NSC COP8SAA716N9

July 1999
COP8SA Family
8-Bit CMOS ROM Based and One-Time Programmable
(OTP) Microcontroller with 1k to 4k Memory, Power On
Reset, and Very Small Packaging
General Description
Note: COP8SAx devices are instruction set and pin compatible supersets of the COP800 Family devices, and are
replacements for these in new designs when possible.
The COPSAx Rom based and OTP microcontrollers are
highly integrated COP8™ feature core devices, with 1k to 4k
memory and advanced features including low EMI. These
single-chip CMOS devices are suited for low cost applications requiring a full featured controller, low EMI, and POR.
100% form-fit-function compatible OTP versions are available with 1k, 2k, and 4k memory, and in a variety of packages including 28-pin CSP. Erasable windowed versions are
available for use with a range of COP8 software and hardware development tools.
Family features include an 8-bit memory mapped architecture, 10 MHz CKI with 1 µs instruction cycle, one multifunction 16-bit timer/counter with PWM output,
MICROWIRE/PLUS™ serial I/O, two power saving HALT/
IDLE modes, MIWU, idle timer, on-chip R/C oscillator, 12
high current outputs, user selectable options (WATCHDOG™, 4 clock/oscillator modes, power-on-reset), low EMI
2.7V to 5.5V operation, and 16/20/28/40/44 pin packages.
Devices included in this datasheet are:
Device
Memory
(bytes)
RAM
(bytes)
I/O Pins
COP8SAA5
1k ROM
64
12/16/24
COP8SAB5
2k ROM
128
16/24
COP8SAC5
4k ROM
128
16/24/36/40
COP8SAA7
1k OTP EPROM
64
12/16/24
COP8SAB7
2k OTP EPROM
128
COP8SAC7
4k OTP EPROM
COP8SAA7SLB9
COP8SAB7SLB9
COP8SAC7SLB9
Packages
Temperature
16/20/28 DIP/SOIC
0 to +70˚C, -40 to +85˚C,
-40 to +125˚C
20/28 DIP/SOIC
0 to +70˚C, -40 to +85˚C,
-40 to +125˚C
20/28 DIP/SOIC, 28 CSP,
40 DIP, 44 PLCC/QFP
0 to +70˚C, -40 to +85˚C,
-40 to +125˚C
16/20/28 DIP/SOIC
0 to +70˚C, -40 to +85˚C,
-40 to +125˚C
16/24
20/28 DIP/SOIC
0 to +70˚C, -40 to +85˚C,
-40 to +125˚C
128
16/24
20/28 DIP/SOIC, 28 CSP,
40 DIP, 44 PLCC/QFP
0 to +70˚C, -40 to +85˚C,
-40 to +125˚C
1k OTP EPROM
64
24
28 CSP
0 to +70˚C
2k OTP EPROM
128
24
28 CSP
0 to +70˚C
4k OTP EPROM
128
24
28 CSP
0 to +70˚C
COP8SAC7-Q3
4k EPROM
128
16/24/36
COP8SAC7-J3
4k EPROM
128
40
Key Features
n Low cost 8-bit OTP microcontroller
n OTP program space with read/write protection (fully
secured)
n Quiet Design (low radiated emissions)
n Multi-Input Wakeup pins with optional interrupts
(4 to 8 pins)
n 8 bytes of user storage space in EPROM
20/28/40 DIP
Room Temp. Only
44 PLCC
Room Temp. Only
n User selectable clock options
— Crystal/Resonator options
— Crystal/Resonator option with on-chip bias resistor
— External oscillator
— Internal R/C oscillator
n Internal Power-On Reset — user selectable
n WATCHDOG and Clock Monitor Logic — user selectable
n Up to 12 high current outputs
TRI-STATE ® is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation.
MICROWIRE/PLUS™, COP8™, MICROWIRE™ and WATCHDOG™ are trademarks of National Semiconductor Corporation.
iceMASTER ® is a registered trademark of MetaLink Corporation.
© 1999 National Semiconductor Corporation
DS012838
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COP8SA Family, 8-Bit CMOS ROM Based and One-Time Programmable (OTP) Microcontroller
with 1k to 4k Memory, Power On Reset, and Very Small Packaging
PRELIMINARY
CPU Features
I/O Features
n Versatile easy to use instruction set
n 1 µs instruction cycle time
n Eight multi-source vectored interrupts servicing
— External interrupt
— Idle Timer T0
— One Timer (with 2 interrupts)
— MICROWIRE/PLUS Serial Interface
— Multi-Input Wake Up
— Software Trap
— Default VIS (default interrupt)
n 8-bit Stack Pointer SP (stack in RAM)
n Two 8-bit Register Indirect Data Memory Pointers
n True bit manipulation
n Memory mapped I/O
n BCD arithmetic instructions
n Software selectable I/O options
— TRI-STATE ® Output
— Push-Pull Output
— Weak Pull Up Input
— High Impedance Input
n Schmitt trigger inputs on ports G and L
n Up to 12 high current outputs
n Pin efficient (i.e., 40 pins in 44-pin package are devoted
to useful I/O)
Fully Static CMOS Design
n Low current drain (typically < 4 µA)
n Single supply operation: 2.7V to 5.5V
n Two power saving modes: HALT and IDLE
Temperature Ranges
Peripheral Features
0˚C to +70˚C, −40˚C to +85˚C, and −40˚C to +125˚C
n Multi-Input Wakeup Logic
n One 16-bit timer with two 16-bit registers supporting:
— Processor Independent PWM mode
— External Event counter mode
— Input Capture mode
n Idle Timer
n MICROWIRE/PLUS Serial Interface (SPI Compatible)
Development Support
n Windowed packages for DIP and PLCC
n Real time emulation and full program debug offered by
MetaLink Development System
Block Diagram
DS012838-1
FIGURE 1. COP8SAx Block Diagram
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2
General Description
Single Byte/Single Cycle Code Execution
The efficiency is due to the fact that the majority of instructions are of the single byte variety, resulting in minimum program space. Because compact code does not occupy a substantial amount of program memory space, designers can
integrate additional features and functionality into the microcontroller program memory space. Also, the majority instructions executed by the device are single cycle, resulting in
minimum program execution time. In fact, 77% of the instructions are single byte single cycle, providing greater code and
I/O efficiency, and faster code execution.
(Continued)
Key features include an 8-bit memory mapped architecture,
a 16-bit timer/counter with two associated 16-bit registers
supporting three modes (Processor Independent PWM generation, External Event counter, and Input Capture capabilities), two power saving HALT/IDLE modes with a
multi-sourced wakeup/interrupt capability, on-chip R/C oscillator, high current outputs, user selectable options such as
WATCHDOG, Oscillator configuration, and power-on-reset.
1.1 EMI REDUCTION
The COP8SAx family of devices incorporates circuitry that
guards against electromagnetic interference — an increasing
problem in today’s microcontroller board designs. National’s
patented EMI reduction technology offers low EMI clock circuitry, gradual turn-on output drivers (GTOs) and internal ICC
smoothing filters, to help circumvent many of the EMI issues
influencing embedded control designs. National has
achieved 15 dB–20 dB reduction in EMI transmissions when
designs have incorporated its patented EMI reducing circuitry.
1.3.2 Many Single-Byte, Multifunction Instructions
The COP8SAx instruction set utilizes many single-byte, multifunction instructions. This enables a single instruction to accomplish multiple functions, such as DRSZ, DCOR, JID, and
LOAD/EXCHANGE instructions with post-incrementing and
post-decrementing, to name just a few examples. In many
cases, the instruction set can simultaneously execute as
many as three functions with the same single-byte instruction.
JID: (Jump Indirect); Single byte instruction; decodes external events and jumps to corresponding service routines
(analogous to “DO CASE” statements in higher level languages).
LAID: (Load Accumulator-Indirect); Single byte look up table
instruction provides efficient data path from the program
memory to the CPU. This instruction can be used for table
lookup and to read the entire program memory for checksum
calculations.
RETSK: (Return Skip); Single byte instruction allows return
from subroutine and skips next instruction. Decision to
branch can be made in the subroutine itself, saving code.
AUTOINC/DEC: (Auto-Increment/Auto-Decrement); These
instructions use the two memory pointers B and X to efficiently process a block of data (analogous to “FOR NEXT” in
higher level languages).
1.2 ARCHITECTURE
The COP8SAx family is based on a modified Harvard architecture, which allows data tables to be accessed directly
from program memory. This is very important with modern
microcontroller-based applications, since program memory
is usually ROM or EPROM, while data memory is usually
RAM. Consequently data tables usually need to be contained in ROM or EPROM, so they are not lost when the microcontroller is powered down. In a modified Harvard architecture, instruction fetch and memory data transfers can be
overlapped with a two stage pipeline, which allows the next
instruction to be fetched from program memory while the
current instruction is being executed using data memory.
This is not possible with a Von Neumann single-address bus
architecture.
The COP8SAx family supports a software stack scheme that
allows the user to incorporate many subroutine calls. This
capability is important when using High Level Languages.
With a hardware stack, the user is limited to a small fixed
number of stack levels.
1.3.3 Bit-Level Control
Bit-level control over many of the microcontroller’s I/O ports
provides a flexible means to ease layout concerns and save
board space. All members of the COP8 family provide the
ability to set, reset and test any individual bit in the data
memory address space, including memory-mapped I/O ports
and associated registers. Three memory-mapped pointers
handle register indirect addressing and software stack
pointer functions. The memory data pointers allow the option
of post-incrementing or post-decrementing with the data
movement instructions (LOAD/EXCHANGE). And 15
memory-maped registers allow designers to optimize the
precise implementation of certain specific instructions.
1.3 INSTRUCTION SET
In today’s 8-bit microcontroller application arena cost/
performance, flexibility and time to market are several of the
key issues that system designers face in attempting to build
well-engineered products that compete in the marketplace.
Many of these issues can be addressed through the manner
in which a microcontroller’s instruction set handles processing tasks. And that’s why COP8 family offers a unique and
code-efficient instruction set — one that provides the flexibility, functionality, reduced costs and faster time to market that
today’s microcontroller based products require.
Code efficiency is important because it enables designers to
pack more on-chip functionality into less program memory
space (ROM/OTP). Selecting a microcontroller with less program memory size translates into lower system costs, and
the added security of knowing that more code can be packed
into the available program memory space.
1.4 PACKAGING/PIN EFFICIENCY
Real estate and board configuration considerations demand
maximum space and pin efficiency, particularly given today’s
high integration and small product form factors. Microcontroller users try to avoid using large packages to get the I/O
needed. Large packages take valuable board space and increases device cost, two trade-offs that microcontroller designs can ill afford.
The COP8 family offers a wide range of packages and do not
waste pins: up to 90.9% (or 40 pins in the 44-pin package)
are devoted to useful I/O.
1.3.1 Key Instruction Set Features
The COP8SAx family incorporates a unique combination of
instruction set features, which provide designers with optimum code efficiency and program memory utilization.
3
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Connection Diagrams
DS012838-2
Top View
DS012838-3
Top View
DS012838-4
Top View
DS012838-39
Top View
DS012838-6
Top View
DS012838-5
Top View
FIGURE 2. Connection Diagrams
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4
Ordering Information
DS012838-8
FIGURE 3. Part Numbering Scheme
1k EPROM
2k EPROM
4k EPROM
4k EPROM
Windowed
Device
Temperature
Order Number
Package
0˚C to +70˚C
COP8SAA716M9
16M
COP8SAA720M9
COP8SAA728M9
COP8SAA716N9
16N
COP8SAA720N9
COP8SAA728N9
−40˚C to +85˚C
Order Number
Package
Order Number
Package
Order Number
Package
20M
COP8SAB720M9
20M
COP8SAC720M9
20M
28M
COP8SAB728M9
28M
COP8SAC728M9
28M
20N
COP8SAB720N9
20N
COP8SAC720N9
28N
COP8SAB728N9
28N
COP8SAC728N9
20N
COP8SAC720Q3
20Q
28N
COP8SAC728Q3
28Q
COP8SAC740N9
40N
COP8SAC740Q3
40Q
COP8SAC744V9
44V
COP8SAC744J3
44J
COP8SAA716M8
16M
COP8SAA720M8
20M
COP8SAB720M8
20M
COP8SAC720M8
20M
COP8SAA728M8
28M
COP8SAB728M8
28M
COP8SAC728M8
28M
COP8SAA716N8
16N
COP8SAA720N8
20N
COP8SAB720N8
20N
COP8SAC720N8
20N
COP8SAA728N8
28N
COP8SAB728N8
28N
COP8SAC728N8
28N
COP8SAC740N8
40N
COP8SAA7SLB8
SLB
COP8SAB7SLB8
SLB
−40˚C to
+125˚C
5
COP8SAC744V8
44V
COP8SAC7SLB8
SLB
COP8SAC720M7
20M
COP8SAC728M7
28M
COP8SAC720N7
20N
COP8SAC728N7
28N
COP8SAC740N7
40N
COP8SAC744V7
44V
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4.0 Electrical Characteristics
ESD Protection Level
Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 1)
Total Current into VCC Pin (Source)
Total Current out of GND Pin (Sink)
Storage Temperature Range
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required,
please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/
Distributors for availability and specifications.
Supply Voltage (VCC)
Voltage at Any Pin
−0.6V to VCC
2 kV
(Human Body Model)
80 mA
100 mA
−65˚C to +140˚C
Note 1: Absolute maximum ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to
the device may occur. DC and AC electrical specifications are not ensured
when operating the device at absolute maximum ratings.
7V
+0.6V
DC Electrical Characteristics
0˚C ≤ TA ≤ +70˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Operating Voltage
Conditions
(Note 8)
Min
Max
Units
2.7
Typ
5.5
V
10 ns
50 ms
Power Supply Rise Time from 0.0V
(On-Chip Power-On Reset Selected)
VCC Start Voltage to Guarantee POR
Power Supply Ripple (Note 3)
Supply Current (Note 4)
CKI = 10 MHz
CKI = 4 MHz
HALT Current (Note 5) — WATCHDOG Disabled
IDLE Current (Note 4)
CKI = 10 MHz
CKI = 4 MHz
Peak-to-Peak
VCC = 5.5V, tC = 1 µs
VCC = 4.5V, tC = 2.5 µs
VCC = 5.5V, CKI = 0 MHz
<4
VCC = 5.5V, tC = 1 µs
VCC = 4.5V, tC = 2.5 µs
0.25
V
0.1 VCC
V
6
mA
2.1
mA
8
µA
1.5
mA
0.8
mA
Input Levels (VIH, VIL)
RESET
Logic High
0.8 VCC
V
Logic Low
0.2 VCC
V
CKI, All Other Inputs
Logic High
0.7 VCC
V
Logic Low
Value of the Internal Bias Resistor
0.2 VCC
V
0.5
1.0
2.0
MΩ
5
8
11
kΩ
for the Crystal/Resonator Oscillator
CKI Resistance to VCC or GND when R/C
VCC = 5.5V
Oscillator is Selected
Hi-Z Input Leakage (same as TRI-STATE output)
Input Pullup Current
VCC = 5.5V
VCC = 5.5V, VIN = 0V
G and L Port Input Hysteresis
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−2
+2
µA
−40
−250
µA
0.25 VCC
6
V
DC Electrical Characteristics
(Continued)
0˚C ≤ TA ≤ +70˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Output Current Levels
D Outputs
Source
Sink
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 1.0V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
−0.4
mA
−0.2
mA
10
mA
2
mA
L Port
Source (Weak Pull-Up)
Source (Push-Pull Mode)
Sink (L0–L3, Push-Pull Mode)
Sink (L4–L7, Push-Pull Mode)
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 2.7V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 1.0V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 0.4V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
−10
−110
µA
−2.5
−33
µA
−0.4
mA
−0.2
mA
10
mA
2
mA
1.6
mA
0.7
mA
All Others
Source (Weak Pull-Up Mode)
Source (Push-Pull Mode)
Sink (Push-Pull Mode)
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 2.7V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 0.4V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
−10
−110
µA
−2.5
−33
µA
−0.4
mA
−0.2
mA
1.6
mA
0.7
mA
Allowable Sink Current per Pin (Note 8)
D Outputs and L0 to L3
15
All Others
3
mA
± 200
mA
Maximum Input Current without Latchup
mA
(Note 6)
RAM Retention Voltage, Vr
2.0
V
12
µs
VCC Rise Time from a VCC ≥ 2.0V
(Note 9)
Input Capacitance
(Note 8)
7
pF
Load Capacitance on D2
(Note 8)
1000
pF
7
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AC Electrical Characteristics
0˚C ≤ TA ≤ +70˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Instruction Cycle Time (tC)
Crystal/Resonator, External
Internal R/C Oscillator
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
1.0
DC
µs
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
2.0
DC
µs
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
2.0
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
TBD
µs
µs
R/C Oscillator Frequency Variation
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
± 35
%
(Note 8)
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
fr = Max
TBD
%
External CKI Clock Duty Cycle (Note 8)
Rise Time (Note 8)
Fall Time (Note 8)
45
fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock
fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock
55
%
12
ns
8
ns
Inputs
tSETUP
tHOLD
Output Propagation Delay (Note 7)
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
200
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
500
ns
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
60
ns
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
RL = 2.2k, CL = 100 pF
150
ns
ns
tPD1, tPD0
SO, SK
All Others
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
0.7
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
1.75
µs
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
1.0
µs
2.5
µs
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
MICROWIRE Setup Time (tUWS) (Note 7)
20
MICROWIRE Hold Time (tUWH) (Note 7)
56
MICROWIRE Output Propagation Delay (tUPD)
µs
ns
ns
220
ns
MICROWIRE Maximum Shift Clock
Master Mode
500
kHz
Slave Mode
1
MHz
Input Pulse Width (Note 7)
Interrupt Input High Time
1
Interrupt Input Low Time
1
tC
Timer 1 Input High Time
1
tC
Timer 1 Input Low Time
1
tC
1
µs
Reset Pulse Width
tC
Note 2: tC = Instruction cycle time (Clock input frequency divided by 10).
Note 3: Maximum rate of voltage change must be < 0.5 V/ms.
Note 4: Supply and IDLE currents are measured with CKI driven with a square wave Oscillator, CKO driven 180˚ out of phase with CKI, inputs connected to VCC
and outputs driven low but not connected to a load.
Note 5: The HALT mode will stop CKI from oscillating in the R/C and the Crystal configurations. In the R/C configuration, CKI is forced high internally. In the crystal
or external configuration, CKI is TRI-STATE. Measurement of IDD HALT is done with device neither sourcing nor sinking current; with L. F, C, G0, and G2–G5 programmed as low outputs and not driving a load; all outputs programmed low and not driving a load; all inputs tied to VCC; WATCHDOG and clock monitor disabled.
Parameter refers to HALT mode entered via setting bit 7 of the G Port data register.
Note 6: Pins G6 and RESET are designed with a high voltage input network. These pins allow input voltages > VCC and the pins will have sink current to VCC when
biased at voltages > VCC (the pins do not have source current when biased at a voltage below VCC). The effective resistance to VCC is 750Ω (typical). These two
pins will not latch up. The voltage at the pins must be limited to < 14V. WARNING: Voltages in excess of 14V will cause damage to the pins. This warning excludes ESD transients.
Note 7: The output propagation delay is referenced to the end of the instruction cycle where the output change occurs.
Note 8: Parameter characterized but not tested.
Note 9: Rise times faster than this specification may reset the device if POR is enabled and may affect the value of Idle Timer T0 if POR is not enabled.
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8
Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 10)
Total Current into VCC Pin (Source)
Total Current out of GND Pin (Sink)
Storage Temperature Range
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required,
please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/
Distributors for availability and specifications.
Supply Voltage (VCC)
Voltage at Any Pin
ESD Protection Level
80 mA
100 mA
−65˚C to +140˚C
Note 10: Absolute maximum ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to
the device may occur. DC and AC electrical specifications are not ensured
when operating the device at absolute maximum ratings.
7V
−0.6V to VCC +0.6V
2 kV
(Human Body Model)
DC Electrical Characteristics
−40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Operating Voltage
Power Supply Rise Time from 0.0V
Min
Max
Units
2.7
Typ
5.5
V
10 ns
50 ms
(Note 17)
(On-Chip Power-On Reset Selected)
VCC Start Voltage to Guarantee POR
Power Supply Ripple (Note 12)
Supply Current (Note 13)
CKI = 10 MHz
Peak-to-Peak
HALT Current (Note 14) — WATCHDOG Disabled
VCC = 5.5V, tC = 1 µs
VCC = 5.5V, CKI = 0 MHz
IDLE Current (Note 13)
CKI = 10 MHz
VCC = 5.5V, tC = 1 µs
<4
0.25
V
0.1 VCC
V
6.0
mA
10.0
µA
1.5
mA
Input Levels (VIH, VIL)
RESET
Logic High
0.8 VCC
V
Logic Low
0.2 VCC
V
CKI, All Other Inputs
Logic High
0.7 VCC
V
Logic Low
Value of the Internal Bias Resistor
0.2 VCC
V
0.5
1.0
2.0
MΩ
5
8
11
kΩ
−2
+2
µA
−40
−250
µA
for the Crystal/Resonator Oscillator
CKI Resistance to VCC or GND when R/C
VCC = 5.5V
Oscillator is Selected
Hi-Z Input Leakage (same as TRI-STATE output)
Input Pullup Current
VCC = 5.5V
VCC = 5.5V, VIN = 0V
G and L Port Input Hysteresis
0.25 VCC
9
V
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DC Electrical Characteristics
(Continued)
−40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Output Current Levels
D Outputs
Source
Sink
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 1.0V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
−0.4
mA
−0.2
mA
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 2.7V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
−10.0
−110
µA
−2.5
−33
µA
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 1.0V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 0.4V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
10.0
mA
2
mA
1.6
mA
0.7
mA
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 2.7V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 2.7V, VOH = 1.8V
−10.0
−110
µA
−2.5
−33
µA
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 0.4V
VCC = 2.7V, VOL = 0.4V
10
mA
2
mA
L Port
Source (Weak Pull-Up)
Source (Push-Pull Mode)
Sink (L0–L3, Push-Pull Mode)
Sink (L4–L7, Push-Pull Mode)
−0.4
mA
−0.2
mA
All Others
Source (Weak Pull-Up Mode)
Source (Push-Pull Mode)
Sink (Push-Pull Mode)
−0.4
mA
−0.2
mA
1.6
mA
0.7
mA
Allowable Sink Current per Pin (Note 17)
D Outputs and L0 to L3
15
mA
All Others
3
mA
± 200
mA
Maximum Input Current without Latchup (Note 15)
RAM Retention Voltage, Vr
2.0
V
12
µs
VCC Rise Time from a VCC ≥ 2.0V
(Note 18)
Input Capacitance
(Note 17)
7
pF
Load Capacitance on D2
(Note 17)
1000
pF
AC Electrical Characteristics
−40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Instruction Cycle Time (tC)
Crystal/Resonator, External
Internal R/C Oscillator
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
1.0
DC
µs
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
2.0
DC
µs
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
2.0
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
TBD
µs
µs
R/C Oscillator Frequency Variation
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
± 35
%
(Note 17)
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
fr = Max
TBD
%
External CKI Clock Duty Cycle (Note 17)
Rise Time (Note 17)
Fall Time (Note 17)
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fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock
fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock
10
45
55
%
12
ns
8
ns
AC Electrical Characteristics
(Continued)
−40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Inputs
tSETUP
tHOLD
Output Propagation Delay (Note 16)
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
200
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
500
ns
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
60
ns
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
RL = 2.2k, CL = 100 pF
150
ns
ns
tPD1, tPD0
SO, SK
All Others
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
0.7
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
1.75
µs
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
1.0
µs
2.5
µs
2.7V ≤ VCC < 4.5V
MICROWIRE Setup Time (tUWS) (Note 16)
20
MICROWIRE Hold Time (tUWH) (Note 16)
56
MICROWIRE Output Propagation Delay (tUPD)
µs
ns
ns
220
ns
MICROWIRE Maximum Shift Clock
Master Mode
500
kHz
Slave Mode
1
MHz
Input Pulse Width (Note 17)
Interrupt Input High Time
1
tC
Interrupt Input Low Time
1
tC
Timer 1 Input High Time
1
tC
Timer 1 Input Low Time
1
tC
1
µs
Reset Pulse Width
Note 11: tC = Instruction cycle time (Clock input frequency divided by 10).
Note 12: Maximum rate of voltage change must be < 0.5 V/ms.
Note 13: Supply and IDLE currents are measured with CKI driven with a square wave Oscillator, CKO driven 180˚ out of phase with CKI, inputs connected to VCC
and outputs driven low but not connected to a load.
Note 14: The HALT mode will stop CKI from oscillating in the R/C and the Crystal configurations. In the R/C configuration, CKI is forced high internally. In the crystal
or external configuration, CKI is TRI-STATE. Measurement of IDD HALT is done with device neither sourcing nor sinking current; with L. F, C, G0, and G2–G5 programmed as low outputs and not driving a load; all outputs programmed low and not driving a load; all inputs tied to VCC; clock monitor disabled. Parameter refers
to HALT mode entered via setting bit 7 of the G Port data register.
Note 15: Pins G6 and RESET are designed with a high voltage input network. These pins allow input voltages > VCC and the pins will have sink current to VCC when
biased at voltages > VCC (the pins do not have source current when biased at a voltage below VCC). The effective resistance to VCC is 750Ω (typical). These two
pins will not latch up. The voltage at the pins must be limited to < 14V. WARNING: Voltages in excess of 14V will cause damage to the pins. This warning excludes
ESD transients.
Note 16: The output propagation delay is referenced to the end of the instruction cycle where the output change occurs.
Note 17: Parameter characterized but not tested.
Note 18: Rise times faster than this specification may reset the device if POR is enabled and may affect the value of Idle Timer T0 if POR is not enabled.
DS012838-9
FIGURE 4. MICROWIRE/PLUS Timing
11
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Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 19)
Total Current into VCC Pin (Source)
Total Current out of GND Pin (Sink)
Storage Temperature Range
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required,
please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/
Distributors for availability and specifications.
Supply Voltage (VCC)
Voltage at Any Pin
ESD Protection Level
80 mA
100 mA
−65˚C to +140˚C
Note 19: Absolute maximum ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to
the device may occur. DC and AC electrical specifications are not ensured
when operating the device at absolute maximum ratings.
7V
−0.6V to VCC +0.6V
2 kV
(Human Body Model)
DC Electrical Characteristics
−40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +125˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Operating Voltage
Power Supply Rise Time from 0.0V
Min
Max
Units
4.5
Typ
5.5
V
10 ns
50 ms
(Note 17)
(On-Chip Power-On Reset Selected)
VCC Start Voltage to Guarantee POR
Power Supply Ripple (Note 12)
Supply Current (Note 13)
CKI = 10 MHz
HALT Current (Note 14) — WATCHDOG
Disabled
IDLE Current (Note 13)
CKI = 10 MHz
Peak-to-Peak
VCC = 5.5V, tC = 1 µs
VCC = 5.5V, CKI = 0 MHz
< 10
VCC = 5.5V, tC = 1 µs
0.25
V
0.1 VCC
V
6.0
mA
30
µA
1.5
mA
Input Levels (VIH, VIL)
RESET
Logic High
0.8 VCC
V
Logic Low
0.2 VCC
V
CKI, All Other Inputs
Logic High
0.7 VCC
V
Logic Low
Value of the Internal Bias Resistor
0.2 VCC
V
0.5
1.0
2.0
MΩ
5
8
11
kΩ
−5
+5
µA
−35
−400
µA
for the Crystal/Resonator Oscillator
CKI Resistance to VCC or GND when R/C
VCC = 5.5V
Oscillator is Selected
Hi-Z Input Leakage
Input Pullup Current
VCC = 5.5V
VCC = 5.5V, VIN = 0V
G and L Port Input Hysteresis
0.25 VCC
V
Output Current Levels
D Outputs
Source
Sink
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 1.0V
−0.4
mA
9
mA
L Port
−0.4
Sink (L0–L3, Push-Pull Mode)
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 2.7V
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 1.0V
9
mA
Sink (L4–L7, Push-Pull Mode)
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 0.4V
1.4
mA
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 2.7V
VCC = 4.5V, VOH = 3.3V
VCC = 4.5V, VOL = 0.4V
−0.4
Source (Weak Pull-Up)
Source (Push-Pull Mode)
−9
−140
µA
mA
All Others
Source (Weak Pull-Up Mode)
Source (Push-Pull Mode)
Sink (Push-Pull Mode)
TRI-STATE Leakage
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VCC = 5.5V
−9
µA
mA
1.4
−5
12
−140
mA
+5
µA
DC Electrical Characteristics
(Continued)
−40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +125˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
D Outputs and L0 to L3
15
mA
All Others
3
mA
± 200
mA
Allowable Sink Current per Pin (Note 17)
Maximum Input Current without Latchup
Room Temp
(Note 15)
RAM Retention Voltage, Vr
VCC Rise Time from a VCC ≥ 2.0V
(Note 18)
2.0
V
12
µs
Input Capacitance
(Note 17)
7
pF
Load Capacitance on D2
(Note 17)
1000
pF
AC Electrical Characteristics
−40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +125˚C unless otherwise specified.
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
DC
µs
DC
µs
TBD
%
Instruction Cycle Time (tC)
Crystal/Resonator, External
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
Internal R/C Oscillator
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
R/C Oscillator Frequency Variation
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
1.0
2.0
(Note 6)
fr = Max
fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock
fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock
45
tSETUP
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
200
ns
tHOLD
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
RL = 2.2k, CL = 100 pF
60
ns
External CKI Clock Duty Cycle (Note 6)
Rise Time (Note 6)
Fall Time (Note 6)
55
%
12
ns
8
ns
Inputs
Output Propagation Delay (Note 5)
tPD1, tPD0
SO, SK
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
0.7
µs
All Others
4.5V ≤ VCC ≤ 5.5V
1.0
µs
MICROWIRE Setup Time (tUWS) (Note 5)
20
MICROWIRE Hold Time (tUWH) (Note 5)
56
MICROWIRE Output Propagation Delay (tUPD)
ns
ns
220
ns
MICROWIRE Maximum Shift Clock
Master Mode
500
kHz
Slave Mode
1
MHz
Input Pulse Width (Note 6)
Interrupt Input High Time
1
tC
Interrupt Input Low Time
1
tC
Timer 1, 2, 3 Input High Time
1
tC
Timer 1, 2, 3 Input Low Time
1
tC
1
µs
Reset Pulse Width
13
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not selected. If WATCHDOG feature is selected, bit 1 of the
Port G configuration and data register does not have any effect on Pin G1 setup. Pin G7 is either input or output depending on the oscillator option selected. With the crystal oscillator option selected, G7 serves as the dedicated output pin for
the CKO clock output. With the internal R/C or the external
oscillator option selected, G7 serves as a general purpose
Hi-Z input pin and is also used to bring the device out of
HALT mode with a low to high transition on G7. There are
two registers associated with Port G, a data register and a
configuration register. Using these registers, each of the 5
I/O pins (G0, G2–G5) can be individually configured under
software control.
Since G6 is an input only pin and G7 is the dedicated CKO
clock output pin (crystal clock option) or general purpose input (R/C or external clock option), the associated bits in the
data and configuration registers for G6 and G7 are used for
special purpose functions as outlined below. Reading the G6
and G7 data bits will return zeroes.
The device will be placed in the HALT mode by writing a “1”
to bit 7 of the Port G Data Register. Similarly the device will
be placed in the IDLE mode by writing a “1” to bit 6 of the
Port G Data Register.
Writing a “1” to bit 6 of the Port G Configuration Register enables the MICROWIRE/PLUS to operate with the alternate
phase of the SK clock. The G7 configuration bit, if set high,
enables the clock start up delay after HALT when the R/C
clock configuration is used.
5.0 Pin Descriptions
COP8SAx I/O structure minimizes external component requirements. Software-switchable I/O enables designers to
reconfigure the microcontroller’s I/O functions with a
single instruction. Each individual I/O pin can be independently configured as an output pin low, an output high, an
input with high impedance or an input with a weak pull-up
device. A typical example is the use of I/O pins as the keyboard matrix input lines. The input lines can be programmed with internal weak pull-ups so that the input
lines read logic high when the keys are all up. With a key
closure, the corresponding input line will read a logic zero
since the weak pull-up can easily be overdriven. When the
key is released, the internal weak pullup will pull the input
line back to logic high. This flexibility eliminates the need
for external pull-up resistors. The High current options are
available for driving LEDs, motors and speakers. This
flexibility helps to ensure a cleaner design, with less external components and lower costs. Below is the general description of all available pins.
VCC and GND are the power supply pins. All VCC and
GND pins must be connected.
CKI is the clock input. This can come from the Internal
R/C oscillator, external, or a crystal oscillator (in conjunction with CKO). See Oscillator Description section.
RESET is the master reset input. See Reset description
section.
The device contains four bidirectional 8-bit I/O ports (C, G,
L and F), where each individual bit may be independently
configured as an input (Schmitt trigger inputs on ports L
and G), output or TRI-STATE under program control.
Three data memory address locations are allocated for
each of these I/O ports. Each I/O port has two associated
8-bit memory mapped registers, the CONFIGURATION
register and the output DATA register. A memory mapped
address is also reserved for the input pins of each I/O
port. (See the memory map for the various addresses associated with the I/O ports.) Figure 5 shows the I/O port
configurations. The DATA and CONFIGURATION registers allow for each port bit to be individually configured under software control as shown below:
CONFIGURATION
DATA
Register
Register
0
0
Hi-Z Input
0
1
Input with Weak Pull-Up
1
0
Push-Pull Zero Output
1
1
Push-Pull One Output
Config. Reg.
CLKDLY
HALT
G6
Alternate SK
IDLE
Port
G6
G5
G4
G3
G2
G0
Port
G7
G has the following alternate features:
SI (MICROWIRE Serial Data Input)
SK (MICROWIRE Serial Clock)
SO (MICROWIRE Serial Data Output)
T1A (Timer T1 I/O)
T1B (Timer T1 Capture Input)
INTR (External Interrupt Input)
G has the following dedicated functions:
CKO Oscillator dedicated output or general purpose input
G1 WDOUT WATCHDOG and/or CLock Monitor if WATCHDOG enabled, otherwise it is a general purpose I/O
Port C is an 8-bit I/O port. The 40-pin device does not have
a full complement of Port C pins. The unavailable pins are
not terminated. A read operation on these unterminated pins
will return unpredictable values. Only the COP8SAC7 device
contains Port C. The 20/28 pin devices do not offer Port C.
On these devices, the associated Port C Data and Configuration registers should not be used.
Port Set-Up
(TRI-STATE Output)
Port L is an 8-bit I/O port. All L-pins have Schmitt triggers on
the inputs.
Port L supports the Multi-Input Wake Up feature on all eight
pins. The 16-pin device does not have a full complement of
Port L pins. The unavailable pins are not terminated. A read
operation these unterminated pins are not terminated. A read
operation these unterminated pins will return unpredictable
values. To minimize current drain, the unavailable pins must
be programmed as outputs.
Port F is an 8-bit I/O port. The 28-pin device does not have
a full complement of Port F pins. The unavailable pins are
not terminated. A read operation on these unterminated pins
will return unpredictable values.
Port G is an 8-bit port. Pin G0, G2–G5 are bi-directional I/O
ports. Pin G6 is always a general purpose Hi-Z input. All pins
have Schmitt Triggers on their inputs. Pin G1 serves as the
dedicated WDOUT WATCHDOG output with weak pullup
if WATCHDOG feature is selected by the ECON register.
The pin is a general purpose I/O if WATCHDOG feature is
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Data Reg.
G7
14
5.0 Pin Descriptions
6.0 Functional Description
(Continued)
The architecture of the device is a modified Harvard architecture. With the Harvard architecture, the program memory
EPROM is separated from the data store memory (RAM).
Both EPROM and RAM have their own separate addressing
space with separate address buses. The architecture,
though based on the Harvard architecture, permits transfer
of data from EPROM to RAM.
6.1 CPU REGISTERS
The CPU can do an 8-bit addition, subtraction, logical or shift
operation in one instruction (tC) cycle time.
There are six CPU registers:
A is the 8-bit Accumulator Register
PC is the 15-bit Program Counter Register
PU is the upper 7 bits of the program counter (PC)
PL is the lower 8 bits of the program counter (PC)
B is an 8-bit RAM address pointer, which can be optionally
post auto incremented or decremented.
X is an 8-bit alternate RAM address pointer, which can be
optionally post auto incremented or decremented.
SP is the 8-bit stack pointer, which points to the subroutine/
interrupt stack (in RAM). With reset the SP is initialized to
RAM address 02F Hex (devices with 64 bytes of RAM), or
initialized to RAM address 06F Hex (devices with 128 bytes
of RAM).
All the CPU registers are memory mapped with the exception of the Accumulator (A) and the Program Counter (PC).
DS012838-10
FIGURE 5. I/O Port Configurations
6.2 PROGRAM MEMORY
The program memory consists of 1024, 2048, or 4096 bytes
of EPROM or ROM. Table 1 shows the program memory
sizes for the different devices. These bytes may hold program instructions or constant data (data tables for the LAID
instruction, jump vectors for the JID instruction, and interrupt
vectors for the VIS instruction). The program memory is addressed by the 15-bit program counter (PC). All interrupts in
the device vector to program memory location 0FF Hex. The
contents of the program memory read 00 Hex in the erased
state.
DS012838-12
FIGURE 6. I/O Port Configurations — Output Mode
6.3 DATA MEMORY
The data memory address space includes the on-chip RAM
and data registers, the I/O registers (Configuration, Data and
Pin), the control registers, the MICROWIRE/PLUS SIO shift
register, and the various registers, and counters associated
with the timers (with the exception of the IDLE timer). Data
memory is addressed directly by the instruction or indirectly
by the B, X and SP pointers.
The data memory consists of 64 or 128 bytes of RAM. Table
1 shows the data memory sizes for the different devices. Fifteen bytes of RAM are mapped as “registers” at addresses
0F0 to 0FE Hex. These registers can be loaded immediately,
and also decremented and tested with the DRSZ (decrement
register and skip if zero) instruction. The memory pointer
registers X, SP and B are memory mapped into this space at
address locations 0FC to 0FE Hex respectively, with the
other registers (except 0FF) being available for general usage. Address location 0FF is reserved for future RAM expansion. If compatibility with future devices (with more RAM) is
not desired, this location can be used as a general purpose
RAM location.
DS012838-11
FIGURE 7. I/O Port Configurations — Input Mode
Port D is an 8-bit output port that is preset high when RESET
goes low. The user can tie two or more D port outputs (except D2) together in order to get a higher drive.
Note: Care must be exercised with the D2 pin operation. At RESET, the external loads on this pin must ensure that the output voltages stay
above 0.7 VCC to prevent the chip from entering special modes. Also
keep the external loading on D2 to less than 1000 pF.
15
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6.0 Functional Description
6.5 USER STORAGE SPACE IN EPROM
In addition to the ECON register, there are 8 bytes of
EPROM available for “user information”. ECON and these 8
bytes are outside of the code area and are not protected by
the security bit of the ECON register. Even when security is
set, information in the 8-byte USER area is both read and
write enabled allowing the user to read from and write into
the area at all times while still protecting the code from unauthorized access.
Both ECON and USER area, 9 bytes total, are outside of the
normal address range of the EPROM and can not be accessed by the executing software. This allows for the storage of non-secured information. Typical uses are for storage
of serial numbers, data codes, version numbers, copyright
information, lot numbers, etc.
(Continued)
The instruction set permits any bit in memory to be set, reset
or tested. All I/O and registers (except A and PC) are
memory mapped; therefore, I/O bits and register bits can be
directly and individually set, reset and tested. The accumulator (A) bits can also be directly and individually tested.
RAM contents are undefined upon power-up.
TABLE 1. Program/Data Memory Sizes
Device
Program
Data
User
Memory
Memory
Storage
(Bytes)
(Bytes)
(Bytes)
COP8SAA7
1024
64
8
COP8SAB7
2048
128
8
COP8SAC7
4096
128
8
The COP8 assembler defines a special ROM section type,
CONF, into which the ECON and USER data may be coded.
Both ECON and User Data are programmed automatically
by programmers that are certified by National.
The following examples illustrate the declaration of ECON
and the User information.
Syntax:
[label:] .sect econ, conf
.db
value ;1 byte,
;configures options
.db
.endsect<user information>
;up to 8 bytes
Example: The following sets a value in the ECON register
and User Identification for a COP8SAC728M7. The ECON
bit values shown select options: Power-on enabled, Security
disabled, Crystal oscillator with on-chip bias disabled,
WATCHDOG enabled and HALT mode enabled.
.chip 8SAC
.sect econ, conf
.db 0x55
;por, extal, wd, halt
.db 'my v1.00' ;user data declaration
.endsect
...
.end start
6.4 ECON (CONFIGURATION) REGISTER
The ECON register is used to configure the user selectable
clock, security, power-on reset, WATCHDOG, and HALT options. The register can be programmed and read only in
EPROM programming mode. Therefore, the register should
be programmed at the same time as the program memory.
The contents of the ECON register shipped from the factory
read 00 Hex (windowed device), 80 Hex (OTP device) or as
specified by the customer (ROM device).
The format of the ECON register is as follows:
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
X
POR
SECURITY
CKI 2
CKI 1 WATCH
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
Reserved
HALT
DOG
Bit 7
=x
This is for factory test. The polarity is always 0.
=1
Bit 6
Power-on reset enabled.
=0
Power-on reset disabled.
=1
Bit 5
Security enabled. EPROM read and write
are not allowed.
=0
Security disabled. EPROM read and write
are allowed.
Bits 4, 3 = 0, 0 External CKI option selected. G7 is available as a HALT restart and/or general purpose input. CKI is clock input.
= 0, 1 R/C oscillator option selected. G7 is available as a HALT restart and/or general purpose input. CKI clock input. Internal R/C
components are supplied for maximum
R/C frequency.
= 1, 0 Crystal oscillator with on-chip crystal bias
resistor disabled. G7 (CKO) is the clock
generator output to crystal/resonator.
= 1, 1 Crystal oscillator with on-chip crystal bias
resistor enabled. G7 (CKO) is the clock
generator output to crystal/resonator.
=1
Bit 2
WATCHDOG feature disabled. G1 is a
general purpose I/O.
=0
WATCHDOG feature enabled. G1 pin is
WATCHDOG output with waek pullup.
=
Bit 1
Reserved.
=1
Bit 0
HALT mode disabled.
=0
HALT mode enabled.
www.national.com
Note: All programmers certified for programming this family of parts will support programming of the CONFiguration section. Please contact National or your device programmer supplier for more information.
6.6 OTP SECURITY
The device has a security feature that, when enabled, prevents external reading of the OTP program memory. The security bit in the ECON register determines, whether security
is enabled or disabled. If the security feature is disabled, the
contents of the internal EPROM may be read.
If the security feature is enabled, then any attempt to externally read the contents of the EPROM will result in the
value FF Hex being read from all program locations. Under no circumstances can a secured part be read. In addition, with the security feature enabled, the write operation
to the EPROM program memory and ECON register is inhibited. The ECON register is readable regardless of the state
of the security bit. The security bit, when set, cannot be
erased, even in windowed packages. If the security bit is
set in a device in a windowed package, that device may be
erased but will not be further programmable.
If security is being used, it is recommended that all other bits
in the ECON register be programmed first. Then the security
bit can be programmed.
16
6.0 Functional Description
frequency at the termination of reset. A Clock Monitor error
will cause an active low error output on pin G1. This error
output will continue until 16 tC–32 tC clock cycles following
the clock frequency reaching the minimum specified value,
at which time the G1 output will go high.
(Continued)
6.7 RESET
The device is initialized when the RESET pin is pulled low or
the On-chip Power-On Reset is enabled.
6.7.1 External Reset
The RESET input when pulled low initializes the device. The
RESET pin must be held low for a minimum of one instruction cycle to guarantee a valid reset. During Power-Up initialization, the user must ensure that the RESET pin is held low
until the device is within the specified VCC voltage. An R/C
circuit on the RESET pin with a delay 5 times (5x) greater
than the power supply rise time or 15 µs whichever is
greater, is recommended. Reset should also be wide enough
to ensure crystal start-up upon Power-Up.
DS012838-13
FIGURE 8. Reset Logic
RESET may also be used to cause an exit from the HALT
mode.
A recommended reset circuit for this deviced is shown in Figure 9.
The following occurs upon initialization:
Port L: TRISTATE
Port C: TRISTATE
Port G: TRISTATE
Port F: TRISTATE
Port D: HIGH
PC: CLEARED to 0000
PSW, CNTRL and ICNTRL registers: CLEARED
SIOR: UNAFFECTED after RESET with power already
applied
RANDOM after RESET at power-on
T1CNTRL: CLEARED
Accumulator, Timer 1:
RANDOM after RESET with crystal clock option
(power already applied)
UNAFFECTED after RESET with R/C clock option
(power already applied)
RANDOM after RESET at power-on
WKEN, WKEDG: CLEARED
WKPND: RANDOM
SP (Stack Pointer):
Initialized to RAM address 02F Hex (devices with
64 bytes of RAM), or initialized to
RAM address 06F Hex (devices with
128 bytes of RAM).
B and X Pointers:
DS012838-14
RC > 5x power supply rise time or 15 µs, whichever is greater.
FIGURE 9. Reset Circuit Using External Reset
6.7.2 On-Chip Power-On Reset
The on-chip reset circuit is selected by a bit in the ECON register. When enabled, the device generates an internal reset
as VCC rises to a voltage level above 2.0V. The on-chip reset
circuitry is able to detect both fast and slow rise times on VCC
(VCC rise time between 10 ns and 50 ms).
Under no circumstances should the RESET pin be allowed
to float. If the on-chip Power-On Reset feature is being used,
RESET pin should be connected directly to VCC. The output
of the power-on reset detector will always preset the Idle
timer to 0FFF(4096 tC). At this time, the internal reset will be
generated.
If the Power-On Reset feature is enabled, the internal reset
will not be turned off until the Idle timer underflows. The internal reset will perform the same functions as external reset.
The user is responsible for ensuring that VCC is at the minimum level for the operating frequency within the 4096 tC. After the underflow, the logic is designed such that no additional internal resets occur as long as VCC remains above
2.0V.
UNAFFECTED after RESET with power
already applied
RANDOM after RESET at power-on
RAM:
UNAFFECTED after RESET with power already
applied
RANDOM after RESET at power-on
WATCHDOG (if enabled):
Note: While the POR feature of the COP8SAx was never intended to function
as a brownout detector, there are certain constraints of this block that
the system designer must address to properly recover from a brownout
condition. This is true regardless of whether the internal POR or the
external reset feature is used.
The device comes out of reset with both the WATCHDOG
logic and the Clock Monitor detector armed, with the
WATCHDOG service window bits set and the Clock Monitor
bit set. The WATCHDOG and Clock Monitor circuits are inhibited during reset. The WATCHDOG service window bits
being initialized high default to the maximum WATCHDOG
service window of 64k tC clock cycles. The Clock Monitor bit
being initialized high will cause a Clock Monitor error following reset if the clock has not reached the minimum specified
A brownout condition is reached when VCC of the device goes below
the minimum operating conditions of the device. The minimum guaranteed operating conditions are defined as VCC = 4.5V @ 10 MHz CKI,
VCC = 2.7V @ 4 MHz, or VCC = 2.0V during HALT mode (or when CKI
is stopped) operation.
When using either the external reset or the POR feature to recover
from a brownout condition, VCC must be lowered to 0.25V or an external reset must be applied whenever it goes below the minimum operating conditions as stated above.
17
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6.0 Functional Description
6.8.1 Crystal Oscillator
The crystal Oscillator mode can be selected by programming
ECON Bit 4 to 1. CKI is the clock input while G7/CKO is the
clock generator output to the crystal. An on-chip bias resistor
connected between CKI and CKO can be enabled by programming ECON Bit 3 to 1 with the crystal oscillator option
selection. The value of the resistor is in the range of 0.5M to
2M (typically 1.0M). Table 3 shows the component values required for various standard crystal values. Resistor R2 is
only used when the on-chip bias resistor is disabled. Figure
12 shows the crystal oscillator connection diagram.
(Continued)
The contents of data registers and RAM are unknown following the on-chip reset.
TABLE 3. Crystal Oscillator Configuration,
TA = 25˚C, VCC = 5V
R1 (kΩ)
R2 (MΩ)
C1 (pF)
C2 (pF)
CKI Freq. (MHz)
0
1
30
30
15
0
1
32
32
10
0
1
45
30–36
4
5.6
1
100
100–156
0.455
6.8.2 External Oscillator
The External Oscillator mode can be selected by programming ECON Bit 3 to 0 and ECON Bit 4 to 0. CKI can be
driven by an external clock signal provided it meets the
specified duty cycle, rise and fall times, and input levels. G7/
CKO is available as a general purpose input G7 and/or Halt
control. Figure 13 shows the external oscillator connection
diagram.
6.8.3 R/C Oscillator
The R/C Oscillator mode can be selected by programming
ECON Bit 3 to 1 and ECON Bit 4 to 0. In R/C oscillation
mode, CKI is left floating, while G7/CKO is available as a
general purpose input G7 and/or HALT control. The R/C controlled oscillator has on-chip resistor and capacitor for maximum R/C oscillator frequency operation. The maximum frequency is 5 MHz ± 35% for VCC between 4.5V to 5.5V and
temperature range of −40˚C to +85˚C. For max frequency
operation, the CKI pin should be left floating. For lower frequencies, an external capacitor should be connected between CKI and either VCC or GND. Immunity of the R/C oscillator to external noise can be improved by connecting one
half the external capacitance to VCC and one half to GND.
PC board trace length on the CKI pin should be kept as short
as possible. Table 4 shows the oscillator frequency as a
function of external capacitance on the CKI pin. Figure 14
shows the R/C oscillator configuration.
DS012838-15
FIGURE 10. Reset Timing (Power-On Reset Enabled)
with VCC Tied to RESET
DS012838-16
FIGURE 11. Reset Circuit Using Power-On Reset
6.8 OSCILLATOR CIRCUITS
There are four clock oscillator options available: Crystal Oscillator with or without on-chip bias resistor, R/C Oscillator
with on-chip resistor and capacitor, and External Oscillator.
The oscillator feature is selected by programming the ECON
register, which is summarized in Table 2.
TABLE 4. R/C Oscillator Configuration,
−40˚C to +85˚C, VCC = 4.5V to 5.5V,
OSC Freq. Variation of ± 35%
TABLE 2. Oscillator Option
ECON4 ECON3
Oscillator Option
External Capacitor
R/C OSC Freq
Instr. Cycle
(pF)
(MHz)
(µs)
0
0
External Oscillator
0
5
2.0
1
0
Crystal Oscillator without Bias Resistor
9
4
2.5
0
1
R/C Oscillator
52
2
5.0
1
1
Crystal Oscillator with Bias Resistor
150
1
10
TBD
32 kHz
312.5
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18
6.0 Functional Description
(Continued)
Without On-Chip Bias Resistor
With On-Chip Bias Resistor
DS012838-17
DS012838-18
FIGURE 12. Crystal Oscillator
DS012838-19
FIGURE 13. External Oscillator
DS012838-20
DS012838-21
For operation at lower than maximum R/C oscillator frequency.
For operation at maximum R/C oscillator frequency.
FIGURE 14. R/C Oscillator
19
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6.0 Functional Description
T1ENB
(Continued)
Timer T1 Interrupt Enable for T1B Input capture edge
6.9 CONTROL REGISTERS
7.0 Timers
CNTRL Register (Address X'00EE)
T1C3
T1C2
T1C1
T1C0
MSEL
IEDG
SL1
Bit 7
The device contains a very versatile set of timers (T0, T1).
Timer T1 and associated autoreload/capture registers power
up containing random data.
SL0
Bit 0
The Timer1 (T1) and MICROWIRE/PLUS control register
contains the following bits:
T1C3
Timer T1 mode control bit
T1C2
T1C1
Timer T1 mode control bit
Timer T1 mode control bit
T1C0
Timer T1 Start/Stop control in timer
modes 1 and 2, T1 Underflow Interrupt
Pending Flag in timer mode 3
Selects G5 and G4 as MICROWIRE/PLUS
signals SK and SO respectively
MSEL
IEDG
7.1 TIMER T0 (IDLE TIMER)
The device supports applications that require maintaining
real time and low power with the IDLE mode. This IDLE
mode support is furnished by the IDLE timer T0. The Timer
T0 runs continuously at the fixed rate of the instruction cycle
clock, tC. The user cannot read or write to the IDLE Timer T0,
which is a count down timer.
The Timer T0 supports the following functions:
• Exit out of the Idle Mode (See Idle Mode description)
• WATCHDOG logic (See WATCHDOG description)
• Start up delay out of the HALT mode
• Timing the width of the internal power-on-reset
The IDLE Timer T0 can generate an interrupt when the
twelfth bit toggles. This toggle is latched into the T0PND
pending flag, and will occur every 4.096 ms at the maximum
clock frequency (tC = 1 µs). A control flag T0EN allows the interrupt from the twelfth bit of Timer T0 to be enabled or disabled. Setting T0EN will enable the interrupt, while resetting
it will disable the interrupt.
External interrupt edge polarity select
(0 = Rising edge, 1 = Falling edge)
Select the MICROWIRE/PLUS clock divide
by (00 = 2, 01 = 4, 1x = 8)
SL1 & SL0
PSW Register (Address X'00EF)
HC
C
T1PNDA
T1ENA
EXPND
BUSY
EXEN
GIE
Bit 7
Bit 0
The PSW register contains the following select bits:
HC
Half Carry Flag
C
Carry Flag
T1PNDA Timer T1 Interrupt Pending Flag (Autoreload
RA in mode 1, T1 Underflow in Mode 2, T1A
capture edge in mode 3)
T1ENA
Timer T1 Interrupt Enable for Timer Underflow
or T1A Input capture edge
EXPND External interrupt pending
BUSY
MICROWIRE/PLUS busy shifting flag
EXEN
Enable external interrupt
GIE
Global interrupt enable (enables interrupts)
The Half-Carry flag is also affected by all the instructions that
affect the Carry flag. The SC (Set Carry) and R/C (Reset
Carry) instructions will respectively set or clear both the carry
flags. In addition to the SC and R/C instructions, ADC,
SUBC, RRC and RLC instructions affect the Carry and Half
Carry flags.
7.2 TIMER T1
One of the main functions of a microcontroller is to provide
timing and counting capability for real-time control tasks. The
COP8 family offers a very versatile 16-bit timer/counter
structure, and two supporting 16-bit autoreload/capture registers (R1A and R1B), optimized to reduce software burdens
in real-time control applications. The timer block has two pins
associated with it, T1A and T1B. Pin T1A supports I/O required by the timer block, while pin T1B is an input to the
timer block.
The timer block has three operating modes: Processor Independent PWM mode, External Event Counter mode, and Input Capture mode.
The control bits T1C3, T1C2, and T1C1 allow selection of the
different modes of operation.
7.2.1 Mode 1. Processor Independent PWM Mode
One of the timer’s operating modes is the Processor Independent PWM mode. In this mode, the timer generates a
“Processor Independent” PWM signal because once the
timer is setup, no more action is required from the CPU
which translates to less software overhead and greater
throughput. The user software services the timer block only
when the PWM parameters require updating. This capability
is provided by the fact that the timer has two separate 16-bit
reload registers. One of the reload registers contains the
“ON” timer while the other holds the “OFF” time. By contrast,
a microcontroller that has only a single reload register requires an additional software to update the reload value (alternate between the on-time/off-time).
ICNTRL Register (Address X'00E8)
Reserved
LPEN
T0PND
T0EN
µWPND
µWEN
T1PNDB
T1ENB
Bit 7
Bit 0
The ICNTRL register contains the following bits:
Reserved This bit is reserved and should to zero
LPEN
T0PND
L Port Interrupt Enable (Multi-Input Wakeup/
Interrupt)
Timer T0 Interrupt pending
T0EN
µWPND
Timer T0 Interrupt Enable (Bit 12 toggle)
MICROWIRE/PLUS interrupt pending
µWEN
T1PNDB
Enable MICROWIRE/PLUS interrupt
Timer T1 Interrupt Pending Flag for T1B capture edge
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The timer can generate the PWM output with the width and
duty cycle controlled by the values stored in the reload registers. The reload registers control the countdown values
and the reload values are automatically written into the timer
when it counts down through 0, generating interrupt on each
reload. Under software control and with minimal overhead,
20
7.0 Timers
Underflows from the timer are alternately latched into two
pending flags, T1PNDA and T1PNDB. The user must reset
these pending flags under software control. Two control enable flags, T1ENA and T1ENB, allow the interrupts from the
timer underflow to be enabled or disabled. Setting the timer
enable flag T1ENA will cause an interrupt when a timer underflow causes the R1A register to be reloaded into the
timer. Setting the timer enable flag T1ENB will cause an interrupt when a timer underflow causes the R1B register to be
reloaded into the timer. Resetting the timer enable flags will
disable the associated interrupts.
(Continued)
the PMW outputs are useful in controlling motors, triacs, the
intensity of displays, and in providing inputs for data acquisition and sine wave generators.
In this mode, the timer T1 counts down at a fixed rate of tC.
Upon every underflow the timer is alternately reloaded with
the contents of supporting registers, R1A and R1B. The very
first underflow of the timer causes the timer to reload from
the register R1A. Subsequent underflows cause the timer to
be reloaded from the registers alternately beginning with the
register R1B.
The T1 Timer control bits, T1C3, T1C2 and T1C1 set up the
timer for PWM mode operation.
Either or both of the timer underflow interrupts may be enabled. This gives the user the flexibility of interrupting once
per PWM period on either the rising or falling edge of the
PWM output. Alternatively, the user may choose to interrupt
on both edges of the PWM output.
Figure 15 shows a block diagram of the timer in PWM mode.
The underflows can be programmed to toggle the T1A output
pin. The underflows can also be programmed to generate interrupts.
DS012838-22
FIGURE 15. Timer in PWM Mode
7.2.2 Mode 2. External Event Counter Mode
This mode is quite similar to the processor independent
PWM mode described above. The main difference is that the
timer, T1, is clocked by the input signal from the T1A pin. The
T1 timer control bits, T1C3, T1C2 and T1C1 allow the timer
to be clocked either on a positive or negative edge from the
T1A pin. Underflows from the timer are latched into the
T1PNDA pending flag. Setting the T1ENA control flag will
cause an interrupt when the timer underflows.
In this mode the input pin T1B can be used as an independent positive edge sensitive interrupt input if the T1ENB control flag is set. The occurrence of a positive edge on the T1B
input pin is latched into the T1PNDB flag.
Figure 16 shows a block diagram of the timer in External
Event Counter mode.
DS012838-23
Note: The PWM output is not available in this mode since the T1A pin is being used as the counter input clock.
FIGURE 16. Timer in External Event Counter Mode
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7.0 Timers
fied either as a positive or a negative edge. The trigger condition for each input pin can be specified independently.
The trigger conditions can also be programmed to generate
interrupts. The occurrence of the specified trigger condition
on the T1A and T1B pins will be respectively latched into the
pending flags, T1PNDA and T1PNDB. The control flag
T1ENA allows the interrupt on T1A to be either enabled or
disabled. Setting the T1ENA flag enables interrupts to be
generated when the selected trigger condition occurs on the
T1A pin. Similarly, the flag T1ENB controls the interrupts
from the T1B pin.
Underflows from the timer can also be programmed to generate interrupts. Underflows are latched into the timer T1C0
pending flag (the T1C0 control bit serves as the timer underflow interrupt pending flag in the Input Capture mode). Consequently, the T1C0 control bit should be reset when entering the Input Capture mode. The timer underflow interrupt is
enabled with the T1ENA control flag. When a T1A interrupt
occurs in the Input Capture mode, the user must check both
the T1PNDA and T1C0 pending flags in order to determine
whether a T1A input capture or a timer underflow (or both)
caused the interrupt.
(Continued)
7.2.3 Mode 3. Input Capture Mode
The device can precisely measure external frequencies or
time external events by placing the timer block, T1, in the input capture mode. In this mode, the reload registers serve as
independent capture registers, capturing the contents of the
timer when an external event occurs (transition on the timer
input pin). The capture registers can be read while maintaining count, a feature that lets the user measure elapsed time
and time between events. By saving the timer value when
the external event occurs, the time of the external event is
recorded. Most microcontrollers have a latency time because they cannot determine the timer value when the external event occurs. The capture register eliminates the latency
time, thereby allowing the applications program to retrieve
the timer value stored in the capture register.
In this mode, the timer T1 is constantly running at the fixed tC
rate. The two registers, R1A and R1B, act as capture registers. Each register acts in conjunction with a pin. The register
R1A acts in conjunction with the T1A pin and the register
R1B acts in conjunction with the T1B pin.
The timer value gets copied over into the register when a
trigger event occurs on its corresponding pin. Control bits,
T1C3, T1C2 and T1C1, allow the trigger events to be speci-
Figure 17 shows a block diagram of the timer in Input Capture mode.
DS012838-24
FIGURE 17. Timer in Input Capture Mode
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22
7.0 Timers
T1PNDA Timer Interrupt Pending Flag
T1ENA
Timer Interrupt Enable Flag
1 = Timer Interrupt Enabled
(Continued)
7.3 TIMER CONTROL FLAGS
The control bits and their functions are summarized below.
T1C3
Timer mode control
T1C2
Timer mode control
T1C1
T1C0
0 = Timer Interrupt Disabled
T1PNDB Timer Interrupt Pending Flag
T1ENB
Timer Interrupt Enable Flag
1 = Timer Interrupt Enabled
Timer mode control
Timer Start/Stop control in Modes 1 and 2 (Processor Independent PWM and External Event
Counter), where 1 = Start, 0 = Stop
Timer Underflow Interrupt Pending Flag in
Mode 3 (Input Capture)
0 = Timer Interrupt Disabled
The timer mode control bits (T1C3, T1C2 and T1C1) are detailed below:
1
0
1
PWM: T1A Toggle
Autoreload RA
Autoreload RB
1
0
0
PWM: No T1A
Toggle
Autoreload RA
Autoreload RB
0
0
0
External Event
Counter
Timer
Underflow
Pos. T1B Edge
Pos. T1A
Edge
0
0
1
External Event
Counter
Timer
Underflow
Pos. T1B Edge
Pos. T1A
Edge
0
1
0
Captures:
Pos. T1A Edge
Pos. T1B Edge
tC
T1A Pos. Edge
or Timer
tC
3
0
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
Description
Timer
Counts On
1
1
T1C1
Interrupt B
Source
T1C3
2
T1C2
Interrupt A
Source
Mode
T1B Pos. Edge
Underflow
Captures:
Pos. T1A
Neg. T1B
T1A Pos. Edge
Edge or Timer
Edge
T1B Neg. Edge
Underflow
Captures:
Neg. T1A
Neg. T1B
T1A Neg. Edge
Edge or Timer
Edge
T1B Neg. Edge
Underflow
Captures:
Neg. T1A
Neg. T1B
T1A Neg. Edge
Edge or Timer
Edge
T1B Neg. Edge
Underflow
23
tC
tC
tC
tC
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with a low to high transition on the CKO (G7) pin. This
method precludes the use of the crystal clock configuration
(since CKO becomes a dedicated output), and so may only
be used with an R/C clock configuration. The third method of
exiting the HALT mode is by pulling the RESET pin low.
8.0 Power Save Modes
Today, the proliferation of battery-operated based applications has placed new demands on designers to drive power
consumption down. Battery-operated systems are not the
only type of applications demanding low power. The power
budget constraints are also imposed on those consumer/
industrial applications where well regulated and expensive
power supply costs cannot be tolerated. Such applications
rely on low cost and low power supply voltage derived directly from the “mains” by using voltage rectifier and passive
components. Low power is demanded even in automotive
applications, due to increased vehicle electronics content.
This is required to ease the burden from the car battery. Low
power 8-bit microcontrollers supply the smarts to control
battery-operated, consumer/industrial, and automotive applications.
The COP8SAx devices offer system designers a variety of
low-power consumption features that enable them to meet
the demanding requirements of today’s increasing range of
low-power applications. These features include low voltage
operation, low current drain, and power saving features such
as HALT, IDLE, and Multi-Input wakeup (MIWU).
The devices offer the user two power save modes of operation: HALT and IDLE. In the HALT mode, all microcontroller
activities are stopped. In the IDLE mode, the on-board oscillator circuitry and timer T0 are active but all other microcontroller activities are stopped. In either mode, all on-board
RAM, registers, I/O states, and timers (with the exception of
T0) are unaltered.
Since a crystal or ceramic resonator may be selected as the
oscillator, the Wakeup signal is not allowed to start the chip
running immediately since crystal oscillators and ceramic
resonators have a delayed start up time to reach full amplitude and frequency stability. The IDLE timer is used to generate a fixed delay to ensure that the oscillator has indeed
stabilized before allowing instruction execution. In this case,
upon detecting a valid Wakeup signal, only the oscillator circuitry is enabled. The IDLE timer is loaded with a value of
256 and is clocked with the tC instruction cycle clock. The tC
clock is derived by dividing the oscillator clock down by a factor of 10. The Schmitt trigger following the CKI inverter on
the chip ensures that the IDLE timer is clocked only when the
oscillator has a sufficiently large amplitude to meet the
Schmitt trigger specifications. This Schmitt trigger is not part
of the oscillator closed loop. The start-up time-out from the
IDLE timer enables the clock signals to be routed to the rest
of the chip.
If an R/C clock option is being used, the fixed delay is introduced optionally. A control bit, CLKDLY, mapped as configuration bit G7, controls whether the delay is to be introduced
or not. The delay is included if CLKDLY is set, and excluded
if CLKDLY is reset. The CLKDLY bit is cleared on reset.
The device has two options associated with the HALT mode.
The first option enables the HALT mode feature, while the
second option disables the HALT mode selected through bit
0 of the ECON register. With the HALT mode enable option,
the device will enter and exit the HALT mode as described
above. With the HALT disable option, the device cannot be
placed in the HALT mode (writing a “1” to the HALT flag will
have no effect, the HALT flag will remain “0”).
The WATCHDOG detector circuit is inhibited during the
HALT mode. However, the clock monitor circuit if enabled remains active during HALT mode in order to ensure a clock
monitor error if the device inadvertently enters the HALT
mode as a result of a runaway program or power glitch.
If the device is placed in the HALT mode, with the R/C oscillator selected, the clock input pin (CKI) is forced to a logic
high internally. With the crystal or external oscillator the CKI
pin is TRI-STATE.
Clock Monitor if enabled can be active in both modes.
8.1 HALT MODE
The device can be placed in the HALT mode by writing a “1”
to the HALT flag (G7 data bit). All microcontroller activities,
including the clock and timers, are stopped. The WATCHDOG logic on the device is disabled during the HALT mode.
However, the clock monitor circuitry, if enabled, remains active and will cause the WATCHDOG output pin (WDOUT) to
go low. If the HALT mode is used and the user does not want
to activate the WDOUT pin, the Clock Monitor should be disabled after the device comes out of reset (resetting the Clock
Monitor control bit with the first write to the WDSVR register).
In the HALT mode, the power requirements of the device are
minimal and the applied voltage (VCC) may be decreased to
Vr (Vr = 2.0V) without altering the state of the machine.
The device supports three different ways of exiting the HALT
mode. The first method of exiting the HALT mode is with the
Multi-Input Wakeup feature on Port L. The second method is
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24
8.0 Power Save Modes
(Continued)
DS012838-25
FIGURE 18. Wakeup from HALT
The user can enter the IDLE mode with the Timer T0 interrupt enabled. In this case, when the T0PND bit gets set, the
device will first execute the Timer T0 interrupt service routine
and then return to the instruction following the “Enter Idle
Mode” instruction.
Alternatively, the user can enter the IDLE mode with the
IDLE Timer T0 interrupt disabled. In this case, the device will
resume normal operation with the instruction immediately
following the “Enter IDLE Mode” instruction.
8.2 IDLE MODE
The device is placed in the IDLE mode by writing a “1” to the
IDLE flag (G6 data bit). In this mode, all activities, except the
associated on-board oscillator circuitry and the IDLE Timer
T0, are stopped.
As with the HALT mode, the device can be returned to normal operation with a reset, or with a Multi-Input Wakeup from
the L Port. Alternately, the microcontroller resumes normal
operation from the IDLE mode when the twelfth bit (representing 4.096 ms at internal clock frequency of 10 MHz, tC =
1 µs) of the IDLE Timer toggles.
This toggle condition of the twelfth bit of the IDLE Timer T0 is
latched into the T0PND pending flag.
The user has the option of being interrupted with a transition
on the twelfth bit of the IDLE Timer T0. The interrupt can be
enabled or disabled via the T0EN control bit. Setting the
T0EN flag enables the interrupt and vice versa.
Note: It is necessary to program two NOP instructions following both the set
HALT mode and set IDLE mode instructions. These NOP instructions
are necessary to allow clock resynchronization following the HALT or
IDLE modes.
DS012838-26
FIGURE 19. Wakeup from IDLE
25
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8.0 Power Save Modes
An example may serve to clarify this procedure. Suppose we
wish to change the edge select from positive (low going high)
to negative (high going low) for L Port bit 5, where bit 5 has
previously been enabled for an input interrupt. The program
would be as follows:
RBIT 5, WKEN
; Disable MIWU
SBIT 5, WKEDG ; Change edge polarity
RBIT 5, WKPND ; Reset pending flag
SBIT 5, WKEN
; Enable MIWU
If the L port bits have been used as outputs and then
changed to inputs with Multi-Input Wakeup/Interrupt, a safety
procedure should also be followed to avoid wakeup conditions. After the selected L port bits have been changed from
output to input but before the associated WKEN bits are enabled, the associated edge select bits in WKEDG should be
set or reset for the desired edge selects, followed by the associated WKPND bits being cleared.
This same procedure should be used following reset, since
the L port inputs are left floating as a result of reset.
The occurrence of the selected trigger condition for
Multi-Input Wakeup is latched into a pending register called
WKPND. The respective bits of the WKPND register will be
set on the occurrence of the selected trigger edge on the corresponding Port L pin. The user has the responsibility of
clearing these pending flags. Since WKPND is a pending
register for the occurrence of selected wakeup conditions,
the device will not enter the HALT mode if any Wakeup bit is
both enabled and pending. Consequently, the user must
clear the pending flags before attempting to enter the HALT
mode.
WKEN and WKEDG are all read/write registers, and are
cleared at reset. WKPND register contains random value after reset.
(Continued)
8.3 MULTI-INPUT WAKEUP
The Multi-Input Wakeup feature is used to return (wakeup)
the device from either the HALT or IDLE modes. Alternately
Multi-Input Wakeup/Interrupt feature may also be used to
generate up to 8 edge selectable external interrupts.
Figure 20 shows the Multi-Input Wakeup logic.
The Multi-Input Wakeup feature utilizes the L Port. The user
selects which particular L port bit (or combination of L Port
bits) will cause the device to exit the HALT or IDLE modes.
The selection is done through the register WKEN. The register WKEN is an 8-bit read/write register, which contains a
control bit for every L port bit. Setting a particular WKEN bit
enables a Wakeup from the associated L port pin.
The user can select whether the trigger condition on the selected L Port pin is going to be either a positive edge (low to
high transition) or a negative edge (high to low transition).
This selection is made via the register WKEDG, which is an
8-bit control register with a bit assigned to each L Port pin.
Setting the control bit will select the trigger condition to be a
negative edge on that particular L Port pin. Resetting the bit
selects the trigger condition to be a positive edge. Changing
an edge select entails several steps in order to avoid a
Wakeup condition as a result of the edge change. First, the
associated WKEN bit should be reset, followed by the edge
select change in WKEDG. Next, the associated WKPND bit
should be cleared, followed by the associated WKEN bit being re-enabled.
DS012838-27
FIGURE 20. Multi-Input Wake Up Logic
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26
The Software trap has the highest priority while the default
VIS has the lowest priority.
Each of the six maskable inputs has a fixed arbitration ranking and vector.
9.0 Interrupts
9.1 INTRODUCTION
The device supports eight vectored interrupts. Interrupt
sources include Timer 1, Timer T0, Port L Wakeup, Software
Trap, MICROWIRE/PLUS, and External Input.
All interrupts force a branch to location 00FF Hex in program
memory. The VIS instruction may be used to vector to the
appropriate service routine from location 00FF Hex.
Figure 21 shows the Interrupt Block Diagram.
DS012838-28
FIGURE 21. Interrupt Block Diagram
27
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9.0 Interrupts
interrupt, and jump to the interrupt handling routine corresponding to the highest priority enabled and active interrupt.
Alternately, the user may choose to poll all interrupt pending
and enable bits to determine the source(s) of the interrupt. If
more than one interrupt is active, the user’s program must
decide which interrupt to service.
Within a specific interrupt service routine, the associated
pending bit should be cleared. This is typically done as early
as possible in the service routine in order to avoid missing
the next occurrence of the same type of interrupt event.
Thus, if the same event occurs a second time, even while the
first occurrence is still being serviced, the second occurrence will be serviced immediately upon return from the current interrupt routine.
(Continued)
9.2 MASKABLE INTERRUPTS
All interrupts other than the Software Trap are maskable.
Each maskable interrupt has an associated enable bit and
pending flag bit. The pending bit is set to 1 when the interrupt
condition occurs. The state of the interrupt enable bit, combined with the GIE bit determines whether an active pending
flag actually triggers an interrupt. All of the maskable interrupt pending and enable bits are contained in mapped control registers, and thus can be controlled by the software.
A maskable interrupt condition triggers an interrupt under the
following conditions:
1. The enable bit associated with that interrupt is set.
2. The GIE bit is set.
An interrupt service routine typically ends with an RETI instruction. This instruction sets the GIE bit back to 1, pops the
address stored on the stack, and restores that address to the
program counter. Program execution then proceeds with the
next instruction that would have been executed had there
been no interrupt. If there are any valid interrupts pending,
the highest-priority interrupt is serviced immediately upon return from the previous interrupt.
3.
The device is not processing a non-maskable interrupt.
(If a non-maskable interrupt is being serviced, a
maskable interrupt must wait until that service routine is
completed.)
An interrupt is triggered only when all of these conditions are
met at the beginning of an instruction. If different maskable
interrupts meet these conditions simultaneously, the highest
priority interrupt will be serviced first, and the other pending
interrupts must wait.
Upon Reset, all pending bits, individual enable bits, and the
GIE bit are reset to zero. Thus, a maskable interrupt condition cannot trigger an interrupt until the program enables it by
setting both the GIE bit and the individual enable bit. When
enabling an interrupt, the user should consider whether or
not a previously activated (set) pending bit should be acknowledged. If, at the time an interrupt is enabled, any previous occurrences of the interrupt should be ignored, the associated pending bit must be reset to zero prior to enabling
the interrupt. Otherwise, the interrupt may be simply enabled; if the pending bit is already set, it will immediately trigger an interrupt. A maskable interrupt is active if its associated enable and pending bits are set.
An interrupt is an asychronous event which may occur before, during, or after an instruction cycle. Any interrupt which
occurs during the execution of an instruction is not acknowledged until the start of the next normally executed instruction
is to be skipped, the skip is performed before the pending interrupt is acknowledged.
At the start of interrupt acknowledgment, the following actions occur:
1. The GIE bit is automatically reset to zero, preventing any
subsequent maskable interrupt from interrupting the current service routine. This feature prevents one maskable
interrupt from interrupting another one being serviced.
2. The address of the instruction about to be executed is
pushed onto the stack.
3. The program counter (PC) is loaded with 00FF Hex,
causing a jump to that program memory location.
The device requires seven instruction cycles to perform the
actions listed above.
If the user wishes to allow nested interrupts, the interrupts
service routine may set the GIE bit to 1 by writing to the PSW
register, and thus allow other maskable interrupts to interrupt
the current service routine. If nested interrupts are allowed,
caution must be exercised. The user must write the program
in such a way as to prevent stack overflow, loss of saved
context information, and other unwanted conditions.
The interrupt service routine stored at location 00FF Hex
should use the VIS instruction to determine the cause of the
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9.3 VIS INSTRUCTION
The general interrupt service routine, which starts at address
00FF Hex, must be capable of handling all types of interrupts. The VIS instruction, together with an interrupt vector
table, directs the device to the specific interrupt handling routine based on the cause of the interrupt.
VIS is a single-byte instruction, typically used at the very beginning of the general interrupt service routine at address
00FF Hex, or shortly after that point, just after the code used
for context switching. The VIS instruction determines which
enabled and pending interrupt has the highest priority, and
causes an indirect jump to the address corresponding to that
interrupt source. The jump addresses (vectors) for all possible interrupts sources are stored in a vector table.
The vector table may be as long as 32 bytes (maximum of 16
vectors) and resides at the top of the 256-byte block containing the VIS instruction. However, if the VIS instruction is at
the very top of a 256-byte block (such as at 00FF Hex), the
vector table resides at the top of the next 256-byte block.
Thus, if the VIS instruction is located somewhere between
00FF and 01DF Hex (the usual case), the vector table is located between addresses 01E0 and 01FF Hex. If the VIS instruction is located between 01FF and 02DF Hex, then the
vector table is located between addresses 02E0 and 02FF
Hex, and so on.
Each vector is 15 bits long and points to the beginning of a
specific interrupt service routine somewhere in the 32 kbyte
memory space. Each vector occupies two bytes of the vector
table, with the higher-order byte at the lower address. The
vectors are arranged in order of interrupt priority. The vector
of the maskable interrupt with the lowest rank is located to
0yE0 (higher-order byte) and 0yE1 (lower-order byte). The
next priority interrupt is located at 0yE2 and 0yE3, and so
forth in increasing rank. The Software Trap has the highest
rank and its vector is always located at 0yFE and 0yFF. The
number of interrupts which can become active defines the
size of the table.
Table 5 shows the types of interrupts, the interrupt arbitration
ranking, and the locations of the corresponding vectors in
the vector table.
The vector table should be filled by the user with the memory
locations of the specific interrupt service routines. For ex28
9.0 Interrupts
gram context (A, B, X, etc.) and executing the RETI instruction, an interrupt service routine can be terminated by returning to the VIS instruction. In this case, interrupts will be
serviced in turn until no further interrupts are pending and
the default VIS routine is started. After testing the GIE bit to
ensure that execution is not erroneous, the routine should
restore the program context and execute the RETI to return
to the interrupted program.
This technique can save up to fifty instruction cycles (tc), or
more, (50 µs at 10 MHz oscillator) of latency for pending interrupts with a penalty of fewer than ten instruction cycles if
no further interrupts are pending.
To ensure reliable operation, the user should always use the
VIS instruction to determine the source of an interrupt. Although it is possible to poll the pending bits to detect the
source of an interrupt, this practice is not recommended. The
use of polling allows the standard arbitration ranking to be altered, but the reliability of the interrupt system is compromised. The polling routine must individually test the enable
and pending bits of each maskable interrupt. If a Software
Trap interrupt should occur, it will be serviced last, even
though it should have the highest priority. Under certain conditions, a Software Trap could be triggered but not serviced,
resulting in an inadvertent “locking out” of all maskable interrupts by the Software Trap pending flag. Problems such as
this can be avoided by using VIS instruction.
(Continued)
ample, if the Software Trap routine is located at 0310 Hex,
then the vector location 0yFE and -0yFF should contain the
data 03 and 10 Hex, respectively. When a Software Trap interrupt occurs and the VIS instruction is executed, the program jumps to the address specified in the vector table.
The interrupt sources in the vector table are listed in order of
rank, from highest to lowest priority. If two or more enabled
and pending interrupts are detected at the same time, the
one with the highest priority is serviced first. Upon return
from the interrupt service routine, the next highest-level
pending interrupt is serviced.
If the VIS instruction is executed, but no interrupts are enabled and pending, the lowest-priority interrupt vector is
used, and a jump is made to the corresponding address in
the vector table. This is an unusual occurrence, and may be
the result of an error. It can legitimately result from a change
in the enable bits or pending flags prior to the execution of
the VIS instruction, such as executing a single cycle instruction which clears an enable flag at the same time that the
pending flag is set. It can also result, however, from inadvertent execution of the VIS command outside of the context of
an interrupt.
The default VIS interrupt vector can be useful for applications in which time critical interrupts can occur during the
servicing of another interrupt. Rather than restoring the pro-
TABLE 5. Interrupt Vector Table
Arbitration
Ranking
Vector (Note 20)
Source
Description
Address
(Hi-Low Byte)
(1) Highest
Software
INTR Instruction
(2)
Reserved
Future
0yFE–0yFF
0yFC–0yFD
(3)
External
G0
0yFA–0yFB
(4)
Timer T0
Underflow
0yF8–0yF9
(5)
Timer T1
T1A/Underflow
0yF6–0yF7
(6)
Timer T1
T1B
0yF4–0yF5
(7)
MICROWIRE/PLUS
BUSY Low
0yF2–0yF3
(8)
Reserved
Future
0yF0–0yF1
(9)
Reserved
Future
0yEE–0yEF
(10)
Reserved
Future
0yEC–0yED
(11)
Reserved
Future
0yEA–0yEB
(12)
Reserved
Future
0yE8–0yE9
(13)
Reserved
Future
0yE6–0yE7
(14)
Reserved
Future
0yE4–0yE5
(15)
Port L/Wakeup
Port L Edge
0yE2–0yE3
(16) Lowest
Default
VIS Instruction
0yE0–0yE1
Execution without any interrupts
Note 20: y is a variable which represents the VIS block. VIS and the vector table must be located in the same 256-byte block except if VIS is located at the last address of a block. In this case, the table must be in the next block.
29
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9.0 Interrupts
mains unchanged. The new PC is therefore pointing to the
vector of the active interrupt with the highest arbitration ranking. This vector is read from program memory and placed
into the PC which is now pointed to the 1st instruction of the
service routine of the active interrupt with the highest arbitration ranking.
(Continued)
9.3.1 VIS Execution
When the VIS instruction is executed it activates the arbitration logic. The arbitration logic generates an even number
between E0 and FE (E0, E2, E4, E6 etc...) depending on
which active interrupt has the highest arbitration ranking at
the time of the 1st cycle of VIS is executed. For example, if
the software trap interrupt is active, FE is generated. If the
external interrupt is active and the software trap interrupt is
not, then FA is generated and so forth. If the only active interrupt is software trap, than E0 is generated. This number replaces the lower byte of the PC. The upper byte of the PC re-
Figure 22 illustrates the different steps performed by the VIS
instruction. Figure 23 shows a flowchart for the VIS instruction.
The non-maskable interrupt pending flag is cleared by the
RPND (Reset Non-Maskable Pending Bit) instruction (under
certain conditions) and upon RESET.
DS012838-29
FIGURE 22. VIS Operation
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30
9.0 Interrupts
(Continued)
DS012838-30
FIGURE 23. VIS Flowchart
31
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9.0 Interrupts
(Continued)
Programming Example: External Interrupt
= 00EF
PSW
= 00EE
CNTRL
RBIT
0,PORTGC
RBIT
0,PORTGD
SBIT
IEDG, CNTRL
SBIT
GIE, PSW
SBIT
EXEN, PSW
WAIT:
JP
WAIT
.
.
.
. = 0FF
VIS
.
.
.
. = 01FA
.ADDRW SERVICE
;
;
;
;
;
G0 pin configured Hi-Z
Ext interrupt polarity; falling edge
Set the GIE bit
Enable the external interrupt
Wait for external interrupt
; The interrupt causes a
; branch to address 0FF
;The VIS causes a branch to
;interrupt vector table
; Vector table (within 256 byte
; of VIS inst.) containing the ext
;interrupt service routine
.
.
.
SERVICE:
RBIT, EXPND, PSW
.
.
.
RET
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; Interrupt Service Routine
; Reset ext interrupt pend. bit
; Return, set the GIE bit
32
9.0 Interrupts
Programming a return to normal execution requires careful
consideration. If the Software Trap routine is interrupted by
another Software Trap, the RPND instruction in the service
routine for the second Software Trap will reset the STPND
flag; upon return to the first Software Trap routine, the
STPND flag will have the wrong state. This will allow
maskable interrupts to be acknowledged during the servicing
of the first Software Trap. To avoid problems such as this, the
user program should contain the Software Trap routine to
perform a recovery procedure rather than a return to normal
execution.
Under normal conditions, the STPND flag is reset by a
RPND instruction in the Software Trap service routine. If a
programming error or hardware condition (brownout, power
supply glitch, etc.) sets the STPND flag without providing a
way for it to be cleared, all other interrupts will be locked out.
To alleviate this condition, the user can use extra RPND instructions in the main program and in the WATCHDOG service routine (if present). There is no harm in executing extra
RPND instructions in these parts of the program.
(Continued)
9.4 NON-MASKABLE INTERRUPT
9.4.1 Pending Flag
There is a pending flag bit associated with the non-maskable
interrupt, called STPND. This pending flag is not
memory-mapped and cannot be accessed directly by the
software.
The pending flag is reset to zero when a device Reset occurs. When the non-maskable interrupt occurs, the associated pending bit is set to 1. The interrupt service routine
should contain an RPND instruction to reset the pending flag
to zero. The RPND instruction always resets the STPND
flag.
9.4.2 Software Trap
The Software Trap is a special kind of non-maskable interrupt which occurs when the INTR instruction (used to acknowledge interrupts) is fetched from program memory and
placed in the instruction register. This can happen in a variety of ways, usually because of an error condition. Some examples of causes are listed below.
If the program counter incorrectly points to a memory location beyond the available program memory space, the
non-existent or unused memory location returns zeroes
which is interpreted as the INTR instruction.
If the stack is popped beyond the allowed limit (address 02F
or 06F Hex), a Software Trap is triggered.
A Software Trap can be triggered by a temporary hardware
condition such as a brownout or power supply glitch.
The Software Trap has the highest priority of all interrupts.
When a Software Trap occurs, the STPND bit is set. The GIE
bit is not affected and the pending bit (not accessible by the
user) is used to inhibit other interrupts and to direct the program to the ST service routine with the VIS instruction. Nothing can interrupt a Software Trap service routine except for
another Software Trap. The STPND can be reset only by the
RPND instruction or a chip Reset.
The Software Trap indicates an unusual or unknown error
condition. Generally, returning to normal execution at the
point where the Software Trap occurred cannot be done reliably. Therefore, the Software Trap service routine should
reinitialize the stack pointer and perform a recovery procedure that restarts the software at some known point, similar
to a device Reset, but not necessarily performing all the
same functions as a device Reset. The routine must also execute the RPND instruction to reset the STPND flag. Otherwise, all other interrupts will be locked out. To the extent possible, the interrupt routine should record or indicate the
context of the device so that the cause of the Software Trap
can be determined.
If the user wishes to return to normal execution from the
point at which the Software Trap was triggered, the user
must first execute RPND, followed by RETSK rather than
RETI or RET. This is because the return address stored on
the stack is the address of the INTR instruction that triggered
the interrupt. The program must skip that instruction in order
to proceed with the next one. Otherwise, an infinite loop of
Software Traps and returns will occur.
9.5 PORT L INTERRUPTS
Port L provides the user with an additional eight fully selectable, edge sensitive interrupts which are all vectored into the
same service subroutine.
The interrupt from Port L shares logic with the wake up circuitry. The register WKEN allows interrupts from Port L to be
individually enabled or disabled. The register WKEDG specifies the trigger condition to be either a positive or a negative
edge. Finally, the register WKPND latches in the pending
trigger conditions.
The GIE (Global Interrupt Enable) bit enables the interrupt
function.
A control flag, LPEN, functions as a global interrupt enable
for Port L interrupts. Setting the LPEN flag will enable interrupts and vice versa. A separate global pending flag is not
needed since the register WKPND is adequate.
Since Port L is also used for waking the device out of the
HALT or IDLE modes, the user can elect to exit the HALT or
IDLE modes either with or without the interrupt enabled. If he
elects to disable the interrupt, then the device will restart execution from the instruction immediately following the instruction that placed the microcontroller in the HALT or IDLE
modes. In the other case, the device will first execute the interrupt service routine and then revert to normal operation.
(See HALT MODE for clock option wakeup information.)
9.6 INTERRUPT SUMMARY
The device uses the following types of interrupts, listed below in order of priority:
1. The Software Trap non-maskable interrupt, triggered by
the INTR (00 opcode) instruction. The Software Trap is
acknowledged immediately. This interrupt service routine can be interrupted only by another Software Trap.
The Software Trap should end with two RPND instructions followed by a restart procedure.
2.
33
Maskable interrupts, triggered by an on-chip peripheral
block or an external device connected to the device. Under ordinary conditions, a maskable interrupt will not interrupt any other interrupt routine in progress. A
maskable interrupt routine in progress can be interrupted by the non-maskable interrupt request. A
maskable interrupt routine should end with an RETI instruction.
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10.2 WATCHDOG/CLOCK MONITOR OPERATION
The WATCHDOG is enabled by bit 2 of the ECON register.
When this ECON bit is 0, the WATCHDOG is enabled and
pin G1 becomes the WATCHDOG output with a weak pullup.
10.0 WATCHDOG/Clock Monitor
The devices contain a user selectable WATCHDOG and
clock monitor. The following section is applicable only if
WATCHDOG feature has been selected in the ECON register. The WATCHDOG is designed to detect the user program
getting stuck in infinite loops resulting in loss of program control or “runaway” programs.
The WATCHDOG logic contains two separate service windows. While the user programmable upper window selects
the WATCHDOG service time, the lower window provides
protection against an infinite program loop that contains the
WATCHDOG service instruction.
The COP8SAx devices provide the added feature of a software trap that provides protection against stack overpops
and addressing locations outside valid user program space.
The Clock Monitor is used to detect the absence of a clock or
a very slow clock below a specified rate on the CKI pin.
The WATCHDOG and Clock Monitor are disabled during reset. The device comes out of reset with the WATCHDOG
armed, the WATCHDOG Window Select bits (bits 6, 7 of the
WDSVR Register) set, and the Clock Monitor bit (bit 0 of the
WDSVR Register) enabled. Thus, a Clock Monitor error will
occur after coming out of reset, if the instruction cycle clock
frequency has not reached a minimum specified value, including the case where the oscillator fails to start.
The WDSVR register can be written to only once after reset
and the key data (bits 5 through 1 of the WDSVR Register)
must match to be a valid write. This write to the WDSVR register involves two irrevocable choices: (i) the selection of the
WATCHDOG service window (ii) enabling or disabling of the
Clock Monitor. Hence, the first write to WDSVR Register involves selecting or deselecting the Clock Monitor, select the
WATCHDOG service window and match the WATCHDOG
key data. Subsequent writes to the WDSVR register will
compare the value being written by the user to the WATCHDOG service window value and the key data (bits 7 through
1) in the WDSVR Register. Table 8 shows the sequence of
events that can occur.
The user must service the WATCHDOG at least once before
the upper limit of the service window expires. The WATCHDOG may not be serviced more than once in every lower
limit of the service window. The user may service the
WATCHDOG as many times as wished in the time period between the lower and upper limits of the service window. The
first write to the WDSVR Register is also counted as a
WATCHDOG service.
The WATCHDOG has an output pin associated with it. This
is the WDOUT pin, on pin 1 of the port G. WDOUT is active
low and must be externally connected to the RESET pin or to
some other external logic which handles WATCHDOG event.
The WDOUT pin has a weak pullup in the inactive state. This
pull-up is sufficient to serve as the connection to VCC for systems which use the internal Power On Reset. Upon triggering the WATCHDOG, the logic will pull the WDOUT (G1) pin
low for an additional 16 tC–32 tC cycles after the signal level
on WDOUT pin goes below the lower Schmitt trigger threshold. After this delay, the device will stop forcing the WDOUT
output low. The WATCHDOG service window will restart
when the WDOUT pin goes high.
A WATCHDOG service while the WDOUT signal is active will
be ignored. The state of the WDOUT pin is not guaranteed
on reset, but if it powers up low then the WATCHDOG will
time out and WDOUT will go high.
The WATCHDOG consists of two independent logic blocks:
WD UPPER and WD LOWER. WD UPPER establishes the
upper limit on the service window and WD LOWER defines
the lower limit of the service window.
Servicing the WATCHDOG consists of writing a specific
value to a WATCHDOG Service Register named WDSVR
which is memory mapped in the RAM. This value is composed of three fields, consisting of a 2-bit Window Select, a
5-bit Key Data field, and the 1-bit Clock Monitor Select field.
Table 6 shows the WDSVR register.
TABLE 6. WATCHDOG Service Register (WDSVR)
Window
Key Data
Clock
Select
X
Monitor
X
0
1
1
0
0
Y
The lower limit of the service window is fixed at 256 instruction cycles. Bits 7 and 6 of the WDSVR register allow the
user to pick an upper limit of the service window.
Table 7 shows the four possible combinations of lower and
upper limits for the WATCHDOG service window. This flexibility in choosing the WATCHDOG service window prevents
any undue burden on the user software.
Bits 5, 4, 3, 2 and 1 of the WDSVR register represent the
5-bit Key Data field. The key data is fixed at 01100. Bit 0 of
the WDSVR Register is the Clock Monitor Select bit.
TABLE 7. WATCHDOG Service Window Select
WDSVR WDSVR
Bit 7
Bit 6
Clock
Service Window
Monitor
(Lower-Upper Limits)
0
0
x
2048–8k tC Cycles
0
1
x
2048–16k tC Cycles
1
0
x
2048–32k tC Cycles
1
1
x
2048–64k tC Cycles
x
x
0
Clock Monitor Disabled
x
x
1
Clock Monitor Enabled
The Clock Monitor forces the G1 pin low upon detecting a
clock frequency error. The Clock Monitor error will continue
until the clock frequency has reached the minimum specified
value, after which the G1 output will go high following 16
tC–32 tC clock cycles. The Clock Monitor generates a continual Clock Monitor error if the oscillator fails to start, or fails
to reach the minimum specified frequency. The specification
for the Clock Monitor is as follows:
1/tC > 10 kHz — No clock rejection.
10.1 CLOCK MONITOR
The Clock Monitor aboard the device can be selected or deselected under program control. The Clock Monitor is guaranteed not to reject the clock if the instruction cycle clock (1/
tC) is greater or equal to 10 kHz. This equates to a clock
input rate on CKI of greater or equal to 100 kHz.
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1/tC < 10 Hz — Guaranteed clock rejection.
34
10.0 WATCHDOG/Clock Monitor
(Continued)
TABLE 8. WATCHDOG Service Actions
Key
Window
Clock
Data
Data
Monitor
Action
Match
Match
Match
Don’t Care
Mismatch
Don’t Care
Valid Service: Restart Service Window
Error: Generate WATCHDOG Output
Mismatch
Don’t Care
Don’t Care
Error: Generate WATCHDOG Output
Don’t Care
Don’t Care
Mismatch
Error: Generate WATCHDOG Output
10.3 WATCHDOG AND CLOCK MONITOR SUMMARY
•
A hardware WATCHDOG service occurs just as the device exits the IDLE mode. Consequently, the WATCHDOG should not be serviced for at least 256 instruction
cycles following IDLE, but must be serviced within the selected window to avoid a WATCHDOG error.
•
Following RESET, the initial WATCHDOG service (where
the service window and the CLOCK MONITOR enable/
disable must be selected) may be programmed anywhere within the maximum service window (65,536 instruction cycles) initialized by RESET. Note that this initial
WATCHDOG service may be programmed within the initial 256 instruction cycles without causing a WATCHDOG
error.
•
In order to RESET the device on the occurrence of a
WATCH event, the user must connect the WDOUT pin
(G1) pin to the RESET external to the device. The weak
pull-up on the WDOUT pin is sufficient to provide the RESET connection to VCC for devices which use both Power
On Reset and WATCHDOG.
The following salient points regarding the WATCHDOG and
CLOCK MONITOR should be noted:
•
Both the WATCHDOG and CLOCK MONITOR detector
circuits are inhibited during RESET.
•
Following RESET, the WATCHDOG and CLOCK MONITOR are both enabled, with the WATCHDOG having the
maximum service window selected.
•
The WATCHDOG service window and CLOCK MONITOR enable/disable option can only be changed once,
during the initial WATCHDOG service following RESET.
•
The initial WATCHDOG service must match the key data
value in the WATCHDOG Service register WDSVR in order to avoid a WATCHDOG error.
•
Subsequent WATCHDOG services must match all three
data fields in WDSVR in order to avoid WATCHDOG errors.
•
The correct key data value cannot be read from the
WATCHDOG Service register WDSVR. Any attempt to
read this key data value of 01100 from WDSVR will read
as key data value of all 0’s.
•
The WATCHDOG detector circuit is inhibited during both
the HALT and IDLE modes.
•
The CLOCK MONITOR detector circuit is active during
both the HALT and IDLE modes. Consequently, the device inadvertently entering the HALT mode will be detected as a CLOCK MONITOR error (provided that the
CLOCK MONITOR enable option has been selected by
the program).
•
With the single-pin R/C oscillator option selected and the
CLKDLY bit reset, the WATCHDOG service window will
resume following HALT mode from where it left off before
entering the HALT mode.
•
With the crystal oscillator option selected, or with the
single-pin R/C oscillator option selected and the CLKDLY
bit set, the WATCHDOG service window will be set to its
selected value from WDSVR following HALT. Consequently, the WATCHDOG should not be serviced for at
least 256 instruction cycles following HALT, but must be
serviced within the selected window to avoid a WATCHDOG error.
•
•
10.4 DETECTION OF ILLEGAL CONDITIONS
The device can detect various illegal conditions resulting
from coding errors, transient noise, power supply voltage
drops, runaway programs, etc.
Reading of undefined ROM gets zeroes. The opcode for
software interrupt is 00. If the program fetches instructions
from undefined ROM, this will force a software interrupt, thus
signaling that an illegal condition has occurred.
The subroutine stack grows down for each call (jump to subroutine), interrupt, or PUSH, and grows up for each return or
POP. The stack pointer is initialized to RAM location 06F Hex
during reset. Consequently, if there are more returns than
calls, the stack pointer will point to addresses 070 and 071
Hex (which are undefined RAM). Undefined RAM from addresses 070 to 07F (Segment 0), and all other segments
(i.e., Segments 4 … etc.) is read as all 1’s, which in turn will
cause the program to return to address 7FFF Hex. This is an
undefined ROM location and the instruction fetched (all 0’s)
from this location will generate a software interrupt signaling
an illegal condition.
Thus, the chip can detect the following illegal conditions:
1. Executing from undefined ROM
2.
Over “POP”ing the stack by having more returns than
calls.
When the software interrupt occurs, the user can re-initialize
the stack pointer and do a recovery procedure before restarting (this recovery program is probably similar to that following reset, but might not contain the same program initialization procedures). The recovery program should reset the
software interrupt pending bit using the RPND instruction.
The IDLE timer T0 is not initialized with external RESET.
The user can sync in to the IDLE counter cycle with an
IDLE counter (T0) interrupt or by monitoring the T0PND
flag. The T0PND flag is set whenever the twelfth bit of the
IDLE counter toggles (every 4096 instruction cycles). The
user is responsible for resetting the T0PND flag.
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11.1 MICROWIRE/PLUS OPERATION
Setting the BUSY bit in the PSW register causes the
MICROWIRE/PLUS to start shifting the data. It gets reset
when eight data bits have been shifted. The user may reset
the BUSY bit by software to allow less than 8 bits to shift. If
enabled, an interrupt is generated when eight data bits have
been shifted. The device may enter the MICROWIRE/PLUS
mode either as a Master or as a Slave. Figure 24 shows how
two microcontroller devices and several peripherals may be
interconnected using the MICROWIRE/PLUS arrangements.
11.0 MICROWIRE/PLUS
MICROWIRE/PLUS is a serial SPI compatible synchronous
communications interface. The MICROWIRE/PLUS capability enables the device to interface with MICROWIRE/PLUS
or SPI peripherals (i.e. A/D converters, display drivers, EEPROMs etc.) and with other microcontrollers which support
the MICROWIRE/PLUS or SPI interface. It consists of an
8-bit serial shift register (SIO) with serial data input (SI), serial data output (SO) and serial shift clock (SK). Figure 24
shows a block diagram of the MICROWIRE/PLUS logic.
The shift clock can be selected from either an internal source
or an external source. Operating the MICROWIRE/PLUS arrangement with the internal clock source is called the Master
mode of operation. Similarly, operating the MICROWIRE/
PLUS arrangement with an external shift clock is called the
Slave mode of operation.
WARNING
The SIO register should only be loaded when the SK clock is
in the idle phase. Loading the SIO register while the SK clock
is in the active phase, will result in undefined data in the SIO
register.
Setting the BUSY flag when the input SK clock is in the active phase while in the MICROWIRE/PLUS is in the slave
mode may cause the current SK clock for the SIO shift register to be narrow. For safety, the BUSY flag should only be
set when the input SK clock is in the idle phase.
The CNTRL register is used to configure and control the
MICROWIRE/PLUS mode. To use the MICROWIRE/PLUS,
the MSEL bit in the CNTRL register is set to one. In the master mode, the SK clock rate is selected by the two bits, SL0
and SL1, in the CNTRL register. Table 9 details the different
clock rates that may be selected.
11.1.1 MICROWIRE/PLUS Master Mode Operation
In the MICROWIRE/PLUS Master mode of operation the
shift clock (SK) is generated internally. The MICROWIRE
Master always initiates all data exchanges. The MSEL bit in
the CNTRL register must be set to enable the SO and SK
functions onto the G Port. The SO and SK pins must also be
selected as outputs by setting appropriate bits in the Port G
configuration register. In the slave mode, the shift clock
stops after 8 clock pulses. Table 10 summarizes the bit settings required for Master mode of operation.
TABLE 9. MICROWIRE/PLUS
Master Mode Clock Select
SL1
SL0
0
0
2 x tC
SK Period
0
1
4 x tC
1
x
8 x tC
Where tC is the instruction cycle clock
DS012838-32
FIGURE 24. MICROWIRE/PLUS Application
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11.0 MICROWIRE/PLUS
The user must set the BUSY flag immediately upon entering
the Slave mode. This ensures that all data bits sent by the
Master is shifted properly. After eight clock pulses the BUSY
flag is clear, the shift clock is stopped, and the sequence
may be repeated.
(Continued)
11.1.2 MICROWIRE/PLUS Slave Mode Operation
In the MICROWIRE/PLUS Slave mode of operation the SK
clock is generated by an external source. Setting the MSEL
bit in the CNTRL register enables the SO and SK functions
onto the G Port. The SK pin must be selected as an input
and the SO pin is selected as an output pin by setting and resetting the appropriate bits in the Port G configuration register. Table 10 summarizes the settings required to enter the
Slave mode of operation.
This table assumes that the control flag MSEL is set.
10.1.3 Alternate SK Phase Operation
and SK Idle Polarity
The device allows either the normal SK clock or an alternate
phase SK clock to shift data in and out of the SIO register. In
both the modes the SK idle polarity can be either high or low.
The polarity is selected by bit 5 of Port G data register. In the
normal mode data is shifted in on the rising edge of the SK
clock and the data is shifted out on the falling edge of the SK
clock. The SIO register is shifted on each falling edge of the
SK clock. In the alternate SK phase operation, data is shifted
in on the falling edge of the SK clock and shifted out on the
rising edge of the SK clock. Bit 6 of Port G configuration register selects the SK edge.
A control flag, SKSEL, allows either the normal SK clock or
the alternate SK clock to be selected. Resetting SKSEL
causes the MICROWIRE/PLUS logic to be clocked from the
normal SK signal. Setting the SKSEL flag selects the alternate SK clock. The SKSEL is mapped into the G6 configuration bit. The SKSEL flag will power up in the reset condition,
selecting the normal SK signal.
TABLE 10. MICROWIRE/PLUS Mode Settings
G4 (SO)
G5 (SK)
G4
G5
Config. Bit
Config. Bit
Fun.
Fun.
1
1
SO
Int.
MICROWIRE/PLUS
SK
Master
0
1
TRI-
Int.
MICROWIRE/PLUS
STATE
SK
Master
SO
Ext.
MICROWIRE/PLUS
SK
Slave
1
0
0
0
Operation
TRI-
Ext.
MICROWIRE/PLUS
STATE
SK
Slave
TABLE 11. MICROWIRE/PLUS Shift Clock Polarity and Sample/Shift Phase
Port G
SK Phase
G6 (SKSEL)
G5
Config. Bit
Data Bit
SO Clocked Out On:
SK Idle
Phase
SI Sampled On:
Normal
0
0
SK Falling Edge
SK Rising Edge
Low
Alternate
1
0
SK Rising Edge
SK Falling Edge
Low
Alternate
0
1
SK Rising Edge
SK Falling Edge
High
Normal
1
1
SK Falling Edge
SK Rising Edge
High
DS012838-33
FIGURE 25. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Normal SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being Low
DS012838-34
FIGURE 26. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Alternate SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being Low
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11.0 MICROWIRE/PLUS
(Continued)
DS012838-35
FIGURE 27. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Alternate SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being High
DS012838-31
FIGURE 28. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Normal SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being High
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12.0 Memory Map
All RAM, ports and registers (except A and PC) are mapped into data memory address space.
RAM
Address
Select
ADD REG
Contents
64 On-Chip RAM Bytes.
02 to 2F
On-Chip RAM (48 Bytes)
(COP8SAAx)
30 to 7F
Unused RAM (Reads as all ones)
128 On-Chip RAM Bytes
00 to 6F
On-Chip RAM (112 Bytes)
(COP8SABx/SACx)
70 to 7F
Unused RAM (Reads as all ones)
80 to 93
Reserved
94
Port F Data Register
95
Port F Configuration Register
96
Port F Input Pins (Read Only)
97
Reserved
A0 to C6
Reserved
C7
WATCHDOG Service Register (Reg: WDSVR)
C8
MIWU Edge Select Register (Reg: WKEDG)
C9
MIWU Enable Register (Reg: WKEN)
CA
MIWU Pending Register (Reg: WKPND)
CB to CF
Reserved
D0
Port L Data Register
D1
Port L Configuration Register
D2
Port L Input Pins (Read Only)
D3
Reserved
D4
Port G Data Register
D5
Port G Configuration Register
D6
Port G Input Pins (Read Only)
D7
Reserved
D8
Port C Data Register
D9
Port C Configuration Register
DA
Port C Input Pins (Read Only)
DB
Reserved
DC
Port D
DD to DF
Reserved
E0 to E5
Reserved
E6
Timer T1 Autoload Register T1RB Lower Byte
E7
Timer T1 Autoload Register T1RB Upper Byte
E8
ICNTRL Register
E9
MICROWIRE/PLUS Shift Register
EA
Timer T1 Lower Byte
EB
Timer T1 Upper Byte
EC
Timer T1 Autoload Register T1RA Lower Byte
ED
Timer T1 Autoload Register T1RA Upper Byte
EE
CNTRL Control Register
EF
PSW Register
F0 to FB
On-Chip RAM Mapped as Registers
FC
X Register
FD
SP Register
FE
B Register
FF
Reserved (Segment Register)
Reading any undefined memory location in the address range of 0080H–00FFH will return undefined data.
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• Register B or X Indirect
• Register B or X Indirect with Post-Incrementing/
Decrementing
• Immediate
• Immediate Short
• Indirect from Program Memory
The addressing modes are described below. Each description includes an example of an assembly language
instruction using the described addressing mode.
Direct. The memory address is specified directly as a byte
in the instruction. In assembly language, the direct address is written as a numerical value (or a label that has
been defined elsewhere in the program as a numerical
value).
Example: Load Accumulator Memory Direct
LD A,05
13.0 Instruction Set
13.1 INTRODUCTION
This section defines the instruction set of the COP8SAx
Family members. It contains information about the instruction set features, addressing modes and types.
13.2 INSTRUCTION FEATURES
The strength of the instruction set is based on the following features:
• Mostly single-byte opcode instructions minimize program size.
• One instruction cycle for the majority of single-byte instructions to minimize program execution time.
• Many single-byte, multiple function instructions such
as DRSZ.
• Three memory mapped pointers: two for register indirect addressing, and one for the software stack.
• Sixteen memory mapped registers that allow an optimized implementation of certain instructions.
• Ability to set, reset, and test any individual bit in data
memory
address
space,
including
the
memory-mapped I/O ports and registers.
• Register-Indirect LOAD and EXCHANGE instructions
with optional automatic post-incrementing or decrementing of the register pointer. This allows for greater
efficiency (both in cycle time and program code) in
loading, walking across and processing fields in data
memory.
• Unique instructions to optimize program size and
throughput efficiency. Some of these instructions are
DRSZ, IFBNE, DCOR, RETSK, VIS and RRC.
Reg/Data
Contents
Memory
Before
Contents
After
Accumulator
XX Hex
A6 Hex
Memory Location
A6 Hex
A6 Hex
0005 Hex
Register B or X Indirect. The memory address is specified
by the contents of the B Register or X register (pointer register). In assembly language, the notation [B] or [X] specifies
which register serves as the pointer.
Example: Exchange Memory with Accumulator, B Indirect
X A,[B]
12.3 ADDRESSING MODES
The instruction set offers a variety of methods for specifying memory addresses. Each method is called an addressing mode. These modes are classified into two categories:
operand
addressing
modes
and
transfer-of-control addressing modes. Operand addressing modes are the various methods of specifying an address for accessing (reading or writing) data.
Transfer-of-control addressing modes are used in conjunction with jump instructions to control the execution sequence of the software program.
Reg/Data
Contents
Memory
Before
Contents
After
Accumulator
01 Hex
87 Hex
Memory Location
87 Hex
01 Hex
0005 Hex
B Pointer
05 Hex
05 Hex
Register B or X Indirect with Post-Incrementing/
Decrementing. The relevant memory address is specified
by the contents of the B Register or X register (pointer register). The pointer register is automatically incremented or
decremented after execution, allowing easy manipulation of
memory blocks with software loops. In assembly language,
the notation [B+], [B−], [X+], or [X−] specifies which register
serves as the pointer, and whether the pointer is to be incremented or decremented.
13.3.1 Operand Addressing Modes
The operand of an instruction specifies what memory location is to be affected by that instruction. Several different operand addressing modes are available, allowing
memory locations to be specified in a variety of ways. An
instruction can specify an address directly by supplying
the specific address, or indirectly by specifying a register
pointer. The contents of the register (or in some cases,
two registers) point to the desired memory location. In the
immediate mode, the data byte to be used is contained in
the instruction itself.
Example: Exchange Memory with Accumulator, B Indirect
with Post-Increment
Each addressing mode has its own advantages and disadvantages with respect to flexibility, execution speed,
and program compactness. Not all modes are available
with all instructions. The Load (LD) instruction offers the
largest number of addressing modes.
The available addressing modes are:
B Pointer
05 Hex
06 Hex
Intermediate. The data for the operation follows the instruction opcode in program memory. In assembly language, the
number sign character (#) indicates an immediate operand.
X A,[B+]
Contents
Memory
Before
Contents
After
Accumulator
03 Hex
62 Hex
Memory Location
62 Hex
03 Hex
0005 Hex
• Direct
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Reg/Data
40
13.0 Instruction Set
The available transfer-of-control addressing modes are:
(Continued)
• Jump Relative
• Jump Absolute
• Jump Absolute Long
• Jump Indirect
The transfer-of-control addressing modes are described below. Each description includes an example of a Jump instruction using a particular addressing mode, and the effect
on the Program Counter bytes of executing that instruction.
Jump Relative. In this 1-byte instruction, six bits of the instruction opcode specify the distance of the jump from the
current program memory location. The distance of the jump
can range from −31 to +32. A JP+1 instruction is not allowed.
The programmer should use a NOP instead.
Example: Jump Relative
JP 0A
Example: Load Accumulator Immediate
LD A,#05
Reg/Data
Contents
Contents
Memory
Before
After
Accumulator
XX Hex
05 Hex
Immediate Short. This is a special case of an immediate instruction. In the “Load B immediate” instruction, the 4-bit immediate value in the instruction is loaded into the lower
nibble of the B register. The upper nibble of the B register is
reset to 0000 binary.
Example: Load B Register Immediate Short
LD B,#7
Reg/Data
Contents
Contents
Memory
Before
After
Reg
B Pointer
12 Hex
07 Hex
Indirect from Program Memory. This is a special case of
an indirect instruction that allows access to data tables
stored in program memory. In the “Load Accumulator Indirect” (LAID) instruction, the upper and lower bytes of the Program Counter (PCU and PCL) are used temporarily as a
pointer to program memory. For purposes of accessing program memory, the contents of the Accumulator and PCL are
exchanged. The data pointed to by the Program Counter is
loaded into the Accumulator, and simultaneously, the original
contents of PCL are restored so that the program can resume normal execution.
Example: Load Accumulator Indirect
LAID
Reg/Data
Contents
Contents
Memory
Before
After
PCU
04 Hex
04 Hex
PCL
35 Hex
36 Hex
Accumulator
1F Hex
25 Hex
Memory Location
25 Hex
25 Hex
PCU
Contents
Contents
Before
After
02 Hex
02 Hex
PCL
05 Hex
0F Hex
Jump Absolute. In this 2-byte instruction, 12 bits of the instruction opcode specify the new contents of the Program
Counter. The upper three bits of the Program Counter remain unchanged, restricting the new Program Counter address to the same 4 kbyte address space as the current instruction.
(This restriction is relevant only in devices using more than
one 4 kbyte program memory space.)
Example: Jump Absolute
JMP 0125
Reg
PCU
Contents
Contents
Before
After
0C Hex
01 Hex
PCL
77 Hex
25 Hex
Jump Absolute Long. In this 3-byte instruction, 15 bits of
the instruction opcode specify the new contents of the Program Counter.
Example: Jump Absolute Long
JMP 03625
041F Hex
13.3.2 Tranfer-of-Control Addressing Modes
Program instructions are usually executed in sequential order. However, Jump instructions can be used to change the
normal execution sequence. Several transfer-of-control addressing modes are available to specify jump addresses.
A change in program flow requires a non-incremental
change in the Program Counter contents. The Program
Counter consists of two bytes, designated the upper byte
(PCU) and lower byte (PCL). The most significant bit of PCU
is not used, leaving 15 bits to address the program memory.
Reg/
Contents
Memory
Before
Contents
After
PCU
42 Hex
36 Hex
PCL
36 Hex
25 Hex
Different addressing modes are used to specify the new address for the Program Counter. The choice of addressing
mode depends primarily on the distance of the jump. Farther
jumps sometimes require more instruction bytes in order to
completely specify the new Program Counter contents.
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13.0 Instruction Set
Jump to Subroutine Long (JSRL)
Return from Subroutine (RET)
(Continued)
Jump Indirect. In this 1-byte instruction, the lower byte of
the jump address is obtained from a table stored in program
memory, with the Accumulator serving as the low order byte
of a pointer into program memory. For purposes of accessing program memory, the contents of the Accumulator are
written to PCL (temporarily). The data pointed to by the Program Counter (PCH/PCL) is loaded into PCL, while PCH remains unchanged.
Example: Jump Indirect
Return from Subroutine and Skip (RETSK)
Return from Interrupt (RETI)
Software Trap Interrupt (INTR)
Vector Interrupt Select (VIS)
13.4.3 Load and Exchange Instructions
The load and exchange instructions write byte values in registers or memory. The addressing mode determines the
source of the data.
Load (LD)
JID
Reg/
Contents
Memory
Before
Contents
After
PCU
01 Hex
01 Hex
PCL
C4 Hex
32 Hex
13.4.4 Logical Instructions
Accumulator
26 Hex
26 Hex
32 Hex
32 Hex
The logical instructions perform the operations AND, OR,
and XOR (Exclusive OR). Other logical operations can be
performed by combining these basic operations. For example, complementing is accomplished by exclusiveORing
the Accumulator with FF Hex.
Logical AND (AND)
Logical OR (OR)
Exclusive OR (XOR)
Load Accumulator Indirect (LAID)
Exchange (X)
Memory
Location
0126 Hex
The VIS instruction is a special case of the Indirect Transfer
of Control addressing mode, where the double-byte vector
associated with the interrupt is transferred from adjacent addresses in program memory into the Program Counter in order to jump to the associated interrupt service routine.
13.4.5 Accumulator Bit Manipulation Instructions
The Accumulator bit manipulation instructions allow the user
to shift the Accumulator bits and to swap its two nibbles.
Rotate Right Through Carry (RRC)
Rotate Left Through Carry (RLC)
Swap Nibbles of Accumulator (SWAP)
13.4 INSTRUCTION TYPES
The instruction set contains a wide variety of instructions.
The available instructions are listed below, organized into related groups.
Some instructions test a condition and skip the next instruction if the condition is not true. Skipped instructions are executed as no-operation (NOP) instructions.
13.4.6 Stack Control Instructions
Push Data onto Stack (PUSH)
Pop Data off of Stack (POP)
13.4.1 Arithmetic Instructions
The arithmetic instructions perform binary arithmetic such as
addition and subtraction, with or without the Carry bit.
Add (ADD)
Add with Carry (ADC)
Subtract (SUB)
Subtract with Carry (SUBC)
Increment (INC)
Decrement (DEC)
Decimal Correct (DCOR)
13.4.7 Memory Bit Manipulation Instructions
The memory bit manipulation instructions allow the user to
set and reset individual bits in memory.
Set Bit (SBIT)
Reset Bit (RBIT)
Reset Pending Bit (RPND)
13.4.8 Conditional Instructions
The conditional instruction test a condition. If the condition is
true, the next instruction is executed in the normal manner; if
the condition is false, the next instruction is skipped.
If Equal (IFEQ)
If Not Equal (IFNE)
If Greater Than (IFGT)
If Carry (IFC)
Clear Accumulator (CLR)
Set Carry (SC)
Reset Carry (RC)
13.4.2 Transfer-of-Control Instructions
The transfer-of-control instructions change the usual sequential program flow by altering the contents of the Program Counter. The Jump to Subroutine instructions save the
Program Counter contents on the stack before jumping; the
Return instructions pop the top of the stack back into the
Program Counter.
Jump Relative (JP)
If Not Carry (IFNC)
If Bit (IFBIT)
If B Pointer Not Equal (IFBNE)
And Skip if Zero (ANDSZ)
Decrement Register and Skip if Zero (DRSZ)
Jump Absolute (JMP)
Jump Absolute Long (JMPL)
Jump Indirect (JID)
Jump to Subroutine (JSR)
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13.0 Instruction Set
(Continued)
13.4.9 No-Operation Instruction
The no-operation instruction does nothing, except to occupy
space in the program memory and time in execution.
No-Operation (NOP)
Note: The VIS is a special case of the Indirect Transfer of Control addressing
mode, where the double byte vector associated with the interrupt is
transferred from adjacent addresses in the program memory into the
program counter (PC) in order to jump to the associated interrupt service routine.
13.5 REGISTER AND SYMBOL DEFINITION
The following abbreviations represent the nomenclature
used in the instruction description and the COP8
cross-assembler.
Registers
A
8-Bit Accumulator Register
B
8-Bit Address Register
X
8-Bit Address Register
SP
8-Bit Stack Pointer Register
PC
15-Bit Program Counter Register
PU
Upper 7 Bits of PC
PL
Lower 8 Bits of PC
C
1 Bit of PSW Register for Carry
HC
1 Bit of PSW Register for Half Carry
GIE
1 Bit of PSW Register for Global Interrupt
Enable
VU
Interrupt Vector Upper Byte
VL
Interrupt Vector Lower Byte
[B]
Memory Indirectly Addressed by B Register
[X]
Memory Indirectly Addressed by X Register
MD
Direct Addressed Memory
Mem
Direct Addressed Memory or [B]
Meml
Direct Addressed Memory or [B] or
Immediate Data
Imm
8-Bit Immediate Data
Reg
Register Memory: Addresses F0 to FF
(Includes B, X and SP)
Bit
←
Bit Number (0 to 7)
↔
Exchanged with
Symbols
Loaded with
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13.0 Instruction Set
(Continued)
13.6 INSTRUCTION SET SUMMARY
A ←A + Meml
A ←A + Meml + C, C← Carry,
HC ←Half Carry
ADD
A,Meml
ADD
ADC
A,Meml
ADD with Carry
SUBC
A,Meml
Subtract with Carry
A ←A − MemI + C, C←Carry,
HC ←Half Carry
A ←A and Meml
AND
A,Meml
Logical AND
ANDSZ
A,Imm
Logical AND Immed., Skip if Zero
Skip next if (A and Imm) = 0
OR
A,Meml
Logical OR
XOR
A,Meml
Logical EXclusive OR
A ←A or Meml
A ←A xor Meml
IFEQ
MD,Imm
IF EQual
IFEQ
A,Meml
IF EQual
Compare MD and Imm, Do next if MD = Imm
Compare A and Meml, Do next if A = Meml
IFNE
A,Meml
IF Not Equal
Compare A and Meml, Do next if A ≠ Meml
IFGT
A,Meml
IF Greater Than
Compare A and Meml, Do next if A > Meml
Do next if lower 4 bits of B ≠ Imm
IFBNE
#
If B Not Equal
DRSZ
Reg
Decrement Reg., Skip if Zero
SBIT
#,Mem
Set BIT
Reg ←Reg − 1, Skip if Reg = 0
1 to bit, Mem (bit = 0 to 7 immediate)
RBIT
#,Mem
Reset BIT
0 to bit, Mem
IFBIT
#,Mem
IF BIT
If bit #, A or Mem is true do next instruction
Reset PeNDing Flag
Reset Software Interrupt Pending Flag
A ↔Mem
RPND
X
A,Mem
EXchange A with Memory
X
A,[X]
EXchange A with Memory [X]
A ↔[X]
LD
A,Meml
LoaD A with Memory
LD
A,[X]
LoaD A with Memory [X]
A ←Meml
A ←[X]
LD
B,Imm
LoaD B with Immed.
LD
Mem,Imm
LoaD Memory Immed.
LD
Reg,Imm
LoaD Register Memory Immed.
X
A, [B ± ]
EXchange A with Memory [B]
X
A, [X ± ]
EXchange A with Memory [X]
LD
A, [B ± ]
LoaD A with Memory [B]
LD
A, [X ± ]
LoaD A with Memory [X]
A←[X], (X ←X ± 1)
LD
[B ± ],Imm
LoaD Memory [B] Immed.
CLR
A
CLeaR A
[B] ←Imm, (B←B ± 1)
A←0
INC
A
INCrement A
DEC
A
DECrement A
LAID
B ←Imm
Mem ←Imm
Reg ←Imm
A↔[B], (B ←B ± 1)
A↔[X], (X ←X ± 1)
A←[B], (B ←B ± 1)
A←A + 1
A←A − 1
A←ROM (PU,A)
Load A InDirect from ROM
DCOR
A
Decimal CORrect A
RRC
A
Rotate A Right thru C
A←BCD correction of A (follows ADC, SUBC)
C →A7→… →A0→C
RLC
A
Rotate A Left thru C
C←A7←…←A0←C, HC ←A0
SWAP
A
SWAP nibbles of A
SC
Set C
RC
Reset C
A7…A4↔A3…A0
C←1, HC ←1
C←0, HC ←0
IFC
IF C
IF C is true, do next instruction
IFNC
IF Not C
If C is not true, do next instruction
SP←SP + 1, A←[SP]
POP
A
POP the stack into A
PUSH
A
PUSH A onto the stack
VIS
[SP]←A, SP←SP − 1
PU ←[VU], PL ←[VL]
Vector to Interrupt Service Routine
JMPL
Addr.
Jump absolute Long
JMP
Addr.
Jump absolute
PC ←ii (ii = 15 bits, 0 to 32k)
PC9…0 ←i (i = 12 bits)
JP
Disp.
Jump relative short
PC ←PC + r (r is −31 to +32, except 1)
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13.0 Instruction Set
(Continued)
JSRL
Addr.
Jump SubRoutine Long
JSR
Addr.
Jump SubRoutine
[SP] ←PL, [SP−1]←PU,SP−2, PC ←ii
[SP] ←PL, [SP−1]←PU,SP−2, PC9…0←i
PL← ROM (PU,A)
JID
Jump InDirect
RET
RETurn from subroutine
RETSK
RETurn and SKip
RETI
RETurn from Interrupt
INTR
Generate an Interrupt
skip next instruction
SP + 2, PL ←[SP],PU ←[SP−1],GIE ←1
[SP] ←PL, [SP−1]←PU, SP−2, PC ←0FF
NOP
No OPeration
PC ←PC + 1
SP + 2, PL ← [SP], PU ← [SP−1]
SP + 2, PL ←[SP],PU ← [SP−1],
13.7 INSTRUCTION EXECUTION TIME
Most instructions are single byte (with immediate addressing
mode instructions taking two bytes).
Most single byte instructions take one cycle time to execute.
Instructions Using A & C
Skipped instructions require x number of cycles to be
skipped, where x equals the number of bytes in the skipped
instruction opcode.
See the BYTES and CYCLES per INSTRUCTION table for
details.
Bytes and Cycles per Instruction
The following table shows the number of bytes and cycles for
each instruction in the format of byte/cycle.
Arithmetic and Logic Instructions
[B]
Direct
Immed.
ADD
1/1
3/4
2/2
ADC
1/1
3/4
2/2
SUBC
1/1
3/4
2/2
CLRA
1/1
INCA
1/1
DECA
1/1
LAID
1/3
DCORA
1/1
RRCA
1/1
RLCA
1/1
SWAPA
1/1
SC
1/1
RC
1/1
IFC
1/1
IFNC
1/1
PUSHA
1/3
POPA
1/3
ANDSZ
2/2
AND
1/1
3/4
2/2
OR
1/1
3/4
2/2
XOR
1/1
3/4
2/2
JMPL
3/4
2/2
JMP
2/3
2/2
JP
1/3
IFEQ
1/1
IFGT
1/1
IFBNE
1/1
DRSZ
SBIT
1/1
3/4
3/4
Transfer of Control Instructions
JSRL
3/5
1/3
JSR
2/5
3/4
JID
1/3
1/5
RBIT
1/1
3/4
VIS
IFBIT
1/1
3/4
RET
1/5
RETSK
1/5
RPND
1/1
45
RETI
1/5
INTR
1/7
NOP
1/1
www.national.com
13.0 Instruction Set
(Continued)
Memory Transfer Instructions
Register
Direct
Immed.
Indirect
Register Indirect
Auto Incr. & Decr.
[B]
[X]
X A, (Note 21)
1/1
1/3
2/3
LD A, (Note 21)
1/1
1/3
2/3
2/2
[B+, B−]
[X+, X−]
1/2
1/3
1/2
1/3
LD B, Imm
1/1
(If B < 16)
LD B, Imm
2/2
(If B > 15)
LD Mem, Imm
2/2
3/3
LD Reg, Imm
2/3
IFEQ MD, Imm
3/3
2/2
Note 21: = > Memory location addressed by B or X or directly.
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46
47
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JP−18
JP−17
JP−16
JP−2
JP−1
JP−0
LD 0FF, #i
LD 0FE, #i
LD 0FD, #i
LD 0FC, #i
LD 0FB, #i
LD 0FA, #i
LD 0F9, #i
LD 0F8, #i
LD 0F7, #i
LD 0F6, #i
LD 0F5, #i
LD 0F4, #i
LD 0F3, #i
LD 0F2, #i
LD 0F1, #i
LD 0F0, #i
D
DRSZ
0FF
DRSZ
0FE
DRSZ
0FD
DRSZ
0FC
DRSZ
0FB
DRSZ
0FA
DRSZ
0F9
DRSZ
0F8
DRSZ
0F7
DRSZ
0F6
DRSZ
0F5
DRSZ
0F4
DRSZ
0F3
DRSZ
0F2
DRSZ
0F1
DRSZ
0F0
C
B
*
LD
A,[X]
DIR
LD
Md,#i
LD
A,[X−]
LD
A,[X+]
IFNE
A,[B]
NOP
*
X A,[X]
RPND
VIS
X
A,[X−]
X
A,[X+]
*
RRCA
Where,
i is the immediate data
Md is a directly addressed memory location
* is an unused opcode
The opcode 60 Hex is also the opcode for IFBIT #i,A
JP−19
JP−3
JP−24
JP−8
JP−20
JP−25
JP−9
JP−4
JP−26
JP−10
JP−21
JP−27
JP−11
JP−5
JP−28
JP−12
JP−22
JP−29
JP−13
JP−6
JP−30
JP−14
JP−23
JP−31
JP−15
JP−7
E
F
13.8 Opcode Table
OR A,#i
XOR
A,#i
AND
A,#i
ADD
A,#i
IFGT
A,#i
IFEQ
A,#i
SUBC
A, #i
ADC
A,#i
9
LD
[B−],#i
LD
[B+],#i
IFNE
A,#i
*
LD
A,[B]
JSRL
LD B,#i
LD
[B],#i
LD
A,Md
JMPL X A,Md
LD
A,[B−]
LD
A,[B+]
IFEQ
Md,#i
RLCA LD A,#i
*
X
A,[B]
JID
LAID
X
A,[B−]
X
A,[B+]
SC
RC
A
RETI
RET
6
CLRA
*
*
*
5
LD
B,#0B
LD
B,#0C
LD
B,#0D
LD
B,#0E
LD
B,#0F
SBIT
7,[B]
SBIT
6,[B]
SBIT
5,[B]
SBIT
4,[B]
SBIT
3,[B]
SBIT
2,[B]
SBIT
1,[B]
SBIT
0,[B]
RBIT
7,[B]
RBIT
6,[B]
RBIT
5,[B]
RBIT
4,[B]
RBIT
3,[B]
RBIT
2,[B]
RBIT
1,[B]
RBIT
0,[B]
IFBIT PUSHA
7,[B]
IFBIT DCORA
6,[B]
LD
B,#00
LD
B,#01
LD
B,#02
LD
B,#03
LD
B,#04
LD
B,#05
LD
B,#06
LD
B,#07
LD
B,#08
LD
B,#09
IFBIT SWAPA
LD
5,[B]
B,#0A
IFBIT
4,[B]
IFBIT
3,[B]
IFBIT
2,[B]
IFBIT
1,[B]
IFBIT ANDSZ
0,[B]
A, #i
7
Upper Nibble
RETSK
POPA
DECA
INCA
IFNC
IFC
OR
A,[B]
XOR
A,[B]
AND
A,[B]
ADD
A,[B]
IFGT
A,[B]
IFEQ
A,[B]
SUBC
A,[B]
ADC
A,[B]
8
4
IFBNE 0F
IFBNE 0E
IFBNE 0D
IFBNE 0C
IFBNE 0B
IFBNE 0A
IFBNE 9
IFBNE 8
IFBNE 7
IFBNE 6
IFBNE 5
IFBNE 4
IFBNE 3
IFBNE 2
IFBNE 1
IFBNE 0
3
2
1
0
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
JMP
JP+26 JP+10 9
x900–x9FF
JMP
JP+25 JP+9
x800–x8FF
JMP
JP+24 JP+8
x700–x7FF
JMP
JP+23 JP+7
x600–x6FF
JMP
JP+22 JP+6
x500–x5FF
JMP
JP+21 JP+5
x400–x4FF
JMP
JP+20 JP+4
x300–x3FF
JMP
JP+19 JP+3
x200–x2FF
JMP
JP+18 JP+2
x100–x1FF
JMP
JP+17 INTR
x000–x0FF
JSR
JMP
JP+32 JP+16 F
xF00–xFFF xF00–xFFF
JSR
JMP
JP+31 JP+15 E
xE00–xEFF xE00–xEFF
JSR
JMP
JP+30 JP+14 D
xD00–xDFF xD00–xDFF
JSR
JMP
JP+29 JP+13 C
xC00–xCFF xC00–xCFF
JSR
JMP
JP+28 JP+12 B
xB00–xBFF xB00–xBFF
JSR
JMP
JP+27 JP+11 A
xA00–xAFF xA00–xAFF
JSR
x900–x9FF
JSR
x800–x8FF
JSR
x700–x7FF
JSR
x600–x6FF
JSR
x500–x5FF
JSR
x400–x4FF
JSR
x300–x3FF
JSR
x200–x2FF
JSR
x100–x1FF
JSR
x000–x0FF
Lower Nibble
development. Supports all COP8 devices. (DOS/Win16
v4.10.2 available with limited support). (Compatible with
WCOP8 IDE, COP8C, and DriveWay COP8).
14.0 Mask Options
For mask options information on COP8SAx5 devices, please
refer to Section 6.4 ECON (CONFIGURATION) REGISTER.
• COP8-NSDEV: Very low cost Software Development
Package for Windows. An integrated development environment for COP8, including WCOP8 IDE, COP8C (limited version), COP8-NSASM, COP8-MLSIM.
• COP8C: Moderately priced C Cross-Compiler and Code
Development System from Byte Craft (no code limit). Includes BCLIDE (Byte Craft Limited Integrated Development Environment) for Win32, editor, optimizing C CrossCompiler, macro cross assembler, BC-Linker, and
MetaLink tools support. (DOS/SUN versions available;
Compiler is installable under WCOP8 IDE; Compatible
with DriveWay COP8).
• EWCOP8-KS: Very Low cost ANSI C-Compiler and Embedded Workbench from IAR (Kickstart version:
COP8Sx/Fx only with 2k code limit; No FP). A fully integrated Win32 IDE, ANSI C-Compiler, macro assembler,
editor, linker, Liberian, C-Spy simulator/debugger, PLUS
MetaLink EPU/DM emulator support.
• EWCOP8-AS: Moderately priced COP8 Assembler and
Embedded Workbench from IAR (no code limit). A fully integrated Win32 IDE, macro assembler, editor, linker, librarian, and C-Spy high-level simulator/debugger with
I/O and interrupts support. (Upgradeable with optional
C-Compiler and/or MetaLink Debugger/Emulator support).
• EWCOP8-BL: Moderately priced ANSI C-Compiler and
Embedded Workbench from IAR (Baseline version: All
COP8 devices; 4k code limit; no FP). A fully integrated
Win32 IDE, ANSI C-Compiler, macro assembler, editor,
linker, librarian, and C-Spy high-level simulator/debugger.
(Upgradeable; CWCOP8-M MetaLink tools interface support optional).
• EWCOP8: Full featured ANSI C-Compiler and Embedded Workbench for Windows from IAR (no code limit). A
fully integrated Win32 IDE, ANSI C-Compiler, macro assembler, editor, linker, librarian, and C-Spy high-level
simulator/debugger. (CWCOP8-M MetaLink tools interface support optional).
• EWCOP8-M: Full featured ANSI C-Compiler and Embedded Workbench for Windows from IAR (no code limit). A
fully integrated Win32 IDE, ANSI C-Compiler, macro assembler, editor, linker, librarian, C-Spy high-level
simulator/debugger, PLUS MetaLink debugger/hardware
interface (CWCOP8-M).
COP8 Productivity Enhancement Tools
• WCOP8 IDE: Very Low cost IDE (Integrated Development Environment) from KKD. Supports COP8C, COP8NSASM, COP8-MLSIM, DriveWay COP8, and MetaLink
debugger under a common Windows Project Management environment. Code development, debug, and emulation tools can be launched from the project window
framework.
• DriveWay-COP8: Low cost COP8 Peripherals Code
Generation tool from Aisys Corporation. Automatically
generates tested and documented C or Assembly source
code modules containing I/O drivers and interrupt handlers for each on-chip peripheral. Application specific
code can be inserted for customization using the integrated editor. (Compatible with COP8-NSASM, COP8C,
and WCOP8 IDE.)
15.0 Development Tools Support
15.1 OVERVIEW
National is engaged with an international community of independent 3rd party vendors who provide hardware and software development tool support. Through National’s interaction and guidance, these tools cooperate to form a choice of
solutions that fits each developer’s needs.
This section provides a summary of the tool and development kits currently available. Up-to-date information, selection guides, free tools, demos, updates, and purchase information can be obtained at our web site at:
www.national.com/cop8.
15.2 SUMMARY OF TOOLS
COP8 Evaluation Tools
• COP8–NSEVAL: Free Software Evaluation package for
Windows. A fully integrated evaluation environment for
COP8, including versions of WCOP8 IDE (Integrated Development Environment), COP8-NSASM, COP8-MLSIM,
COP8C, DriveWay™ COP8, Manuals, and other COP8
information.
• COP8–MLSIM: Free Instruction Level Simulator tool for
Windows. For testing and debugging software instructions only (No I/O or interrupt support).
• COP8–EPU: Very Low cost COP8 Evaluation & Programming Unit. Windows based evaluation and
hardware-simulation tool, with COP8 device programmer
and erasable samples. Includes COP8-NSDEV, Driveway COP8 Demo, MetaLink Debugger, I/O cables and
power supply.
• COP8–EVAL-HIxx: Low cost target application evaluation and development board for COP8Sx Families, from
Hilton Inc. Real-time environment with integrated A/D,
Temp Sensor, and Peripheral I/O.
• COP8–EVAL-ICUxx: Very Low cost evaluation and design test board for COP8ACC and COP8SGx Families,
from ICU. Real-time environment with add-on A/D, D/A,
and EEPROM. Includes software routines and reference
designs.
• Manuals, Applications Notes, Literature: Available free
from our web site at: www.national.com/cop8.
COP8 Integrated Software/Hardware Design Development Kits
• COP8-EPU: Very Low cost Evaluation & Programming
Unit. Windows based development and hardwaresimulation tool for COPSx/xG families, with COP8 device
programmer and samples. Includes COP8-NSDEV,
Driveway COP8 Demo, MetaLink Debugger, cables and
power supply.
• COP8-DM: Moderate cost Debug Module from MetaLink.
A Windows based, real-time in-circuit emulation tool with
COP8 device programmer. Includes COP8-NSDEV,
DriveWay COP8 Demo, MetaLink Debugger, power supply, emulation cables and adapters.
COP8 Development Languages and Environments
• COP8-NSASM: Free COP8 Assembler v5 for Win32.
Macro assembler, linker, and librarian for COP8 software
www.national.com
48
15.0 Development Tools Support
•
IM-COP8: MetaLink iceMASTER ® . A full featured, realtime in-circuit emulator for COP8 devices. Includes
COP8-NSDEV, Driveway COP8 Demo, MetaLink Windows Debugger, and power supply. Package-specific
probes and surface mount adaptors are ordered separately.
COP8 Device Programmer Support
(Continued)
•
COP8-UTILS: Free set of COP8 assembly code examples, device drivers, and utilities to speed up code development.
•
COP8-MLSIM: Free Instruction Level Simulator tool for
Windows. For testing and debugging software instructions only (No I/O or interrupt support).
COP8 Real-Time Emulation Tools
•
COP8-DM: MetaLink Debug Module. A moderately
priced real-time in-circuit emulation tool, with COP8 device programmer. Includes MetaLink Debugger, power
supply, emulation cables and adapters.
•
MetaLink’s EPU and Debug Module include development
device programming capability for COP8 devices.
•
Third-party programmers and automatic handling equipment cover needs from engineering prototype and pilot
production, to full production environments.
•
Factory programming available for high-volume requirements.
15.3 TOOLS ORDERING NUMBERS FOR THE COP8SAx FAMILY DEVICES
Note: The following order numbers apply to the COP8 devices in this datasheet only.
Vendor
National
Tools
COP8-NSEVAL
Order Number
COP8-NSEVAL
Cost
Free
Notes
Web site download
COP8-NSASM
COP8-NSASM
Free
Included in EPU and DM. Web site download
COP8-MLSIM
COP8-MLSIM
Free
Included in EPU and DM. Web site download
COP8-NSDEV
COP8-NSDEV
VL
Included in EPU and DM. Order CD from website
COP8-EPU
COP8SA-EPU (-1 or -2)
VL
-1 = 110V, -2 = 220V; Included p/s, 40 pin DIP target
cable, manuals, software, 16/20/28/40 DIP OTP
programming socket; add DM target adapter or OTP
adapter (if needed)
COP8-DM
COP8SA-DM (10 MHz)
M
Included p/s, 20/28/40 pin DIP target cables, 28 SOIC
converter, manuals, software, 16/20/28/40 DIP/SO and
44 PLCC programming socket; add OTP adapter or
target adapter (if needed)
DM Target
Adapters
DM-COP8/20D-SO
VL
20 pin DIP to SO converter
DM-COP8/20D-16D
VL
20 pin DIP to 16 pin DIP converter
DM-COP8/44P
VL
44 pin PLCC target cable
DM-COP8/28D-28CSP
L
28 pin DIP to 28 pin CSP converter
DM-COP8/44P-44Q
L
44 pin PLCC to 44 QFP converter
Development
Devices
COP8SAx7
VL
4k Eraseable or OTP devices
OTP
Programming
Adapters
COP8SA-PGMA
L
For programming 16/20/28 SOIC and 44 PLCC on the
EPU
COP8-PGMA-44QFP
L
For programming 44 QFP on any programmer
COP8-PGMA-28CSP
L
For programming 28 CSP on any programmer
COP8-PGMA-28SO
VL
For programming 16/20/28 SOIC on any programmer
IM-COP8
Call MetaLink
49
www.national.com
15.0 Development Tools Support
MetaLink COP8-EPU
(Continued)
EPU-COP8SA
VL
1 = 110V, 2 = 220V; included p/s, 40 pin DIP target
cable, manuals, software, 16/20/28/40 DIP OTP
programming socket; add DM target adapter or OTP
adapter (if needed)
COP8-DM
DM4-COP8-SAx (10
MHz), plus PS-10, plus
DM-COP8/xxx (ie. 28D)
M
Included p/s (PS-10), target cable of choice (DIP or
PLCC; i.e. DM-COP8/28D), 16/20/28/40 DIP/SO and
44 PLCC programming sockets. Add OTP adapter (if
needed) and target adapter (if needed)
DM Target
Adapters
MHW-CNVxx (xx = 33, 34
etc.)
L
DM target converters for
16DIP/20SO/28SO/44QFP/28CSP; (i.e. MHW-CNV38
for 20 pin DIP to SO package converter)
OTP
Programming
Adapters
MHW-COP8-PGMA-DS
L
For programming 16/20/28 SOIC and 44 PLCC on the
EPU
MHW-COP8-PGMA-44QFP L
For programming 44 QFP on any programmer
MHW-COP8-PGMA-28CSP L
For programming 28 CSP on any programmer
IM-COP8
IM-COP8-AD-464 (-220)
(10 MHz maximum)
H
Base unit 10 MHz; -220 = 220V; add probe card
(required) and target adapter (if needed); included
software and manuals
IM Probe Card
PC-COP8SA28DW-AD-10
M
10 MHz 28 DIP probe card; 2.5V to 6.0V
PC-COP8SA40DW-AD-10
M
10 MHz 40 DIP probe card; 2.5V to 6.0V
MHW-SOICxx (xx = 16,
20, 28)
L
16 or 20 or 28 pin SOIC adapter for probe card
MHW-CSPxx (xx = 20,
28)
M
20 or 28 pin CSP adapter for probe card
MHW-CONV33
L
44 pin QFP adapter for 44 PLCC probe card
Included in EPU and DM
IM Probe Target
Adapters
ICU
COP8-EVAL-ICUxx Not available for this device
KKD
WCOP8-IDE
WCOP8-IDE
VL
IAR
EWCOP8-xx
See summary above
L-H
Included all software and manuals
Byte
Craft
COP8C
COP8C
M
Included all software and manuals
Aisys
DriveWay COP8
DriveWay COP8
L
Included all software and manuals
Contact vendors
L-H
For approved programmer listings and vendor
information go to our OTP Support page at:
www.national.com/cop8
OTP Programmers
Cost: Free; VL = < $100; L = $100 - $300; M = $300 - $1k; H = $1k - $3k; VH = $3k - $5k
www.national.com
50
15.0 Development Tools Support
(Continued)
15.4 WHERE TO GET TOOLS
Tools are ordered directly from the following vendors. Please go to the vendor’s web site for current listings of distributors.
Vendor
Aisys
Home Office
Electronic Sites
U.S.A.: Santa Clara, CA
www.aisysinc.com
1-408-327-8820
[email protected]
Other Main Offices
Distributors
fax: 1-408-327-8830
Byte Craft
U.S.A.
www.bytecraft.com
1-519-888-6911
info @bytecraft.com
Distributors
fax: 1-519-746-6751
IAR
Sweden: Uppsala
www.iar.se
U.S.A.: San Francisco
+46 18 16 78 00
[email protected]
1-415-765-5500
fax: +46 18 16 78 38
[email protected]
fax: 1-415-765-5503
[email protected]
U.K.: London
[email protected]
+44 171 924 33 34
fax: +44 171 924 53 41
Germany: Munich
+49 89 470 6022
fax: +49 89 470 956
ICU
Sweden: Polygonvaegen
www.icu.se
Switzeland: Hoehe
+46 8 630 11 20
[email protected]
+41 34 497 28 20
fax: +46 8 630 11 70
support @icu.ch
fax: +41 34 497 28 21
KKD
Denmark:
www.kkd.dk
MetaLink
U.S.A.: Chandler, AZ
www.metaice.com
Germany: Kirchseeon
1-800-638-2423
sales @metaice.com
80-91-5696-0
fax: 1-602-926-1198
support @metaice.com
fax: 80-91-2386
National
bbs: 1-602-962-0013
[email protected]
www.metalink.de
Distributors Worldwide
U.S.A.: Santa Clara, CA
www.national.com/cop8
Europe: +49 (0) 180 530 8585
1-800-272-9959
support @nsc.com
fax: +49 (0) 180 530 8586
fax: 1-800-737-7018
europe.support @nsc.com
Distributors Worldwide
15.5 CUSTOMER SUPPORT
Complete product information and technical support is available from National’s customer response centers, and from
our on-line COP8 customer support sites.
The following companies have approved COP8 programmers in a variety of configurations. Contact your local office
or distributor. You can link to their web sites and get the latest listing of approved programmers from National’s COP8
OTP Support page at: www.national.com/cop8.
Advantech; Advin; BP Microsystems; Data I/O; Hi-Lo Systems; ICE Technology; Lloyd Research; Logical Devices;
MQP; Needhams; Phyton; SMS; Stag Programmers; System General; Tribal Microsystems; Xeltek.
51
www.national.com
Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted
20-Lead Hermetic Dual-In-Line Package, EPROM (D)
Order Number COP8SAC720Q3
NS Package Number D20CQ
www.national.com
52
Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
Molded Small Outline Package (WM)
Order Number COP8SAA716M8 or COP8SAA716M9
NS Package Number M16B
Molded Dual-In-Line Package (N)
Order Number COP8SAA716N8 or COP8SAA716N9
NS Package Number N16A
53
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Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
Molded SO Wide Body Package (WM)
Order Number COP8SAA720M9, COP8SAB720M9, COP8SAC720M9
COP8SAA720M8, COP8SAB720M8 or COP8SAC720M8
NS Package Number M20B
Molded Dual-In-Line Package (N)
Order Number COP8SAA720N9, COP8SAB720N9, COP8SAC720N9,
COP8SAA720N8, COP8SAB720N8 or COP8SAC720N8
NS Package Number N20A
www.national.com
54
Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
28-Lead Hermetic Dual-In-Line Package EPROM (D)
Order Number COP8SAC728Q3
NS Package Number D28JQ
55
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Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
Molded SO Wide Body Package (WM)
Order Number COP8SAA728M9, COP8SAB728M9, COP8SAC728M9,
COP8SAA728M8, COP8SAB728M8 or COP8SAC728M8
NS Package Number M28B
Molded Dual-In-Line Package (N),
Order Number COP8SAA728N9, COP8SAB728N9, COP8SAC728N9,
COP8SAA728N8, COP8SAB728N8 or COP8SAC728N8
NS Package Number N28B
www.national.com
56
Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
28 Lead Chip Scale Package (SLB)
Order Number COP8SAA7SLB9, COP8SAB7SLB9 or COP8SAC7SLB9
NS Package Number SLB28A
57
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Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
40-Lead Hermetic DIP EPROM (D)
Order Number COP8SAC740Q3
NS Package Number D40KQ
Molded Dual-In-Line Package (N)
Order Number COP8SAC740N9 or COP8SAC740N8
NS Package Number N40A
www.national.com
58
Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
44-Lead EPROM Leaded Chip Carrier (EL)
Order Number COP8SAC744Q3
NS Package Number EL44C
59
www.national.com
COP8SA Family, 8-Bit CMOS ROM Based and One-Time Programmable (OTP) Microcontroller
with 1k to 4k Memory, Power On Reset, and Very Small Packaging
Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued)
Molded Dual-In-Line Package (N)
Order Number COP8SAC744V9 or COP8SAC744V8
NS Package Number V44A
LIFE SUPPORT POLICY
NATIONAL’S PRODUCTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR USE AS CRITICAL COMPONENTS IN LIFE SUPPORT
DEVICES OR SYSTEMS WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN APPROVAL OF THE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL
COUNSEL OF NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION. As used herein:
1. Life support devices or systems are devices or
systems which, (a) are intended for surgical implant
into the body, or (b) support or sustain life, and
whose failure to perform when properly used in
accordance with instructions for use provided in the
labeling, can be reasonably expected to result in a
significant injury to the user.
National Semiconductor
Corporation
Americas
Tel: 1-800-272-9959
Fax: 1-800-737-7018
Email: [email protected]
www.national.com
National Semiconductor
Europe
Fax: +49 (0) 1 80-530 85 86
Email: [email protected]
Deutsch Tel: +49 (0) 1 80-530 85 85
English Tel: +49 (0) 1 80-532 78 32
Français Tel: +49 (0) 1 80-532 93 58
Italiano Tel: +49 (0) 1 80-534 16 80
2. A critical component is any component of a life
support device or system whose failure to perform
can be reasonably expected to cause the failure of
the life support device or system, or to affect its
safety or effectiveness.
National Semiconductor
Asia Pacific Customer
Response Group
Tel: 65-2544466
Fax: 65-2504466
Email: [email protected]
National Semiconductor
Japan Ltd.
Tel: 81-3-5639-7560
Fax: 81-3-5639-7507
National does not assume any responsibility for use of any circuitry described, no circuit patent licenses are implied and National reserves the right at any time without notice to change said circuitry and specifications.