominant bit. The Overload Flag consists of six dominant bits that correspond to an Error Flag. Because
the Overload Frame is only transmitted at the first bit time of the Interframe Space, it is possible for the
CAN processor to discriminate between an Error Frame and an Overload Frame. The Overload Flag
destroys the Intermission field. When such a condition is detected, the CAN processor will detect the
Overload condition and will begin transmitting an Overload Frame. After the transmission of an Overload
Frame the CAN processors will monitor the bus for a dominant to recessive level change. The CAN
processor will then begin the transmission of six additional recessive bits, for a total of seven recessive
bits on the bus. The Overload Delimiter consists of eight recessive bits.
136 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Initializing the CAN controllers
Software initialization of each CAN controller begins with the setting of the Software Initialization bit
(SWINT) in the appropriate CAN Control SFR Register. When SWINT=1, the respective CAN module is
disabled and the corresponding CAN transmit output will be placed in a recessive state. This in turn
allows the microcontroller to write information into the CAN MOVX SRAM Control/Status/Mask
registers without the possibility of corrupting data transmissions or receptions in progress. Setting
SWINT will not clear the receive and transmit error counters, but will allow the microcontroller to write a
common value to both error counters via the CAN Transmit Error SFR Register. Consult the description
of the SWINT bit for specifics of the software initialization process.
All CAN registers located in the SFR memory map, with the exception of the CAN 0 and CAN 1 Control
Registers, are cleared to a 00 Hex following a system Reset. The CAN 0 and CAN 1 Control Registers,
are set to 0B Hex following a system Reset. CAN registers located in the MOVX memory map are
indeterminate following a system Reset. A system Reset also clears both the receive and transmit error
counters in the CAN controllers, takes the CAN processors off line, and sets the SWINT bit in the CAN
0/1 Control Register.
Following a reset, the following general registers must be initialized for proper operation of the CAN
modules. These registers are in addition to specific registers associated with mask, format, or specific
message centers.
Register
Significance
P5CNT (SFR A2h)
C0_I/O (P5CNT.3) must be set to enable CAN 0 pins P5.1 and P5.0.
C1_I/O (P5CNT.4) must be set to enable CAN 1 pins P5.2 and P5.3
C0BT0, C0BT1
C1BT0, C1BT1
(MOVX SRAM xxxx04-5)
These MOVX SRAM control registers must be set to configure CAN 0
(C0BT0, C0BT1) or CAN 1 (C1BT0, C1BT1) bus timing. The exact
values are dependent on the network configuration and environment.
COR (SFR CEh)
C0BPR7-6 (COR.4-3) must be configured as part of the CAN 0 bus timing
C1BPR7-6 (COR.6-5) must be configured as part of the CAN 1 bus timing
CAN Interrupts
Each CAN processor is assigned one individual interrupt and one common CAN Bus Activity Interrupt
which are globally enabled or disabled by the EA bit in the IE SFR register. The CAN 0/1 interrupt is
generated by either a receive/transmit acknowledgment from one of the fifteen message centers or an
error condition which results in a change in the CAN 0/1 Status Register. These interrupts are enabled via
the C0IE or C1IE bit (CAN 0 or CAN 1) in the EIE register. The third CAN related interrupt is common
to both CAN systems and is supplied to detect CAN bus activity on either CAN input pin. This interrupt
is termed the CAN Bus Activity Interrupt, operates independent of the CAN processor, and is only
available if one or both of the CAN processors have been connected to the respective Port 5 pins (via
C0_I/O and/or C1_I/O in the Port 5 Control SFR).
CAN 0/1 receive/transmit interrupt sources are derived from a successful transmit or receive of data
within one of the fifteen message centers as determined by the INTRQ bit in the associated CAN 0/1
Message (1-15) Control Register. Each message center (1-15) also provides separate receive and transmit
interrupt enables via the ETI and ERI bits in the respective CAN 0/1 Message (1-15) Control Register.
This allows each message center to be programmed to issue an interrupt request as per the application
requirements of the message center. Each source is determined through the use of the CAN 0/1 Interrupt
137 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
SFR Register. Software must clear the respective INTRQ bit in the associated CAN 0/1 Message (1-15)
Control Register to clear the interrupt source before leaving the interrupt routine.
The CAN 0/1 Interrupt source is connected to a change in the CAN 0/1 Status Register. Each of the status
bits in the CAN 0/1 Status Register represents a potential source for the interrupt. To simplify the
application and testing of a device, these sources are broken into two groups which are further enabled via
the ERIE and STIE bits of the CAN 0/1 Control register. This allows the non-standard errors typically
associated with development to be grouped under the STIE enable. These include the successful receive
RXS, successful transmit TXS, wake status WKS, and general set of error conditions reported by ER2 ER0. Also note that since the RXS and TXS bit are cleared by software, if a second message is received
or transmitted before the RXS or TXS bits are cleared and after a read of the CAN 0/1 Status Register, a
second interrupt will be generated. The remaining error sources comprise the BSS and CECE bits in the
CAN 0/1 Status Register. These read-only bits are separately enabled via the ERIE bit in the CAN 0/1
Control register. A read of the CAN 0/1 Status Register is required to clear either of the two groups of
Error interrupts. It is possible that multiple changes to the Status Register may occur before the register is
read; in that case the Status Register will generate only one interrupt. The following figure provides a
graphical illustration of the interrupt sources and their respective interrupt enables.
INTERRUPT
PRIORITY LOGIC
ER1
CxIE
EA
ER2
BSS EC96 WKS RXS TXS
CAN 0/1 STATUS REGISTER
ER0
Figure 16- 10 CAN Interrupt Logic
1
INTERRUPT
VECTOR
63 HEX
D Q
C
R
CAN 0/1
CONTROL ERIE STIE
REGISTER
CAN 0/1 MESSAGE 1
CONTROL REGISTER
ETI
ERI
CAN 0/1 STATUS
REGISTER READ
INTRQ
SUCCESSFUL RECEIVE
MESSAGE CENTER1
SUCCESSFUL TRANSMIT
MESSAGE CENTER 1
MESSAGE CENTER 1
MESSAGE CENTER 15
138 of 155
UPDATE CAN 0/1
INTERRUPT
REGISTER
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Arbitration/Masking Considerations
Each CAN processor evaluates CAN bus activity to determine if an incoming message is loaded into one
of the 15 message centers. Acceptance of a message is determined by comparing the message’s ID or data
field against the corresponding arbitration value loaded into each message center and checking if the bits
match. Messages that contain bit errors or which fail arbitration are discarded. The incoming message is
tested in order against each enabled message center (enabled by the MSRDY bit in the CAN Message
Control Register) from 1 to 15. The first message center to successfully pass the test will receive the
incoming message and end the testing, and the message is loaded into the respective message center.
The CAN modules support an optional masking feature that restricts arbitration to those bits that are
masked with a 1 in the respective masking register. By selectively programming the message center
arbitration registers and the related masks, it is possible to allow groups of incoming messages to be
loaded into any single message center. Each pair of mask and arbitration registers has the same number of
bits as the message ID in the incoming message. When masking is enabled, only those arbitration and
identifier bits that correspond to a 1 in the masking register will be compared. Programming a bit in the
mask to a 0 will make the comparison of those arbitration and identifier bits a don’t care, automatically
registering a match between those bits. If all of the bits in the mask are programmed to a 0, any incoming
message arbitration field will match with any message center arbitration value. On the other hand, if a
mask is programmed with all 1’s all of the arbitration and identifier bits must match identically before the
incoming message will be loaded into the message center.
The DS80C390 supports two types of arbitration: basic and media. Basic arbitration compares either 29bits (EX/ ST =1) or 11-bits (EX/ ST =0) of the message ID against the corresponding bits in the 4 CAN
Arbitration registers (CnMxAR0-3). Each message center can be individually be configured for 29- or 11bit operation. If the Message Identification Mask Enable bit (MEME) is set, the CAN module will utilize
the Standard Global Mask registers (CnSGM0-1) when EX/ ST =0 or the Extended Global Mask registers
(CnEGM0-3) when EX/ ST =1. In either case, only those bits in the message ID and arbitration registers
which correspond with a 1 in the mask register will be compared. Bits corresponding with 0 in the mask
register will be ignored, creating a don’t care condition. Filling the mask register with all 0s while
MEME=1 will cause the arbitration circuitry to automatically match all message IDs. When MEME=0,
all ID bits in the incoming message are compared directly (bit for bit) with the respective arbitration bits
of the message center.
Media arbitration is an optional second arbitration performed when the Media Identification Mask Enable
bit (MDME) is set. Media arbitration compares the first and second byte of the data field in each message
against two 8-bit Media Arbitration bytes (stored at locations CnMA0, CnMA1). If the incoming
arbitration field matches a specific message arbitration value and the first two data bytes match the two 8bit Media Arbitration bytes (and no bit errors are detected) the message is loaded into the respective
message center. Unlike the Identification Mask Enable (MEME), however, when MDME=0 no testing
will be performed of the first two bytes of the incoming data field.
MESSAGE CENTER 15
Message center 15 supports an additional set of set of masks to supplement basic arbitration. While this
message center performs basic and media arbitration as per message centers 1-14, it also uses the
Cn15M3-0 mask registers perform an additional level of filtering during basic (i.e., not media) arbitration.
When determining arbitration for message center 15, the contents of Cn15M3-0 are logically ANDed
with either CnEGM3-0 (if EX/ ST =1 for message center 15) or CnSGM1-0 (if EX/ ST =0 for message
center 15). This ANDed value is then used in place of CnEGM3-0 or CnSGM1-0 when performing basic
139 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
arbitration as described previous. If the MDME bit is set then the incoming message must pass the media
arbitration test as well.
Message center 15 has a buffered FIFO arrangement to allow up to two received messages to be received
without being lost prior to the microcontroller reading of the first message. The first message received by
message center 15 is stored in the normal MOVX memory location for Message Center 15, if the previous
message has been already read by the microcontroller. If the first message has not been read, then the
incoming message is buffered internally until the first message is read, at which time the second message
is automatically loaded into the first (MOVX) message 15 slot, allowing software to then read the second
message. The CAN module determines if the first message has been read is by software clearing the
DTUP bit and the EXTRQ bit. If a third message comes in before the second message has been copied
into the MOVX message 15 slot, then the third message will write over the second buffered message.
Software should clear the INTRQ bit as well as the DTUP and EXTRQ bit after reading each message in
the MOVX message 15 center. The WTOE bit associated with message center 15 has unique operating
considerations, described later in the section regarding the function of the WTOE bit.
Transmitting and Receiving Messages
All CAN data is sent and received through message centers. All CAN message centers for both CAN
modules are identical with the exception of message center 15. Message center 15 has been designed as a
receive only center and is also shadow-buffered to help prevent the loss of incoming messages, when the
software is not able to read the first message before the next message is loaded. All message centers, with
the exception of message center 15, are capable of four different operations. These are:
Transmitting a data message
Receiving a data message
Transmitting a remote frame request
Receiving a remote frame request
Transmitting Data Messages:
Starting with the lowest numbered message center (highest priority) each CAN module sequentially scans
each message center until it finds a message center that is proper enabled for transmission (T/ R = 1, TIH
= 0, DTUP = 1, MSRDY = 1, and MTRQ = 1). The contents of the respective message center is then
transferred to the transmit buffer and the CAN module attempts to transmit the message. If successful the
appropriate MTRQ bit will be cleared to 0, indicating that the message was successfully sent. Following a
successful transmission, loss of arbitration, or an error condition, the CAN module will again search for a
properly configured message center, starting with the lowest numbered message center. This search
relationship will always allow the highest priority message center to be transmitted, independent of the
last successful (MTRQ = 0) or unsuccessful (MTRQ = 1) message transmission.
Receiving Data Messages:
Each incoming data message is compared sequentially with each receive enabled (T/ R = 0) message
center starting with the lowest numbered message center (highest priority) and proceeding to the highest
numbered message center. This testing continues until a match is found (incorporating masking functions
as required), at which time the incoming message is stored in the respective message center. Higher
numbered message centers that are not reviewed prior to the match will not be evaluated during the
current message test. When the WTOE=1, the CAN module can overwrite receive message centers that
have DTUP = 1, which will in turn set ROW = 1. When WTOE = 0, incoming messages will not
overwrite receive message centers that have DTUP = 1.
140 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Message center 15 is a special receive-only, FIFO-buffered message center, designed to receive messages
not accepted by the other message centers. The ROW bit in message center 15 is associated with the
overwrite of the shadow buffer for message center 15. The EXTRQ and DTUP bits are shadow buffered
to allow the buffered message and the message center 15 value to take on different relationships. The
EXTRQ and DTUP values read by the microcontroller are not those of the shadow buffer as is the case
with the ROW bit, but are the current values associated with message center 15. The shadow buffer is
automatically loaded into message center 15 when both the DTUP bit and the EXTRQ bit are cleared. If
either DTUP or EXTRQ are left set when clearing the other, any message in the shadow buffer will not be
transferred to the message 15 registers, and any incoming messages for message 15 will be stored in the
shadow buffer (if WTOE = 1), or will be lost if (WTOE = 0).
Transmitting Remote Frame Requests
Starting with the lowest numbered message center (highest priority) each CAN module sequentially scans
each message center. When it finds a message center properly enabled to transmit a remote frame (T/ R =
0, MSRDY = 1, and MTRQ = 1), the contents of the respective message center is then transferred to the
transmit buffer and the CAN module attempts to transmit the message. If successful the appropriate
MTRQ bit will be cleared to 0, indicating that the message was successfully sent. Following a successful
transmission, loss of arbitration, or an error condition, the CAN module will again search for a properly
configured message center, starting with the lowest numbered message center. This search relationship
will always allow the highest priority message center to be transmitted, independent of the last successful
(MTRQ = 0) or unsuccessful (MTRQ = 1) message transmission. The state of the TIH bit does not effect
the transmission of a remote frame request.
Receiving/Responding to Remote Frame Requests
The remote frame request is handled like a data frame with data length zero and the EXTRQ and RXS
bits are set. Each incoming Remote Frame Request (RFR) message is compared sequentially with each
enabled (MSRDY = 1) message center starting with the lowest numbered message center (highest
priority) and proceeding to the highest numbered message center. Testing continues until a match is found
(incorporating masking functions as required), at which time the incoming RFR message is stored in the
respective message center, the DTBYC bits are updated to indicate the requested number of return bytes
(DTBYC=0 for a remote frame request), and EXTRQ and MTRQ are both set to 1. When the message is
successfully received and stored, an interrupt of the corresponding message center will be asserted if
enabled by the ERI bit. The EXTRQ bit can be left set if the message center is reconfigured to perform a
transmit (T/ R = 1) and used in the standard reply of a remote frame operating with transmit message
centers. EXTRQ can also be cleared by software if the current message center is not being used to reply
to the remote frame request. Higher numbered message centers (lower priority) that are not reviewed
prior to the match will not be evaluated during the current message test. Depending on the state of the
transmit/receive bit for that message center, the CAN module will perform one of two responses.
If the microcontroller wishes to request data from another node, it first clears the respective MSRDY bit
to 0 and then writes the identifier and control bits in this message center, configures the message center as
a receive message center (T/ R = 0) and then sets the MTRQ bit. After a successful transmission, the
CAN module will clear MTRQ = 0 and set TXS = 1. In addition to the TXS bit, if the ETI bit is set, the
successful transmission will also set the corresponding INTRQ bit. Requesting data from another node is
possible in message centers 1 to 14. As seen above the CAN module sends a remote frame request and
receives the data frame in the same message center that sent the request. Therefore, only one mailbox is
necessary to do a remote request.
141 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Message centers enabled for transmission (T/ R = 1) will set the EXTRQ and MTRQ bits in the
corresponding message center when a remote frame request is successfully received, to mark the message
as a ‘to be sent’ message. The CAN module will attempt to automatically transmit the requested if the
message center is fully enabled to do so (MSRDY = 1, TIH = 0, DTUP = 1). After the transmission, the
TXS bit in the status register is set, the EXTRQ and MTRQ bits are reset to a 0 and a message center
interrupt of the corresponding message center is asserted if enabled by the respective ETI bit. If the
transmit inhibit bit is set (TIH = 1), the message center will receive the RFR, modifying the DTBYC
and/or arbitration bits if necessary, but the return data will not be transmitted until TIH = 0.
If software wants to modify the data in a message center configured for transmission of an answer to a
remote request (EXTRQ set to a 1), the microcontroller must set the TIH = 1 and DTUP = 0. The
microcontroller may then access the data byte registers 0 -7, data byte count (DTBYC3–0), the extended
or standard mode bit (EX/ ST ), and the mask enables (MEME and MDME) of the message center to load
the required settings. Following the set up, the software should reset TIH to a 0 and sets DTUP to a 1 bit
to signal the CAN that the access is finished. Until the DTUP = 1 and TIH = 0, the transmission of this
mailbox is not permitted. Thus, the CAN will transmit the newest data and reset EXTRQ = 0 after the
transmission is complete. The message center must first be disabled to change the identifier or the
direction control (T/ R ).
Message centers enabled for reception (T/ R = 0) will not automatically transmit the requested data. The
Remote Frame Request will, however, continue to store the requested number of return bytes in DTBYC
and set EXTRQ = 1. No data bytes are received or stored from a remote frame request. The message
center can then be configured via software to either function as transmitter (T/ R = 1) and transmit the
requested data, or the microcontroller can configure another message center in a transmit mode (T/ R = 1)
to send the requested data. Note that the MTRQ bit is not set by the loading of a matching remote frame
request, when T/ R = 0. RXS must be previously cleared by software or a system reset.
When a remote frame is received the CAN module can be configure to either automatically transmit data
back to the remote node or to allow the microcontroller to intervene and establish the conditions of the
transmitting of the return message. The following examples outline various options to respond to remote
frame requests.
Case 1)
Automatic Reply
CAN Controller receives a remote frame Request (RFR) and automatically transmits data
without additional software intervention.
1. Software sets T/ R = 1, MSRDY = 0, DTUP = 0, and TIH = 1.
2. Software loads data into respective message center.
3. Software sets MSRDY = 1, DTUP = 1 and TIH = 0 in same instruction.
Note: Software does not change MTRQ = 0 from previous completed transmission
4. CAN does not transmit data (MTRQ = 0), but waits for RFR.
5. CAN successfully receives RFR.
6. CAN forces MTRQ = 1 and EXTRQ = 1
7. CAN loads DTBYC from RFR and ID into arbitration registers.
8. CAN automatically transmits data in respective message center.
9. CAN clears EXTRQ = 0 and MTRQ = 0.
142 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Case 2)
Software-Initiated Reply (Using TIH as Gating Control)
CAN module wishes to receive an RFR and wait for software to determine when and what
will be transmitted in reference to RFR.
1. Software sets T/ R = 1, MSRDY = 0, DTUP = 0, and TIH = 1.
2. Software then loads data into respective message center.
3. Software sets MSRDY = 1, DTUP = 1 and TIH = 1 in same instruction.
Note: Software does not change MTRQ = 0 from previous completed transmission
4. CAN does not transmit data (MTRQ = 0), but waits for RFR.
5. CAN successfully receives RFR.
6. CAN forces MTRQ = 1 and EXTRQ = 1.
7. CAN loads DTBYC from RFR and ID into arbitration registers.
8. CAN waits for software to read message center and determine the fact that EXTRQ = 1.
9. Software may load data into message center (or it may already have the data established).
10. Software writes MSRDY = 1, DTUP = 1 and TIH = 0 in same instruction.
11. CAN will automatically transmit data (as per RFR DTBYC) in respective message center.
12. CAN clears EXTRQ = 0 and MTRQ = 0.
Case 3)
Software-Initiated Reply (Reply via same message center, using TIH as Gating Control)
CAN module wishes to receive an RFR in a receive-configured (T/ R = 0) message
center. When the data is received, the message center will be reconfigured send data back
to the remote request node. This relationship is not possible for message center 15.
1. Software sets T/ R = 0, MSRDY = 1, and DTUP = 0 and awaits either data frame or RFR.
Note: Software does not change MTRQ = 0 from previous completed transmission
2. CAN successfully receives RFR.
3. CAN forces EXTRQ = 1 and DTUP = 1.
4. MTRQ can not be written to a 1 by the CAN when T/ R = 0 and is left as MTRQ = 0
5. CAN loads DTBYC from RFR and ID into arbitration registers.
6. CAN waits for Software to read message center and determine the fact that EXTRQ = 1.
7. Software disables message center and converts message center into transmit message center.
8. Software clears MSRDY = 0 to disable message center. Software leaves EXTRQ = 1.
9. Software then forces message center to transmit mode, T/R = 1.
10. Software writes MSRDY = 0, DTUP = 0 and TIH = 1 in preparation to load data.
11. Software loads data into message center.
12. Software writes MSRDY = 1, MTRQ = 1, DTUP = 1 and TIH = 0 in same instruction.
13. Note that Software leaves EXTRQ = 1.
14. CAN will automatically transmit data (as per RFR DTBYC) in respective message center.
15. CAN clears EXTRQ = 0 and MTRQ =0.
143 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Case 4)
Software-Initiated Reply (Reply via same different center, using TIH as Gating Control)
CAN Controller wishes to receive an RFR in a message center (denoted MC1) configured
also be able to receive data (T/ R = 0) and to wait for software to select another message
center (denoted MC2) to send data back to remote request node.
1. Software sets T/ R = 0, MSRDY = 1, and DTUP = 0 in MC1 and awaits either data frame or RFR.
Note: Software does not change MTRQ = 0 in MC1 from previous completed transmission.
2. CAN successfully receives RFR in MC1.
3. CAN forces EXTRQ = 1 and DTUP = 1 in MC1.
MTRQ can not be written to a 1 by the CAN when T/ R = 0 and is left as MTRQ = 0
4. CAN loads DTBYC from RFR and ID into arbitration registers in MC1.
5. CAN waits for Software to read message center and determine the fact that EXTRQ = 1.
6. Software disables in MC1 to transfer information to MC2.
7. Software clears MSRDY = 0 to disable MC1. Software leaves EXTRQ = 1.
8. Software clears MSRDY = 0 in a MC2.
9. Software forces MC2 to transmit mode T/ R = 1.
10. Software loads ID and DTBYC value from MC1 into ID and DTBYC value for MC2.
11. Software writes MSRDY = 0, DTUP = 0 and TIH = 1 in MC2 in preparation to load data to MC2.
12. Software loads data into MC2.
13. Software writes MSRDY = 1, MTRQ = 1 EXTRQ = 0, DTUP = 1 and TIH = 0 in MC2 in same
instruction.
Note that CAN has not set EXTRQ in MC2, and is not required to be set for transmission of data
from MC2.
14. CAN will automatically transmit data (as per RFR DTBYC) in MC2.
15. CAN clears MTRQ =0 (leaving previous EXTRQ = 0 cleared).
16. Software sets T/ R = 0, MSRDY = 1, EXTRQ = 0, and DTUP = 0 in MC1 and awaits either next
RFR or data frame.
Note that MTRQ is still cleared in MC1 since MC1 has not been set to a transmit mode.
Remote Frame Handling in Relation to the DTBYC Bits
The DTBYC bits in the CAN Message Format Register perform a slightly modified function when
Remote Frames are used. When remote frames are used, the data length code will be overwritten by the
data length code field of the incoming remote request frame. These requested data bytes will be sent in
the data frame which answers the remote request. The following example demonstrates how the DTBYC
bits are modified by a received remote frame request.
1. Assume the microcontroller has programmed the following into a message center:
DTBYC = 5, data field = 75 AF 43 2E 12 78 90 00
(Note that only the first through the fifth data bytes will be recognized because DTBYC=5)
2. When the CAN module successfully receives a remote frame with the following data:
Identifier = ID, DTBYC = 2, RTR = 1.
144 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
3. The incoming message will overwrite the identifier and the data length code. The new data in the
message center will be:
DTBYC = 2, data field = 75 AF 43 2E 12 78 90 00
(Note that now only the first and second data bytes are recognized because DTBYC is now 2)
4. The outgoing response will be a data frame containing the following information:
DTBYC = 2, data field = 75 AF
Important Information Concerning ID Changes when Awaiting Data from a Previous Remote
Frame Request:
The use of acceptance filtering (MEME=1) in conjunction with remote frame requests can result in a
modification of the message center arbitration registers. When a message center is configured to transmit
a remote frame request (MTRQ = 1, EXTRQ = 0, T/ R = 0 and MSRDY = 1) it is possible for a second
Frame Request from an external node to modify the initial Arbitration Register value of the current
message center prior to the current message center receiving the requested data if arbitration masks are
used. When a remote frame request is received, the message ID is loaded into that message center’s
arbitration registers. When message identification masking is not used (MEME=0), the message ID will
always match the arbitration value, so the process will be transparent. If masking is used, however, the
message ID ANDed with the appropriate mask will be loaded into that message center’s arbitration
registers, resulting in a change of the arbitration values for that message center. To prevent this situation,
acceptance filtering should be disabled (MEME = 0) for any message center configured for remote frame
handling. An alternate solution would be to disable the overwrite feature for that message center, which
also prevents incoming messages from altering the message center ID.
Overwrite Enable/Disable Feature
The Write Over Enable bit (WTOE) located in each message center (CnMxAR3.0) enables or disables the
overwriting of unread messages in message centers 1 through 15. Programming WTOE = 1 following a
system reset or CRST bit-enabled reset allows newly received messages which pass arbitration to
overwrite unread (i.e., message centers with DTUP=1) messages. When an overwrite occurs the Receive
Overwrite (ROW) bit in the respective CAN Message Control Register will be set. When WTOE = 0,
message centers which have data waiting to be read (indicated by DTUP = 1) or transmitted (EXTRQ=1)
will not be overwritten by incoming data.
Special care must be taken when reading data from a message center with the overwrite feature enabled
(WTOE = 1). The caution is needed because the WTOE bit, when set, allows an incoming message to
overwrite the message center. If this overwrite occurs at the same time that software is attempting to read
several bytes from the message center (such as a multi-byte data field), it is possible that the read could
return a mix of information from the old and overwriting messages. To avoid this situation, software
should clear the DTUP bit to 0 prior to reading the message center, and then verify afterwards that the
DTUP bit remained at 0. If DTUP remains cleared after the read, no overwrite occurred and the returned
data was correct. If DTUP = 1 after the read then software again should clear DTUP = 0 and re-read the
message center, since a possible overwrite has occurred. The original message will be lost (as planned
since WTOE=1), but new message should be available on the next read.
One important use of the WTOE bit is to allow the microprocessor to program multiple message centers
with the same ID when operating in the receive mode, with WTOE=0. This allows the CAN module to
store multiple incoming messages in a series of message centers, creating a large storage area for highspeed recovery of large amounts of data. The CPU is required to manage the use of these message centers
to keep track of the incoming data, but the use of multiple message centers and disabling of their
145 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
overwrite (WTOE=0) function prevents the module from potentially losing data during a high-speed data
transfer. In transmit mode, the WTOE bit prevents a message center ID from being overwritten by an
incoming remote frame.
The following examples demonstrate the use of the WTOE and other bits when using multiple message
centers with the same arbitration value. Case 2 illustrates the approach described above for configuring
multiple message centers to capture a large amount of data at a relatively high rate.
Case 1: WTOE=1 (Overwrites allowed)
1. Software configures message center 1 & 2 with the same arbitration value (abbreviated AV).
2. Software configures message center 1 & 2 to receive (T/ R = 0) and to allow message overwrite
WTOE=1.
3. The first message received that matches AV will be stored into message center 1, DTUP = 1.
4. The second message that matches AV will be stored into message center 1, DTUP = ROW = 1.
5. The third message that matches AV will be stored into message center 1.
6. etc.
Note that in this example message center 2 will never receive a message, and that if software does not
read message center 1 before the second message is received, the first message will be lost.
Case 2: WTOE=0 (Overwrites disabled)
1. Software configures message center 1 & 2 with the same arbitration value (abbreviated AV).
2. Software configures message center 1 & 2 to receive (T/ R = 0) and to disable message overwrite
WTOE=0.
3. The first message received that matches AV will be stored in message center 1, DTUP = 1.
4. The second message received that matches AV will be stored in message center 2, DTUP = 1
5. Software reads message center 1 and then programs message center 1 DTUP = 0.
6. The third message received that matches AV will be stored into message center 1, DTUP = 1.
7. Software reads message center 2 and then programs message center 2 DTUP = 0.
8. The fourth message received that matches AV will be stored into message center 2, DTUP = 1
9. etc.
Note that in this example message center 1 or 2 will never be overwritten. The user must insure that the
proper number of message centers be allocated to the same arbitration value when using this arrangement.
If software fails to read the allocated message group, an incoming message may be lost without software
realizing it (ROW is never set when WTOE = 0). To put a message center back into operation software
must force DTUP = 0 and EXTRQ = 0. This indicates that software has read the message center.
Special Considerations for Message Center 15
Message center 15 incorporates a shadow message center used to buffer incoming messages, in addition
to the standard message center registers. When the message center is empty (DTUP=EXTRQ=0),
incoming messages are loaded directly into the message center registers. When the message center has
unread data (DTUP =1) or a pending remote frame request (EXTRQ = 1), incoming messages are loaded
into the shadow message center. Unread contents of the shadow message center are automatically loaded
into the message center when it becomes empty (DTUP=0). An overwrite condition is possible when both
the message center 15 and shadow message centers are full.
The response of message center 15 to the overwrite condition is dependent on the Writeover Enable
(WTOE) bit. When overwrite is enabled (WTOE = 1) and there is unread data (DTUP =1) or a pending
146 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
remote frame request (EXTRQ = 1), successfully received messages are stored in the shadow message
center, overwriting existing data. If the shadow message center contained previously unread data at the
time of the overwrite, the message center 15 ROW bit will be set. If the shadow message center was
empty at the time of the overwrite, then the incoming message will overwrite the previous message in the
shadow buffer and ROW will be set to a 1. Note that the message center 15 ROW bit reflects only an
overwrite of the shadow message center, not the message center registers as with message centers 1-14.
When WTOE = 0 and there is unread data (DTUP =1) or a pending remote frame request (EXTRQ = 1)
in message center 15 and there is already a message stored in the shadow buffer, incoming messages will
not be stored in either the message center or shadow buffers.
Bus Off / Bus Off Recovery and Error Counter Operation
Each CAN module contains two SFR registers that allow the software to monitor and modify (under
controlled conditions) the error counts associated with the transmit and receive error counters in each
CAN module. These registers can be read at any time. Writing the CAN Transmit Error Counter registers
updates both the Transmit Error Counter registers and the Receive Error Counter registers with the same
value. Details are given in the SFR description of these registers. These counters are incremented or
decremented according to CAN specification version 2.0B, summarized in the rules below. The error
counters are initialized by a CRST = 1 or a system reset to 00h. The error counters remain unchanged
when the CAN module enters and exits from a low power mode via the SIESTA or PDE bit.
Changes to the error counters are performed according to the following rules. This level of detail is not
necessary for the average CAN user, and full information is provided in the CAN 2.0B specification.
More than one rule may apply to a given message.
Condition
Effect on error counters
Error detected by receiver, unless the detected error
was a bit error during the sending of an active error
flag or an overload flag.
Receive Error Counter incremented by 1.
Receiver detects a dominant bit as the first bit after
sending an error flag.
Receive Error Counter incremented by 8.
Transmitter sends an error flag.
Transmit Error Counter incremented by 8.
Note, however, that the transmit error count will not
change if:
1) The transmitter is error passive and detects an
acknowledgement error because of not detecting a
dominant acknowledge and does not detect a
dominant bit while sending its passive error flag.
2) Or, if the transmitter sends an error flag because a
stuff error occurred during arbitration, and has
been sent as recessive but monitored as dominant.
Transmitter detects a bit error while sending an active
error flag or an overload flag.
Transmit Error Counter incremented by 8.
Receiver detects a bit error while sending an active
error flag or an overload flag.
Receive Error Counter incremented by 8.
147 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Node detects the 14th consecutive dominant bit (in
case of an active error flag or an overload flag), or
detects the 8th consecutive dominant bit following a
passive error flag, or after a sequence of additional
eight consecutive dominant bits.
Transmit Error Counter incremented by 8.
Receive Error Counter incremented by 8.
Message is successfully transmitted (acknowledge
received and no error until end of frame is complete)
Transmit Error Count is decremented by 1
(unless it was already 0).
A message has been successfully received (reception
without error up to the acknowledge slot and the
successful sending of the acknowledge bit), and the
receive error count was between 1 and 127.
Receive Error Counter decremented by 1.
A message has been successfully received (reception
without error up to the acknowledge slot and the
successful sending of the acknowledge bit), and the
receive error count was greater than 127.
Receive Error Counter is set to a value
between 119 and 127.
A node is error passive when the transmit error count equals or exceeds 128, or when the receive error
count equals or exceeds 128. An error condition letting a node become error passive causes the node to
send an active error flag. An error passive node becomes error active again when both the transmit error
count and the receive error count are less than or equal to 127.
A node is bus off when the transmit error count is greater than or equal to 256. A bus off node will
become error active (no longer bus off) with its error counters both set to 0 after 128 occurrence of 11
consecutive recessive bits have been monitored on the bus.
After exceeding the error passive limit (128), the receive error counter will not be increased any further.
When a message was received correctly, the counter is set again to a value between 119 and 127
(compare with CAN 2.0B specification). After reaching the “bus off“ status, the transmit error counter is
undefined while the receive error counter is cleared and changes its function. The receive error counter
will be incremented after every 11 consecutive recessive bits on the bus. These 11 bits correspond to the
gap between two messages on the bus. If the receive error counter reaches the count 128, following the
bus off recovery sequence, the CAN module changes automatically back to the status of “bus on” and
then sets SWINT = 1. After setting SWINT, all internal flags of the CAN module are reset and the error
counters are cleared. A recovery from a bus off condition does not alter any of the previously
programmed MOVX memory values and will also not alter SFR registers, apart from the transmit and
receive error SFR registers and the error conditions displayed in CAN Status Register. The bus timing
will remain as previously programmed.
Bit Timing
Bit timing in the CAN 2.0B specification is based on a unit called the nominal bit time. The nominal bit
time is further subdivided into four specific time periods.
1.
The SYNC_SEG time segment is where an edge is expected when synchronizing to the CAN Bus.
2.
The PROP_SEG time segment is provided to compensate for the physical times associated with
the CAN Bus network
148 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
3 & 4. The PHASE_SEG1 and PHASE_SEG2 time segments compensate for edge phase errors. The
PHASE_SEG1 and PHASE_SEG2 time segments can be lengthened or shorted through the use of
the SJW1 and SJW0 bits in the CAN 0/1 Bus Timing Register Zero.
The CAN bus is data is evaluated at the sample point. A time quantum (tQU) is a unit of time derived from
the division of the microprocessor crystal oscillator by both the Baud Rate Prescaler (programmed by the
BPR5 - BPR0 bits in the CAN 0/1 Bus Timing register) and the System Clock Divider (programmed by
the SCD2 - SCD0 bits in the Clock Output Register). Combining the PROP_SEG and PHASE_SEG1
time segments into one time period termed tTSEG1 and equating the SYNC_SEG time segment to tSYNC_SEG
and PHASE_SEG2 to tTSEG2, provides the basis for the time segments outlined below and in the CAN Bus
Timing SFR Register descriptions. These are shown in the following figure.
Figure 16- 11 Bit Timing
Nominal Bit Time
SYNC_SEG
PROP_SEG
PHASE_SEG1
PHASE_SEG2
SAMPLE
POINT
1 Bit Time
tSYNC-SEG
1 tQU
tSEG2
tSEG1
1 tQU
Time Quanta
Time Quanta
3 tQU – 16 tQU
TRANSMIT
2 tQU – 8 tQU
SAMPLE
POINT
The CAN 0/1 Bus Timing Register Zero (C0BT0/C1BT0) contains the control bits for the PHASE_SEG1
and PHASE_SEG2 time segments as well as the Baud Rate Prescaler (BPR5-0) bits. CAN 0/1 Bus
Timing Register One (C0BT1/C1BT1) controls the sampling rate, the Time Segment Two bits that
control the number of clock cycles assigned to the Phase Segment 2 portion, and the Time segment One
bits that determine the number of clock cycles assigned to the Phase Segment 1 portion. The value of both
of the Bus Timing registers are automatically loaded into the CAN module following each software
change of the SWINT bit from a 1 to a 0 by the microcontroller. The bit timing parameters must be
configured before starting operation of the CAN module. These registers can only be modified during a
software initialization (SWINT = 1), when the CAN module is NOT in a bus off mode, and after the
removal of a system reset or a CAN reset. To avoid unpredictable behavior of the CAN module the Bus
149 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Timing Registers should never be written with all zeros. To prevent this the SWINT is forced to 0 when
TSEG1 = TSEG2 = 00h.
The timing of the various time segments is determined via the following formulae. Most users will never
need to perform these calculations, as other devices already attached to the network will dictate the bus
timing parameters.
tQU =
BRPV ⋅ CCD
FOSC
tSYNC _ SEG = 1 ⋅ tQU
tTSEG1 = (TS1 _ LEN ) ⋅ tQU
tTSEG 2 = (TS2 _ LEN ) ⋅ tQU
tSJW = (SJW) ⋅ tQU
1
baud rate ⋅ tQU
(only integer values are permitted.)
tQU per bit =
where BPRV is the CAN baud rate prescaler value found in the description of the C0BT0/C1BT0
registers, FOSC is the crystal or external oscillator frequency of the microprocessor, and TS1_LEN and
TS2_LEN are listed in the description of the TSEG26-24 and TSEG13-10 bits in the CAN Bus Timing
Register 1. SJW is listed in the description of the SJW1-0 bits in the CAN Bus Timing Register 0. The
CCD is the CAN clock divide value, calculated from the following table.
CD1
CD0
4X/ 2X
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
x
x
CCD
0.5
1
2
512
The following restrictions apply to the above equations:
tTSEG1 ≥ tTSEG2
tTSEG2 ≥ tSJW
tSJW < tTSEG1
2 ≤ TS1_LEN ≤ 16
2 ≤ TS2_LEN ≤ 8
(TS1_LEN + TS2_LEN +1) ≤ 25
The nominal bit time applies when a synchronization edge falls within the tSYNC_SEG period. The
maximum bit time occurs when the synchronization edge falls outside of the tSYNC_SEG period, and the
synchronization jump width time is added to perform the resynchronization.
150 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
nominal bit time = tSYNC_SEG + tTSEG1 + tTSEG2
=
( BRPV)(CCD)[1 + (TS1 _ LEN) + (TS2 _ LEN)]
FOSC
maximum bit time = tSYNC_SEG + tTSEG1 + tTSEG2 + tSJW
=
CAN baud rate
=
( BRPV)(CCD)[1 + (TS1 _ LEN) + (TS2 _ LEN ) + (SJW)]
FOSC
FOSC
( BRPV)(CCD)[1 + (TS1 _ LEN) + (TS2 _ LEN)]
Threefold Bit Sampling:
The DS80C390 supports the ability perform one or three samplings of each bit, based on the SMP bit
(CxBT1.7). The single sample mode (SMP=0) is available in all settings and takes one sample during
each bit time. The triple sampling mode (SMP=1) samples each bit three times for increased noise
immunity. This mode can only be used when the baud rate prescale value (BPRV) is greater than 3.
Bus Rate Timing Example:
The following table shows a few example bit timing settings for common oscillator frequency and baud
rate selections. Because of the large number of variables, there are many combinations not shown that can
achieve a desired baud rate. There are a number of approaches to determining all the bit timing factors,
but this utilizes the most common, i.e., the oscillator frequency and baud rate have already been
determined by system constraints.
Additional Bit Timing Examples (assumes CCD=1)
FOSC Baud rate BRPV CCD
tQU
tQU TS1_LEN TS2_LEN
per bit
40 MHz 1 Mbps
2
2
100 ns
10
5
4
500 kbps
4
2
200 ns
10
5
4
250 kbps
5
2
250 ns
16
10
5
125 kbps
10
2
500 ns
16
10
5
SJW
3
3
4
4
SMP=1
Permitted?
NO
YES
YES
YES
16 MHz
1 Mbps
500 kbps
250 kbps
125 kbps
1
1
2
4
2
2
2
2
125 ns
125 ns
250 ns
500 ns
8
16
16
16
4
10
10
10
3
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
NO
NO
NO
YES
8 MHz
1 Mbps
500 kbps
250 kbps
125 kbps
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
2
125 ns
125 ns
250 ns
500 ns
8
16
16
16
4
10
10
10
3
5
5
5
2
4
4
4
NO
NO
NO
NO
As an aid to understanding, the following is an explanation of how the table row illustrating an oscillator
frequency of 16 MHz and a CAN baud rate of 125 kbps is derived.
Various combinations of BRPV are selected until one is located that meets the "tQU per bit" criteria, i.e.,
an integer value less than 24. Selecting BRPV=4, the previously described equations state that there
151 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
should be 16 tQU per bit. That leaves 16-1 or 15 tQU remaining for TS1_LEN and TS2_LEN, which are
arbitrarily assigned as shown. Because BRPV > 3, the triple sampling feature (SMP=1) may be used if
desired.
152 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
SECTION 19: ARITHMETIC ACCELERATOR
The DS80C390 incorporates an arithmetic accelerator which performs 32- and 16-bit calculations while
maintaining 8051 software compatibility. Math operations are performed by sequentially loading three
special registers. The mathematical operation is determined by the sequence in which three dedicated
SFRs (MA, MB and MC) are accessed, eliminating the need for a special step to choose the operation.
The arithmetic accelerator has four functions: multiply, divide, shift right/left, and normalize. The
normalize function facilitates the conversion of 4-byte unsigned binary integers into floating point format.
An integral 40-bit accumulator, described later, supports multiply-and-add and divide-and-add operations.
The following table shows the operations supported by the math accelerator and their time of execution.
ARITHMETIC ACCELERATOR EXECUTION TIMES Table 19-1
Operation
Result
32-bit/16-bit divide
32-bit quotient, 16-bit remainder
16-bit/16-bit divide
16-bit quotient, 16-bit remainder
16-bit/16-bit multiply
32-bit product
32-bit shift left/right
32-bit result
32-bit normalize
32-bit mantissa, 5 bit exponent
Execution Time
36 tCLCL
24 tCLCL
24 tCLCL
36 tCLCL
36 tCLCL
The following is a brief summary of the bits and registers used in conjunction with arithmetic acceleration
operations. Please consult the SFR listing in Section 4for a complete description of all these registers.
LSHIFT
MCNT0.7
Left Shift. This bit determines whether shift operations proceed from LSb to MSb or
vice versa.
CSE
MCNT0.6
Circular Shift Enable. This bit determines whether shift operations will wrap
between the LSb and MSb.
SCE
MCNT0.5
Shift Carry Enable. This bit determines whether the arithmetic accelerator carry bit
is included in the shift process.
MAS4-0
MCNT0.40.
Multiplier Register Shift Bits. When performing a shift operation, these bits
determine how many shifts to perform. Following a normalize operation, these bits
will contain indicate the number shifts performed.
MST
MCNT1.7
Multiply/Accumulate Status Flag. This bit serves as a busy flag for the arithmetic
accumulator operations.
MOF
MCNT1.6
Multiply Overflow Flag. This bit is set when a divide by zero or when the result of
a calculation exceeds FFFFh.
SCB
MCNT1.5
Shift Carry Bit. This bit serves as the carry bit during arithmetic accelerator shift
operations when SCE=1. This bit must be cleared (or set) via software as desired
before each new shift operation.
CLM
MCNT1.4
Clear Accelerator Registers. Setting this bit clears the MA, MB, and MC registers.
MA
MA.7-0
Multiplier A Register. This register is used as both a source and result register for
various arithmetic accelerator functions.
153 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
MB
MB.7-0
Multiplier B Register. This register is used as both a source and result register for
various arithmetic accelerator functions.
MC
MC.7-0
Multiplier C Register. This register serves as the 40-bit accumulator of the
arithmetic accelerator.
The following procedures illustrate how to use the arithmetic accelerator. The MA and MB registers must
be loaded and read in the order shown for proper operation, although accesses to any other registers can
be performed between access to the MA or MB registers. An access to the MA, MB, or MC registers out
of sequence will corrupt the operation, requiring the software to clear the MST bit to restart the math
accelerator state machine.
Divide (32/16 or 16/16)
The divide operation utilizes a 32 or 16 bit dividend and a 16-bit divisor. The dividend is loaded into MA
(four bytes in the case of a 32-bit dividend, 2 bytes for a 16-bit dividend) and the 16-bit divisor is loaded
into MB. The quotient is stored in MA and the remainder in MB. The optional test of the MOF bit can be
performed to detect a divide by zero operation if software has not previously checked for a non-zero
divisor.
1. Load MA with dividend LSB.
2. Load MA with dividend LSB+1*
3. Load MA with dividend LSB+2*
4. Load MA with dividend MSB.
5. Load MB with divisor LSB.
6. Load MB with divisor MSB.
7. Poll the MST bit until cleared (9 machine cycles).
8. Check MOF bit (MCNT1.6) to see if divide by zero occurred. (optional)
9. Read MA to retrieve the quotient MSB.
10. Read MA to retrieve the quotient LSB+2.
11. Read MA to retrieve the quotient LSB+1.
12. Read MA to retrieve the quotient LSB.
13. Read MB to retrieve the remainder MSB.
14. Read MB to retrieve the remainder LSB.
*Steps 2 and 3 not performed for 16 bit dividend.
Multiply (16x16)
This function multiplies two 16-bit values in MA and MB and places the 32-bit product into MA. If the
product exceeds FFFFh then the Multiply Overflow Flag (MOF) will be set
1. Load MB with multiplier LSB.
2. Load MB with multiplier MSB.
3. Load MA with multiplicand LSB.
4. Load MA with multiplicand MSB.
5. Poll the MST bit until cleared (6 machine cycles).
6. Read MA for product MSB.
7. Read MA for product LSB+2.
8. Read MA for product LSB+1.
9. Read MA for product LSB.
10. Check MOF bit (MCNT1.6) to see if product exceeded FFFFh. (optional)
154 of 155
DS80C390 High-Speed Microcontroller User’s Guide Supplement
Shift right/left
The shift function rotates the 32 bits of the MA register as directed by the control bits of the MCNT0
register. MA will contain the shifted results following the operation. Note that the multiplier register shift
bits (MCNT.4-0) must be set to a nonzero value or the Normalize function will be performed instead of
the desired shift operation.
1. Load MA with data LSB.
2. Load MA with data LSB+1.
3. Load MA with data LSB+2.
4. Load MA with data MSB.
5. Configure MCNT0 register as required.
6. Poll the MST bit until cleared. (9 machine cycles)
7. Read MA for result MSB.
8. Read MA for result LSB+2.
9. Read MA for result LSB+1.
10. Read MA for result LSB.
Normalize
The normalize function is used to convert four byte unsigned binary integers into floating point format by
removing all leading zeros by shift left operations. Following the operation MA will contain the
normalized value (mantissa) and the MAS4-0 bits will contain the number of shifts performed
(characteristic).
1. Load MA with data LSB.
2. Load MA with data LSB+1.
3. Load MA with data LSB+2.
4. Load MA with data MSB.
5. Write 00000b to the MAS4-0 bits in the MCNT0 register.
6. Poll the MST bit until cleared. (9 machine cycles)
7. Read MA for mantissa MSB.
8. Read MA for mantissa LSB+2.
9. Read MA for mantissa LSB+1.
10. Read MA for mantissa LSB.
11. Read MAS4-0 to determine the number of shifts performed.
40-BIT ACCUMULATOR
The accelerator also incorporates an automatic accumulator function, permitting the implementation of
multiply-and-accumulate and divide-and-accumulate functions without any additional delay. Each time
the accelerator is used for a multiply or divide operation, the result is transparently added to a 40-bit
accumulator. This can greatly increase speed of DSP and other high-level math operations.
The accumulator can be accessed any time the Multiply/Accumulate Status Flag (MCNT1;D2h) is
cleared. The accumulator is initialized by performing five writes to the Multiplier C Register (MC;D5h),
LSB first. The 40-bit accumulator can be read by performing five reads of the Multiplier C Register,
MSB first.
155 of 155