NSC DP83901AV

DP83901A SNIC
Serial Network Interface Controller
General Description
Features
The DP83901A Serial Network Interface Controller (SNIC) is
a microCMOS VLSI device designed for easy implementation of CSMA/CD local area networks. These include Ethernet (10BASE5), Thin Ethernet (10BASE2) and Twisted-pair
Ethernet (10BASE-T). The overall SNIC solution provides
the Media Access Control (MAC) and Encode-Decode
(ENDEC) functions in accordance with the IEEE 802.3 standard.
The integrated ENDEC module allows Manchester encoding and decoding via a differential transceiver and phase
lock loop at 10 Mbit/sec. Also included is a collision detect
translator and diagnostic loopback capability. (Continued)
Y
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Compatible with IEEE 802.3, 10BASE5, 10BASE2,
10BASE-T
Dual 16-byte DMA channels
16-byte internal FIFO
Network statistics storage
Supports physical, multicast and broadcast address
filtering
10 Mbit/sec Manchester encoding and decoding plus
clock recovery
No external precision components required
Efficient buffer management implementation
Transmitter can be selected for half or full step mode
Integrated squelch on receive and collision pairs
3 levels of loopback supported
Utilizes independent system and network clocks
Lock Time 5 bits typical
Decodes Manchester data with up to g 18 ns jitter
1.0 System Diagram
TL/F/10469 – 1
TRI-STATEÉ is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation.
C1995 National Semiconductor Corporation
TL/F/10469
RRD-B30M115/Printed in U. S. A.
DP83901A SNIC Serial Network Interface Controller
November 1995
General Description (Continued)
Table Of Contents
The MAC function (NIC) provides simple and efficient packet transmission and reception control by means of unique
dual DMA channels and an internal FIFO. Bus arbitration
and memory control logic are integrated to reduce board
cost and area overheads.
SNIC used in conjunction with the DP8392 Coaxial Transceiver Interface (CTI) provides a comprehensive 2 chip solution for IEEE 802.3 networks and is designed for easy interface to the latest 10BASE-T transceivers.
Due to the inherent constraints of CMOS processing, isolation is required at the differential signal interfaces for
10BASE5 and 10BASE2 applications. Capacitive or inductive isolation may be used.
1.0 SYSTEM DIAGRAM
2.0 PIN DESCRIPTION
3.0 BLOCK DIAGRAM
4.0 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
5.0 TRANSMIT/RECEIVE PACKET
ENCAPSULATION/DECAPSULATION
6.0 DIRECT MEMORY ACCESS CONTROL (DMA)
7.0 PACKET RECEPTION
8.0 PACKET TRANSMISSION
9.0 REMOTE DMA
10.0 INTERNAL REGISTERS
11.0 INITIALIZATION PROCEDURE
12.0 LOOPBACK DIAGNOSTICS
13.0 BUS ARBITRATION
14.0 PRELIMINARY ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
15.0 SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS
16.0 AC TIMING TEST CONDITIONS
17.0 PHYSICAL DIMENSIONS
Connection Diagram
TL/F/10469 – 2
Top View
Order Number DP83901AV
See NS Package Number V68A
2
Pin Description
Pin No
Pin Name
I/O
Description
BUS INTERFACE PINS
2
PRD
O
PORT READ: Enables data from external latch on to local bus during a memory write cycle to
local memory (remote write operation). This allows asynchronous transfer of data from the
system memory to local memory.
3–6
RA0–RA3
I
REGISTER ADDRESS: These four pins are used to select a register to be read or written. The
state of these inputs is ignored when the NIC is not in slave mode (CS high).
7 – 17,
19,
22 – 25
AD0–AD15
I/O, Z
MULTIPLEXED ADDRESS/DATA BUS:
# Register Access, with DMA inactive, CS low and ACK returned from SNIC, pins AD0–AD7 are
used to read and write register data. AD8–AD15 float during I/O transfers, SRD, SWR pins are
used to select direction of transfer.
# Bus Master with BACK input asserted.
During t1 of memory cycle AD0 – AD15 contain address.
During t2, t3, t4 AD0 – AD15 contain data (word transfer mode).
During t2, t3, t4 AD0 – AD7 contain data, AD8 – AD15 contain address (byte transfer mode).
Direction of transfer is indicated by SNIC on MWR, MRD lines.
26
ADS0
I/O, Z
ADDRESS STROBE 0:
# Input: with DMA inactive and CS low, latches RA0–RA3 inputs on falling edge. If high, data
present on RA0–RA3 will flow through latch.
# Output: When Bus Master, latches address bits (A0–A15) to external memory during DMA
transfers.
27
CS
28
MWR
O, Z
MASTER WRITE STROBE: (Strobe for DMA transfers)
Active low during write cycles (t2, t3, tw) to buffer memory. Rising edge coincides with the
presence of valid output data. TRI-STATEÉ until BACK asserted.
29
MRD
O, Z
MASTER READ STROBE: (Strobe for DMA transfers)
Active during read cycles (t2, t3, tw) to buffer memory. Input data must be valid on rising edge of
MRD. TRI-STATE until BACK asserted.
30
SWR
I
SLAVE WRITE STROBE: Strobe from CPU to write an internal register selected by RA0 – RA3.
Data is latched into the SNIC on the rising edge of this input.
31
SRD
I
SLAVE READ STROBE: Strobe from CPU to read an internal register selected by RA0 – RA3.
The register data is output when SRD goes low.
32
ACK
O
ACKNOWLEDGE: Active low when SNIC grants access to CPU. Used to insert WAIT states to
CPU until SNIC is synchronized for a register read or write operation.
34
BSCK
I
BUS CLOCK: This clock is used to establish the period of the DMA memory cycle. Four clock
cycles (t1, t2, t3, t4) are used per DMA cycle. DMA transfers can be extended by one BSCK
increments using the READY input.
36
RACK
I
READ ACKNOWLEDGE: Indicates that the system DMA or host CPU has read the data placed
in the external latch by the SNIC. The SNIC will begin a read cycle to update the latch.
37
PWR
O
PORT WRITE: Strobe used to latch data from the SNIC into external latch for transfer to host
memory during Remote Read transfers. The rising edge of PWR coincides with the presence of
valid data on the local bus.
38
READY
I
READY: This pin is set high to insert wait states during a DMA transfer. The SNIC will sample this
signal at t3 during DMA transfers.
O
CHIP SELECT: Chip Select places controller in slave mode for mP access to internal registers.
Must be valid through data portion of bus cycle. RA0 – RA3 are used to select the internal
register. SWR and SRD select direction of data transfer.
3
Pin Description (Continued)
Pin No
Pin Name
I/O
Description
BUS INTERFACE PINS (Continued)
39
PRQ/ADS1
O, Z
40
BACK
I
BUS ACKNOWLEDGE: Bus Acknowledge is an active high signal indicating that the CPU has
granted the bus to the SNIC. If immediate bus access is desired, BREQ should be tied to BACK.
Tying BACK to VCC will result in a deadlock.
41
BREQ
O
BUS REQUEST: Bus Request is an active high signal used to request the bus for DMA transfers.
This signal is automatically generated when the FIFO needs servicing.
65
RESET
I
RESET: Reset is active low and places the SNIC in a reset immediately, no packets are
transmitted or received by the SNIC until STA bit is set. Affects Command Register, Interrupt
Mask Register, Data Configuration Register and Transmit Configuration Register. The SNIC will
execute reset within 10 BSCK cycles and TXC cycles.
67
INT
O
INTERRUPT: Indicates that the SNIC requires CPU attention after reception transmission or
completion of DMA transfers. The interrupt is cleared by writing to the ISR (Interrupt Service
Register). All interrupts are maskable.
68
WACK
I
WRITE ACKNOWLEDGE: Issued from system to SNIC to indicate that data has been written to
the external latch. The SNIC will begin a write cycle to place the data in local memory.
PORT REQUEST/ADDRESS STROBE 1
# 32-BIT MODE: If LAS is set in the Data Configuration Register, this line is programmed
as ADS1. It is used to strobe addresses A16 – A31 into external latches. (A16 – A31 are the
fixed addresses stored in RSAR0, RSAR1). ADS1 will remain at TRI-STATE until BACK is
received.
# 16-BIT MODE: If LAS is not set in the Data Configuration Register, this line is programmed as
PRQ and is used for Remote DMA Transfers. The SNIC initiates a single remote DMA read or
write operation by asserting this pin. In this mode PRQ will be a standard logic output.
Note: This line will power up as TRI-STATE until the Data Configuration Register is programmed.
NETWORK INTERFACE PINS
42,
43
TXb
TX a
O
TRANSMIT OUTPUT: Differential driver which sends the encoded data to the transceiver. The
outputs are source followers which require 270X pulldown resistors.
46
TEST
I
FACTORY TEST INPUT: Used to check the chip’s internal functions. Tied low during normal
operation.
47
SEL
I
MODE SELECT: When high, Transmit a and Transmitb are the same voltage in the idle state.
When low, Transmit a is positive with respect to Transmitb in the idle state, at the transformer’s
primary.
50
X1
I
EXTERNAL OSCILLATOR INPUT
51
GND/X2
O
GROUND/X2: This in should normally be connected to ground. It is possible to use a crystal
oscillator using X1 and GND/X2 if certain precautions are taken. Contact National
Semiconductor for more information.
56
SNISEL
I
FACTORY TEST INPUT: For normal operation tied to VCC. When low enables the ENDEC
module to be tested independently of the SNIC module.
60,
61
RXb
RX a
I
RECEIVE INPUT: Differential receive input pair from the transceiver.
62,
63
CDb
CD a
I
COLLISION INPUT: Differential collision pair input from the transceiver.
4
Pin Description (Continued)
Pin No
Pin Name
I/O
Description
POWER SUPPLY PINS
21, 48,
53, 55
VCC
DIGITAL POSITIVE 5V SUPPLY PINS:
20, 33, 49
54, 66
GND
DIGITAL NEGATIVE (GROUND) SUPPLY PINS: It is suggested that a decoupling capacitor be
connected between the VCC and GND pins.
59
VCC
AUI RECEIVE 5V SUPPLY: Power pin supplies 5V to the AUI receiver.
64
GND
AUI RECEIVE GROUND: Ground pin for AUI receiver.
45
VCC
AUI TRANSMIT 5V SUPPLY: Power pin supplies 5V to the AUI transmitter.
44
GND
AUI TRANSMIT GROUND: Ground pin for AUI transmitter
58
VCC
VCO 5V SUPPLY: Care should be taken to reduce noise on this pin as it supplies 5V to the
ENDEC’s Phase Lock Loop.
57
GND
VCO GROUND PIN: Care should be taken to reduce noise on this pin as it is the ground to the
ENDEC’s Phase Lock Loop.
NO CONNECTION
1, 18,
35, 52
NC
NO CONNECTION: Do not connect to these pins.
3.0 Block Diagram
TL/F/10469 – 3
FIGURE 1
5
4.0 Functional Description (Refer to Figure 1 )
ENCODER/DECODER (ENDEC) MODULE
NIC (Media Access Control) MODULE
The ENDEC consists of four main logical blocks:
RECEIVE DESERIALIZER
a) The Manchester encoder accepts NRZ data from the
controller, encodes the data to Manchester, and transmits it differentially to the transceiver, through the differential transmit driver.
b) The Manchester decoder receives Manchester data from
the transceiver, converts it to NRZ data and clock pulses,
and sends it to the controller.
c) The collision translator indicates to the controller the
presence of a valid 10 MHz collision signal to the PLL.
The Receive Deserializer is activated when the input signal
Carrier Sense is asserted to allow incoming bits to be shifted into the shift register by the receive clock. The serial
receive data is also routed to the CRC generator/checker.
The Receive Deserializer includes a synch detector which
detects the SFD (Start of Frame Delimiter) to establish
where byte boundaries within the serial bit stream are located. After every eight receive clocks, the byte wide data is
transferred to the 16-byte FIFO and the Receive Byte Count
is incremented. The first six bytes after the SFD are
checked for valid comparison by the Address Recognition
Logic. If the Address Recognition Logic does not recognize
the packet, the FIFO is cleared.
MANCHESTER ENCODER AND DIFFERENTIAL DRIVER
The differential transmit pair, on the secondary of the employed transformer, drives up to 50 meters of twisted pair
AUI cable. These outputs are source followers which require
two 270X pull-down resistors to ground.
The DP83901A allows both half-step and full-step to be
compatible with Ethernet and IEEE 802.3. With the SEL pin
low (for Ethernet I). Transmit a is positive with respect to
Transmitb during idle; with SEL high (for IEEE 802.3),
Transmit a and Transmitb are equal in the idle state. This
provides zero differential voltage to operate with transformer coupled loads.
CRC GENERATOR/CHECKER
During transmission, the CRC logic generates a local CRC
field for the transmitted bit sequence. The CRC encodes all
fields after the SFD. The CRC is shifted out MSB first following the last transmit byte. During reception the CRC logic
generates a CRC field from the incoming packet. This local
CRC is serially compared to the incoming CRC appended to
the end of the packet by the transmitting node. If the local
and received CRC match, a specific pattern will be generated and decoded to indicate no data errors. Transmission
errors result in different pattern and are detected, resulting
in rejection of a packet (if so programmed).
MANCHESTER DECODER
The decoder consists of a differential receiver and a PLL to
separate a Manchester decoded data stream into internal
clock signals and data. The differential input must be externally terminated with two 39X resistors connected in series
if the standard 78X transceiver drop cable is used, in thin
Ethernet applications, these resistors are optional. To prevent noise from falsely triggering the decoder, a squelch
circuit at the input rejects signals with levels less than
b 175 mV. Signals more negative than b 300 mV and a
duration greater than 30 ns are decoded. Data becomes
valid typically within 5 bit times. The DP83901A may tolerate
bit jitter up to 18 ns in the received data. The decoder detects the end of a frame when no more mid-bit transitions
are detected.
TRANSMIT SERIALIZER
The Transmit Serializer reads parallel data from the FIFO
and serializes it for transmission. The serializer is clocked by
the transmit clock generated internally. The serial data is
also shifted into the CRC generator/checker. At the beginning of each transmission, the Preamble and Synch Generator append 62 bits of 1,0 preamble and a 1,1 synch pattern. After the last data byte of the packet has been serialized the 32-bit FCS field is shifted directly out of the CRC
generator. In the event of a collision the Preamble and
Synch generator is used to generate a 32-bit JAM pattern of
all 1’s.
COLLISION TRANSLATOR
When the Ethernet transceiver (DP8392 CTI) detects a collision, it generates a 10 MHz signal to the differential collision
inputs (CD g ) of the DP83901A. When these inputs are detected active, the DP83901A uses this signal to back off its
current transmission and reschedule another one.
The collision differential inputs are terminated the same way
as the differential receive inputs. The squelch circuitry is
also similar, rejecting pulses with levels less than b175 mV.
ADDRESS RECOGNITION LOGIC
The address recognition logic compares the Destination Address Field (first 6 bytes of the received packet) to the Physical address registers stored in the Address Register Array.
If any one of the six bytes does not match the pre-programmed physical address, the Protocol Control Logic rejects the packet. All multicast destination addresses are filtered using a hashing technique. (See register description.)
If the multicast address indexes a bit that has been set in
the filter bit array of the Multicast Address Register Array
the packet is accepted, otherwise it is rejected by the Proto-
6
4.0 Functional Description (Continued)
col Control Logic. Each destination address is also checked
for all 1’s which is the reserved broadcast address.
2. During the burst, packet ends, resulting in BREQ extended.
FIFO AND BUS OPERATIONS
3. SNIC flushes remaining bytes from FIFO.
4. SNIC performs internal processing to prepare for writing
the header.
5. SNIC writes 4-byte (2-word) header.
6. SNIC de-asserts BREQ.
Overview
To accommodate the different rates at which data comes
from (or goes to) the network and goes to (or comes from)
the system memory, the SNIC contains a 16-byte FIFO for
buffering data between the media. The FIFO threshold is
programmable, allowing filling (or emptying) the FIFO at different rates. When the FIFO has filled to its programmed
threshold, the local DMA channel transfers these bytes (or
words) into local memory. It is crucial that the local DMA is
given access to the bus within a minimum bus latency time;
otherwise a FIFO underrun (or overrun) occurs.
FIFO underruns or overruns are caused by two conditions:
(1) the bus latency is so long that the FIFO has filled (or
emptied) from the network before the local DMA has serviced the FIFO and (2) the bus latency has slowed the
throughput of the local DMA to point where it is slower than
the network data rate (10 Mbit/sec). This second condition
is also dependent upon DMA clock and word width (byte
wide or word wide). The worst case condition ultimately limits the overall bus latency which the SNIC can tolerate.
FIFO Threshold Detection
To assure that no overwriting of data in the FIFO, the FIFO
logic flags a FIFO overrun as the 13th byte is written into the
FIFO, effectively shortening the FIFO to 13 bytes. The FIFO
logic also operates differently in Byte Mode and in Word
Mode. In Byte Mode, a threshold is indicated when the n a 1
byte has entered the FIFO; thus, with an 8-byte threshold,
the SNIC issues Bus Request (BREQ) when the 9th byte
has entered the FIFO. For Word Mode, BREQ is not generated until the n a 2 bytes have entered the FIFO. Thus, with
a 4 word threshold (equivalent to 8-byte threshold), BREQ is
issued when the 10th byte has entered the FIFO.
Beginning of Transmit
Before transmitting, the SNIC performs a prefetch from
memory to load the FIFO. The number of bytes prefetched
is the programmed FIFO threshold. The next BREQ is not
issued until after the SNIC actually begins transmitting data,
i.e., after SFD.
Beginning of Receive
At the beginning or reception, the SNIC stores entire Address field of each incoming packet in the FIFO to determine whether the packet matches its Physical Address Registers or maps to one of its Multicast Registers. This causes
the FIFO to accumulate 8 bytes. Furthermore, there are
some synchronization delays in the DMA PLA. Thus, the
actual time that BREQ is asserted from the time the Start of
Frame Delimiter (SFD) is detected is 7.8 ms. This operation
affects the bus latencies at 2 and 4-byte thresholds during
the first receive BREQ since the FIFO must be filled to
8 bytes (or 4 words) before issuing a BREQ.
Reading the FIFO
During normal operation, the FIFO must not be read. The
SNIC will not issue an ACKnowledge back to the CPU if the
FIFO is read. The FIFO should only be read during loopback
diagnostics.
PROTOCOL PLA
The protocol PLA is responsible for implementing the IEEE
802.3 protocol, including collision recovery with random
backoff. The Protocol PLA also formats packets during
transmission and strips preamble and synch during reception.
End of Receive
When the end of a packet is detected by the ENDEC module, the SNIC enters its end of packet processing sequence,
emptying its FIFO and writing the status information at the
beginning of the packet. The SNIC holds onto the bus for
the entire sequence. The longest time BREQ may be extended occurs when a packet ends just as the SNIC performs its last FIFO burst. The SNIC, in this case, performs a
programmed burst transfer followed by flushing the remaining bytes in the FIFO, and completed by writing the header
information to memory. The following steps occur during
this sequence.
1. SNIC issues BREQ because the FIFO threshold has been
reached.
DMA AND BUFFER CONTROL LOGIC
The DMA and Buffer Control Logic is used to control two
16-bit DMA channels. During reception, the local DMA
stores packets in a receive buffer ring, located in buffer
memory. During transmission the Local DMA uses programmed pointer and length registers to transfer a packet
from local buffer memory to the FIFO. A second DMA channel is used as a slave DMA to transfer data between the
local buffer memory and the host system. The Local DMA
and Remote DMA are internally arbitrated, with the Local
DMA channel having highest priority. Both DMA channels
use a common external bus clock to generate all required
bus timing. External arbitration is performed with a standard
bus request, bus acknowledge handshake protocol.
7
5.0 Transmit/Receive Packet Encapsulation/Decapsulation
of ‘‘1’’. The SNIC filters multicast addresses using a standard hashing algorithm that maps all multicast addresses
into a 6-bit value. This 6-bit value indexes a 64-bit array that
filters the value. If the address consists of all 1’s it is a
broadcast address, indicating that the packet is intended for
all nodes. A promiscuous mode allows reception of all packets: the destination address is not required to match any
filters. Physical, broadcast, multicast, and promiscuous address modes can be selected.
A standard IEEE 802.3 packet consists of the following
fields: preamble, Start of Frame Delimiter (SFD), destination
address, source address, length, data, and Frame Check
Sequence (FCS). The typical format is shown in Figure 2.
The packets are Manchester encoded and decoded by the
ENDEC module and transferred serially to the NIC module
using NRZ data with a clock. All fields are of fixed length
except for the data field. The SNIC generates and appends
the preamble, SFD and FCS field during transmission. The
Preamble and SFD fields are stripped during reception. (The
CRC is passed through to buffer memory during reception.)
SOURCE ADDRESS
The source address is the physical address of the node that
sent the packet. Source addresses cannot be multicast or
broadcast addresses. This field is simply passed to buffer
memory.
PREAMBLE AND START OF FRAME DELIMITER (SFD)
The Manchester encoded alternating 1,0 preamble field is
used by the ENDEC to acquire bit synchronization with an
incoming packet. When transmitted each packet contains
62 bits of alternating 1,0 preamble. Some of this preamble
will be lost as the packet travels through the network. The
preamble field is stripped by the NIC module. Byte alignment is performed with the Start of Frame Delimiter (SFD)
pattern which consists of two consecutive 1’s. The SNIC
does not treat the SFD pattern as a byte, it detects only the
two bit pattern. This allows any preceding preamble within
the SFD to be used for phase locking.
LENGTH FIELD
The 2-byte length field indicates the number of bytes that
are contained in the data field of the packet. This field is not
interpreted by the SNIC.
DATA FIELD
The data field consists of anywhere from 46 to 1500 bytes.
Messages longer than 1500 bytes need to be broken into
multiple packets. Messages shorter than 46 bytes will require appending a pad to bring the data field to the minimum
length of 46 bytes. If the data field is padded, the number of
valid data bytes is indicated in the length field. The SNIC
does not strip or append pad bytes for short packets,
or check for oversize packets.
DESTINATION ADDRESS
The destination address indicates the destination of the
packet on the network and is used to filter unwanted packets from reaching a node. There are three types of address
formats supported by the SNIC: physical, multicast and
broadcast. The physical address is a unique address that
corresponds only to a single node. All physical addresses
have an MSB of ‘‘0’’. These addresses are compared to the
internally stored physical address registers. Each bit in the
destination address must match in order for the SNIC to
accept the packet. Multicast addresses begin with an MSB
FCS FIELD
The Frame Check Sequence (FCS) is a 32-bit CRC field
calculated and appended to a packet during transmission to
allow detection of errors when a packet is received. During
reception, error free packets result in a specific pattern in
the CRC generator. Packets with improper CRC will be rejected. The AUTODIN II (X32 a X26 a X23 a X22 a X16 a
X12 a X11 a X10 a X8 a X7 a X5 a X4 a X2 a X1 a 1)
polynomial is used for the CRC calculations.
TL/F/10469 – 5
FIGURE 2
8
6.0 Direct Memory Access Control (DMA)
on a local bus, where the SNIC’s local DMA channel performs burst transfers between the buffer memory and the
SNIC’s FIFO. The Remote DMA transfers data between the
buffer memory and the host memory via a bidirectional I/O
port. The Remote DMA provides local addressing capability
and is used as a slave DMA by the host. Host side addressing must be provided by a host DMA or the CPU. The SNIC
allows Local and Remote DMA operations to be interleaved.
The DMA capabilities of the SNIC greatly simplify the use of
the DP83901A in typical configurations. The local DMA
channel transfers data between the FIFO and memory. On
transmission, the packet is DMA’d from memory to the FIFO
in bursts. Should a collision occur (up to 15 times), the packet is retransmitted with no processor intervention. On reception, packets are DMAed from the FIFO to the receive buffer
ring (as explained below).
A remote DMA channel is also provided on the SNIC to
accomplish transfers between a buffer memory and system
memory. The two DMA channels can alternatively be combined to form a single 32-bit address with 8- or 16-bit data.
SINGLE CHANNEL DMA OPERATION
If desirable, the two DMA channels can be combined to
provide a 32-bit DMA address. The upper 16 bits of the
32-bit address are static and are used to point to a 64 kbyte
(or 32k word) page of memory where packets are to be
received and transmitted.
DUAL DMA CONFIGURATION
An example configuration using both the local and remote
DMA channels is shown below. Network activity is isolated
Dual Bus System
TL/F/10469 – 6
9
7.0 Packet Reception
provides three basic functions: linking receive buffers for
long packets, recovery of buffers when a packet is rejected,
and recirculation of buffer pages that have been read by the
host.
At initialization, a portion of the 64 kbyte (or 32k word) address space is reserved for the receive buffer ring. Two 8-bit
registers, The Page Start Address Register (PSTART) and
the Page Stop Address Register (PSTOP) define the physical boundaries of where the buffers reside. The SNIC treats
the list of buffers as a logical ring; whenever the DMA address reaches the Page Stop Address, the DMA is reset to
the Page Start Address.
The Local DMA receive channel uses a Buffer Ring Structure comprised of a series of contiguous fixed length
256-byte (128 word) buffers for storage of received packets.
The location of the Receive Buffer Ring is programmed in
two registers, a Page Start and a Page Stop Register. Ethernet packets consist of a distribution of shorter link control
packets and longer data packets, the 256-byte buffer length
provides a good compromise between short packets and
longer packets to most efficiently use memory. In addition
these buffers provide memory resources for storage of
back-to-back packets in loaded networks. The assignment
of buffers for storing packets is controlled by Buffer Management Logic in the SNIC. The Buffer Management Logic
NIC Receive Buffer Ring
TL/F/10469 – 7
10
7.0 Packet Reception (Continued)
simple analogy to remember the function of these registers
is that the Current Page Register acts as a Write Pointer and
the Boundary Pointer acts as a Read Pointer.
INITIALIZATION OF THE BUFFER RING
Two static registers and two working registers control the
operation of the Buffer Ring. These are the Page Start Register, Page Stop Register (both described previously), the
Current Page Register and the Boundary Pointer Register.
The Current Page Register points to the first buffer used to
store a packet and is used to restore the DMA for writing
status to the Buffer Ring or for restoring the DMA address in
the event of a Runt packet, a CRC, or Frame Alignment
error. The Boundary Register points to the first packet in the
Ring not yet read by the host. If the local DMA address ever
reaches the Boundary, reception is aborted. The Boundary
Pointer is also used to initialize the Remote DMA for removing a packet and is advanced when a packet is removed. A
Note: At initialization, the Page Start Register value should be loaded into
both the Current Page Register and the Boundary Pointer Register.
Note: The Page Start Register must not be initialized to 00H.
BEGINNING OF RECEPTION
When the first packet begins arriving the SNIC begins storing the packet at the location pointed to by the Current Page
Register. An offset of 4 bytes is saved in this first buffer to
allow room for storing receive status corresponding to this
packet.
Buffer Ring at Initialization
TL/F/10469 – 8
Received Packet Enters the Buffer Pages
TL/F/10469 – 9
11
7.0 Packet Reception (Continued)
dress of the next buffer address and the contents of the
Boundary Pointer Register. If the two values are equal the
reception is aborted. The Boundary Pointer Register can be
used to protect against overwriting any area in the receive
buffer ring that has not yet been read. When linking buffers,
buffer management will never cross this pointer, effectively
avoiding any overwrites. If the buffer address does not
match either the Boundary Pointer or Page Stop Address,
the link to the next buffer is performed.
LINKING RECEIVE BUFFER PAGES
If the length of the packet exhausts the first 256-byte buffer,
the DMA performs a forward link to the next buffer to store
the remainder of the packet. For a maximal length packet
the buffer logic will link six buffers to store the entire packet.
Buffers cannot be skipped when linking, a packet will always
be stored in contiguous buffers. Before the next buffer can
be linked, the Buffer Management Logic performs two comparisons. The first comparison tests for equality between
the DMA address of the next buffer and the contents of the
Page Stop Register. If the buffer address equals the Page
Stop Register, the buffer management logic will restore the
DMA to the first buffer in the Receive Buffer Ring value
programmed in the Page Start Address Register. The second comparison tests for equality between the DMA ad-
Linking Buffers
Before the DMA can enter the next contiguous 256-byte
buffer, the address is checked for equality to PSTOP and to
the Boundary Pointer. If neither are reached, the DMA is
allowed to use the next buffer.
Linking Receive Buffer Pages
TL/F/10469 – 10
1) Check for e to PSTOP
2) Check for e to Boundary
12
7.0 Packet Reception (Continued)
mit Error bit (TXE) is set to a 1, set the ‘‘Resend’’ variable to a 0 and jump to step 6. If neither of these bits is
set, place a 1 in the ‘‘Resend’’ variable and jump to step
6.
This step determines if there was a transmission in progress when the stop command was issued in step 2. If
there was a transmission in progress, the SNIC’s ISR is
read to determine whether or not the packet was recognized by the SNIC. If neither the PTX nor TXE bit was
set, then the packet will essentially be lost and re-transmitted only after a time-out takes place in the upper level software. By determining that the packet was lost at
the driver level, a transmit command can be reissued to
the SNIC once the overflow routine is completed (as in
step 11). Also, it is possible for the SNIC to defer indefinitely, when it is stopped on a busy network. Step 5 also
alleviates this problem. Step 5 is essential and should
not be omitted from the overflow routine, in order for the
SNIC to operate correctly.
6. Place the SNIC in either mode 1 or mode 2 loopback.
This can be accomplished by setting bits D2 and D1, of
the Transmit Configuration Register, to ‘‘0,1’’ or ‘‘1,0’’,
respectively.
7. Issue the START command to the SNIC. This can be
accomplished by writing 22H to the Command Register.
This is necessary to activate the SNIC’s Remote DMA
channel.
8. Remove one or more packets from the receive buffer
ring.
9. Reset the overwrite warning (OVW, overflow) bit in the
Interrupt Status Register.
10. Take the SNIC out of loopback. This is done by writing
the Transmit Configuration Register with the value it
contains during normal operation. (Bits D2 and D1
should both be programmed to 0.)
11. If the ‘‘Resend’’ variable is set to a 1, reset the ‘‘Resend’’ variable and reissue the transmit command. This
is done by writing a value of 26H to the Command Register. If the ‘‘Resend’’ variable is 0, nothing needs to be
done.
Buffer Ring Overflow
If the Buffer Ring has been filled and the DMA reaches the
Boundary Pointer Address, reception of the incoming packet will be aborted by the SNIC. Thus, the packets previously
received and still contained in the Ring will not be destroyed.
In heavily loaded network which cause overflows of the Receive Buffer Ring, the SNIC may disable the local DMA and
suspend further receptions even if the Boundary register is
advanced beyond the Current register. To guarantee this
will not happen, a software reset must be issued during all
Receive Buffer Ring overflows (indicated by the OVW bit in
the Interrupt Status Register). The following procedure is
required to recover from a Receiver Buffer Ring Overflow.
If this routine is not adhered to, the SNIC may act in an
unpredictable manner. It should also be noted that it is not
permissible to service an overflow interrupt by continuing to
empty packets from the receive buffer without implementing
the prescribed overflow routine. A flow chart of the SNIC’s
overflow routine can be found on the next page.
Note: It is necessary to define a variable in the driver, which will be called
‘‘Resend’’.
1. Read and store the value of the TXP bit in the SNIC’s
Command Register.
2. Issue the STOP command to the SNIC. This is accomplished by setting the STP bit in the SNIC’s Command
Register. Writing 21H to the Command Register will stop
the SNIC.
3. Wait for at least 1.6 ms. Since the SNIC will complete
any transmission or reception that is in progress, it is
necessary to time out for the maximum possible duration of an Ethernet transmission or reception. By waiting
1.6 ms this is achieved with some guard band added.
Previously, it was recommended that the RST bit of the
Interrupt Status Register be polled to insure that the
pending transmission or reception is completed. This bit
is not a reliable indicator and subsequently should be
ignored.
4. Clear the SNIC’s Remote Byte Count registers (RBCR0
and RBCR1).
5. Read the stored value of the TXP bit from step 1, above.
If this value is a 0, set the ‘‘Resend’’ variable to a 0 and
jump to step 6.
If this value is a 1, read the SNIC’s Interrupt Status Register. If either the Packet Transmitted bit (PTX) or Trans-
Note 1: If Remote DMA is not being used, the SNIC does not need to be
started before packets can be removed from the receive buffer ring. Hence,
step 8 could be done before step 7.
Note 2: When the SNIC is in STOP mode, the Missed Talley Counter is
disabled.
Received Packet Aborted If It Hits Boundary
TL/F/10469 – 11
13
7.0 Packet Reception (Continued)
Overflow Routine Flow Chart
TL/F/10469 – 52
14
7.0 Packet Reception (Continued)
10) Put SNIC in START mode (Command Register e 22H).
The local receive DMA is still not active since the SNIC
is in LOOPBACK.
11) Initialize the Transmit Configuration for the intended value. The SNIC is now ready for transmission and reception.
Enabling the SNIC On An Active Network
After the SNIC has been initialized the procedure for disabling and then re-enabling the SNIC on the network is similar to handling Receive Buffer Ring overflow as described
previously.
1. Program Command Register for page 0 (Command
Register e 21H)
2. Initialize Data Configuration Register (DCR)
3. Clear Remote Byte Count Registers (RBCR0, RBCR1)
4. Initialize Receive Configuration Register (RCR)
5. Place the SNIC in LOOPBACK mode 1 or 2 (Transmit
Configuration Register e 02H or 04H)
6. Initialize Receive Buffer Ring: Boundary Pointer
(BNDRY), Page Start (PSTART), and Page Stop
(PSTOP)
7. Clear Interrupt Status Register (ISR) by writing 0FFH to
it.
8. Initialize Interrupt Mask Register (IMR)
9. Program Command Register for page 1 (Command
Register e 61H)
i) Initialize Physical Address Registers (PAR0–PAR5)
ii) Initialize Multicast Address Registers (MAR0 – MAR7)
iii) Initialize CURRent pointer
END OF PACKET OPERATIONS
At the end of the packet the SNIC determines whether the
received packet is to be accepted or rejected. It either
branches to a routine to store the Buffer Header or to another routine that recovers the buffers used to store the packet.
SUCCESSFUL RECEPTION
If the packet is successfully received, the DMA is restored
to the first buffer used to store the packet (pointed to by the
Current Page Register). The DMA then stores the Receive
Status, a Pointer to where the next packet will be stored
(Buffer 4) and the number of received bytes. Note that the
remaining bytes in the last buffer are discarded and reception of the next packet begins on the next empty 256-byte
buffer boundary. The Current Page Register is then initialized to the next available buffer in the Buffer Ring. (The
location of the next buffer had been previously calculated
and temporarily stored in an internal scratchpad register.)
Termination of Received PacketÐPacket Accepted
TL/F/10469 – 12
15
7.0 Packet Reception (Continued)
errors. The received CRC is always stored in buffer memory
after the last byte of received data for the packet.
BUFFER RECOVERY FOR REJECTED PACKETS
If the packet is a runt packet or contains CRC or Frame
Alignment errors, it is rejected. The buffer management logic resets the DMA back to the first buffer page used to store
the packet (pointed to by CURR), recovering all buffers that
had been used to store the rejected packet. This operation
will not be performed if the SNIC is programmed to accept
either runt packets or packets with CRC or Frame Alignment
Error Recovery
If the packet is rejected as shown, the DMA is restored by
the SNIC by reprogramming the DMA starting address
pointed to by the Current Page Register.
Termination of Receive PacketÐPacket Reject
TL/F/10469 – 13
16
7.0 Packet Reception (Continued)
REMOVING PACKETS FROM THE RING
AD15
Packets are removed from the ring using the Remote DMA
or an external device. When using the Remote DMA the
Send Packet command can be used. This programs the Remote DMA to automatically remove the received packet
pointed to by the Boundary Pointer. At the end of the transfer, the SNIC moves the Boundary Pointer, freeing additional buffers for reception. The Boundary Pointer can also be
moved manually by programming the Boundary Register.
AD8 AD7
Receive Byte Count 0
Receive Byte Count 1
Byte 1
Byte 2
Receive Status
Next Packet Pointer
Receive Byte Count 0
Receive Byte Count 1
AD0
Next Packet Pointer
Receive Status
Receive Byte Count 1
Receive Byte Count 0
Byte 2
Byte 1
AD0
Receive Status
BOS e 1, WTS e 1 in Data Configuration Register. This format is used with
680x0 type processors. (Note: The Receive Count ordering remains the
same for BOS e 0 or 1.)
STORAGE FORMAT FOR RECEIVED PACKETS
The following diagrams describe the format for how received packets are placed into memory by the local DMA
channel. These modes are selected in the Data Configuration Register.
AD15
AD8 AD7
Next Packet Pointer
Byte 0
Byte 1
BOS e 0, WTS e 0 in Data Configuration Register. This format is used with
general 8-bit processors.
BOS e 0, WTS e 1 in Data Configuration Register. This format is used with
Series 32xxx, or 808xx processors.
1st Received Packet Removed by Remote DMA
TL/F/10469 – 14
17
8.0 Packet Transmission
The Local DMA is also used during transmission of a packet. Three registers control the DMA transfer during transmission, a Transmit Page Start Address Register (TPSR)
and the Transmit Byte Count Registers (TBCR0, 1). When
the SNIC receives a command to transmit the packet pointed to by these registers, buffer memory data will be moved
into the FIFO as required during transmission. The SNIC will
generate and append the preamble, synch and CRC fields.
TRANSMIT PACKET ASSEMBLY FORMAT
The following diagrams describe the format for how packets
must be assembled prior to transmission for different byte
ordering schemes. The various formats are selected in the
Data Configuration Register.
D15
General Transmit Packet Format
D8 D7
D0
Destination Address 1
Destination Address 0
Destination Address 3
Destination Address 2
Transmit
Destination Address
6 Bytes
Destination Address 5
Destination Address 4
Byte
Source Address
6 Bytes
Source Address 1
Source Address 0
Count
Type/Length
2 Bytes
Source Address 3
Source Address 2
TBCR0, 1
Data
Pad (If Data k 46 Bytes)
t 46 Bytes
Source Address 5
Source Address 4
Type/Length 1
Type/Length 0
Data 1
Data 0
TRANSMIT PACKET ASSEMBLY
The SNIC requires a contiguous assembled packet with the
format shown. The transmit byte count includes the Destination Address, Source Address, Length Field and Data. It
does not include preamble and CRC. When transmitting
data smaller than 46 bytes, the packet must be padded to a
minimum size of 64 bytes. The programmer is responsible
for adding and stripping pad bytes.
BOS e 0, WTS e 1 in Data Configuration Register.
This format is used with Series 32xxx, or 808xx processors.
D15
D8 D7
D0
TRANSMISSION
Prior to transmission, the TPSR (Transmit Page Start Register) and TBCR0, TBCR1 (Transmit Byte Count Registers)
must be initialized. To initiate transmission of the packet the
TXP bit in the Command Register is set. The Transmit
Status Register (TSR) is cleared and the SNIC begins to
prefetch transmit data from memory (unless the SNIC is currently receiving). If the interframe gap has timed out the
SNIC will begin transmission.
Destination Address 0
Destination Address 1
Destination Address 2
Destination Address 3
Destination Address 4
Destination Address 5
Source Address 0
Source Address 1
Source Address 2
Source Address 3
Source Address 4
Source Address 5
Type/Length 0
Type/Length 1
Data 0
Data 1
BOS e 1, WTS e 1 in Data Configuration Register.
CONDITIONS REQUIRED TO BEGIN TRANSMISSION
In order to transmit a packet, the following three conditions
must be met:
1. The Interframe Gap Timer has timed out the first 6.4 ms
of the Interframe Gap.
2. At least one byte has entered the FIFO. (This indicates
that the burst transfer has been started.)
3. If a collision had been detected then before transmission
the packet time must have timed out.
In typical systems the SNIC prefetchs the first burst of bytes
before the 6.4 ms timer expires. The time during which SNIC
transmits preamble can also be used to load the FIFO.
This format is used with 680x0 type processors.
D1
D0
Destination Address 0
Destination Address 1
Destination Address 2
Destination Address 3
Destination Address 4
Destination Address 5
Source Address 0
Note: If carrier sense is asserted before a byte has been loaded into the
FIFO, the SNIC will become a receiver.
Source Address 1
Source Address 2
COLLISION RECOVERY
During transmission, the Buffer Management logic monitors
the transmit circuitry to determine if a collision has occurred.
If a collision is detected, the Buffer Management logic will
reset the FIFO and restore the Transmit DMA pointers for
retransmission of the packet. The COL bit will be set in the
TSR and the NCR (Number of Collisions Register) will be
incremented. If 15 retransmissions each result in a collision
the transmission will be aborted and the ABT bit in the TSR
will be set.
Source Address 3
Source Address 4
Source Address 5
BOS e 0, WTS e 0 in Data Configuration Register.
This format is used with general 8-bit processors.
Note: All examples above will result in a transmission of a packet in order of
DA0, DA1, DA3 . . . bits within each byte will be transmitted least
significant bit first.
Note: NCR reads as zeroes if excessive collisions are encountered.
DA e Destination Address.
18
9.0 Remote DMA
sequentially read data from the local buffer memory, beginning at the Remote Start Address, and write data to the I/O
port. The DMA Address will be incremented and the Byte
Counter will be decremented after each transfer. The DMA
is terminated when the Remote Byte Count Register reaches zero.
The Remote DMA channel is used to both assemble packets for transmission, and to remove received packets from
the Receive Buffer Ring. It may also be used as a general
purpose slave DMA channel for moving blocks of data or
commands between host memory and local buffer memory.
There are three modes of operation, Remote Write, Remote
Read, or Send Packet.
Two register pairs are used to control the Remote DMA, a
Remote Start Address (RSAR0, RSAR1) and a Remote
Byte Count (RBCR0, RBCR1) register pair. The Start Address Register pair points to the beginning of the block to be
moved while the Byte Count Register pair is used to indicate
the number of bytes to be transferred. Full handshake logic
is provided to move data between local buffer memory and
a bidirectional I/O port.
SEND PACKET COMMAND
The Remote DMA channel can be automatically initialized
to transfer a single packet from the Receive Buffer Ring.
The CPU begins this transfer by issuing a ‘‘Send Packet’’
Command. The DMA will be initialized to the value of the
Boundary Pointer Register and the Remote Byte Count
Register pair (RBCR0, RBCR1) will be initialized to the value
of the Receive Byte Count fields found in the Buffer Header
of each packet. After the data is transferred, the Boundary
Pointer is advanced to allow the buffers to be used for new
receive packets. The Remote Read will terminate when the
Byte Count equals zero. The Remote DMA is then prepared
to read the next packet from the Receive Buffer Ring. If the
DMA pointer crosses the Page Stop Register, it is reset to
the Page Start Address. This allows the Remote DMA to
remove packets that have wrapped around to the top of the
Receive Buffer Ring.
REMOTE WRITE
A Remote Write transfer is used to move a block of data
from the host into local buffer memory. The Remote DMA
will read data from the I/O port and sequentially write it to
local buffer memory beginning at the Remote Start Address.
The DMA Address will be incremented and the Byte Counter will be decremented after each transfer. The DMA is
terminated when the Remote Byte Count Register reaches
a count of zero.
Note 1: In order for the SNIC to correctly execute the Send Packet Command, the upper Remote Byte Count Register (RBCR1) must first
be loaded with 0FH.
REMOTE READ
A Remote Read transfer is used to move a block of data
from local buffer memory to the host. The Remote DMA will
Note 2: The Send Packet command cannot be used with 680x0 type processors.
Remote DMA Autoinitialization from Buffer Ring
TL/F/10469 – 15
19
10.0 Internal Registers
monly accessed during SNIC operation while page 1 registers are used primarily for initialization. The registers are
partitioned to avoid having to perform two write/read cycles
to access commonly used registers.
All registers are 8-bit wide and mapped into four pages
which are selected in the Command Register (PS0, PS1).
Pins RA0 – RA3 are used to address registers within each
page. Page 0 registers are those registers which are com-
10.1 REGISTER ADDRESS MAPPING
TL/F/10469 – 16
10.2 REGISTER ADDRESS ASSIGNMENTS
Page 0 Address Assignments (PS1 e 0, PS0 e 0)
RA0 – RA3
RD
WR
RA0 – RA3
RD
WR
00H
Command (CR)
Command (CR)
09H
01H
Current Local DMA
Address 0 (CLDA0)
Page Start Register
(PSTART)
Current Remote DMA Remote Start Address
Address 1 (CRDA1)
Register 1 (RSAR1)
0AH
Reserved
02H
Current Local DMA
Address 1 (CLDA1)
Page Stop Register
(PSTOP)
Remote Byte Count
Register 0 (RBCR0)
0BH
Reserved
03H
Boundary Pointer
(BNRY)
Boundary Pointer
(BNRY)
Remote Byte Count
Register 1 (RBCR1)
0CH
04H
Transmit Status
Register (TSR)
Transmit Page Start
Address (TPSR)
Receive Status
Register (RSR)
Receive Configuration
Register (RCR)
0DH
05H
Number of Collisions
Register (NCR)
Transmit Byte Count
Register 0 (TBCR0)
Tally Counter 0
(Frame Alignment
Errors) (CNTR0)
Transmit Configuration
Register (TCR)
06H
FIFO (FIFO)
Transmit Byte Count
Register 1 (TBCR1)
0EH
Tally Counter 1
(CRC Errors)
(CNTR1)
Data Configuration
Register (DCR)
07H
Interrupt Status
Register (ISR)
Interrupt Status
Register (ISR)
0FH
Interrupt Mask
Register (IMR)
08H
Current Remote DMA Remote Start Address
Address 0 (CRDA0)
Register 0 (RSAR0)
Tally Counter 2
Missed Packet
Errors) (CNTR2)
20
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
Page 1 Address Assignments (PS1 e 0, PS0 e 1)
RA0 – RA3
RD
Page 2 Address Assignments (PS1 e 1, PS0 e 0)
WR
RA0 – RA3
RD
WR
00H
Command (CR)
Command (CR)
00H
Command (CR)
Command (CR)
01H
Physical Address
Register 0 (PAR0)
Physical Address
Register 0 (PAR0)
01H
Page Start Register
(PSTART)
Current Local DMA
Address 0 (CLDA0)
02H
Physical Address
Register 1 (PAR1)
Physical Address
Register 1 (PAR1)
02H
Page Stop Register
(PSTOP)
Current Local DMA
Address 1 (CLDA1)
03H
Physical Address
Register 2 (PAR2)
Physical Address
Register 2 (PAR2)
03H
Remote Next Packet
Pointer
Remote Next Packet
Pointer
04H
Physical Address
Register 3 (PAR3)
Physical Address
Register 3 (PAR3)
04H
Transmit Page Start
Address (TPSR)
Reserved
05H
Physical Address
Register 4 (PAR4)
Physical Address
Register 4 (PAR4)
05H
Local Next Packet
Pointer
Local Next Packet
Pointer
06H
Physical Address
Register 5 (PAR5)
Physical Address
Register 5 (PAR5)
06H
Address Counter
(Upper)
Address Counter
(Upper)
07H
Current Page
Register (CURR)
Current Page
Register (CURR)
07H
Address Counter
(Lower)
Address Counter
(Lower)
08H
Multicast Address
Register 0 (MAR0)
Multicast Address
Register 0 (MAR0)
08H
Reserved
Reserved
09H
Reserved
Reserved
09H
Multicast Address
Register 1 (MAR1)
Multicast Address
Register 1 (MAR1)
0AH
Reserved
Reserved
0AH
Multicast Address
Register 2 (MAR2)
Multicast Address
Register 2 (MAR2)
0BH
Reserved
Reserved
0CH
Reserved
Multicast Address
Register 3 (MAR3)
Multicast Address
Register 3 (MAR3)
Receive Configuration
Register (RCR)
0DH
Reserved
0CH
Multicast Address
Register 4 (MAR4)
Multicast Address
Register 4 (MAR4)
Transmit
Configuration
Register (TCR)
0DH
Multicast Address
Register 5 (MAR5)
Multicast Address
Register 5 (MAR5)
0EH
Data Configuration
Register (DCR)
Reserved
0EH
Multicast Address
Register 6 (MAR6)
Multicast Address
Register 6 (MAR6)
0FH
Interrupt Mask
Register (IMR)
Reserved
0FH
Multicast Address
Register 7 (MAR7)
Multicast Address
Register 7 (MAR7)
0BH
Note: Page 2 registers should only be accessed for diagnostic purposes.
They should not be modified during normal operation.
Page 3 should never be modified.
21
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS
COMMAND REGISTER (CR)
00H (READ/WRITE)
The Command Register is used to initiate transmissions, enable or disable Remote DMA operations and to select register
pages. To issue a command the microprocessor sets the corresponding bit(s) (RD2, RD1, RD0, TXP). Further commands may
be overlapped, but with the following rules: (1) If a transmit command overlaps with a remote DMA operation, bits RD0, RD1,
and RD2 must be maintained for the remote DMA command when setting the TXP bit. Note, if a remote DMA command is re-issued when giving the transmit command, the DMA will complete immediately if the remote byte count register has not been
reinitialized. (2) If a remote DMA operation overlaps a transmission, RD0, RD1, and RD2 may be written with the desired values
and a ‘‘0’’ written to the TXP bit. Writing a ‘‘0’’ to this bit has no effect. (3) A remote write DMA may not overlap remote read
operation or visa versa. Either of these operations must either complete or be aborted before the other operation may start. Bits
PS1, PS0, RD2, and STP may be set any time.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
PS1
PS0
RD2
RD1
RD0
TXP
STA
STP
Bit
Symbol
D0
STP
Description
D1
STA
Start: This bit is used to activate the SNIC after either power up, or when the SNIC has been placed in a
reset mode by software command or error. STA powers up low.
D2
TXP
Transmit Packet: This bit must be set to initiate transmission of a packet. TXP is internally reset either after
the transmission is completed or aborted. This bit should be set only after the Transmit Byte Count and
Transmit Page Start registers have been programmed.
D3,
D4,
and
D5
RD0,
RD1,
and
RD2
Remote DMA Command: These three encoded bits control operation of the Remote DMA channel. RD2
can be set to abort any Remote DMA command in progress. The Remote Byte Count Registers should be
cleared when a Remote DMA has been aborted. The Remote Start Addresses are not restored to the
starting address if the Remote DMA is aborted.
RD2
RD1
RD0
0
0
0
Not Allowed
0
0
1
Remote Read
0
1
0
Remote Write (Note 2)
0
1
1
Send Packet
1
X
X
Abort/Complete Remote DMA (Note 1)
Stop: Software reset command, takes the controller offline, no packets will be received or transmitted. Any
reception or transmission in progress will continue to completion before entering the reset state. To exit this
state, the STP bit must be reset and the STA bit must be set high. To perform a software reset, this bit
should be set high. The software reset has executed only when indicated by the RST bit in the ISR being set
to 1. STP powers up high.
Note: If the SNIC has previously been in start mode and the STP is set, both the STP and STA bits will remain set.
Note 1: If a remote DMA operation is aborted and the remote byte count has not decremented to zero. PRQ will remain high. A read
acknowledge (RACK) on a write acknowledge (WACK) will reset PRQ low.
Note 2: For proper operation of the Remote Write DMA, there are two steps which must be performed before using the Remote Write
DMA. The steps are as follows:
I) Write a non-zero value into RBCR0.
II) Set bits RD2, RD1, and RD0 to 0, 0, and 1.
III) Issue the Remote Write DMA Command (RD2, RD1, RD0 e 0, 1, 0).
D6
and
D7
PS0
and
PS1
Page Select: These two encoded bits select which register page is to be accessed with addresses RA0 – 3.
PS1
PS0
0
0
Register Page 0
0
1
Register Page 1
1
0
Register Page 2
1
1
Reserved
22
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS (Continued)
INTERRUPT STATUS REGISTER (ISR)
07H (READ/WRITE)
This register is accessed by the host processor to determine the cause of an interrupt. Any interrupt can be masked in the
Interrupt Mask Register (IMR). Individual interrupt bits are cleared by writing a ‘‘1’’ into the corresponding bit of the ISR. The INT
signal is active as long as any unmasked signal is set, and will not go low until all unmasked bits in this register have been
cleared. The ISR must be cleared after power up by writing it with all 1’s.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
RST
RDC
CNT
OVW
TXE
RXE
PTX
PRX
Bit
Symbol
D0
PRX
Packet Received: Indicates packet received with no errors.
Description
D1
PTX
Packet Transmitted: Indicates packet transmitted with no errors.
D2
RXE
Receive Error: Indicates that a packet was received with one or more of the following errors:
Ð CRC Error
Ð Frame Alignment Error
Ð FIFO Overrun
Ð Missed Packet
D3
TXE
Transmit Error: Set when packet transmitted with one or more of the following errors:
Ð Excessive Collisions
Ð FIFO Underrun
D4
OVW
Overwrite Warning: Set when receive buffer ring storage resources have been exhausted.
(Local DMA has reached Boundary Pointer)
D5
CNT
Counter Overflow: Set when MSB of one or more of the Network Tally Counters has been set.
D6
RDC
Remote DMA Complete: Set when Remote DMA operation has been completed.
D7
RST
Reset Status: Set when SNIC enters reset state and cleared when a Start Command is issued to
the CR. This bit is also set when a Receive Buffer Ring overflow occurs and is cleared when one
or more packets have been removed from the ring. Writing to this bit has no effect.
Note: This bit does not generate an interrupt, it is merely a status indicator.
23
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS (Continued)
INTERRUPT MASK REGISTER (IMR)
0FH (WRITE)
The Interrupt Mask Register is used to mask interrupts. Each interrupt mask bit corresponds to a bit in the Interrupt Status
Register (ISR). If an interrupt mask bit is set, an interrupt will be issued whenever the corresponding bit in the ISR is set. If any bit
in the IMR is set low, an interrupt will not occur when the bit in the ISR is set. The IMR powers up to all zeroes.
7
Ð
Bit
6
5
4
3
RDCE CNTE OVWE TXEE
Symbol
2
1
0
RXEE
PTXE
PRXE
Description
D0
PRXE
Packet Received Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupt Disabled
1: Enables Interrupt when packet received
D1
PTXE
Packet Transmitted Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupt Disabled
1: Enables Interrupt when packet is transmitted
D2
RXEE
Receive Error Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupt Disabled
1: Enables Interrupt when packet received with error
D3
TXEE
Transmit Error Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupt Disabled
1: Enables Interrupt when packet transmission results in error
D4
OVWE
Overwrite Warning Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupt Disabled
1: Enables Interrupt when Buffer Management Logic lacks sufficient buffers to store incoming packet
D5
CNTE
Counter Overflow Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupt Disabled
1: Enables Interrupt when MSB of one or more of the Network Statistics counters has been set
D6
RDCE
DMA Complete Interrupt Enable
0: Interrupt Disabled
1: Enables Interrupt when Remote DMA transfer has been completed
D7
Reserved
Reserved
24
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS (Continued)
DATA CONFIGURATION REGISTER (DCR)
0EH (WRITE)
This Register is used to program the SNIC for 8- or 16-bit memory interface, select byte ordering in 16-bit applications and
establish FIFO thresholds. The DCR must be initialized prior to loading the Remote Byte Count Registers. LAS is set on
power up.
Bit
Symbol
D0
WTS
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Ð
FT1
FT0
ARM
LS
LAS
BOS
WTS
Description
Word Transfer Select
0: Selects byte-wide DMA transfers
1: Selects word-wide DMA transfers
; WTS establishes byte or word transfers for both Remote and Local DMA transfers
Note: When word-wide mode is selected up to 32k words are addressable; A0 remains low.
D1
BOS
D2
LAS
Byte Order Select
0: MS byte placed on AD15–AD8 and LS byte on AD7 – AD0. (32xxx, 80x86)
1: MS byte placed on AD7–AD0 and LS byte on AD15 – A8. (680x0)
: Ignored when WTS is low
Long Address Select
0: Dual 16-bit DMA mode
1: Single 32-bit DMA mode
; When LAS is high, the contents of the Remote DMA registers RSAR0, 1 are issued as A16 – A31 Power up
high
D3
LS
Loopback Select
0: Loopback mode selected. Bits D1 and D2 of the TCR must also be programmed for Loopback operation
1: Normal Operation
D4
ARM
Auto-Initialize Remote
0: Send Command not executed, all packets removed from Buffer Ring under program control
1: Send Command executed, Remote DMA auto-initialized to remove packets from Buffer Ring
D5
and
D6
FT0
and
FT1
Note: Send Command cannot be used with 680x0 byte processors.
FIFO Threshold Select: Encoded FIFO threshold. Establishes point at which bus is requested when filling or
emptying the FIFO. During reception, the FIFO threshold indicates the number of bytes (or words) the FIFO has
filled serially from the network before bus request (BREQ) is asserted.
Note: FIFO threshold setting determines the DMA burst length.
Receive Thresholds
FT1
FT0
Word Wide
Byte Wide
0
0
1 Word
2 Bytes
0
1
2 Words
4 Bytes
1
0
4 Words
8 Bytes
1
1
6 Words
12 Bytes
During transmission, the FIFO threshold indicates the number of bytes (or words) the FIFO has filled from the
Local DMA before BREQ is asserted. Thus, the transmission threshold is 13 bytes less the received threshold.
25
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS (Continued)
TRANSMIT CONFIGURATION REGISTER (TCR)
0DH (WRITE)
The transmit configuration establishes the actions of the transmitter section of the SNIC during transmission of a packet on the
network. LB1 and LB0 which select loopback mode power up as 0.
Bit
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Ð
Ð
Ð
OFST
ATD
LB1
LB0
CRC
Symbol
Description
D0
CRC
Inhibit CRC
0: CRC appended by transmitter
1: CRC inhibited by transmitter
In loopback mode CRC can be enabled or disabled to test the CRC logic
D1
and
D2
LB0
and
LB1
Encoded Loopback Control: These encoded configuration bits set the type of loopback that is to be
performed. Note that loopback in mode 2 places the ENDEC Module in loopback mode and that D3 of the
DCR must be set to zero for loopback operation.
LB1
LB0
Mode 0
0
0
Normal Operation (LPBK e 0)
Mode 1
0
1
Internal NIC Module Loopback (LPBK e 0)
Mode 2
1
0
Internal ENDEC Module Loopback (LPBK e 1)
Mode 3
1
1
External Loopback (LPBK e 0)
D3
ATD
Auto Transmit Disable: This bit allows another station to disable the SNIC’s transmitter by transmission of a
particular multicast packet. The transmitter can be re-enabled by resetting this bit or by reception of a
second particular multicast packet.
1: Reception of multicast address hashing to bit 62 disables transmitter, reception of multicast address
hashing to bit 63 enables transmitter.
D4
OFST
Collision Offset Enable: This bit modifies the backoff algorithm to allow prioritization of nodes.
0: Backoff Logic implements normal algorithm.
1: Forces Backoff algorithm modification to 0 to 2min(3 a n, 10) slot times for first three collisions, then follows
standard backoff. (For the first three collisions, the station has higher average backoff delay making a low
priority mode.)
D5
Reserved
Reserved
D6
Reserved
Reserved
D7
Reserved
Reserved
26
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS (Continued)
TRANSMIT STATUS REGISTER (TSR)
04H (READ)
This register records events that occur on the media during transmission of a packet. It is cleared when the next transmission is
initiated by the host. All bits remain low unless the event that corresponds to a particular bit occurs during transmission. Each
transmission should be followed by a read of this register. The contents of this register are not specified until after the first
transmission.
Bit
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
OWC
CDH
FU
CRS
ABT
COL
Ð
PTX
Symbol
Description
D0
PTX
Packet Transmitted: Indicates transmission without error. (No excessive collisions or FIFO
underrun) (ABT e ‘‘0’’, FU e ‘‘0’’)
D1
Reserved
Reserved
D2
COL
Transmit Collided: Indicates that the transmission collided at least once with another station on
the network. The number of collisions is recorded in the Number of Collisions Registers (NCR).
D3
ABT
Transmit Aborted: Indicates the SNIC aborted transmission because of excessive collisions.
(Total number of transmissions including original transmission attempt equals 16.)
D4
CRS
Carrier Sense Lost: This bit is set when carrier is lost during transmission of the packet.
Transmission is not aborted on loss of carrier.
D5
FU
FIFO Underrun: If the SNIC cannot gain access of the bus before the FIFO empties, this bit is
set. Transmission of the packet will be aborted.
D6
CDH
CD Heartbeat: Failure of the transceiver to transmit a collision signal after transmission of a
packet will set this bit. The Collision Detect (CD) heartbeat signal must commence during the first
6.4 ms of the Interframe Gap following a transmission. In certain collisions, the CD Heartbeat bit
will be set even though the transceiver is not performing the CD heartbeat test.
D7
OWC
Out of Window Collision: Indicates that a collision occurred after a slot time (51.2 ms).
Transmissions rescheduled as in normal collisions.
27
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS (Continued)
RECEIVE CONFIGURATION REGISTER (RCR)
0CH (WRITE)
This register determines operation of the SNIC during reception of a packet and is used to program what types of packets to
accept.
Bit
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Ð
Ð
MON
PRO
AM
AB
AR
SEP
Symbol
Description
D0
SEP
Save Errored Packets
0: Packets with receive errors are rejected.
1: Packets with receive errors are accepted. Receive errors are CRC and Frame Alignment
errors.
D1
AR
Accept Runt Packets: This bit allows the receiver to accept packets that are smaller than 64
bytes. The packet must be at least 8 bytes long to be accepted as a runt.
0: Packets with fewer than 64 bytes rejected.
1: Packets with fewer than 64 bytes accepted.
D2
AB
Accept Broadcast: Enables the receiver to accept a packet with an all 1’s destination address.
0: Packets with broadcast destination address rejected.
1: Packets with broadcast destination address accepted.
D3
AM
Accept Multicast: Enables the receiver to accept a packet with a multicast address, all multicast
addresses must pass the hashing array.
0: Packets with multicast destination address not checked.
1: Packets with multicast destination address checked.
D4
PRO
Promiscuous Physical: Enables the receiver to accept all packets with a physical address.
0: Physical address of node must match the station address programmed in PAR0 – PAR5.
1: All packets with physical addresses accepted.
D5
MON
Monitor Mode: Enables the receiver to check addresses and CRC on incoming packets without
buffering to memory. The Missed Packet Tally counter will be incremented for each recognized
packet.
0: Packets buffered to memory.
1: Packets checked for address match, good CRC and Frame Alignment but not buffered to
memory.
D6
Reserved
Reserved
D7
Reserved
Reserved
Note: D2 and D3 are ‘‘OR’d’’ together, i.e., if D2 and D3 are set the SNIC will accept broadcast and multicast addresses as well as its own physical address. To
establish full promiscuous mode, bits D2, D3, and D4 should be set. In addition the multicast hashing array must be set to all 1’s in order to accept all multicast
addresses.
28
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.3 REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS (Continued)
RECEIVE STATUS REGISTER (RSR)
0CH (READ)
This register records status of the received packet, including information on errors and the type of address match, either
physical or multicast. The contents of this register are written to buffer memory by the DMA after reception of a good packet. If
packets with errors are to be saved the receive status is written to memory at the head of the erroneous packet if an erroneous
packet is received. If packets with errors are to be rejected the RSR will not be written to memory. The contents will be cleared
when the next packet arrives. CRC errors, Frame Alignment errors and missed packets are counted internally by the SNIC which
relinguishes the Host from reading the RSR in real time to record errors for Network Management Functions. The contents of
this register are not specified until after the first reception.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
DFR
DIS
PHY
MPA
FO
FAE
CRC
PRX
Bit
Symbol
D0
PRX
Packet Received Intact: Indicates packet received without error. (Bits CRC, FAE, FO, and MPA
are zero for the received packet.)
Description
D1
CRC
CRC Error: Indicates packet received with CRC error. Increments Tally Counter (CNTR1). This
bit will also be set for Frame Alignment errors.
D2
FAE
Frame Alignment Error: Indicates that the incoming packet did not end on a byte boundary and
the CRC did not match at last byte boundary. Increments Tally Counter (CNTR0).
D3
FO
FIFO Overrun: This bit is set when the FIFO is not serviced causing overflow during reception.
Reception of the packet will be aborted.
D4
MPA
Missed Packet: Set when a packet intended for node cannot be accepted by SNIC because of a
lack of receive buffers or if the controller is in monitor mode and did not buffer the packet to
memory. Increments Tally Counter (CNTR2).
D5
PHY
Physical/Multicast Address: Indicates whether received packet had a physical or multicast
address type.
0: Physical Address Match
1: Multicast/Broadcast Address Match
D6
DIS
Receiver Disabled: Set when receiver disabled by entering Monitor mode. Reset when receiver
is re-enabled when exiting Monitor mode.
D7
DFR
Deferring: Set when internal Carrier Sense or Collision signals are generated in the ENDEC
module. If the transceiver has asserted the CD line as a result of the jabber, this bit will stay set
indicating the jabber condition.
Note: Following coding applies to CRC and FAE bits.
FAE
0
0
1
1
CRC
0
1
0
1
Type of Error
No Error (Good CRC and k6 Dribble Bits)
CRC Error
Illegal, Will Not Occur
Frame Alignment Error and CRC Error
29
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
10.4 DMA REGISTERS
DMA Registers
TL/F/10469 – 17
The DMA Registers are partitioned into groups; Transmit,
Receive and Remote DMA Registers. The Transmit registers are used to initialize the Local DMA Channel for transmission of packets while the Receive Registers are used to
initialize the Local DMA Channel for packet Reception. The
Page Stop, Page Start, Current and Boundary Registers are
used by the Buffer Management Logic to supervise the Receive Buffer Ring. The Remote DMA Registers are used to
initialize the Remote DMA.
Bit Assignment
7
6
5
TPSR
A15
A14
A13
4
3
2
1
0
A12
A11
A10
A9
A8
(A7–A0 Initialized to Zero)
TRANSMIT BYTE COUNT REGISTER 0, 1
(TBCR0, TBCR1)
These two registers indicate the length of the packet to be
transmitted in bytes. The count must include the number of
bytes in the source, destination, length and data fields. The
maximum number of transmit bytes allowed is 64 Kbytes.
The SNIC will not truncate transmissions longer than 1500
bytes. The bit assignment is shown below:
Note: In the figure above, registers are shown as 8 or 16 bits wide. Although
some registers are 16-bit internal registers, all registers are accessed
as 8-bit registers. Thus the 16-bit Transmit Byte Count Register is
broken into two 8-bit registers, TBCR0, TBCR1. Also TPSR, PSTART,
PSTOP, CURR and BNRY only check or control the upper 8 bits of
address information on the bus. Thus, they are shifted to positions
15–8 in the diagram above.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TBCR1
L15
L14
L13
L12
L11
L10
L9
L8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TBCR0
L7
L6
L5
L4
L3
L2
L1
L0
10.5 TRANSMIT DMA REGISTERS
TRANSMIT PAGE START REGISTER (TPSR)
This register points to the assembled packet to be transmitted. Only the eight higher order addresses are specified
since all transmit packets are assembled on 256-byte page
boundaries. The bit assignment is shown below. The values
placed in bits D7 –D0 will be used to initialize the higher
order address (A8 –A15) of the Local DMA for transmission.
The lower order bits (A7–A0) are initialized to zero.
30
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
REMOTE BYTE COUNT REGISTERS (RBCR0, 1)
10.6 LOCAL DMA RECEIVE REGISTERS
PAGE START AND STOP REGISTERS (PSTART, PSTOP)
7
The Page Start and Page Stop Registers program the starting and stopping address of the Receive Buffer Ring. Since
the SNIC uses fixed 256-byte buffers aligned on page
boundaries only the upper 8 bits of the start and stop address are specified.
PSTART, PSTOP Bit Assignment
7
6
5
4
3
2
PSTART,
A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10
PSTOP
1
0
A9
A8
BNRY
6
5
4
3
2
A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10
1
A9
7
7
6
5
4
3
2
A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10
7
CRDA1 A15
A8
1
0
A8
CRDA0
CLDA1
5
4
3
2
A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10
1
0
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
A14
A13
A12
A11
A10
A9
A8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
A7
A6
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
D7
6
2
10.8 PHYSICAL ADDRESS REGISTERS (PAR0 – PAR5)
The physical address registers are used to compare the
destination address of incoming packets for rejecting or accepting packets. Comparisons are performed on a bytewide basis. The bit assignment shown below relates the sequence in PAR0 – PAR5 to the bit sequence of the received
packet.
CURRENT LOCAL DMA REGISTER 0,1 (CLDA0, 1)
These two registers can be accessed to determine the current local DMA address.
7
3
CURRENT REMOTE DMA ADDRESS (CRDA0, CRDA1)
The Current Remote DMA Registers contain the current address of the Remote DMA. The bit assignment is shown
below:
0
A9
4
Note: RSAR0 programs the start address bits A0–A7.
RSAR1 programs the start address bits A8–A15.
Address incremented by two for word transfers, and by one for byte
transfers. Byte Count decremented by two for word transfers and by
one for byte transfers.
RBCR0 programs LSB byte count.
RBCR1 programs MSB byte count.
CURRENT PAGE REGISTER (CURR)
This register is used internally by the Buffer Management
Logic as a backup register for reception. CURR contains the
address of the first buffer to be used for a packet reception
and is used to restore DMA pointers in the event of receive
errors. This register is initialized to the same value as
PSTART and should not be written to again unless the controller is Reset.
CURR
5
RBCR0 BC7 BC6 BC5 BC4 BC3 BC2 BC1 BC0
BOUNDARY (BNRY) REGISTER
This register is used to prevent overflow of the Receive
Buffer Ring. Buffer management compares the contents of
this register to the next buffer address when linking buffers
together. If the contents of this register match the next buffer address the Local DMA operation is aborted.
7
6
RBCR1 BC15 BC14 BC13 BC12 BC11 BC10 BC9 BC8
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
DA6
DA5
DA4
DA3
DA2
DA1
DA0
PAR1 DA15 DA14 DA13 DA12 DA11 DA10 DA9
DA8
PAR0 DA7
1
0
PAR2 DA23 DA22 DA21 DA20 DA19 DA18 DA17 DA16
A9
A8
PAR3 DA31 DA30 DA29 DA28 DA27 DA26 DA25 DA24
PAR4 DA39 DA38 DA37 DA36 DA35 DA34 DA33 DA32
CLDA0
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
A7
A6
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
PAR5 DA47 DA46 DA45 DA44 DA43 DA42 DA41 DA40
Destination Address
10.7 REMOTE DMA REGISTERS
P/S DA0 DA1 DA2 DA3 . . .
REMOTE START ADDRESS REGISTERS (RSAR0, 1)
Remote DMA operations are programmed via the Remote
Start Address (RSAR0, 1) and Remote Byte Count
(RBCR0, 1) registers. The Remote Start Address is used to
point to the start of the block of data to be transferred and
the Remote Byte Count is used to indicate the length of the
block (in bytes).
7
RSAR1
RSAR0
6
5
4
3
2
A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10
1
0
A9
A8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
A7
A6
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
Source
DA46 DA47 SA0 . . .
Note: P/S e Preamble, Synch
DA0 e Physical/Multicast Bit
10.9 MULTICAST ADDRESS REGISTERS (MAR0 – MAR7)
The multicast address registers provide filtering of multicast
addresses hashed by the CRC logic. All destination addresses are fed through the CRC logic and as the last bit of
the destination address enters the CRC, the 6 most signifi-
31
10.0 Internal Registers (Continued)
cant bits of the CRC generator are latched. These 6 bits are
then decoded by a 1 of 64 decode to index a unique filter bit
(FB0 – 63) in the multicast address registers. If the filter bit
selected is set, the multicast packet is accepted. The system designer would use a program to determine which filter
bits to set in the multicast registers. All multicast filter bits
that correspond to multicast address accepted by the node
are then set to one. To accept all multicast packets all of
the registers are set to all ones.
10.10 NETWORK TALLY COUNTERS
Three 8-bit counters are provided for monitoring the number
of CRC errors, Frame Alignment Errors and Missed Packets. The maximum count reached by any counter is 192
(C0H). These registers will be cleared when read by the
CPU. The count is recorded in binary in CT0 – CT7 of each
Tally Register.
Frame Alignment Error Tally (CNTR0)
This counter increments every time a packet is received
with a Frame Alignment Error. The packet must have been
recognized by the address recognition logic. The counter is
cleared after it is read by the processor.
Note: Although the hashing algorithm does not guarantee perfect filtering of
multicast address, it will perfectly filter up to 64 multicast addresses if
these addresses are chosen to map into unique locations in the multicast filter.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CNTR0 CT7 CT6 CT5 CT4 CT3 CT2 CT1 CT0
CRC Error Tally (CNTR1)
This counter is incremented every time a packet is received
with a CRC error. The packet must first be recognized by
the address recognition logic. The counter is cleared after it
is read by the processor.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
CNTR1 CT7 CT6 CT5 CT4 CT3 CT2 CT1 CT0
Frames Lost Tally Register (CNTR2)
This counter is incremented if a packet cannot be received
due to lack of buffer resources. In monitor mode, this counter will count the number of packets that pass the address
recognition logic.
TL/F/10469–18
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
MAR0 FB7
FB6
FB5
FB4
FB3
FB2
FB1
FB0
MAR1 FB15 FB14 FB13 FB12 FB11 FB10 FB9
FB8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
MAR2 FB23 FB22 FB21 FB20 FB19 FB18 FB17 FB16
CNTR2 CT7 CT6 CT5 CT4 CT3 CT2 CT1 CT0
MAR3 FB31 FB30 FB29 FB28 FB27 FB26 FB25 FB24
FIFO
This is an 8-bit register that allows the CPU to examine the
contents of the FIFO after loopback. The FIFO will contain
the last 8 data bytes transmitted in the loopback packet.
Sequential reads from the FIFO will advance a pointer in the
FIFO and allow reading of all 8 bytes.
MAR4 FB39 FB38 FB37 FB36 FB35 FB34 FB33 FB32
MAR5 FB47 FB46 FB45 FB44 FB43 FB42 FB41 FB40
MAR6 FB55 FB54 FB53 FB52 FB51 FB50 FB49 FB48
MAR7 FB63 FB62 FB61 FB60 FB59 FB58 FB57 FB56
7
If address Y is found to hash to the value 32 (20H), then
FB32 in MAR4 should be initialized to ‘‘1’’. This will cause
the SNIC to accept any multicast packet with the address Y.
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
FIFO DB7 DB6 DB5 DB4 DB3 DB2 DB1 DB0
Note: The FIFO should only be read when the SNIC has been programmed
in loopback mode.
NUMBER OF COLLISIONS (NCR)
This register contains the number of collisions a node experiences when attempting to transmit a packet. If no collisions are experienced during a transmission attempt, the
COL bit of the TSR will not be set and the contents of NCR
will be zero. If there are excessive collisions, the ABT bit in
the TSR will be set and the contents of NCR will be zero.
The NCR is cleared after the TXP bit in the CR is set.
NCR
32
7
6
5
4
Ð
Ð
Ð
Ð
3
2
1
0
NC3 NC2 NC1 NC0
11.0 Initialization Procedures
12.0 Loopback Diagnostics
The SNIC must be initialized prior to transmission or reception of packets from the network. Power on reset is applied
to the SNIC’s reset pin. This clears/sets the following bits:
Three forms of local loopback are provided on the SNIC.
The user has the ability to loopback through the deserializer
on the controller, through the ENDEC module or the Coax
Transceiver on the DP83901A SNIC. Because of the half
duplex architecture of the SNIC, loopback testing is a
special mode of operation with the following restrictions:
Register
Reset Bits
Command Register (CR)
TXP, STA
Interrupt Status (ISR)
Set Bits
RD2, STP
RST
The SNIC remains in its reset state until a Start Command is
issued. This guarantees that no packets are transmitted or
received and that the SNIC remains a bus slave until all
appropriate internal registers have been programmed. After
initialization the STP bit of the command register is reset
and packets may be received and transmitted.
Restrictions During Loopback
The FIFO is split into two halves, one used for transmission
the other for reception. Only 8-bit fields can be fetched from
memory so two tests are required for 16-bit systems to verify integrity of the entire data path. During loopback the maximum latency from the assertion of BREQ to BACK is 2.0 ms.
Systems that wish to use the loopback test yet do not meet
this latency can limit the loopback to 7 bytes without experiencing underflow. Only the last 8 bytes of the loopback
packet are retained in the FIFO. The last 8 bytes can be
read through the FIFO register which will advance through
the FIFO to allow reading the receive packet sequentially.
Initialization Sequence
The following initialization procedure is mandatory.
Destination Address e (6 Bytes) Station Physical Address
Interrupt Mask (IMR)
All Bits
Data Control (DCR)
Transmit Config. (TCR)
LAS
LB1, LB0
1. Program Command Register for Page 0 (Command
Register e 21H)
2. Initialize Data Configuration Register (DCR)
3. Clear Remote Byte Count Registers (RBCR0, RBCR1)
4. Initialize Receive Configuration Register (RCR)
5. Place the SNIC in LOOPBACK mode 1 or 2 (Transmit
Configuration Register e 02H or 04H)
6. Initialize Receive Buffer Ring: Boundary Pointer
(BNDRY), Page Start (PSTART), and Page Stop
(PSTOP)
7. Clear Interrupt Status Register (ISR) by writing 0FFH to
it.
8. Initialize Interrupt Mask Register (IMR)
9. Program Command Register for page 1 (Command
Register e 61H)
I) Initialize Physical Address Registers (PAR0 – PAR5)
II) Initialize Multicast Address Registers (MAR0 – MAR5)
III) Initialize CURRent pointer
10. Put SNIC in START mode (Command Register e 22H).
11. Initialize the Transmit Configuration for the intended value. The SNIC is now ready for transmission and reception.
Before receiving packets, the user must specify the location
of the Receive Buffer Ring. This is programmed in the Page
Start and Page Stop Registers. In addition, the Boundary
and Current Page Register must be initialized to the value of
the Page Start Register. These registers will be modified
during reception of packets.
Source Address
l
Length
2 Bytes
Data
e 46 to 1500 Bytes
CRC
Appended by SNIC
if CRC e ‘‘0’’ in TCR
When in word-wide mode with Byte Order Select set, the
loopback packet must be assembled in the even byte location as shown below. (The loopback only operated with byte
wide transfers.)
TL/F/10469 – 50
When in word-wide mode with Byte Order Select low, the
following format must be used for the loopback packet.
TL/F/10469 – 51
Note: When using loopback in word mode 2n bytes must be programmed in
TBCR0, 1. Where n e actual number of bytes assembled in even or
odd location.
33
12.0 Loopback Diagnostics (Continued)
The alignment for a 64-byte packet is shown below.
To initiate a loopback the user first assembles the loopback
packet then selects the type of loopback using the Transmit
Configuration register bits LB0, LB1. The transmit configuration register must also be set to enable or disable CRC generation during transmission. The user then issues a normal
transmit command to send the packet. During loopback the
receiver checks for an address match and if CRC bit in the
TCR is set, the receiver will also check the CRC. The last 8
bytes of the loopback packet are buffered and can read out
of the FIFO using FIFO read port.
Loopback Modes
MODE 1: Loopback through the NIC Module (LB1 e 0,
LB0 e 1): If this loopback is used, the NIC Modules’s serializer is connected to the deserializer.
MODE 2: Loopback through the ENDEC Module (LB1 e 1,
LB0 e 0): If the loopback is to be performed through the
SNI, the SNIC provides a control (LPBK) that forces the
ENDEC module to loopback all signals.
MODE 3: Loopback to Coax (LB1 e 1, LB0 e 1). Packets
can be transmitted to the coax in loopback mode to check
all of the transmit and receive paths and the coax itself.
FIFO
Location
FIFO
Contents
0
Lower Byte Count
First Byte Read
1
Upper Byte Count
Second Byte Read
2
Upper Byte Count
#
3
Last Byte
#
4
CRC1
#
5
CRC2
#
6
CRC3
#
7
CRC4
Last Byte Read
For the following alignment in the FIFO the packet length
should be (N x 8) a 5 Bytes. Note that if the CRC bit in the
TCR is set, CRC will not be appended by the transmitter. If
the CRC is appended by the transmitter, the 1st four bytes,
bytes N-3 to N, correspond to the CRC.
Note: Collision and Carrier Sense can be generated by the ENDEC module
and are masked by the NIC module. It is not possible to go directly
between the loopback modes, it is necessary to return to normal operation (00H) when changing modes.
FIFO
Location
Note: The FIFO may only be read during Loopback. Reading the FIFO at
any other time will cause the SNIC to malfunction.
Reading the Loopback Packet
The last 8 bytes of a received packet can be examined by 8
consecutive reads of the FIFO register. The FIFO pointer is
incremented after the rising edge of the CPU’s read strobe
by internally synchronizing and advancing the pointer. This
may take up to four bus clock cycles, if the pointer has not
been incremented by the time the CPU reads the FIFO register again, the SNIC will insert wait states.
Note: The FIFO may only be read during Loopback. Reading the FIFO at
any other time will cause the SNIC to malfunction.
FIFO
Contents
0
Byte N-4
First Byte Read
1
Byte N-3 (CRC1)
Second Byte Read
2
Byte N-2 (CRC2)
#
3
Byte N-1 (CRC3)
#
4
Byte N (CRC4)
#
5
Lower Byte Count
#
6
Upper Byte Count
Last Byte Read
7
Upper Byte Count
LOOPBACK TESTS
Loopback capabilities are provided to allow certain tests to
be performed to validate operation of the DP83901A SNIC
prior to transmitting and receiving packets on a live network.
Typically these tests may be performed during power up of
a node. The diagnostic provides support to verify the following:
1. Verify integrity of data path. Received data is checked
against transmitted data.
2. Verify CRC logic’s capability to generate good CRC on
transmit, verify CRC on receive (good or bad CRC).
Alignment of the Received Packet in the FIFO
Reception of the packet in the FIFO begins at location zero,
after the FIFO pointer reaches the last location in the FIFO,
the pointer wraps to the top of the FIFO overwriting the
previously received data. This process continued until the
last byte is received. The SNIC then appends the received
byte count in the next two locations of the FIFO. The contents of the Upper Byte Count are also copied to the next
FIFO location. The number of bytes used in the loopback
packet determined the alignment of the packet in the FIFO.
34
12.0 Loopback Diagnostics (Continued)
3. Verify that the Address Recognition Logic can
a) Recognize address match packets
b) Reject packets that fail to match an address
LOOPBACK OPERATION IN THE SNIC
Loopback is a modified form of transmission using only half
of the FIFO. This places certain restrictions on the use of
loopback testing. When loopback mode is selected in the
TCR, the FIFO is split. A packet should be assembled in
memory with programming of TPSR and TBCR0, TBCR1
registers. When the transmit command is issued the following operations occur:
SNIC Internal
02
1F
RSR
TSR
RSR
ISR
1F
43
(Note 1)
02
02
Path
TCR
RCR
TSR
RSR
ISR
SNIC External
06
1F
03
(Note 1)
02
02
(Note 2)
Note 2: Will contain 08H if packet is not transmittable.
Note 3: During external loopback the SNIC is now exposed to network traffic, it is therefore possible for the contents of both the Receive
portion of the FIFO and the RSR to be corrupted by any other
packet on the network. Thus in a live network the contents of the
FIFO and RSR should not be depended on. The SNIC will still abide
by the standard CSMA/CD protocol in external loopback mode.
(i.e., The network will not be disturbed by the loopback packet.)
Note 4: All values are hex.
CRC AND ADDRESS RECOGNITION
The next three tests exercise the address recognition logic
and CRC. These tests should be performed using internal
loopback only so that the SNIC is isolated from interference
from the network. These tests also require the capability to
generate CRC in software.
The address recognition logic cannot be directly tested. The
CRC and FAE bits in the RSR are only set if the address in
the packet matches the address filters. If errors are expected to be set and they are not set, the packet has been
rejected on the basis of an address mismatch. The following
sequence of packets will test the address recognition logic.
The DCR should be set to 40H, the TCR should be set to
03H with a software generated CRC.
Packet Contents
EXAMPLES
The following examples show what results can be expected
from a properly operating SNIC during loopback. The restrictions and results of each type of loopback are listed for
reference. The loopback tests are divided into two sets of
tests. One to verify the data path, CRC generation and byte
count through all three paths. The second set of tests uses
internal loopback to verify the receiver’s CRC checking and
address recognition. For all of the tests the DCR was programmed to 40H.
TSR
RCR
04
Note 1: CDH and CRS should not be set. The TSR however, could also
contain 01H, 03H, 07H and a variety of other values depending on
whether collisions were encountered or the packet was deferred.
Receiver Actions
1. Wait for synch, all preamble stripped.
2. Store packet in FIFO, increment receive byte count for
each incoming byte.
3. If CRC e 1 in TRC, receiver checks incoming packet for
CRC errors. If CRC e 0 in TCR, receiver does not check
CRC errors, CRC error bit always set in RSR (for address
matching packets).
4. At end of receive, receive byte count written into FIFO,
receive status register is updated. The PRX bit is typically
set in the RSR even if the address does not match. If
CRC errors are forced, the packet must match the address filters in order for the CRC error bit in the RSR to be
set.
TCR RCR
TCR
Note 1: CDH is set, CRS is not set since it is generated by the external
encoder/decoder.
Transmitter Actions
1. Data is transferred from memory by the DMA until the
FIFO is filled. For each transfer TBCR0 and TBCR1 are
decremented. (Subsequent burst transfers are initiated
when the number of bytes in the FIFO drops below the
programmed threshold.)
2. The SNIC generates 56 bits of preamble followed by an
8-bit synch pattern.
3. Data transferred from FIFO to serializer.
4. If CRC e 1 in TCR, no CRC calculated by SNIC, the last
byte transmitted is the last byte from the FIFO (Allows
software CRC to be appended). If CRC e 0, SNIC calculates and appends four bytes of CRC.
5. At end of Transmission PTX bit set in ISR.
Path
Path
SNIC Internal
Results
Test
Address
CRC
RSR
Test A
Test B
Test C
Matching
Matching
Non-Matching
Good
Bad
Bad
01 (Note 1)
02 (Note 2)
01
Note 1: Status will read 21H if multicast address used.
Note 2: Status will read 22H if multicast address used.
Note 3: In test A, the RSR is set up. In test B the address is found to match
since the CRC is flagged as bad. Test C proves that the address
recognition logic can distinguish a bad address and does not notify
the RSR of the bad CRC. The receiving CRC is proven to work in
test A and test B.
Note 4: All values are hex.
ISR
NETWORK MANAGEMENT FUNCTIONS
Network management capabilities are required for maintenance and planning of a local area network. The SNIC supports the minimum requirement for network management in
hardware, the remaining requirements can be met with software counts. There are three events that software alone
can not track during reception of packets: CRC errors,
Frame Alignment errors, and missed packets.
53
02
02
(Note 1) (Note 2) (Note 3)
Note 1: Since carrier sense and collision detect are generated in the ENDEC module. They are blocked during NIC loopback, carrier and
CD heartbeat are not seen and the CRS and CDH bits are set.
Note 2: CRC errors are always indicated by receiver if CRC is appended by
the transmitter.
Note 3: Only the PTX bit in the ISR is set, the PRX bit is only set if status is
written to memory. In loopback this action does not occur and the
PRX bit remains 0 for all loopback modes.
Note 4: All values are hex.
35
12.0 Loopback Diagnostics (Continued)
Additional information required for network management is
available in the Receive and Transmit Status Registers.
Transmit status is available after each transmission for information regarding events during transmission.
Typically, the following statistics might be gathered in software:
Traffic: Frames Sent OK
Frames Received OK
Multicast Frames Received
Packets Lost Due to Lack of Resources
Retries/Packet
Since errored packets can be rejected, the status associated with these packets is lost unless the CPU can access the
Receive Status Register before the next packer arrives. In
situations where another packet arrives very quickly, the
CPU may have no opportunity to do this. The SNIC counts
the number of packets with CRC errors and Frame Alignment errors. 8-Bit counters have been selected to reduce
overhead. The counters will generate interrupts whenever
their MSBs are set so that a software routine can accumulate the network statistics and reset the counter before
overflow occurs. The counters are sticky so that when they
reach a count of 192 (C0H) counting is halted. An additional
counter is provided to count the number of packets the
SNIC misses due to buffer overflow or being offline.
The structure of the counters is shown below:
Errors: CRC Errors
Alignment Errors
Excessive Collisions
Packet with Length Errors
Heartbeat Failure
TL/F/10469–19
36
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing
The SNIC operates in three possible modes:
# BUS MASTER (WHILE PERFORMING DMA)
# BUS SLAVE (WHILE BEING ACCESSED BY CPU)
# IDLE
TL/F/10469 – 20
the bus in a BREQ/BACK handshake the Remote or Local
DMA transfer is completed and the SNIC re-enters the idle
state.
Upon power-up the SNIC is in an indeterminate state. After
receiving a hardware reset the SNIC is a bus slave in the
Reset State, the receiver and transmitter are both disabled
in this state. The reset state can be re-entered under three
conditions, soft reset (Stop Command), hard reset (RESET
input) or an error that shuts down the receiver of transmitter
(FIFO underflow or overflow). After initialization of registers,
the SNIC is issued a Start command and the SNIC enters
Idle state. Until the DMA is required the SNIC remains in idle
state. The idle state is exited by a request from the FIFO on
the case of receiver or transmit, or from the Remote DMA in
the case of Remote DMA operation. After acquiring
DMA TRANSFERS TIMING
The DMA can be programmed for the following types of
transfers:
16-Bit Address, 8-bit Data Transfer
16-Bit Address, 16-bit Data Transfer
32-Bit Address, 8-bit Data Transfer
32-Bit Address, 16-bit Data Transfer
All DMA transfers use BSCK for timing. 16-Bit Address
modes require 4 BSCK cycles as shown below:
16-Bit Address, 8-Bit Data
TL/F/10469 – 21
37
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
16-Bit Address, 16-Bit Data
TL/F/10469 – 22
32-Bit Address, 8-Bit Data
TL/F/10469 – 23
32-Bit Address, 16-Bit Data
TL/F/10469 – 24
Note: In 32-bit address mode, ADS1 is at TRI-STATE after the first T1–T4 states: thus, a 4.7k pull-down resistor is required for 32-bit address.
38
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
When in 32-bit mode four additional BSCK cycles are required per burst. The first bus cycle (T1Ê – T4Ê ) of each burst
is used to output the upper 16-bit addresses. This 16-bit
address is programmed in RSAR0 and RSAR1 and points to
a 64k page of system memory. All transmitted or received
packets are constrained to reside within this 64k page.
FIFO BURST CONTROL
All Local DMA transfers are burst transfers, once the DMA
requests the bus and the bus is acknowledged, the DMA will
transfer an exact burst of bytes programmed in the Data
Configuration Register (DCR) then relinquish the bus. If
there are remaining bytes in the FIFO the next burst will not
be initiated until the FIFO threshold is exceeded. If BACK is
removed during the transfer, the burst transfer will be aborted. (DROPPING BACK DURING A DMA CYCLE IS NOT
RECOMMENDED.)
TL/F/10469 – 25
where N e 1, 2, 4, or 6 Words or N e 2, 4, 8, or 12 Bytes when in byte mode.
INTERLEAVED LOCAL OPERATION
If a remote DMA transfer is initiated or in progress when a
packet is being received or transmitted, the Remote DMA
transfer will be interrupted for higher priority Local DMA
transfers. When the Local DMA transfer is completed the
Remote DMA will rearbitrate for the bus and continue its
transfers. This is illustrated below:
Note that if the FIFO requires service while a remote DMA is
in progress, BREQ is not dropped and the Local DMA burst
is appended to the Remote Transfer. When switching from
a local transfer to a remote transfer, however, BREQ is
dropped and raised again. This allows the CPU or other
devices to fairly contend for the bus.
1. the bus latency is so long that the FIFO has filled (or
emptied) from the network before the local DMA has
serviced the FIFO.
2. the bus latency or bus data rate has slowed the throughput of the local DMA to a point where it is slower than the
network data rate (10 Mb/s). This second condition is
also dependent upon DMA clock and word width (byte
wide or word wide).
The worst case condition ultimately limits the overall bus
latency which the SNIC can tolerate.
TL/F/10469 – 26
FIFO AND BUS OPERATIONS
Overview
To accommodate the different rates at which data comes
from (or goes to) the network and goes to (or comes from)
the system memory, the SNIC contains a 16-byte FIFO for
buffering data between the bus and the media. The FIFO
threshold is programmable, allowing filling (or emptying) the
FIFO at different rates. When the FIFO has filled to its programmed threshold, the local DMA channel transfers these
bytes (or words) into local memory. It is crucial that the local
DMA is given access to the bus within a minimum bus latency time; otherwise a FIFO underrun (or overrun) occurs.
To understand FIFO underruns or overruns, there are two
causes which produce this conditionÐ
FIFO Underrun and Transmit Enable
During transmission, if a FIFO underrun occurs, the Transmit enable (TXE) output may remain high (active). Generally,
this will cause a very large packet to be transmitted onto the
network. The jabber feature of the transceiver will terminate
the transmission, and reset TXE.
To prevent this problem, a properly designed system will not
allow FIFO underruns by giving the SNIC a bus acknowledge within time shown in the maximum bus latency curves
shown and described later.
39
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
End of Packet Processing Times for Various FIFO
Thresholds, Bus Clocks and Transfer Modes
FIFO AT THE BEGINNING OF RECEIVE
At the beginning of reception, the SNIC stores entire Address field of each incoming packet in the FIFO to determine whether the packet matches its Physical Address Register or maps to one of its Multicast Registers. This causes
the FIFO to accumulate 8 bytes. Furthermore, there are
some synchronization delays in the DMA PLA. Thus, the
actual time that BREQ is asserted from the time the Start of
Frame Delimiter (SFD) is detected is 7.8 ms. This operation
affects the bus latencies at 2 byte and 4 byte thresholds
during the first receive BREQ since the FIFO must be filled
to 8 bytes (or 4 words) before issuing a BREQ.
Mode
Byte
Byte
Word
FIFO Operation at the End of Receive
When Carrier Sense goes low, the SNIC enters its end of
packet processing sequence, emptying its FIFO and writing
the status information at the beginning of the packet, Figure
5 . The SNIC holds onto the bus for the entire sequence. The
longest time BREQ may be extended occurs when a packet
ends just as the SNIC performs its last FIFO burst. The
SNIC, in this case, performs a programmed burst transfer
followed by flushing the remaining bytes in the FIFO, and
completes by writing the header information to memory. The
following steps occur during this sequence.
1. SNIC issues BREQ because the FIFO threshold has been
reached
2. During the burst, packet ends, resulting in BREQ extended.
3. SNIC flushes remaining bytes from FIFO
4. SNIC performs internal processing to prepare for writing
the header.
5. SNIC writes 4-byte (2-word) header
6. SNIC deasserts BREQ
Word
Threshold
Bus Clock
EOPP
2 bytes
4 bytes
8 bytes
10 MHz
7.0 ms
8.6 ms
11.0 ms
2 bytes
4 bytes
8 bytes
20 MHz
3.6 ms
4.2 ms
5.0 ms
2 bytes
4 bytes
8 bytes
10 MHz
5.4 ms
6.2 ms
7.4 ms
2 bytes
4 bytes
8 bytes
20 MHz
3.0 ms
3.2 ms
3.6 ms
Maximum Bus Latency for Byte Mode
End of Packet Processing
TL/F/10469 – 54
Maximum Bus Latency for Word Mode
TL/F/10469–53
End of Packet Processing (EOPP) times for 10 MHz and
20 MHz have been tabulated below.
TL/F/10469 – 55
40
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
hold), BREQ is issued when the 10th byte has entered the
FIFO. The two graphs indicate the maximum allowable bus
latency for Word or Byte transfer modes.
Threshold Detection (Bus Latency)
To assure that no overwriting of data in the FIFO occurs, the
FIFO logic flags a FIFO overrun as the 13th byte is written
into the FIFO, effectively shortening the FIFO to 13 bytes.
The FIFO logic also operates differently in Byte Mode and in
Word Mode. In Byte Mode, a threshold is indicated when
the n a 1 byte has entered the FIFO; thus, with an 8 byte
threshold, the SNIC issues Bus Request (BREQ) when the
9th byte has entered the FIFO. For Word Mode, BREQ is
not generated until the n a 2 bytes have entered the FIFO.
Thus, with a 4 word threshold (equivalent to 8 byte thres-
The FIFO at the Beginning of Transmit
Before transmitting, the SNIC performs a prefetch from
memory to load the FIFO. The number of bytes prefetched
is the programmed FIFO threshold. The next BREQ is not
issued until after the SNIC actually begins transmitting data,
i.e., after SFD. The Transmit Prefetch diagram illustrates
this process.
Transmit Prefetch Timing
TL/F/10469 – 56
41
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
tional port is also read/written by the host. All transfers
through this port are asynchronous. At any one time transfers are limited to one direction, either from the port to local
buffer memory (Remote Write) or from local buffer memory
to the port (Remote Read).
REMOTE DMA-BIDIRECTIONAL PORT CONTROL
The Remote DMA transfers data between the local buffer
memory and a bidirectional port (memory to I/O transfer).
This transfer is arbited on a byte by byte basis versus the
burst transfer used for Local DMA transfers. This bidirec-
Bus Handshake Signals for Remote DMA Transfers
TL/F/10469 – 27
Steps 1 – 3 are repeated until the remote DMA is complete.
Note that in order for the Remote DMA to transfer a byte
from memory to the latch, it must arbitrate access to the
local bus via a BREQ, BACK handshake. After each byte or
word is transferred to the latch, BREQ is dropped. If a Local
DMA is in progress, the Remote DMA is held off until the
local DMA is complete.
REMOTE READ TIMING
1. The DMA reads byte/word from local buffer memory and
writes byte/word into latch, increments the DMA address
and decrements the byte count (RBCR0, 1).
2. A Request Line (PRQ) is asserted to inform the system
that a byte is available.
3. The system reads the port, the read strobe (RACK) is
used as an acknowledge by the Remote DMA and it goes
back to step 1.
TL/F/10469 – 28
42
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
1. SNIC asserts PRQ. System writes byte/word into latch.
SNIC removes PRQ.
REMOTE WRITE TIMING
A Remote Write operation transfers data from the I/O port
to the local buffer RAM. The SNIC initiates a transfer by
requesting a byte/word via the PRQ. The system transfers a
byte-word to the latch via IOW, this write strobe is detected
by the SNIC and PRQ is removed. By removing the PRQ,
the Remote DMA holds off further transfers into the latch
until the current byte/word has been transferred from the
latch, PRQ is reasserted and the next transfer can begin.
2. Remote DMA reads contents of port and writes byte/
word to local buffer memory, increments address and
decrements byte count (RBCR0, 1).
3. Go back to step 1.
Steps 1 – 3 are repeated until the remote DMA is complete.
TL/F/10469 – 29
Write is subsequently executed. This single Remote Read
cycle is called a ‘‘dummy Remote Read.’’ In order for the
dummy Remote Read cycle to operate correctly, the Start
Address should be programmed to a known, safe location in
the buffer memory space, and the Remote Byte Count
should be programmed to a value greater than 1. This will
ensure that the master read cycle is performed safely, eliminating the possibility of data corruption.
REMOTE DMA WRITE
Setting PRQ Using the Remote Read
Under certain conditions the SNIC’s bus state machine may
issue MWR and PRD before PRQ for the first DMA transfer
of a Remote Write Command. If this occurs this could cause
data corruption, or cause the remote DMA count to be different from the main CPU count causing the system to ‘‘lock
up.’’
To prevent this condition when implementing a Remote
DMA Write, the Remote DMA Write command should first
be preceded by a Remote DMA Read command to insure
that the PRQ signal is asserted before the SNIC starts its
port read cycle. The reason for this is that the state machine
that asserts PRQ runs independently of the state machine
that controls the DMA signals. The DMA machine assumes
that PRQ is asserted, but actually may not be. To remedy
this situation, a single Remote Read cycle should be inserted before the actual DMA Write Command is given. This will
ensure that PRQ is asserted when the Remote DMA
Remote Write with High Speed Buses
When implementing the Remote DMA Write solution with
high speed buses and CPU’s, timing problems may cause
the system to hang. Therefore additional considerations are
required.
The problem occurs when the system can execute the dummy Remote Read and then start the Remote Write before
the SNIC has had a chance to execute the Remote Read. If
this happens the PRQ signal will not get set, and the Remote Byte Count and Remote Start Address for the Remote
43
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
TL/F/10469 – 57
Note: The dashed lines indicate incorrect timing as described in the text.
FIGURE 9. Timing Diagram for Dummy Remote Read
The general flow for executing a Remote Write is:
1. Set Remote Byte Count to a value l1 and Remote Start
Address to unused RAM (one location before the transmit
start address is usually a safe location).
2. Issue the ‘‘dummy’’ Remote Read command.
3. Read the Current Remote DMA Address (CRDA) (both
bytes).
4. Compare to previous CRDA value if different go to 6.
5. Delay and jump to 3.
6. Set up for the Remote Write command, by setting the
Remote Byte Count and the Remote Start Address (note
that if Remote Byte count in step 1 can be set to the
transmit byte count plus one, and the Remote Start Address to one less, these will now be incremented to the
correct values.)
7. Issue the Remote Write command.
Write operation could be corrupted. This is shown by the
hatched waveforms in the timing diagram of Figure 9 . The
execution of the Remote Read can be delayed by the local
DMA operations (particularly during end-of-packet processing).
To ensure the dummy Remote Read does execute, a delay
must be inserted between writing the Remote Read Command, and starting to write the Remote Write State Address.
(This time is designated in Figure 9 by the delay arrows.)
The recommended method to avoid this problem is after the
Remote Read command is given, to poll both bytes of the
Current Remote DMA Address Registers. When the address has incremented PRQ has been set. Software should
recognize this and then start the Remote Write.
An additional caution for high speed systems is that the
polling must follow guidelines specified in Time Between
Chip Select section. That is, there must be at least 4 bus
clocks between chip selects (for example when BSCK e 20
MHz, then this time should be 200 ns).
44
13.0 Bus Arbitration and Timing (Continued)
ADS0 is used to latch the address when interfacing to a
multiplexed, address data bus. Since the SNIC may be a
local bus master when the host CPU attempts to read or
write to the controller, an ACK line is used to hold off the
CPU until the SNIC leaves master mode. Some number of
BSCK cycles is also required to allow the SNIC to synchronize to the read or write cycles.
SLAVE MODE TIMING
When CS is low, the SNIC becomes a bus slave. The CPU
can then read or write any internal registers. All register
access is byte wide. The timing for register access is shown
below. The host CPU accesses internal registers with four
address lines, RA0–RA3, SRD and SWR strobes.
Write to Register
TL/F/10469 – 30
Read from Register
TL/F/10469 – 31
execute consecutive I/O cycles very quickly. The solution is
to delay the execution of consecutive I/O cycles by either
breaking the pipeline or forcing the CPU to access outside
its cache.
TIME BETWEEN CHIP SELECTS
The SNIC requires that successive chip selects be no closer
than 4 bus clocks (BSCK) together. If the condition is violated, the SNIC may glitch ACK. CPUs that operate from pipelined instructions (i.e., 386) or have a cache (i.e., 486) can
Time between Chip Selects
TL/F/10469 – 58
45
14.0 Preliminary Electrical Characteristics
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Note: Absolute Maximum ratings are those values beyond
which the safety of the device cannot be guaranteed. They
are not meant to imply that the device should be operated at
these limits.
Note: All specifications in this datasheet are valid only if the
mandatory isolation is employed and all differential signals
are taken to exist at the AUI side of the isolation.
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required,
please contact the National Semiconductor Sales
Office/Distributors for availability and specifications.
b 0.5V to a 7.0V
Supply Voltage (VCC)
b 0.5V to VCC a 0.5V
DC Input Voltage (VIN)
b 0.5V to VCC a 0.5V
DC Output Voltage (VOUT)
b 65§ C to a 150§ C
Storage Temperature Range (TSTG)
Power Dissipation (PD)
800 mW
Lead Temp. (TL) (Soldering, 10 sec.)
260§ C
1.5 kV
ESD Rating (RZAP e 1.5k, CZAP e 120 pF)
Preliminary DC Specifications TA e 0§ C to 70§ C, VCC e 5V g 5%, unless otherwise specified.
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Max
VCC b0.1
3.5
Units
VOH
Minimum High Level Output Voltage
(Notes 1, 4)
IOH e b20 mA
IOH e b2.0 mA
V
V
VOL
Minimum Low Level Output Voltage
(Notes 1, 4)
IOL e 20 mA
IOL e 2.0 mA
VIH
Minimum High Level Input Voltage (Note 2)
2.0
V
VIH2
Minimum High Level Input Voltage
For RACK WACK (Note 2)
2.7
V
VIL
Minimum Low Level Input Voltage (Note 2)
0.8
V
VIL2
Minimum Low Level Input Voltage
For RACK, WACK (Note 2)
0.6
V
IIN
Input Current
VI e VCC or GND
b 1.0
a 1.0
mA
IOZ
Minimum TRI-STATE
Output Leakage Current (Note 5)
VOUT e VCC or GND
b 10
a 10
mA
ICC
Average Supply Current
(Note 3)
X1 e 20 MHz Clock
IOUT e 0 mA
VIN e VCC or GND
110
mA
0.1
0.4
V
V
Note 1: These levels are tested dynamically using a limited amount of functional test patterns, please refer to AC test load.
Note 2: Limited functional test patterns are performed at these input levels. The majority of functional tests are performed at levels of 0V and 3V.
Note 3: This is measured with a 0.1 mF bypass capacitor between VCC and GND.
Note 4: The low drive CMOS compatible VOH and VOL limits are not tested directly. Detailed device characterization validates that this specification can be
guaranteed by testing the high drive TTL compatible VOL and VOH specification.
Note 5: RA0–RA3, PRD, WACK, BREQ and INT pins are used as outputs in test mode and as a result are tested as if they are TRI-STATE input/outputs. For these
pins the input leakage specification is IOZ.
46
14.0 Preliminary Electrical Characteristics (Continued)
Preliminary DC Specifications TA e 0§ C to 70§ C, V e 5V g 5%, unless otherwise specified.
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Min
g 550
Max
Units
g 1200
mV
DIFFERENTIAL PINS (TX g , RX g , and CD g )
VOD
Diff. Output Voltage (TX g )
78X Termination, and 270Xs from each to GND
VOB
Diff. Output Voltage Imbalance (TX g )
Same as Above
Typical: 40 mV
VU
Undershoot Voltage (TX g )
Same as Above
Typical: 80 mV
VDS
Diff. Squelch Threshold
(RX g and CD g )
VCM
Diff. Input Common Mode Voltage
(RX g and CD g ) (Note 1)
b 175
b 300
mV
0
5.25
V
OSCILLATOR PINS (X1 and GND/X2)
VIH
X1 Input High Voltage
X1 is Connected to an Oscillator
and GND/X2 is Grounded
VIL
X1 Input Low Voltage
Same as Above
0.8
V
IOSC
X1 Input Current
GND/X2 is Grounded
VIN e VCC or GND
a3
mA
Note 1: This parameter is guaranteed by the isolation and is not tested.
47
2.0
V
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary
Register Read (Latched Using ADS0)
TL/F/10469 – 32
Symbol
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
rss
Register Select Setup to ADS0 Low
10
rsh
Register Select Hold from ADS0 Low
13
ns
ns
aswi
Address Strobe Width In
15
ns
ackdv
Acknowledge Low to Data Valid
rdz
Read Strobe to Data TRI-STATE (Note 3)
rackl
Read Strobe to ACK Low (Notes 1, 2)
rackh
Read Strobe to ACK High
rsrsl
Register Select to Slave Read Low,
Latched RS0–3
55
15
10
ns
70
ns
n*bcyc a 30
ns
30
ns
ns
Note 1: ACK is not generated until CS and SRD are low and the SNIC has synchronized to the register access. The SNIC will insert an integral number of Bus Clock
cycles until it is synchronized. In Dual Bus systems additional cycles will be used for a local or remote DMA to complete. Wait states must be issued to the CPU until
ACK is asserted low.
Note 2: CS may be asserted before or after SRD. If CS is asserted after SRD, rackl is referenced from falling edge of CS. CS can be de-asserted concurrently with
SRD or after SRD is de-asserted.
Note 3: These limits include the RC delay inherent in our test method. These signals typically turn off within 15 ns, enabling other devices to drive these lines with
no contention.
48
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Register Read (Non-Latched, ADS0 e 1)
TL/F/10469 – 33
Symbol
Parameter
Min
rsrs
Register Select to Read Setup
(Notes 1, 3)
10
rsrh
Register Select Hold from Read
0
ackdv
ACK Low to Valid Data
rdz
Read Strobe to Data TRI-STATE (Note 2)
rackl
Read Strobe to ACK Low (Note 3)
rackh
Read Strobe to ACK High
15
Max
Units
ns
ns
55
ns
70
ns
n*bcyc a 30
ns
30
ns
Note 1: rsrs includes flow-through time of latch.
Note 2: These limits include the RC delay inherent in our test method. These signals typically turn off within 15 ns enabling other devices to drive these lines with
no contention.
Note 3: CS may be asserted before of after RA0–3, and SRD, since address decode begins when ACK is asserted. If CS is asserted after RA0–3, and SRD, rackl
is referenced from falling edge of CS.
49
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Register Write (Latched Using ADS0)
TL/F/10469 – 34
Symbol
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
rss
Register Select Setup to ADS0 Low
10
ns
rsh
Register Select Hold from ADS0 Low
17
ns
aswi
Address Strobe Width In
15
ns
rwds
Register Write Data Setup
20
ns
rwdh
Register Write Data Hold
21
ns
ww
Write Strobe Width from ACK
50
ns
wackh
Write Strobe High to ACK High
wackl
Write Low to ACK Low (Notes 1, 2)
rswsl
Register Select to Write Strobe Low
30
ns
n*bcyc a 30
ns
10
ns
Note 1: ACK is not generated until CS and SWR are low and the SNIC has synchronized to the register access. In Dual Bus Systems additional cycles will be used
for a local DMA or Remote DMA to complete.
Note 2: CS may be asserted before or after SWR. If CS is asserted after SWR, wackl is referenced from falling edge of CS.
50
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Register Write (Non-Latched, ADS0 e 1)
TL/F/10469 – 35
Symbol
Parameter
Min
rsws
Register Select to Write Setup (Note 1)
15
ns
rswh
Register Select Hold from Write
0
ns
rwds
Register Write Data Setup
20
ns
rwdh
Register Write Data Hold
21
wackl
Write Low to ACK Low (Note 2)
wackh
Write High to ACK High
ww
Write Width from ACK
Max
ns
n*bcyc a 30
30
50
Units
ns
ns
ns
Note 1: Assumes ADS0 is high when RA0–3 changing.
Note 2: ACK is not generated until CS and SWR are low and the SNIC has synchronized to the register access. In Dual Bus systems additional cycles will be used
for a local DMA or remote DMA to complete.
51
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
DMA Control, Bus Arbitration
TL/F/10469 – 36
Symbol
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
50
ns
brqhl
Bus Clock to Bus Request High for Local DMA
brqhr
Bus Clock to Bus Request High for Remote DMA
45
ns
brql
Bus Request Low from Bus Clock
60
ns
backs
Acknowledge Setup to Bus Clock (Note 1)
bccte
Bus Clock to Control Enable
60
ns
bcctr
Bus Clock to Control Release (Notes 2, 3)
70
ns
2
ns
Note 1: BACK must be setup before T1 after BREQ is asserted. Missed setup will slip the beginning of the DMA by four bus clocks. The Bus Latency will influence
the allowable FIFO threshold and transfer mode (empty/fill vs exact burst transfer).
Note 2: During remote DMA transfers only, a single bus transfer is performed. During local DMA operations burst mode transfers are performed.
Note 3: These limits include the RC delay inherent in our test method. These signals typically turn off within 15 ns enabling other devices to drive these lines with
no contention.
52
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
DMA Address Generation
TL/F/10469 – 37
Min
Max
Units
bcyc
Symbol
Bus Clock Cycle Time (Note 2)
Parameter
50
125
ns
bch
Bus Clock High Time
20
ns
bcl
Bus Clock Low Time
20
ns
bcash
Bus Clock to Address Strobe High
34
bcasl
Bus Clock to Address Strobe Low
44
aswo
Address Strobe Width Out
bcadv
Bus Clock to Address Valid
bcadz
Bus Clock to Address TRI-STATE (Note 3)
ads
Address Setup to ADS0/1 Low
adh
Address Hold from ADS0/1 Low
bch
ns
ns
45
15
ns
55
ns
ns
bch b 15
ns
bcl b 5
ns
Note 1: Cycles T1Ê , T2Ê , T3Ê and T4Ê are only issued for the first transfer in a burst when 32-bit mode has been selected.
Note 2: The rate of bus clock must be high enough to support transfers to/from the FIFO at a rate greater than the serial network transfers from/to the FIFO.
Note 3: These limits include the RC delay inherent in our test method. These signals typically turn off within 15 ns, enabling other devices to drive these lines with
no contention.
53
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
DMA Memory Read
TL/F/10469 – 38
Max
Units
bcrl
Symbol
Bus Clock to Read Strobe Low
Parameter
Min
43
ns
bcrh
Bus Clock to Read Strobe High
40
ns
ds
Data Setup to Read Strobe High
22
dh
Data Hold from Read Strobe High
0
ns
drw
DMA Read Strobe Width Out
2*bcyc b 15
ns
raz
Memory Read High to Address TRI-STATE
(Notes 1, 2)
asds
Address Strobe to Data Strobe
dsada
Data Strobe to Address Active
avrh
Address Valid to Read Strobe High
ns
bch a 40
bcl a 10
ns
ns
bcyc b 10
ns
3*bcyc b 18
ns
Note 1: During a burst A8–A15 are not TRI-STATE if byte wide transfers are selected. On the last transfer A8–A15 are TRI-STATE as shown above.
Note 2: These limits include the RC delay inherent in our test method. These signals typically turn off within bch a 15 ns, enabling other devices to drive these
lines with no contention.
54
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
DMA Memory Write
TL/F/10469 – 39
Symbol
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
40
ns
bcwl
Bus Clock to Write Strobe Low
bcwh
Bus Clock to Write Strobe High
wds
Data Setup to WR High
2*bcyc b 30
wdh
Data Hold from WR Low
bch a 7
waz
Write Strobe to Address TRI-STATE (Notes 1, 2)
bch a 40
ns
asds
Address Strobe to Data Strobe
bcl a 10
ns
aswd
Address Strobe to Write Data Valid
bcl a 30
ns
40
ns
ns
ns
Note 1: When using byte mode transfers A8–A15 are only TRI-STATE on the last transfer, waz timing is only valid for last transfer in a burst.
Note 2: These limits include the RC delay inherent in our test method. These signals typically turn off within bch a 15 ns, enabling other devices to drive these
lines with no contention.
55
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Wait State Insertion
TL/F/10469 – 40
Parameter
Min
ews
Symbol
External Wait Setup to T3 0Clock (Note 1)
10
Max
Units
ns
ewr
External Wait Release Time (Note 1)
15
ns
Note 1: The addition of wait states affects the count of deserialized bytes and is limited to a number of bus clock cycles depending on the bus clock and network
rates. The allowable wait states are found in the table below. (Assumes 10 Mbit/sec data rate.)
BSCK (MHz)
The number of allowable wait states in byte mode can be
calculated using:
Max Ý of Wait States
Byte Transfer
Word Transfer
8
0
1
10
0
1
12
1
2
14
1
2
16
1
3
18
2
3
20
2
4
ÝW(byte mode) e
# 4.5 tbsck 1 J
8 tnw
b
e Number of Wait States
ÝW
e Network Clock Period
tnw
e BSCK Period
tbsck
The number of allowable wait states in word mode can be
calculated using:
ÝW(word mode) e
Table assumes 10 MHz network clock.
56
# 2 tbsck 1 J
5 tnw
b
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Remote DMA (Read, Send Command)
TL/F/10469 – 41
Symbol
Max
Units
Bus Clock to Port Write Low
43
ns
bpwrh
Bus Clock to Port Write High
40
ns
prqh
Port Write High to Port Request High (Note 1)
30
ns
prql
Port Request Low from Read Acknowledge High
60
ns
rakw
Remote Acknowledge Read Strobe Pulse Width
bpwrl
Parameter
Min
20
Note 1: Start of next transfer is dependent on where RACK is generted relative to BSCK and whether a local DMA is pending.
57
ns
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Remote DMA (Read, Send Command) Recovery Time
TL/F/10469 – 42
Max
Units
bpwrl
Symbol
Bus Clock to Port Write Low
Parameter
Min
43
ns
bpwrh
Bus Clock to Port Write High
40
ns
prqh
Port Write High to Port Request High (Note 1)
30
ns
prql
Port Request Low from Read Acknowledge High
60
ns
rakw
Remote Acknowledge Read Strobe Pulse Width
20
ns
rhpwh
Read Acknowledge High to Next Port Write Cycle
(Notes 2, 3, 4)
11
BSCK
Note 1: Start of next transfer is dependent on where RACK is generated relative to BSCK and whether a local DMA is pending.
Note 2: This is not a measured value but guaranteed by design.
Note 3: RACK must be high for a minimum of 7 BSCK.
Note 4: Assumes no local DMA interleave, no CS, and immediate BACK.
58
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Remote DMA (Write Cycle)
TL/F/10469 – 43
Symbol
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
bprqh
Bus Clock to Port Request High (Note 1)
42
ns
wprql
WACK to Port Request Low
52
ns
wackw
WACK Pulse Width
bprdl
Bus Clock to Port Read Low (Note 2)
55
ns
bprdh
Bus Clock to Port Read High
40
ns
25
ns
Note 1: The first port request is issued in response to the remote write command. It is subsequently issued on T1 clock cycles following completion of remote DMA
cycles.
Note 2: The start of the remote DMA write following WACK is dependent on where WACK is issued relative to BSCK and whether a local DMA is pending.
59
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Remote DMA (Write Cycle) Recovery Time
TL/F/10469 – 44
Symbol
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
42
ns
bprqh
Bus Clock to Port Request High (Note 1)
wprql
WACK to Port Request Low
wackw
WACK Pulse Width
bprdl
Bus Clock to Port Read Low (Note 2)
55
ns
bprdh
Bus Clock to Port Read High
40
ns
wprq
Remote Write Port Request to Port
Request Time (Notes 3, 4, 5)
50
25
ns
ns
12
BSCK
Note 1: The first port request is issued in response to the remote write command. It is subsequently issued on T1 clock cycles following completion of remote
DMA cycles.
Note 2: The start of the remote DMA write following WACK is dependent on where WACK is issued relative to BSCK and whether a local DMA is pending.
Note 3: Assuming wackw k 1 BSCK, and no local DMA interleave, no CS, immediate BACK, and WACK goes high before T4.
Note 4: WACK must be high for a minimum of 7 BSCK.
Note 5: This is not a measured value but guaranteed by design.
60
15.0 Switching Characteristics AC Specs DP83901A Note: All Timing is Preliminary (Continued)
Transmit Timing (End of Packet)
TL/F/10469 – 47
TRANSMIT SPECIFICATIONS (End of Packet)
Symbol
Parameter
Min
tTOH
Transmit Output High before Idle (Half Step)
tTOI
Transmit Output Idle Time to g 40 mV(Half Step)
Max
Units
8000
ns
200
ns
Reset Timing
TL/F/10469 – 45
Symbol
rstw
Parameter
Min
Reset Pulse Width (Note 1)
8
Max
Units
BSCK Cycles or TXC Cycles (Note 2)
Note 1: The RESET pulse requires the BSCK and TXC be stable. On power up, RESET should not be raised until BSCK and TXC have become stable. Several
registers are affected by RESET. Consult the register descriptions for details.
Note 2: The slower of BSCK or TXC clocks will determine the minimum time for the RESET signal to be low. TXC is X1 divided by 2.
If BSCK k TXC then RESET e 8 c BSCK
If TXC k BSCK then RESET e 8 c TXC
16.0 AC Timing Test Conditions
All specifications are valid only if the mandatory isolation is
employed and all differential signals are taken to be at the
AUI side of the pulse transformer.
Input Pulse Levels (TTL/CMOS)
GND to 3.0V
Input Rise and Fall Times (TTL/CMOS)
5 ns
Input and Output Reference Levles (TTL/CMOS)
1.3V
b 350 mV to b 1315 mV
Input Pulse Levels (Diff.)
Input and Output
Reference Levels (Diff.)
TRI-STATE Reference Levels
50% Point of
the Differential
Float (DV) g 0.5V
TL/F/10469 – 48
Note 1: 50 pF, includes scope and jig capacitance
Output Load (See Figure Below)
Note 2: S1 e Open for timing tests for push pull outputs.
S1 e VCC for VOL test.
S1 e GND for VOH test.
S1 e VCC for High Impedance to active low and
active low to High Impedance measurements.
S1 e GND for High Impedance to active high and
active high to High Impedance measurements.
61
DP83901A SNIC Serial Network Interface Controller
Pin Capacitance TA e 25§ C, f e 1 MHz
Symbol
Parameter
Typ
Units
CIN
Input Capacitance
7
pF
COUT
Output Capacitance
7
pF
DERATING FACTOR
Output timings are measured with a purely capacitive load
for 50 pF. The following correction factor can be used for
other loads: CL t 50 pF a 0.3 ns/pF.
AUI Transmit Load
TL/F/10469 – 49
Note: In the above diagram, the TX a and TX b signals are taken from the
AUI side of the isolation (pulse transformer). The pulse transformer
used for all testing is the Pulse Engineering PE64103.
Physical Dimensions inches (millimeters)
Plastic Chip Carrier (V)
Order Number DP83901V
NS Package Number V68A
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