CYPRESS CYRF69313

CYRF69313
Programmable Radio-on-Chip LPstar
Programmable Radio-on-Chip LPstar
Features
Simple Development
■
Radio System-on-Chip, with built-in 8-bit MCU in a single
device.
■
Operates in the unlicensed worldwide Industrial, Scientific, and
Medical (ISM) band (2.400 GHz to 2.483 GHz).
■
On Air compatible with second
WirelessUSB™ LP and PRoC LP.
■
Pin-to-pin compatible with PRoC LP except the pin 31 and
pin 37.
generation
radio
Intelligent
■
Auto transaction sequencer (ATS): MCU can stay sleeping
longer to save power
■
Framing, length, CRC16, and Auto ACK
■
Separate 16 byte transmit and receive FIFOs
■
Receive signal strength indication (RSSI)
■
Built-in serial peripheral interface (SPI) control while in sleep
mode
■
Advanced development tools based on Cypress’s PSoC® Tools
■
Flexible I/O
■
2 mA source current on all GPIO pins. Configurable 8 mA or
50 mA/pin current sink on designated pins
■
Each GPIO pin supports high impedance inputs, configurable
pull-up, open-drain output, CMOS/TTL inputs, and CMOS
output
■
Maskable interrupts on all I/O pins
■
M8C based 8-bit CPU, optimized for human interface devices
(HID) applications
■
256 bytes of SRAM
■
8 Kbytes of flash memory with EEPROM emulation
■
In-System reprogrammable through D+/D– pins
■
CPU speed up to 12 MHz
■
16-bit free running timer
■
Low power wakeup timer
■
Low external component count
■
12-bit programmable interval timer with interrupts
■
Small footprint 40-pin QFN (6 mm × 6 mm)
■
Watchdog timer
■
GPIOs that require no external components
■
Operates off a single crystal
■
Integrated 3.3 V regulator
■
Integrated pull-up on D–
BOM Savings
Low Power
■
21 mA operating current (Transmit at –5 dBm)
■
Sleep current less than 1 µA
■
Operating voltage from 4.0 V to 5.25 V DC
■
Fast startup and fast channel changes
■
Conforms to USB specification version 2.0
■
Supports coin-cell operated applications
■
Conforms to USB HID specification version 1.1
■
Supports one low speed USB device address
■
Supports one control endpoint and two data end points
■
Integrated USB transceiver
USB Specification Compliance
Reliable and Robust
■
Receive sensitivity typical –90 dBm
■
AutoRate™ – dynamic data rate reception
❐ Enables data reception for any of the supported bit rates
automatically.
❐ DSSS (250 Kbps), GFSK (1 Mbps)
Applications
■
Wireless keyboards and mice
■
Operating temperature from 0 °C to 70 °C
■
Presentation tools
■
Closed-loop frequency synthesis for minimal frequency drift
■
Wireless gamepads
■
Remote controls
■
Toys
■
Fitness
Cypress Semiconductor Corporation
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
•
198 Champion Court
•
San Jose, CA 95134-1709
•
408-943-2600
Revised April 27, 2013
CYRF69313
Logic Block Diagram
1ohm
VIO
VCC1
VCC2
VCC3
VBat0
VCC4
VBat1
VBat2
SCK
nSS
RST
P1.2 / VReg
VDD_MICRO
MOSI
Vbus
RFbias
RFp
RFn
P0_1,3,4,7
Microcontroller
Function
4
P1_6:7
2
Radio
Function
IRQ/GPIO
P1.5/MOSI
MISO/GPIO
P1.4/SCK
P2_0:1
2
XOUT/GPIO
P1.3/nSS
12MHz
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
VSS
.....
GND
GND
RESV
Xtal
GND
D+/D2
.......
Page 2 of 81
CYRF69313
Contents
Functional Description ..................................................... 5
Functional Overview ........................................................ 5
2.4 GHz Radio Function .............................................. 5
USB Microcontroller Function ...................................... 5
Backward Compatibility ............................................... 5
Pinouts .............................................................................. 6
Pin Configuration ............................................................. 6
PRoC LPstar Functional Overview ................................. 7
Functional Block Overview .............................................. 8
2.4 GHz Radio ............................................................. 8
Frequency Synthesizer ................................................ 8
Baseband and Framer ................................................. 8
Packet Buffers ............................................................. 9
Auto Transaction Sequencer (ATS) ............................ 9
Interrupts ..................................................................... 9
Clocks .......................................................................... 9
GPIO Interface ............................................................ 9
Power-on Reset ......................................................... 10
Power Management .................................................. 10
Timers ....................................................................... 10
USB Interface ............................................................ 10
Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) and
Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI) ..................... 10
SPI Interface .................................................................... 10
Three-Wire SPI Interface ........................................... 10
Four-Wire SPI Interface ............................................. 11
SPI Communication and Transactions ...................... 11
SPI I/O Voltage References ...................................... 11
SPI Connects to External Devices ............................ 11
CPU Architecture ............................................................ 12
CPU Registers ................................................................. 13
Flags Register ........................................................... 13
Accumulator Register ................................................ 13
Index Register ........................................................... 13
Stack Pointer Register ............................................... 14
CPU Program Counter High Register ....................... 14
CPU Program Counter Low Register ........................ 14
Addressing Modes ......................................................... 15
Source Immediate ..................................................... 15
Source Direct ............................................................. 15
Source Indexed ......................................................... 15
Destination Direct ...................................................... 15
Destination Indexed ................................................... 16
Destination Direct Source Immediate ........................ 16
Destination Indexed Source Immediate .................... 16
Destination Direct Source Direct ............................... 16
Source Indirect Post Increment ................................. 17
Destination Indirect Post Increment .......................... 17
Instruction Set Summary ............................................... 18
Memory Organization ..................................................... 19
Flash Program Memory Organization ....................... 19
Data Memory Organization ....................................... 20
Flash .......................................................................... 20
SROM ........................................................................ 20
SROM Function Descriptions .................................... 21
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
SROM Table Read Description ...................................... 24
Clocking .......................................................................... 25
Clock Architecture Description .................................. 26
CPU Clock During Sleep Mode ................................. 32
Reset ................................................................................ 32
Power-on Reset .............................................................. 34
Watchdog Timer Reset .............................................. 34
Sleep Mode ...................................................................... 34
Sleep Sequence ........................................................ 34
Wakeup Sequence .................................................... 35
Low Power in Sleep Mode ......................................... 35
Power-on Reset Control ................................................. 37
POR Compare State ................................................. 37
ECO Trim Register .................................................... 37
General-Purpose I/O Ports ............................................. 38
Port Data Registers ................................................... 38
GPIO Port Configuration ........................................... 39
GPIO Configurations for Low Power Mode ............... 43
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) .................................... 44
SPI Data Register ...................................................... 45
SPI Configure Register .............................................. 45
Timer Registers .............................................................. 47
Registers ................................................................... 47
Interrupt Controller ......................................................... 50
Architectural Description ........................................... 50
Interrupt Processing .................................................. 51
Interrupt Latency ....................................................... 51
Interrupt Registers ..................................................... 51
USB Transceiver ............................................................. 56
USB Transceiver Configuration ................................. 56
USB Serial Interface Engine (SIE) ................................. 56
USB Device ..................................................................... 57
Endpoint 0 Mode ....................................................... 58
Endpoint Data Buffers ............................................... 60
USB Mode Tables ........................................................... 61
Mode Column ............................................................ 61
Encoding Column ...................................................... 61
SETUP, IN, and OUT Columns ................................. 61
Details of Mode for Differing Traffic Conditions .......... 62
Register Summary .......................................................... 64
Radio Function Register Descriptions ......................... 66
Absolute Maximum Ratings .......................................... 67
DC Characteristics ......................................................... 67
RF Characteristics .......................................................... 69
AC Test Loads and Waveforms for Digital Pins .......... 70
AC Characteristics ......................................................... 71
Switching Waveforms .................................................... 72
Ordering Information ...................................................... 76
Ordering Code Definitions ......................................... 76
Package Handling ........................................................... 77
Package Diagrams .......................................................... 77
Acronyms ........................................................................ 79
Document Conventions ................................................. 79
Units of Measure ....................................................... 79
Page 3 of 81
CYRF69313
Document History Page ................................................. 80
Sales, Solutions, and Legal Information ...................... 81
Worldwide Sales and Design Support ....................... 81
Products .................................................................... 81
PSoC Solutions ......................................................... 81
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 4 of 81
CYRF69313
Functional Description
PRoC LPstar devices are integrated radio and microcontroller
functions in the same package to provide a dual role single-chip
solution.
Communication between the microcontroller and the radio is via
the SPI interface between both functions.
Functional Overview
The CYRF69313 is a complete Radio System-on-Chip device,
providing a complete RF system solution with a single device and
a few discrete components. The CYRF69313 is designed to
implement low cost wireless systems operating in the worldwide
2.4 GHz Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM) frequency band
(2.400 GHz–2.4835 GHz).
2.4 GHz Radio Function
The SoC contains a 2.4 GHz, 1 Mbps GFSK radio transceiver,
packet data buffering, packet framer, DSSS baseband controller,
Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI), and SPI interface
for data transfer and device configuration.
The radio supports 98 discrete 1 MHz channels (regulations may
limit the use of some of these channels in certain jurisdictions).
The baseband performs DSSS spreading/despreading, Start of
Packet (SOP), End of Packet (EOP) detection, and CRC16
generation and checking. The baseband may also be configured
to automatically transmit Acknowledge (ACK) handshake
packets whenever a valid packet is received.
When in receive mode, with packet framing enabled, the device
is always ready to receive data transmitted at any of the
supported bit rates. This enables the implementation of
mixed-rate systems in which different devices use different data
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
rates. This also enables the implementation of dynamic data rate
systems that use high data rates at shorter distances or in a
low-moderate interference environment or both. It changes to
lower data rates at longer distances or in high interference
environments or both.
USB Microcontroller Function
The microcontroller function is based on the powerful
CYRF69313 microcontroller. It is an 8-bit Flash programmable
microcontroller with integrated low speed USB interface.
The microcontroller has up to 14 GPIO pins to support USB,
PS/2 and other applications. Each GPIO port supports high
impedance inputs, configurable pull-up, open drain output,
CMOS/TTL inputs and CMOS output. Up to two pins support
programmable drive strength of up to 50 mA. Additionally each
I/O pin can be used to generate a GPIO interrupt to the
microcontroller. Each GPIO port has its own GPIO interrupt
vector with the exception of GPIO Port 0.
The microcontroller features an internal oscillator. With the
presence of USB traffic, the internal oscillator can be set to
precisely tune to USB timing requirements (24 MHz ± 1.5%).
The PRoC LPstar has up to 8 Kbytes of Flash for user’s firmware
code and up to 256 bytes of RAM for stack space and user
variables.
Backward Compatibility
The CYRF69313 IC is fully interoperable with the main modes
of the second generation Cypress radio SoC namely the
CYRF6936, CYRF69103 and CYRF69213.
CYRF69313 IC device may transmit data to or receive data from
a second generation device, or both.
Page 5 of 81
CYRF69313
Pinouts
Figure 1. 40-pin QFN pinout
NC
31
33
P1.6 32
VIO
36
RST 34
37
P1.7 35
GND
39
VDD_1.8
VBAT0
40
P0.7 38
V CC
Corner
tabs
P0.4
1
30
XOUT / GPIO
XTAL
2
29
MISO / GPIO
VCC
3
P0.3
4
P0.1
5
26 P1. 4 / SCK
VBAT1
6
25 P1. 3 / SS
VCC
7
24 P1. 2
P2.1
8
23 VDD_ Micro
VBAT2
9
CYRF69313
PRoC LPstar
28 P1. 5 / MOSI
27
IRQ / GPIO
22 P1.1/D* E- PAD Bottom Side
RFBIAS 10
21 P1.0/D+
20 NC
19 RESV
18 NC
17 NC
16 VCC
15 P2.0
14 NC
13 RFN
12 GND
11 RFP
Pin Configuration
Pin
Name
1
P0.4
Function
Individually configured GPIO
2
Xtal_in
3, 7, 16, 40
VCC
12 MHz Crystal. External clock in
Connected to pin 24 via 0.047 F capacitor
4
P0.3
Individually configured GPIO
5
P0.1
Individually configured GPIO
6, 9, 39
Vbat
Connected to pin 24 via 0.047 Fshunt capacitor
8
P2.1
GPIO. Port 2 Bit 1
10
RF Bias
11
RFp
12
GND
Ground
13
RFn
Differential RF to/from antenna
14, 17, 18, 20,
36
NC
15
P2.0
19
RESV
RF pin voltage reference
Differential RF input to/from antenna
GPIO. Port 2 Bit 0
Reserved. Must connect to GND
21
P1.0 / D+ / GPIO 1.0 / Low speed USB I/O / ISSP-SCLK
ISSP-SCLK
22
P1.1 / D– / GPIO 1.1 / Low speed USB I/O/ISSP-SDATA
ISSP-SDATA
23
VDD_micro
24
P1.2
4.0–5.5 for 12 MHz CPU/4.75–5.5 for 24 MHz CPU
Must be configured as 3.3 V output. It must have a 1–2 F output capacitor
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 6 of 81
CYRF69313
Pin Configuration (continued)
Pin
Name
Function
25
P1.3 / nSS
Slave select SPI Pin
26
P1.4 / SCK
Serial Clock Pin from MCU function to radio function
27
28
IRQ
Interrupt output, configure high/low or GPIO
P1.5 / MOSI Master Out Slave In
29
MISO
Master In Slave Out, from radio function. Can be configured as GPIO
30
XOUT
Bufferd CLK or GPIO
31
NC
32
P1.6
Must be floating
GPIO. Port 1 Bit 6
33
VIO
I/O interface voltage. Connected to pin 24 via 0.047 F
34
Reset
Radio Reset. Connected to VDD via 0.47 F capacitor or to microcontroller GPIO pin. Must have a
RESET = HIGH event the very first time power is applied to the radio otherwise the state of the radio
function control registers is unknown
35
P1.7
36
VDD_1.8
37
GND
Must be connected to ground
38
P0.7
GPIO. Port 0 Bit 7
E-pad
Must be connected to GND
41
42
GPIO. Port 1 Bit 7
Regulated logic bypass. Connected via 0.47 F to GND
Corner Tabs Do not connect corner tabs
PRoC LPstar Functional Overview
The SoC contains a 2.4 GHz 1 Mbps GFSK radio transceiver,
packet data buffering, packet framer, DSSS baseband controller,
Received Signal Strength Indication (RSSI), and SPI interface
for data transfer and device configuration.
The radio supports 98 discrete 1 MHz channels (regulations may
limit the use of some of these channels in certain jurisdictions).
In
DSSS modes the
baseband
performs
DSSS
spreading/despreading, while in GFSK Mode (1 Mb/s - GFSK)
the baseband performs Start of Frame (SOF), End of Frame
(EOF) detection and CRC16 generation and checking. The
baseband may also be configured to automatically transmit
Acknowledge (ACK) handshake packets whenever a valid
packet is received.
When in receive mode, with packet framing enabled, the device
is always ready to receive data transmitted at any of the
supported bit rates. This enables the implementation of
mixed-rate systems in which different devices use different data
rates. This also enables the implementation of dynamic data rate
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
systems that use high data rates at shorter distances or in a
low-moderate interference environment or both. It changes to
lower data rates at longer distances or in high interference
environments or both.
The MCU function is an 8-bit Flash programmable
microcontroller with integrated low speed USB interface. The
instruction set has been optimized specifically for USB
operations, although it can be used for a variety of other
embedded applications.
The MCU function has up to eight Kbytes of Flash for user’s code
and up to 256 bytes of RAM for stack space and user variables.
In addition, the MCU function includes a Watchdog timer, a
vectored interrupt controller, a 16-bit Free-Running Timer, and
12-bit Programmable Interrupt Timer.
The MCU function supports in-system programming by using the
D+ and D– pins as the serial programming mode interface. The
programming protocol is not USB.
Page 7 of 81
CYRF69313
Functional Block Overview
■
All the blocks that make up the PRoC LPstar are presented here.
2.4 GHz Radio
The radio transceiver is a dual conversion low IF architecture
optimized for power and range/robustness. The radio employs
channel matched filters to achieve high performance in the
presence of interference. An integrated Power Amplifier (PA)
provides up to 0 dBm transmit power, with an output power
control range of 30 dB in six steps. The supply current of the
device is reduced as the RF output power is reduced.
Table 1. Internal PA Output Power Step Table
PA Setting
Typical Output Power (dBm)
6
0
5
–5
4
–10
3
–15
2
–20
1
–25
0
–30
In DSSS mode eight bits (8DR, 32 chip) are encoded in each
derived code symbol transmitted, resulting in effective
250 Kbps data rate.
32 chip Pseudo Noise (PN) codes are supported. The two data
transmission modes apply to the data after the SOP. In particular
the length, data, and CRC16 are all sent in the same mode. In
general, DSSS reduce packet error rate in any environment.
Link Layer Modes
The CYRF69313 IC device supports the following data packet
framing features:
SOP
Packets begin with a two-symbol SoP marker. If framing is
disabled then an SOP event is inferred whenever two successive
correlations are detected. The SOP_CODE_ADR code used for
the SOP is different from that used for the “body” of the packet,
and if desired may be a different length. SOP must be configured
to be the same length on both sides of the link.
Length
Length field is the first eight bits after the SOP symbol, and is
transmitted at the payload data rate. An EoP condition is inferred
after reception of the number of bytes defined in the length field,
plus two bytes for the CRC16.
CRC16
Frequency Synthesizer
The ‘fast channels’ (<100 s settling time) are every third
frequency, starting at 2400 MHz up to and including 2472 MHz
(for example, 0,3,6,9…….69 and 72).
The device may be configured to append a 16-bit CRC16 to each
packet. The CRC16 uses the USB CRC polynomial with the
added programmability of the seed. If enabled, the receiver
verifies the calculated CRC16 for the payload data against the
received value in the CRC16 field. The starting value for the
CRC16 calculation is configurable, and the CRC16 transmitted
may be calculated using either the loaded seed value or a zero
seed; the received data CRC16 is checked against both the
configured and zero CRC16 seeds.
Baseband and Framer
CRC16 detects the following errors:
The baseband and framer blocks provide the DSSS encoding
and decoding, SOP generation and reception and CRC16
generation and checking, and EOP detection and length field.
■
Any one bit in error
■
Any two bits in error (irrespective of how far apart, which
column, and so on)
Data Rates and Data Transmission Modes
■
Any odd number of bits in error (irrespective of the location)
■
An error burst as wide as the checksum itself
Before transmission or reception may commence, it is necessary
for the frequency synthesizer to settle. The settling time varies
depending on channel; 25 fast channels are provided with a
maximum settling time of 100 s.
The SoC supports two different data transmission modes:
■
In GFSK mode, data is transmitted at 1 Mbps, without any
DSSS.
Figure 2 shows an example packet with SOP, CRC16 and
lengths fields enabled.
Figure 2. Example Default Packet Format
2nd Framing Symbol*
Preamble N*16us
Preamble
SOP1
1st Framing Symbol*
SOP2
Length
<== P a y l o a d ==>
CRC 16
Packet length 1 Byte Period
*Note: 32 us
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 8 of 81
CYRF69313
Packet Buffers
Packet data and configuration registers are accessed through
the SPI interface. All configuration registers are directly
addressed through the address field in the SPI packet.
Configuration registers are provided to allow configuration of
DSSS PN codes, data rate, operating mode, interrupt masks,
interrupt status, and others.
Packet Buffers
All data transmission and reception uses the 16-byte packet
buffers — one for transmission and one for reception.
The transmit buffer allows a complete packet of up to 16 bytes of
payload data to be loaded in one burst SPI transaction. This is
then transmitted with no further MCU intervention. Similarly, the
receive buffer allows an entire packet of payload data up to 16
bytes to be received with no firmware intervention required until
packet reception is complete.
The CYRF69313 IC supports packet length of up to 40 bytes;
interrupts are provided to allow an MCU to use the transmit and
receive buffers as FIFOs. When transmitting a packet longer
than 16 bytes, the MCU can load 16 bytes initially, and add
further bytes to the transmit buffer as transmission of data
creates space in the buffer. Similarly, when receiving packets
longer than 16 bytes, the MCU function must fetch received data
from the FIFO periodically during packet reception to prevent it
from overflowing.
Auto Transaction Sequencer (ATS)
The CYRF69313 IC provides automated support for
transmission and reception of acknowledged data packets.
When transmitting a data packet, the device automatically starts
the crystal and synthesizer, enters transmit mode, transmits the
packet in the transmit buffer, and then automatically switches to
receive mode and waits for a handshake packet — and then
automatically reverts to sleep mode or idle mode when either an
ACK packet is received, or a timeout period expires.
Similarly, when receiving in transaction mode, the device waits
in receive mode for a valid packet to be received, then
automatically transitions to transmit mode, transmits an ACK
packet, and then switches back to receive mode to await the next
packet. The contents of the packet buffers are not affected by the
transmission or reception of ACK packets.
In each case, the entire packet transaction takes place without
any need for MCU firmware action; to transmit data the MCU
simply needs to load the data packet to be transmitted, set the
length, and set the TX GO bit. Similarly, when receiving packets
in transaction mode, firmware simply needs to retrieve the fully
received packet in response to an interrupt request indicating
reception of a packet.
Interrupts
The radio function provides an interrupt (IRQ) output, which is
configurable to indicate the occurrence of various different
events. The IRQ pin may be programmed to be either active high
or active low, and be either a CMOS or open drain output. The
IRQ pin can be multiplexed on the SPI if routed to an external pin.
The radio function features three sets of interrupts: transmit,
receive, and system interrupts. These interrupts all share a
single pin (IRQ), but can be independently enabled/disabled. In
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
transmit mode, all receive interrupts are automatically disabled,
and in receive mode all transmit interrupts are automatically
disabled. However, the contents of the enable registers are
preserved when switching between transmit and receive modes.
If more than one radio interrupt is enabled at any time, it is
necessary to read the relevant status register to determine which
event caused the IRQ pin to assert. Even when an interrupt
source is disabled, the status of the condition that would
otherwise cause an interrupt can be determined by reading the
appropriate status register. It is therefore possible to use the
devices without making use of the IRQ pin by polling the status
register(s) to wait for an event, rather than using the IRQ pin.
The microcontroller function supports 23 maskable interrupts in
the vectored interrupt controller. Interrupt sources include a USB
bus reset, POR, a programmable interval timer, a 1.024-ms
output from the Free Running Timer, three USB endpoints, two
capture timers, five GPIO Ports, three GPIO pins, two SPI, a
16-bit free running timer wrap, an internal wakeup timer, and a
bus active interrupt. The wakeup timer causes periodic interrupts
when enabled. The USB endpoints interrupt after a USB
transaction complete is on the bus. The capture timers interrupt
whenever a new timer value is saved due to a selected GPIO
edge event. A total of eight GPIO interrupts support both TTL or
CMOS thresholds. For additional flexibility, on the edge sensitive
GPIO pins, the interrupt polarity is programmable to be either
rising or falling.
Clocks
The radio function has a 12 MHz crystal (30-ppm or better)
directly connected between XTAL and GND without the need for
external capacitors. A digital clock out function is provided, with
selectable output frequencies of 0.75, 1.5, 3, 6, or 12 MHz. This
output may be used to clock an external microcontroller (MCU)
or ASIC. This output is enabled by default, but may be disabled.
Following are the requirements for the crystal to be directly
connected to XTAL pin and GND:
■
Nominal Frequency: 12 MHz
■
Operating Mode: Fundamental Mode
■
Resonance Mode: Parallel Resonant
■
Frequency Stability: ±30 ppm
■
Series Resistance: <60 ohms
■
Load Capacitance: 10 pF
■
Drive Level:100 W
The MCU function features an internal oscillator. With the
presence of USB traffic, the internal oscillator can be set to
precisely tune to USB timing requirements (24 MHz ±1.5%). The
clock generator provides the 12 MHz and 24 MHz clocks that
remain internal to the microcontroller.
GPIO Interface
The MCU function features up to 20 general purpose I/O (GPIO)
pins to support USB, PS/2, and other applications. The I/O pins
are grouped into five ports (Port 0 to 4). The pins on Port 0 and
Port 1 may each be configured individually while the pins on
Ports 2, 3, and 4 may only be configured as a group. Each GPIO
port supports high impedance inputs, configurable pull-up, open
Page 9 of 81
CYRF69313
drain output, CMOS/TTL inputs, and CMOS output with up to five
pins that support programmable drive strength of up to 50 mA
sink current. GPIO Port 1 features four pins that interface at a
voltage level of 3.3 volts. Additionally, each I/O pin can be used
to generate a GPIO interrupt to the microcontroller. Each GPIO
port has its own GPIO interrupt vector with the exception of GPIO
Port 0. GPIO Port 0 has three dedicated pins that have
independent interrupt vectors (P0.3–P0.4).
USB Interface
Power-on Reset
The gain of the receiver may be controlled directly by clearing
the AGC EN bit and writing to the low noise amplifier (LNA) bit of
the RX_CFG_ADR register. When the LNA bit is cleared, the
receiver gain is reduced by approximately 20 dB, allowing
accurate reception of very strong received signals (for example
when operating a receiver very close to the transmitter). An
additional 20 dB of receiver attenuation can be added by setting
the Attenuation (ATT) bit; this allows data reception to be limited
to devices at very short ranges. Disabling AGC and enabling
LNA is recommended unless receiving from a device using
external PA.
The power-on reset (POR) circuit detects logic when power is
applied to the device, resets the logic to a known state, and
begins executing instructions at Flash address 0x0000. When
power falls below a programmable trip voltage, it generates reset
or may be configured to generate interrupt. The Watchdog timer
can be used to ensure the firmware never gets stalled in an
infinite loop.
Power Management
The device draws its power supply from the USB Vbus line. The
Vbus supplies power to the MCU function, which has an internal
3.3 V regulator. This 3.3 V is supplied to the radio function via
P1.2 after proper filtering as shown in Figure 3.
Figure 3. Power Management From Internal Regulator
1 ohm
0.047µF
0.047µF
0.047µF
The MCU function includes an integrated USB serial interface
engine (SIE) that allows the chip to easily interface to a USB
host. The hardware supports one USB device address with three
endpoints.
Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) and Received Signal
Strength Indication (RSSI)
The RSSI register returns the relative signal strength of the
on-channel signal power.
When receiving, the device may be configured to automatically
measure and store the relative strength of the signal being
received as a 5-bit value. When enabled, an RSSI reading is
taken and may be read through the SPI interface. An RSSI
reading is taken automatically when the start of a packet is
detected. In addition, a new RSSI reading is taken every time the
previous reading is read from the RSSI register, allowing the
background RF energy level on any channel to be easily
measured when RSSI is read when no signal is being received.
A new reading can occur as fast as once every 12 s.
0.047µF
0.047µF
0.047µF
SPI Interface
0.047µF
VCC1
VCC2
VCC3
VIO
VCC4
VBat0
VBat1
VBat2
0.047µF
P1.2
CYRF69313
Vbus
0.1µF
GND
VDD_MICRO
Timers
The free-running 16-bit timer provides two interrupt sources: the
programmable interval timer with 1 s resolution and the
1.024 ms outputs. The timer can be used to measure the
duration of an event under firmware control by reading the timer
at the start and at the end of an event, then calculating the
difference between the two values.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
The SPI interface between the MCU function and the radio
function is a 3-wire SPI Interface. The three pins are MOSI
(Master Out Slave In), SCK (Serial Clock), SS (Slave Select).
There is an alternate 4-wire MISO Interface that requires the
connection of two external pins. The SPI interface is controlled
by configuring the SPI Configure Register (SICR Address:
0x3D).
Three-Wire SPI Interface
The radio function receives a clock from the MCU function on the
SCK pin. The MOSI pin is multiplexed with the MISO pin.
Bidirectional data transfer takes place between the MCU function
and the radio function through this multiplexed MOSI pin. When
using this mode the user firmware should ensure that the MOSI
pin on the MCU function is in a high impedance state, except
when the MCU is actively transmitting data. Firmware must also
control the direction of data flow and switch directions between
MCU function and radio function by setting the SWAP bit [Bit 7]
of the SPI Configure Register. The SS pin is asserted prior to
initiating a data transfer between the MCU function and the radio
function. The IRQ function may be optionally multiplexed with the
MOSI pin; when this option is enabled the IRQ function is not
available while the SS pin is low. When using this configuration,
user firmware should ensure that the MOSI function on MCU
function is in a high impedance state whenever SS is high.
Page 10 of 81
CYRF69313
SPI Communication and Transactions
The SPI transactions can be single byte or multi-byte. The MCU
function initiates a data transfer through a Command/Address
byte. The following bytes are data bytes. The SPI transaction
format is shown in Table 2 on page 12.
nSS
MOSI
SCK
Figure 4. Three-Wire SPI Mode
The DIR bit specifies the direction of data transfer. 0 = Master
reads from slave. 1 = Master writes to slave.
Radio Function
MCU Function
P1.5/MOSI
MOSI
MOSI/MISO multiplexed
on one MOSI pin
P1.4/SCK
SCK
P1.3/nSS
nSS
The INC bit helps to read or write consecutive bytes from
contiguous memory locations in a single burst mode operation.
If Slave Select is asserted and INC = 1, then the master MCU
function reads a byte from the radio, the address is incremented
by a byte location, and then the byte at that location is read, and
so on. If Slave Select is asserted and INC = 0, then the MCU
function reads/writes the bytes in the same register in burst
mode, but if it is a register file then it reads/writes the bytes in
that register file.
Four-Wire SPI Interface
The four-wire SPI communications interface consists of MOSI,
MISO, SCK, and SS.
The device receives SCK from the MCU function on the SCK pin.
Data from the MCU function is shifted in on the MOSI pin. Data
to the MCU function is shifted out on the MISO pin. The active
low SS pin must be asserted for the two functions to
communicate. The IRQ function may be optionally multiplexed
with the MOSI pin; when this option is enabled the IRQ function
is not available while the SS pin is low. When using this
configuration, user firmware should ensure that the MOSI
function on MCU function is in a high impedance state whenever
SS is high.
The SPI interface between the radio function and the MCU is not
dependent on the internal 12 MHz oscillator of the radio.
Therefore, radio function registers can be read from or written
into while the radio is in sleep mode.
SPI I/O Voltage References
The SPI interfaces between MCU function and the radio and the
IRQ and RST have a separate voltage reference VIO, enabling
the radio function to directly interface with the MCU function,
which operates at higher supply voltage. The internal SPIO pins
between the MCU function and radio function should be
connected with a regulated voltage of 3.3 V (by setting [bit4] of
Registers P13CR, P14CR, P15CR, and P16CR of the MCU
function) and the internal 3.3 V regulator of the MCU function
should be turned on.
SPI Connects to External Devices
SCK
nSS
MOSI
Figure 5. Four-Wire SPI Mode
Radio Function
MCU Function
P1.6/MISO
P1.5/MOSI
MOSI
P1.4/SCK
SCK
P1.3/nSS
nSS
The three SPI wires, MOSI, SCK, and SS are also drawn out of
the package as external pins to allow the user to interface their
own external devices (such as optical sensors and others)
through SPI. The radio function also has its own SPI wires MISO
and IRQ, which can be used to send data back to the MCU
function or send an interrupt request to the MCU function. They
can also be configured as GPIO pins.
MISO
This connection is external to the PRoC LPstar Chip
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 11 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 2. SPI Transaction Format
Byte 1
Byte 1+N
Bit#
7
6
[5:0]
[7:0]
Bit Name
DIR
INC
Address
Data
CPU Architecture
This family of microcontrollers is based on a high performance,
8-bit, Harvard-architecture microprocessor. Five registers
control the primary operation of the CPU core. These registers
are affected by various instructions, but are not directly
accessible through the register space by the user.
Table 3. CPU Registers and Register Names
Register
Register Name
Flags
CPU_F
Program Counter
CPU_PC
Accumulator
CPU_A
Stack Pointer
CPU_SP
Index
CPU_X
The 16-bit Program Counter Register (CPU_PC) allows for direct
addressing of the full eight Kbytes of program memory space.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
The Accumulator Register (CPU_A) is the general purpose
register that holds the results of instructions that specify any of
the source addressing modes.
The Index Register (CPU_X) holds an offset value that is used
in the indexed addressing modes. Typically, this is used to
address a block of data within the data memory space.
The Stack Pointer Register (CPU_SP) holds the address of the
current top-of-stack in the data memory space. It is affected by
the PUSH, POP, LCALL, CALL, RETI, and RET instructions,
which manage the software stack. It can also be affected by the
SWAP and ADD instructions.
The Flag Register (CPU_F) has three status bits: Zero Flag bit
[1]; Carry Flag bit [2]; Supervisory State bit [3]. The Global
Interrupt Enable bit [0] is used to globally enable or disable
interrupts. The user cannot manipulate the Supervisory State
status bit [3]. The flags are affected by arithmetic, logic, and shift
operations. The manner in which each flag is changed is
dependent upon the instruction being executed (for example,
AND, OR, XOR). See Table 20 on page 18.
Page 12 of 81
CYRF69313
CPU Registers
Flags Register
The Flags Register can only be set or reset with logical instruction.
Table 4. CPU Flags Register (CPU_F) [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
XIO
Super
Carry
Zero
Global IE
Read/Write
–
Reserved
–
–
R/W
R
RW
RW
RW
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
Bits 7:5
Reserved
Bit 4
XIO
Set by the user to select between the register banks
0 = Bank 0
1 = Bank 1
Bit 3
Super
Indicates whether the CPU is executing user code or Supervisor Code. (This code cannot be accessed directly by the user.)
0 = User Code
1 = Supervisor Code
Bit 2
Carry
Set by CPU to indicate whether there has been a carry in the previous logical/arithmetic operation
0 = No Carry
1 = Carry
Bit 1
Zero
Set by CPU to indicate whether there has been a zero result in the previous logical/arithmetic operation
0 = Not Equal to Zero
1 = Equal to Zero
Bit 0
Global IE
Determines whether all interrupts are enabled or disabled
0 = Disabled
1 = Enabled
Note CPU_F register is only readable with explicit register address 0xF7. The OR F, expr and AND F, expr instructions must be
used to set and clear the CPU_F bits
Accumulator Register
Table 5. CPU Accumulator Register (CPU_A)
Bit #
7
6
5
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
Default
0
0
0
0
Field
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
0
0
0
0
CPU Accumulator [7:0]
Bits 7:0
CPU Accumulator [7:0]
8-bit data value holds the result of any logical/arithmetic instruction that uses a source addressing mode
Index Register
Table 6. CPU X Register (CPU_X)
Bit #
7
6
5
4
Field
3
2
1
0
X [7:0]
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bits 7:0
X [7:0]
8-bit data value holds an index for any instruction that uses an indexed addressing mode
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 13 of 81
CYRF69313
Stack Pointer Register
Table 7. CPU Stack Pointer Register (CPU_SP)
Bit #
7
6
5
4
Field
3
2
1
0
Stack Pointer [7:0]
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
3
2
1
0
Bits 7:0
Stack Pointer [7:0]
8-bit data value holds a pointer to the current top-of-stack
CPU Program Counter High Register
Table 8. CPU Program Counter High Register (CPU_PCH)
Bit #
7
6
5
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
3
2
1
0
Field
Program Counter [15:8]
Bits 7:0
Program Counter [15:8]
8-bit data value holds the higher byte of the program counter
CPU Program Counter Low Register
Table 9. CPU Program Counter Low Register (CPU_PCL)
Bit #
7
6
5
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Program Counter [7:0]
Bits 7:0
Program Counter [7:0]
8-bit data value holds the lower byte of the program counter
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 14 of 81
CYRF69313
Addressing Modes
Source Indexed
Examples of the different addressing modes are discussed in
this section and example code is given.
Source Immediate
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
in the A register, the F register, the SP register, or the X register,
which is specified as part of the instruction opcode. Operand 1
is an immediate value that serves as a source for the instruction.
Arithmetic instructions require two sources. Instructions using
this addressing mode are two bytes in length.
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
in either the A register or the X register, which is specified as part
of the instruction opcode. Operand 1 is added to the X register
forming an address that points to a location in either the RAM
memory space or the register space that is the source for the
instruction. Arithmetic instructions require two sources; the
second source is the A register or X register specified in the
opcode. Instructions using this addressing mode are two bytes
in length.
Table 12. Source Indexed
Opcode
Table 10. Source Immediate
Opcode
Operand 1
Instruction
Immediate Value
Examples
ADD
A,
7
;In this case, the immediate value
;of 7 is added with the Accumulator,
;and the result is placed in the
;Accumulator.
MOV
X,
8
;In this case, the immediate value
;of 8 is moved to the X register.
AND
F,
9
;In this case, the immediate value
;of 9 is logically ANDed with the F
;register and the result is placed
;in the F register.
Source Direct
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
in either the A register or the X register, which is specified as part
of the instruction opcode. Operand 1 is an address that points to
a location in either the RAM memory space or the register space
that is the source for the instruction. Arithmetic instructions
require two sources; the second source is the A register or X
register specified in the opcode. Instructions using this
addressing mode are two bytes in length.
Instruction
Source Index
Examples
ADD
A,
[X+7]
;In this case, the value in
;the memory location at
;address X + 7 is added with
;the Accumulator, and the
;result is placed in the
;Accumulator.
MOV
X,
REG[X+8]
;In this case, the value in
;the register space at
;address X + 8 is moved to
;the X register.
Destination Direct
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
within either the RAM memory space or the register space.
Operand 1 is an address that points to the location of the result.
The source for the instruction is either the A register or the X
register, which is specified as part of the instruction opcode.
Arithmetic instructions require two sources; the second source is
the location specified by Operand 1. Instructions using this
addressing mode are two bytes in length.
Table 13. Destination Direct
Opcode
Table 11. Source Direct
Opcode
Operand 1
Source Address
Examples
ADD
A,
[7]
;In this case, the value in
;the RAM memory location at
;address 7 is added with the
;Accumulator, and the result
;is placed in the Accumulator.
MOV
X,
REG[8]
;In this case, the value in
;the register space at address
;8 is moved to the X register.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Operand 1
Instruction
Instruction
Operand 1
Destination Address
Examples
ADD
[7],
A
;In this case, the value in
;the memory location at
;address 7 is added with the
;Accumulator, and the result
;is placed in the memory
;location at address 7. The
;Accumulator is unchanged.
MOV
REG[8],
A
;In this case, the Accumula;tor is moved to the regis;ter space location at
;address 8. The Accumulator
;is unchanged.
Page 15 of 81
CYRF69313
Destination Indexed
Destination Indexed Source Immediate
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
within either the RAM memory space or the register space.
Operand 1 is added to the X register forming the address that
points to the location of the result. The source for the instruction
is the A register. Arithmetic instructions require two sources; the
second source is the location specified by Operand 1 added with
the X register. Instructions using this addressing mode are two
bytes in length.
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
within either the RAM memory space or the register space.
Operand 1 is added to the X register to form the address of the
result. The source for the instruction is Operand 2, which is an
immediate value. Arithmetic instructions require two sources; the
second source is the location specified by Operand 1 added with
the X register. Instructions using this addressing mode are three
bytes in length.
Table 14. Destination Indexed
Table 16. Destination Indexed Immediate
Opcode
Instruction
Operand 1
Destination Index
Example
ADD
Opcode
Instruction
Destination Index
Operand 2
Immediate Value
Examples
[X+7],
A
;In this case, the value in the
;memory location at address X+7
;is added with the Accumulator,
;and the result is placed in
;the memory location at address
;x+7. The Accumulator is
;unchanged.
ADD
[X+7],
5
;In this case, the value in
;the memory location at
;address X+7 is added with
;the immediate value of 5,
;and the result is placed
;in the memory location at
;address X+7.
MOV
REG[X+8],
6
;In this case, the immedi;ate value of 6 is moved
;into the location in the
;register space at
;address X+8.
Destination Direct Source Immediate
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
within either the RAM memory space or the register space.
Operand 1 is the address of the result. The source for the
instruction is Operand 2, which is an immediate value. Arithmetic
instructions require two sources; the second source is the
location specified by Operand 1. Instructions using this
addressing mode are three bytes in length.
Table 15. Destination Direct Immediate
Opcode
Instruction
Operand 1
Operand 1
Destination Address
Operand 2
Immediate Value
Destination Direct Source Direct
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
within the RAM memory. Operand 1 is the address of the result.
Operand 2 is an address that points to a location in the RAM
memory that is the source for the instruction. This addressing
mode is only valid on the MOV instruction. The instruction using
this addressing mode is three bytes in length.
Table 17. Destination Direct Source Direct
Examples
ADD
MOV
[7],
REG[8],
Opcode
5
6
;In this case, value in the
;memory location at address 7 is
;added to the immediate value of
;5, and the result is placed in
;the memory location at address 7.
;In this case, the immediate
;value of 6 is moved into the
;register space location at
;address 8.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Instruction
Operand 1
Destination Address
Operand 2
Source Address
Example
MOV
[7],
[8] ;In this case, the value in the
;memory location at address 8 is
;moved to the memory location at
;address 7.
Page 16 of 81
CYRF69313
Source Indirect Post Increment
Destination Indirect Post Increment
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
in the Accumulator. Operand 1 is an address pointing to a
location within the memory space, which contains an address
(the indirect address) for the source of the instruction. The
indirect address is incremented as part of the instruction
execution. This addressing mode is only valid on the MVI
instruction. The instruction using this addressing mode is two
bytes in length. Refer to the PSoC Designer: Assembly
Language User Guide for further details on MVI instruction.
The result of an instruction using this addressing mode is placed
within the memory space. Operand 1 is an address pointing to a
location within the memory space, which contains an address
(the indirect address) for the destination of the instruction. The
indirect address is incremented as part of the instruction
execution. The source for the instruction is the Accumulator. This
addressing mode is only valid on the MVI instruction. The
instruction using this addressing mode is two bytes in length.
Table 19. Destination Indirect Post Increment
Table 18. Source Indirect Post Increment
Opcode
Instruction
Operand 1
Opcode
Instruction
Operand 1
Destination Address Address
Source Address Address
Example
Example
MVI
A,
MVI
[8]
;In this case, the value in the
;memory location at address 8 is
;an indirect address. The memory
;location pointed to by the indi;rect address is moved into the
;Accumulator. The indirect
;address is then incremented.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
[8],
A
;In this case, the value in
;the memory location at
;address 8 is an indirect
;address. The Accumulator is
;moved into the memory loca;tion pointed to by the indi;rect address. The indirect
;address is then incremented.
Page 17 of 81
CYRF69313
Instruction Set Summary
The instruction set is summarized in Table 20 numerically and serves as a quick reference. If more information is needed, the
Instruction Set Summary tables are described in detail in the PSoC Designer Assembly Language User Guide (available on
www.cypress.com).
Bytes
Flags
Cycles
Instruction Format
Opcode Hex
Bytes
Flags
Cycles
Instruction Format
Opcode Hex
Bytes
Cycles
Opcode Hex
Table 20. Instruction Set Summary Sorted Numerically by Opcode Order [1, 2]
Instruction Format
Flags
00 15 1
SSC
2D 8
2
OR [X+expr], A
Z
5A 5
2
MOV [expr], X
01 4
2
ADD A, expr
C, Z
2E 9
3
OR [expr], expr
Z
5B 4
1
MOV A, X
02 6
2
ADD A, [expr]
C, Z
2F 10 3
OR [X+expr], expr
Z
5C 4
1
MOV X, A
03 7
2
ADD A, [X+expr]
C, Z
30
9
1
HALT
5D 6
2
MOV A, reg[expr]
Z
04 7
2
ADD [expr], A
C, Z
31 4
2
XOR A, expr
Z
5E 7
2
MOV A, reg[X+expr]
Z
05 8
2
ADD [X+expr], A
C, Z
32 6
2
XOR A, [expr]
Z
5F 10 3
MOV [expr], [expr]
06 9
3
Z
ADD [expr], expr
C, Z
33 7
2
XOR A, [X+expr]
Z
60 5
2
MOV reg[expr], A
07 10 3
ADD [X+expr], expr
C, Z
34 7
2
XOR [expr], A
Z
61 6
2
MOV reg[X+expr], A
08
35 8
2
XOR [X+expr], A
Z
62 8
3
MOV reg[expr], expr
3
XOR [expr], expr
Z
63 9
3
MOV reg[X+expr], expr
Z
64
4
1
ASL A
C, Z
65
7
2
ASL [expr]
C, Z
66
8
2
ASL [X+expr]
C, Z
67
4
1
ASR A
C, Z
68
7
2
ASR [expr]
C, Z
4
1
PUSH A
09 4
2
ADC A, expr
C, Z
36 9
0A 6
2
ADC A, [expr]
C, Z
37 10 3
XOR [X+expr], expr
0B 7
2
ADC A, [X+expr]
C, Z
38
5
2
ADD SP, expr
0C 7
2
ADC [expr], A
C, Z
39
5
2
CMP A, expr
0D 8
2
ADC [X+expr], A
C, Z
3A
7
2
CMP A, [expr]
0E 9
3
ADC [expr], expr
C, Z
3B
8
2
CMP A, [X+expr]
0F 10
3 ADC [X+expr], expr
C, Z
10
4
1 PUSH X
11
4
2 SUB A, expr
C, Z
3E 10
2 MVI A, [ [expr]++ ]
12
6
2 SUB A, [expr]
C, Z
3F 10
13
7
2 SUB A, [X+expr]
C, Z
40
14
7
2 SUB [expr], A
C, Z
41
15
8
2 SUB [X+expr], A
C, Z
16
9
3 SUB [expr], expr
17 10
3 SUB [X+expr], expr
18
5
1 POP A
19
4
2 SBB A, expr
C, Z
1A
6
2 SBB A, [expr]
if (A=B)
Z=1
if (A<B)
C=1
3C
8
3 CMP [expr], expr
69
8
2 ASR [X+expr]
C, Z
3D
9
3 CMP [X+expr], expr
6A
4
1 RLC A
C, Z
6B
7
2 RLC [expr]
C, Z
2 MVI [ [expr]++ ], A
6C
8
2 RLC [X+expr]
C, Z
4
1 NOP
6D
4
1 RRC A
C, Z
9
3 AND reg[expr], expr
Z
6E
7
2 RRC [expr]
C, Z
42 10
3 AND reg[X+expr], expr
Z
6F
8
2 RRC [X+expr]
C, Z
C, Z
43
3 OR reg[expr], expr
Z
70
4
2 AND F, expr
C, Z
C, Z
44 10
3 OR reg[X+expr], expr
Z
71
4
2 OR F, expr
C, Z
45
3 XOR reg[expr], expr
Z
72
4
2 XOR F, expr
C, Z
46 10
3 XOR reg[X+expr], expr
Z
73
4
1 CPL A
Z
C, Z
47
8
3 TST [expr], expr
Z
74
4
1 INC A
C, Z
Z
9
9
Z
1B
7
2 SBB A, [X+expr]
C, Z
48
9
3 TST [X+expr], expr
Z
75
4
1 INC X
C, Z
1C
7
2 SBB [expr], A
C, Z
49
9
3 TST reg[expr], expr
Z
76
7
2 INC [expr]
C, Z
1D
8
2 SBB [X+expr], A
C, Z
4A 10
3 TST reg[X+expr], expr
Z
77
8
2 INC [X+expr]
C, Z
1E
9
3 SBB [expr], expr
C, Z
4B
5
1 SWAP A, X
Z
78
4
1 DEC A
C, Z
1F 10
3 SBB [X+expr], expr
C, Z
4C
7
2 SWAP A, [expr]
Z
79
4
1 DEC X
C, Z
20
5
1 POP X
4D
7
2 SWAP X, [expr]
7A
7
2 DEC [expr]
C, Z
21
4
2 AND A, expr
Z
4E
5
1 SWAP A, SP
7B
8
2 DEC [X+expr]
C, Z
22
6
2 AND A, [expr]
Z
4F
4
1 MOV X, SP
23
7
2 AND A, [X+expr]
Z
50
4
2 MOV A, expr
24
7
2 AND [expr], A
Z
51
5
2 MOV A, [expr]
25
8
2 AND [X+expr], A
Z
52
6
2 MOV A, [X+expr]
26
9
Z
7C 13
3 LCALL
Z
7D
7
3 LJMP
Z
7E 10
1 RETI
Z
7F
8
1 RET
5
2 JMP
3 AND [expr], expr
Z
53
5
2 MOV [expr], A
8x
27 10
3 AND [X+expr], expr
Z
54
6
2 MOV [X+expr], A
9x 11
2 CALL
28 11
1 ROMX
Z
55
8
3 MOV [expr], expr
Ax
5
2 JZ
29
4
2 OR A, expr
Z
56
9
3 MOV [X+expr], expr
Bx
5
2 JNZ
2A
6
2 OR A, [expr]
Z
57
4
2 MOV X, expr
Cx
5
2 JC
2B
7
2 OR A, [X+expr]
Z
58
6
2 MOV X, [expr]
Dx
5
2 JNC
2C
7
2 OR [expr], A
Z
59
7
2 MOV X, [X+expr]
Ex
7
2 JACC
Fx 13
2 INDEX
C, Z
Z
Notes
1. Interrupt routines take 13 cycles before execution resumes at interrupt vector table.
2. The number of cycles required by an instruction is increased by one for instructions that span 256-byte boundaries in the Flash memory space.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 18 of 81
CYRF69313
Memory Organization
Flash Program Memory Organization
Table 21. Program Memory Space with Interrupt Vector Table
after reset
16-bit PC
Address
0x0000
0x0004
0x0008
0x000C
0x0010
0x0014
0x0018
0x001C
0x0020
0x0024
0x0028
0x002C
0x0030
0x0034
0x0038
0x003C
0x0040
0x0044
0x0048
0x004C
0x0050
0x0054
0x0058
0x005C
0x0060
0x0064
0x0068
0x1FFF
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Program execution begins here after a reset
POR
INT0
SPI Transmitter Empty
SPI Receiver Full
GPIO Port 0
GPIO Port 1
INT1
EP0
EP1
EP2
USB Reset
USB Active
1 ms Interval Timer
Programmable Interval Timer
Reserved
Reserved
16-bit Free Running Timer Wrap
INT2
Reserved
GPIO Port 2
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Sleep Timer
Program Memory begins here (if below interrupts not used,
program memory can start lower)
8 KB ends here
Page 19 of 81
CYRF69313
Data Memory Organization
The MCU function has 256 bytes of data RAM
Table 22. Data Memory Organization
after reset
Address
8-bit PSP
0x00
Top of RAM Memory
Stack begins here and grows upward.
0xFF
Flash
SROM
This section describes the Flash block of the CYRF69313. Much
of the user-visible Flash functionality, including programming
and security, are implemented in the M8C Supervisory Read
Only Memory (SROM). CYRF69313 Flash has an endurance of
1000 cycles and 10 year data retention.
The SROM holds code that is used to boot the part, calibrate
circuitry, and perform Flash operations. (Table 23 lists the SROM
functions.) The functions of the SROM may be accessed in
normal user code or operating from Flash. The SROM exists in
a separate memory space from user code. The SROM functions
are accessed by executing the Supervisory System Call
instruction (SSC), which has an opcode of 00h. Prior to
executing the SSC, the M8C’s accumulator needs to be loaded
with the desired SROM function code from Table 23. Undefined
functions causes a HALT if called from user code. The SROM
functions are executing code with calls; therefore, the functions
require stack space. With the exception of Reset, all of the
SROM functions have a parameter block in SRAM that must be
configured before executing the SSC. Table 24 on page 21 lists
all possible parameter block variables. The meaning of each
parameter, with regards to a specific SROM function, is
described later in this section.
Flash Programming and Security
All Flash programming is performed by code in the SROM. The
registers that control the Flash programming are only visible to
the M8C CPU when it is executing out of SROM. This makes it
impossible to read, write, or erase the Flash by bypassing the
security mechanisms implemented in the SROM.
Customer firmware can only program the Flash via SROM calls.
The data or code images can be sourced by way of any interface
with the appropriate support firmware. This type of programming
requires a ‘bootloader’ — a piece of firmware resident on the
Flash. For safety reasons this bootloader should not be
overwritten during firmware rewrites.
The Flash provides four auxiliary rows that are used to hold Flash
block protection flags, boot time calibration values, configuration
tables, and any device values. The routines for accessing these
auxiliary rows are documented in the SROM section. The
auxiliary rows are not affected by the device erase function.
In-System Programming
Most designs that include an CYRF69313 part have a USB
connector attached to the USB D+/D– pins on the device. These
designs require the ability to program or reprogram a part
through these two pins alone.
CYRF69313 device enables this type of in-system programming
by using the D+ and D– pins as the serial programming mode
interface. This allows an external controller to cause the
CYRF69313 part to enter serial programming mode and then to
use the test queue to issue Flash access functions in the SROM.
The programming protocol is not USB.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Table 23. SROM Function Codes
Function Code
Function Name
Stack Space
00h
SWBootReset
0
01h
ReadBlock
7
02h
WriteBlock
10
03h
EraseBlock
9
05h
EraseAll
11
06h
TableRead
3
07h
CheckSum
3
Two important variables that are used for all functions are KEY1
and KEY2. These variables are used to help discriminate
between valid SSCs and inadvertent SSCs. KEY1 must always
have a value of 3Ah, while KEY2 must have the same value as
the stack pointer when the SROM function begins execution.
This would be the Stack Pointer value when the SSC opcode is
Page 20 of 81
CYRF69313
executed, plus three. If either of the keys do not match the
expected values, the M8C halts (with the exception of the
SWBootReset function). The following code puts the correct
value in KEY1 and KEY2. The code starts with a halt, to force the
program to jump directly into the setup code and not run into it.
halt
SSCOP: mov [KEY1], 3ah
mov X, SP
mov A, X
add A, 3
mov [KEY2], A
Table 24. SROM Function Parameters
Variable Name
SRAM Address
Key1/Counter/Return Code
0,F8h
SWBootReset Function
The SROM function, SWBootReset, is the function that is
responsible for transitioning the device from a reset state to
running user code. The SWBootReset function is executed
whenever the SROM is entered with an M8C accumulator value
of 00h; the SRAM parameter block is not used as an input to the
function. This happens, by design, after a hardware reset,
because the M8C's accumulator is reset to 00h or when user
code executes the SSC instruction with an accumulator value of
00h. The SWBootReset function does not execute when the
SSC instruction is executed with a bad key value and a nonzero
function code. A CYRF69313 device executes the HALT
instruction if a bad value is given for either KEY1 or KEY2.
The SWBootReset function verifies the integrity of the calibration
data by way of a 16-bit checksum, before releasing the M8C to
run user code.
Key2/TMP
0,F9h
BlockID
0,FAh
ReadBlock Function
Pointer
0,FBh
Clock
0,FCh
The ReadBlock function is used to read 64 contiguous bytes
from Flash — a block.
Mode
0,FDh
Delay
0,FEh
PCL
0,FFh
The SROM also features Return Codes and Lockouts.
Return Codes
Return codes aid in the determination of success or failure of a
particular function. The return code is stored in KEY1’s position
in the parameter block. The CheckSum and TableRead functions
do not have return codes because KEY1’s position in the
parameter block is used to return other data.
Table 25. SROM Return Codes
Return Code
Description
00h
Success
01h
Function not allowed due to level of protection
on block
02h
Software reset without hardware reset
03h
Fatal error, SROM halted
Read, write, and erase operations may fail if the target block is
read or write protected. Block protection levels are set during
device programming.
The EraseAll function overwrites data in addition to leaving the
entire user Flash in the erase state. The EraseAll function loops
through the number of Flash macros in the product, executing
the following sequence: erase, bulk program all zeros, erase.
After all the user space in all the Flash macros are erased, a
second loop erases and then programs each protection block
with zeros.
SROM Function Descriptions
All SROM functions are described in the following sections.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
The first thing this function does is to check the protection bits
and determine if the desired BLOCKID is readable. If read
protection is turned on, the ReadBlock function exits, setting the
accumulator and KEY2 back to 00h. KEY1 has a value of 01h,
indicating a read failure. If read protection is not enabled, the
function reads 64 bytes from the Flash using a ROMX instruction
and store the results in SRAM using an MVI instruction. The first
of the 64 bytes is stored in SRAM at the address indicated by the
value of the POINTER parameter. When the ReadBlock
completes successfully, the accumulator, KEY1, and KEY2 all
have a value of 00h.
Table 26. ReadBlock Parameters
Name
Address
Description
KEY1
0,F8h
3Ah
KEY2
0,F9h
Stack Pointer value, when SSC is
executed
BLOCKID
0,FAh
Flash block number
POINTER
0,FBh
First of 64 addresses in SRAM where
returned data should be stored
WriteBlock Function
The WriteBlock function is used to store data in the Flash. Data
is moved 64 bytes at a time from SRAM to Flash using this
function. The first thing the WriteBlock function does is to check
the protection bits and determine if the desired BLOCKID is
writable. If write protection is turned on, the WriteBlock function
exits, setting the accumulator and KEY2 back to 00h. KEY1 has
a value of 01h, indicating a write failure. The configuration of the
WriteBlock function is straightforward. The BLOCKID of the
Flash block, where the data is stored, must be determined and
stored at SRAM address FAh.
The SRAM address of the first of the 64 bytes to be stored in
Flash must be indicated using the POINTER variable in the
parameter block (SRAM address FBh). Finally, the CLOCK and
DELAY values must be set correctly. The CLOCK value
determines the length of the write pulse that is used to store the
data in the Flash. The CLOCK and DELAY values are dependent
Page 21 of 81
CYRF69313
on the CPU speed. Refer to ‘Clocking’ Section for additional
information.
Table 27. WriteBlock Parameters
Name
Address
Description
KEY1
0,F8h
3Ah
KEY2
0,F9h
Stack Pointer value, when SSC is
executed
BLOCKID
0,FAh
8 KB Flash block number (00h–7Fh)
4 KB Flash block number (00h–3Fh)
3 KB Flash block number (00h–2Fh)
POINTER
0,FBh
First of 64 addresses in SRAM, where
the data to be stored in Flash is
located prior to calling WriteBlock
CLOCK
0,FCh
Clock divider used to set the write
pulse width
DELAY
0,FEh
For a CPU speed of 12 MHz set to
56h
function is indicated by SR. The protection level is stored in two
bits according to Table 29. These bits are bit packed into the 64
bytes of the protection block. Therefore, each protection block
byte stores the protection level for four Flash blocks. The bits are
packed into a byte, with the lowest numbered block’s protection
level stored in the lowest numbered bits.
The first address of the protection block contains the protection
level for blocks 0 through 3; the second address is for blocks 4
through 7. The 64th byte stores the protection level for blocks
252 through 255.
Table 29. Protection Modes
Mode
Settings
Description
Marketing
00b
SR ER EW IW
Unprotected
Unprotected
01b
SR ER EW IW
Read protect
Factory upgrade
10b
SR ER EW IW
Disable external Field upgrade
write
11b
SR ER EW IW
Disable internal Full protection
write
EraseBlock Function
The EraseBlock function is used to erase a block of 64
contiguous bytes in Flash. The first thing the EraseBlock function
does is to check the protection bits and determine if the desired
BLOCKID is writable. If write protection is turned on, the
EraseBlock function exits, setting the accumulator and KEY2
back to 00h. KEY1 has a value of 01h, indicating a write failure.
The EraseBlock function is only useful as the first step in
programming. Erasing a block does not cause data in a block to
be one hundred percent unreadable. If the objective is to
obliterate data in a block, the best method is to perform an
EraseBlock followed by a WriteBlock of all zeros.
7
6
Block n+3
5
4
Block n+2
3
2
Block n+1
1
0
Block n
To setup the parameter block for the EraseBlock function, correct
key values must be stored in KEY1 and KEY2. The block number
to be erased must be stored in the BLOCKID variable and the
CLOCK and DELAY values must be set based on the current
CPU speed.
The level of protection is only decreased by an EraseAll, which
places zeros in all locations of the protection block. To set the
level of protection, the ProtectBlock function is used. This
function takes data from SRAM, starting at address 80h, and
ORs it with the current values in the protection block. The result
of the OR operation is then stored in the protection block. The
EraseBlock function does not change the protection level for a
block. Because the SRAM location for the protection data is fixed
and there is only one protection block per Flash macro, the
ProtectBlock function expects very few variables in the
parameter block to be set prior to calling the function. The
parameter block values that must be set, besides the keys, are
the CLOCK and DELAY values.
Table 28. EraseBlock Parameters
Table 30. ProtectBlock Parameters
Name
Address
Description
Name
Address
Description
KEY1
0,F8h
3Ah
KEY1
0,F8h
3Ah
KEY2
0,F9h
Stack Pointer value when SSC is
executed
KEY2
0,F9h
Stack Pointer value when SSC is
executed
BLOCKID
0,FAh
Flash block number (00h–7Fh)
CLOCK
0,FCh
CLOCK
0,FCh
Clock divider used to set the erase
pulse width
Clock divider used to set the write
pulse width
DELAY
0,FEh
DELAY
0,FEh
For a CPU speed of 12 MHz set to
56h
For a CPU speed of 12 MHz set to
56h
EraseAll Function
ProtectBlock Function
The CYRF69313 device offers Flash protection on a
block-by-block basis. Table 29 lists the protection modes
available. In the table, ER and EW are used to indicate the ability
to perform external reads and writes. For internal writes, IW is
used. Internal reading is always permitted by way of the ROMX
instruction. The ability to read by way of the SROM ReadBlock
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
The EraseAll function performs a series of steps that destroy the
user data in the Flash macros and resets the protection block in
each Flash macro to all zeros (the unprotected state). The
EraseAll function does not affect the three hidden blocks above
the protection block in each Flash macro. The first of these four
hidden blocks is used to store the protection table for its eight
Kbytes of user data.
Page 22 of 81
CYRF69313
The EraseAll function begins by erasing the user space of the
Flash macro with the highest address range. A bulk program of
all zeros is then performed on the same Flash macro, to destroy
all traces of the previous contents. The bulk program is followed
by a second erase that leaves the Flash macro in a state ready
for writing. The erase, program, erase sequence is then
performed on the next lowest Flash macro in the address space
if it exists. Following the erase of the user space, the protection
block for the Flash macro with the highest address range is
erased. Following the erase of the protection block, zeros are
written into every bit of the protection table. The next lowest
Flash macro in the address space then has its protection block
erased and filled with zeros.
The end result of the EraseAll function is that all user data in the
Flash is destroyed and the Flash is left in an unprogrammed
state, ready to accept one of the various write commands. The
protection bits for all user data are also reset to the zero state.
The parameter block values that must be set, besides the keys,
are the CLOCK and DELAY values.
Table 31. EraseAll Parameters
Name
Address
Description
value placed in the table by programming the Flash and is
controlled by Cypress Semiconductor Product Engineering. The
Revision ID is hard coded into the SROM. The Revision ID is
discussed in more detail later in this section.
An internal table holds alternate trim values for the device and
returns a one-byte internal revision counter. The internal revision
counter starts out with a value of zero and is incremented each
time one of the other revision numbers is not incremented. It is
reset to zero each time one of the other revision numbers is
incremented. The internal revision count is returned in the
CPU_A register. The CPU_X register is always set to FFh when
trim values are read. The BLOCKID value, in the parameter
block, is used to indicate which table should be returned to the
user. Only the three least significant bits of the BLOCKID
parameter are used by the TableRead function for the
CYRF69313. The upper five bits are ignored. When the function
is called, it transfers bytes from the table to SRAM addresses
F8h–FFh.
The M8C’s A and X registers are used by the TableRead function
to return the die’s Revision ID. The Revision ID is a 16-bit value
hard coded into the SROM that uniquely identifies the die’s
design.
KEY1
0,F8h
3Ah
Checksum Function
KEY2
0,F9h
Stack Pointer value when SSC is
executed
CLOCK
0,FCh
Clock divider used to set the write
pulse width
DELAY
0,FEh
For a CPU speed of 12 MHz set to
56h
The Checksum function calculates a 16-bit checksum over a
user specifiable number of blocks, within a single Flash macro
(Bank) starting from block zero. The BLOCKID parameter is
used to pass in the number of blocks to calculate the checksum
over. A BLOCKID value of 1 calculates the checksum of only
block 0, while a BLOCKID value of 0 calculates the checksum of
all 256 user blocks. The 16-bit checksum is returned in KEY1 and
KEY2. The parameter KEY1 holds the lower eight bits of the
checksum and the parameter KEY2 holds the upper eight bits of
the checksum.
TableRead Function
The TableRead function gives the user access to part specific
data stored in the Flash during manufacturing. It also returns a
Revision ID for the die (not to be confused with the Silicon ID).
Table 32. Table Read Parameters
Name
Address
Description
The checksum algorithm executes the following sequence of
three instructions over the number of blocks times 64 to be
checksummed.
romx
add [KEY1], A
adc [KEY2], 0
KEY1
0,F8h
3Ah
KEY2
0,F9h
Stack Pointer value when SSC is
executed
Table 33. Checksum Parameters
BLOCKID
0,FAh
Table number to read
KEY1
0,F8h
3Ah
KEY2
0,F9h
Stack Pointer value when SSC is
executed
BLOCKID
0,FAh
Number of Flash blocks to calculate
checksum on
The table space for the CYRF69313 is simply a 64-byte row
broken up into eight tables of eight bytes. The tables are
numbered zero through seven. All user and hidden blocks in the
CYRF69313 parts consist of 64 bytes.
Name
Address
Description
An internal table holds the Silicon ID and returns the Revision ID.
The Silicon ID is returned in SRAM, while the Revision ID is
returned in the CPU_A and CPU_X registers. The Silicon ID is a
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 23 of 81
CYRF69313
SROM Table Read Description
Figure 6. SROM Table
Table 0
F8h
F9h
Silicon ID
[15-8]
Silicon ID
[7-0]
F8h
F8h
F8h
F8h
F8h
F8h
Table 1
Table 2
Table 3
Table 4
Table 5
Table 6
Table 7
The Silicon IDs for enCoRe II devices are stored in SROM tables in the part, as shown in Figure 6 on page 24.
The Silicon ID can be read out from the part using SROM Table reads. This is demonstrated in the following pseudo code. As
mentioned in the section SROM on page 20, the SROM variables occupy address F8h through FFh in the SRAM. Each of the variables
and their definition in given in the section SROM on page 20.
AREA SSCParmBlkA(RAM,ABS)
org
F8h // Variables are defined starting at address F8h
SSC_KEY1:
SSC_RETURNCODE:
blk 1
SSC_KEY2 :
blk 1
SSC_BLOCKID:
blk 1
SSC_POINTER:
blk 1
SSC_CLOCK:
blk 1
SSC_MODE:
blk 1
SSC_DELAY:
blk 1
SSC_WRITE_ResultCode: blk
; F8h supervisory key
; F8h result code
;F9h supervisory stack ptr key
; FAh block ID
; FBh pointer to data buffer
; FCh Clock
; FDh ClockW ClockE multiplier
; FEh flash macro sequence delay count
1 ; FFh temporary result code
_main:
mov
A, 0
mov
[SSC_BLOCKID], A // To read from Table 0 - Silicon ID is stored in Table 0
//Call SROM operation to read the SROM table
mov
X, SP
; copy SP into X
mov
A, X
; A temp stored in X
add
A, 3
; create 3 byte stack frame (2 + pushed A)
mov
[SSC_KEY2], A
; save stack frame for supervisory code
; load the supervisory code for flash operations
mov
[SSC_KEY1], 3Ah ;FLASH_OPER_KEY - 3Ah
mov
SSC
A,6
; load A with specific operation. 06h is the code for Table read Table 23
; SSC call the supervisory ROM
// At the end of the SSC command the silicon ID is stored in F8 (MSB) and F9(LSB) of the SRAM
.terminate:
jmp .terminate
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 24 of 81
CYRF69313
Clocking
The CYRF69313 internal oscillator outputs two frequencies, the Internal 24 MHz Oscillator and the 32 kHz Low power Oscillator.
The Internal 24 MHz Oscillator is designed such that it may be trimmed to an output frequency of 24 MHz over temperature and voltage
variation. With the presence of USB traffic, the Internal 24 MHz Oscillator can be set to precisely tune to USB timing requirements
(24 MHz ± 1.5%). Without USB traffic, the Internal 24 MHz Oscillator accuracy is 24 MHz ± 5% (between 0 °C–70 °C). No external
components are required to achieve this level of accuracy.
The internal low speed oscillator of nominally 32 kHz provides a slow clock source for the CYRF69313 in suspend mode, particularly
to generate a periodic wakeup interrupt and also to provide a clock to sequential logic during power-up and power-down events when
the main clock is stopped. In addition, this oscillator can also be used as a clocking source for the Interval Timer clock (ITMRCLK)
and Capture Timer clock (TCAPCLK). The 32 kHz Low power Oscillator can operate in low power mode or can provide a more accurate
clock in normal mode. The Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator accuracy ranges (between 0 °C–70° C) as follows:
5 V Normal mode: –8% to + 16%
5 V LPstar mode: +12% to + 48%
When using the 32 kHz oscillator the PITMRL/H should be read until two consecutive readings match before sending/receiving data.
The following firmware example assumes the developer is interested in the lower byte of the PIT.
Read_PIT_counter:
mov A, reg[PITMRL]
mov [57h], A
mov A, reg[PITMRL]
mov [58h], A
mov [59h], A
mov A, reg{PITMRL]
mov [60h], A
;;;Start comparison
mov A, [60h]
mov X, [59h]
sub A, [59h]
jz done
mov A, [59h]
mov X, [58h]
sub A, [58h]
jz done
mov X, [57h]
;;;correct data is in memory location 57h
done:
mov [57h], X
ret
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 25 of 81
CYRF69313
Figure 7. Clock Block Diagram
CPUCLK
SEL
SCALE (divide by 2n,
n = 0-5,7)
MUX
CPU_CLK
CLK_24MHz
CLK_USB
MUX
24 MHz
SEL
SEL
0
0
1
1
SCALE
SCALE
X
X
1
1
OUT
12 MHz
12 MHz
RESERVED
RESERVED
Low power
OSC 32
KHz
Clock Architecture Description
The CYRF69313 clock selection circuitry allows the selection of
independent clocks for the CPU, USB, Interval Timers, and
Capture Timers.
The CPU clock, CPUCLK, can be sourced from the Internal 24
MHz Oscillator. This clock source can optionally be divided by 2n
where n is 0–5,7 (see Table 37 on page 29).
USBCLK, which must be 12 MHz for the USB SIE to function
properly, can be sourced by the Internal 24 MHz Oscillator. An
optional divide-by-two allows the use of the 24 MHz source.
The Interval Timer clock (ITMRCLK), can be sourced from the
Internal 24 MHz Oscillator, the Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator, except when in sleep mode, or from the timer capture clock
(TCAPCLK). A programmable prescaler of 1, 2, 3, 4 then divides
the selected source.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
CLK_32
KHz
The Timer Capture clock (TCAPCLK) can be sourced from the
Internal 24 MHz Oscillator, or the Internal 32 kHz Low power
Oscillator except when in sleep mode.
The CLKOUT pin (P0.1) can be driven from one of many
sources. This is used for test and can also be used in some
applications.
The sources that can drive the CLKOUT are:
■
CLKIN after the optional EFTB filter
■
Internal 24 MHz Oscillator
■
Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator except when in sleep
mode
■
CPUCLK after the programmable divider
Page 26 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 34. IOSC Trim (IOSCTR) [0x34] [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
Read/Write
Default
6
5
4
3
foffset[2:0]
2
1
0
Gain[4:0]
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
D
D
D
D
D
The I/OSC Calibrate register is used to calibrate the internal oscillator. The reset value is undefined, but during boot the SROM
writes a calibration value that is determined during manufacturing test. This value should not require change during normal use.
This is the meaning of ‘D’ in the Default field
Bits 7:5
foffset [2:0]
This value is used to trim the frequency of the internal oscillator. These bits are not used in factory calibration and is zero. Setting
each of these bits causes the appropriate fine offset in oscillator frequency
foffset bit 0 = 7.5 KHz
foffset bit 1 = 15 KHz
foffset bit 2 = 30 KHz
Bits 4:0
Gain [4:0]
The effective frequency change of the offset input is controlled through the gain input. A lower value of the gain setting increases
the gain of the offset input. This value sets the size of each offset step for the internal oscillator. Nominal gain change (KHz/offsetStep) at each bit, typical conditions (24 MHz operation):
Gain bit 0 = –1.5 KHz
Gain bit 1 = –3.0 KHz
Gain bit 2 = –6 KHz
Gain bit 3 = –12 KHz
Gain bit 4 = –24 KHz
Table 35. LPOSC Trim (LPOSCTR) [0x36] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
32 kHz Low
Power
Reserved
Field
Read/Write
Default
5
4
3
32 kHz Bias Trim [1:0]
2
1
0
32 kHz Freq Trim [3:0]
R/W
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
D
D
D
D
D
D
D
This register is used to calibrate the 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator. The reset value is undefined, but during boot the SROM writes
a calibration value that is determined during manufacturing test. This value should not require change during normal use. This
is the meaning of ‘D’ in the Default field. If the 32 kHz Low power bit needs to be written, care should be taken not to disturb the
32 kHz Bias Trim and the 32 kHz Freq Trim fields from their factory calibrated values
Bit 7
32 kHz Low Power
0 = The 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator operates in normal mode
1 = The 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator operates in a low power mode. The oscillator continues to function normally but with reduced accuracy
Bit 6
Reserved
Bits 5:4
32 kHz Bias Trim [1:0]
These bits control the bias current of the low power oscillator.
0 0 = Mid bias
0 1 = High bias
1 0 = Reserved
1 1 = Reserved
Important Note Do not program the 32 kHz Bias Trim [1:0] field with the reserved 10b value, as the oscillator does not oscillate at
all corner conditions with this setting
Bits 3:0
32 kHz Freq Trim [3:0]
These bits are used to trim the frequency of the low power oscillator
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 27 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 36. CPU/USB Clock Config CPUCLKCR) [0x30] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Read/Write
–
R/W
R/W
–
–
–
–
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Reserved
Bit 7
Reserved
Bit 6
Reserved
Bit 5
Reserved
Bits 4:1
Reserved
Bit 0
Reserved
Note The CPU speed selection is configured using the OSC_CR0 Register (Table 37)
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 28 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 37. OSC Control 0 (OSC_CR0) [0x1E0] [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
6
5
Reserved
No Buzz
4
3
2
Sleep Timer [1:0]
1
0
CPU Speed [2:0]
Read/Write
–
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bits 7:6
Reserved
Bit 5
No Buzz
During sleep (the Sleep bit is set in the CPU_SCR Register—Table 41), the POR detection circuit is turned on periodically to
detect any POR events on the VCC pin (the Sleep Duty Cycle bits in the ECO_TR are used to control the duty cycle—Table 45).
To facilitate the detection of POR events, the No Buzz bit is used to force the POR detection circuit to be continuously enabled
during sleep. This results in a faster response to a POR event during sleep at the expense of a slightly higher than average sleep
current
0 = The POR detection circuit is turned on periodically as configured in the Sleep Duty Cycle
1 = The Sleep Duty Cycle value is overridden. The POR detection circuit is always enabled
Note The periodic Sleep Duty Cycle enabling is independent with the sleep interval shown in the Sleep [1:0] bits below
Bits 4:3
Sleep Timer [1:0]
Sleep Timer
Sleep Timer Clock
[1:0]
Frequency (Nominal)
Sleep Period
(Nominal)
Watchdog Period
(Nominal)
00
512 Hz
1.95 ms
6 ms
01
64 Hz
15.6 ms
47 ms
10
8 Hz
125 ms
375 ms
11
1 Hz
1 sec
3 sec
Note Sleep intervals are approximate
Bits 2:0
CPU Speed [2:0]
The CYRF69313 may operate over a range of CPU clock speeds. The reset value for the CPU Speed bits is zero; therefore, the
default CPU speed is one-eighth of the internal 24 MHz, or 3 MHz
Regardless of the CPU Speed bit’s setting, if the actual CPU speed is greater than 12 MHz, the 24 MHz operating requirements
apply. The operating voltage requirements are not relaxed until the CPU speed is at 12 MHz or less
CPU Speed [2:0]
CPU
000
3 MHz (Default)
001
6 MHz
010
12 MHz
011
24 MHz
100
1.5 MHz
101
750 kHz
110
187 kHz
111
Reserved
Important Note Correct USB operations require the CPU clock speed be at least 1.5 MHz or not less than USB clock/8. If the two
clocks have the same source then the CPU clock divider should not be set to divide by more than 8. If the two clocks have
different sources, care must be taken to ensure that the maximum ratio of USB Clock/CPU Clock can never exceed 8 across the
full specification range of both clock sources
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 29 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 38. USB Osclock Clock Configuration (OSCLCKCR) [0x39] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
Reserved
Field
1
0
Fine Tune
Only
USB Osclock
Disable
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
–
–
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
This register is used to trim the Internal 24 MHz Oscillator using received low speed USB packets as a timing reference. The USB
Osclock circuit is active when the Internal 24 MHz Oscillator provides the USB clock
Bits 7:2
Reserved
Bit 1
Fine Tune Only
0 = Enable
1 = Disable the oscillator lock from performing the course-tune portion of its retuning. The oscillator lock must be allowed to perform a course tuning to tune the oscillator for correct USB SIE operation. After the oscillator is properly tuned this bit can be set
to reduce variance in the internal oscillator frequency that would be caused by course tuning
Bit 0
USB Osclock Disable
0 = Enable. With the presence of USB traffic, the Internal 24 MHz Oscillator precisely tunes to 24 MHz ± 1.5%
1 = Disable. The Internal 24 MHz Oscillator is not trimmed based on USB packets. This setting is useful when the internal oscillator is not sourcing the USBSIE clock
Table 39. Timer Clock Config (TMRCLKCR) [0x31] [R/W]
Bit #
Field
Read/Write
Default
7
6
TCAPCL Divider
5
4
TCAPCLK Select
3
2
ITMRCLK Divider
1
0
ITMRCLK Select
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
–
–
–
–
1
1
0
0
Bits 7:6
TCAPCLK Divider
TCAPCLK Divider controls the TCAPCLK divisor
00 = Divide by 2
01 = Divide by 4
10 = Divide by 6
11 = Divide by 8
Bits 5:4
TCAPCLK Select
The TCAPCLK Select field controls the source of the TCAPCLK
0 0 = Internal 24 MHz Oscillator
0 1 = Reserved)
1 0 = Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator. However this configuration is not used in sleep mode.
1 1 = TCAPCLK Disabled
Note The 1024-s interval timer is based on the assumption that TCAPCLK is running at 4 MHz. Changes in TCAPCLK frequency
causes a corresponding change in the 1024 s interval timer frequency
Bits 3:2
ITMRCLK Divider
ITMRCLK Divider controls the ITMRCLK divisor.
0 0 = Divider value of 1
0 1 = Divider value of 2
1 0 = Divider value of 3
1 1 = Divider value of 4
Bits 1:0
ITMRCLK Select
0 0 = Internal 24 MHz Oscillator
0 1 = Reserved
1 0 = Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator. However this configuration is not used in sleep mode.
1 1 = TCAPCLK
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 30 of 81
CYRF69313
Interval Timer Clock (ITMRCLK)
The Interval Timer Clock (ITMRCLK) can be sourced from the
Internal 24 MHz oscillator, the internal 32 kHz low power
oscillator except when in sleep mode, or the timer capture clock.
A programmable prescaler of 1, 2, 3, or 4 then divides the
selected source. The 12-bit Programmable Interval Timer is a
simple down counter with a programmable reload value. It
provides a 1 s resolution by default. When the down counter
reaches zero, the next clock is spent reloading. The reload value
can be read and written while the counter is running, but care
should be taken to ensure that the counter does not
unintentionally reload while the 12-bit reload value is only
partially stored — for example, between the two writes of the
12-bit value. The programmable interval timer generates an
interrupt to the CPU on each reload.
The parameters to be set appears on the device editor view of
PSoC Designer after you place the CYRF69313 Timer User
Module. The parameters are PITIMER_Source and
PITIMER_Divider. The PITIMER_Source is the clock to the timer
and the PITMER_Divider is the value the clock is divided by.
The interval register (PITMR) holds the value that is loaded into
the PIT counter on terminal count. The PIT counter is a down
counter.
The Programmable Interval Timer resolution is configurable. For
example:
TCAPCLK divide by x of CPU clock (for example TCAPCLK
divide by 2 of a 24 MHz CPU clock gives a frequency of 12 MHz)
ITMRCLK divide by x of TCAPCLK (for example, ITMRCLK
divide by 3 of TCAPCLK is 4 MHz so resolution is 0.25 s)
Timer Capture Clock (TCAPCLK)
The Timer Capture clock can be sourced from the internal 24
MHz oscillator or the Internal 332 kHz low power oscillator except
when in sleep mode. A programmable prescaler of 2, 4, 6, or 8
then divides the selected source.
Figure 8. Programmable Interval Timer Block Diagram
System
Clock
Clock
Timer
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Configuration
Status and
Control
12-bit
reload
value
12-bit down
counter
12-bit
reload
counter
Interrupt
Controller
Page 31 of 81
CYRF69313
Figure 9. Timer Capture Block Diagram
System Clock
Configuration Status
and Control
Captimer Clock
16-bit counter
Prescale Mux
Capture Registers
1ms
timer
Overflow
Interrupt
Capture0 Int
Capture1 Int
Interrupt Controller
Table 40. Clock I/O Config (CLKIOCR) [0x32] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
–
–
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Reserved
0
CLKOUT Select
Bits 7:2
Reserved
Bits 1:0
CLKOUT Select
0 0 = Internal 24 MHz Oscillator
0 1 = Reserved
1 0 = Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator.However this configuration is not used in sleep mode.
1 1 = CPUCLK
CPU Clock During Sleep Mode
When the CPU enters sleep mode the CPUCLK Select (Bit [0],
Table 36) is forced to the internal oscillator, and the oscillator is
stopped. When the CPU comes out of sleep mode it is running
on the internal oscillator. The internal oscillator recovery time is
three clock cycles of the Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator.
Reset
The microcontroller supports two types of resets: Power on
Reset (POR) and Watchdog Reset (WDR). When reset is
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
initiated, all registers are restored to their default states and all
interrupts are disabled.
The occurrence of a reset is recorded in the System Status and
Control Register (CPU_SCR). Bits within this register record the
occurrence of POR and WDR Reset respectively. The firmware
can interrogate these bits to determine the cause of a reset.
The microcontroller resumes execution from Flash address
0x0000 after a reset. The internal clocking mode is active after a
reset.
Note The CPU clock defaults to 3 MHz (Internal 24 MHz
Oscillator divide-by-8 mode) at POR to guarantee operation at
the low VCC that might be present during the supply ramp.
Page 32 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 41. System Status and Control Register (CPU_SCR) [0xFF] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
Field
GIES
Reserved
WDRS
PORS
Sleep
R
–
R/C[3]
R/C[3]
R/W
Read/Write
2
1
Reserved
–
0
Stop
–
R/W
Default
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
The bits of the CPU_SCR register are used to convey status and control of events for various functions of an CYRF69313 device
Bit 7
GIES
The Global Interrupt Enable Status bit is a read only status bit and its use is discouraged. The GIES bit is a legacy bit, which
was used to provide the ability to read the GIE bit of the CPU_F register. However, the CPU_F register is now readable. When
this bit is set, it indicates that the GIE bit in the CPU_F register is also set which, in turn, indicates that the microprocessor services interrupts
0 = Global interrupts disabled
1 = Global interrupt enabled
Bit 6
Reserved
Bit 5
WDRS
The WDRS bit is set by the CPU to indicate that a WDR event has occurred. The user can read this bit to determine the type of
reset that has occurred. The user can clear but not set this bit
0 = No WDR
1 = A WDR event has occurred
Bit 4
PORS
The PORS bit is set by the CPU to indicate that a POR event has occurred. The user can read this bit to determine the type of
reset that has occurred. The user can clear but not set this bit
0 = No POR
1 = A POR event has occurred. (Note that WDR events does not occur until this bit is cleared)
Bit 3
SLEEP
Set by the user to enable CPU sleep state. CPU remains in sleep mode until any interrupt is pending. The Sleep bit is covered
in more detail in the Sleep Mode section
0 = Normal operation
1 = Sleep
Bit 2:1
Reserved
Bit 0
STOP
This bit is set by the user to halt the CPU. The CPU remains halted until a reset (WDR, POR, or external reset) has taken place.
If an application wants to stop code execution until a reset, the preferred method would be to use the HALT instruction rather
than writing to this bit
0 = Normal CPU operation
1 = CPU is halted (not recommended)
Note
3. C = Clear. This bit can only be cleared by the user and cannot be set by firmware.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 33 of 81
CYRF69313
Power-on Reset
WDT cannot be disabled. The only exception to this is if a POR
event takes place, which disables the WDT.
POR occurs every time the power to the device is switched on.
POR is released when the supply is typically 2.6 V for the upward
supply transition, with typically 50 mV of hysteresis during the
power on transient. Bit 4 of the System Status and Control
Register (CPU_SCR) is set to record this event (the register
contents are set to 00010000 by the POR). After a POR, the
microprocessor is held off for approximately 20 ms for the VCC
supply to stabilize before executing the first instruction at
address 0x00 in the Flash. If the VCC voltage drops below the
POR downward supply trip point, POR is reasserted. The VCC
supply needs to ramp linearly from 0 to 4 V in 0 to 200 ms.
The sleep timer is used to generate the sleep time period and the
Watchdog time period. The sleep timer is clocked by the Internal
32 kHz Low power Oscillator system clock. The user can
program the sleep time period using the Sleep Timer bits of the
OSC_CR0 Register (Table 37 on page 29). When the sleep time
elapses (sleep timer overflows), an interrupt to the Sleep Timer
Interrupt Vector is generated.
The Watchdog Timer period is automatically set to be three
counts of the Sleep Timer overflows. This represents between
two and three sleep intervals depending on the count in the
Sleep Timer at the previous WDT clear. When this timer reaches
three, a WDR is generated.
Important The PORS status bit is set at POR and can only be
cleared by the user. It cannot be set by firmware.
The user can either clear the WDT, or the WDT and the Sleep
Timer. Whenever the user writes to the Reset WDT Register
(RES_WDT), the WDT is cleared. If the data that is written is the
hex value 0x38, the Sleep Timer is also cleared at the same time.
Watchdog Timer Reset
The user has the option to enable the WDT. The WDT is enabled
by clearing the PORS bit. When the PORS bit is cleared, the
Table 42. Reset Watchdog Timer (RESWDT) [0xE3] [W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Read/Write
W
W
W
W
Default
0
0
0
0
Field
4
3
2
1
0
W
W
W
W
0
0
0
0
Reset Watchdog Timer [7:0]
Any write to this register clears Watchdog Timer, a write of 0x38 also clears the Sleep Timer
Bits 7:0
Reset Watchdog Timer [7:0]
Sleep Mode
The CPU can only be put to sleep by the firmware. This is
accomplished by setting the Sleep bit in the System Status and
Control Register (CPU_SCR). This stops the CPU from
executing instructions, and the CPU remains asleep until an
interrupt comes pending, or there is a reset event (either a Power
on Reset, or a Watchdog Timer Reset).
The internal 32 kHz low speed oscillator remains running. Prior
to entering suspend mode, firmware can optionally configure the
32 kHz Low speed Oscillator to operate in a low power mode to
help reduce the overall power consumption (using Bit 7, Table 35
on page 27). This helps save approximately 5 A; however, the
trade off is that the 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator is less accurate.
All interrupts remain active. Only the occurrence of an interrupt
wakes the part from sleep. The Stop bit in the System Status and
Control Register (CPU_SCR) must be cleared for a part to
resume out of sleep. The Global Interrupt Enable bit of the CPU
Flags Register (CPU_F) does not have any effect. Any
unmasked interrupt wakes the system up. As a result, any
interrupts not intended for waking must be disabled through the
Interrupt Mask Registers.
When the CPU exits sleep mode the CPUCLK Select (Bit 1,
Table 36 on page 28) is forced to the Internal Oscillator. The
internal oscillator recovery time is three clock cycles of the
Internal 32 kHz Low power Oscillator. The Internal 24 MHz
Oscillator restarts immediately on exiting Sleep mode.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
On exiting sleep mode, when the clock is stable and the delay
time has expired, the instruction immediately following the sleep
instruction is executed before the interrupt service routine (if
enabled).
The Sleep interrupt allows the microcontroller to wake up
periodically and poll system components while maintaining very
low average power consumption. The Sleep interrupt may also
be used to provide periodic interrupts during non sleep modes.
Sleep Sequence
The SLEEP bit is an input into the sleep logic circuit. This circuit
is designed to sequence the device into and out of the hardware
sleep state. The hardware sequence to put the device to sleep
is shown in Figure 10 on page 35 and is defined as follows.
1. Firmware sets the SLEEP bit in the CPU_SCR0 register. The
Bus Request (BRQ) signal to the CPU is immediately
asserted. This is a request by the system to halt CPU
operation at an instruction boundary. The CPU samples BRQ
on the positive edge of CPUCLK.
2. Due to the specific timing of the register write, the CPU issues
a Bus Request Acknowledge (BRA) on the following positive
edge of the CPU clock. The sleep logic waits for the following
negative edge of the CPU clock and then asserts a
system-wide Power-down (PD) signal. In Figure 10 on page
35 the CPU is halted and the system-wide power-down signal
is asserted.
3. The system-wide PD (power-down) signal controls several
major circuit blocks: The Flash memory module, the internal
Page 34 of 81
CYRF69313
24 MHz oscillator, the EFTB filter and the bandgap voltage
reference. These circuits transition into a zero power state.
The only operational circuits on chip are the low power
oscillator, the bandgap refresh circuit, and the supply voltage
monitor (POR) circuit.
Note To achieve the lowest possible power consumption during
suspend/sleep, the following conditions must be observed in
addition to considerations for the sleep timer.
■
All GPIOs must be set to outputs and driven low
■
The USB pins P1.0 and P1.1 should be configured as inputs
with their pull-ups enabled.
Figure 10. Sleep Timing
Firmware write to SCR
SLEEP bit causes an
immediate BRQ
CPU captures
BRQ on next
CPUCLK edge
CPU
responds
with a BRA
On the falling edge of
CPUCLK, PD is asserted.
The 24/48 MHz system clock
is halted; the Flash and
bandgap are powered down
CPUCLK
IOW
SLEEP
BRQ
BRA
PD
Wakeup Sequence
When asleep, the only event that can wake the system up is an
interrupt. The global interrupt enable of the CPU flag register
does not need to be set. Any unmasked interrupt wakes the
system up. It is optional for the CPU to actually take the interrupt
after the wakeup sequence. The wakeup sequence is
synchronized to the 32 kHz clock for purposes of sequencing a
startup delay, to allow the Flash memory module enough time to
power-up before the CPU asserts the first read access. Another
reason for the delay is to allow the oscillator, Bandgap, and POR
circuits time to settle before actually being used in the system.
As shown in Figure 11 on page 36, the wakeup sequence is as
follows:
1. The wakeup interrupt occurs and is synchronized by the
negative edge of the 32 kHz clock.
2. At the following positive edge of the 32 kHz clock, the
system-wide PD signal is negated. The Flash memory
module, internal oscillator, EFTB, and bandgap circuit are all
powered up to a normal operating state.
3. At the following positive edge of the 32 kHz clock, the current
values for the precision POR have settled and are sampled.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
4. At the following negative edge of the 32 kHz clock (after about
15 µs nominal), the BRQ signal is negated by the sleep logic
circuit. On the following CPUCLK, BRA is negated by the CPU
and instruction execution resumes. Note that in Figure 11 on
page 36 fixed function blocks, such as Flash, internal
oscillator, EFTB, and bandgap, have about 15 µs start up. The
wakeup times (interrupt to CPU operational) ranges from 75
µs to 105 µs.
Low Power in Sleep Mode
The following steps are mandatory before configuring the system
into suspend mode to meet the specifications:
1. Clear P11CR[0], P10CR[0] - during USB and Non-USB operations
2. Clear the USB Enable USBCR[7] - during USB mode operations
3. Set P10CR[1] - during non-USB mode operations
4. To avoid current consumption make sure ITMRCLK,
TCPCLK, and USBCLK are not sourced by either low power
32 kHz oscillator or 24 MHz crystal-less oscillator.
All the other blocks go to the power-down mode automatically on
suspend.
Page 35 of 81
CYRF69313
The following steps are user configurable and help in reducing the average suspend mode power consumption.
1. Configure the power supply monitor at a large regular intervals, control register bits are 1,EB[7:6] (Power system sleep duty cycle
PSSDC[1:0]).
2. Configure the low power oscillator into low power mode, control register bit is LOPSCTR[7].
Figure 11. Wakeup Timing
Sleep Timer or GPIO
interrupt occurs
Interrupt is double sampled
by 32K clock and PD is
negated to system
CPU is restarted
after 90 ms
(nominal)
CLK32K
INT
SLEEP
PD
BANDGAP
PPOR
ENABLE
SAMPLE
SAMPLE
POR
CPUCLK/
24MHz (Not to Scale)
BRQ
BRA
CPU
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 36 of 81
CYRF69313
Power-on Reset Control
Table 43. Power On Reset Control Register (POR CR) [0x1E3] [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
6
5
Reserved
4
3
2
PORLEV[1:0]
1
0
Reserved
Read/Write
–
–
R/W
R/W
–
–
–
–
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
This register controls the configuration of the Power on Reset block
Bits 7:6
Reserved
Bits 5:4
PORLEV[1:0]
This field controls the level below which the precision power-on-reset (PPOR) detector generates a reset
0 0 = 2.7 V Range (trip near 2.6 V)
0 1 = 3 V Range (trip near 2.9 V)
1 0 = 5 V Range, >4.75 V (trip near 4.65 V). This setting must be used when operating the CPU above 12 MHz.
1 1 = PPOR does not generate a reset, but values read from the Voltage Monitor Comparators Register (Table 44) give the
internal PPOR comparator state with trip point set to the 3 V range setting
Bits 3:0
Reserved
POR Compare State
Table 44. Voltage Monitor Comparators Register (VLTCMP) [0x1E4] [R]
Bit #
7
6
5
–
–
–
Field
Read/Write
4
3
2
1
–
–
–
Reserved
–
0
PPOR
R
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
This read-only register allows reading the current state of the Precision-Power-On-Reset comparators
Bits 7:1
Reserved
Bit 0
PPOR
This bit is set to indicate that the precision-power-on-reset comparator has tripped, indicating that the supply voltage is below
the trip point set by PORLEV[1:0]
0 = No precision-power-on-reset event
1 = A precision-power-on-reset event has tripped
ECO Trim Register
Table 45. ECO (ECO_TR) [0x1EB] [R/W]
Bit #
Field
Read/Write
Default
7
6
5
4
3
Sleep Duty Cycle [1:0]
2
1
0
Reserved
R/W
R/W
–
–
–
–
–
–
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
This register controls the ratios (in numbers of 32 kHz clock periods) of ‘on’ time versus ‘off’ time for POR detection circuit
Bits 7:6
Sleep Duty Cycle [1:0]
0 0 = 1/128 periods of the Internal 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator
0 1 = 1/512 periods of the Internal 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator
1 0 = 1/32 periods of the Internal 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator
1 1 = 1/8 periods of the Internal 32 kHz Low speed Oscillator
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 37 of 81
CYRF69313
General-Purpose I/O Ports
The general purpose I/O ports are discussed in the following sections.
Port Data Registers
Table 46. P0 Data Register (P0DATA)[0x00] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Field
P0.7
Reserved
Reserved
P0.4/INT2
P0.3/INT1
Reserved
P0.1
Reserved
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Default
This register contains the data for Port 0. Writing to this register sets the bit values to be output on output enabled pins. Reading
from this register returns the current state of the Port 0 pins
Bit 7
P0.7 Data
Bits 6:5
Reserved
The use of the pins as the P0.6–P0.5 GPIOs and the alternative functions exist in the CYRF69313
Bits 4:3
P0.4–P0.3 Data/INT2 – INT1
In addition to their use as the P0.4–P0.3 GPIOs, these pins can also be used for the alternative functions as the Interrupt pins
(INT0–INT2). To configure the P0.4–P0.3 pins, refer to the P0.3/INT1–P0.4/INT2 Configuration Register (Table 50)
The use of the pins as the P0.4–P0.3 GPIOs and the alternative functions exist in the CYRF69313
Bit 2
Reserved
Bit 1
P0.1
Bit 0
Reserved
Table 47. P1 Data Register (P1DATA) [0x01] [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
P1.7
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
Default
6
5
P1.6/SMISO P1.5/SMOSI
4
3
2
1
0
P1.4/SCLK
P1.3/SSEL
P1.2
P1.1/D–
P1.0/D+
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
This register contains the data for Port 1. Writing to this register sets the bit values to be output on output enabled pins. Reading
from this register returns the current state of the Port 1 pins
Bit 7
P1.7 Data
Bits 6:3
P1.6–P1.3 Data/SPI Pins (SMISO, SMOSI, SCLK, SSEL)
In addition to their use as the P1.6–P1.3 GPIOs, these pins can also be used for the alternative function as the SPI interface pins.
To configure the P1.6–P1.3 pins, refer to the P1.3–P1.6 Configuration Register (Table 55)
The use of the pins as the P1.6–P1.3 GPIOs and the alternative functions exist in all the CYRF69313 parts
Bit 2
P1.2
This pin is used as the regulator output.
Bits 1:0
P1.1–P1.0/D– and D+
When USB mode is disabled (Bit 7 in Table 79 is clear), the P1.1 and P1.0 bits are used to control the state of the P1.0 and P1.1
pins. When the USB mode is enabled, the P1.1 and P1.0 pins are used as the D– and D+ pins, respectively. If the USB Force
State bit (Bit 0 in Table 78) is set, the state of the D– and D+ pins can be controlled by writing to the D– and D+ bits
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 38 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 48. P2 Data Register (P2DATA) [0x02] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Field
4
3
2
1
Reserved
0
P2.1–P2.0
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
–
–
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
This register contains the data for Port 2. Writing to this register sets the bit values to be output on output enabled pins. Reading
from this register returns the current state of the Port 2 pins
Bits 7:2
Reserved Data [7:2]
Bits 1:0
P2 Data [1:0]
GPIO Port Configuration
All the GPIO configuration registers have common configuration
controls. The following are the bit definitions of the GPIO configuration registers.
Int Enable
When set, the Int Enable bit allows the GPIO to generate
interrupts. Interrupt generate can occur regardless of whether
the pin is configured for input or output. All interrupts are edge
sensitive, however for any interrupt that is shared by multiple
sources (that is, Ports 2, 3, and 4) all inputs must be deasserted
before a new interrupt can occur.
When clear, the corresponding interrupt is disabled on the pin.
On the CYRF69313, only the P1.7–P1.3 have 50 mA sink drive
capability. Other pins have 8 mA sink drive capability.
Open Drain
When set, the output on the pin is determined by the Port Data
Register. If the corresponding bit in the Port Data Register is set,
the pin is in high impedance state. If the corresponding bit in the
Port Data Register is clear, the pin is driven low.
When clear, the output is driven LOW or HIGH.
Pull-up Enable
When set the pin has a 7 K pull-up to VCC.
When clear, the pull-up is disabled.
It is possible to configure GPIOs as outputs, enable the interrupt
on the pin and then to generate the interrupt by driving the
appropriate pin state. This is useful in test and may have value
in applications as well.
Output Enable
When set, the output driver of the pin is enabled.
When clear, the output driver of the pin is disabled.
Int Act Low
For pins with shared functions there are some special cases.
When set, the corresponding interrupt is active on the falling
edge.
SPI Use
When clear, the corresponding interrupt is active on the rising
edge.
The P1.3 (SSEL), P1.4 (SCLK), P1.5 (SMOSI) and P1.6
(SMISO) pins can be used for their dedicated functions or for
GPIO.
TTL Thresh
The SPI function controls the output enable for its dedicated
function pins when their GPIO enable bit is clear.
When set, the input has TTL threshold. When clear, the input has
standard CMOS threshold.
3.3 V Drive
The P1.3 (SSEL), P1.4 (SCLK), P1.5 (SMOSI) and P1.6
(SMISO) pins have an alternate voltage source from the voltage
regulator. If the 3.3 V Drive bit is set a high level is driven from
the voltage regulator instead of from VCC.
High Sink
When set, the output can sink up to 50 mA.
When clear, the output can sink up to 8 mA.
Table 49. P0.1 Configuration (P01CR) [0x06] R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Int Enable
Int Act Low
TTL Thresh
High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
This register is used to configure P0.1 In the CYRF69313, only 8 mA sink drive capability is available on this pin regardless of
the setting of the High Sink bit
Bit 7: Reserved
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 39 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 50. P0.3/INT1–P0.4/INT2 Configuration (P03CR–P04CR) [0x08–0x09] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
Reserved
5
4
3
2
1
0
Int Act Low
TTL Thresh
Reserved
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
Field
Read/Write
–
–
R/W
R/W
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
These registers control the operation of pins P0.3–P0.4, respectively. These pins are shared between the P0.3–P0.4 GPIOs and
the INT0–INT2. These registers exist in all CYRF69313 parts. The INT0–INT2 interrupts are different than all the other GPIO
interrupts. These pins are connected directly to the interrupt controller to provide three edge-sensitive interrupts with
independent interrupt vectors. These interrupts occur on a rising edge when Int act Low is clear and on a falling edge when Int
act Low is set. These pins are enabled as interrupt sources in the interrupt controller registers (Table 76 on page 55 and Table
74 on page 53)
To use these pins as interrupt inputs configure them as inputs by clearing the corresponding Output Enable. If the INT0–INT2 pins
are configured as outputs with interrupts enabled, firmware can generate an interrupt by writing the appropriate value to the P0.3
and P0.4 data bits in the P0 Data Register
Regardless of whether the pins are used as Interrupt or GPIO pins the Int Enable, Int act Low, TTL Threshold, Open Drain, and
Pull-up Enable bits control the behavior of the pin
The P0.3/INT1–P0.4/INT2 pins are individually configured with the P03CR (0x08), and P04CR (0x09), respectively.
Note Changing the state of the Int Act Low bit can cause an unintentional interrupt to be generated. When configuring these
interrupt sources, it is best to follow the following procedure:
1. Disable interrupt source
2. Configure interrupt source
3. Clear any pending interrupts from the source
4. Enable interrupt source
Table 51. P0.7 Configuration (P07CR) [0x0C] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Int Enable
Int Act Low
TTL Thresh
Reserved
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
Read/Write
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
3
2
1
0
5 K pull-up
enable
Output
Enable
Field
This register controls the operation of pin P0.7.
Table 52. P1.0/D+ Configuration (P10CR) [0x0D] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Reserved
Int Enable
Int Act Low
R/W
R/W
R/W
–
–
–
–
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Reserved
Field
Read/Write
Default
This register controls the operation of the P1.0 (D+) pin when the USB interface is not enabled, allowing the pin to be used as a
GPIO pin which is pulled up. See Table 79 on page 57 for information on enabling USB. When USB is enabled, none of the
controls in this register have any effect on the P1.0 pin
Note The P1.0 is an open drain only output. It can actively drive a signal low, but cannot actively drive a signal high
Bit 1
5 K Pull-up Enable
0 = Disable the 5 k pull-up resistors
1 = Enable 5 k pull-up resistors for both P1.0 and P1.1. Enable the use of the P1.0 (D+) and P1.1 (D–) pins as pulled up GPIOs
Bit 0
This bit enables the output on P1.0/D+. This bit should be cleared in sleep mode.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 40 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 53. P1.1/D– Configuration (P11CR) [0x0E] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Reserved
Int Enable
Int Act Low
4
Read/Write
–
R/W
R/W
–
Default
0
0
0
0
3
2
1
0
Open Drain
Reserved
Output
Enable
–
R/W
–
R/W
0
0
0
0
Reserved
Field
This register controls the operation of the P1.1 (D–) pin when the USB interface is not enabled, allowing the pin to be used as a
GPIO. See Table 79 on page 57 for information on enabling USB. When USB is enabled, none of the controls in this register
have any effect on the P1.1 pin. When USB is disabled, the 5 k pull-up resistor on this pin can be enabled by the 5 K Pull-up
Enable bit of the P10CR Register (Table 52 on page 40)
Bit 0
This bit enables the output on P1.1/D–. This bit should be cleared in sleep mode.
Note There is no 2 mA sourcing capability on this pin. The pin can only sink 5 mA at VOL3
Table 54. P1.2 Configuration (P12CR) [0x0F] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CLK Output
Int Enable
Int Act Low
TTL
Threshold
Reserved
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
This register controls the operation of the P1.2
Bit 7
CLK Output
0 = The internally selected clock is not sent out onto P1.2 pin
1 = When CLK Output is set, the internally selected clock is sent out onto P1.2 pin
Table 55. P1.3 Configuration (P13CR) [0x10] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Int Enable
Int Act Low
3.3 V Drive
High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
Read/Write
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
This register controls the operation of the P1.3 pin. This register exists in all CYRF69313 parts
The P1.3 GPIO’s threshold is always set to TTL
When the SPI hardware is enabled, the output enable and output state of the pin is controlled by the SPI circuitry. When the SPI
hardware is disabled, the pin is controlled by the Output Enable bit and the corresponding bit in the P1 data register
Regardless of whether the pin is used as an SPI or GPIO pin the Int Enable, Int act Low, 3.3 V Drive, High Sink, Open Drain, and
Pull-up Enable control the behavior of the pin
The 50 mA sink drive capability is only available in the CY7C638xx.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 41 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 56. P1.4–P1.6 Configuration (P14CR–P16CR) [0x11–0x13] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SPI Use
Int Enable
Int Act Low
3.3 V Drive
High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
These registers control the operation of pins P1.4–P1.6, respectively
The P1.4–P1.6 GPIO’s threshold is always set to TTL
When the SPI hardware is enabled, pins that are configured as SPI Use have their output enable and output state controlled by the
SPI circuitry. When the SPI hardware is disabled or a pin has its SPI Use bit clear, the pin is controlled by the Output Enable bit
and the corresponding bit in the P1 data register
Regardless of whether any pin is used as an SPI or GPIO pin the Int Enable, Int act Low, 3.3 V Drive, High Sink, Open Drain, and
Pull-up Enable control the behavior of the pin
Bit 7
SPI Use
0 = Disable the SPI alternate function. The pin is used as a GPIO
1 = Enable the SPI function. The SPI circuitry controls the output of the pin
Important Note for Comm Modes 01 or 10 (SPI Master or SPI Slave, see Table 60 on page 45)
When configured for SPI (SPI Use = 1 and Comm Modes [1:0] = SPI Master or SPI Slave mode), the input/output direction of pins
P1.3, P1.5, and P1.6 is set automatically by the SPI logic. However, pin P1.4's input/output direction is NOT automatically set;
it must be explicitly set by firmware. For SPI Master mode, pin P1.4 must be configured as an output; for SPI Slave mode, pin
P1.4 must be configured as an input
Table 57. P1.7 Configuration (P17CR) [0x14] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Int Enable
Int Act Low
TTL Thresh
High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
Read/Write
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
This register controls the operation of pin P1.7. This register only exists in CY7C638xx
The 50 mA sink drive capability is only available in the CY7C638xx. The P1.7 GPIO’s threshold is always set to TTL
Table 58. P2 Configuration (P2CR) [0x15] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Int Enable
Int Act Low
TTL Thresh
High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
Read/Write
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
This register only exists in CY7C638xx. This register controls the operation of pins P2.0–P2.1. In the CY7C638xx, only 8 mA sink
drive capability is available on this pin regardless of the setting of the High Sink bit
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 42 of 81
CYRF69313
GPIO Configurations for Low Power Mode
To ensure low power mode, unbonded GPIO pins in CYRF69313 must be placed in a non floating state. The following assembly code
snippet shows how this is achieved. This snippet can be added as a part of the initialization routine.
//Code Snippet for addressing unbonded GPIOs
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
mov
and
mov
A, 00h
reg[1Fh],A
A, 01h
reg[16h],A // Port3 Configuration register - Enable ouptut
A, 00h
reg[03h],A // Asserting P3.0 and P3.1 outputs to '0'
A, 01h
reg[05h],A // Port0.0 Configuration register - Enable output
reg[07h],A // Port0.2 Configuration register - Enable output
reg[0Ah],A // Port0.5 Configuration register - Enable output
reg[0Bh],A // Port0.6 Configuration register - Enable output
A,reg[00h]
A,00h
A,9Ah
reg[00h], A // Asserting outputs '0' to pins in port 1
When writing to port 0 , to access GPIOs P0.1,3,4,7, mask bits 0,2,5,6. Failing to do so voids the low power
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 43 of 81
CYRF69313
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)
The SPI Master/Slave Interface core logic runs on the SPI clock domain, making its functionality independent of system clock speed.
SPI is a four pin serial interface comprised of a clock, an enable and two data pins.
Figure 12. SPI Block Diagram
Register Block
SCK Speed Sel
SCK Clock Generation
Master/Slave Sel
SCK Clock Select
SCK Polarity
SCK_OE
SCK Clock Phase/Polarity
Select
SCK Phase
SCK
SCK
Little Endian Sel
LE_SEL
GPIO Block
SS_N
SS_N
SPI State Machine
SS_N_OE
SS_N
Data (8 bit)
MISO_OE
Output Shift Buffer
Load
Empty
Master/Slave Set
MISO/MOSI
Crossbar
MISO
SCK
LE_SEL
Shift Buffer
MOSI_OE
MOSI
Data (8 bit)
Input Shift Buffer
Load
Full
Sclk Output Enable
Slave Select Output Enable
Master IN, Slave Out OE
Master Out, Slave In, OE
SCK_OE
SS_N_OE
MISO_OE
MOSI_OE
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 44 of 81
CYRF69313
SPI Data Register
Table 59. SPI Data Register (SPIDATA) [0x3C] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
Field
Read/Write
Default
3
2
1
0
SPIData[7:0]
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
When read, this register returns the contents of the receive buffer. When written, it loads the transmit holding register
Bits 7:0
SPI Data [7:0]
When an interrupt occurs to indicate to firmware that a byte of receive data is available, or the transmitter holding register is empty,
firmware has 7 SPI clocks to manage the buffers — to empty the receiver buffer, or to refill the transmit holding register. Failure to
meet this timing requirement results in incorrect data transfer.
SPI Configure Register
Table 60. SPI Configure Register (SPICR) [0x3D] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
Field
Swap
LSB First
Read/Write
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
Default
5
4
3
2
CPOL
CPHA
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
Comm Mode
1
0
SCLK Select
Bit 7
Swap
0 = Swap function disabled
1 = The SPI block swaps its use of SMOSI and SMISO. Among other things, this can be useful in implementing single wire
SPI-like communications
Bit 6
LSB First
0 = The SPI transmits and receives the MSB (Most Significant Bit) first
1 = The SPI transmits and receives the LSB (Least Significant Bit) first.
Bits 5:4
Comm Mode [1:0]
0 0: All SPI communication disabled
0 1: SPI master mode
1 0: SPI slave mode
1 1: Reserved
Bit 3
CPOL
This bit controls the SPI clock (SCLK) idle polarity
0 = SCLK idles low
1 = SCLK idles high
Bit 2
CPHA
The Clock Phase bit controls the phase of the clock on which data is sampled. Table 61 on page 46 shows the timing for the
various combinations of LSB First, CPOL, and CPHA
Bits 1:0
SCLK Select
This field selects the speed of the master SCLK. When in master mode, SCLK is generated by dividing the base CPUCLK
Important Note for Comm Modes 01b or 10b (SPI Master or SPI Slave):
When configured for SPI, (SPI Use = 1 — Table 56 on page 42), the input/output direction of pins P1.3, P1.5, and P1.6 is set
automatically by the SPI logic. However, pin P1.4's input/output direction is NOT automatically set; it must be explicitly set by
firmware. For SPI Master mode, pin P1.4 must be configured as an output; for SPI Slave mode, pin P1.4 must be configured as
an input
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 45 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 61. SPI Mode Timing vs. LSB First, CPOL and CPHA
LSB First
0
CPHA
0
CPOL
0
Diagram
SCLK
SSEL
D AT A
0
0
X
MSB
B it 7
B it 6
B it 5
B it 4
B it 3
B it 2
X
LSB
1
SC LK
SSEL
DAT A
0
1
X
MSB
B it 7
B it 6
B it 5
B it 4
B it 3
B it 2
X
LSB
0
SC LK
SSEL
DAT A
0
1
X
MSB
B it 7
B it 6
B it 5
B it 4
B it 3
B it 2
LS B
X
X
MS B
B it 7
B it 6
B it 5
B it 4
B it 3
B it 2
LS B
X
1
SC L K
SSEL
D AT A
1
0
0
SCLK
SSEL
DAT A
1
0
X
LSB
B it 2
B it 3
B it 4
B it 5
B it 6
B it 7
MS B
X
X
LSB
Bit 2
Bit 3
Bit 4
Bit 5
Bit 6
Bit 7
MSB
X
1
SCLK
SSEL
DAT A
1
1
0
SCLK
SSEL
DAT A
1
1
X
LSB
Bit 2
Bit 3
Bit 4
Bit 5
Bit 6
Bit 7
MSB
X
X
LSB
Bit 2
Bit 3
Bit 4
Bit 5
Bit 6
Bit 7
MSB
X
1
SC LK
SSEL
DAT A
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 46 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 62. SPI SCLK Frequency
SCLK Frequency when
CPUCLK =
SCLK
Select
CPUCLK
Divisor
00
6
01
12
1 MHz
2 MHz
10
48
250 KHz
500 KHz
11
96
125 KHz
250 KHz
12 MHz
24 MHz
2 MHz
4 MHz
Timer Registers
All timer functions of the CYRF69313 are provided by a single timer block. The timer block is asynchronous from the CPU clock.
Registers
Reading the high order byte reads this register allowing the CPU
to read the 16-bit value atomically (loads all bits at one time). The
free-running timer generates an interrupt at a 1024 s rate. It can
also generate an interrupt when the free-running counter
overflow occurs — every 16.384 ms. This allows extending the
length of the timer in software.
Free-Running Counter
The 16-bit free-running counter is clocked by a 4/6 MHz source.
It can be read in software for use as a general purpose time base.
When the low order byte is read, the high order byte is registered.
Figure 13. 16-Bit Free-Running Counter Block Diagram
Overflow
Interrupt
Timer Capture
Clock
16-bit Free
Running Counter
1024-µs
Timer
Interrupt
Table 63. Free-Running Timer Low Order Byte (FRTMRL) [0x20] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Field
Read/Write
Default
4
3
2
1
0
Free-running Timer [7:0]
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bits 7:0
Free-running Timer [7:0]
This register holds the low order byte of the 16-bit free-running timer. Reading this register causes the high order byte to be moved
into a holding register allowing an automatic read of all 16 bits simultaneously.
For reads, the actual read occurs in the cycle when the low order is read. For writes, the actual time the write occurs is the cycle
when the high order is written
When reading the free-running timer, the low order byte should be read first and the high order second. When writing, the low order
byte should be written first then the high order byte
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 47 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 64. Free-Running Timer High Order Byte (FRTMRH) [0x21] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Field
Read/Write
Default
4
3
2
1
0
Free-running Timer [15:8]
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bits 7:0
Free-running Timer [15:8]
When reading the free-running timer, the low order byte should be read first and the high order second. When writing, the low order
byte should be written first then the high order byte
Table 65. Programmable Interval Timer Low (PITMRL) [0x26] [R]
Bit #
7
6
5
Read/Write
R
R
R
R
Default
0
0
0
0
Field
4
3
2
1
0
R
R
R
R
0
0
0
0
Prog Interval Timer [7:0]
Bits 7:0
‘Prog Interval Timer [7:0]
This register holds the low order byte of the 12-bit programmable interval timer. Reading this register causes the high order byte to
be moved into a holding register allowing an automatic read of all 12 bits simultaneously
Table 66. Programmable Interval Timer High (PITMRH) [0x27] [R]
Bit #
7
6
Field
5
4
3
Reserved
2
1
0
Prog Interval Timer [11:8]
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
R
R
R
R
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bits 7:4
Reserved
Bits 3:0
Prog Internal Timer [11:8]
This register holds the high order nibble of the 12-bit programmable interval timer. Reading this register returns the high order nibble
of the 12-bit timer at the instant that the low order byte was last read
Table 67. Programmable Interval Reload Low (PIRL) [0x28] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
3
2
1
0
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
Prog Interval [7:0]
Bits 7:0
Prog Interval [7:0]
This register holds the lower 8 bits of the timer. While writing into the 12-bit reload register, write lower byte first then the higher
nibble
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 48 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 68. Programmable Interval Reload High (PIRH) [0x29] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
Field
5
4
3
Reserved
2
1
0
Prog Interval[11:8]
Read/Write
–
–
–
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bits 7:4
Reserved
Bits 3:0
Prog Interval [11:8]
This register holds the higher 4 bits of the timer. While writing into the 12-bit reload register, write lower byte first then the higher
nibble
Figure 14. 16-Bit Free-Running Counter Loading Timing Diagram
clk_sys
write
valid
addr
write data
FRT reload
ready
Clk Timer
12b Prog Timer
12b reload
interrupt
12-bit programmable timer load timing
Capture timer
clk
16b free running
counter load
16b free
running counter
00A0 00A1 00A2 00A3 00A4 00A5 00A6 00A7 00A8 00A9 00AB 00AC 00AD 00AE 00AF 00B0 00B1 00B2 ACBE ACBF ACC0
16-bit free running counter loading timing
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 49 of 81
CYRF69313
Figure 15. Memory Mapped Registers Read/Write Timing Diagram
clk_sys
rd_wrn
Valid
Addr
rdata
wdata
Memory mapped registers Read/Write timing diagram
Interrupt Controller
Table 69. Interrupt Numbers, Priorities, Vectors (continued)
The interrupt controller and its associated registers allow the
user’s code to respond to an interrupt from almost every
functional block in the CYRF69313 devices. The registers
associated with the interrupt controller allow interrupts to be
disabled either globally or individually. The registers also provide
a mechanism by which a user may clear all pending and posted
interrupts, or clear individual posted or pending interrupts.
The following table lists all interrupts and the priorities that are
available in the CYRF69313.
Table 69. Interrupt Numbers, Priorities, Vectors
Interrupt
Priority
Interrupt
Address
17
0044h
16-bit Free Running Timer Wrap
18
0048h
INT2
19
004Ch
Reserved
Name
20
0050h
GPIO Port 2
21
0054h
Reserved
22
0058h
Reserved
23
005Ch
Reserved
Interrupt
Priority
Interrupt
Address
0
0000h
Reset
1
0004h
POR
Architectural Description
2
0008h
INT0
3
000Ch
SPI Transmitter Empty
4
0010h
SPI Receiver Full
5
0014h
GPIO Port 0
An interrupt is posted when its interrupt conditions occur. This
results in the flip-flop in Figure 16 on page 51 clocking in a ‘1’.
The interrupt remains posted until the interrupt is taken or until it
is cleared by writing to the appropriate INT_CLRx register.
6
0018h
GPIO Port 1
7
001Ch
INT1
8
0020h
EP0
9
0024h
EP1
10
0028h
EP2
11
002Ch
USB Reset
12
0030h
USB Active
13
0034h
1 ms Interval timer
Name
14
0038h
Programmable Interval Timer
15
003Ch
Reserved
16
0040h
Reserved
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
24
0060h
Reserved
25
0064h
Sleep Timer
A posted interrupt is not pending unless it is enabled by setting
its interrupt mask bit (in the appropriate INT_MSKx register). All
pending interrupts are processed by the Priority Encoder to
determine the highest priority interrupt which is taken by the M8C
if the Global Interrupt Enable bit is set in the CPU_F register.
Disabling an interrupt by clearing its interrupt mask bit (in the
INT_MSKx register) does not clear a posted interrupt, nor does
it prevent an interrupt from being posted. It simply prevents a
posted interrupt from becoming pending.
Nested interrupts can be accomplished by re-enabling interrupts
inside an interrupt service routine. To do this, set the IE bit in the
Flag Register.
A block diagram of the CYRF69313 Interrupt Controller is shown
in Figure 16 on page 51.
Page 50 of 81
CYRF69313
Figure 16. Interrupt Controller Block Diagram
Priority
Encoder
Interrupt Taken
or
Interrupt Vector
INT_CLRx Write
Posted
Interrupt
Pending
Interrupt
1
D
... ...
R
Interrupt
Request
Q
Interrupt
Source
(Timer,
GPIO, etc.)
M8C Core
CPU_F[0]
GIE
INT_MSKx
Mask Bit Setting
Interrupt Processing
The sequence of events that occur during interrupt processing is
as follows:
1. An interrupt becomes active, either because:
❐ The interrupt condition occurs (for example, a timer expires).
❐ A previously posted interrupt is enabled through an update
of an interrupt mask register.
❐ An interrupt is pending and GIE is set from 0 to 1 in the CPU
Flag register.
❐ The GPIO interrupts are edge triggered.
2. The current executing instruction finishes.
3. The internal interrupt is dispatched, taking 13 cycles. During
this time, the following actions occur:
❐ The MSB and LSB of Program Counter and Flag registers
(CPU_PC and CPU_F) are stored onto the program stack by
an automatic CALL instruction (13 cycles) generated during
the interrupt acknowledge process.
❐ The PCH, PCL, and Flag register (CPU_F) are stored onto
the program stack (in that order) by an automatic CALL
instruction (13 cycles) generated during the interrupt
acknowledge process.
❐ The CPU_F register is then cleared. Because this clears the
GIE bit to 0, additional interrupts are temporarily disabled
❐ The PCH (PC[15:8]) is cleared to zero.
❐ The interrupt vector is read from the interrupt controller and
its value placed into PCL (PC[7:0]). This sets the program
counter to point to the appropriate address in the interrupt
table (for example, 0004h for the POR interrupt).
4. Program execution vectors to the interrupt table. Typically, a
LJMP instruction in the interrupt table sends execution to the
user's Interrupt Service Routine (ISR) for this interrupt.
5. The ISR executes. Note that interrupts are disabled because
GIE = 0. In the ISR, interrupts can be re-enabled if desired by
setting GIE = 1 (care must be taken to avoid stack overflow).
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
6. The ISR ends with a RETI instruction which restores the
Program Counter and Flag registers (CPU_PC and CPU_F).
The restored Flag register re-enables interrupts, because
GIE = 1 again.
7. Execution resumes at the next instruction, after the one that
occurred before the interrupt. However, if there are more
pending interrupts, the subsequent interrupts are processed
before the next normal program instruction.
Interrupt Latency
The time between the assertion of an enabled interrupt and the
start of its ISR can be calculated from the following equation.
Latency = Time for current instruction to finish + Time for internal
interrupt routine to execute + Time for LJMP instruction in
interrupt table to execute.
For example, if the 5 cycle JMP instruction is executing when an
interrupt becomes active, the total number of CPU clock cycles
before the ISR begins would be as follows:
(1 to 5 cycles for JMP to finish) + (13 cycles for interrupt routine)
+ (7 cycles for LJMP) = 21 to 25 cycles.
In the example above, at 24 MHz, 25 clock cycles take 1.042 s.
Interrupt Registers
The Interrupt Registers are discussed it the following sections.
Interrupt Clear Register
The Interrupt Clear Registers (INT_CLRx) are used to enable the
individual interrupt sources’ ability to clear posted interrupts.
When an INT_CLRx register is read, any bits that are set
indicates an interrupt has been posted for that hardware
resource. Therefore, reading these registers gives the user the
ability to determine all posted interrupts.
Page 51 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 70. Interrupt Clear 0 (INT_CLR0) [0xDA] [R/W]
Bit #
Field
Read/Write
Default
7
6
GPIO Port 1 Sleep Timer
5
INT1
4
3
2
GPIO Port 0 SPI Receive SPI Transmit
1
0
INT0
POR
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
When reading this register,
0 = There’s no posted interrupt for the corresponding hardware
1 = Posted interrupt for the corresponding hardware present
Writing a ‘0’ to the bits clears the posted interrupts for the corresponding hardware. Writing a ‘1’ to the bits and to the ENSWINT
(Bit 7 of the INT_MSK3 Register) posts the corresponding hardware interrupt
Table 71. Interrupt Clear 1 (INT_CLR1) [0xDB] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Prog Interval
Timer
1 ms Timer
USB Active
USB Reset
USB EP2
USB EP1
USB EP0
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
When reading this register,
0 = There’s no posted interrupt for the corresponding hardware
1 = Posted interrupt for the corresponding hardware present
Writing a ‘0’ to the bits clears the posted interrupts for the corresponding hardware. Writing a ‘1’ to the bits AND to the ENSWINT
(Bit 7 of the INT_MSK3 Register) posts the corresponding hardware interrupt
Bit 7
Reserved
Table 72. Interrupt Clear 2 (INT_CLR2) [0xDC] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
GPIO Port 2
Reserved
INT2
16-bit
Counter
Wrap
Reserved
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
When reading this register,
0 = There’s no posted interrupt for the corresponding hardware
1 = Posted interrupt for the corresponding hardware present
Writing a ‘0’ to the bits clears the posted interrupts for the corresponding hardware. Writing a ‘1’ to the bits AND to the ENSWINT
(Bit 7 of the INT_MSK3 Register) posts the corresponding hardware interrupt
Bits 7,6,5,3,0Reserved
Interrupt Mask Registers
The Interrupt Mask Registers (INT_MSKx) are used to enable
the individual interrupt sources’ ability to create pending
interrupts.
There are four Interrupt Mask Registers (INT_MSK0,
INT_MSK1, INT_MSK2, and INT_MSK3), which may be referred
to in general as INT_MSKx. If cleared, each bit in an INT_MSKx
register prevents a posted interrupt from becoming a pending
interrupt (input to the priority encoder). However, an interrupt can
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
still post even if its mask bit is zero. All INT_MSKx bits are
independent of all other INT_MSKx bits.
If an INT_MSKx bit is set, the interrupt source associated with
that mask bit may generate an interrupt that becomes a pending
interrupt.
The Enable Software Interrupt (ENSWINT) bit in INT_MSK3[7]
determines the way an individual bit value written to an
INT_CLRx register is interpreted. When is cleared, writing 1's to
an INT_CLRx register has no effect. However, writing 0's to an
Page 52 of 81
CYRF69313
INT_CLRx register, when ENSWINT is cleared, causes the
corresponding interrupt to clear. If the ENSWINT bit is set, any
0’s written to the INT_CLRx registers are ignored. However, 1’s
written to an INT_CLRx register, while ENSWINT is set, causes
an interrupt to post for the corresponding interrupt.
Software interrupts can aid in debugging interrupt service
routines by eliminating the need to create system level
interactions that are sometimes necessary to create a
hardware-only interrupt.
Table 73. Interrupt Mask 3 (INT_MSK3) [0xDE] [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
ENSWINT
Read/Write
Default
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
R/W
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bit 7
Enable Software Interrupt (ENSWINT)
0 = Disable. Writing 0’s to an INT_CLRx register, when ENSWINT is cleared, causes the corresponding interrupt to clear
1 = Enable. Writing 1’s to an INT_CLRx register, when ENSWINT is set, causes the corresponding interrupt to post
Bits 6:0
Reserved
Table 74. Interrupt Mask 2 (INT_MSK2) [0xDF] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
GPIO Port 2
Int Enable
Reserved
INT2 Int
Enable
16-bit
Counter
Wrap Int
Enable
Reserved
Read/Write
–
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Default
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Bit 7
Reserved
Bit 6
Reserved
Bit 5
Reserved
Bit 4
GPIO Port 2 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask GPIO Port 2 interrupt
1 = Unmask GPIO Port 2 interrupt
Bit 3
Reserved
Bit 2
INT2 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask INT2 interrupt
1 = Unmask INT2 interrupt
Bit 1
16-bit Counter Wrap Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask 16-bit Counter Wrap interrupt
1 = Unmask 16-bit Counter Wrap interrupt
Bit 0
Reserved
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 53 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 75. Interrupt Mask 1 (INT_MSK1) [0xE1] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
3
Reserved
Prog Interval
Timer Int
Enable
1 ms Timer
Int Enable
USB Active
Int Enable
USB Reset
Int Enable
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
2
1
0
USB EP2 Int USB EP1 Int USB EP0 Int
Enable
Enable
Enable
Reserved
Prog Interval Timer Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask Prog Interval Timer interrupt
1 = Unmask Prog Interval Timer interrupt
1 ms Timer Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask 1 ms interrupt
1 = Unmask 1 ms interrupt
USB Active Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask USB Active interrupt
1 = Unmask USB Active interrupt
USB Reset Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask USB Reset interrupt
1 = Unmask USB Reset interrupt
USB EP2 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask EP2 interrupt
1 = Unmask EP2 interrupt
USB EP1 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask EP1 interrupt
1 = Unmask EP1 interrupt
USB EP0 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask EP0 interrupt
1 = Unmask EP0 interrupt
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 54 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 76. Interrupt Mask 0 (INT_MSK0) [0xE0] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Field
GPIO Port 1
Int Enable
Sleep Timer
Int Enable
INT1 Int
Enable
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
3
Read/Write
Default
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
4
3
2
1
0
INT0 Int
Enable
POR Int
Enable
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
2
1
0
GPIO Port 0 SPI Receive SPI Transmit
Int Enable
Int Enable
Int Enable
GPIO Port 1 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask GPIO Port 1 interrupt
1 = Unmask GPIO Port 1 interrupt
Sleep Timer Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask Sleep Timer interrupt
1 = Unmask Sleep Timer interrupt
INT1 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask INT1 interrupt
1 = Unmask INT1 interrupt
GPIO Port 0 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask GPIO Port 0 interrupt
1 = Unmask GPIO Port 0 interrupt
SPI Receive Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask SPI Receive interrupt
1 = Unmask SPI Receive interrupt
SPI Transmit Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask SPI Transmit interrupt
1 = Unmask SPI Transmit interrupt
INT0 Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask INT0 interrupt
1 = Unmask INT0 interrupt
POR Interrupt Enable
0 = Mask POR interrupt
1 = Unmask POR interrupt
Interrupt Vector Clear Register
Table 77. Interrupt Vector Clear Register (INT_VC) [0xE2] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
4
Pending Interrupt [7:0]
The Interrupt Vector Clear Register (INT_VC) holds the interrupt vector for the highest priority pending interrupt when read, and
when written clears all pending interrupts
Bits 7:0
Pending Interrupt [7:0]
8-bit data value holds the interrupt vector for the highest priority pending interrupt. Writing to this register clears all pending interrupts
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 55 of 81
CYRF69313
USB Transceiver
USB Transceiver Configuration
Table 78. USB Transceiver Configure Register (USBXCR) [0x74] [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
USB Pull-up
Enable
Read/Write
Default
6
5
4
3
2
1
Reserved
0
USB Force
State
R/W
–
–
–
–
–
–
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bit 7
USB Pull-up Enable
0 = Disable the pull-up resistor on D–
1 = Enable the pull-up resistor on D–. This pull-up is to VCC. This bit should be cleared in sleep mode.
Bits 6:1
Reserved
Bit 0
USB Force State
This bit allows the state of the USB I/O pins DP and D+ to be forced to a state while USB is enabled
0 = Disable USB Force State
1 = Enable USB Force State. Allows the D– and D+ pins to be controlled by P1.1 and P1.0 respectively when the
USBIO is in USB mode. Refer to Table 47 for more information
Note The USB transceiver has a dedicated 3.3 V regulator for USB signalling purposes and to provide for the 1.5 K D– pull-up.
Unlike the other 3.3 V regulator, this regulator cannot be controlled/accessed by firmware. When the device is suspended, this
regulator is disabled along with the bandgap (which provides the reference voltage to the regulator) and the D– line is pulled up
to 5 V through an alternate 6.5 K resistor. During wakeup following a suspend, the band gap and the regulator are switched on
in any order. Under an extremely rare case when the device wakes up following a bus reset condition and the voltage regulator
and the band gap turn on in that particular order, there is possibility of a glitch/low pulse occurring on the D– line. The host can
misinterpret this as a deattach condition. This condition, although rare, can be avoided by keeping the bandgap circuitry enabled
during sleep. This is achieved by setting the ‘No Buzz’ bit, bit[5] in the OSC_CR0 register. This is an issue only if the device is
put to sleep during a bus reset condition.
USB Serial Interface Engine (SIE)
The SIE allows the microcontroller to communicate with the USB
host at low speed data rates (1.5 Mbps). The SIE simplifies the
interface between the microcontroller and USB by incorporating
hardware that handles the following USB bus activity
independently of the microcontroller:
■
Translating the encoded received data and formatting the data
to be transmitted on the bus
■
CRC checking and generation. Flagging the microcontroller if
errors exist during transmission
■
Address checking. Ignoring the transactions not addressed to
the device
■
Sending appropriate ACK/NAK/STALL handshakes
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
■
Identifying token type (SETUP, IN, or OUT). Setting the
appropriate token bit after a valid token is received
■
Placing valid received data in the appropriate endpoint FIFOs
■
Sending and updating the data toggle bit (Data1/0)
■
Bit stuffing/unstuffing.
Firmware is required to handle the rest of the USB interface with
the following tasks:
■
Coordinate enumeration by decoding USB device requests
■
Fill and empty the FIFOs
■
Suspend/Resume coordination
■
Verify and select Data toggle values
Page 56 of 81
CYRF69313
USB Device
Table 79. USB Device Address (USBCR) [0x40] [R/W]
Bit #
7
Field
USB Enable
Read/Write
Default
6
5
4
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
3
2
1
0
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
Device Address[6:0]
The content of this register is cleared when a USB Bus Reset condition occurs
Bit 7
Bits 6:0
USB Enable
This bit must be enabled by firmware before the serial interface engine (SIE) responds to USB traffic at the address
specified in Device Address [6:0]. When this bit is cleared, the USB transceiver enters power-down state. User’s firmware should clear this bit prior to entering sleep mode to save power
0 = Disable USB device address and put the USB transceiver into power-down state
1 = Enable USB device address and put the USB transceiver into normal operating mode
Device Address [6:0]
These bits must be set by firmware during the USB enumeration process (for example, SetAddress) to the non-zero
address assigned by the USB host
Table 80. Endpoint 0, 1, and 2 Count (EP0CNT–EP2CNT) [0x41, 0x43, 0x45] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
Field
Data Toggle
Data Valid
R/W
R/W
0
0
Read/Write
Default
5
4
3
2
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
0
Reserved
1
0
Byte Count[3:0]
Bit 7
Data Toggle
This bit selects the DATA packet's toggle state. For IN transactions, firmware must set this bit to the select the
transmitted Data Toggle. For OUT or SETUP transactions, the hardware sets this bit to the state of the received Data
Toggle bit.
0 = DATA0
1 = DATA1
Bit 6
Data Valid
This bit is used for OUT and SETUP tokens only. This bit is cleared to ‘0’ if CRC, bitstuff, or PID errors have occurred.
This bit does not update for some endpoint mode settings
0 = Data is invalid. If enabled, the endpoint interrupt occurs even if invalid data is received
1 = Data is valid
Bits 5:4
Reserved
Bits 3:0
Byte Count Bit [3:0]
Byte Count Bits indicate the number of data bytes in a transaction: For IN transactions, firmware loads the count with the
number of bytes to be transmitted to the host from the endpoint FIFO. Valid values are 0 to 8 inclusive. For OUT or
SETUP transactions, the count is updated by hardware to the number of data bytes received, plus 2 for the CRC bytes.
Valid values are 2–10 inclusive.
For Endpoint 0 Count Register, whenever the count updates from a SETUP or OUT transaction, the count register locks and cannot
be written by the CPU. Reading the register unlocks it. This prevents firmware from overwriting a status update on it
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 57 of 81
CYRF69313
Endpoint 0 Mode
Because both firmware and the SIE are allowed to write to the Endpoint 0 Mode and Count Registers the SIE provides an interlocking
mechanism to prevent accidental overwriting of data.
When the SIE writes to these registers they are locked and the processor cannot write to them until after it has read them. Writing to
this register clears the upper four bits regardless of the value written.
Table 81. Endpoint 0 Mode (EP0MODE) [0x44] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
IN Received
OUT
Received
ACK’d Trans
Field
Setup
Received
R/C[3]
R/C[3]
R/C[3]
R/C[3]
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
Read/Write
Default
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bits 3:0
3
2
1
0
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
Mode[3:0]
SETUP Received
This bit is set by hardware when a valid SETUP packet is received. It is forced HIGH from the start of the data packet
phase of the SETUP transactions until the end of the data phase of a control write transfer and cannot be cleared during this interval. While this bit is set to ‘1’, the CPU cannot write to the EP0 FIFO. This prevents firmware from overwriting an incoming SETUP transaction before firmware has a chance to read the SETUP data
This bit is cleared by any non-locked writes to the register
0 = No SETUP received
1 = SETUP received
IN Received
This bit, when set, indicates a valid IN packet has been received. This bit is updated to ‘1’ after the host acknowledges an IN data packet.When clear, it indicates that either no IN has been received or that the host didn’t acknowledge the IN data by sending an ACK handshake
This bit is cleared by any non-locked writes to the register.
0 = No IN received
1 = IN received
OUT Received
This bit, when set, indicates a valid OUT packet has been received and ACKed. This bit is updated to ‘1’ after the last
received packet in an OUT transaction. When clear, it indicates no OUT received
This bit is cleared by any non-locked writes to the register
0 = No OUT received
1 = OUT received
ACK’d Transaction
The ACK’d transaction bit is set whenever the SIE engages in a transaction to the register’s endpoint that completes
with a ACK packet
This bit is cleared by any non-locked writes to the register
1 = The transaction completes with an ACK
0 = The transaction does not complete with an ACK
Mode [3:0]
The endpoint modes determine how the SIE responds to USB traffic that the host sends to the endpoint. The mode
controls how the USB SIE responds to traffic and how the USB SIE changes the mode of that endpoint as a result of
host packets to the endpoint
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 58 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 82. Endpoint 1 and 2 Mode (EP1MODE – EP2MODE) [0x45, 0x46] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
4
Stall
Reserved
NAK Int
Enable
ACK’d
Transaction
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/C (Note 3)
R/W
0
0
0
0
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
3
2
1
0
R/W
R/W
R/W
0
0
0
Mode[3:0]
Bit 7
Stall
When this bit is set the SIE stalls an OUT packet if the Mode Bits are set to ACK-OUT, and the SIE stalls an IN packet
if the mode bits are set to ACK-IN. This bit must be clear for all other modes
Bit 6
Reserved
Bit 5
NAK Int Enable
This bit, when set, causes an endpoint interrupt to be generated even when a transfer completes with a NAK. Unlike
enCoRe, CYRF69313 family members do not generate an endpoint interrupt under these conditions unless this bit is
set
0 = Disable interrupt on NAK’d transactions
1 = Enable interrupt on NAK’d transaction
Bit 4
ACK’d Transaction
The ACK’d transaction bit is set whenever the SIE engages in a transaction to the register’s endpoint that completes
with an ACK packet
This bit is cleared by any writes to the register
0 = The transaction does not complete with an ACK
1 = The transaction completes with an ACK
Bits 3:0
Mode [3:0]
The endpoint modes determine how the SIE responds to USB traffic that the host sends to the endpoint. The mode
controls how the USB SIE responds to traffic and how the USB SIE changes the mode of that endpoint as a result of
host packets to the endpoint.
Note: When the SIE writes to the EP1MODE or the EP2MODE register it blocks firmware writes to the EP2MODE or the EP1MODE
registers, respectively (if both writes occur in the same clock cycle). This is because the design employs only one common
‘update’ signal for both EP1MODE and EP2MODE registers. Thus, when SIE writes to the EP1MODE register, the update signal
is set and this prevents firmware writes to EP2MODE register. SIE writes to the endpoint mode registers have higher priority
than firmware writes. This mode register write block situation can put the endpoints in incorrect modes. Firmware must read the
EP1/2MODE registers immediately following a firmware write and rewrite if the value read is incorrect.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 59 of 81
CYRF69313
Endpoint Data Buffers
The three data buffers are used to hold data for both IN and OUT transactions. Each data buffer is 8 bytes long. The reset values of
the Endpoint Data Registers are unknown. Unlike past enCoRe parts the USB data buffers are only accessible in the I/O space of the
processor.
Table 83. Endpoint 0 Data (EP0DATA) [0x50-0x57] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Field
Read/Write
Default
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
2
1
0
Endpoint 0 Data Buffer [7:0]
The Endpoint 0 buffer is comprised of 8 bytes located at address 0x50 to 0x57
Table 84. Endpoint 1 Data (EP1DATA) [0x58-0x5F] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
2
1
0
Field
Read/Write
Default
4
3
Endpoint 1 Data Buffer [7:0]
The Endpoint 1buffer is comprised of 8 bytes located at address 0x58 to 0x5F
Table 85. Endpoint 2 Data (EP2DATA) [0x60-0x67] [R/W]
Bit #
7
6
5
Field
Read/Write
Default
4
3
Endpoint 2 Data Buffer [7:0]
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
The Endpoint 2 buffer is comprised of 8 bytes located at address 0x60 to 0x67
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 60 of 81
CYRF69313
USB Mode Tables
Mode
Encoding
SETUP
IN
OUT
Comments
DISABLE
0000
Ignore
Ignore
Ignore
Ignore all USB traffic to this endpoint. Used by
Data and Control endpoints
NAK IN and OUT token. Control endpoint only
NAK IN/OUT
0001
Accept
NAK
NAK
STATUS OUT ONLY
0010
Accept
STALL
Check
STALL IN and ACK zero byte OUT. Control endpoint only
STALL IN/OUT
0011
Accept
STALL
STALL
STALL IN and OUT token. Control endpoint only
STATUS IN ONLY
0110
Accept
TX0 byte
STALL
STALL OUT and send zero byte data for IN token.
Control endpoint only
ACK OUT –
STATUS IN
1011
Accept
TX0 byte
ACK
ACK the OUT token or send zero byte data for IN
token. Control endpoint only
ACK IN –
STATUS OUT
1111
Accept
TX Count
Check
Respond to IN data or Status OUT. Control endpoint only
NAK OUT
1000
Ignore
Ignore
NAK
Send NAK handshake to OUT token. Data endpoint only
ACK OUT (STALL = 0)
1001
Ignore
Ignore
ACK
This mode is changed by the SIE to mode 1000 on
issuance of ACK handshake to an OUT. Data endpoint only
ACK OUT (STALL = 1)
1001
Ignore
Ignore
STALL
STALL the OUT transfer
NAK IN
1100
Ignore
NAK
Ignore
Send NAK handshake for IN token. Data endpoint
only
ACK IN (STALL = 0)
1101
Ignore
TX Count
Ignore
This mode is changed by the SIE to mode 1100
after receiving ACK handshake to an IN data. Data
endpoint only
ACK IN (STALL = 1)
1101
Ignore
STALL
Ignore
STALL the IN transfer. Data endpoint only
Reserved
0101
Ignore
Ignore
Ignore
Reserved
0111
Ignore
Ignore
Ignore
These modes are not supported by SIE. Firmware
should not use this mode in Control and Data endpoints
Reserved
1010
Ignore
Ignore
Ignore
Reserved
0100
Ignore
Ignore
Ignore
Reserved
1110
Ignore
Ignore
Ignore
Mode Column
SETUP, IN, and OUT Columns
The 'Mode' column contains the mnemonic names given to the
modes of the endpoint. The mode of the endpoint is determined
by the four-bit binaries in the 'Encoding' column as discussed in
the following section. The Status IN and Status OUT represent
the status IN or OUT stage of the control transfer.
Depending on the mode specified in the 'Encoding' column, the
'SETUP', 'IN', and 'OUT' columns contain the SIE's responses
when the endpoint receives SETUP, IN, and OUT tokens,
respectively.
Encoding Column
The contents of the 'Encoding' column represent the Mode
Bits [3:0] of the Endpoint Mode Registers (Table 81 on page 58
and Table 82 on page 59). The endpoint modes determine how
the SIE responds to different tokens that the host sends to the
endpoints. For example, if the Mode Bits [3:0] of the Endpoint 0
Mode Register are set to '0001', which is NAK IN/OUT mode, the
SIE sends an ACK handshake in response to SETUP tokens and
NAK any IN or OUT tokens.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
A 'Check' in the Out column means that upon receiving an OUT
token the SIE checks to see whether the OUT is of zero length
and has a Data Toggle (Data1/0) of 1. If these conditions are true,
the SIE responds with an ACK. If any of the above conditions is
not met, the SIE responds with either a STALL or Ignore.
A 'TX Count' entry in the IN column means that the SIE transmits
the number of bytes specified in the Byte Count Bit [3:0] of the
Endpoint Count Register (Table 80 on page 57) in response to
any IN token.
Page 61 of 81
CYRF69313
Details of Mode for Differing Traffic Conditions
Control Endpoint
SIE
Mode
Bus Event
Token
SIE
Count
Dval
D0/1
x
x
x
EP0 Mode Register
Response S
I
O A MODE
EP0 Count Register
DTOG
DVAL
EP0
Interrupt
Comments
COUNT FIFO
DISABLED
0000
x
Ignore All
STALL_IN_OUT
0011
SETUP
>10
x
x
junk
0011
SETUP
<=10
invalid
x
junk
0011
SETUP
<=10
valid
x
ACK
0011
IN
x
x
x
STALL
0011
OUT
>10
x
x
0011
OUT
<=10
invalid
x
0011
OUT
<=10
valid
x
1
1
0001
update
1
update
data
Ignore
Ignore
Yes
ACK SETUP
Stall IN
Ignore
Ignore
STALL
Stall OUT
NAK_IN_OUT
0001
SETUP
>10
x
x
junk
0001
SETUP
<=10
invalid
x
junk
0001
SETUP
<=10
valid
x
ACK
0001
IN
x
x
x
NAK
0001
OUT
>10
x
x
0001
OUT
<=10
invalid
x
0001
OUT
<=10
valid
x
1
1
0001
update
1
update
data
Ignore
Ignore
Yes
ACK SETUP
NAK IN
Ignore
Ignore
NAK
NAK OUT
ACK_IN_STATUS_OUT
1111
SETUP
>10
x
x
junk
Ignore
1111
SETUP
<=10
invalid
x
junk
Ignore
1111
SETUP
<=10
valid
x
ACK
1111
IN
x
x
x
TX
TX
1111
IN
x
x
x
1111
OUT
>10
x
x
1111
OUT
<=10
invalid
x
1111
OUT
<=10, <>2
valid
x
STALL
1111
OUT
2
valid
0
STALL
1111
OUT
2
valid
1
ACK
1
1
0001
update
1
update
data
Yes
ACK SETUP
Host Not ACK'd
1
1
0001
Yes
Host ACK'd
Ignore
Ignore
0011
Yes
0011
1
1
0010
1
1
2
Bad Status
Yes
Bad Status
Yes
Good Status
STATUS_OUT
0010
SETUP
>10
x
x
junk
0010
SETUP
<=10
invalid
x
junk
0010
SETUP
<=10
valid
x
ACK
0010
IN
x
x
x
STALL
0010
OUT
>10
x
x
0010
OUT
<=10
invalid
x
0010
OUT
<=10, <>2
valid
x
STALL
0011
Yes
Bad Status
0010
OUT
2
valid
0
STALL
0011
Yes
Bad Status
0010
OUT
2
valid
1
ACK
Yes
Good Status
1
1
0001
update
1
update
data
0011
Ignore
Ignore
Yes
ACK SETUP
Yes
Stall IN
Ignore
Ignore
1
1
1
1
2
ACK_OUT_STATUS_IN
1011
SETUP
>10
x
x
junk
1011
SETUP
<=10
invalid
x
junk
1011
SETUP
<=10
valid
x
ACK
1011
IN
x
x
x
TX 0
1011
IN
x
x
x
TX 0
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
1
1
0001
1
0011
update
1
update
data
Ignore
Ignore
Yes
ACK SETUP
Yes
Host ACK'd
Host Not ACK'd
1
Page 62 of 81
CYRF69313
Details of Mode for Differing Traffic Conditions (continued)
Control Endpoint
SIE
Bus Event
SIE
Mode
Token
Count
Dval
D0/1
1011
OUT
>10
x
x
1011
OUT
<=10
invalid
x
1011
OUT
<=10
valid
x
EP0 Mode Register
Response S
I
O A MODE
EP0 Count Register
DTOG
DVAL
EP0
Interrupt
junk
Ignore
junk
ACK
1
1
0001
update
1
Comments
COUNT FIFO
update
data
Ignore
Yes
Good OUT
STATUS_IN
0110
SETUP
>10
x
x
junk
0110
SETUP
<=10
invalid
x
junk
0110
SETUP
<=10
valid
x
ACK
0110
IN
x
x
x
TX 0
0110
IN
x
x
x
TX 0
0110
OUT
>10
x
x
0110
OUT
<=10
invalid
x
0110
OUT
<=10
valid
x
1
1
0001
1
0011
update
1
update
data
Ignore
Ignore
Yes
ACK SETUP
Yes
Host ACK'd
Host Not ACK'd
1
Ignore
Ignore
STALL
0011
Yes
Stall OUT
Data Out Endpoints
SIE
Mode
Bus Event
Token
Count
SIE
Dval
D0/1
EP0 Mode Register
Response S
I
O A MODE
EP0 Count Register
DTOG
DVAL
EP0
Interrupt
Comments
COUNT FIFO
ACK OUT (STALL Bit = 0)
1001
IN
x
x
x
1001
OUT
>MAX
x
x
1001
OUT
<=MAX
invalid
invalid
1001
OUT
<=MAX
valid
valid
Ignore
junk
Ignore
junk
ACK
1
1000
update
1
update
data
Ignore
Yes
ACK OUT
ACK OUT (STALL Bit = 1)
1001
IN
x
x
x
Ignore
1001
OUT
>MAX
x
x
Ignore
1001
OUT
<=MAX
invalid
invalid
1001
OUT
<=MAX
valid
valid
Ignore
STALL
Stall OUT
NAK OUT
1000
IN
x
x
x
Ignore
1000
OUT
>MAX
x
x
Ignore
1000
OUT
<=MAX
invalid
invalid
1000
OUT
<=MAX
valid
valid
Ignore
NAK
If Enabled NAK OUT
Data In Endpoints
SIE
Mode
Bus Event
Token
Count
SIE
Dval
D0/1
EP0 Mode Register
Response S
I
O A MODE
EP0 Count Register
DTOG
DVAL
EP0
Interrupt
Comments
COUNT FIFO
ACK IN (STALL Bit = 0)
1101
OUT
x
x
x
1101
IN
x
x
x
1101
IN
x
x
x
Ignore
Host Not ACK'd
TX
1
1100
Yes
Host ACK'd
ACK IN (STALL Bit = 1)
1101
OUT
x
x
x
1101
IN
x
x
x
1100
OUT
x
x
x
1100
IN
x
x
x
Ignore
STALL
Stall IN
NAK IN
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Ignore
NAK
If Enabled NAK IN
Page 63 of 81
CYRF69313
Register Summary
Addr
Name
7
00
P0DATA
P0.7
Reserved Reserved
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
Default
P0.4/INT2
P0.3/INT1
Reserved
P0.1
Reserved
b--bbb--
00000000
01
P1DATA
P1.7
P1.6/SMI P1.5/SMO P1.4/SCLK P1.3/SSEL
SO
SI
P1.2
P1.1/D–
P1.0/D+
bbbbbbbb
00000000
02
P2DATA
06
P01CR
Reserved Int Enable
Int Act
Low
bbbbbbbb
00000000
TTL Thresh High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
--bbbbbb
00000000
08–09
P03CR–
P04CR
Reserved Reserved
Int Act
Low
TTL Thresh Reserved
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
--bbbbbb
00000000
0C
P07CR
Reserved
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
TTL Thresh Reserved
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
-bbbbbbb
00000000
0D
P10CR
Reserved
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
Reserved
5 K pull-up
enable
Output
Enable
-bb----b
00000000
0E
P11CR
Reserved
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
Reserved
Open Drain
Reserved
Output
Enable
-bb--b-b
00000000
0F
P12CR
CLK
Output
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
TTL Thresh Reserved
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
bbbbbbbb
00000000
10
P13CR
Reserved
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
3.3 V Drive
High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
-bbbbbbb
00000000
11–13
P14CR–
P16CR
SPI Use
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
3.3 V Drive
High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
bbbbbbbb
00000000
14
P17CR
Reserved
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
TTL Thresh High Sink
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
-bbbbbbb
00000000
15
P2CR
Reserved
Int
Enable
Int Act
Low
TTL Thresh Reserved
Open Drain
Pull-up
Enable
Output
Enable
-bbbbbbb
00000000
Res
P2.1–P2.0
20
FRTMRL
Free-Running Timer [7:0]
bbbbbbbb
00000000
21
FRTMRH
Free-Running Timer [15:8]
bbbbbbbb
00000000
26
PITMRL
Prog Interval Timer [7:0]
bbbbbbbb
00000000
27
PITMRH
----bbbb
00000000
28
PIRL
bbbbbbbb
00000000
29
PIRH
----bbbb
00000000
30
CPUCLKCR
--------
00010000
31
ITMRCLKCR
32
CLKIOCR
Reserved
34
IOSCTR
foffset[2:0]
35
XOSCTR
Reserved
36
LPOSCTR
39
OSCLCKCR
3C
SPIDATA
3D
SPICR
Swap
40
USBCR
USB
Enable
41
EP0CNT
Data
Toggle
Data Valid
Reserved
42
EP1CNT
Data
Toggle
Data Valid
43
EP2CNT
Data
Toggle
44
EP0MODE
45
Reserved
Prog Interval Timer [11:8]
Prog Interval [7:0]
Reserved
Prog Interval [11:8]
Reserved
TCAPCLK Divider
ITMRCLK Select
bbbbbbbb
10001111
CLKOUT Select
---bbbbb
00000000
bbbbbbbb
000ddddd
---bbb-b
000ddd0d
b-bbbbbb
dddddddd
------bb
00000000
bbbbbbbb
00000000
bbbbbbbb
00000000
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Byte Count[3:0]
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Reserved
Byte Count[3:0]
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Data Valid
Reserved
Byte Count[3:0]
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Setup
rcv’d
IN rcv’d
OUT rcv’d ACK’d trans
Mode[3:0]
ccccbbbb
00000000
EP1MODE
Stall
Reserved
NAK Int
Enable
Ack’d trans
Mode[3:0]
b-bcbbbb
00000000
46
EP2MODE
Stall
Reserved
NAK Int
Enable
Ack’d trans
Mode[3:0]
b-bcbbbb
00000000
32 kHz
Low
Power
TCAPCLK Select
ITMRCLK Divider
Reserved
Gain[4:0]
Reserved
Reserved 32 kHz Bias Trim [1:0]
Reserved
Mode
32 kHz Freq Trim [3:0]
Reserved
Fine Tune
Only
USB
Osclock
Disable
SPIData[7:0]
LSB First
Comm Mode
CPOL
CPHA
SCLK Select
Device Address[6:0]
50–57
EP0DATA
Endpoint 0 Data Buffer [7:0]
bbbbbbbb
????????
58–5F
EP1DATA
Endpoint 1 Data Buffer [7:0]
bbbbbbbb
????????
60–67
EP2DATA
Endpoint 2 Data Buffer [7:0]
bbbbbbbb
????????
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 64 of 81
CYRF69313
Register Summary (continued)
Addr
Name
7
74
USBXCR
USB
Pull-up
Enable
6
5
4
3
2
DA
INT_CLR0
GPIO Port
1
Sleep
Timer
INT1
GPIO Port
0
DB
INT_CLR1
Reserved
Prog
Interval
Timer
1-ms
Timer
USB Active USB Reset
DC
INT_CLR2
Reserved Reserved Reserved GPIO Port 2 Reserved
DE
INT_MSK3
ENSWINT
DF
INT_MSK2
Reserved Reserved Reserved GPIO Port 2 Reserved
Int Enable
E0
INT_MSK0
E1
INT_MSK1
1
Reserved
SPI
Receive
0
R/W
Default
USB Force
State
b------b
00000000
SPI Transmit
INT0
POR
bbbbbbbb
00000000
USB EP2
USB EP1
USB EP0
-bbbbbbb
00000000
INT2
16-bit
Counter
Wrap
Reserved
-bbbbbb-
00000000
b-------
00000000
INT2
Int Enable
16-bit
Counter
Wrap
Int Enable
Reserved
---bbbb-
00000000
GPIO Port
Sleep
INT1
GPIO Port 0
SPI
SPI Transmit
INT0
POR
1
Timer
Int Enable Int Enable
Receive
Int Enable Int Enable Int Enable
Int Enable Int Enable
Int Enable
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Reserved
bbbbbbbb
00000000
Reserved
Prog
1-ms
USB Active USB Reset
Interval
Timer
Int Enable Int Enable
Timer
Int Enable
Int Enable
USB EP2
Int Enable
USB EP1 USB EP0
Int Enable Int Enable
E2
INT_VC
Pending Interrupt [7:0]
bbbbbbbb
00000000
E3
RESWDT
Reset Watchdog Timer [7:0]
wwwwwwww
00000000
--
CPU_A
Temporary Register T1 [7:0]
--------
00000000
--
CPU_X
X[7:0]
--------
00000000
--
CPU_PCL
Program Counter [7:0]
--------
00000000
--
CPU_PCH
Program Counter [15:8]
--------
00000000
--
CPU_SP
Stack Pointer [7:0]
--------
00000000
-
CPU_F
FF
CPU_SCR
1E0
OSC_CR0
Reserved
1E3
PORCR
Reserved
1E4
VLTCMP
1EB
ECO_TR
Reserved
GIES
Reserved
WDRS
No Buzz
XOI
Super
Carry
Zero
Global IE
---brwww
00000010
PORS
Sleep
Reserved
Reserved
Stop
r-ccb--b
00010000
--bbbbbb
00000000
--bb-bbbb
00000000
------rr
00000000
bb------
00000000
Sleep Timer [1:0]
CPU Speed [2:0]
PORLEV[1:0]
Reserved
Reserved
Sleep Duty Cycle [1:0]
PPOR
Reserved
LEGEND
In the R/W column,
b = Both Read and Write
r = Read Only
w = Write Only
c = Read/Clear
? = Unknown
d = calibration value. Should not change during normal use
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 65 of 81
CYRF69313
Radio Function Register Descriptions
All registers are read and writeable, except where noted. Registers may be written to or read from either individually or in sequential
groups. A single-byte read or write reads or writes from the addressed register. Incrementing burst read and write is a sequence that
begins with an address, and then reads or writes to/from each register in address order for as long as clocking continues. It is possible
to repeatedly read (poll) a single register using a non-incrementing burst read. These registers are managed and configured over SPI
by the user firmware running in the microcontroller function.
Table 86. Register Map Summary
Address
Mnemonic
0x00
CHANNEL_ADR
0x01
TX_LENGTH_ADR
b7
b6
b5
b4
b3
Not Used
0x02
TX_CTRL_ADR
TX GO
TX CLR
TX_CFG_ADR
Not Used
Not Used
DATA CODE
LENGTH
RSVD
0x03
TX_IRQ_STATUS_ADR
OS
IRQ
RSVD
0x04
TXB15
IRQ
TXB8
IRQ
0x05
TXB8
IRQEN
TXB0
IRQEN
Data mode
RX_CTRL_ADR
RX GO
RSVD
RXB16
IRQEN
RX_IRQ_STATUS_ADR
b0
TXBERR
IRQEN
TXC
IRQEN
TXE
IRQEN
Default[4]
Access[4]
-1001000
-bbbbbbb
00000000
bbbbbbbb
00000011
bbbbbbbb
--000101
--bbbbbb
PA SETTING
TXB0
IRQ
TXBERR IRQ
TXC
IRQ
TXE
IRQ
10111000
rrrrrrrr
RXB8
IRQEN
RXB1
IRQEN
RXBERR
IRQEN
RXC
IRQEN
RXE
IRQEN
00000111
bbbbbbbb
10010-10
bbbbb-bb
Not Used
RXOW EN
VLD EN
RXC
IRQ
RXE
IRQ
00000000
brrrrrrr
0x06
0x07
b1
TX Length
TXB15
IRQEN
RX_CFG_ADR
b2
Channel
AGC EN
LNA
ATT
HILO
FAST TURN
EN
RXOW
IRQ
SOFDET
IRQ
RXB16
IRQ
RXB8
IRQ
RXB1
IRQ
RXBERR IRQ
RX ACK
PKT ERR
EOP ERR
CRC0
Bad CRC
RX Code
0x08
RX_STATUS_ADR
00001---
rrrrrrrr
0x09
RX_COUNT_ADR
RX Count
00000000
rrrrrrrr
0x0A
RX_LENGTH_ADR
RX Length
00000000
rrrrrrrr
0x0B
PWR_CTRL_ADR
The firmware should set “00010000” to this register while initiating
10100000
bbb-bbbb
0x0C
XTAL_CTRL_ADR
0x0D
IO_CFG_ADR
0x0E
XOUT FN
RX Data Mode
XSIRQ EN
Not Used
Not Used
000--100
bbb--bbb
IRQ OD
IRQ POL
MISO OD
XOUT OD
RSVD
RSVD
SPI 3PIN
FREQ
IRQ GPIO
00000000
bbbbbbbb
GPIO_CTRL_ADR
XOUT OP
MISO OP
RSVD
IRQ OP
XOUT IP
MISO IP
RSVD
IRQ IP
0000----
bbbbrrrr
0x0F
XACT_CFG_ADR
ACK EN
Not Used
FRC END
1-000000
b-bbbbbb
0x10
FRAMING_CFG_ADR
SOP EN
SOP LEN
LEN EN
10100101
bbbbbbbb
0x11
DATA32_THOLD_ADR
Not Used
Not Used
Not Used
----0100
----bbbb
0x12
DATA64_THOLD_ADR
Not Used
Not Used
Not Used
TH64
---01010
---bbbbb
0x13
RSSI_ADR
SOP
Not Used
LNA
RSSI
0-100000
r-rrrrrr
0x14
EOP_CTRL_ADR[9]
HEN
10100100
bbbbbbbb
0x15
CRC_SEED_LSB_ADR
CRC SEED LSB
00000000
bbbbbbbb
0x16
CRC_SEED_MSB_ADR
CRC SEED MSB
00000000
bbbbbbbb
0x17
TX_CRC_LSB_ADR
CRC LSB
--------
rrrrrrrr
0x18
TX_CRC_MSB_ADR
CRC MSB
--------
rrrrrrrr
0x19
RX_CRC_LSB_ADR
CRC LSB
11111111
rrrrrrrr
0x1A
RX_CRC_MSB_ADR
CRC MSB
11111111
rrrrrrrr
0x1B
TX_OFFSET_LSB_ADR
STRIM LSB
00000000
bbbbbbbb
0x1C
TX_OFFSET_MSB_ADR
Not Used
Not Used
Not Used
----0000
----bbbb
0x1D
MODE_OVERRIDE_ADR
RSVD
RSVD
FRC SEN
00000--0
wwwww--w
0000000-
bbbbbbb-
END STATE
ACK TO
SOP TH
Not Used
TH32
HINT
EOP
Not Used
STRIM MSB
FRC AWAKE
Not Used
Not Used
RST
FRC RXDR
0x1E
RX_OVERRIDE_ADR
ACK RX
RXTX DLY
0x1F
TX_OVERRIDE_ADR
ACK TX
FRC PRE
RSVD
0x27
CLK_OVERRIDE_ADR
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
0x28
CLK_EN_ADR
RSVD
RSVD
0x29
RX_ABORT_ADR
RSVD
RSVD
0x32
AUTO_CAL_TIME_ADR
0x35
AUTO_CAL_OFFSET_ADR
0x39
ANALOG_CTRL_ADR
RSVD
RSVD
MAN RXACK
DIS CRC0
DIS RXCRC
ACE
Not Used
MAN
TXACK
00000000
bbbbbbbb
OVRD ACK
DIS TXCRC
RSVD
TX INV
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
RXF
RSVD
00000000
wwwwwwww
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
RXF
RSVD
00000000
wwwwwwww
ABORT EN
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
00000000
wwwwwwww
AUTO_CAL_TIME_MAX
00000011
wwwwwwww
AUTO_CAL_OFFSET_MINUS_4
00000000
wwwwwwww
00000000
wwwwwwww
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
RSVD
ALL SLOW
Register Files
0x20
TX_BUFFER_ADR
TX Buffer File
--------
wwwwwwww
0x21
RX_BUFFER_ADR
RX Buffer File
--------
rrrrrrrr
0x22
SOP_CODE_ADR
SOP Code File
Note 5
bbbbbbbb
0x23
DATA_CODE_ADR
Data Code File
Note 6
bbbbbbbb
0x24
PREAMBLE_ADR
Preamble File
Note 7
bbbbbbbb
0x25
MFG_ID_ADR
MFG ID File
NA
rrrrrrrr
Notes
4. b = read/write; r = read only; w = write only; ‘-’ = not used, default value is undefined.
5. SOP_CODE_ADR default = 0x17FF9E213690C782.
6. DATA_CODE_ADR default = 0x02F9939702FA5CE3012BF1DB0132BE6F.
7. PREAMBLE_ADR default = 0x333302
8. Registers must be configured or accessed only when the radio is in IDLE or SLEEP mode.The GPIOs,RSSI registers can be accessed in Active Tx and Rx mode.
9. EOP_CTRL_ADR[6:4] should never have the value of “000” i.e. EOP Hint Symbol count should never be “0”.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 66 of 81
CYRF69313
DC Voltage to Logic Inputs [10] ............ –0.3 V to VIO + 0.3 V
Absolute Maximum Ratings
DC Voltage applied to Outputs
in High Z State ..................................... –0.3 V to VIO + 0.3 V
Exceeding maximum ratings may shorten the useful life of the
device. User guidelines are not tested.
Static Discharge Voltage (Digital) [11] ...................... > 2000 V
Storage Temperature ................................. –40 °C to +90 °C
Static Discharge Voltage (RF) [11] .............................. 1100 V
Ambient Temperature with Power Applied ..... 0 °C to +70 °C
Latch up Current .....................................+200 mA, –200 mA
Supply Voltage on any power supply
pin relative to VSS ........................................–0.3 V to +3.9 V
Ground Voltage ................................................................ 0 V
FOSC (Crystal Frequency) ......................... 12 MHz ± 30 ppm
DC Characteristics
(T = 25 C)
Parameter
Description
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
0 C–70 C
2.7
–
3.6
V
2.7
–
3.6
V
0 C–70 C
2.7
–
3.6
V
Radio Function Operating Voltages
(For RF activity, Vcc = Vbat = 3.0 V to 3.6 V)
VBAT
Battery voltage
VIO
VIO Voltage
VCC
VCC Voltage
MCU Function Operating Voltages
VDD_MICRO1
Operating voltage
No USB activity,
CPU speed < 12 MHz
4.0
–
5.25
V
VDD_MICRO2
Operating voltage
USB activity,
CPU speed < 12 MHz.
Flash programming
4.35
–
5.25
V
Device Current
(For total current consumption in different modes, for example Radio, active, MCU, sleep, etc., add Radio Function Current and MCU
Function Current)
IDD (GFSK)[12]
Average IDD, 1 Mbps, slow
channel
PA = 5, 2-way, 4 bytes/10 ms
–
10.87
–
mA
IDD (32-8DR)[12]
Average IDD, 250 kbps, fast
channel
PA = 5, 2-way, 4 bytes/10 ms
–
11.2
–
mA
ISB
Sleep Mode IDD
Radio function and MCU function
in Sleep mode
–
40.1
–
µA
XOUT disabled
–
2.1
–
mA
Radio Function Current
(VDD_Micro = 5.0 V, MCU sleep)
IDLE ICC
Radio Off, XTAL Active
Isynth
ICC during Synth Start
–
9.8
–
mA
TX ICC
ICC during transmit
PA = 5 (–5 dBm)
–
22.4
–
mA
TX ICC
ICC during transmit
PA = 6 (0 dBm)
–
27.7
–
mA
RX ICC
ICC during receive
LNA off, ATT on
–
20.2
–
mA
RX ICC
ICC during receive
LNA on, ATT off
–
23.4
–
mA
Notes
10. It is permissible to connect voltages above VIO to inputs through a series resistor limiting input current to 1 mA. AC timing not guaranteed.
11. Human Body Model (HBM).
12. Includes current drawn while starting crystal, starting synthesizer, transmitting packet (including SOP and CRC16), changing to receive mode, and receiving ACK
handshake. Device is in sleep except during this transaction.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 67 of 81
CYRF69313
DC Characteristics (continued)
(T = 25 C)
Parameter
Description
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
MCU Function Current
(VDD_Micro = 5.0 V)
IDD_MICRO1
VDD_MICRO operating supply
current
No GPIO loading, 6 MHz
–
10
–
mA
ISB1
Standby current
Internal Oscillators, Bandgap,
Flash, CPU Clock, Timer Clock,
USB Clock all disabled
–
4
10
µA
VON
Static output High
15 K ± 5% Ohm to VSS
2.8
–
3.6
V
VOFF
Static output Low
RUP is enabled
–
–
0.3
V
VDI
Differential input sensitivity
0.2
–
–
V
VCM
Differential input common mode
range
0.8
–
2.5
V
VSE
Single ended receiver threshold
0.8
–
2
V
CIN
Transceiver capacitance
–
–
20
pF
IIO
Hi-Z State data line leakage
–10
–
10
µA
USB Interface
0 V < VIN < 3.3 V
Radio Function GPIO Interface
VOH1
Output High voltage condition 1
At IOH = –100.0 µA
VIO – 0.1
VIO
–
V
VOH2
Output High voltage condition 2
At IOH = –2.0 mA
VIO – 0.4
VIO
–
V
VOL
Output Low voltage
At IOL = 2.0 mA
–
0
0.4
V
VIH
Input High voltage
0.76 VIO
–
VIO
V
VIL
Input Low voltage
0
–
0.24 VIO
V
IIL
Input leakage current
0 < VIN < VIO
–1
0.26
+1
µA
CIN
Pin Input capacitance
except XTAL, RFN, RFP, RFBIAS
–
3.5
10
pF
MCU Function GPIO Interface
RUP
Pull-up resistance
4
–
12
K
VICR
Input threshold voltage Low,
CMOS mode
Low to High edge
40%
–
65%
VCC
VICF
Input threshold voltage Low,
CMOS mode
High to Low edge
30%
–
55%
VCC
VHC
Input hysteresis voltage, CMOS High to Low edge
mode
3%
–
10%
VCC
VILTTL
Input Low voltage, TTL mode
IO-pin Supply = 2.9–3.6 V
–
–
0.8
V
VIHTTL
Input High voltage, TTL mode
IO-pin Supply = 4.0–5.5 V
2.0
–
–
V
VOL1
Output Low voltage,
High drive [13]
IOL1 = 50 mA
–
–
0.8
V
VOL2
Output Low voltage,
High drive [13]
IOL1 = 25 mA
–
–
0.4
V
VOL3
Output Low voltage,
Low drive [13]
IOL2 = 8 mA
–
–
0.4
V
VOH
Output High voltage [13]
IOH = 2 mA
VCC – 0.5
–
–
V
Note
13. Except for pins P1.0, P1.1 in GPIO mode.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 68 of 81
CYRF69313
RF Characteristics
Table 87. Radio Parameters
Parameter Description
RF Frequency Range
Conditions
Subject to regulations.
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
2.400
–
2.497
GHz
–90
–
dBm
Receiver
(T = 25 °C, VCC = Vbat = 3.0 V, fOSC = 12.000 MHz, BER < 10–3)
Sensitivity 250 kbps 32-8DR
BER 1E-3
–
Sensitivity GFSK
BER 1E-3, ALL SLOW = 1
–
–84
–
dBm
–
22.8
–
dB
LNA gain
ATT gain
–
–31.7
–
dB
Maximum received signal
LNA On
–15
–6
–
dBm
RSSI value for PWRin –60 dBm
LNA On
–
21
–
Count
–
1.9
–
dB/Count
9
–
dB
RSSI slope
Interference Performance
(CER 1E-3)
Co-channel Interference rejection
Carrier-to-Interference (C/I)
C = –60 dBm,
v
Adjacent (±1 MHz) channel selectivity C/I 1 MHz
C = –60 dBm
–
3
–
dB
Adjacent (±2 MHz) channel selectivity C/I 2 MHz
C = –60 dBm
–
–30
–
dB
Adjacent (> 3 MHz) channel selectivity C/I > 3 MHz C = –67 dBm
–
–38
–
dB
Out-of-Band Blocking 30 MHz–12.75 MHz[14]
C = –67 dBm
–
–30
–
dBm
Intermodulation
C = –64 dBm, f = 5,10 MHz
–
–36
–
dBm
Receive Spurious Emission
800 MHz
100 kHz ResBW
–
–79
–
dBm
1.6 GHz
100 kHz ResBW
–
–71
–
dBm
3.2 GHz
100 kHz ResBW
–
–65
–
dBm
PA = 6
–2
0
+2
dBm
Maximum RF transmit power
PA = 5
–7
–5
–3
dBm
Maximum RF transmit power
PA = 0
–
–35
–
dBm
–
39
–
dB
RF power range control step size
Six steps, monotonic
–
5.6
–
dB
Frequency deviation Min
PN Code Pattern 10101010
–
270
–
kHz
Frequency deviation Max
PN Code Pattern 11110000
–
323
–
kHz
Transmitter
(T = 25 °C, VCC = Vbat = 3.0 V, fOSC = 12.000 MHz)
Maximum RF transmit power
RF power control range
Error vector magnitude (FSK error)
>0 dBm
Occupied bandwidth
–6 dBc, 100 kHz ResBW
–
10
–
%rms
500
876
–
kHz
Transmit Spurious Emission
(PA = 6)
In-band spurious second channel power (±2 MHz)
–
–38
–
dBm
In-band spurious third channel power (>3 MHz)
–
–44
–
dBm
Non-harmonically related spurs (8.000 GHz)
–
–38
–
dBm
Non-harmonically related spurs (1.6 GHz)
–
–34
–
dBm
Notes
14. Exceptions F/3 and 5C/3.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 69 of 81
CYRF69313
Table 87. Radio Parameters (continued)
Parameter Description
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
Non-harmonically related spurs (3.2 GHz)
–
–47
–
dBm
Harmonic spurs (Second Harmonic)
–
–43
–
dBm
Harmonic spurs (Third Harmonic)
–
–48
–
dBm
Fourth and Greater Harmonics
–
–59
–
dBm
–
0.7
1.3
–
0.6
Power Management
(Crystal PN# eCERA GF-1200008)
Crystal start to 10 ppm
Crystal start to IRQ
XSIRQ EN = 1
ms
ms
Synth Settle
Slow channels
–
–
270
µs
Synth Settle
Medium channels
–
–
180
µs
Synth Settle
Fast channels
–
–
100
µs
Link turnaround time
GFSK
–
–
30
µs
Link turnaround time
250 kbps
–
–
62
µs
Max packet length
< 60 ppm crystal-to-crystal
–
–
40
bytes
AC Test Loads and Waveforms for Digital Pins
Figure 17. AC Test Loads and Waveforms for Digital Pins
AC Test Loads
DC Test Load
OUTPUT
OUTPUT
5 pF
30 pF
INCLUDING
JIG AND
SCOPE
VCC
R1
OUTPUT
INCLUDING
JIG AND
Typical
SCOPE
Max
R2
ALL INPUT PULSES
Parameter
R1
R2
RTH
VTH
VCC
1071
937
500
1.4
3.00
Unit



V
V
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
VCC
GND
90%
10%
Rise time: 1 V/ns
90%
10%
Fall time: 1 V/ns
THÉVENIN EQUIVALENT
RTH
VTH
OUTPUT
Equivalent to:
Page 70 of 81
CYRF69313
AC Characteristics
Parameter
Description
Conditions
Min
Typical
Max
Unit
Clock
FIMO
Internal main oscillator
frequency
No USB present
With USB present
22.8
23.64
–
25.2
24.36
MHz
MHz
FILO
Internal low-power oscillator
Normal Mode
Low Power Mode
29.44
35.84
–
37.12
47.36
kHz
kHz
45
–
55
%
3.3 V Regulator
VORIP
Output ripple voltage
USB Driver
TR1
Transition rise time
CLOAD = 200 pF
75
–
–
ns
TR2
Transition rise time
CLOAD = 600 pF
–
–
300
ns
TF1
Transition fall time
CLOAD = 200 pF
75
–
–
ns
TF2
Transition fall time
CLOAD = 600 pF
–
–
300
ns
TR
Rise/Fall time matching
80
–
125
%
VCRS
Output signal crossover voltage
1.3
–
2.0
V
1.4775
–
1.5225
Mbp
s
75
ns
USB Data Timing
TDRATE
Low speed data rate
Ave. Bit Rate (1.5 Mbps ± 1.5%)
TDJR1
Receiver data jitter tolerance
To next transition
–75
–
TDJR2
Receiver data jitter tolerance
To pair transition
–45
–
45
ns
TDEOP
Differential to EOP transition
skew
–40
–
100
ns
TEOPR1
EOP width at receiver
Rejects as EOP
–
–
330
ns
TEOPR2
EOP width at receiver
Accept as EOP
675
–
–
ns
TEOPT
Source EOP width
1.25
–
1.5
s
TUDJ1
Differential driver jitter
To next transition
–95
–
95
ns
TUDJ2
Differential driver jitter
To pair transition
–95
–
95
ns
TLST
Width of SE0 during different
transition
–
–
210
ns
50
–
300
ns
Non-USB Mode Driver Characteristics
TFPS2
SDATA/SCK transition fall time
SPI Timing
TSMCK
SPI master clock rate
TSSCK
SPI slave clock rate
TSCKH
SPI clock high time
TSCKL
FCPUCLK/6
–
–
2
MHz
–
–
2.2
MHz
High for CPOL = 0,
Low for CPOL = 1
125
–
–
ns
SPI clock low time
Low for CPOL = 0,
High for CPOL = 1
125
–
–
ns
TMDO
Master data output time[15]
SCK to data valid
–25
–
50
ns
TMDO1
Master data output time,
First bit with CPHA = 0
Time before leading SCK edge
100
–
–
ns
Note
15. In Master mode first bit is available 0.5 SPICLK cycle before Master clock edge available on the SCLK pin.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 71 of 81
CYRF69313
AC Characteristics (continued)
Parameter
Description
Conditions
Min
Typical
Max
Unit
TMSU
Master input data setup time
50
–
–
ns
TMHD
Master input data hold time
50
–
–
ns
TSSU
Slave input data setup time
50
–
–
ns
TSHD
Slave input data hold time
50
–
–
ns
TSDO
Slave data output time
SCK to data valid
–
–
100
ns
TSDO1
Slave data output time,
First bit with CPHA = 0
Time after SS LOW to data valid
–
–
100
ns
TSSS
Slave select setup time
Before first SCK edge
150
–
–
ns
TSSH
Slave select hold time
After last SCK edge
150
–
–
ns
Switching Waveforms
Figure 18. Clock Timing
TCYC
TCH
CLOCK
TCL
Figure 19. USB Data Signal Timing
TF
TR
D
Voh
90%
Vcrs
90%
10%
Vol
10%
D
Figure 20. Clock Timing
TCYC
TCH
CLOCK
TCL
Figure 21. USB Data Signal Timing
Voh
90%
Vcrs
Vol
TF
TR
D
10%
90%
10%
D
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 72 of 81
CYRF69313
Switching Waveforms (continued)
Figure 22. Receiver Jitter Tolerance
TPERIOD
Differential
Data Lines
TJR
TJR1
TJR2
Consecutive
Transitions
N * TPERIOD + TJR1
Paired
Transitions
N * TPERIOD + TJR2
Figure 23. Differential to EOP Transition Skew and EOP Width
TPERIOD
Differential
Data Lines
Crossover Point
Extended
Crossover
Point
Diff. Data to
SE0 Skew
N * TPERIOD + TDEOP
Source EOP Width: TEOPT
Receiver EOP Width: TEOPR1, TEOPR2
Figure 24. Differential Data Jitter
TPERIOD
Differential
Data Lines
Crossover
Points
Consecutive
Transitions
N * TPERIOD + TxJR1
Paired
Transitions
N * TPERIOD + TxJR2
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 73 of 81
CYRF69313
Switching Waveforms (continued)
Figure 25. SPI Master Timing, CPHA = 1
SS
(SS is under firmware control in SPI Master mode)
TSCKL
SCK (CPOL=0)
TSCKH
SCK (CPOL=1)
TMDO
MSB
MOSI
MSB
MISO
LSB
LSB
TMSU TMHD
Figure 26. SPI Slave Timing, CPHA = 1
SS
TSSS
TSSH
TSCKL
SCK (CPOL=0)
TSCKH
SCK (CPOL=1)
MOSI
MSB
TSDO
MISO
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
LSB
TSSU TSHD
MSB
LSB
Page 74 of 81
CYRF69313
Switching Waveforms (continued)
Figure 27. SPI Master Timing, CPHA = 0
SS
(SS is under firmware control in SPI Master mode)
TSCKL
SCK (CPOL=0)
TSCKH
SCK (CPOL=1)
TMDO
TMDO1
MSB
MOSI
LSB
MSB
MISO
LSB
TMSU TMHD
Figure 28. SPI Slave Timing, CPHA = 0
SS
TSSH
TSSS
TSCKL
SCK (CPOL=0)
TSCKH
SCK (CPOL=1)
MSB
MOSI
LSB
TSSU TSHD
TSDO
TSDO1
MISO
MSB
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
LSB
Page 75 of 81
CYRF69313
Ordering Information
Package
Ordering Part Number
Status
40-pin Pb-free QFN 6 × 6 mm (Sawn)
CYRF69313-40LTXC
In Production
40-pin Pb-free QFN 6 × 6 mm (Punch)
CYRF69313-40LFXC
NRND
Ordering Code Definitions
CY RF 69313
- 40
LX
X
C
Temperature Range:
C = Commercial
Pb-free
Package Type: LX = LT or LF
LT = QFN (Sawn Type); LF = QFN (Punch Type)
No of pins in package: 40-pin
Part Number
Marketing Code: RF = Wireless (radio frequency) product line
Company ID: CY = Cypress
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 76 of 81
CYRF69313
Package Handling
Some IC packages require baking before they are soldered onto a PCB to remove moisture that may have been absorbed after leaving
the factory. A label on the packaging has details about actual bake temperature and the minimum bake time to remove this
moisture.The maximum bake time is the aggregate time that the parts are exposed to the bake temperature. Exceeding this exposure
time may degrade device reliability.
Table 88. Package Handling
Parameter
Description
TBAKETEMP
Bake Temperature
tBAKETIME
Bake Time
Min
see package label
Typ
Max
Unit
125
see package label
°C
24
hours
Package Diagrams
Figure 29. 40-pin QFN (6 × 6 × 1.00 mm) LT40B 3.5 × 3.5 mm E-Pad (Sawn) Package Outline, 001-13190
001-13190 *H
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 77 of 81
CYRF69313
Package Diagrams (continued)
Figure 30. 40-pin QFN (6 × 6 ×1.0 mm) LF40A/LY40A 3.50 × 3.50 E-Pad (Punch) Package Outline, 001-12917 [16]
SOLDERABLE
EXPOSED
PAD
001-12917 *C
Note
16. Not Recommended for New Design.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Page 78 of 81
CYRF69313
Acronyms
Document Conventions
Table 89. Acronyms Used in this Document
Units of Measure
Acronym
Description
Table 90. Units of Measure
ACK
Acknowledge (packet received, no errors)
BER
Bit Error Rate
°C
degree Celsius
BOM
Bill Of Materials
dB
decibel
CMOS
Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor
dBc
decibel relative to carrier
CRC
Cyclic Redundancy Check
dBm
decibel-milliwatt
FEC
Forward Error Correction
Hz
hertz
FER
Frame Error Rate
KB
1024 bytes
GFSK
Gaussian Frequency-Shift Keying
Kbit
1024 bits
HBM
Human Body Model
kHz
kilohertz
ISM
Industrial, Scientific, and Medical
k
kilohm
IRQ
Interrupt Request
MHz
megahertz
MCU
Microcontroller Unit
M
megaohm
NRZ
Non Return to Zero
A
microampere
PLL
Phase-Locked Loop
s
microsecond
QFN
Quad Flat No-lead
V
microvolt
RSSI
Received Signal Strength Indication
Vrms
microvolts root-mean-square
RF
Radio Frequency
W
microwatts
Rx
Receive
mA
milliampere
Tx
Transmit
ms
millisecond
mV
millivolt
nA
nanoampere
ns
nanosecond
nV
nanovolt

ohm
pp
peak-to-peak
ppm
parts per million
ps
picosecond
sps
samples per second
V
volt
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Symbol
Unit of Measure
Page 79 of 81
CYRF69313
Document History Page
Document Title: CYRF69313, Programmable Radio-on-Chip LPstar
Document Number: 001-66503
Rev.
ECN
Orig. of
Change
Submission
Date
**
3188093
NXZ /
KKCN
04/05/11
*A
3333406
KPMD
08/01/2011
Changed status from Advance to Final.
Post to external web.
*B
3532316
KKCN
02/28/2012
Updated Ordering Information (Added MPN CYRF69313-40LTXC) and
Ordering Code Definitions.
Added Package Handling.
Updated Package Diagrams (Added spec 001-44328).
*C
3735882
ANKC
09/06/2012
Updated Ordering Information (No change in part numbers, included a column
“Status”).
Updated Package Diagrams (No change in revisions of specs, added Note 16
and referred the same note in Figure 30).
Updated in new template.
*D
3983055
ANKC
04/27/2013
Updated Pin Configuration (Updated Name and Function of Pin 21 and Pin 22).
Updated Package Diagrams (Replaced spec 001-44328 *F with spec
001-13190 *H).
Completing Sunset Review.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Description of Change
New data sheet.
Page 80 of 81
CYRF69313
Sales, Solutions, and Legal Information
Worldwide Sales and Design Support
Cypress maintains a worldwide network of offices, solution centers, manufacturer’s representatives, and distributors. To find the office
closest to you, visit us at Cypress Locations.
Products
Automotive
Clocks & Buffers
Interface
Lighting & Power Control
PSoC Solutions
cypress.com/go/automotive
cypress.com/go/clocks
psoc.cypress.com/solutions
cypress.com/go/interface
PSoC 1 | PSoC 3 | PSoC 5
cypress.com/go/powerpsoc
cypress.com/go/plc
Memory
PSoC
Touch Sensing
USB Controllers
Wireless/RF
cypress.com/go/memory
cypress.com/go/psoc
cypress.com/go/touch
cypress.com/go/USB
cypress.com/go/wireless
© Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, 2011-2013. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. Cypress Semiconductor Corporation assumes no responsibility for the use of
any circuitry other than circuitry embodied in a Cypress product. Nor does it convey or imply any license under patent or other rights. Cypress products are not warranted nor intended to be used for
medical, life support, life saving, critical control or safety applications, unless pursuant to an express written agreement with Cypress. Furthermore, Cypress does not authorize its products for use as
critical components in life-support systems where a malfunction or failure may reasonably be expected to result in significant injury to the user. The inclusion of Cypress products in life-support systems
application implies that the manufacturer assumes all risk of such use and in doing so indemnifies Cypress against all charges.
Any Source Code (software and/or firmware) is owned by Cypress Semiconductor Corporation (Cypress) and is protected by and subject to worldwide patent protection (United States and foreign),
United States copyright laws and international treaty provisions. Cypress hereby grants to licensee a personal, non-exclusive, non-transferable license to copy, use, modify, create derivative works of,
and compile the Cypress Source Code and derivative works for the sole purpose of creating custom software and or firmware in support of licensee product to be used only in conjunction with a Cypress
integrated circuit as specified in the applicable agreement. Any reproduction, modification, translation, compilation, or representation of this Source Code except as specified above is prohibited without
the express written permission of Cypress.
Disclaimer: CYPRESS MAKES NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WITH REGARD TO THIS MATERIAL, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Cypress reserves the right to make changes without further notice to the materials described herein. Cypress does not
assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any product or circuit described herein. Cypress does not authorize its products for use as critical components in life-support systems where
a malfunction or failure may reasonably be expected to result in significant injury to the user. The inclusion of Cypress’ product in a life-support systems application implies that the manufacturer
assumes all risk of such use and in doing so indemnifies Cypress against all charges.
Use may be limited by and subject to the applicable Cypress software license agreement.
Document Number: 001-66503 Rev. *D
Revised April 27, 2013
All products and company names mentioned in this document may be the trademarks of their respective holders.
Page 81 of 81