COP8TAB9/TAC9 8-Bit CMOS Flash Microcontroller with 2k Byte or 4k Byte Memory 1.0 General Description The COP8TAB9/TAC9 Flash microcontrollers are highly integrated COP8™ Feature core devices, with 2k or 4k Flash memory and advanced features. These single-chip CMOS devices are suited for applications requiring a full featured, in-system reprogrammable controller with moderate memory and low EMI. The same device is used for development, pre-production and volume production with a range of COP8 software and hardware development tools. A Masked ROM device (COP8TAB5/TAC5) has been developed and provides identical features except for the Boot ROM and Flash Memory and related features such as In- System Programming and reprogrammability. The ROM device is supported, in emulation, by this device. The lack of the Boot ROM and Flash Memory in the ROM device, prompts us to caution the user, utilizing the COP8TAx9 Flash based devices during development for applications to be produced using the COP8TAx5 ROM devices, to ensure that code contains NO calls to Boot ROM functions prior to submission for ROM generation. Instances of the JSRB instruction in ROM based devices will be executed as a JSR instruction to a location in the first 256 bytes of Program Memory. Device included in this datasheet: Device Flash Program Memory (kbytes) RAM (bytes) COP8TAB9 2 128 COP8TAC9 4 128 I/O Pins 16, 24 or 40 2.0 Features KEY FEATURES n 2k bytes or 4k bytes Flash Program Memory, with Security Feature, organized in 512 byte pages that can be erased or written individually n 128 bytes volatile RAM n 2.25V – 2.75V In-System Programmability of Flash n High endurance - 20k Erase/Write Cycles n Superior Data Retention - 100 years n Crystal Oscillator at 15 MHz or Integrated RC Oscillator at 10MHz n Clock Prescaler For Adjusting Power Dissipation to Processing Requirements n Power-On Reset n HALT/IDLE Power Save Modes n One 16-bit timer: — Processor Independent PWM mode — External Event counter mode — Input Capture mode n High Current I/Os — 10 mA @ 0.4V OTHER FEATURES n Single supply operation: — 2.25V–2.75V (−40˚C to +85˚C) n Quiet Design (low radiated emissions) n Multi-Input Wake-Up with optional interrupts n MICROWIRE/PLUS (Serial Peripheral Interface Compatible) Packages 20 and 28 SOIC WIDE, 44 LLP Temperature −40˚C to +85˚C n ACCESS.Bus Synchronous Serial Interface (compatible with I2C™ and SMBus™) — Master Mode and Slave Mode — Full Master Mode Capability — Bus Speed Up To 400KBits/Sec — Low Power Mode With Wake-Up Detection — Optional 1.8V ACCESS.Bus Compatibility n Eight multi-source vectored interrupts servicing: — External Interrupt — Idle Timer T0 — One Timers (with 2 interrupts) — MICROWIRE/PLUS Serial peripheral interface — ACCESS.Bus/I2C/SMBus compatible Synchronous Serial Interface — Multi-Input Wake-Up — Software Trap n Idle Timer with programmable interrupt interval n 8-bit Stack Pointer SP (stack in RAM) n Two 8-bit Register Indirect Data Memory Pointers n True bit manipulation n WATCHDOG and Clock Monitor logic n Software selectable I/O options — TRI-STATE Output/High Impedance Input — Push-Pull Output — Weak Pull Up Input n Schmitt trigger inputs on I/O ports n Temperature range: –40˚C to +85˚C n Packaging: 20 and 28 SOIC and 44 LLP COP8 ® is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation. I2C ® is a registered trademark of Phillips Corporation. SMBus is a trademark of Intel Corporation. © 2005 National Semiconductor Corporation DS200475 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 8-Bit CMOS Flash Based Microcontroller with 2k Byte or 4k Byte Memory February 2005 COP8TAB9/TAC9 3.0 Block Diagram 20047501 4.0 Ordering Information Part Numbering Scheme COP8 TA C 9 H LQ 8 Family and Feature Set Indicator Program Memory Size Program Memory Type No. Of Pins Package Type Temperature B = 2k C = 4k 5 = Masked ROM C = 20 Pin 9 = Flash E = 28 Pin H = 44 Pin 8 = -40 to +85˚C Flash and ROM devices are not 100% identical. The execution of the JSRB instruction is an example of the potential differences between the devices. For this reason, the user is strongly advised to obtain a masked ROM prototype devices before committing to production quantities. This will allow the user to ensure there are no unexpected differences between Flash an ROM devices within the application. Note: The user, utilizing the COP8TAx9 Flash based devices during development for applications to be produced using the COP8TAx5 ROM devices, is cautioned to ensure that code contains NO calls to Boot ROM functions prior to submission for ROM generation. Instances of the JSRB instruction in ROM based devices will be executed as a JSR instruction to a location in the first 256 bytes of Program Memory. www.national.com LQ = LLP MW = SOIC WIDE 2 3 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 Table of Contents 1.0 General Description ..................................................................................................................................... 1 2.0 Features ....................................................................................................................................................... 1 3.0 Block Diagram .............................................................................................................................................. 2 4.0 Ordering Information .................................................................................................................................... 2 5.0 Connection Diagrams ................................................................................................................................... 6 6.0 Architectural Overview ................................................................................................................................. 8 6.1 EMI REDUCTION ...................................................................................................................................... 8 6.2 IN-SYSTEM PROGRAMMING .................................................................................................................. 8 6.3 TRUE IN-SYSTEM EMULATION .............................................................................................................. 8 6.4 ARCHITECTURE ..................................................................................................................................... 8 6.5 INSTRUCTION SET ................................................................................................................................. 8 6.5.1 Key Instruction Set Features ............................................................................................................... 8 6.5.2 Single Byte/Single Cycle Code Execution ......................................................................................... 8 6.5.3 Many Single-Byte, Multi-Function Instructions .................................................................................... 8 6.5.4 Bit-Level Control .................................................................................................................................. 8 6.5.5 Register Set ......................................................................................................................................... 9 6.6 PACKAGING/PIN EFFICIENCY ................................................................................................................ 9 7.0 Absolute Maximum Ratings ....................................................................................................................... 10 8.0 Electrical Characteristics ............................................................................................................................ 10 9.0 Pin Descriptions ......................................................................................................................................... 13 9.1 EMULATION CONNECTION ................................................................................................................... 15 10.0 Functional Description .............................................................................................................................. 15 10.1 CPU REGISTERS ................................................................................................................................. 15 10.2 PROGRAM MEMORY ........................................................................................................................... 16 10.3 DATA MEMORY .................................................................................................................................... 16 10.4 OPTION REGISTER ............................................................................................................................. 16 10.5 SECURITY ............................................................................................................................................ 17 10.6 RESET ................................................................................................................................................... 17 10.6.1 External Reset ................................................................................................................................. 18 10.6.2 On-Chip Power-On Reset ................................................................................................................ 18 10.7 OSCILLATOR CIRCUITS ...................................................................................................................... 18 10.7.1 R/C Oscillator ................................................................................................................................... 19 10.7.2 Crystal Oscillator .............................................................................................................................. 20 10.7.3 External Oscillator ............................................................................................................................ 20 10.7.4 Clock Prescaler ................................................................................................................................ 20 10.8 CONTROL REGISTERS ....................................................................................................................... 20 10.8.1 CNTRL Register (Address X'00EE) ................................................................................................. 20 10.8.2 PSW Register (Address X'00EF) ..................................................................................................... 20 10.8.3 ICNTRL Register (Address X'00E8) ................................................................................................ 21 10.8.4 ITMR Register (Address X'00CF) .................................................................................................... 21 11.0 In-System Programming ........................................................................................................................... 21 11.1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................... 21 11.2 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION .............................................................................................................. 21 11.3 REGISTERS .......................................................................................................................................... 21 11.3.1 ISP Address Registers ..................................................................................................................... 21 11.3.2 ISP Read Data Register .................................................................................................................. 22 11.3.3 ISP Write Data Register ................................................................................................................... 22 11.3.4 ISP Write Timing Register ................................................................................................................ 22 11.4 MANEUVERING BACK AND FORTH BETWEEN FLASH MEMORY AND BOOT ROM ..................... 23 11.5 FORCED EXECUTION FROM BOOT ROM ......................................................................................... 23 11.6 RETURN TO FLASH MEMORY WITHOUT HARDWARE RESET ....................................................... 23 11.7 MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP ........................................................................................................................ 23 12.0 Timers ....................................................................................................................................................... 25 12.1 TIMER T0 (IDLE TIMER) ...................................................................................................................... 25 12.1.1 ITMR Register .................................................................................................................................. 25 12.2 TIMER T1 .............................................................................................................................................. 26 12.3 MODE 1. PROCESSOR INDEPENDENT PWM MODE ....................................................................... 26 12.4 MODE 2. EXTERNAL EVENT COUNTER MODE ................................................................................ 26 12.5 MODE 3. INPUT CAPTURE MODE ..................................................................................................... 27 12.6 TIMER CONTROL FLAGS .................................................................................................................... 28 13.0 Power Save Modes .................................................................................................................................. 28 13.1 HALT MODE .......................................................................................................................................... 28 COP8TAB9/TAC9 Table of Contents (Continued) 13.2 IDLE MODE ........................................................................................................................................... 13.3 MULTI-INPUT WAKE-UP ...................................................................................................................... 14.0 Interrupts .................................................................................................................................................. 14.1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................... 14.2 MASKABLE INTERRUPTS ................................................................................................................... 14.3 VIS INSTRUCTION ............................................................................................................................... 14.3.1 VIS Execution .................................................................................................................................. 14.4 NON-MASKABLE INTERRUPT ............................................................................................................ 14.4.1 Pending Flag .................................................................................................................................... 14.4.2 Software Trap .................................................................................................................................. 14.4.2.1 Programming Example: External Interrupt ................................................................................. 14.5 PORT C AND PORT L INTERRUPTS .................................................................................................. 14.6 INTERRUPT SUMMARY ....................................................................................................................... 15.0 WATCHDOG/Clock Monitor ..................................................................................................................... 15.1 CLOCK MONITOR ................................................................................................................................ 15.2 WATCHDOG/CLOCK MONITOR OPERATION .................................................................................... 15.3 WATCHDOG AND CLOCK MONITOR SUMMARY .............................................................................. 15.4 DETECTION OF ILLEGAL CONDITIONS ............................................................................................ 16.0 MICROWIRE/PLUS .................................................................................................................................. 16.1 MICROWIRE/PLUS OPERATION ......................................................................................................... 16.2 MICROWIRE/PLUS MASTER MODE OPERATION ............................................................................. 16.3 MICROWIRE/PLUS SLAVE MODE OPERATION ................................................................................ 16.4 ALTERNATE SK PHASE OPERATION AND SK IDLE POLARITY ...................................................... 17.0 ACCESS.Bus Interface ............................................................................................................................ 17.1 DATA TRANSACTIONS ........................................................................................................................ 17.1.1 Start and Stop .................................................................................................................................. 17.1.2 Acknowledge Cycle .......................................................................................................................... 17.1.3 Addressing Transfer Formats .......................................................................................................... 17.2 BUS ARBITRATION .............................................................................................................................. 17.3 POWER SAVE MODES ........................................................................................................................ 17.4 SDA AND SCL DRIVER CONFIGURATION ......................................................................................... 17.5 ACB SERIAL DATA REGISTER (ACBSDA) .......................................................................................... 17.6 ACB STATUS REGISTER (ACBST) ..................................................................................................... 17.7 ACB CONTROL STATUS REGISTER (ACBCST) ................................................................................ 17.8 ACB CONTROL 1 REGISTER (ACBCTL1) .......................................................................................... 17.9 ACB CONTROL REGISTER 2 (ACBCTL2) .......................................................................................... 17.10 ACB OWN ADDRESS REGISTER (ACBADDR) ................................................................................ 18.0 Memory Map ............................................................................................................................................ 19.0 Instruction Set .......................................................................................................................................... 19.1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................... 19.2 INSTRUCTION FEATURES .................................................................................................................. 19.3 ADDRESSING MODES ......................................................................................................................... 19.3.1 Operand Addressing Modes ............................................................................................................ 19.3.2 Tranfer-of-Control Addressing Modes .............................................................................................. 19.4 INSTRUCTION TYPES ......................................................................................................................... 19.4.1 Arithmetic Instructions ...................................................................................................................... 19.4.2 Transfer-of-Control Instructions ....................................................................................................... 19.4.3 Load and Exchange Instructions ..................................................................................................... 19.4.4 Logical Instructions .......................................................................................................................... 19.4.5 Accumulator Bit Manipulation Instructions ....................................................................................... 19.4.6 Stack Control Instructions ................................................................................................................ 19.4.7 Memory Bit Manipulation Instructions ............................................................................................. 19.4.8 Conditional Instructions ................................................................................................................... 19.4.9 No-Operation Instruction .................................................................................................................. 19.5 REGISTER AND SYMBOL DEFINITION .............................................................................................. 19.6 INSTRUCTION SET SUMMARY .......................................................................................................... 19.7 INSTRUCTION EXECUTION TIME ...................................................................................................... 20.0 Development Support ............................................................................................................................. 20.1 TOOLS ORDERING NUMBERS FOR THE COP8TA 2.5V FLASH FAMILY DEVICES ....................... 20.2 COP8 TOOLS OVERVIEW ................................................................................................................... 20.3 WHERE TO GET TOOLS ..................................................................................................................... www.national.com 4 29 30 31 31 32 33 34 35 35 35 36 37 37 37 38 38 38 39 39 39 40 40 40 42 42 43 43 43 43 43 43 44 44 44 44 45 45 45 46 46 46 46 47 48 48 48 48 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 49 50 51 54 54 55 56 (Continued) 21.0 Revision History ....................................................................................................................................... 57 22.0 Physical Dimensions ................................................................................................................................ 58 5 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 Table of Contents COP8TAB9/TAC9 5.0 Connection Diagrams 20047502 Top View 44 Pin LLP Package See NS Package Number LQA44A 20047505 Top View 20 Pin Plastic SOIC WIDE Package See NS Package Number M20B 20047504 Top View 28 Pin Plastic SOIC WIDE Package See NS Package Number M28B www.national.com 6 In System Emulation Mode 44-Pin LLPa 28-Pin SOICa 20-Pin SOICa MIWU/SDA 12 18 12 MIWU/SCL 13 19 13 I/O MIWU 14 20 14 L3 I/O MIWU 15 21 15 L4 I/O MIWU 20 22 16 L5 I/O MIWU 21 23 17 L6 I/O MIWU 22 24 18 L7 I/O MIWU 23 25 19 G0 I/O INT 2 12 10 Port Type Alt. Function L0 I/O L1 I/O L2 Input a G1 I/O WDOUT POUT 1 11 9 G2 I/O T1B Output 44 10 8 G3 I/O T1A Clock 43 9 7 G4 I/O SO 32 2 20 G5 I/O SK 33 3 1 G6 I SI 34 4 2 G7 I CKO 35 5 3 C0 I/O MIWU 37 C1 I/O MIWU 38 C2 I/O MIWU 39 C3 I/O MIWU 40 C4 I/O MIWU 16 C5 I/O MIWU 17 C6 I/O MIWU 18 C7 I/O MIWU 19 F0 I/O 4 14 F1 I/O 5 15 F2 I/O 6 16 F3 I/O 7 17 F4 I/O 8 F5 I/O 9 F6 I/O 10 F7 I/O 11 J0 I/O 24 26 J1 I/O 25 27 J2 I/O 26 28 J3 I/O 27 1 J4 I/O 28 J5 I/O 29 J6 I/O 30 J7 I/O 31 VCC VCC 42 8 6 GND GND 41 7 5 CKI I RESET I RESET 36 6 4 3 13 11 a. G1 operation as WDOUT is controlled by Option Register, bit 2. 7 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 Pinouts for 44-, 20- and 28-Pin Packages COP8TAB9/TAC9 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 the 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. 6.0 Architectural Overview 6.1 EMI REDUCTION The COP8TAB9/TAC9 devices incorporate 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. Code efficiency is important because it enables designers to pack more on-chip functionality into less program memory space (ROM, OTP or Flash). 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. 6.2 IN-SYSTEM PROGRAMMING The devices include a program in a boot ROM that provides the capability, through the MICROWIRE/PLUS serial interface, to erase, program and read the contents of the Flash memory. Additional routines are included in the boot ROM, which can be called by the user program, to enable the user to customize in-system software update capability if MICROWIRE/ PLUS is not desired. The contents of the boot ROM have been defined by National. Execution of code from the boot ROM is dependent on the state of the FLEX bit in the Option Register on exit from RESET. If the FLEX bit is a zero, the Flash Memory is assumed to be empty and execution from the boot ROM begins. 6.5.1 Key Instruction Set Features 6.3 TRUE IN-SYSTEM EMULATION 6.5.3 Many Single-Byte, Multi-Function Instructions The COP8 instruction set utilizes many single-byte, multifunction instructions. This enables a single instruction to accomplish multiple functions, such as DRSZ, DCOR, JID, LD (Load) and X (Exchange) instructions with postincrementing 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 (simplifying “FOR NEXT” or other loop structures in higher level languages). The COP8 family incorporates a unique combination of instruction set features, which provide designers with optimum code efficiency and program memory utilization. 6.5.2 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. On-chip emulation capability has been added which allows the user to perform true in-system emulation using final production boards and devices. This simplifies testing and evaluation of software in real environmental conditions. The user, merely by providing for a standard connector which can be bypassed by jumpers on the final application board, can provide for software and hardware debugging using actual production units. 6.4 ARCHITECTURE The COP8 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 constant data tables need to be contained in non-volatile memory, 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 COP8 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. 6.5.4 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. 6.5 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 www.national.com 8 troller users try to avoid using large packages to get the I/O needed. Large packages take valuable board space and increase device cost, two trade-offs that microcontroller designs can ill afford. (Continued) 6.5.5 Register Set Three memory-mapped pointers handle register indirect addressing and software stack pointer functions. The memory data pointers allow the option of post-incrementing or postdecrementing with the data movement instructions (LOAD/ EXCHANGE). Fifteen (15) memory-mapped registers allow designers to optimize the precise implementation of certain specific instructions. The COP8 family offers a wide range of packages to mnimize the need for unused pins. 6.6 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. Microcon- 9 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 6.0 Architectural Overview COP8TAB9/TAC9 7.0 Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note Total Current into VCC Pin (Source) 1) Total Current out of GND Pin (Sink) 60 mA Storage Temperature Range −65˚C to +140˚C 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 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. 3.5V −0.3V to VCC +0.3V ESD Protection Level (Human Body Model) (Machine Model) 80 mA 2 kV 200V 8.0 Electrical Characteristics DC Electrical Characteristics −40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified. Datasheet min/max specification limits are guaranteed by design, test, or statistical analysis. Parameter Conditions Operating Voltage Min Typ Max Units 2.25 2.75 V 20 µs 10 ms Power Supply Rise Time from 0.0V (On-Chip Power-On Reset Selected) Power Supply Ripple (Note 3) Peak-to-Peak 0.1 VCC V Supply Current (Note 4) CKI = 15 MHz VCC = 2.75V, tC = 0.65µs 6 mA CKI = 5MHz VCC = 2.75V, tC = 2.0 µs 3 mA HALT Current (Note 5) — WATCHDOG Disabled VCC = 2.75V, CKI = 0 MHz TA=25˚C 2 TA=85˚C 15 µA 100 µA IDLE Current (Note 4) CKI = 15 MHz VCC = 2.75V, tC = 0.65µs 1 mA CKI = 5MHz VCC = 2.75V, tC = 2.0 µs 0.8 mA Input Levels (VIH, VIL) Logic High L0 (SDA), L1 (SCL) and L2 1.8V compatibility option selected and ACCESS.Bus is enabled All Other Inputs 1.4 V V 0.8 VCC Logic Low Value of the Internal Bias Resistor 0.3 1.0 0.25 VCC V 2.5 MΩ for the Crystal/Resonator Oscillator Hi-Z Input Leakage (same as TRI-STATE output) VCC = 2.75V −0.1 +0.1 µA Input Pullup Current VCC = 2.75V, VIN = 0V −15 −120 µA Port Input Hysteresis 0.1 V Output Current Levels Source (Weak Pull-Up) VCC = 2.25V, VOH = 1.7V −10 Source (Push-Pull Mode) VCC = 2.25V, VOH = 1.7V −10 mA Sink (Push-Pull Mode) VCC = 2.25V, VOL = 0.4V 10 mA −80 µA Allowable Sink & Source Current per Pin 16 mA Maximum Input Current without Latchup ± 200 mA RAM Retention Voltage, Vr TBD V 8.5 pF Input Capacitance Flash Endurance Flash Data Retention www.national.com 20K 25˚C Erase/Write Cycles 100 10 years (Continued) AC Electrical Characteristics −40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified. Datasheet min/max specification limits are guaranteed by design, test, or statistical analysis. Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Units 15 MHz Oscillator Frequency Crystal/Resonator, External 2.25V ≤ VCC ≤ 2.75V Internal R/C Oscillator 2.25V ≤ VCC ≤ 2.75V R/C Oscillator Frequency Variation 2.25V ≤ VCC ≤ 2.75V 9.0 MHz ± 30 % DC µs Instruction Cycle Time (tC) Crystal/Resonator, External 2.25V ≤ VCC ≤ 2.75V Internal R/C Oscillator 2.25V ≤ VCC ≤ 2.75V External CKI Clock Duty Cycle fr = Max 0.65 1.1 45 µs 55 % Rise Time fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock 12 ns Fall Time fr = 10 MHz Ext Clock 8 ns MICROWIRE Setup Time (tUWS) Figure 1 20 MICROWIRE Hold Time (tUWH) Figure 1 20 MICROWIRE Output Propagation Delay (tUPD) Figure 1 ns ns 150 ns Master Mode 750 kHz Slave Mode 1.5 MHz MICROWIRE Maximum Shift Clock Input Pulse Width Interrupt Input High Time (Note 2) 1 tC Interrupt Input Low Time 1 tC Timer Input High Time 1 tC Timer Input Low Time 1 tC Reset Pulse Width 0.5 µs Mass Erase Time 200 ms Page Erase Time 20 ms ACCESS.Bus Input signals (Note 6) Bus Free Time Between Stop and Start Condition (tBUFi) Figure 2 tSCLhigho SCL Setup Time (tCSTOsi) Figure 2 Before Stop Condition 8 mclk SCL Hold Time (tCSTRhi) Figure 2 After Start Condition 8 mclk SCL Setup Time (tCSTRsi) Figure 3 Before Start Condition 8 mclk Data High Setup Time (tDHCsi) Figure 3 Before SCL Rising Edge (RE) 2 mclk Data Low Setup Time (tDLCsi) Figure 2 Before SCL RE 2 mclk SCL Low Time (tSCLlowi) Figure 4 After SCL Falling Edge (FE) 12 mclk SCL High Time (tSCLhighi) Figure 4 After SCL RE 12 mclk SDA Hold Time (tSDAhi) Figure 4 After SCL FE 0 ns SDA Setup Time (tSDAsi) Figure 4 Before SCL RE 2 mclk ACCESS.Bus Output Signals (Note 6) Bus Free Time Between Stop and Start Condition (tBUFo) Figure 2 tSCLhigho SCL Setup Time (tCSTOso) Figure 2 Before Stop Condition tSCLhigho SCL Hold Time (tCSTRho) Figure 3 After Start Condition tSCLhigho SCL Setup Time (tCSTRso) Figure 3 Before Start Condition tSCLhigho Data High Setup Time (tDHCso) Figure 3 Before SCL RE tSCLhigho Data Low Setup Time (tDLCso) Figure 2 Before SCL RE tSCLhigho SCL Low Time (tSCLlowo) Figure 4 After SCL FE 16 mclk SCL High Time (tSCLhigho) Figure 4 After SCL RE 16 mclk 11 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 8.0 Electrical Characteristics COP8TAB9/TAC9 8.0 Electrical Characteristics (Continued) AC Electrical Characteristics −40˚C ≤ TA ≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified. (Continued) Datasheet min/max specification limits are guaranteed by design, test, or statistical analysis. Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Units SDA Hold Time (tSDAho) Figure 4 After SCL FE 7 mclk SDA Valid Time (tSDAso) Figure 4 Before SCL RE 7 mclk 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, 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. 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: The ACCESS.Bus interface of the COP8TAB9/TAC9 device implements and meets the timings necessary for interface to the I2C and SMBus protocols at logic levels. The bus drivers are designed with open-drain outputs, as required for proper bidirectional operation. The device will not meet the AC timing and current/voltage drive requirements of the full bus specifications. 20047582 FIGURE 1. MICROWIRE/PLUS Timing 20047583 FIGURE 2. ACB Start and Stop Condition Timing www.national.com 12 COP8TAB9/TAC9 8.0 Electrical Characteristics (Continued) 20047584 FIGURE 3. ACB Start Condition Timing 20047585 FIGURE 4. ACB Data Timing speakers. This flexibility helps to ensure a cleaner design, with fewer external components and lower costs. Below is the general description of all available pins. VCC and GND are the power supply pins. Users of the LLP package are cautioned to be aware that the central metal area and the pin 1 index mark on the bottom of the package may be internally connected to GND. See figure below: 9.0 Pin Descriptions The COP8TAB9/TAC9 I/O structure enables designers to reconfigure the microcontroller’s I/O functions with a single instruction. Each individual I/O pin can be independently configured as output pin low, output high, input with high impedance or input with 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 open. 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 pull-up will pull the input line back to logic high. This eliminates the need for external pull-up resistors. The high current options are available for driving LEDs, motors and 13 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 9.0 Pin Descriptions C2 Multi-Input Wake-Up (Continued) C1 Multi-Input Wake-Up C0 Multi-Input Wake-Up 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 G pins have Schmitt Triggers on their inputs. Pin G1 serves as the dedicated WATCHDOG output with weak pull-up if the WATCHDOG feature is selected by the Option register. The pin is a general purpose I/O, if WATCHDOG feature is 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. 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 zeros. 20047520 FIGURE 5. LLP Package Bottom View CKI is the clock input. This pin can be connected (in conjunction with CKO) to an external crystal circuit to form a crystal oscillator, to an external resistor for RC oscillator operation or to an external clock. See Oscillator Description section. RESET is the master reset input. See Reset description section. The device contains up to five bidirectional 8-bit I/O ports (C, F, G, J and L), where each individual bit may be independently configured as an input (Schmitt trigger inputs on all ports), 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 three associated 8-bit memory mapped registers, the CONFIGURATION register, the output DATA register and the Pin input register. (See the memory map for the various addresses associated with the I/O ports.) Figure 6 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 Register DATA Register 0 0 0 1 Input with Weak Pull-Up 1 0 Push-Pull Zero Output 1 1 Push-Pull One Output 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. Config. Reg. CLKDLY HALT G6 Alternate SK IDLE Port G has the following alternate features: G7 CKO Oscillator dedicated output or general purpose input. G6 G5 G4 G3 G2 G1 SI (MICROWIRE/PLUS Serial Data Input) SK (MICROWIRE/PLUS Serial Clock) SO (MICROWIRE/PLUS Serial Data Output) T1A (Timer T1 I/O) T1B (Timer T1 Capture Input) WDOUT WATCHDOG and/or Clock Monitor if WATCHDOG enabled, otherwise it is a general purpose I/O G0 INTR (External Interrupt Input) Port Set-Up Hi-Z Input (TRI-STATE Output) G0 through G3 are also used for In-System Emulation. Port J is an 8-bit I/O port. All J pins have Schmitt triggers on the inputs. At RESET, Port J outputs are enabled and are forced to the High state. Port L is an 8-bit I/O port. All L-pins have Schmitt triggers on the inputs. Pins L0 (SDA), L1 (SCL) and L2 inputs provide compatibility with 1.8V logic levels when LVCMP (Option Register bit 7) is set and the ACCESS.Bus is enabled. Port L supports the Multi-Input Wake-Up feature on all eight pins. Port L has the following alternate pin functions: L7 Multi-Input Wake-Up L6 Multi-Input Wake-Up Port C supports the Multi-Input Wake-Up feature on all eight pins. Port C is not available on 20 and 28 pin packages. When using these packages, the user should ensure that Port C Multi-Input Wake-Up is disabled by clearing the CWKEN Register to prevent spurious interrupts and wake-up events. Port C has the following alternate pin functions: C7 Multi-Input Wake-Up C6 Multi-Input Wake-Up C5 Multi-Input Wake-Up C4 Multi-Input Wake-Up C3 Multi-Input Wake-Up www.national.com Data Reg. G7 14 9.1 EMULATION CONNECTION Connection to the emulation system is made via a 2 x 7 connector which interrupts the continuity of the RESET, G0, G1, G2 and G3 signals between the COP8 device and the rest of the target system (as shown in Figure 9). This connector can be designed into the production pc board and can be replaced by jumpers or signal traces when emulation is no longer necessary. The emulator will replicate all functions of G0 - G3 and RESET. For proper operation, no connection should be made on the device side of the emulator connector. (Continued) L5 Multi-Input Wake-Up L4 Multi-Input Wake-Up L3 Multi-Input Wake-Up L2 Multi-Input Wake-Up (optional 1.8V compatible input) L1 Multi-Input Wake-Up or ACCESS.Bus Serial Clock (optional 1.8V compatible input) L0 Multi-Input Wake-Up or ACCESS.Bus Serial Data (optional 1.8V compatible input) 20047560 FIGURE 6. I/O Port Configurations 20047509 FIGURE 9. Emulation Connection 10.0 Functional Description The architecture of the device is a modified Harvard architecture. With the Harvard architecture, the program memory (Flash) is separate from the data store memory (RAM). Both Program Memory and Data Memory have their own separate addressing space with separate address buses. The architecture, though based on the Harvard architecture, permits transfer of data from Flash Memory to RAM. 20047561 FIGURE 7. I/O Port Configurations — Output Mode 10.1 CPU REGISTERS The CPU can do an 8-bit addition, subtraction, logical or shift operation in one instruction (tC) cycle time. 20047562 FIGURE 8. I/O Port Configurations — Input Mode 15 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 9.0 Pin Descriptions COP8TAB9/TAC9 10.0 Functional Description 10.2 PROGRAM MEMORY The program memory consists of 4096 bytes of Flash Memory. 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 00FF Hex. The program memory reads 00 Hex in the erased state. Program execution starts at location 0 after RESET. (Continued) There are five 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. If a Return instruction is executed when the SP contains 6F (hex), instruction execution will continue from Program Memory location 7FFF (hex). If location 7FFF is accessed by an instruction fetch, the Flash Memory will return a value of 00. This is the opcode for the INTR instruction and will cause a Software Trap. For the purpose of erasing and rewriting the Flash Memory, it is organized in pages of 512 bytes as shown in Table 1. 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 06F Hex. The SP is decremented as items are pushed onto the stack. SP points to the next available location on the stack. All the CPU registers are memory mapped with the exception of the Accumulator (A) and the Program Counter (PC). TABLE 1. Available Memory Address Ranges Device Program Memory Size (Flash)(Bytes) COP8TAB9 2048 COP8TAC9 4096 Flash Memory Page Size (Bytes) 512 Option Register Address (Hex) 0x07FF (hex) 0x0FFF (hex) Data Memory Size (RAM) (Bytes) RAM Segments Available Maximum RAM Address (HEX) 128 Segment 0 06F 10.3 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, ACCESS.Bus Interface and the various registers and counters associated with the timer, T1. Data memory is addressed directly by the instruction or indirectly by the B, X and SP pointers. The format of the Option register is as follows: The data memory consists of 128 bytes of RAM. Sixteen bytes of RAM are mapped as “registers” at addresses 0F0 to 0FF 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 being available for general usage. 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. Note: RAM contents are undefined upon power-up. Bit 6 Bit 6 CLKSEL2 Bit 7 Bit 5 =1 Bit 5 Bit 4 SEC CLKSEL1 Bit 3 Bit 2 CLKSEL0 WATCH DOG Bit 1 Bit 0 HALT FLEX When this bit is set and the ACCESS.Bus is enabled, inputs L0, L1 and L2, are compatible with 1.8V logic levels. This bit defines the most significant bit of the oscillator selection. (See Section 10.7 OSCILLATOR CIRCUITS) for more information on Oscillator selection.) Security enabled. Flash Memory read and write are not allowed except in User ISP/Virtual E2 commands. Mass Erase is allowed. =0 Security disabled. Flash Memory read and write are allowed. Bits 4, 3 These bits define the two least significant bits of the oscillator selection. Bit 2 =1 WATCHDOG feature disabled. G1 is a general purpose I/O. =0 WATCHDOG feature enabled. G1 pin is WATCHDOG output with weak pullup. Bit 1 =1 HALT mode disabled. =0 HALT mode enabled. 10.4 OPTION REGISTER The Option register, located at address 0x0FFF (hex) or 0x07FF (hex) in the Flash Program Memory, is used to configure the user selectable security, WATCHDOG, HALT and Oscillator selection options. The register can be programmed only in external Flash Memory programming or ISP Programming modes. Therefore, the register must be programmed at the same time as the program memory. The contents of the Option register shipped from the factory read 00 Hex. www.national.com Bit 7 LVCMP 16 1, however the MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP routines require the address FFFF (hex) to be used to read the Option Register when the Flash Memory is secured. (Continued) Bit 0 =1 Execution following RESET will be from Flash Memory. =0 Flash Memory is erased. Execution following RESET will be from Boot ROM with the MICROWIRE/ PLUS ISP routines. The entire Option Register must be programmed at one time and cannot be rewritten without first erasing the entire last page of Flash Memory. 10.6 RESET The device is initialized when the RESET pin is pulled low or the On-chip Power-On Reset is activated. The COP8 assembler defines a special ROM section type, CONF, into which the Option Register data may be coded. The Option Register is programmed automatically by programmers that are certified by National. The user needs to ensure that the FLEX bit will be set when the device is programmed. The following examples illustrate the declaration of the Option Register. Syntax: 20047521 [label:].sect .db config, conf value ;1 byte, ;configures ;options .endsect Example: The following sets a value in the Option Register and User Identification for a COP8TAC9HLQ7. The Option Register bit values shown select options: Security disabled, WATCHDOG enabled HALT mode enabled and execution will commence from Flash Memory. .chip 8TAC .sect option, conf .db 0x01 ;wd, halt, flex .endsect ... .end start Note: All programmers certified for programming this family of devices will support programming of the Option Register. Please contact National or your device programmer supplier for more information. FIGURE 10. Reset Logic The following occurs upon initialization: Port F: TRI-STATE (High Impedance Input) Port G: TRI-STATE (High Impedance Input). Exceptions: If Watchdog is enabled, then G1 is Watchdog output. G0 and G2 have their weak pull-up enabled during RESET. Port J: Output High Port L: TRI-STATE (High Impedance Input) PC: CLEARED to 0000 PSW, CNTRL and ICNTRL registers: CLEARED SIOR: UNAFFECTED after RESET with power already applied RANDOM after RESET at power-on ITMR, CLKPS: Cleared Accumulator and Timer 1: RANDOM after RESET CWKEN, CWKEDG, LWKEN, LWKEDG: CLEARED CWKPND, LWKPND: RANDOM SP (Stack Pointer): Initialized to RAM address 06F Hex 10.5 SECURITY The device has a security feature which, when enabled, prevents external reading of the Flash program memory. The security bit in the Option Register determines, whether security is enabled or disabled. If the security feature is disabled, the contents of the internal Flash Memory may be read by external programmers or by the built in MICROWIRE/PLUS serial interface ISP. Security must be enforced by the user when the contents of the Flash Memory are accessed via the user ISP. If the security feature is enabled, then any attempt to externally read the contents of the Flash Memory will result in the value FF (hex) being read from all program locations (except the Option Register). In addition, with the security feature enabled, the write operation to the Flash program memory and Option Register is inhibited. Page Erases are also inhibited when the security feature is enabled. The Option Register is readable regardless of the state of the security bit by accessing location FFFF (hex). Mass Erase Operations are possible regardless of the state of the security bit. The security bit can be erased only by a Mass Erase of the entire contents of the Flash unless Flash operation is under the control of User ISP functions. Note: The actual memory address of the Option Register is dependent on the Flash Memory size and is defined in Table 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 ISP CONTROL: ISPADLO: CLEARED ISPADHI: CLEARED PGMTIM: PRESET TO VALUE FOR 10 MHz CKI WATCHDOG (if enabled): 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 T0 clock cycles. The Clock Monitor bit being initialized high will cause a Clock 17 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 10.0 Functional Description COP8TAB9/TAC9 10.0 Functional Description tC. After the underflow, the logic is designed such that the Power On Reset circuit will generate no additional internal resets as long as VCC remains above 2.0V. (Continued) Monitor error following reset if the clock has not reached the minimum specified frequency at the termination of reset. A Clock Monitor error will cause an active low output on pin G1. This error output will continue until 16–32 T0 clock cycles following the clock frequency reaching the minimum specified value, at which time the G1 output will go high. Note: The POR feature of the COP8TAB9/TAC9 is not intended to function as a brownout detector. A brownout condition is reached whenever VCC of the device goes below the minimum guaranteed operating conditions. The minimum guaranteed operating conditions are defined in the Electrical Specifications. We strongly recommend the use of an external supervisory circuit which ensures that the COP8 device is held in the RESET state until Vcc has recovered to the minimum operating conditions as stated above. The contents of data registers and RAM are unknown following the on-chip reset. 10.6.1 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. An R/C circuit on the RESET pin with a delay 5 times (5x) greater than the power supply rise time is recommended. Reset should also be long enough to ensure crystal start-up upon Power-Up. RESET may also be used to cause an exit from the HALT mode. Note: Flash memory may be non-volatile, but it is not invulnerable. Any controller which features the capability for the software to modify the contents of the Flash memory is susceptible to inadvertent writes or erases any time VCC is below the minimum guaranteed operating conditions, the clock is running and the device is not held in Reset. For this reason, we recommend the use of external brownout detection any time VCC drops below the minimum guaranteed VCC/Frequency operating conditions. A recommended reset circuit for this device is shown in Figure 11. 20047523 FIGURE 12. Reset Timing (Power-On Reset Enabled) with VCC Tied to RESET 20047522 10.7 OSCILLATOR CIRCUITS There are five clock oscillator options available: fully internal R/C Oscillator, R/C Oscillator with external frequency determination resistor, Crystal Oscillator with or without on-chip bias resistor and External Oscillator. The oscillator feature is selected by programming the Option Byte, which is summarized in Table 2. FIGURE 11. Reset Circuit Using External Reset 10.6.2 On-Chip Power-On Reset 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 20 µs and 10 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 to VCC , either directly or through a pull-up resistor. If forced operation from the Boot ROM is anticipated, a pull-up resistor should always be used so that the ISP circuit can override the RESET circuit and force the RESET pin low. The output of the power-on reset detector will always preset the Idle timer to 00FF(256 tC). At this time, the internal reset will be generated. 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 operating within the 256 www.national.com TABLE 2. Oscillator Option 18 Option Bit 6 Option Bit 4 Option Bit 3 Oscillator Option 0 0 0 On-Chip R/C Oscillator 0 0 1 R/C Oscillator with External Resistor 0 1 0 Crystal Oscillator with Internal Bias Resistor 0 1 1 Crystal Oscillator with External Bias Resistor 1 x x External Oscillator COP8TAB9/TAC9 10.0 Functional Description (Continued) 10.7.1 R/C Oscillator The device features an R/C oscillator with two modes of operation: 1. R/C with internal R operating at a fixed frequency (R/C mode) 2. R/C with external frequency control resistor (R/C+R mode). If the Oscillator Selection bits of the Option Byte remain unprogrammed (equal to zero), the internal R/C Oscillator mode will be selected. In internal R/C oscillation mode, CKI may be left unconnected, while G7/CKO is available as a general purpose input G7 and/or HALT control. The internal R/C oscillator has on-chip resistor and capacitor for predetermined R/C oscillator frequency operation. The predetermined frequency is 10 MHz ± 20% for temperature range of −40˚C to +85˚C. 20047525 FIGURE 14. Crystal Oscillator With External Bias Resistor The R/C Oscillator with external frequency control resistor mode (R/C+R) can be selected by programming Option Bit 3 to 1 and Option Bits 6 and 4 to 0. In R/C+R mode, the frequency of oscillation is controlled by the current through a resistor connected from the CKI pin to GND. G7/CKO is available as a general purpose input G7 and/or HALT control. The maximum frequency is 10 MHz ± 20% for temperature range of −40˚C to +85˚C. For lower frequencies, an external resistor should be connected between CKI and GND. PC board trace length on the CKI pin should be kept as short as possible. Table 3 shows the oscillator frequency as a function of approximate external resistance on the CKI pin. Figure 16 shows the R/C oscillator configuration. 20047526 FIGURE 15. External Oscillator TABLE 3. R/C+R Oscillator Configuration, −40˚C to +85˚C, OSC Freq. Variation of ± 20% External Resistor OSC Freq Instr. Cycle (kΩ) (MHz) (µs) 60 15 0.65 100 10 1.0 200 5 2.0 500 2 5.0 20047524 FIGURE 13. Crystal Oscillator With On-Chip Bias Resistor 19 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 10.0 Functional Description (Continued) With External Frequency Control Resistor (R/C+R) With Fully On-Chip R/C Oscillator. 20047527 20047528 FIGURE 16. R/C Oscillator 10.7.2 Crystal Oscillator The Crystal Oscillator mode can be selected by programming Option 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 Option Bit 3 to 0. The value of the resistor is in the range of 0.3M to 2.5M (typically 1.0M). TABLE 5. Clock Prescale Register (CLKPS) CLKPS Bit 7 10.8 CONTROL REGISTERS 10.8.1 CNTRL Register (Address X'00EE) Table 4 shows the component values required for various standard crystal values. Resistor R2 is only used when the on-chip bias resistor is disabled. Figure 13 and Figure 14 show the crystal oscillator connection diagrams. T1C3 1 18 18 15 0 1 18 18 10 0 1 45 30–36 4 5.6 1 100 100–156 0.455 T1C1 T1C0 MSEL IEDG SL1 SL0 Bit 0 The Timer1 (T1) and MICROWIRE/PLUS control register contains the following bits: T1C3 Timer T1 mode control bit T1C2 Timer T1 mode control bit T1C1 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 MSEL Selects G5 and G4 as MICROWIRE/PLUS signals SK and SO respectively IEDG External interrupt edge polarity select (0 = Rising edge, 1 = Falling edge) SL1 & SL0 Select the MICROWIRE/PLUS clock divide by (00 = 2, 01 = 4, 1x = 8) CKI Freq. (MHz) 0 T1C2 Bit 7 TABLE 4. Crystal Oscillator Configuration, TA = 25˚C, VCC = 2.5V R1 (kΩ) R2 (MΩ) C1 (pF) C2 (pF) Bit 0 10.7.3 External Oscillator The External Oscillator mode can be selected by programming Option Bit 3 to 0 and Option 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. 10.8.2 PSW Register (Address X'00EF) HC Bit 7 10.7.4 Clock Prescaler The device is equipped with a programmable clock prescaler which allows the user to dynamically adjust the clock speed, and thus the power dissipation, to the processing needs of the application. By merely writing an eight-bit value to the CLKPS register, the user can divide the input oscillator clock by an integer multiple (1 — 256) and reduce the CPU clock frequency. The format of the CLKPS Register is shown in Table 5. The value written to the CLKPS register is one less than the desired divider. A value of 0 (zero) written to the CLKPS register yields a CPU clock equal to the input clock frequency. A value of 255 written to the CLKPS register yields a CPU clock with a period equal to 256 input clock periods. C T1PNDA T1ENA EXPND BUSY EXEN GIE 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 RC (Reset www.national.com 20 COP8TAB9/TAC9 10.0 Functional Description (Continued) Carry) instructions will respectively set or clear both the carry flags. In addition to the SC and RC instructions, ADC, SUBC, RRC and RLC instructions affect the Carry and Half Carry flags. 10.8.3 ICNTRL Register (Address X'00E8) Unused LPEN T0PND T0EN µWPND µWEN T1PNDB T1ENB Bit 7 Bit 0 The ICNTRL register contains the following bits: LPEN L/C Port Interrupt Enable (Multi-Input Wake-Up/Interrupt) T0PND Timer T0 Interrupt pending 20047529 T0EN Timer T0 Interrupt Enable (Bit 12 toggle) µWPND MICROWIRE/PLUS interrupt pending FIGURE 17. Block Diagram of ISP µWEN Enable MICROWIRE/PLUS interrupt T1PNDB Timer T1 Interrupt Pending Flag for T1B capture edge T1ENB Timer T1 Interrupt Enable for T1B Input capture edge As described in Section 10.4 OPTION REGISTER, there is a bit, FLEX, that controls whether the device exits RESET executing from the Flash memory or the Boot ROM. The user must program the FLEX bit as appropriate for the application. In the erased state, the FLEX bit = 0 and the device will power-up executing from Boot ROM. When FLEX = 0, this assumes that either the MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP routine or external programming is being used to program the device. If using the MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP routine, the software in the boot ROM will monitor the MICROWIRE/ PLUS for commands to program the Flash memory. When programming the Flash program memory is complete, the FLEX bit will have to be programmed to a 1 and the device will have to be reset, either by pulling external Reset to ground or by a MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP EXIT command, before execution from Flash program memory will occur. If FLEX = 1, upon exiting Reset, the device will begin executing from location 0000 in the Flash program memory. The assumption, here, is that either the application is not using ISP, is using MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP by jumping to it within the application code, or is using a customized ISP routine. If a customized ISP routine is being used, then it must be programmed into the Flash memory by means of the MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP or external programming as described in the preceding paragraph. 10.8.4 ITMR Register (Address X'00CF) RSVD ITSEL2 ITSEL1 Bit 7 The ITMR RSVD ITSEL2 ITSEL1 ITSEL0 ITSEL0 Bit 0 register contains the following bits: These bits are reserved and must be 0. Idle Timer period select bit. Idle Timer period select bit. Idle Timer period select bit. 11.0 In-System Programming 11.1 INTRODUCTION This device provides the capability to program the program memory while installed in an application board. This feature is called In System Programming (ISP). It provides a means of ISP by using the MICROWIRE/PLUS, or the user can provide his own, customized ISP routine. The factory installed ISP uses the MICROWIRE/PLUS port. The user can provide his own ISP routine that uses any of the capabilities of the device, such as ACCESS.Bus, parallel port, etc. The user is cautioned, however, to remove all calls to Boot ROM functions prior to submission of code for ROM generation and production in COP8TAx5 devices. 11.3 REGISTERS There are six registers required to support ISP: Address Register Hi byte (ISPADHI), Address Register Low byte (ISPADLO), Read Data Register (ISPRD), Write Data Register (ISPWR), Write Timing Register (PGMTIM), and the Control Register (ISPCNTRL). The ISPCNTRL Register is not available to the user. None of these six registers, which support ISP, have been implemented in the COP8TAx5 ROM based devices. 11.2 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION The organization of the ISP feature consists of the user Flash program memory, the factory boot ROM, and some registers dedicated to performing the ISP function. See Figure 17 for a simplified block diagram. The factory installed ISP that uses MICROWIRE/PLUS is located in the Boot ROM. The size of the Boot ROM is 1k bytes and also contains code to facilitate in system emulation capability. If a user chooses to write an application specific ISP routine, it must be located in the Flash program memory. 11.3.1 ISP Address Registers The address registers (ISPADHI & ISPADLO) are used to specify the address of the byte of data being written or read. For page erase operations, the address of the beginning of the page should be loaded. For mass erase operations, 0000 must be placed into the address registers. When reading the Option register, 07FF (hex) should be placed into the address registers of COP8TAB9 devices and 0FFF (hex) 21 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 11.0 In-System Programming 11.3.3 ISP Write Data Register The Write Data Register (ISPWR) contains the data to be written into the specified address. This register is undetermined on Reset. (Continued) should be placed into the address registers of COP8TAC9 devices. Registers ISPADHI and ISPADLO are cleared to 00 on Reset. Note: The actual memory address of the Option Register is 0x0FFF (hex), however the MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP routines require the address FFFF (hex) to be used to read the Option Register when the Flash Memory is secured. TABLE 9. ISP Write Data Register ISPWR Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Bit7 Bit6 Bit5 Bit4 Bit3 Bit2 Bit1 Bit0 11.3.4 ISP Write Timing Register TABLE 6. High Byte of ISP Address The Write Timing Register (PGMTIM) is used to control the width of the timing pulses for write and erase operations. The value to be written into this register is dependent on the frequency of CKI and is shown in Table 10. This register must be written before any write or erase operation can take place. It only needs to be loaded once, for each value of CKI frequency. The MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP routine that is resident in the boot ROM requires that this register be defined prior to any access to the Flash memory. Refer to Section 11.7 MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP for more information on available ISP commands. On Reset, the PGMTIM register is loaded with the value that corresponds to 10 MHz frequency for CKI. The best choice for value of PGMTIM will center the operating frequency in the CKI Frequency Range. ISPADHi Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Addr 15 Addr 14 Addr 13 Addr 12 Addr 11 Addr 10 Addr 9 Addr 8 TABLE 7. Low Byte of ISP Address ISPADLO Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Addr 7 Addr 6 Addr 5 Addr 4 Addr 3 Addr 2 Addr 1 Addr 0 11.3.2 ISP Read Data Register The Read Data Register (ISPRD) contains the value read back from a read operation. This register is undefined on Reset. TABLE 8. ISP Read Data Register ISPRD Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Bit7 Bit6 Bit5 Bit4 Bit3 Bit2 Bit1 Bit0 TABLE 10. PGMTIM Register Format PGMTIM Register Bit CKI Frequency Range 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25 kHz–50 kHz 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 50 kHz–100 kHz 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 75 kHz–150 kHz 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 125 kHz–250 kHz 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 200 kHz–400 kHz 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 275 kHz–550 kHz 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 425 kHz–850 kHz 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 625 kHz–1.25 MHz 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1.025 MHz–2.05 MHz 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1.5 MHz–3 MHz 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 2.5 MHz–5 MHz 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 3.75 MHz–7.5 MHz 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 6.75 MHz–13.5 MHz 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 11.25 MHz–22.5 MHz R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W www.national.com 22 the Flex bit has been erased by specific Page Erase or Mass Erase ISP commands, execution will start from location 0000 in the Flash program memory. The forced entry to MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP mode will not erase either the Flex or the Security bit in the Option Register. The Security bit, if set, can only be erased by a Mass Erase of the entire contents of the Flash Memory unless under the control of User ISP routines in the Application Program. (Continued) 11.4 MANEUVERING BACK AND FORTH BETWEEN FLASH MEMORY AND BOOT ROM When using ISP, at some point, it will be necessary to maneuver between the Flash program memory and the Boot ROM, even when using customized ISP routines. This is because it’s not possible to execute from the Flash program memory while it’s being programmed. Two instructions are available to perform the jumping back and forth: Jump to Boot (JSRB) and Return to Flash (RETF). The JSRB instruction is used to jump from Flash memory to Boot ROM, and the RETF is used to return from the Boot ROM back to the Flash program memory. See Section 19.0 Instruction Set for specific details on the operation of these instructions. The MICROWIRE/PLUS routine in Boot ROM monitors the G6 input, waits for it to go low, debounces it, and then enables the ISP routine. The user may wish to disconnect other circuitry while RESET, G0, G2 and the MICROWIRE/ PLUS pins are in use for ISP. The correct sequence to be used to force execution from Boot ROM is : 1. Apply VCC to the device. 2. Pull RESET Low. 3. Using G2 as a shift clock, shift a value of 5E38AC(hex) into the G0 pin least significant bit first. The JSRB instruction must be used in conjunction with the Key register. This is to prevent jumping to the Boot ROM in the event of run-away software. For the JSRB instruction to actually jump to the Boot ROM, the Key bit must be set. This is done by writing the value shown in Table 11 to the Key register. The Key is a 6 bit key and if the key matches, the KEY bit will be set for 8 instruction cycles. The JSRB instruction must be executed while the KEY bit is set. If the KEY does not match, then the KEY bit will not be set and the JSRB will jump to the specified location in the Flash memory. In emulation mode, if a breakpoint is encountered while the KEY is set, the counter that counts the instruction cycles will be frozen until the breakpoint condition is cleared. If an interrupt occurs while the key is set, the key will expire before interrupt service is complete. It is recommended that the software globally disable interrupts before setting the key and re-enable interrupts on completion of Boot ROM execution. The Key register is a memory mapped register. Its format when writing is shown in Table 11. 4. 5. 11.6 RETURN TO FLASH MEMORY WITHOUT HARDWARE RESET After programming the entire program memory, including options, it is necessary to exit the Boot ROM and return to the Flash program memory for program execution. Upon receipt and completion of the EXIT command through the MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP, the ISP code will reset the part and begin execution from the Flash program memory as described in the Reset section. This assumes that the FLEX bit in the Option register was programmed to 1. 11.7 MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP National Semiconductor provides a program, which is available from our web site at www.national.com/cop8, that is capable of programming a device from the parallel port of a PC. The software accepts manually input commands and is capable of downloading standard Intel HEX Format files. TABLE 11. KEY Register Write Format KEY When Writing Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 X X Pull RESET High. Pull G6 low and initiate the MICORWIRE/PLUS communication. Users who wish to write their own MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP host software should refer to the COP8 FLASH ISP User Manual, available from the same web site. This document includes details of command format and delays necessary between command bytes. The MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP supports the following features and commands: • Write a value to the ISP Write Timing Register. NOTE: This must be the first command after entering MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP mode. • Erase the entire Flash program memory (mass erase). • Erase a page at a specified address. Bits 7–2: Key value that must be written to set the KEY bit. Bits 1–0: Don’t care. 11.5 FORCED EXECUTION FROM BOOT ROM When the user is developing a customized ISP routine, code lockups due to software errors may be encountered. The normal, and preferred, method to recover from these conditions is to reprogram the device with the corrected code by either an external parallel programmer or the emulation tools. As a last resort, when this equipment is not available, there is a hardware method to get out of these lockups and force execution from the Boot ROM MICROWIRE/PLUS routine. The customer will then be able to erase the Flash Memory code and start over. The method to force this condition is to shift a 24 bit code into the G0 pin, using the G2 pin as a shift clock, while Reset is activated. This special condition will bypass checking the state of the Flex bit in the Option Register and will start execution from location 0000 in the Boot ROM. In this state, the user can input the appropriate commands, using MICROWIRE/PLUS, to erase the Flash program memory and reprogram it. If the device is subsequently reset before • Read Option register. • Read a byte from a specified address. • Write a byte to a specified address. • Read multiple bytes starting at a specified address. • Write multiple bytes starting at a specified address. • Exit ISP and return execution to Flash program memory. The following table lists the MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP commands and provides information on required parameters and return values. 23 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 11.0 In-System Programming COP8TAB9/TAC9 11.0 In-System Programming (Continued) TABLE 12. MICROWIRE/PLUS ISP Commands Command Function Command Value (Hex) Parameters Return Data PGMTIM_SET Write Pulse Timing Register 0x3B Value N/A PAGE_ERASE Page Erase 0xB3 Starting Address of Page N/A MASS_ERASE Mass Erase 0xBF Confirmation Code N/A (The entire Flash Memory will be erased) READ_BYTE Read Byte 0x1D Address High, Address Low Data Byte if Security not set. 0xFF if Security set. Option Register if address = 0xFFFF, regardless of Security BLOCKR Block Read 0xA3 Address High, Address Low, Byte Count (n) High, Byte Count (n) Low 0 ≤ n ≤ 32767 n Data Bytes if Security not set. n Bytes of 0xFF if Security set. WRITE_BYTE Write Byte 0x71 Address High, Address Low, Data Byte N/A BLOCKW Block Write 0x8F Address High, Address Low, Byte Count (0 ≤ n ≤ 16), n Data Bytes N/A EXIT EXIT 0xD3 N/A N/A (Device will Reset) INVALID N/A Any other invalid command will be ignored N/A Note: The user must ensure that Block Writes do not cross a 64 byte boundary within one operation. www.national.com 24 The device contains a very versatile set of timers (T0 and T1). Timer T1 and associated autoreload/capture registers power up containing random data. 12.1 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, which is a 16-bit timer. The user cannot read or write to the IDLE Timer T0, which is a count down timer. In order for an interrupt to be generated, the IDLE Timer interrupt enable bit T0EN must be set, and the GIE (Global Interrupt Enable) bit must also be set. The T0PND flag and T0EN bit are bits 5 and 4 of the ICNTRL register, respectively. The interrupt can be used for any purpose. Typically, it is used to perform a task upon exit from the IDLE mode. For more information on the IDLE mode, refer to Section 13.2 IDLE MODE. The clock to the IDLE Timer is the instruction cycle clock (one-tenth of the CKI frequency). In addition to its time base function, the Timer T0 supports the following functions: • Exit out of the Idle Mode (See Idle Mode description) The Idle Timer period is selected by bits 0–2 of the ITMR register Bit 3 of the ITMR Register is reserved and should not be used as a software flag. Bits 4 through 7 of the ITMR Register are reserved and must be zero. • WATCHDOG logic (See WATCHDOG description) • Start up delay out of the HALT mode • Start up delay from POR Figure 18 is a functional block diagram showing the structure of the IDLE Timer and its associated interrupt logic. 20047530 FIGURE 18. Functional Block Diagram for Idle Timer T0 12.1.1 ITMR Register TABLE 13. Idle Timer Window Length ITSEL2 ITSEL1 ITSEL0 Idle Timer Period 0 0 0 4,096 inst. cycles 0 0 1 8,192 inst. cycles 0 1 0 16,384 inst. cycles 0 1 1 32,768 inst. cycles 1 0 0 65,536 inst. cycles 1 0 1 Reserved - Undefined 1 1 0 Reserved - Undefined 1 1 1 Reserved - Undefined RSVD Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 ITSEL2 ITSEL1 ITSEL0 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 RSVD: These bits are reserved and must be set to 0. ITSEL2:0: Selects the Idle Timer period as described in Table 13 Any time the IDLE Timer period is changed there is the possibility of generating a spurious IDLE Timer interrupt by setting the T0PND bit. The user is advised to disable IDLE Timer interrupts prior to changing the value of the ITSEL bits of the ITMR Register and then clear the T0PND bit before attempting to synchronize operation to the IDLE Timer. The ITSEL bits of the ITMR register are cleared on Reset and the Idle Timer period is reset to 4,096 instruction cycles. 25 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 Bits 11 through 15 of the ITMR register can be selected for triggering the IDLE Timer interrupt. Each time the selected bit underflows (every 4k, 8k, 16k, 32k or 64k selected clocks), the IDLE Timer interrupt pending bit T0PND is set, thus generating an interrupt (if enabled), and bit 6 of the Port G data register is reset, thus causing an exit from the IDLE mode if the device is in that mode. 12.0 Timers COP8TAB9/TAC9 12.0 Timers 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) 12.2 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. 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. 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. 12.3 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). 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, 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. Figure 19 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. 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 www.national.com 20047531 FIGURE 19. Timer in PWM Mode 12.4 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 20 shows a block diagram of the timer in External Event Counter mode. Note: The PWM output is not available in this mode since the T1A pin is being used as the counter input clock. 26 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. (Continued) 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. Figure 21 shows a block diagram of the timer in Input Capture mode. 20047532 FIGURE 20. Timer in External Event Counter Mode 12.5 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- 20047533 FIGURE 21. Timer in Input Capture Mode 27 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 12.0 Timers COP8TAB9/TAC9 12.0 Timers T1PNDA Timer Interrupt Pending Flag (Continued) T1ENA 12.6 TIMER CONTROL FLAGS The control bits and their functions are summarized below. T1C3 Timer mode control T1C2 T1C1 Timer mode control Timer mode control T1C0 Timer Start/Stop control in Modes 1 and 2 (Processor Independent PWM and External Event Counter), where 1 = Start, 0 = Stop 0 = Timer Interrupt Disabled T1PNDB Timer Interrupt Pending Flag T1ENB The timer mode control bits (T1C3, T1C2 and T1C1) are detailed below: Interrupt A Source Timer Counts On T1C3 1 0 1 PWM: T1A Toggle Autoreload RA Autoreload RB 1 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 1 3 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 Description Interrupt B Source Mode 2 T1C1 Timer Interrupt Enable Flag 1 = Timer Interrupt Enabled 0 = Timer Interrupt Disabled Timer Underflow Interrupt Pending Flag in Mode 3 (Input Capture) T1C2 Timer Interrupt Enable Flag 1 = Timer Interrupt Enabled 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 tC tC tC 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. Clock Monitor if enabled can be active in both modes. 13.0 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 COP8TAx 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 Wake-Up (MIWU). The devices offer the user two power save modes of operation: HALT and IDLE. In the HALT mode, all microcontroller www.national.com tC 13.1 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 Wake-Up feature on Port L and Port C. The 28 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 Option Byte. 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”). (Continued) second method is 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. Since a crystal or ceramic resonator may be selected as the oscillator, the Multi-Input Wake-Up 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 Multi-Input Wake-Up 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. 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. 20047534 FIGURE 22. Multi-Input Wake-Up 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. 13.2 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 Wake-Up 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. 29 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 13.0 Power Save Modes COP8TAB9/TAC9 13.0 Power Save Modes (Continued) 20047535 FIGURE 23. Wake-Up from IDLE 13.3 MULTI-INPUT WAKE-UP The Multi-Input Wake-Up feature is used to exit from the HALT and IDLE modes. In addition, the Multi-Input WakeUp/Interrupt feature may be used to generate up to 16 edge-selectable external interrupts on the 44-pin devices or 8 interrupts on the 20- and 28-pin devices. Figure 24 shows the Multi-Input Wake-Up logic. The Multi-Input Wake-Up feature uses the C and L ports. (The 20- and 28-pin devices only have the L port.) Software selects which port bit (or set of port bits) may cause the device to exit the HALT or IDLE modes. The selection is controlled by the CWKEN and LWKEN registers. These registers are 8-bit read/write registers, which contain control bits that correspond to the C and L port bits. Setting a CWKEN or LWKEN bit enables a Wake-Up event or interrupt from the associated C or L port pin. If the ACCESS.Bus module is enabled, port pin L0 may also be used to generate a Wake-Up event on ACCESS.Bus activity. Please see the section on Section 17.0 ACCESS.Bus Interface for more information. Software selects whether the trigger condition on the selected port pin is a positive edge (low-to-high transition) or a negative edge (high-to-low transition). The trigger conditions are selected in the CWKEDG and LWKEDG registers, which are 8-bit control registers with bits corresponding to the C and L port pins. Setting a trigger condition control bit selects the negative edge, while clearing the bit selects the positive edge. The occurrence of a selected trigger condition is latched in the pending registers called CWKPND and LWKPND. The bits of these registers correspond to the C and L port pins. These bits are set on the occurrence of the selected trigger condition on the corresponding port pin, whether or not the trigger condition is enabled in CWKEN or LWKEN. Software has responsibility for clearing the pending bits before enabling them for Wake-Up events or interrupts. Any set pend- www.national.com ing bit in CWKPND or LWKPND remains set until cleared by software. The device will not enter HALT or IDLE mode if any Wake-Up input is both enabled and pending. Changing a trigger condition control bit requires several steps to avoid generating a spurious Wake-Up event or interrupt as a side effect • First, the corresponding CWKEN or LWKEN bit should be cleared to disable any Wake-Up event or interrupt for that port pin. • Second, the trigger condition is selected in CWKEDG or LWKEDG. • Third, any spurious pending event is removed by clearing the associated bit in CWKPND or LWKPND. • Finally, the trigger is re-enabled by setting the associated bit in CWKEN or LWKEN. An example shows how software performs this procedure. Assume the trigger condition for L port bit 5 is to be changed from positive (low-to-high transition) to negative (high-to-low transition), and bit 5 has previously been enabled for an input interrupt. Software would execute the following instructions: RBIT 5, LWKEN ; Disable MIWU Port L.5 SBIT 5, LWKEDG ; Change edge polarity RBIT 5, LWKPND ; Reset pending flag SBIT 5, LWKEN ; Enable MIWU Port L.5 If the C or L port pins have been used as outputs and then changed to inputs using the Multi-Input Wake-Up feature, a safe procedure should be used to avoid generating a spurious Wake-Up event or interrupt. After the selected C or L port pins have been changed from output to input, the trigger conditions are selected in CWKEDG or LWKEDG and the pending bits in CWKPND or LWKPND are cleared. Finally, the CWKEN or LWKEN bits are set to enable the desired Wake-Up events or interrupts. The same procedure should be used following reset, because the C and L port pins are left floating. The CWKPND 30 CWKEN and LWKEN are read/write registers that are cleared at reset, so no Wake-Up events or interrupts are enabled following reset. CWKEDG and LWKEDG are also cleared at reset. (Continued) and LWKPND registers contain undefined values after reset, so software should clear these bits after reset to ensure that no spurious Wake-Up events or interrupts are left pending. 20047581 FIGURE 24. Multi-Input Wake-Up Logic The Software trap has the highest priority while the default VIS has the lowest priority. Each of the 13 maskable inputs has a fixed arbitration ranking and vector. Figure 25 shows the Interrupt block diagram. 14.0 Interrupts 14.1 INTRODUCTION The device supports eleven vectored interrupts. Interrupt sources include Timer 1, Timer 2, Timer T0, Multi-Input Wake-Up, 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. 31 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 13.0 Power Save Modes COP8TAB9/TAC9 14.0 Interrupts (Continued) 20047576 FIGURE 25. Interrupt Block Diagram 14.2 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: 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. If 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 interrupt, and jump to the interrupt handling routine corre- 1. 2. 3. The enable bit associated with that interrupt is set. The GIE bit is set. 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 highestpriority 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 www.national.com 32 next priority interrupt is located at 0yE2 and 0yE3, and so forth in increasing rank. The Software Trap has the highest rand 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 14 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 example, 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. (Continued) sponding 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. An interrupt service routine typically ends with an RETI instruction. This instruction set 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. 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 program 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, (100 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. Note: While executing from the Boot ROM for ISP or virtual E2 operations, the hardware will disable interrupts from occurring. The hardware will leave the GIE bit in its current state, and if set, the hardware interrupts will occur when execution is returned to Flash Memory. Subsequent interrupts, during ISP operation, from the same interrupt source will be lost. 14.3 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 33 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 14.0 Interrupts COP8TAB9/TAC9 14.0 Interrupts (Continued) TABLE 14. Interrupt Vector Table Arbitration Ranking Vector Address (Note 7) (Hi-Low Byte) Source Description (1) Highest Software (2) Reserved for NMI INTR Instruction 0yFE–0yFF (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) ACCESS.Bus Address Match, Bus Error, 0yF0–0yF1 Negative Acknowledge, Valid Sto or SDAST is set (9) Reserved 0yEE–0yEF (10) Reserved 0yEC–0yED (11) Reserved 0yEA–0yEB (12) Reserved 0yE8–0yE9 (13) Reserved 0yE6–0yE7 (14) Reserved (15) Port L/Wake-up Port C/Wake-up Port L Edge Port C Edge 0yE2–0yE3 (16) Lowest Default VIS Reserved 0yE0–0yE1 0yFC–0yFD 0yE4–0yE5 Note 7: 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. 14.3.1 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 no active interrupt is pending, than E0 is generated. This number replaces the lower byte of the PC. The upper byte of the PC remains unchanged. The new PC is therefore pointing to the vector of www.national.com 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. Figure 26 illustrates the different steps performed by the VIS instruction. Figure 27 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. 34 COP8TAB9/TAC9 14.0 Interrupts (Continued) 20047577 FIGURE 26. VIS Operation 14.4 NON-MASKABLE INTERRUPT 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 re-initialize the stack pointer and perform a recovery procedure that re-starts 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. 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 14.4.1 Pending Flag There is a pending flag bit associated with the non-maskable Software Trap 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. 14.4.2 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 programmed Flash memory space, the unused memory location returns zeros which is interpreted as the INTR instruction. 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. 35 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 14.0 Interrupts 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) 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 20047578 FIGURE 27. VIS Flow Chart 14.4.2.1 Programming Example: External Interrupt WAIT: PSW CNTRL RBIT RBIT SBIT SBIT SBIT JP . . . .=0FF VIS . . . .=01FA .ADDRW SERVICE =00EF =00EE 0,PORTGC 0,PORTGD IEDG, CNTRL GIE, PSW EXEN, PSW WAIT ; ; ; ; ; 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 . . www.national.com 36 COP8TAB9/TAC9 14.0 Interrupts (Continued) . SERVICE: RBIT,EXPND,PSW . . . RET I ; Interrupt Service Routine ; Reset ext interrupt pend. bit ; Return, set the GIE bit 14.5 PORT C AND PORT L INTERRUPTS Ports C and L provides the user with an additional sixteen fully selectable, edge sensitive interrupts which are all vectored into the same service subroutine. The interrupt from Ports C and L share logic with the wake-up circuitry. The registers CWKEN and LWKEN allow interrupts from Ports C and L to be individually enabled or disabled. The register CWKEDG and LWKEDG specify the trigger condition to be either a positive or a negative edge. Finally, the registers CWKPND and LWKPND latch in the pending trigger conditions. terrupts, during ISP operation, from the same interrupt source will be lost. 15.0 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 Option Byte. 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 COP8TAx 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 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 15 shows the WDSVR register. The GIE (Global Interrupt Enable) bit enables the interrupt function. A control flag, LPEN, functions as a global interrupt enable for Port C and Port L interrupts. Setting the LPEN flag will enable interrupts and vice versa. A separate global pending flag is not needed since the registers CWKPND and LWKPND are adequate. Since Ports C and L are 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. 14.6 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 re-start procedure. 2. 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 or, prior to restoring context, should return to execute the VIS instruction. This is particularly useful when exiting long interrupt service routines if the time between interrupts is short. In this case the RETI instruction would only be executed when the default VIS routine is reached. 3. While executing from the Boot ROM for ISP or virtual E2 operations, the hardware will disable interrupts from occurring. The hardware will leave the GIE bit in its current state, and if set, the hardware interrupts will occur when execution is returned to Flash Memory. Subsequent in- TABLE 15. 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 16 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 16. WATCHDOG Service Window Select WDSVR WDSVR Bit 7 37 Bit 6 Clock Service Window Monitor (Lower-Upper Limits) 0 0 x 256–8k tC Cycles 0 1 x 256–16k tC Cycles www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 15.0 WATCHDOG/Clock Monitor DOG 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 17 shows the sequence of events that can occur. (Continued) TABLE 16. WATCHDOG Service Window Select (Continued) WDSVR WDSVR Bit 7 Bit 6 Clock Service Window Monitor (Lower-Upper Limits) 1 0 x 256–32k tC Cycles 1 1 x 256–64k tC Cycles x x 0 Clock Monitor Disabled x x 1 Clock Monitor Enabled 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 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. 1/tC < 10 Hz — Guaranteed clock rejection. 15.1 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. 15.2 WATCHDOG/CLOCK MONITOR OPERATION The WATCHDOG is enabled by bit 2 of the Option Byte. When this Option bit is 0, the WATCHDOG is enabled and pin G1 becomes the WATCHDOG output with a weak pullup. 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 WATCH- TABLE 17. WATCHDOG Service Actions Key Window Clock Monitor Action Data Data Match Match Match Don’t Care Mismatch Don’t Care Mismatch Don’t Care Don’t Care Error: Generate WATCHDOG Output Don’t Care Don’t Care Mismatch Error: Generate WATCHDOG Output Valid Service: Restart Service Window Error: Generate WATCHDOG Output 15.3 WATCHDOG AND CLOCK MONITOR SUMMARY 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. • www.national.com • • 38 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. 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. (Continued) • 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. • 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. • 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. 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. 16.0 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 28 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. 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 18 details the different clock rates that may be selected. TABLE 18. 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 15.4 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. 16.1 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 28 shows how two microcontroller devices and several peripherals may be interconnected using the MICROWIRE/PLUS arrangements. 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 39 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 15.0 WATCHDOG/Clock Monitor COP8TAB9/TAC9 16.0 MICROWIRE/PLUS 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 19 summarizes the bit settings required for Master mode of operation. (Continued) 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. 16.2 MICROWIRE/PLUS MASTER MODE OPERATION In the MICROWIRE/PLUS Master mode of operation the shift clock (SK) is generated internally. The MICROWIRE 20047537 FIGURE 28. MICROWIRE/PLUS Application Master is shifted properly. After eight clock pulses the BUSY flag is clear, the shift clock is stopped, and the sequence may be repeated. 16.3 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 19 summarizes the settings required to enter the Slave mode of operation. This table assumes that the control flag MSEL is set. 16.4 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 19. MICROWIRE/PLUS Mode Settings G4 (SO) G5 (SK) G4 G5 Config. Bit Config. Bit Fun. Fun. 1 1 SO Int. MICROWIRE/PLUS SK Master Operation 0 1 0 1 0 0 TRI- Int. MICROWIRE/PLUS STATE SK Master SO Ext. MICROWIRE/PLUS SK Slave TRI- Ext. MICROWIRE/PLUS STATE SK Slave The user must set the BUSY flag immediately upon entering the Slave mode. This ensures that all data bits sent by the www.national.com 40 (Continued) TABLE 20. MICROWIRE/PLUS Shift Clock Polarity and Sample/Shift Phase Port G SK Phase G6 (SKSEL) G5 Config. Bit Data Bit SO Clocked Out On: SI Sampled On: SK Idle Phase Low Normal 0 0 SK Falling Edge SK Rising Edge 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 20047538 FIGURE 29. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Normal SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being Low 20047539 FIGURE 30. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Alternate SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being Low 20047540 FIGURE 31. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Normal SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being High 41 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 16.0 MICROWIRE/PLUS COP8TAB9/TAC9 16.0 MICROWIRE/PLUS (Continued) 20047541 FIGURE 32. MICROWIRE/PLUS SPI Mode Interface Timing, Alternate SK Mode, SK Idle Phase being High The ACCESS.Bus protocol supports multiple master and slave transmitters and receivers. Each bus device has a unique address and can operate as a transmitter or a receiver (though some peripherals are only receivers). 17.0 ACCESS.Bus Interface The ACCESS.Bus interface module (ACB) is a two-wire serial interface compatible with the ACCESS.Bus physical layer. It permits easy interfacing to a wide range of low-cost memories and I/O devices, including: EEPROMs, SRAMs, timers, A/D converters, D/A converters, clock chips, and peripheral drivers. It is compatible with Intel’s SMBus and Philips’ I2C bus. The module can be configured as a bus master or slave, and can maintain bidirectional communications with both multiple master and multiple slave devices. • ACCESS.Bus master and slave • Supports polling and interrupt-controlled operation • Generate a wake-up signal on detection of a Start Condition, while in reduced-power mode • Optional internal pull-up on SDA and SCL pins • Optional 1.8V logic compatibility on SDA and SCL pins The ACCESS.Bus protocol uses a two-wire interface for bidirectional communication between the devices connected to the bus. The two interface signals are the Serial Data Line (SDA) and the Serial Clock Line (SCL). These signals should be connected to the positive supply, through pull-up resistors, to keep the signals high when the bus is idle. When the ACCESS.Bus module is enabled and Bit 7 of the Option Register (LVCMP) is set, the SDA and SCL inputs, along with input L2, provide compatibility with 1.8V logic levels. 17.1 DATA TRANSACTIONS During data transactions, the master device initiates the transaction, generates the clock signal and terminates the transaction. For example, when the ACB initiates a data transaction with an ACCESS.Bus peripheral, the ACB becomes the master. When the peripheral responds and transmits data to the ACB, their master/slave (data transaction initiator and clock generator) relationship is unchanged, even though their transmitter/receiver functions are reversed. One data bit is transferred during each clock period. Data is sampled during the high phase of the serial clock (SCL). Consequently, throughout the clock high phase, the data must remain stable (see Figure 33). Any change on the SDA signal during the high phase of the SCL clock and in the middle of a transaction aborts the current transaction. New data must be driven during the low phase of the SCL clock. This protocol permits a single data line to transfer both command/control information and data using the synchronous serial clock. 20047579 FIGURE 33. Bit Transfer Each data transaction is composed of a Start Condition, a number of byte transfers (programmed by software) and a www.national.com Stop Condition to terminate the transaction. Each byte is transferred with the most significant bit first, and after each byte, an Acknowledge signal must follow. 42 17.1.1 Start and Stop The ACCESS.Bus master generates Start and Stop Conditions (control codes). After a Start Condition is generated, the bus is considered busy and it retains this status until a certain time after a Stop Condition is generated. A high-tolow transition of the data line (SDA) while the clock (SCL) is high indicates a Start Condition. A low-to-high transition of the SDA line while the SCL is high indicates a Stop Condition (Figure 34). (Continued) At each clock cycle, the slave can stall the master while it handles the previous data, or prepares new data. The slave can hold SCL low, to extend the clock-low period, on each bit transfer, or on a byte boundary, to accomplish this. Typically, slaves extend the first clock cycle of a transfer if a byte read has not yet been stored, or if the next byte to be transmitted is not yet ready. Some microcontrollers, with limited hardware support for ACCESS.Bus, extend the access after each bit, to allow software time to handle this bit. 20047580 FIGURE 34. Start and Stop Conditions arbitration. In master mode, the device immediately aborts a transaction if the value sampled on the SDA line differs from the value driven by the device. When an abort occurs during the address transmission, the master that identifies the conflict should give up the bus, switch to slave mode, and continue to sample SDA to see if it is being addressed by the winning master on the ACCESS.Bus. In addition to the first Start Condition, a repeated Start Condition can be generated in the middle of a transaction. This allows another device to be accessed, or a change in the direction of the data transfer. 17.1.2 Acknowledge Cycle The Acknowledge Cycle consists of two signals: the acknowledge clock pulse the master sends with each byte transferred, and the acknowledge signal sent by the receiving device. The master generates an acknowledge clock pulse after each byte transfer. The receiver sends an acknowledge signal after every byte received. There are two exceptions to the "acknowledge after every byte" rule. • When the master is the receiver, it must indicate to the transmitter an end-of-data condition by notacknowledging ("negative acknowledge") the last byte clocked out of the slave. This "negative acknowledge" still includes the acknowledge clock pulse (generated by the master), but the SDA line is not pulled down. • When the receiver is full, otherwise occupied, or a problem has occurred, it sends a negative acknowledge to indicate that it cannot accept additional data bytes. 17.3 POWER SAVE MODES When this device is placed in HALT or IDLE mode, the ACB module is effectively disabled. Registers ACBST, ACBCST and ACBCTL1 are reset, however ACBSDA, ACBADDR and ACBCTL2 are unaffected. If the ACB is enabled (ACBCTL2.ENABLE = 1) on detection of a Start Condition, a wake-up signal is issued to the Multi-Input Wake-Up module. The byte transfer which causes the Wake-Up event will not be acknowledged by the COP8 ACCESS.Bus and thus must be retransmitted. The Multi-Input Wake-Up logic must be configured, by the user, to enable Wake-Up on ACCESS.Bus transfer. The ACCESS.Bus SDA signal is an alternate function of the one of the Multi-Input Wake-Up pins, and thus the associated bit of the LWKEN or CWKEN and LWKEDG or CWKEDG registers must be configured to cause a Wake-Up event on a rising edge. See Figure 24 and the pinout table for determination of the Multi-Input Wake-Up channel associated with the ACCESS.Bus. 17.1.3 Addressing Transfer Formats Each device on the bus has a unique address. Before any data is transmitted, the master transmits the address of the slave being addressed. The slave device should send an acknowledge signal on the SDA signal, once it recognizes its address. 17.4 SDA AND SCL DRIVER CONFIGURATION SDA and SCL are driven as open-drain signals on Port L signals L0 and L1. If the ACB interface is not being used, these pins are available for use as general-purpose port pins or Multi-Input Wake-Up inputs. 17.2 BUS ARBITRATION Arbitration is required when multiple master devices attempt to gain control of the bus simultaneously. Control of the bus is initially determined according to the address bits and clock cycle. If the masters are trying to address the same bus device, data comparisons determine the outcome of this 43 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 17.0 ACCESS.Bus Interface COP8TAB9/TAC9 17.0 ACCESS.Bus Interface TGSCL The Toggle SCL bit enables toggling the SCL signal during error recovery. When the SDA signal is low, writing 1 to this bit drives the SCL signal high for one cycle. Writing 1 to TGSCL when the SDA signal is high is ignored. TSDA The Test SDA bit samples the state of the SDA signal. This bit can be used while recovering from an error condition in which the SDA signal is constantly pulled low by a slave that has lost synchronization. This bit is a read-only bit. (Continued) 17.5 ACB SERIAL DATA REGISTER (ACBSDA) The ACBSDA register is a byte-wide, read/write shift register used to transmit and receive data. The most significant bit is transmitted (received) first and the least significant bit is transmitted (received) last. 7 0 DATA 17.6 ACB STATUS REGISTER (ACBST) The ACBST register is a byte-wide, read-only register that reports the current ACB status. 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 GCMTCH The Global Call Match bit is set in slave mode when the ACBCTL1.GCMEN bit is set and the address byte (the first byte transferred after a Start Condition) is 00. 0 SLVSTP SDAST BER NEGACK RSVD NMATCH MASTER XMIT SLVSTP The Slave Stop bit is set when a Stop Condition was detected after a slave transfer (i.e., after a slave transfer in which MATCH or GCMTCH is set). SDAST The SDA Status bit is set when the SDA data register is waiting for data (transmit, as master or slave) or holds data that should be read (receive, as master or slave) BER The Bus Error bit is set when a Start or Stop Condition is detected during data transfer or when an arbitration problem is detected. NEGACK The Negative Acknowledge bit is set when a transmission is not acknowledged. RSVD This bit is reserved and will be zero. NMATCH The New Match bit is set when the address byte following a Start Condition, or repeated starts, causes a match or a global-call match. MASTER The Master bit indicates that the module is currently in master mode. It is set when a request for bus mastership succeeds. It is cleared upon arbitration loss (BER is set) or the recognition of a Stop Condition. XMIT The Direction bit is set when the ACB module is currently in master/slave transmit mode. Otherwise, it is clear. 6 RSVD 5 4 3 2 1 0 TGSCL TSDA GCMTCH MATCH BB BUSY www.national.com The Address Match bit indicates in slave mode when ACBADDR.SAEN is set and the first seven bits of the address byte (the first byte transferred after a Start Condition) matches the 7-bit address in the ACBADDR register. BB The Bus Busy bit indicates the bus is busy. It is set when the bus is active (i.e., a low level on either SDA or SCL) or by a Start Condition. It is cleared when the module is disabled or a Stop Condition is detected. BUSY The BUSY bit indicates that the ACB module is: • • • • Generating a Start Condition In Master mode (ACBST.MASTER is set) In Slave mode (ACBCST.MATCH or ACBCST.GCMTCH is set) In the period between detecting a Start and completing the reception of the address byte. After this, the ACB either becomes not busy or enters slave mode. The BUSY bit is cleared by the completion of any of the above states, or by disabling the module. BUSY is a read only bit. 17.8 ACB CONTROL 1 REGISTER (ACBCTL1) The ACBCTL1 register is a byte-wide, read/write register that configures and controls the ACB module. At reset and while the module is disabled (ACBCTL2.ENABLE = 0), the ACBCTL1 register is cleared. 17.7 ACB CONTROL STATUS REGISTER (ACBCST) The ACBCST register is a byte-wide, read/write register that reports the current ACB status. At reset and when the module is disabled, the non-reserved bits of ACBCST are cleared. 7 MATCH 7 6 5 4 3 2 CLRST NMINTE GCMEN ACK RSVD INTEN 44 1 0 STOP START CLRST The Clear Status bit clears the NMATCH, BER, NEGACK and SLVSTP bits when 1 is written to this bit. NMINTE The New Match Interrupt Enable controls whether ACB interrupts are generated on new matches. ENABLE The Enable bit controls the ACB module. When this bit is set, the ACB module is enabled. When the Enable bit is clear, the ACB module is disabled, the ACBCTL1, ACBST, and ACBCST registers are cleared, and the ACB module clocks are halted. (Continued) GCMEN The Global Call Match Enable bit enables the match of an incoming address byte to the general call address (Start Condition followed by address byte of 00) while the ACB is in slave mode. ACK The Acknowledge bit holds the value this device sends in master or slave mode during the next acknowledge cycle. Setting this bit to 1 instructs the transmitting device to stop sending data, because the receiver either does not need, or cannot receive, any more data. INTEN STOP START 17.10 ACB OWN ADDRESS REGISTER (ACBADDR) The ACBADDR register is a byte-wide, read/write register that holds the module’s first ACCESS.Bus address. 7 • An address MATCH is detected (ACBST.NMATCH = 1) and the NMINTE bit is set. • A Bus Error occurs (ACBST.BERR = 1). • Negative acknowledge after sending a byte (ACBST.NEGACK = 1). • An interrupt is generated on acknowledge of each transaction (same as hardware setting the ACBST.SDAST bit). • Detection of a Stop Condition while in slave receive mode (ACBST.SLVSTP = 1). The Stop bit in master mode generates a Stop Condition that completes or aborts the current message transfer. The Start bit is set to generate a Start Condition on the ACCESS.Bus. This bit should be set only when in Master mode or when requesting Master mode. An address send sequence should then be performed. 7 1 SCLFRQ 0 ADDR SAEN The Slave Address Enable bit controls whether address matching is performed in slave mode. When set, the SAEN bit indicates that the ADDR field holds a valid address and enables the match of ADDR to an incoming address byte. ADDR The Own Address field holds the 7-bit ACCESS.Bus address of this device. In slave mode, the 7 bits received after a Start Condition are compared to this field (first bit received to bit 6, and the last to bit 0). If the address field matches the received data and the SAEN bit is set, a match is detected. The Interrupt Enable bit controls generating ACB interrupts. When the INTEN bit is set, interrupts are enabled. An interrupt is generated on any of the following events: 18.0 Memory Map All RAM, ports and registers (except A and PC) are mapped into data memory address space. Address Contents ADD REG 17.9 ACB CONTROL REGISTER 2 (ACBCTL2) The ACBCTL2 register is a byte-wide, read/write register that controls the module and selects the ACB clock rate. At reset, the ACBCTL2 register is cleared. SCLFRQ 6 SEAN 00 to 6F On-Chip RAM bytes (112 bytes) 70 to 7F Unused RAM Address Space (Reads As All Ones) 80 to 83 Unused RAM Address Space (Reads Undefined Data) 84 Port C MIWU Edge Select Register (Reg: CWKEDG) 85 Port C MIWU Enable Register (Reg: CWKEN) 86 Port C MIWU Pending Register (Reg: CWKPND) 87 to 8F Reserved 0 ENABLE The SCL Frequency field specifies the SCL period (low time and high time) in master mode. The clock low time and high time are defined as follows: tSCLK1 = tSCLKh = 2 x SCLFRQ x tSCLK Where tCLK is this device’s clock period when in Active mode. The SCLFRQ field may be programmed to values in the range of 0001000 through 1111111. 45 90 to 93 Reserved 94 Port F Data Register 95 Port F Configuration Register 96 Port F Input pins (Read Only) 97 Reserved for Port F 98 to 9F Reserved A0 to A7 Reserved www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 17.0 ACCESS.Bus Interface COP8TAB9/TAC9 18.0 Memory Map (Continued) Address Contents ADD REG Address Contents ADD REG E7 Timer T1 Autoload Register T1RB Upper Byte A8 ISP Address Register Low Byte (ISPADLO) E8 ICNTRL Register A9 ISP Address Register High Byte (ISPADHI) 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 AA ISP Read Data Register (ISPRD) AB ISP Write Data Register (ISPWR) AC to AF Reserved B0 to B7 Reserved B8 ACB Serial Data Register (ACBSDA) B9 ACB Status Register (ACBST) BA ACB Control And Status (ACBCST) BB ACB Control Register 1 (ACBCTL1) BC ACB Own Address Register (ACBADDR) BD ACB Control Register 2(ACBCTL2) BE to BF Reserved C0 to C6 Reserved C7 WATCHDOG Service Register (Reg:WDSVR) Note: Reading memory locations 70H–7FH will return all ones. Reading unused memory locations 80H–83H, 87H–93H will return undefined data. C8 Port L MIWU Edge Select Register (Reg:LWKEDG) 19.0 Instruction Set C9 Port L MIWU Enable Register (Reg:LWKEN) CA Port L MIWU Pending Register (Reg:LWKPND) CB to CE Reserved CF Idle Timer Control Register (ITMR) D0 Port L Data Register D1 Port L Configuration Register D2 Port L Input Pins (Read Only) D3 Reserved for Port L 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 J Data Register DD Port J Configuration Register DE Port J Input Pins (Read Only) DF CPU Clock Prescale Register (CLKPS) E0 Reserved E1 Flash Memory Write Timing Register (PGMTIM) E2 ISP Key Register (ISPKEY) E3 to E5 Reserved E6 Timer T1 Autoload Register T1RB Lower Byte www.national.com F0 to FB On-Chip RAM Mapped as Registers FC X Register FD SP Register FE B Register FF On-Chip RAM Mapped as Register 19.1 INTRODUCTION This section defines the instruction set of the COP8 Family members. It contains information about the instruction set features, addressing modes and types. 19.2 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. 19.3 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: op46 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. Example: Exchange Memory with Accumulator, B Indirect with Post-Increment X A,[B+] (Continued) erand 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. 19.3.1 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. Memory Before After XX Hex A6 Hex A6 Hex A6 Hex Memory Location 0005 Hex After Accumulator 03 Hex 62 Hex 62 Hex 03 Hex 05 Hex 06 Hex B Pointer Contents Intermediate. The data for the operation follows the instruction opcode in program memory. In assembly language, the number sign character (#) indicates an immediate operand. 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 Memory Before Contents After 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 Contents Accumulator Before 0005 Hex • 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 Contents Contents Memory Memory Location 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: • Direct • Register B or X Indirect • Register B or X Indirect with Post-Incrementing/ Decrementing • Immediate • Immediate Short Reg/Data Reg/Data 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] Reg/Data Contents Reg/Data Contents Contents Memory Before After Memory Before After PCU 04 Hex 04 Hex Accumulator 01 Hex 87 Hex PCL 35 Hex 36 Hex 87 Hex 01 Hex Accumulator 1F Hex 25 Hex 05 Hex 05 Hex 25 Hex 25 Hex Memory Location 0005 Hex B Pointer Memory Location 041F Hex 47 Contents www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 19.0 Instruction Set COP8TAB9/TAC9 19.0 Instruction Set (Continued) Reg/ 19.3.2 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. Reg Contents Before After PCU 02 Hex 02 Hex PCL 05 Hex 0F Hex Contents Contents Before After PCU 0C Hex 01 Hex PCL 77 Hex 25 Hex Before After PCU 42 Hex 36 Hex PCL 36 Hex 25 Hex Reg/ Contents Memory Before Contents After PCU 01 Hex 01 Hex PCL C4 Hex 32 Hex Accumulator 26 Hex 26 Hex 32 Hex 32 Hex 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. 19.4 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. 19.4.1 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 with Carry (SUBC) Increment (INC) Decrement (DEC) Decimal Correct (DCOR) Clear Accumulator (CLR) Set Carry (SC) Reset Carry (RC) 19.4.2 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) Jump Absolute (JMP) 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 www.national.com Memory Memory 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 Contents 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 JID 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. 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. The available transfer-of-control addressing modes are: • 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 Contents Contents 48 COP8TAB9/TAC9 19.0 Instruction Set If Carry (IFC) (Continued) If Not Carry (IFNC) If Bit (IFBIT) Jump Absolute Long (JMPL) Jump Indirect (JID) Jump to Subroutine (JSR) If B Pointer Not Equal (IFBNE) And Skip if Zero (ANDSZ) Jump to Subroutine Long (JSRL) Jump to Boot ROM Subroutine (JSRB) Decrement Register and Skip if Zero (DRSZ) 19.4.9 No-Operation Instruction Return from Subroutine (RET) Return from Subroutine and Skip (RETSK) The no-operation instruction does nothing, except to occupy space in the program memory and time in execution. Return from Interrupt (RETI) 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. Software Trap Interrupt (INTR) Vector Interrupt Select (VIS) 19.4.3 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) 19.5 REGISTER AND SYMBOL DEFINITION Load Accumulator Indirect (LAID) Exchange (X) The following abbreviations represent the nomenclature used in the instruction description and the COP8 crossassembler. 19.4.4 Logical Instructions 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 exclusive-ORing the Accumulator with FF Hex. Logical AND (AND) Logical OR (OR) Exclusive OR (XOR) Registers A 8-Bit Accumulator Register B 8-Bit Address Register X 8-Bit Address Register S 8-Bit Segment Register SP 8-Bit Stack Pointer Register PC 15-Bit Program Counter Register PU Upper 7 Bits of PC 19.4.5 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) 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 19.4.6 Stack Control Instructions 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) Push Data onto Stack (PUSH) Pop Data off of Stack (POP) Symbols 19.4.7 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) 19.4.8 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) 49 Bit ← Loaded with Bit Number (0 to 7) ↔ Exchanged with www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 19.0 Instruction Set (Continued) 19.6 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 AND A,Meml Logical AND A←A and Meml 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 Compare MD and Imm, Do next if MD = Imm IFEQ A,Meml IF EQual Compare A and Meml, Do next if A = Meml Compare A and Meml, Do next if A ≠ Meml IFNE A,Meml IF Not Equal IFGT A,Meml IF Greater Than IFBNE # If B Not Equal Compare A and Meml, Do next if A > Meml Do next if lower 4 bits of B ≠ Imm DRSZ Reg Decrement Reg., Skip if Zero Reg←Reg − 1, Skip if Reg = 0 SBIT #,Mem Set BIT 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 X A,Mem EXchange A with Memory A↔Mem X A,[X] EXchange A with Memory [X] A↔[X] LD A,Meml LoaD A with Memory A←Meml A←[X] RPND LD A,[X] LoaD A with Memory [X] LD B,Imm LoaD B with Immed. B←Imm LD Mem,Imm LoaD Memory Immed. LD Reg,Imm LoaD Register Memory Immed. Mem←Imm Reg←Imm 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] LD [B ± ],Imm LoaD Memory [B] Immed. CLR A CLeaR A INC A INCrement A DEC A LAID A↔[B], (B←B ± 1) A↔[X], (X←X ± 1) A←[B], (B←B ± 1) A←[X], (X←X ± 1) [B]←Imm, (B←B ± 1) A←0 A←A + 1 A←A − 1 DECrement A A←ROM (PU,A) A←BCD correction of A (follows ADC, SUBC) C→A7→…→A0→C Load A InDirect from ROM DCOR A RRC A Decimal CORrect A Rotate A Right thru C RLC A Rotate A Left thru C C←A7←…←A0←C, HC←A0 SWAP A SWAP nibbles of A SC Set C A7…A4↔A3…A0 C←1, HC←1 RC Reset C C←0, HC←0 IFC IF C IF C is true, do next instruction IF Not C If C is not true, do next instruction SP←SP + 1, A←[SP] [SP]←A, SP←SP − 1 IFNC POP A POP the stack into A PUSH A PUSH A onto the stack JMPL Addr. Jump absolute Long JMP Addr. Jump absolute PU←[VU], PL←[VL] 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) VIS www.national.com Vector to Interrupt Service Routine 50 JSRL (Continued) Addr. Jump SubRoutine Long JSR Addr. Jump SubRoutine JSRB Addr Jump SubRoutine Boot ROM [SP] ←PL, [SP−1]←PU,SP−2, PC←ii [SP]←PL, [SP−1]←PU,SP−2, PC9…0←i [SP]←PL, [SP−1]←PU,SP−2, PL←Addr,PU←00, switch to flash RET RETurn from subroutine RETSK RETurn and SKip PL←ROM (PU,A) SP + 2, PL←[SP], PU←[SP−1] SP + 2, PL←[SP],PU←[SP−1], skip next instruction SP + 2, PL←[SP],PU←[SP−1],GIE←1 JID Jump InDirect RETI RETurn from Interrupt INTR Generate an Interrupt NOP No OPeration [SP]←PL, [SP−1]←PU, SP−2, PC←0FF PC←PC + 1 19.7 INSTRUCTION EXECUTION TIME Most instructions are single byte (with immediate addressing mode instructions taking two bytes). Instructions Using A & C Most single byte instructions take one cycle time to execute. 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 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 [B] Direct Immed. ADD 1/1 3/4 2/2 ADC 1/1 3/4 2/2 SUBC 1/1 3/4 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 IFEQ 1/1 3/4 2/2 JMP 2/3 IFGT 1/1 3/4 2/2 JP 1/3 IFBNE 1/1 JSRL 3/5 1/3 JSR 2/5 DRSZ IFNC 1/1 PUSHA 1/3 POPA 1/3 ANDSZ 2/2 Transfer of Control Instructions SBIT 1/1 3/4 JSRB 2/5 RBIT 1/1 3/4 JID 1/3 IFBIT 1/1 3/4 VIS 1/5 RET 1/5 RETSK 1/5 RETI 1/5 RPND COP8TAB9/TAC9 19.0 Instruction Set 1/1 51 INTR 1/7 NOP 1/1 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 19.0 Instruction Set (Continued) Memory Transfer Instructions Register Indirect Register Indirect Direct [B] [X] X A, (Note 8) 1/1 1/3 2/3 LD A, (Note 8) 1/1 1/3 2/3 Immed. 2/2 Auto Incr. & Decr. [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 8: = > Memory location addressed by B or X or directly. www.national.com 52 JP−18 LD 0FD,#i JP−17 LD 0FE,#i JP−2 JP−1 * is an unused opcode JP−16 JP−19 LD 0FC,#i JP−3 JP−0 JP−20 LD 0FB,#i LD 0FF,#i LD 0F9,#i LD 0F8,#i JP−4 LD 0F7,#i LD 0F6,#i JP−21 LD 0FA,#i JP−25 JP−9 LD 0F5,#i JP−5 JP−26 JP−10 LD 0F4,#i JP−22 JP−27 JP−11 LD 0F3,#i JP−6 JP−28 JP−12 LD 0F2,#i JP−23 JP−29 JP−13 LD 0F1,#i JP−7 JP−30 JP−14 LD 0F0,#i JP−24 JP−31 JP−15 D JP−8 E F 19.0 Instruction Set * 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 B i is the immediate data 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 (Continued) * LD A,[B] JSRL JMPL LD A,[B−] LD A,[B+] IFEQ Md,#i RLCA * X A,[B] JID LAID X A,[B−] X A,[B+] SC RC A 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 RETI RET SBIT 7,[B] SBIT 6,[B] SBIT 5,[B] SBIT 4,[B] SBIT 3,[B] SBIT 2,[B] SBIT 1,[B] SBIT 0,[B] IFBIT 7,[B] IFBIT 6,[B] IFBIT 5,[B] IFBIT 4,[B] IFBIT 3,[B] IFBIT 2,[B] IFBIT 1,[B] IFBIT 0,[B] 7 RBIT 7,[B] RBIT 6,[B] RBIT 5,[B] RBIT 4,[B] RBIT 3,[B] RBIT 2,[B] RBIT 1,[B] RBIT 0,[B] PUSHA DCORA SWAPA CLRA Reserved Reserved JSRB ANDSZ A,#i 6 Upper Nibble Md is a directly addressed memory location LD B,#i LD [B],#i LD A,Md RETSK X A,Md LD [B−],#i LD [B+],#i IFNE A,#i LD A,#i 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 OPCODE TABLE 5 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 LD B,#0A LD B,#0B LD B,#0C LD B,#0D LD B,#0E LD B,#0F 4 3 JSR xF00–xFFF JSR xE00–xEFF JSR xD00–xDFF JSR xC00–xCFF JSR xB00–xBFF JSR 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 2 JMP xF00–xFFF JMP xE00–xEFF JMP xD00–xDFF JMP xC00–xCFF JMP xB00–xBFF JMP xA00–xAFF JMP x900–x9FF JMP x800–x8FF JMP x700–x7FF JMP x600–x6FF JMP x500–x5FF JMP x400–x4FF JMP x300–x3FF JMP x200–x2FF JMP x100–x1FF JMP x000–x0FF 1 JP+32 JP+31 JP+30 JP+29 JP+28 JP+27 JP+26 JP+25 JP+24 JP+23 JP+22 JP+21 JP+20 JP+19 JP+18 JP+17 The opcode 60 Hex is also the opcode for IFBIT #i,A 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 0 JP+16 JP+15 JP+14 JP+13 JP+12 JP+11 JP+10 JP+9 JP+8 JP+7 JP+6 JP+5 JP+4 JP+3 JP+2 INTR F E D C B A 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Lower Nibble COP8TAB9/TAC9 53 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 20.0 Development Support 20.1 TOOLS ORDERING NUMBERS FOR THE COP8TA 2.5V FLASH FAMILY DEVICES This section provides specific tools ordering information for the devices in this datasheet, followed by a summary of the tools and development kits available at print time. Up-to-date information, device selection guides, demos, updates, and purchase information can be obtained at our web site at: www.national.com/cop8. Unless otherwise noted, tools can be purchased for worldwide delivery from National’s e-store: http://www.national.com/ store/ Tool Order Number Cost* Notes/Includes Free Assembler/ Linker/ Simulators/ Library Manager/ Compiler Demos/ Flash ISP and NiceMon Debugger Utilities/ Example Code/ etc. (Flash Emulator support requires licensed COP8-NSDEV CD-ROM). L Supports COP8TA - Target board with 44LLP and 28SOIC sockets, LEDs, Test Points, and Breadboard Area. Development CD, ISP Cable and Source Code. No p/s. Also supports COP8 Low Voltage Flash Emulator and Kanda ISP Tool. Evaluation Software and Reference Designs Software and Utilities Web Downloads: www.national.com/cop8 Hardware Reference Designs None Starter Kits and Hardware Target Boards Starter Development Kits COP8-DB-TAC Software Development Languages, and Integrated Development Environments National’s WCOP8 IDE and Assembler on CD COP8-NSDEV COP8 Library Manager from KKD www.kkd.dk/libman.htm Fully Licensed IDE with Assembler and Emulator/Debugger Support. Assembler/ Linker/ Simulator/ Utilities/ Documentation. Updates from web. Included with COP8-DB-TAC, SKFlash, COP8 Emulators. Eval The ultimate information source for COP8 developers Integrates with WCOP8 IDE. Organize and manage code, notes, datasheets, etc. M Includes 110v/220v p/s, target cable with 2x7 connector, manuals and software on CD. Programming Adapters COP8-PGMA-20SF2 (For any programmer COP8-PGMA-28SF2 supporting flash adapter COP8-PGMA-44CF2 base pinout) L For programming 20SOIC COP8TA only. L For programming 28SOIC COP8TA only. L For programming 44LLP COP8TAC only. KANDA’s Flash ISP Programmer COP8 USB ISP www.kanda.com L USB connected Dongle, with target cable and Control Software; Updateable from the web; Purchase from www.kanda.com Development Devices COP8TAB9 COP8TAC9 Free All packages. Obtain samples from: www.national.com Hardware Emulation and Debug Tools Hardware Emulators COP8-IMFlash-LV Development and Production Programming Tools *Cost: Free; VL= < $100; L=$100-$300; M=$300-$1k; H=$1k-$3k; VH=$3k-$5k www.national.com 54 (Continued) 20.2 COP8 TOOLS OVERVIEW COP8 Evaluation Software and Reference Designs Software and Hardware for: Evaluation of COP8 Development Environments; Learning about COP8 Architecture and Features; Demonstrating Application Specific Capabilities. Product WCOP8 IDE and Software Downloads Description Software Evaluation downloads for Windows. Includes WCOP8 IDE evaluation version, Full COP8 Assembler/Linker, COP8-SIM Instruction Level Simulator or Unis Simulator, Byte Craft COP8C Compiler Demo, IAR Embedded Workbench (Assembler version), Manuals, Applications Software, and other COP8 technical information. Source www.national.com/cop8 FREE Download COP8 Starter Kits and Hardware Target Solutions Hardware Kits for: In-depth Evaluation and Testing of COP8 capabilities; Developing and Testing Code; Implementing Target Design. Product COP8TAC Starter Kits Description COP8-DB-TAC - A complete Code Development Tool for 2.5V COP8Flash Families. A Windows IDE with Assembler, Simulator, and Debug Monitor, combined with a simple realtime target environment. Quickly design and simulate your code, then download to the target COP8flash device for execution and simple debugging. Includes a library of software routines, and source code. No power supply. (Add a COP8-EMFlash Emulator for advanced emulation and debugging) Source NSC Distributor, or Order from: www.national.com/cop8 COP8 Software Development Languages and Integrated Environments Integrated Software for: Project Management; Code Development; Simulation and Debug. Product Description Source WCOP8 IDE from National on CD-ROM National’s COP8 Software Development package for Windows on CD. Fully licensed versions of our WCOP8 IDE and Emulator Debugger, with Assembler/ Linker/ Simulators/ Library Manager/ Compiler Demos/ Flash ISP and NiceMon Debugger Utilities/ Example Code/ etc. Includes all COP8 datasheets and documentation. Included with most tools from National. NSC Distributor, or Order from: www.national.com/cop8 Unis Processor Expert Processor Expert( from Unis Corporation - COP8 Code Generation and Simulation tool with Graphical and Traditional user interfaces. Automatically generates customized source code "Beans" (modules) containing working code for all on-chip features and peripherals, then integrates them into a fully functional application code design, with all documentation. Unis, or Order from: www.national.com/cop8 Byte Craft COP8C Compiler ByteCraft COP8C- C Cross-Compiler and Code Development System. Includes BCLIDE (Integrated Development Environment) for Win32, editor, optimizing C Cross-Compiler, macro cross assembler, BC-Linker, and MetaLinktools support. (DOS/SUN versions available; Compiler is linkable under WCOP8 IDE) ByteCraft Distributor, or Order from: www.national.com/cop8 IAR Embedded Workbench IAR EWCOP8 - ANSI C-Compiler and Embedded Workbench. A fully integrated Win32 IDE, ANSI C-Compiler, macro assembler, editor, linker, librarian, and C-Spy high-level simulator/debugger. (EWCOP8-M version includes COP8Flash Emulator support) (EWCOP8-BL version is limited to 4k code limit; no FP). IAR Distributor, or Order from: www.national.com/cop8 COP8 Hardware Emulation/Debug Tools Hardware Tools for: Real-time Emulation; Target Hardware Debug; Target Design Test. Product Description COP8Flash Emulators COP8-DMFlash COP8 In-Circuit Emulator for Flash Families. Windows based development and real-time in-circuit emulation tool with 32k, trace 32k s/w breakpoints, source/symbolic debugger, and device programming. Includes COP8-NSDEV CD, Null Target, emulation cable with 2x7 connector, and power supply. NSC Distributor, or Order from: www.national.com/cop8 NiceMon Debug Monitor Utility A simple, single-step debug monitor with one breakpoint. MICROWIRE interface. Download from: www.national.com/cop8 55 Source www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 20.0 Development Support COP8TAB9/TAC9 20.0 Development Support (Continued) Development and Production Programming Tools Programmers for: Design Development; Hardware Test; Pre-Production; Full Production. Product Description Source COP8 Flash Emulators COP8 Flash Emulators include in-circuit device programming capability during development. NSC Distributor, or Order from: www.national.com/cop8 NiceMon Debugger, KANDAFlash National’s software Utilities "KANDAFlash" and "NiceMon" provide development In-System-Programming for our Flash Starter Kit, our Prototype Development Board, or any other target board with appropriate connectors. Download from: www.national.com/cop8 KANDA COP8-ISP The COP8-ISP programmer from KANDA is available for engineering, and small volume production use. PC parallel or serial interface. www.kanda.com SofTec Micro inDart COP8 The inDart COP8 programmer from SofTec is available for engineering and small volume production use. PC serial interface only. www.softecmicro.com Third-Party Programmers Third-party programmers and automatic handling equipment are approved for non-ISP engineering and production use. Factory Programming Factory programming available for high-volume requirements and LLP production. National Representative 20.3 WHERE TO GET TOOLS Tools can be ordered directly from National, National’s e-store (Worldwide delivery: http://www.national.com/store/) , a National Distributor, or from the tool vendor. Go to the vendor’s web site for current listings of distributors. Vendor Byte Craft Limited Home Office Electronic Sites 421 King Street North www.bytecraft.com Waterloo, Ontario [email protected] Other Main Offices Distributors Worldwide Canada N2J 4E4 Tel: 1-(519) 888-6911 Fax: (519) 746-6751 IAR Systems AB PO Box 23051 www.iar.se USA:: San Francisco S-750 23 Uppsala [email protected] Tel: +1-415-765-5500 Sweden [email protected] Fax: +1-415-765-5503 Tel: +46 18 16 78 00 [email protected] UK: London Fax +46 18 16 78 38 [email protected] Tel: +44 171 924 33 34 Fax: +44 171 924 53 41 Germany: Munich Tel: +49 89 470 6022 Fax: +49 89 470 956 Embedded Results Ltd. P.O. Box 200, Aberystwyth, SY23 2WD, UK Tel/Fax: +44 (0)8707 446 807 www.kanda.com [email protected] K and K Development ApS Kaergaardsvej 42 DK-8355 Solbjerg Denmark Fax: +45-8692-8500 www.kkd.dk [email protected] National 2900 Semiconductor Dr. www.national.com/cop8 Santa Clara, CA 95051 support @nsc.com Tel: 49(0) 180 530 8585 USA [email protected] Fax: 49(0) 180 530 8586 Semiconductor www.national.com USA: Tel: 408-441-1300 Fax: 408-437-8970 [email protected] www.allamerican.com Tel/Fax: 800-510-3609 [email protected] www.ucpros.com Europe: Tel: 1-800-272-9959 Hong Kong: Fax: 1-800-737-7018 Distributors Worldwide 56 Vendor (Continued) Home Office SofTec Microsystems Via Roma, 1 33082 Azzano Decimo (PN) Italy Tel: +39 0434 640113 Fax: +39 0434 631598 Electronic Sites Other Main Offices [email protected] www.softecmicro.com [email protected] Germany: Tel.:+49 (0) 8761 63705 France: Tel: +33 (0) 562 072 954 UK: Tel: +44 (0) 1970 621033 The following companies have approved COP8 programmers in a variety of configurations. Contact your vendor’s local office or distributor and request a COP8FLASH update. You can link to their web sites and get the latest listing of approved programmers at: www.national.com/cop8. Advantech; BP Microsystems; Data I/O; Dataman; Hi-Lo Systems; KANDA, Lloyd Research; MQP; Needhams; Phyton; SofTec Microsystems; System General; and Tribal Microsystems. 21.0 Revision History Date Section December, 2002 April, 2003 Summary of Changes Preliminary Datasheet Release. User ISP and Virtual E2 Deleted Restrictions on Software Deleted When Calling ISP Routines in Boot ROM June, 2003 Multi-Input Wake-Up and ACCESS.Bus Interface Updated to account for C Port Wake-Up. August, 2003 Electrical Specifications, Option Register and ACCESS.Bus Added 1.8V input compatibility on L0 (SDA), L1 (SCL) and L2. Added Electrical Specifications for ACCESS.Bus February, 2004 Electrical Specifications, Development Support Updated Electrical Specifications, Updated Development Support May, 2004 Reset Clarified need for external Reset in Brownout conditions. Memory Map Modified Recommended Reset Circuit to include external Brownout detector. Added missing Port C. February, 2005 General Electrical Specifications Clarify differences between COP8TAx9 and COP8TAx5 to minimize problems when generating ROM code for COP8TAx5 production. General rework, through Section 11.0 In-System Programming, for clarity. Increase Input Capacitance specification. Add Oscillator Frequency specification. Increase Typical R/C Oscillator specification. Add Figure references to ACCESS.Bus timing specifications. Correct SCL edge reference for SDA Valid Time. Reduce Halt Current Specification. 57 www.national.com COP8TAB9/TAC9 20.0 Development Support COP8TAB9/TAC9 22.0 Physical Dimensions inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted LLP Package Order Number COP8TAB9HLQ8 or COP8TAC9HLQ8 NS Package Number LQA44A SOIC Wide Package Order Number COP8TAB9EMW8 or COP8TAC9EMW8 NS Package Number M28B www.national.com 58 inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued) SOIC Wide Package Order Number COP8TAB9CMW8 or COP8TAC9CMW8 NS Package Number M20B 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. For the most current product information visit us at www.national.com. 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. 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. BANNED SUBSTANCE COMPLIANCE National Semiconductor manufactures products and uses packing materials that meet the provisions of the Customer Products Stewardship Specification (CSP-9-111C2) and the Banned Substances and Materials of Interest Specification (CSP-9-111S2) and contain no ‘‘Banned Substances’’ as defined in CSP-9-111S2. National Semiconductor Americas Customer Support Center Email: [email protected] Tel: 1-800-272-9959 www.national.com National Semiconductor Europe Customer Support Center Fax: +49 (0) 180-530 85 86 Email: [email protected] Deutsch Tel: +49 (0) 69 9508 6208 English Tel: +44 (0) 870 24 0 2171 Français Tel: +33 (0) 1 41 91 8790 National Semiconductor Asia Pacific Customer Support Center Email: [email protected] National Semiconductor Japan Customer Support Center Fax: 81-3-5639-7507 Email: [email protected] Tel: 81-3-5639-7560 COP8TAB9/TAC9 8-Bit CMOS Flash Based Microcontroller with 2k Byte or 4k Byte Memory 22.0 Physical Dimensions