82C59A CMOS Priority Interrupt Controller March 1997 Features Description • 12.5MHz, 8MHz and 5MHz Versions Available - 12.5MHz Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82C59A-12 - 8MHz Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82C59A - 5MHz Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82C59A-5 The Intersil 82C59A is a high performance CMOS Priority Interrupt Controller manufactured using an advanced 2µm CMOS process. The 82C59A is designed to relieve the system CPU from the task of polling in a multilevel priority system. The high speed and industry standard configuration of the 82C59A make it compatible with microprocessors such as 80C286, 80286, 80C86/88, 8086/88, 8080/85 and NSC800. • High Speed, “No Wait-State” Operation with 12.5MHz 80C286 and 8MHz 80C86/88 • Pin Compatible with NMOS 8259A The 82C59A can handle up to eight vectored priority interrupting sources and is cascadable to 64 without additional circuitry. Individual interrupting sources can be masked or prioritized to allow custom system configuration. Two modes of operation make the 82C59A compatible with both 8080/85 and 80C86/88/286 formats. • 80C86/88/286 and 8080/85/86/88/286 Compatible • Eight-Level Priority Controller, Expandable to 64 Levels • Programmable Interrupt Modes • Individual Request Mask Capability Static CMOS circuit design ensures low operating power. The Intersil advanced CMOS process results in performance equal to or greater than existing equivalent products at a fraction of the power. • Fully Static Design • Fully TTL Compatible • Low Power Operation - ICCSB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10µA Maximum - ICCOP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1mA/MHz Maximum • Single 5V Power Supply • Operating Temperature Ranges - C82C59A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0oC to +70oC - I82C59A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -40oC to +85oC - M82C59A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -55oC to +125oC Ordering Information PART NUMBER 5MHz CP82C59A-5 8MHz CP82C59A 12.5MHz PACKAGE CP82C59A-12 TEMPERATURE RANGE 28 Ld PDIP 0oC to +70oC -40oC to +85oC 28 Ld PLCC 0oC to +70oC PKG. NO. E28.6 IP82C59A-5 IP82C59A IP82C59A-12 CS82C59A-5 CS82C59A CS82C59A-12 IS82C59A-5 IS82C59A IS82C59A-12 CD82C59A-5 CD82C59A CD82C59A-12 ID82C59A-5 ID82C59A ID82C59A-12 -40oC to +85oC F28.6 MD82C59A-5/B MD82C59A/B MD82C59A-12/B -55oC to +125oC F28.6 -55oC to +125oC J28.A 0oC to +70oC M28.3 5962-8501601YA 5962-8501602YA MR82C59A-5/B MR82C59A/B 5962-85016013A 5962-85016023A CM82C59A-5 CM82C59A -40oC to +85oC CERDIP - 0oC to +70oC SMD# MR82C59A-12/B - 28 Pad CLCC 28 Ld SOIC CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures. http://www.intersil.com or 407-727-9207 | Copyright © Intersil Corporation 1999 4-1 N28.45 F28.6 F28.6 SMD# CM82C59A-12 E28.6 N28.45 J28.A File Number 2784.2 82C59A Pinouts D7 4 25 IR7 D6 5 24 IR6 D5 6 INTA 26 INTA A0 RD 3 VCC 27 A0 CS 28 VCC WR 2 WR CS 1 D7 82C59A (PLCC, CLCC) TOP VIEW RD 82C59A (PDIP, CERDIP, SOIC) TOP VIEW 4 3 2 1 28 27 26 D6 5 25 IR7 D5 6 24 IR6 23 IR5 D4 7 23 IR5 D4 7 22 IR4 D3 8 22 IR4 D3 8 21 IR3 D2 9 21 IR3 D2 9 20 IR2 D1 10 20 IR2 D1 10 19 IR1 D0 11 18 IR0 CAS 0 12 17 INT CAS 1 13 16 SP/EN GND 14 15 CAS 2 D0 11 PIN CAS 1 GND CAS 2 16 17 18 IR0 15 INT 14 SP/ EN 13 CAS 0 19 IR1 12 DESCRIPTION D7 - D0 Data Bus (Bidirectional) RD Read Input WR Write Input A0 Command Select Address CS Chip Select CAS 2 - CAS 0 Cascade Lines SP/EN Slave Program Input Enable INT Interrupt Output INTA Interrupt Acknowledge Input IR0 - IR7 Interrupt Request Inputs Functional Diagram INTA DATA BUS BUFFER D7-D0 RD WR A0 CONTROL LOGIC READ/ WRITE LOGIC IN SERVICE REG (ISR) CS CAS 0 CAS 1 CAS 2 SP/EN INT CASCADE BUFFER COMPARATOR PRIORITY RESOLVER INTERRUPT MASK REG (IMR) INTERNAL BUS FIGURE 1. 4-2 INTERRUPT REQUEST REG (IRR) IR0 IR1 IR2 IR3 IR4 IR5 IR6 IR7 82C59A Pin Description SYMBOL PIN NUMBER TYPE DESCRIPTION VCC 28 I VCC: The +5V power supply pin. A 0.1µF capacitor between pins 28 and 14 is recommended for decoupling. GND 14 I GROUND CS 1 I CHIP SELECT: A low on this pin enables RD and WR communications between the CPU and the 82C59A. INTA functions are independent of CS. WR 2 I WRITE: A low on this pin when CS is low enables the 82C59A to accept command words from the CPU. RD 3 I READ: A low on this pin when CS is low enables the 82C59A to release status onto the data bus for the CPU. D7 - D0 4 - 11 I/O BIDIRECTIONAL DATA BUS: Control, status, and interrupt-vector information is transferred via this bus. CAS0 - CAS2 12, 13, 15 I/O CASCADE LINES: The CAS lines form a private 82C59A bus to control a multiple 82C59A structure. These pins are outputs for a master 82C59A and inputs for a slave 82C59A. SP/EN 16 I/O SLAVE PROGRAM/ENABLE BUFFER: This is a dual function pin. When in the Buffered Mode it can be used as an output to control buffer transceivers (EN). When not in the Buffered Mode it is used as an input to designate a master (SP = 1) or slave (SP = 0). INT 17 O INTERRUPT: This pin goes high whenever a valid interrupt request is asserted. It is used to interrupt the CPU, thus, it is connected to the CPU's interrupt pin. IR0 - IR7 18 - 25 I INTERRUPT REQUESTS: Asynchronous inputs. An interrupt request is executed by raising an IR input (low to high), and holding it high until it is acknowledged (Edge Triggered Mode), or just by a high level on an IR input (Level Triggered Mode). Internal pull-up resistors are implemented on IR0 - 7. INTA 26 I INTERRUPT ACKNOWLEDGE: This pin is used to enable 82C59A interrupt-vector data onto the data bus by a sequence of interrupt acknowledge pulses issued by the CPU. A0 27 I ADDRESS LINE: This pin acts in conjunction with the CS, WR, and RD pins. It is used by the 82C59A to decipher various Command Words the CPU writes and status the CPU wishes to read. It is typically connected to the CPU A0 address line (A1 for 80C86/88/286). Functional Description CPU - DRIVEN MULTIPLEXER Interrupts in Microcomputer Systems Microcomputer system design requires that I/O devices such as keyboards, displays, sensors and other components receive servicing in an efficient manner so that large amounts of the total system tasks can be assumed by the microcomputer with little or no effect on throughput. The most common method of servicing such devices is the Polled approach. This is where the processor must test each device in sequence and in effect “ask” each one if it needs servicing. It is easy to see that a large portion of the main program is looping through this continuous polling cycle and that such a method would have a serious, detrimental effect on system throughput, thus, limiting the tasks that could be assumed by the microcomputer and reducing the cost effectiveness of using such devices. CPU RAM I/O (1) ROM I/O (2) I/O (N) FIGURE 2. POLLED METHOD 4-3 82C59A A more desirable method would be one that would allow the microprocessor to be executing its main program and only stop to service peripheral devices when it is told to do so by the device itself. In effect, the method would provide an external asynchronous input that would inform the processor that it should complete whatever instruction that is currently being executed and fetch a new routine that will service the requesting device. Once this servicing is complete, however, the processor would resume exactly where it left off. This is the Interrupt-driven method. It is easy to see that system throughput would drastically increase, and thus, more tasks could be assumed by the microcomputer to further enhance its cost effectiveness. INT CPU The Programmable Interrupt Controller (PlC) functions as an overall manager in an Interrupt-Driven system. It accepts requests from the peripheral equipment, determines which of the incoming requests is of the highest importance (priority), ascertains whether the incoming request has a higher priority value than the level currently being serviced, and issues an interrupt to the CPU based on this determination. Each peripheral device or structure usually has a special program or “routine” that is associated with its specific functional or operational requirements; this is referred to as a “service routine”. The PlC, after issuing an interrupt to the CPU, must somehow input information into the CPU that can “point” the Program Counter to the service routine associated with the requesting device. This “pointer” is an address in a vectoring table and will often be referred to, in this document, as vectoring data. 82C59A Functional Description PIC RAM I/O (1) ROM I/O (2) The 82C59A is a device specifically designed for use in real time, interrupt driven microcomputer systems. It manages eight levels of requests and has built-in features for expandability to other 82C59As (up to 64 levels). It is programmed by system software as an I/O peripheral. A selection of priority modes is available to the programmer so that the manner in which the requests are processed by the 82C59A can be configured to match system requirements. The priority modes can be changed or reconfigured dynamically at any time during main program operation. This means that the complete interrupt structure can be defined as required, based on the total system environment. I/O (N) Interrupt Request Register (IRR) and In-Service Register (ISR) FIGURE 3. INTERRUPT METHOD The interrupts at the IR input lines are handled by two registers in cascade, the Interrupt Request Register (lRR) and the InService Register (lSR). The IRR is used to indicate all the interrupt levels which are requesting service, and the ISR is used to store all the interrupt levels which are currently being serviced. INTA DATA BUS BUFFER D 7 - D0 RD WR A0 CONTROL LOGIC READ/ WRITE LOGIC IN SERVICE REG (ISR) CS CAS 0 CAS 1 CAS 2 SP/EN INT CASCADE BUFFER COMPARATOR PRIORITY RESOLVER INTERRUPT MASK REG (IMR) INTERNAL BUS FIGURE 4. 82C59A FUNCTIONAL DIAGRAM 4-4 INTERRUPT REQUEST REG (IRR) IR0 IR1 IR2 IR3 IR4 IR5 IR6 IR7 82C59A Priority Resolver The Cascade Buffer/Comparator This logic block determines the priorities of the bits set in the lRR. The highest priority is selected and strobed into the corresponding bit of the lSR during the INTA sequence. The lMR stores the bits which disable the interrupt lines to be masked. The IMR operates on the output of the IRR. Masking of a higher priority input will not affect the interrupt request lines of lower priority. This function block stores and compares the IDs of all 82C59As used in the system. The associated three I/O pins (CAS0 - 2) are outputs when the 82C59A is used as a master and are inputs when the 82C59A is used as a slave. As a master, the 82C59A sends the ID of the interrupting slave device onto the CAS0 - 2 lines. The slave, thus selected will send its preprogrammed subroutine address onto the Data Bus during the next one or two consecutive INTA pulses. (See section “Cascading the 82C59A”.) Interrupt (INT) Interrupt Sequence This output goes directly to the CPU interrupt input. The VOH level on this line is designed to be fully compatible with the 8080, 8085, 8086/88, 80C86/88, 80286, and 80C286 input levels. The powerful features of the 82C59A in a microcomputer system are its programmability and the interrupt routine addressing capability. The latter allows direct or indirect jumping to the specified interrupt routine requested without any polling of the interrupting devices. The normal sequence of events during an interrupt depends on the type of CPU being used. Interrupt Mask Register (IMR) Interrupt Acknowledge (INTA) INTA pulses will cause the 82C59A to release vectoring information onto the data bus. The format of this data depends on the system mode (µPM) of the 82C59A. Data Bus Buffer This 3-state, bidirectional 8-bit buffer is used to interface the 82C59A to the System Data Bus. Control words and status information are transferred through the Data Bus Buffer. Read/Write Control Logic The function of this block is to accept output commands from the CPU. It contains the Initialization Command Word (lCW) registers and Operation Command Word (OCW) registers which store the various control formats for device operation. This function block also allows the status of the 82C59A to be transferred onto the Data Bus. These events occur in an 8080/8085 system: 1. One or more of the INTERRUPT REQUEST lines (IR0 - IR7) are raised high, setting the corresponding IRR bit(s). 2. The 82C59A evaluates those requests in the priority resolver and sends an interrupt (INT) to the CPU, if appropriate. 3. The CPU acknowledges the lNT and responds with an INTA pulse. 4. Upon receiving an lNTA from the CPU group, the highest priority lSR bit is set, and the corresponding lRR bit is reset. The 82C59A will also release a CALL instruction code (11001101) onto the 8-bit data bus through D0 - D7. 5. This CALL instruction will initiate two additional INTA pulses to be sent to 82C59A from the CPU group. Chip Select (CS) A LOW on this input enables the 82C59A. No reading or writing of the device will occur unless the device is selected. Write (WR) A LOW on this input enables the CPU to write control words (lCWs and OCWs) to the 82C59A. Read (RD) A LOW on this input enables the 82C59A to send the status of the Interrupt Request Register (lRR), In-Service Register (lSR), the Interrupt Mask Register (lMR), or the interrupt level (in the poll mode) onto the Data Bus. A0 This input signal is used in conjunction with WR and RD signals to write commands into the various command registers, as well as to read the various status registers of the chip. This line can be tied directly to one of the system address lines. 6. These two INTA pulses allow the 82C59A to release its preprogrammed subroutine address onto the data bus. The lower 8-bit address is released at the first INTA pulse and the higher 8-bit address is released at the second INTA pulse. 7. This completes the 3-byte CALL instruction released by the 82C59A. In the AEOI mode, the lSR bit is reset at the end of the third INTA pulse. Otherwise, the lSR bit remains set until an appropriate EOI command is issued at the end of the interrupt sequence. The events occurring in an 80C86/88/286 system are the same until step 4. 4. The 82C59A does not drive the data bus during the first INTA pulse. 5. The 80C86/88/286 CPU will initiate a second INTA pulse. During this INTA pulse, the appropriate ISR bit is set and the corresponding bit in the IRR is reset. The 82C59A outputs the 8-bit pointer onto the data bus to be read by the CPU. 4-5 82C59A ADDRESS BUS (16) CONTROL BUS I/OR I/OW INT INTA DATA BUS (8) CS A0 CAS 0 CAS 1 CAS 2 CASCADE LINES D 7 - D0 RD WR INT INTA IRQ 2 IRQ IRQ 1 0 82C59A IRQ 7 SP/EN IRQ 6 IRQ IRQ IRQ 5 4 3 INTERRUPT REQUESTS SLAVE PROGRAM/ ENABLE BUFFER FIGURE 5. 82C59A STANDARD SYSTEM BUS INTERFACE 6. This completes the interrupt cycle. In the AEOI mode, the ISR bit is reset at the end of the second INTA pulse. Otherwise, the ISR bit remains set until an appropriate EOI command is issued at the end of the interrupt subroutine. CONTENT OF SECOND INTERRUPT VECTOR BYTE IR If no interrupt request is present at step 4 of either sequence (i.e., the request was too short in duration), the 82C59A will issue an interrupt level 7. If a slave is programmed on IR bit 7, the CAS lines remain inactive and vector addresses are output from the master 82C59A. Interrupt Sequence Outputs 8080, 8085 Interrupt Response Mode This sequence is timed by three INTA pulses. During the first lNTA pulse, the CALL opcode is enabled onto the data bus. D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 7 A7 A6 A5 1 1 1 0 0 6 A7 A6 A5 1 1 0 0 0 5 A7 A6 A5 1 0 1 0 0 4 A7 A6 A5 1 0 0 0 0 3 A7 A6 A5 0 1 1 0 0 2 A7 A6 A5 0 1 0 0 0 1 A7 A6 A5 0 0 1 0 0 0 A7 A6 A5 0 0 0 0 0 IR Call Code D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 During the second INTA pulse, the lower address of the appropriate service routine is enabled onto the data bus. When interval = 4 bits, A5 - A7 are programmed, while A0 - A4 are automatically inserted by the 82C59A. When interval = 8, only A6 and A7 are programmed, while A0 - A5 are automatically inserted. INTERVAL = 8 D7 D6 DS D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 7 A7 A6 1 1 1 0 0 0 6 A7 A6 1 1 0 0 0 0 5 A7 A6 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 A7 A6 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 A7 A6 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 A7 A6 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 A7 A6 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 A7 A6 0 0 0 0 0 0 First Interrupt Vector Byte Data: Hex CD D7 INTERVAL = 4 D7 During the third INTA pulse, the higher address of the appropriate service routine, which was programmed as byte 2 of the initialization sequence (A8 - A15), is enabled onto the bus. 4-6 82C59A Initialization Command Words (lCWs) CONTENT OF THIRD INTERRUPT VECTOR BYTE D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10 A9 A8 General 80C86, 8OC88, 80C286 Interrupt Response Mode 80C86/88/286 mode is similar to 8080/85 mode except that only two Interrupt Acknowledge cycles are issued by the processor and no CALL opcode is sent to the processor. The first interrupt acknowledge cycle is similar to that of 8080/85 systems in that the 82C59A uses it to internally freeze the state of the interrupts for priority resolution and, as a master, it issues the interrupt code on the cascade lines. On this first cycle, it does not issue any data to the processor and leaves its data bus buffers disabled. On the second interrupt acknowledge cycle in the 86/88/286 mode, the master (or slave if so programmed) will send a byte of data to the processor with the acknowledged interrupt code composed as follows (note the state of the ADI mode control is ignored and A5 - A11 are unused in the 86/88/286 mode). Whenever a command is issued with A0 = 0 and D4 = 1, this is interpreted as Initialization Command Word 1 (lCW1). lCW1 starts the initialization sequence during which the following automatically occur: a. The edge sense circuit is reset, which means that following initialization, an interrupt request (IR) input must make a low-to-high transition to generate an interrupt. b. The Interrupt Mask Register is cleared. c. lR7 input is assigned priority 7. d. Special Mask Mode is cleared and Status Read is set to lRR. e. If lC4 = 0, then all functions selected in lCW4 are set to zero. (Non-Buffered mode (see note), no Auto-EOI, 8080/85 system). NOTE: Master/Slave in ICW4 is only used in the buffered mode. CONTENT OF INTERRUPT VECTOR BYTE FOR 80C86/88/286 SYSTEM MODE D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 lR7 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 1 1 1 lR6 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 1 1 0 IR5 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 1 0 1 IR4 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 1 0 0 IR3 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 0 1 1 IR2 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 0 1 0 IR1 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 0 0 1 IR0 T7 T6 T5 T4 T3 0 0 0 ICW1 ICW2 NO (SNGL = 1) IN CASCADE MODE YES (SNGL = 0)) Programming the 82C59A ICW3 The 82C59A accepts two types of command words generated by the CPU: NO (IC4 = 0) 1. Initialization Command Words (ICWs): Before normal operation can begin, each 82C59A in the system must be brought to a starting point - by a sequence of 2 to 4 bytes timed by WR pulses. IS ICW4 NEEDED YES (IC4 = 1) 2. Operation Command Words (OCWs): These are the command words which command the 82C59A to operate in various interrupt modes. Among these modes are: ICW4 a. Fully nested mode. READY TO ACCEPT INTERRUPT REQUESTS b. Rotating priority mode. c. Special mask mode. FIGURE 6. 82C59A INITIALIZATION SEQUENCE d. Polled mode. Initialization Command Words 1 and 2 (ICW1, lCW2) The OCWs can be written into the 82C59A anytime after initialization. A5 - A15: Page starting address of service routines. In an 8080/85 system the 8 request levels will generate CALLS to 8 locations equally spaced in memory. These can be programmed to be spaced at intervals of 4 or 8 memory locations, thus, the 8 routines will occupy a page of 32 or 64 bytes, respectively. 4-7 82C59A ICW1 A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 0 A7 A6 A5 1 LTIM ADI SNGL IC4 1 = ICW4 needed 0 = No ICW4 needed 1 = Single 0 = Cascade Mode CALL address interval 1 = Interval of 4 0 = Interval of 8 1 = Level triggered mode 0 = Edge triggered mode A7 - A5 of Interrupt vector address (MCS-80/85 mode only) ICW2 A0 1 D7 D6 A14 A15 T7 D5 D4 A13 T6 A12 T5 D3 D2 A11 A10 T4 D1 A9 D0 A8 T3 A15 - A8 of interrupt vector address (MCS80/85 mode) T7 - T3 of interrupt vector address (8086/8088 mode) ICW3 (MASTER DEVICE) A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 1 S7 S6 S5 S4 S3 S2 S1 S0 1 = IR input has a slave 0 = IR input does not have a slave ICW3 (SLAVE DEVICE) A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 1 0 0 0 0 0 ID2 ID1 ID0 SLAVE ID (NOTE) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 ICW4 A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 1 0 0 0 SFNM BUF M/S AEOI µPM 1 = 8086/8088 mode 0 = MCS-80/85 mode 1 = Auto EOI 0 = Normal EOI 0 X - Non buffered mode 1 0 - Buffered mode slave 1 1 - Buffered mode master 1 = Special fully nested moded 0 = Not special fully nested mode NOTE: Slave ID is equal to the corresponding master IR input. FIGURE 7. 82C59A INITIALIZATION COMMAND WORD FORMAT 4-8 82C59A The address format is 2 bytes long (A0 - A15). When the routine interval is 4, A0 - A4 are automatically inserted by the 82C59A, while A5 - A15 are programmed externally. When the routine interval is 8, A0 - A5 are automatically inserted by the 82C59A while A6 - A15 are programmed externally. AEOI: If AEOI = 1, the automatic end of interrupt mode is programmed. The 8-byte interval will maintain compatibility with current software, while the 4-byte interval is best for a compact jump table. Operation Command Words (OCWs) In an 80C86/88/286 system, A15 - A11 are inserted in the five most significant bits of the vectoring byte and the 82C59A sets the three least significant bits according to the interrupt level. A10 - A5 are ignored and ADI (Address interval) has no effect. LTlM: µPM: After the Initialization Command Words (lCWs) are programmed into the 82C59A, the device is ready to accept interrupt requests at its input lines. However, during the 82C59A operation, a selection of algorithms can command the 82C59A to operate in various modes through the Operation Command Words (OCWs). OPERATION COMMAND WORDS (OCWs) If LTlM = 1, then the 82C59A will operate in the level interrupt mode. Edge detect logic on the interrupt inputs will be disabled. A0 ALL address interval. ADI = 1 then interval = 4; ADI = 0 then interval = 8. 1 SNGL: Single. Means that this is the only 82C59A in the system. If SNGL = 1, no ICW3 will be issued. 0 ADI: IC4: Microprocessor mode: µPM = 0 sets the 82C59A for 8080/85 system operation, µPM = 1 sets the 82C59A for 80C86/88/286 system operation. D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 M3 M2 M1 M0 0 L2 L1 L0 1 P RR RIS OCW1 M7 M6 M5 M4 OCW2 R SL EOI 0 OCW3 If this bit is set - lCW4 has to be issued. If lCW4 is not needed, set lC4 = 0. 0 0 ESMM SMM 0 Initialization Command Word 3 (ICW3) Operation Command Word 1 (OCW1) This word is read only when there is more than one 82C59A in the system and cascading is used, in which case SNGL = 0. It will load the 8-bit slave register. The functions of this register are: OCW1 sets and clears the mask bits in the Interrupt Mask Register (lMR) M7 - M0 represent the eight mask bits. M = 1 indicates the channel is masked (inhibited), M = 0 indicates the channel is enabled. a. In the master mode (either when SP = 1, or in buffered mode when M/S = 1 in lCW4) a “1” is set for each slave in the bit corresponding to the appropriate IR line for the slave. The master then will release byte 1 of the call sequence (for 8080/85 system) and will enable the corresponding slave to release bytes 2 and 3 (for 80C86/88/ 286, only byte 2) through the cascade lines. Operation Command Word 2 (OCW2) b. In the slave mode (either when SP = 0, or if BUF = 1 and M/S = 0 in lCW4), bits 2 - 0 identify the slave. The slave compares its cascade input with these bits and if they are equal, bytes 2 and 3 of the call sequence (or just byte 2 for 80C86/88/286) are released by it on the Data Bus. NOTE: (The slave address must correspond to the IR line it is connected to in the master ID). Initialization Command Word 4 (ICW4) SFNM: If SFNM = 1, the special fully nested mode is programmed. BUF: M/S: If BUF = 1, the buffered mode is programmed. In buffered mode, SP/EN becomes an enable output and the master/slave determination is by M/S. If buffered mode is selected: M/S = 1 means the 82C59A is programmed to be a master, M/S = 0 means the 82C59A is programmed to be a slave. If BUF = 0, M/S has no function. R, SL, EOI - These three bits control the Rotate and End of Interrupt modes and combinations of the two. A chart of these combinations can be found on the Operation Command Word Format. L2, L1, L0 - These bits determine the interrupt level acted upon when the SL bit is active. Operation Command Word 3 (OCW3) ESMM - Enable Special Mask Mode. When this bit is set to 1 it enables the SMM bit to set or reset the Special Mask Mode. When ESMM = 0, the SMM bit becomes a “don’t care”. SMM - Special Mask Mode. If ESMM = 1 and SMM = 1, the 82C59A will enter Special Mask Mode. If ESMM = 1 and SMM = 0, the 82C59A will revert to normal mask mode. When ESMM = 0, SMM has no effect. Fully Nested Mode This mode is entered after initialization unless another mode is programmed. The interrupt requests are ordered in priority from 0 through 7 (0 highest). When an interrupt is acknowledged the highest priority request is determined and its vector placed on the bus. Additionally, a bit of the Interrupt Service register (IS0 - 7) is set. This bit remains set until the microprocessor issues an End of Interrupt (EOI) command 4-9 82C59A After the initialization sequence, IR0 has the highest priority and IR7 the lowest. Priorities can be changed, as will be explained in the rotating priority mode or via the set priority command. immediately before returning from the service routine, or if the AEOI (Automatic End of Interrupt) bit is set, until the trailing edge of the last INTA. While the IS bit is set, all further interrupts of the same or lower priority are inhibited, while higher levels will generate an interrupt (which will be acknowledged only if the microprocessor internal interrupt enable flip-flop has been re-enabled through software). OCW1 A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 1 M7 M6 M5 M4 M3 M2 M1 M0 Interrupt Mask 1 = Mask set 0 = Mask reset OCW2 A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 0 R SL EOI 0 0 L2 L1 L0 0 0 Non-specific EOI command 1 IR LEVEL TO BE ACTED UPON 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 End of interrupt 0 1 1 1 0 1 Rotate on non-specific EOI command 1 0 0 Rotate in automatic EOI mode (set) 0 0 0 Rotate in automatic EOI mode (clear) 1 1 1 † Rotate on specific EOI command 1 1 0 † Set priority command 0 1 0 † Specific EOI command Automatic rotation Specific rotation No operation † L0 - L2 are used OCW3 A0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 0 0 ESMM SMM 0 1 P RR RIS READ REGISTER COMMAND 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 Read IR reg on Read IS reg on No Action next RD pulse next RD pulse 1 = Poll command 0 = No poll command SPECIAL MASK MODE 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 Reset special No Action mask FIGURE 8. 82C59A OPERATION COMMAND WORD FORMAT 4-10 Set special mask 82C59A End of Interrupt (EOI) The In-Service (IS) bit can be reset either automatically following the trailing edge of the last in sequence INTA pulse (when AEOI bit in lCW1 is set) or by a command word that must be issued to the 82C59A before returning from a service routine (EOI Command). An EOI command must be issued twice if servicing a slave in the Cascade mode, once for the master and once for the corresponding slave. There are two forms of EOl command: Specific and NonSpecific. When the 82C59A is operated in modes which preserve the fully nested structure, it can determine which IS bit to reset on EOI. When a Non-Specific command is issued the 82C59A will automatically reset the highest IS bit of those that are set, since in the fully nested mode the highest IS level was necessarily the last level acknowledged and serviced. A non-specific EOI can be issued with OCW2 (EOl = 1, SL = 0, R = 0). When a mode is used which may disturb the fully nested structure, the 82C59A may no longer be able to determine the last level acknowledged. In this case a Specific End of Interrupt must be issued which includes as part of the command the IS level to be reset. A specific EOl can be issued with OCW2 (EOI = 1, SL = 1, R = 0, and L0 - L2 is the binary level of the IS bit to be reset). An lRR bit that is masked by an lMR bit will not be cleared by a non-specific EOI if the 82C59A is in the Special Mask Mode. Automatic End of Interrupt (AEOI) Mode If AEOI = 1 in lCW4, then the 82C59A will operate in AEOl mode continuously until reprogrammed by lCW4. In this mode the 82C59A will automatically perform a non-specific EOI operation at the trailing edge of the last interrupt acknowledge pulse (third pulse in 8080/85, second in 80C86/88/286). Note that from a system standpoint, this mode should be used only when a nested multilevel interrupt structure is not required within a single 82C59A. Automatic Rotation (Equal Priority Devices) IS5 IS4 IS3 IS2 IS1 IS0 “IS” Status 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 Priority Status 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 lowest IS6 IS5 IS4 IS3 IS2 IS1 IS0 “IS” Status 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Priority Status 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 highest lowest There are two ways to accomplish Automatic Rotation using OCW2, the Rotation on Non-Specific EOI Command (R = 1, SL = 0, EOI = 1) and the Rotate in Automatic EOI Mode which is set by (R = 1, SL = 0, EOI = 0) and cleared by (R = 0, SL = 0, EOl = 0). Specific Rotation (Specific Priority) The programmer can change priorities by programming the lowest priority and thus, fixing all other priorities; i.e., if IR5 is programmed as the lowest priority device, then IR6 will have the highest one. The Set Priority command is issued in OCW2 where: R = 1, SL = 1, L0 - L2 is the binary priority level code of the lowest priority device. Observe that in this mode internal status is updated by software control during OCW2. However, it is independent of the End of Interrupt (EOI) command (also executed by OCW2). Priority changes can be executed during an EOI command by using the Rotate on Specific EOl command in OCW2 (R = 1, SL = 1, EOI = 1, and L0 - L2 = IR level to receive lowest priority). Interrupt Masks Each Interrupt Request input can be masked individually by the Interrupt Mask Register (IMR) programmed through OCW1. Each bit in the lMR masks one interrupt channel if it is set (1). Bit 0 masks IR0, Bit 1 masks IR1 and so forth. Masking an IR channel does not affect the operation of other channels. Some applications may require an interrupt service routine to dynamically alter the system priority structure during its execution under software control. For example, the routine may wish to inhibit lower priority requests for a portion of its execution but enable some of them for another portion. The difficulty here is that if an Interrupt Request is acknowledged and an End of Interrupt command did not reset its IS bit (i.e., while executing a service routine), the 82C59A would have inhibited all lower priority requests with no easy way for the routine to enable them. Before Rotate (lR4 the highest priority requiring service) IS6 IS7 Special Mask Mode In some applications there are a number of interrupting devices of equal priority. In this mode a device, after being serviced, receives the lowest priority, so a device requesting an interrupt will have to wait, in the worst case until each of 7 other devices are serviced at most once. For example, if the priority and “in service” status is: IS7 After Rotate (lR4 was serviced, all other priorities rotated correspondingly) highest That is where the Special Mask Mode comes in. In the Special Mask Mode, when a mask bit is set in OCW1, it inhibits further interrupts at that level and enables interrupts from all other levels (lower as well as higher) that are not masked. Thus, any interrupts may be selectively enabled by loading the mask register. 4-11 82C59A The Special Mask Mode is set by OCW3 where: ESMM = 1, SMM = 1, and cleared where ESMM = 1, SMM = 0. The word enabled onto the data bus during RD is: Poll Command In this mode, the INT output is not used or the microprocessor internal Interrupt Enable flip flop is reset, disabling its interrupt input. Service to devices is achieved by software using a Poll command. The Poll command is issued by setting P = 1 in OCW3. The 82C59A treats the next RD pulse to the 82C59A (i.e., RD = 0, CS = 0) as an interrupt acknowledge, sets the appropriate IS bit if there is a request, and reads the priority level. Interrupt is frozen from WR to RD. LTIM BIT 0 = EDGE 1 = LEVEL D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 I - - - - W2 W1 W0 W0 - W2: Binary code of the highest priority level requesting service. I: This mode is useful if there is a routine command common to several levels so that the INTA sequence is not needed (saves ROM space). Another application is to use the poll mode to expand the number of priority levels to more than 64. TO OTHER PRIORITY CELLS CLR ISR EDGE SENSE LATCH CLR Q SET ISR REQUEST LATCH D Q IR D Q INTA CONTROL LOGIC NONMASKED REQ MASK LATCH C Q 80C86/ 88/286 MODE PRIORITY RESOLVER IN - SERVICE LATCH SET 8080/85 MODE ISR BIT SET CLR Q VCC Equal to a “1” if there is an interrupt. C CLR FREEZE READ IMR READ ISR MASTER CLEAR INTA FREEZE FREEZE READ WRITE IRR MASK NOTES: 1. Master clear active only during ICW1. 2. FREEZE is active during INTA and poll sequence only. 3. Truth Table for D-latch. C D Q Operation 1 D1 D1 Follow 0 X Qn-1 Hold FIGURE 9. PRIORITY CELL - SIMPLIFIED LOGIC DIAGRAM Reading the 82C59A Status The input status of several internal registers can be read to update the user information on the system. The following registers can be read via OCW3 (lRR and ISR) or OCW1 (lMR). Interrupt Request Register (IRR): 8-bit register which contains the levels requesting an interrupt to be acknowledged. The highest request level is reset from the lRR when an interrupt is acknowledged. lRR is not affected by lMR. In-Service Register (ISR): 8-bit register which contains the priority levels that are being serviced. The ISR is updated when an End of Interrupt Command is issued. Interrupt Mask Register: 8-bit register which contains the interrupt request lines which are masked. The lRR can be read when, prior to the RD pulse, a Read Register Command is issued with OCW3 (RR = 1, RIS = 0). The ISR can be read when, prior to the RD pulse, a Read Register Command is issued with OCW3 (RR = 1, RIS = 1). There is no need to write an OCW3 before every status read operation, as long as the status read corresponds with the previous one: i.e., the 82C59A “remembers” whether the lRR or ISR has been previously selected by the OCW3. This is not true when poll is used. In the poll mode, the 82C59A 4-12 82C59A treats the RD following a “poll write” operation as an INTA. After initialization, the 82C59A is set to lRR. For reading the lMR, no OCW3 is needed. The output data bus will contain the lMR whenever RD is active and A0 = 1 (OCW1). Polling overrides status read when P = 1, RR = 1 in OCW3. Edge and Level Triggered Modes This mode is programmed using bit 3 in lCW1. If LTlM = “0”, an interrupt request will be recognized by a low to high transition on an IR input. The IR input can remain high without generating another interrupt. If LTIM = “1”, an interrupt request will be recognized by a “high” level on an IR input, and there is no need for an edge detection. The interrupt request must be removed before the EOI command is issued or the CPU interrupt is enabled to prevent a second interrupt from occurring. The priority cell diagram shows a conceptual circuit of the level sensitive and edge sensitive input circuitry of the 82C59A. Be sure to note that the request latch is a transparent D type latch. In both the edge and level triggered modes the IR inputs must remain high until after the falling edge of the first INTA. If the IR input goes low before this time a DEFAULT lR7 will occur when the CPU acknowledges the interrupt. This can be a useful safeguard for detecting interrupts caused by spurious noise glitches on the IR inputs. To implement this feature the lR7 routine is used for “clean up” simply executing a return instruction, thus, ignoring the interrupt. If lR7 is needed for other purposes a default lR7 can still be detected by reading the ISR. A normal lR7 interrupt will set the corresponding ISR bit, a default IR7 won’t. If a default IR7 routine occurs during a normal lR7 routine, however, the ISR will remain set. In this case it is necessary to keep track of whether or not the IR7 routine was previously entered. If another lR7 occurs it is a default. In power sensitive applications, it is advisable to place the 82C59A in the edge-triggered mode with the IR lines normally high. This will minimize the current through the internal pull-up resistors on the IR pins. 80C86/88/286 8080/85 IR INT 80C86/88/286 INTA LATCH ARM (NOTE 1) 8080/85 LATCH ARM (NOTE 1) EARLIEST IR CAN BE REMOVED LATCH ARM (NOTE 1) NOTE: 1. Edge triggered mode only. FIGURE 10. IR TRIGGERING TIMING REQUIREMENTS The Special Fully Nested Mode one from that slave. This is done by sending a non-specific End of Interrupt (EOI) command to the slave and then reading its In-Service register and checking for zero. If it is empty, a non-specified EOI can be sent to the master, too. If not, no EOI should be sent. This mode will be used in the case of a big system where cascading is used, and the priority has to be conserved within each slave. In this case the special fully nested mode will be programmed to the master (using lCW4). This mode is similar to the normal nested mode with the following exceptions: a. When an interrupt request from a certain slave is in service, this slave is not locked out from the master’s priority logic and further interrupt requests from higher priority IRs within the slave will be recognized by the master and will initiate interrupts to the processor. (In the normal nested mode a slave is masked out when its request is in service and no higher requests from the same slave can be serviced. Buffered Mode When the 82C59A is used in a large system where bus driving buffers are required on the data bus and the cascading mode is used, there exists the problem of enabling buffers The buffered mode will structure the 82C59A to send an enable signal on SP/EN to enable the buffers. In this mode, whenever the 82C59A’s data bus outputs are enabled, the SP/EN output becomes active. b. When exiting the Interrupt Service routine the software has to check whether the interrupt serviced was the only 4-13 82C59A release the device routine address during bytes 2 and 3 of INTA. (Byte 2 only for 80C86/88/286). This modification forces the use of software programming to determine whether the 82C59A is a master or a slave. Bit 3 in ICW4 programs the buffered mode, and bit 2 in lCW4 determines whether it is a master or a slave. The cascade bus lines are normally low and will contain the slave address code from the leading edge of the first INTA pulse to the trailing edge of the last INTA pulse. Each 82C59A in the system must follow a separate initialization sequence and can be programmed to work in a different mode. An EOI command must be issued twice: once for the master and once for the corresponding slave. Chip select decoding is required to activate each 82C59A. Cascade Mode The 82C59A can be easily interconnected in a system of one master with up to eight slaves to handle up to 64 priority levels. The master controls the slaves through the 3 line cascade bus (CAS2 - 0). The cascade bus acts like chip selects to the slaves during the INTA sequence. NOTE: Auto EOI is supported in the slave mode for the 82C59A. The cascade lines of the Master 82C59A are activated only for slave inputs, non-slave inputs leave the cascade line inactive (low). Therefore, it is necessary to use a slave address of 0 (zero) only after all other addresses are used. In a cascade configuration, the slave interrupt outputs (INT) are connected to the master interrupt request inputs. When a slave request line is activated and afterwards acknowledged, the master will enable the corresponding slave to ADDRESS BUS (16) CONTROL BUS INT REQ DATA BUS (8) CS A0 D7 - D0 INTA SP/EN 7 6 5 4 3 INT CAS 0 CAS 1 CAS 2 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 SLAVE A 82C59A GND 1 0 CS A0 D7 - D0 INTA SP/EN 7 6 5 4 3 INT CAS 0 CAS 1 CAS 2 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 82C59A GND SLAVE B 1 0 INTERRUPT REQUESTS FIGURE 11. CASCADING THE 82C59A 4-14 CS A0 D7 - D0 INTA CAS 0 CAS 1 MASTER 82C59A CAS 2 SP/EN 7 6 5 4 3 2 VCC 7 6 5 4 3 2 INT 1 0 1 0 82C59A Absolute Maximum Ratings Thermal Information Supply Voltage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +8.0V Input, Output or I/O Voltage . . . . . . . . . . . . GND-0.5V to VCC+0.5V ESD Classification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Class I Thermal Resistance (Typical) θJA (oC/W) θJC (oC/W) CERDIP Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 12 CLCC Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 14 PDIP Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 N/A PLCC Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 N/A SOIC Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 N/A Storage Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-65oC to +150oC Maximum Junction Temperature Ceramic Package . . . . . . . +175oC Maximum Junction Temperature Plastic Package. . . . . . . . . +150oC Maximum Lead Temperature Package (Soldering 10s) . . . . +300oC (PLCC and SOIC - Lead Tips Only) Operating Conditions Operating Voltage Range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +4.5V to +5.5V Operating Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -55oC to +125oC Input Low Voltage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0V to +0.8V Die Characteristics Gate Count . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1250 Gates CAUTION: Stresses above those listed in “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress only rating and operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. DC Electrical Specifications SYMBOL VCC = +5.0V ±10%, TA = 0oC to +70oC (C82C59A), TA = -40oC to +85oC (I82C59A), TA = -55oC to +125oC (M82C59A) PARAMETER MIN MAX UNITS TEST CONDITIONS VlH Logical One Input Voltage 2.0 2.2 - V V VIL Logical Zero Input Voltage - 0.8 V VOH Output HIGH Voltage 3.0 VCC -0.4 - V V IOH = -2.5mA lOH = -100µA VOL Output LOW Voltage - 0.4 V lOL = +2.5mA Input Leakage Current -1.0 +1.0 µA VIN = GND or VCC, Pins 1-3, 26-27 Output Leakage Current -10.0 +10.0 µA VOUT = GND or VCC, Pins 4-13, 15-16 IR Input Load Current - -200 10 µA µA VIN = 0V VIN = VCC lCCSB Standby Power Supply Current - 10 µA VCC = 5.5V, VIN = VCC or GND Outputs Open, (Note 1) ICCOP Operating Power Supply Current - 1 mA/MHz II IO ILIR C82C59A, I82C59A M82C59A VCC = 5.0V, VIN = VCC or GND, Outputs Open, TA = 25oC, (Note 2) NOTES: 1. Except for IR0 - lR7 where VIN = VCC or open. 2. ICCOP = 1mA/MHz of peripheral read/write cycle time. (ex: 1.0µs I/O read/write cycle time = 1mA). Capacitance TA = +25oC SYMBOL CIN COUT CI/O PARAMETER TYP UNITS Input Capacitance 15 pF Output Capacitance 15 pF I/O Capacitance 15 pF 4-15 TEST CONDITIONS FREQ = 1MHz, all measurements reference to device GND. 82C59A AC Electrical Specifications VCC = +5.0V ±10%, GND = 0V, TA = 0oC to +70oC (C82C59A), TA -40oC to +85oC (l82C59A), TA = -55oC to +125oC (M82C59A) 82C59A-5 SYMBOL PARAMETER 82C59A 82C59A-12 MIN MAX MIN MAX MIN MAX UNITS TEST CONDITIONS TIMING REQUIREMENTS (1) TAHRL A0/CS Setup to RD/INTA 10 - 10 - 5 - ns (2) TRHAX A0/CS Hold after RD/INTA 5 - 5 - 0 - ns (3) TRLRH RD/lNTA Pulse Width 235 - 160 - 60 - ns (4) TAHWL A0/CS Setup to WR 0 - 0 - 0 - ns (5) TWHAX A0/CS Hold after WR 5 - 5 - 0 - ns (6) TWLWH WR Pulse Width 165 - 95 - 60 - ns (7) TDVWH Data Setup to WR 240 - 160 - 70 - ns (8) TWHDX Data Hold after WR 5 - 5 - 0 - ns Interrupt Request Width Low 100 - 100 - 40 - ns (10) TCVlAL Cascade Setup to Second or Third INTA (Slave Only) 55 - 40 - 30 - ns (11) TRHRL End of RD to next RD, End of INTA (within an INTA sequence only) 160 - 160 - 90 - ns (12) TWHWL End of WR to next WR 190 - 190 - 60 - ns (13) TCHCL (Note 1) End of Command to next command (not same command type), End of INTA sequence to next INTA sequence 500 - 400 - 90 - ns (9) TJLJH TIMING RESPONSES (14) TRLDV Data Valid from RD/INTA - 160 - 120 - 40 ns 1 (15) TRHDZ Data Float after RD/INTA 5 100 5 85 5 22 ns 2 Interrupt Output Delay - 350 - 300 - 90 ns 1 (17) TlALCV Cascade Valid from First INTA (Master Only) - 565 - 360 - 50 ns 1 (18) TRLEL Enable Active from RD or INTA - 125 - 100 - 40 ns 1 (19) TRHEH Enable Inactive from RD or INTA - 60 - 50 - 22 ns 1 (20) TAHDV Data Valid from Stable Address - 210 - 200 - 60 ns 1 (21) TCVDV Cascade Valid to Valid Data - 300 - 200 - 70 ns 1 (16) TJHlH NOTE: 1. Worst case timing for TCHCL in an actual microprocessor system is typically greater than the values specified for the 82C59A, (i.e. 8085A = 1.6µs, 8085A -2 = 1µs, 80C86 = 1µs, 80C286 -10 = 131ns, 80C286 -12 = 98ns). 4-16 82C59A AC Test Circuit V1 R1 OUTPUT FROM DEVICE UNDER TEST TEST POINT C1 (NOTE) R2 NOTE: Includes stray and jig capacitance. TEST CONDITION DEFINITION TABLE TEST CONDITION V1 R1 R2 C1 1 1.7V 523Ω Open 100pF 2 VCC 1.8kΩ 1.8kΩ 50pF AC Testing Input, Output Waveform INPUT VIH +0.4V OUTPUT VOH 1.5V 1.5V VIL - 0.4V VOL NOTE: AC Testing: All input signals must switch between VIL - 0.4V and VIH + 0.4V. Input rise and fall times are driven at 1ns/V. Timing Waveforms (6) TWLWH WR (5) TWHAX (4) TAHWL CS ADDRESS BUS A0 (7) TDVWH DATA BUS FIGURE 12. WRITE 4-17 (8) TWHDX 82C59A Timing Waveforms (Continued) (3) TRLRH RD/INTA (18) TRLEL (19) TRHEH EN (2) TRHAX (1) TAHRL CS ADDRESS BUS A0 (14) TRLDV (15) TRHDZ DATA BUS (20) TAHDV FIGURE 13. READ/INTA RD INTA (11) TRHRL WR (12) TWHWL RD INTA WR (13) TCHCL RD INTA WR FIGURE 14. OTHER TIMING (16) TJHIH IR SEE NOTE 3 (9) TJLJH SEE NOTE 4 INT INTA SEE NOTE 1 DB SEE NOTE 2 TCVIAL (10) CAS 0 - 2 (17) TIALCV (21) TCVDV NOTES: 1. Interrupt Request (IR) must remain HIGH until leading edge of first INTA. 2. During first INTA the Data Bus is not active in 80C86/88/286 mode. 3. 80C86/88/286 mode. 4. 8080/8085 mode. FIGURE 15. INTA SEQUENCE 4-18 (10) TCVIAL 82C59A Burn-In Circuits MD82C59A CERDIP R1 GND R1 WR R1 RD D5 7 R1 D3 D2 R1 D1 R1 D0 R3 CAS 0 R3 CAS 1 9 VCC IR6 IR5 IR4 R3 IR3 IR2 11 19 R2 18 R2 12 17 A 13 16 R3 15 R3 CAS 2 10 14 GND IR7 21 R2 20 R2 8 R1 C1 INTA 23 R2 22 R2 6 R1 VCC A0 25 R2 24 R2 5 R1 D4 27 R1 26 R1 4 R1 D6 28 2 3 R1 D7 1 A R3 IR1 IR0 SP/EN MR82C59A CLCC VCC D7 RD WR GND R1 4 R1 D6 R1 3 R1 2 C1 A0 INTA R1 1 R1 28 27 R1 26 25 5 R1 D0 R1 R1 22 8 21 9 10 20 11 19 12 13 15 R1 CAS1 CAS0 R1 14 16 R1 NOTES: 1. VCC = 5.5V ±0.5V. 2. VIH = 4.5V ±10%. 7. R3 = 10kΩ ±5%. 3. VIL = -0.2V to 0.4V. 9. C1 = 0.01µF min. 8. R4 = 1.2kΩ ±5%. 4. GND = 0V. 10. F0 = 100kHz ±10%. 5. R1 = 47kΩ ±5%. 11. F1 = F0/2, F2 = F1/2, ...F8 = F7/2. 6. R2 = 510Ω ±5%. 4-19 17 R1 18 R4 IR0 D1 R1 VCC/2 D3 23 7 SP/EN R1 CAS2 D4 GND R1 D2 24 6 D5 R2 R2 IR7 R2 IR6 R2 IR5 R2 IR4 R2 R2 R2 IR3 IR2 IR1 82C59A Die Characteristics DIE DIMENSIONS: 143 x 130 x 19 ±1mils (3630 x 3310 x 525µm) METALLIZATION: Type: Si-Al-Cu Thickness: Metal 1: 8kÅ ± 0.75kÅ Metal 2: 12kÅ ± 1.0kÅ GLASSIVATION: Type: Nitrox Thickness: 10kÅ ± 3.0kÅ Metallization Mask Layout 82C59A D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 CAS0 D7 CAS1 RD GND WR CS CAS2 VCC SP/EN INT A0 IR0 INTA IR1 IR2 IR3 IR4 IR5 IR6 IR7 All Intersil semiconductor products are manufactured, assembled and tested under ISO9000 quality systems certification. Intersil products are sold by description only. Intersil Corporation reserves the right to make changes in circuit design and/or specifications at any time without notice. Accordingly, the reader is cautioned to verify that data sheets are current before placing orders. Information furnished by Intersil is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Intersil or its subsidiaries for its use; nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Intersil or its subsidiaries. For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see web site http://www.intersil.com 4-20