July 2003 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 I/O Companion Multi-Function South Bridge General Description The National Semiconductor® Geode™ CS5535 is a complete I/O companion for an integrated processor North Bridge component such as the Geode GX2 processor series. Together, the GX2 and CS5535 provide a systemlevel solution well suited for the high-performance and lowpower needs of a host of information appliances that include digital set-top boxes, personal access devices, and thin client applications. The internal architecture has been greatly simplified over previous I/O companions by use of a single, high-performance modular structure based on GeodeLink™ architecture. This architecture yields high internal speed (over 4 GB/s) data movement and extremely versatile internal power management. The GeodeLink architecture is transparent to application software. Communication with the GX2 processor is over a 33/66 MHz PCI bus. The CS5535 incorporates many I/O functions, including those found in typical SuperI/O chips, simplifying many system designs. Since the graphics subsystem is entirely contained in the GX2 processor, system interconnect is simplified. The device contains state-of-the-art power management that enables systems, especially battery powered systems, to significantly reduce power consumption. Audio is supported by an internal controller, designed to connect to multiple AC97 compatible codecs such as National’s LM4550. An IR (infrared) port supports all popular IR communication protocols. The IR port is shared with one of two industry-standard serial ports that can reach speeds of 115.2 kbps. An LPC (low pin count) port is provided to facilitate connections to a SuperI/O should additional expansion, such as a floppy drive, be necessary, and/or to an LPC ROM for the system BIOS. Geode™ CS5535 Block Diagram External USB Ports 1-1 & 1-2 USB Controller #1 (USBC1) External USB Ports 2-1 & 2-2 USB Controller #2 (USBC2) External Audio External IDE/Flash System Power Voltages Geode™ GX2 Interface GeodeLink™ Control Processor (GLCP) AC97 Controller (ACC) ATA-5 Controller (ATAC) Low Voltage Detect (LVD) Power Good for Power On Reset (POR) PCI GeodeLink™ Interface Unit (GLIU) 33 or 66 MHz GeodeLink™ PCI South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL) 82xx PC Legacy UART (2) & IR (1) SMB Controller Flash Interface LPC Port RTC & CMOS RAM GPIO Diverse Device (DD) External I/O Test/Reset Interface Power Mgmnt MFGP Timers National Semiconductor and Virtual System Architecture are registered trademarks of National Semiconductor Corporation. Geode, GeodeLink, MacPHYTER, WebPAD, and VSA are trademarks of National Semiconductor Corporation. For a complete listing of National Semiconductor trademarks, please visit www.national.com/trademarks. © 2003 National Semiconductor Corporation www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 I/O Companion: Multi-Function South Bridge Preliminary Geode™ CS5535 General Description (Continued) GeodeLink Control Processor The hard disk controller is an ATA-5 compatible bus mastering IDE controller; includes support for two ATA-compliant devices on one channel. Two dual-port USBs (universal serial buses, USB specification v1.1 compliant) provide four ports with both low and full-speed capabilities for Plug & Play expansion for a variety of consumer peripheral devices such as a keyboard, mouse, printer, and digital camera. A battery-backed RTC (real-time clock) keeps track of time and provides calendar functions. ■ SUSP#/SUPA# handshake with power management logic provides Sleep control of all GeodeLink devices ■ System software debug support using built-in “logic analyzer” with: — 8192-bit capture memory — Capture memory can be organized wide or narrow — “Analyzer” can be connected to thousands of possible internal nodes — Synchronous operation with GX2 GeodeLink Control Processor — JTAG interface and system bus interfaces — For debug use, able to conduct any GeodeLink transaction via the JTAG interface — Manufacturing test support A suite of 82xx devices provide the legacy PC functionality required by most designs, including two PICs (programmable interrupt controllers), one PIT (programmable interval timer) with three channels, and DMA (direct memory access) functions. The CS5535 contains eight MFGPTs (multi-function general purpose timers) that can be used for a variety of functions. A number of GPIOs (general purpose input/outputs) are provided, and are assigned to system functions on power-up (i.e., LPC port); each of these may be reassigned and given different I/O characteristics such as debounce, edge-triggering, etc. ATA-5 Controller ■ 66 MB per second IDE Controller in UDMA mode per the ATA-5 specification State-of-the-art power management features are attained with the division of the device into two internal power domains. The GPIOs and multi-function timers are distributed into each of the two domains to allow these to act as wakeup sources for the device. In addition to full ACPI (Advanced Configuration Power Interface) compliance and support of industry-standard Wakeup and Sleep modes, the device automatically disables clocks from internal blocks when they are not being used. ■ 3.3V interface ■ Legacy and Enhanced PIO (Programmable I/O), MDMA (Multi DMA), and UDMA (Ultra DMA) modes ■ One channel with two devices ■ Multiplexed with Flash interface Flash Interface ■ Multiplexed with IDE interface Features ■ Connects to array of industry standard NAND Flash and/or NOR Flash General Features ■ NOR optional execute-in-place boot source ■ Designed for use with National’s Geode GX2 processor series ■ NAND optional file system ■ 208-Terminal PBGA (plastic ball grid array) package ■ General purpose ISA bus slave-like devices supported with configurable chip selects ■ 3.3V I/O and 1.5V (nominal) Core operation ■ Hardware support for SmartMedia type ECC (Error ■ Low power operation: less than 1.0W in Working state Correcting Code) calculation off loading software intensive algorithm ■ Working and Standby power domains ■ IEEE 1149.1 compliant TAP and boundary scan USB Controllers 1 and 2 GeodeLink PCI Bridge (South Bridge) ■ Two independent host USB controllers; doubles the throughput of a single controller ■ Provides a PCI interface for GeodeLink devices: — — — — — PCI specification v2.2 compliant 32-Bit, 33/66 MHz operation Transaction FIFOs (first in/first out) Bus master or slave Converts selected PCI configuration bus cycles to internal MSR (Model Specific Register) cycles — Capable of handling in-bound transactions immediately after reset - no setup — Mapping of PCI virtual configuration space to MSR space is done completely in VSA™ (Virtual System Architecture®) code — Serialized processor control interface www.national.com ■ Each controller has two ports; total of four ports ■ USB specification v1.1 compliant, with external crimp protection diodes ■ OHCI (Open Host Controller Interface) specification v1.0 compliant ■ Supports wakeup events ■ Second generation proven core design ■ Over-current and power control support ■ GeodeLink master burst reads and writes 2 Revision 0.8 ■ General Purpose I/Os (GPIOs): Audio Codec 97 (AC97) Controller — Programmable: In, Out, I/O, Open-Drain, PullUp/Down, and Invert — Parallel bit read and write — Individual bit access eliminates Read-Modify-Write cycles — Input Conditioning Functions (ICF): – Input debounce/filter — Input event counter — Input edge detect ■ AC97 specification v2.1 compliant interface to multiple audio codecs: Serial In, Serial Out, Sync Out, Bit Clock In ■ Legacy “PC Beep” support ■ Eight-channel buffered GeodeLink mastering interface ■ ASMI and IRQ support ■ Multiple codec support ■ Multi-Function General Purpose Timers (MFGPTs): ■ Surround sound support — Eight MFGPTs - two are multiplexed with GPIOs for external usage — Two MFGPTs are powered by Standby power and can be used as wakeups — Watchdog timer generates reset, IRQ, ASMI, or NMI — Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) — Pulse Density Modulation (PDM) — Blink Diverse Device ■ 82xx Legacy Devices: — Two 8259A-equivalent PICs: – Shadow registers allow reading of internal registers — One 8254-equivalent PIT — Two 8237A-equivalent DMA controllers: – 8-bit DMA supported (only) — Serial Ports 1 and 2: – Port 1 is shared with an IR port – 16550A and 16450 software compatible – Shadow register support for write-only bit monitoring – UART data rates up to 115.2 kbps ■ Real-Time Clock (RTC) with CMOS RAM: — Battery backed-up century calendar in days, day of the week, date of month, months, years and century, with automatic leap-year adjustment — Battery backed-up time of day in seconds, minutes, and hours that allows a 12 or 24 hour format and adjustments for daylight savings time — BCD or binary format for time keeping — DS1287, MC146818, and PC87911 compatibility — Selective lock mechanisms for the RTC RAM — Real-time alarm — VBAT or VSTANDBY power sources with automatic switching between them — 242 bytes of battery-backed CMOS RAM in two banks ■ IR (Infrared) Communication Port: — — — — — — — Shared with Serial Port 1 16550A and 16450 software compatible Shadow register support for write-only bit monitoring Consumer-IR (TV-Remote) mode Data rate up to 115.2 kbps (SIR) HP-SIR (same as SIR above) Selectable internal or external modulation/demodulation (Sharp-IR) — ASK-IR option of SHARP-IR — DASK-IR option of SHARP-IR — Consumer Remote Control supports RC-5, RC-6, NEC, RCA, and RECS 80 ■ Power Management Controller: — ACPI (Advanced Configuration Power Interface) specification v2.0 compliant timer and register set — Supports APM (Advanced Power Management) and Legacy PM — PME (power management event) from GPIOs and/or on-chip sources — Working, Sleep, and Standby states — Wakeup circuits powered by Standby power rails while rest of component and system powered off — Automatic clock-off gating reduces power to inactive blocks — Flexible power supply controls including On/Off and Sleep button inputs — Generic Sleep output controls — ACPI-compliant four second fail-safe off — Low-voltage detect function for battery-powered applications — Suspend/Acknowledge handshake with GX2 — System over-temperature support — Low Voltage Detect (LVD) provides Power On Reset (POR) as well as continuous voltage monitoring for automatic system reset on a low voltage condition ■ System Management Bus (SMB) Controller: — Compatible with Intel System Management Bus, Phillips I2C, and ACCESS.bus — Bus master and slave operation ■ LPC (Low Pin Count) Port: — — — — — — Based on Intel LPC Interface specification v1.0 Serial IRQ support Serial DMA support (8-bit only) Boot source typically off external LPC Supports firmware hub protocol External bus masters not supported Revision 0.8 3 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Features (Continued) GeodeLink Interface Unit ■ Programmable use and activity monitors that generate ■ 64-Bit, 66 MHz operation optional ASMIs (asynchronous system management interrupts) for legacy power management purposes ■ Transparent to applications software and BIOS due to ■ Programmable SSMI (synchronous system manage- PCI VSM (virtual system module) implementation ment interrupt) generators for selected range of addresses; intended for virtual device emulation (future support, if needed) ■ Non-blocking arbitration and routing of request and data packets ■ ATA-5 Controller, GLIU, and Diverse Device are the only ■ Programmable routing descriptors SSMI sources www.national.com 4 Revision 0.8 1.0 Architecture Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 2.0 Signal Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 2.1 2.2 3.0 GEODELINK PCI SOUTH BRIDGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 GEODELINK CONTROL PROCESSOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 ATA-5 CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 UNIVERSAL SERIAL BUS CONTROLLERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 AUDIO CODEC 97 (AC97) CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 DIVERSE DEVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 1.6.1 Legacy DMA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 1.6.2 Programmable Interval Timers - Legacy Timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1.6.3 Programmable Interrupt Controller - Legacy Interrupt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1.6.4 Keyboard Emulation Logic - Legacy Support Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1.6.5 Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter and IR Port . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1.6.6 System Management Bus Controller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1.6.7 Low Pin Count Port . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1.6.8 General Purpose I/Os with Input Conditioning Functions (ICF) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1.6.9 Multi-Function General Purpose Timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 1.6.10 Flash Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 1.6.11 Real-Time Clock with CMOS RAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 1.6.12 Power Management Controller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 GEODELINK INTERFACE UNIT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 LOW VOLTAGE DETECT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 PROCESSOR SUPPORT / SYSTEM OVERVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 BALL ASSIGNMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 2.1.1 Buffer Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 2.1.2 Boot Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 2.1.3 Ball Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 SIGNAL DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 2.2.1 System Interface Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 2.2.2 PCI Interface Signals () . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 2.2.3 IDE/Flash Interface Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 2.2.4 USB Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 2.2.5 System Management Bus (SMB) Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 2.2.6 Low Pin Count (LPC) Interface () . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 2.2.7 Audio Codec 97 Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 2.2.8 GPIOs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 2.2.9 Debug and Manufacturing Test Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 2.2.10 Power, Ground, and No Connects () . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Global Concepts and Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 3.1 Revision 0.8 GEODELINK ARCHITECTURE OVERVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 3.1.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 3.1.2 Routing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 3.1.3 Response Packets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 3.1.4 ASMI and Error . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 3.1.5 Topology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 3.1.6 Address Spaces and MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 3.1.7 Special Cycles and BIZZARO Flag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 5 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Table of Contents Geode™ CS5535 Table of Contents (Continued) 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 4.0 CS5535 MSR ADDRESSING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 TYPICAL CS5535 GEODELINK DEVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 EMBEDDED PCI ADAPTER (PA) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 CLOCK CONSIDERATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 3.5.1 Clock Domain Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 3.5.2 Clock Controls and Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 RESET CONSIDERATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 MEMORY AND I/O MAP OVERVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 3.7.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 3.7.2 PCI Bus Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 3.7.3 GLIU Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 3.7.4 Legacy Keyboard Emulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 3.7.5 GeodeLink Device Decoding Except Diverse Device . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 3.7.6 Diverse Device Decoding Except Legacy I/O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 3.7.7 Legacy I/O Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 STANDARD GEODELINK DEVICE MSRS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 3.8.1 MSR Address 0: Capabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 3.8.2 MSR Address 1: Master Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 3.8.3 MSR Address 2: SMI Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 3.8.4 MSR Address 3: Error Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 3.8.5 MSR Address 4: Power Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 POWER MANAGEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 3.9.1 Power Domains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 3.9.2 ACPI Power Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 3.9.3 APM Power Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 COMPONENT REVISION ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 Module Functional Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 4.1 4.2 www.national.com GEODELINK INTERFACE UNIT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 4.1.1 GLIU Port Connections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 4.1.2 Descriptor Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 GEODELINK PCI SOUTH BRIDGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 4.2.1 GeodeLink Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 4.2.2 FIFOs/Synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 4.2.3 Transaction Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 4.2.4 PCI Bus Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 4.2.5 CPU Interface Serial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 4.2.6 Programmable ID Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 4.2.7 SSMI and EXCEP Support in GLIU Read/Write Response Packets . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.2.8 Subtractive Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.2.9 Byte Enable Checking in I/O Address Decoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.2.10 IDE Data Port Read Prefetch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.2.11 IDE Data Port Write Posting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.2.12 Other Typical Slave Write Posting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.2.13 Memory Writes with Send Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 4.2.14 CPU Interface Serial (CIS) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 4.2.15 Exception Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 4.2.16 Out-Bound Write Exceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 4.2.17 Out-Bound Read Exceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 4.2.18 In-Bound Write Exceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 4.2.19 In-Bound Read Exceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 6 Revision 0.8 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11 4.12 Revision 0.8 AC97 AUDIO CODEC CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 4.3.1 Audio Bus Masters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 4.3.2 Bus Master Audio Configuration Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 4.3.3 AC Link Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 4.3.4 Codec Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 4.3.5 AC Link Power Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 4.3.6 Bus Mastering Buffer Scheme . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 4.3.7 ACC Software Programming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 ATA-5 CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 4.4.1 PIO Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 4.4.2 Bus Master Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 UNIVERSAL SERIAL BUS CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 4.5.1 GeodeLink Adapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 4.5.2 PCI Adapter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 4.5.3 USB Core . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 4.5.4 Host Controller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 4.5.5 USB Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 DIVERSE INTEGRATION LOGIC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 4.6.1 LBARs and Comparators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 4.6.2 Standard MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 PROGRAMMABLE INTERVAL TIMER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 4.7.1 Programming the 8254 PIT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 PROGRAMMABLE INTERRUPT CONTROL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 4.8.1 Mapper and Masks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 4.8.2 Extended PIC (XPIC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 4.8.3 Legacy PIC (LPIC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 4.8.4 PIC Subsystem Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 KEYBOARD EMULATION LOGIC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 4.9.1 Keyboard Emulation and Port A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 4.9.2 Keyboard Emulation Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 4.9.3 Theory - Keyboard / Mouse Input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 4.9.4 Theory - Keyboard Output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 4.9.5 Emulation Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 4.9.6 Theory - KEL EEs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 4.9.7 Theory - Mixed Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 4.9.8 Theory - Force A20 Low Sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 4.9.9 Theory - Processor Initialize Sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 4.9.10 Port A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 4.9.11 Keyboard Emulation Logic MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 4.9.12 Related Diverse Device Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 4.9.13 Emulation Event Decode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 SYSTEM MANAGEMENT BUS CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 4.10.1 Data Transactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 UNIVERSAL ASYNCHRONOUS RECEIVER TRANSMITTER AND IR PORT CONTROLLER . 125 4.11.1 Operational Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126 4.11.2 Modem Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 4.11.3 Dongle Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131 DIRECT MEMORY ACCESS MODULE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 4.12.1 DMA Mapper Source Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 7 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Table of Contents (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Table of Contents (Continued) 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 4.20 www.national.com LOW PIN COUNT PORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 4.13.1 LPC Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 4.13.2 Cycle Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137 4.13.3 Serial IRQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139 4.13.4 Firmware Hub Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141 REAL-TIME CLOCK FEATURES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 4.14.1 External Use Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 GENERAL PURPOSE INPUT/OUTPUT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 4.15.1 Programming for Recommended Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147 4.15.2 Register Strategy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148 4.15.3 Lock Bits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148 4.15.4 GPIO Basic I/O Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149 4.15.5 Input Conditioning Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150 MULTI-FUNCTION GENERAL PURPOSE TIMER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153 4.16.1 Prescaler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154 4.16.2 I/O Registers Block . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154 4.16.3 Clock Switch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155 4.16.4 Single MFGPT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156 4.16.5 Working Power Domain Logic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158 4.16.6 Power Domain Crossing Interface Logic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158 POWER MANAGEMENT CONTROL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159 4.17.1 Power Domains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159 4.17.2 Power States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159 4.17.3 Software Power Management Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161 4.17.4 PMC Power Management States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 4.17.5 PMC Power Management Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166 FLASH CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 169 4.18.1 NAND Flash Controller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 169 4.18.2 NOR Flash Controller/General Purpose Chip Select . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 171 4.18.3 Flash Controller Interface Timing Diagrams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172 GEODELINK CONTROL PROCESSOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176 4.19.1 GeodeLink Power Management Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176 4.19.2 GLCP Clocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177 TAP CONTROLLER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178 4.20.1 EXTEST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181 4.20.2 TAPSCAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181 4.20.3 TAPFUNC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181 4.20.4 GL_ADDR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.5 GL_DATA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.6 PADACC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.7 PROGMISR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.8 MB_ADDR_ACT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.9 TST_IDDQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.10 REVID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.11 TRISTATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.12 BISTDR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.13 IDCODE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 4.20.14 BYPASS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183 8 Revision 0.8 5.0 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 5.10 5.11 5.12 Revision 0.8 GEODELINK INTERFACE UNIT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186 5.1.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189 5.1.2 P2D Descriptor MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194 5.1.3 GLIU Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196 5.1.4 IOD Descriptor MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210 GEODELINK PCI SOUTH BRIDGE REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213 5.2.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214 5.2.2 GLPCI_SB Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219 5.2.3 PCI Configuration Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225 AC97 AUDIO CODEC CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 230 5.3.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233 5.3.2 ACC Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236 ATA-5 CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247 5.4.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 248 5.4.2 ATAC Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 254 5.4.3 ATAC Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258 USB CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 261 5.5.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 264 5.5.2 USB Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269 5.5.3 USB Embedded PCI Configuration Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270 5.5.4 Host Controller Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277 DIVERSE INTEGRATION LOGIC REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295 5.6.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 299 5.6.2 DIVIL Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 307 FLOPPY PORT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320 5.7.1 Floppy Port Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321 PROGRAMMABLE INTERVAL TIMER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323 5.8.1 PIT Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 324 5.8.2 PIT Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325 PROGRAMMABLE INTERRUPT CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . 331 5.9.1 PIC Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 333 5.9.2 PIC Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 339 KEYBOARD EMULATION LOGIC REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 347 5.10.1 KEL Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 348 5.10.2 KEL Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349 SYSTEM MANAGEMENT BUS REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 353 5.11.1 SMB Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 354 UART AND IR PORT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360 5.12.1 UART/IR Controller Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363 5.12.2 UART/IR Controller Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 366 5.12.3 Bank 0 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 367 5.12.4 Bank 1 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 381 5.12.5 Bank 2 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 383 5.12.6 Bank 3 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387 5.12.7 Bank 4 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389 5.12.8 Bank 5 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390 5.12.9 Bank 6 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391 5.12.10 Bank 7 Register Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393 9 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Table of Contents (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Table of Contents (Continued) 5.13 5.14 5.15 5.16 5.17 5.18 5.19 5.20 6.0 DIRECT MEMORY ACCESS REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 400 5.13.1 DMA Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 403 5.13.2 DMA Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405 LOW PIN COUNT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 418 5.14.1 LPC Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419 REAL-TIME CLOCK REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 421 5.15.1 RTC Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 422 5.15.2 RTC Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 424 GPIO SUBSYSTEM REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 432 5.16.1 Atomic Bit Programming Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 436 5.16.2 GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 438 5.16.3 GPIO Input Conditioning Function Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 454 5.16.4 GPIO Interrupt and PME Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 462 MULTI-FUNCTION GENERAL PURPOSE TIMER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . 466 5.17.1 MFGPT Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 467 5.17.2 MFGPT Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 472 POWER MANAGEMENT CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 477 5.18.1 PMC Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479 5.18.2 ACPI Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479 5.18.3 PM Support Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 487 FLASH CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 501 5.19.1 Flash Controller Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 502 5.19.2 Flash Controller Native Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 507 GEODELINK CONTROL PROCESSOR REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 513 5.20.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 514 5.20.2 GLCP Specific MSRs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 518 Electrical Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525 6.1 6.2 6.3 www.national.com GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525 6.1.1 Electro Static Discharge (ESD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525 6.1.2 Power/Ground Connections and Decoupling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525 6.1.3 Absolute Maximum Ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525 6.1.4 Recommended Operating Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 526 6.1.5 Current Consumption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 526 DC CHARACTERISTICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 527 AC CHARACTERISTICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 530 6.3.1 Clock Inputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 532 6.3.2 Reset and Test Inputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 533 6.3.3 PCI and Related Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 534 6.3.4 IDE Signals in IDE Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 535 6.3.5 IDE Signals in Flash Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 539 6.3.6 USB Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 540 6.3.7 System Management Bus (SMB) Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 542 6.3.8 AC97 Codec Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 543 6.3.9 Low Pin Count (LPC) Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 544 6.3.10 Power Management and Processor Control Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 545 6.3.11 Miscellaneous Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 546 6.3.12 UART and IR Signaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 547 6.3.13 GPIO Signaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 548 6.3.14 MFGPT Signaling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 549 6.3.15 JTAG Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 550 10 Revision 0.8 6.4 6.5 7.0 POWER SUPPLY SEQUENCE REQUIREMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 551 LOW VOLTAGE DETECT (LVD) PARAMETERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 552 Package Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 553 Appendix A A.1 Revision 0.8 Support Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 554 REVISION HISTORY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 554 11 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Table of Contents (Continued) Architecture Overview The Geode™ CS5535 provides interfaces for all the common peripherals of an information appliance, plus offers expansion for additional needs, if required. Featuring a 33/66 MHz PCI interface to the GX2, the I/O companion is internally connected using the GeodeLink™ packet architecture. This architecture supports multiple simultaneous transactions and is totally transparent to all application software. GeodeLink architecture related operations are managed via Model Specific Registers (MSRs) that are detailed in Section 3.1.6 "Address Spaces and MSRs" on page 52. • Universal Serial Bus 1 Controller with Ports 1-1 and 1-2 • Universal Serial Bus 2 Controller with Ports 2-1 and 2-2 • Audio Codec 97 (AC97) Controller • Diverse Device — Legacy DMA, Timer, and Interrupt (82xx PC Legacy) — UARTs (2) and IR (1) Port (shared with UART1) — System Management Bus (SMB) Controller — Low Pin Count (LPC) Controller — General Purpose I/O (GPIO) with Input Conditioning Functions (ICF) — Multi-Function General Purpose Timers (MFGPTs) — Flash Interface (multiplexed with IDE interface) — Real-Time Clock (RTC) with CMOS RAM Power Management Controller (PMC)The Low Voltage Detect (LVD) circuit is not a GeodeLink Device (GLD) but is connected to the Power Management Controller for voltage monitoring support. As shown in Figure 1-1, the CS5535 is implemented with one GeodeLink Interface Unit (GLIU) that connects to the: • GeodeLink PCI South Bridge • GeodeLink Control Processor • ATA-5 Controller (IDE Controller multiplexed with Flash Interface) Test/Reset Interface External USB Ports 1-1 & 1-2 USB Controller #1 (USBC1) External USB Ports 2-1 & 2-2 USB Controller #2 (USBC2) External Audio External IDE/Flash System Power Voltages Geode™ GX2 Interface GeodeLink™ Control Processor (GLCP) PCI GeodeLink™ Interface Unit (GLIU) AC97 Controller (ACC) GeodeLink™ PCI South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL) 82xx PC Legacy ATA-5 Controller (ATAC) Low Voltage Detect (LVD) 33 or 66 MHz UART (2) & IR (1) SMB Controller Power Good for Power On Reset (POR) Flash Interface LPC Port RTC & CMOS RAM GPIO Diverse Device (DD) External I/O Geode™ CS5535 1.0 Power Mgmnt MFGP Timers Figure 1-1. Internal Block Diagram www.national.com 12 Revision 0.8 1.1 GEODELINK PCI SOUTH BRIDGE 1.4 The GeodeLink PCI South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) provides a PCI interface for the CS5535. It acts as a PCI master or slave in providing PCI transactions to and from the CS5535 and the PCI bus. A special serial interface to the GX2 processor, the CPU Interface Serial (CIS), is provided that assists in the transfer of information between the CS5535 and the GX2. The interface is complaint to PCI specification v2.2 and may operate at up to 66 MHz. Optional bus signals PERR#, SERR#, LOCK#, and CLKRUN are not implemented. Within a PCI burst, zero wait state operation is achieved. The PCI interface supports programmable IDSEL selection, and can handle inbound transactions immediately after system reset. 1.5 1.2 GEODELINK CONTROL PROCESSOR The GLCP interfaces with a JTAG compatible Test Access Port (TAP) Controller that is IEEE 1149.1 compliant. During debug, it can be used to pass GeodeLink packets to/from the GLIU. It is also used to support manufacturing test. This arrangement is capable of producing multi-channel 5.1 surround sound (left, center, right, left rear, right rear, and low frequency effects). The codec interface is AC97 v2.1 compliant and contains Serial In (x2), Serial Out, Sync Out, and Bit Clock allowing support for any AC97 codec with Sample Rate Conversion (SRC). Additionally, the interface supports the industrystandard 16-bit pulse code modulated (PCM) format. ATA-5 CONTROLLER The CS5535 integrates a fully-buffered, ATA-5 compliant (UDMA/66) IDE interface. The IDE interface supports one channel, which in turn supports two devices that can operate in PIO modes 1 to 4, MDMA modes 0 to 2, or UDMA/66 modes 0 to 4. 1.6 DIVERSE DEVICE A suite of 82xx devices provide all the legacy PC functionality required by most designs, including two PICs (programmable interrupt controllers), one PIT (programmable interval timer) with three channels, and DMA (direct memory access) functions. The CS5535 contains eight MFGPTs (multi-function general purpose timers) that can be used for a variety of functions. A number of GPIOs (general-purpose input/outputs) are provided, and are assigned to system functions on power-up (i.e., LPC port); each of these may be reassigned and given different I/O characteristics such as debounce, edge-triggering, and so forth. This interface is shared with the Flash interface, using the same balls. The interface usage, immediately after reset, is defined by the boot options selected (see Table 2-5 "Boot Options Selection" on page 29). After reset, the interface may be dynamically altered using the Ball Options MSR (see Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29). The IDE interface provides a variety of features to optimize system performance, including 32-bit disk access, post write buffers, bus master, MDMA, look-ahead read buffer, and prefetch mechanism. The Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL) holds the devices together and provides overall control and management via MSRs. The IDE interface timing is completely programmable. Timing control covers the command active and recover pulse widths, and command block register accesses. The IDE data transfer speed for each device on each channel can be independently programmed allowing high-speed IDE peripherals to coexist on the same channel as older, compatible devices. 1.6.1 Legacy DMA The CS5535 DMA controller consists of two cascaded 8237A-type DMA controllers that together support four 8bit channels. The DMA controller is used to provide high speed transfers between internal chip sources. It has full 32-bit address range support via high-page registers. An internal mapper allows routing of any of seven internal DMA sources to the four 8-bit DMA channels. The CS5535 also provides a software accessible buffered reset signal to the IDE drive. The IDE_RST# signal is driven low during reset to the CS5535 and can be driven low or high as needed for device-power-off conditions. Revision 0.8 AUDIO CODEC 97 (AC97) CONTROLLER The audio subsection of the CS5535 consists of three 32bit stereo-buffered bus masters (two for output, one for input) and five 16-bit mono-buffered bus masters (three for output, two for input), whose function is to transport audio data between system memory and external AC97 codecs. The GeodeLink Control Processor is responsible for debug support and monitors system clocks in support of PMC operations. 1.3 UNIVERSAL SERIAL BUS CONTROLLERS The CS5535 provides four USB ports, controlled by two independent controllers (USBC1 and USBC2) for 2x enhanced system performance. There are two ports associated with each controller for a total of four. Separate power and ground pins for the transceivers are provided to accommodate various system designs and provide superior noise immunity. Each pair of ports has an associated power control line, and there is a common over-current sense line for all four ports, compatible with National’s LM3526 dual-port USB power switch. The controllers are OpenHost Controller Interface (OHCI) v1.0 compliant, and the ports adhere to the USB v1.1 specification, with external crimp protection diodes. 13 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Architecture Overview (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Architecture Overview (Continued) 1.6.2 Programmable Interval Timers - Legacy Timers The Programmable Interval Timer (PIT) generates programmable time intervals from the divided clock of an external clock input. The PIT is an 8254-style timer that contains three 16-bit independently programmable counters. A 14.318 MHz external clock signal (from a crystal oscillator or a clock chip) is divided by 12 to generate 1.19 MHz for the clocking reference of all three counters. 1.6.6 System Management Bus Controller The System Management Bus (SMB) Controller provides a system interface to the industry standard SMB. The SMB allows easy interfacing to a wide range of low-cost memory and I/O devices, including: EEPROMs, SRAMs, timers, ADC, DAC, clock chips, and peripheral drivers. These lines are shared with two GPIOs and must be configured as SMB ports in order for this interface to be functional. 1.6.3 The SMB is a two-wire synchronous serial interface compatible with the System Management Bus physical layer. The SMB Controller can be configured as a bus master or slave, and can maintain bidirectional communication with both multiple master and slave devices. As a slave device, the SMB Controller may issue a request to become the bus master. Programmable Interrupt Controller - Legacy Interrupt The Programmable Interrupt Controller (PIC) consists of two 8259A-compatible programmable interrupt controllers connected in cascade mode through interrupt number two. Request mask capability and edge-level controls are provided for each of the 15 channels along with a 15-level priority controller. 1.6.7 Low Pin Count Port This port provides a system interface to the industry standard Low Pin Count (LPC) bus. The controller can convert an internal Local bus memory or I/O cycle to an external LPC cycle. It receives serial IRQs from the LPC and converts them to parallel form so they can be routed to the IRQ mapper. Lastly, it interacts with Legacy DMA logic to perform DMA between on-chip or off-chip DMA devices. An IRQ mapper takes up to 62 discrete interrupt request (IRQ) inputs and maps or masks them to the 15 PIC inputs and to one ASMI (asynchronous system management interrupt). All 62 inputs are individually maskable and status readable. In addition to the above 8259A features, there are shadow registers to obtain the values of legacy 8259A registers that have not been historically readable. The LPC interface is based on the Intel’s Low Pin Count (LPC) Interface specification v1.0. In addition to the required signals/pins specified in the Intel specification, it also supports two optional signals: 1.6.4 Keyboard Emulation Logic - Legacy Support Interface The PS2 Keyboard Emulation Logic (KEL) provides a virtual 8042 keyboard controller interface that may be used to map non-legacy keyboard and mouse sources to this traditional interface. Flexible keyboard emulation logic allows PS2 keyboard emulation traditionally used for USB legacy keyboard emulation. For example, USB sources may be ‘connected’ to this interface via SMM (System Management Mode) software. It also allows mixed environments with one LPC legacy device and one USB device. • LPC_DRQ# - LPC DMA Request • LPC_SERIRQ - LPC Serial encoded IRQ The LPC interface supports memory, I/O, DMA, and Intel’s firmware hub interfaces. 1.6.8 General Purpose I/Os with Input Conditioning Functions (ICF) There are 32 GPIOs in the CS5535, 28 are externally available, that offer a variety of user-selectable configurations including accessing auxiliary functions within the chip, and input conditioning such as debounce and edge detect. Register access is configured in such a way as to avoid Read-Modify-Write operations; each GPIO may be directly and independently configured. 1.6.5 Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter and IR Port Two Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitters (UARTs) provide a system interface to the industry standard serial interface consisting of the basic transmit and receive signals. One of the UARTs can be coupled with infrared logic and be connected to an infrared sensor. Several groups of GPIOs are multiplexed between the LPC Controller, the SMB Controller, access to the UARTs and MFGPTs, and power management controls including system power and Sleep buttons. Six of the GPIOs are in the Standby power domain, giving them increased versatility as wakeup event sources when only Standby power is applied. The UARTs are both 16550A and 16450 software-compatible and contain shadow register support for write-only bit monitoring. The ports have data rates up to 115.2 kbps. Serial port 1 can be configured as an infrared communications port that supports Sharp-IR, Consumer-IR, and HPSIR as well as many popular consumer remote-control protocols. www.national.com A GPIO interrupt and power management event (PME) mapper can map any subset of GPIOs to the PICs (eight interrupts available) or Power Management Subsystem (eight events available). 14 Revision 0.8 Versatile input filtering is available for each GPIO input. Each preliminary input is optionally connected to a digital filter circuit that is optionally followed by an event counter. Lastly followed by an edge detector that together provide eight different ICFs (input conditioning functions), plus an auto-sense feature for determining the initial condition of the pin. 1.6.11 Real-Time Clock with CMOS RAM The CS5535 maintains a real-time clock for system use. The clock is powered by an external battery and so continues to keep accurate time even when system power is removed. The clock can be set to make automatic Daylight Savings Time changes in the spring and fall without user intervention. There are separate registers for seconds, minutes, hours, days (both day of the week and day of the month), months, and years. Alarms can be set for any time within the range of these registers, which have a 100-year capability. The clock uses an external 32 kHz oscillator or crystal as the timing element. 1.6.9 Multi-Function General Purpose Timers This module contains eight Multi-Function General Purpose Timers (MFGPTs), six are in the normal VDD Working power domain, while the other two are in the Standby power domain. The timers are very versatile and can be configured to provide a Watchdog timer (trigger GPIO output, interrupt or reset), perform Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) or Pulse Density Modulation (PDM), create Blink (low frequency pulse for LED), generate GPIO outputs, or act as general purpose timers. The same battery that keeps the clock continuously powered also provides power to a block of 242 bytes of CMOS RAM, used for storing non-volatile system parameters. 1.6.12 Power Management Controller The CS5535 has state-of-the-art power management capabilities designed into every module. Independent clock controls automatically turn clocks off to sections of the chip that are not being used, saving considerable power. In addition, the chip supports full Sleep and Wakeup states with multiple methods of inducement. A suite of external signals support power management of devices on the system board. Legacy Power Management (PM), Advanced Power Management (APM), and Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) techniques and requirements are supported. The GPIO subsystem can be configured to transmit any of several wakeup events into the system. Each MFGPT operates independently and has the following features: • 32 kHz or 14.318 MHz clock selectable by software (applies to MFGPT0 to MFGPT5, in Working power domain, only). • MFGPT6 and MFGPT7, in Standby power domain, use 32 kHz clock. • Programmable input clock prescaler divisor to divide input clock by 2i, where i = 0 to 15. • Provide outputs for generating reset (limited to MFGPT0 to MFGPT5), IRQs, NMI, and ASMIs (indirectly through PICs). The CS5535 is divided into two main power domains: Working and Standby, plus circuits such as the real-time clock and CMOS RAM that are battery-backed. Most of the CS5535 is in the Working power domain, except for GPIO[31:24] and MFGPT[7:6]. This allows these devices to be used for wakeup events or output controls. 1.6.10 Flash Interface The CS5535 has a Flash device interface that supports popular NOR Flash and inexpensive NAND Flash devices. This interface is shared with the IDE interface (ATA-5 Controller (ATAC)), using the same balls. NOR or NAND Flash may co-exist with IDE devices using PIO (Programmed I/O) mode. The 8-bit interface supports up to four “lanes” of byte-wide Flash devices through use of four independent chip selects, and allows for booting from the array. Hardware support is present for SmartMedia-type ECC (Error Correction Code) calculations, off-loading software from having to support this task. 1.7 All four independent chip selects may be used as general purpose chip selects to support other ISA-like slave devices. Up to 1 kB of address space (without external latches) may be supported using these signals. Revision 0.8 GEODELINK INTERFACE UNIT The GeodeLink Interface Unit (GLIU) makes up the internal bus derived from the GeodeLink architecture. It has eight ports, one of which is dedicated to itself, leaving seven for use by internal GeodeLink devices. Figure 1-1 "Internal Block Diagram" on page 12 shows this device as the central element of the architecture, though its presence is basically transparent to the end user. 1.8 LOW VOLTAGE DETECT The Low Voltage Detect (LVD) circuit monitors: Standby I/O voltage, Standby Core voltage, and Working Core voltage. Working I/O voltage is not monitored and is assumed to track with Working Core voltage. The LVD monitors these voltages to provide Working and Standby power-good signals (resets) for the respective working and standby power domains. Additionally, the PMC monitors the working power-good signal to shut-down and/or re-start the system as appropriate. 15 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Architecture Overview (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Architecture Overview (Continued) 1.9 PROCESSOR SUPPORT / SYSTEM OVERVIEW As previously stated, the CS5535 was designed to interface with GX2 processor series. Figure 1-2 and Figure 1-3 SDRAM SODIMM show typical block diagrams for a WebPAD™ system and thin client application based on the GX2 and CS5535. LVDS Geode™ GX2 TFT LCD DSTN LCD CE Optional Cardbus Controller Cardbus Socket PCI1211 TPS2211 PCI COP8™ PADCard Connector CPLD 2-Wire UART I/F LPC XpressROM Geode™ CS5535 LPC Bus LM4549 Compact Flash M-Systems LPC DiskOnChip Internal Mic IDE LM4880 LM3544 Choose 1 USB Port 3USB Port 3 Power Section AC Cube Mic In Charger Includes: LM2676 LM3430 Touchscreen Interface Headphone USB Port 2USB Port 2 LiIon Battery AC Adapter or Battery Power LM2633 CPU Core, I/O, & Memory Clock Generator for all clocks LM2951 5V/3.3V Figure 1-2. Typical WebPAD™ System Block Diagram www.national.com 16 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 Architecture Overview (Continued) SDRAM DC to DC LM2633 VCC3V Reg. LM2633 VCCCore Reg. Server Memory Bus Philips I2C RGB Out Geode™ GX2 CRT Digital RGB DSTN or TFT MacPHYTER™ DP83815 10/100 Ethernet LM2951 VCC5V Reg. Clocks PCI Bus Flash/ ROM M-Systems LPC DiskOnChip LPC Bus Choose 1 Compact Flash IDE Headphones Geode™ CS5535 LM3544 LM4549 AC97 Codec LM4881 Boomer® Amp USB 4 Ports Figure 1-3. Thin Client Application System Block Diagram Revision 0.8 17 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 2.0 Signal Definitions This section defines the signals and describes the external interface of the Geode CS5535. Signal multiplexing has been utilized to a high degree. For example, the IDE and Flash interfaces are multiplexed on the same balls. Configuration is dependent upon the boot options selected (see Table 2-5 "Boot Options Selection" on page 29). If Flash is selected, the user has the option of using NOR and/or NAND Flash devices. MHZ66_CLK MHZ48_CLK MHZ14_CLK KHZ32_XCI KHZ32_XCO RESET_WORK# RESET_STAND# RESET_OUT# WORKING SUSP#/CIS SUSPA# IRQ13 VBAT VSS_BAT1 Note: Bold-italicized signal VSS_BAT2 names in parenthesis denote LVD_EN# a “recommended” use for a specific GPIO. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 for additional details. PCI_CLK AD[31:0] C/BE[3:0]# PAR FRAME# DEVSEL# IRDY# TRDY# STOP# REQ# GNT# IDE_RESET# IDE_AD0+FLASH_AD25/AD[0]+CLE IDE_AD[2:1]+FLASH_AD[27:26]/AD[2:1] IDE_DATA15+FLASH_ALE IDE_DATA[14:8]+FLASH_AD[24:18]/AD[9:3] IDE_DATA[7:0]+FLASH_AD[17:10]/IO[7:0] IDE_CS0#+FLASH_CS0#+CE0# IDE_CS1#+FLASH_CS1#+CE1# IDE_DREQ0+FLASH_CS2#+CE2# IDE_DACK0#+FLASH_CS3#+CE3# IDE_IOR0#+FLASH_RE# IDE_IOW0#+FLASH_WE# IDE_RDY0+FLASH_IOCHRDY+RDY/BUSY# TCK TMS TDI TDO T_DEBUG_IN T_DEBUG_OUT LVD_TEST TEST_MODE FUNC_TEST The GPIOs are configurable (e.g., any GPIO input can be mapped to an interrupt, ASMI, or PME). Figure 2-1 shows the signals organized in typical functional groups - not all possible multiplexing is shown. Where signals are multiplexed, the primary signal name is listed first and is separated by a plus sign (+). A slash (/) in a signal name means that the function is always enabled and available (i.e., time multiplexed). USB Interface Signals System Interface Signals LPC Interface Signals PCI Interface Signals Audio Codec 97 Interface Signals GPIOs and “Recommended” Usage IDE/Flash Interface Signals USB_PWR_EN1 USB_PWR_EN2 USB_OC_SENS# USB1_1_DATPOS USB1_1_DATNEG USB1_2_DATPOS USB1_2_DATNEG USB2_1_DATPOS USB2_1_DATNEG USB2_2_DATPOS USB2_2_DATNEG AVSS_USB AVDD_USB LPC_CLK LPC_AD[3:0]+GPIO[19:16] LPC_DRQ#+GPIO20 LPC_SERIRQ+GPIO21 LPC_FRAME#+GPIO22 AC_S_OUT+BOS1 AC_S_IN AC_S_SYNC+BOS0 AC_CLK GPIO1+AC_BEEP GPIO2+IDE_IRQ0 GPIO10+THRM_ALRM# GPIO11+SLP_CLK_EN#+MFGPT_C2 GPIO24+WORK_AUX GPIO25+LOW_BAT#+MFGPT7_C2 GPIO28+PWR_BUT# GPIO13+SLEEP_BUT GPIO0 (PCI_INTA#) GPIO7+MFGPT2_C1+SLEEP_X (PCI_INTB#) GPIO12+AC_S_IN2+SLEEP_Y GPIO26+MFGPT7_RS (PME#) GPIO14+SMB_CLK GPIO15+SMB_DATA Debug and Manufacturing Interface Signals Power, Ground, and No Connects GPIO8+UART1_TX+UART1_IR_TX GPIO9+UART1_RX+UART1_IR_RX GPIO4+UART2_TX (DDC_SDA) GPIO3+UART2_RX (DDC_SCL) GPIO5+MFGPT1_RS+MFGPT0_C1 GPIO6+MFGPT0_RS+MFGPT1_C1+MFGPT2_C2 GPIO27+MFGPT7_C1+32KHZ VCORE [Total of 8] VCORE_VSB [Total of 1] VIO [Total of 14] VIO_VSB [Total of 1] VSS [Total of 18] NC [Total of 19] Figure 2-1. Typical Signal Groups www.national.com 18 Revision 0.8 2.1 BALL ASSIGNMENTS As illustrated in Figure 2-1 on page 18, the CS5535 is configurable. Boot options and register programming are used to set various modes of operation and specific signals on specific balls. — Includes a column labeled Configuration with references to: – BOS[1:0] - See Section 2.1.2 "Boot Options" on page 29. – Ball Opt MSR - See Section 2.1.3 "Ball Options" on page 29. – AUX_IN, AUX_OUT_1, and AUX_OUT_2 - See Section 2.2.8 "GPIOs" on page 42. This section describes the ball assignments and interface options: • Figure 2-2 "208-PBGA Ball Assignment Diagram" on page 20: — Top view looking through package. • Table 2-3 "Ball Assignments: Sorted Alphabetically by Signal Name" on page 25: — Quick-reference list, sorted alphabetically with primary signal listed first. • Table 2-2 "Ball Assignments: Sorted by Ball Number" on page 21: — Primary signal name is listed first. — Includes a column labeled Buffer Type. See Section 2.1.1 "Buffer Types" on page 28 for details. The tables in this section use several abbreviations. Table 2-1 lists the mnemonics and their meanings. Table 2-1. Abbreviations/Definitions Mnemonic Definition A Analog AVSS Analog Ground Connection AVDD Analog Power Connection GND Ground I Input I/O Bidirectional O Output OD Open-drain Ball Opt MSR Model Specific Register Ball Options: A register is used to configure balls with multiple functions. Refer to Section 2.1.3 "Ball Options" on page 29 for further details. PD Pull-down resistor PWR Power PU Pull-up resistor TS TRI-STATE VCORE 1.5V Core Power Working Connection VCORE_VSB 1.5V Core Power Standby Connection VIO 3.3V I/O Power Working Connection VIO_VSB 3.3V I/O Power Standby Connection VSS Ground # The “#” symbol at the end of a signal name indicates that the active, or asserted state occurs when the signal is at a low voltage level. When “#” is not present after the signal name, the signal is asserted when at a high voltage level. / A “/” in a signal name indicates the function is always enabled (i.e., time multiplexed - available when needed). + A “+” in a signal name indicates the function is available on the ball, but that either strapping options or register programming is required to select the desired function. Revision 0.8 19 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 GPIO11 NC VBAT KHZ32I RST# TSTM VCORE GPIO28 GPIO25 MHZ66 IDE_A0 IDE_A1 NC NC VIO_VSB GPIO26 RSTSD# LVDTST IDE_CS0# IDE_A2 GPIO2 RSTWRK# LVDEN# GPIO27 GPIO24 IDE_CS1# NC VCORE VIO VCORE VSS 13 14 15 16 17 IDE_RDY IDE_DQ# IDE_D1 NC IDE_D12 IDE_IOR# IDE_D0 IDE_D14 IDE_D13 IDE_D4 IDE_DK0# IDE_IOW# IDE_D15 IDE_D2 IDE_D3 IDE_D11 VIO IDE_D5 IDE_D10 IDE_D9 IDE_D6 IDE_D7 IDE_D8 A A B B NC VSS_VBAT2 KHZ32O C C MHZ14 GPIO7 GPIO10 VSS_VBAT1 WRKG GPIO9 GPIO6 GPIO5 VIO VSS GPIO3 GPIO4 GPIO8 VSS VSS GPIO15 GPIO13 FTST VIO VIO GPIO14 VSS D D VIO VSS VIO VSS E E F F Geode™ G LPC_DQ# LPC_SQ H LCP_CLK LPC_A0 LPC_FRM# LPC_A2 LPC_A1 GPIO12 VSS LPC_A3 IRQ13 GPIO1 VCORE B B AC_SIN VSS NC USB2_2N USB2_2P VCORE NC USB2_1N USB2_1P VSS NC AVSS_USB AVDD_USB VCORE NC USB1_1P USB1_1N VSS NC USB1_2P USB1_2N NC AVSS_USB AVDD_USB H CS5535 I/O Companion K L G VCORE J IDE_RST# AVSS_USB AVDD_USB J K L AC_SOUT AC_SSYNC VSS (Top View - Looking Through Package) M M AC_CLK DBUGI DBUGO VIO VIO SUSPA# TCK TMS VSS VSS TDI TDO SUSP# VIO VSS VIO VSS VCORE VIO VCORE VSS VIO VSS VIO AD7 AD4 USB_PW1E GNT# GPIO0 NC AD28 AD26 C/BE3# AD21 AD18 NC IRDY# DEVSEL# AD15 AD12 AD9 AD6 AD2 AD0 REQ# NC AD30 AD27 AD25 AD23 AD20 AD17 C/BE2# TRDY# STOP# AD14 AD11 AD8 AD5 AD3 AD1 AD31 NC AD29 PCI_CLK AD24 AD22 AD19 AD16 FRAME# PAR C/BE1# AD13 AD10 C/BE0# NC NC NC 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 N N USB_OC# USB_PW2E MHZ48 P P R R T T U U Note: Signal names have been abbreviated in this figure due to space constraints. = GND terminal = PWR terminal = Multiplexed signal B = BOS (Boot Option Select) Figure 2-2. 208-PBGA Ball Assignment Diagram Order Number: CS5535-UDC www.national.com 20 Revision 0.8 Table 2-2. Ball Assignments: Sorted by Ball Number Ball No. Signal NameNote 1 Type Buffer TypeNote 2 A1 GPIO11 I/O Q7 SLP_CLK_EN# O AUX_OUT_1 MFGPT1_C2 O AUX_OUT_2 A2 NC A3 VBAT A4 KHZ32_XCI A5 RESET_OUT# --- --- Wire Bare_Wire_ BP Wire Bare_Wire O Q7 A6 TEST_MODE Wire A7 VCORE_VSB PWR --- A8 GPIO28 I/O Q7 A9 GPIO25 PWR_BUT# A10 A11 A12 A13 LOW_BAT# I MFGPT7_C2 O MHZ66_CLK I IDE_AD0 O FLASH_AD25/AD0 O FLASH_CLE O IDE_AD1 O FLASH_AD26/AD1 O IDE_RDY0 I FLASH_IOCHRDY A14 I IDE_DREQ0 I FLASH_CS2# A15 O IDE_DATA1 I/O Type Buffer TypeNote 2 B12 GPIO2 I/O IDE IDE_IRQ0 I B13 IDE_IOR0# O FLASH_RE# O B14 IDE_DATA0 I/O FLASH_AD10/IO0 I/O IDE_DATA14 I/O FLASH_AD24/AD9 O B16 IDE_DATA13 I/O AUX_IN FLASH_AD23/AD8 O B17 IDE_DATA4 I/O FLASH_AD14/IO4 I/O IDE C1 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 C2 BOS[1:0] = 10 IDE IDE AUX_OUT_1 AUX_OUT_2 GPIO10 I/O C3 BOS[1:0] = 10 C4 VSS_VBAT1 AGND AVSS_USB BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 C5 WORKING O SMB C6 RESET_WORK# I Q7 C7 LVD_EN# Wire Bare_Wire Q7 THRM_ALRM# C8 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 10 C9 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 Q7 I AUX_IN GPIO27 I/O MFGPT7_C1 O AUX_OUT_1 32KHZ O AUX_OUT_2 GPIO24 I/O WORK_AUX O IDE_CS1# O FLASH_CS1# O FLASH_CE1# O C11 NC --- --- C12 IDE_DACK0# O IDE C10 FLASH_AD22/AD7 O B1 NC --- --- B2 VSS_VBAT2 AGND AVSS_USB FLASH_CS3# O Wire Bare_Wire FLASH_CE3# O --- --- C13 IDE_IOW0# O FLASH_WE# O C14 IDE_DATA15 I/O FLASH_ALE O C15 IDE_DATA2 I/O FLASH_AD12/IO2 I/O C16 IDE_DATA3 I/O FLASH_AD13/IO3 I/O C17 IDE_DATA11 I/O FLASH_AD21/AD6 O SMB AUX_OUT_1 IDE BOS[1:0] = 10 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 10 B3 KHZ32_XCO B4 NC B5 NC --- --- B6 VIO_VSB PWR --- GPIO26 I/O I B8 RESET_STAND# I Bare_Wire AUX_IN B9 LVD_TEST Wire (O) Bare_Wire B10 IDE_CS0# O IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 10 21 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 10 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 10 BOS[1:0] = 10 BOS[1:0] = 10 BOS[1:0] = 10 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 10 Q7 MFGPT7_RS Revision 0.8 BOS[1:0] = 10 O IDE O BOS[1:0] = 10 SLEEP_X I/O FLASH_AD27/AD2 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 PCI IDE_DATA12 O IDE BOS[1:0] = 10 O A17 IDE_AD2 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 I/O --- B11 IDE BOS[1:0] = 10 GPIO7 --- O BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 MFGPT2_C1 I/O O IDE BOS[1:0] = 10 Q7 NC FLASH_CE0# BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 I FLASH_AD11/IO1 FLASH_CS0# IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 BOS[1:0] = 10 IDE MHZ14_CLK A16 B7 AUX_IN BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 AUX_OUT_2 Q3 Configuration IDE AUX_IN O FLASH_CE2# Signal NameNote 1 Q7 I FLASH_RDY/BUSY# Ball No. B15 Bare_Wire I I/O Configuration BOS[1:0] = 10 BOS[1:0] = 10 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Table 2-2. Ball No. Signal NameNote 1 D1 GPIO9 D2 D3 Type Buffer TypeNote 2 I/O Q7 UART1_RX I UART1_IR_RX I GPIO6 Ball Assignments: Sorted by Ball Number (Continued) I/O Configuration Ball No. Signal NameNote 1 F2 GPIO13 AUX_IN Q7 Type Buffer TypeNote 2 I/O Q7 SLEEP_BUT I F3 FUNC_TEST I SMB AUX_IN F4 VIO PWR --- MFGPT0_RS I AUX_IN F14 VIO PWR --- MFGPT1_C1 O AUX_OUT_1 F15 IDE_RESET# O IDE MFGPT2_C2 O AUX_OUT_2 F16 AVSS_USB AGND AVSS_USB GPIO5 I/O F17 AVDD_USB APWR AVDD_USB G1 LPC_DRQ# I PCI Q7 MFGPT1_RS I AUX_IN MFGPT0_C1 O AUX_OUT_1 D4 VIO PWR --- D5 VSS GND --- D6 VIO PWR --- G2 D7 VSS GND --- D8 VCORE PWR --- D9 VIO PWR --- D10 VCORE PWR --- D11 VSS GND --- D12 VIO PWR --- G4 GPIO20 I/O LPC_SERIRQ I/O GPIO21 I/O MFGPT2_RS G3 I/O SMB_CLK I/O PCI AUX_IN SMB AUX_IN and AUX_OUT_1 VSS GND ----- D13 VSS GND --- G14 VSS GND VIO PWR --- G15 NC --- --- IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 G16 USB2_2_DATNEG I/O Bare_Wire G17 USB2_2_DATPOS I/O Bare_Wire BOS[1:0] = 10 H1 LPC_CLK I Q7 BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 H2 LPC_AD0 I/O PCI GPIO16 I/O LPC_FRAME# O GPIO22 I/O D16 D17 E1 IDE_DATA5 I/O FLASH_AD15/IO5 I/O IDE_DATA10 I/O FLASH_AD20/AD5 O IDE_DATA9 I/O FLASH_AD19/AD4 O GPIO3 I/O UART2_RX E2 E3 GPIO4 IDE BOS[1:0] = 10 IDE UART2_TX O GPIO8 I/O SMB AUX_IN SMB AUX_OUT_1 Q7 UART1_TX O AUX_OUT_1 UART1_IR_TX O AUX_OUT_2 E4 VSS GND E14 VSS GND --- E15 IDE_DATA6 I/O IDE FLASH_AD16/IO6 I/O IDE_DATA7 I/O E16 E17 FLASH_AD17/IO7 I/O IDE_DATA8 I/O FLASH_AD18/AD3 F1 I/O SMB_DATA I/O www.national.com --- PCI BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 H4 VCORE PWR --- H14 VCORE PWR --- H15 NC --- --- H16 USB2_1_DATNEG I/O Bare_Wire H17 USB2_1_DATPOS I/O Bare_Wire J1 LPC_AD2 I/O PCI GPIO18 I/O LPC_AD1 I/O GPIO17 I/O GPIO12 I/O J2 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 IDE BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 J3 BOS[1:0] = 10 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 1 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 0 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 1 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 0 PCI BOS[1:0] = 10 O GPIO15 H3 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 1 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 0 BOS[1:0] = 10 I I/O BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11 Ball Opt MSR [6,5] = 1,1 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 0 D14 D15 Ball Opt MSR [6,4] = 1,1 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 0 I GPIO14 Configuration Ball Opt MSR [6] = 1 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 0 Q7 AC_S_IN2 I AUX_IN SLEEP_Y O AUX_OUT_2 BOS[1:0] = 10 SMB AUX_IN and AUX_OUT_1 22 Revision 0.8 Table 2-2. Ball Assignments: Sorted by Ball Number (Continued) Ball No. Signal NameNote 1 Type Buffer TypeNote 2 --- P7 VSS GND --- --- P8 VCORE PWR ----- Ball No. Signal NameNote 1 Type Buffer TypeNote 2 J4 VSS GND J14 VSS GND Configuration J15 NC --- --- P9 VIO PWR J16 AVSS_USB AGND AVSS_USB P10 VCORE PWR --- J17 AVDD_USB APWR AVDD_USB P11 VSS GND --- K1 LPC_AD3 I/O PCI P12 VIO PWR --- P13 VSS GND --- P14 VIO PWR --- GPIO19 I/O Ball Opt MSR [6] = 1 Ball Opt MSR [6] = 0 K2 IRQ13 I Q7 K3 GPIO1 I/O Q7 AC_BEEP MFGPT0_C2 P15 AD7 I/O PCI Default P16 AD4 I/O PCI O AUX_OUT_1 P17 USB_PWR_EN1 O Q7 O AUX_OUT_2 R1 GNT# I PCI PCI K4 VCORE PWR --- R2 GPIO0 I/O K14 VCORE PWR --- R3 NC --- --- K15 NC --- --- R4 AD28 I/O PCI K16 USB1_1_DATPOS I/O Bare_Wire R5 AD26 I/O PCI K17 USB1_1_DATNEG I/O Bare_Wire R6 C/BE3# I/O PCI L1 AC_S_IN I Q7 R7 AD21 I/O PCI L2 AC_S_OUT O Q7 R8 AD18 I/O PCI BOS1 I R9 NC --- --- L3 AC_S_SYNC O R10 IRDY# I/O PCI R11 DEVSEL# I/O PCI L4 VSS GND --- R12 AD15 I/O PCI L14 VSS GND --- R13 AD12 I/O PCI R14 AD9 I/O PCI R15 AD6 I/O PCI R16 AD2 I/O PCI R17 AD0 I/O PCI T1 REQ# O PCI T2 NC --- --- T3 AD30 I/O PCI T4 AD27 I/O PCI T5 AD25 I/O PCI T6 AD23 I/O PCI T7 AD20 I/O PCI T8 AD17 I/O PCI C/BE2# I/O PCI BOS0 Q7 I L15 NC --- --- L16 USB1_2_DATPOS I/O Bare_Wire L17 M1 USB1_2_DATNEG AC_CLK I/O I Bare_Wire Q7 M2 T_DEBUG_IN I Q5 M3 T_DEBUG_OUT O Q5 M4 VIO PWR --- M14 VIO PWR --- M15 NC --- --- M16 AVSS_USB AGND AVSS_USB M17 AVDD_USB APWR AVDD_USB N1 SUSPA# I Q7 T9 N2 TCK I Q7 T10 TRDY# I/O PCI N3 TMS I Q7 T11 STOP# I/O PCI N4 VSS GND --- T12 AD14 I/O PCI N14 VSS GND --- T13 AD11 I/O PCI N15 USB_OC_SENS# I Q7 T14 AD8 I/O PCI N16 USB_PWR_EN2 O Q7 T15 AD5 I/O PCI N17 MHZ48_CLK I Q3 T16 AD3 I/O PCI P1 TDI I Q5 T17 AD1 I/O PCI P2 TDO O, TS Q5 U1 AD31 I/O PCI P3 SUSP# O Q3 U2 NC --- --- CIS O U3 AD29 I/O PCI P4 VIO PWR --- U4 PCI_CLK I Q3 P5 VSS GND --- U5 AD24 I/O PCI P6 VIO PWR --- U6 AD22 I/O PCI Revision 0.8 23 Configuration www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Table 2-2. Ball No. Signal NameNote 1 U7 Ball Assignments: Sorted by Ball Number (Continued) Type Buffer TypeNote 2 AD19 I/O U8 AD16 U9 FRAME# U10 Ball No. Signal NameNote 1 PCI U14 I/O PCI I/O PCI PAR I/O PCI U11 C/BE1# I/O PCI U12 AD13 I/O PCI U13 AD10 I/O PCI www.national.com Configuration Type Buffer TypeNote 2 C/BE0# I/O PCI U15 NC --- --- U16 NC --- --- U17 NC --- --- Note 1. Note 2. 24 Configuration The primary signal name is listed first. See Table 2-4 "Buffer Type Characteristics" on page 28 for buffer type definitions. Revision 0.8 Table 2-3. Ball Assignments: Sorted Alphabetically by Signal Name Signal Name 32KHZ AC_BEEP Muxed with GPIO27, MFGPT7_C1 C8 GPIO1, MFGPT0_C2 K3 AC_CLK M1 AC_S_IN AC_S_IN2 Ball No. L1 Signal Name Muxed with Ball No. C/BE2# T9 C/BE3# R6 CIS SUSP# DEVSEL# P3 R11 Signal Name Muxed with Ball No. GPIO7 MFGPT2_C1, SLEEP_X C2 GPIO8 UART1_TX, UART1_IR_TX E3 GPIO9 UART1_RX, UART1_IR_RX D1 FLASH_AD10/IO0 IDE_DATA0 B14 FLASH_AD11/IO1 IDE_DATA1 A15 GPIO10 THRM_ALRM# C3 FLASH_AD12/IO2 IDE_DATA2 C15 GPIO11 SLP_CLK_EN#, MFGPT1_C2 A1 GPIO12 AC_S_IN2, SLEEP_Y J3 GPIO12, SLEEP_Y J3 AC_S_OUT BOS1 L2 FLASH_AD13/IO3 IDE_DATA3 C16 AC_S_SYNC BOS0 L3 FLASH_AD14/IO4 IDE_DATA4 B17 AD0 R17 FLASH_AD15/IO5 IDE_DATA5 D15 AD1 T17 FLASH_AD16/IO6 IDE_DATA6 E15 AD2 R16 FLASH_AD17/IO7 IDE_DATA7 E16 AD3 T16 FLASH_AD18/AD3 IDE_DATA8 E17 AD4 P16 FLASH_AD19/AD4 IDE_DATA9 D17 AD5 T15 FLASH_AD20/AD5 IDE_DATA10 D16 AD6 R15 FLASH_AD21/AD6 IDE_DATA11 C17 AD7 P15 FLASH_AD22/AD7 IDE_DATA12 A17 AD8 T14 FLASH_AD23/AD8 IDE_DATA13 B16 AD9 R14 FLASH_AD24/AD9 IDE_DATA14 B15 AD10 U13 FLASH_AD25/AD0 IDE_AD0 A11 GPIO22 LPC_FRAME# H3 AD11 T13 FLASH_AD26/AD1 IDE_AD1 A12 GPIO24 WORK_AUX C9 AD12 R13 FLASH_AD27/AD2 IDE_AD2 B11 GPIO25 U12 FLASH_ALE IDE_DATA15 C14 LOW_BAT#, MFGPT7_C2 A9 AD13 AD14 T12 FLASH_CE0# IDE_CS0# B10 SLEEP_BUT F2 GPIO14 SMB_CLK G3 GPIO15 SMB_DATA F1 GPIO16 LPC_AD0 H2 GPIO17 LPC_AD1 J2 GPIO18 LPC_AD2 J1 GPIO19 LPC_AD3 K1 GPIO20 LPC_DRQ G1 GPIO21 LPC_SERIRQ, MFGPT2_RS G2 GPIO26 MFGPT7_RS B7 GPIO27 MFGPT7_C1, 32KHZ C8 GPIO28 PWR_BUT# A8 IDE_AD0 FLASH_AD25/AD0, FLASH_CLE A11 A12 AD15 R12 FLASH_CE1# IDE_CS1# AD16 U8 FLASH_CE2# IDE_DREQ0# A14 AD17 T8 FLASH_CE3# IDE_DACK0# C12 AD18 R8 FLASH_CLE IDE_AD0 A11 AD19 U7 FLASH_CS0# IDE_CS0# B10 IDE_AD1 FLASH_AD26/AD1 AD20 T7 FLASH_CS1# IDE_CS1# C10 IDE_AD2 FLASH_AD27/AD2 B11 AD21 R7 FLASH_CS2# IDE_DREQ0# A14 IDE_CS0# B10 AD22 U6 FLASH_CS3# IDE_DACK0# C12 FLASH_CS0#, FLASH_CE0# AD23 T6 FLASH_IOCHRDY IDE_RDY0 A13 IDE_CS1# FLASH_CS1#, FLASH_CE1# C10 AD24 U5 FLASH_RDY/BUSY# IDE_RDY0 A13 IDE_DACK0# T5 FLASH_RE# IDE_IOR0# B13 FLASH_CS3#, FLASH_CE3# C12 AD25 AD26 R5 FLASH_WE# IDE_IOW0# C13 IDE_DATA0 FLASH_AD10/IO0 B14 AD27 T4 FRAME# U9 IDE_DATA1 FLASH_AD11/IO1 A15 AD28 R4 FUNC_TEST F3 IDE_DATA2 FLASH_AD12/IO2 C15 AD29 U3 GNT# R1 IDE_DATA3 FLASH_AD13/IO3 C16 AD30 T3 GPIO0 R2 IDE_DATA4 FLASH_AD14/IO4 B17 AD31 U1 GPIO1 K3 IDE_DATA5 FLASH_AD15/IO5 D15 F17, J17, M17 AC_BEEP, MFGPT0_C2 IDE_DATA6 FLASH_AD16/IO6 E15 GPIO2 IDE_IRQ0 B12 IDE_DATA7 FLASH_AD17/IO7 E16 GPIO3 UART2_RX E1 IDE_DATA8 FLASH_AD18/AD3 E17 GPIO4 UART2_TX E2 GPIO5 MFGPT1_RS, MFGPT0_C1 D3 GPIO6 MFGPT0_RS, MFGPT1_C1, MFGPT2_C2 D2 AVDD_USB F16, J16, M16 AVSS_USB BOS0 AC_S_SYNC L3 BOS1 AC_S_OUT L2 C/BE0# U14 C/BE1# U11 Revision 0.8 25 C10 GPIO13 IDE_DATA9 FLASH_AD19/AD4 D17 IDE_DATA10 FLASH_AD20/AD5 D16 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Table 2-3. Ball Assignments: Sorted Alphabetically by Signal Name (Continued) Muxed with Ball No. IDE_DATA11 FLASH_AD21/AD6 C17 IDE_DATA12 FLASH_AD22/AD7 A17 IDE_DATA13 FLASH_AD23/AD8 B16 IDE_DATA14 FLASH_AD24/AD9 B15 IDE_DATA15 FLASH_ALE C14 IDE_DREQ0# FLASH_CS2#, FLASH_CE2# A14 IDE_IOR0# FLASH_RE# B13 IDE_IOW0# FLASH_WE# C13 IDE_IRQ0 GPIO2 B12 IDE_RDY0 FLASH_IOCHRDY, FLASH_RDY/BUSY # A13 Signal Name IDE_RESET# F15 IRDY# R10 IRQ13 K2 KHZ32_XCI A4 KHZ32_XCO LOW_BAT# A9 LPC_AD0 GPIO16 H2 LPC_AD1 GPIO17 J2 LPC_AD2 GPIO18 J1 LPC_AD3 GPIO19 K1 LPC_CLK H1 LPC_DRQ# GPIO20 G1 LPC_FRAME# GPIO22 H3 LPC_SERIRQ GPIO21, MFGPT2_RS G2 LVD_EN# C7 LVD_TEST B9 GPIO5, MFGPT1_RS D3 MFGPT0_C2 AC_BEEP, GPIO1 K3 MFGPT0_RS GPIO6, MFGPT1_C1, MFGPT2_C2 D2 GPIO6, MFGPT0_RS, MFGPT2_C2 D2 MFGPT1_C1 MFGPT1_C2 GPIO11, SLP_CLK_EN# A1 MFGPT1_RS GPIO5, MFGPT0_C1 D3 MFGPT2_C1 GPIO7, SLEEP_X C2 MFGPT2_C2 www.national.com MFGPT2_RS Muxed with GPIO6, MFGPT0_RS, MFGPT1_C1 G2 MFGPT7_C1 GPIO27, 32KHZ C8 MFGPT7_C2 GPIO25, LOW_BAT# A9 MFGPT7_RS GPIO26 B7 MHZ14_CLK C1 MHZ48_CLK N17 MHZ66_CLK A10 NC (Total of 19) A2, A16, B1, B4, B5, C11, G15, H15, J15, K15, L15, M15, R3, R9, T2, U2, U15, U16, U17 PAR U10 PCI_CLK U4 PWR_BUT# GPIO28 A8 REQ# T1 RESET_OUT# A5 RESET_STAND# B8 RESET_WORK# C6 SLEEP_BUT GPIO13 F2 SLEEP_X GPIO7, MFGPT2_C1 C2 SLEEP_Y AC_S_IN2, GPIO12 J3 SLP_CLK_EN# GPIO11, MFGPT1_C2 A1 SMB_CLK GPIO14 G3 SMB_DATA GPIO15 STOP# SUSP# D2 Ball No. GPIO21, LPC_SERIRQ B3 GPIO25, MFGPT7_C2 MFGPT0_C1 Signal Name Signal Name THRM_ALRM# Muxed with GPIO10 Ball No. C3 TMS N3 TRDY# T10 UART1_IR_RX GPIO9, UART1_RX D1 UART1_IR_TX GPIO8, UART1_TX E3 UART1_RX GPIO9, UART1_IR_RX D1 UART1_TX GPIO8, UART1_IR_TX E3 UART2_RX GPIO3 E1 UART2_TX GPIO4 USB_OC_SENS# E2 N15 USB_PWR_EN1 P17 USB_PWR_EN2 N16 USB1_1_DATNEG K17 USB1_1_DATPOS K16 USB1_2_DATNEG L17 USB1_2_DATPOS L16 USB2_1_DATNEG H16 USB2_1_DATPOS H17 USB2_2_DATNEG G16 USB2_2_DATPOS G17 VBAT VCORE (Total of 8) VCORE_VSB A3 D8, D10, H4, H14, K4, K14, P8, P10 A7 F1 T11 CIS P3 SUSPA# N1 T_DEBUG_IN M2 T_DEBUG_OUT M3 TCK N2 TDI P1 TDO P2 TEST_MODE A6 26 Revision 0.8 Table 2-3. Signal Name VIO (Total of 14) VIO_VSB Revision 0.8 Ball Assignments: Sorted Alphabetically by Signal Name (Continued) Muxed with Ball No. D4, D6, D9, D12, D14, F4, F14, M4, M14, P4, P6, P9, P12, P14 Signal Name Muxed with VSS (Total of 18) Ball No. D5, D7, D11, D13, E4, E14, G4, G14, J4, J14, L4, L14, N4, N14, P5, P7, P11, P13 B6 27 Signal Name Muxed with Ball No. VSS_VBAT1 C4 VSS_VBAT2 B2 WORK_AUX WORKING GPIO24 C9 C5 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.1.1 Buffer Types Table 2-2 "Ball Assignments: Sorted by Ball Number" on page 21 includes a column labeled “Buffer Type”. The details of each buffer type listed in this column are given in Table 2-4. The column headings in Table 2-4 are identified as follows: PU/PD: Indicates if an internal, programmable pull-up or pull-down resistor may be present. Current High/Low (mA): This column gives the current source/sink capacities when the voltage at the pin is high, and low. The high and low values are separated by a “/” and values given are in milli-amps (mA). TS: Indicates whether the buffer may be put into the TRISTATE mode. Note some pins that have buffer types that allow TRI-STATE may never actually enter the TRI-STATE mode in practice, since they may be inputs or provide other signals that are always driven. To determine if a particular signal can be put in the TRI-STATE mode, consult the individual signal descriptions in Section 2.2 "Signal Descriptions" on page 31. Rise/Fall @ Load: This column indicates the rise and fall times for the different buffer types at the load capacitance indicated. These measurements are given in two ways: rise/fall time between the 20%-80% voltage levels, or, the rate of change the buffer is capable of, in volts-per-nanosecond (V/ns). See Section 6.3 "AC Characteristics" on page 530 for details. Note the presence of several “wire” type buffers in this table. Signals identified as one of the wire-types are not driven by a buffer, hence no rise/fall time or other measurements are given; these are marked “NA” in Table 2-4. The wire-type connection indicates a direct connection to internal circuits such as power, ground, and analog signals. OD: Indicates if the buffer is open-drain, or not. Open-drain outputs may be wire ORed together and require a discrete pull-up resistor to operate properly. 5VT: Indicates if the buffer is 5-volt tolerant, or not. If it is 5volt tolerant, then 5 volt TTL signals may be safely applied to this pin. Backdrive Protected: Indicates that the buffer may have active signals applied even when the CS5535 itself is powered down. Table 2-4. Buffer Type Characteristics Name TS OD 5VT Backdrive Protected PU/PD Current High/Low (mA) Rise/Fall @ Load Q3 X X 24/24 3 ns @ 50 pF Q5 X X 24/24 5 ns @ 50 pF Q7 X X 24/24 7 ns @ 50 pF PCI X 0.5/1.5 1-4 V/ns @ 10 pF IDE X 16/16 1.25 V/ns @ 40 pF SMB X X X Rise: 1 µs @ 400 pF Fall: 300 ns @ 400 pF Bare_Wire NA NA Bare_Wire_BP NA NA AVDD_USB NA AVSS_USB NA www.national.com NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA X 28 Revision 0.8 2.1.2 Boot Options Two balls on the device, L2 and L3, the Boot Options Select balls (BOS[1:0]), serve to specify the location of the boot device as the system undergoes a full reset. Since boot devices may reside in Flash or on an IDE device, the IDE/Flash interface is necessarily selected as operating in one of the two modes by the Boot Options. After Reset, the function of these interfaces may be changed with the Ball Options MSR (see Section 2.1.3 "Ball Options"). Both these balls are multiplexed with other functions as identified in Section 2.2.7 "Audio Codec 97 Interface" on page 41 and function as BOS[1:0] only when RESET_OUT# is asserted. Table 2-5 indicates how these two balls should be configured to select the desired boot device. Both balls contain an internal pull-up, active only during reset, so if a ball is required to be high during this time, it may be left unconnected. If a ball is desired to be low during reset, a pull-down (i.e., not a hard tie to ground) should be added. During reset, both balls’ output drivers are in the TRISTATE mode. 2.1.3 Ball Options Table 2-6 shows the Ball Options MSR (DIVIL MSR 51400015h), through which the function of certain groups of multiplexed balls may be dynamically changed after the reset period ends. Specifically, the functions LPC/GPIO and IDE/Flash groups are selected, and certain individual balls, as specified in the MSR, are controlled. Table 2-5. Boot Options Selection BOS1 (Ball L2) BOS0 (Ball L3) 0 0 Boot from Memory Device on the LPC Bus. IDE pins come up connected to IDE Controller (see Section 2.2.3 "IDE/Flash Interface Signals" on page 35 and Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29). 0 1 Reserved. 1 0 Boot from NOR Flash on the IDE Bus. IDE pins come up connected to Flash Controller (see Section 2.2.3 "IDE/Flash Interface Signals" on page 35 and Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29). Description NOR Flash, ROM, or other random access devices must be connected to “FLASH_CS_3”. 1 1 Boot from Firmware Hub on the LPC Bus. IDE pins come up connected to IDE Controller (see Section 2.2.3 "IDE/Flash Interface Signals" on page 35 and Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29). Table 2-6. DIVIL_BALL_OPT Bit Name Description 31:12 RSVD Reserved. Reads always return 0. Writes have no effect; by convention, always write 0. 11:10 SEC_BOOT_LOC Secondary Boot Location. Determines which chip select asserts for addresses in the range F00F0000h to F00F3FFFh. Defaults to the same value as boot option: 00: LPC ROM. 01: Reserved . 10: Flash. 11: FirmWare Hub. 9:8 7 Revision 0.8 BOOT_OP_ LATCHED(RO) Latched Value of Boot Option (Read Only). For values, see Table 2-5 "Boot Options Selection" on page 29. RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. By convention, always write 0. Defaults low. 29 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Table 2-6. DIVIL_BALL_OPT (Continued) Bit 6 Name Description PIN_OPT_LALL All LPC Pin Option Selection. 0: All LPC pins become GPIOs including LPC_DRQ# and LPC_SERIRQ. Ball H3 functions as GPIO22 Ball H2 functions as GPIO16 Ball J2 functions as GPIO17 Ball J1 functions as GPIO18 Ball K1 functions as GPIO19 Ball G1 functions as GPIO20 Ball G2 functions as GPIO21 1: All LPC pins are controlled by the LPC controller except LPC_DRQ# and LPC_SERIRQ use are determined by bits [5:4]. (Default) Ball H3 functions as LPC_FRAME# Ball H2 functions as LPC_AD0 Ball J2 functions as LPC_AD1 Ball J1 functions as LPC_AD2 Ball K1 functions as LPC_AD3 When this bit is low, there is an implied high for LPC_DISABLE_IO and LPC_DISABLE_MEM in MSR_LEG_IO (DD MSR 51400014h). 5 PIN_OPT_LIRQ LPC_SERIRQ or GPIO21 Pin Option Selection. 0: Ball G2 is GPIO21. 1: Ball G2 functions as LPC_SERIRQ. (Default) 4 PIN_OPT_LDRQ LPC_DRQ# or GPIO20 Pin Option Selection. 0: Ball G1 is GPIO20. 1: Ball G2 functions as LPC_DRQ#. (Default) 3:2 PRI_BOOT_LOC [1:0] Primary Boot Location. Determines which chip select asserts for addresses at or above F0000000h. Except those in the range specified by SEC_BOOT_LOC[1:0]. Defaults to the same value as boot option. 00: LPC ROM. 01: Reserved . 10: Flash. 11: FirmWare Hub. 1 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. By convention, always write 0. Defaults low. 0 PIN_OPT_IDE IDE or Flash Controller Pin Function Selection. 0: All IDE pins associated with Flash Controller. Default if BOS[1:0] = 10. 1: All IDE pins associated with IDE Controller. Default if BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11. IDE_IRQ0 is multiplexed with GPIO2; therefore, this bit has no affect with regards to programming IDE_IRQ0. www.national.com 30 Revision 0.8 2.2 SIGNAL DESCRIPTIONS Information in the tables that follow may have duplicate information in multiple tables. Multiple references all contain identical information. 2.2.1 System Interface Signals Signal Name Ball No. Type Description MHZ66_CLK A10 I 66 MHz Clock. This is the main system clock. It is also used by the IDE interface. MHZ48_CLK N17 I USB Clock. This is the 48 MHz clock for the UARTs and SMB Controller. MHZ14_CLK C1 I 14.31818 MHz Timer Clock. This is the input clock for power management functions and the Programmable Interval Timers (PITs). KHZ32_XCI A4 Wire 32 kHz Input. This input is used for the real-time clock (RTC), GPIOs, MFGPTs, and power management functions. This input may come from either an external oscillator or one side of a 32.768 kHz crystal. If an external oscillator is used, it should be powered by VIO_VSB. This signal takes approximately one second to lock after power-up. KHZ32_XCO B3 Wire 32 kHz Input 2. This input is to be connected to the other side of the crystal oscillator connected to KHZ32_XCI, if used. Leave open (not connected) if an oscillator (not a crystal) is connected to KHZ32_XCI. RESET_WORK# C6 I Reset Working Power Domain. This signal, when asserted, is the master reset for all CS5535 interfaces that are in the Working power domain. See Section 3.9 "Power Management" on page 72 for a description of the Working power domain. RESET_WORK# must be asserted for at least 10 ns in order to be properly recognized. If LVD_EN# is enabled (tied low) use of this input is not required. See the LVD_EN# signal description for further details. RESET_STAND# B8 I Reset Standby Power Domain. This signal, when asserted, is the master reset for all CS5535 interfaces that are in the Standby power domain. See Section 3.9 "Power Management" on page 72 for a description of the Standby power domain. If LVD_EN# is enabled (tied low) use of this input is not required. See the LVD_EN# discussion in this table. Tie directly to VIO_VSB if not used. RESET_OUT# A5 O Reset Output. This is the main system reset signal. RESET_OUT# is de-asserted synchronously with the low-to-high edge of PCI_CLK. The de-assertion is delayed from internal reset by up to 32 seconds, with an 8 ms default value, using a programmable counter driven by the 32 kHz clock. Note this counter default is established by RESET_STAND# and is not affected by RESET_WORK#. Therefore, the delay value may be changed and the system reset with the new value. WORKING C5 O Working State. Indicates the chip is in the Working state when high. This signal is intended to be used to control power to off-chip devices in a system. Open-drain. External pull-up required. Revision 0.8 31 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.1 System Interface Signals (Continued) Signal Name SUSP# Ball No. Type P3 O Suspend. This signal goes low in response to events as determined by the CS5535’s internal power management logic. It requests the GX2 to enter the Suspend state. This is the default state for this ball at reset. Not used in normal operation. O CPU Interface Serial. A 20-bit serial status word is output on this ball, synchronized to PCI_CLK. Data changes on the rising edge and is stable on the falling edge of PCI_CLK. This word is output whenever one of the internally-monitored signals changes states. See Section 4.2.14 "CPU Interface Serial (CIS)" on page 79 for details. Used in normal operation. CIS Description SUSPA# N1 I Suspend Acknowledge. This input signal is driven low by the GX2 processor when it has successfully entered the Suspend state. IRQ13 K2 I Interrupt Request Level 13. Floating Point error. Connect directly to IRQ13 of the GX2 processor. VBAT A3 Wire Real-Time Clock Battery Back-Up. Battery voltage on this ball keeps the real-time clock and CMOS RAM circuits continuously powered. If not used, tie to ground. 2.4-3.6V, typical 3.0V. 10 µA max. 5 µAs typical. This ball incorporates a reverse bias protection diode on-chip. There is no need for an external diode. VSS_VBAT1 C4 VSS_VBAT2 B2 LVD_EN# C7 AGND Wire Real-Time Clock Battery Grounds 1 and 2 Low Voltage Detect Enable. LVD_EN# enables/disables the on-chip low voltage detect circuit. When disabled, the external subsystem must assert RESET_STAND# as Standby power is applied and must assert RESET_WORK# as Working power is applied. When LVD is enabled, use of these two resets are optional. Generally, RESET_STAND# would be tied high (not used) while RESET_WORK# would be tied to a reset output that is typically available from the power supply. However, a system could just have a simple regulator circuit and also tie RESET_WORK# high. Tie to VSS to enable. Tie to VIO_VSB to disable. www.national.com 32 Revision 0.8 2.2.2 PCI Interface Signals (Note 1) Signal Name Ball No. Type PCI_CLK U4 I AD[31:0] U1, T3, U3, R4, T4, R5, T5, U5, T6, U6, R7, T7, U7, R8, T8, U8, R12, T12, U12, R13, T13, U13, R14, T14, P15, R15, T15, P16, T16, R16, T17, R17 I/O R6, T9, U11, U14 I/O C/BE[3:0]# Description PCI Clock. 33 MHz or 66 MHz. PCI Address/Data. AD[31:0] is a physical address during the first clock of a PCI transaction; it is the data during subsequent clocks. When the CS5535 is a PCI master, AD[31:0] are outputs during the address and write data phases, and are inputs during the read data phase of a transaction. When the CS5535 is a PCI slave, AD[31:0] are inputs during the address and write data phases, and are outputs during the read data phase of a transaction. PCI Bus Command and Byte Enables. During the address phase of a PCI transaction, when FRAME# is active, C/BE[3:0]# define the bus command. During the data phase of a transaction, C/BE[3:0]# are the data byte enables. C/BE[3:0]# are outputs when the CS5535 is a PCI master and inputs when it is a PCI slave. PAR U10 I/O PCI Parity. PAR is the parity signal driven to maintain even parity across AD[31:0] and C/BE[3:0]#. The CS5535 drives PAR one clock after the address phase and one clock after each completed data phase of write transactions as a PCI master. It also drives PAR one clock after each completed data phase of read transactions as a PCI slave. FRAME# U9 I/O PCI Cycle Frame. FRAME# is asserted to indicate the start and duration of a transaction. It is de-asserted on the final data phase. FRAME# is an input when the CS5535 is a PCI slave. Normally connected to a 10k to15k Ω external pull-up. This signal is TRI-STATE after reset. DEVSEL# R11 I/O PCI Device Select. DEVSEL# is asserted by a PCI slave, to indicate to a PCI master and subtractive decoder that it is the target of the current transaction. As an input, DEVSEL# indicates a PCI slave has responded to the current address. As an output, DEVSEL# is asserted one cycle after the assertion of FRAME# and remains asserted to the end of a transaction as the result of a positive decode. DEVSEL# is asserted four cycles after the assertion of FRAME# if DEVSEL# has not been asserted by another PCI device when the CS5535 is programmed to be the subtractive decode agent. Normally connected to a 10k to 15k Ω external pull-up. This signal is TRI-STATE after reset. Revision 0.8 33 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.2 PCI Interface Signals (Note 1) (Continued) Signal Name IRDY# Ball No. Type R10 I/O Description PCI Initiator Ready. IRDY# is driven by the master to indicate valid data on a write transaction, or that it is ready to receive data on a read transaction. When the CS5535 is a PCI slave, IRDY# is an input that can delay the beginning of a write transaction or the completion of a read transaction. Wait cycles are inserted until both IRDY# and TRDY# are asserted together. Normally connected to a 10k to15k Ω external pull-up. This signal is TRI-STATE after reset. TRDY# T10 I/O PCI Target Ready. TRDY# is asserted by a PCI slave to indicate it is ready to complete the current data transfer. TRDY# is an input that indicates a PCI slave has driven valid data on a read or a PCI slave is ready to accept data from the CS5530A on a write. TRDY# is an output that indicates the CS5535 has placed valid data on AD[31:0] during a read or is ready to accept the data from a PCI master on a write. Wait cycles are inserted until both IRDY# and TRDY# are asserted together. Normally connected to a 10k to15k Ω external pull-up. This signal is TRI-STATE after reset. STOP# T11 I/O PCI Stop. As an input, STOP# indicates that a PCI slave wants to terminate the current transfer. The transfer is either aborted or retried. STOP# is also used to end a burst. As an output, STOP# is asserted with TRDY# to indicate a target disconnect, or without TRDY# to indicate a target retry. The CS5535 asserts STOP# during any cache line crossings if in single transfer DMA mode or if busy. Normally connected to a 10k to15k Ω external pull-up. This signal is TRI-STATE after reset. REQ# T1 O PCI Bus Request. The CS5535 asserts REQ# to gain ownership of the PCI bus. The REQ# and GNT# signals are used to arbitrate for the PCI bus. REQ# should connect to the REQ2# of the GX2-series processor and function as the highest-priority PCI master. GNT# R1 I PCI Bus Grant. GNT# is asserted by an arbiter that indicates to the CS5535 that access to the PCI bus has been granted. GNT# should connect to GNT2# of the GX2-series processor and function as the highest-priority PCI master. Note 1. Use RESET_OUT# for PCI reset. For SMI, PME, INTA#, and INTB# functions see Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. www.national.com 34 Revision 0.8 2.2.3 IDE/Flash Interface Signals The IDE and Flash interface signals are multiplexed together on the same balls as shown in Table 2-7. Section 2.2.3.1 provides the names and functions of these signals when the interface is in the IDE mode and Section 2.2.3.2 when in Flash mode (NOR Flash/GPCS and NAND Flash modes). Table 2-7. IDE and Flash Ball Multiplexing NOR Flash/GPCS Mode Ball No. IDE Mode Address Phase Data Phase NAND Flash Mode B11, A12 IDE_AD[2:1] FLASH_AD[27:26] FLASH_AD[2:1] --- A11 IDE_AD0 FLASH_AD25 FLASH_AD0 FLASH_CLE B15, B16, A17, C17, D16, D17, E17 IDE_DATA[14:8] FLASH_AD[24:18] FLASH_AD[9:3] --- E16, E15, D15, B17, C16, C15, A15, B14 IDE_DATA[7:0] FLASH_AD[17:10] FLASH_IO[7:0] FLASH_IO[7:0] C14 IDE_DATA15 FLASH_ALE FLASH_ALE B10 IDE_CS0# FLASH_CS0# FLASH_CE0# C10 IDE_CS1# FLASH_CS1# FLASH_CE1# B13 IDE_IOR0# FLASH_RE# FLASH_RE# C13 IDE_IOW0# FLASH_WE# FLASH_WE# A14 (Note 1) IDE_DREQ0 FLASH_CS2# FLASH_CE2# C12 IDE_DACK0# FLASH_CS3# (Boot Flash Chip Select) FLASH_CE3# A13 IDE_RDY0 FLASH_IOCHRDY FLASH_RDY/BUSY# Note 1. 2.2.3.1 Ball A14 is the only ball that changes direction from IDE to Flash (input when in IDE mode, output when in Flash mode). If this interface is to be switched between IDE and Flash modes, then ball A14 needs an external pull-up to keep it high during IDE mode. IDE Interface Signals Signal Name Ball No. Type IDE_IRQ0 B12 I IDE Interrupt Request Channel 0. This signal is required for all IDE applications that use IDE DMA modes. It is available on GPIO2, which must be configured in the AUX_IN mode. If an IDE application will not use IDE DMA modes, or if the Flash interface will be used instead of the IDE interface, then this signal may be used as GPIO2. IDE_RESET# F15 O IDE Reset. An internal reset that is the functional “OR” of inputs RESET_WORK# and RESET_STAND#. It may also be controlled directly via an MSR (see Section 5.4.2.2 "Reset Decode (ATAC_RESET)" on page 254). This signal resets all the devices that are attached to the IDE interface. IDE_AD[2:0] B11, A12, A11 O IDE Address Bits. These address bits are used to access a register or data port in a device on the IDE bus. IDE_DATA[15:0] C14, B15, B16, A17, C17, D16, D17, E17, E16, E15, D15, B17, C16, C15, A15, B14 I/O IDE Data Lines. IDE_DATA[15:0] transfers data to/from the IDE devices. Revision 0.8 Description 35 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.3.1 IDE Interface Signals (Continued) Signal Name IDE_IOR0# Ball No. Type B13 O Description IDE I/O Read. This output is asserted on read accesses to corresponding IDE port addresses. When in Ultra DMA/33 mode, this signal is redefined: • IDE_HDMA_RDY - Host DMA Ready for Ultra DMA data-in bursts • IDE_HDMA_DS - Host DMA Data Strobe for Ultra DMA data-out bursts IDE_IOW0# C13 O IDE I/O Write. This output is asserted on write accesses to corresponding IDE port addresses. When in Ultra DMA/33 mode, this signal is redefined: • IDE_STOP - Stop Ultra DMA data burst IDE_CS0# B10 O IDE Chip Select 0. This chip select signal is used to select the Command Block registers in IDE Device 0. IDE_CS1# C10 O IDE Chip Select. This chip select signal is used to select the Command Block registers in IDE Device 1. IDE_DREQ0 A14 I DMA Request. The DREQ input is used to request a DMA transfer from the CS5535. The direction of the transfers are determined by the IDE_IOR0# and IDE_IOW0# signals. Note: Ball A14 is the only ball that changes direction from IDE to Flash (input when in IDE mode, output when in Flash mode). If this interface is to be switched between IDE and Flash modes, then ball A14 needs an external pull-up to keep it high during IDE mode. IDE_DACK0# C12 O DMA Acknowledge. The DACK# output acknowledges the IDE_DREQ0 request to initiate DMA transfers. IDE_RDY0 A13 I I/O Ready. When de-asserted, this signal extends the transfer cycle of any host register access when the device is not ready to respond to the data transfer request. When in Ultra DMA/33 mode, this signal is redefined: • IDE_DDMA_DS - Device DMA Data Strobe for Ultra DMA data-in bursts • IDE_DDMA_RDY - Device DMA Ready for Ultra DMA data-out bursts www.national.com 36 Revision 0.8 2.2.3.2 Flash Controller Interface Signal Name Ball No. Type Description NOR Flash / GPCS Mode FLASH_CS[3:0]# C12, A14, C10, B10 O Chip Selects. Combine with FLASH_RE#/WE# strobes to access external NOR Flash devices or some simple devices such as UART. CS3# is dedicated to a boot Flash device. Note: Ball A14 is the only ball that changes direction from IDE to Flash (input when in IDE mode, output when in Flash mode). If this interface is to be switched between IDE and Flash modes, then ball A14 needs an external pull-up to keep it high during IDE mode. FLASH_RE# B13 O Read Enable Strobe. This signal is asserted during READ operations from the NOR array. FLASH_WE# C13 O Write Enable Strobe. This signal is asserted during WRITE operations to the NOR array. FLASH_ALE C14 O Address Latch Enable. Controls external latch (e.g., 74x373) for latching the higher address bits in address phase. B11, A12, A11, B15, B16, A17, C17, D16, D17, E17 O Address Bus. During the address phase, address [27:18] is put on the bus. During the data phase, address [9:0] is put on the bus. FLASH_AD[17:10]/ IO[7:0] E16, E15, D15, B17, C16, C15, A15, B14 I/O Multiplexed Address and I/O Bus. During the address phase, NOR address [17:10] are placed on these lines. During the data phase, it is the NOR I/O data bus. FLASH_IOCHRDY A13 I I/O Channel Ready. When a device is hanging off the bus and wants to extend its current cycle, it pulls this signal low to insert the wait state. C12, A14, C10, B10 O Chip Enables. The signals remain low during entire period of a NAND cycle. FLASH_AD[27:26]/ AD[2:1], FLASH_AD25/ AD0, FLASH_AD[24:18]/ AD[9:3] NAND Flash Mode FLASH_CE[3:0]# Note: Ball A14 is the only ball that changes direction from IDE to Flash. Needs external pull-up for Flash use. FLASH_RE# B13 O Read Enable Strobe. This signal is asserted during READ operations from the NAND array. FLASH_WE# C13 O Write Enable Strobe. This signal is asserted during WRITE operations to the NAND array. FLASH_ALE C14 O Address Latch Enable. Level signal to indicate an address byte is writing to the NAND Flash device. FLASH_CLE A11 O Command Latch Enable. Indicates a Command byte is being written to the device. E16, E15, D15, B17, C16, C15, A15, B14 I/O I/O Bus. I/O Bus for NAND Flash devices. Command, address, and data are sent on this bus. This bus is actively driven to zero with or without an LPC_CLK from and after reset. A13 I Ready/Busy#. NAND Flash pulls this signal low to indicate it is busy with an internal operation. No further action is accepted except read status. FLASH_IO[7:0] FLASH_RDY/BUSY# Revision 0.8 37 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.4 USB Interface Signal Name USB_PWR_EN1 Ball No. Type P17 O Description USB Power Enable 1. This signal is intended to be used to enable an external USB power source for Port 1, such as the National LM3526. USB_PWR_EN1 is an active high signal. If low, it indicates that the external USB power source for Port 1 is turned off. Defaults off from reset. USB_PWR_EN2 N16 O USB Power Enable 2. This signal is intended to be used to enable an external USB power source for Port 2, such as the National LM3526. USB_PWR_EN2 is an active high signal. If low, it indicates that the external USB power source for Port 2 is turned off. Defaults off from reset. USB_OC_SENS# N15 I USB Over Current Sense. This signal is the logical OR or wired-OR from all external USB power supply devices, such as the National LM3526, and is shared by USB1 and USB2 (all four ports). When pulled low it causes both USB_PWR_EN1 and USB_PWR_EN2 to de-assert and generate an interrupt. Tie high if not used. USB1_1_DATPOS K16 I/O USB Port 1_1 Data Positive. This is the positive differential side of the USB data for port 1_1. (Note 1, Note 2.) USB1_1_DATNEG K17 I/O USB Port 1_1 Data Negative. This is the negative differential side of the USB data for port 1_1. (Note 1, Note 2.) USB1_2_DATPOS L16 I/O USB Port 1_2 Data Positive. This is the positive differential side of the USB data for port 1_2. (Note 1, Note 2.) USB1_2_DATNEG L17 I/O USB Port 1_2 Data Negative. This is the negative differential side of the USB data for port 1_2. (Note 1, Note 2.) USB2_1_DATPOS H17 I/O USB Port 2_1 Data Positive. This is the positive differential side of the USB data for port 2_1. (Note 1, Note 2.) USB2_1_DATNEG H16 I/O USB Port 2_1 Data Negative. This is the negative differential side of the USB data for port 2_1. (Note 1, Note 2.) USB2_2_DATPOS G17 I/O USB Port 2_2 Data Positive. This is the positive differential side of the USB data for port 2_2. (Note 1, Note 2.) USB2_2_DATNEG G16 I/O USB Port 2_2 Data Negative. This is the negative differential side of the USB data for port 2_2. (Note 1, Note 2.) AVSS_USB F16, J16, M16 AGND USB Analog Circuit Ground. Total of three ground balls for the USB transceivers. Most applications should connect this to signal ground. AVDD_USB F17, J17, M17 APWR USB Analog Circuit Power. Total of three power balls for the USB transceivers. Most applications should connect this to VIO. Note 1. Use external 27 Ω series resistor on output. From reset, these outputs are in TRI-STATE. At board level, a 15 kΩ pull-down resistor is required per the USB specification. Note 2. External clamping diodes may be needed to meet over voltage requirements. www.national.com 38 Revision 0.8 2.2.5 System Management Bus (SMB) Interface Signal Name SMB_CLK Ball No. Type G3 I/O Description SMB Clock. This is the clock for the System Management bus. It is initiated by the master of the current transaction. Data is sampled during the high state of the clock. An external pull-up resistor is required. Shared with GPIO14. Set GPIO14 to AUX_IN and AUX_OUT_1 modes simultaneously to use as SMB_CLK. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. External voltage applied to this ball should not exceed VIO. SMB_DATA F1 I/O SMB Data. This is the bidirectional data line for the System management Bus. Data may change during the low state of the SMB clock and should remain stable during the high state. An external pull-up resistor is required. Shared with GPIO15. Set GPIO15 to AUX_IN and AUX_OUT_1 modes simultaneously to use as SMB_DATA. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. External voltage applied to this ball should not exceed VIO. Revision 0.8 39 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.6 Low Pin Count (LPC) Interface (Note 1) Signal Name LPC_CLK LPCAD[3:0] Ball No. Type H1 I K1, J1, J2, H2 I/O Description LPC Clock. 33 MHz LPC bus shift clock. LPC Address/Data Bus. This is the 4-bit LPC bus. Address, control, and data are transferred on this bus between the CS5535 and LPC devices. An external pull-up of 100 kΩ is required on these balls if is used in LPC mode to maintain a high level when the signals are in TRISTATE. From reset, these signals are not driven. LPC_AD3 is shared with GPIO19. LPC_AD2 is shared with GPIO18. LPC_AD1 is shared with GPIO17. LPC_AD0 is shared with GPIO16. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 for further details. LPC_DRQ# G1 I LPC DMA Request. This is the LPC DMA request signal. Peripherals requiring service pull it low and then place a serially-encoded requested channel number on this line to initiate a DMA transfer. If the device wakes up from Sleep, at least six LPC_CLKs must occur before this input is asserted. Shared with GPIO20. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. Tie high if selected as LPC_DRQ# but not used. LPC_SERIRQ G2 I/O LPC Encoded IRQ. This is the LPC serial interrupt request line, used to report ISA-style interrupt requests. It may be activated by either the CS5535 or an LPC peripheral. An external pull-up of 100 kΩ is required if this ball is used in LPC mode to maintain a high level when the signal is in TRI-STATE. From reset, this signal is not driven. If the device wakes up from Sleep, at least six LPC_CLKs must occur before this input is asserted if operating in Quiet mode. Shared with GPIO21. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. LPC_FRAME# H3 O LPC Frame. This signal provides the active-low LPC FRAME signal used to start and stop transfers on the LPC bus. Shared with GPIO22. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. Note 1. All the LPC signals, except the LPC_CLK (LPC Clock) are shared on GPIO balls (see Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42). The CS5535 powers up with this group of balls set to the LPC mode; in order to use them as GPIOs they must be explicitly reprogrammed. The LPC may be switched to GPIO use via the Ball Opt MSR (see Table 26 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29). Use RESET_OUT# for LPC reset. Use any GPIO assigned as a PME for the LPC PME. Use any GPIO assigned as an SMI for the LPC SMI. Use general Sleep and Standby controls (SLEEP_X, ball C2 and SLEEP_Y, ball J3) in place of LPCPD# for LPC power-down. www.national.com 40 Revision 0.8 2.2.7 Audio Codec 97 InterfaceNote 1 Signal Name Ball No. Type AC_CLK M1 I Audio Bit Clock. The serial bit clock from the codec. The frequency of the bit clock is 12.288 MHz and is derived from the 24.576 MHz crystal input to the external audio codec. Not required if audio not used; tie low. AC_S_OUT L2 O Audio Controller Serial Data Out. This output transmits audio data to the codec. This data stream contains both control data and the DAC audio data. The data is sent on the rising edge of the AC_CLK. Connect to the audio codec’s serial data input pin. I Boot Options Select Bit 1. During system reset, this ball is the MSB of the two-bit boot option (balls L2 and L3), used to determine the location of the system boot device. It should be pulled low if required by Table 2-5 "Boot Options Selection" on page 29, otherwise, an internal pull up, asserted during reset, will pull it high. During reset, the ball output drivers are held in TRI-STATE, and the ball is sampled on the rising edge of RESET_OUT# (i.e., when external reset is de-asserted). After reset, this signal defaults low (off). BOS1 Description AC_S_IN L1 I Audio Controller Serial Data Input. This input receives serial data from the audio codec. This data stream contains both control data and ADC audio data. This input data is sampled on the falling edge of AC_CLK.Connect to the audio codec’s serial data output pin. AC_S_SYNC L3 O Audio Controller Sync. This is a 48 kHz sync pulse that signifies the beginning of a serial transfer on AC_S_OUT, AC_S_IN, and AC_S_IN2. AC_S_SYNC is synchronous to the rising edge of AC_CLK. Connect to the audio codec’s SYNC pin. I Boot Options Select Bit 0. During system reset, this ball is the LSB of the two-bit boot option (balls L2 and L3), used to determine the location of the system boot device. It should be pulled low if required by Table 2-5 "Boot Options Selection" on page 29, otherwise, an internal pull up, asserted during reset, will pull it high. During reset, the ball drivers are held in TRI-STATE, and the ball is sampled on the rising edge of RESET_OUT# (i.e., when external reset is de-asserted). After reset, this signal defaults low (off). O Legacy PC/AT Speaker Beep. Connect to codec’s PC_BEEP. BOS0 AC_BEEP K3 This function is only available when GPIO1 is programmed to AUX_OUT_1. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. AC_S_IN2 J3 I Audio Controller Serial Data Input 2. This input receives serial data from a second codec. This data stream contains both control data and ADC audio data. This input data is sampled on the falling edge of AC_CLK. If the codec’s Ready bit is set in this stream (slot 0, bit 15), then it is functionally ORed with AC_S_IN. Connect to a second codec’s serial data output. This function is only available when GPIO12 is programmed to AUX_IN. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. Note 1. Use RESET_OUT# for AC97 reset. Revision 0.8 41 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.8 GPIOs Table 2-8 gives the dedicated functions associated with each GPIO. These functions may be invoked by configuring the associated GPIO to the AUX_IN, AUX_OUT_1, or AUX_OUT_2 modes. (The functions themselves are described in Table 2-9 "GPIOx Available Functions Descriptions" on page 44.) The column “Recommended Use” is a guideline for system designers to assign GPIO functionality. Any GPIO input can be mapped to an interrupt, ASMI, or PME. Details of configuring the GPIOs are given in Section 5.16 "GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions" on page 432. All GPIOs have selectable pull-up or pull-down resistors available on the output, except for those indicated by Note 1 in the “Weak PU/PD” column of Table 2-8. Table 2-8. GPIO Options Function Programming Options Post Reset GPIO Ball No. GPIO0 R2 Power Buffer Domain Type W PCI Weak PU/PD I/O Config (Note 1) Disabled PCI_INTA# (Note 2) Recommended Use AUX_IN AUX_OUT_1 AUX_OUT_2 AC_BEEP MFGPT0_C2 GPIO1 K3 W Q7 PU Disabled --- GPIO2 B12 W IDE (Note 1) Disabled --- IDE_IRQ0 GPIO3 E1 W SMB (Note 1) Disabled DDC_SCL (Note 3) UART2 RX GPIO4 E2 W SMB (Note 1) Disabled DDC_SDA (Note 3) GPIO5 D3 W Q7 Autosense Disabled --- MFGPT1_RS MFGPT0_C1 GPIO6 D2 W Q7 Autosense Disabled --- MFGPT0_RS MFGPT1_C1 MFGPT2_C2 GPIO7 C2 W PCI (Note 1) Disabled PCI_INTB# (Note 2) MFGPT2_C1 SLEEP_X GPIO8 E3 W Q7 PU Disabled --- UART1_TX UART1_IR_TX GPIO9 D1 W Q7 PU Disabled --- UART1_RX or UART1_IR_RX GPIO10 C3 W Q7 PU Disabled --- (Note 4) THRM_ALRM# GPIO11 A1 W Q7 PU Disabled --- SLP_CLK_EN# MFGPT1_C2 GPIO12 J3 W Q7 PD Disabled --- AC_S_IN2 GPIO13 F2 W Q7 PU Disabled --- (Note 4) SLEEP_BUT GPIO14 G3 W SMB (Note 1) Disabled --- (Note 5) SMB_CLK_IN SMB_CLK_OUT GPIO15 F1 W SMB (Note 1) Disabled --- (Note 5) SMB_DATA_IN SMB_DATA_OUT GPIO16 H2 W PCI (Note 1) LPC (Note 6) LPC_AD0 GPIO17 J2 W PCI (Note 1) LPC (Note 6) LPC_AD1 GPIO18 J1 W PCI (Note 1) LPC (Note 6) LPC_AD2 GPIO19 K1 W PCI (Note 1) LPC (Note 6) LPC_AD3 GPIO20 G1 W PCI (Note 1) LPC (Note 6) LPC_DRQ# GPIO21 G2 W PCI (Note 1) LPC (Note 6) LPC_SERIRQ GPIO22 H3 W PCI (Note 1) LPC (Note 6) LPC_FRAME# GPIO24 C9 S SMB (Note 1) Disabled --- UART2 TX SLEEP_Y MFGPT2_RS WORK_AUX GPIO25 A9 S Q7 Disabled --- LOW_BAT# GPIO26 B7 S Q7 Disabled PME# (Note 7) MFGPT7_RS GPIO27 C8 S Q7 Disabled --- GPIO28 A8 S Q7 Input Enabled (Note 8) PWR_BUT# (Note 9) MFGPT7_C2 MFGPT7_C1 32KHZ PWR_BUT# Note 1. No internal pull-up/down available. If not used, tie low. Note 2. Any GPIO can be used as an interrupt input without restriction. These particular GPIOs have PCI I/O buffer types for complete PCI bus compatibility. However, such strict compatibility is generally not required. www.national.com 42 Revision 0.8 Note 3. Applications incorporating a CRT often require support for the Display Data Channel (DDC) serial interface. These particular GPIOs have open collector SMB I/O buffer types required by the DDC interface specification. The DDC protocol supplied by National is provided via software implementation and defaults to these GPIOs. However, any design not needing strict DDC electrical support can use other GPIOs. Lastly, applications not incorporating DDC use at all may use these GPIOs without restriction. Note 4. Internal signal is active high. Use GPIO invert for active low external. Note 5. When both AUX_IN and AUX_OUT are enabled, I/O direction on this ball is controlled by the SMB Controller. Note 6. Defaults to LPC use. Use Ball Options MSR (see Table 2-6 on page 29) to switch this ball to GPIO control. Note 7. Any GPIO can be used as a Power Management Event (PME) wakeup input without restriction. PMEs are supported for both Sleep and Standby wakeup. However, if Standby wakeup is desired, a GPIO on the Standby power domain must be used. Only GPIO[24:28] are supplied via the Standby Power Rail and are typically used as follows: GPIO24 - Auxiliary Working Power Control GPIO25 - Low Battery Alarm GPIO26 - PME GPIO27 - MFGPT setup to provide a blink GPIO28 - Power Button Depending on application use, the PME function could be moved to GPIO[24:27]. If only external PME wakeup from Sleep is required, the PME function could be moved to GPIO[0:23]. Lastly, the PME function could simply not be used, making more GPIOs available for other uses. Note 8. GPIOH_IN_EN (GPIO Offset A0h) and GPIOH_IN_AUX1_SEL (GPIO Offset B4h) are enabled. Note 9. Reset default. Revision 0.8 43 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.8.1 GPIO Functions and Recommended Usage Functions listed in Table 2-9 are functions that may be assigned to specific GPIO balls. The “Ball No.” column gives the ball that must be used if this function is selected, and the “GPIOx” column gives the GPIO that the function is associated with. Table 2-9. GPIOx Available Functions Descriptions Function Name Ball No. GPIO[x] Type 32KHZ C8 GPIO27 O Description 32 kHz Clock. When invoked, this ball produces a buffered output of the 32 kHz clock provided on the 32kHz XCI and XCO pins. This option is invoked by selecting the AUX_OUT_2 option of GPIO27. Note that since GPIO27 is in the Standby power domain, the 32 kHz clock output will continue in Sleep and Standby states. AC_BEEP K3 GPIO1 O Legacy PC/AT Speaker Beep. Connect to codec’s PC_BEEP. DDC_SCL E1 GPIO3 I/O DDC Serial Clock. This is a “recommended use” for GPIO3, because this is one of the few GPIOs that have a high drive capacity, open-drain output. The serial clock function must be implemented in software to support DDC monitors. There is no dedicated DDC clock function within the CS5535. DDC_SDA E2 GPIO4 I/O DDC Serial Data. This is a “recommended use” for GPIO4, because this is one of the few GPIOs that have a high drive capacity, open-drain output. The serial data function must be implemented in software to support DDC monitors. There is no dedicated DDC data function within the CS5535. LOW_BAT# A9 GPIO25 I Low Battery Detect. This is a “recommended use” for GPIO25 in battery-powered systems. It is invoked by setting GPIO25 to the AUX_IN mode. The signal is intended to be driven low by an external circuit when the battery voltage falls below a preset value (determined by the external circuit). It could be used to generate a PME (interrupt) - connected to LowBat function in the Power Management Controller that would then de-assert WORKING and WORK_AUX, if no software action is taken within a programmable time. MFGPT0_C1 D3 GPIO5 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #0 - Compare 1 Out. An output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 1 registers. MFGPT0_C2 K3 GPIO1 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #0 - Compare 2 Out. An output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 2 registers. MFGPT0_RS D2 GPIO6 I Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #0 - Restart. An input to the counter that causes it to be reset to initial conditions and then to resume counting. MFGPT1_C1 D2 GPIO6 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #1 - Compare 1 Out. An output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 1 registers. MFGPT1_C2 A1 GPIO11 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #1 - Compare 2 Out. An output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 2 registers. MFGPT1_RS D3 GPIO5 I Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #1 - Restart. An input to the counter that causes it to be reset to initial conditions and then to resume counting. www.national.com 44 Revision 0.8 Table 2-9. GPIOx Available Functions Descriptions (Continued) Function Name Ball No. GPIO[x] Type MFGPT2_C1 C2 GPIO7 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #2 - Compare 1 Out. An output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 1 registers. MFGPT2_C2 D2 GPIO6 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #2 - Compare 2 Out. Output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 2 registers. MFGPT2_RS G2 GPIO21 I Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #2 - Restart. An input to the counter that causes it to be reset to initial conditions and then to resume counting. MFGPT7_C1 C8 GPIO27 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #7 - Compare 1 Out. An output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 1 registers. MFGPT7_C2 A9 GPIO25 O Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #7 - Compare 2 Out. An output from the counter that, when asserted, indicates the counter has reached the conditions set up in the counter’s Compare 2 registers. MFGPT7_RS B7 GPIO26 I Multi-Function General Purpose Counter #7 - Restart. An input to the counter that causes it to be reset to initial conditions and then to resume counting. PCI_INTA# R2 GPIO0 I PCI Interrupt A. This is a “recommended use” for GPIO0, because this GPIO has a PCI-compatible output type. PCI_INTB# C2 GPIO7 I PCI Interrupt B. This is a “recommended use” for GPIO7, because this GPIO has a PCI-compatible output type. PME# B7 GPIO26 I Power Management Event. This is a “recommended use” for GPIO26. By mapping this GPIO (or any other) to the PME# function, the CS5535 may be awakened from a Sleep state when the mapped ball (in the recommended case, ball B7) is pulled low. Revision 0.8 Description 45 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Table 2-9. GPIOx Available Functions Descriptions (Continued) Function Name PWR_BUT# Ball No. GPIO[x] Type A8 GPIO28 I Description Power Button. This GPIO can be mapped to the PMC “buttonpush” event, that may be used to implement the power ON and the four-second-delay power OFF functions. Note that GPIO28 comes up in the AUX_IN mode after reset, enabling this feature. Any power button change on this input must be at least two KHZ32_XCI edges (approximately 62 µs) in duration to be correctly detected. If spurious transitions smaller than this are possible, then use on-chip GPIO input filter function to insure proper operation. Additionally, the rise or fall time on this input must be less than 10 µs. If transition times longer than this are possible, then use the on-chip GPIO input filter function to insure proper operation. From the first power-up of the Standby power domain under which no filter is enabled, spurious transitions on the first high-to-low power button push are acceptable as long as the input is eventually low at least two KHZ32_XCI edges. Additionally, transition times as slow as one milli-second are acceptable for the first push. Note that these relaxed requirements work because this input is effectively a “don’t care” at the hardware level after the first powerup until software enables use of the power button. Before enabling use, the software can setup the GPIO filter or other functions as needed. Per the discussion of the “skip” feature in Section 4.17 "Power Management Control" on page 159, this input may be tied to ground in order for the system to come on immediately when Standby and Working power are available. Specifically, systems that do not incorporate a power button should tie this input to ground. One side effect of the “skip” feature, is that the platform design must insure that this input is not low when Standby power is applied if the “skip” feature is not desired. Specifically, systems that do incorporate use of a power button must insure that this input ramps to a “high” no more than 1 µs behind VIO_VSB rampup. Failure to quickly establish a “high” on this input during powerup could result in a spurious “skip”. AC_S_IN2 J3 GPIO12 I Audio Controller Serial Data Input 2. This input receives serial data from a second codec. This data stream contains both control data and ADC audio data. This input data is sampled on the falling edge of AC_CLK. If the codec’s Ready bit is set in this stream (slot 0, bit 15), then it is functionally OR-ed with AC_SDATA_IN1. Connect to second codec’s serial data output. SLP_CLK_EN# A1 GPIO11 O Sleep Clock Enable. This signal is a control that is intended to be connected to the external system clock generator chip. The intended use is, when high, the clock generator runs; when low, the clock generator turns off. From reset, a pull-up makes this GPIO high. The active state of this signal indicates that the CS5535 is in the Sleep state. SLEEP_BUT F2 GPIO13 I Sleep Button. This GPIO can be mapped to a PME “button-push” type event, that may be used to request the system software to put the system to Sleep. www.national.com 46 Revision 0.8 Table 2-9. GPIOx Available Functions Descriptions (Continued) Function Name Ball No. GPIO[x] Type SLEEP_X C2 GPIO7 O Sleep X. This general purpose power control output becomes active as the CS5535 enters and exits various power management modes. It may be used by external devices to control their power states synchronous with power state changes in the CS5535. It may be configured as active high or active low. SLEEP_Y J3 GPIO12 O Sleep Y. This general purpose power control output becomes active as the CS5535 enters and exits various power-management modes. It may be used by external devices to control their power states synchronous with power state changes in the CS5535. It may be configured as active high or active low. SMB_CLK_IN G3 GPIO14 I SMB Clock In / SMB Clock Out. This is the clock for the SMB. In order to use it properly, the associated GPIO (GPIO14) should be set to AUX_IN and AUX_OUT_1 simultaneously. The SMB controller determines the direction (in or out) of the associated ball. SMB_CLK_OUT SMB_DATA_IN O F1 GPIO15 I SMB_DATA_OUT O Description SMB Data In / SMB Data Out. This is the data line for the SMB. In order to use it properly, the associated GPIO (GPIO15) should be set to AUX_IN and AUX_OUT_1 simultaneously. The SMB controller determines the direction (in or out) of the associated ball. THRM_ALRM# C3 GPIO10 I Thermal Alarm. When connected to an external thermal monitor, this input can act as a thermal fail-safe to shut down power by signalling the power management controller to de-assert WORKING and WORK_AUX. Set GPIO10 to the AUX_IN mode to enable this feature. IDE_IRQ0 B12 GPIO2 I IDE Interrupt. Indicates the external IDE device has completed the DMA operation. UART1_IR_TX E3 GPIO8 O UART1 Infrared Transmit. This signal is the data output (TX) from the infrared mode of UART1. It is available when GPIO8 is switched to the AUX_OUT_2 mode UART1_RX D1 GPIO9 I UART1 Receive or UART1 Infrared Receive. This signal is the data input (RX) to the UART1. It acts as the input in both IR and conventional modes of UART1. It is available when GPIO9 is switched to the AUX_IN mode. UART1_IR_RX I UART1_TX E3 GPIO8 O UART1 Transmit. This signal is the data output (TX) from the conventional mode of UART1. It is available when GPIO8 is switched to the AUX_OUT_1 mode. UART2_RX E1 GPIO3 I UART2 Receive. This signal is the data input (RX) to the UART2. It acts as the input of UART2. It is available when GPIO3 is switched to the AUX_IN mode. UART2_TX E2 GPIO4 O UART2 Transmit. This signal is the data output (TX) from the conventional mode of UART1. It is available when GPIO4 is switched to the AUX_OUT_1 mode. WORK_AUX C9 GPIO24 O Working Auxiliary. This output is intended to be used to control external power sources to all devices except memory (which is intended to be controlled by WORKING). WORK_AUX de-asserts in synchronism with WORKING. 2.2.9 Debug and Manufacturing Test Interface Signal Name TCK Revision 0.8 Ball No. Type N2 I Description JTAG Test Clock. 47 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) 2.2.9 Debug and Manufacturing Test Interface (Continued) Signal Name Ball No. Type TMS N3 I JTAG Test Mode Select. TDI P1 I JTAG Test Data In. TDO P2 O, TS T_DEBUG_IN M2 I Test Debug Input. Input to GeodeLink Control Processor (GLCP) from GX2. T_DEBUG_OUT M3 O Test Debug Out. Output from GeodeLink Control Processor (GLCP) to GX2. LVD_TEST B9 O Low Voltage Detect Test. Manufacturing test only. No operational use. Make no connection. TEST_MODE A6 I Test Mode. Manufacturing test only. No operational use. Tie low. FUNC_TEST F3 I Functional Test. Manufacturing test only. No operational use. Tie low. www.national.com Description JTAG Test Data Out. From reset, this output is TRI-STATE. It is only enabled and driven when commanded to output or pass-through data per JTAG standards. 48 Revision 0.8 2.2.10 Power, Ground, and No Connects (Note 1) Signal Name Ball No. Type Description VCORE D8, D10, H4, H14, K4, K14, P8, P10 PWR 1.5V (Nominal) Core Power Working Connection (Total of 8) A7 PWR 1.5V (Nominal) Core Power Standby Connection D4, D6, D9, D12, D14, F4, F14, M4, M14, P4, P6, P9, P12, P14 PWR 3.3V (Nominal) I/O Power Connection (Total of 14) B6 PWR 3.3V (Nominal) I/O Power Standby Connection VSS D5, D7, D11, D13, E4, E14, G4, G14, J4, J14, L4, L14, N4, N14, P5, P7, P11, P13 GND Ground Connection (Total of 18) NC A2, A16, B1, B4, B5, C11, G15, H15, J15, K15, L15, M15, R3, R9, T2, U2, U15, U16, U17 --- VCORE_VSB VIO VIO_VSB No Connection (Total of 19). These lines must be left disconnected. Connecting any or these lines to a pull-up/-down resistor, an active signal, power, or ground could cause unexpected results and possible malfunctions. Note 1. For module specific power and ground signals see: Section 2.2.1 "System Interface Signals" on page 31. Section 2.2.4 "USB Interface" on page 38. Revision 0.8 49 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Signal Definitions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 3.0 3.1 Global Concepts and Features GEODELINK ARCHITECTURE OVERVIEW The information in this section provides a basic understanding of the architecture used to internally connect GeodeLink Devices. The actual existence of architecture is generally invisible to the user and the system programmer. National Semiconductor Core BIOS software provides all GeodeLink initialization and support, including related Model Specific Registers (MSRs). Additionally, this software provides a Virtual PCI Configuration Space that abstracts the architecture to industry standard interfaces. From this interface, all GeodeLink devices appear in one PCI multi-function configuration space header on the external PCI bus. • All outputs from the GLIU to a GLD are registered. Furthermore, there are dedicated output registers for each GLD. • GLD inputs from the GLIU need not be registered but they are buffered at the interface. • All connections between the GLDs and GLIU are dedicated point-to-point connections with one source and one load. There are no TRI-STATE buses. • The GLIU itself is a GLD and is always Port 0. The GLIU implements the “bus”. Transactions between GLDs and GLIUs are conducted with packets. The GLIU accepts request packets from masters and routes them to slaves. Similarly, slave response packets are routed back to the master. The bus is non-blocking. Several requests can be pending but order is guaranteed. Broadcasts are not allowed. All packets have one source and one destination. 3.1.1 Introduction This component is based on the GeodeLink packet architecture. It consists of a set of GeodeLink Devices (GLDs) and a GeodeLink Control Processor (GLCP) connected through the GeodeLink Interface Unit (GLIU). A simplified view of a GLIU connected with three generic GLDs is illustrated in Figure 3-1. The following points are relevant: 3.1.2 Routing The Physical To Device (P2D) descriptors control the routing of the packets. The descriptors are initialized by software at system setup. They establish the address map to be used by the system. They associate a memory or I/O address range with a GLIU port. • All outputs from a GLD to the GLIU are registered. GLD1 RO P2D HS DO ARB RO - Request Out DO - Data Out GLD2 RO Data Mux RI - Request In DI - Data In HS GLD3 DO RO RI GLIU DI RI HS DO DI HS - Handshake P2D - Physical to Device Descriptors RI DI ARB - Arbiter Figure 3-1. Simplified GLIU with Generic GeodeLink Devices www.national.com 50 Revision 0.8 When a request packet arrives from a Request Out (RO) port, the address and other attributes in the packet are used to look up the destination port. If the port Request In (RI) is available, the request is passed. If there are multiple requests, priorities are used to establish which requestor and destination port utilize the transfer cycle. A transfer from an RO to an RI takes one clock edge. 3.1.4 ASMI and Error Two additional signals are needed to complete this GeodeLink architecture overview: Asynchronous System Management Interrupt (ASMI) and Error. Each GLD outputs these ASMI and Error signals. An ASMI is much like a legacy interrupt, except it invokes the SMM handler. As the name suggests, an ASMI is an asynchronous event, while an SSMI is synchronous to the instruction that generated it. 3.1.3 Response Packets Earlier in this section, it was indicated that an RO can be used to present a write data packet or a read response packet. The use and need of a read response packet for a read request is obvious. However, there is also an optional write response packet. This tells the requestor that the write has completed. This is used to hold a processor I/O write instruction until the response is received, that is, I/O writes are never posted. Memory writes are always posted. The Error signal simply indicates some type of unexpected error has occurred. A device asserts this signal when an unexpected error occurs. In a normal operating system, this would not be asserted. For example, a disk read error or ethernet network error would be signaled using normal GeodeLink packet mechanisms. This signal is reserved for the truly unexpected. The response packet is also used to generate Synchronous System Management Interrupts (SSMIs). System Management Mode (SMM) is used for hardware emulation and other traps. An SSMI can be generated by a GLD or via special GLIU descriptors. When the response arrives back at the processor, interface circuits generate an SMI to invoke the SMM software. Lastly, all response packets contain an exception flag that can be set to indicate an error. Each GLD has mechanisms for enabling and mapping multiple internal sources down to these singular outputs. The mechanism consists of the logical “OR” of all enabled sources. The GLIU receives the ASMI and Error pair from each GLD. It has the same “OR” and enable mechanism that finally results in a single ASMI and Error pair for the whole component (see Figure 3-2). The ASMI is routed to the processor, while the Error is routed to the GLCP. Within the GLCP, the Error signal can be mapped into an ASMI for routing back into the GLIU. ACC ASMI & Error DD ASMI & Error ATAC ASMI & Error USBC2 ASMI & Error GLPCI_SB ASMI & Error OR ASMI & Error OR USBC1 Enable GLCP Enable CS5535 ASMI to GX2 ASMI & Error ASMI & Error CS5535 Error to GLCP Debug or conversion to ASM GLIU ASMI & Error Figure 3-2. GeodeLink Architecture ASMI and Error Routing Revision 0.8 51 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) 3.1.5 Topology The connection of the GLIU to the seven GLDs of the CS5535 is illustrated in Figure 3-3. Note the circled number next to each GLD. This is the port number of the GLD. By design convention, the GLIU is always port zero. Part of the physical to device (P2D) descriptor is a port number. When there is a hit on the descriptor address, the port number indicates which GLD to route the packet to. If there is no hit, then the packet is routed to the default port. For the CS5535, the default is always Port 4, that is, the Diverse Device (DD). Thus, for the GX2 processor to address an MSR in the CS5535, it specifies a series of ports that must be traversed to get there. Once a specific device port is identified, additional address bits are available to select a specific MSR within a given device. MSR space is functionally similar to PCI configuration space. At boot time system initialization, the Core BIOS (see Section 3.1 "GeodeLink Architecture Overview" on page 50) traverses the topology of the system to determine what is present. By convention, the first MSR at each port is an ID register that indicates a specific device. Once the Core BIOS knows what is present, it assigns devices to specific locations in the appropriate memory or I/O address space using MSRs. Generally, MSRs are used to configure and set up GLDs, but are not used for ongoing operations. 3.1.6 Address Spaces and MSRs The GLIU and GLDs support the traditional memory and I/O spaces. The memory space supports a traditional 32bit byte address with associated byte enables. The I/O space is a 20-bit byte address with byte enables. I/O registers can be 8, 16, or 32 bits. The GLIU has both memory and I/O P2Ds for routing. The “assignment” MSRs are located in the GLIUs as “descriptors”. The “assignment descriptor” basically says: “route a request packet containing address X to port Y”. Port Y can be the final device or another GLIU. This second GLIU must have assignments to route address X to port Z. This process continues until the final device port is specified. In addition to the above spaces, there is a Model Specific Register (MSR) space that is tied to the GeodeLink topology. As introduced in the previous section, the GLIU has eight ports with Port 0 assigned to the GLIU. An MSR “address” is relative to the device making a request to it and the topology between the requestor and the MSR. Diag Req Out Data Out Req In GLPCI_SB Data In Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Req In Req In Port 1 Data In USBC2 Req Out Data Out Port 2 Diag Req In Req Out Data Out Port 7 Data In Port 6 Diag DD Req Out Data Out Req In Req In Data In Data Out USBC1 Diag Data In Req Out GLCP Data Out Req In Port 0 Port 3 Req Out Diag GLIU Data In ATAC Data In Port 4 Port 5 Diag Req Out Data Out ACC Diag Figure 3-3. CS5535 GeodeLink Architecture Topology www.national.com 52 Revision 0.8 In addition to the “positive” address decode above, each GLIU has a subtractive port that takes all addresses not assigned to a specific port. There is always a default subtractive port path to the boot ROM to allow the central processor to start executing code from time zero. Thus, from system reset, there is a default memory address path that allows the first processor instruction fetch to: 1) Proceed down through the two GX2 GLIUs; 2) cross the PCI bus to the CS5535; 3) proceed down through the CS5535 GLIU to the default port connected to the DD; and 4) access the boot device connected to the DD. that is, the address value 0 accesses one 64-bit register, the address value 1 accesses one 64-bit register, the address value 2 accesses one 64-bit register, etc. There are no MSR byte enables. All 64 bits are always written and read. Many CS5535 MSRs are only 32 bits in physical size. In these cases, interface logic discards the upper 32 bits on writes and pads the upper 32 bits on reads. Read padding is undefined. Lastly, CS5535 GLDs only decode enough bits of the address to select one of N MSRs, where N is the total number of MSRs in the device. For example, if a GLD has only 16 MSRs, then the addresses 0x2001, 0x0201, 0x0021, and 0x0x0001 all access MSR number 1, while the addresses 0x200F, 0x020F, 0x002F, and 0x0x000F all access MSR number 15. 3.1.7 Special Cycles and BIZZARO Flag The BIZZARO flag is used to indicate special cycles and exceptions to normal packet operation. All special cycles traverse the GLIU system as I/O packets with the BIZZARO flag set. The special cycles are: 1) Interrupt Acknowledge: I/O read from address zero. 2) Shutdown: I/O write to address zero. 3) Halt: I/O write to address one. 3.2 To access a given GLD, use Table 3-2 "CS5535 MSR Addresses from GX2 Processor" on page 54. Note the target device addresses: GLPCI_SB GLIU USBC2 ATAC DD ACC USBC1 GLCP CS5535 MSR ADDRESSING An MSR address consists of the fields shown in Table 3-1. 5100xxxxh 5101xxxxh 5120xxxxh 5130xxxxh 5140xxxxh 5150xxxxh 5160xxxxh 5170xxxxh The xxxx portion refers to the MSR addresses as they appear any place within Section 5.0 "Register Descriptions" on page 184. To form a complete MSR address, “OR” an address provided in a register description section with the appropriate address above. When a GLIU receives an MSR packet, it routes the packet to the port specified in Field 0 but shifts address bits [31:14] to the left by three bits and replaces bits [16:14] with zero. Thus, Field 1 is moved to Field 0, Field 2 is moved to Field 1, etc. The address field always remains unchanged and selects one 64-bit MSR per address value, Table 3-1. MSR Routing Conventions Routing Field 0 Routing Field 1 Routing Field 2 Routing Field 3 Routing Field 4 Routing Field 5 Address Field Bits [31:29] Bits [28:26] Bits [25:23] Bits [22:20] Bits [19:17] Bits [16:14] Bits [13:0] Revision 0.8 53 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Table 3-2. CS5535 MSR Addresses from GX2 Processor Routing Field 0 Routing Field 1 Routing Field 2 Routing Field 3 Routing Field 4 Routing Field 5 Bits [31:29] Bits [28:26] Bits [25:23] Bits [22:20] Bits [19:17] Bits [16:14] These bits are shifted off to the left and never enter the CS5535. These bits are shifted into positions [31:23] by the time they reach the CS5535. Bits in positions [22:14] are always 0 after shifting. GLD Target Name & Address Comment 010 100 010 000 000 000 GLPCI_SB 5100xxxxh This all-zero convention indicates to the GLPCI_SB that the MSR packet coming across the PCI bus is actually for the GLCPI_SB. 010 100 010 000 Non-zero value GLIU 5101xxxxh This non-zero convention indicates to the GLPCI_SB that the MSR packet coming across the PCI bus should be forwarded to the GLIU. The GLIU only looks at [22:20] and hence, keeps the packet. 010 100 010 001 Any value Illegal The GLIU can not send any packets back to the port it came from. 010 100 010 010 Any value USBC2 5120xxxxh 010 100 010 011 Any value ATAC 5130xxxxh 010 100 010 100 Any value DD 5140xxxxh 010 100 010 101 Any value ACC 5150xxxxh 010 100 010 110 Any value USBC1 5160xxxxh 010 100 010 111 Any value GLCP 5170xxxxh www.national.com 54 Revision 0.8 3.3 TYPICAL CS5535 GEODELINK DEVICE A typical or “generic” CS5535 GeodeLink Device (GLD) is illustrated in Figure 3-4 along with internal and external connections. The GLD consists of the Native Block (NB), GeodeLink Adapter (GLA), MSRs, and Clock Control Units (CCU). Each of these is discussed in the following paragraphs. The GLA sits between the GLIU and the Local bus. The Local bus is a traditional address/data bus supporting GLA to NB transactions (slave transactions) and NB to GLA transactions (master transactions). However, it is a single transaction bus in that any given slave or master transaction runs to completion before another transaction can start. This is compatible with the NBs listed above (i.e., ACC, ATAC, and DD), which are all single transaction devices. As suggested by Figure 3-4, the GLA contains no registers and is strictly speaking, just a bridge. Before going into the blocks of the typical device, it should be noted that the following modules in CS5535 follow this model very closely: — AC97 Controller (ACC) — ATA-5 Controller (ATAC) — Diverse Device (DD) The MSRs are conceptually separate from the NB and GLA and generally provide overall GLD configuration and control. In most designs they are physically separated as shown. There are six standard MSRs that are detailed in Section 3.8 "Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs". All GLDs have these standard MSRs. GLDs may also incorporate additional MSRs as appropriate. Specifically, they all use the GLA. The NB performs the “useful” work for the device. For example, in a serial port device, the transmit parallel to serial shift register is located in this block. The NB connects to the outside world, that is, external devices, via the I/O cells and pads. The NB contains registers that are manipulated by software to perform the “work”. These are operational registers that are typically manipulated by device drivers. The NBs are covered in detail in the corresponding GeodeLink Device register descriptions. Native Block (NB) Native Block Registers On the upper right of the figure, the connections between the GLA and GLIU are illustrated. All of these signals were covered previously in Section 3.1 "GeodeLink Architecture Overview". The Clock Control Units (CCU) are a key component in the Active Hardware Clock Gating (AHCG) infrastructure. They provide the mechanism for turning off clocks to sections of logic that are Not Busy. Furthermore, they take an asynchronous global reset signal and synchronize it to the applicable clock domain. Reg In Data In Reg Out Data Out Diag MSRs Local Bus Interface GL Adapter (GLA) ASMI GLIU Other Device Connections MSRs ERR CCU CCU CCU I/O Cells & Pads GL Clock Local Bus Clock Native Clock Global internal_reset Busy Signals GL Device to GLCP Side-band signals to other Native Blocks External Device Interface Figure 3-4. Typical CS5535 GeodeLink Device Revision 0.8 55 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) 3.4 EMBEDDED PCI ADAPTER (PA) A GeodeLink Device with an embedded PCI bus is illustrated in Figure 3-5. Note the similarity with Figure 3-4 "Typical CS5535 GeodeLink Device" on page 55. The only difference is the PCI Adapter (PA) located in the center of the figure. The PA allows a module designed for the PCI bus to be easily embedded in a GeodeLink architecture. It is used to embed the USB core into the GeodeLink architecture. • Capable of responding to both single data phase as well as burst transactions. • Closely follows the functioning of the GLA. • Capable of issuing retries to the master when the Local bus side is taking too long to complete the current transaction. • Safely handles all the error conditions possible during normal and configuration PCI transactions. The PA provides the following features: • Converts GLA Local Bus transactions to/from PCI bus transactions. Using the Virtual PCI Configuration Space (see Section 3.1 "GeodeLink Architecture Overview" on page 50), the Core BIOS lifts this embedded physical interface into the multifunction PCI configuration space header mentioned previously. • Provides PCI bus configuration transactions from GLD MSR transactions. • Performs PCI bus protocol checking and sets the GLD Error Flag if appropriate. Native Block (NB) Native Block Registers MSRs Embedded PCI Bus Interface PCI Adapter (PA) Local Bus Interface GL Adapter (GLA) Reg In Data In Reg Out Data Out Diag ASMI ERR CCU CCU CCU I/O Cells & Pads GeodeLink Device Side-band signals to other Native Blocks External Device Interface Figure 3-5. CS5535 GeodeLink Device With Embedded PCI Bus www.national.com 56 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) 3.5 CLOCK CONSIDERATIONS 3.5.1 Clock Domain Definitions Table 3-3 lists the clock sources and domains. Table 3-3. CS5535 Clock Sources and Clock Domains Component Pin Domain Name Description MHZ66_CLK ATAC_LB ATAC Local bus and ATAC core Inverted MHZ66_CLK (Note 1) GLIU_GLA GLIU GLA interface and related logic GLIU_STAT GLIU Statistics Counters MHZ66_CLK divided by two (Note 2) PCI_CLK MHZ48_CLK MHZ48_CLK divided by two (Note 2) LPC_CLK GLPCI_GLIU GLPCI_SB GLIU interface and related logic USBC2_GLIU USBC2 GLIU interface and related logic ATAC_GLIU ATAC GLIU interface and related logic DD_GLIU DD GLIU interface and related logic ACC_GLIU ACC GLIU interface and related logic USBC1_GLIU USBC1 GLIU interface and related logic GLCP_GLIU GLCP GLIU interface and related logic USBC2_LB USBC2 Local bus interface and related logic ACC_LB ACC Local bus interface and related logic USBC1_LB USBC1 Local bus interface and related logic GLPCI_TRNA GLPCI_SB transaction processing GLPCI_INTF GLPCI_SB interface to PCI bus GLCP_PCI GLCP PCI related logic USBC#2_COR USBC2 core logic USBC#1_COR USBC1 core logic SMB_COR System Management Bus core logic UART1_COR UART1 core logic UART2_COR UART2 core logic DD_LB DD Local bus interface and related logic; Includes PIC LPC_COR LPC Controller core logic PIT_COR Programmable Interval Timer core logic DMA_COR 8237 DMA core logic AC_CLK ACC_COR ACC core logic MHZ14_CLK (Note 3) MFGPT_COR_14M MFGPT core logic14 MHz clock PMC_SLP Power Management Controller Sleep logic KHZ32_XCI (Note 3) PIT_REF Programmable Interval Timer reference clock RTC_COR RTC core logic MFGPT_COR_32K MFGPT core logic 32 kHz clock MFGPT_COR_32K_S MFGPT 32kHz clock source; Standby power domain PMC_STB Power Management Controller Standby logic; Standby power domain GPIO_COR GPIO core logic GPIO_COR_S GPIO core logic; Standby power domain TCK (Note 3) TAP_CNTRL JTAG TAP Controller clock source (Note 4) GLCP_DBG GLCP debug logic Note 1. The MHZ66_CLK is first inverted and then fed to all these domains. Note 2. Each domain receives the referenced clock and performs the divide just before the CCU. Note 3. This clock differs from other clocks in this table in that this clock does not utilize a CCU nor is it subject to GLCP control or power management control. Note 4. This logic does not have a fixed clock source. During debug it is switched to the clock domain of interest. It does have a CCU. Revision 0.8 57 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) 3.5.2 Clock Controls and Setup Each of the clock domains listed in Table 3-3 is subject to various GLCP controls and status registers except those with “Note 3”. These registers and a brief description of each is provided: 5170000Bh[1] = 1). This will disable the use of GLCP_CLK4ACK and shut off the clocks in GLCP_PMCLKDISABLE after the GLCP_CLK_DIS_DELAY expires. This delay is measured in PCI clock edges. • GLCP Clock Active (GLCP_CLKACTIVE), MSR 51700011h: A 1 indicates the corresponding clock is active. This is a read only register. 3.6 RESET CONSIDERATIONS The elements that effect “reset” within the CS5535 are illustrated in Figure 3-6 on page 59. The following points are significant: • GLCP Clock Control (GLCP_CLKOFF), MSR 51700010h: A 1 indicates the corresponding clock is to be disabled immediately and unconditionally. Not normally used operationally. Debug only. • Signals denoted in upper case (i.e., all capitals) are external pins. Signals denoted in lower case are internal signals. • GLCP Clock Mask for Debug Clock Stop Action (GLCP_CLKDISABLE), MSR 51700012h: A 1 indicates the corresponding clock is to be disabled by debug logic via a debug event or trigger. Not normally used operationally. Debug only. • There are separate resets for the Working power domain (RESET_WORK#) and the Standby power domain (RESET_STAND#). • All elements in the figure are within the Standby power domain and operate off the KHZ32_CLK. • GLCP Clock Active Mask for Suspend Acknowledge (GLCP_CLK4ACK), MSR 51700013h: A 1 indicates the corresponding clock is to be monitored during a power management Sleep operation. When all the clocks with associated 1s go inactive, the GLCP sends a Sleep Acknowledge to the Power Management Controller. This register is used during Sleep sequences and requires the CLK_DLY_EN bit in GLCP_GLB_PM (MSR 5170000Bh[1]) to be 0. • The TAP Controller is in the Working power domain, but it may be reset separately from the other Working domain logic. • Any time the CS5535 is in the Standby state, the Working power domain is unconditionally and immediately driven into reset. • Any faulted event or external reset input forces the CS5535 into the Standby state. • GLCP Clock Mask for Sleep Request (GLCP_PMCLKDISABLE), MSR 51700009h: A 1 indicates the corresponding clock is to be disabled unconditionally during a power management Sleep operation. Clocks are disabled when the GLCP completes all of its Sleep Request operations and sends a Sleep Acknowledge to the Power Management Controller. • External reset (RESET_OUT#) is always asserted immediately with internal working domain reset but is de-asserted subject to a programmable delay. RESET_OUT# asserts without any clocks but requires the KHZ32_CLK for the delay and the PCI_CLK to deassert. All of the registers above have the same layout, where each bit is associated with a clock domain. The layout and recommended operating values for the registers is provided in Table 5-73 "Clock Mapping / Operational Settings" on page 518. • IDE_RESET# is always asserted immediately with internal working domain reset and de-asserts when the ATAC comes out of reset, that is, within a few MHZ66_CLK edges of internal reset de-assert. 3.5.2.1 • LVD monitors VCORE and only asserts power_good_working when VCORE is within normal operating range. Additional Setup Operations • GLCP Debug Clock Control (GLCP_DBGCLKCTL), MSR 51700016h: Set all bits to 0. This turns off all clocks to debug features; not needed during normal operation. • LVD monitors VCORE_VSB and VIO_VSB along with RESET_STAND#. The assertion of power_good_standy only occurs when the voltages are within normal operating range and RESET_STAND# is high, that is, deasserted. • GLCP Global Power Management Control (GLCP_GLB_PM), MSR 5170000Bh: Set all bits to 0. This disables the use of the fixed delay in GLCP_CLK_DIS_DELAY and enables the use of GLCP_CLK4ACK. When power is applied to the CS5535 from a completely cold start, that is, no Standby or Working power, both RESET_STAND# and RESET_WORK# are applied. Alternatively, one or both of the reset inputs may be tied to Standby I/O power (VIO_VSB), and the LVD circuit will generate internal Power Good Working and internal Power Good Standby. Assuming the LVD circuit is enabled (LVD_EN# pin tied low), Power Good Standby will assert until proper Standby voltages have been achieved and RESET_STAND# has been de-asserted. • GLCP Clock Disable Delay Value (GLCP_CLK_DIS_DELAY), MSR 51700008h: Set all bits to 0. Since use of this register is disabled by setting all GLCP_DBGCLKCTL bits to 0, the actual value of this register is a “don’t care”; it is set here for completeness. If use of GLCP_CLK_DIS_DELAY is desired, set the CLK_DLY_EN bit in GLCP_GLB_PM (MSR www.national.com 58 Revision 0.8 RESET_OUT# is de-asserted synchronous with the low-tohigh edge of PCI_CLK. The de-assertion is delayed from internal_reset using a counter in the Power Management Controller. This counter is driven by the 32 kHz clock and is located in the Standby power domain. The value of the counter is programmable but defaults to 0x0_0100 (256 edges). 31.25 µs per edge times 256 equals an 8 ms delay. Note this counter default is established by RESET_STAND# and is not effected by RESET_WORK#. Therefore, the delay value may be changed and then the system can be reset with the new value. with the other logic in the Working domain during power management sequences. Note the special consideration for TAP Controller reset. When boundary scan is being performed, internal component operation is not possible due to the scanning signals on the I/Os. Under this condition, it is desirable to hold the component internals in reset while the boundary scan is being performed by the TAP Controller. However, under normal operation, it is desirable to reset the TAP Controller • Assert and de-assert RESET_WORK# as needed to reset the TAP Controller. Achieving these dual goals is accomplished as follows: For boundary scan: • Assert RESET_STAND#, causing internal power_good_standby to go low. This causes the complete component to reset, except for the TAP Controller. Keep this input held low throughout boundary scan operations. For normal operation: • The internal Power Good Standby will be high, meaning the TAP Controller reset asserts any time the Standby state is active or anytime RESET_WORK# is active. Normal Software Request for Standby State Fail-safe Power Off Alarm Thermal Alarm Low Power Alarm Shutdown Special Cycle MFGPT WATCHDOG DD Bad Packet GLCP Soft Reset DD Soft Reset Working Power Fail RESET_WORK# Faulted Event Status Faulted Event Capture unconditionally & immediately enter Standby state working work_aux standby_state Power Manage Standby State Controller 32kHZ_CLK Internal Reset to all Working Domain Logic except TAP Controller RESET_OUT# D Q De-assert Delay ATA Controller PCI_CLK VCORE VCORE_VSB VIO_VSB RESET_STAND# LVD (Low Voltage Detect) IDE_RESET# Power Good Working Power Good Standby (Standby Domain Reset When Low) standby_state TAP Controller Reset Figure 3-6. Reset Logic Revision 0.8 59 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) 3.7 MEMORY AND I/O MAP OVERVIEW 3.7.1 Introduction There are several places in the CS5535 where addresses are decoded and routed: • Bit 14: Reject Secondary IDE. If this bit is set, the GLPCI_SB will not actively decode the secondary IDE addresses of: 0170h/0177h and 0376h. • Physical PCI Bus: The GLPCI_SB decodes PCI bus transactions and claims them with a “DEVSEL#” as appropriate. After claiming a transaction, the GLPCI_SB converts it to a GLIU request packet. It then passes the request to the GLIU. It has no routing control or responsibility beyond this point. • Bit 15: Reject DMA High Page Active. If this bit is set, the GLPCI_SB will actively decode the following I/O range associated with the DMA High Page registers: 0480h/048Fh. For further details on the GLPCI_MSR_CTL register see Section 5.2.2.1 "Global Control (GLPCI_CTRL)" on page 219. • GLIU: The GLIU compares the request addresses against the descriptor settings. It passes the request to the port associated with the compare hit. Each port is connected to a specific GeodeLink Device (see Section 3.1.5 "Topology" on page 52 for port assignment). There are also specific legacy addresses that receive “special” routing beyond the standard descriptor routing mechanisms. Lastly, there in an “MSR Access Mailbox” located in PCI Configuration register space. It consists of the following 32bit registers: • MSR Address (PCI Index F4h). Full MSR routing path in the upper portion plus 14 device address bits in the lower portion. • Typical GeodeLink Device: For most GeodeLink Devices, further decoding is minimal. If a device contains only MSRs and a single native block (register group) in I/O or memory space, specific bits within the request packet can be used to easily select between the two. If a device contains more than one register group, a Local Base Address Register (LBAR) for each group is used. Like a PCI Base Address Register (BAR), an LBAR compare and hit operation is used to select the desired group. • MSR Data Low (PCI Index F8h). Bits [31:0]: When read, an MSR cycle is generated. The 64-bit read returns the low 32 bits and saves the upper 32 bits for a read to “Data High”. A write holds the value written as the current “Data Low”. • MSR Data High (PCI Index FCh). Bits [63:32]: Reads return upper 32 bits of the last MSR value read. Writes generate an MSR write cycle using the current value and the “Data Low” value. For further details on the MSR Access Mailbox see Section 5.2.3 "PCI Configuration Registers" on page 225. • Diverse Device: The Diverse Device has the same decoding responsibilities as a typical GeodeLink Device. Beyond this programmable LBAR decoding, it has substantial fixed decoding associated with legacy addresses. 3.7.3 GLIU Decoding From reset, the GLIU passes all request packets to the Diverse Device, except for the legacy primary IDE addresses (01F0h/01F7h and 03F6h), these are passed to the IDE device in the ATAC. There is a GLIU IOD_SC descriptor to control this primary IDE behavior and it defaults configured (see Section 5.1.4.2 "IOD Swiss Cheese Descriptors (GLIU_IOD_SC[x])" on page 211). If this descriptor is disabled, all requests pass to the Diverse Device. 3.7.2 PCI Bus Decoding From reset, the GLPCI_SB does not actively decode anything. However, it will subtractively decode everything. From reset, everything not positively claimed on the PCI bus is converted to a GLIU request and passed to the GLIU. Using appropriate setup registers, the GLPCI_SB can be programmed to actively decode selected I/O and memory regions. Other than actively claiming, the “convert” and “pass” operation is the same. Using appropriate MSR setup registers (descriptors), the GLIU can be programmed to route selected I/O and memory regions to specific GeodeLink Devices. Any memory or I/O address that does not hit one of these regions, subtractively routes to the Diverse Device. Unlike PCI, there is no performance loss associated with being the subtractive port. There are also control bits in the GLPCI_MSR_CTL (MSR 51700010h) register to regulate behavior associated with legacy addresses: • Bits [12:11]: Legacy I/O Space Active Decode. These bits control the degree to which the GLPCI_SB will actively claim I/O region 0000h through 03FFh: — 00: Subtractive – Claim on fourth clock. (Default.) — 01: Slow – Claim on third clock. — 10: Medium – Claim on second clock. Operationally, there are five bus masters within the CS5535: ATAC, ACC, DD, USBC1, and USBC2. These masters only generate requests to access main memory off the GX2. Therefore, all their GLIU requests need to be routed to the GLPCI_SB for presentation to the PCI bus. A set of GLIU P2D_BM descriptors could be used for this purpose. However, the CS5535 GLIU is uniquely modified to route all requests for the listed masters to the GLPCI_SB unconditionally. Therefore, GLIU P2D_BM settings do not • Bit 13: Reject Primary IDE. If this bit is set, the GLPCI_SB will not actively decode the primary IDE addresses of: 01F0h/01F7h and 03F6h. www.national.com 60 Revision 0.8 affect packet routing from the listed masters. GLIU descriptors are only used to route requests from the GLPCI_SB and GLCP. controller in any of three locations: in either USB Controller (USBC1 or USBC2), or on the LPC bus. This leaves the problem of the control registers that are physically in the DD, but logically (from the software perspective) in the USB Controller. 3.7.4 Legacy Keyboard Emulation In the CS5535, there are two USB Controllers and hence two copies of this hardware. The USB control registers are memory mapped. The memory region associated with these registers is relocatable via standard GLIU descriptor MSRs starting at an appropriate base address. The region size is 4 kB (1000h), that is, an offset range of 000h through FFFh. There are four registers called: HceControl, HceInput, HceOutput, and HceStatus. There are no USB control registers above this region. A descriptor type is incorporated into the CS5535 to deal with this keyboard issue. It is a variant of the standard “P2D Base Mask Descriptor” (P2D_BM) called P2D_BMK (keyboard). A P2D_BMK descriptor does additional decoding based on Address bit 8. If this bit is low, the hit directs to the USB port. If this bit is high, the hit directs to the subtractive port. There are two P2D_BMK descriptors in the CS5535 (see Section 5.1.2.2 "P2D Base Mask KEL Descriptors (GLIU_P2D_BMK[x])" on page 195). Special consideration is given to the legacy keyboard emulation control registers normally associated with the USB Controller. This “normal” association is due to the fact that “normally”, the keyboard emulation hardware is physically located with the USB hardware, even though there is no logical association between the two at the hardware level. This “normal” association is driven by industry standard device drivers that group the two register sets in the same region. The keyboard emulation registers are located at the USB base address plus 0100h. 3.7.5 GeodeLink Device Decoding Except Diverse Device Table 3-4 shows the register space map for all CS5535 devices except the Diverse Device. There are no fixed addresses associated with these devices other than the MSRs and the legacy IDE I/O addresses as detailed in Section 3.7.3 "GLIU Decoding". 3.7.6 Diverse Device Decoding Except Legacy I/O The Diverse Device “space” map except legacy I/O is shown in Table 3-5. A single copy of the Keyboard Emulation Logic (KEL) hardware is located in the Diverse Device (DD) module, where it can be closely coordinated with a possible real keyboard Table 3-4. CS5535 Register Space Map Except Diverse Device Device MSR Space (Note 1) I/O Space Memory Space GLPCI_SB Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs plus GLPCI_SB setup. All MSRs also accessible from PCI Configuration space. None. None. GLCP Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs plus diagnostic and debug. None. None. GLIU Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs plus descriptor setup. Programmable SSMIs. Programmable SSMIs. ACC Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs. 16-byte codec I/F plus 48byte master interface. All trap registers removed. The register space can be here also. Generates no SSMIs. ATAC Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs plus timing parameters. Legacy primary addresses. None. 16-byte master interface. Bus Master LBAR. USBC1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs plus PCI configuration emulation. None. 4 kB, but less than 256 bytes used. Keyboard emulation registers to Diverse Device. None. 4 kB, but less than 256 bytes used. Keyboard emulation registers to Diverse Device. Must set PCI BAR in USB Controller. USBC2 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs plus PCI configuration emulation. Must set PCI BAR in USB Controller. Note 1. See Section 3.8 "Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs" on page 67 for register descriptions. Revision 0.8 61 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Table 3-5. Diverse Device Space Map Except Legacy I/O Device MSR Space (Note 1) I/O Space Memory Space DD Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs plus: SMB LBAR, ACPI LBAR, PM LBAR, GPIO LBAR, MFGPT LBAR, NAND LBAR, KEL LBAR, KEL LBAR, IRQ Mapper LBAR, Legacy Controls, DMA Mappers, Shadow Registers, LPC Controls, and Memory Mask. Located by associated LBAR. Defaults disabled. 16-Byte KEL Host Controller register set at LBAR. Defaults disabled. NOR Flash address control. 008 Bytes SMB, 016 Bytes ACPI, 064 Bytes PM Support, 256 Bytes GPIO and ICFs, 064 Bytes MFGPTs, 016 Bytes NAND Flash, and 032 Bytes IRQ Mapper. NOR Flash per LBAR. All other memory accesses are directed to the LPC bus. All I/O that does not hit one of the items above and does not hit a legacy address, is directed to the LPC bus. Note 1. See Section 3.8 "Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs" on page 67 for register descriptions. 3.7.7 Legacy I/O Decoding Table 3-6 details the legacy I/O range for 000h through 4FFh. Each I/O location has a read/write (R/W) capability. Note the following abbreviations: Shw --- Unknown or can not be determined. Shw@ Yes Read and Write the register at the indicated location. No shadow required. Reads of the location return a constant or meaningless value. Shw$ WO Write only. Value written can not be read back. Reads do not contain any useful information. Reads of the location return a status or some other meaningful information. Rec Writes to the location are “recorded” and written to the LPC. RO The value written to the register can not be read back via the same I/O location. Read back is accomplished via a “Shadow” register located in MSR space. Read only. Writes have no effect. Reads to the location return the recorded value. The LPC is not read. Table 3-6. Legacy I/O: 000h-4FFh I/O Addr. Function Size R/W Comment 000h Slave DMA Address - Channel 0 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 001h Slave DMA Counter - Channel 0 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 002h Slave DMA Address - Channel 1 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 003h Slave DMA Counter - Channel 1 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 004h Slave DMA Address - Channel 2 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 005h Slave DMA Counter - Channel 2 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 006h Slave DMA Address - Channel 3 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 007h Slave DMA Counter - Channel 3 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 008h Slave DMA Command/Status - Channels [3:0] 8-bit Shw$ 009h Slave DMA Request - Channels [3:0] 8-bit WO Reads return value B2h. 00Ah Slave DMA Mask - Channels [3:0] 8-bit Shw@ Reads return value B2h. 00Bh Slave DMA Mode - Channels [3:0] 8-bit Shw@ Reads return value B2h. 00Ch Slave DMA Clear Pointer - Channels [3:0] 8-bit WO Reads return value B2h. 00Dh Slave DMA Reset - Channels [3:0] 8-bit WO Reads return value B2h. www.national.com 62 Revision 0.8 Table 3-6. Legacy I/O: 000h-4FFh (Continued) I/O Addr. Function Size R/W Comment 00Eh Slave DMA Reset Mask - Channels [3:0] 8-bit Shw@ Reads return value B2h. 00Fh Slave DMA General Mask - Channels [3:0] 8-bit Shw@ Reads return value B2h. 010h-01Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 020h PIC Master - Command/Status 8-bit Shw$ 021h PIC Master - Command/Status 8-bit Shw$ 022h-03Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 040h PIT – System Timer 8-bit Shw$ 041h PIT – Refresh Timer 8-bit Shw$ 042h PIT – Speaker Timer 8-bit Shw$ 043h PIT – Control 8-bit Shw$ 044h-05Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 060h Keyboard/Mouse - Data Port 8-bit Yes If KEL Memory Offset 100h[0] = 1 (EmulationEnable bit). If MSR 5140001Fh[0] = 1 (SNOOP bit) and KEL Memory Offset 100h[0] = 0 (EmulationEnable bit). 061h Port B Control 062h-063h No Specific Usage 064h Keyboard/Mouse - Command/ Status 8-bit Yes --- --- 8-bit Yes If KEL Memory Offset 100h[0] = 1 (EmulationEnable bit). If MSR 5140001Fh[0] = 1 (SNOOP bit) and KEL Memory Offset 100h[0] = 0 (EmulationEnable bit). 065h-06Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 070h-071h RTC RAM Address/Data Port 8-bit Yes Options per MSR 51400014h[0]. (Note 1) 072h-073h High RTC RAM Address/Data Port 8-bit Yes Options per MSR 51400014h[1]. 074h-077h No Specific Usage --- --- 078h-07Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 080h Post Code Display 8-bit Rec Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 081h DMA Channel 2 Low Page 8-bit Rec 082h DMA Channel 3 Low Page Upper addr bits [23:16]. Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 083h DMA Channel 1 Low Page 084h-086h No Specific Usage 8-bit Rec Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 087h DMA Channel 0 Low Page 8-bit Rec Upper addr bits [23:16]. Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 088h No Specific Usage 8-bit Rec Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 089h DMA Channel 6 Low Page 8-bit Rec Upper addr bits [23:16]. Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 08Ah DMA Channel 7 Low Page 08B DMA Channel 5 Low Page Revision 0.8 63 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Table 3-6. Legacy I/O: 000h-4FFh (Continued) I/O Addr. Function Size R/W Comment 08Ch-08Eh No Specific Usage 8-bit Rec Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 08Fh DMA C4 Low Page 8-bit Rec Upper addr bits [23:16] ment at 080h. 090h-091h No Specific Usage --- --- 092h Port A 8-bit Yes 093h-09Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 0A0h PIC Slave - Command/Status 8-bit Shw$ 0A1h PIC Slave - Command/Status See com- If kel_porta_en is enabled, then access Port A; else access LPC. 8-bit Shw$ 0A2h-0BFh No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0C0h Master DMA Address - Channel 4 8-bit Yes 0C1h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0C2h Master DMA Counter - Channel 4 8-bit Yes 0C3h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0C4h Master DMA Address - Channel 5 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 0C6h Master DMA Counter - Channel 5 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 0C7h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0C8h Master DMA Address - Channel 6 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 0CAh Master DMA Counter - Channel 6 8-bit Yes 16-bit values in two transfers. 0CBh No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0CCh Master DMA Address - Channel 7 8-bit Yes 0CDh No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0CEh Master DMA Counter - Channel 7 8-bit Yes 0CFh No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0D0h Master DMA Command/Status - Channels [7:4] 8-bit Shw$ 0D1h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0D2h Master DMA Request - Channels [7:4] 8-bit WO 0D3h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0D4h Master DMA Mask - Channels [7:4] 8-bit Yes 0D5h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0D6h Master DMA Mode - Channels [7:4] 8-bit Shw@ 0D7h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0D8h Master DMA Clear Pointer - Channels [7:4] 8-bit WO 0D9h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0DAh Master DMA Reset - Channels [7:4] 8-bit WO 0DBh No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0DCh Master DMA Reset Mask - Channels [7:4] 8-bit WO 0DDh No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 0DEh Master DMA General Mask - Channels [7:4] 8-bit Shw@ 0DFh No Specific Usage 8-bit --- www.national.com 64 16-bit values in two transfers. 16-bit values in two transfers. 16-bit values in two transfers. 16-bit values in two transfers. Revision 0.8 Table 3-6. Legacy I/O: 000h-4FFh (Continued) I/O Addr. Function Size R/W 0E0h-2E7h No Specific Usage --- --- 2E8h-2EFh UART/IR - COM4 8-bit --- Comment MSR bit enables/disables into I/O space.(UART1 MSR 51400014h[18:16], UART2 MSR 51400014h[22:20]). Defaults to LPC. 2F0h-2F7h No Specific Usage --- --- 2F8h-2FFh UART/IR - COM2 8-bit --- 300h-36Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 370h Floppy Status R A 8-bit RO Second Floppy. 371h Floppy Status R B 8-bit RO Second Floppy. 372h Floppy Digital Out 8-bit Shw@ Second Floppy. 373h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 374h Floppy Cntrl Status 8-bit RO Second Floppy. 375h Floppy Data 8-bit Yes Second Floppy. 376h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 377h Floppy Conf Reg 8-bit Shw$ 378h-3E7h No Specific Usage --- --- 3E8h-3EFh UART/IR - COM3 8-bit --- MSR bit enables/disables into I/O space.(UART1 MSR 51400014h[18:16], UART2 MSR 51400014h[22:20]). Defaults to LPC. 3F0h Floppy Status R A 8-bit RO First Floppy. 3F1h Floppy Status R B 8-bit RO First Floppy. 3F2h Floppy Digital Out 8-bit Shw@ First Floppy. 3F3h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 3F4h Floppy Cntrl Status 8-bit RO First Floppy. 3F5h Floppy Data 8-bit Yes First Floppy. 3F6h No Specific Usage 8-bit --- 3F7h Floppy Conf Reg 8-bit Shw$ 3F8h-3FFh UART/IR - COM1 8-bit --- 400h-47Fh No Specific Usage --- --- 480h No Specific Usage 8-bit WO Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 481h DMA Channel 2 High Page 8-bit Rec 482h DMA Channel 3 High Page Upper addr bits [31:24]. Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 483h DMA Channel 1 High Page 484h-486h No Specific Usage 8-bit WO Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. Revision 0.8 65 MSR bit enables/disables into I/O space.(UART1 MSR 51400014h[18:16], UART2 MSR 51400014h[22:20]). Defaults to LPC. Second Floppy. First Floppy. MSR bit enables/disables into I/O space.(UART1 MSR 51400014h[18:16], UART2 MSR 51400014h[22:20]). Defaults to LPC. www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Table 3-6. Legacy I/O: 000h-4FFh (Continued) I/O Addr. Function Size R/W Comment 487h DMA Channel 0 High Page 8-bit Rec Upper addr bits [31:24]. Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 488h No Specific Usage 8-bit WO Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 489h DMA Channel 6 High Page 8-bit Rec 48Ah DMA Channel 7 High Page Upper addr bits [31:24]. Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 48Bh DMA Channel 5 High Page 48Ch-48Eh No Specific Usage 8-bit WO Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 48Fh DMA Channel 4 High Page 8-bit Rec Upper addr bits [31:24]. Write LPC and DMA. Read only DMA. 490h-4CFh No Specific Usage --- --- 4D0h PIC Level/Edge 8-bit Yes IRQ0-IRQ 7. 4D1h PIC Level/Edge 8-bit Yes IRQ8-IRQ15. --- --- 4D2h-4FFh No Specific Usage Note 1. The Diverse Device snoops writes to this port and maintains the MSB as NMI enable. When low, NMI is enabled. When high, NMI is disabled. This bit defaults high. Reads of this port return bits [6:0] from the on-chip or off-chip target, while bit 7 is returned from the “maintained” value. www.national.com 66 Revision 0.8 3.8 STANDARD GEODELINK DEVICE MSRS All GeodeLink Devices have the following Standard MSRs and are always located at the addresses indicated below from the base address given in Table 3-2 "CS5535 MSR Addresses from GX2 Processor" on page 54: 3.8.2 MSR Address 1: Master Configuration The defined fields in the GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (GLD_MSR_CONF) vary depending upon the device. Refer to the appropriate GeodeLink Device register chapter starting in Section 5.0 "Register Descriptions" on page 184. • MSR Address 0: GeodeLink Device Capabilities (GLD_MSR_CAP) 3.8.3 MSR Address 2: SMI Control Each GeodeLink Device within the CS5535 incorporates System Management Interrupts (SMIs). These SMIs are controlled via the Standard GLD_MSR_SMI located at MSR Address 2 within each GLD (see Table 3-8). The lower 32 bits of this register contain Enable (EN) bits, while the upper 32 bits contain Flag (FLAG) bits. The EN and FLAG bits are organized in pairs of (n, n+32). For example: (0,32); (1,33); (2,34); etc. The GLD_MSR_SMI is used to control and report events. • MSR Address 1: GeodeLink Device Master Configuration (and GLA Prefetch) (GLD_MSR_CONFIG) • MSR Address 2: GeodeLink Device System Management Interrupt Control (GLD_MSR_SMI) • MSR Address 3: GeodeLink Device Error Control (GLD_MSR_ERROR) • MSR Address 4: GeodeLink Device Power Management (GLD_MSR_PM) • MSR Address 5: GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (GLD_MSR_DIAG) (This register is reserved for internal use by National and should not be written to.) An event is any action or occurrence within the GeodeLink Device requiring processor attention. The FLAG bits are status bits that record events. The EN bits enable events to be recorded. An EN bit must be 1 for an event to be recorded (with the exception of the GLUI and the GLCP the EN bit must be 0 for an event to be recorded). When an event is recorded, the associated FLAG bit is set to a 1. SMI events are of two types: Asynchronous SMI (ASMI) and Synchronous SMI (SSMI). 3.8.1 MSR Address 0: Capabilities The Capabilities MSR (GLD_MSR_CAP) is read only and provides identification information as illustrated Table 3-7. Table 3-7. GLD_MSR_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 23:8 DEV_ID Device ID. Identifies the module. 7:0 REV_ID Revision ID. Identifies the module revision. Table 3-8. Standard GLD_MSR_SMI Format SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG 67 SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG SMI_EN SMI_EN SMI_FLAG 0 SMI_EN SMI_FLAG 1 SMI_EN SMI_FLAG 2 SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG 3 SMI_EN 4 SMI_EN SMI_FLAG 5 SMI_EN 6 Revision 0.8 SMI_FLAG 7 SMI_EN SMI_FLAG 8 SMI_EN SMI_FLAG SMI_FLAG 9 SMI_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 SMI_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) 3.8.3.1 ASMI ASMIs fall into two classes: direct and in-direct. A behavioral model for a in-direct class ASMI is illustrated in Figure 3-8 on page 69. An event is represented as before, but it is first applied to some type of Native Event register. Generally, this is an IRQ status register of some kind that records multiple IRQ sources. Alternatively, there might be multiple independent Native Event registers that are at some point ORed together to form a single Native Event Summary Signal (NESS). In general, a NESS can also be an IRQ signal routed to the PIC subsystem. Hence, depending on operational needs, a NESS can be an IRQ or ASMI. A behavioral model for a direct class ASMI is illustrated in Figure 3-7. In the model, an event is represented as a short duration (much less than 1 µs) positive pulse that is associated with a given Enable/Event pair n. The Enable/Event pair is represented by a pair of simple “D” flip/flops that can be set (write 1 to Q) or cleared (write 0 to Q) by software. The EN bit can be written high or low, but the FLAG bit can only be cleared. By GeodeLink architecture convention, writing a 1 to a FLAG bit clears it; writing a 0 has no effect. If the EN bit is 1, then the 0-to-1 transition of the event pulse clocks a 1 into the SMI FLAG flip/flop. The important point is that the NESS 0-to-1 transition clocks a 1 into the SMI FLAG flip/flop. The event only indirectly causes the SMI FLAG bit to be set. Further note that the Event[X] and ASMI[n+1] are independently clearable. ASMI[n+1] can be cleared, while leaving NESS at a 1 state. After such clearing action with NESS high, ASMI[n+1] will not set again. Alternatively, Event[X] could be cleared without effecting the state of ASMI[n+1]. All of the ASMI bits are ORed together to form the GLD ASMI. The GLD ASMI is routed through the GLIU where it is ORed with all other device ASMIs to form the CS5535 ASMI. SMI MSR Lastly, it is possible to clear and set ASMI[n+1] while NESS remains at a constant high state. Consider the following sequence: Other ASMI FLAG Bits GLD ASMI + D Q ASMI [n+1] 1) Assume EN[n] is high. 2) Event[X] occurs and NESS makes a 0-to-1 transition that sets ASMI[n+1]. 3) Software clears ASMI[n+1] by writing a 1 to it. 4) NESS remains high because Event[X] has not been cleared. 5) EN[n] is cleared to 0. 6) EN[n] is set to a 1 and causes ASMI[n+1] to be set again. CI Note: Clear_By_Software FLAG Bit[n+1] The previous sequence is used when multiple events X, Y, Z, etc. all OR to form a single NESS. The events are sharing a single NESS. Under this arrangement, the following Virtual System Architecture (VSA) software sequence would be typical: Event [X] Set_By_Software D Step 5 could also be performed between steps 2 and 3 instead, yielding the same result. The sequence of setting EN[n] to 0 followed by setting EN[n] to 1 is called an Enable Toggle. Q CI Clear_By_Software EN Bit[n] 1) Assume EN[n] is high. 2) Event[X] fires and causes a CS5535 ASMI. 3) VSA searches the GX2/CS5535 system looking for the ASMI source and finds ASMI[n+1]. 4) VSA clears EN[n] to 0 and begins to perform the actions associated with Event[X]. 5) While the “actions” are being taken, Event[Y] fires. 6) VSA “actions” ASMI[n+1]. 7) NESS remains high because Event[Y] has fired. include clearing Event[X] and Figure 3-7. Direct ASMI Behavioral Model www.national.com 68 Revision 0.8 8) VSA sets EN[n] high. This action sets ASMI[n+1] high again and causes another CS5535 ASMI. 9) VSA begins to return to the process interrupted by the original ASMI, but notes SMI into the processor is still asserted and returns to step 3. blocks access to the target register. The actual register write and/or read operation is not performed. Generally, only write operations are trapped, but there are cases of trapping writes and reads. The CS5535 does not support SSMIs, however, the CS5535 supports a mechanism called “Apparent SSMI” using ASMIs. (Hereafter “Apparent SSMI” is referred to as “SSMI”.) 10) If there was no Event[Y] at any point above, return to the interrupted process. Note: The CS5535 insures that the ASMI is taken on the I/O instruction boundary. The ASMI reaches the CPU before a target ready is signaled on the PCI bus. This action creates an SSMI because the I/O instruction will not complete before ASMI reaches the CPU. VSA software then examines the GLPCI_SB GLD_SMI_MSR to determine if an SSMI has occurred from an I/O trap. Step 5 above could occur at any time between step 2 and step 9, or the Event[Y] could come after step 10. Regardless, the same VSA approach is used in order not to miss any events. 3.8.3.2 Apparent SSMI An SSMI event is associated with an I/O space access to a specific address or range of addresses. If SSMIs are enabled for the given address, then the hardware traps or Native Event Register SMI MSR Other FLAG Bits + OR ALL D Q Native Event Summary Signal (NESS) Event [X] Other ASMI FLAG Bits + D CI OR ALL Q GLD ASMI ASMI [n+1] CI Clear_By_Software Clear_By_Software FLAG Bit[n+1] FLAG Bit[x] Event [X] Set_By_Software D Set_By_Software Q D CI Q CI Clear_By_Software EN Bit[m] Clear_By_Software EN Bit[n] Figure 3-8. In-Direct ASMI Behavioral Model Revision 0.8 69 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) SSMIs are primarily used for hardware emulation and extension. From the perspective of the code on which the trap occurred, everything is normal and done in hardware. However, VSA code generally performs a number of operations to achieve the desired result. This can include returning an appropriate read value to the trapped software. The GLIU is often used to implement SSMI traps. Any I/O descriptor can be used for this purpose by setting the Destination ID to 0. On a descriptor hit, the GLIU traps the access and sets the SSMI bit in the response packet. 3.8.3.3 ASMI/SSMI Summary Table 3-9 provides a register summary for the Standard GLD_SMI_MSRs. Table 3-9. GLD_MSR_SMIs Summary Port #, Device Port 0, GLIU (Note 1) Port 1, GLPCI_SB Port 2, USBC2 Port 3, ATAC Port 4, DD (DIVIL) Port 5, ACC Port 6, USBC1 Port 7, GLCP (Note 1) Note 1. FLAG Bit EN Bit SMI Type Description 35 3 ASMI Statistics Counter 2 Event 34 2 ASMI Statistics Counter 1 Event 33 1 ASMI Statistics Counter 0 Event 32 0 SSMI Descriptor Trap and Illegal Accesses 22 6 ASMI Target Abort Signaled 21 5 ASMI Parity Error 20 4 ASMI System Error 19 3 ASMI EXECP Received 18 2 ASMI SSMI Received 17 1 ASMI Target Abort Received 16 0 ASMI Master Abort Received 33 1 ASMI INT by the USB (see PIC for actual source) 32 0 ASMI ASMI for the USB (see USB for actual source) 33 1 ASMI IRQ for IDE (see PIC for actual source) 1 0 SSMI IDE PIO 47 15 SSMI PMC PM1_CNT 46 14 SSMI PMC PM2_CNT 45 13 ASMI KEL A20 Keyboard 44 12 SSMI 8237 DMA Controller access during legacy DMA 43 11 SSMI LPC access during legacy DMA 41 9 SSMI UART 2 access during legacy DMA 40 8 SSMI UART 1 access during legacy DMA 39 7 ASMI KEL INIT Port A 38 6 ASMI KEL A20 Port A 37 5 ASMI KEL INIT Keyboard 36 4 ASMI PMC Event (see PMC for actual source) 35 3 ASMI Extended PIC Mapper (see PIC for actual source) 34 2 ASMI KEL Emulation Event 33 1 ASMI Shutdown Special Cycle 32 0 ASMI Halt Special Cycle 32 0 SSMI IRQ from ACC 33 1 ASMI INT by the USB (see PIC for actual source) 32 0 ASMI ASMI for the USB (see USB for actual source) 17 1 ASMI Debug event 16 0 ASMI Convert CS5535 Global GLIU_Error to ASMI For this device, the listed events are enabled when the EN bit is low. For all other devices, events are enabled when the associated EN bit is high. www.national.com 70 Revision 0.8 3.8.4 MSR Address 3: Error Control Each GeodeLink Device within the CS5535 can generate errors. Furthermore, these errors are controlled via the Standard GeodeLink Device Error MSR (GLD_MSR_ERROR) located at MSR Address 3 within each GLD. The register is organized just like GLD_MSR_SMI, that is, the lower 32 bits contain Enable (EN) bits, while the upper 32 bits contain Flag (FLAG) bits (see Table 3-8 on page 67). The EN and FLAG bits are organized in pairs of (n, n+32). For example: (0,32); (1,33); (2,34); etc. The Error MSR is used to control and report errors. sharing the same MSR. The GLD_MSR_PM fields have the following definitions: • Power Mode for Clock Domains: — 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. — 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. — 10: Reserved. — 11: Reserved. • I/O Mode (Applies only to GLPCI_SB and ATAC modules, see Table 3-11 and Table 3-12 for a list of controlled signals): — 00: No gating of I/O cells during a Sleep sequence (Default). — 01: During a power management Sleep sequence, force inputs to their non-asserted state when PM_IN_SLPCTL is enabled. — 10: During a power management Sleep sequence, force inputs to their non-asserted state when PM_IN_SLPCTL is enabled, and park (force) outputs low when PM_OUT_SLPCTL is enabled. — 11: Immediately and unconditionally, force inputs to their not asserted state, and park (force) outputs low. The SMI concepts of direct asynchronous and synchronous carry over into similar error concepts. However, there is no concept of an in-direct error. At each GeodeLink Device, all of the Error FLAG bits are ORed together to form the Error signal. The Error is routed through the GLIU where it is ORed with all other device Errors to form the CS5535 Error signal. This signal is routed to the GLCP for debug purposes. Only the GLIU is capable of generating synchronous errors that utilize the Exception (EXCEP) bit of the associated response packet. All other CS5535 GeodeLink Devices only generate asynchronous errors. The PMC controls when the PCI/IDE inputs and outputs (listed in Table 3-11 and Table 3-12) are asserted and deasserted. The PM_OUT_SLPCTL (PMS I/O Offset 0Ch) and PM_IN_SLPCTL (PMS I/O Offset 20h) registers provide the global control of the PCI/IDE I/Os. The IO_MODE bits individually control PCI (GLPCI_SB GLD_MSR_PM 3.8.5 MSR Address 4: Power Management All the power management MSRs (GLD_MSR_PM) conform to the model illustrated in Table 3-10. The power and I/O mode functions are completely independent other than Table 3-10. MSR Power Management Model 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD Ball No. Direction C/BE[3:0]# R6, T9, U11, U14 Pad driven to 0. Internal logic sees logic 1. DEVSEL# R11 Pad driven to 0. Internal logic sees logic 1. FRAME# U9 Pad driven to 0. Internal logic sees logic 1. TRDY# T10 Pad driven to 0. Internal logic sees logic 1. IRDY# R10 Pad driven to 0. Internal logic sees logic 1. STOP# T11 Pad driven to 0. Internal logic sees logic 1. Revision 0.8 5 4 3 2 1 0 PMODE0 6 PMODE1 7 PMODE2 8 PMODE4 PMODE5 9 Table 3-11. Sleep Driven PCI Signals Table 3-11. Sleep Driven PCI Signals Signal PMODE6 PMODE7 PMODE8 PMODE9 PMODE10 PMODE11 PMODE12 PMODE13 PMODE14 PMODE15 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PMODE3 IO IO IO IO IO IO IO IO MODE MODE MODE MODE MODE MODE MODE MODE A B C D E F G H 71 Signal Ball No. Direction PAR U10 Pad driven to 0. Internal logic sees logic 1. REQ# T1 Pad driven to 0. GNT# R1 Pad TRI-STATE. Internal logic sees logic 0. www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Table 3-11. Sleep Driven PCI Signals Signal Ball No. Direction AD[31:0] U1, T3, U3, R4, T4, R5, T5, U5, T6, U6, R7, T7, U7, R8, T8, U8, R12, T12, U12, R13, T13, U13, R14, T14, P15, R15, T15, P16, T16, R16, T17, R17 Pad driven to 0. from which the complete power management solution depends on. Basically two methods are supported to manage power during periods of inactivity. The first method, called activity based power management allows the hardware in the Geode I/O companion to monitor activity to certain devices in the system and if a period of inactivity occurs take some form of power conservation action. This method does not require OS support because this support is handled by SMM software. Simple monitoring of external activity is imperfect as well as inefficient. The second method, called passive power management, requires the OS to take an active role in managing power. National supports two application programming interfaces (APIs) to enable power management by the OS: Advanced Power Management (APM) and Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI). These two methods can be used independent of one another or they can be used together. The extent to which these resources are employed depends on the application and the discretion of the system designer. Table 3-12. Sleep Driven IDE Signals Signal Ball No. Direction IDE_CS[1:0]# C10, B10 Pad driven to 0. IDE_IOR0# B13 Pad driven to 0. IDE_IOW0# C13 Pad driven to 0. IDE_AD[2:0] B11, A12, A11 Pad driven to 0. IDE_RESET# F15 Pad driven to 0. IDE_RDY0 A13 Pad TRI-STATE. Internal logic sees logic 0. IDE_DREQ0 A14 Pad TRI-STATE. Internal logic sees logic 0. IDE_DACK0# C12 Pad driven to 0. IDE_DATA[15:0] C14, B15, B16, A17, C17, D16, D17, E17, E16, E15, D15, B17, C16, C15, A15, B14 Pad driven to 0. 3.9 The GX2 processor and Geode CS5535 I/O companion devices contain advanced power management features for reducing the power consumption of the processor, I/O companion and other devices in the system. 3.9.1 Power Domains In order to support power management in periods of inactivity as well as “off” conditions, the CS5535 is divided into three power domains: • Working Domain - Consists of VCORE and VIO • Standby Domain - Consists of VCORE_VSB and VIO_VSB • RTC Domain - Consists of VBAT When the system is in an operational mode all three of the domains are on. In general the power management techniques used while operating produce power savings without user awareness. The performance and usability of the system is unaffected. When the system is “off” only the standby domain is powered. If desired, the operational design can allow returning the system to the operational point when the system was last “on”. This “instant on” feature is a requirement for many battery powered systems. POWER MANAGEMENT Typically the three greatest power consumers in a computing device are the display, the hard drive (if it has one) and the system electronics. The CPU usually consumes the most power of all the system electronic components. Managing power for the first two is relatively straightforward in the sense that they are simply turned on or off. Managing CPU power is more difficult since effective use clock control technology requires effective detection of inactivity, both at a system level and at a code processing level. If the system has been removed from all power sources the Real Time Clock (RTC) can be kept operating with a small button battery. All sections of CS5535 use the Working domain except: Standby Domain Power consumption in a GX2 or other Geode processor based system is managed with the use of both hardware and software. The complete hardware solution is provided for only when the GX2 processor is combined with the CS5535 Geode I/O companion. • GPIO[31:24] and associated registers. • GPIO Input Conditioning Functions 6 and 7. • GPIO Power Management Events (PMEs) 6 and 7. • MFGPT[7:6]. The processor power consumption is managed primarily through a sophisticated clock stop management technology. The processor also provides the hardware enablers www.national.com 72 Revision 0.8 • Power Management Controller (PMC) Standby Controller and associated I/O consisting of: WORKING, WORK_AUX, and RESET_OUT. 3.9.3 APM Power Management Some systems rely solely on an APM (Advanced Power Management) driver for enabling the operating system to power-manage the CPU. APM provides several services which enhance the system power management. It is a reasonable approach to power management but APM has some limitations: • PMC Standby registers starting at PMS I/O Offset 30h. See Table 5-68 "PM Support Registers Summary" on page 478. RTC domain • APM is an OS-specific driver, and may not be available for some operating systems. • Real Time Clock • Application support is inconsistent. Some applications in foreground may prevent Idle calls. 3.9.2 ACPI Power Management ACPI power management is a standardized method to manage power. An overview of the standard is presented here. See Section 4.17 "Power Management Control" on page 159 for a more complete discussion of ACPI support in the CS5535. See ACPI specification v2.0 for complete details on ACPI. A GX2/CS5535 system solution can fully support all the requirements in the ACPI specification. • APM does not help with Suspend determination or peripheral power management. 3.10 COMPONENT REVISION ID The revision ID number of the CS5535 may be read in any of the following places. All return the same value: ACPI defines power states from a system perspective down to a device perspective. There are four global system states: G0 through G3. As a subset of the Global system states G0-G2 there are six Sleep states: S0 through S5. Within the sleep states S0-S1 there are five CPU states: C0-C3 and CT, and three Device states: D0-D2. In a GX2/CS5535 system design, the optional Sleep state S2, and the CPU states C3 and CT (CPU Throttling) are not supported. See Table 4-34 "Supported ACPI Power Management States" on page 159“. Table 4-34 shows how the ACPI power states relate to each other. The table also shows the condition of the power domains and the logic within those domains with respect to the ACPI power states. 1) GLCP_CHIP_REV_ID register: MSR 51700017h[7:0]. 2) PCI Configuration Space Device Revision ID: PCI Index 08h[15:0]. 3) TAP Controller Revision register: Instruction 8FFFFAh[7:0]. The revision is an 8-bit value. Bits [7:4] indicate major revisions while bits [3:0] indicate minor revisions. For example: 0x11 A1 Value assigned to first manufactured silicon of any new product. 0x12 A2 Minor update to first silicon. 0x21 B1 Major change to first silicon. For listing of updates, refer to the document entitled Geode CS5535 I/O Companion Device Errata. Revision 0.8 73 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Global Concepts and Features (Continued) Module Functional Descriptions The modules that make up the Geode CS5535 (shown in gray in Figure 4-1) are: • Universal Serial Bus 2 Controller with Ports 2-1 and 2-2 • Audio Codec 97 (AC97) Controller • GeodeLink Interface Unit • Diverse Device • GeodeLink PCI South Bridge The Low Voltage Detect (LVD) circuit is not a GeodeLink Device (GLD), but is connected to the PMC for voltage monitoring support. • GeodeLink Control Processor • ATA-5 Controller (IDE Controller multiplexed with Flash Interface) This section provides a functional description of each module. • Universal Serial Bus 1 Controller with Ports 1-1 and 1-2 Test/Reset Interface External USB Ports 1-1 & 1-2 USB Controller #1 (USBC1) External USB Ports 2-1 & 2-2 USB Controller #2 (USBC2) External Audio External IDE/Flash System Power Voltages Geode™ GX2 Interface GeodeLink™ Control Processor (GLCP) PCI GeodeLink™ Interface Unit (GLIU) AC97 Controller (ACC) GeodeLink™ PCI South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL) 82xx PC Legacy ATA-5 Controller (ATAC) Low Voltage Detect (LVD) 33 or 66 MHz UART (2) & IR (1) SMB Controller Power Good for Power On Reset (POR) Flash Interface LPC Port RTC & CMOS RAM GPIO Diverse Device (DD) External I/O Geode™ CS5535 4.0 Power Mgmnt MFGP Timers Figure 4-1. Module Block Diagram www.national.com 74 Revision 0.8 GEODELINK INTERFACE UNIT Many traditional architectures use buses to connect modules together, usually requiring unique addressing for each register in every module. This requires that some kind of house-keeping be done as new modules are designed and new devices are created from the module set. Module select signals can be used to create the unique addresses, but that can get cumbersome and it requires that the module selects be sourced from some centralized location. space. The full 64-bit data space is always read or written when accessed. 4.1.1 GLIU Port Connections Table 4-1 shows the GeodeLink Devices connected to each of the seven GLIU ports on CS5535. Table 4-1. GLIU Port Connections To alleviate this issue, National developed an internal bus architecture called GeodeLink. The GeodeLink architecture connects the internal modules of a device using the data channels provided by GeodeLink Interface Units (GLIUs). Using GLIUs, all internal module port addresses are derived from the distinct port that the module is connected to. In this way, a module’s Model Specific Registers (MSRs) do not have unique addresses until a device is defined. Also, as defined by the GeodeLink architecture, a module’s port address depends on the location of the module sourcing the cycle, or source module. Port Number The CS5535 incorporates one GLIU into its device architecture. Except for the configuration registers that are required for x86 compatibility, all internal registers are accessed through a Model Specific Register (MSR) set. MSRs have a 32-bit address space and a 64-bit data Device 1 GeodeLink PCI South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) 2 USB Controller #2 (USBC2) 3 ATA-5 Controller (ATAC) 4 Diverse Device (DD) 5 AC97 Audio Controller (ACC) 6 USB Controller #1 (USBC1) 7 GeodeLink Control Processor (GLCP) 4.1.2 Descriptor Summary Table 4-2 shows the descriptors reserved for each GeodeLink Device. Table 4-2. GLIU Descriptors Reserved for GeodeLink Devices Device Descriptor Type # of Descriptors USBC1 P2D_BMK 1 Do not hit on keyboard emulation registers. USBC2 P2D_BMK 1 Do not hit on keyboard emulation registers. IOD_BM 1 For IDE master registers. IOD_BM 1 Defaults to 1Fxh. IOD_SC 1 Defaults to 3F6h. IOD_BM 3 COM ports legacy power management. IOD_BM 1 For secondary IDE trapping to 17xh. IOD_SC 1 For secondary IDE trapping to 376h. IOD_SC 1 Keyboard legacy power management. IOD_SC 3 LPC ports legacy power management. IOD_SC 1 Floppy legacy power management. P2D_BM 1 For memory space registers. IOD_BM 1 For I/O space registers. GLPCI_SB P2D_BM 1 For master requests to GX2 GLPCI. Spares IOD_BM 2 Provides the possibility to virtualize NAND Flash accesses when the IDE/Flash shared pins are in the ‘IDE Position’. For the ‘Flash Position’, already dedicated IDE descriptors can be used to virtualize. IOD_BM 1 IOD_SC 1 P2D_BM 1 ATAC DD ACC Revision 0.8 75 Usage www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.1 Geode™ CS5535 4.2 GEODELINK PCI SOUTH BRIDGE The GeodeLink PCI Bus South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) provides a PCI interface for GeodeLink Device based designs. Its three major functions are: 1) Acting as a PCI slave and transforming PCI transactions to GLIU transactions as a GLIU master. 2) Acting as a GLIU slave and transforming GLIU transactions to PCI bus transactions as a PCI master. 3) Providing a CPU serial interface that conveys system information such as interrupts, SSMI, ASMI, etc. • Programmable IDSEL selection. • Support active decoding for Legacy I/O space 000h to 3FFh and DMA High Page 480h to 48Fh. • Support subtractive decode for memory and I/O space. • Special performance enhancements for fast IDE PIO data transfers. The GLPCI_SB module is composed of the following major blocks: • GeodeLink Interface Features include: • FIFO/Synchronization • PCI v2.2 compliance. Optional signals PERR#, SERR#, LOCK#, and CLKRUN are not implemented. • Transaction Forwarding • PCI Bus Interface • 32-bit, 66 MHz PCI bus operation and 64-bit, 66 MHz GeodeLink Device operation. • CPU Interface Serial (CIS) • Target support for fast back-to-back transactions. The GLIU and PCI bus interfaces provide adaptation to the respective buses. The Transaction Forwarding block provides bridging logic. The CIS block provides serial output to the CPU for any change in SSMI and the selected sideband signals. Little endian byte ordering is used on all signal buses. • Zero wait state operation within a PCI burst. • MSR access mailbox in PCI configuration space. • Capable of handling in-bound transactions after RESET_OUT# + 2 clock cycles. Figure 4-2 is a block diagram of the GLPCI_SB module. • Dynamic clock stop/start support for GeodeLink and PCI clock domains via power management features. GX2 CIS PCI Bus REQ# / GNT# PCI Bus Interface MSR Transaction Forwarding FIFOs/Synchronization CIS Side-band signals GeodeLink Interface Request Data Request Figure 4-2. GLPCI_SB Block Diagram www.national.com 76 Revision 0.8 4.2.1 GeodeLink Interface The GeodeLink Interface block provides a thin protocol conversion layer between the transaction forwarding module and the GLIU. It is responsible for multiplexing in-bound write request data with out-bound read response data on the single GLIU data out bus. Support IDE data port Read Prefetch when MSR Control register (MSR 51000010h[19:18]) is set to IDE prefetch for performance enhancement. I/O reads to address 1F0h can follow a prefetching behavior. When enabled, the GLPCI_SB issues GLIU Read Request Packets for this specific address before receiving a request on the PCI bus for it. All PCI accesses to 1F0h must be DWORDs; that is, 4 bytes. 4.2.2 FIFOs/Synchronization The FIFO block consists of a collection of in-bound and out-bound FIFOs. Each FIFO provides simple, synchronous interfaces to the reader and to the writer. 4.2.4 PCI Bus Interface The PCI Bus Interface block provides a protocol conversion layer between the transaction forwarding module and the PCI bus. The master and target portions of this module operate independently. Thus, out-bound write requests and in-bound read responses are effectively multiplexed onto the PCI bus. It includes address decoding logic to recognize distinct address regions for slave operation. Each address region is defined by a starting address, an address mask, and some attached attributes (i.e., memory and/or I/O space indicator, prefetchable, retry/hold, postable memory write, region enable). The FIFO block also includes synchronization logic for a few non-FIFO related signals and clock gating logic. 4.2.3 Transaction Forwarding The Transaction Forwarding block receives, processes, and forwards transaction requests and responses between the GeodeLink Interface and PCI Bus Interface blocks. It implements the transaction ordering rules. It performs write/read prefetching as needed. It also performs the necessary translation between GLIU and PCI commands. The Transaction Forwarding block also handles the conversion between 64-bit GLIU data paths and 32-bit PCI data paths. The PCIF is responsible for retrying out-bound requests when a slave termination without data is seen on the PCI bus. It also must restart transactions on the PCI that are prematurely ended with a slave termination. This module also always slave terminates in-bound read transactions issued to non-prefetchable regions after a single WORD has been transferred. Out-bound transactions are handled in a strongly ordered fashion. All out-bound memory writes are posted. The SEND_RESPONSE flag is never expected to be set in a memory write and is ignored. Any queued out-bound requests are flushed prior to handling an in-bound read request. 4.2.5 CPU Interface Serial The CPU Interface Serial block provides a serial interface to the CPU for side-band signals. From reset, the GLPCI_SB connects only the SUSP# signal to the serial output. All other signals must be added by programming the CIS mode (MSR 51000010h[4:3]). Any change of the signals selected from the 16 side-band signals will start shifting to the CPU all 20 bits of the CIS register including two START bits (00) and two padding STOP bits (11). Three different modes control the selection of the sideband signals to the CIS shift register. All in-bound memory writes are posted. South bridge master out-bound read request data can pass in-bound writes. Thus, a pending out-bound read request need not be deferred while posted in-bound write data is waiting to be flushed or is in the process of being flushed. The out-bound read request may be performed on the PCI bus at the same time that the in-bound write data is flowing through the GLIU. When handling an in-bound read request, the intended size of the transfer is unknown. In-bound read requests for nonprefetchable addresses will only fetch the data explicitly indicated in the PCI transaction. Thus, all in-bound read requests made to non-prefetchable addresses will return at most a single 32-bit WORD. In-bound read requests made to prefetchable memory may cause more than a 32-bit WORD to be prefetched. The amount of data prefetched is configurable via the read threshold fields of the Global Control (GLPCI_CTRL), MSR 51000010h. Multiple read requests may be generated to satisfy the read threshold value. 4.2.6 Programmable ID Selection An ID select register, IDSEL[31:0], is used for programmable ID selection. Only one bit in IDSEL[31:12] is set and used as a chip select (i.e., compared with AD[31:12]) during a PCI configuration write/read. The reset value of the IDSEL register is 02000000h. After reset, the first 32-bit I/O write PCI command (i.e., BE# = 0h) with address 00000000h and one bit set in AD[31:0] is assumed to initialize the IDSEL register. Only data with one bit set in AD[31:0] is considered valid. All other values are ignored and will not change the contents of IDSEL. In-bound read requests may pass posted in-bound write data when there is no address collision between the read request and the address range of the posted write data (different cache lines) and the read address is marked as being prefetchable. Revision 0.8 77 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Functional Description (Continued) 4.2.7 SSMI and EXCEP Support in GLIU Read/Write Response Packets If the HCD (Hold for CIS Transfer Disable) bit in GLPCI_MSR_CTRL (MSR 51000010h[9]) is set, any inbound memory, I/O, or external MSR read/write response packet will be checked for SSMI and EXCEP bits. If the response packet has the EXCEP bit and/or SSMI bit set, then the GLPCI_SB will not complete the transaction (it will either issue a Retry or Hold PCI bus) until the CIS transfer completes. bytes of read data to IDE read operations ignoring byte enables of the IDE read operation. 4.2.11 IDE Data Port Write Posting The PPIDE (Post Primary IDE) in GLPCI_MSR_CTRL (MSR 51000010h[17]) controls post/write on confirmation for I/O writes of address 1F0h (part of primary IDE address). If bit 17 is set, a write is completed immediately on the PCI bus as soon as it is accepted by the GLPCI_SB. If bit 17 is cleared, an I/O write is completed only after completing the write in the primary IDE space. Default behavior is write on confirmation. During an out-bound transaction, when the GLPCI_SB issues a Master Abort, the EXCEP bit in the GLIU response packet is set. 4.2.12 Other Typical Slave Write Posting For each GLPCI_SB Region Configuration register (0 through 15), if the SPACE bit (bit 32) is programmed for I/O and bit 3 (PF, Prefetchable) is high, post all I/O writes to this region. (See Section 5.2.2.2 "Region 0-15 Configuration MSRs (GLPCI_R[x])" on page 223 for furtherdetails.) 4.2.8 Subtractive Decoding If the SDOFF (Subtractive Decode Off) bit in the GLPCI_MSR_CTRL (MSR 51000010h[10]) is cleared (reset value), any PCI transaction, other than Configuration Read/Write, Interrupt Acknowledge, and Special Cycle transactions, not claimed by any device (i.e., not asserting DEVSEL#) within the default active decode cycles (three cycles immediately after FRAME# being asserted) will be accepted by GLPCI_SB at the fourth clock edge. The Retry condition will be issued for Memory Read, Memory Read Line, Memory Read Multiple (after Initial Latency Timeout), and I/O Read/Write (immediately) and all the required information (command, address and byte enable bits) is stored for the following Delayed Transactions. During Delayed Transactions, the active decode scheme is used. Any address accessed through a subtractive decoding is assumed to be non-prefetchable. Use of this feature is most appropriate for GPIO “bit banging” in the Diverse Device module. Posting writes on the North Bridge side will not increase performance. 4.2.13 Memory Writes with Send Response Normally memory writes are posted independent of region and independent of decode and legacy/non-legacy address. The USB registers are in memory space and can not be moved to I/O space due to driver compatibility issues. In a GX2/CS5535 system a memory write is posted and a possibility exists that a subsequent I/O write will complete before the posted memory write completes. In order to prevent out of order execution, when a memory write is issued to the GLIU in the CS5535, the request packet is issued with the send response bit set to serialize the request. I/O writes are not an issue, since the requests packet always has the send response bit set. 4.2.9 Byte Enable Checking in I/O Address Decoding In any in-bound I/O transaction, the byte enables BE[3:0]# are checked against address bits PCI_AD[1:0] for valid combinations. If an illegal byte enable pattern is asserted, the GLPCI_SB will issue a Target Abort. The only exception is when subtractive decode is used. During a subtractive decode, PCI_AD[1:0] and BE# are passed to the GLIU as is. The IOED (I/O Addressing Error Checking Disable) bit in GLPCI_MSR_CTRL (MSR 51000010h[8]) can be set to disable the I/O addressing error checking, where AD[1:0] is ignored and the byte enables are passed to the GLIU. 4.2.10 IDE Data Port Read Prefetch This algorithm issues multiple four byte reads to the IDE data register (1F0h) at the “beginning” of an IDE “read operation”. The hardware continues to read ahead of software read requests until a sector boundary is about to be crossed. The hardware does not read ahead over a sector boundary. Once a software read crosses a sector boundary, the hardware proceeds to read ahead again. Furthermore, the algorithm does not prefetch the last read of a sector because there is the potential that the last sector read will be the last read of the overall “read operation”. On the last read, the status will change to indicate the operation is complete. By not prefetching the last sector read, the data and status never get out of sync with each other. In PIDE prefetch mode, hardware always makes four byte reads to the IDE data register (1F0h) and supplies the four www.national.com 78 Revision 0.8 4.2.14 CPU Interface Serial (CIS) The CIS provides the system interface between the CS5535 and GX2. The interface supports several modes to send different combinations of 16-bit side-band signals through the CIS signal (ball P3). The sideband signals are synchronized to the PCI clock through 2-stage latching. Whenever at least one of 16 signals is changed, the serial transfer (using the PCI clock) immediately starts to send the information from the South Bridge to the North Bridge. But, if any bit changes within 20 clocks of any previous change, the later change will not be transmitted during the transfer. Another transfer will start immediately after the conclusion of the transfer due to the subsequent change. • Mode B - Serialized mode with signals SUSP#, NMI, Sleep, and Delayed Sleep. Not used in normal operation. • Mode C - Serialized mode with Mode B signals plus ASMI, and INTR. Used in normal operation. If the GLPCI_MSR_CTRL bit HCD (MSR 51000010h[9]) is set, any in-bound transaction, except in-bound memory writes, will be held for any CIS transfer to complete before claiming completion. Mode selection is programmed in the GLPCI_MSR_CTRL, bits [4:3] (MSR 51000010h). Table 4-3 lists the serial data with corresponding side-band signals. The serial shift register takes the selected sideband signals as inputs. The signal SMI is the ORed result of the SSMI_ASMI_FLAG (SSMI Received Event) bit in GLPCI_SB GLD_MSR_SMI (MSR 51000002h[18]) and the side-band signal ASMI. It also serves as a direct output to the processor. There are three modes of operation for the CIS signal (ball P3). Note that the transmitted polarity may be different than the “generally defined” polarity state: • Mode A - Non-serialized mode with CIS equivalent to SUSP# (reset mode). Not used in normal operation. Table 4-3. CIS Serial Bits Assignment and Descriptions Bit Position Mode B Mode C Comment start_0 0 0 Start Bit 0 start_1 0 0 Start Bit 1 data 00 1 1 Reserved data 01 1 1 Reserved data 02 SUSP SUSP Sleep Request data 03 NMI# NMI# Non-Maskable Interrupt data 04 Sleep# Sleep# data 05 Delayed Sleep# Delayed Sleep# data 06 1 ASMI# ASMI or SSMI data 07 1 INTR# Maskable Interrupt out data 08 1 1 Reserved data 09 1 1 Reserved data 10 1 1 Reserved data 11 1 1 Reserved data 12 1 1 Reserved data 13 1 1 Reserved data 14 1 1 Reserved data 15 1 1 Reserved stop_0 1 1 Stop Bit 0 stop_1 1 1 Stop Bit 1 Note: Revision 0.8 Power Management Input Disable Power Management Output Disable Mode A is not listed since it is a non-serialized mode with CIS equivalent to SUSP# (reset mode). 79 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Functional Description (Continued) 4.2.15 Exception Handling This section describes how various errors are handled by the PCI Bus Interface block. 4.2.18 In-Bound Write Exceptions When performing an in-bound write from PCI, two errors may occur: a detected parity error and a GLIU exception. A GLIU exception cannot be relayed back to the originating PCI bus master, because in-bound PCI writes are always posted. When a parity error is detected, an ASMI is generated if it is enabled. ASMI generation is enabled and reported in GLPCI_SB GLD_MSR_SMI (MSR 51000002h). However, the corrupted write data will be passed along to the GLIU. Since PERR# is not implemented on the CS5535 or the GX2 processor, error reporting via this signal is not supported. In a GX2/CS5535 system, other PCI devices that do have the PERR# pin must have a pull-up. 4.2.16 Out-Bound Write Exceptions When performing an out-bound write on PCI, three errors may occur: master abort, target abort, and parity error. When a master or target abort occurs, the PCI Bus Interface block will flush any stored write data. If enabled, an ASMI is generated. ASMI generation is enabled and reported in GLPCI_SB GLD_MSR_SMI (MSR 51000002h). Parity errors are detected and handled by the processor. The failed transaction will not be retried. 4.2.19 In-Bound Read Exceptions When performing an in-bound read from the GLIU, the EXCEP flag may be set on any received bus-WORD of data. This may be due to an address configuration error caused by software or by an error reported by the source of data. The asynchronous ERR and/or SMI bit will be set by the PCI Bus Interface block and the read data, valid or not, will be passed to the PCI Bus Interface block along with the associated exceptions. The PCI Bus Interface block should simply pass the read response data along to the PCI bus. 4.2.17 Out-Bound Read Exceptions When performing an out-bound read on PCI, three errors may occur: master abort, target abort, and detected parity error. When a master or target abort occurs, the PCI Bus Interface block will return the expected amount of data. If enabled, an ASMI is generated. ASMI generation is enabled and reported in GLPCI_SB GLD_MSR_SMI (MSR 51000002h). Parity errors are detected and handled by the processor. The failed transaction will not be retried. www.national.com 80 Revision 0.8 AC97 AUDIO CODEC CONTROLLER The primary purpose of the AC97 Audio Codec Controller (ACC) is to stream data between system memory and an AC97 codec (or codecs) using direct memory access (DMA). The AC97 codec supports several channels of digital audio input and output. Hence, the ACC contains several bus mastering DMA engines to support these channels. This method off-loads the CPU, improving system performance. The ACC is connected to the system through the GLIU and all accesses to and from system memory go through the GLIU. The AC97 codec is connected with a serial interface, and all communication with the codec occurs via that interface (see Figure 4-3). • Transport for audio data to and from the system memory and AC97 codec. • Capable of outputting multi-channel 5.1 surround sound (Left, Center, Right, Left Rear, Right Rear, and Low Frequency Effects). Hardware Includes: • GeodeLink Adapter. • Three 32-bit stereo-buffered bus masters (two for output, one for input). Features include: • Five 16-bit mono-buffered bus masters (three for output, two for input). • AC97 version 2.1 compliant interface to codecs: serial in (x2), serial out, sync out, and bit clock in. • AC Link Control block for interfacing with external AC97 codec(s). • Eight-channel buffered GLIU mastering interface. The ACC logic controls the traffic to and from the AC97 codec. For input channels, serial data from the codec is buffered and written to system memory using DMA. For output channels, software-processed data is read from system memory and streamed out serially to the codec. • Support for industry standard 16-bit pulse code modulated (PCM) audio format. • Support for any AC97 codec with Sample Rate Conversion (SRC). GLIU Data In GLCP I/F GLIU Data Out GeodeLink Adaptor (GLA) Bus Master 0 GL Clock CCU Bus Master 1 LBus Clock CCU AC Link Bit Clock CCU Bus Master 2 Bus Master 3 Bus Master 4 Bus Master 5 AC Link Bus Master 6 Output Data Mux Bus Master 7 Registers / Control Control Signals to Bus Masters To/From Codec Figure 4-3. ACC Block Diagram www.national.com 81 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 4.3 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) 4.3.1 Audio Bus Masters The ACC includes eight bus mastering units (three for input, five for output). Each bus master corresponds to one or two slots in the AC Link transfer protocol (see Section 4.3.4.1 "AC Link Serial Interface Protocol" on page 83). Table 4-4 lists the details for each bus master. 4.3.3 AC Link Overview The AC Link is the interface between the AC97 codec and the ACC. The interface is AC97 v2.1 compliant. Any AC97 codec that supports Sample Rate Conversion (SRC) can be used with the ACC. See Intel Corporation’s “Audio Codec 97” Revision 2.1 component specification for more details. 4.3.2 Bus Master Audio Configuration Registers The bus masters must be programmed by software to configure how they transfer data. This is done using their configuration registers. These registers determine whether the bus master is active and what parts of memory they have been assigned to transfer. Status registers allow software to read back information on the state of the bus masters. (See Section 5.3.2 "ACC Native Registers" on page 236 for further details on the Bus Master Audio Configuration registers.) The AC Link protocol defines an input and output frame consisting of 12 “slots” of data. Each slot contains 20 bits, except slot 0, it contains 16 bits. The SYNC signal is generated by the ACC and defines the beginning of an input and an output frame. The serial clock is generated by the AC97 codec. The AC Link is covered in depth in Section 4.3.4.1 "AC Link Serial Interface Protocol" on page 83. It is important to note that the AC97 codec has its own set of configuration registers that are separate from the ACC. These registers are accessible over the serial link. There are registers in the ACC that provide software with an interface to the AC97 codec registers. (See Section 5.3.2 "ACC Native Registers" on page 236 for register descriptions.) Table 4-4. Audio Bus Master Descriptions Bus Master Size Direction AC Link Slot(s) Channel Description BM0 32-bit (16 bits/channel) Output to codec 3 (left) and 4 (right) Left and Right Stereo Main Playback BM1 32-bit (16 bits/channel) Input from codec 3 (left) and 4 (right) Left and Right Stereo Recording BM2 16-bit Output to codec 5 Modem Line 1 DAC Output BM3 16-bit Input from codec 5 Modem Line 1 ADC Input BM4 16-bit Output to codec 6 or 11 (configurable) Center Channel Playback (slot 6) or Headset Playback (slot 11) BM5 16-bit Input from codec 6 or 11 (configurable) Microphone Record (slot 6) or Headset Record (slot 11) BM6 32-bit (16 bits/channel) Output to codec 7 (left) and 8 (right) Left and Right Surround Playback BM7 16-bit Output to codec 9 Low Frequency Effects Playback (LFE) www.national.com 82 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) 4.3.4 Codec Interface 4.3.4.1 AC Link Serial Interface Protocol The following figures outline the slot definitions and timing scheme of the AC Link serial protocol. 0 1 2 3 AC_S_OUT (Outgoing Stream) TAG CMD ADDR CMD DATA PCM LEFT PCM LINE1 RIGHT DAC PCM CEN AC_S_IN or AC_S_IN2 (Incoming Stream) TAG STATUS STATUS PCM ADDR DATA LEFT PCM LINE1 RIGHT ADC MIC ADC Slot # 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 PCM PCM L SUR R SUR PCM LFE RSVD HSET DAC GPIO CNTL RSVD RSVD RSVD HSET GPIO ACD STATUS AC_S_SYNC RSVD Data Phase TAG Phase Figure 4-4. AC Link Slot Scheme 48 kHz (20.8 µs) Tag Phase Data Phase AC_S_SYNC 12.288 MHz (81.4 ns) AC_CLK AC_S_OUT Valid Frame Slot 1 Slot 2 End of Previous Frame Slot 12 “0” “0” “0” 19 Time slot “valid” bits (“1” = Time slot contains valid PCM data) 0 19 Slot 1 0 19 0 19 Slot 12 Slot 3 Slot 2 0 Figure 4-5. AC Link Output Frame 48 kHz (20.8 µs) Tag Phase Data Phase AC_S_SYNC 12.288 MHz (81.4 ns) AC_CLK AC_S_IN or AC_S_IN2 Codec Ready Slot 1 Slot 2 Slot 12 “0” “0” “0” “19” 0 19 0 19 0 19 0 End of Previous Frame Time slot “valid” bits (“1” = Time slot contains valid PCM data) Slot 1 Slot 2 Slot 3 Slot 12 Figure 4-6. AC Link Input Frame www.national.com 83 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) 4.3.4.2 AC Link Output Frame (AC_S_OUT) The audio output frame data stream corresponds to the time division multiplexed bundles of all digital output data targeting the AC97 codec’s DAC inputs and control registers. Each audio output frame contains 13, 20-bit outgoing data slots, except for slot 0, it has 16 bits. Slot 0 is a dedicated slot used for the AC Link protocol. Slot 0: TAG This slot is used for AC Link protocol information. The first bit (bit 15) flags the validity of the entire audio frame as a whole. If this bit is 0, all of the remaining bits in the frame should be 0. The next 12 bits indicate the validity of the 12 following slots. The last two bits contain the codec ID for accessing registers of several codecs. When the codec ID is 01, 10, or 11, bits 13 and 14 must always be 0, even if slots 1 and 2 are valid. Slots that are marked invalid by slot 0 should be padded with all 0s (except for slots 1 and 2 while accessing registers of a secondary codec). bit 14 Slot 1 Valid (primary codec only) bit 13 Slot 2 Valid (primary codec only) bits [12:3] Slot 3-12 Valid bits (bit[12] -> slot 3, bit[11] -> slot 4, bit[10] -> slot 5, ... , bit[3] -> slot 12) bit 2 Reserved bits [1:0] Codec ID field bits [19:4] Control Register Write Data (Stuffed with 0s if current operation is a read) bits [3:0] Reserved (Stuffed with 0s) Slot 3: PCM Playback Left Channel Outputs the front left audio DAC data (main output) (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 4: PCM Playback Right Channel Outputs the front right audio DAC data (main output) (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 5: Modem Line 1 DAC Outputs the modem line 1 DAC data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 6: PCM Playback Center Channel Outputs the center channel DAC data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 7: PCM Playback Left Surround Channel Outputs the left surround channel DAC data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 8: PCM Playback Right Surround Channel Outputs the right surround channel DAC data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 9: PCM Playback LFE Channel Outputs the low frequency effects channel DAC data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). The control interface architecture supports up to 64 16-bit read/write registers, addressable on even byte boundaries, and reserves support for 64 odd addresses. Audio output frame slot 1 communicates control register address, and write/read command information to the AC97 codec. www.national.com Reserved (Stuffed with 0s) If the current command port operation is a read, then the entire slot is stuffed with 0s. Slot 1: Command Address The command address is used to access registers within the AC97 codec. The AC97 registers control features and monitor status for AC97 codec functions, including mixer settings and power management as indicated in the AC97 Codec specifications. bit 19 bits [11:0] Slot 2: Command Data The command data slot carries 16-bit control register write data if the current command port operation is a write cycle as indicated by slot 1, bit 19. The serial output stream is MSB justified (MSB first) within each slot, and all non-valid bit positions are stuffed with 0s by the AC Link interface module. Frame Valid Control Register Index (64 16-bit locations, addressed on even byte boundaries) The first bit (MSB) indicates whether the current control transaction is a read or write operation. The following 7 bit positions communicate the targeted control register address. An audio output frame begins with a low-to-high transition of the AC_S_SYNC signal. AC_S_SYNC is synchronous to the rising edge of AC_CLK. The AC97 codec samples the AC_S_SYNC on the immediately following falling edge of AC_CLK. AC_S_SYNC is held high for 16 bit clocks. The ACC transmits data on each rising edge of the bit clock, whereas the AC97 codec samples the data on the falling edge of AC_CLK. bit 15 bits [18:12] Slot 10: Not used Slots 10 is not used by the ACC. Slot 11: Modem Headset DAC Outputs the headset DAC data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Read/Write Command (1 = Read, 0 = Write) 84 Revision 0.8 Slot 12: GPIO Control This slot allows the ACC to set the value of the AC97 codec’s GPIO output pins. pendent of the validity of slot 1, and slot 1 will only be tagged valid by the codec if it contains a register index. bits [19:4] Value of the GPIO pins (Up to 16 can be implemented) Table 4-5. SLOTREQ to Output Slot Mapping bits [3:0] Reserved Bit Slot Request 11 Slot 3 Left Channel Out (BM0) 10 Slot 4 Right Channel Out (BM0) 9 Slot 5 Modem Line 1 Out (BM2) 8 Slot 6 Center Out (BM4 if selected) 7 Slot 7 Left Surround Out (BM6) 6 Slot 8 Right Surround Out (BM6) 5 Slot 9 LFE Out (BM7) 4 Slot 10 Not Supported 3 Slot 11 Handset Out (BM4 if selected) 2 Slot 12 Not Supported 4.3.4.3 AC Link Input Frame (AC_S_IN, AC_S_IN2) The audio input frame data streams correspond to the time division multiplexed bundles of all digital input data coming from the AC97 codec. Each input frame contains 13, 20-bit incoming data slots, except for slot 0; it is 16 bits. Slot 0 is a dedicated slot used for the AC Link protocol. An audio input frame begins with a low-to-high transition of the AC_S_SYNC signal. AC_S_SYNC is synchronous to the rising edge of AC_CLK. The AC97 codec samples the AC_S_SYNC signal on the immediately following falling edge of the bit clock. The AC97 codec transmits data on each following rising edge of AC_CLK. The ACC samples the data on the falling edges of AC_CLK. The serial input stream is MSB justified (MSB first) within each slot, and all non-valid bit positions stuffed with zeroes by the AC97 codec. Notes Slot 2: Status Data The status data slot delivers 16-bit control register read data. Slot 0: TAG The first bit of the TAG slot (bit 15) is the Codec_Ready bit. The next 12 bits indicate the validity of the next 12 data slots. bits [19:4] Control Register Read Data (Stuffed with 0s if slot 2 is tagged “invalid” by slot 0) Slot 1: Status Address / SLOTREQ Bits The status address is the echo of the register address (index) that was sent to the codec on output slot 1 of the previous output frame. It indicates the address (index) of the register whose data is being returned in slot 2 of the input frame. bits [3:0] Reserved (Stuffed with 0s) bit 19 Reserved (Stuffed with 0s) bits [18:12] Control Register Index (Echo of register index for which data is being returned) Slot 4: PCM Record Right Channel Contains the right channel ADC input data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). bits [11:2] SLOTREQ bits (For variable sampling rate) bits [1:0] Reserved (Stuffed with 0s) Slot 3: PCM Record Left Channel Contains the left channel ADC input data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 5: Modem Line 1 ADC Contains the modem line 1 ADC input data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). Slot 6: Optional Microphone Record Data Contains the microphone ADC input data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). The SLOTREQ bits support the variable sample rate signaling protocol. With normal 48 kHz operation, these bits are always zero. When the AC97 codec is configured for a lower sample rate, some output frames will not contain samples because the AC Link always outputs frames at 48 kHz. The SLOTREQ bits serve as the codec’s instrument to tell the ACC whether it needs a sample for a given slot on the next output frame. For each bit: 0 = Send data; 1 = Do NOT send data. If the codec does not request data for a given slot, the ACC should tag that slot invalid and not send PCM data. The mapping between SLOTREQ bits and output slots is given in Table 4-5. The SLOTREQ bits are indewww.national.com Slots 7-10: Not Used Slots 7-10 are reserved. Slot 11: Modem Headset ADC Contains the modem headset ADC input data (16-bit resolution, MSB first, unused LSBs = 0). 85 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) Slot 12: GPIO Status This slot returns the pin status of the AC97 codec’s GPIO pins (if implemented). bits [19:4] Value of the GPIO pins (Up to 16 can be implemented) bits [3:1] Reserved bit 0 GPIO_INT input pin event interrupt (1 = Event; 0 = No Event) buffer space. A bus master will always do buffer fill/empty requests whenever it can transfer 16 bytes of data. It will attempt to do transfers of 16 bytes on a 16-byte boundary, whenever possible. A bus master may do a transfer of more (if it is just starting, and sufficient buffer space is available) or less than 16 bytes (to bring itself onto a 16-byte boundary). It may also do a transfer of less than 16 bytes if the size of the physical memory region causes it to end on a non-16 byte boundary. Some important details on how a bus master behaves: Bit[0] indicates that there was a transition on one of the unmasked codec GPIO pins (see AC97 Codec Specification v2.1 for details). If the Codec GPIO Interrupt Enable bit is set, then slot 12, bit[0] = 1 will trigger an IRQ and set the Codec GPIO Interrupt Flag bit. 4.3.5 • When an outgoing bus master is enabled, it begins sending data over the AC Link as soon as data is available in its buffer. The slot valid tag for its slot will be asserted beginning with the first audio sample. • When a bus master is disabled while operating, any data in its buffer is lost. Re-enabling the bus master begins by fetching a PRD. AC Link Power Management 4.3.5.1 AC Link Power-down The AC Link interface signals can be placed in a low power mode by programming the AC97 codec’s Power-down Control/Status register. When this is performed, both the AC_CLK and AC_S_IN are brought to a low voltage level by the AC97 codec. This happens immediately following the write to the AC97 codec’s Power-down Control/Status register, so no data can be transmitted in slots 3-12 for the frame signaling power-down. After powering down the AC Link, the ACC must keep AC_S_SYNC and AC_S_OUT low; hence, all the AC Link signals (input and output) are driven low. • If the bus master is paused during recording or playback, the data in its buffer remains there in a frozen state. Once resumed, it continues as if nothing has occurred. If the bus master is playing back data, the output slots corresponding to the bus master are tagged invalid while it is in the paused state. • If a buffer underrun occurs on an outgoing bus master, the output slots corresponding to the bus master are tagged invalid until data becomes available. • If a buffer overrun occurs on an incoming bus master, samples coming in on the serial link are tossed away until space becomes available in the bus master’s buffer. AC_CLK is de-asserted at the same time that bit[4] of slot 2 is being transmitted on the AC Link. This is necessary because the precise time when the codec stops AC_CLK is not known. 4.3.7 4.3.7.1 Physical Region Descriptor (PRD) Table Address Register Before a bus master starts a transfer it must be programmed with a pointer to a Physical Region Descriptor (PRD) table. This is done by writing to the bus master’s PRD Table Address register. This pointer sets the starting memory location of the PRD table. The PRDs in the PRD table describe the areas of memory that are used in the data transfer. The table must be aligned on a 4-byte boundary (DWORD aligned). 4.3.5.2 AC Link Wakeup (Warm Reset) A warm reset re-activates the AC Link without altering the registers in the AC97 codec. The ACC signals the warm reset by driving AC_S_SYNC high for a minimum of 1 µs in the absence of the AC_CLK. This must not occur for a minimum of four audio frame periods following power-down (note that no bit clock is available during this time). AC_S_SYNC is normally a synchronous signal to AC_CLK, but when the AC97 codec is powered down, it is treated as an asynchronous wakeup signal. During wakeup, the AC97 codec does not re-activate the bit clock until AC_S_SYNC is driven high (for 1 µs minimum) and then low again by the ACC. Once AC_S_SYNC is driven low, AC_CLK is reasserted. 4.3.7.2 Physical Region Descriptor Format Each physical memory region to be transferred is described by a PRD as illustrated in Table 4-6 on page 87. The PRD table must be created in memory by software before the bus master can be activated. When the bus master is enabled by setting its Bus Master Enable bit, data transfer begins, with the PRD table serving as the bus master’s “guide” for what to do. The bus master does not cache PRDs. See "Audio Driver Power-up/down Programming Model" on page 90 for additional power management information and programming details. 4.3.6 Bus Mastering Buffer Scheme Because the bus masters must feed data to the codec without interruption, they require a certain amount of data buffering. A PRD entry in the PRD table consists of two DWORDs. The first DWORD contains a 32-bit pointer to a buffer to be transferred (Memory Region Base Address). The second DWORD contains control flags and a 16-bit buffer size value. The maximum amount of audio data that can be The 32-bit bus masters (stereo) use 24 bytes of buffer space, and the 16-bit bus masters (mono) use 20 bytes of www.national.com ACC Software Programming 86 Revision 0.8 transferred for a given PRD is 65534 bytes for mono streams and 65532 bytes for stereo streams. Master Error and the End of Page bits, and the bus master continues. For stereo streams (bus masters 0, 1, and 6): Memory Region Base Address and Size should be a multiple of four (DWORD aligned). This ensures an equal number of left and right samples. • Jump (JMP) - This PRD is special. If set, the Memory Region Base Address is now the target address of the JMP. The target address of the JMP must point to another PRD. There is no audio data transfer with this PRD. This PRD allows the creation of a looping mechanism. If a PRD table is created with the JMP bit set in the last PRD, the PRD table does not need a PRD with the EOT bit set. A PRD can not have both the JMP and EOT bits set. For mono streams (bus masters 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7): Memory Region Base Address and Size should be a multiple of two (WORD aligned). Descriptions of the control flags are: • End of Transfer (EOT) - If set in a PRD, this bit indicates the last entry in the PRD table. The last entry in a PRD table must have either the EOT bit or the JMP bit set. A PRD can not have both the JMP and EOT bits set. When the bus master reaches an EOT, it stops and clears its Bus Master Enable bit. If software desires an IRQ to be generated with the EOT, it must set the EOP bit and the EOT bit on the last PRD entry. 4.3.7.3 PCM Data Format and Byte Order Table 4-7 shows an example of the how PCM audio data is stored in memory (byte order and channel order). Each row represents a byte in memory, with increasing addresses as you go down. The byte order can be configured via the Bus Master Command Register for Intel (little endian) or Motorola (big endian) byte ordering. Changing the byte order ONLY affects how PCM data is interpreted. PRD entries and register contents are always little endian. The two channel format applies to the 32-bit bus masters handling left and right input and output. The single channel format applies to the 16-bit bus masters. The 32-bit bus masters always operate on stereo data, and the 16-bit bus masters always operate on mono data. Since there is no special mode for playing monaural sound through the main channels (left and right), it is the responsibility of the software to create stereo PCM data with identical samples for the left and right channels to effectively output monaural sound. • End of Page (EOP) - If set in a PRD and the bus master has completed the PRD’s transfer, the End of Page bit is set (in the IRQ status register) and an IRQ is generated. If a second EOP is reached due to the completion of another PRD before the End of Page bit is cleared, the Bus Master Error bit is set (in the IRQ status register) and the bus master pauses. In this paused condition, reading the IRQ status register clears both the Bus Table 4-6. Physical Region Descriptor (PRD) Format Byte 3 DWORD Byte 2 Byte 0 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 0 1 Byte 1 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Memory Region Base Address [31:0] (Address of Audio Data Buffer) Reserved E E J O O M T P P Size [15:0] Table 4-7. PCM Data format (Byte and Channel Ordering) 2 Channel, Little Endian 1 Channel, Little Endian 2 Channel, Big Endian 1 Channel, Big Endian Sample Channel Byte Sample Byte Sample Channel Byte Sample Byte 0 Left Low 0 Low 0 Left High 0 High 0 Left High 0 High 0 Left Low 0 Low 0 Right Low 1 Low 0 Right High 1 High 0 Right High 1 High 0 Right Low 1 Low 1 Left Low 2 Low 1 Left High 2 High 1 Left High 2 High 1 Left Low 2 Low 1 Right Low 3 Low 1 Right High 3 High 1 Right High 3 High 1 Right Low 3 Low www.national.com 87 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) 4.3.7.4 Programming Model Audio Playback/Record The following discussion explains, in steps, how to initiate and maintain a bus master transfer between memory and an audio slave device. In the steps, the reference to Example refers to Figure 4-7: 1) The bus master reads the PRD entry pointed to by the PRD Table Address register. Using the address from the PRD, it begins the audio transfer. The PRD Table Address register is incremented by eight. Example - The bus master is now properly programmed to transfer Audio Buffer_1 to a specific slot(s) in the AC97 interface. Software creates a PRD table in system memory. The last PRD entry in a PRD table must have the EOT or JMP bit set. 5) Example - Assume the data is outbound. There are three PRDs in the example PRD table. The first two PRDs (PRD_1, PRD_2) have only the EOP bit set. The last PRD (PRD_3) has only the JMP bit set. This example creates a PRD loop. 2) Example - After transferring the data described by PRD_1, an interrupt is generated because the EOP bit is set, and the bus master continues on to PRD_2. The interrupt service routine reads the Second Level Audio IRQ Status register to determine which bus master to service. It refills Audio Buffer_1 and then reads the bus master’s IRQ Status register to clear the End of Page flag and the interrupt. Software loads the starting address of the PRD table by programming the PRD Table Address register. Example - Program the PRD Table Address register with Address_3. 3) Software must fill the buffers pointed to by the PRDs with audio data. It is not absolutely necessary to fill the buffers; however, the buffer filling process must stay ahead of the buffer emptying. The simplest way to do this is by using the EOP flags to generate an interrupt when an audio buffer is empty. After transferring the data described by PRD_2, another interrupt is generated because the EOP bit is set, and the bus master continues on to PRD_3. The interrupt service routine reads the Second Level Audio IRQ Status register to determine which bus master to service. It refills Audio Buffer_2 and then reads the bus master’s IRQ Status register to clear the End of Page flag and the interrupt. Example - Fill Audio Buffer_1 and Audio Buffer_2. Ensure than an interrupt service routine is assigned to the audio interrupt. 4) The bus master transfers data from memory and sends it to the AC97 Codec. At the completion of each PRD, the bus master’s next response depends on the settings of the flags in the PRD. Read the IRQ Status register to clear the Bus Master Error and End of Page flags (if set). PRD_3 has the JMP bit set. This means the bus master uses the address stored in PRD_3 (Address_3) to locate the next PRD. It does not use the address in the PRD Table Address register to get the next PRD. Since Address_3 is the location of PRD_1, the bus master has looped the PRD table. No interrupt is generated for PRD_3. Program the AC97 codec properly to receive audio data (mixer settings, etc.). Engage the bus master by setting the Bus Master Enable bit. Address_3 Address_1 Address_1 PRD_1 EOT = 0 EOP = 1 JMP = 0 Audio Buffer_1 Size_1 Size_1 Address_2 PRD_2 EOT = 0 EOP = 1 JMP = 0 Size_2 Address_2 Address_3 EOT = 0 EOP = 0 JMP = 1 PRD_3 Audio Buffer_2 Size_2 Don’t Care Figure 4-7. ACC PRD Table Example www.national.com 88 Revision 0.8 Pausing the bus master can be accomplished by setting the Bus Master Pause bit in its control register. The bus master stops immediately on the current sample being processed. Upon resuming, the bus master (clearing the Bus Master Pause bit), resumes on the exact sample where it left off. Codec Register Access The ACC provides a set of registers that serve as an interface to the AC97 codec’s registers. The Codec Command register allows software to initiate a read or a write of a codec register. The Codec Status register allows software to read back the data from the codec after a read operation has completed. Since the AC Link runs very slow relative to core CPU speed (and therefore software speed), it is necessary for software to wait between issuing commands to the codec. The bus master can be stopped in the middle of a transfer by clearing the Bus Master Enable bit in its control register. In this case, the bus master will not remember what sample it left off on. If it is re-enabled, it will begin by reading the PRD entry pointed to by its PRD Table Address register. If software does not reinitialize this pointer, it will be pointing to the PRD entry immediately following the PRD entry that was being processed. This may be an invalid condition if the bus master was disabled while processing the last PRD in a PRD table (PRD Table Address register pointing to memory beyond the table). For register reads, software specifies a command address and sets both the read/write flag and the Codec Command New flag in the Codec Control register. Software must then wait for the Codec Status New bit to be set before using the returned status data in the Codec Status register. Before issuing another read command, software must wait for the Codec Command New flag to be cleared by hardware. (Note: Codec Command New will clear before Codec Status New is set; therefore, a second read can be issued before the result of the current read is returned). Note that if the Bus Master Error bit is set, the interrupt service routine should refill two buffers instead of one, because a previous interrupt was missed (unless it was intentionally missed). For this to work correctly, the service routine should read the Second Level Audio IRQ Status register, fill the buffer of the bus master needing service, read the bus master’s IRQ Status register, and then fill the next buffer if the Bus Master Error bit was set. Failing to fill the first buffer before reading the IRQ Status register would possibly resume the bus master too early and result in sound being played twice or data being overwritten (if recording). www.national.com For register writes, software specifies a command address and command data using the Codec Control register. At the same time it must set the Codec Command New flag. Before issuing another read or write, software must wait for the Codec Command New flag to clear. See Section 5.3 "AC97 Audio Codec Controller Register Descriptions" for details on the Codec register interface. 89 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 ACC Functional Description (Continued) Power-up Procedure 1) If GPIO Wakeup Interrupt Enable (ACC I/O Offset 00h[29]) was set in the power-down procedure, it will automatically be disabled upon power-up. Audio Driver Power-up/down Programming Model The ACC contains Machine Specific Registers (MSRs) that relate to a very low level power management scheme, but are discrete from the power management features of the codec and the device driver programming model. This section covers the power management features for the device driver. See Section 4.3.5 "AC Link Power Management" on page 86 for power management hardware details. 2) Set the AC Link Warm Reset bit in the Codec Control register (ACC I/O Offset 0Ch[17]). This will initiate the warm reset sequence. 3) Wait for the Codec Ready bit(s) in the Codec Status register (ACC I/O Offset 08h[23:22]) to be asserted before accessing any codec features or enabling any bus masters. The following sections outline how the device driver should perform power management. Notes: Power-down Procedure 1) Disable or pause all bus masters using their bus master command register. 2) 3) It may be necessary to determine if a second codec is being used, and if so, verify that the power-down Semaphore for Secondary Codec bit is set before proceeding (to insure that the modem driver has prepared the second codec for power-down, if necessary). Using the Codec Control register, access the primary codec’s registers and program the codec to powerdown. Also, simultaneously write to the AC Link Shutdown bit in the Codec Control register (ACC I/O Offset 0Ch[18]). 4) The ACC and codec will power-down once the command is received by the codec. All of the contents of the ACC and codec registers are preserved during the power-down state. 5) If you wish to enable the GPIO wakeup interrupt, wait for an additional two audio frame periods (42 µs) before setting the GPIO Wakeup Interrupt Enable bit (ACC I/O Offset 00h[29]). Failure to wait will cause false interrupt events to occur. www.national.com 90 1) If the GPIO Wakeup Interrupt Enable (ACC I/O Offset 00h[29]) is set, and an interrupt occurs, it is detected and fired, but the interrupt does not wakeup the codec and ACC. The hardware will only wakeup if the software responds to the interrupt and performs the power-up procedure. 2) Once software has issued a power-down, it must not perform the power-up procedure for at least six audio frame periods (about 0.125 ms or 125 µs). Doing so could lock up the codec or ACC. 3) If the system has cut off power to the codec and restarted it, it is not necessary to initiate a warm reset. The AC Link Shutdown should be cleared manually to restart the operation of the AC Link. Revision 0.8 ATA-5 CONTROLLER The hard disk controller is an ATA-5 compatible IDE controller (ATAC). This controller supports UDMA/66, MDMA, and PIO modes. The controller can support one channel (two devices). The PIO portion of the IDE registers is enabled through: • Channel 0 Drive 0 PIO (ATAC_CH0D0_PIO) (MSR 51300020h) • Channel 0 Drive 1 PIO (ATAC_CH0D1_PIO) (MSR 51300022h) The IDE interface provides a variety of features to optimize system performance, including 32-bit disk access, post write buffers, bus master, MDMA, look-ahead read buffer, and prefetch mechanism. The IDE channel and devices can be individually programmed to select the proper address setup time, asserted time, and recovery time. The IDE interface timing is completely programmable. Timing control covers the command active and recover pulse widths, and command block register accesses. The IDE data-transfer speed for each device on each channel can be independently programmed allowing high-speed IDE peripherals to coexist on the same channel as older, compatible devices. Faster devices must be ATA-5 compatible. The bit formats for these registers are shown in Section 5.4.3 "ATAC Native Registers" on page 258. Note that there are different bit formats for each of the PIO programming registers depending on the operating format selected: Format 0 or Format 1. Channel 0 Drive 0/1 - The DMA register (MSR 51300021h/ 51300023h) sets the format of the PIO register. If bit 31 = 0, Format 0 is used and it selects the slowest PIO mode (bits [19:16]) for commands. If bit 31 = 1, Format 1 is used and it allows independent control of command and data. The ATAC also provides a software-accessible buffered reset signal to the IDE drive. The IDE_RST# signal is driven low during system reset and can be driven low or high as needed for device power-off conditions. Also listed in the bit formats are recommended values for the different PIO modes. Note that these values are only recommended settings and are not 100% tested. Features include: • ATA5-compliant IDE controller • Supports PIO (mode 0 to 4), MDMA (mode 0 to 2), and UDMA (mode 0 to 4) 4.4.2 Bus Master Mode An IDE bus master is provided to perform the data transfers for the IDE channel. The ATAC off-loads the CPU and improves system performance. • Supports one channel, two devices • Allows independent timing programming for each device The bus master mode programming interface is an extension of the standard IDE programming model. This means that devices can always be dealt with using the standard IDE programming model, with the master mode functionality used when the appropriate driver and devices are present. Master operation is designed to work with any IDE device that supports DMA transfers on the IDE bus. Devices that work in PIO mode can only use the standard IDE programming model. 4.4.1 PIO Modes The IDE data port transaction latency consists of address latency, asserted latency, and recovery latency. Address latency occurs when a PCI master cycle targeting the IDE data port is decoded, and the IDE_ADDR[2:0] and IDE_CS# lines are not set up. Address latency provides the setup time for the IDE_ADDR[2:0] and IDE_CS# lines prior to IDE_IOR# and IDE_IOW#. The IDE bus master uses a simple scatter/gather mechanism, allowing large transfer blocks to be scattered to or gathered from memory. This cuts down on the number of interrupts to and interactions with the CPU. Asserted latency consists of the I/O command strobe assertion length and recovery time. Recovery time is provided so that transactions may occur back-to-back on the IDE interface without violating minimum cycle periods for the IDE interface. 4.4.2.1 Physical Region Descriptor Table Address Before the controller starts a master transfer it is given a pointer to a Physical Region Descriptor Table. This pointer sets the starting memory location of the Physical Region Descriptors (PRDs). The PRDs describe the areas of memory that are used in the data transfer. The PRDs must be aligned on a 4-byte boundary and the table cannot cross a 64 kB boundary in memory. If IDE_IORDY is asserted when the initial sample point is reached, no wait states are added to the command strobe assertion length. If IDE_IORDY is negated when the initial sample point is reached, additional wait states are added. Recovery latency occurs after the IDE data port transactions have completed. It provides hold time on the IDE_ADDR[2:0] and IDE_CS# lines with respect to the read and write strobes (IDE_IOR# and IDE_IOW#). Revision 0.8 4.4.2.2 IDE Bus Master Registers The IDE Bus Master registers have an IDE Bus Master Command register and Bus Master Status register. These registers can be accessed by byte, WORD, or DWORD. 91 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.4 4.4.2.3 Physical Region Descriptor Format Each physical memory region to be transferred is described by a Physical Region Descriptor (PRD) as illustrated in Table 4-8. When the bus master is enabled (Command register bit 0 = 1), data transfer proceeds until each PRD in the PRD table has been transferred. The bus master does not cache PRDs. 2) Software loads the starting address of the PRD table by programming the PRD Table Address register. 3) Software must fill the buffers pointed to by the PRDs with IDE data. 4) Write 1 to the Bus Master Interrupt bit and Bus Master Error (Status register bits 2 and 1) to clear the bits. The PRD table consists of two DWORDs. The first DWORD contains a 32-bit pointer to a buffer to be transferred. This pointer must be 4-byte aligned. The second DWORD contains the size (16 bits) of the buffer and the EOT (End Of Table) flag. The size must be in multiples of 1 WORD (2 bytes) or zero (which means a 64 kB transfer). The EOT bit (bit 31) must be set to indicate the last PRD in the PRD table. 5) Set the correct direction to the Read or Write Control bit (Command register bit 3). Engage the bus master by writing a 1 to the Bus Master Control bit (Command register bit 0). The bus master reads the PRD entry pointed to by the PRD Table Address register and increments the address by 08h to point to the next PRD. The transfer begins. 4.4.2.4 Programming Model The following steps explain how to initiate and maintain a bus master transfer between memory and an IDE device: 1) Software creates a PRD table in system memory. Each PRD entry is 8 bytes long, consisting of a base address pointer and buffer size. The maximum data that can be transferred from a PRD entry is 64 kB. A PRD table must be aligned on a 4-byte boundary. The last PRD in a PRD table must have the EOT bit set. 6) The bus master transfers data to/from memory responding to bus master requests from the IDE device until all PRD entries are serviced. 7) The IDE device signals an interrupt once its programmed data count has been transferred. 8) In response to the interrupt, software resets the Bus Master Control bit in the Command register. It then reads the status of the controller and IDE device to determine if the transfer is successful. Table 4-8. Physical Region Descriptor Format Byte 3 DWORD 0 1 Byte 2 Byte 1 Byte 0 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 Memory Region Physical Base Address [31:4] (IDE Data Buffer) EOT Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Functional Description (Continued) www.national.com Reserved Size [15:2] 92 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Revision 0.8 4.4.2.5 UDMA/66 Mode The ATAC supports UDMA/66. It utilizes the standard IDE bus master functionality to interface, initiate, and control the transfer. The UDMA/66 definition also incorporates a Cyclic Redundancy Checking (CRC) error checking protocol to detect errors. The data transfer phase continues the burst transfers with the ATAC and the IDE via providing data, toggling STROBE and DMARDY#. IDE_DATA[15:0] is latched by the receiver on each rising and falling edge of STROBE. The transmitter can pause the burst cycle by holding STROBE high or low, and resume the burst cycle by again toggling STROBE. The receiver can pause the burst cycle by negating DMARDY# and resumes the burst cycle by asserting DMARDY#. The UDMA/66 protocol requires no extra signal pins on the IDE connector. The ATAC redefines three standard IDE control signals when in UDMA/66 mode. These definitions are shown in Table 4-9. The current burst cycle can be terminated by either the transmitter or receiver. A burst cycle must first be paused, as described above, before it can be terminated. The ATAC can then stop the burst cycle by asserting STOP, with the IDE device acknowledging by negating IDE_DREQ. The transmitter then drives the STROBE signal to a high level. The ATAC then puts the result of the CRC calculation onto IDE_DATA[15:0] while de-asserting IDE_DACK#. The IDE device latches the CRC value on the rising edge of IDE_DACK#. Table 4-9. UDMA/66 Signal Definitions IDE Channel Signal UDMA/66 Read Cycle UDMA/66 Write Cycle IDE_IOW# STOP STOP IDE_IOR# DMARDY# STROBE IDE_IORDY STROBE DMARDY# The CRC value is used for error checking on UDMA/66 transfers. The CRC value is calculated for all data by both the ATAC and the IDE device during the UDMA/66 burst transfer cycles. This result of the CRC calculation is defined as all data transferred with a valid STROBE edge while IDE_DACK# is asserted. At the end of the burst transfer, the ATAC drives the result of the CRC calculation onto IDE_DATA[15:0], which is then strobed by the deassertion of IDE_DACK#. The IDE device compares the CRC result of the ATAC to its own and reports an error if there is a mismatch. All other signals on the IDE connector retain their functional definitions during the UDMA/66 operation. IDE_IOW# is defined as STOP for both read and write transfers to request to stop a transaction. IDE_IOR# is redefined as DMARDY# for transferring data from the IDE device to the ATAC. It is used by the ATAC to signal when it is ready to transfer data and to add wait states to the current transaction. The IDE_IOR# signal is defined as STROBE for transferring data from the ATAC to the IDE device. It is the data strobe signal driven by the ATAC on which data is transferred during each rising and falling edge transition. The timings for UDMA/66 are programmed into the DMA control registers: • Channel 0 Drive 0 DMA (ATAC_CH0D0_DMA) (MSR 51300021h) IDE_IORDY is redefined as STROBE for transferring data from the IDE device to the ATAC during a read cycle. It is the data strobe signal driven by the IDE device on which data is transferred during each rising and falling edge transition. IDE_IORDY is defined as DMARDY# during a write cycle for transferring data from the ATAC to the IDE device. It is used by the IDE device to signal when it is ready to transfer data and to add wait states to the current transaction. • Channel 0 Drive 1 DMA (ATAC_CH0D1_DMA) (MSR 51300023h) The bit formats for these registers are given in Section 5.4.3 "ATAC Native Registers" on page 258. Note that MSR 51300021h[20] is used to select either MDMA or UDMA mode. Bit 20 = 0 selects MDMA mode. If bit 20 = 1, then UDMA/66 mode is selected. Once mode selection is made using this bit, the remaining DMA registers also operate in the selected mode. UDMA/66 data transfer consists of three phases: a startup phase, a data transfer phase, and a burst termination phase. Also listed in the bit formats are recommended values for both MDMA modes 0-2 and UDMA/66 modes 0-4. Note that these values are only recommended settings and are not 100% tested. The IDE device begins the startup phase by asserting IDE_DREQ. When ready to begin the transfer, the ATAC asserts IDE_DACK#. When IDE_DACK# is asserted, the ATAC drives IDE_CS0# and IDE_CS1# asserted, and IDE_ADDR[2:0] low. For write cycles, the ATAC negates STOP, waits for the IDE device to assert DMARDY#, and then drives the first data word and STROBE signal. For read cycles, the ATAC negates STOP and asserts DMARDY#. The IDE device then sends the first data word and asserts STROBE. Revision 0.8 93 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Functional Description (Continued) UNIVERSAL SERIAL BUS CONTROLLER The two Universal Serial Bus Controllers (USBC) each contain a GeodeLink Adapter, PCI Adapter, and USB Core blocks. The functional descriptions of the blocks are described in the following sub-sections. the GLA synchronizes GLIU transactions at the GLIU clock to the slower Local bus transaction at Local bus clock. 4.5.2 PCI Adapter The PCI Adapter translates PCI signals to a specific Local bus transaction that is attached to the GLA, while the PCI signals are connected directly to a compatible PCI device. It also translates the Local bus transactions to PCI transactions. 4.5.1 GeodeLink Adapter The GeodeLink Adapter (GLA) translates GeodeLink transactions to/from Local bus transactions. The GLA interfaces to a 64-bit GLIU (GeodeLink Interface Unit) and a 32-bit Local bus. The GLA supports in-bound memory and I/O requests which are converted by the PCI Adapter (PA) into PCI memory and I/O requests that target the USBC. It also supports in-bound MSR transactions to the MSRs. These are located “between” the GLA and PA. Lastly, there is a special MSR used to pass PCI configuration requests to the PA. The GLA supports out-bound memory requests only. I/O and MSR transactions from the USBC never occur. USBC PCI master requests are converted by the PA into Local bus master requests. These requests may consist of a simple 4-byte read or write. Alternatively, a PCI burst transaction of any length may be converted to an appropriate series of GLIU transactions by the GLA. Lastly, 4.5.3 USB Core The USB Core is a PCI-based implementation of the Universal Serial Bus (USB) v1.1 Specification utilizing the Open Host Controller Interface (OHCI) standard developed by Compaq, Microsoft, and National Semiconductor. The USB Core consists of the following three blocks: • Host Controller • USB Interface • PCI Interface The USB Core block diagram is shown in Figure 4-8. Embedded PCI Bus PCI Config PCI Interface PCI Slave PCI Master Host Controller PCI I/O Bus Master List Processor Frame Mgmnt USB Core Geode™ CS5535 4.5 Interrupts Data Buffer Root Hub Control USB Interface SIE Port 1 Clock Generator Port 2 USB Port 1 USB Port 2 Figure 4-8. USB Core Block Diagram www.national.com 94 Revision 0.8 4.5.4 Host Controller The USB host interacts with USB devices through the Host Controller. The host is responsible for: sal Serial Bus, which in turn is described by the Universal Serial Bus specification. OHCI allows multiple host controller vendors to design and sell host controllers with a common software interface, freeing them from the burden of writing and distributing software drivers. The design goal has been to balance the complexity of the hardware and software so that OHCI is more than the simplest possible host controller for USB yet not the most complex possible. • Detecting the attachment and removal of USB devices. • Managing control flow between the host and USB devices. • Managing data flow between the host and USB devices. The Host Controller has four USB states visible to the host controller driver via the operational registers: USBOPERATIONAL, USBRESET, USBSUSPEND, and USBRESUME. These states define the Host Controller responsibilities relating to USB signaling and bus states. The USB states are reflected in the HostControllerFunctionalState field of the HcControl register. The Host Controller may only perform a single state transition. During a remote wakeup event, the Host Controller may transition from USBSUSPEND to USBRESUME. The Host Controller interface registers are PCI memory mapped I/O. The functional state machine (FSM) is shown in Figure 4-9. • Collecting status and activity statistics. • Providing power to attached USB devices. The USB system software on the host manages interactions between USB devices and host-based device software. There are five areas of interactions between the USB system software and device software: 1) Device enumeration and configuration. 2) Isochronous data transfers. 3) Asynchronous data transfers. 4) Power management. 5) Device and bus management information. 4.5.5 USB Interface The USB Interface includes the integrated Root Hub with two external ports, Port 1 and Port 2, as well as the Serial Interface Engine (SIE) and USB clock generator. The interface combines responsibility for executing bus transactions requested by the Host Controller as well as the hub and port management specified by USB. Whenever possible, the USB system software uses existing host system interfaces to manage the above interactions. The OHCI specification for the Universal Serial Bus is a register-level description of a host controller for the Univer- USBRESET WRITE USBOPERATIONAL USBOPERATIONAL WRITE USBOPERATIONAL WRITE USBRESUME USBSUSPEND WRITE USBRESET WRITE USBRESET USBRESUME WRITE or REMOTE WAKEUP USBRESET WRITE USBSUSPEND HARDWARE RESET SOFTWARE RESET Figure 4-9. USB Host Controller FSM Revision 0.8 95 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USBC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 4.6 DIVERSE INTEGRATION LOGIC The Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL) connects a series of Local bus devices to the GeodeLink architecture. Figure 410 illustrates how the DIVIL (within the dashed lines) interfaces with the other devices of the Diverse Device. The main blocks of the DIVIL are: Address Decode, Standard MSRs, Local BARs, and Dataout Mux (DOM). RI GLIU Interface Local Bus Interface • Address Decode - Decodes the upper Local bus address bits to select a target slave. Most of the legacy devices have fixed addresses or are selectable between a small number of selectable I/O addresses. However, many of the functions are relocatable via a Local Base Address Register (LBAR); established via an MSR. Address Decode also detects special GLIU cycles, such as Shutdown, and takes appropriate action. DI DO RO GeodeLink Adapter Data Out RO Packet Arguments from MSR * 8254 & Port B Data In (2) 8259A & IRQ Map Slave Addr & Byte Enables Master Addr & Byte Enables Kybd Emu & Port A System Mgmt Bus Control Local Bus Handshake External I/O Req/Ack (2) UART & IR External I/O Chip Selects (2) 8237 & DMA Map Address LPC Bus Control Address Decode and Legacy Decode MSRs Address Hits External I/O RTC & CMOS RAM GPIO & ICF Standard MSRs External I/O MFGP Timers DIVIL Local BARs, Compares, and Miscellaneous Pwr Mgmnt NOR & NAND Flash Interfaces and Control *Data Out Mux not shown. External I/O Figure 4-10. Diverse Logic Block Diagram www.national.com 96 Revision 0.8 • Standard MSRs - Includes the Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs found in all GeodeLink Devices: Capabilities, Master Configuration, SMI Control, Error Control, Power Management, and Diagnostics. 4.6.1.1 Fixed Target Size I/O LBARs This discussion applies to the following LBARs: • Local BARs - Local Base Address Registers (LBARs) establish the location of non-legacy functions within the Diverse Device. The module also includes logic to compare the current bus cycle address to the LBAR to detect a hit. For the I/O LBARs, the I/O address space 000h-4FFh is off limits. No I/O LBAR is allowed to point to this space. • MSR 5140000Bh: SMB (MSR_LBAR_SMB) • MSR 51400008h: IRQ Mapper (MSR_LBAR_IRQ) • MSR 5140000Ch: GPIO and ICFs (MSR_LBAR_GPIO) • MSR 5140000Dh: MFGPTs (MSR_LBAR_MFGPT) • MSR 5140000Eh: ACPI (MSR_LBAR_ACPI) • MSR 5140000Fh: Power Management Support (MSR_LBAR_PMS) • Data Out Mux (DOM) - This mux is not explicitly illustrated. Each function above produces a single output to the DIVIL. The DIVIL DOM has a port for each of the functions and is responsible for selecting between them. The IO_MASK only applies to the upper bits [15:12] (see Figure 4-11). Normally, one would set all the mask bits (i.e., no mask on upper bits). One should only mask or clear bits if address wrapping or aliasing is desired. 4.6.1 LBARs and Comparators The LBARs are used to establish the address and hence, chip select location of all functions that do not have fixed legacy addresses. This block also has comparators to establish when a current bus cycle address hits an LBAR. A hit is passed to the address decode block and results in a chip select to the target device if there are no conflicts. The mask and base address values are established via an MSR. ADDR[15:12] I/O_MASK • Rule. When a mask bit is cleared, the associated bit in the base address must also be cleared. Otherwise, the compare will not be equal on these bits. This rule applies to both memory and I/O LBARs. The base size is fixed based on the target. For example, the GPIO takes 256 bytes of address space. Therefore, the base only applies to bits [15:8]. Base bits [7:0] are always cleared by the hardware. Therefore, the base is always forced by hardware to be on a boundary the size of the target. [15:12] Compare [15:n] BASE_ADDR Hit Notes: 1) The I/O mask is always 4 bits. 2) The I/O base address is variable ([15:n]). The value of “n” depends on the I/O space requirements of the target. For example, a device needing 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, or 256 bytes of I/O space has “n” = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, respectively. The value “n” for various functions is: MSR_LBAR_IRQ MSR_LBAR_GPIO MSR_LBAR_ACPI MSR_LBAR_FLASH_IO n=5 n=8 n=5 n=4 MSR_LBAR_SMB MSR_LBAR_MFGPT MSR_LBAR_PMS n=3 n=6 n=7 Figure 4-11. I/O Space LBAR - Fixed Target Size Revision 0.8 97 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Functional Description (Continued) 4.6.1.2 Variable Target Size I/O LBARs This discussion applies to the following LBARs: 4.6.1.3 Memory LBARs This discussion applies to the following LBARs: • MSR 51400010h: Flash Chip Select 0 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH0) with bit 34 = 0 (I/O mapped) • MSR 51400009h: KEL from USB Host Controller 1 (MSR_LBAR_KEL1) • MSR 51400011h: Flash Chip Select 1 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH1) with bit 34 = 0 (I/O mapped) • MSR 51400010h: Flash Chip Select 0 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH0) with bit 34 = 1 (memory mapped) • MSR 51400012h: Flash Chip Select 2 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH2) with bit 34 = 0 (I/O mapped) • MSR 51400011h: Flash Chip Select 1 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH1) with bit 34 = 1 (memory mapped) • MSR 51400013h: Flash Chip Select 3 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH3) with bit 34 = 0 (I/O mapped) • MSR 51400012h: Flash Chip Select 2 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH2) with bit 34 = 1 (memory mapped) Note: • MSR 51400013h: Flash Chip Select 3 (MSR_LBAR_FLSH3) with bit 34 = 1 (memory mapped) Flash Chip Selects [3:0] can be programmed for I/O or a memory space. See Section 4.6.1.3 "Memory LBARs". • MSR 5140000Ah: KEL from USB Host Controller 2 (MSR_LBAR_KEL2) The I/O LBAR works just like the Fixed style, except the size of the IO_MASK has been expanded to cover the entire address range (see Figure 4-12). In the Fixed style, the IO_MASK applies to bits [15:12] but for Variable style, the IO_MASK applies to bits [15:4]. If all bits are set, then the target size is 16 bytes and base address bits [15:4] determine the base. Base bits [3:0] are a “don't care” and are effectively forced to zero by the hardware. Thus, the smallest I/O target is 16 bytes. As the LSBs of IO_MASK are cleared, the “target space” expands. For example, assume a 64-byte device is desired in I/O space. The IO_MASK = FFCh, base address bits [15:6] are programmed to the desired base, and base address bits [5:4] are cleared (see Rule on page 97). ADDR[15:4] I/O_MASK Note: The Flash Chip Selects [3:0] can be programmed for an I/O space or a Memory space. For memory space, the LBAR works exactly like the Variable style (see Figure 4-13), except that clearing the LSBs of the MEM_MASK begins to make sense. For example, assume there is a 64 kB external ROM that is going to be connected to Flash Chip Select 0. Such a device needs address bits [15:0]. The MEM_MASK would normally be programmed to FFFF0h and base address bits [31:16] would be programmed to the desired base. The values in base address [15:12] would be cleared because the associated mask bits are cleared (see Rule on page 97). Lastly, the memory target can not be smaller than 4 kB. [15:4] Compare [15:4] BASE_ADDR Hit Figure 4-12. I/O Space LBAR - Variable Target Size ADDR[31:12] Note: MEM_MASK [31:12] Compare [31:12] BASE_ADDR Hit The memory mask is always 20 bits, which is equal to the number of memory base address bits. Figure 4-13. Memory Space LBAR www.national.com 98 Revision 0.8 4.6.1.4 Miscellaneous Block Special cycles are sent to the Miscellaneous block. They are decoded as given in Table 4-10. Note that the Halt special cycle depends on the value of the SPEC_CYC_MD bit in MSR_LEG_IO (MSR 51400014h[28]). 4.6.2 Standard MSRs This block contains the Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs and their associated logic. These standard MSRs are: Capabilities, Master Configuration, SMI Control, Error Control, Power Management, and Diagnostics. The Capabilities, Master Configuration, and Diagnostic MSRs are “passive” in that they contain values that have an effect elsewhere. The other MSRs have various “active” bits that are set and cleared via hardware/software interactions. Soft IRQ and Soft Reset MSRs are decoded within the Miscellaneous block. Each block in the Diverse Device generates an output to the DIVIL. The DIVIL DOM has a port for each of the functions and is responsible for selecting between them. Table 4-10. Special Cycle Decodes Cycle Type Address Function Write 00h Shutdown Action Send shutdown pulse to MSR_ERROR. Send shutdown pulse to MSR_SMI. If RESET_SHUT_EN (MSR 51400014h[31]) is high, send reset pulse to power management indicating shutdown reset. SPEC_CYC_MD (MSR 51400014h[28]) = 0 Write 01h Halt Send halt pulse to MSR_SMI. SPEC_CYC_MD (MSR 51400014h[28]) = 1 Write Read 02h Halt Send halt pulse to MSR_SMI. All other values x86 Special Discard with no side effects. All other values Not Defined Discard with no side effects. 00h Interrupt Ack Send cycle to PIC. GeodeLink Adapter generates back-to-back bus cycles. All other values Revision 0.8 Not Defined Return zero with no side effects. 99 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Functional Description (Continued) PROGRAMMABLE INTERVAL TIMER The Programmable Interval Timer (PIT) generates programmable time intervals from the divided clock of an external clock signal of a crystal oscillator. The PIT (8254) has six modes of operation. Figure 4-14 shows the block diagram of the PIT and its connectivity to the Local bus. Each counter has its output signal, whose shape is dependent upon the counter’s operational mode. The Control register loads the counters and controls the various modes of operation. This Control register controls the operation mode of the control logic (counter state machine), which in turn controls the counter, the high-order and low-order output latches. A status latch is also present in the 8254 and is used to output status information. The 8254 is comprised of three independently programmable counters. Each counter is 16 bits wide. A 14.318 MHz external clock signal (from a crystal oscillator or an external clock chip) is divided by 12 to generate 1.19 MHz, which is used as a clocking reference for these three counters. Features include: • Comprised of three 16-bit wide counters. Each counter is enabled or triggered with its GATE signal. Based on the counting mode, the counter concerned is activated by a high level or a low-to-high transition of its GATE signal. • Supports read-back and counter latch commands. • Supports six modes of counting. • Allows several counter latch commands in parallel with the read-back command. CPU GeodeLink Adapter Local Bus 14 MHz Control Register PIT Shadow Register Divide By 12 c Timer 0 c Geode™ CS5535 4.7 Timer 1 Timer 2 Figure 4-14. PIT Block Diagram www.national.com 100 Revision 0.8 4.7.1 Programming the 8254 PIT Programming of the 8254 PIT is initiated by first writing one control word via I/O Address 043h into the PIT Mode Control Word register. It is followed by writing one or two data bytes via the I/O address of the intended counter. If the Control register is loaded once, the counters may be overwritten with different values without accessing the Control register again. Table 4-11 lists the I/O addresses of the various registers. 0 of the Control Word register defines the binary or BCD counting format. The maximum loadable count value is not FFFFh (binary counting) or 9999 (BCD counting), but 0. On the next CLK pulse the counter concerned jumps to FFFFh or 9999. Once the value is decreased to 0 again, it outputs a signal according to the programmed mode. Therefore, the value 0 corresponds to 2^16 for binary counting and 10^4 for BCD counting. Read from the Counters There are three options for reading a counter in the 8254 PIT: Table 4-11. 8254 PIT Register Ports I/O Address Register Access Type 1) Counter Latch command 040h Counter 0 Read/ Write 2) Read-back (read-status) command 041h Counter 1 Read / Write 3) Direct Read 042h Counter 2 Read / Write 043h Control Word Write To read a counter, the third option (Direct Read) should not be used. The Counter Latch command or Read-back command should be used to transfer the current state of the counter into its output latches. One or two successive read counter instructions for the port address of the counter concerned reads these latches. If only the low-order or highorder byte was written when the counter was loaded with the initial counting value, then read the current counting value of the initially written byte by a single read counter instruction. If both the low-order and high-order counter bytes are written previously, then to read the current counter value, two read counter instructions are needed. The 8254 PIT returns the low-order byte of the 16-bit counter with the first read counter instruction, and then the high-order byte with the second read counter instruction. If the content of the counter has been transferred once by a counter latch command into the output latches, then this value is held there until the CPU executes one or two counter read instructions, or until the corresponding counter is reprogrammed. Successive counter latch commands are ignored if the output latches haven’t been read before. Figure 4-15 shows the format of the control word for the counter latch command. The Control register in the 8254 PIT is write-only, but certain control information can be determined by the readback (read-status) command. 4.7.1.1 Write to the Counters To load a counter with new values, a control word needs to output that defines the intended counter, number and type of bytes to write, the counting mode and the counting format. Bits [5:4] of the Control Word register (see Section 5.8.2.7 on page 329) indicate whether low-order or highorder or both are going to be written. If low-order or highorder counter byte only is specified to be written, then only that byte can be read during a read access. According to bits [5:4] of the Control Word register, one needs to write either the low-order or the high-order or both into the counter after passing the control word. If bits [5:4] of the Control Word register is 11, then a low-order byte needs to be written first, followed by a high-order byte. For small counting values or counting values that are multiples of 256, it is sufficient to pass the low-order or high-order counter byte. Bits [3:1] of the Control Word register define the counting mode of the counter selected by bits [5:4]. Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 0 x x x x Bits [7:6] = Select counter to latch Figure 4-15. PIT Counter Latch Command Format Revision 0.8 101 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIT Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 PIT Functional Description (Continued) The read-back command present in the 8254 PIT is used to determine the current counter value and its status like counting format, the counting mode, the low-order or highorder byte or both being read or written, and the status of its output. Figure 4-16 shows the format of the read-back command. The two most significant bits define the readback command with their value 11b. CT and ST indicate that the value and the status of the counter are to be determined respectively. The C0-C2 bits define the counter whose value or status is to be determined. With the readback command, several counter latch commands can be issued in parallel by indicating several counters simultaneously with the C0-C2 bits. The 8254 then behaves as if several counter latch commands have been issued individually, and transfers the individual count values into the output latches of each counter. All successive counter latch commands, whether issued by its own counter or a next read-back command, are ignored if the counter concerned has not been read by counter read instructions. To determine the programmed mode of a particular counter, set CT = 1 and ST = 0. The read-back command latches the current mode and provides a status byte (see Figure 4-17) at the port address of the counter concerned. This status byte is fetched by a counter read instruction. The PIN bit indicates the current status of the concerned counter’s output pin. If PIN = 1, then the counter output is at logic 1, else at logic 0. Bit 0 shows whether the last written counter value has already been transferred to the counter. Not before zero = 0 is it meaningful to read back the counter value. 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 1 CT ST C2 C1 C0 x CT: Determine count value of selected counter. 0 = Determine count value. 1 = Do not determine count value. ST: Determine status of selected counter. 0 = Determine count status. 1 = Do not determine count status. C2, C1, C0: Counter selection. 0 = Counter not selected. 1 = Counter selected. Figure 4-16. PIT Read-Back Command Format 7 6 PIN LOAD 5 4 3 LH 2 1 MODE 0 BCD PIN: Status of counter output pin: 0 = Output pin low. 1 = Output pin high. LOAD: Is counter loaded with a start value? 0 = Counter loaded, count value can be read. 1 = Counter not yet loaded, count value cannot be read. LH: Corresponds to bits [5:4] of the Control Word register. MODE: Corresponds to bits [3:1] of the Control Word register. BCD: Corresponds to bit 0 of the Control Word register. Figure 4-17. PIT Status Byte Format www.national.com 102 Revision 0.8 PROGRAMMABLE INTERRUPT CONTROL The Programmable Interrupt Control subsystem (PIC) is illustrated in Figure 4-18. The major modules are the Mapper and Masks (MM), Extended PIC (XPIC), and Legacy 8259A PIC (LPIC). 4.8.1 Mapper and Masks This block maps and masks up to 62 interrupt sources to 60 discrete Extended PIC (XPIC) inputs. The sources are organized into four groups: Features • Two x86 compatible 8259As • 15-Level Priority Controller • Programmable Interrupt Modes • Individual Edge/Level Controls • Complete 8259A state read back via shadow registers • Mapper routes 62 inputs to 15 legacy interrupts and one Asynchronous System Management Interrupt (ASMI) • All 62 inputs individually maskable and status readable (MSRs 51400020h-51400027h or PIC I/O Offsets 00h1Ch, see Section 5.9.1 on page 333) LPC Input 0 LPC Input 1 LPC Input 3 LPC Input 4 : LPC Input 15 Unrestricted Y Input 0 Unrestricted Y Input 1 Unrestricted Y Input 2 Unrestricted Y Input 3 : Unrestricted Y Input 15 Unrestricted Z Input 0 Unrestricted Z Input 1 Unrestricted Z Input 2 Unrestricted Z Input 3 : Unrestricted Z Input 15 Note: Mapper and Masks (MM) 15 Primary pre-defined inputs (see Table 4-12) 2) 15 LPC inputs pre-defined (see Table 4-12) 3) 16 Unrestricted Y inputs (see Table 4-13) 4) 16 Unrestricted Z inputs (see Table 4-14) The outputs are organized into 16 groups of four signals each, except groups 0 and 2; they have two signals each. Each group is called an Interrupt Group (IG). Each predefined input is mapped to a specific IG. Each unrestricted input can be mapped to any IG except IG0. Regardless of mapping, any interrupt source can be masked to prevent participation in the interrupt process. Once the input to output map is established along with the mask values, signal flow from input to output is always completely combinational. • Individual Request Mask Capability Primary Input 0 Primary Input 1 Primary Input 3 Primary Input 4 : Primary Input 15 1) IG0 (Note) IRQ0 IG1 IRQ1 IG2 (Note) (IRQ2) IG3 IRQ3 IG4 IRQ4 IG5 IRQ5 IG6 IRQ6 IG7 IG8 Extended PIC (XPIC) IRQ7 IRQ8 IG9 IRQ9 IG10 IRQ10 IG11 IRQ11 IG12 IRQ12 IG13 IRQ13 IG14 IRQ14 IG15 IRQ15 ASMI Legacy 8259A PICs (LPIC) INTR The outputs are organized into 16 groups of four signals each, except IG0 and IG2; they have two signals each. Figure 4-18. PIC Subsystem Revision 0.8 103 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Functional Description (Continued) Table 4-12. IRQ Map - Primary and LPC Input # Primary Sources LPC Sources Legacy IRQ Input 0 8254 Timer IRQ LPC IRQ0 8254 Timer Input 1 KEL IRQ1 LPC IRQ1 Keyboard N/A None (Slave Controller) None None Input 3 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ3 UART Input 4 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ4 UART Input 5 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ5 Parallel Port 2 Input 6 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ6 Floppy Input 7 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ7 Parallel Port1 Input 8 RTC Periodic IRQ LPC IRQ8 RTC Input 9 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ9 Undefined Input 10 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ10 Undefined Input 11 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ11 Undefined Input 12 KEL IRQ12 LPC IRQ12 Mouse Input 13 Float Point Error IRQ LPC IRQ13 FPU Input 14 Primary IDE Channel IRQ LPC IRQ14 Primary IDE Input 15 Reserved - Grounded LPC IRQ15 Secondary IDE Table 4-13. IRQ Map - Unrestricted Sources Y Unrestricted Y Source Input 0 Software Generated IRQ Input 1 USB1 IRQ Input 2 USB2 IRQ Input 3 RTC Alarm Comment This is a pulse from the RTC. Must use edge triggered interrupt, that is, level interrupt will not work. Input 4 Audio IRQ OR of all audio codec interrupts and master interrupts. Input 5 Power Management SCI OR of all possible power management System Control Interrupts (SCIs). Input 6 NAND Flash Ready Ready to perform NAND write or read. Input 7 NAND Flash Distraction NOR access occurred during NAND operation causing a NAND abort or distraction. Input 8 Reserved, Grounded Input 9 Reserved, Grounded Input 10 Reserved, Grounded Input 11 Reserved, Grounded Input 12 SMB Controller IRQ Input 13 KEL Emulation IRQ Input 14 UART 1 IRQ Input 15 UART 2 IRQ www.national.com 104 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Functional Description (Continued) Table 4-14. IRQ Map - Unrestricted Sources Z Unrestricted Z Source Comment Input 0 MFGPT_Comp_1A OR of MFGPT_Comp_1 0 and 4. Input 1 MFGPT_Comp_1B OR of MFGPT_Comp_1 1 and 5. Input 2 MFGPT_Comp_1C OR of MFGPT_Comp_1 2 and 6. Input 3 MFGPT_Comp_1D OR of MFGPT_Comp_1 3 and 7. Input 4 MFGPT_Comp_2A OR of MFGPT_Comp_2 0 and 4. Input 5 MFGPT_Comp_2B OR of MFGPT_Comp_2 1 and 5. Input 6 MFGPT_Comp_2C OR of MFGPT_Comp_2 2 and 6. Input 7 MFGPT_Comp_2D OR of MFGPT_Comp_2 3 and 7. Input 8 GPIO Interrupt 0 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. Input 9 GPIO Interrupt 1 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. Input 10 GPIO Interrupt 2 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. Input 11 GPIO Interrupt 3 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. Input 12 GPIO Interrupt 4 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. Input 13 GPIO Interrupt 5 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. Input 14 GPIO Interrupt 6 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. Input 15 GPIO Interrupt 7 From GPIO Interrupt/PME Mapper. 4.8.2 Extended PIC (XPIC) For each of 16 input IGs of four signals each (except IG0 and IG2 with two signals each), XPIC provides a four input “OR”. Thus, 16 outputs are formed. A software readable XPIC Input Request Register (XIRR) is available to read the status of the 64 inputs. Outputs [0:1] and [3:15] are connected directly to the corresponding inputs on LPIC. Output 2 can be used as an ASMI. 2) Determine the input request status via an Interrupt Request Register (IRR). 3) Generate an interrupt request (INTR) to the processor when any of the unmasked requests are asserted. 4) Provide an interrupt vector to the processor as part of an interrupt acknowledge operation based on request priorities. 4.8.3 Legacy PIC (LPIC) The LPIC consists of two 8259A compatible Programmable Interrupt Controllers (PICs) connected in Cascade mode through interrupt signal two (see Figure 4-19). LPIC contains mechanisms to: 5) Determine which requests are acknowledged but not yet fully serviced, via an In-Service Register (ISR). 1) In addition to the above 8259A features, there are two registers to control edge/level mode for each of the interrupt inputs as well as shadow registers to obtain the values of legacy 8259A registers that have not been historically readable. Mask any of the 15 inputs via an Interrupt Mask Register (IMR). D0-D7 INT D0-D7 INTA INT 8259A Slave 8259A Master IR0 IR1 IR2 IR3 IR4 IR5 IR6 IR7 IR0 IR1 IR2 IR3 IR4 IR5 IR6 IR7 IRQ8 Note: INTA IRQ10 IRQ12 IRQ14 IRQ9 IRQ11 IRQ13 IRQ15 IRQ0 IRQ2 IRQ4 IRQ6 IRQ1 IRQ3 IRQ5 IRQ7 Cascading the 8259A PICs. The INT output of the slave is connected to the IRQ2 input of the master. Figure 4-19. Cascading 8259As for LPIC Revision 0.8 105 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Functional Description (Continued) As illustrated in Figure 4-20, the blocks that make up the 8259A PIC are: registers is eight bits wide, where every bit corresponds to one of the IR0-IR7 input lines. • Read/Write Control Logic Priority Resolver The priority resolver block manages the hardware requests according to their priority. As several bits may be set in the IRR simultaneously, the priority encoder passes only the highest priority bit; ordered in priority 0 through 7 (0 being the highest). • Interrupt Request Register (IRR) • In-Service Register (ISR) • Interrupt Mask Register (IMR) • Priority Resolver Interrupt Sequence The INT output goes directly to the CPU interrupt input. When an INT signal is activated, the CPU responds with an Interrupt Acknowledge access that is translated to two pulses on the INTA input of the PIC. At the first INTA pulse the highest priority IRR bit is loaded into the corresponding ISR bit, and that IRR bit is reset. The second INTA pulse instructs the PIC to present the 8-bit vector of the interrupt handler onto the data bus. • Interrupt Sequence • Data Bus Buffer • Cascade Buffer/Comparator Read/Write Control Logic The function of this block is to accept commands from the CPU. It contains the four Initialization Command Word registers, ICW1-ICW4, and three Operation Command Word registers, OCW1-OCW3, that can be programmed to operate in various modes. Data Bus Buffer Control words and status information are transferred through the data bus buffer. IRR, ISR, and IMR Three registers are available to handle interrupts in the PIC: Interrupt Request Register (IRR), In-Service Register (ISR), and Interrupt Mask Register (IMR). Each of the three Cascade Buffer/Comparator This functional block stores and compares the IDs of the PICs. INTA D7-D0 Data Bus Buffer INT Control Logic RD WR A0 Read/ Write Logic In-Service Register (ISR) CS Priority Resolver Interrupt Request Register (IRR) IR0 IR1 IR2 IR3 IR4 IR5 IR6 IR7 CAS0 CAS1 CAS2 Cascade Buffer/ Comparator Interrupt Mask Register (IMR) SP/EN Internal Bus Figure 4-20. PIC 8259A Block Diagram www.national.com 106 Revision 0.8 4.8.3.1 Interrupt Sequence There are three registers in the PIC that control the interrupt requests: Interrupt Request Register (IRR), Interrupt Service Register (ISR), and Interrupt Mask Register (IMR). The eight interrupt lines IR0-IR7 are connected to the IRR. Table 4-15. 8259A PIC I/O Addresses and I/O Data The peripheral that requests an interrupt raises the signal at the corresponding IR0-IR7 inputs, which sets the corresponding bit in the IRR. Several peripheral devices can issue interrupt requests at the same time. The PIC gates these requests under the Interrupt Mask register and under the priority of any interrupt service routine already entered (using the ISR), and activates the PIC’s output INTR to the CPU. The CPU acknowledges the INTR, generating two INTA pulses. On the first, the priority encoder transfers (clears) the highest-priority enabled bit in the IRR to the corresponding bit in the ISR (sets). Also, the two PICs use their Cascade connections to decide which one will be selected to respond further. On the second INTA pulse, the selected PIC presents the 8-bit pointer (called as vector data) onto the data bus. The CPU reads this pointer as the number of the interrupt handler to call. Write Data 020h 0A0h IRR ICW1 ISR OCW2 0A1h IMR ICW2 ICW3 ICW4 OCW1 (IMR) 4.8.3.2 Interrupt Modes Fully Nested Mode The interrupt requests are ordered in priority from 0 through 7. The highest priority request is processed and its vector data placed on the bus. The corresponding ISR bit is set until the trailing edge of the last INTA. While the ISR bit is set, all other interrupts of the same or lower priority are inhibited, while higher levels will be acknowledged only if the CPU’s internal interrupt enable flip-flop has been re-enabled through software. Initialization Command Word (ICW): The PIC is first initialized by four ICWs (ICW1-ICW4) before any normal operation begins. The sequence is started by writing Initialization Command Word 1 (CW1). After ICW1 has been written, the controller expects the next writes to follow in the sequence ICW2, ICW3, and ICW4 if it is needed. End of Interrupt (EOI) Mode The ISR bit can be reset by a command word that must be issued to the PIC before returning from a service routine. EOI must be issued twice if in cascade mode, once for the master and once for the slave. Operation Command Word (OCW): Using these three OCWs (OCW1-OCW3), the PIC is instructed to operate in various interrupt modes. These registers can be written after the initialization above. There are two forms of EOI: Specific and Non-Specific. When a non-specific EOI is issued, the PIC automatically resets the ISR bit corresponding to the highest priority level in service. A non-specific EOI can be issued with OCW2 (EOI = 1, SL = 0, R = 0). ICWs and OCWs must be programmed before operation begins. Since both the PICs are cascaded, the ICW3 of the master PIC should be programmed with the value 04h, indicating that the IRQ2 input of the master PIC is connected to the INT output of the slave PIC, rather than the I/O device. This is part of the system initialization code. Also, ICW3 of the slave PIC should be programmed with the value 02h (slave ID) as that corresponds to the input on the master PIC. A specific EOI is issued when a mode is used that may disturb the fully nested structure and the PIC might not be able to determine the last interrupt level acknowledged. A specific EOI can be issued with OCW2 (EOI = 1, SL = 1, R = 0, and L0-L2 is the binary level of the ISR bit to be reset). Automatic End of Interrupt (AEOI) Mode The PIC automatically performs a non-specific EOI at the trailing edge of the last INTA pulse. This mode is not supported in the CS5535. For accessing the PIC’s registers, two ports are available for the master and slave. Table 4-15 lists the addresses and read/write data for these registers. Revision 0.8 Read Data 021h Initialization and Programming Two types of command words are generated by the CPU to program the PIC: 2) I/O Address IRQ8-IRQ15 (Slave) OCW3 Software writes a command (EOI) at the end of the interrupt subroutine, which clears the appropriate ISR bit. 1) I/O Address IRQ0-IRQ7 (Master) 107 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 PIC Functional Description (Continued) Automatic Rotation Mode In cases where a number of IRQs have equal priority, the device that has been serviced, will receive the lowest priority. So now that device, if requesting another interrupt, must wait until the other seven devices have been serviced. Assume LPIC is initialized as follows: ;Set Initialization Command Words (ICWs) ;All values are in hex ;PIC #1 (Master) out 20, 11 ; ICW1 - Edge, Master, ICW4 needed out 21, 8 ; ICW2 - Interrupt vector table offset is 8 out 21, 4 ; ICW3 - Master level 2 out 21, 1 ; ICW4 - Master, 8086 mode out 21, ff ; mask all IRQs ;PIC #2 (Slave) out a0, 11 ; ICW1 - Edge, Slave ICW4 needed out a1, 70 ; ICW2 - Interrupt vector table offset 70 out a1, 2 ; ICW3 - Slave Level 2 out a1, 1 ; ICW4 - Slave, 8086 mode out a1, ff ; mask all IRQs ;Use Operation Control Words (OCWs) during interrupt service There are two ways to accomplish automatic rotation using OCW2: • Rotation on the non-specific EOI command (R = 1, SL = 0, EOI = 1). • Rotation in automatic EOI mode, which is set by (R = 1, SL = 0, EOI = 0) and cleared by (R = 0, SL = 0, EOI = 0). Specific Rotation Mode Priorities can be changed by programming the bottom priority, which fixes all other priorities. For example, if IR5 is programmed as the bottom priority device, then IR6 will have the highest priority. The command is issued to OCW2 (R = 1, SL = 1, and L0-L2 is the binary priority level code of the bottom priority device). Thus, the LPIC 8259As all start in edge mode. This is followed by writes to the individual edge level registers at 4D0h (interrupts 0-7) and 4D1h (interrupts 8-15) to establish level mode for all level inputs. Note that IRQ0 and IRQ2 can not be put in level mode. Writing 0FFh to 4D0h will read back 0FAh. Special Mask Mode In this mode, when a mask bit is set in OCW1, it inhibits further interrupts at that level and enables interrupts from all other levels (lower as well as higher) that are not masked. The special mask mode is set (SSMM = 1, SMM = 1) and cleared (SSMM = 1, SMM = 0) by OCW3. Scheduled Interrupts Approach The following set of events would be typical. Assume the processor has maskable interrupts enabled: 4.8.4 PIC Subsystem Operation From reset, the PIC subsystem comes up in legacy mode. The “Primary” mapper and mask inputs connect directly to LPIC and all other interrupt sources are masked off. While there are a number of different ways to use the PIC Subsystem, the discussions that follow assume a mix of “level” and “edge” interrupt inputs. The first discussion assumes the OS schedules the “work” of the interrupt service after a brief interrupt service routine. The second discussion assumes the OS performs the “work” real-time in the interrupt service routine. Assume the mapper and masks have been established as desired. “Level” interrupts can be shared, but “edge” interrupts cannot. This means an XPIC “level” output can be driven by up to four mapper and masks inputs. Further, this means an XPIC “edge” output can only be driven by one mapper and mask input. Assume all edge interrupts generate a low-to-high edge to indicate an interrupt. Assume active low interrupts are inverted outside the PIC subsystem as needed; that is, all MM inputs are active high. An external PCI bus uses active low interrupts that can be shared in an open-collector wired “OR” fashion. This is OK. On-chip, the interrupt sense is inverted. Lastly, note that for the edge interrupts the edge must remain high until the interrupt acknowledge action. www.national.com 108 1) One or more interrupts are generated in the system. These set the associated bits in the LPIC Interrupt Request Register (IRR). 2) The maskable interrupt signal (INTR) is asserted by the LPIC and interrupts the processor. INTR is an active high level. 3) The processor generates an interrupt acknowledge bus cycle that flows through the GeodeLink system as a single BIZZARO packet. When it reaches the Diverse Logic, it is converted to the two cycle interrupt acknowledge sequence expected by the LPIC. 4) The acknowledge operation returns an interrupt vector to the processor that is used to call the appropriate interrupt service routine. Processor interrupts are now disabled at the processor. 5) The acknowledge operation also selects the highest priority interrupt from the IRR and uses it to set one bit in the LPIC Interrupt Service Register (ISR). Each acknowledge operation always sets a single ISR bit. Revision 0.8 6) The acknowledge operation generally de-asserts INTR if there are no higher priority interrupts. However, it is possible that another interrupt is generated in the system anytime after the acknowledge. Any new interrupts will appear in the IRR. If they are higher priority than the current interrupt, then the INTR is reasserted. Since interrupts are disabled at the processor, INTR remaining high or going high during the interrupt service routine has no effect until interrupts are explicitly enabled again at the processor by the interrupt service routine or implicitly enabled when a return-from-interrupt is executed. 7) The interrupt service routine masks off the interrupt in the LPIC Interrupt Mask Register (IMR). The interrupt service routine interacts with the OS to schedule calls to the drivers associated with the interrupt. If level, one or more drivers could be associated. If edge, only one driver could be associated. The service executes a return-from-interrupt. 8) The OS calls the drivers associated with the interrupt as scheduled. Each driver checks its associated device to determine service needs. If no “need”, the driver returns to the OS without any action. If “need”, the driver performs the interrupt action, clears the interrupt source, and returns to the OS. When all the scheduled drivers have been called, the OS un-masks the interrupt at LPIC. Note that the individual drivers do not directly interact with LPIC. 10) The interrupt service routine disables interrupts at the processor and prepares to return to a lower priority service routine or the initially interrupted process. It writes an end-of-interrupt (EOI) command (020h) to the LPIC OCW2 register. This clears the highest priority ISR bit. One EOI always clears one ISR bit. The service routine executes a return-from-interrupt that enables interrupts again at the processor. 11) It is possible for INTR to assert from the same interrupt as soon as EOI is written. The initial interrupt acknowledge action copies the bit to the ISR. For edge mode, the initial interrupt acknowledge action also clears the bit in the IRR. For level, IRR always reflects the level of the signal on the interrupt port. After the interrupt acknowledge for edge mode, another edge could set the bit in the IRR before the EOI. If in level mode, another shared interrupt could be keeping the input high or potentially the initial interrupt has occurred again, since the driver cleared the source but before the EOI. At any rate, if IRR is high at EOI, INTR will immediately assert again. Hence, the need to disable interrupts at the processor in step 10 above before writing the EOI. 12) Eventually, all system events are serviced and control returns to the originally interrupted program. Note that the above procedure did not use the Interrupt Mask Register (IMR), but variations on the above could have. Lastly note, as in the first discussion, drivers do not directly interact with the LPIC. Note in the above procedure that there is not a need to handle “level” and “edge” types separately as long as “edge” types are not shared. Real-Time Interrupts Approach The following discussion assumes the “work” associated with the interrupt is performed in the interrupt service routine. The setup and steps 1 through 6 are the same: 7) If there is only one driver associated with the interrupt, it is called at this point. If more than one driver (shared), then they could be called in order to determine “need”. Alternately, the XIRR could be read to directly identify the source. 8) Depending on the event being serviced and the OS policies, the processor will enable interrupts again at some point. Potentially, this will generate another higher priority interrupt causing the current service routine to nest with another interrupt acknowledge cycle. For a nest operation, an additional bit will be set in the ISR. 9) Eventually, the highest priority service routine is running and INTR is de-asserted. The service calls the driver(s) associated with the interrupt. The driver completes the interrupt “work”, clears the interrupt at its system source, and returns to the interrupt service routine. Revision 0.8 109 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 4.9 KEYBOARD EMULATION LOGIC The Keyboard Emulation Logic (KEL) provides a virtual 8042 keyboard controller interface that is used to map nonlegacy keyboard and mouse sources to this traditional interface. For example, Universal Serial Bus (USB) sources are “connected” to this interface via System Management Mode (SMM) software. It also allows mixed environments with one LPC legacy device and multiple new (USB) devices. It produces IRQ and ASMI outputs. • Produces IRQ and ASMI outputs. • Employs a clock control logic for power management purposes. • No USB controller required for KEL to operate. 4.9.1 Keyboard Emulation and Port A The Keyboard Emulation Logic (KEL) with Port A is illustrated in Figure 4-21. Strictly speaking, these are separate functions. However, since they both effect the FA20# (Force processor Address bit 20 to zero when low), the two functions are implemented together. The Keyboard Emulation Logic is the most complex and is discussed first. Features • Provides a virtual 8042 keyboard controller interface. • Allows mixed environments. 14 MHz Reset Local Bus Clock USB1_SOF USB2_SOF 14 MHz to 1 kHz IRQ 1 (to PIC Subsystem) IRQ 12 (to PIC Subsystem) EmulationInterrupt ASMI EmulationEnable SnoopEnable FA20# INIT Keyboard A20 Keyboard INIT Port A A20 Port A 1 kHz Clock LPC_IRQ1 LPC_IRQ12 KEL X Control HCE Control * Port A Enable Keyboard Emulator Logic (KEL) Port A Write & Read Port 060h and Port 064h Write HCE Input * Port 060h Read HCE Output * Port 064h Read * * HCE Status * 32 32 8 8 * Read-Back Multiplexer is not shown IN OUT OUT Local Bus Data IN Local Bus Data Figure 4-21. KEL Block Diagram www.national.com 110 Revision 0.8 4.9.2 Keyboard Emulation Overview The purpose of the KEL is to model the legacy 8042 keyboard/mouse controller interfaced via legacy I/O Addresses 060h and 064h (also known as Ports 60 and 64). This hardware and supporting processor System Management Mode (SMM) software are designed to support systems that do not have a true PS/2-compatible keyboard and/or mouse interface, but those that have alternative devices performing the equivalent function. Generally, the alternative device is a keyboard or mouse off a USB (Universal Serial Bus) port, but it need not be. Due to the origins of the hardware to be explained shortly, this discussion generally assumes a USB alternative device, but this is not a requirement from a hardware perspective. The following sub-sections use the term “alternate device interrupt”. This is an ASMI or IRQ as appropriate for the device; for example the USB can generate either an ASMI or IRQ. The KEL generates a separate ASMI or IRQ. 4.9.3 Theory - Keyboard / Mouse Input When data is received from the alternative device, the emulation code is notified with an alternate device interrupt and translates the keyboard/mouse data into an equivalent PS/2-compatible sequence for presentation to the application software. For each byte of PS/2-compatible data that is to be presented to the applications software, the emulation code writes to the HCE_Output register. The emulation code then sets the appropriate bits in the HCE_Status register (normally, OutputFull is set for keyboard data and OutputFull plus AuxOutputFull for mouse data). If keyboard/mouse interrupts are enabled, setting the HCE_Status register bits causes the generation of an IRQ1 for keyboard data and IRQ12 for mouse data. The emulation code then exits and waits for the next alternate device interrupt. The KEL closely models the keyboard emulation hardware detailed in the USB OpenHost Controller Interface specification (OHCI). It is specifically designed to be software compatible with this model. In the USB model, it is part of the USB “Host Controller”, but is logically separate from it. The discussion and description that follows is taken from the OHCI specification, but with modifications to reflect the Geode CS5535 specific implementation. When the host CPU exits from SMM, it can service the pending IRQ1/IRQ12. This normally results in a read from I/O Address 060h. When I/O Address 060h is read, the KEL intercepts the access and returns the current contents of HCE_Output. The KEL also clears the OutputFull bit in HCE_Status and de-asserts IRQ1/IRQ12. To support applications and drivers in non-USB-aware environments (e.g., DOS), a peripheral subsystem needs to provide some hardware support for the emulation of a PS/2 keyboard and/or mouse by their USB equivalents (alternative devices). For OHCI, this emulation support is provided by a set of registers that are controlled by code running in SMM. Working in conjunction, this hardware and software produces approximately the same behavior-toapplication code as would be produced by a PS/2-compatible keyboard and/or mouse interface. If the emulation software has multiple characters to send to the application software, it sets the CharacterPending bit in the HCE_Control register. This causes the KEL to generate an ASMI at the beginning of the next frame a time after the application read from I/O Address 060h (HCE_Output.). When data is received from the alternative device, the emulation code is notified and becomes responsible for translating the alternative device keyboard/mouse data into a data sequence that is equivalent to what would be produced by a PS/2-compatible keyboard/mouse interface. The translated data is made available to the system through the legacy keyboard interface I/O Addresses 060h and 064h. Likewise, when data/control is to be sent to the alternative device (as indicated by the system writing to the legacy keyboard interface), the emulation code is notified and becomes responsible for translating the information into appropriate data to be sent to the alternative device. 4.9.4 Theory - Keyboard Output Keyboard output is indicated by application software writing data to either I/O Address 060h or 064h. Upon a write to either address, the KEL captures the data in the HCE_Input register and, except in the case of a FA20# (Force processor Address bit 20 to zero when low) sequence, updates the HCE_Status register’s InputFull and CmdData bits. When the InputFull bit is set, a KEL ASMI is generated at the beginning of the next frame. Upon receipt of the KEL ASMI, the emulation software reads HCE_Control and HCE_Status to determine the cause of the emulation interrupt and performs the operation indicated by the data. Generally, this means putting out data to the alternate device. On the PS/2 keyboard/mouse interface, a read of I/O Address 060h returns the current contents of the keyboard output buffer; a read of I/O Address 064h returns the contents of the keyboard status register. An I/O write to I/O Addresses 060h and 064h puts data into the keyboard input buffer (data is being input into the keyboard subsystem). When emulation is enabled, reads and writes of I/O Addresses 060h and 064h are captured in the KEL HceOutput, HceStatus, and/or HceInput operational registers. 4.9.5 Emulation Events Emulation Events (EEs) are caused by reads and writes of the emulation registers. EEs generated by the emulation hardware are steered by the KEL to either an ASMI or an Emulation Interrupt. Steering is determined by the EE Routing (EER) bit of the Keyboard Emulation Logic Control Register (KELX_CTL) (MSR 5140001Fh[1]). Historically, EEs for data coming from the keyboard/mouse are generated on USB frame boundaries. The KEL is independent of the USB logic, but uses USB frame boundaries for backward compatibility. Alternately, an independent 1 The KEL described here supports a mixed environment in which either the keyboard or mouse is implemented as an alternative device and the other device is attached to a standard PS/2 interface. Revision 0.8 111 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 KEL Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 KEL Functional Description (Continued) ms counter can be used (MSR 5140001Fh[3:2]). At the beginning of each frame, the conditions that define asynchronous EEs are checked and, if an EE condition exists, the EE is signaled to the host. This has the effect of reducing the number of EEs that are generated for legacy input to no more than 1,000 per second. The number of emulation interrupts is limited because the maximum rate of data delivery to an application cannot be more than 1,000 bytes per second. A benefit of this rule is that, for normal keyboard and mouse operations, only one EE is required for each data byte sent to the application. Additionally, delay of the EE until the next Start of Frame causes data persistence for keyboard input data that is equivalent to that provided by an 8042. A20Sequence will set the KEL_INIT_ASMI_FLAG if enabled. If a write to Port A changes the value of bit 1, the KEL sets the PORTA_A20_ASMI_FLAG if enabled in the DIVIL. If bit 0 of Port A is written to a 1, KEL sets the PORTA_INIT_ASMI_FLAG if enabled in the DIVIL. It also sets Port A to the value 2; that is, only bit 1 is high. The A20State bit in HCE_Control (KEL Memory Offset 100h[8]) is not effected. The rate of application software reading of I/O Address 060h is dependent on the alternate device interrupt rate or SOFEVENT (Start of Frame Event, MSR 5140001Fh[3:2]) when the CharacterPending bit is used in the HCE_Control register (KEL Memory Offset 100h[2]). There is one KEL EE per application software read of I/O Address 060h when CharacterPending is set. 4.9.6 Theory - KEL EEs There are three EEs that produce the signal KEL ASMI. These three EEs are: Character Pending, Input Full, and External IRQ. An A20 sequence is a possible Input Full EE. The A20Sequence bit in the HCE_Control register (KEL Memory Offset 100h[5]) will be set in this case. The signal KEL ASMI is an active high pulse one Local bus clock in width and sent to the Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL). This signal is only asserted when the EmulationEnable bit in HCE_Control is high (KEL Memory Offset 100h[0] = 1), that is, emulation is enabled. For an EE, KEL also optionally produces an Emulation IRQ (KEL_EMU_IRQ). This signal is a level and is only asserted when the EE Routing (EER) bit in MSR_KELX_CTL (MSR 5140001Fh[1]) is low. De-asserting KEL_EMU_IRQ requires clearing the appropriate bit in the HCE_Control or KEL HCE_Status registers (KEL Memory Offset 100h and 10Ch). For the keyboard A20Sequence, KEL sets KEL_A20_ASMI_FLAG if enabled in the DIVIL. The rate of application software writing of I/O Addresses 060h and 064h is no greater than SOFEVENT. Generally, there is one KEL EE per application write to I/O Address 060h. SOFEVENT is used to emulate normal delays associated with a real 8042 controller and PS/2 device. Its source is established via MSR 5140001Fh[3:2]. Its value is 1 ms frame interval. 4.9.7 Theory - Mixed Environment A mixed environment is one in which an alternate device and a PS/2 device are supported simultaneously (e.g., a USB keyboard and a PS/2 mouse). The mixed environment is supported by allowing the emulation software to control the PS/2 interface. Control of this interface includes capturing I/O accesses to I/O Addresses 060h and 064h and also includes capture of interrupts from the PS/2 keyboard controller off the LPC. IRQ1 and IRQ12 from the LPC keyboard controller are routed through the KEL. When ExternalIRQEn in HCE_Control (KEL Memory Offset 100h[4]) is set, IRQ1 and IRQ12 from the legacy keyboard controller are blocked at the KEL and an ASMI is generated instead. This allows the emulation software to capture data coming from the legacy controller and presents it to the application through the emulated interface. The behavior of IRQ1 and IRQ12 with respect to ExternalIRQEn and IRQEN bits is summarized in Table 4-16. the Keyboard INIT and A20 are generated as appropriate when emulation is enabled or snoop is enabled in MSR_KELX_CTL. KEL ASMI is generated as appropriate when emulation is enabled. KEL ASMI is not generated when emulation is disabled and snoop is enabled. Keyboard A20 under snoop does not require service beyond the DIVIL GLD_MSR_SMI (MSR 51400002h); that is, KEL does not need to be manipulated. The InputFull bit in HCE_Status (KEL Memory Offset 10Ch[1]) will set, but does not require service. Each new keyboard Table 4-16. KEL Mixed Environment Emulation Enable ExternalIRQEn IRQEN LPC_IRQ1 LPC_IRQ12 OutputFull OutputFull Aux IRQ1 Active IRQ12 Active Action 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 IRQ1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 IRQ12 x 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 EE x 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 EE www.national.com 112 Revision 0.8 4.9.8 Theory - Force A20 Low Sequence The FA20 sequence occurs frequently in DOS applications. Mostly, the sequence is to set FA20 high; that is, do not force address bit 20 to a 0. High is the default state of this signal. To reduce the number of ASMIs caused by the A20 sequence, KEL generates an ASMI only if the GateA20 sequence would change the state of A20. Note that A20 can be changed with Port A or the GateA20 sequence. Another important point is that A20State in HCE_Control and bit 1 in Port A are independent from each other. Writing a 1 to Port A bit 1 does not effect the A20State bit. Changing the state of the A20State bit does not effect the bit 1 of Port A. Note that when A20 has a value of 0, it means that the second MB wraps to the first MB. However, a value of 1 means that A20 is not modified. The A20 sequence is initiated with a write of D1h to I/O Address 064h. On detecting this write, the KEL sets the A20Sequence bit in HCE_Control (KEL Memory Offset 100h[5]). It captures the data byte in HCE_Input (KEL Memory Offset 104h[7:0]), but does not set the InputFull bit in HCE_Status (KEL Memory Offset 10Ch[1]). When A20Sequence is set, a write of a value to I/O Address 060h that has bit 1 set to a value different than A20State in HCE_Control (KEL Memory Offset 100h[8]) causes InputFull to be set and causes an ASMI. An ASMI with both InputFull and A20Sequence set indicates that the application is trying to change the setting of FA20 on the keyboard controller. However, when A20Sequence is set, and a write of a value to I/O Address 060h that has bit 1 set to the same value as A20State in HCE_Control is detected, then no ASMI will occur. The following statements summarize the above INIT and A20 sequences : INIT will respond to: Write 01h to I/O Address 092h or FEh to I/O Address 064h. A20 toggle will respond to: Write 02h to Address 092h or Write 00h to Address 092h (bit 1 toggles, bit 0 held at 0), and Write D1h to I/O Address 064h then write a value to I/O Address 060h that has bit 1 set to a value different than the A20State in HceControl register. Trapping will insure the SMI is taken on the instruction boundary. A Keyboard INIT will not respond to: Write D1h to I/O Address 064h followed by a write 02h to I/O Address 060h (set bit 0 to 0). As mentioned above, a write to I/O Address 064h of any value other than D1h causes A20Sequence to be cleared. If A20Sequence is active and a value of FFh is written to I/O Address 064h, A20Sequence is cleared but InputFull is not set. A write of any value other than D1h or FFh causes InputFull to be set, which then causes an ASMI. A write of FFh to I/O Address 064h when A20Sequence is not set causes InputFull to be set. The current value of the A20_Mask is maintained in two unconnected places. The A20State bit in HCE_Control and bit 1 in Port A. The value of A20State is only changed via a software write to HCE_Control. It is set to 0 at reset. The value of bit 1 in Port A changes on any write to Port A. From reset PortA[1] is 1. 4.9.11 Keyboard Emulation Logic MSRs In addition to HCE_Control (KEL Memory Offset 100h), there is a KEL Extended Control MSR, MSR_KELX_CTL (MSR 5140001Fh), to provide additional features. A “snoop” feature is used when an external LPC based keyboard controller is used (while the KEL is not enabled). All I/O accesses to I/O Addresses 060h and 064h proceed to the LPC, but the KEL snoops or watches for the A20 and INIT sequences. If these occur, KEL sets KEL_A20_ASMI_FLAG or KEL_INIT_ASMI_FLAG in the DIVIL if enabled. EEs may be routed such that they generate an IRQ or ASMI. In the case of Emulation IRQ, the clearing is done by an operation on the appropriate HCE_Control or HCE_Status registers. Reading the EE routing bit is not required for emulation processing via IRQ. This bit does not effect ASMIs associated with A20 and INIT operations. All ASMI signals are a single clock pulse wide. 4.9.9 Theory - Processor Initialize Sequence The processor initialization sequence is possible if either of the following cases is true: • A write of a value fed to I/O Address 064h indicates processor initialization (INIT) or warm reset. This sets KEL_INIT_ASMI_FLAG if enabled in the DIVIL. All HCE registers and Port A are not effected. SOFEVENT (Start of Frame Event) is established with bits [3:2] of MSR 5140001Fh. These bits provide alternative sources for SOFEVENT. The SOFEVENT can be sourced from USB1, USB2, or the PIT. A 00 value selects the test mode. • Port A initialization, INIT will respond to: Write 01h to I/O Address 092h. (Refer to Section 4.9.10 "Port A".) 4.9.10 Port A This register is at I/O Address 092h. It can also be used to change the state of A20 or to cause an INIT. When 8-bit data that has its bit 0 set to 1 is written, it causes an INIT. However, if bit 1 of the 8-bit data is set to 1, it causes a change in the state of A20 (A20 gets asserted). As above, an ASMI is only generated on an INIT or A20 event. The INIT operation always forces A20 high. Writes to bits 2 and higher are a “don’t care”. Reads to Port A always return 00h or 02h depending on the state of the bit 1 of Port A. Revision 0.8 The Port A enable bit is a mask bit for Port A and its default state is high. 113 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 KEL Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 KEL Functional Description (Continued) 4.9.12 Related Diverse Device Functions FA20# and INIT are not passed directly to the processor. SSM code manipulates equivalent functions in the processor. 4.9.13 Emulation Event Decode Emulation Events are of two types: frame synchronous and asynchronous. The conditions for a frame synchronous interrupt are sampled by the KEL at each SOF interval and, if an event condition exists, it is signaled at that time. For asynchronous events, the event is signaled as soon as the condition exists. The HCE registers are considered part of the USB operational register set for some software and hence share the same memory mapped register space. The GLIU descriptor for the USBs, MSR_LBAR_KEL1, and MSR_LBAR_KEL2 must all be set to the same base. The GLIU will route accesses at memory offset 100h and above to the Diverse Device and accesses below 100h to the USB. The equation for the synchronous Emulation Event condition is: synchronousEvent = HCE_Control.EmulationEnable (KEL Memory Offset 100h[0]) and HCE_Control.CharacterPending (KEL Memory Offset 100h[2]) and not HCE_Status.OutputFull (KEL Memory Offset 10Ch[0]). The address decoder in the DIVIL routes accesses to I/O Addresses 060h and 064h to the KEL or LPC based on the value of EmulationEnable in HCE_Control (KEL Memory Offset 100h). If snoop mode is enabled and the EmulationEnable bit is not set, writes are made directly to both the KEL and LPC. The LPC IRQ1 and IRQ12 outputs are connected to both KEL and the PIC subsystem. Masking logic in the subsystem allows the LPC interrupts to be used directly or the KEL set can be used. When this decode is true, an Emulation Event is generated at the next SOF. The Event condition is latched until the decode becomes false. The equation for the asynchronous Emulation Event condition is: The KEL ASMI is routed through the Diverse Device’s Standard GLD_MSR_SMI (MSR 51400002h). It may be masked off there, but it is only cleared via MSR_KELX_CTL (MSR 5140001Fh). www.national.com asynchronousEvent = HCE_Control.EmulationEnable (KEL Memory Offset 100h[0]) and HCE_Status.InputFull (KEL Memory Offset 10Ch[1]), or HCE_Control.ExternlIRQEn (KEL Memory Offset 100h[4]) and HCE_Control.IRQ1Active (KEL Memory Offset 100h[6]) or HCE_Control.IRQ12Active (KEL Memory Offset 100h[7]). 114 Revision 0.8 The System Management Bus (SMB) Controller is a twowire synchronous serial interface compatible with the System Management Bus physical layer. The SMB Controller is also compatible with Intel's SMBus and Philips’ I2C. The SMB Controller can be configured as a bus master or slave, and can maintain bidirectional communication with both multiple master and slave devices. As a slave device, the SMB Controller may issue a request to become the bus master. The SMB Controller’s protocol uses a two-wire interface for bidirectional communication between the ICs connected to the bus. The two interface lines are the Serial Data Line (SDL) and the Serial Clock Line (SCL). These lines should be connected to a positive supply via an internal or external pull-up resistor, and remain high even when the bus is idle. Each IC has a unique address and can operate as a transmitter or a receiver (though some peripherals are only receivers). The SMB Controller allows easy interfacing to a wide range of low-cost memories and I/O devices, including: EEPROMs, SRAMs, timers, ADC, DAC, clock chips, and peripheral drivers. During data transactions, the master device initiates the transaction, generates the clock signal, and terminates the transaction. For example, when the SMB Controller initiates a data transaction with an attached SMB compliant peripheral, the SMB Controller becomes the master. When the peripheral responds and transmits data to the SMB Controller, their master/slave (data transaction initiator and clock generator) relationship is unchanged, even though their transmitter/receiver functions are reversed. This chapter describes the general SMB Controller functional block. A device may include a different implementation. A block diagram of the System Management Bus (SMB) Controller is shown Figure 4-22. The SMB Controller is upward compatible with previous industry standard two-wire interfaces as detailed in Table 417 on page 116. CCU PIC Local Bus Interface Clock Busy IRQ Data In Data In SMB Controller I/O Enable Data Out Clock Out Figure 4-22. SMB Block Diagram Revision 0.8 115 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.10 SYSTEM MANAGEMENT BUS CONTROLLER Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) Table 4-17. Comparison of SMB, I2C, and ACCESS.bus I2C SMB Symbol Parameter ACCESS.bus Min Max Min Max Min Max 100 kHz 0 kHz 100 kHz 10 kHz 100 kHz F Operating frequency 10 kHz TBUF Bus free time between STOP and START condition 4.7 µs 4.7 µs 4.7 µs THD:STA Hold time after (repeated) START condition. After this period the first clock is generated 4.0 µs 4.0 µs 4.0 µs TSU:STA Repeated START condition setup time 4.7 µs 4.7us 4.7 µs TSU:STO STOP condition setup time 4.0 µs 4.0us 4.0 µs THD:DAT Data hold time 300 ns 0 µs TSU:DAT Data setup time 250 ns 250 ns TTimeout Detect clock low time-out 25 ms TLOW Clock low period 4.7 µs THIGH Clock high period 4.0 µs TLOW:SEXT Cumulative clock low extend period (slave) 25 ms 25 ms TLOW:MEXT Cumulative clock low extend period (master) 10 ms 10 ms TF Clock/data fall time 300 ns 300 ns 300 ns TR Clock/data rise time 1000 ns 1000 ns 1000 ns TPOR Time that device must be operational after power-on reset 500 ms VIL SMBus signal input low voltage 0.8V -0.5V VIH SMBus signal input high voltage VDD 3.0V VOL SMBus signal output low voltage 0.4V 0V 0.4V ILEAK_BUS Input leakage per bus segment +-200uA ILEAK_PIN Input leakage per device pin +-10 µA -10 µA +10 µA VDD Nominal bus voltage IPULLUP Current sinking, VOL = 0.4V (SMBus) CBUS Capacitive load per bus segment 400 pF CI Capacitance for SMBDAT or SMBCLK pin 10 pF VNOISE Signal noise immunity from 10 to 100 MHz www.national.com 2.1V 2.7V 3.45 µs 250 ns 35 ms 50 µs 300 ns 25 ms 4.7 µs 4.7 µs 4.0 µs 4.0 µs 1.5V 5.5V 4.0 mA 35 ms 50 µs -0.5V 0.6V 1.4V 5.5V 0V 0.4V 10 µA 2.0V 5.0V 100 µA 350 µA 10 pF 300 mV p-p 116 Revision 0.8 4.10.1 Data Transactions One data bit is transferred during each clock pulse. Data is sampled during the high state of the serial clock (SCL). Consequently, throughout the clock’s high period, the data should remain stable (see Figure 4-23). Any changes on the SDA line during the high state of SCL and in the middle of a transaction aborts the current transaction. New data should be sent during the low SCL state. This protocol permits a single data line to transfer both command/control information and data, using the synchronous serial clock. 4.10.1.1 START and STOP Conditions The SMB master generates START and STOP conditions (control codes). After a START condition is generated, the bus is considered busy and retains this status for a certain time after a STOP condition is generated. A high-to-low 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 (see Figure 4-24). 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 arbitrate the bus, or a change in the direction of data transfer. Each data transaction is composed of a START condition, a number of byte transfers (set by the software), and a STOP condition to terminate the transaction. Each byte is transferred with the most significant bit first, and after each byte (8 bits), an Acknowledge signal must follow. The following subsections provide further details of this process. SDA During each clock cycle, the slave can stall the master while it handles the previous data or prepares new data. This can be done for each bit transferred, or on a byte boundary, by the slave holding SCL low to extend the clocklow period. 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 SMB, extend the SMB after each bit, thus allowing the software to handle this bit. SCL S P START Condition STOP Condition Figure 4-24. SMB START and STOP Conditions 4.10.1.2 Acknowledge (ACK) Cycle The ACK cycle consists of two signals: the ACK clock pulse sent by the master with each byte transferred, and the ACK signal sent by the receiving device (see Figure 4-25). SDA The master generates the ACK clock pulse on the ninth clock pulse of the byte transfer. The transmitter releases the SDA line (permits it to go high) to allow the receiver to send the ACK signal. The receiver must pull down the SDA line during the ACK clock pulse, signalling that it has correctly received the last data byte and is ready to receive the next byte. Figure 4-26 illustrates the ACK cycle. SCL Data Line Change Stable: of Data Data Valid Allowed Figure 4-23. SMB Bit Transfer Acknowledge Signal From Receiver SDA MSB SCL S 1 2 3-6 7 8 9 ACK 1 2 3-8 9 ACK START Condition P STOP Condition Byte Complete Interrupt Within Receiver Clock Line Held Low by Receiver While Interrupt is Serviced Figure 4-25. SMB Data Transaction Revision 0.8 117 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) Data Output by Transmitter Transmitter Stays Off Bus During Acknowledge Clock Data Output by Receiver Acknowledge Signal From Receiver SCL 1 S 2 3-6 8 7 9 START Condition Figure 4-26. SMB Acknowledge Cycle 4.10.1.3 Acknowledge After Every Byte Rule According to this rule, the master generates an acknowledge clock pulse after each byte transfer, and the receiver sends an acknowledge signal after every byte received. There are two exceptions to this rule: The address consists of the first seven bits after a START condition. The direction of the data transfer (R/W) depends on the bit sent after the address, the eighth bit. A low-tohigh transition during an SCL high period indicates the STOP condition, and ends the transaction of SDA (see Figure 4-27). • When the master is the receiver, it must indicate to the transmitter the end of data by not acknowledging (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 address is sent, each device in the system compares this address with its own. If there is a match, the device considers itself addressed and sends an acknowledge signal. Depending on the state of the R/W bit (1 = Read, 0 = Write), the device acts either as a transmitter or a receiver. • 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. The SMB protocol allows a general call address to be sent to all slaves connected to the bus. The first byte sent specifies the general call address (00h) and the second byte specifies the meaning of the general call (for example, write slave address by software only). Those slaves that require data acknowledge the call, and become slave receivers; other slaves ignore the call. 4.10.1.4 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 line, once it recognizes its address. SDA SCL 8 9 1-7 S START Condition Address R/W ACK 1-7 Data 8 9 1-7 ACK Data 9 8 ACK P STOP Condition Figure 4-27. SMB Complete Data Transaction www.national.com 118 Revision 0.8 4.10.1.5 Arbitration on the Bus Multiple master devices on the bus require arbitration between their conflicting bus SMB demands. Control of the bus is initially determined according to address bits and clock cycle. If the masters are trying to address the same slave, data comparisons determine the outcome of this 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. (An exception to this rule is SDA while receiving data. The lines may be driven low by the slave without causing an abort.) The SCL signal is monitored for clock synchronization and to allow the slave to stall the bus. The actual clock period is set by the master with the longest clock period, or by the slave stall period. The clock high period is determined by the master with the shortest clock high period. 1) Configure SMBCTL1.INTEN to the desired operation mode (Polling = 0 or Interrupt = 1) and set SMBCTL1.START. This causes the SMB Controller to issue a START condition on the bus when the bus becomes free (SMBCST.BB is cleared, or other conditions that can delay START). It then stalls the bus by holding SCL low. 2) If a bus conflict is detected (i.e., another device pulls down the SCL signal), SMBST.BER is set. 3) If there is no bus conflict, SMBST.SDAST and SMBST.MASTER are set. 4) If SMBCTL1.INTEN is set and either SMBST.BER or SMBST.SDAST is set, an interrupt is issued. Sending the Address Byte When the device is the active master of the bus (SMBST.MASTER is set), it can send the address on the bus. When an abort occurs during the address transmission, a master that identifies the conflict should give up the bus, switch to slave mode, and continue to sample SDA to check if it is being addressed by the winning master on the bus. The address sent should not be the device’s own address, as defined by the ADDR bits of the SMBADDR register if the SMBADDR.SAEN is set, nor should it be the global call address if the SMBCST.GCMTCH is set. 4.10.1.6 Master Mode This discussion and Section 4.10.1.7 "Slave Mode" reference several bits in the SMB Native register set (e.g., SMBCTL1.STASTRE, SMBST.MASTER, etc.). Table 4-18 provides the bit map for the SMB Native registers for the reader’s convenience. For full bit descriptions, refer to Section 5.11.1 "SMB Native Registers" on page 354. To send the address byte, use the following sequence: Requesting Bus Mastership An SMB transaction starts with a master device requesting bus mastership. It asserts a START condition, followed by the address of the device that wants the bus. If this transaction is successfully completed, the software may assume that the device has become the bus master. 1) For a receive transaction, where the software wants only one byte of data, it should set SMBCTL1.ACK. If only an address needs to be sent or if the device requires stall for some other reason, set the SMBCTL1.STASTRE. 2) Write the address byte (7-bit target device address) and the direction bit to SMBSDA. This causes the SMB Controller to generate a transaction. At the end of this transaction, the acknowledge bit received is copied to SMBST.NEGACK. During the transaction, the SDA and SCL lines are continuously checked for conflict with other devices. If a conflict is detected, the transaction is aborted, SMBST.BER is set, and SMBST.MASTER is cleared. For the device to become the bus master, the software should perform the following steps: Table 4-18. SMB Native Registers Map SMB I/O Offset Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 00h SMBSDA 01h SMBST 02h SMBCST 03h SMBCTL1 STASTRE 04h SMBADDR SAEN SMBADDR 05h SMBCTL2 SCLFRQ EN 06h SMBCTL3 SCLFRQ EN Revision 0.8 SMBSDA SLVSTP SDAST RSVD NMINTE BER NEGACK STASTR NMATCH MASTER XMIT TGSCL TSDA GCMTCH MATCH BB BUSY GCMEN ACK RSVD INTEN STOP START 119 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) 3) If SMBCTL1.STASTRE is set and the transaction was successfully completed (i.e., both SMBST.BER and SMBST.NEGACK are cleared), the STASTR bit is set. In this case, the SMB Controller stalls any further bus operations (i.e., holds SCL low). If SMBCTL1.INTEN is set, it also sends an interrupt request to the host. 4) If the requested direction is transmit and the START transaction was completed successfully (i.e., neither SMBST.NEGACK nor SMBST.BER is set, and no other master has arbitrated the bus), SMBST.SDAST is set to indicate that the SMB Controller awaits attention. 5) If the requested direction is receive, the START transaction was completed successfully and SMBCTL1.STASTRE is cleared, the SMB Controller starts receiving the first byte automatically. 6) Check that both SMBST.BER and SMBST.NEGACK are cleared. If SMBCTL1.INTEN is set, an interrupt is generated when either SMBST.BER or SMBST.NEGACK is set. Master STOP To end a transaction, set SMBCTL1.STOP before clearing the current stall flag (i.e., the SDAST, NEGACK, or STASTR bit of SMBST). This causes the SMB to send a STOP condition immediately, and to clear SMBCTL1.STOP. A STOP condition may be issued only when the device is the active bus master (SMBST.MASTER is set). Master Bus Stall The SMB Controller can stall the bus between transfers while waiting for the host response. The bus is stalled by holding the SCL signal low after the acknowledge cycle. Note that this is interpreted as the beginning of the following bus operation. The user must make sure that the next operation is prepared before the flag that causes the bus stall is cleared. The flags that can cause a bus stall in master mode are: • Negative acknowledge after sending a byte (SMBST.NEGACK = 1). • SMBST.SDAST bit is set. Master Transmit After becoming the bus master, the device can start transmitting data on the bus. • SMBCTL1.STASTRE = 1, after a successful START (SMBST.STASTR = 1). To transmit a byte in an interrupt or polling controlled operation, the software should: 1) Check that both SMBST.BER and SMBST.NEGACK are cleared, and that SMBST.SDAST is set. If SMBCTL1.STASTRE is set, also check that the SMBST.STASTR is cleared (and clear it if required). 2) Write the data byte to be transmitted to SMBSDA. Repeated START A repeated START is performed when the device is already the bus master (SMBST.MASTER is set). In this case, the bus is stalled and the SMB Controller awaits host handling due to: negative acknowledge (SMBST.NEGACK = 1), empty buffer (SMBST.SDAST = 1), and/or a stall after START (SMBST.STASTR = 1). For a repeated START: When either SMBST.NEGACK or SMBST.BER is set, an interrupt is generated. When the slave responds with a negative acknowledge, SMBST.NEGACK is set and SMBST.SDAST remains cleared. In this case, if SMBCTL1.INTEN is set, an interrupt is issued. 1) Set (1) SMBCTL1.START. 2) In master receive mode, read the last data item from SMBSDA. 3) Follow the address send sequence, as described in “Write the address byte (7-bit target device address) and the direction bit to SMBSDA. This causes the SMB Controller to generate a transaction. At the end of this transaction, the acknowledge bit received is copied to SMBST.NEGACK. During the transaction, the SDA and SCL lines are continuously checked for conflict with other devices. If a conflict is detected, the transaction is aborted, SMBST.BER is set, and SMBST.MASTER is cleared. 4) If the SMB Controller was awaiting handling due to SMBST.STASTR = 1, clear it only after writing the requested address and direction to SMBSDA. Master Receive After becoming the bus master, the device can start receiving data on the bus. To receive a byte in an interrupt or polling operation, the software should: 1) Check that SMBST.SDAST is set and that SMBST.BER is cleared. If SMBCTL1.STASTRE is set, also check that SMBST.STASTR is cleared (and clear it if required). 2) Set SMBCTL1.ACK, if the next byte is the last byte that should be read. This causes a negative acknowledge to be sent. 3) Read the data byte from SMBSDA. Master Error Detection The SMB Controller detects illegal START or STOP conditions (i.e., a START or STOP condition within the data transfer, or the acknowledge cycle) and a conflict on the data lines of the bus. If an illegal condition is detected, SMBST.BER is set and master mode is exited (SMBST.MASTER is cleared). Before receiving the last byte of data, set SMBCTL1.ACK. Before generating a STOP condition or generating a repeated START condition, it is necessary to perform an SDA read and clear the SMBST.SDAST bit. www.national.com 120 Revision 0.8 Bus Idle Error Recovery When a request to become the active bus master or a restart operation fails, SMBST.BER is set to indicate the error. In some cases, both the device and the other device may identify the failure and leave the bus idle. In this case, the START sequence may be incomplete and the bus may remain deadlocked. Slave Receive and Transmit Slave receive and transmit are performed after a match is detected and the data transfer direction is identified. After a byte transfer, the SMB Controller extends the acknowledge clock until the software reads or writes the SMBSDA register. The receive and transmit sequences are identical to those used in the master routine. To recover from deadlock, use the following sequence: 1) Clear SMBST.BER and SMBCST.BB. 2) Wait for a time-out period to check that there is no other active master on the bus (i.e., SMBCST.BB remains cleared). 3) Slave Bus Stall When operating as a slave, the device stalls the bus by extending the first clock cycle of a transaction in the following cases: • SMBST.SDAST is set. Disable, and re-enable the SMB Controller to put it in the non-addressed slave mode. This completely resets the functional block. • SMBST.NMATCH and SMBCTL1.NMINTE are set. Slave Error Detection The SMB Controller detects an illegal START and STOP conditions on the bus (i.e., a START or STOP condition within the data transfer or the acknowledge cycle). When this occurs, SMBST.BER is set and SMBCST.MATCH and SMBCST.GMATCH are cleared, setting the SMB Controller as an unaddressed slave. At this point, some of the slaves may not identify the bus error. To recover, the SMB Controller becomes the bus master: it asserts a START condition, sends an address byte, then asserts a STOP condition that synchronizes all the slaves. 4.10.1.7 Slave Mode A slave device waits in Idle mode for a master to initiate a bus transaction. Whenever the SMB Controller is enabled and it is not acting as a master (i.e., SMBST.MASTER is cleared), it acts as a slave device. Once a START condition on the bus is detected, the device checks whether the address sent by the current master matches either: • The SMBADDR.ADDR value if SMBADDR.SAEN = 1, or • The general call address if SMBCTL1.GCMEN = 1. This match is checked even when SMBST.MASTER is set. If a bus conflict (on SDA or SCL) is detected, SMBST.BER is set, SMBST.MASTER is cleared and the device continues to search the received message for a match. If an address match or a global match is detected: 1) The device asserts its SDA line during the acknowledge cycle. 2) SMBCST.MATCH and SMBST.NMATCH are set. If SMBST.XMIT = 1 (i.e., slave transmit mode) SMBST.SDAST is set to indicate that the buffer is empty. 3) If SMBCTL1.INTEN is set, an interrupt is generated if both SMBCTL1.INTEN and SMBCTL1.NMINTE are set. 4) The software then reads SMBST.XMIT to identify the direction requested by the master device. It clears SMBST.NMATCH so future byte transfers are identified as data bytes. Revision 0.8 121 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) 4.10.1.9 Transaction Types SDA and SCL Signals The SDA and SCL are open-drain signals. The device permits the user to define whether to enable or disable the internal pull-up of each of these signals. Byte Write Sequence of events (see Figure 4-28): Device Address Write START SMB Clock Frequency The SMB permits the user to set the clock frequency for the System Management Bus clock. The clock is set by the SMBCTL2.SCLFRQ field and the SMBCTL3 register, which determines the SCL clock period used by the device. This clock low period may be extended by stall periods initiated by the SMB or by another System Management Bus device. In case of a conflict with another bus master, a shorter clock high period may be forced by the other bus master until the conflict is resolved. 1) START 2) Address phase 3) Acknowledge 4) Word address 5) Acknowledge 6) Data 7) Acknowledge 8) STOP STOP 4.10.1.8 Configuration Data Word Address ACK LSB ACK MSB LSB R/W ACK SDA Line MSB Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) Figure 4-28. SMB Byte Write www.national.com 122 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) Page Write Sequence of Events (see Figure 4-29): Current Address Read Sequence of Events (see Figure 4-30): 1) START 1) START 2) Address 2) Device Address - 8 bit 3) Acknowledge 3) Acknowledge 4) Word Address 4) Data 5) Acknowledge 5) No Acknowledge 6) Data1 6) STOP 7) Acknowledge 8) Data(n) 9) Acknowledge 10) Data(n+1) 11) Acknowledge 12) Data(n+x) 13) Acknowledge Data (n) Word Address (n) Data (n + 1) STOP Device Address Write START 14) STOP Data (n + x) ACK ACK ACK ACK LSB MSB LSB R/W ACK MSB SDA Line STOP Device Address Read START Figure 4-29. SMB Page Write Data No ACK LSB R/W ACK MSB SDA Line Figure 4-30. SMB Current Address Read Revision 0.8 123 www.national.com Random Read Sequence of Events (see Figure 4-31): Sequential Reads Sequence of Events (see Figure 4-32): 1) START 1) START 2) Device Address 2) Device Address 3) Acknowledge 3) Acknowledge 4) Word Address(n) 4) Data(n) 5) Acknowledge 5) Acknowledge 6) START 6) Data(n+1) 7) Device Address 7) Acknowledge 8) Acknowledge 8) Data(n+2) 9) Data(n) 9) Acknowledge 10) No Acknowledge 10) Data(n+x) 11) STOP 11) No Acknowledge Device Address STOP Word Address (n) Read START Device Address Write START 12) STOP Data (n) No ACK ACK LSB MSB LSB ACK MSB LSB R/W ACK MSB SDA Line Dummy Write Data (n+1) Data (n) Data (n+2) STOP Device Address Read START Figure 4-31. SMB Random Read Data (n + x) No ACK ACK ACK ACK LSB R/W ACK SDA Line MSB Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Functional Description (Continued) Figure 4-32. SMB Sequential Reads www.national.com 124 Revision 0.8 The Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter and IR Port (UART/IR Controller) is an enhanced serial port with fast IR (infrared). The UART/IR Controller provides advanced, versatile serial communications features with IR capabilities and supports: Figure 4-33 shows the serial port connections to the peripheral devices and host, as well as the device configuration. • UART (Section 4.11.1.1 "UART Mode" on page 127) • Fully compatible with 16550 and 16450 devices (except modem) Features • Sharp-IR (Section 4.11.1.2 "Sharp-IR Mode" on page 128) • Extended UART mode • IrDA 1.0 SIR (Section 4.11.1.3 "SIR Mode" on page 128) • Sharp-IR • Consumer Electronic IR (CEIR); also called TV Remote or Consumer remote control (Section 4.11.1.4 "CEIR Mode" on page 128) • IrDA 1.0 SIR with up to 115.2 kbaud data rate In UART mode, the functional block can act as a standard 16450 or 16550, or in extended mode. • UART mode data rates up to 1.5 Mbps Existing 16550-based legacy software is completely and transparently supported. Organization and specific fallback mechanisms switch the functional block to 16550 compatibility mode upon reset, or when initialized by 16550 software. • Transmit deferral • Consumer-IR mode • Full duplex infrared frame transmission and reception • Automatic fallback to 16550 compatibility mode • Selectable 16 and 32 level FIFOs • 12-bit timer for infrared protocol support This functional block has two DMA channels, of which the device can use one or both. One channel is required for IRbased applications, since IR communication works in halfduplex fashion. Two channels are normally needed to handle high-speed, full duplex, UART-based applications. • DMA handshake signal routing for either 1 or 2 channels • Support for power management • Virtual dongle interface Microprocessor MHZ48_CLK Master Bus Interrupt Controller CCU Local Bus Interface IRQ BUSY UART/IR Controller Local Bus to SuperI/O Bus Converter and Control Logic Virtual Dongle Interface MSR_MOD MSR_DON ID[3:0] Register Bank IRSL0_DS SuperI/O Bus and DMA Interface IRSL[2:0] Tx and Rx UART/IR Logic MSR_CONFIG MSR_RSVD Modem/Control Signals IR Interface IRTX DMA Controller IRRX1 UART Interface SOUT SIN Figure 4-33. UART/IR Overview Diagram Revision 0.8 125 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.11 UNIVERSAL ASYNCHRONOUS RECEIVER TRANSMITTER AND IR PORT CONTROLLER Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Functional Description (Continued) 4.11.1 Operational Modes This section describes the operation modes of the UART/IR Controller. Although each mode is unique, certain system resources and features are common. This discussion references several bits in the UART/IR Controller Native register set. Table 4-19 provides the bit map for the UART/IR Controller Native registers for the reader’s convenience. For full bit descriptions, refer to Section 5.12.2 on page 366. Table 4-19. UART/IR Controller Native Register Bit Map I/O Offset Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Bank 0 00h RXD RXD7 RXD6 RXD5 RXD4 RXD3 RXD2 RXD1 RXD0 00h TXD TXD7 TXD6 TXD5 TXD4 TXD3 TXD2 TXD1 TXD0 01h IER (Note 1) MS_IE LS_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE MS_IE LS_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE 02h RSVD IER (Note 2) RSVD EIR (Note 1) FEN[1:0] EIR (Note 2) RSVD FCR TXEMP_IE DMA_IE RSVD TXEMP_EV RXFTH[1:0] RXFT DMA_EV TXFTH[1:0] SBRK STKP IPR[1:0] IPF MS_EV LS_EV/ TXHLT_EV TXLDL_EV RXHDL_IE RSVD TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN PEN STB 03h LCR BKSE EPS WLS[1:0] BSR BKSE 04h MCR (Note 1) RSVD LOOP ISEN or DCDLP RILP RTS DTR MCR (Note 2) MDSL[2:0] IR_PLS TX_DFR DMA_EN RTS DTR BSR[6:0] 05h LSR ER_INF TXEMP TXRDY BRK FE PE OE RXDA 06h MSR DCD RI DSR CTS DDCD TERI DDSR DCTS 07h SPR (Note 1) S_OET RSVD RXF_TOUT STB WLS1 WLS0 DMATH DMANF EXT_SL ASCR (Note 2) Scratch Data CTE TXUR RXACT RXWDG RSVD Bank 1 00h LBGD_L LBGD[7:0] 01h LBGD_H LBGD[15:8] 02h RSVD 03h LCR BKSE BSR BKSE RSVD SBRK STKP EPS PEN BSR[6:0] 04-07h RSVD RSVD Bank 2 00h BGD_L BGD[7:0] 01h BGD_H BGD[15:8] 02h EXCR1 RSVD EDTLBK LOOP DMASWP 03h BSR BKSE 04h EXCR2 LOCK BSR[6:0] 05h RSVD 06h TXFLV RSVD TFL[5:0] 07h RXFLV RSVD RFL[5:0] RSVD PRESL[1:0] RF_SIZ[1:0] TF_SIZ1[1:0] RSVD Bank 3 00h MRID 01h SH_LCR www.national.com MID[3:0] RSVD SBRK RID[3:0] STKP EPS 126 PEN STB WLS1 WLS0 Revision 0.8 Table 4-19. UART/IR Controller Native Register Bit Map (Continued) I/O Offset Name 7 6 5 RXFTH[1:0] 4 02h SH_FCR 03h BSR TXFTH[1:0] 04h07h RSVD RSVD 00h01h RSVD RSVD 02h IRCR1 03h BSR 04h07h RSVD RSVD 00h02h RSVD RSVD 03h BSR BKSE 04h IRCR2 RSVD 05h07h RSVD BKSE 3 2 1 0 RSVD TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN BSR[6:0] Bank 4 RSVD IR_SL[1:0] BKSE RSVD BSR[6:0] Bank 5 BSR[6:0] RSVD RSVD AUX_IRRX RSVD RSVD IRMSSL IR_FDPLX SPW2 SPW1 SPW0 RSVD Bank 6 00h IRCR3 01h RSVD 02h SIR_PW 03h BSR 04h07h RSVD SHDM_DS SHMD_DS RSVD RSVD RSVD SPW3 BKSE BSR[6:0] RSVD Bank 7 00h IRRXDC DBW[2:0] DFR[4:0] 01h IRTXMC MCPW[2:0] MCFR[4:0] 02h RCCFG R_LEN 03h BSR BKSE 04h IRCFG1 05h06h RSVD 07h IRCFG4 T_OV RXHSC RCDM_DS RSVD TXHSC RC_MMD[1:0] BSR[6:0] STRV_MS RSVD SET_IRTX IRRX1_LV RSVD IRIC[2:0] IRSL21_DS RSVD RSVD RSVD IRSL0_DS RXINV Note 1. Non-Extended Mode. Note 2. Extended Mode. 4.11.1.1 UART Mode UART mode supports serial data communication with a remote peripheral device using a wired interface. This functional block provides receive and transmit channels that can operate concurrently in full-duplex mode. This functional block performs all functions required to conduct parallel data interchange with the system and composite serial data exchange with the external data channel. START -LSB- It performs parallel-to-serial conversion on data characters received from the processor or a DMA controller, and serial-to-parallel conversion on data characters received from the serial interface. Figure 4-34 shows the serial data stream. A data character contains five to eight data bits. It is preceded by a START bit and is followed by an optional PARITY bit and a STOP bit. Data is transferred in Little Endian order (LSB first). DATA[5:8] -MSB- PARITY STOP Figure 4-34. UART Serial Data Stream Format Revision 0.8 127 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Functional Description (Continued) UART mode can be implemented in standard 16450 and 16550 compatibility (non-extended) and extended mode. UART 16450 compatibility mode is the default after powerup or reset. When extended mode is selected, the functional block architecture changes slightly and a variety of additional features are made available. The interrupt sources are no longer prioritized, and an Auxiliary Status and Control Register (ASCR) replaces the Scratch Pad Register (SPR). The additional features include: transmitter FIFO (TX_FIFO) thresholding, DMA capability, and interrupts on transmitter empty states and DMA events. prevents legacy software, running in non-extended mode, from spuriously switching the functional block to UART mode when the software writes to the MCR. 4.11.1.3 SIR Mode SIR mode supports bidirectional data communication with a remote device, using IR radiation as the transmit medium. SIR allows serial communication at baud rates up to 115.2 kbaud. The serial data format is similar to that of the UART data format. Each data word is sent serially, beginning with a 0 value START bit, followed by eight data bits (LSB first), an optional PARITY bit, and ending with at least one STOP bit, with a binary value of 1. A 0 value is signalled by sending a single IR pulse. A 1 value is signalled by the absence of a pulse. The width of each pulse can be either 1.6 µs (3/16 the time required to transmit a single bit at 115.2 kbps). This way, each word begins with a pulse at the START bit. The clock for both transmit and receive channels is provided by an internal baud generator that divides its input clock by any divisor value from 1 to 216-1. The output clock frequency of the baud generator must be programmed to be 16 times the baud rate value. The baud generator input clock is derived from a 24 MHz clock through a programmable prescaler. The prescaler value is determined by the PRESL bits in the EXCR2 register. Its default value is 13. This allows all the standard baud rates, up to 115.2 kbaud, to be obtained. Smaller prescaler values allow baud rates up to 921.6 kbaud (standard) and 1.5 Mbaud (non-standard). Operation in SIR is similar to that of the UART mode. The difference being that data transfer operations are normally performed in half-duplex fashion. Selection of the IrDA 1.0 SIR mode is controlled by the MDSL bits in the MCR when the UART is in extended mode, or by the IR_SL bits in the IRCR1 register when the UART is in non-extended mode. This prevents legacy software, running in non-extended mode, from spuriously switching the functional block to UART mode when the software writes to the MCR. Before operation can begin, both the communication format and baud rate must be programmed by the software. The communication format is programmed by loading a control byte into the LCR (Link Control Register), while the baud rate is selected by loading an appropriate value into the Baud Generator Divisor Register. The software can read the status of the functional block at any time during operation. The status information includes Full/Empty states for both transmit and receive channels, and any other condition detected on the received data stream, such as a parity error, framing error, data overrun, or break event. 4.11.1.4 CEIR Mode The Consumer Electronics IR circuitry is designed to optimally support all major protocols presently used in the following remote-controlled home entertainment equipment: RC-5, RC-6, RECS 80, NEC, and RCA. This module, in conjunction with an external optical device, provides the physical layer functions necessary to support these protocols. Such functions include: modulation, demodulation, serialization, de-serialization, data buffering, status reporting, interrupt generation, etc. The software is responsible for the generation of IR code transmitted, and the interpretation of received code. 4.11.1.2 Sharp-IR Mode This mode supports bidirectional data communication with a remote device, using IR radiation as the transmission medium. Sharp-IR uses Digital Amplitude Shift Keying (DASK) and allows serial communication at baud rates up to 38.4 kbaud. The format of the serial data is similar to that of the UART data format. Each data word is sent serially, beginning with a 0 value START bit, followed by up to eight data bits (LSB first), an optional parity bit, and ending with at least one STOP bit, with a binary value of 1. A logical 0 is signalled by sending a 500 kHz continuous pulse train of IR radiation. A logical 1 is signalled by the absence of an IR signal. This functional block can perform the modulation and demodulation operations internally, or can rely on the external optical module to perform them. CEIR Transmit Operation The transmitted code consists of a sequence of bytes that represents either a bit string or a set of run-length codes. The number of bits or run-length codes needed to represent each IR code bit depends on the IR protocol used. The RC-5 protocol, for example, needs two bits or between one and two run-length codes to represent each IR code bit. Transmission is initiated when the processor or DMA controller writes code bytes into the empty TX_FIFO. Transmission is completed when the processor sets the S_EOT bit of the ASCR, before writing the last byte, or when the DMA controller activates the terminal count (TC). Transmission also terminates if the processor simply stops transferring data and the transmitter becomes empty. In this case, however, a transmitter-underrun condition is generated that must be cleared in order to begin the next transmission. Sharp-IR device operation is similar to operation in UART mode. The difference being that data transfer operations are normally performed in half-duplex fashion, and the modem control and status signals are not used. Selection of the Sharp-IR mode is controlled by the Mode Select (MDSL) bits in the MCR when the functional block is in extended mode, or by the IR_SL bits in the IRCR1 register when the functional block is in non-extended mode.) This www.national.com 128 Revision 0.8 The transmission bytes are either de-serialized or runlength encoded, and the resulting bit-string modulates a carrier signal that is sent to the transmitter LED. The transfer rate of this bit-string, like in UART mode, is determined by the value programmed in the Baud Generator Divisor Register. Unlike a UART transmission, START, STOP, and PARITY bits are not included in the transmitted data stream. A logic 1 in the bit-string keeps the LED off, so no IR signal is transmitted. A logic 0 generates a sequence of modulating pulses that turn on the transmitter LED. Frequency and pulse width of the modulating pulses are programmed by the MCFR and MCPW fields in the IRTXMC register, as well as the TXHSC bit of the RCCFG register. The receiver also sets the RXWDG bit of the ASCR each time an IR pulse signal is detected. This bit is automatically cleared when the ASCR is read. It is intended to assist the software in determining when the IR link has been Idle for a period of time. The software can then stop data from being received by writing a 1 into the RXACT bit to clear it, and return the receiver to the inactive state. The frequency bandwidth for the incoming modulated IR signal is selected by the DFR and DBW fields in the IRRXDC register. There are two CEIR receive data modes: Oversampled and Programmed T Period. For either mode, the sampling rate is determined by the setting of the Baud Generator Divisor Registers. The RC_MMD field of RCCFG selects the transmitter modulation mode. If the C_PLS mode is selected, modulating pulses are generated continuously for the entire logic 0 bit time. If 6_PLS or 8_PLS mode is selected, six or eight pulses are generated each time a logic 0 bit is transmitted following a logic 1 bit. Oversampled mode can be used with the receiver demodulator either enabled or disabled. It should be used with the demodulator disabled when a detailed snapshot of the incoming signal is needed; for example, to determine the period of the carrier signal. If the demodulator is enabled, the stream of samples can be used to reconstruct the incoming bit-string. To obtain good resolution, a fairly high sampling rate should be selected. C_PLS modulation mode is used for RC-5, RC-6, NEC, and RCA protocols. 8_PLS or 6_PLS modulation mode is used for the RECS 80 protocol. The 8_PLS or 6_PLS mode allows minimization of the number of bits needed to represent the RECS 80 IR code sequence. The current transmitter implementation supports only the modulated modes of the RECS 80 protocol; it does not support the Flash mode. Note: Programmed T Period mode should be used with the receiver demodulator enabled. The T Period represents one-half bit time for protocols using biphase encoding or the basic unit of pulse distance for protocols using pulse distance encoding. The baud is usually programmed to match the T Period. For long periods of logic low or high, the receiver samples the demodulated signal at the programmed sampling rate. The total transmission time for the logic 0 bits must be equal to or greater than six or eight times the period of the modulation subcarrier, otherwise fewer pulses will be transmitted. When a new IR energy pulse is detected, the receiver synchronizes the sampling process to the incoming signal timing. This reduces timing-related errors and eliminates the possibility of missing short IR pulse sequences, especially with the RECS 80 protocol. In addition, the Programmed T Period sampling minimizes the amount of data used to represent the incoming IR signal, therefore reducing the processing overhead in the host CPU. CEIR Receive Operation The CEIR receiver is significantly different from a UART receiver. The incoming IR signals are DASK modulated; therefore, demodulation may be necessary. Also, there are no START bits in the incoming data stream. The operations performed by the receiver, whenever an IR signal is detected, are slightly different, depending on whether or not receiver demodulation is enabled. If demodulation is disabled, the receiver immediately becomes active. If demodulation is enabled, the receiver checks the carrier frequency of the incoming signal and becomes active only if the frequency is within the programmed range. Otherwise, the signal is ignored and no other action is taken. 4.11.1.5 FIFO Timeouts Timeout mechanisms are provided to prevent received data from remaining in the RX_FIFO indefinitely, in case the programmed interrupt or DMA thresholds are not reached. An RX_FIFO timeout generates a Receiver Data Ready interrupt and/or a receiver DMA request if bit 0 of the IER register and/or bit 2 of the MCR register (in Extended mode) are set to 1, respectively. An RX_FIFO timeout also sets bit 0 of the ASCR register to 1 if the RX_FIFO is below the threshold. When a Receiver Data Ready interrupt occurs, this bit is tested by the software to determine whether a number of bytes indicated by the RX_FIFO threshold can be read without checking bit 0 of the LSR register. When the receiver enters the Active state, the RXACT bit of the ASCR is set to 1. Once in the Active state, the receiver keeps sampling the IR input signal and generates a bitstring, where a logic 1 indicates an Idle condition and a logic 0 indicates the presence of IR energy. The IR input is sampled regardless of the presence of IR pulses at a rate determined by the value loaded into the Baud Generator Divisor Registers. The received bit-string is either de-serialized and assembled into 8-bit characters, or is converted to run-length encoded values. The resulting data bytes are then transferred into the receiver FIFO (RX_FIFO). Revision 0.8 The conditions that must exist for a timeout to occur in the modes of operation are described below. When a timeout has occurred, it can only be reset when the FIFO is read by the processor or DMA controller. 129 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Functional Description (Continued) Timeout Conditions for UART, SIR, and Sharp-IR Modes RX_FIFO timeout conditions: The fallback mechanism eliminates the need to change the state when a legacy program is executed following completion of a program that used extended features. It automatically switches the module to 16550 compatibility mode and turns off any extended features whenever the Baud Generator Divisor Register is accessed through the LBGD_L or LBGD_H ports in register Bank 1. • At least one byte is in the RX_FIFO. • More than four character times have elapsed since the last byte was loaded into the RX_FIFO from the receiver logic. In order to avoid spurious fallbacks, baud generator divisor ports are provided in Bank 2. Baud generator divisor access through these ports changes the baud rate setting but does not cause fallback. • More than four character times have elapsed since the last byte was read from the RX_FIFO by the processor or DMA controller. New programs designed to take advantage of the extended features should not use LBGD_L and LBGD_H to change the baud rate. Instead, they should use BGD_L and BGD_H. Timeout Conditions for CEIR Mode The RX_FIFO timeout in CEIR mode is disabled while the receiver is active. The conditions for this timeout to occur are as follows: A fallback can occur in either extended or non-extended modes. If extended mode is selected, fallback is always enabled. In this case, when a fallback occurs, the following happens: • At least one byte has been in the RX_FIFO for 64 µs or more. • The receiver has been inactive (RXACT = 0) for 64 µs or more. • TX_FIFO and RX_FIFO switch to 16 levels. • More than 64 µs have elapsed since the last byte was read from the RX_FIFO by the processor or DMA controller. • A value of 13 is selected for the baud generator prescaler. 4.11.1.6 Transmit Deferral This feature allows software to send short, high-speed data frames in PIO mode without the risk of generating a transmitter underrun. • UART mode is selected. • ETDLBK and BTEST of the EXCR1 register are cleared. • The functional block switches to non-extended mode. When fallback occurs from non-extended mode, only the first three of the above actions occur. If either Sharp-IR or SIR infrared modes were selected, no switching to UART mode occurs. This prevents spurious switching to UART mode when a legacy program, running in Infrared mode, accesses the Baud Generator Divisor Register from Bank 1. Transmit deferral is available only in extended mode and when the TX_FIFO is enabled. When transmit deferral is enabled (TX_DFR bit of the MCR register set to 1) and the transmitter becomes empty, an internal flag is set and locks the transmitter. If the processor now writes data into the TX_FIFO, the transmitter does not start sending the data until the TX_FIFO level reaches either 14 for a 16-level TX_FIFO or 30 for a 32-level TX_FIFO, at which time the internal flag is cleared. The internal flag is also cleared and the transmitter starts transmitting when a timeout condition is reached. This prevents some bytes from being in the TX_FIFO indefinitely if the threshold is not reached. Fallback from non-extended mode can be disabled by setting LOCK in the EXCR2 register to 1. When LOCK is set and the functional block is in non-extended mode, two scratch pad registers overlaid with LBGD_L and LBGD_H are enabled. Any attempted processor access of the Baud Generator Divisor Register through LBGD_L and LBGD_H accesses the scratch pad registers, without affecting the baud rate setting. This feature allows existing legacy programs to run faster than 115.2 kbaud, without realizing they are running at this speed. The timeout mechanism is implemented by a timer that is enabled when the internal flag is set and there is at least one byte in the TX_FIFO. Whenever a byte is loaded into the TX_FIFO, the timer is reloaded with the initial value. If no byte is loaded for a 64 µs time, the timer times out and the internal flag is cleared, thus enabling the transmitter. 4.11.2 Modem Support An MSR (MSR_UART[x]_MOD) (UART1 MSR 51400038h and UART2 MSR 5140003Ch) mimics modem input signals for making it compatible with the software having modem support. The hardware of this module has all the required functionality for modem compatibility. 4.11.1.7 Automatic Fallback to 16550 Compatibility Mode This feature is designed to support existing legacy software packages, using the 16550 serial port. For proper operation, many of these software packages require that the module look identical to a plain 16550, since they access the serial port registers directly. Because several extended features and new operational modes are provided, make sure the module is in the proper state before executing a legacy program. www.national.com 130 Revision 0.8 4.11.3 Dongle Interface The dongle interface on the CS5535 is not a fully hardware compatible interface. The real dongle interface requires six external interface signals and the CS5535 only supports three. With only three signals, the dongle interface supports a subset of the real dongle interface through virtualization. Phase 3: Configure mode: Change IRSL[2:0] as an output and configure the transceiver for the required mode. If two infrared inputs are required, change IRSL0 to an input to give the second receiver channel IRRX2. The IRSL2 and IRSL1 are configured as outputs to keep the transceiver in the required mode. 4.11.3.1 Real Dongle The real dongle interface uses six multiplexed pins for dongle identification, data transfer, and transceiver configuration. Figure 4-35 illustrates the real dongle interface and Table 4-20 provides the interface signals and their descriptions. Table 4-20. Real Dongle Interface Signals Signal Name Type IRTX O Infrared transmit data IRRX I Infrared receive data I/O Identification signal 0 ID0/IRSL0/IRRX2 Only three signals (IRTX, IRRX, and ID0/IRSL0/IRRX2) are used for the IR interface. It has three phases: Description Infrared mode select 0 Infrared receive data for transceivers with two RX channels Phase 1: Change the ID0-ID3 bits to input mode, and read the status to complete primary identification of the dongle. ID1/IRSL1 Phase 2: Change ID1 and ID2 as output and read the status of ID0 and ID3 to complete the secondary dongle identification phase. This phase provides information about the connected dongle. I/O Identification signal 1 Infrared mode select 1 ID2/IRSL2 I/O Identification signal 2 Infrared mode select 2 ID3 I/O Identification signal 2 IRTX VCC IRRXI ID0/IRSL0/IRRX2 ID1/IRSL1 IR Controller ID2/IRSL2 Pull-up Resistance ID3 ASIC Boundary Shielded Cable RX-B Transceiver Select Logic RX-A TX IrDa-Data Transceiver with Receive Channels Figure 4-35. Real Dongle Interface Revision 0.8 131 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Functional Description (Continued) 4.11.3.2 Virtual Dongle The virtual dongle interface is used due to the unavailability of pins for dongle identification and configuration (see Figure 4-36). The operational mode of an infrared dongle that uses a non_serial transceiver is selected by the driving the IRSL[2:0] signals. Features The virtual dongle interface is a method used to run legacy software on the UART/IR Controller. The virtual dongle interface uses dedicated UART/IR MSRs. (See Section 5.12.1 "UART/IR Controller Specific MSRs" on page 363 for complete register and bit formats.) The virtual dongle imitates the real dongle as far as legacy software is concerned, and there are no plug-and-play requirements for IR transceivers. • Uses only three pins to connect to IR transceiver. • Fully supports legacy software written for real dongle, with some manual intervention. • All real dongle modes can be supported by changing the MSR. Limitations • The software inputs the dongle's ID to the ID[0:3] bits of MSR_UART[x]_MOD (UART1 MSR 51400038h and UART2 MSR 5140003Ch) as the primary ID encoding. • No Plug-and-Play features available. • IRSL1 and IRSL2 pins need to be tied in the IR transceiver for the required mode. • For dongles that use a non-serial transceiver, it identifies the Consumer IR capabilities. The software should switch ID1 and ID2 to output mode (so they become IRSL1 and IRSL2), IRSL1 and IRSL2 will or will not behave differently (i.e., INV [invert] or NCH [no change]) from the previous step and the software should respond by driving the appropriate level on ID0 and ID3 in the MSR_UART[x]_DONG register. • MSR contents must be changed when changing the transceiver mode. If BIOS is used to change the MSR contents, it must be a factory setting. • If the legacy software supports IR transceiver configuration, the contents of IRSL[2:0] are to be read from the MSR and the required bit tieing needs to be done in the transceiver board. UART/IR Controller MSR_UART[x]_MOD ID1 ID2 ID0 MSR_UART[x]_DONG ID3 ID0_SEC ID3_SEC IRSL0 IRSL1 IRSL2 Mux ID1 ID2 ID0 ID3 IR Controller IRRX1 IRTX ASIC Boundary IRSL1 IRSL2 IR Transceiver Tie IRSL1 and IRSL2 Figure 4-36. Virtual Dongle Interface www.national.com 132 Revision 0.8 The Direct Memory Access (DMA) module supports industry standard DMA architecture using two 8237-compatible DMA controllers in cascaded configuration. Figure 4-37 shows the DMA module partitioning. It consists of two standard 8237 DMA controllers, a bus interface, address mapper, and source mapper. When LPC is selected as the DMA source for DMA Channel 0, the source is LPC DMA Channel 0. Similarly, when LPC is selected as the source for DMA Channel 1, 2, or 3, then the DMA sources for those three DMA channels are respectively LPC DMA Channels 1, 2, and 3. Therefore, LPC DMA Channel 0 can only be mapped to DMA Channel 0, LPC DMA Channel 1 can only be mapped to DMA Channel 1, etc. Features • 32-bit address range support via high page registers. Table 4-21. DMA Source Selection • Supports the standard 7-channel DMA configuration, out of which the four 8-bit channels are used. Source Selector Value from DMA Mapper • DMA mapper to route DMA sources to the four 8-bit DMA channels. DMA Source • DMA sources to come from the LPC bus, and come from transmit and receive from the two UARTs. 0 None (DMA channel off) 1 UART1 Transmit • Allow the data bus to be released in between DMA transfers during demand or bulk mode to allow transfers to the DMA module or the module doing DMA transfers. 2 UART1 Receive 3 UART2 Transmit 4 UART2 Receive 5 Reserved (not active) 6 Reserved (not active) 7 LPC 4.12.1 DMA Mapper Source Selection For each 8-bit DMA channel, the DMA mapper allows the DMA request to come from a number of sources. Table 421 shows how the DMA mapper register select field selects the appropriate DMA source. LPC I/F 8237 Data LBus I/F LPC and DMA Interfaces with DMA mapper Bus Interface and Registers 8237 DMA R/W Controls DMA Requests DMA Acks Figure 4-37. DMA Module Block Diagram Revision 0.8 133 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.12 DIRECT MEMORY ACCESS MODULE Geode™ CS5535 4.13 LOW PIN COUNT PORT The Low Pin Count port is based on Intel’s Low Pin Count (LPC) Interface Specification v1.0. In addition to the required pins, the CS5535 also supports two optional pins: LDRQ# and SERIRQ. The LPC interface supports memory, I/O, DMA, and Intel’s Firmware Hub Interface. Figure 4-38 shows the block diagram of the LPC port. • Bus master cycles not supported. • CLKRUN# and LPCPD# not supported. SMI# and PME# supported via GPIOs. • On-chip DMA transfers through LPC. • Supports Intel’s FirmWare Hub (FWH) Interface: — 5 Signal communication interface supporting byte-ata-time reads and writes. — LAD[3:0] called as FWH0-FWH3 and LFRAME# as FWH4. Features • Based on Intel’s Low Pin Count (LPC) Specification v1.0. • Serial IRQ support. • Supports memory, I/O, and DMA cycle types. GeodeLink Adapter Local Bus LPC to/from Local Bus Local Bus Slave Local Bus Master From DMA LPC Master Busy To PIC LPC Reg SIRQ SERIRQ LPC Master Local Bus Master Local Bus Slave SIRQ LDRQ DRQ LPC Reg LPC to/from Local Bus Busy DRQ To DMA LDRQ LFRAME# LAD[3:0] LDRQ# Initiates all transactions on LPC bus, takes/issues requests from Local bus. Takes request from LPC master and DMA. Issues request to LPC master from Local bus. Decodes SERIRQ into IRQ to be passed on to PIC. Decodes LDRQ# into DRQ sets and clears. Combines multiple LDRQ# outputs and passes results to DMA. Contains all the LPC I/O registers. LPC to Local bus interface module. Generates busy signal for clock controls. Figure 4-38. LPC Block Diagram www.national.com 134 Revision 0.8 4.13.1 LPC Protocol LPC supports memory read/write, I/O read/write, DMA read/write, and Firmware Hub Interface (see Table 4-22). Data transfers on the LPC bus are serialized over a 4-bit bus. CYCTYP: The Cycle Type field is driven by the host when it is performing DMA or target accesses. Bits [3:2] are used for cycle type and bit 1 is used for direction. Bit 0 is reserved. SIZE: This field is one clock. It is driven by the host on memory and DMA transfers to determine how many bytes are to be transferred. Bits [1:0] are used to determine size and bits [3:2] are reserved. Table 4-22. Cycle Types Supported Size Size Supported Intel FWH Read 1 Byte Yes Intel FWH Write 1 Byte Yes Cycle Type Memory Read 1 Byte Yes Memory Write 1 Byte Yes I/O Read 1 Byte Yes I/O Write 1 Byte Yes DMA Read 1, 2, 4 Bytes 1 Byte Only DMA Write 1, 2, 4 Bytes 1 Byte Only Bus Master Mem Read 1, 2, 4 Bytes No Bus Master Mem Write 1, 2, 4 Bytes No Bus Master I/O Read 1, 2, 4 Bytes No Bus Master I/O Write 1, 2, 4 Bytes No TAR: The Turn Around field is two clocks, and is driven by the host when it is turning control over to a peripheral and vice versa. In the first clock a host or a peripheral drives the LAD[3:0] lines to 1111b, on the second cycle the host or peripheral TRI-STATES the LAD[3:0] lines. These lines have weak pull-ups so they will remain at a logical high state. ADDR: The Address field is four clocks for I/O cycles and eight clocks for memory cycles. It is driven by the host on target accesses. This field is not driven on DMA cycles. The most significant nibble is driven first. CHANNEL/Terminal Count: The Channel field is one clock and driven by the host on DMA cycles to indicate the DMA channel. Only 8-bit channels are supported (0, 1, 2, 3). DMA channel is communicated on LAD[2:0] and Terminal Count (TC) is communicated through LAD3. TC indicates the last byte of transfer, based upon the size of the transfer. If an 8-bit transfer and TC is set, then this is the last byte. DATA: This field is two clocks, representing one byte data. It is driven by the host on target and DMA cycles when data is flowing to the peripheral, and by the peripheral when data is flowing to the host. The lower nibble is driven first. LFRAME# is used by the host to start or stop transfers. No peripherals drive this signal. A cycle is started by the host when it drives LFRAME# active and puts information related to the cycle on the LAD[3:0] signals. The host drives information such as address or DMA channel number. For DMA and target cycles, the host drives cycle type (memory or I/O), read/write direction, and size of the transfer. The host optionally drives data, and turns around to monitor peripherals for completion of the cycle. The peripheral indicates the completion of the cycle by driving appropriate values on the LAD[3:0] signals. SYNC: This field can be several clocks in length and is used to add wait states. Driven by the peripheral on target or DMA cycles. SYNC Timeout: 1) The host starts a cycle, but no device ever drives SYNC valid. If the host observes three consecutive clocks without a valid SYNC, it can abort the cycle. The LAD[3:0] signals communicate address, control, and data information over the LPC bus between the host and the peripheral. The information carried on the LAD signals are: start, stop (abort a cycle), transfer type (memory, I/O, DMA), transfer direction (read/write), address, data, wait states, and DMA channel number. The following sections give an overview of fields used. Detailed field descriptions are provided in Table 4-23 on page 136. 2) – If the SYNC pattern is 0101b, then the maximum number of SYNC clocks is eight. If the host sees more than eight, it may abort the cycle. START: This field indicates the start or stop of a transaction. The START field is valid on the last clock that LFRAME# is active. It is used to indicate a device number, or start/stop indication. Revision 0.8 The host starts a cycle, a device drives a SYNC valid to insert wait states (LAD[3:0] = 0101b or 0110b), but never completes it. This could happen if the peripheral locks up for some reason. The peripheral should be designed to prevent this case: – If the SYNC pattern is 0110b, then no maximum number of SYNC clocks took place, the peripheral must have protection mechanisms to complete the cycle. 135 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) When the host is driving SYNC, it may insert a very large number of wait-states depending on PCI latencies. The peripheral must not assume any timeouts. peripheral must transfer it. If the host was writing, data had already been transferred. In DMA if it was a multiple byte cycle, an error SYNC terminates the cycle. SYNC Error Indication: A peripheral can report an error via the LAD[3:0] = 1010b encoding. If the host was reading data from a peripheral, the data will still be transferred in the next two nibbles, even though this data is invalid, the For more info on SYNC timeout and SYNC error details, refer to the LPC Specification. Table 4-23. Cycle Field Definitions: Target Memory, I/O, and DMA Field # Clocks Comment START 1 Start of Cycle. 0000b indicates a start of a cycle. CYCTYP 1 Cycle Type. Indicates the type of cycle. Bits [3:0] 000x 001x 010x 011x 100x 101x 1100 1101 1110 1111 CHANNEL 1 Definition I/O Read I/O Write Memory Read Memory Write DMA Read DMA Write Reserved FWH Read FWH Write Reserved Channel #. Used only for DMA cycles to indicate channel number being granted. The LAD[2:0] bits indicate the channel number being granted, and LAD[3] indicates the TC bit. The encoding on LAD[2:0] for channel number is as follows: LAD[2:0] 000 001 010 011 100-111 Definition I/O Read I/O Write Memory Read Memory Write Reserved Only 8-bit channels are supported. TAR 2 Turn-Around. The last component driving LAD[3:0] will drive it high during the first clock and TRI-STATE during the second clock. SIZE 1 Size of Transfer. Used only for DMA cycles. Bits [3:0] are reserved and must be ignored by the peripheral. LAD[1:0] 00 01-11 Definition 8-Bit Reserved Only 8-bit is supported for all transfers. DATA ADDR 1 Byte Data Phase. The data byte is transferred with the least significant nibble first (D[3:0] on LAD[3:0], then D[7:4] on LAD[3:0]). DMA: 1 Byte DMA. The data byte is transferred with the least significant nibble first (D[3:0] on LAD[3:0], then D[7:4] on LAD[3:0]). Only one byte data transfer is supported. 8 for Memory, 4 for I/O Address Phase. Address is 32-bit for memory, 16-bit for I/O. It is transferred most significant nibble first. DMA cycles do not use the ADDR field. www.national.com 136 Revision 0.8 Table 4-23. Cycle Field Definitions: Target Memory, I/O, and DMA (Continued) Field # Clocks SYNC 1-N Comment Sync: Allows peripheral or host to synchronize (add wait-states). Generally, the peripheral or host drives 0101 or 0110 until no more wait-states are needed. At that point it will drive 0000. All other combinations are reserved. 0000 Sync achieved with no error. DMA. Sync achieved with no error. Also indicates no more transfer desired for that channel, and DMA request is de-asserted. 0101 Indicates that Sync not achieved yet, but the part is driving the bus. DMA. Part indicating wait states. 0110 Indicates that Sync not achieved yet, but the part is driving the bus, and expect long Sync. DMA. Part indicating wait states, and many wait states will be added. 1010 Special case. Peripheral indicating errors, see sync section in protocol overview. DMA. Sync achieved with error. Also indicates no more transfers desired for that channel, and DMA request is de-asserted. 1001 DMA (only). Sync achieved with no error and more DMA transfer desired to continue after this transfer. 4.13.2 Cycle Protocol Start of Cycle (see Figure 4-39): The host asserts LFRAME# for one or more clocks and drives a START value on LAD[3:0], all peripherals stop driving the LAD[3:0] signals even if in the middle of a transfer. The peripheral must always use the last START value when LFRAME# was active. On the clock after the START value, the host de-asserts LFRAME#. Abort Mechanism (see Figure 4-40): The host can cause an abort on the LPC interface by driving LFRAME# active with a START value of 1111b. The host must keep LFRAME# active for at least four consecutive clocks and drive LAD[3:0] to 1111b no later than the fourth clock after LFRAME# goes active. The host must drive LFRAME# inactive for at least one clock after an abort. An abort typically occurs on SYNC timeouts. LCLK LFRAME# LAD[3:0]# START CYCTYP ADDR 1 1 1-8 TAR SYNC DATA TAR START 2 1-n 2 2 1 Figure 4-39. Start of Cycle Timing Diagram LCLK LFRAME# LAD[3:0]# START CYCTYP 1 1 ADDR 1-8 TAR 2 SYNC Peripheral must Stop driving Chip set will drive high Too many Syncs causes Timeout Figure 4-40. Abort Mechanism Timing Diagram Revision 0.8 137 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) 4.13.2.1 Host Initiated Cycles Memory Cycles: Memory read or write cycles are intended for memory-mapped devices. The ADDR field is a full 32 bits, and transmitted with most significant nibble first. Typically a memory device supports much less addressing and ignores address bits above which it is capable of decoding. requested channel is active or not. The case where the ACT is low (inactive) will be rare, and is only used to indicate that a previous request for that channel is being abandoned. After indication, LDRQ# should go high for at least one clock. After that one clock LDRQ# can be brought low for next encoding sequence (see Figure 4-41.) DMA Transfer: Arbitration for DMA channels is performed through the 8237 within the host. Once the host won the arbitration, it asserts LFRAME# on the LPC bus. The host starts a transfer by asserting 0000b on LAD[3:0] with LFRAME# asserted. The host’s assert “cycle type” and direction is based on the DMA transfer. In the next cycle it asserts channel number and in the following cycle it indicates the size of the transfer. I/O Cycles: I/O read or write cycles are intended for peripherals. These cycles are generally used for register or FIFO accesses and have minimal Sync times. Data transfers are assumed to be exactly 1 byte. The host is responsible for breaking up larger data transfers into 8-bit cycles. The minimum number of wait states between bytes is 1. The host initiated cycles are shown in Table 4-24. DMA Reads: The host drives 8 bits of data and turns the bus around, then the peripheral acknowledges the data with a valid SYNC. Table 4-24. Host Initiated Cycles Driven By Memory or I/O Read Cycle Write Cycle START Host Host CYCTYP + DIR Host Host ADDR Host Host TAR Host Host SYNC Peripheral Peripheral DATA Peripheral Host TAR Peripheral Peripheral DMA Writes: The host turns the bus around and waits for data, then the peripheral indicates data is ready through valid SYNC and transfer of the data. The DMA initiated cycles are shown in Table 4-25. Table 4-25. DMA Initiated Cycles Driven By 4.13.2.2 DMA Initiated Cycles DMA on LPC is handled through the LDRQ# line from peripherals and special encoding on LAD[3:0] for the host. Single, demand, verify, and increment mode are supported on the LPC interface. Block, decrement, and cascade are not supported. Channels 0 through 3 are 8-bit channels. Only 8-bit channels are supported. Asserting DMA Requests: Peripherals need the DMA service to encode their request channel number on the LDRQ# signal. LDRQ# is synchronous with LCLK. Peripherals start the sequence by asserting LDRQ# low. The next 3 bits contain the encoded DMA channel number with the MSB first. And the next bit (ACT) indicates whether the DMA Read Cycle (Host to Peripheral) Write Cycle (Peripheral to Host) START Host Host CYCTYP Host Host CHANNEL Host Host SIZE Host Host DATA Host Host TAR Host Peripheral SYNC Peripheral Peripheral TAR Peripheral Peripheral LCLK LDRQ# START MSB LSB ACT START Figure 4-41. DMA Cycle Timing Diagram www.national.com 138 Revision 0.8 4.13.3 Serial IRQ The LPC supports a serial IRQ scheme. This allows a single signal to be used to report ISA-style interrupt requests. Because more than one device may need to share the single serial IRQ signal, an Open Collector signaling scheme is used. Stop Frame After all of the Data frames, a Stop frame is performed by the host. This is accomplished by driving SERIRQ low for two to three clocks. The number of clocks determines the next mode: • If the SERIRQ is low for two clocks, the next mode is the Quiet mode. Any device may initiate a Start frame in the second clock (or more) after the rising edge of the Stop frame. Serial interrupt information is transferred using three types of frames: a Start frame, one or more IRQ Data frames, and one Stop frame (see Figure Figure 4-42, Figure 4-43, and Figure 4-44 on page 140). There are also two modes of operation. Quiet mode, initiated by the peripheral, and Continuous mode, initiated by the host: 1) • If SERIRQ is low for three clocks, the next cycle is the Continuous mode. Only the host may initiate a Start frame in the second clock (or more) after the rising edge of the Stop frame. Quiet (Active) Mode: To indicate an interrupt, the peripheral brings the SERIRQ signal active for one clock, and then places the signal in TRI-STATE mode. This brings all the state machines from the Idle state to the Active state. Table 4-26. IRQ Data Frames Date Frame Number Usage 0 IRQ0 1 IRQ1 2 SMI# (Not Supported) 3 IRQ3 Continuous (Idle) Mode: In this mode, the host initiates the Start frame, rather than the peripherals. Typically, this is done to update IRQ status (acknowledges). The host drives SERIRQ low for 4-8 clocks. This is the default mode after reset; it can be used to enter the Quiet Mode. 4 IRQ4 5 IRQ5 6 IRQ6 7 IRQ7 8 IRQ8 Data Frame Once the Start frame has been initiated, all of the serial interrupt peripherals must start counting frames based on the rising edge of the SERIRQ. Each of the IRQ/DATA frames has exactly three phases of one clock each: a Sample phase, a Recovery phase, and a Turn Around phase. 9 IRQ9 10 IRQ10 11 IRQ11 12 IRQ12 13 IRQ13 14 IRQ14 15 IRQ15 16 IOCHK# 17 INTA# 18 INTB# 19 INTC# 20 INTD# 31-21 Unassigned The host then takes control of the SERIRQ signal by driving it low on the next clock, and continues driving it low for 3-7 clocks more (programmable). Thus, the total number of clocks low will be 4-8. After those clocks, the host drives SERIRQ high for one clock and then places SERIRQ into the TRI-STATE mode. 2) During the sample phase, the device drives SERIRQ low if the corresponding interrupt signals should be active. If the corresponding interrupt is inactive, then the devices should not drive the SERIRQ signal. It will remain high due to pullup registers. During the other two phases (Turn Around and Recovery), no device should drive the SERIRQ signal. The IRQ/DATA frames have a specific order and usage as shown in Table 4-26. Revision 0.8 139 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) LCLK START SERIRQ Host or Slave Drivers REC TAR None Host Controller START: Start pulse width can be from 4-8 cycles, the width is determined by the value of START width. REC: Recover, host actively drives SERIRQ high. TAR: Turn Around Cycle. Dead cycle to prevent bus contention. Figure 4-42. Start Frame Waveform IRQ Set: LCLK SERIRQ Driver REC SAMP IRQX TAR None IRQ Clear: SERIRQ REC SAMP Driver TAR None SAMP: Sample, slave drives low or leaves high. REC: Recover, slave actively drives SERIRQ high if driven low during sample. TAR: Turn Around Cycle. Dead cycle to prevent bus contention. Figure 4-43. IRQ Frame Waveform Continues Mode: LCLK SERIRQ Drivers STOP REC TAR None Host Controller Quiet Mode: SERIRQ Drivers REC: TAR: STOP Host Controller REC TAR None Recover, host actively drives SERIRQ high. Turn Around Cycle. Dead cycle to prevent bus contention. Figure 4-44. Stop Frame Waveform www.national.com 140 Revision 0.8 4.13.4 Firmware Hub Interface The Firmware Hub (FWH) relies on the Intel Firmware Hub interface to communicate with the outside world. This interface consists of four bidirectional signals and one “control” input. The timing and the electrical parameters of the FWH interface are similar to those of the LPC interface. The Intel FWH interface is designed to use an LPC-compatible Start cycle, with a reserved cycle type code. This ensures that all LPC devices present on the shared interface will ignore cycles destined for the FWH, without becoming “confused” by the different protocols. FWH Write Cycles: A write cycle is initiated by asserting 1110b on LAD[3:0] with LFRAME# low. All data transfers are valid on the rising edge of the LCLK. The cycle is illustrated in Figure 4-46 and described in Table 4-28. Abort Operation: LFRAME# (FWH4) active (low) indicates either that a Start cycle will eventually occur or that an abort is in progress. In either case, if LFRAME# (FWH4) is asserted, the Intel FWH will “immediately” TRI-STATE its outputs and the FWH state machine will reset. During a write cycle, there is a possibility that an internal Flash write or erase operation is in progress (or has just been initiated). If LFRAME# (FWH4) is asserted during this frame, the internal operation will not abort. The software must send an explicit Flash command to terminate or Suspend the operation. When the FWH interface is active, information is transferred to and from the FWH by a series of “fields” where each field contains four bits of data. Many fields are one clock cycle in length but can be of variable length, depending upon the nature of the field. Field sequences and contents are strictly defined for read and write operations. The internal FWH state machine will not initiate a Flash write or erase operation until it has received the last data nibble from the chip set. This means that LFRAME (FWH4) can be asserted as late as this cycle (“cycle 12") and no internal Flash operation will be attempted. However, since the Intel FWH will start “processing” incoming data before it generates its SYNC field, it should be considered a nonbuffered peripheral device. 4.13.4.1 FWH Cycles A cycle is started on the rising edge of LCLK when LFRAME# is asserted and a valid cycle type is driven on LAD[3:0] by the host. Valid cycle types for the FWH are 1101b (read) and 1110b (write). FWH Read Cycles: A read cycle is initiated by asserting 1101b on LAD[3:0] with LFRAME# low. All data transfers are valid on the rising edge of the LCLK. The cycle is illustrated in Figure 4-45 and described in Table 4-27. LCLK LFRAME (FWH4) LAD[3:0] (FWH3-FWH0) Number of Clock Cycles START 1 IDSEL ADDR MSIZE TAR SYNC DATA TAR 1 7 1 2 3 2 2 Figure 4-45. FWH Read Cycle Revision 0.8 141 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) Table 4-27. FWH Read Cycle Signal Clock Cycle LAD[3:0] Peripheral I/O START 1 1101b I On the rising edge of CLK with LFRAME# low, the contents of LAD[3:0] indicate the start of an FWH cycle. IDSEL 1 0000 I Indicates which FWH peripheral is selected. The value on the LAD[3:0] is compared to the IDSEL strapping on the FWH device pins to select which device is being addressed. Description Note: From Intel 82802 Specification - the boot device must have an ID (determined by ID strapping pins ID[3:0]) of 0. It is advisable that subsequent devices use incremental numbering. ADDR 7 xxxx I A 28-bit address phase is transferred starting with the most significant nibble first. MSIZE 1 0000b I Always 0000b (single byte transfer). TAR 1 1111b I The LPC host drives LAD[3:0] to 1111b to indicate a turnaround cycle. TAR 1 1111b (float) O The FWH device takes control of LAD[3:0] during this cycle. WSYNC 2 0101b O The FWH device drives LAD[3:0] to 0101b (short wait-sync) for two clock cycles, indicating that the data is not yet available. RSYNC 1 0000b O The FWH device drives LAD[3:0] to 0000b, indicating that data will be available during the next clock cycle. DATA 2 xxxx O Data transfer is two cycles, starting with least significant nibble. TAR 1 1111b O The FWH device drives LAD[3:0] to 1111b, to indicate a turnaround cycle. TAR 1 1111b (float) N/A The FWH device floats its output and the LPC host takes control of LAD[3:0]. LCLK LFRAME# (FWH4) LAD[3:0] (FWH0-FWH3) Number of Clock Cycles START IDSEL 1 1 ADDR MSIZE DATA TAR SYNC TAR 7 1 2 2 1 2 Figure 4-46. FWH Write Cycle www.national.com 142 Revision 0.8 Table 4-28. FWH Write Cycle Signal Clock Cycle LAD[3:0] Peripheral I/O START 1 1110b I On the rising edge of CLK with LFRAME# Low, the contents of LAD[3:0] indicate the start of an FWH cycle. IDSEL 1 0000 I Indicates which FWH peripheral is selected. The value on the LAD[3:0] is compared to the IDSEL strapping on the FWH device pins to select which device is being addressed. Description Note: From Intel(R) 82802 spec - the boot device must have an ID (determined by ID strapping Pins ID[3:0]) of 0. It is advisable that subsequent devices use incremental numbering. ADDR 7 xxxx I A 28-bit address phase is transferred starting with the most significant nibble first. MSIZE 1 0000b I Always 0000b (single byte transfer). DATA 2 xxxx I Data transfer is two cycles, starting with least significant nibble. TAR 1 1111b I The LPC host drives LAD[3:0] to 1111b to indicate a turnaround cycle. TAR 1 1111b (float) O The FWH device takes control of LAD[3:0] during this cycle. SYNC 1 0000b O The FWH device drives LAD[3:0] to 0000b to indicate it has received data or a command. TAR 1 1111b O The FWH device drives LAD[3:0] to 1111b, indicating a turnaround cycle. TAR 1 1111b (float) N/A The FWH device floats its output and the LPC host takes control of LAD[3:0]. Revision 0.8 143 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 4.14 REAL-TIME CLOCK FEATURES • Valid timekeeping during power-down, by utilizing external battery backup The Real-Time Clock (RTC) consists of three main blocks: the digital section, the analog section, and the level-shifter block (see Figure 4-47). The digital section contains the bus interface, RAM, voltage control, time generator, and the time keeper. The analog section contains the voltage switch and low power crystal oscillator. Finally, the level shifter block provides the appropriate voltage level translation of signals to and from the RTC block. Level shifters are needed because the RTC is powered by the VPP (output of the analog section), which is different from the VCORE and VCORE_VSB power domains. • 242 bytes of battery-backed RAM • RAM lock schemes to protect its content • Internal oscillator circuit (the crystal itself is off-chip), or external clock supply for the 32.768 kHz clock • A century counter • Additional low-power features such as: — Automatic switching from battery to VSB — Internal power monitoring on the VRT bit — Oscillator disabling to save battery during storage Features • Accurate timekeeping and calendar management • Software compatible with the DS1287 and MC146818 • Alarm at a predetermined time and/or date • Three programmable interrupt sources Local Bus Level Shifter Data & Ctrls rtc_seconds rtc_minutes Index_Reg Ctrl_Reg A, B, C, D RAM I/F Gated Clocks rtc_hours rtc_weekday rtc_monthday rtc_months Bus Interface Index Read Data rtc_years Write Data Time Keeper 242x8 Bit RAM Update Clock Voltage Control Voltage Sense VIO_VSB VBAT KHZ32_XCI KHZ32_XCO Voltage Select VPP Voltage Switch q Low Power Osc. q q 32 kHz Clock #0 #1 #14 Time Generator Figure 4-47. RTC Block Diagram www.national.com 144 Revision 0.8 4.14.1 External Use Recommendations It is recommended that the external components for the oscillator be connected as illustrated in Figure 4-48. The recommended specifications for those external components are listed in Table 4-29. To other modules Capacitors C1 and C2 should be chosen to match the crystal’s load capacitance. The load capacitance CL “seen” by the crystal Y is comprised of C1 in series with C2 in parallel with the parasitic capacitance of the circuit. The parasitic capacitance is caused by the chip package, board layout, and socket (if any). The rule of thumb in choosing these capacitors is: KHZ32_XCI R1 KHZ32_XCO Internal External CL = (C1 * C2)/(C1 + C2) + CPARASITIC C1 can be trimmed to achieve precisely 32.768 kHz. To achieve high time accuracy, use crystal and capacitors with low tolerance and temperature coefficients. Y C1 C2 Figure 4-48. Recommended External Component Connections Table 4-29. External Component Recommended Specifications Component Parameters Values Tolerance Crystal Resonance 32.768 kHz Parallel Mode User-defined Type N-Cut or XY-bar Serial Resistance 40 kΩ Max Q Factor 35000 Min Shunt Capacitance 2 pF Max Load Capacitance, CL 9-13 pF Temperature Coefficient User-defined Resistor, R1 Resistor 20 MΩ (Note 1) 5% Capacitor, C1 Capacitor 22 pF 5% Capacitor, C2 Capacitor 22 pF 5% Note 1. A single 20 MΩ resistor may be difficult to acquire. Substituting two 10 MΩ resistors in series is acceptable. Revision 0.8 145 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 RTC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 4.15 GENERAL PURPOSE INPUT/OUTPUT Proper use and understanding of the General Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) subsystem is the key to applying the CS5535 in a custom system design. By totalizing the optional features of the CS5535 GPIOs, system functions such as soft buttons, DDC monitoring, timers, system interrupts, and others, may be implemented. The system designer should pay careful attention to the suite of features available through the GPIO subsystem and, because the GPIOs are multiplexed with other on-chip functions, must make careful trade-offs to obtain the features desired in the system. • Output Mapping: — After passing through the optional input conditioning circuits, any GPIO may be mapped (connected) to one of eight PIC-level interrupts, or to one of eight Power Management Event (PME) inputs. A given GPIO may not be simultaneously mapped to both an interrupt and a PME. The PIC subsystem interrupt inputs may be configured to cause the generation of an ASMI-type interrupt from any or all of the mapped GPIO signals. • Power Domains: — The GPIO circuits are distributed into the Working and Standby power domains. Those circuits in the Standby power domain may be used for system wakeup events, since they remain powered when the Working power is removed. As indicated in Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42, GPIO[28:24] are located in the Standby power domain; all others are in the Working power domain. Event/Filter pairs 6 and 7 are located in the Standby domain; pairs [5:0] are in the Working power domain. The register space for control of the GPIO subsystem contains space for control of 32 GPIOs. Since only 28 GPIOs are realized, the control bits for the non-existent GPIO[31:29], and GPIO[23] are marked “Reserved”. GPIO[22:16] are multiplexed with the LPC bus; therefore, if the system requires an LPC bus, GPIO[22:16] are not available as GPIOs. Likewise, GPIO[15:14] are multiplexed with the SMB (System Management Bus); if the system requires the SMB, GPIO[15:14] will be dedicated to this function and not available as GPIOs. Other GPIOs are multiplexed with individual functions as indicated in Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. • Auto-Sense: — GPIO5 and GPIO6 have a feature called Auto-sense. When reset is applied to the system, a weak internal pull-up is applied to the pad. When reset is deasserted, the auto-sense value is used to establish the pull-up/down state on the de-assertion edge. If nothing pulls down the pad, then the weak pull-up continues to be applied. If the pad is pulled down, then pull-up is set to “no” and pull-down is set to “yes”. The output driver does not actively drive the pad, that is, it remains in TRI-STATE mode. If an auto-sensed pull-down is desired, a diode between the reset signal and the GPIO pin will pull it down during the Auto-Sense operation but will have no effect during normal operation. Features • Input Features: — Each of the available GPIOs may be configured as an input. A block of eight Input Conditioning Functions, providing edge detection, event counting, and input filtering, may be configured for use by any eight of the 28 GPIOs, though all 28 may have edge detection. The optionally-conditioned input may then be fed to steering logic that can connect it to an interrupt, or power-management input event (PME). • Output Features: — Each of the available 28 GPIOs has a configurable output cell. The output cell for each GPIO may be independently configured to provide a variety of interface options. The cell may be enabled or disabled, configured as a totem-pole or open-drain type, have internal pull-up or pull-down resistors applied, or be inverted. • Recommended Functions: — System designers at National Semiconductor have created a list of recommended uses for selected GPIOs, see Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42. The desired functions were matched up with GPIOs by selecting appropriate buffer types and multiplexing options to create an optimal list of recommended uses for the GPIOs. Designers may use these recommended functions as a starting point and make modifications to the list as needed to fit the particulars of their system. — As indicated in Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42, the GPIOs have differing output driver types and reset defaults. When choosing a GPIO for a given function, choose one with a compatible output driver type, and one that the use of, does not make another desired function inaccessible. Careful study of this table will assist the system designer in making proper selections of the desired functionality of the suite of GPIOs. • Auxiliary Functions — Most of the 28 GPIOs have additional hard-wired internally-connected functions that may be selected by choosing either the AUX_1 or AUX_2 outputs. Use of these allows internal functions to be accessed at the device pins. Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 identifies these auxiliary functions, including access to the UARTS and multi-function timers, as well as certain power-management controls. www.national.com 146 Revision 0.8 4.15.1 Programming for Recommended Functions Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 includes an “Recommended Use” column. Shown below are the register settings to achieve the example. Example Use Getting Example Use Note --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------PCI_INTA# INPUT_ENABLE = 1 Setup GPIO Interrupt Mapper AC_BEEP OUT_ENABLE = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 IDE_IRQ0 INPUT_ENABLE = 1 IN_AUX1_SELECT = 1 DDC_SCL OUT_ENABLE = 1 Software write OUT_VALUE DDC_SDA OUT_ENABLE = 1 Software write OUT_VALUE MFGPT0 OUT_ENABLE = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 MFGPT1 OUT_ENABLE = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 PCI_INTB# INPUT_ENABLE = 1 Setup GPIO Interrupt Mapper UART1_TX OUT_ENABLE = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 UART1_RX INPUT_ENABLE = 1 IN_AUX1_SELECT = 1 THRM_ALRM# INPUT_ENABLE = 1 IN_AUX1_SELECT = 1 INPUT_INVERT = 1 SLP_CLK# OUT_ENABLE = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 GPIO IN INPUT_ENABLE = 1 Software read READ_BACK GPIO IN INPUT_ENABLE = 1 Software read READ_BACK SMB_CLK INPUT_ENABLE = 1 IN_AUX1_SELECT = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 SMB_DATA INPUT_ENABLE = 1 IN_AUX1_SELECT = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 LPC_AD0 Hardware default Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29 LPC_AD1 Hardware default Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29 LPC_AD2 Hardware default Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29 LPC_AD3 Hardware default Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29 LPC_DRQ# Hardware default Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29 LPC_SERIRQ Hardware default Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29 LPC_FRAME# Hardware default Table 2-6 "DIVIL_BALL_OPT" on page 29 WORK_AUX OUT_ENABLE = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 LOW_BAT# INPUT_ENABLE = 1 IN_AUX1_SELECT = 1 PME# INPUT_ENABLE = 1 Setup GPIO PME Mapper MFGPT7 OUT_ENABLE = 1 OUT_AUX1_SELECT = 1 PWR_BUT# INPUT_ENABLE = 1 IN_AUX1_SELECT = 1 Revision 0.8 147 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Functional Description (Continued) 4.15.2 Register Strategy The register set for the GPIO subsystem has been arranged in such a way as to eliminate the need for readmodify-write operations. Individual GPIO control bits may be directly and immediately altered without requiring knowledge of any other GPIO states or bit settings. Previous systems required the current settings for all GPIOs to be read, selected pins changed, and the result written back. If this read-modify-write operation was interrupted by another process that also used the GPIOs, then erroneous operation could result. GPIO5 has a 0 in the logic 0 bit position (register bit 13), and a 1 in the logic 1 bit position (register bit 5), so the GPIO5 feature bit would become a 1. GPIO4 has a 1 in the logic 0 bit position (register bit 13), and a 0 in the logic 1 bit position (register bit 5), so the GPIO4 feature bit would become a 0. GPIO7 has a 1 in both bit positions 15 and 7. Writing a 1 to both the logic 1 and logic 0 bit positions causes no change to the GPIO7 feature bit. GPIO6 has a 0 in both bit positions 14 and 6. Writing a 0 to both the logic 1 and logic 0 bit positions causes no change to the GPIO6 control bit. GPIO[3:0], also have 0s in both bit positions, so they experience no change. To avoid the read-modify-write operation, two data bits are used to control each GPIO feature bit, wherein a feature is enabled or disabled. One register bit is used to establish a logic 1, while a second register bit is used to establish a logic 0. A 1 in a register bit changes the feature bit’s value, while a 0 does nothing. Since there are two register bits for each feature bit, for each GPIO, there are four combinations of register bits possible. The two control bits operate in an exclusive-OR pattern, as illustrated in Table 4-30. Reads produce a normal and an inverted value. For example, assume the Output Enable is set only for GPIO4 in the above register. A read would return the value EF10h. Actual GPIO registers associated with feature bit settings are 32 bits wide and each handle 16 GPIOs. They are organized into low and high banks. The low bank deals with GPIO[15:0], while the high bank deals with GPIO[28:24] and GPIO[22:16]. Table 4-30. Effect on Feature Bit Logic 0 Bit Position Logic 1 Bit Position 0 0 No change 1 0 Feature bit is cleared to 0 0 1 Feature bit is set to 1 1 1 No change In addition to these “bit registers”, there are value registers for the Input Conditioning Functions. Effect on Feature Bit 4.15.3 Lock Bits Many GPIO registers are protected against accidental changes by Lock Enable registers that prevent further changes. Once a LOCK bit is set, the associated register can not be changed until the corresponding LOCK bit is cleared. There are two Lock Bit registers, one for the high bank (GPIOH_LOCK_EN, GPIO I/O Offset 8Ch) and one for the low bank (GPIOH_LOCK_EN, GPIO I/O Offset 3Ch). All GPIO registers are protected by LOCK bits except the High and Low Bank Read Back registers, (GPIO[x]_READ_BACK), High and Low Bank Positive Edge Status registers (GPIO[x]POSEDGE_STS), the High Low Bank Negative Edge Status registers (GPIO[x]NEGEDGE_STS), and of course the Lock Enable registers themselves. An example 16-bit register controlling a feature bit for eight GPIOs is illustrated in Table 4-31. Note that the real registers are 32 bits; 16 bits are used here as an illustrative example. Assume that the register in Table 4-31 allows setting and clearing of an unspecified “feature bit” for GPIO[7:0]. Assume that the 16-bit value given in the example has just been written into the register. In this example, all four possible bit combinations fromTable 4-30 are examined. Table 4-31. 16-Bit GPIO Control Register Example “1” Sets Control Bit to 0 “1” Sets Control Bit to 1 Bit No. 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Value 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 GPIO # 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 www.national.com 148 Revision 0.8 4.15.4 GPIO Basic I/O Configuration The General Purpose Input and Output (GPIO) Interface is illustrated in Figure 4-49. The figure represents one of twenty-eight GPIOs potentially available. Note the GPIOs [31:29] and [23] are non-existent. Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 provides a complete list of features for each GPIO and should be consulted when configuring a system. • OUT_INVRT_EN. When high, inverts the Output Value. • IN_INVRT_EN. Inverts the signal applied to the ball, and presents the inverted value to all follow-up circuitry (i.e., input conditioning functions). • OUT_OD_EN. Configures this GPIO for open-drain operation. When the output pad is to be driven low, the pad is driven low. When the output pad is to be driven high, the pad is allowed to float and is not driven. Each GPIO has basic configuration options used to set up the characteristics of the GPIO for either input or output. Each of the functions in the list below follows the GPIO register strategy outlined inSection 4.15.2 "Register Strategy" on page 148 unless otherwise noted. This strategy allows individual GPIOs to be modified without accidentally changing the characteristics of unrelated GPIOs, and without requiring ‘read-modify-write’ cycles. All values are active high. • OUT_AUX1_SEL and OUT_AUX2_SEL. Selects an internal auxiliary source for the Output Value. Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 identifies all the possible internal connections for these two auxiliary sources. • IN_AUX1_SEL. Selects an internal source as an input instead of the ball. Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 lists all the functions that may be connected in this manner. • OUT_EN. When high, enables this GPIO for output. A pad may be configured for output, input, or both. • PU_EN. Applies a weak pull-up to the pad. The effect of this control is independent of all other settings except PD_EN. If PU_EN is set by software, PD_EN is automatically cleared. • IN_EN. Enables this GPIO for input. A pad may be configured for input, output, or both. • OUT_VAL. This will establish the value driven to the pad when it is selected as an Output, unless either OUT_AUX1 or OUT_AUX2 are selected. The value driven to the GPIO pad is subject to an optional inversion. • PD_EN. Applies a weak pull-down to the pad. The effect of this control is independent of all other settings except PU_EN. If PD_EN is set by software, PU_EN is automatically cleared. Event Event Count Enable Count Positive Edge Enable Read Status Interrupts [7:0] Filter Amount Event Counter Filter Enable Digital Filter Input Enable Pull-Up Enable Input Invert Enable Input Conditioning Functions (1 of 8) Negative Edge Enable Ball AUX1 Event Enable X,Y,Z,W Interrupt Mapping Registers AUX2 Output Value PME Open-Drain Output Output Invert Enable Enable Enable [7:0] X,Y,Z,W PME Mapping Registers Pull-Down Enable Figure 4-49. GPIO Configuration Revision 0.8 149 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Functional Description (Continued) 4.15.5 Input Conditioning Functions GPIOs in the CS5535 may have their inputs conditioned by configurable circuitry as illustrated in Figure 4-49 on page 149. Any GPIO may be connected to one of eight Input Conditioning functions, each consisting of a Digital Filter and an Event Counter (known as an Event/Filter pair). Each GPIO is followed by an edge detection function that may be set for either positive or negative going edges. As shown in Figure 4-49, the edge detection function may be used to monitor the output of the Event/Filter pair that has been associated with that particular GPIO, or it may be used independently of the Event /Filter pair. then the counter reaches 0 and produces an output pulse to whatever the GPIO is internally connected to. If the associated GPIO input changes during the count-down period, then the counter reloads the initial count from the GPIO_FLTR[x]_AMNT register and begins counting down towards 0 again. Direct access to the counter’s state is provided by the R/W register GPIO_FLTR[x]_CNT, that may be read at any time to determine the current value of the counter. The GPIO_FLTR[x]_CNT register may also be written to at any time, thereby jamming the counter state forward or backward from the current count. These functions are enabled as follows: Reads and writes of the GPIO_FLTR[x]_CNT register are internally synchronized to avoid false read values and corrupted writes, that is, reads and writes may occur to a filter circuit without concern of the phasing or timing of the 32 kHz clock edges. When GPIO[x]_IN_FLTR_EN is low the filter circuit is not clocked. • IN_FLTR_EN. Enables the input filter function of the associated GPIO. • EVNTCNT_EN. Enables the event counter function of the associated GPIO. • IN_POSEDGE_EN and IN_NEGEDGE_EN. Enables the edge detection function and mode. The filter circuit is used to produce a stable output from an unstable input. Mechanical switch de-bounce is a typical use. The default value for all flip-flops, the Down Counter, and the Filter Amount Register is zero. Software establishes the filter amount. As long as the preliminary input on the left matches the filtered input on the right, the circuit is stable and the counter continuously loads the filter amount value. When the preliminary input changes, the counter begins to count. If the input remains steady, then the counter reaches zero and enables loading the value flipflop. This brings the circuit back to the stable point. If the input does not remain steady, then the counter reloads. The preliminary input on the left must remain steady the “filter amount” number of clock edges for the final input on the right to change. A filter amount of zero effectively disables the filtering function because the Down Counter will not roll over backwards to all ones. The maximum filter amount is FFFFh The final input value may be read back by a software accessible register (GPIO[x]_READ_BACK). It may also be used as an Interrupt or a Power Management Event. There are a total of eight Digital Filter/Event Counter pairs that are shared by 28 GPIOs. There is a selection function to associate a given Filter/Counter pair with a given GPIO. All GPIOs incorporate edge detection. 4.15.5.1 Input Filter Conditioning Function The digital filter is one-half of a Filter/Event conditioning circuit. (The other half is the Event Counter.) The filter is used to produce a stable output from an unstable input. Mechanical switch de-bounce is a typical use. To use one of the eight digital filters, it must first be assigned to one of the GPIO inputs using one of the GPIO_FE[x]_SEL registers (GPIO I/O Offsets F0h-F7h); where “x” is the number of the Filter/Event pair, 0 to 7. Then the filter function must be enabled through either the GPIOL_IN_FLTR_EN (GPIO I/O Offset 28h) or the GPIOH_IN_FLTR_EN (GPIO I/O Offset A8h) registers, depending on whether the selected GPIO is in the high [28:16] or low [15:0] bank. Finally, a GPIO_FLTR[x]_AMNT (GPIO I/O Offsets 50h, 58h, 60h, 68h, 70h, 78h, D0h, and D8h) must be determined and then programmed to establish the filter’s stability period. 4.15.5.2 Input Event Counter Conditioning Function The event counter is one half of a filter/event conditioning circuit, and is in series with its associated filter. (The other half is the digital filter.) It counts events and can produce an output when a predefined count is reached. The event counter may be down-counted by writing to a particular address. It may be used as a rate counter that may be periodically read, and that produces no output at all. To use one of the eight event counters, it must first be assigned to one of the GPIO inputs using one of the GPIO_FE[x]_SEL registers (where X is the number of the Filter/Event pair, 0 to 7). Then the associated digital filter must be enabled, through either the GPIOL_IN_FLTR_EN or GPIOH_IN_FLTR_EN registers, depending on whether the selected GPIO is in the high [28:16] or low [15:0] bank. If digital filtering is not required, program the associated GPIO_FLTR[x]_AMNT registers to 0000h. Finally, the desired “compare value” (GPIO_EVNTCNT[x] _COMPARE) must be determined and then programmed to establish the number of events that will produce an output when that count has been reached. The associated GPIO input must ultimately remain stable for a FLTR_AMNT number of 32 kHz clock edges in order for the output to change. A FLTR_AMNT of 0 effectively disables the filtering function, because the counter will not roll over from 0 to all 1s. The maximum FLTR_AMNT is FFFFh. The digital filter is based upon a 16-bit programmable down-counter. An initial count is loaded into the counter via the GPIO_FLTR[x]_AMNT register. When the associated GPIO input changes, the counter begins counting down from FLTR_AMNT towards 0. If the associated GPIO input remains stable for the length of the count-down period, www.national.com 150 Revision 0.8 The event counter is based upon a 16-bit programmable up/down counter. The up-down counter counts positive edges of the selected GPIO input and produces a constant or level output when the GPIO_EVNTCNT[x] (counter value) exceeds the CPIO_EVNTCNT[x]_COMPARE (compare value). The output can be read as the GPIO and/or used to drive an auxiliary input. GPIO[x]_POSEDGE_STS or the GPIO[x]NEGEDGE_STS registers, whichever is appropriate. If another edge occurs before clearing, the active high output is not affected. If the clear action occurs at the “same time” as another edge, the result is not defined. Each edge detection function is controlled by four registers as follows: The counter may be counted down one count by writing to one of two addresses, depending on which bank (High or Low) the associated GPIO resides in. Knowledge of which GPIO is associated with the event counter is required, since these two decrementer registers have a dedicated bit for each GPIO. When counted down, this counter, unlike the counter in the digital filter, will roll over from 0000h to FFFFh. Typically, decrementing is used to clear an interrupt or power management event as part of the associated service routine. • Positive Edge Enable (GPIO[x]_POSEDGE_EN). Enabled if feature bit is high. • Negative Edge Enable (GPIO[x]_NEGEDGE_EN). Enabled if feature bit is high. • Positive Edge Status (GPIO[x]_POSEDGE_STS). Set indicates edge. Write 1 to clear. • Negative Edge Status (GPIO[x]_POSEDGE_STS). Set indicates edge. Write 1 to clear. 4.15.5.3 Uses of the Event Counter Such an auxiliary input could be used to drive an ASMI or maskable interrupt. Assume the compare value is set to 0. The service routine clears the ASMI by decrementing the counter via the mechanism illustrated. If additional events have occurred, the count does not decrement to 0 and the ASMI remains asserted. The count up and down inputs are synchronized such that false values are not created if up and down pulses occur at or near the same instant in time. The counter will not decrement through 0. 4.15.5.5 Output Steering (Mapping) Outputs from the internal GPIO circuits, driven by inputs to the CS5535 from the system, may be steered (or ‘mapped’) to either interrupts, or power management events (PME). Sufficient steering logic exists in the CS5535 to provide for eight independent interrupts and simultaneously for eight independent PMEs. The eight GPIO interrupts are all in Working power domain; of the eight PMEs, [7:6] are in Standby power domain and [5:0] are in Working domain. Those in the Standby power domain are intended to be used to awaken the system when the Working power domain is off, however, they may also be used when the Working power domain is on. The interrupts are connected to the PIC subsystem, and the PMEs are connected to the Power Management subsystem. Alternatively, the compare value could be set to a higher value to trigger an ASMI or interrupt when a certain number of events has occurred. In this case, the ASMI or interrupt is cleared by writing the counter to 0. Lastly, the input value may be ignored and the event counter used as a rate indicator. If software reads the counter at a fixed periodic interval, an input pulse rate may be measured. Such an approach may be used to implement a tachometer function. The counter will increment past all Fs back to 0. Four 32-bit steering registers control the routing of the GPIOs’ internal output (that produced by an input to the chip from an external source, or from one of the internallyconnected AUX inputs) to either an interrupt or PME. The set of four registers taken together, contain a nibble for each GPIO. The upper bit of each nibble selects either a PME (if high) or an interrupt (if low). The remaining three bits of each nibble select which of the eight possible interrupts or PMEs the GPIO will be steered to. As suggested above, the counter may be read or written under software control. The read and write operations are synchronized such that false values are not created if count up pulses occur at or near the same instant in time. 4.15.5.4 Input Edge Conditioning Function The Edge Detection function is illustrated as part of Figure 4-49 on page 149. It is normally used to generate an ASMI or maskable interrupt on each positive and/or negative edge of an input signal. Use of this function simultaneously with the event counter function is somewhat logically mutually exclusive, but is not prevented in hardware. • GPIO_MAP_X = GPIO[7:0] Each GPIO has the optional edge detection function. • GPIO_MAP_W = GPIO[31:24] The reset default for the detection circuit establishes a 0 level on GPIO[x]_POSEDGE_EN and GPIO[x]_NEGEDGE_EN. When both are set to 0, the edge detection function is disabled. If either a positive or negative edge detection is enabled, an active high output is produced when the appropriate edge occurs. This level must be cleared by writing to either the The steering logic does not prohibit mapping of two or more GPIOs to the same output, but it is impossible to create a single GPIO that functions simultaneously as both an interrupt and a PME. Registers X, Y, Z, and W default to all 0s, as do both the High and Low EVNT_EN registers. Thus, all GPIOs are mapped to INT[0] after a reset, but none are enabled. Revision 0.8 The four registers are identified as GPIO Mapper X, Y, Z, and W. Their GPIO associations are as follows: • GPIO_MAP_Y = GPIO[15:8] • GPIO_MAP_Z = GPIO[23:16] 151 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Functional Description (Continued) 4.15.5.6 Auto Sense Two GPIOs (GPIO5 and GPIO6) have a function called “Auto-sense”. Auto-sense is a method of automatically determining whether or not to apply a pull-up or pull-down to the corresponding GPIO input. www.national.com Auto-sensed inputs behave as follows: when reset is applied to the system, a weak pull-up is applied to the pad. When reset is de-asserted, the sensed value is used to establish the pull-up/down state on the de-assertion edge. If nothing pulls down the pad, then the pull-up continues to be applied. If the pad is pulled down, then the pull-up is cleared to 0 and the pull-down is set to 1. If a pull-down is desired, a diode between the reset signal and the GPIO pin will pull it down during the Auto-Sense operation but have no effect during normal operation. 152 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 4.16 MULTI-FUNCTION GENERAL PURPOSE TIMER The Multi-Function General Purpose Timer module contains eight multi-function general purpose timers (MFGPTs). Six of the eight MFGPTs are in the Working power domain running off a 32 kHz clock or a 14.318 MHz clock, while the other two are in the Standby power domain running off a 32 kHz clock. Working Domain Control and MSR Registers The Working power domain contains the following blocks: 32 kHz Prescaler • Six MFGPTs each split into three blocks, one containing I/O registers, one containing the clock switch, and one containing the timer logic. • 15-bit prescaler to divide down the 14.318 MHz clock and generate 15 carry-out signals. MFGPT0 I/O Reg Clock Timer Switch • 15-bit prescaler to divide down the 32 kHz clock and generate 15 carry-out signals. Bus Interface • Logic to implement Local Bus Interface, Control Logic, MSR Registers, and NMI, IRQ, and Reset Output Events. • Two blocks containing I/O registers to write into the two MFGPTs in the Standby power domain. MFGPT1 I/O Reg Clock Timer Switch MFGPT2 I/O Reg Clock Timer Switch MFGPT3 I/O Reg Clock Timer Switch The Standby power domain contains the following blocks: • Two MFGPTs. • 15-bit prescaler to divide down the 32 kHz clock and generate 15 carry-out signals. Reset and Interrupt Generation 14.318 MHz Prescaler MFGPT4 I/O Reg Clock Timer Switch • Interface for signals going between Standby and Working power domains. MFGPT5 I/O Reg Clock Timer Switch Figure 4-50 shows the top level block diagram of the MultiFunction General Purpose Timer module. MFGPT6 I/O Reg I/F Features Each MFGPT operates independently and can have the following features: MFGPT7 I/O Reg I/F Power Domain Crossing I/F • 32 kHz or 14.318 MHz clock selectable by software (MFGPT0 to MFGPT5 only; MFGPT6 and MFGPT7 use 32 kHz clock). MFGPT6 Timer • Programmable input clock prescaler divisor to divide input clock by 2i, where i = 0 to 15. MFGPT7 Timer 32kHz Prescaler • Watchdog timer (trigger GPIO output, interrupt, or reset). Standby Domain • Pulse Width Modulation (PWM). • Pulse Density Modulation (PDM). Figure 4-50. MFGPT System Top Level Block Diagram • Blink (low frequency pulse for LED). • General Purpose Timer. • Generate GPIO outputs. • Provide outputs for generating reset (limited to MFGPT0 to MFGPT5), IRQs, NMI, and ASMI (indirectly through PIC). Revision 0.8 153 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 MFGPT Functional Description (Continued) 4.16.1 Prescaler The 15-bit prescaler is a binary down counter, dividing down the incoming clock, and provides 15 outputs for the MFGPTs. The frequency of these outputs ranges from 2-1 to 2-15 of the input frequency and each pulse is one incoming clock high, so these outputs function as increment enables for the MFGPTs. The prescaler resets to 000016 and starts decrementing after reset. The prescaler output vector, psclr_out[14:0], is based on prescaler counter psclr_cnt[14:0], where psclr_out[i] = &(~psclr_cnt[i:0]) (i.e., prescaler output bit i is asserted if the prescaler counter from bit i down to bit 0 are all low). When the prescaler reaches 000016, all prescaler outputs are asserted at that time. 4.16.2.2 Setup Register The Setup Register contains the following control fields that control the MFGPT operation: • Counter Enable. Enables the Up Counter to count (it does not enable/disable other MFGPT functions). • Clock Select. Instructs the clock switch logic to use the 32 kHz clock as the MFGPT clock if low or the 14.318 MHz clock if high, once this register has been written (only for MFGPT0 to MFGPT5). • Scale Factor. Selects the prescaler divide scale factor for Up Counter to increment. • Stop Enable. Enables the Up Counter to stop counting during a system power management Sleep mode (for MFGPT0 to MFGPT5) or Standby mode (for MFGPT6 and MFGPT7). The external clock for the prescaler is activated if there is one or more MFGPTs activated using it as its clock source; it is also activated for MFGPT I/O register writes and synchronous counter reads (only for 14.318 MHz) when the MFGPT being written has already selected the 14.318 MHz clock as its clock source. Whenever the external clock is activated, the prescaler counts. Therefore, multiple MFGPTs and register access can affect the prescaler counting. From the point of view of the MFGPT, once the MFGPT is disabled and then re-enabled, it cannot be determined exactly when the prescaler carry-out occurs as it does not know how long the prescaler has been stopped, if at all. • External Enable. Enables the Up Counter to be cleared and restarted rather than performing the next increment each time there is a low to high transition detected on the GPIO input associated with the timer. An asynchronous edge-detector catches the transition; the signal is then synchronized and sent to clear the counter synchronously. Therefore, the clear does not occur immediately on the transition. • Reverse Enable. Flips the order of the Up Counter outputs going to the Compare 1 circuit so that bit 0 becomes bit 15, bit 1 becomes bit 14, etc. This allows the timer logic to generate a PDM signal instead of a PWM signal. To properly generate a PDM signal, the Compare 2 Value should be set to FFFF16 to allow the Compare 1 Value to establish the density. 4.16.2 I/O Registers Block The I/O register write data is first stored in I/O register submodules before being transferred over to the MFGPTs. There are two types of I/O register sub-modules, one for the Working power domain and one for the Standby power domain. The main difference is that for the Working power domain, except for the counter register, the register values here and the register values in the timer are the same. For the Standby power domain, the register values in the I/O register sub-module cannot be relied upon except during write, as this logic could have been powered down in Standby mode and the register data is therefore invalid. For the Standby power domain, the read always comes from the timer directly. • Compare 1 Mode. Controls the Compare 1 output. There are four cases: 00: Disabled. Output is low. 01: Compare on Equal. The compare output goes high when the Up Counter value, after going through Bit Reverse logic, is the same value as the Compare 1 Value. 10: Compare on GE. The compare output goes high when the Up Counter value, after going through Bit Reverse logic, is greater than or equal to the Compare 1 Value. 4.16.2.1 MFGPT Register Set There are four software accessible I/O registers per MFGPT: Up Counter, Comparator 1 Value, Comparator 2 Value, and Setup registers. (See Section 5.17 "Multi-Function General Purpose Timer Register Descriptions" on page 466 for register details.) Writes to these registers are first stored here and then transferred to a separate copy of the register in the timer. For MFGPT0 to MFGPT5, read of these registers, except for the counter, comes from the registers here, while read of the counter register comes from the timer. For MFGPT6 and MFGPT7, reads of these registers comes from the copy inside the timer. (TW Note: Restate reason or be more precise in reference.) www.national.com 11: Event. Same as “Compare on GE”, but an event is also created. This event can be read and cleared via the MFGPT Setup Register and is used to generate interrupt and reset. • Compare 2 Mode. Same as Compare 1 Mode, except this controls the Compare 2 output. The Up Counter is directly compared against the Compare 2 Value (i.e., without going through Bit Reverse logic). All of the above fields, except Count Enable, are write-once only. 154 Revision 0.8 Compare Status/Event Bits The Setup register also contains two status bits: one from Compare 1 and one from Compare 2. If Event mode is selected, then these two status bits represent the events from the two Compare circuits, and writing a 1 to one of the bits would clear that particular event. If Event mode is not selected, then the status bits read back the compare outputs, and writing to those bits has no effect. Note that since this logic is in the Working power domain, MFGPT6 and MFGPT7 would lose these events when VCORE is powered off. In order for events to be captured again, the chip has to have VCORE powered up out of Standby mode and then come out of reset. On a write, the write transfer on the bus is considered complete when the write to the register in the I/O register submodule is complete. This occurs before the register data is transferred to the timer. However, a subsequent read or write to the same register will be held up until that first write transfer to the timer is complete. The Setup register, except for bits 13 and 14, are handled in the same way as the Compare 1 Value and Compare 2 Value registers. Bits 13 and 14 write and read were discussed earlier, where the entire logic is in the Working power domain. 4.16.2.5 Register Re-initialization If it is necessary to re-initialize the Up Counter, Compare 1 Value, or Compare 2 Value, the following sequence should be followed to prevent any spurious reset, interrupt, or output pulses from being created: The Compare 1 and Compare 2 outputs may change simultaneously on the same MFGPT clock edge. However, when checking the outputs through the two status bits after this occurred, on rare occasions the read may find only one of the two outputs changed to the new value. This could occur when the two outputs change at about the same time they are synchronized, by separate synchronizers to the local bus clock domain, and one synchronizer captured the new value in time while the other one does not. A subsequent read can show that both outputs did change states. 4.16.2.3 Register Initialization Sequence for Event Mode If the Setup register is written before the other three I/O registers, and if Event mode is selected for Compare 1 mode or Compare 2 mode, then events will be triggered immediately. This is because the compare outputs will look for a Compare register value greater than or equal to the counter, and the result will be true as those registers are all 0. To avoid triggering these events on Setup register initialization, first initialize the Compare 1 Value and Compare 2 Value registers before initializing the Setup register. 1) Clear Counter Enable bit to 0. 2) Clear Interrupt Enable, NMI Enable, and Reset Enable bits in MSRs; disable GPIO inputs and outputs. 3) Update Up Counter, Compare 1 Value, and Compare 2 Value registers as desired. 4) When updates are completed, clear any event bits that are set. 5) Set up Interrupt Enable, NMI Enable, and Reset Enable bits in MSRs; enable desired GPIO inputs and outputs. 6) Set Counter Enable bit to 1. 4.16.3 Clock Switch The clock switch output is disabled at reset and selection can only be done one time after reset, at the first write to Setup register. 4.16.2.4 Register Data Transfer to/from MFGPT Only WORD writes and DWORD writes are accepted for I/O register accesses; BYTE writes to I/O registers are ignored. The DWORD write would cause the two I/O registers located within the DWORD boundaries to be written in parallel. If Up Counter, Compare 1 Value, or Compare 2 Value registers are written while the MFGPT is running, it could cause the compare outputs to change in the middle of a prescaler period (i.e., not at a clock cycle where the prescaler signals a counter increment). For MFGPT0 to MFGPT5, the clock switch circuitry disables all clocks to MFGPT until the Setup register has been written. Therefore, even if the Up Counter, Compare 1 Value, and/or Compare 2 Value registers are written before the Setup register; these register values would get transferred to the timer at the same time as the Setup register values. Restriction on Register Read/Write Sequence Due to Clock Switch Note that because the timer clock is stopped until the first write to the Setup register, a write to one of the other three I/O registers during this time could not complete its transfer to the timer. As a result, a second access, read or write, to the same register will cause the bus interface to hang, as the second access waits for the first access (the initial write) to complete before completing its own operation. But since the first access cannot complete without a clock, the second access is in limbo. This means no more accesses can occur, so there is no way to write to the Setup register to enable the timer clock. Care should be taken to see that this situation does not occur. All reads and writes to MFGPT registers can be done by software at any time and are completed without requiring any additional software operation and without affecting the proper operation of the MFGPT as long as a clock to the MFGPT has been selected by writing to the Setup register. Revision 0.8 155 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 MFGPT Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 MFGPT Functional Description (Continued) 4.16.4 Single MFGPT Figure 4-51 shows the functionality of one of these timers. There are two types of timers, one for the Working power domain and one for the Standby power domain. 4 0 15 Scale Factor VCORE 14 MHz/32 kHz Prescaler_Carry_Outs Count_Enable Stop Enable Count 32 kHz/14 MHz External Enable Standby State/ Sleep State 16 Bit Sync Up Counter Little Endian Big Endian Bit Reverse Clear & Re-start GPIO Clear GPIO Input Value Reverse Enable Compare 1 Mode Compare 1 Output Compare 1 Compare 1 Event Compare 1 Value Compare 2 Mode ≥ Compare 2 Output Compare 2 Compare 2 Event Compare 2 Value Figure 4-51. MFGPT Block Diagram www.national.com 156 Revision 0.8 4.16.4.1 Clock Selection and Counter Increment The MFGPT can use either the 32 kHz clock or 14.318 MHz clock as the clock source (MFGPT6 and MFGPT7 in Standby power domain are limited to the 32 kHz clock). When the Counter Enable bit is high, the MFGPT is activated and capable of counting. An actual increment is performed when the selected prescaler divide-by signals the increment; this is done through the Scale Factor selecting one of 16 signals. Table 4-32 shows how the Scale Factor effectively divides down the incoming clock. 4.16.4.2 Compare 1 and Compare 2 Outputs When the Up Counter reaches the Compare 1 Value, the Compare 1 Output is asserted. When the Compare 2 Value is reached, the Compare 2 Output is asserted, and the Up Counter then synchronously clears and restarts. The MFGPT outputs coming from Compare 1 and Compare 2 are all glitch-free outputs. The compare outputs and events may change in the middle of a prescaler period if new values are written to the Up Counter, Compare 1 Value, or Compare 2 Value registers. These compare outputs can be used to trigger their respective events and drive GPIO outputs. The events are used to trigger interrupts, NMI, and reset. Table 4-32. MFGPT Prescaler Clock Divider Scale Factor Input Clock Divide-By 0000 1 0001 2 0010 4 0011 8 0100 16 0101 32 0110 64 0111 128 1000 256 1001 512 1010 1024 1011 2048 1100 4096 1101 8192 1110 16384 1111 32768 4.16.4.3 GPIO Input The Up Counter could also be software selected to have a GPIO input positive edge as another source for the counter to clear and restart. The GPIO input signal is asynchronous to the timer and the timer uses a flip-flop to capture the GPIO rising edge. It takes up to one prescaler clock period plus two MFGPT clock periods from the GPIO rising edge for the clear to take effect. Once the counter is cleared, this edge detect circuit can then accept a new GPIO edge. Each individual pulse can be as short as a few nanoseconds wide for the rising edge to be captured. If this feature is not selected or the counter is disabled, the clear counter output and the edge detector are kept de-asserted. 4.16.4.4 Bit Reverse and Pulse Density Modulation Figure 4-52 shows how the Little Endian/Big Endian Bit Reverse functions. Table 4-33 on page 158 shows a 3-bit example of pulse density modulation; note that the MFGPT has a 16-bit implementation. If the desired pulse train is of the opposite polarity, this can be inverted in the GPIO or generated with a different Compare 1 value. Input Word from Up Counter 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Output Word to Compare Circuit Figure 4-52. MFGPT Bit Reverse Logic Revision 0.8 157 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 MFGPT Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 MFGPT Functional Description (Continued) Table 4-33. MFGPT Pulse Density Modulation Example Pulse Train Output for Given Compare 1 Value (Note 1) Up Counter Output Bit Reverse Output 1 2 4 5 6 000 000 0 0 0 0 0 001 100 1 1 1 0 0 010 010 1 1 0 0 0 011 110 1 1 1 1 1 100 001 1 0 0 0 0 101 101 1 1 1 1 0 110 011 1 1 0 0 0 111 111 1 1 1 1 1 Note 1. Compare 2 Value must be set to all 1s for pulse density modulation. 4.16.5 Working Power Domain Logic The Working power domain logic consists of the Local Bus Interface, Control Logic, MSRs, and NMI, IRQ, and Reset Output Events. 4.16.6 Power Domain Crossing Interface Logic The asynchronous internal Standby State signal will disable/enable the Working power domain interface immediately. Therefore, any bus operation active at that time will have an indeterminate result. When Event mode is enabled, the NMI, IRQ, and Reset Output Events logic gathers the event outputs of all eight MFGPTs and then generates the interrupt and resets outputs based on MSR settings. The interrupt outputs go to the PIC that can then trigger an IRQ or ASMI. Note that MFGPT6 and MFGPT7 cannot trigger reset. These outputs are controlled by MSR bits, and the NMI output can be further controlled by the MSB of I/O Address 070h. www.national.com 158 Revision 0.8 The Power Management Control (PMC) module is a GeodeLink Device whose function is to control all aspects of power management. Power management is event driven meaning that, in general, any action that the PMC performs is predicated on some event. These events can come from other GeodeLink Devices, including the CPU module inside the GX2 for example, or events coming from other off-chip sources. • The Working block contains all circuits and functions associated with the Working power domain. It includes the Working state machine, Local bus interface, ACPI power management registers, and power management supporting logic (i.e., counters, timer, CCU, etc.). The main function of the Working block is to put the system into Sleep, that is, turn off clocks to the system and disable I/Os to reduce power consumption. The PMC is compatible with the industry standard power management capabilities as defined in the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) v2.0 specification. An OS that conforms to ACPI can take advantage of the CS5535 ACPI support hardware. • The Standby block contains all circuits and functions associated with the Standby power domain. It includes the Standby state machine, ACPI registers, and power management supporting logic (i.e., counters, reset, CCU, etc.). The function of the Standby logic is to control power to the Working power domain. The PMC disables all interfaces between the Standby and Working domains while the Working power is off. Advanced Power Management (APM) is another power management approach that the PMC supports. APM is a subset of ACPI and therefore will not be directly discussed. • The RTC block contains the timing circuits for keeping real time. These circuits are powered by VBAT (ball A3). It is not a device requirement that the RTC block be powered during Mechanical Off. If a system design does not require that real time be kept, then VBAT should be tied to ground. Components in a GeodeLink architecture based system have hardware and software means of performing power management which the PMC controls. A high performance computing system consumes multiple watts of power when fully on. However, with GeodeLink architecture, system power consumption is significantly lower on average through the use of power states that reduce power needs when the system is idle. 4.17.2 Power States Table 4-34 shows the supported ACPI power states and how they relate to the CS55335/GX2. ACPI power states not described are not supported. 4.17.1 Power Domains The PMC module consists of three blocks: Working Standby and RTC. Table 4-34. Supported ACPI Power Management States ACPI States Hardware States Sleep State C State GX2 State CS5535 Working Logic S0 C0 FO FO FO AHCG AHCG AHCG C1 Suspend on Halt AHCG AHCG S1: Sleeping C2 Sleep Sleep Auto-refresh On (Sleep) S3: Save-to-RAM Off Off Off Auto-refresh Standby S4: Save-to-Disk Off Off Off Off G2: Soft Off S5 Off Off Off Off Standby G3: Mechanical Off Off Off Off Off Off Off Global System State G0: Working G1: Idle Revision 0.8 159 System Main Memory CS5535 Standby Logic On www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.17 POWER MANAGEMENT CONTROL Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) 4.17.2.1 ACPI System Power States • G1/S1/C2: Processor is in the lowest power state that maintains context in a software invisible fashion. Entered as part of the S1 sequence. The SUSP#/SUSPA# signaling protocol indicates entry. SUSP# is not an explicit external signal, it is part of the CIS packet. (See Section 4.2.14 "CPU Interface Serial (CIS)" on page 79 for further details.) No explicit software action required. However, this state can be entered by explicit software action by reading the ACPI P_LVL2 register provided by the GX2 GLCP. • G0/S0: Not Sleeping. Software is executing code or could be halted waiting for a system event. • G1/S1: Requires explicit software action to enter this state. All GX2, CS5535, and main memory states maintained. All system clocks may be turned off except 32 kHz or selected additional clocks may be left on as required. The PMC provides generic controls SLEEP_X and SLEEP_Y that may be used to control the “D” states of external system devices (not described in this datasheet, see ACPI specification for details). Two additional internal signals control PCI and IDE input and outputs. A wakeup event brings the system back to the opcode following the one that initiated entry into S1. Context restore operation is not required on the GX2, CS5535, or main memory. 4.17.2.3 Hardware Power States • FO (Full On): From a hardware reset, all clocks come up Full On or always running. Generally, the system should not be left in this state. The AHCG state should be used. • AHCG (Active Hardware Clock Gating): This is the desired mode of operation; it utilizes automatic hardware clock gating. Latency to turn on a clock is near 0. This hardware state should be established at system initialization by BIOS code; after initialization it needs no additional support. AHCG is invisible to the Operating System, ACPI, or other software based power management facilities. • G1/S3: Save-to-RAM state. Requires explicit software action to enter this state. The CS5535 and other system context are lost. System state is saved in the main memory. To properly support this state, main memory power must be controlled by WORKING power while the CS5535, GX2, and all other system components power must be controlled by WORK_AUX power. Note that this applies only to the Working domain of the CS5535. The Standby domain must be continuously supplied from Standby power. • Suspend on Halt: See CPU power state G0/S0/C1. • Sleep: See CPU power state G1/S1/C2. • G1/S4: Suspend-to-Disk state. Requires explicit software action to enter this state. Same as S3 state, but the system state is “saved” on the hard drive or other mass storage device. Only Standby power is on while in this state. • Auto-refresh: The memory controller issues an autorefresh command to the DRAMs. In this state, the DRAMs perform refresh cycles on their own without any additional commands or activity from the memory controller or the interface. As long as power to the DRAMs is maintained, the memory contents are retained. • G2/S5: Requires explicit software action to enter this state. All system context is lost and not saved. Operating system re-boot is required. The 32 kHz clock is kept running for Standby PMC and selected GPIO and MFGPT circuits. 4.17.2.4 PMC Control Under S3, S4, and S5 power management states, all Working domain circuits, as well as the GX2, are turned off to conserve power. Under S3, the system memory is powered by VIO_VSB in Standby Auto-refresh mode but otherwise, all other system components are also turned off. • G3: Software action is not required to enter this state. Working power and Standby power are removed. The only domain that may be powered is the RTC. It is not a requirement that the RTC be powered. The PMC is used to establish overall system power states. Normally, the Standby domain voltages are present anytime the system is plugged into the wall; if portable, anytime the battery is plugged in. Generally, G3 Mechanical Off (see Table 4-34 on page 159) only applies during storage or maintenance. Therefore, operationally speaking, the PMC Standby controller is always available to manage power. There is a class of system designs that do not require G1 and G2 global power states. These systems usually power-up WORKING and STANDBY power domains simultaneously when power is applied. 4.17.2.2 CPU Power States • G0/S0/C0: Processor actively executing instructions and clock running. Cache snoops supported. • G0/S0/C1: HLT instruction executed. Usually occurs in the Operating System’s idle loop. Operating System waiting for Power Management Event (PME), interrupt, or ASMI. Cache snoops are supported while in this state, so bus mastering activity can safely occur. For supporting “Save-to-RAM” (G1/S3) the WORKING output is used to switch off/on the Working domain sources for system memory while the WORK_AUX output is used to switch off/on the Working domain sources for everything else. Thus, the PMC can completely control the system power states via these outputs. www.national.com 160 Revision 0.8 4.17.3 Software Power Management Actions The hardware comes up from hardware system reset in the Full On (FO) state. As part of system initialization, the power management MSRs (see Section 5.18.1 on page 479) are written to establish the Active Hardware Clock Gating (AHCG) state. The AHCG state is the nominal operational state. 4.17.3.1 Sleep/Standby Sequence Entering the states under G1 and G2 requires explicit software action. That action starts a hardware chain of events in which some of the chain is determined by registers that must be programmed previous to the start of the sequence. The block diagram of the hardware involved in this sequence is illustrated in Figure 4-53. Figure 4-54 and Figure 4-55 graphically show the Sleep/Standby sequence. The sequence is as follows: 1) The “explicit software action” begins with a write to PM1_CNT (ACPI I/O Offset 08h) starting the Sleep/Standby sequence. 2) The PMC issues a Sleep Request to the CS5535 GLCP and it passes the request as SUSP# to the GX2 GLCP. 3) The GX2 GLCP issues a suspend request to the processor. After the processor has shutdown operation it provides a suspend acknowledge back to the GX2 GLCP. 4) The GX2 GLCP processes a sleep sequence similar to that described in step 5 while issuing a SUSPA# to the CS5535 GLCP. GLIU Processor Activity Counters DSMI, SMI, NMI, IRQ SUSP# (CIS packet) GeodeLink Device (1 of n) SUSPA# Clock Control GLCP PM MSR Turn Off PCI/IDE Outputs Sleep Request Turn Off PCI/IDE Inputs Sleep Acknowledge Internal Wakeup Events External I/O System Reset if Wakeup from Standby PML & Reset (with Standby power) External Wakeup and Thermal Events including Buttons SLEEP_X, SLEEP_Y, SLP_CLK_EN#, WORKING, and WORK_AUX Power Low Indicator Notes: *At least one per GeodeLink Device. #Global signal, one per system. Figure 4-53. PMC Power Management Elements Revision 0.8 161 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) 5) The CS5535 GLCP processes a Sleep sequence. This is done in one of the three ways: a) If the CLK_DLY_EN bit in GLCP_GLB_PM (MSR 5170000Bh[1]) is 0 and the CLK_DELAY value in the GLCP_CLK_DIS_DELAY (MSR 51700008h[23:0]) is 0, then wait until the CLK_ACTIVE flags specified in GLCP_CLK4ACK (MSR 51700013h[33:0]) have gone to 0. 7) When the Sleep Acknowledge is received, the PMC can optionally issue additional external generic controls SLEEP_X and SLEEP_Y as well as SLP_CLK#to turn off external clocks. The completion of this step takes the system to S1. The system is now in Sleep. 8) If the Sleep Request was to enter S3 (Save-to-RAM) then the PMC moves beyond S1 and removes main power by de-asserting WORK_AUX and leaving WORKING asserted. WORKING is used to power main memory, while WORK_AUX is used for everything else in the system. 9) If the Sleep Request was to enter S4 (Save-to-Disk) or S5 (Soft Off) then the PMC moves beyond S1 and removes main power by de-asserting both WORK_AUX and WORKING. b) If the CLK_DLY_EN bit is 1 and the CLK_DELAY value is non-zero, then wait the amount of time of the CLK_DELAY value. c) If the CLK_DLY_EN is 0 and the CLK_DELAY value is non-zero, then wait as in (a) but no longer than (b). 6) At the completion of the wait above, de-assert the CLK_DIS bits specified in GLCP_PMCLKDISABLE (MSR 51700009h[33:0]) and assert Sleep Acknowledge to the PMC. 10) An external or internal wakeup event reverses the events above to bring the system back to the S0 state. Sleep Request SUSP# SUSPA# GL Device Clock Control Sleep Acknowledge PCI/IDE Input Control SLEEP_X/SLEEP_Y PCI/IDE Output Control SLP_CLK_EN# Indicates a variable delay. SLP_CLK_EN# signal must be the last control to assert because it turns off all system clocks. NOTE: External signals are not necessarily active high. Shown as active high for clarity. Figure 4-54. PMC System Sleep Sequence www.national.com 162 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) Sleep Request SUSP# SUSPA# GL Device Clock Control Sleep Acknowledge PCI/IDE Input Control SLEEP_X/SLEEP_Y PCI/IDE Output Control SLP_CLK_EN# Indicates a variable delay. SLP_CLK_EN# de-asserts at wakeup event and turns on system clocks. SLEEP_X/SLEEP_Y Controls should de-assert between PCI/IDE input and output controls. Wakeup sequence begins with a Sleep wakeup event. NOTE: External signals are not necessarily active high. Shown as active high for clarity. Figure 4-55. PMC System Wakeup Sequence 4.17.3.2 Sleep Controls Sleep Request/Sleep Acknowledge handshake (see Figure 4-53 on page 161) between the GLCP and PMC controls the transitions into and out of the Sleep and Standby states. The PMC starts the Sleep sequence by asserting Sleep Request to the GLCP. The GLCP requests the processor to enter C2 by asserting the SUSP# signal. When SUSPA# from the processor is received, the GLCP informs the internal GeodeLink Devices of a pending shutdown and waits until the GeodeLink Devices’ clock control indicates that they are ready. The length of time it takes for each device to respond is programmable (GLCP MSR 51700008h, 51700013h, and 5170000Bh). After all designated GeodeLink Devices have responded, the GLCP asserts Sleep Acknowledge to the PMC. 4.17.3.3 Power Controls In response to Sleep Acknowledge from the GLCP, the PMC can assert five controls/enables: SLEEP_X, SLEEP_Y, SLP_CLK_EN#, WORKING, and WORK_AUX. These can control external electronic power switches and enables. Each control’s assertion and de-assertion is subject to an enable and a programmable delay (PMS I/O Offset 04h to 3Ch). Controls SLEEP_X and SLEEP_Y are generic and have no specific use. Asserting control SLP_CLK_EN# is assumed to turn off the system (board) clocks. It is always deasserted by the wakeup event. The following conditions apply to the timing of selected output control (see Section 4.17.3.2 "Sleep Controls"), SLEEP_X, SLEEP_Y and SLP_CLK_EN#. The PM_IN_SLPCTL (PMS I/O Offset 20h) register and the PM_OUT_SLPCTL (PMS I/O Offset 0Ch) are used to disable PCI/IDE inputs and outputs respectively during Sleep. Generally, they are asserted at the end of a Sleep sequence and de-asserted at the beginning of a Wakeup sequence. When “disabled”, some of the outputs are forced to TRI-STATE with an active internal pull-down resistor while the rest are simply pulled low. See Section 3.8.5 "MSR Address 4: Power Management" on page 71 for specific details on PCI/IDE I/O controls during Sleep. When going to sleep: a) If not enabled, SLEEP_X and SLEEP_Y do not assert at all. If they are enabled, the delay should be set to occur between the delays programmed in the PM_IN_SLPCTL and PM_OUT_SLPCTL registers. b) If SLP_CLK_EN# is enabled, any delays associated with the PM_OUT_SLPCTL, SLEEP_X, and SLEEP_Y registers must be less than the SLP_CLK_EN# delay. c) If SLP_CLK_EN# is enabled, then Sleep wakeup is possible only after SLP_CLK_EN# asserts. Revision 0.8 163 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) d) If SLP_CLK_EN# is not enabled, and if at least one of the following PM_OUT_SLPCTL, SLEEP_X, or SLEEP_Y registers is enabled, then Sleep wakeup is possible only after the longest delay of the three. The delays could be zero. b) PCI/IDE inputs are re-enabled at Sleep wakeup or after a programmable delay. Generally, PCI/IDE inputs are normally used with a delay and that delay is longer than any de-assertion delay associated with SLEEP_X and/or SLEEP_Y. Re-enabling PCI/IDE inputs is generally not useful at the beginning of a wakeup sequence. e) If SLP_CLK_EN# is not enabled, and the PM_OUT_SLPCTL, SLEEP_X, or SLEEP_Y registers are not enabled, then Sleep wakeup is possible immediately. c) Sleep Request is de-asserted at Sleep wakeup or after a programmable delay. Sleep Request is kept de-asserted until the PCI/IDE inputs are re-enabled. Generally, the enable and delay values in PM_SED (PMS I/O Offset 14h) and PM_IN_SLPCTL (PMS I/O Offset 20h) should always be the same. f) If SLP_CLK_EN# is enabled and the delay associated with the PM_OUT_SLPCTL register is longer than or equal to the delay associated with SLP_CLK_EN#, then the PCI/IDE outputs will not be disabled. d) If used, SLEEP_X/SLEEP_Y delay should be set to occur between the delays programmed in PM_OUT_SLPCTL (PMS I/O Offset 0Ch) and PM_IN_SLPCTL (PMS I/O Offset 20h). If the delays for SLEEP_X/SLEEP_Y are longer than the PM_IN_SLPCTL delay, then SLEEP_X/SLEEP_Y de-assert at the same time as the PCI/IDE inputs are re-enabled. If enabled, the de-assertion of WORKING is assumed to remove Working power and all clock sources except 32 kHz; that is, the Standby state is entered. In this state, the PMC, disables its interface to all circuits connected to Working power and asserts RESET_OUT# before deassertion of WORKING. RESET_OUT# remains asserted throughout Standby. On wakeup from Standby (not Sleep, but Standby Wakeup) the PMC asserts WORKING and performs a system reset. RESET_OUT# is de-asserted after a programmable delay and the normal software start-up sequence begins. However, early in the sequence, the software checks the PMC state to determine if waking from Standby (PMS I/O Offset 54h[0]). If yes, then the system state is potentially restored from non-volatile storage. WORK_AUX is an auxiliary control for the Standby state with no specific use. It can be de-asserted any time before or after WORKING. WORKING and WORK_AUX are independent controls, but the use of either implies that Standby state is to be entered. In both cases, the PMC disables all circuits connected to Working power and asserts reset. However, since they are independent, one may be left on while the other is deasserted. If enabled, WORK_AUX may be asserted before or after RESET_OUT# is de-asserted. 4.17.3.4 Wakeup Events If the system has been put to Sleep, only preprogrammed wakeup events can get the system running again. The PMC contains the controls that allow the system to respond to the selected wakeup events. 4.17.3.5 Fail-Safe Power Off The PMC provides the support logic to implement an ACPI compliant fail-safe power off button. This logic unconditionally de-asserts the WORKING and WORK_AUX signals if the On/Off button is held down for a programmable delay. For ACPI compliance, this delay should be set to four seconds. On wakeup from Sleep (not Standby, but Sleep Wakeup) (see Figure 4-53 on page 161), the PMC immediately deasserts SLP_CLK_EN# to turn system clocks back on. It also re-enables PCI/IDE outputs to allow output drivers to return to their operational levels. Next it de-asserts SLEEP_X and SLEEP_Y based on programmable delays. Alternate SLEEP_X and SLEEP_Y interactions are shown as dotted lines. Lastly, the PMC, re-enables PCI/IDE inputs after a programmable delay and de-asserts Sleep Request. The GLCP starts any on-chip PLLs and waits for them to become stable. Then the GLCP de-asserts SUSP# to the processor. When the processor de-asserts SUSPA#, the GLCP de-asserts Sleep Acknowledge. The PMC allows the wakeup event to assert a System Control Interrupt (SCI). 4.17.3.6 Wake Events Status and SCI When enabled, a wake event from the general wake events register (see Section 5.16.4 "GPIO Interrupt and PME Registers" on page 462) set its status bit and the "WAK_STS" bit and causes a system control interrupt (SCI). The Sleep button, RTC alarm, and power button when asserted, always set their status bit. They set the "WAK_STS" bit and generate an SCI only when their enable bit is set. When overflowed, the PM timer sets its status bit. This overflow condition does not cause a wakeup event but if enabled, it generates an SCI. The event’s status is cleared by writing a one to it. After a wakeup event: a) PCI/IDE outputs are re-enabled after SLP_CLK_EN# is de-asserted. www.national.com 164 Revision 0.8 4.17.4 PMC Power Management States The PMC state machines support the fundamental hardware states: Power Off, Reset Standby, Working, Sleep, and Controlled Standby. • Reset Standby State: From Power Off, reset is applied to the Standby domain by the external input pin RESET_STAND#. Once reset, the Reset Standby state de-asserts WORKING and WORK_AUX outputs and waits for a Reset Standby wakeup event. • Working State: The Working state can be entered from Reset Standby, Sleep, or Controlled Standby states. Working state is established when Working power is applied and all system clocks are enabled. Once in this state, registers and functions in the PMC can be initialized, programmed, enabled/disabled, and the potential exists for the system to proceed to the Sleep state or Standby state. PM_RD De-assert Reset Delay from Standby (PMS I/O Offset 38h) PM_WKXA WORK_AUX Assert Delay from Standby (PMS I/O Offset 3Ch) PM_FSD Fail-Safe Delay and Enable (PMS I/O Offset 40h) PM_TSD Thermal Safe Delay and Enable (PMS I/O Offset 44h) PM_PSD Power Safe Delay and Enable (PMS I/O Offset 48h) PM_NWKD Normal to Work Delay and Enable (PMS I/O Offset 4Ch) PM_FWKD Faulted to Work Delay and Enable (PMS I/O Offset 50h) The Faulted to Work Delay and Enable (PM_FWKD) register is the only one of the above registers that potentially applies during a re-start entry. • Sleep State: The system initiates the entry to the Sleep state with a Sleep sequence. Under the Sleep state, Working and Standby power are maintained. PCI/IDE inputs are disabled when Sleep Acknowledge asserts. PCI/IDE outputs are disabled when Sleep Acknowledge asserts or after a programmable delay. SLEEP_X, SLEEP_Y, and SLP_CLK_EN# may be asserted if enabled. A Sleep wakeup event returns the system to Working state. Lastly, note that any normal entry operation in process is aborted. Wakeup from faulted entry is the same as that associated with Standby State Entry from Power Off; that is, it acts as if the power button has been pushed. Other possible wakeup events such as RTC Alarm and PMEs are ignored. However, the system can be held in the Standby state for the following reasons: • Controlled Standby State: Can be entered “normally”, “fault condition”, or by a “restart”. 1) If enabled and locked, the low power indicator is still asserted. 2) If LVD_EN# is tied to ground and VCORE is not at a valid voltage, or if RESET_WORK # is asserted. A normal entry is by way of a system initiated sequence as in the Sleep case. This method of entry requires the Standby state machine to monitor SLP_CLK_EN# and look for an enable of the “Working De-assert Delay and Enable” register (PM_WKD, PMS I/O Offset 30h[30]) or the Work_aux De-assert Delay and Enable register (PM_WKXD, PMS I/O Offset 34h[30]). This signals the Controlled Standby state normal entry. A Standby wakeup event returns the system to Working state after a programmable delay (PM_NWKD, PMS I/O Offset 4Ch). Note: If enabled, a faulted entry can be initiated by a low power off, thermal off, or fail-safe off. It can also be initiated by Working power fail asserted. A default wakeup event returns the system to the Working state after a programmable delay (PM_FWKD, PMS I/O Offset 50h). The Power Management Control (PMC) has two state machines: • Working State Machine: Operates under Working power and runs on a 14 MHz clock from the CCU. Its function is to generate control signals used to turn off/on systems clocks and I/Os based on events coming from on or off the chip. A re-start can be initiated by any of these resets: GLCP soft reset, soft reset, shutdown reset, watchdog reset, or bad packet type reset. The system returns to the Working state when reset is de-asserted and the faulted_to_work delay (PM_FWKD) expired. WORKING and WORK_AUX are not de-asserted. • Standby State Machine: Operates under Standby power and runs on the 32 kHz clock. Its function is to power-up and down the Working power to the Working domain based on events coming from on or off the chip. When a Controlled Standby state is entered by a faulted condition or restart event, software control is assumed lost and the software established state is assumed to be potentially wrong. Therefore, the Standby domain returns to the state associated with “Standby State Entry from Power Off”; that is, Standby domain reset defaults are used. The only exceptions are registers from the following list; these are locked and not subject to change by software: Revision 0.8 If enabled and locked, the thermal alarm does not keep the system in the Standby state if it is asserted. The thermal alarm circuitry resides in the Working domain, and its state is ignored by the Standby state. Once out of Standby, the thermal alarm again comes into play. If it is still asserted, its timer would start again. 165 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) 4.17.5 PMC Power Management Events A large number of inputs to the PMC are used to monitor and create system power managements events. Some of these inputs apply the Working state machine while the remainder apply to the Standby state machine. — Assertion of the Power Button for 4 seconds (PWR_BUT#, system fault) — Thermal Alarm (THRM_ALRM#, system fault) — Low battery (LOW_BAT#, system fault) — Hardware reset (system restart) — Software initiated reset (system restart) — Shutdown initiated reset, CPU triple fault (system restart) — Watchdog initiated reset (system restart) — GLCP software initiated reset (system restart) — Bad packet type reset (system restart) — Reset Standby state machine RESET_STAND# (Standby) 4.17.5.1 PM Sleep Events • Sleep: — Sleep sequence initiated by software • Wakeup: — Assertion of the Sleep Button (SLEEP_BUT) — Assertion of the Power Button (PWR_BUT#) — RTC alarm — Working power domain PMEs — Standby power domain PMEs • Wakeup: — Assertion of the Power Button (PWR_BUT#) — RTC Alarm — Standby power domain PMEs 4.17.5.2 PM Standby Events Table 4-35 provides a complete list of the power management inputs and describes their function. The system can only be in one of three states: Working, Sleep, or Standby. The activity of the inputs is to move the system from one state to another. • Standby: — Sleep sequence initiated by software — LVD detection of low voltage on VCORE (system fault) Table 4-35. PM Events and Functions Event Current State Function The following events are Sleep and/or Standby wakeup events (except for ACPI Timer). PWR_BTN# (also serves as a Standby event) Working Sets the status bit (PWRBTN_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[8] = 1). If PWRBTN_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[8] = 1), an SCI is generated. Sleep Sets the status bit (PWRBTN_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[8] = 1). If PWRBTN_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[8] = 1), SCI generation and wakeup from this event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). Standby Sets the status bit (PWRBTN_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[8] = 1). If PWRBTN_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[8] = 1), SCI generation and wakeup from this event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). SLP_BTN Working Sets the status bit (SLPBTN_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[9] = 1). If SLPBTN_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[9] = 1), an SCI is generated. Sleep Sets the status bit (SLPBTN_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[9] = 1). If SLPBTN_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[9] = 1), SCI generation and wakeup from this event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). RTC Alarm Working Sets the status bit (RTC_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[10] = 1). If RTC_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[10] = 1), an SCI is generated. Sleep Sets the status bit (RTC_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[10] = 1). If RTC_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[10] = 1), SCI generation and wakeup from this event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). Standby Sets the status bit (RTC_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[10] = 1). If RTC_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[10] = 1), SCI generation and wakeup from this event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). ACPI Timer (internal timer) www.national.com Working Sets the status bit (TMR_STS) in PM1_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 00h[0] = 1). If TMR_EN is enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 02h[0] = 1), an SCI is generated. 166 Revision 0.8 Table 4-35. PM Events and Functions (Continued) Event Current State Function GPE[23:0] (General Purpose Power Management Events in Working Domain) Working If GPE_EN[23:0] are enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 1Ch[23:0] = 1), the corresponding status bit (GPE_STS[23:0]) in GPE0_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 18h[23:0]) is set and an SCI is generated. Sleep If GPE_EN[23:0] are enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 1Ch[23:0] = 1), SCI generation and wakeup from the event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). GPE[31:24] (General Purpose Power Management Events in Standby Domain) Working If GPE_EN[31:24] are enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 1Ch[31:24] = 1), the corresponding status bit (GPE_STS[31:24]) in GPE0_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 18h[23:0]) is set and an SCI is generated. Sleep If GPE_EN[31:24] are enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 1Ch[23:0] = 1), SCI generation and wakeup from the event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). Standby If GPE_EN[31:24] are enabled (ACPI I/O Offset 1Ch[31:24] = 1), the corresponding status bit (GPE_STS[31:24]) in GPE0_STS (ACPI I/O Offset 18h[23:0]) is set, and SCI generation and wakeup from the event is enabled (i.e., sets the WAK_STS bit, ACPI I/O Offset 00h[15] = 1). The following events caused a Standby state entry. RESET_STAND# LVD circuit detects low voltage on VCORE PWR_BTN# THRM_ALRM# Revision 0.8 Working If asserted, the corresponding status bit (OFF_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[0]) is set and causes a Reset Standby state entry. No Working or Standby power. Sleep If asserted, the corresponding status bit (OFF_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[0]) is set and causes a Reset Standby state entry. No Working or Standby power. Standby If asserted in Restart, or Normal or Faulted Standby state, the corresponding status bit (OFF_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[0]) is set and causes a Reset Standby state entry. Working If de-asserted, the status bit (LVD_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[2]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Sleep If de-asserted, the status bit (LVD_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[2]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Standby If de-asserted in Restart state, the status bit (LVD_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[2]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working If enabled and asserted for four seconds (fail-safe), the status bit (PWRBUT_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[3]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Sleep If enabled and asserted for four seconds (fail-safe), the status bit (PWRBUT_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[3]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Standby If enabled and asserted for four seconds (fail-safe) while in Normal or Restart state, the status bit (PWRBUT_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[3]) is set and causes a Faulted Standby state entry. Working If enabled and asserted for a programmable amount of time, the status bit (THRM_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[4]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Sleep If enabled and asserted for a programmable amount of time, the status bit (THRM_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[4]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Standby If asserted in Normal or Re-start state, the status bit (THRM_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[4]) is set and causes a Faulted state entry. 167 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 PMC Functional Description (Continued) Table 4-35. PM Events and Functions (Continued) Event Current State LOW_BAT# Working If enabled and asserted for a programmable amount of time, the status bit (LOWBAT_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[5]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Sleep If enabled and asserted for a programmable amount of time, the status bit (LOWBAT_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[5]) is set and causes an Faulted Standby state entry. Working power is turned-off. Standby If asserted in Normal or Re-start state, the status bit (LOWBAT_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[5]) is set and causes a Faulted state entry. Working If asserted, the status bit (HRD_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[6]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Sleep If asserted, the status bit (HRD_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[6]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Working If asserted, the status bit (SFT_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[8]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Sleep If asserted, the status bit (SFT_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[8]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Shutdown initiated reset (CPU triple fault) Working If asserted, the status bit (SHTDWN_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[9]) is set and causes a Re-start state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Sleep If asserted, the status bit (SHTDWN_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[9]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Watchdog initiated reset Working If asserted, the status bit (WATCHDOG_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[10]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Sleep If asserted, the status bit (WATCHDOG_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[10]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Working If asserted, the status bit (GLCP_SFT_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[11]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Sleep If asserted, the status bit (GLCP_SFT_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[11]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Working If asserted, the status bit (BADPACK_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[12]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. Sleep If asserted, the status bit (BADPACK_RST_FLAG) in PM_SSC (PMS I/O Offset 54h[12]) is set and causes a Restart state entry. Working power is not turned-off. RESET_WORK# Software initiated reset GLCP Soft Reset Bad packet type reset www.national.com Function 168 Revision 0.8 The CS5535 has a Flash device interface that supports popular NOR Flash and inexpensive NAND Flash devices. This interface is shared with the IDE interface (ATA-5 Controller (ATAC)), using the same balls. NOR or NAND Flash may co-exist with IDE devices using PIO (Programmed I/O) mode. The 8-bit interface supports up to four “lanes” of byte-wide Flash devices through use of four independent chip selects, and allows for booting from the array. Hardware support is present for SmartMedia-type ECC (Error Correction Code) calculations, off-loading software from having to support this task. 4.18.1.2 Read 1) Allocate a memory buffer. Start at address BAh in system memory. 2) Fill the buffer with the following values: – – – – – – – – – – – Features • Supports popular NOR Flash and inexpensive NAND Flash devices on IDE interface. No extra pins needed. • NOR Flash and NAND Flash co-exist with IDE devices with PIO (Programmed I/O) only mode. 3) For (i = 0; i < 11; i++), write the data in buffer [BA+i] to memory location [NAND_START + 800h + i]. Generate the command and address phase on the NAND Flash interface. 4) NAND Flash device may pull down the RDY/BUSY# signal at this point. Software sets the EN_INT bit and waits for the interrupt. 5) Memory byte writes 03h to memory location [NAND_START + 815h] to clear ECC parity and Enable ECC engine. 6) For (i = 0; i < 256; i++), read data from [NAND_START + i] to buffer [BA + i] (read data from NAND Flash to memory buffer. Can use DWORD read to save time). 7) Memory DWORD Reads [NAND_START + 810h] to get ECC parity [ECC0] of first 256 byte data. 8) Memory byte writes 03h to memory location [NAND_START + 815h] to clear ECC parity and enable ECC engine. 9) For (i = 256; i < 512; i++), read data from [NAND_START + i] to buffer [BA + i] (read data from NAND Flash to memory buffer. Can use DWORD read to save time). • General purpose chip select pins support on-board ISAlike slave devices. • Programmable timing supports a variety of Flash devices. • Supports up to four byte-wide NOR Flash devices. — Address up to 256 kB boot ROMs using an external octal latch. — Address up to 256 MB linear Flash memory arrays using external latches. — Boot ROM capability. — Burst mode capability (DWORD read/write on PCI bus). • Supports up to four byte-wide NAND Flash devices. — Hardware support for SmartMedia-type ECC (Error Correction Code) calculation off-loading software effort. • Supports four programmable chip select pins with memory or I/O addressable. — Up to 1 kB of address space without external latch. BA: 02h (Assert CE#, CLE) BA + 1: 00h (Command: Read mode) BA + 2: 04h (Assert CE#, ALE, De-assert CLE) BA + 3: CA (Start column address) BA + 4: 04h BA + 5: PA0 (Page address byte 0) BA + 6: 04h BA + 7: PA1 (Page address byte 1) BA + 8: 04h BA + 9: PA2 (Page address byte 2) BA + 10: 08h (Assert CE#, De-assert ALE, Enable Interrupt) 4.18.1 NAND Flash Controller To understand the functioning of the NAND Flash Controller, an initialization sequence and a read sequence is provided in the following sub-sections. The NAND Flash Controller’s registers can be mapped to memory or I/O space. The following example is based on memory mapped registers. 10) Memory DWORD reads [NAND_START + 810h] to get ECC parity [ECC1] of second 256 byte data. 4.18.1.1 Initialization 1) Program MSR_LBAR_FLSH0 (MSR 51400010h) to establish a base address (NAND_START) and whether in memory or I/O space. The NAND Controller is memory mapped in this example and always occupies 4 kB of memory space. 12) Write 01h to memory location [NAND_START + 800h] (de-assert CE#, NAND Flash enters to Idle state). 2) 11) For (i = 512; i < 528; i++), read data from [NAND_START + i] to buffer [BA + i] (read data from NAND Flash redundant data to memory buffer. Can use DWORD read to save time). 13) Retrieve ECC parity data from redundant data area and compare them to ECC0 and ECC1. Set the NAND timing MSRs to the appropriate values (MSRs 5140001Bh and 5140001Ch). 14) Correct data if data error is detected and can be fixed. Figure 4-56 on page 170 shows a basic NAND read cycle. Revision 0.8 169 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.18 FLASH CONTROLLER Geode™ CS5535 Flash Controller Functional Description (Continued) CLE CE# WE# ALE RE# I/O 00h CA PA0 PA1 D0 PA2 D1 D2 D (n-1) R/B# Figure 4-56. Flash Controller NAND Read Cycle 4.18.1.3 NAND ECC Control Module The NAND ECC Control Module is part of the NAND Flash Controller. It calculates 22-bit ECC parity for each of the 256 bytes of the NAND Flash’s data transferred on the Local bus. The ECC calculation algorithm follows the SmartMedia Physical Format Specification. The ECC algorithm is capable of single-bit correction and 2-bit randomerror detection. ECCs are generated only for data areas and no ECC is generated for page-data redundant areas containing ECCs as the page-data redundant area is duplicated for reliability. For ECC calculations, 256 bytes are handled as a stream of 2048-bit serial data. In the event of an error, the error-correction feature can detect the bit location of the error based on the results of a parity check and correct the data. address for every single bit in the 256-byte data block. The address uses the notation: LLLL_LLLL, CCC. This module contains an 8-bit counter to keep track of the LA of each byte. Each ECC parity bit calculation in the ECC engine produces even parity of half of the data bits in the block. Different parity bits use different sets of the bits. For example, CP0 is the even parity bit of the bits with Column Address bit 0 equals 0. CP1 is the even parity bit of the bits with Column Address bit 0 equals 1. Both odd and even parity are supported for ECC. The ECC parity available in the NAND ECC column, LSB line, and MSB line parity registers is the inverted output of the ECC parity from the ECC engine in the case of odd ECC parity and the non-inverted output in the case of even parity. Table 4-36 lists the relationship between the parity bits and the corresponding bit addresses. The hardware ECC engine calculates 22-bit ECC parity whenever there is a data write or data read to/from the NAND Flash device. On power-up, the ECC engine is configured to be odd parity. Even or odd ECC parity is controlled by bit 2 of NAND ECC Control register (Flash Memory Offset 815h). Hardware Operation The ECC engine treats 256-byte data as a block. Each byte has an 8-bit address called a Line Address (LA). Each bit in a byte has a 3-bit address called a Column Address (CA). Combining these two address fields forms an 11-bit unique www.national.com 170 Revision 0.8 Table 4-36. ECC Parity and Bit Address Relationship Parity Bit Address Parity Bit Address CP0 xxxx_xxxx, xx0 CP1 xxxx_xxxx, xx1 CP2 xxxx_xxxx, x0x CP3 xxxx_xxxx, x1x CP4 xxxx_xxxx, 0xx CP5 xxxx_xxxx, 1xx LP00 xxxx_xxx0, xxx LP01 xxxx_xxx1, xxx LP02 xxxx_xx0x, xxx LP03 xxxx_xx1x, xxx LP04 xxxx_x0xx, xxx LP05 xxxx_x1xx, xxx LP06 xxxx_0xxx, xxx LP07 xxxx_1xxx, xxx LP08 xxx0_xxxx, xxx LP09 xxx1_xxxx, xxx LP10 xx0x_xxxx, xxx LP11 xx1x_xxxx, xxx LP12 x0xx_xxxx, xxx LP13 x1xx_xxxx, xxx LP14 0xxx_xxxx, xxx LP15 1xxx_xxxx, xxx Software Operation The NAND Flash contains a redundant data area containing ECC fields. While writing to the NAND Flash, the hardware ECC engine calculates ECC parity, if it is enabled properly. Software can write the ECC parity bits to the ECC field after writing the data area. When software reads the data from NAND Flash, the hardware ECC engine calculates ECC parity. After the data is read from the NAND Flash, software can compare the ECC parity in the hardware ECC engine and the ECC parity in the ECC field of the NAND Flash to determine if the data block is correct. 4.18.2 NOR Flash Controller/General Purpose Chip Select The NOR Flash Controller supports up to four independent chip selects that can be used for NOR Flash devices or General Purpose Chip Selects (GPCS). Up to 28 bits of address is supported for each chip select, allowing bytewide linear arrays up to 256 MB in memory space. Chips selects may also be located in I/O space, but the usable address bits are limited by the over all limits of I/O space. Each chip select is independently programmable: • Address Setup: Defaults to seven Local bus clocks Each data bit has 11 corresponding parity bits, which can be determined by the bit address. If one data bit is different from its original value, 11 ECC parity bits are changed from the original ECC parity bits. Take the ECC parity from the hardware ECC engine and perform bit-wise exclusive OR with it and the ECC parity field in NAND Flash. The result can be as follows. 1) All bits are 0. The data is correct. 2) Eleven bits are 1. One bit error has been detected. Use the eleven bits to identify the error bit position. 3) One bit is 1. One bit in ECC field is corrupt. Data area should be OK. 4) Otherwise, two or more data bits are corrupt. Cannot be corrected. Revision 0.8 • Read/Write Strobe Width: Defaults to seven Local bus clocks • Address Hold: Defaults to seven Local bus clocks cycles • Optional Wait State Insertion: Defaults off, driven by an external input (FLASH_IOCHRDY) to be used by General Purpose devices. • Optional Write Protect: Defaults protected These settings are located in MSR space and on hard reset default to the settings listed above. Hence, virtually any NOR device can be used immediately out of reset for first instruction fetch. After booting, delays can be programmed as appropriate. 171 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Flash Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Flash Controller Functional Description (Continued) Special considerations must be made for NOR Flash write operations. Depending on the manufacturer and write mode, each write can take from a few microseconds to a few hundred microseconds. Specifically, the software performing the write must observe the following procedure: 4.18.3 Flash Controller Interface Timing Diagrams 1) Write to device. 2) Wait an amount of time dependent on manufacturer’s specifications. In the address phase, the address bus and data bus present a higher address, ADD[27:10]. Board designers can use external latches, such as 74x373, to latch the address bits. 3) Repeat from #1 until all writes are completed. 4.18.3.1 NOR/GPCS The NOR/GPCS timing has two phases: address phase and data phase. In the data phase, the address bus presents ADD[9:0], and the data bus is for data read or write. The “wait” in step two is implemented using an appropriate time base reference. There is no reference within the Flash Controller subsystem. The Flash Controller is running off internal Local bus clock , which is at the highest frequency of 33 MHz. The address phase is always two clock periods. The ALE signal asserts high in the first-half clock period and de-asserts in the second clock period. A 74LCX373 only needs 4 ns setup time and 2 ns hold time (worst case). This timing provides a lot of flexibility for the designing of the board. In the data phase, the address bus and write data bus are available in the first clock period. In the second clock period of the data phase, chip select goes low. After the required hold time, chip select goes high, and write data bus change. After one Local bus clock from chip select change (going high), address bus changes. The setup time, strobe pulse width, and hold time are programmable through the NOR timing registers. See Section 5.19.1.2 "NOR Flash Timing MSRs" on page 504. Some NOR devices provide a ready line that de-asserts during the “wait” in step two. Direct use of this signal is not supported by the Flash Controller. The NOR write software should use an appropriate time base reference to determine when the device is ready, that is, determine how long to wait for the current write to complete before starting another write. Alternatively, the NOR device internal status may be read to determine when the write operation is complete. Refer to NOR Flash manufactures data sheets for additional write operation details. Figure 4-57 and Figure 4-58 provides some NOR Flash timing examples. 0 1 2 3 4 X Y Address Phase ADD[9:0] Higher Address ALE CS# Y+1 Y+2 Lower Address » » » » » » » » » » » » tP tS Higher Address DATA (read) Higher Address Z+2 tH » » DATA (write) Z+1 Data Phase tS WE#, RE# Z » » » » » » » » Data » Data tH » Figure 4-57. NOR Flash Basic Timing www.national.com 172 Revision 0.8 0 1 2 3 4 X Y Address Phase ADD[9:0] Higher Address ALE CS# IOCHRDY Don’t Care Y+2 Z Lower Address » » » » » » » » » » » Higher Address DATA (read) Higher Address Z+2 » Wait States tP tH » » » » » » tS DATA (write) Z+1 Data Phase tS WE#, RE# Y+1 Don’t Care tH » » » » » » » » » Data Data » Figure 4-58. NOR Flash with Wait States Timing Revision 0.8 173 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Flash Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 Flash Controller Functional Description (Continued) 4.18.3.2 NAND The NAND Flash interface has three external timings that are controlled by nine timing registers. The timing parameters are described in Table 4-37 and illustrated in Figures 4-59 through 4-61. Table 4-37. NAND Flash External Timing Parameters Symbol Description tCS Control Setup Time: The setup time from the toggle of the control signals to the falling edge of WE#. tCP Control Pulse Width: The WE# active pulse width in the Command/Address phase. Note that the command/address byte is put on the I/O bus at the same time that the WE# is asserted. tCH Control Hold Time: The hold time from the rising edge of WE# to the toggle of the control signals. Note that the I/O bus is turned off when the tCH expires. tWS Data Write Setup Time: This timing is just for the internal state machine; no external reference point. Can be set to 0 if the setup time is not needed. tWP Data Write Pulse Width: The WE# active pulse width in the data write phase. Note that the data byte is put on the I/O bus at the same time that WE# is asserted; no external reference point. Can be set to 0 if the hold time is not needed. tRP Data Read Pulse Width: The RE# active pulse width in the data read phase. tRH Data Read Hold Time: This timing is just for the internal state machine; no external reference point. Can be set to 0 if the hold time is not needed. 0 1 2 4 3 X X+1 Y Z Z+1 Z+2 CTLR_BUSY tCS WE# tCH » » » tCP » » I/O[7:0] Note: tCH » » » » Command / Address CTLR_BUSY is bit 2 of the NAND Status register (Flash Memory Offset 810h or Flash I/O Offset 06h). Figure 4-59. NAND Flash Command/Address Timing www.national.com 174 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 Flash Controller Functional Description (Continued) 0 1 2 3 X Y Y+1 Z » WE# / RE# Z+1 Z+2 » » tWS / tRS tWP / tRP » » » » I/O [7:0] (write) I/O [7:0] (read) tWH / tRP » » » » » » Figure 4-60. NAND Data Timing with No Wait States and No Prefetch (for the first data read) 0 1 2 3 X » » » FLASH_RDY/BUSY# WE# / RE# Y » » Y+1 Z Z+1 Z+2 » » » » Wait State tWS / tRS I/O [7:0] (write) I/O [7:0] (read) » » » » tWP / tRP tWH / tRH » » » » » » Figure 4-61. NAND Data Timing with Wait States Revision 0.8 175 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 4.19 GEODELINK CONTROL PROCESSOR The GeodeLink Control Processor (GLCP) functionality is illustrated in Figure 4-62 and is summarized as: 4.19.1 GeodeLink Power Management Support The main power management functions are performed by the Power Management Logic, with the GLCP playing a supporting role. (See Section 4.17 "Power Management Control" on page 159 for a complete understanding of power management.) • Serial to GeodeLink conversion to facilitate JTAG accesses to GeodeLink Devices • Power management support (reset and clock control) • MSRs 4.19.1.1 Soft Reset This is one of the active high soft reset sources going to the Power Management Logic. It resides in the GLCP_SYS_RST register. When active, all circuitry in the CS5535 chip is reset (including the GLCP_SYS_RST register itself). Together with a JTAG controller, the GLCP provides complete visibility of the register state that the chip is in. All registers are accessible via the JTAG interface. How the JTAG controller interfaces with the GLCP is beyond the scope of this document and is not explained here. 4.19.1.2 Clock Control The GLCP provides a mechanism to shut off clocks. The busy signal from a module can control the clock gating in its CCU, however, clocks can also be enabled or disabled by the functional clock enable signals coming from the GLCP. These enable signals are asynchronous to the modules and need to be synchronized in the CCU blocks before being used to enable or disable the functional clocks. The GLCP also works with the CCU (Clock Control Unit) blocks of other GeodeLink Devices to provide clock control via its relevant MSRs. The GLCP supplies the clock enable signals to all the CCUs, which allows clocks to be shut off if the power management logic generates a Sleep request or if a debug event triggers a clock disable situation. The clocks can be disabled in one or a combination of the three ways below. All the MSRs mentioned can be found in Section 5.18 "Power Management Controller Register Descriptions" on page 477 and Section 5.20 "GeodeLink Control Processor Register Descriptions" on page 513. TAP Controller 1) PCI Clock Serial to GL Conversion PCI Interface – If Sleep Acknowledge is asserted and the clock disable delay period has expired, disable the clocks specified in GLCP_PMCLKDISABLE (MSR 51700009h). Each bit in GLCP_PMCLKDISABLE corresponds to a CCU, and when set, indicates that the clock going to that CCU should be disabled during a Sleep sequence. The clock disable delay period is specified by the CLK_DELAY bits in GLCP_CLK_DIS_DELAY (MSR 51700008h), and is enabled by the CLK_DLY_EN bit in GLCP_GLB_PM (MSR 5170000Bh). It is clocked by the PCI functional clock. Power Management Support MSR Registers GeodeLink Interface Req Out Req In The power management circuitry disables the clocks when going into Sleep. The Sleep sequence is started by the assertion of Sleep Request from the Power Management Logic. The GLCP asserts Sleep Request and waits for the assertion of Sleep Acknowledge, which indicates that the clocks should be disabled. There are two ways to do this: Data Data Out In Figure 4-62. GLCP Block Diagram www.national.com 176 Revision 0.8 – If Sleep Acknowledge is asserted and the clock disable delay period is not enabled, check to see if all clocks specified by GLCP_CLK4ACK (MSR 51700013h) have become inactive. If GLCP_CLKACTIVE (MSR 51700011h) shows that those clocks are indeed inactive, disable the clocks specified in GLCP_PMCLKDISABLE (MSR 51700009h). 4.19.2 GLCP Clocks The GLCP has multiple clock domains, namely the GeodeLink clock and PCI clock. The GeodeLink clock is the clock source for the MSRs, the serial interface, and the GeodeLink interface. The PCI clock is used in the power management support for the clock disable delay timer. Both the GeodeLink and PCI functional clocks come from primary inputs. All these clocks are handled by a CCU. Even though the PCI clock is always running in functional mode, a CCU is needed to be able to perform reset synchronization and to turn off the internal clock to support TAPSCAN. The CCUs used by the GLCP are the asynchronous versions, since the GLCP outputs asynchronous busy signals. Sleep Acknowledge is asserted after the clocks have been disabled. The wakeup sequence is triggered by the de-assertion of the Sleep Request, which turns on all the clocks. 2) If a debug event in the debug circuitry triggers a clock disable, disable all the clocks specified in GLCP_CLKDISABLE. Each GLCP_CLKDISABLE bit corresponds to a CCU, and when set, indicates that the clock going to that CCU should be disabled. 3) Each bit in GLCP_CLKOFF (MSR 51700010h) corresponds to a CCU. When set, the bit indicates that the clock going to that CCU should be disabled. This is the simplest case. Revision 0.8 177 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLCP Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 4.20 TAP CONTROLLER The TAP Controller is IEEE 1149.1 compliant. A block diagram of the TAP, boundary scan and Internal scan is shown in Figure 4-63. The JTAG pins TCK, TDI, TDO, TMS, and RESET_STAND# are directly supported. The TAP is programmable by means of TAP control instructions. The meanings of the various instructions are shown in Table 438 on page 179 along with the length of the DR (Data register) that can be accessed once the instruction is entered. All Data registers shift in and out data LSB first. The Instruction register and all Data registers are shift registers, so if more bits are shifted in than the register can hold, only the last bits shifted in - the MSBs - will be used. This can be useful on systems that always shift in a multiple of 8 bits to the Data or Instruction registers. The Instruction register is 24 bits wide and defined in Table 4-39 on page 180. The TAP has specific pre-assigned meanings to the bits in the 24-bit IR register. The meanings are summarized in Table 4-39. Note that the bits only affect the chip once the “Update-IR” JTAG state occurs in the JTAG Controller shifting through these bits will not change the state of internal signals (e.g., test_mode). The details on JTAG Controller states are covered in the IEEE 1149.1 standard. The TAP Controller can be initialized synchronously or asynchronously. For a synchronous reset, holding TMS high and clocking TCK a minimum of five times will put the TAP state machine into the Test-Logic-Reset state. Asynchronous reset is available too by asserting RESET_STAND# (Tap Controller Reset) (see Section 3.6 "Reset Considerations" on page 58). From RESET_STAND#, the TAP state machine will immediately enter the Test-Logic-Reset state. • TRI-STATE mode control Features TAP control/access to the following: • Shift/capture of CCU scan chain • GLIU access via Request-in, Request-out packets • TAPSCAN access • Memory BIST control • ID code • Configures component for JTAG bypass mode Boundary Scan Registers Internal Scan Registers To Bscan To Iscan From Iscan From Bscan TDI TDO TAP TCK TMS RESET_STAND# or LVD Standby Reset Serial Interface with GLCP Memory BIST Interface Figure 4-63. TAP Controller, Boundary Scan Block Diagram www.national.com 178 Revision 0.8 Table 4-38. TAP Controller Instructions Instruction 000000h and FFFFE8h DR Length IR Name Description 240 EXTEST Boundary Scan Ring. IEEE 1149.1 specification compliant. (Mapped twice in IR address space.) 01FFFAh through 1DFFFAh Variable TAPSCAN[0:28] TAP Scan Chain 0 through Chain 28. These are parts of the internal scan chain subdivided according to a common CCU clock. 01FFFFh through 1DFFFFh 1 TAPFUNC[0:28] TAP Function Chain 0 through Chain 28. One capture cycle applied to the individual CCU scan chain clocked by the functional clock. 81FFFAh 70 GL_ADDR GeodeLink Address. Access GeodeLink request packet and data packet control bits. 83FFFAh 66 GL_DATA GeodeLink Data. Access GeodeLink data. 85FFFAh 4 PADACC Pad Access. Padtestmode for access to analog and memory BIST signals. 87FFFAh 24 PROGMISR Program instruction. This instruction provides direct access to an MSR used for the ROM memory BIST test. Not supported. 8BFFFAh 70 GL_ADDR_ACT GeodeLink Address Action. Same data register as GL_ADDR, but no GeodeLink transactions are triggered by the access only by GLCP debug action. 8DFFFAh -- TST_IDDQ Test IDDQ. Put chip in a mode for running IDDQ tests. 8FFFFAh 8 REVID Revision ID. The TAP instruction used to access the current revision code (8 bits) for the chip. FFFFDFh 1 TRISTATE TRI-STATE. Put chip into TRI-STATE and comparison mode. FFFFFDh 21 BISTDR Parallel RAM BIST. Internal data register (for chip test). FFFFFEh 32 IDCODE ID Code. 0FE1101Fh for CS5535. FFFFFFh Revision 0.8 1 BYPASS MSB ID[31:28] ID27 ID[12:11] LSB ID[1:0] Version Part Number Manuf. ID 1 Bypass. IEEE 1149.1 specification requires all 1s to be bypassed. 179 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 TAP Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 TAP Controller Functional Description (Continued) Table 4-39. TAP Controller Instruction Bits Bit Name Description 23 TAPSCAN TAP Scan. (Also USER[6].) This is a user bit added by National. Low indicates that an internal scan chain will be accessed by the TAP. 22:17 USER[5:0] User Bits 5 through 0. User bits used to identify an internal scan chain or, if bit 23 is high, to access a special internal DR. bistEnable[3] BIST Enable Bit 3. Works in conjunction with bits [9:7]. See bits [9:7] description for decode. RSVD Reserved. Should always be high. bistEnable[2:0] BIST Enable Bits 2 through 0. Works in conjunction with bit 16. 16 15:10 9:7 0000: 0010: 0100: 0110: 0001: 0011: 0101: 0111: 1000: 1010: 1100: 1110: 1011: 1001: 1101: 1111: bistEn12 bistEn11 bistEn10 bistEn9 bistEn8 bistEn7 bistEn6 bistEn5 bistEn4 bistEn3 bistEn2 bistEn1 bistEn0 Does nothing [normally used for logic BIST] Parallel scan Scan through TAP 6 RSVD Reserved. Should always be high. 5 forceDis Force Disable. Active low bit that places all output pins in TRI-STATE mode. See TRISTATE for details. 4 selectJtagOut Select JTAG Output. Active low bit that allows boundary scan cells to control pads. 3 selectJtagIn Select JTAG Output. Active low bit that allows boundary scan cells to drive data into core logic of chip. OP[2:0] Operation Bits 2 through 0. Selects for how the JTAG chains are wired together. 2:0 000: 001: 010: 011: 100: 101: 110: 111: www.national.com TDI -> Boundary Scan -> TDO TDI -> Boundary Scan -> Internal Scan -> Device ID -> Bypass -> TDO TDI -> Internal Scan -> TDO TDI -> Boundary Scan -> Internal Scan -> Device ID -> Bypass -> TDO TDI -> Internal Scan -> TDO TDI -> Internal Data Register -> TDO TDI -> Device ID -> TDO TDI -> Bypass -> TDO 180 Revision 0.8 4.20.1 EXTEST The EXTEST instruction accesses the boundary scan chain around the chip and controls the pad logic such that the boundary scan data will control the data and enable signals for the pads. IEEE 1149.1 requires that an all-zero instruction access the boundary scan chain. 4.20.2 TAPSCAN These instructions enable JTAG access to the internal scan associated with a particular CCU clock. TCK will then provide the Scan clock to the CCU so that shifting occurs correctly during the Shift-DR state of the TAP. (See Figure 464 and Figure 4-65.) 4.20.3 TAPFUNC These instructions connect TDI and TDO to the 1-bit bypass register during DR access. They are useful in that during the Capture-DR state, one functional clock can be applied to the specific CCU clock indicated by the instruction. This mode works well with the FS2 JTAG control software available with CS5535. The Scan Enable signal to the block will be inactive during this clock. Scan In Scan Out Pad Pad GeodeLink™ Device Scan In TAP Pad Test Mode = 1 Figure 4-64. TAP Controller and Parallel Scan Mode Revision 0.8 181 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 TAP Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 TAP Controller Functional Description (Continued) Scan In[0] Scan Out[0] GeodeLink™ Device Scan In[1] Scan Out[1] TAP TDI Pad Test Mode = 0 TAP_INST[23] = 0 TDO TDO Pad Select Figure 4-65. TAP Controller and TAPSCAN Mode www.national.com 182 Revision 0.8 4.20.4 GL_ADDR This register contains 53 bits for a GeodeLink control packet and the 17 bits for a GeodeLink data packet. The 17 bits from the data packet are updated if a GeodeLink read is requested and is available for shifting out. The GL_DATA description discusses the various conditions under which a valid request packet is posted to the internal GeodeLink. Note that since only one GL_ADDR request packet can be sequenced in with JTAG, the special “read with byte enable” 2-packet requests that GeodeLink supports cannot be triggered. Of course, 8, 16, 32, and 64-bit reads can still be performed and reads of less than 64-bit sizes will generate the appropriate byte enables at the device. As with GeodeLink traffic, reads of less than 64 bits must be to an aligned address, but the data will return in the GL_DATA adjusted to 64-bit alignment (i.e., a 16-bit read to address 102h should have address bit 1 set and data will return in bits [31:16] of the 64-bit response). Writes of less than 64 bits must always have 64-bit aligned addresses and should use the byte enables in the data packet (part of the GL_ADDR data register) to identify which specific bytes are to be written. 4.20.6 PADACC Provides a test mode whereby USB interface signals or memory BIST signals can be accessed by input/output pads. This access is accomplished by writing to the Auxiliary Test Register. 4.20.7 PROGMISR This instruction provides direct access to an MSR used for the ROM memory BIST test. At the conclusion of the test, the resulting signature is then checked. A correct test will result in MBIST_GO being logic-high. 4.20.8 MB_ADDR_ACT This is the same data register as GL_ADDR, but it disables any GeodeLink transaction from occurring either on this access or a following access to the GL_DATA register. Only the GLCP debug action that triggers a GeodeLink cycle will cause these bits to be used. 4.20.9 TST_IDDQ Places the chip in a mode for running IDDQ tests (i.e., generates an internal signal to disable pull-ups and pull downs). Also the transceiver is powered off. 4.20.5 GL_DATA The data transfer rate in and out of the JTAG port is limited to about 90% of the TCK frequency by the GLCP design. The GLCP is designed for up to 50 MHz TCKs, but typical TCK rates for industry interfaces are about 15 MHz. As such, the GLCP JTAG data rate is 14 Mbits/sec or 1.6 Mbytes/sec. Again, however, industry interface boxes will limit this rate to about 500 kbytes/sec. 4.20.10 REVID The TAP instruction used to access the current 8-bit revision code of the chip. 4.20.11 TRISTATE This instruction will TRI-STATE all of the tri-statable primary outputs. The DR accessed is the BYPASS register. GeodeLink requests packets are triggered at these specific moments: 4.20.12 BISTDR Can be used to run all memory BIST controllers in parallel. • If GL_ADDR has been accessed more recently than GL_ADDR_ACT and... 4.20.13 IDCODE This instruction accesses the 32-bit IDCODE register during DR access. — the TYPE of the request is a read and the Update-DR JTAG state is entered after loading the GL_ADDR register. 4.20.14 BYPASS In the IEEE 1149.1 specification, shifting all 1s into the IR must connect the 1-bit BYPASS register. The register has no function except as a storage flip-flop. This instruction can also allow relatively easy connection of multiple GLCP JTAG interface chips. On a board with two GLCP chips, TMS and TCK of each chip should be wired together and TDO of one chip should connect to TDI of the other chip. — the TYPE of the request is a write and the UpdateDR JTAG state is entered after loading the GL_DATA register. — the TYPE of the request is a read and the second TCK in the Shift-DR state for shifting out the GL_DATA register is received and the first two bits shifted in (GL_DATA DR bits 1 and 0) are non-zero and the first bit shifted out was non-zero. Note: • If GL_ADDR_ACT register has been accessed more recently than GL_ADDR and... — the GLCP debug logic triggers the GeodeLink_action due to a debug event occurring. Note that if both MSR accesses from the GLIU and JTAG accesses are interfacing to these registers, the results will be non-deterministic. Revision 0.8 183 In parallel scan mode, “input” pads provide data into the boundary scan cells (the boundary scan cells provide data into the core). “Cowrie” pads will behave as dictated by the internal core flops that normally control the pad; the output data and enable state will be latched into the boundary scan cells. “Cheroot” pads will drive out data as dictated by the internal core flop associated with the pad. www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 TAP Controller Functional Description (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 5.0 Register Descriptions This chapter provides detailed information regarding the registers of the CS5535. The register descriptions are documented at the module-level and briefly summarized below. Floppy Port • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • Floppy Port Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. GeodeLink Interface Unit (GLIU) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. Programmable Interval Timer (PIT) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • P2D Descriptor MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Memory base descriptor.) • PIT Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • GLIU Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • PIT Native Registers: Accessed as I/O addresses. • IOD Descriptor MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (I/O base descriptor.) Programmable Interrupt Controller (PIC) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) GeodeLink PCI South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • PIC Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • GLPCI_SB Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • PIC Native Registers: Accessed as I/O addresses. • PCI Configuration Registers: Index accessed via PCI configuration cycle. Keyboard Emulation Logic (KEL) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) Audio Codec 97 Controller (ACC) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • KEL Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • KEL Native Registers: Accessed via a base address register, MSR_LBAR_KEL1 (MSR 51400009h) and/or MSR_LBAR_KEL2 (MSR 5140000Ah), as memory offsets. • ACC Native Registers: Accessed as I/O offsets from a GLIU IOD descriptor. ATA5 Controller (ATAC) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. System Management Bus (SMB) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • ATAC Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • ATAC Native Registers: Accessed as I/O offsets from a GLIU IOD descriptor. • SMB Native Registers: Accessed via a base address register, MSR_LBAR_SMB (MSR 5140000Bh), as I/O offsets. Universal Serial Bus Controllers (USBC1, USBC2) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. Universal Asynchronous Receiver-Transmitter (UART) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • USB Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • UART/IR Controller Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • USB Embedded PCI Configuration Registers: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. Also requires GLIU P2D descriptor. • UART/IR Controller Native Registers: Accessed via Banks 0 through 7 as I/O offsets. See MSR_LEG_IO (MSR 51400014h) bits [22:20] and bits [18:16] for setting base address. • Host Controller Native Registers: Accessed via a base address register at USB PCI Index 10h as memory offsets. Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • DIVIL Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. www.national.com 184 Revision 0.8 Direct Memory Access (DMA) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) Flash Controller • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • DMA Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • Flash Controller Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • DMA Native Registers: Accessed as I/O Addresses. • Flash Controller Native Registers: Accessed via a base address register as either memory or I/O offsets: — MSR_LBAR_FLSH0 (MSR 51400010h) for use with FLASH_CS0#. — MSR_LBAR_FLSH1 (MSR 51400011h) for use with FLASH_CS1#. — MSR_LBAR_FLSH2 (MSR 51400012h) for use with FLASH_CS2#. — MSR_LBAR_FLSH3 (MSR 51400013h) for use with FLASH_CS3#. Low Pin Count (LPC) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • LPC Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. Real-Time Clock (RTC) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) GeodeLink Control Processor (GLCP) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • RTC Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. • RTC Native Registers: Accessed as I/O addresses. • GLCP Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. General Purpose Input Output (GPIO) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) Note that MSRs for the Floppy Port, PIT, PIC, KEL, SMB, UART, DMA, LPC, RTC, GPIO, MFGPT, and Flash Controller modules are part of the DIVIL (i.e., MSR 51400000h514000FFh). Hence, the Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (MSR 51400000h-51400007h) are documented in the DIVIL register description and the device Specific MSRs are documented in their appropriate register description chapter. • GPIO Native Registers: Accessed via a base address register, MSR_LBAR_GPIO (MSR 5140000Ch), as I/O offsets. – GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers – GPIO Input Conditioning Function Registers – GPIO Interrupt and PME Registers The tables in this chapter use the following abbreviations: Multi-Function General Purpose Timer (MFGPT) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • MFGPT Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. Type Description R/W Read/Write. R Read from a specific address returns the value of a specific register. Write to the same address is to a different register. • MFGPT Native Registers: Accessed via a base address register, MSR_LBAR_MFGPT (MSR 5140000Dh), as I/O offsets. Power Management Controller (PMC) • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. (Shared with DIVIL.) • PMC Specific MSRs: Accessed via RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. W Write. RO Read Only. WO Write Only. R/W1C Read/Write 1 to clear. Writing 1 to a bit clears it to 0. Writing 0 has no effect. • ACPI Registers: Accessed via a base address register, MSR_LBAR_ACPI (MSR 5140000Eh), as I/O offsets. • PM Support Registers: Accessed via a base address register, MSR_LBAR_PMS (MSR 5140000Fh), as I/O offsets. Revision 0.8 185 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 5.1 GEODELINK INTERFACE UNIT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The GeodeLink Interface Unit (GLIU) registers are Model Specific Registers (MSRs) and are accessed through the RDMSR and WRMSR instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. • P2D Descriptor MSRs • GLIU Specific MSRs • IOD Descriptor MSRs Tables 5-1 through 5-4 are GLIU register summary tables that include reset values and page references where the bit descriptions are provided. The MSRs are split into the following groups: • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Reserved (RSVD) fields do not have any meaningful storage elements. They always return 0. Table 5-1. Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Summary MSR Address Type 51010000h RO 51010001h Register Name Reset Value Reference GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_CAP) 00000000_000010xxh Page 189 R/W GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) 0000000_00000004h Page 189 51010002h R/W GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_SMI) 00000000_00000001h Page 190 51010003h R/W GeodeLink Device Error MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_ERROR) 00000000_00000001h Page 191 51010004h R/W GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_PM) 00000000_00000000h Page 193 51010005h R/W GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_DIAG) 00000000_00000000h Page 193 51010006h5101000Fh R/W GLIU Reserved MSRs (GLD_MSRs_RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- Table 5-2. P2D Descriptor MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 51010020h R/W P2D Base Mask Descriptor 0 (GLIU_P2D_BM0) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 194 51010021h R/W P2D Base Mask Descriptor 1 (GLIU_P2D_BM1) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 194 51010022h R/W P2D Base Mask Descriptor 2 (GLIU_P2D_BM2) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 194 51010023h R/W P2D Base Mask KEL Descriptor 0 (GLIU_P2D_BMK0) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 195 51010024h R/W P2D Base Mask KEL Descriptor 1 (GLIU_P2D_BMK1) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 195 51010025h5101003Fh R/W P2D Reserved Descriptors (P2D_RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- www.national.com 186 Revision 0.8 Table 5-3. GLIU Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 51010080h R/W Coherency (GLIU_COH) 00000000_00000000h Page 196 51010081h R/W Port Active Enable (GLIU_PAE) 00000000_0000FFFFh Page 196 51010082h R/W Arbitration (GLIU_ARB) 00000000_00000000h Page 197 51010083h R/W Asynchronous SMI (GLIU_ASMI) 00000000_00000000h Page 197 51010084h R/W Asynchronous Error (GLIU_AERR) 00000000_00000000h Page 198 51010085h R/W Debug (GLIU_DEBUG) 00000000_00000004h Page 199 51010086h RO Physical Capabilities (GLIU_PHY_CAP) 327920A0_80000003h Page 200 51010087h RO N Outstanding Response (GLIU_NOUT_RESP) 00000000_00000000h Page 201 51010088h RO Number of Outstanding Write Data (GLIU_NOUT_WDATA) 00000000_00000000h Page 201 51010089h5101008Ah R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- 5101008Bh RO WHO AM I (GLIU_WHOAMI) Configuration Dependent Page 201 5101008Ch R/W Slave Disable (GLIU_SLV_DIS) 00000000_00000000h Page 202 5101008Dh5101008Fh R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- 510100A0h WO Descriptor Statistic Counter 0 (GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT0) 00000000_00000000h Page 203 510100A1h R/W Descriptor Statistic Mask 0 (GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK0) 00000000_00000000h Page 204 510100A2h R/W Descriptor Statistic Action 0 (GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION0) 00000000_00000000h Page 205 510100A3h R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- 510100A4h WO Descriptor Statistic Counter 1 (GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT1) 00000000_00000000h Page 203 510100A5h R/W Descriptor Statistic Mask 1 (GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK1) 00000000_00000000h Page 204 510100A6h R/W Descriptor Statistic Action 1 (GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION1) 00000000_00000000h Page 205 510100A7h R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- 510100A8h WO Descriptor Statistic Counter 2 (GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT2) 00000000_00000000h Page 203 510100A9h R/W Descriptor Statistic Mask 2 (GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK2) 00000000_00000000h Page 204 510100AAh R/W Descriptor Statistic Action 2 (GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION2) 00000000_00000000h Page 205 510100ABh510100BFh R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- 510100C0h R/W Request Compare Value (GLIU_RQ_COMP_VAL) 001FFFFF_FFFFFFFFh Page 206 510100C1h R/W Request Compare Mask (GLIU_RQ_COMP_MASK) 00000000_00000000h Page 207 Revision 0.8 187 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-3. GLIU Specific MSRs Summary (Continued) MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 510100C2h510100CFh R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- 510100D0h R/W Data Compare Value Low (GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_LO) 00001FFF_FFFFFFFFh Page 207 510100D1h R/W Data Compare Value High (GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_HI) 0000000F_FFFFFFFFh Page 208 510100D2h R/W Data Compare Mask Low (GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_LO) 00000000_00000000h Page 208 510100D3h R/W Data Compare Mask High (GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_HI) 00000000_00000000h Page 209 510100D4h510100DFh R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- Table 5-4. IOD Descriptor MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 510100E0h R/W IOD Base Mask 0 (GLIU_IOD_BM0); Reserved for ATA-5; Defaults to 1Fx16. 60000000_1F0FFFF0h Page 210 510100E1h R/W IOD Base Mask 1 (GLIU_IOD_BM1) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E2h R/W IOD Base Mask 2 (GLIU_IOD_BM2) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E3h R/W IOD Base Mask 3 (GLIU_IOD_BM3) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E4h R/W IOD Base Mask 4 (GLIU_IOD_BM4) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E5h R/W IOD Base Mask 5 (GLIU_IOD_BM5) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E6h R/W IOD Base Mask 6 (GLIU_IOD_BM6) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E7h R/W IOD Base Mask 7 (GLIU_IOD_BM7) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E8h R/W IOD Base Mask 8 (GLIU_IOD_BM8) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100E9h R/W IOD Base Mask 9 (GLIU_IOD_BM9) 000000FF_FFF00000h Page 210 510100EAh R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 0 (GLIU_IOD_SC0) 60000000_403003F0h Page 211 510100EAh R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 0 (GLIU_IOD_SC0); Reserved for ATA-5; Defaults to 3F616. 60000000_403003F0h Page 211 510100EBh R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 1 (GLIU_IOD_SC1) 00000000_00000000h Page 211 510100ECh R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 2 (GLIU_IOD_SC2) 00000000_00000000h Page 211 510100EDh R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 3 (GLIU_IOD_SC3) 00000000_00000000h Page 211 510100EEh R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 4 (GLIU_IOD_SC4) 00000000_00000000h Page 211 510100EFh R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 5 (GLIU_IOD_SC5) 00000000_00000000h Page 211 510100F0h R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 6 (GLIU_IOD_SC6) 00000000_00000000h Page 211 510100F1h R/W IOD Swiss Cheese 7 (GLIU_IOD_SC7) 00000000_00000000h Page 211 510100F2h510100FFh R/W Reserved (RSVD) 00000000_00000000h --- www.national.com 188 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs 5.1.1.1 GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_CAP) MSR Address 51010000h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_000010xxh GLIU_GLD_MSR_CAP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 DEV_ID 4 3 2 1 0 REV_ID GLIU_GLD_MSR_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 23:8 DEV_ID Device ID. Identifies module (0010h). 7:0 REV_ID Revision ID. Identifies module revision. See CS5535 I/O Companion Device Errata document for value. 5.1.1.2 GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) MSR Address 51010001h Type R/W Reset Value 0000000_00000004h GLIU_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 RSVD 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SUBP GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:3 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 2:0 SUBP Subtractive Port. For all negative decode requests. 000: Port 0 (GLIU) 001: Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) 010: Port 2 (USBC2) 011: Port 3 (ATAC) Note: Revision 0.8 100: Port 4 (DD) 101: Port 5 (ACC) 110: Port 6 (USBC1) 111: Port 7 (GLCP) The reset value of this register should not be changed. 189 www.national.com 5.1.1.3 GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_SMI) MSR Address 51010002h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000001h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 0. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.3 "MSR Address 2: SMI Control" on page 67 for further SMI and ASMI generation details.) GLIU_GLD_MSR_SMI Register Map 5 4 SSMI_FLAG 6 STATCNT0_ASMI_FLAG 7 2 1 0 SSMI_EN 8 STATCNT0_ASMI_EN RSVD 9 STATCNT1_ASMI_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 3 STATCNT1_ASMI_EN RSVD STATCNT2_ASMI_FLAG 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 STATCNT2_ASMI_EN Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:36 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 35 STATCNT2_ ASMI_FLAG Statistic Counter 2 ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to a Statistic Counter 2 (MSR 510100A8h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. STATCNT2_ASMI_EN (bit 3) must be low to generate ASMI and set flag. 34 STATCNT1_ ASMI_FLAG Statistic Counter 1 ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to a Statistic Counter 1 (MSR 510100A4h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. STATCNT1_ASMI_EN (bit 2) must be low to generate ASMI and set flag. 33 STATCNT0_ ASMI_FLAG Statistic Counter 0 SMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to a Statistic Counter 0 (MSR 510100A0h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. STATCNT0_ASMI_EN (bit 1) must be low to generate ASMI and set flag. 32 SSMI_FLAG SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated due to a received event. Event sources are: • Illegal request type to GLIU (Port 0), meaning anything other than MSR read/write, debug request, and null. • A self-referencing packet (i.e., a packet sent to the GLIU that finds its destination port is the source port). • The destination of the packet is to a port where the GLIU slave for that port has been disabled. • Trap on a descriptor with device port set to 0. This is the typical operational use of this bit. The data returned with such a trap is the value 0. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. SSMI_EN (bit 0) must be low to generate SSMI and set flag. 31:4 RSVD www.national.com Reserved. Write as read. 190 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 3 STATCNT2_ ASMI_EN Statistic Counter 2 ASMI Enable. Write 0 to enable STATCNT2_ASMI_FLAG (bit 35) and to allow a Statistic Counter 2 (MSR 510100A8h) event to generate an ASMI. 2 STATCNT1_ ASMI_EN Statistic Counter 1 ASMI Enable. Write 0 to enable STATCNT1_ASMI_FLAG (bit 34) and to allow a Statistic Counter 1 (MSR 510100A4h) event to generate an ASMI. 1 STATCNT0_ ASMI_EN Statistic Counter 0 ASMI Enable. Write 0 to enable STATCNT0_ASMI_FLAG (bit 33) and to allow a Statistic Counter 0 (MSR 510100A0h) event to generate an ASMI. 0 SSMI_EN SSMI Enable. Write 0 to enable SSMI_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow a received SSMI event to generate an SSMI. (See bit 32 description for SSMI event sources.) 5.1.1.4 GeodeLink Device Error MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_ERROR) MSR Address 51010003h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000001h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 0. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.4 "MSR Address 3: Error Control" on page 71 for further details.) GLIU_GLD_MSR_ERROR Register Map UNEXP_ADD_ERR_FLAG UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG 4 3 SSMI_ERR_EN UNEXP_ADD_ERR_EN STATCNT0_ERR_FLAG 5 STATCNT0_ERR_EN UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_EN STATCNT1_ERR_FLAG 6 STATCNT1_ERR_EN 0 RSVD 1 STATCNT2_ERR_FLAG DACMP_ERR_EN 2 7 RSVD RSVD RSVD 8 STATCNT2_ERR_EN 9 RQCOMP_ERR_FLAG DACMP_ERR_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RQCOMP_ERR_EN RSVD RSVD SSMI_ERR_FLAG 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 GLIU_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:44 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. DACOMP_ ERR_FLAG Data Comparator Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a Data Comparator (DA_COMP_VAL_LO / DA_COMP_VAL_HI, MSR 510100D0h / 510100D1h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. DACOMP_ERR_EN (bit 11) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 43 42:40 Revision 0.8 191 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 39 RQCOMP_ ERR_FLAG Request Comparator Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a Request Comparator 0 (RQ_COMP_VAL, MSR 510100C0h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. RQCOMP_ERR_EN (bit 7) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. 38 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 37 STATCNT2_ ERR_FLAG Statistic Counter 2 Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a Statistic Counter 2 (MSR 510100A8h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. STATCNT2_ERR_EN (bit 5) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. 36 STATCNT1_ ERR_FLAG Statistic Counter 1 Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a Statistic Counter 1 (MSR 510100A4h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. STATCNT2_ERR_EN (bit 4) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. 35 STATCNT0_ ERR_FLAG Statistic Counter 0 Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a Statistic Counter 0 (MSR 510100A4h) event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. STATCNT0_ERR_EN (bit 3) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. 34 SSMI_ERR_ FLAG SSMI Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due an unhandled SSMI (synchronous error). Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. SSMI_ERR_EN (bit 2) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. (Note 1) 33 UNEXP_ADD_ ERR_FLAG Unexpected Address Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due an unexpected address (synchronous error). Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. UNEXP_ADD_ERR_EN (bit 1) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. (Note 1) 32 UNEXP_TYPE _ERR_FLAG Unexpected Type Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due an unexpected type (synchronous error). Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_EN (bit 0) must be low to generate ERR and set flag. (Note 1) RSVD Reserved. Write as read. DACOMP_ ERR_EN Data Comparator Error Enable. Write 0 to enable DACOMP_ERR_FLAG (bit 43) and to allow a Data Comparator (DA_COMP_VAL_LO / DA_COMP_VAL_HI, MSR 510100D0h / 510100D1h) event to generate an ERR and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 7 RQCOMP_ ERR_EN Request Comparator Error Enable. Write 0 to enable RQCOMP_ERR_FLAG (bit 39) and to allow a Request Comparator (RQ_COMP_VAL, MSR 510100C0h) event to generate an ERR. 6 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 5 STATCNT2_ ERR_EN Statistic Counter 2 Error Enable. Write 0 to enable STATCNT2_ERR_FLAG (bit 37) and to allow a Statistic Counter 2 (MSR 510100A8h) event to generate an ERR. 4 STATCNT1_ ERR_EN Statistic Counter 1 Error Enable. Write 0 to enable STATCNT1_ERR_FLAG (bit 36) and to allow a Statistic Counter 1 (MSR 510100A4h) event to generate an ERR. 3 STATCNT0_ ERR_EN Statistic Counter 0 Error Enable. Write 0 to enable STATCNT0_ERR_FLAG (bit 35) and to allow a Statistic Counter 0 (MSR 510100A0h) event to generate an ERR. 2 SSMI_ERR_ EN SSMI Error Enable. Write 0 to enable SSMI_ERR_FLAG (bit 34) and to allow the unhandled SSMI (synchronous error) event to generate an ERR. 1 UNEXP_ADD_ ERR_EN Unexpected Address Error Enable. Write 0 to enable UNEXP_ADD_ERR_FLAG (bit 33) and to allow the unexpected address (synchronous error) event to generate an ERR. 0 UNEXP_TYPE _ERR_EN Unexpected Type Error Enable. Write 0 to enable UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow the unexpected type (synchronous error) event to generate an ERR. 31:12 11 10:8 Note 1. These are synchronous errors, that is, they do not result in the assertion of the GL Error signal but instead set the Exception bit in the response packet. www.national.com 192 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.1.5 GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_PM) MSR Address 51010004h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_GLD_MSR_PM Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 RSVD 1 0 PMODE0 9 PMODE1 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 GLIU_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:4 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 3:2 PMODE1 Power Mode 1. Statistics and Time Slice Counters. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 1:0 PMODE0 Power Mode 0. Online GLIU logic. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 5.1.1.6 GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (GLIU_GLD_MSR_DIAG) MSR Address 51010005h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h This register is reserved for internal use by National and should not be written to. Revision 0.8 193 www.national.com 5.1.2 P2D Descriptor MSRs 5.1.2.1 P2D Base Mask Descriptors (GLIU_P2D_BM[x]) P2D Base Mask Descriptor 0 (GLIU_P2D_BM0) MSR Address 51010020h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h P2D Base Mask Descriptor 1 (GLIU_P2D_BM1) MSR Address 51010021h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h P2D Base Mask Descriptor 2 (GLIU_P2D_BM2) MSR Address 51010022h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h These registers set up the Physical To Device Base Mask descriptors for determining an address hit. GLIU_P2D_BM[x] Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 PDID1_BM PCMP_BIZ_BM Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) RSVD PBASE 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PBASE_BM 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PMASK_BM GLIU_P2D_BM[x] Bit Descriptions Bit 63:61 Name Description PDID_BM Physical Descriptor Destination ID. These bits define which port to route the request to if it is a hit based on the other settings in this register. 000: Port 0 (GLIU) 001: Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) 010: Port 2 (USBC2) 011: Port 3 (ATAC) 60 PCMP_BIZ_BM 100: Port 4 (DD) 101: Port 5 (ACC) 110: Port 6 (USBC1) 111: Port 7 (GLCP) Physical Compare BIZZARO Flag. 0: Consider only transactions whose BIZZARO flag is low as a potentially valid address hit. A low BIZZARO flag indicates a normal transaction cycle such as a memory or I/O. 1: Consider only transactions whose BIZZARO flag is high as a potentially valid address hit. A high BIZZARO flag indicates a ‘special’ transaction, such as a PCI Shutdown or Halt cycle 59:40 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 39:20 PBASE_BM Physical Memory Address Base. These bits form the matching value against which the masked value of the physical address bits [31:12] are directly compared. If a match is found, then a hit is declared, depending on the setting of the BIZZARO flag comparator. 19:0 PMASK_BM Physical Memory Address Mask. These bits are used to mask physical address bits [31:12] for the purposes of this hit detection. www.national.com 194 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.2.2 P2D Base Mask KEL Descriptors (GLIU_P2D_BMK[x]) P2D Base Mask KEL Descriptor 0 (GLIU_P2D_BMK0) MSR Address 51010023h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h P2D Base Mask KEL Descriptor 1 (GLIU_P2D_BMK1) MSR Address 51010024h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h This is a special version of a P2D_BM descriptor to support routing the USB Keyboard Emulation Logic (KEL) native registers to the default port. The default port device on the CS5535 contains the KEL. GLIU_P2D_BMK[x] Register Map PDID1_BM K PCMP_BIZ_BMK 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD PBASE_BMK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PBASE_BMK 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PMASK_BMK GLIU_P2D_BMK[x] Bit Descriptions Bit 63:61 Name Description PDID1_BMK Physical Descriptor Destination ID. Descriptor Destination ID. These bits define which port to route the request to if it is a hit based on the other settings in this register. 000: Port 0 (GLIU) 001: Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) 010: Port 2 (USBC2) 011: Port 3 (ATAC) 60 100: Port 4 (DD) 101: Port 5 (ACC) 110: Port 6 (USBC1) 111: Port 7 (GLCP) PCMP_BIZ_BMK Physical Compare BIZZARO Flag. If set, bit 8 of the address must be low for a hit on this descriptor. 59:40 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 39:20 PBASE_BMK Physical Memory Address Base.These bits form the matching value against which the masked value of the physical address bits [31:12] are directly compared. If a match is found, then a hit is declared, depending on the setting of the BIZZARO flag comparator. 19:0 PMASK_BMK Physical Memory Address Mask.These bits are used to mask physical address bits [31:12] for the purposes of this hit detection. Revision 0.8 195 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3 GLIU Specific MSRs 5.1.3.1 Coherency (GLIU_COH) MSR Address 51010080h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_COH Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 RSVD 1 0 COHP GLIU_COH Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:3 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 2:0 COHP Coherent Device Port. The port that coherent snoops are routed to. If the coherent device is on the other side of a bridge, the COHP points to the bridge. 000: Port 0 (GLIU) 001: Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) 010: Port 2 (USBC2) 011: Port 3 (ATAC) 100: Port 4 (DD) 101: Port 5 (ACC) 110: Port 6 (USBC1) 111: Port 7 (GLCP) 5.1.3.2 Port Active Enable (GLIU_PAE) MSR Address 51010081h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_0000FFFFh GLIU_PAE Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD PAE0 PAE7 PAE6 9 8 PAE5 7 6 PAE4 5 4 PAE3 3 2 PAE2 1 0 PAE1 GLIU_PAE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:16 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 15:14 PAE0 Port Active Enable for Port 0 (GLIU). 00: OFF - Master transactions are disabled. 01: LOW - Master transactions limited to one outstanding transaction. 10: Reserved. 11: ON - Master transactions enabled with no limitations. 13:12 PAE7 Port Active Enable for Port 7 (GLCP).See bits [15:14] for decode. 11:10 PAE6 Port Active Enable for Port 6 (USBC1). See bits [15:14] for decode. 9:8 PAE5 Port Active Enable for Port 5 (ACC). See bits [15:14] for decode. 7:6 PAE4 Port Active Enable for Port 4 (DD). See bits [15:14] for decode. www.national.com 196 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_PAE Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 5:4 PAE3 Port Active Enable for Port 3 (ATAC). See bits [15:14] for decode. 3:2 PAE2 Port Active Enable for Port 2 (USBC2). See bits [15:14] for decode. 1:0 PAE1 Port Active Enable for Port 1 (GLPCI_SB). 5.1.3.3 Arbitration (GLIU_ARB) MSR Address 51010082h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_ARB Register RSVD PIPE_DIS 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD GLIU_ARB Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 62 PIPE_DIS Pipelined Arbitration Disabled. 0: Pipelined arbitration enabled and the GLIU is not limited to one outstanding transaction. 1: Limit the entire GLIU to one outstanding transaction. 61:0 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 5.1.3.4 Asynchronous SMI (GLIU_ASMI) MSR Address 51010083h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h ASMI is a condensed version of the Port ASMI signals. The EN bits ([15:8]) can be used to prevent a device from issuing an ASMI. A write of 1 to the EN bit disables the device’s ASMI. The FLAG bits ([7:0]) are status bits. If high, an ASMI was generated due to the associated device. (See Section 3.1.4 "ASMI and Error" on page 51 for further details.) GLIU_ASMI Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 Revision 0.8 197 5 4 P7_ASMI_FLAG P6_ASMI_FLAG P5_ASMI_FLAG P4_ASMI_FLAG 3 2 1 0 P0_ASMI_FLAG 6 P1_ASMI_FLAG 7 P2_ASMI_FLAG 8 P3_ASMI_FLAG 9 P0_ASMI_EN P2_ASMI_EN P3_ASMI_EN P4_ASMI_EN P5_ASMI_EN P6_ASMI_EN RSVD P7_ASMI_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 P1_ASMI_EN RSVD www.national.com GLIU_ASMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:16 RSVD Reserved. 15 P7_ASMI_EN Port 7 (GLCP) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 14 P6_ASMI_EN Port 6 (USBC1) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 13 P5_ASMI_EN Port 5 (ACC) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 12 P4_ASMI_EN Port 4 (DD) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 11 P3_ASMI_EN Port 3 (ATAC) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 10 P2_ASMI_EN Port 2 (USBC2) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 9 P1_ASMI_EN Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 8 P0_ASMI_EN Port 0 (GLIU) Asynchronous SMI Enable. 7 P7_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 7 (GLCP) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 6 P6_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 6 (USBC1) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 5 P5_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 5 (ACC) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 4 P4_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 4 (DD) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 3 P3_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 3 (ATAC) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 2 P2_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 2 (USBC2) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 1 P1_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 0 P0_ASMI_FLAG (RO) Port 0 (GLIU) Asynchronous SMI Flag (Read Only). 5.1.3.5 Asynchronous Error (GLIU_AERR) MSR Address 51010084h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h ERR is a condensed version of the port (asynchronous) ERR signals. The EN bits ([15:8]) can be used to prevent a device from issuing an ERR. A write of 1 to the EN bit disables the device’s ERR. The FLAG bits ([7:0]) are status bits. If high, an ERR was generated due to the associated device. (See Section 3.1.4 "ASMI and Error" on page 51 for further details.) GLIU_AERR Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 7 6 5 4 3 2 P7_AERR_FLAG P6_AERR_FLAG P5_AERR_FLAG P4_AERR_FLAG P3_AERR_FLAG P2_AERR_FLAG 1 0 P0_AERR_FLAG 8 P1_AERR_FLAG 9 P0_AERR_EN P2_AERR_EN P3_AERR_EN P4_AERR_EN P5_AERR_EN RSVD P6_AERR_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 P1_AERR_EN RSVD P7_AERR_EN Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_AERR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:16 RSVD Reserved. 15 P7_AERR_EN Port 7 (GLCP) Asynchronous Error Enable. 14 P6_AERR_EN Port 6 (USBC1) Asynchronous Error Enable. www.national.com 198 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_AERR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 13 P5_AERR_EN Port 5 (ACC) Asynchronous Error Enable. 12 P4_AERR_EN Port 4 (DD) Asynchronous Error Enable. 11 P3_AERR_EN Port 3 (ATAC) Asynchronous Error Enable. 10 P2_AERR_EN Port 2 (USBC2) Asynchronous Error Enable. 9 P1_AERR_EN Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) Asynchronous Error Enable. 8 P0_AERR_EN Port 0 (GLIU) Asynchronous Error Enable. 7 P7_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 7 (GLCP) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 6 P6_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 6 (USBC1) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 5 P5_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 5 (ACC) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 4 P4_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 4 (DD) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 3 P3_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 3 (ATAC) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 2 P2_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 2 (USBC2) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 1 P1_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 0 P0_AERR_FLAG (RO) Port 0 (GLIU) Asynchronous Error Flag (Read Only). 5.1.3.6 Debug (GLIU_DEBUG) MSR Address 51010085h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000004h GLIU_DEBUG Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD GLIU_DEBUG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:0 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. Revision 0.8 199 www.national.com 5.1.3.7 Physical Capabilities (GLIU_PHY_CAP) MSR Address 51010086h Type RO Reset Value 327920A0_80000003h This register provides the resources available in the CS5535. GLIU_PHY_CAP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) NSTAT_ CNT NDBG_DA_ NDBG_RQ CMP _CMP NPORTS NCOH NIOD_SC NIOD_BM 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 NP2D_ BMK NP2D_SC NP2D_RO NP2D_R 9 8 7 NP2D_BMO 6 NP2D_BMK 5 4 3 2 1 0 NP2D_BM GLIU_PHY_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0. 62:60 NSTAT_CNT Number Of Statistic Counters. Provides the number of available Statistic Counters. 59:57 NDBG_DA_CMP Number Of Data Comparators. Provides the number of available Data Comparators. 56:54 NDBG_RQ_CMP Number Of Request Comparators. Provides the number of available Request Comparators. 53:51 NPORTS Number of Ports on the GLIU. Provides the number of available ports on the GLIU. 50:48 NCOH Number of Coherent Devices. Provides the number of available Coherent Devices. 47:42 NIOD_SC Number of IOD_SC Descriptors. Provides the number of available IOD_SC Descriptors. 41:36 NIOD_BM Number of IOD_BM Descriptors. Provides the number of available IOD_BM Descriptors. 35:30 NP2D_BMK Number of P2D_BMK Descriptors. Provides the number of available P2D_BMK Descriptors. 29:24 NP2D_SC Number of P2D_SC Descriptors. Provides the number of available P2D_SC Descriptors 23:18 NP2D_RO Number of P2D_RO Descriptors. Provides the number of available P2D_RO Descriptors. 17:12 NP2D_R Number of P2D_R Descriptors. Provides the number of available P2D_R Descriptors. 11:6 NP2D_BMO Number of P2D_BMO Descriptors. Provides the number of available P2D_BMO Descriptors. 5:0 NP2D_BM Number of P2D_BM Descriptors. Provides the number of available P2D_BM Descriptors. www.national.com 200 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3.8 N Outstanding Response (GLIU_NOUT_RESP) MSR Address 51010087h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h . GLIU_NOUT_RESP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD GLIU_NOUT_RESP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:0 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0. 5.1.3.9 Number of Outstanding Write Data (GLIU_NOUT_WDATA) MSR Address 51010088h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_NOUT_WDATA Register Map (RO) 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD GLIU_NOUT_WDATA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:0 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0. 5.1.3.10 WHO AM I (GLIU_WHOAMI) MSR Address 5101008Bh Type RO Reset Value Configuration Dependent GLIU_WHOAMI Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD GLIU_WHOAMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:0 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0. Revision 0.8 201 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3.11 Slave Disable (GLIU_SLV_DIS) MSR Address 5101008Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_SLV_DIS Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD GLIU_SLV_DIS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:0 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. www.national.com 202 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3.12 Descriptor Statistic Counters (GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT[x]) Descriptor Statistic Counter 0 (GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT0) MSR Address 510100A0h Type WO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Descriptor Statistic Counter 1 (GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT1) MSR Address 510100A4h Type WO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Descriptor Statistic Counter 2 (GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT2) MSR Address 510100A8h Type WO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h These registers work in conjunction with the GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK[x] and the GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION[x] registers. The counters count ‘hits’ on the P2D and IOD descriptors. The counter behaves as setup in the GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION[x] register. GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT[x] Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 LOAD_VAL 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CNT GLIU_STATISTIC_CNT[x] Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:32 LOAD_VAL Counter Load Value. A value loaded here will be used as the initial Statistics Counter value when a LOAD action occurs or is commanded. 31:0 CNT Counter Value. These bits provide the current counter value when read. Revision 0.8 203 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3.13 Descriptor Statistic Mask (GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK[x]) Descriptor Statistic Mask 0 (GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK0) MSR Address 510100A1h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Descriptor Statistic Mask 1 (GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK1) MSR Address 510100A5h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Descriptor Statistic Mask 2 (GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK2) MSR Address 510100A9h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK[x] Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 IOD_MASK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 P2D_MASK GLIU_STATISTIC_MASK[x] Bit Descriptions Bit 63:32 Name Description IOD_MASK Mask for Hits to each IOD. Hits are determined after the request is arbitrated. A hit is determined by the following logical equation: hit = |(IOD_MASK[n-1:0] & RQ_DESC_HIT[n-1:0] && is_io) | |(P2D_MASK[n-1:0] & RQ_DESC_HIT[n-1:0] && is_mem) 31:0 P2D_MASK Mask for Hits to each P2D. A hit is determined by the following logical equation: hit = |(IOD_MASK[n-1:0] & RQ_DESC_HIT[n-1:0] && is_io) | |(P2D_MASK[n-1:0] & RQ_DESC_HIT[n-1:0] && is_mem) www.national.com 204 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3.14 Descriptor Statistic Action (GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION[x]) Descriptor Statistic Action 0 (GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION0) MSR Address 510100A2h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Descriptor Statistic Action 1 (GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION1) MSR Address 510100A6h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Descriptor Statistic Action 2 (GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION2) MSR Address 510100AAh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION[x] Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 5 4 3 2 ALWAYS_DEC HIT_ERR HIT_SMI PREDIV 1 0 HIT_DEC 6 HIT_LDEN 7 ZERO_SMI 8 ZERO_ERR RSVD 9 WRAP RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION[x] Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 23:8 PREDIV Pre-divider used for ALWAYS_DEC. The pre-divider is free running and extends the depth of the counter. WRAP Decrement Counter Beyond Zero and Wrap. 7 0: Disable wrap; counter stops when it reaches zero. 1: Enable wrap; counter decrements through 0 to all ones. 6 ZERO_ERR Asset AERR on Cnt = 0. Assert AERR (internal GLIU_P_SERR) when STATISTIC_CNT[x] = 0. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 5 ZERO_SMI Assert ASMI on Cnt = 0. Assert ASMI (internal GLIU_P_ASMI) when STATISTIC_CNT[x] = 0. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 4 ALWAYS_DEC Always Decrement Counter. If enabled, the counter will decrement on every memory clock, subject to the prescaler value PREDIV (bits [23:8]). Decrementing will continue unless loading is occurring due to another action, or if the counter reaches zero and WRAP is disabled (bit[7]). 0: Disable. 1: Enable. Revision 0.8 205 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_STATISTIC_ACTION[x] Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 3 Name Description HIT_ERR Assert AERR on Descriptor Hit. This bit causes an asynchronous error to be generated when a matching descriptor hit occurs, or not. The descriptor hits are ANDed with the masks and then all ORed together. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 2 HIT_SMI Assert ASMI on Descriptor Hit. This bit causes an ASMI to be generated when a matching descriptor hit occurs, or not. The descriptor hits are ANDed with the masks and then all ORed together. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 1 HIT_DEC Decrement Counter on Descriptor Hit. This bit causes the associated counter to decrement when a matching descriptor hit occurs, or not.The descriptor hits are ANDed with the masks and then all ORed together. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 0 HIT_LDEN Load Counter on Descriptor Hit. This bit causes the associated counter to reload its LOAD_VAL when a matching descriptor hit occurs, or not.The descriptor hits are ANDed with the masks and then all ORed together. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 5.1.3.15 Request Compare Value (GLIU_RQ_COMP_VAL) MSR Address 510100C0h Type R/W Reset Value 001FFFFF_FFFFFFFFh The RQ Compare Value and the RQ Compare Mask enable traps on specific transactions. A hit to the RQ Compare is determined by hit = (RQ_IN & RQ_COMP_MASK) == RQ_COMP_VAL). A hit can trigger the RQ_COMP error sources when they are enabled. The value is compared only after the packet is arbitrated. GLIU_RQ_COMP_VAL Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD RQ_COMPVAL 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RQ_COMPVAL GLIU_RQ_COMP_VAL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:53 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 52:0 RQ_COMPVAL Request Packet Value. This is the value compared against the logical bit-wise AND of the incoming request packet and the RQ_COMP_MASK in order to determine a hit. www.national.com 206 Revision 0.8 5.1.3.16 Request Compare Mask (GLIU_RQ_COMP_MASK) MSR Address 510100C1h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The RQ Compare Value and the RQ Compare Mask enable traps on specific transactions. A hit to the RQ Compare is determined by hit = (RQ_IN & RQ_COMP_MASK) == RQ_COMP_VAL). A hit can trigger the RQ_COMP error sources when they are enabled. The value is compared only after the packet is arbitrated. GLIU_RQ_COMP_MASK Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD RQ_COMPMASK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RQ_COMPMASK GLIU_RQ_COMP_MASK Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:53 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 52:0 RQ_COMPMASK Request Packet Mask. This field is bit-wise logically ANDed with the incoming Request Packet before it is compared to the RQ_COMPVAL. 5.1.3.17 Data Compare Value Low (GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_LO) MSR Address 510100D0h Type R/W Reset Value 00001FFF_FFFFFFFFh The DA Compare Value and the DA Compare Mask enable traps on specific transactions. A hit to the DA Compare is determined by hit = (DA_IN & DA_COMP_MASK) == DA_COMP_VAL). A hit can trigger the DA_CMP error sources when they are enabled. The value is compared only after the packet is arbitrated. GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_LO Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD DALO_COMPVAL 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DALO_COMPVAL GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_LO Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:45 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 44:0 DALO_COMPVAL Data Packet Compare Value [44:0]. This field forms the lower portion of the data value that is compared to the logical bit-wise AND of the incoming data value and the data value compare mask in order to determine a hit. The “HI” and “LO” portions of the incoming data, the compare value, and the compare mask, are assembled into complete bit patterns before these operations occur. Revision 0.8 207 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3.18 Data Compare Value High (GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_HI) MSR Address 510100D1h Type R/W Reset Value 0000000F_FFFFFFFFh The DA Compare Value and the DA Compare Mask enable traps on specific transactions. A hit to the DA Compare is determined by hit = (DA_IN & DA_COMP_MASK) == DA_COMP_VAL). A hit can trigger the DA_CMP error sources when they are enabled. The value is compared only after the packet is arbitrated. GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_HI Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD DAHI_ COMPVAL 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DAHI_COMPVAL GLIU_DA_COMP_VAL_HI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:36 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 35:0 DAHI_ COMPVAL DA Packet Compare Value [80:45]. This field forms the upper portion of the data value that is compared to the logical bit-wise AND of the incoming data value and the data value compare mask in order to determine a hit. The “HI” and “LO” portions of the incoming data, the compare value, and the compare mask, are assembled into complete bit patterns before these operations occur. 5.1.3.19 Data Compare Mask Low (GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_LO) MSR Address 510100D2h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The DA Compare Value and the DA Compare Mask enable traps on specific transactions. A hit to the DA Compare is determined by hit = (DA_IN & DA_COMP_MASK) == DA_COMP_VAL). A hit can trigger the DA_COMP error sources when they are enabled. The value is compared only after the packet is arbitrated. GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_LO Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD DALO_COMPMASK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DALO_COMPMASK GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_LO Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:45 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 44:0 DALO_COMPMASK Data Packet Compare Value [44:0]. This field is forms the lower portion of the data COMPMASK value, that is then bit-wise logically ANDed with the incoming data value before it is compared to the DA_COMPVAL. The “HI” and “LO” portions of the incoming data, the compare value, and the compare mask, are assembled into complete bit patterns before these operations occur. www.national.com 208 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.1.3.20 Data Compare Mask High (GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_HI) MSR Address 510100D3h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_HI Register 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD DAHI_ COMPMASK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DAHI_COMPMASK GLIU_DA_COMP_MASK_HI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:36 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 35:0 DAHI_COMPMASK DA Packet Compare Mask [80:45]. This field is forms the upper portion of the data COMPMASK value that is then bit-wise logically ANDed with the incoming data value before it is compared to the DA_COMP_VAL.The “HI” and “LO” portions of the incoming data (the compare value and compare mask) are assembled into complete bit patterns before these operations occur. Revision 0.8 209 www.national.com 5.1.4 IOD Descriptor MSRs 5.1.4.1 IOD Base Mask Descriptors (GLIU_IOD_BM[x]) IOD Base Mask 0 (GLIU_IOD_BM0) MSR Address 510100E0h Type R/W Reset Value 60000000_1F0FFFF0h IOD Base Mask 5 (GLIU_IOD_BM5) MSR Address 510100E5h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 1 (GLIU_IOD_BM1) MSR Address 510100E1h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 6 (GLIU_IOD_BM6) MSR Address 510100E6h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 2 (GLIU_IOD_BM2) MSR Address 510100E2h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 7 (GLIU_IOD_BM7) MSR Address 510100E7h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 3 (GLIU_IOD_BM3) MSR Address 510100E3h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 8 (GLIU_IOD_BM8) MSR Address 510100E8h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 4 (GLIU_IOD_BM4) MSR Address 510100E4h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h IOD Base Mask 9 (GLIU_IOD_BM9) MSR Address 510100E9h Type R/W Reset Value 000000FF_FFF00000h GLIU_IOD_BM[x] Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 IDID_BM ICMP_BIZ_BM Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) RSVD IBASE 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 IBASE_BM 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IMASK_BM GLIU_IOD_BM[x] Bit Descriptions Bit 63:61 Name Description IDID_BM I/O Descriptor Destination ID. These bits define which port to route the request to if it is a hit based on the other settings in this register. 000: Port 0 (GLIU) 001: Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) 010: Port 2 (USBC2) 011: Port 3 (ATAC) 60 ICMP_BIZ_BM 100: Port 4 (DD) 101: Port 5 (ACC) 110: Port 6 (USBC1) 111: Port 7 (GLCP) Compare BIZZARO Flag. 0: Consider only transactions whose BIZZARO flag is low as a potentially valid address hit. A low BIZZARO flag indicates a normal transaction cycle such as a memory or I/O. 1: Consider only transactions whose BIZZARO flag is high as a potentially valid address hit. A high BIZZARO flag indicates a ‘special’ transaction, such as a PCI Shutdown or Halt cycle. www.national.com 210 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_IOD_BM[x] Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 59:40 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 39:20 IBASE_BM Physical I/O Address Base.These bits form the matching value against which the masked value of the physical address, bits [31:12] are directly compared. If a match is found, then a hit is declared, depending on the setting of the BIZZARO flag comparator. 19:0 IMASK_BM Physical I/O Address Mask. These bits are used to mask address bits [31:12] for the purposes of this hit detection. 5.1.4.2 IOD Swiss Cheese Descriptors (GLIU_IOD_SC[x]) IOD Swiss Cheese 0 (GLIU_IOD_SC0) MSR Address 510100EAh Type R/W Reset Value 60000000_403003F0h IOD Swiss Cheese 4 (GLIU_IOD_SC4) MSR Address 510100EEh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h IOD Swiss Cheese 1 (GLIU_IOD_SC1) MSR Address 510100EBh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h IOD Swiss Cheese 5 (GLIU_IOD_SC5) MSR Address 510100EFh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h IOD Swiss Cheese 2 (GLIU_IOD_SC2) MSR Address 510100ECh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h IOD Swiss Cheese 6 (GLIU_IOD_SC6) MSR Address 510100F0h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h IOD Swiss Cheese 3 (GLIU_IOD_SC3) MSR Address 510100EDh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h IOD Swiss Cheese 7 (GLIU_IOD_SC7) MSR Address 510100F1h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Each of these eight descriptors checks that the physical address supplied by the device’s request on the address bits is equal to the IBASE_SC field of descriptor register bits and that the enable write or read conditions given by the descriptor register fields WEN and REN respectively matches the request type and enable fields given on the physical address bits of the device’s request. If the above matches, then the descriptor has a hit condition and routes the received address to the programmed destination ID, IDID1_SC field of the descriptor register bits. GLIU_IOD_SC[x] Register IDID_SC ICMP_BIZ_SC 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD Revision 0.8 RSVD REN_SC EN_SC WEN_SC 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 IBASE_SC 211 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLIU Register Descriptions (Continued) GLIU_IOD_SC Bit Descriptions Bit 63:61 Name Description IDID_SC I/O Descriptor Destination ID. Encoded port number of the destination of addresses which produce a hit based on the other fields in this descriptor. 000: Port 0 (GLIU) 001: Port 1 (GLPCI_SB) 010: Port 2 (USBC2) 011: Port 3 (ATAC) 60 100: Port 4 (DD) 101: Port 5 (ACC) 110: Port 6 (USBC1) 111: Port 7 (GLCP) ICMP_BIZ_SC Compare BIZZARO Flag. Used to check that the BIZZARO flag of the request is equal to the PICMP_BIZ_SC bit (this bit). If a match does not occur, then the incoming request cannot generate a hit. The BIZZARO flag, if set in the incoming request, signifies a “special’ cycle such as a PCI Shutdown or Halt. 59:32 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 31:24 EN_SC Enable for Hits to IDID_SC else SUBP. bit 0, if set, hit on I/O Address Base plus 0. bit 1, if set, hit on I/O Address Base plus 1. : bit 7, if set, hit on I/O Address Base plus 7. 21 WEN_SC Descriptor Hits IDID_SC on Write Request Types else SUBP. If set, causes the incoming request to be routed to the port specified in IDID_SC if the incoming request is a WRITE type. 20 REN_SC Descriptors Hit IDID_SC on Read Request Types else SUBP. If set, causes the incoming request to be routed to the port specified in IDID_SC if the incoming request is a READ type. 19:0 IBASE_SC I/O Address Base. This field forms the basis of comparison with the incoming checks that the physical address supplied by the device’s request on address bits [31:18] are equal to the PBASE field of descriptor register bits [13:0] 2:0 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. www.national.com 212 Revision 0.8 GEODELINK PCI SOUTH BRIDGE REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The GeodeLink PCI South Bridge (GLPCI_SB) register set consists of: Section 5.2.3 "PCI Configuration Registers" on page 225 for details. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs The PCI configuration registers can only be accessed through the PCI interface and include: • GLPCI_SB Specific MSRs • The first 16 bytes of standard PCI configuration registers. • PCI Configuration Registers The MSRs (both Standard and GLPCI_SB Specific) are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. • MSR access registers: — PMCTRL — PMADDR — PMDATA0 — PMDATA1 Additionally, all GLPCI_SB Specific MSRs can be accessed through both the PCI and GLIU interfaces. See Tables 5-5 through 5-7 are register summary tables that include reset values and page references where the bit descriptions are provided. Table 5-5. Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Summary MSR Address Type 51000000h RO 51000001h Register Reset Value Reference GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_CAP) 00000000_002051xxh Page 214 R/W GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) 00000000_00000000h Page 215 51000002h R/W GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_SMI) 00000000_00000000h Page 215 51000003h R/W GeodeLink Device Error MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_ERROR) 00000000_00000000h Page 216 51000004h R/W GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_PM) 00000000_00000000h Page 218 51000005h R/W GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_DIAG) 00000000_00000000h Page 219 Table 5-6. GLPCI_SB Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Reset Value Reference 51000010h R/W Global Control (GLPCI_CTRL) 44000030_00000003h Page 219 51000020h R/W Region 0 Configuration (GLPCI_R0) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000021h R/W Region 1 Configuration (GLPCI_R1) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000022h R/W Region 2 Configuration (GLPCI_R2) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000023h R/W Region 3 Configuration (GLPCI_R3) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000024h R/W Region 4 Configuration (GLPCI_R4) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000025h R/W Region 5 Configuration (GLPCI_R5) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000026h R/W Region 6 Configuration (GLPCI_R6) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000027h R/W Region 7 Configuration (GLPCI_R7) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000028h R/W Region 8 Configuration (GLPCI_R8) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000029h R/W Region 9 Configuration (GLPCI_R9) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 5100002Ah R/W Region 10 Configuration (GLPCI_R10) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 5100002Bh R/W Region 11 Configuration (GLPCI_R11) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 5100002Ch R/W Region 12 Configuration (GLPCI_R12) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 Revision 0.8 213 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.2 Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-6. GLPCI_SB Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Reset Value Reference 5100002Dh R/W Region 13 Configuration (GLPCI_R13) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 5100002Eh R/W Region 14 Configuration (GLPCI_R14) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 5100002Fh R/W Region 15 Configuration (GLPCI_R15) 00000000_00000000h Page 223 51000030h RO PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 0-3 (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTE0-3) 00000000_002A100Bh Page 224 51000031h RO PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 4-7 (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTE4-7) 00000000_00000000h Page 224 51000032h RO PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 8-B (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTE8-B) 00000000_00000000h Page 224 51000033h RO PCI Configuration Space Header Byte C-F (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTEC-F) 00000000_00000000h Page 224 Table 5-7. PCI Configuration Registers Width (Bits) Name Reset Value Reference RO 32 (Note 1) PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 0-3 (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE0-3) 002A100Bh Page 225 04h RO 32 (Note 1) PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 4-7 (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE4-7) 00000000h Page 226 08h RO 32 (Note 1) PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 8-B (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE8-B) FF0000xxh Page 226 0Ch RO 32 (Note 1) PCI Configuration Space Header Byte C-F (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTEC-F) 00000000h Page 227 F0h R/W 32 PCI MSR Control (GLPCI_PMCTRL) 00000001h Page 227 F4h R/W 32 PCI MSR Address (GLPCI_PMADDR) 00000000h Page 228 F8h R/W 32 PCI MSR Data 0 (GLPCI_PMDATA0) 00000000h Page 228 FCh R/W 32 PCI MSR Data 1 (GLPCI_PMDATA1) 00000000h Page 229 Index Type 00h Note 1. Read address bits [1:0] are ignored and taken as 00. 5.2.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs 5.2.1.1 GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_CAP) MSR Address 51000000h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_002051xxh GLPCI_GLD_MSR_CAP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD www.national.com DEV_ID 214 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 REV_ID Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) GLPCI_GLD_MSR_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 23:8 DEV_ID Device ID. Identifies module (2051h). 7:0 REV_ID Revision ID. Identifies module revision. See CS5535 I/O Companion Device Errata document for value. 5.2.1.2 GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) MSR Address 51000001h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLCPI_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 9 8 7 6 RSVD 5 4 3 2 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PRI 1 0 PID GLPCI_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:7 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 6:4 PRI Priority Level. Always write 0. RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. PID Priority ID. Always write 0. 3 2:0 5.2.1.3 GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_SMI) MSR Address 51000002h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.3 "MSR Address 2: SMI Control" on page 67 for further SMI/ASMI generation details.) GLPCI_GLD_MSR_SMI Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 Revision 0.8 215 4 3 2 RSVD 1 0 TAR_ASMI_EN 5 MAR_ASMI_EN 6 SSMI_ASMI_EN 7 EXCEP_ASMI_EN 8 SYSE_ASMI_EN 9 TAS_ASMI_EN MAR_ASMI_FLAG TAR_ASMI_FLAG SSMI_ASMI_FLAG EXCEP_ASMI_FLAG PAR_ASMI_FLAG SYSE_ASMI_FLAG RSVD TAS_ASMI_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PAR_ASMI_EN RSVD www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) GLPCI_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:23 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 22 TAS_ASMI_ FLAG Target Abort Signaled ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due the signaling of a target abort on the PCI bus. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. TA_ASMI_EN (bit 6) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 21 PAR_ASMI_ FLAG Parity Error ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to the detection of a PCI bus parity error. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PAR_ASMI_EN (bit 5) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 20 SYSE_ASMI_ FLAG System Error ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to the detection of a PCI bus system error. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. SYSE_ASMI_EN (bit 4) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 19 EXCEP_ASMI_ FLAG Exception Bit Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to the EXCEP bit being set in the received GLIU read or write response packet. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. EXCEP_ASMI_EN (bit 3) must be set to enable this flag. 18 SSMI_ASMI_ FLAG SSMI ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to the SSMI bit being set in the received GLIU read or write response packet. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. SSMI_ASMI_EN (bit 2) must be set to enable this flag. 17 TAR_ASMI_ FLAG Target Abort Received ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to the reception of a target abort on the PCI bus. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. TAR_ASMI_EN (bit 1) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 16 MAR_ASMI_ FLAG Master Abort Received ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to the reception of a master abort on the PCI bus. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. MAR_ASMI_EN (bit 0) be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 15:7 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 6 TAS_ASMI_EN Target Abort Signaled ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable TAS_ASMI_FLAG (bit 22) and to allow the event to generate an ASMI. 5 PAR_ASMI_EN Parity Error ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable PAR_ASMI_FLAG (bit 21) and to allow the event to generate an ASMI. 4 SYSE_ASMI_ EN System Error SMI Enable. Write 1 to enable SYSE_ASMI_FLAG (bit 20) and to allow the event to generate an ASMI. 3 EXCEP_ASMI_ EN Exception Bit Enable. Write 1 to enable EXCEP_ASMI_FLAG (bit 19) and to allow the event. 2 SSMI_EN SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable SSMI_ASMI_FLAG bit (bit 18) and to allow the event. 1 TAR_ASMI_EN Target Abort Received ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable TAR_ASMI_FLAG (bit 17) and to allow the event to generate an ASMI. 0 MAR_ASMI_EN Master Abort Received ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable MAR_ASMI_FLAG (bit 16) and to allow the event to generate an ASMI. 5.2.1.4 GeodeLink Device Error MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_ERROR) MSR Address 51000003h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.4 "MSR Address 3: Error Control" on page 71 for further details.) www.national.com 216 Revision 0.8 GLPCI_GLD_MSR_ERROR Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 4 3 2 RSVD 1 0 TAR_ERR_EN 5 MAR_ERR_EN 6 RSVD 7 EXCEP_ERR_EN 8 SYSE_ERR_EN 9 TAS_ERR_EN MAR_ERR_FLAG TAR_ERR_FLAG RSVD EXCEP_ERR_FLAG SYSE_ERR_FLAG TAS_ERR_FLAG RSVD PARE_ERR_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PARE_ERR_EN RSVD GLPCI_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:23 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 22 TAS_ERR_ FLAG Target Abort Signaled Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to signaling of a target abort on the PCI bus. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. TAS_ERR_EN (bit 6) must be set to enable this event and set flag. 21 PARE_ERR_ FLAG Parity Error Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to the detection of a PCI bus parity error. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PARE_ERR_EN (bit 5) must be set to enable this event and set flag. 20 SYSE_ERR_ FLAG System Error Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to the detection of a PCI bus system error. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. SYSE_ERR_EN (bit 4) must be set to enable this event and set flag. 19 EXCEP_ERR_ FLAG Exception Bit Error Flag. If high, records that the EXCP bit in the received GLIU read or write response packet is set. Write 1 to clear. EXCEP_ERR_EN (bit 3) must be set to enable this event and set flag. 18 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 17 TAR_ERR_ FLAG Target Abort Received Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to the reception of a target abort on the PCI bus. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. TAR_ERR_EN (bit 1) must be set to enable this event and set flag. 16 MAR_ERR_ FLAG Master Abort Received Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to the reception of a master abort on the PCI bus. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. MAR_ERR_EN (bit 0) must be set to enable this event and set flag. 15:7 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 6 TAS_ERR_EN Target Abort Signaled Error Enable. Write 1 to enable TAS_ERR_FLAG (bit 22) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 5 PARE_ERR_EN Parity Error Error Enable. Write 1 to enable PAR_ERR_FLAG (bit 21) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 4 SYSE_ERR_EN System Error Error Enable. Write 1 to enable SYSE_ERR_FLAG (bit 20) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 3 EXCEP_ERR_ EN Exception Bit Error Enable. Write 1 to enable EXCEP_ERR_FLAG (bit 19) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 2 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 1 TAR_ERR_EN Target Abort Received Error Enable. Write 1 to enable TAR_ERR_FLAG (bit 17) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 0 MAR_ERR_EN Master Abort Received Enable. Write 1 to enable MAR_ERR_FLAG (bit 16) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. Revision 0.8 217 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.2.1.5 GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_PM) MSR Address 51000004h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h CLPCI_GLD_MSR_PM Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD IO MODEA 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 RSVD 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 P P P MODE2 MODE1 MODE0 GLPCI_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:50 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 49:48 IOMODEA I/O Mode A Control. These bits determine how the associated PCI inputs and outputs will behave when the PMC asserts two internal signals that are controlled by PMS I/O Offset 20h and 0Ch. The list of affected signals is given in Table 3-11 "Sleep Driven PCI Signals" on page 71. 00: No gating of I/O cells during a Sleep sequence (Default). 01: During a power management Sleep sequence, force inputs to their non-asserted state when PM_IN_SLPCTL is enabled. 10: During a power management Sleep sequence, force inputs to their non-asserted state when PM_IN_SLPCTL is enabled, and park (force) outputs low when PM_OUT_SLPCTL is enabled. 11: Immediately and unconditionally, force inputs to their not asserted state, and park (force) outputs low. 47:35 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 34:32 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 31:6 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 5:4 PMODE2 Power Mode 2. Power mode for PCI-fast clock domain. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 3:2 PMODE1 Power Mode 1. Power mode for PCI clock domain. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. www.national.com 218 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) GLPCI_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 1:0 PMODE0 Power Mode 0. Power mode for GLIU clock domain. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 5.2.1.6 GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (GLPCI_GLD_MSR_DIAG) MSR Address 51000005h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h This register is reserved for internal use by National and should not be written to. 5.2.2 GLPCI_SB Specific MSRs 5.2.2.1 Global Control (GLPCI_CTRL) MSR Address 51000010h Type R/W Reset Value 44000030_00000003h GLPCI_CTRL Register Map SDOFF LEGACT RPIDE PSIDE RDHP FPIDE LRH SUS PPIDE RSVD RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 ILTO 9 8 LAT 7 6 RSVD 5 4 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 ME RSVD IE RTL OD RSVD IOED RTH HCD FTH SLTO 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 CISM GLPCI_CTRL Bit Descriptions Bit Name IB/OB Description 63:60 FTH IB In-Bound Flush Threshold. Controls the timing for requesting new read data while concurrently flushing previously prefetched, stale read data. While flushing stale data, if the number of prefetched 64-bit WORDs reaches this level, then a new read request is made. 59:56 RTH IB In-Bound Read Threshold. Controls the timing for prefetching read data. If the number of prefetched 32-bit WORDs is decremented and reaches this threshold, a subsequent GLIU request is generated to fetch the next cache-line of read data. 55:52 RSVD (RO) --- Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 51:49 RTL OB Retry Transaction Limit. Limits the number of out-bound retries. If a target signals retry indefinitely the PCI interface may be configured to abort the failing out-bound request. 000: No limit. 001: 8 retries. 010: 16 retries. 011: 32 retries. Revision 0.8 100: 64 retries. 101: 128 retries. 110: 256 retries. 111: 512 retries. 219 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) GLPCI_CTRL Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name IB/OB Description 48:43 RSVD (RO) --- Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 42 SLTO IB Subsequent Latency Time-Out Select. Specifies the subsequent target latency timeout limit. If, within a burst, the GLPCI_SB module does not respond with the configured number of clock edges the PCI interface terminates the PCI bus cycle. 0: 8 PCI clock edges. 1: 4 PCI clock edges. 41:40 ILTO IB Initial Latency Time-out Select. Specifies the initial target latency time-out limit for the PCI interface. If the GLPCI_SB module does not respond with the first data phase within the configured number of clock edges the PCI interface terminates the PCI bus cycle. 00: 32 PCI clock edges. 01: 16 PCI clock edges. 10: 8 PCI clock edges. 11: 4 PCI clock edges. 39:35 LAT IB/OB PCI Usage Timer. Usage time-out value for limiting bus tenure. 34:32 0 (RO) IB/OB Constant 0 (Read Only). The three least significant bits of the PCI latency timer field are fixed as zeros. These bits are not used as part of the PCI latency timer comparison. 31:24 RSVD (RO) 23:21 SUS --IB/OB Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. Busy Sustain. Controls the sustain time for keeping the clocks running after the internal busy signals indicate that the clocks may be gated. 000: No sustain. 001: 4 clock cycles. 010: 8 clock cycles. 011: 16 clock cycles. 100: 32 clock cycles. 101: 64 clock cycles. 110: 128 clock cycles. 111: 256 clock cycles. 20 RSVD (RO) --- Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 19:18 FPIDE IB Prefetch Primary IDE. If these bits are set, I/O reads to address 1F0h conform to a prefetching behavior. Under this mode, the GLPCI_SB issues GLIU Read Request Packets for this specific address before receiving a request on the PCI bus for it. When IDE prefetch is enabled, all PCI accesses to 1F0h must be DWORDs; that is, 4 bytes. This setting can only be changed between PIO operations. 00: Off. (Default) 01: At “beginning” initialize pipeline with two read requests. 10: At “beginning” initialize pipeline with three read requests. 11: Reserved. The prefetch only applies if the current command is "read". The current command is assumed from the last write to IDE Command Register at 1F7h. The following commands are considered "reads": Read sectors - 20h Read multiple - C4h Read buffer - E4h Prefetch does not cross sector boundaries; that is, 512-byte boundaries. Any prefetched data is discarded and the “boundary” set to 0 on any write to 1F7h. 17 PPIDE www.national.com IB Post Primary IDE. Defaults to 0. If this bit is set, I/O writes to address 1F0h are posted; that is, the “send response” flag is not set in the GLIU Write Request Packet. Effectively, an I/O write to this specific address is posted just like memory writes are posted. When IDE posting is enabled, single and double WORD writes may be mixed without restriction. 220 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) GLPCI_CTRL Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name 16 LRH IB/OB IB Description Legacy I/O Retry/Hold. 0: Legacy I/O retry. 1: Legacy I/O hold. Regardless of the above settings an I/O read or write to 1F0h always causes a retry if data can not be immediately transferred. 15 RDHP IB Reject DMA High Page. Controls the decoding of I/O range associated with the DMA High Page registers (480h-48Fh). 0: Considered part of legacy I/O. 1: Subtractive decode. 14 RSIDE IB Reject Secondary IDE. Controls the decoding of I/O range associated with Secondary IDE address of 170h-177h and 376h. 0: Considered part of legacy I/O. 1: Subtractive decode. 13 RPIDE IB Reject Primary IDE. Controls the decoding of I/O range associated with Primary IDE address of 1F0h-1F7h and 3F6h. 0: Considered part of legacy I/O. 1: Subtractive decode. 12:11 LEGACT IB Legacy I/O Space Active Decode. 00: Subtractive decode (claim on fourth clock). 01: Slow decode (claim on third clock). 10: Medium decode (Claim on second clock). 11: Reserved (implemented as medium decode and returned 10 when read). 10 SDOFF OB Non Legacy Subtractive Decode Off. 0: Subtractive decode enabled. 1: Subtractive decode disabled. 9 HCD IB Hold for CIS Transfer Disable. 0: Hold for CIS transfer enabled. 1: Hold for CIS transfer disabled. 8 IOED IB I/O Addressing Error Checking Disable. 0: I/O addressing error checking enabled. 1: I/O addressing error checking disabled. 7:5 RSVD (RO) --- 4:3 CISM IB/OB Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. CIS Mode. 00: Mode A (Default). Not used in normal operation. 01: Mode B. Not used in normal operation. 10: Mode C. Used in normal operation. 11: Reserved. See Section 4.2.14 "CPU Interface Serial (CIS)" on page 79 for details regarding operation modes. 2 OD OB Out-Bound Request Disable. 0: Out-bound request enabled. 1: Out-bound request disabled. When an out-bound request is disabled, all outstanding out-bound requests are serviced before a read response packet with SSMI bit and all data bits cleared and EXCEP bit set is returned. Revision 0.8 221 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) GLPCI_CTRL Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name IB/OB Description 1 IE IB I/O Enable. Enable handling of in-bound I/O transactions from PCI. When set to 1 the PCI interface accepts all in-bound I/O transactions from PCI. This mode is only intended for design verification purposes. When cleared to 0 no in-bound I/O transactions are accepted. 0 ME IB Memory Enable. Enable handling of in-bound memory access transaction from PCI. When cleared to 0, the PCI interface does not accept any in-bound memory transactions from the PCI bus. www.national.com 222 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.2.2.2 Region 0-15 Configuration MSRs (GLPCI_R[x]) Region 0 Configuration (GLPCI_R0) MSR Address 51000020h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 8 Configuration (GLPCI_R8) MSR Address 51000028h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 1 Configuration (GLPCI_R1) MSR Address 51000021h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 9 Configuration (GLPCI_R9) MSR Address 51000029h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 2 Configuration (GLPCI_R2) MSR Address 51000022h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 10 Configuration (GLPCI_R10) MSR Address 5100002Ah Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 3 Configuration (GLPCI_R3) MSR Address 51000023h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 11 Configuration (GLPCI_R11) MSR Address 5100002Bh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 4 Configuration (GLPCI_R4) MSR Address 51000024h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 12 Configuration (GLPCI_R12) MSR Address 5100002Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 5 Configuration (GLPCI_R5) MSR Address 51000025h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 13 Configuration (GLPCI_R13) MSR Address 5100002Dh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 6 Configuration (GLPCI_R6) MSR Address 51000026h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 14 Configuration (GLPCI_R14) MSR Address 5100002Eh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 7 Configuration (GLPCI_R7) MSR Address 51000027h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Region 15 Configuration (GLPCI_R15) MSR Address 5100002Fh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h GLPCI_R[x] Register Map 8 7 RSVD 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 EN BASE 9 RH 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD RSVD PF TOP SPACE 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 GLPCI_REGCONF[x] Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:44 TOP Top of Region. For memory use [63:44] as top of address bits [31:12]. For I/O use [63:46] as top of address bits [19:2]. (Note 1) 43:33 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only): Returns 0. Revision 0.8 223 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) GLPCI_REGCONF[x] Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 32 SPACE Region Space Indicator. 0: Memory space. 1: I/O space. 31:12 11:4 BASE Base of Region. For memory use [31:12] as base of address bits [31:12]. For I/O use [31:14] as base of address bits [19:2]. (Note 1) RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 3 PF Prefetchable. If region is memory and this bit is set, it indicates a prefetechable memory region. Reads to this region have no side-effects. If region is I/O and this bit is set, post all I/O writes to this region. 2 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. 1 RH Retry/Hold. Defines whether GLPCI_SB PCI slave generates a retry condition or holds the PCI bus until cycle completion. Note that even if hold is selected, the cycle will be terminated if initial latency time-out is reached. 0: Retry. 1: Hold. 0 EN Region Enable. Set to 1 to enable access to this region. Note 1. For memory, 4 kB granularity, inclusive: [63:44] <= address[31:12] <= [31:12]. For I/O, 4B granularity, inclusive: [63:46] <= address[19:2] <= [31:14]. 5.2.2.3 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 0-3 (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTE0-3) MSR Address 51000030h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_002A100Bh Reads back the value of PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 0-3 (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE0-3). See Section 5.2.3.1 on page 225 for register map and bit definitions. 5.2.2.4 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 4-7 (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTE4-7) MSR Address 51000031h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Reads back the value of PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 4-7 (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE4-7). See Section 5.2.3.2 on page 226 for register map and bit definitions. 5.2.2.5 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 8-B (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTE8-B) MSR Address 51000032h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Reads back the value of PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 8-B (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE8-B). See Section 5.2.3.3 on page 226 for register map and bit definitions. 5.2.2.6 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte C-F (GLPCI_PCIHEAD_BYTEC-F) MSR Address 51000033h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Reads back the value of PCI Configuration Space Header Byte C-F (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTEC-F). See Section 5.2.3.4 on page 227 for register map and bit definitions. www.national.com 224 Revision 0.8 5.2.3 PCI Configuration Registers The first 16 bytes of the PCI configuration register space consist of standard PCI header registers. An additional 32 bytes are used to implement a mailbox for giving access from the PCI bus to the internal MSRs of the CS5535. • A PCI configuration read of register FCh (PMDATA1). The PCI bus is held (i.e., no retry unless time-out) until the transaction completes. MSR Access Mailbox Upon reset, MSR access is enabled. That is, the PMCTRL.EN bit is set. A PCI configuration (config) write to register F0h clearing the EN bit is required to disable MSR access. • A PCI configuration write to register F4h (PMADDR) with the appropriate address value. If the appropriate address value was previously written to register F4h, then this step is unnecessary. An MSR write is accomplished by: • A PCI configuration write to register F8h (PMDATA0). An MSR read is accomplished by: • A PCI configuration write to register FCh (PMDATA1). This starts the GLIU MSR write. The PCI bus is held (i.e., no retry unless time-out) until the transaction completes. • A PCI configuration write to register F4h (PMADDR) with the appropriate address value. If the appropriate address value was previously written to register F4h, then this step is unnecessary. Any PCI transaction interrupting an MSR read/write transaction is retried until the MSR transaction is complete. • A PCI configuration read of register F8h (PMDATA0). This starts the GLIU MSR read. The PCI bus is held (i.e., no retry unless time-out) until the transaction completes. The external MSR write request always has the SEND_RESPONSE bit set. The returned MSR read or write response packet is checked for the SSMI and EXCEP bits. 5.2.3.1 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 0-3 (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE0-3) PCI Index 00h Type RO Reset Value 002A100Bh GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE0-3 Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 DEV_ID 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 VEN_ID GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE0-3 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:16 DEV_ID Device Identification Register (Read Only). Identifies CS5535 as the device. Reads as 002Ah. 15:0 VEN_ID Vendor Identification Register (Read Only). Identifies National Semiconductor as the vendor. Reads as 100Bh. Revision 0.8 225 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.2.3.2 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 4-7 (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE4-7) PCI Index 04h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE4-7 Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 PCI_STS 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PCI_CMD GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE4-7 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:16 PCI_STS PCI Status Register (Read Only). Not implemented. 15:0 PCI_CMD PCI Command Register (Read Only). Not implemented. 5.2.3.3 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte 8-B (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE8-B) PCI Index 08h Type RO Reset Value FF0000xxh GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE8-B Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 PCI_CLASS 8 7 DEV_REV_ID GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTE8-B Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:16 PCI_CLASS PCI Class Code (Read Only). 15:0 DEV_REV_ID Device Revision ID (Read Only). Identifies the major and minor silicon revision of the CS5535. Can also be read at MSR 51700017h[7:0]. See Section 5.20.2.13 "Chip Revision ID (GLCP_CHIP_REV_ID)" on page 524. www.national.com 226 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.2.3.4 PCI Configuration Space Header Byte C-F (GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTEC-F) PCI Index 0Ch Type RO Reset Value 00000000h GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTC-F Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PCI_BIST PCI_HEADER 9 8 7 6 PCI_LTNCY_TMR 5 4 3 2 1 0 PCI_CACHE GLPCI_PCI_HEAD_BYTEC-F Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:24 PCI_BIST PCI BIST Register (Read Only). Not implemented. 23:16 PCI_HEADER PCI Header Type Byte (Read Only). This register defines the format of this header. This header is of type format 0, that is, this byte contains all zeroes. 16:8 PCI_LTNCY_TMR PCI Latency Timer Register (Read Only). Not implemented. Writing these bits have no effect. 7:0 PCI_CACHE PCI Cache Line Size Register (Read Only). Not implemented. Writing these bits have no effect. 5.2.3.5 PCI MSR Control (GLPCI_PMCTRL) PCI Index F0h Type R/W Reset Value 00000001h GLPCI_PMCTRL Register Map 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MSR_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD GLPCI_PMCTRL Bit Descriptions Bit 31:1 0 Revision 0.8 Name Description RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. MSR_EN MSR Enable. Set to 1 to enable access to Model Specific Registers (MSRs). 227 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.2.3.6 PCI MSR Address (GLPCI_PMADDR) PCI Index F4h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h GLPCI_PMADDR Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ADDRESS GLPCI_PMADDR Bit Descriptions Bit 31:0 Name Description ADDRESS MSR Address. Address field to use in GLIU MSR accessing. Addresses with the most significant 18 bits set to zero address the model specific registers of the GLPCI_SB module itself. If any of the 18 most significant bits are set to one, the GLPCI_SB forwards the MSR access to the GLIU without performing any address translation. 5.2.3.7 PCI MSR Data 0 (GLPCI_PMDATA0) PCI Index F8h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h GLPCI_PMDATA0 Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DATA0 GLPCI_PMDATA0 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:0 DATA0 MSR Data 0. Least significant 32-bits of MSR data. DATA0 and DATA1 R/W are atomic in nature (i.e., if DATA0 access is made in GLPCI_SB then it must followed by DATA1 access). Until the DATA1 access, the GLPCI_SB retries all other transactions on the PCI bus for 215 cycles. After the timeout expires, atomic nature of DATA0 and DATA1 expires and other transactions are accepted. www.national.com 228 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 GLPCI_SB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.2.3.8 PCI MSR Data 1 (GLPCI_PMDATA1) PCI Index FCh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h GLPCI_PMDATA1 Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DATA1 GLPCI_PMDATA1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:0 DATA1 MSR Data 1. Most significant 32-bits of MSR data. DATA0 and DATA1 R/W are atomic in nature (i.e., if DATA0 access is made in GLPCI_SB then it must followed by DATA1 access). Until the DATA1 access, GLPCI_SB will retry all other transactions on PCI bus for 215 cycles. After this timeout, atomic nature for DATA0 and DATA1 expires and other transactions are accepted. Revision 0.8 229 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.3 AC97 AUDIO CODEC CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The control registers for the AC97 Audio Codec Controller (ACC) are divided into two register sets: Tables 5-8 and 5-9 are ACC register summary tables that include reset values and page references where the bit descriptions are provided. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Eliminating Race Conditions All I/O writes are sequence locked, that is, completion of the write at the target is confirmed before the executing processor proceeds to the next instruction. All memory writes are posted, that is, the executing processor proceeds to the next instruction immediately after the write whether or not the write has completed. Write posting can lead to out of order execution. Reading the register to which a write has been posted, forces any pending posted write to execute if it has not already done so. • ACC Native Registers The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. The ACC Native registers begin at ACC Offset 00h. The system automatically maps the ACC registers to a location in memory space or I/O space, but this is hidden from the module’s point of view. At the audio block level, it does not matter if these registers are in memory or I/O space but at the system level, there are significant operational differences (see Section "Eliminating Race Conditions") Hereafter the ACC Address are called out as I/O Offsets, since I/O mapping is recommended. Consider this example. Assume an audio master is performing an access to system memory and register access is temporarily blocked. If the processor was servicing an interrupt, a write to clear the interrupt would post to a memory mapped register but not execute immediately, that is, the interrupt would not immediately clear. If the processor then enabled the Programmable Interrupt Controller (PIC) for new interrupts, then the “not immediately cleared” interrupt would cause a false new interrupt, a form of a race condition. For Native register access, only the lower seven bits of the address are decoded, so the register space is aliased. Accesses beyond 7Fh alias below 7Fh. Accesses to addresses that are not implemented or reserved are “don’t cares” (i.e. writes do nothing, reads return 0s). This type of race condition can be eliminated by placing the audio registers in I/O space, or, by performing a register read to any register having a pending posted write that is capable of creating a race condition. Table 5-8. Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Summary MSR Address Type 51500000h RO 51500001h Register Name Reset Value Reference GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_CAP) 00000000_002330xxh Page 233 R/W GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) 00000000_0000F000h Page 233 51500002h R/W GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_SMI) 00000000_00000000h Page 234 51500003h R/W GeodeLink Device Error MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_ERROR) 00000000_00000000h Page 235 51500004h R/W GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_PM) 00000000_00000000h Page 236 51500005h R/W GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_DIAG) 00000000_00000000h Page 236 Table 5-9. ACC Native Registers Summary ACC I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) 00h R/W 04h 08h www.national.com Name Reset Value Reference 32 Codec GPIO Status Register (ACC_GPIO_STATUS) 00000000h Page 236 R/W 32 Codec GPIO Control Register (ACC_GPIO_CNTL) 00000000h Page 237 R/W 32 Codec Status Register (ACC_CODEC_STATUS) 00000000h Page 238 230 Revision 0.8 Table 5-9. ACC Native Registers Summary ACC I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) 0Ch R/W 10h-11h Name Reset Value Reference 32 Codec Control Register (ACC_CODEC_CNTL) 00000000h Page 239 --- --- Not Used --- --- 12h RO 16 Second Level Audio IRQ Status Register (ACC_IRQ_STATUS) 00000000h Page 241 14h R/W 32 Bus Master Engine Control Register (ACC_ENGINE_CNTL) 00000000h Page 242 18h-1Fh --- --- Not Used --- --- 20h R/W 8 Bus Master 0 Command (ACC_BM0_CMD) 00h Page 243 21h RC 8 Bus Master 0 IRQ Status (ACC_BM0_STATUS) 00h Page 244 22h-23h --- --- Not Used --- --- 24h R/W 32 Bus Master 0 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM0_PRD) 00000000h Page 245 28h R/W 8 Bus Master 1 Command (ACC_BM1_CMD) 08h Page 243 29h RC 8 Bus Master 1 IRQ Status (ACC_BM1_STATUS) 00h Page 244 2Ah-2Bh --- --- Not Used --- --- 2Ch R/W 32 Bus Master 1 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM1_PRD) 00000000h Page 245 30h R/W 8 Bus Master 2 Command (ACC_BM2_CMD) 00h Page 243 31h RC 8 Bus Master 2 IRQ Status (ACC_BM2_STATUS) 00h Page 244 32h-33h --- --- Not Used --- --- 34h R/W 32 Bus Master 2 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM2_PRD) 00000000h Page 245 38h R/W 8 Bus Master 3 Command (ACC_BM3_CMD) 08h Page 243 39h RC 8 Bus Master 3 IRQ Status (ACC_BM3_STATUS) 00h Page 244 3Ah-3Bh --- --- Not Used --- --- 3Ch R/W 32 Bus Master 3 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM3_PRD) 00000000h Page 245 40h R/W 8 Bus Master 4 Command (ACC_BM4_CMD) 00h Page 243 41h RC 8 Bus Master 4 IRQ Status (ACC_BM4_STATUS) 00h Page 244 42h-43h --- --- Not Used --- --- 44h R/W 32 Bus Master 4 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM4_PRD) 00000000h Page 245 48h R/W 8 Bus Master 5 Command (ACC_BM5_CMD) 08h Page 243 Revision 0.8 231 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-9. ACC Native Registers Summary ACC I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) 49h RC 8 Bus Master 5 IRQ Status (ACC_BM5_STATUS) 4Ah-4Bh --- --- Not Used 4Ch R/W 32 Bus Master 5 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM5_PRD) 50h R/W 8 51h RC 52h-53h Reset Value Reference 00h Page 244 --- --- 00000000h Page 245 Bus Master 6 Command (ACC_BM6_CMD) 00h Page 243 8 Bus Master 6 IRQ Status (ACC_BM6_STATUS) 00h Page 244 --- --- Not Used --- --- 54h R/W 32 Bus Master 6 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM6_PRD) 00000000h Page 245 58h R/W 8 Bus Master 7 Command (ACC_BM7_CMD) 00h Page 243 59h RC 8 Bus Master 7 IRQ Status (ACC_BM7_STATUS) 00h Page 244 5Ah-5Bh --- --- Not Used --- --- 5Ch R/W 32 Bus Master 7 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM7_PRD) 00000000h Page 245 60h RO 32 Bus Master 0 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM0_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 64h RO 32 Bus Master 1 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM1_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 68h RO 32 Bus Master 2 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM2_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 6Ch RO 32 Bus Master 3 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM3_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 70h RO 32 Bus Master 4 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM4_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 74h RO 32 Bus Master 5 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM5_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 78h RO 32 Bus Master 6 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM6_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 7Ch RO 32 Bus Master 7 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM7_PNTR) 00000000h Page 246 www.national.com Name 232 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.3.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs 5.3.1.1 GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_CAP) MSR Address 51500000h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_002330xxh ACC_GLD_MSR_CAP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 DEV_ID 4 3 2 1 0 REV_ID ACC_GLD_MSR_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 23:8 DEV_ID Device ID. Identifies module (2330h). 7:0 REV_ID Revision ID. Identifies module revision. See CS5535 I/O Companion Device Errata document for value. 5.3.1.2 GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) MSR Address 51500001h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_0000F000h ACC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 9 8 7 RSVD 6 5 4 3 PRI 2 1 0 PID RSVD NON_COH_RD NON_COH_WR DISCARD RSVD PREFETCH PREFETCH_SEL 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 ACC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:20 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. PREFETCH_SEL Select Flexible Prefetch Policy. 19 0: Fixed read prefetch policy is selected. (Default) 1: The ACC establishes prefetch policy. 18:16 FIX_PREFETCH Fixed Read Prefetch Policy. 000: None. Each read takes a complete trip to memory. 001: Initial read 08 bytes. Read next 8 only when requested. 010: Initial read 16 bytes. Read next 16 only when requested. 011: Initial read 32 bytes. Read next 32 only when requested. 100: Initial read 32 bytes. Read next 32 when 16 bytes left. 101, 110, and 111: Reserved. Revision 0.8 233 www.national.com ACC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 15:14 Name Description DISCARD Read Prefetch Discard Policy. 00: Reserved. 01: Discard all data not taken under current local bus grant. 10: Discard all data on any local bus transaction. 11: Discard all data on any local bus write transaction. Always use this value. 13 NON_COH_WR Non-Coherent Write. 0: Write requests are coherent. 1: Write requests are non-coherent. Always use this value. 12 NON_COH_RD Non-Coherent Read. 0: Read requests are coherent. 1: Read requests are non-coherent. Always use this value. 11:7 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 6:4 PRI Priority Level. Always write 0. RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. PID Priority ID. Always write 0. 3 2:0 5.3.1.3 GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_SMI) MSR Address 51500002h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.3 "MSR Address 2: SMI Control" on page 67 for further SMI/ASMI generation details.) ACC_GLD_MSR_SMI Register Map IRQ_SSMI_FLAG 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IRQ_SSMI_EN Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) ACC_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. IRQ_SSMI_FLAG IRQ SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated because the ACC interrupt signal transitioned from 0 to 1. This bit is unaffected when the interrupt transitions from 1 to 0. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. IRQ_SSMI_EN (bit 1) must be set to enable this event and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 32 31:1 www.national.com 234 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) ACC_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 0 Name Description IRQ_SSMI_EN IRQ SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable IRQ_SSMI_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow the event to generate an SSMI. 5.3.1.4 GeodeLink Device Error MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_ERROR) MSR Address 51500003h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.3 "MSR Address 2: SMI Control" on page 67 for further details.) ACC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Register Map UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD ACC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. UNEXP_TYPE_ ERR_FLAG Unexpected Type Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to either an unexpected type event or a master response packet with the EXCEP bit set has been received. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_EN (bit 1) must be set to enable this event and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. UNEXP_TYPE_ ERR_EN Unexpected Type Error Enable. Write 1 to enable UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 32 31:1 0 Revision 0.8 235 www.national.com 5.3.1.5 GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_PM) MSR Address 51500004h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h ACC_GLD_MSR_PM Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 RSVD 3 2 1 0 P P MODE1 MODE0 ACC_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:62 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. 61:32 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 31:4 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 3:2 PMODE1 Power Mode 1. Power mode for LBus clock. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever the LBus circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 1:0 PMODE0 Power Mode 0. Power mode for GLIU clock 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever the GLIU circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 5.3.1.6 GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (ACC_GLD_MSR_DIAG) MSR Address 51500005h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h This register is reserved for internal use by National and should not be written to. 5.3.2 ACC Native Registers 5.3.2.1 Codec GPIO Status Register (ACC_GPIO_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h ACC_GPIO_STATUS Register Map www.national.com INT_FLAG RSVD WU_INT_FLAG WU_INT_EN INT_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 GPIO_EN Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PIN_STS 236 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) ACC_GPIO_STATUS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31 GPIO_EN GPIO Enable. This bit determines if the codec GPIO pin data is sent out in slot 12 of the serial output stream. 0: Send 0s and tag slot 12 as invalid. 1: Send GPIO pin data and tag slot valid. 30 INT_EN Codec GPIO Interrupt Enable. Allow a codec GPIO interrupt to set the codec GPIO interrupt flag and generate an IRQ. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. A GPIO interrupt is defined by serial data in slot 12, bit 0 29 WU_INT_EN Codec GPIO Wakeup Interrupt Enable. Allow a codec GPIO wakeup interrupt to set the codec GPIO wakeup interrupt flag and generate an IRQ. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. A codec GPIO wakeup interrupt is defined as a 0-to-1 transition of AC_S_IN or AC_S_IN2 while the codec is powered down. This bit can only be set after the codec(s) are powered down (See Audio Driver Power-up/down Programming Model on page 90). 28:22 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 21 INT_FLAG Codec GPIO Interrupt Flag (Read to Clear). If the GPIO interrupt is enabled (bit 30 = 1) then this flag is set upon a codec GPIO interrupt event (serial data in slot 12, bit 0 = 1), and an IRQ is generated. 20 WU_INT_FLAG Codec GPIO Wakeup Interrupt Flag (Read to Clear). If the GPIO wakeup interrupt is enabled (bit 29 = 1), then this flag is set when a GPIO wakeup interrupt occurs, and an IRQ is generated. PIN_STS Codec GPIO Pin Status (Read Only). This is the GPIO pin status that is received from the codec in slot 12 of the serial input stream. This is updated every time slot 12 of the input stream is tagged valid. 19:0 Note: All 20 bits of input slot 12 are visible in this register, including reserved bits within slot 12. 5.3.2.2 Codec GPIO Control Register (ACC_GPIO_CNTL) ACC I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h ACC_GPIO_CNTL Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PIN_DATA ACC_GPIO_CNTL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:20 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Revision 0.8 237 www.national.com ACC_GPIO_CNTL Bit Descriptions Bit 19:0 Name Description PIN_DATA Codec GPIO Pin Data. This is the GPIO pin data that is sent to the codec in slot 12 of the serial output stream. Note: All 20 bits of the output slot 12 are controllable through this register, even though some are reserved per the AC97 spec and should be set to zero. 5.3.2.3 Codec Status Register (ACC_CODEC_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 08h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h ACC_CODEC_STATUS Register Map 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD STS_NEW RSVD BM4_SEL STS_DATA BM5_SEL SDATAIN2_EN STS_ADD SEC_RDY_STS 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PRM_RDY_STS Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) ACC_CODEC_STATUS Bit Descriptions Bit 31:24 Name Description STS_ADD Codec Status Address (Read Only). Address of the register for which status is being returned. This address comes from slot 1 bits [19:12] of the serial input stream. Note: Bit 19 of slot 1 is reserved, but still observable by software. 23 PRM_RDY_STS Primary Codec Ready (Read Only). Indicates the ready status of the primary codec (slot 0, bit 15). Software should not access the codec or enable any bus masters until this bit is set. This bit is cleared when the AC Link Shutdown bit is set in the Codec Control register (ACC I/O Offset 0Ch[18]). 22 SEC_RDY_STS Secondary Codec Ready (Read Only). Indicates the ready status of the secondary codec (slot 0, bit 15). Software should not access the codec or enable any bus masters until this bit is set. This bit is cleared when the AC Link Shutdown bit is set in the Codec Control register (ACC I/O Offset 0Ch[18]). 21 SDATAIN2_EN Enable Second Serial Data Input (AC_S_IN2) . 0: Disable. 1: Enable. For the second serial input to function, this bit must be set. This is functionally ANDed with the AC_S_IN2 port of the ACC. Often, it may be necessary to configure a corresponding I/O pin as an input on the chip containing the ACC. 20 BM5_SEL Audio Bus Master 5 AC97 Slot Select. Selects the serial input slot for Audio Bus Master 5 to receive data. 0: Slot 6. 1: Slot 11. 19 BM4_SEL Audio Bus Master 4 AC97 Slot Select. Selects slot for Audio Bus Master 4 to transmit data. 0: Slot 6. 1: Slot 11. 18 RSVD www.national.com Reserved. Reads return 0 238 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) ACC_CODEC_STATUS Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 17 STS_NEW Codec Status New (Read to Clear). Indicates if the status data in bits [15:0] is new: 0: Not new. 1: New. This bit is set by hardware after receiving valid codec status data in slot 2 of the input stream. Upon issuing a read to the codec registers, software should wait for this flag to indicate that the corresponding data has been returned. 16 15:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. STS_DATA Codec Status Data (Read Only). This is the codec status data that is received from the codec in slot 2, bits [19:4] of the serial input stream. This is used for reading the contents of registers inside the AC97 codec. 5.3.2.4 Codec Control Register (ACC_CODEC_CNTL) ACC I/O Offset 0Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Note: Since this register could potentially be accessed by both an audio driver and a modem driver running at the same time, it is expected that all writes occur as atomic read-modify-write accesses. ACC_CODEC_CNTL Register Map CMD_NEW LNK_WRMRST LNK_SHTDWN RSVD COMM _SEL PD_SEC RW_CMD CMD_ADD PD_PRIM 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CMD_DATA ACC_CODEC_CNTL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31 RW_CMD Codec Read/Write Command. This bit specifies a read or write operation targeting the AC97 codec’s registers. 0: Write. 1: Read. This bit determines whether slot 1, bit 19 of the serial output stream will be high or low. 30:24 CMD_ADD Codec Command Address. Address of the codec control register for which the command is being sent. This address goes in slot 1, bits [18:12] of the serial output stream. This is used for specifying the address of a register in the AC97 codec (for reading or writing). 23:22 COMM_SEL Audio Codec Communication. Selects which codec to communicate with (for register reads/writes): 00: Codec 1 (Primary) 01: Codec 2 (Secondary) 10: Codec 3 11: Codec 4 These bits determine output slot 0, bits [1:0]. When these bits are non-zero, bits [14:13] of output slot 0 must be set to zeros regardless of the validity of slot 1 and slot 2. Revision 0.8 239 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) ACC_CODEC_CNTL Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 21 PD_PRIM Power-down Semaphore for Primary Codec. This bit is used by software in conjunction with bit 20 to coordinate the power-down of the two codecs. This bit is intended to be set by the audio driver to indicate to the modem driver that the audio codec has been prepared for power-down. Internally it does not control anything, and is simply a memory bit. 20 PD_SEC Power-down Semaphore for Secondary Codec. This bit is used by software in conjunction with bit 21 to coordinate the power-down of the two codecs. This bit is intended to be set by the modem driver to indicate to the audio driver that the modem codec has been prepared for power-down. Internally it does not control anything, and is simply a memory bit. 19 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 18 LNK_SHTDWN AC Link Shutdown. Informs the Controller that the AC Link is being shutdown. This bit should be set at the same time that the codec power-down command is issued to the codec. Setting this bit also clears both Codec Ready bits in the Codec Status register (ACC I/O Offset 08h[23:22]). Issuing a warm reset via bit 17 clears this bit. If the codec has been powered off and back on, a warm reset is unnecessary, this bit should be cleared manually. 17 LNK_WRM_RST AC Link Warm Reset. Setting this bit initiates the AC Link/codec warm reset process. It is automatically cleared by hardware once the serial bit clock resumes. This should only be set when the codec(s) are powered down. Once set, software should then wait for "Codec Ready" before accessing the codec. 16 CMD_NEW Codec Command New. Indicates if the codec command in bits [31:22] (and [15:0] for writes) is new. 0: Not new. 1: New. This bit is to be set by software when a new command is loaded. It is cleared by hardware when the command is sent to the codec. Software must wait for this bit to clear before loading another command. This bit can not be cleared by software. When the CODEC_CNTL register is written by software with bit 16 cleared, then bits [31:22] and [15:0] are unaffected. Thus, bit 16 is an "enable" allowing bits [31:22] and [15:0] to be changed. 15:0 CMD_DATA www.national.com Codec Command Data. This is the command data being sent to the codec in slot 2, bits [19:12] of the serial output stream. This is used for writing data into one of the registers in the AC97 codec. The contents are only sent to the codec for write commands (bit [31] = 0). For reads slot 2, bits[19:12] are stuffed with 0s. 240 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.3.2.5 Second Level Audio IRQ Status Register (ACC_IRQ_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 12h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IRQ_STS 7 WU_IRQ_STS 8 BM0_IRQ_STS 9 BM1_IRQ_STS 10 BM2_IRQ_STS 11 BM3_IRQ_STS 12 RSVD BM4_IRQ_STS 13 BM5_IRQ_STS 14 BM6_IRQ_STS 15 BM7_IRQ_STS ACC_IRQ_STATUS Register Map ACC_IRQ_STATUS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 15:10 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 9 BM7_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 7 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 7. Reading the Bus Master 7 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 8 BM6_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 6 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 6. Reading the Bus Master 6 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 7 BM5_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 5 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 5. Reading the Bus Master 5 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 6 BM4_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 4 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 4. Reading the Bus Master 4 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 5 BM3_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 3 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 3. Reading the Bus Master 3 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 4 BM2_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 2 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 2. Reading the Bus Master 2 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 3 BM1_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 1 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 1. Reading the Bus Master 1 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 2 BM0_IRQ_STS Audio Bus Master 0 IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by an event occurring on Audio Bus Master 0. Reading the Bus Master 0 IRQ Status Register clears this bit. 1 WU_IRQ_STS Codec GPIO Wakeup IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by a GPIO Wakeup Interrupt event (serial data in going high during power-down). Reading the Codec GPIO Status Register clears this bit. 0 IRQ_STS Codec GPIO IRQ Status. If this bit is set, it indicates that an IRQ was caused by a GPIO event in the AC97 Codec (slot 12, bit 0). Reading the Codec GPIO Status Register clears this bit. Revision 0.8 241 www.national.com 5.3.2.6 Bus Master Engine Control Register (ACC_ENGINE_CNTL) ACC I/O Offset 14h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h ACC_ENGINE_CNTL Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SSND_MODE Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) ACC_ENGINE_CNTL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:1 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. SSND_MODE Surround Sound (5.1) Synchronization Mode. Enables synchronization of Bus Masters 0, 4, 6, and 7. This bit should be set whenever playing back multi-channel surround sound. It ensures that the four bus masters stay synchronized and do not introduce any temporal skew between the separate channels. 0 www.national.com 242 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.3.2.7 Audio Bus Master 0-7 Command Registers (ACC_BM[x]_CMD) Bus Master 0 Command (ACC_BM0_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 20h Type R/W Reset Value 00h Bus Master 4 Command (ACC_BM4_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 40h Type R/W Reset Value 00h Bus Master 1 Command (ACC_BM1_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 28h Type R/W Reset Value 08h Bus Master 5 Command (ACC_BM5_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 48h Type R/W Reset Value 08h Bus Master 2 Command (ACC_BM2_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 30h Type R/W Reset Value 00h Bus Master 6 Command (ACC_BM6_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 50h Type R/W Reset Value 00h Bus Master 3 Command (ACC_BM3_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 38h Type R/W Reset Value 08h Bus Master 7 Command (ACC_BM7_CMD) ACC I/O Offset 58h Type R/W Reset Value 00h ACC_BM[x]_CMD Register Map 7 6 5 4 RSVD 3 2 RW BYTE_ORD 1 0 BM_CTL ACC_BM[x]_CMD Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0 RW (RO) Read or Write (Read Only). Indicates the transfer direction of the audio bus master. 3 This bit always reads 0 for BM [0,2,4,6,7]. This bit always reads 1 for BM[1,3,5]. 0: Memory to codec. 1: Codec to memory. 2 BYTE_ORD Byte-Order. Sets the byte order for 16-bit samples that this bus master uses. 0: Little Endian (Intel) byte-order (LSBs at lower address). 1: Big Endian (Motorola) byte-order (MSBs at lower address). 1:0 BM_CTL Bus Master Pause/Enable Control. Enables, disables, or pauses the bus master. 00: Disable bus master. 01: Enable bus master. 10: Reserved. 11: Pause bus master (if currently enabled) or do nothing (if currently disabled). When the bus master is enabled by writing 01, the bus master starts up by using the address in its associated PRD Table Address Register. Writing 00 while the bus master is enabled causes the bus master to stop immediately. Upon resuming the bus master uses the address in its PRD Table Address Register. The PRD Table Address Register must be re-initialized by software before enabling the bus master, or there is a risk that the bus master may overstep the bounds of the PRD Table. Note: Revision 0.8 When the bus master reaches a PRD with the EOT bit set, these bits are set to 00. 243 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.3.2.8 Audio Bus Master 0-7 IRQ Status Registers (ACC_BM[x]_STATUS) Bus Master 0 IRQ Status (ACC_BM0_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 21h Type RC Reset Value 00h Bus Master 4 IRQ Status (ACC_BM4_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 41h Type RC Reset Value 00h Bus Master 1 IRQ Status (ACC_BM1_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 29h Type RC Reset Value 00h Bus Master 5 IRQ Status (ACC_BM5_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 49h Type RC Reset Value 00h Bus Master 2 IRQ Status (ACC_BM2_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 31h Type RC Reset Value 00h Bus Master 6 IRQ Status (ACC_BM6_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 51h Type RC Reset Value 00h Bus Master 3 IRQ Status (ACC_BM3_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 39h Type RC Reset Value 00h Bus Master 7 IRQ Status (ACC_BM7_STATUS) ACC I/O Offset 59h Type RC Reset Value 00h ACC_BM[x]_STATUS Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 1 0 BM_EOP_ERR EOP ACC_BM[x]_STATUS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:2 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0 BM_EOP_ERR Bus Master Error. If this bit is set, it indicates that hardware encountered a second EOP before software cleared the first EOP. 1 If hardware encounters a second EOP (end of page) before software clears the first EOP, it causes the bus master to pause until this register is read to clear the error. Read to clear. 0 EOP www.national.com End of Page. If this bit is set, it indicates the bus master transferred data that is marked by the EOP bit in the PRD table (bit 30). Read to clear. 244 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.3.2.9 Audio Bus Master 7-0 PRD Table Address Registers (ACC_BM[x]_PRD) Bus Master 0 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM0_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 24h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 4 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM4_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 44h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 1 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM1_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 2Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 5 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM5_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 4Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 2 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM2_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 34h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 6 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM6_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 54h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 3 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM3_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 3Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 7 PRD Table Address (ACC_BM7_PRD) ACC I/O Offset 5Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h ACC_BM[x]_PRD Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PRD_PNTR 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD ACC_BM[x]_PRD Bit Descriptions Bit 31:2 Name Description PRD_PNTR Pointer to the Physical Region Descriptor Table. This register is a PRD table pointer for Audio Bus Master [x]. When written, this register points to the first entry in a PRD table. Once Audio Bus Master [x] is enabled (Command Register bit 0 = 1), it loads the pointer and updates this register to the next PRD by adding 08h. When read, this register points to the next PRD. 1:0 Revision 0.8 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0 245 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ACC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.3.2.10 Bus Master 0-7 DMA Pointer Registers (ACC_BM[x]_PNTR) Bus Master 0 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM0_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 60h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 4 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM4_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 70h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 1 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM1_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 64h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 5 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM5_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 74h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 2 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM2_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 68h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 6 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM6_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 78h Type RO Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 3 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM3_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 6Ch Type RO Reset Value 00000000h Bus Master 7 DMA Pointer (ACC_BM7_PNTR) ACC I/O Offset 7Ch Type RO Reset Value 00000000h ACC_BM[x]_PNTR Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_PNTR ACC_BM[x]_PNTR Bit Descriptions Bit 31:0 Name Description DMA_PNTR DMA Buffer Pointer. Address of current sample being fetched (BM [0,2,4,6,7]) or written (BM [1,3,5]) by the DMA Bus Master [x]. www.national.com 246 Revision 0.8 ATA-5 CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The control registers for the ATA-5 compatible IDE controller (ATAC) are divided into three sets: MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs The Native registers are accessed as I/O Offsets from a GLIU IOD Descriptor and are BYTE, WORD and DWORD accessible. • ATAC Specific MSRs • ATAC Native Registers Tables 5-10 through 5-12 are ATAC register summary tables that include reset values and page references where the bit descriptions are provided. The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 Table 5-10. Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Summary MSR Address Type 51300000h RO 51300001h Register Name Reset Value Reference GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_CAP) 00000000_002470xxh Page 248 R/W GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) 00000000_0000F000h Page 249 51300002h R/W GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_SMI) 00000000_00000000h Page 250 51300003h R/W GeodeLink Device Error MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_ERROR) 00000000_00000100h Page 251 51300004h R/W GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_PM) 00000000_00000000h Page 252 51300005h R/W GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_DIAG) 00000000_00000000h Page 253 Table 5-11. ATAC Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 51300008h R/W I/O Base Address (ATAC_IO_BAR) 00000000_00000001h Page 254 51300009h --- --- --- 51300010h R/W 00000000_00000000h Page 254 51300011h5130001Fh --- --- --- 51300020h R/W Channel 0 Drive 0 PIO (ATAC_CH0D0_PIO) 00000000_00009172h Page 255 51300021h R/W Channel 0 Drive 0 DMA (ATAC_CH0D0_DMA) 00000000_00077771h Page 256 51300022h R/W Channel 0 Drive 1 PIO (ATAC_CH0D1_PIO) 00000000_00009172h Page 258 51300023h R/W Channel 0 Drive 1 DMA (ATAC_CH0D1_DMA) 00000000_00077771h Page 258 51300024h R/W PCI Abort Error (ATAC_PCI_ABRTERR) 00000000_00000000h Page 258 Revision 0.8 Unused Reset Decode (ATAC_RESET) Unused 247 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.4 Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-12. ATAC Native Registers Summary ATAC I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) 00h R/W 8 Bus Master 0 Command - Primary (ATAC_BM0_CMD_PRIM) 01h --- --- Unused 02h R/W 8 Bus Master 0 Status - Primary (ATAC_BM0_STS_PRIM) 03h --- --- Unused 04h R/W 32 Bus Master 0 PRD Table Address - Primary (ATAC_BM0_PRD) 08h-0Fh --- --- Reserved. Write accesses are ignored, read accesses return 0. 5.4.1 Register Name Reset Value Reference 00h Page 258 --- --- 00h Page 259 --- --- 00000000h Page 260 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs 5.4.1.1 GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_CAP) MSR Address 51300000h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_002470xxh ATAC_GLD_MSR_CAP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD DEV_ID 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 REV_ID ATAC_GLD_MSR_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 23:8 DEV_ID Device ID. Identifies module (2470h). 7:0 REV_ID Revision ID. Identifies module revision. See CS5535 I/O Companion Device Errata document for value. www.national.com 248 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.4.1.2 GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) MSR Address 51300001h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_0000F000h ATAC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 9 RSVD 8 7 6 5 4 3 PRI 2 1 0 PID RSVD NON_COH_RD NON_COH_WR DISCARD PRG_PREF ETCH FIX_PREFETCH RSVD PREFETCH_SEL 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 ATAC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:23 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 22:20 PRG_PREFETCH Programmable Prefetch Code. When bit 19 is set, these three bits determine the prefetch policy for non-PRD read accesses. PRD read accesses use 001 setting. 000: No prefetch. 001: Prefetch 8 bytes. 010: Prefetch 16 bytes. 011: Prefetch 32 bytes. 100: Prefetch 32 bytes, additional 32 bytes prefetch after 16 bytes have been read. All other values are reserved. 19 PREFETCH_SEL Prefetch Select. Select between fixed (when clear) or programmable prefetch policy codes (when set). 18:16 FIX_PREFETCH Fixed Prefetch Code. When bit 19 is clear, these three bits determine the prefetch policy for all read accesses. 000: No prefetch. 001: Prefetch 8 bytes. 010: Prefetch 16 bytes. 011: Prefetch 32 bytes. 100: Prefetch 32 bytes, additional 32 bytes prefetch after 16 bytes have been read. All other values are reserved. 15:14 DISCARD Discard. Read prefetch discard policy. 00: Reserved. 01: Discard all data not taken under current local bus grant. 10: Discard all data on any local bus transaction. 11: Discard all data on any local bus write transaction. Always use this value. (Default) 13 NON_COH_WR Non-Coherent Write. 0: Write requests are coherent. 1: Write requests are non-coherent. Always use this value. (Default) 12 NON_COH_RD Non-Coherent Read. 0: Read requests are coherent. 1: Read requests are non-coherent. Always use this value. (Default) 11:7 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 6:4 PRI Priority Level. Always write 0. RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. PID Priority ID. Always write 0. 3 2:0 Revision 0.8 249 www.national.com 5.4.1.3 GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_SMI) MSR Address 51300002h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.3 "MSR Address 2: SMI Control" on page 67 for further details.) ATAC_GLD_MSR_SMI Register Map RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 IDE_PIO_SSMI_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 1 0 IDE_PIO_SSMI_EN RSVD IDE_CH0_IRQ_ASMI_FLAG 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 IDE_CH0_IRQ_ASMI_EN Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) ATAC_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:34 RSVD Reserved. Read returns 0. 33 IDE_CH0_IRQ_ ASMI_FLAG IDE Channel 0 IRQ ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to an IRQ event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. IDE_CH0_IRQ_ASMI_EN (bit 1) must be set to enable this event and set flag. 32 IDE_PIO_SSMI FLAG IDE Programmable I/O SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated due to a PIO transaction occurring during a DMA command. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. IDE_PIO_SMI_EN (bit 0) must be set to enable this event and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Read returns 0. 1 IDE_CH0_IRQ_ ASMI_EN IDE Channel 0 IRQ ASMI Mask. Write 1 to enable IDE_CH0_IRQ_ASMI_FLAG (bit 33) and to allow the event to generate an ASMI. 0 IDE_PIO_SSMI EN IDE Programmable I/O SSMI Mask. Write 1 to enable IDE_PIO_SSMI_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow the event to generate an SSMI. 31:2 www.national.com 250 Revision 0.8 5.4.1.4 GeodeLink Device Error MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_ERROR) MSR Address 51300003h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000100h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the FLAG; writing 0 has no effect. ATAC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Register Map UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG 2 1 0 UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_EN BLOCKIO 3 4 RSVD RSVD SSMI_ERR_FLAG 5 BLOCKIO_SSMI_FLAG 6 SSMI_ERR_EN 7 BLOCKIO_SSMI_EN 8 RESP_EXCEP_ERR_EN 9 IDE_PIO_ERR_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 IDE_PIO_ERR_EN RSVD RESP_EXCEP_ERR_FLAG 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 ATAC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:37 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. IDE_PIO_ERR_ FLAG IDE PIO Error. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a PIO access during a DMA command. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. IDE_PIO_ERR_EN (bit 4) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 36 If IDE_PIO_ERR_EN = 1 and IDE_PIO_ASMI_EN (MSR 51300002h[0]) = 0 and the error occurs, this bit gets set, and the GLCP master error signal is asserted. If both IDE_PIO_ERR_EN = 1 and IDE_PIO_ASMI_EN = 1 and the error occurs, this bit gets set, the GLCP master error signal is asserted, and an SSMI is generated. 35 RESP_EXCEP_ ERR_FLAG Response Exception Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated and the GLCP master error signal was asserted due to the EXCEP bit being set in the response packet. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. RESP_EXCEP_ERR_EN (bit 3) must be high to enable these events. 34 SSMI_ERR_FLAG SSMI Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to an uncleared SSMI. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. SSMI_ERR_EN (bit 2) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. If SSMI_ERR_EN and IDE_PIO_SSMI_FLAG (MSR 51300002h[32]) = 1 and the error occurs, this bit gets set, the GLCP master error signal is asserted, lb_slav_rdy is asserted, and an SSMI is generated. 33 Revision 0.8 BLOCKIO_SSMI_ FLAG SSMI on I/O write during DMA. If high, records that an I/O write during DMA had occurred. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. BLOCKIO_SSMI_EN (bit 1) and BLOCKIO (bit 8) must be high to set flag. 251 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) ATAC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 32 UNEXP_TYPE_ ERR_FLAG Unexpected Type Error Flag. If high, records that ERR was generated and the GLCP master error signal was asserted due to an unexpected type occurring. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG (bit 0) must be high to generate ERR, set flag, and assert the GLCP master error signal. Once clear, the GLCP master error signal is de-asserted. RSVD Reserved. Write as read. BLOCKIO IDE Device Register I/O in DMA Blocked. When this bit is set, and if IDE_PIO_SSMI_EN (MSR 51300002h[0]) is 0 and if IDE_PIO_ERR_EN (bit 4) is 0, ignore all PIO writes during DMA, return 80h on all PIO reads during DMA. Neither the GLCP master error signal nor an SSMI will be asserted. 31:9 8 When this bit is clear, IDE device register I/O during DMA will not be blocked. 7:5 RSVD Reserved. Write as read. 4 IDE_PIO_ ERR_EN IDE PIO Error Enable. Write 1 to enable IDE_PIO_ERR_FLAG (bit 36) and to allow a PIO access during a DMA command event to generate an ERR. 3 RESP_EXCEP_ ERR_EN Response Exception Enable. Write 1 to enable RESP_EXCEP_ERR_FLAG (bit 35) and to allow when the EXCEP bit is set in the response packet to generate an ERR. 2 SSMI_ERR_EN Uncleared SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable SSMI_ERR_FLAG (bit 34) and to the allow an uncleared SSMI to generate an ERR. 1 BLOCKIO_SSMI_ EN SSMI on I/O write Enable. Write 1 to enable BLOCKIO_SSMI_FLAG (bit 33) and to allow generation of an SSMI when I/O writes during DMA with BLOCKIO (bit 8) set occur. 0 UNEXP_TYPE_ ERR_FLAG Unexpected Type Enable. Write 1 to enable UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG (bit 32) and to the allow an unexpected type occurring to generate an ERR. 5.4.1.5 GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_PM) MSR Address 51300004h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h ATAC_GLD_MSR_PM Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD IO MODEA 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 P P MODE1 MODE0 ATAC_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:50 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0 on read. www.national.com 252 Revision 0.8 ATAC_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 49:48 Name Description IOMODEA I/O Mode A Control. These bits determine how the associated IDE inputs and outputs behave when the PMC asserts two internal signals that are controlled by PMS I/O Offset 20h and 0Ch. The list of affected signals is in Table 3-12 "Sleep Driven IDE Signals" on page 72. 00: No gating of I/O cells during a Sleep sequence (Default). 01: During a power management Sleep sequence, force inputs to their non-asserted state when PM_IN_SLPCTL is enabled. 10: During a power management Sleep sequence, force inputs to their non-asserted state when PM_IN_SLPCTL is enabled, and park (force) outputs low when PM_OUT_SLPCTL is enabled. 11: Immediately and unconditionally, force inputs to their not asserted state, and park (force) outputs low. 47:4 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0 on read. 3:2 PMODE1 Power Mode 1. Power mode for Channel 1 clock domain. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 1:0 PMODE0 Power Mode 0. Power mode for Channel 0 clock domain. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 5.4.1.6 GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (ATAC_GLD_MSR_DIAG) MSR Address 51300005h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h This register is reserved for internal use by National and should not be written to. Revision 0.8 253 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.4.2 ATAC Specific MSRs 5.4.2.1 I/O Base Address (ATAC_IO_BAR) MSR Address 51300008h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000001h This register sets the base address of the I/O mapped bus mastering IDE and controller registers. Bits [2:0] are read only (001), indicating an 8-byte I/O address range. ATAC_IO_BAR Register Map BM_IDE_BAR_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 BM_IDE_BAR 2 1 0 ADD_RNG ATAC_IO_BAR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:33 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. Return 0 on read. BM_IDE_BAR_ EN Bus Mastering IDE Base Address Enable. This bit should be set to enable access to the native register set after the base address has been set. 32 0: Disable (i.e., cannot access native registers in ATAC). 1: Enable (normal operation). 31:17 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. Return 0 on read. 16:3 BM_IDE_BAR Bus Mastering IDE Base Address. These bits form the base address of the ATAC native register set. Users may write the full address, including bits [2:0], knowing that bits [2:0] will drop off and be assumed as 000. 2:0 ADD_RNG (RO) Address Range (Read Only). Hard wired to 001. This indicates that the I/O base address is in units of bytes. 5.4.2.2 Reset Decode (ATAC_RESET) MSR Address 51300010h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h ATAC_RESET Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD www.national.com 254 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IDE_RESET RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 ATAC_RESET Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) ATAC_RESET Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:2 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. Return 0 on read. ATAC_RESET IDE Controller Reset. Reset the IDE Controller. 1 0: Normal state (operate). 1: Reset. Write 0 to clear. This bit is level-sensitive and must be cleared after reset is performed. 0 IDE_RESET IDE Reset. Reset the IDE bus. 0: Normal state (operate). 1: Reset. Write 0 to clear. This bit is level-sensitive and must be cleared after reset is performed. 5.4.2.3 Channel 0 Drive 0 PIO (ATAC_CH0D0_PIO) MSR Address 51300020h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00009172h Note: The reset value of this register is not a valid PIO mode. ATAC_CH0D0_PIO Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD t2IC t3C t2WC 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 PIOMODE t2I t3 t2W t1 t1C t2ID t3D t2WD t1D 0 ATAC_CH0D0_PIO Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:32 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. If MSR 50302021h[31] = 0, Format 0. Selects slowest PIOMODE per channel (by comparing bit [19:16] of MSR 50302020h and MSR 50302022h) for commands. Format 0 settings for: PIO Mode 0 = 0000F7F4h PIO Mode 1 = 000153F3h PIO Mode 2 = 000213F1h PIO Mode 3 = 00035131h PIO Mode 4 = 00041131h 31:20 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. 19:16 PIOMODE PIO Mode. 0000: PIO Mode 0 0001: PIO Mode 1 0010: PIO Mode 2 0011: PIO Mode 3 0100: PIO Mode 4 All Other Values are Reserved 15:12 t2I Recovery Time. Value + 1 cycle. 11:8 t3 IDE_IOW# Data Setup Time. Value + 1 cycle. 7:4 t2W IDE_IOW# Width Minus t3. Value + 1 cycle. 3:0 t1 Address Setup Time. Value + 1 cycle. Revision 0.8 255 www.national.com ATAC_CH0D0_PIO Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description If MSR 50302021h[31] = 1, Format 1. Allows independent control of command and data. Format 1 settings for: PIO Mode 0 = F7F4F7F4h PIO Mode 1 = 53F3F173h PIO Mode 2 = 13F18141h PIO Mode 3 = 51315131h PIO Mode 4 = 11311131h 31:28 t2IC Command Cycle Recovery Time. Value + 1 cycle. 27:24 t3C Command Cycle IDE_IOW# Data Setup. Value + 1 cycle. 23:20 t2WC Command Cycle IDE_IOW# Pulse Width Minus t3. Value + 1 cycle. 19:16 t1C Command Cycle Address Setup Time. Value + 1 cycle. 15:12 t2ID Data Cycle Recovery Time. Value + 1 cycle. 11:8 t3D Data Cycle IDE_IOW# Data Setup. Value + 1 cycle. 7:4 t2WD Data Cycle IDE_IOW# Pulse Width Minus t3. Value + 1 cycle. 3:0 t1D Data Cycle Address Setup Time. Value + 1 cycle. Note: Register settings described as “Value + n cycle(s)” will produce timings for the indicated parameter as measured in 66 MHz clock cycles. The ‘value’ that is entered is the desired number of 66 MHz clock cycles in hexadecimal; the actual parameter timing generated by that entry is the entered ‘value’ plus the indicated number of ‘cycles’ (‘n’) as listed in the description of that parameter. 5.4.2.4 Channel 0 Drive 0 DMA (ATAC_CH0D0_DMA) MSR Address 51300021h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00077771h ATAC_CH0D0_DMA Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD MODE66_SEL RSVD MODE66_SEL RSVD www.national.com DMA_SEL DMA_SEL 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PIO_FORM PIO_FORM Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 tKR tDR tKW tDW tM tCRC tSS tCYC tRP tACK 256 0 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) ATAC_CH0D0_DMA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:32 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. If bit 20 = 0, Multi-word DMA. Settings for: 31 Multi-word DMA Mode 0 = 7F0FFFF3h Multi-word DMA Mode 1 = 7F035352h Multi-word DMA Mode 2 = 7F024241h PIO_FORM PIO Mode Format. 0: Format 0. 1: Format 1. 30:24 MODE66_SEL Mode 66 Select: Set to 7Fh for 66 MHz system clock. 23:21 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. DMA_SEL DMA Select. DMA operation. 20 0: Multi-word DMA. 1: Ultra DMA. 19:16 tKR IDE_IOR# Recovery Time (4-bit). Value + 1 cycle. 15:12 tDR IDE_IOR# Pulse Width. Value + 1 cycle. 11:8 tKW IDE_IOW# Recovery Time (4-bit). Value + 1 cycle. 7:4 tDW IDE_IOW# Pulse Width. Value + 1 cycle. 3:0 tM IDE_CS0#/CS1# to IDE_IOR#/IOW# Setup; IDE_CS0#/CS1# Setup to IDE_DACK0#/DACK1#. If bit 20 = 1, Ultra DMA. Settings for: 31 Ultra DMA Mode 0 = 7F7436A1h Ultra DMA Mode 1 = 7F733481h Ultra DMA Mode 2 = 7F723261h Ultra DMA Mode 3 = 7F713161h Ultra DMA Mode 4 = 7F703061h PIO_FORM PIO Mode Format. 0: Format 0. 1: Format 1. 30:24 MODE66_SEL Mode 66 Select: Set to 7Fh for 66 MHz system clock. 23:21 RSVD Reserved. Set to 011. Will read back as 011. DMA_SEL DMA Select. DMA operation. 20 0: Multi-word DMA. 1: Ultra DMA. 19:16 tCRC CRC Setup UDMA in IDE_DACK#. Value + 1 cycle (for host terminate CRC setup = tMLI + tSS). 15:12 tSS UDMA Out. Value + 1 cycle. 11:8 tCYC Data Setup and Cycle Time UDMA Out. Value + 2 cycles. 7:4 tRP Ready to Pause Time. Value + 1 cycle. Note: 3:0 Note: Revision 0.8 tACK tRFS + 1 tRP on next clock. IDE_CS0#/CS1# Setup to IDE_DACK0#/DACK1#. Value + 1 cycle. Register settings described as “Value + n cycle(s)” produce timings for the indicated parameter as measured in 66 MHz clock cycles. The ‘value’ that is entered is the desired number of 66 MHz clock cycles in hexadecimal; the actual parameter timing generated by that entry is the entered ‘value’ plus the indicated number of ‘cycles’ (‘n’) as listed in the description of that parameter. 257 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.4.2.5 Channel 0 Drive 1 PIO (ATAC_CH0D1_PIO) MSR Address 51300022h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00009172h Refer to Section 5.4.2.3 "Channel 0 Drive 0 PIO (ATAC_CH0D0_PIO)" on page 255 for bit descriptions. 5.4.2.6 Channel 0 Drive 1 DMA (ATAC_CH0D1_DMA) MSR Address 51300023h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00077771h Refer to Section 5.4.2.4 "Channel 0 Drive 0 DMA (ATAC_CH0D0_DMA)" on page 256 for bit descriptions. 5.4.2.7 PCI Abort Error (ATAC_PCI_ABRTERR) MSR Address 51300024h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h ATAC_PCI_ABRTERR Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 Read: RSVD; Write: PCI_ABORT 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Read: RSVD; Write: PCI_ABORT ATAC_PCI_ABRTERR Bit Descriptions Bit 63:0 Name Description RSVD/PCI_ABORT Reserved. Return 0 on read. PCI Abort. Write (of any value) to this register will set bit 1 of Bus Master 0 Status Register. 5.4.3 ATAC Native Registers 5.4.3.1 Bus Master 0 Command - Primary (ATAC_BM0_CMD_PRIM) ATAC I/O Address 00h Type R/W Reset Value 00h ATAC_BM0_CMD_PRIM Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 RWCTL 1 RSVD 0 BMCTL ATAC_BM0_CMD_PRIM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. Return 0 on read. RWCTL Read or Write Control. Sets the direction of bus master transfers. 3 0: PCI reads performed. 1: PCI writes performed. This bit should not be changed when the bus master is active. 2:1 RSVD www.national.com Reserved. Set to 0. Return 0 on read. 258 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) ATAC_BM0_CMD_PRIM Bit Descriptions Bit 0 Name Description BMCTL Bus Master Control. Controls the state of the bus master. 0: Disable master. 1: Enable master. Bus master operations can be halted by setting bit 0 to 0. Once an operation has been halted, it can not be resumed. If bit 0 is set to 0 while a bus master operation is active, the command is aborted and the data transferred from the drive is discarded. This bit should be reset after completion of data transfer. 5.4.3.2 Bus Master 0 Status - Primary (ATAC_BM0_STS_PRIM) ATAC I/O Address 02h Type R/W Reset Value 00h ATAC_BM0_STS_PRIM Register Map 7 6 5 MODE D1DMA D0DMA 4 3 RSVD 2 1 0 BMINT BMERR BMSTS ATAC_BM0_STS_PRIM Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description MODE (RO) Simplex Mode (Read Only). Can both the primary and secondary channel operate independently? 0: Yes. 1: No (simplex mode). 6 D1DMA Drive 1 DMA Capable. Allows Drive 1 to be capable of DMA transfers. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 5 D0DMA Drive 0 DMA Capable. Allows Drive 0 to be capable of DMA transfers. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 4:3 RSVD Reserved: Set to 0. Must return 0 on reads. 2 BMINT Bus Master Interrupt. Has the bus master detected an interrupt? 0: No. 1: Yes. Write 1 to clear. 1 BMERR Bus Master Error. Has the bus master detected an error during data transfer? (This bit is set by a write access to MSR 51300024h.) 0: No. 1: Yes. Write 1 to clear. 0 BMSTS (RO) Bus Master Status (Read Only). Is the bus master active? 0: No. 1: Yes. Revision 0.8 259 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 ATAC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.4.3.3 Bus Master 0 PRD Table Address - Primary (ATAC_BM0_PRD) ATAC I/O Address 04h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h ATAC_BM0_PRD Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PRD_PNTR 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD ATAC_BM0_PRD Bit Descriptions Bit 31:2 Name Description PRD_PNTR Pointer to the Physical Region Descriptor Table. This register is a PRD table pointer for IDE Bus Master 0. When written, this register points to the first entry in a PRD table. Once IDE Bus Master 0 is enabled (Command Register bit 0 = 1), it loads the pointer and updates this register to the next PRD by adding 08h. When read, this register points to the next PRD. 1:0 RSVD www.national.com Reserved. Set to 0. 260 Revision 0.8 USB CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The control registers allow software to communicate with the USB Controller. These control registers can be broadly divided into four register sets: Frame Counter and Root Hub. All of the registers should be read and written as DWORDs. To ensure interoperability, the Host Controller driver that does not use a reserved field should not assume that the reserved field contains 0. Furthermore, the Host Controller driver should always preserve the value(s) of the reserved field. When a R/W register is modified, the Host Controller driver should first read the register, modify the bits desired, then write the register with the reserved bits still containing the read value. Alternatively, the Host Controller Driver can maintain an in-memory copy of previously written values that can be modified and then written to the Host Controller register. When a write to set/clear register is written, bits written to reserved fields should be 0. These registers can be grouped into four functional groups: Host Controller control and status registers, memory pointers, frame counter and control registers, and Root Hub status and control. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs • USB Specific MSRs • USB Embedded PCI Configuration Registers • Host Controller Native Registers The MSRs (both Standard and Specific) are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. The USB Transceiver Control MSR (MSR_USBXCVR) is dedicated to the USB transceivers and allows software to control transceiver voltage and current settings. It also provides a mechanism by which the software can turn on or turn off the transmitter side of the transceiver for power management purposes. • Host Controller control and status registers define the operating mode of the host controller. They reflect current status of the host controller, provide interrupt control and status, and reflect error status conditions. The embedded PCI Configuration Registers are 32-bit registers decoded from the embedded PCI address bits 7 through 2 and C/BE[3:0]#, when IDSEL is high, AD[10:8] select the appropriate function, and AD[1:0] are 00. This embedded PCI bus is accessed via special GeodeLink Adapter MSR accesses. Bytes within a 32-bit address are selected with the valid byte enables. All registers can be accessed via 8, 16, or 32-bit cycles (i.e., each byte is individually selected by the byte enables.) Registers marked as reserved, and reserved bits within a register are not implemented and should return 0s when read. Writes have no effect for reserved registers. • Memory pointers provide pointers to the data structure that are required to communicate with the host controller driver and perform transactions based on the transfer descriptors that reside in memory. • Frame counter and control provide frame timing status and control. This set of registers also govern Start Of the Frame (SOF) timing and control events that are tied to frame timing intervals. • Root Hub status and control registers are dedicated to the root hub function. Two sets of registers are included to control the two ports. The Host Controller (HC) contains a set of on-chip operational registers that are mapped into a non-cacheable portion of the system addressable space. These registers are used by the Host Controller Driver (HCD). According to the function of these registers, they are divided into four partitions, specifically for Control and Status, Memory Pointer, Tables 5-13 through 5-16 are register summary tables that include reset values and page references where the register maps and bit descriptions are provided. Table 5-13. Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Summary MSR Address Type USBC1: 51600000h USBC2: 51200000h RO USBC1: 51600001h USBC2: 51200001h Reset Value Reference GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_CAP) 00000000_002420xxh Page 264 R/W GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) 00000000_0000F000h Page 264 USBC1: 51600002h USBC2: 51200002h R/W GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_SMI) 00000000_00000000h Page 265 USBC1: 51600003h USBC2: 51200003h R/W GeodeLink Device Error MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_ERROR) 00000000_00000000h Page 266 USBC1: 51600004h USBC2: 51200004h R/W GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_PM) 00000000_00000000h Page 268 USBC1: 51600005h USBC2: 51200005h R/W GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_DIAG) 00000000_00000000h Page 269 Revision 0.8 Register Name 261 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.5 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-14. USB Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name USBC1: 51600008h USBC2: 51200008h R/W USB Transceiver Control (USBC_XCVR_CNTRL) Reset Value Reference 00000000_00020100h Page 269 Table 5-15. USB Embedded PCI Configuration Registers Summary Index Type Width (Bits) 00h RO 16 02h RO 04h Reset Value Reference Vendor Identification (USBC_PCI_ VENID) 0E11h Page 270 16 Device Identification (USBC_PCI_DEVID) A0F8h Page 270 R/W 16 Command (USBC_PCI_CMD) 0000h Page 271 06h R/W 16 Status (USBC_PCI_STS) 0280h Page 271 08h RO 8 Device Revision Identification (USBC_PCI_DEVREVID) 06h Page 272 09h RO 24 PCI Class Code (USBC_PCI_CLASS) 0C0310h Page 272 0Ch R/W 8 Cache Line Size (USBC_PCI_CACHE) 00h Page 273 0Dh R/W 8 Latency Timer (USBC_PCI_LTNCY_TMR) 00h Page 273 0Eh R/W 8 Header Type (USBC_PCI_HEADER) 00h Page 273 0Fh RO 8 BIST (USBC_PCI_BIST) 00h Page 274 10h R/W 32 Base Address Register (USBC_PCI_BAR) 00000000h Page 274 3Ch R/W 8 Interrupt Line (USBC_PCI_INT_LINE) 00h Page 275 3Dh R/W 8 Interrupt Pin (USBC_PCI_INT_PIN) 01h Page 275 3Eh R/W 8 Minimum Grant (USBC_PCI_MIN_GNT) 00h Page 275 3Fh R/W 8 Maximum Latency (USBC_PCI_MAX_LTNCY) 50h Page 276 40h R/W 32 ASIC Test Mode Enable (USBC_PCI_ASIC_TEST) 000F0000h Page 276 44h R/W 16 ASIC Operational Mode Enable (USBC_PCI_ASIC_MODE) 0000h Page 276 www.national.com Register Name 262 Revision 0.8 Table 5-16. USB Host Controller Native Registers Summary USB Memory Offset Width (Bits) HCD HC Register Name Reset Value Reference 00h 32 RO RO Host Controller Revision (USBC_HcRevision) 00000110h Page 277 04h 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Control (USBC_HcControl) 00000000h Page 277 08h 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Command Status (USBC_HcCommandStatus) 00000000h Page 279 0Ch 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Interrupt Status (USBC_HcInterruptStatus) 00000000h Page 279 10h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Interrupt Enable (USBC_HcInterruptEnable) 00000000h Page 280 14h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Interrupt Disable (USBC_HcInterruptDisable) 00000000h Page 282 18h 32 R/W RO Host Controller HCCA (USBC_HcHCCA) 00000000h Page 283 1Ch 32 RO R/W Host Controller Current Period List ED (USBC_HcPeriodCurrentED) 00000000h Page 283 20h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Control List Head ED (USBC_HcControlHeadED) 00000000h Page 283 24h 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Current Control List ED (USBC_HcControlCurrentED) 00000000h Page 284 28h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Bulk List Head ED (USBC_HcBulkHeadED) 00000000h Page 284 2Ch 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Current Bulk List ED (USBC_HcBulkCurrentED) 00000000h Page 284 30h 32 RO R/W Host Controller Current Done List Head ED (USBC_HcDoneHead) 00000000h Page 285 34h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Frame Interval (USBC_HcFmInterval) 00002EDFh Page 285 38h 32 RO R/W Host Controller Frame Remaining (USBC_HcFrameRemaining) 00000000h Page 286 3Ch 32 RO R/W Host Controller Frame Number (USBC_HcFmNumber) 00000000h Page 286 40h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Periodic Start (USBC_HcPeriodicStart) 00000000h Page 287 44h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Low Speed Threshold (USBC_HcLSThreshold) 00000628h Page 287 48h 32 R/W RO Host Controller Root Hub Descriptor A (USBC_HcRhDescriptorA) 01000002h Page 287 4Ch 32 R/W RO Host Controller Root Hub Descriptor B (USBC_HcRhDescriptorB) 00000000h Page 289 50h 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Root Hub Status (USBC_HcRhStatus) 00000000h Page 289 54h 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Root Hub Port Status 1 (USBC_HcRhPortStatus[1]) 00000000h Page 290 58h 32 R/W R/W Host Controller Root Hub Port Status 2 (USBC_HcRhPortStatus[2]) 00000000h Page 292 Revision 0.8 Type 263 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs 5.5.1.1 GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_CAP) MSR Address USBC1: 51600000h USBC2: 51200000h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_002420xxh USBC_GLD_MSR_CAP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 DEV_ID 4 3 2 1 0 REV_ID USBC_GLD_MSR_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 23:8 DEV_ID Device ID. Identifies module (2420h). 7:0 REV_ID Revision ID. Identifies module revision. See CS5535 I/O Companion Device Errata document for value. 5.5.1.2 GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) MSR Address USBC1: 51600001h USBC2: 51200001h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_0000F000h USBC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 9 USB_GLITCHFIX_EN RSVD FIX_PREFETCH PDP SEL RSVD USB_LOPWR_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PCI_MAST_STOP_EN Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:23 RSVD Reserved. Writes “don’t care” and reads return 0. PCI_MAST_STOP _EN PCI Master Stop Enable. PDP PCI Master Prefetch Decode Policy. 22 21:20 www.national.com 264 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 19 SEL Select. 0: Use field [18:16]. 1: Use field [22:20]. 18:16 FIX_PREFETCH Fixed Read Prefetch Policy. 000: None. Each read takes a complete trip to memory. 001: Initial read 08 bytes. Read next 8 only when requested. 010: Initial read 16 bytes. Read next 16 only when requested. 011: Initial read 32 bytes. Read next 32 only when requested. 100: Initial read 32 bytes. Read next 32 when 16 bytes left. 101, 110, and 111: Reserved. 15:14 RSVD Reserved. Read as written. 13 USB_LOPWR_EN USB Low Power Enable. When 0, the transceiver is prevented from entering the low power Suspend state. This bit has no functional impact on the transceiver or USB Controller. Defaults to 1 (i.e., Suspend allowed). 12 USB_GLITCHFIX _EN USB Glitch Fix Enable: When 0, enable transceiver de-glitch logic. This logic suppresses a glitch that can occur when: 1) The transceiver moves from the suspend state to any other state. and 2) A low speed device is connected. The state is defined by HcControl[7:6]. Defaults to 1 (i.e., no glitch suppression). Note that this bit represents a deviation from the standard MSR_CONFIG register in Section 3.8.2 "MSR Address 1: Master Configuration" on page 67. 11:0 RSVD Reserved. Read as written. 5.5.1.3 GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_SMI) MSR Address USBC1: 51600002h USBC2: 51200002h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h USBC_GLD_MSR_SMI Register Map Revision 0.8 265 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 USB_ASMI_FLAG RSVD 9 1 0 USB_ASMI_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 USB_INT_ASMI_FLAG RSVD USB_INT_ASMI_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 www.national.com GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:34 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0 on read. 33 USB_INT_ASMI FLAG USB Interrupt Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated due to an INT being generated by the USB module. The INT condition is cleared inside the USB module core. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (Also see bit 1 description.) 32 USB_ASMI_FLAG USB ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated by the USB module. The ASMI condition is cleared inside the USB module. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (Also see bit 0 description.) RSVD Reserved. Returns 0 on read. 1 USB_INT_ASMI_ EN USB Interrupt Enable. If this bit is high, the INT generated by the USB module is used to generate a GeodeLink ASMI. 0 USB_ASMI_EN USB ASMI Enable. If this bit is high, the ASMI generated by the USB module is used to generate a GeodeLink ASMI. 31:2 5.5.1.4 GeodeLink Device Error MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_ERROR) MSR Address USBC1: 51600003h USBC2: 51200003h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h USBC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Register Map 3 UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG 4 RSVD 2 1 0 RSVD UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_EN EXCEP_ERR_FLAG 5 EXCEP_ERR_EN PAROUT_ERR_EN PARIN_ERR_EN SYS_ERR_EN RSVD PA_MABORT_ERR_FLAG 6 PA_MABORT_ERR_EN 7 PA_TABORT_ERR_FLAG TIMEOUT_ERR_FLAG PA_SVADRS_ERR_FLAG 8 TIMEOUT_ERR_EN PAROUT_ERR_FLAG 9 PA_SVADRS_ERR_EN PARIN_ERR_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 CMD_ERR_FLAG SYS_ERR_FLAG RSVD PA_TABORT_ERR_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 CMD_ERR_EN Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:44 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0 on read. www.national.com 266 Revision 0.8 USBC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 43 CMD_ERR_FLAG Command Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because a PCI device asserted the embedded PCI bus Parity Error signal. (The PCI Adapter slave interface generated a command error on a command received from the PCI device, or when the 2 LSBs of the address received from the PCI device in the address phase are non-zero.) Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. CMD_ERR_EN (bit 11) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 42 SYS_ERR_FLAG System Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because a PCI device asserted the embedded PCI bus System Error signal. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. SYS_ERR_EN (bit 10) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 41 PARIN_ERR_ FLAG Parity Error In Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because a Parity Error on a PCI device master to PCI Adapter target transaction occurred. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. PARIN_ERR_EN (bit 9) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 40 PAROUT_ERR_ FLAG Parity Error Out Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because a Parity error on PCI Adapter master to PCI device target transaction occurred. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. PAROUT_ERR_EN (bit 8) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 39 TIMEOUT_ERR_ FLAG Master Timeout Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because the PCI Adapter completed a master bus cycle to the GeodeLink Adapter when the PCI device failed to perform an expected retry after a disconnect. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. TIMEOUT_ERR_EN (bit 7) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 38 PA_SVADRS_ ERR_FLAG PCI Adapter Slave Interface Address Parity Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because the PCI Adapter slave interface generated a parity error on the address received from the PCI device in the address phase. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. PA_SVADRS_ERR_EN (bit 6) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 37 PA_TABORT_ ERR_FLAG PCI Adapter Target Abort Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because the PCI Adapter, as a target, aborted the PCI bus cycle. The GeodeLink Adapter and the PCI Adapter complete the GeodeLink Transaction. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. PA_TABORT_ERR_EN (bit 5) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 36 PA_MABORT_ ERR_FLAG PCI Adapter Master Abort Error. If high, records that an ERR was generated because the PCI device did not respond as a target. The PCI Adapter aborted the PCI bus cycle and indicated to the GeodeLink Adapter to abort the GeodeLink Adapter transaction. The GeodeLink Adapter completes the GeodeLink transaction and sets the EXCP bit in any response packet. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. PA_MABORT_ERR_EN (bit 4) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. 35 EXCEP_ERR_ FLAG Exception Bit Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because the EXCEP bit was set in THE response packet associated with a device master request. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. EXCEP_ERR_EN (bit 3) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Writes don’t care. Reads return 0. UNEXP_TYPE_ ERR_FLAG Unexpected Type Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated because an unexpected type or other “bad” GeodeLink transaction. This error is fatal and there is no system recovery. The device (GeodeLink Adapter) will hang. Write 1 to clear the flag; writing 0 has no effect. UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_EN (bit 0) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Writes don’t care. Reads return 0. CMD_ERR_EN Command Error Enable. Write 1 to enable CMD_ERR_FLAG (bit 43) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 34:33 32 31:12 11 Revision 0.8 267 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 10 SYS_ERR_EN System Error Enable. Write 1 to enable SYS_ERR_FLAG (bit 42) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 9 PARIN_ERR_EN Parity Error In Enable. Write 1 to enable PARIN_ERR_FLAG (bit 41) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 8 PAROUT_ERR_ EN Parity Error Out Enable. Write 1 to enable PAROUT_ERR_FLAG (bit 40) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 7 TIMEOUT_ERR_ EN Timeout Error Enable. Write 1 to enable TIMEOUT_ERR_FLAG (bit 39) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 6 PA_SVADRS_ ERR_EN PCI Adapter Slave Interface Address Parity Error Enable. Write 1 to enable PA_SVADRS_ERR_FLAG (bit 38) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 5 PA_TABORT_ ERR_EN PCI Adapter Target Abort Error Enable. Write 1 to enable PA_TABORT_ERR_FLAG (bit 37) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 4 PA_MABORT_ER R_EN PCI Adapter Master Abort Error Enable. Write 1 to enable PA_MABORT_ERR_FLAG (bit 36) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 3 EXCEP_ERR_EN Exception Bit Error Enable. Write 1 to enable EXCEP_ERR_FLAG (bit 35) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. RSVD Reserved. Writes don’t care. Reads return zero. UNEXP_TYPE_ ERR_EN Unexpected Type Error Enable. Write 1 to enable UNEXP_TYPE_ERR_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow the event to generate an ERR. 2:1 0 5.5.1.5 GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_PM) MSR Address USBC1: 51600004h USBC2: 51200004h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h USBC_GLD_MSR_PM Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 RSVD 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PMODE PMODE PMODE 2 1 0 USBC_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:6 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0 on read. 5:4 PMODE2 Power Mode 2. Controls clock behavior for the USB Core. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. www.national.com 268 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 3:2 PMODE1 Power Mode 1. Controls clock behavior for the USB PCI Adapter 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 1:0 PMODE0 Power Mode 0. Controls clock behavior for the USB GeodeLink Adapter 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 5.5.1.6 GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (USBC_GLD_MSR_DIAG) MSR Address USBC1: 51600005h USBC2: 51200005h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h This register is reserved for internal use by National and should not be written to. 5.5.2 USB Specific MSRs 5.5.2.1 USB Transceiver Control (USBC_XCVR_CNTRL) MSR Address USBC1: 51600008h USBC2: 51200008h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00020100h USBC_XCVR_CNTRL Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD RSVD RCVR2 _VADJ XMIT2_CADJ 9 8 XCEIV1_PM XCEIV2_PM 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 7 6 5 RCVR1 _VADJ 4 3 2 1 0 XMIT1_CADJ USBC_XCVR Bit Description Bit Name Description 63:18 RSVD Reserved. Read as 0. XCEIV2_PM Transceiver 2 Power Management Bit. Disables transceiver #2 and puts the transceiver in a low power state. 17 0: Enable transceiver. 1: Disable transceiver. Revision 0.8 269 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_XCVR Bit Description Bit Name Description 16:14 RCVR2_VADJ Single Ended Receiver #2 Threshold Voltage Adjustment. For proper operation this must be set to 100 (4h). See electrical specifications Section 6.3.6 "USB Signals" on page 540. 13:9 XMIT2_CADJ Differential Transmitter #2 Slew Rate Current Adjustment. For proper operation this must be set to 010 (2h). See electrical specifications Section 6.3.6 "USB Signals" on page 540. 8 XCEIV1_PM Transceiver 1 Power Management Bit. Disables transceiver #1 and puts the transceiver in a low power state. 0: Enable transceiver. 1: Disable transceiver. 7:5 RCVR1_VADJ Single Ended Receiver #1 Threshold Voltage Adjustment. For proper operation this must be set to 100 (4h). See electrical specifications Section 6.3.6 "USB Signals" on page 540. 4:0 XMIT1_CADJ Differential Transmitter #1 Slew Rate Current Adjustment. For proper operation this must be set to 010 (2h). See electrical specifications Section 6.3.6 "USB Signals" on page 540. 5.5.3 USB Embedded PCI Configuration Registers 5.5.3.1 Vendor Identification (USBC_PCI_ VENID) Index 00h Type RO Reset Value 0E11h USBC_PCI_VENID Register Map 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 4 3 2 1 0 VENDOR_ID USBC_PCI_VENID Bit Descriptions Bit 15:0 Name Description VENDOR_ID Vendor ID. 5.5.3.2 Device Identification (USBC_PCI_DEVID) Index 02h Type RO Reset Value A0F8h USBC_DEVID Register Map 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 DEVICE_ID USBC_DEVID Bit Descriptions Bit 15:0 Name Description DEVICE_ID Device ID. www.national.com 270 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.3.3 Command (USBC_PCI_CMD) Index 04h Type R/W Reset Value 0000h USBC_PCI_CMD Register Map 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 RSVD 8 FB2B_ SERR EN 7 6 WS_ CTL PAR 5 4 3 2 1 VGA_ MEMW SPC_ MSTR_ MEM CYC EN SNP_ _INV EN 0 IO USBC_PCI_CMD Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 15:10 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. 9 FB2B_EN (RO) Fast Back-to-Back Enable (Read Only). USB only acts as a master to a single device, so this functionality is not needed. It is always disabled (must always be set to 0). 8 SERR System Error. USB asserts SERR# when it detects an address parity error. 0: Disable; 1: Enable. 7 WS_CTL Wait Cycle Control. USB does not need to insert a wait state between the address and data on the AD lines. It is always disabled (bit is set to 0). 6 PAR Parity Error. USB asserts PERR# when it is the agent receiving data and it detects a data parity error. 0: Disable; 1: Enable. 5 VGA_SNP_EN (RO) VGA Palette Snoop Enable (Read Only). USB does not support this function. It is always disabled (bit is set to 0). 4 MEMW_INV Memory Write and Invalidate: Allow USB to run Memory Write and Invalidate commands. 0: Disable; 1: Enable. The Memory Write and Invalidate commands only occur if the cache line size is set to 32 bytes and the memory write is exactly one cache line. This bit is ignored by the GeodeLink Adapter and hence the setting is a ‘don’t care’. 3 SPC_CYC Special Cycles. USB does not run special cycles on PCI. It is always disabled (bit is set to 0). 2 MSTR_EN PCI Master Enable. Allow USB to run PCI master cycles. 0: Disable; 1: Enable. 1 MEM Memory Space. Allow USB to respond as a target to memory cycles. 0: Disable; 1: Enable. 0 IO I/O Space. Allow USB to respond as a target to I/O cycles. 0: Disable; 1: Enable. 5.5.3.4 Status (USBC_PCI_STS) Index 06h Type R/W Reset Value 0280h USBC_PCI_STS Register Map 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 PAR_ SERR_ RCVD_ RCVD_ SIG_ DEVSEL_TIME DATA_ PAR ERR STS MSTR_ TRGT_ TRGT_ ABT_ ABT_ ABT_ STS STS STS Revision 0.8 FB2B 271 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_PCI_STS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 15 PAR_ERR Detected Parity Error. This bit is set whenever the USB detects a parity error, even if the Parity Error (response) detection enable bit (Index 04h[6]) is disabled. Write 1 to clear. 14 SERR_ERR SERR# Status. This bit is set whenever the USB detects a PCI address error. Write 1 to clear. 13 RCVD_MSTR_ ABT_STS Received Master Abort Status. This bit is set when the USB, acting as a PCI master, aborts a PCI bus memory cycle. Write 1 to clear. 12 RCVD_TRGT_ ABT_STS Received Target Abort Status. This bit is set when a USB generated PCI cycle (USB is the PCI master) is aborted by a PCI target. Write 1 to clear. 11 SIG_TRGT_ ABT_STS Signaled Target Abort Status. This bit is set whenever the USB signals a target abort. Write 1 to clear. DEVSEL_TIME DEVSEL# Timing (Read Only). These bits indicate the DEVSEL# timing when performing a positive decode. Since DEVSEL# is asserted to meet the medium timing, these bits are encoded as 01. 8 DATA_PAR Data Parity Reported. Set to 1 if the Parity Error bit (Command Register bit 6) is set, and USB detects PERR# asserted while acting as PCI master (whether PERR# was driven by USB or not). 7 FB2B Fast Back-to-Back Capable (Read Only). USB does support fast back-to-back transactions when the transactions are not to the same agent. This bit is always 1. 6:0 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. 10:9 5.5.3.5 Device Revision Identification (USBC_PCI_DEVREVID) Index 08h Type RO Reset Value 06h USBC_PCI_DEVREVID Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DEV_REV_ID USBC_PCI_DEVREVID Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DEV_REV_ID Device Revision ID. 5.5.3.6 PCI Class Code (USBC_PCI_CLASS) Index 09h Type RO Reset Value 0C0310h USBC_PCI_CLASS Register Map 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PCI_CLASS www.national.com 272 Revision 0.8 USBC_PCI_CLASS Bit Descriptions Bit 23:0 Name Description PCI_CLASS PCI Class. This register identifies this function as an OpenHCI device. The base class is 0Ch (serial bus controller). The sub class is 03h (universal serial bus). The programming interface is 10h (OpenHCI). 5.5.3.7 Cache Line Size (USBC_PCI_CACHE) Index 0Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00h USBC_PCI_CACHE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PCI_CACHE USBC_PCI_CACHE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 PCI_CACHE PCI Cache. The USB controller stores the system cache line size, in units of 32-bit WORDs in bit 3 of this register. A cache line size of 32 bytes is the only one applicable to this design. Users must set this register to 08h for proper operation. Any value other than 08h written to this register is read back as 00h. 5.5.3.8 Latency Timer (USBC_PCI_LTNCY_TMR) Index 0Dh Type R/W Reset Value 00h USBC_PCI_LTNCY_TMR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 LTNCY_TMR USBC_PCI_LTNCY_TMR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 LTNCY_TMR Latency Timer. This register identifies the value of the latency timer in PCI clocks for PCI bus master cycles. 5.5.3.9 Header Type (USBC_PCI_HEADER) Index 0Eh Type RO Reset Value 00h USBC_PCI_HEADER Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PCI_HEADER Revision 0.8 273 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_PCI_HEADER Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 PCI_HEADER PCI Header Type. This register identifies the type of the predefined header in the configuration space. Since the USB is a single function device and not a PCI-to-PCI bridge, this byte should be read as 00h. 5.5.3.10 BIST (USBC_PCI_BIST) Index 0Fh Type RO Reset Value 00h USBC_PCI_BIST Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PCI_BIST USBC_PCI_BIST Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 PCI_BIST PCI BIST. This register identifies the control and status of Built In Self Test. The USB does not implement BIST, so this register is read only. 5.5.3.11 Base Address Register (USBC_PCI_BAR) Index 10h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h This BAR sets the base address of the memory mapped USB controller registers. Bits [11:0] are read only (0000 0000 0000), indicating a 4 kB memory address range. Refer to Section 5.5.4 "Host Controller Native Registers" on page 277 for the USB controller register bit formats and reset values. USBC_PCI_BAR Register Map BASE_ADDR 9 8 7 6 ADDR_RNG 5 4 3 2 1 0 WIDTH MEM 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PREFETCH Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_PCI_BAR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:12 BASE_ADDR Base Address. POST writes the value of the memory base address to this register. 11:4 ADDR_RNG Address Range (Always 0.) Indicates a 4k byte address range is requested. 3 PREFETCH Prefetch (Always 0). Indicates there is no support for prefetchable memory. WIDTH Width (Always 0). Indicates that the base register is 32-bits wide and can be placed anywhere in 32-bit memory space. MEM Memory (Always 0). Indicates that the operational registers are mapped into memory space. 2:1 0 www.national.com 274 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.3.12 Interrupt Line (USBC_PCI_INT_LINE) Index 3Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00h USBC_PCI_INT_LINE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 INT_LINE USBC_PCI_INT_LINE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 INT_LINE Interrupt Line. This register identifies which of the system interrupt controllers the devices interrupt pin is connected to. The value of this register is used by device drivers and has no direct meaning to the USB. 5.5.3.13 Interrupt Pin (USBC_PCI_INT_PIN) Index 3Dh Type R/W Reset Value 01h USBC_PCI_INT_PIN Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 INT_PIN USBC_PCI_INT_PIN Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 INT_PIN Interrupt Pin. This register identifies which interrupt pin a device uses. Since the USB uses INTA#, this value is set to 01h. 5.5.3.14 Minimum Grant (USBC_PCI_MIN_GNT) Index 3Eh Type R/W Reset Value 00h USBC_PCI_MIN_GNT Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MIN_GNT USBC_PCI_MIN_GNT Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MIN_GNT Minimum Grant. This register specifies the desired settings for how long a burst the USB needs assuming a clock rate of 33 MHz. The value specifies a period of time in units of 1/4 microsecond. Revision 0.8 275 www.national.com 5.5.3.15 Maximum Latency (USBC_PCI_MAX_LTNCY) Index 3Fh Type R/W Reset Value 50h USBC_PCI_MAX_LTNCY Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MAX_LTNCY USBC_PCI_MAX_LTNCY Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MAX_LTNCY Maximum Latency. This register specifies the desired settings for how often the USB needs access to the PCI bus assuming a clock rate of 33 MHz. The value specifies a period of time in units of 1/4 microsecond. 5.5.3.16 ASIC Test Mode Enable (USBC_PCI_ASIC_TEST) Index 40h Type R/W Reset Value 000F0000h USBC_PCI_ASIC_TEST Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_PCI_ASIC_TEST Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:0 RSVD Reserved. These bits are reserved for internal testing only. These bits should not be written to. 5.5.3.17 ASIC Operational Mode Enable (USBC_PCI_ASIC_MODE) Index 44h Type R/W Reset Value 0000h USBC_PCI_ASIC_MODE Register Map 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 RSVD 6 5 4 RSVD 3 2 1 0 BUFF_SIZE 15 SIE_PIPE_DIS Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_PCI_ASIC_MODE Bit Descriptions Bit Reset Description 15:9 RSVD Reserved. Write 0s; reads undefined. www.national.com 276 Revision 0.8 USBC_PCI_ASIC_MODE Bit Descriptions Bit 8 7:1 0 5.5.4 Reset Description SIE_PIPE_DIS SIE Pipeline Disable. When set, waits for all USB bus activity to complete prior to returning completion status to the List Processor. Should normally be cleared to 0. This is a fail-safe mechanism to avoid potential problems with the clk_dr transition between 1.5 MHz and 12 MHz. RSVD Reserved. Write 0s; reads undefined. BUFF_SIZE Data Buffer Size. When set, the size of the region for the data buffer is 16 bytes. When clear, the size is 32 bytes. Host Controller Native Registers 5.5.4.1 Host Controller Revision (USBC_HcRevision) USB Memory Offset 00h Type HCD: RO HC: RO Reset Value 00000110h USBC_HcRevision Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 RSVD 4 3 2 1 0 REV USBC_HcRevision Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:8 RSVD RO RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. 7:0 REV RO RO Revision (Read Only). Indicates the Open HCI Specification revision number implemented by the Hardware. USB supports 1.0a specification. (X.Y = XYh). 5.5.4.2 Host Controller Control (USBC_HcControl) USB Memory Offset 04h Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h 277 4 3 2 1 0 ControlBulkServiceRatio 5 PeriodicListEnable InterruptRouting Revision 0.8 6 IsochronousEnable RemoteWakeupConnected RSVD 7 ControlListEnable 8 BulkListEnable 9 HostControllerFunctionalState 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RemoteWakeupConnectedEnable USBC_HcControl Register Map www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_HcControl Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:11 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. RemoteWakeup Connected Enable R/W RO Remote Wakeup Connected Enable. This bit is used by the HCD to enable or disable the remote wakeup feature upon the detection of upstream resume signaling. When this bit is set and the ResumeDetected bit in HcInterruptStatus is set, a remote wakeup is signaled to the host system. Setting this bit has no impact on the generation of hardware interrupt. 10 In the host controller, this bit is cleared to 0 on hardware reset and is write-read. Otherwise, it does nothing. It can be used as a flag by software as indicated above. Setting this bit will not enable or disable remote wakeup. That is covered in the Power Management Controller. 9 RemoteWakeup Connected R/W R/W Remote Wakeup Connected. This bit indicates whether the HC supports remote wakeup signaling. If remote wakeup is supported and used by the system it is the responsibility of system firmware to set this bit during POST. The HC clears the bit upon a hardware reset but does not alter it upon a software reset. Remote wakeup signaling of the host system is host-bus-specific and is not described in this specification. In the host controller, it is cleared to 0 on hardware reset and is write-read. Otherwise, it does nothing. It can be used as a flag by software as indicated above. 8 InterruptRouting R/W RO Interrupt Routing. This bit is used for interrupt routing. 0: Interrupts routed to normal interrupt mechanism (INT). 1: Interrupts routed to SMI. 7:6 HostController FunctionalState R/W R/W Host Controller Functional State. This field sets the HC state. The HC may force a state change from UsbSuspend to UsbResume after detecting resume signaling from a downstream port. States are: 00: UsbReset. 01: UsbResume. 10: UsbOperational. 11: UsbSuspend. 5 BulkListEnable R/W RO Bulk List Enable. When set, this bit enables processing of the Bulk list. 4 ControlList Enable R/W RO Control List Enable. When set, this bit enables processing of the Control list. 3 Isochronous Enable R/W RO Isochronous Enable. When clear, this bit disables the Isochronous List when the Periodic List is enabled (so Interrupt EDs may be serviced). While processing the Periodic List, the HC will check this bit when it finds an isochronous ED. 2 PeriodicList Enable R/W RO Periodic List Enable. When set, this bit enables processing of the Periodic (interrupt and isochronous) list. The HC checks this bit prior to attempting any periodic transfers in a frame. 1:0 ControlBulk ServiceRatio R/W RO Control Bulk Service Ratio. Specifies the number of Control Endpoints serviced for every Bulk Endpoint. Encoding is N-1 where N is the number of Control Endpoints (i.e., 00 = 1 Control Endpoint; 11 = 3 Control Endpoints). www.national.com 278 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.4.3 Host Controller Command Status (USBC_HcCommandStatus) USB Memory Offset 08h Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 HostControllerReset 8 BulkListFilled RSVD ScheduleOverrunCount RSVD 9 OwnershipChangeRequest 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 ControlListFilled USBC_HcCommandStatus Register Map USBC_HcCommandStatus Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:18 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 17:16 Schedule OverrunCount RO R/W Schedule Overrun Count. This field increments every time the SchedulingOverrun bit in HcInterruptStatus is set. The count wraps from 11 to 00. 15:4 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 3 Ownership ChangeRequest R/W R/W Ownership Change Request. When set by software, this bit sets the OwnershipChange field in HcInterruptStatus. The bit is cleared by software. This field always reads back as 0. 2 BulkListFilled R/W R/W Bulk List Filled. Set to indicate there is an active ED on the Bulk List. The bit may be set by either software or the HC and cleared by the HC each time it begins processing the head of the Bulk List. 1 ControlListFilled R/W R/W Control List Filled. Set to indicate there is an active ED on the Control List. It may be set by either software or the HC and cleared by the HC each time it begins processing the head of the Control List. 0 HostControllerReset R/W R/W Host Controller Reset. This bit is set to initiate a software reset. This bit is cleared by the HC upon completion of the reset operation. This field always reads back as 0. 5.5.4.4 Host Controller Interrupt Status (USBC_HcInterruptStatus) USB Memory Offset 0Ch Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h All bits are set by the hardware and cleared by software. Revision 0.8 279 www.national.com 5 4 3 2 StartOfFrame 1 0 SchedulingOverrun 6 WritebackDoneHead 7 ResumeDetected RSVD 8 UnrecoverableError 9 RootHubStatusChange RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 FrameNumberOverflow USBC_HcInterruptStatus Register Map OwnershipChange Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_HcInterruptStatus Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 30 Ownership Change R/W R/W Ownership Change. This bit is set when the OwnershipChangeRequest bit of HcCommandStatus is set. RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 6 RootHubStatus Change R/W R/W Root Hub Status Change. This bit is set when the content of HcRhStatus or the content of any HcRhPortStatus register has changed. 5 FrameNumber Overflow R/W R/W Frame Number Overflow. Set when bit 15 of FrameNumber changes value. 4 Unrecoverable Error R/W R/W Unrecoverable Error (Read Only). This event is not implemented and is hard-coded to 0. HCD clears this bit. 3 Resume Detected R/W R/W Resume Detected. Set when HC detects resume signaling on a downstream port. 2 StartOfFrame R/W R/W Start Of Frame. Set when the Frame Management block signals a Start of Frame event. 1 WritebackDone Head R/W R/W Writeback Done Head. Set after the HC has written HcDoneHead. 0 Scheduling Overrun R/W R/W Scheduling Overrun. Set when the List Processor determines a Schedule Overrun has occurred. 29:7 5.5.4.5 Host Controller Interrupt Enable (USBC_HcInterruptEnable) USB Memory Offset 10h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000000h Writing a 1 to a bit in this register sets the corresponding bit, while writing a 0 leaves the bit unchanged. www.national.com 280 Revision 0.8 4 3 2 1 0 SchedulingOverrunEnable 5 StartOfFrameEnable 6 WritebackDoneHeadEnable MasterInterruptEnable OwnershipChangeEnable RSVD 7 ResumeDetectedEnable 8 UnrecoverableErrorEnable 9 RootHubStatusChangeEnable 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 FrameNumberOverflowEnable USBC_HcInterruptEnable Register Map USBC_HcInterruptEnable Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31 MasterInterrupt Enable R/W RO Master Interrupt Enable. This bit is a global interrupt enable. A write of 1 allows interrupts to be enabled via the specific enable bits listed above. 30 Ownership ChangeEnable R/W RO Ownership Change Enable. RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. RootHubStatus ChangeEnable R/W RO RootHub Status Change Enable. FrameNumber OverflowEnable R/W 4 Unrecoverable ErrorEnable R/W RO Unrecoverable Error Enable. This event is not implemented. All writes to this bit are ignored. 3 Resume DetectedEnable R/W RO Resume Detected Enable. StartOfFrame Enable R/W WritebackDone HeadEnable R/W Scheduling OverrunEnable R/W 29:7 6 5 2 1 0 Revision 0.8 0: Ignore. 1: Enable interrupt generation due to Ownership Change. 0: Ignore. 1: Enable interrupt generation due to Root Hub Status Change. RO Frame Number Overflow Enable. 0: Ignore. 1: Enable interrupt generation due to Frame Number Overflow. 0: Ignore. 1: Enable interrupt generation due to Resume Detected. RO Start Of Frame Enable. 0: Ignore. 1: Enable interrupt generation due to Start of Frame. RO Writeback Done Head Enable. 0: Ignore. 1: Enable interrupt generation due to Writeback Done Head. RO Scheduling Overrun Enable. 0: Ignore. 1: Enable interrupt generation due to Scheduling Overrun. 281 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.4.6 Host Controller Interrupt Disable (USBC_HcInterruptDisable) USB Memory Offset 14h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000000h Writing a 1 to a bit in this register clears the corresponding bit, while writing a 0 leaves the bit unchanged. 5 4 3 2 StartOfFrameEnable 1 0 SchedulingOverrunEnable 6 WritebackDoneHeadEnable MasterInterruptEnable 7 ResumeDetectedEnable 8 UnrecoverableErrorEnable 9 RSVD RootHubStatusChangeEnable 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 FrameNumberOverflowEnable USBC_HcInterruptDisable Register Map OwnershipChangeEnable Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_HcInterruptDisable Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31 MasterInterrupt Enable R/W RO Master Interrupt Disable. Global interrupt disable. A write of 1 disables all interrupts. 30 Ownership ChangeEnable R/W RO Ownership Change Disable. RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. RootHubStatus ChangeEnable R/W RO Root Hub Status Change Disable. FrameNumber OverflowEnable R/W 4 Unrecoverable ErrorEnable R/W RO Unrecoverable Error Disable. This event is not implemented. All writes to this bit will be ignored. 3 Resume DetectedEnable R/W RO Resume Detected Disable. StartOfFrame Enable R/W WritebackDone HeadEnable R/W Scheduling OverrunEnable R/W 29:7 6 5 2 1 0 www.national.com 0: Ignore. 1: Disable interrupt generation due to Ownership Change. 0: Ignore. 1: Disable interrupt generation due to Root Hub Status Change. RO Frame Number Overflow Disable. 0: Ignore. 1: Disable interrupt generation due to Frame Number Overflow. 0: Ignore. 1: Disable interrupt generation due to Resume Detected. RO Start Of Frame Disable. 0: Ignore. 1: Disable interrupt generation due to Start of Frame. RO Writeback Done Head Disable. 0: Ignore. 1: Disable interrupt generation due to Writeback Done Head. RO Scheduling Overrun Disable. 0: Ignore. 1: Disable interrupt generation due to Scheduling Overrun. 282 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.4.7 Host Controller HCCA (USBC_HcHCCA) USB Memory Offset 18h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcHCCA Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 HCCA 4 3 2 1 0 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_HcHCCA Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:8 HCCA R/W RO HCCA. Pointer to HCCA base address. 7:0 RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. 5.5.4.8 Host Controller Current Period List ED (USBC_HcPeriodCurrentED) USB Memory Offset 1Ch Type HCD: RO HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcPeriodCurrentED Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 PeriodCurrentED RSVD USBC_HcPeriodCurrentED Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:4 PeriodCurrentED RO R/W Period Current ED. Pointer to the current Periodic List ED. 3:0 RSVD RO R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 5.5.4.9 Host Controller Control List Head ED (USBC_HcControlHeadED) USB Memory Offset 20h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcControlHeadED Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 ControlHeadED 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_HcControlHeadED Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:4 ControlHeadED R/W RO Control Head ED. Pointer to the Control List Head ED. 3:0 RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. Revision 0.8 283 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.4.10 Host Controller Current Control List ED (USBC_HcControlCurrentED) USB Memory Offset 24h Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcControlHeadED Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 ControlCurrentED 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_HcControlHeadED Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:4 ControlCurrentED R/W R/W Control Current ED. Pointer to the current Control List ED. 3:0 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 5.5.4.11 Host Controller Bulk List Head ED (USBC_HcBulkHeadED) USB Memory Offset 28h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcBulkHeadED Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 BulkHeadED 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_HcBulkHeadED Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:4 BulkHeadED R/W RO Bulk Head ED. Pointer to the Bulk List Head ED. 3:0 RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. 5.5.4.12 Host Controller Current Bulk List ED (USBC_HcBulkCurrentED) USB Memory Offset 2Ch Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcBulkCurrentED Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 BulkCurrentED 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_HcBulkCurrentED Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:4 BulkCurrentED R/W R/W Bulk Current ED. Pointer to the current Bulk List ED. 3:0 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. www.national.com 284 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.4.13 Host Controller Current Done List Head ED (USBC_HcDoneHead) USB Memory Offset 30h Type HCD: RO HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcDoneHead Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 DoneHead 2 1 0 RSVD USBC_HcDoneHead Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:4 DoneHead RO R/W Done Head. Pointer to the current Done List Head ED. 3:0 RSVD RO R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 5.5.4.14 Host Controller Frame Interval (USBC_HcFmInterval) USB Memory Offset 34h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00002EDFh USBC_HcFmInterval Register Map FrameIntervalToggle 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 FSLargestDataPacket RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FrameInterval USB_HcFmInterval Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31 FrameInterval Toggle R/W RO Frame Interval Toggle This bit is toggled by HCD when it loads a new value into FrameInterval. 30:16 FSLargest DataPacket R/W RO FS Largest Data Packet. This field specifies a value that is loaded into the Largest Data Packet Counter at the beginning of each frame. 15:14 RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. 13:0 FrameInterval R/W RO Frame Interval. This field specifies the length of a frame as (bit times - 1). For 12,000 bit times in a frame, a value of 11,999 is stored here. Revision 0.8 285 www.national.com 5.5.4.15 Host Controller Frame Remaining (USBC_HcFrameRemaining) USB Memory Offset 38h Type HCD: RO HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcFrameRemaining Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 FrameRemainingToggle Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 9 RSVD 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FrameRemaining USBC_HcFrameRemaining Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31 FrameRemaining Toggle RO R/W Frame Remaining Toggle. Loaded with FrameIntervalToggle when FrameRemaining is loaded. 30:14 RSVD RO R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 13:0 FrameRemaining RO R/W Frame Remaining. When the HC is in the UsbOperational state, this 14-bit field decrements each 12 MHz clock period. When the count reaches 0, (end of frame) the counter reloads with FrameInterval. In addition, the counter loads when the HC transitions into UsbOperational. 5.5.4.16 Host Controller Frame Number (USBC_HcFmNumber) USB Memory Offset 3Ch Type HCD: RO HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcFmNumber Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FrameNumber USBC_HcFmNumber Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 30:16 RSVD RO R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 15:0 FrameNumber RO R/W Frame Number. This 16-bit incrementing counter field is incremented coincident with the loading of FrameRemaining. The count rolls over from FFFFh to 0h. www.national.com 286 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.4.17 Host Controller Periodic Start (USBC_HcPeriodicStart) USB Memory Offset 40h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000000h USBC_HcPeriodicStart Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 RSVD 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PeriodicStart USBC_HcPeriodicStart Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:14 RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. 13:0 PeriodicStart R/W RO Periodic Start. This field contains a value used by the List Processor to determine where in a frame the Periodic List processing must begin. 5.5.4.18 Host Controller Low Speed Threshold (USBC_HcLSThreshold) USB Memory Offset 44h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000628h USBC_HcLSThreshold Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 LSThreshold USBC_HcLSThreshold Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 30:12 RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. 11:0 LSThreshold R/W RO LS Threshold. This field contains a value used by the Frame Management block to determine whether or not a low speed transaction can be started in the current frame. 5.5.4.19 Host Controller Root Hub Descriptor A (USBC_HcRhDescriptorA) USB Memory Offset 48h Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 01000002h This register is only reset by a power-on reset (PCIRST#). It is written during system initialization to configure the Root Hub. These bit should not be written during normal operation. Revision 0.8 287 www.national.com USBC_HcRhDescriptorA Register Map 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PowerSwitchingMode NumberDownstreamPorts NoPowerSwitching RSVD DeviceType PowerOnToPowerGoodTime OverCurrentProtectionMode 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 NoOverCurrentProtection Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_HcRhDescriptorA Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:24 PowerOnTo PowerGoodTime R/W RO PowerOn To PowerGood Time. This field value is represented as the number of 2 ms intervals, ensuring that the power switching is effective within 2 ms. Only bits [25:24] are implemented as R/W. The remaining bits are read only as 0. It is not expected that these bits be written to anything other than 1h, but limited adjustment is provided. This field should be written to support system implementation. This field should always be written to a non-zero value. 23:13 RSVD R/W RO Reserved. Read/write 0s. NoOverCurrent Protection R/W RO No Over-Current Protection. This bit should be written to support the external system port over-current implementation. 12 0: Over-current status is reported. 1: Over-current status is not reported. 11 OverCurrent ProtectionMode R/W RO Over Current Protection Mode. This bit should be written 0 and is only valid when NoOverCurrentProtection is cleared. 0: Global Over-Current. 1: Individual Over-Current 10 DeviceType RO RO Device Type (Read Only). USB is not a compound device, therefore this field will return 0. 9 NoPower Switching R/W RO No Power Switching. This bit should be written to support the external system port power switching implementation. 0: Ports are power switched. 1: Ports are always powered on. 8 PowerSwitching Mode R/W RO Power Switching Mode. This bit is only valid when NoPowerSwitching is cleared. This bit should be written 0. 0: Global Switching. 1: Individual Switching 7:0 NumberDownstreamPorts www.national.com RO RO Number Downstream Ports (Read Only). USB supports two downstream ports, therefore this field will return 02h. 288 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.5.4.20 Host Controller Root Hub Descriptor B (USBC_HcRhDescriptorB) USB Memory Offset 4Ch Type HCD: R/W HC: RO Reset Value 00000000h This register is only reset by a power-on reset (PCIRST#). It is written during system initialization to configure the Root Hub. These bit should not be written during normal operation. USBC_HcRhDescriptorB Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PortPowerControlMask 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DeviceRemoveable USBC_HcRhDescriptorB Bit Descriptions Bit 31:16 Name HCD HC Description PortPower ControlMask R/W RO Port Power Control Mask. Global-power switching. This field is only valid if NoPowerSwitching is cleared and PowerSwitchingMode is set (individual port switching). When set, the port only responds to individual port power switching commands (Set/ClearPortPower). When cleared, the port only responds to global power switching commands (Set/ClearGlobalPower). 0: Device not removable. 1: Global-power mask. Port Bit relationship - Unimplemented ports are reserved, read/write 0. 0: Reserved 1: Port 1 2: Port 2 ... 15: Port 15 15:0 Device Removeable R/W RO Device Removeable. USB ports default to removable devices. 0: Device not removable. 1: Device removable. Port Bit relationship - Unimplemented ports are reserved, read/write 0. 0: Reserved 1: Port 1 2: Port 2 ... 15: Port 15 5.5.4.21 Host Controller Root Hub Status (USBC_HcRhStatus) USB Memory Offset 50h Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h This register is reset by the UsbReset state. Note: Read back are 0s. Revision 0.8 289 www.national.com 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Dual Function 9 RSVD Dual Function RSVD Dual Function OverCurrentIndicatorChange 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OverCurrentIndicator USBC_HcRhStatus Register Map ClearRemoteWakeupEnable Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_HcRhStatus Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31 ClearRemote WakeupEnable WO RO Clear Remote Wakeup Enable. Writing a 1 to this bit clears DeviceRemoteWakeupEnable. Writing a 0 has no effect. RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. 17 OverCurrent IndicatorChange R/W R/W Over Current Indicator Change. This bit is set when OverCurrentIndicator changes. Writing a 1 clears this bit. Writing a 0 has no effect. 16 Dual Function R/W RO Read: Local Power Status Change. Not supported. Always read 0. 30:18 Write: Set Global Power. Write a 1 issues a SetGlobalPower command to the ports. Writing a 0 has no effect. 15 Dual Function R/W RO Read: Device Remote Wakeup Enable. This bit enables ports' ConnectStatusChange as a remote wakeup event. 0: Disabled. 1: Enabled. Write: Set Remote Wakeup Enable. Writing a 1 sets DeviceRemoteWakeupEnable. Writing a 0 has no effect. 14:2 1 RSVD OverCurrent Indicator R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. R R/W Over Current Indicator. This bit reflects the state of the OVRCUR pin. This field is only valid if NoOverCurrentProtection and OverCurrentProtectionMode are cleared. 0: No over-current condition. 1: Over-current condition. 0 Dual Function R/W RO Read: Local Power Status. Not Supported. Always read 0. Write: Clear Global Power. Writing a 1 issues a ClearGlobalPower command to the ports. Writing a 0 has no effect. 5.5.4.22 Host Controller Root Hub Port Status 1 (USBC_HcRhPortStatus[1]) USB Memory Offset 54h Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h This register is reset by the UsbReset state. Note: There must be a Device Connect detected by the host to be able to set other bits. www.national.com 290 Revision 0.8 4 3 2 1 0 Dual Function 5 Dual Function RSVD Dual Function ConnectStatusChange PortEnableStatusChange 6 Dual Function 7 Dual Function 8 Dual Function 9 RSVD PortSuspendStatusChange PortResetStatusChange RSVD PortOverCurrentIndicatorChange 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 Dual Function USBC_HcRhPortStatus[1] Register Map USBC_HcRhPortStatus[1] Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:21 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. PortReset StatusChange R/W R/W Port Reset Status Change. This bit indicates that the port reset signal has completed. 20 0: Port reset is not complete. 1: Port reset is complete. 19 PortOverCurrent IndicatorChange R/W R/W Port Over Current Indicator Change. This bit is set when OverCurrentIndicator changes. Writing a 1 clears this bit. Writing a 0 has no effect. 18 PortSuspend StatusChange R/W R/W Port Suspend Status Change. This bit indicates the completion of the selective resume sequence for the port. 0: Port is not resumed. 1: Port resume is complete. 17 PortEnable StatusChange R/W R/W Port Enable Status Change. This bit indicates that the port has been disabled due to a hardware event (cleared PortEnableStatus). 0: Port has not been disabled. 1: PortEnableStatus has been cleared. 16 ConnectStatus Change R/W R/W Connect Status Change. This bit indicates a connect or disconnect event has been detected. Writing a 1 clears this bit. Writing a 0 has no effect. 0: No connect/disconnect event. 1: Hardware detection of connect/disconnect event. If DeviceRemoveable is set, this bit resets to 1. 15:10 9 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Low Speed Device Attached. This bit defines the speed of the attached device. It is only valid when CurrentConnectStatus is set. 0: Full Speed device. 1: Low Speed device. Write: Clear Port Power. Writing a 1 clears PortPowerStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. Revision 0.8 291 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_HcRhPortStatus[1] Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 8 Name HCD HC Description Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Power Status. This bit reflects the power state of the port regardless of the power switching mode. 0: Port power is off. 1: Port power is on. Note: If NoPowerSwitching is set, this bit is always read as 1. Write: Set Port Power. Writing a 1 sets PortPowerStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 7:5 4 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Reset Status. 0: Port reset signal is not active. 1: Port reset signal is active. Write: Set Port Reset. Writing a 1 sets PortResetStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 3 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Over Current Indicator. This bit reflects the state of the OVRCUR pin dedicated to this port. This field is only valid if NoOverCurrentProtection is cleared and OverCurrentProtectionMode is set. 0: No over-current condition. 1: Over-current condition. Write: Clear Port Suspend. Writing a 1 initiates the selective resume sequence for the port. Writing a 0 has no effect. 2 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Suspend Status. 0: Port is not suspended. 1: Port is selectively suspended. Write: Set Port Suspend. Writing a 1 sets PortSuspendStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 1 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Enable Status. 0: Port disabled. 1: Port enabled. Write: Set PortEnable. Writing a 1 sets PortEnableStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 0 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Current Connect Status. 0: No device connected. 1: Device connected. Note: If DeviceRemoveable is set (not removable) this bit is always 1. Write: Clear Port Enable. Writing 1 a clears PortEnableStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 5.5.4.23 Host Controller Root Hub Port Status 2 (USBC_HcRhPortStatus[2]) USB Memory Offset 58h Type HCD: R/W HC: R/W Reset Value 00000000h This register is reset by the UsbReset state. Note: There must be a Device Connect detected by the host to be able to set other bits. www.national.com 292 Revision 0.8 4 3 2 1 0 Dual Function 5 Dual Function RSVD Dual Function ConnectStatusChange PortEnableStatusChange 6 Dual Function 7 Dual Function 8 Dual Function 9 RSVD PortSuspendStatusChange PortResetStatusChange RSVD PortOverCurrentIndicatorChange 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 Dual Function USBC_HcRhPortStatus[2] Register Map USBC_HcRhPortStatus[2] Bit Descriptions Bit Name HCD HC Description 31:21 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. PortReset StatusChange R/W R/W Port Reset Status Change. This bit indicates that the port reset signal has completed. 20 0: Port reset is not complete. 1: Port reset is complete. 19 PortOverCurrent IndicatorChange R/W R/W Port Over Current Indicator Change. This bit is set when OverCurrentIndicator changes. Writing a 1 clears this bit. Writing a 0 has no effect. 18 PortSuspend StatusChange R/W R/W Port Suspend Status Change. This bit indicates the completion of the selective resume sequence for the port. 0: Port is not resumed. 1: Port resume is complete. 17 PortEnable StatusChange R/W R/W Port Enable Status Change. This bit indicates that the port has been disabled due to a hardware event (cleared PortEnableStatus). 0: Port has not been disabled. 1: PortEnableStatus has been cleared. 16 ConnectStatus Change R/W R/W Connect Status Change. This bit indicates a connect or disconnect event has been detected. Writing a 1 clears this bit. Writing a 0 has no effect. 0: No connect/disconnect event. 1: Hardware detection of connect/disconnect event. If DeviceRemoveable is set, this bit resets to 1. 15:10 9 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Low Speed Device Attached. This bit defines the speed (and bud idle) of the attached device. It is only valid when CurrentConnectStatus is set. 0: Full speed device. 1: Low Speed device. Write: Clear Port Power. Writing a 1 clears PortPowerStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. Revision 0.8 293 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 USB Register Descriptions (Continued) USBC_HcRhPortStatus[2] Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 8 Name HCD HC Description Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Power Status. This bit reflects the power state of the port regardless of the power switching mode. 0: Port power is off. 1: Port power is on. Note: If NoPowerSwitching is set, this bit is always read as 1. Write: Set Port Power. Writing a 1 sets PortPowerStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 7:5 4 RSVD R/W R/W Reserved. Read/write 0s. Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Reset Status. 0: Port reset signal is not active. 1: Port reset signal is active. Write: Set Port Reset. Writing a 1 sets PortResetStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 3 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Over Current Indicator. This bit reflects the state of the OVRCUR pin dedicated to this port. This field is only valid if NoOverCurrentProtection is cleared and OverCurrentProtectionMode is set. 0: No over-current condition. 1: Over-current condition. Write: Clear Port Suspend. Writing a 1 initiates the selective resume sequence for the port. Writing a 0 has no effect. 2 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Suspend Status. 0: Port is not suspended. 1: Port is selectively suspended. Write: Set Port Suspend. Writing a 1 sets PortSuspendStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 1 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Port Enable Status. 0: Port disabled. 1: Port enabled. Write: Set Port Enable. Writing a 1 sets PortEnableStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. 0 Dual Function R/W R/W Read: Current Connect Status. 0: No device connected. 1: Device connected. If DeviceRemoveable is set (not removable) this bit is always 1. Write: Clear Port Enable. Writing 1 a clears PortEnableStatus. Writing a 0 has no effect. www.national.com 294 Revision 0.8 DIVERSE INTEGRATION LOGIC REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS All registers associated with Diverse Integration Logic (DIVIL) are MSRs: All MSRs are 64 bits, however, some DIVIL MSRs are called out as 32 bits. The DIVIL (MDD) treats writes to the upper 32 bits (i.e., bits [63:32]) of the 32-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs • DIVIL Specific MSRs The Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs are summarized in Table 5-17 and the DIVIL Specific MSRs are summarized in Table 5-18. The reference column in the tables point to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. Some notations in the reference column also point to other chapters. These MSRs are physically located in the DIVIL, but the descriptions are documented with the associated module and are listed here only for completeness. The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. Table 5-17. Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs Summary MSR Address Type 51400000h RO 51400001h Register Name Reset Value Reference GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CAP) 00000000_002DF0xxh Page 299 R/W GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) 00000000_0000F000h Page 300 51400002h R/W GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_SMI) 00000000_00000000h Page 300 51400003h R/W GeodeLink Device Error MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_ERROR) 00000000_00000000h Page 303 51400004h R/W GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_PM) 00000000_00000000h Page 306 51400005h R/W GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_DIAG) 00000000_00000000h Page 307 51400006h51400007h R/W DD Reserved MSRs (DD_MSR_RSVD) (Reads return 1; writes have no effect.) FFFFFFFF_FFFFFFFFh --- Table 5-18. DIVIL Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name 51400008h R/W Local BAR - IRQ Mapper (DIVIL_LBAR_IRQ) Reset Value Reference 00000000_00000000h Page 307 00000000_00000000h Page 308 00000000_00000000h Page 308 00000000_00000000h Page 309 I/O Space - Use of this LBAR is optional. IRQ Mapper is always accessible via MSR space. 51400009h R/W Local BAR - KEL from USB Host Controller 1 (DIVIL_LBAR_KEL1) Memory Space - First of two ways to access KEL. KEL operation is not dependent on KEL1 or KEL2 access. 5140000Ah R/W Local BAR - KEL from USB Host Controller 2 (DIVIL_LBAR_KEL2) Memory Space - Second of two ways to access KEL. KEL operation is not dependent on KEL1 or KEL2 access. 5140000Bh R/W Local BAR - SMB (DIVIL_LBAR_SMB) I/O Space - Local Base Address Register for SMB Controller native registers. Revision 0.8 295 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.6 Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-18. DIVIL Specific MSRs Summary (Continued) MSR Address Type Register Name 5140000Ch R/W Local BAR - GPIO and ICFs (DIVIL_LBAR_GPIO) Reset Value Reference 00000000_00000000h Page 310 00000000_00000000h Page 311 00000000_00000000h Page 311 00000000_00000000h Page 312 00000000_00000000h Page 313 00000000_00000000h Page 313 00000000_00000000h Page 313 00000000_00000000h Page 313 04000003h Page 315 00000x7xh Page 316 00000000h Page 318 00000000h Page 318 I/O Space - Local Base Address Register for GPIOs and ICFs. 5140000Dh R/W Local BAR - MFGPTs (DIVIL_LBAR_MFGPT) I/O Space - Local Base Address Register for MFGPTs. 5140000Eh R/W Local BAR - ACPI (DIVIL_LBAR_ACPI) I/O Space - Local Base Address Register for MFGPTs. 5140000Fh R/W Local BAR - Power Management Support (DIVIL_LBAR_PMS) I/O Space - Local Base Address Register for Power Management Support registers. 51400010h R/W Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 0 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH0) Local Base Address Register for Flash Controller, Chip Select 0. 51400011h R/W Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 1 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH1) Local Base Address Register for Flash Controller, Chip Select 1. 51400012h R/W Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 2 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH2) Local Base Address Register for Flash Controller, Chip Select 2. 51400013h R/W Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 3 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH3) Local Base Address Register for Flash Controller, Chip Select 3. 51400014h R/W Legacy I/O Space Controls (DIVIL_LEG_IO) Legacy I/O space controls. 51400015h R/W Ball Options Control (DIVIL_BALL_OPTS) Controls IDE and LPC pin options. 51400016h R/W Soft IRQ (DIVIL_SOFT_IRQ) Software generated IRQ. 51400017h R/W Soft Reset (DIVIL_SOFT_RESET) Software generated RESET. 51400018h R/W NOR Flash Control (NORF_CTL) 00000000h Page 502 (Flash spec) 51400019h R/W NOR Flash Timing for Chip Selects 0 and 1 (NORTF_T01) 07770777h Page 504 (Flash spec) 5140001Ah R/W NOR Flash Timing for Chip Selects 2 and 3 (NORTF_T23) 07770777h Page 505 (Flash spec) www.national.com 296 Revision 0.8 Table 5-18. DIVIL Specific MSRs Summary (Continued) MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 5140001Bh R/W NAND Flash Data Timing MSR (NANDF_DATA) 07770777h Page 505 (Flash spec) 5140001Ch R/W NAND Flash Control Timing (NANDF_CTL) 00000777h Page 506 (Flash spec) 5140001Dh R/W Flash Reserved (NANDF_RSVD) 00000000h Page 507 (Flash spec) 5140001Eh R/W Access Control DMA Request (DIVIL_AC_DMA) 00000000h Page 318 5140001Fh R/W Keyboard Emulation Logic Control Register (KELX_CTL) 00000010h Page 348 (KEL spec) 51400020h R/W IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y and Z Select Low (PIC_[Y/Z]SEL_LOW) 00000000h Page 333 (PIC spec) 51400021h R/W IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y Select High (PIC_YSEL_HIGH) 00000000h Page 334 (PIC spec) 51400022h R/W IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Z Select Low (PIC_ZSEL_LOW) 00000000h Page 333 (PIC spec) 51400023h R/W IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Z Select High (PIC_ZSEL_HIGH) 00000000h Page 334 (PIC spec) 51400024h R/W IRQ Mapper Primary Mask (PIC_IRQM_PRIM) 0000FFFFh Page 334 (PIC spec) 51400025h R/W IRQ Mapper LPC Mask (PIC_IRQM_LPC) 00000000h Page 335 (PIC spec) 51400026h RO IRQ Mapper Extended Interrupt Request Status Low (PIC_XIRR_STS_LOW) xxxxxxxxh Page 335 (PIC spec) 51400027h RO IRQ Mapper Extended Interrupt Request Status High (PIC_XIRR_STS_HIGH) xxxxxxxxh Page 337 (PIC spec) 51400028h R/W MFGPT IRQ Mask (MFGPT_IRQ) 00000000h Page 467 (MFGPT spec) 51400029h R/W MFGPT NMI and Reset Mask (MFGPT_NR) 00000000h Page 469 (MFGPT spec) 5140002Ah R/W MFGPT Reserved (MFGPT_RSVD) 00000000h Page 471 (MFGPT spec) 5140002Bh WO MFGPT Clear Setup Test (MFGPT_SETUP) 00000000h Page 471 (MFGPT spec) 5140002Ch5140002Fh R/W Reserved. Reads return 1. Writes have no effect. FFFFFFFFh --- 51400030h RO Floppy Port 3F2h Shadow (FLPY_3F2_SHDW) xxh Page 321 (Floppy spec) 51400031h RO Floppy Port 3F7h Shadow (FLPY_3F7_SHDW) xxh Page 321 (Floppy spec) 51400032h RO Floppy Port 372h Shadow (FLPY_3F2_SHDW) xxh Page 322 (Floppy spec) 51400033h RO Floppy Port 377h Shadow (FLPY_377_SHDW) xxh Page 322 (Floppy spec) 51400034h RO PIC Shadow (PIC_SHDW) xxh Page 337 (PIC spec) 51400035h R/W Reserved. Reads return 1. Writes have no effect. FFFFFFFFh --- Revision 0.8 297 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-18. DIVIL Specific MSRs Summary (Continued) MSR Address Type 51400036h RO 51400037h Reset Value Reference PIT Shadow (PIT_SHDW) 00h Page 324 (PIT spec) R/W PIT Count Enable (PIT_CNTRL) 03h Page 324 (PIT spec) 51400038h R/W UART1 Primary Dongle and Modem Interface (UART[1]_MOD) 0xh Page 363 (UART spec) 51400039h R/W UART1 Secondary Dongle and Status (UART[1]_DONG) xxh Page 364 (UART spec) 5140003Ah R/W UART1 Interface Configuration (UART[1]_CONF) 42h Page 365 (UART spec) 5140003Bh R/W UART1 Reserved MSR (UART1_RSVD_MSR) Reads return 1; writes have no effect. 11h --- 5140003Ch R/W UART2 Primary Dongle and Modem Interface (UART[2]_MOD) 0xh Page 363 (UART spec) 5140003Dh R/W UART2 Secondary Dongle and Status (UART[2]_DONG) xxh Page 364 (UART spec) 5140003Eh R/W UART2 Interface Configuration (UART[2]_CONF) 42h Page 365 (UART spec) 5140003Fh R/W UART2 Reserved MSR (UART2_RSVD_MSR) Reads return 1; writes have no effect. 11h --- 51400040h R/W DMA Mapper (DMA_MAP) 0000h Page 403 (DMA spec) 51400041h RO DMA Shadow Channel 0 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH0) 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400042 RO DMA Shadow Channel 1 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH1) 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400043 RO DMA Shadow Channel 2 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH2) 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400044 RO DMA Shadow Channel 3 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH3) 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400045h RO DMA Shadow Channel 4 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH4] 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400046h RO DMA Shadow Channel 5 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH5) 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400047h RO DMA Shadow Channel 6 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH6) 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400048h RO DMA Shadow Channel 7 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH7) 00xxh Page 404 (DMA spec) 51400049h RO DMA Shadow Mask (DMA_MSK_SHDW) 00FFh Page 405 (DMA spec) 5140024Ah R/W Reserved MSR (RSVD_MSR) - Reads return 1; writes have no effect. 11h --- 5140024Bh R/W Reserved MSR (RSVD_MSR) - Reads return 1; writes have no effect. 11h --- 5140004Ch RO LPC Address Error (LPC_EADDR) 00000000h Page 419 (LPC spec) www.national.com Register Name 298 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-18. DIVIL Specific MSRs Summary (Continued) MSR Address Type 5140004Dh Register Name Reset Value Reference RO LPC Error Status (LPC_ESTAT) 00000000h Page 419 (LPC spec) 5140004Eh R/W LPC Serial IRQ Control (LPC_SIRQ) 00000000h Page 420 (LPC spec) 5140004Fh R/W LPC Reserved (LPC_RSVD) 00000000h Page 420 (LPC spec) 51400050h R/W PMC Logic Timer (PMC_LTMR) 00000000h Page 479 (PMC spec) 51400051h R/W PMC Reserved (PMC_RSVD) 00000000h Page 479 (PMC spec) 51400052h51400053h R/W Reserved MSR (RSVD_MSR) - Reads return 1; writes have no effect. 11h --- 51400054h R/W RTC RAM Lock (RTC_RAM_LOCK) 00h Page 422 (RTC spec) 51400055h R/W RTC Date of Month Alarm Offset (RTC_DOMA_OFFSET) 00h Page 422 (RTC spec) 51400056h R/W RTC Month Alarm Offset (RTC_MONA_OFFSET) 00h Page 423 (RTC spec) 51400057h R/W RTC Century Offset (RTC_CEN_OFFSET) 00h Page 423 (RTC spec) 51400058h514000FFh R/W Reserved MSR (RSVD_MSR) - Reads return 1; writes have no effect. 11h --- 5.6.1 Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs 5.6.1.1 GeodeLink Device Capabilities MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CAP) MSR Address 51400000h Type RO Reset Value 00000000_002DF0xxh DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CAP Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD DEV_ID 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 REV_ID DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. 23:8 DEV_ID Device ID. Identifies module (2DF0h). 7:0 REV_ID Revision ID. Identifies module revision. See CS5535 I/O Companion Device Errata document for value. Revision 0.8 299 www.national.com 5.6.1.2 GeodeLink Device Master Configuration MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CONFIG) MSR Address 51400001h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_0000F000h DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 9 8 7 RSVD 6 5 4 3 PRI 2 1 0 PID RSVD NON_COH_RD DISCARD RSVD NON_COH_WR 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 FIX_PREFETCH Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_GLD_MSR_CONFIG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:19 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 18:16 FIX_PREFETCH Fixed Read Prefetch Policy. 000: None. Each read takes a complete trip to memory. 001: Initial read 08 bytes. Read next 8 only when requested. 010: Initial read 16 bytes. Read next 16 only when requested. 011: Initial read 32 bytes. Read next 32 only when requested. 100: Initial read 32 bytes. Read next 32 when 16 bytes left. 101, 110, and 111: Reserved. 15:14 DISCARD Read Prefetch Discard Policy. 00: Reserved. 01: Discard all data not taken under current local bus grant. 10: Discard all data on any local bus transaction. 11: Discard all data on any local bus write transaction. Always use this value. 13 NON_COH_WR Non-Coherent Write. 0: Write requests are coherent. 1: Write requests are non-coherent. Always use this value. 12 NON_COH_RD Non-Coherent Read. 0: Read requests are coherent. 1: Read requests are non-coherent. Always use this value. 11:7 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 6:4 PRI Priority Level. Always write 0. RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Returns 0. PID Priority ID. Always write 0. 3 2:0 5.6.1.3 GeodeLink Device SMI MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_SMI) MSR Address 51400002h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.3 "MSR Address 2: SMI Control" on page 67 for further SMI/ASMI generation details.) www.national.com 300 Revision 0.8 DIVIL_GLD_MSR_SMI Register Map UART2_SSMI_FLAG UART1_SSMI_FLAG PORTA_INIT_ASMI_FLAG PORTA_A20_ASMI_FLAG KEL_INIT_ASMI_FLAG PM_ASMI_FLAG PIC_ASMI_FLAG KEL_EE_ASMI_FLAG SHTDWN_ASMI_FLAG HLT_ASMI_FLAG 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 UART2_SSMI_EN UART1_SSMI_EN PORTA_INIT_ASMI_EN PORTA_A20_ASMI_EN KEL_INIT_ASMI_EN PM_ASMI_EN PIC_ASMI_EN KEL_EE_ASMI_EN SHTDWN_ASMI_EN HLT_ASMI_EN LPC_SSMI_EN DMA_SSMI_EN KEL_A20_ASMI_EN PM2_CNT_SSMI_EN PM1_CNT_SSMI_FLAG PM1_CNT_SSMI_EN RSVD LPC_SSMI_FLAG 7 RSVD 8 DMA_SSMI_FLAG 9 KEL_A20_ASMI_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD PM2_CNT_SSMI_FLAG RSVD 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 DIVIL_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:48 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 47 PM1_CNT_SSMI_ FLAG Power Management 1 Control Register SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated on a write to PM1_CNT (ACPI I/O Offset 08h). Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PM1_CNT_SSMI_EN (bit 15) must be high to generate SSMI and set flag. 46 PM2_CNT_SSMI_ FLAG Power Management 2 Control Register SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated on a write to PM2_CNT (ACPI I/O Offset 0Ch). Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PM2_CNT_SSMI_EN (bit 14) must be high to generate SSMI and set flag. 45 KEL_A20_ASMI_ FLAG KEL Gate A20 ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated in the KEL due to keyboard gate A20 signal change. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. KELA20_ASMI_EN (bit 13) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 44 DMA_SSMI_ FLAG DMA SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated on the 8237s during DMA. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. DMA_SSMI_EN (bit 12) must be high to generate SSMI and set flag. (Also see Section 5.6.2.14 "Access Control DMA Request (DIVIL_AC_DMA)" on page 318.) 43 LPC_SSMI_FLAG LPC SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated on the LPC during DMA. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. LPC_SSMI_EN (bit 11) must be high to generate SSMI and set flag. (Also see Section 5.6.2.14 "Access Control DMA Request (DIVIL_AC_DMA)" on page 318.) 42 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 41 UART2_SSMI_ FLAG UART2 SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated on UART2 during DMA. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. UART2_SSMI_EN (bit 9) must be high to generate SSMI and set flag. (Also see Section 5.6.2.14 "Access Control DMA Request (DIVIL_AC_DMA)" on page 318.) 40 UART1_SSMI_ FLAG UART1 SSMI Flag. If high, records that an SSMI was generated on UART1 during DMA. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. UART1_SSMI_EN (bit 8) must be high to generate SSMI and set flag. (Also see Section 5.6.2.14 "Access Control DMA Request (DIVIL_AC_DMA)" on page 318.) 39 PORTA_INIT_ ASMI_FLAG Port A INIT ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated in the KEL due to an INIT on Port A (092h). Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PORTA_INIT_ASMI_EN (bit 7) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. Revision 0.8 301 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 38 PORTA_A20_ ASMI_FLAG Port A A20 ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated in the KEL due to a A20 change on Port A (092h). Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PORTA_A20_ASMI_EN (bit 6) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 37 KEL_INIT_ASMI_ FLAG KEL INIT ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated in the KEL due to a keyboard INIT sequence. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. KEL_INIT_ASMI_EN (bit 5) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 36 PM_ASMI_FLAG Power Management ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated in the Power Management Logic. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PM_ASMI_EN (bit 4) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 35 PIC_ASMI_FLAG PIC ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated in the Extended PIC Mapper. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. PIC_ASMI_EN (bit 3) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 34 KEL_EE_ASMI_ FLAG KEL Emulation Event ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated in the KEL due to a KEL emulation event. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. KEL_EE_ASMI_EN (bit 2) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 33 SHTDWN_ASMI_ FLAG Shutdown ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated on a Shutdown special cycle. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. SHTDWN_ASMI_EN (bit 1) must be high to generate ASMI and set flag. 32 HLT_ASMI_FLAG Halt ASMI Flag. If high, records that an ASMI was generated on a Halt special cycle. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. HLT_ASMI_EN (bit 0) must be high to generate an ASMI and set flag. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 15 PM1_CNT_SSMI_ EN Power Management 1 Control Register SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable PM1_CNT_SSMI_FLAG (bit 47) and to allow writes to PM1_CNT (ACPI I/O Offset 08h) to generate an SSMI. 14 PM2_CNT_SSMI_ EN Power Management 2 Control Register SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable PM2_CNT_SSMI_FLAG (bit 46) and to allow writes to PM2_CNT (ACPI I/O Offset 0Ch) to generate an SSMI. 13 KEL_A20_ASMI_ EN KEL Gate A20 ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable KEL_A20_ASMI_FLAG (bit 45) and to allow a keyboard gate A20 signal change in the KEL to generate an ASMI. 12 DMA_SSMI_EN DMA SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable DMA_SSMI_FLAG (bit 44) and to allow 8237s during DMA to generate an SSMI. 11 LPC_SSMI_EN LPC SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable LPC_SSMI_FLAG (bit 43) and to allow the LPC to generate an SSMI. 10 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 9 UART2_SSMI_EN UART2 SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable UART2_SSMI_FLAG (bit 41) and to allow UART2 to generate an SSMI. 8 UART1_SSMI_EN UART1 SSMI Enable. Write 1 to enable UART1_SSMI_FLAG (bit 40) and to allow UART1 to generate an SSMI. 7 PORTA_INIT_ ASMI_EN Port A INIT ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable PORTA_INIT_ASMI_FLAG (bit 39) and to allow an INIT on Port A in the KEL to generate an ASMI. 6 PORTA_A20_ ASMI_EN Port A A20 ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable PORTA_A20_ASMI_FLAG (bit 38) and to allow an A20 change on Port A in the KEL to generate an ASMI. 5 KEL_INIT_ASMI_ EN KEL INIT ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable KEL_INIT_ASMI_FLAG (bit 37) and to allow a keyboard INIT sequence in the KEL to generate an ASMI. 4 PM_ASMI_EN Power Management ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable PM_ASMI_FLAG (bit 36) and to allow the Power Management Logic to generate an ASMI. 31:16 www.national.com 302 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_GLD_MSR_SMI Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 3 PIC_ASMI_EN PIC ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable PIC_ASMI_FLAG (bit 35) and to allow the Extended PIC Mapper to generate an ASMI. 2 KEL_EE_ASMI_ EN KEL Emulation Event ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable KEL_EE_ASMI_FLAG (bit 34) and to allow the KEL to generate an ASMI. 1 SHTDWN_ASMI_ EN Shutdown ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable SHTDWN_ASMI_FLAG (bit 33) and to allow a Shutdown special cycle to generate an ASMI. 0 HLT_ASMI_EN Halt ASMI Enable. Write 1 to enable HLT_ASMI_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow a Halt special cycle to generate an ASMI. 5.6.1.4 GeodeLink Device Error MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_ERROR) MSR Address 51400003h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h The flags are set by internal conditions. The internal conditions are enabled if the EN bit is 1. Reading the FLAG bit returns the value; writing 1 clears the flag; writing 0 has no effect. (See Section 3.8.4 "MSR Address 3: Error Control" on page 71 for further on ERR generation details.) DIVIL_GLD_MSR_ERROR Register Map DECODE_ERR_FLAG REPEAT_SSMI_ERR_EN LB_ADAP_BAD_FLAG MAST_RESP_EXCEP_EN 2 1 0 DECODE_ERR_EN 3 LB_ADAP_BAD_EN MAST_RESP_EXCEP_FLAG 4 REPEAT_SSMI_ERR_FLAG LPC_SLV_ERR_FLAG LPC_DMA_ERR_FLAG 5 LPC_SLV_ERR_EN RSVD LPC_MAST_ERR_FLAG 6 LPC_MAST_ERR_EN 7 UART1_DMA_ERR_EN UART2__DMA_ERR_EN RSVD LPC_DMA_ERR_EN DMA_DMA_ERR_EN RSVD NAND_DIST_ERR_EN LPC_EXCP_EN SHTDWN_ERR_EN RSVD DMA_DMA_ERR_FLAG 8 RSVD 9 NAND_DIST_ERR_FLAG 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 SHTDWN_ERR_FLAG UART1_DMA_ERR_FLAG RSVD UART2_DMA_ERR_FLAG RSVD RSVD IO_LBAR_DECODE_ERR_FLAG UART1XUART2_ERR_FLAG RSVD MEM_LBAR_DECODE_ERR_FLAG 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 DIVIL_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:55 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. UART1XUART2_ ERR_FLAG UART1 and UART2 Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a collision between the two UARTs. UART1 and UART2 are set to the same I/O address base. No chip selects are asserted and DECODE_ERR_FLAG (bit 33) is asserted. DECODE_ERR_EN (bit 1) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 54 Revision 0.8 303 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 53 MEM_LBAR_ DECODE_ ERR_FLAG Memory LBAR Decode Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a collision between one memory LBAR and another memory LBAR hit. In this case, NO chip select is generated and DECODE_ERR_FLAG (bit 33) is asserted. DECODE_ERR_EN (bit 1) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 52 IO_LBAR_ DECODE_ERR_ FLAG I/O LBAR Decode Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a collision between one I/O LBAR and another I/O LBAR hit. In this case, NO chip select is generated and DECODE_ERR_FLAG (bit 33) is asserted.DECODE_ERR_EN (bit 1) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 47 SHTDWN_ ERR_FLAG Shutdown Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a Shutdown cycle occurrence. SHTDWN_ERR_EN (bit 15) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 46 NAND_DIST_ ERR_FLAG NAND Distract Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a NAND distract error. NAND_DIST_ERR_EN (bit 14) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 45 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 44 DMA_DMA_ ERR_FLAG 8237 DMA Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to an access on the 8237s during DMA. DMA_DMA_ERR_EN (bit 12) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 43 LPC_DMA_ ERR_FLAG LPC DMA Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to an LPC access during DMA. LPC_DMA_ERR_EN (bit 11) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 42 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 41 UART2_DMA_ ERR_FLAG UART2 DMA Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a UART2 access during DMA. UART2_DMA_ERR_EN (bit 9) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 40 UART1_DMA_ ERR_FLAG UART1 DMA Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a UART1 access during DMA. UART1_DMA_ERR_EN (bit 8) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 37 LPC_MAST_ ERR_FLAG LPC Master Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated on the LPC due to a Master <=> GeodeLink Adapter transaction. LPC_MAST_ERR_EN (bit 5) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 36 LPC_SLV_ ERR_FLAG LPC Slave Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated on the LPC due to a Slave <=> GeodeLink Adapter transaction. LPC_SLV_ERR_EN (bit 4) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 35 MAST_RESP_ EXCEP_FLAG Master Response Exception Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to the GeodeLink Adapter detecting the EXCEP bit set in a local bus master response packet. MAST_RESP_EXCP_EN (bit 3) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 34 REPEAT_SSMI_ ERR_FLAG Repeat SSMI Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to a second SSMI occurring on an address before the first was cleared. REPEAT_SSMI_ERR_EN (bit 2) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 33 DECODE_ERR_ FLAG Decode Error Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated during the address decode cycle due to one or more devices being decoded to the same address. Bits [54:52] record further information about this type of error. DECODE_ERR_EN (bit 1) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. 51:48 39:38 www.national.com 304 Revision 0.8 DIVIL_GLD_MSR_ERROR Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 32 LB_ADAP_BAD_ FLAG LBus Adapter Bad Flag. If high, records that an ERR was generated due to the GeodeLink Adapter detected an error at the GeodeLink interface (e.g., packet type not supported). LB_ADAP_BAD_EN (bit 0) must be high to generate ERR and set flag. Write 1 to clear; writing 0 has no effect. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 16 LPC_EXCP_EN LPC Exception Enable. Write 1 to enable EXCEP bit in response packet for LPC address errors. 15 SHTDWN_ ERR_EN Shutdown Error Enable. Write 1 to enable SHTDWN_ERR_FLAG (bit 47) and to allow a Shutdown cycle to generate an ERR. 14 NAND_DIST_ ERR_EN NAND Distract Error Enable. Write 1 to enable NAND_DIST_ERR_FLAG (bit 46) and to allow a NAND distract error to generate an ERR. 13 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 12 DMA_DMA_ ERR_EN 8237 DMA Error Enable. Write 1 to enable DMA_DMA_ERR_FLAG (bit 44) and to allow an access on the 8237s during DMA to generate an ERR. 11 LPC_DMA_ ERR_EN LPC DMA Error Enable. Write 1 to enable LPC_DMA_ERR_FLAG (bit 43) and to allow an LPC access during DMA an LPC access during DMA to generate an ERR. 10 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 9 UART2_DMA_ ERR_EN UART2 DMA Error Enable. Write 1 to enable UART2_DMA_ERR_FLAG (bit 41) and to allow UART2 accesses during DMA to generate an ERR. 8 UART1_DMA _ERR_EN UART1 DMA Error Enable. Write 1 to enable UART1_DMA_ERR_FLAG (bit 40) and to allow UART1 accesses during DMA to generate an ERR. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 5 LPC_MAST_ ERR_EN LPC Master Error Enable. Write 1 to enable LPC_MAST_ERR_FLAG (bit 37) and to allow Master <=> GeodeLink Adapter transactions to generate an ERR. 4 LPC_SLV_ ERR_EN LPC Slave Error Enable. Write 1 to enable LPC_SLV_ERR_FLAG (bit 36) and to allow Slave <=> GeodeLink Adapter transactions to generate an ERR. 3 MAST_RESP_ EXCEP_EN Master Response Exception Enable. Write 1 to enable MAST_RESP_EXCEP_FLAG (bit 35) and to allow when the GeodeLink Adapter detects the EXCEP bit set in a local bus master response packet to generate an ERR. 2 REPEAT_SSMI_ ERR_EN Repeat SSMI Error Enable. Write 1 to enable REPEAT_SSMI_ERR_FLAG (bit 34) and to allow when a second SSMI occurs on an address before the first was cleared to generate an ERR. 1 DECODE_ ERR_EN Decode Error Enable. Write 1 to enable FLAG bits [54:52] and to allow when one or more devices are decoded to the same address during the address decode cycle to generate an ERR. 0 LB_ADAP_ BAD_EN LBus Adapter Bad Enable. Write 1 to enable LB_ADAP_BAD_FLAG (bit 32) and to allow when the GeodeLink Adapter detects an error at the GeodeLink interface to generate an ERR. 31:17 7:6 Revision 0.8 305 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.6.1.5 GeodeLink Device Power Management MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_PM) MSR Address 51400004h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h DIVIL_GLD_MSR_PM Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 6 RSVD 5 4 3 2 1 0 PMODE0 7 PMODE1 8 PMODE2 9 PMODE4 PMODE5 PMODE6 PMODE7 PMODE8 PMODE9 PMODE10 RSVD PMODE11 PMODE14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PMODE15 Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:48 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 47:46 RSVD Reserved. Do not write. Reads return 0. 45:44 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 43:36 RSVD Reserved. Do not write. Reads return 0. 35 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 34:32 RSVD Reserved. Do not write. Reads return 0. 31:30 PMODE15 Power Mode for GPIO Standby Power Domain 32 kHz Clock Domain. 00: Disable clock gating. Clocks are always on. 01: Enable active hardware clock gating. Clock goes off whenever this module’s circuits are not busy. 10: Reserved. 11: Reserved. 29:28 PMODE14 Power Mode for GPIO Working Power Domain 32 kHz Clock Domain. See bits [31:30] for decode. 27:24 RSVD Reserved. Reads will return the value written. 23:22 PMODE11 Power Mode for MFGPT Standby Power Domain 32 kHz Clock Domain. See bits [31:30] for decode. 21:20 PMODE10 Power Mode for MFGPT Working Power Domain 32 kHz Clock Domain. See bits [31:30] for decode. 19:18 PMODE9 Power Mode for MFGPT Working power domain 14 MHz Clock Domain. See bits [31:30] for decode. 17:16 PMODE8 Power Mode for LPC. See bits [31:30] for decode. 15:14 PMODE7 Power Mode for UART2. See bits [31:30] for decode. 13:12 PMODE6 Power Mode for UART1. See bits [31:30] for decode. 11:10 PMODE5 Power Mode for System Management Bus Controller. See bits [31:30] for decode. 9:8 PMODE4 Power Mode for DMA (8237). See bits [31:30] for decode. 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. 5:4 PMODE2 Power Mode for PIT (8254). See bits [31:30] for decode. 3:2 PMODE1 Power Mode for GeodeLink Adapter Local Bus Interface and Local Bus Clock. See bits [31:30] for decode. www.national.com 306 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_GLD_MSR_PM Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 1:0 PMODE0 Power Mode for GeodeLink Adapter GeodeLink Interface. See bits [31:30] for decode. 5.6.1.6 GeodeLink Device Diagnostic MSR (DIVIL_GLD_MSR_DIAG) MSR Address 51400005h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h This register is reserved for internal use by National and should not be written to. 5.6.2 DIVIL Specific MSRs Refer to Section 4.6 "Diverse Integration Logic" on page 96 for an explanation and block diagram of the address comparison mechanism of the base address and the address lines. Note that the I/O space 04FFh-0000h is off limits to I/O LBARs. 5.6.2.1 Local BAR - IRQ Mapper (DIVIL_LBAR_IRQ) MSR Address 51400008h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The IRQ Mapper takes 32 bytes of I/O space. Use of this LBAR is optional. The IRQ Mapper is always available via MSR space. DIVIL_LBAR_IRQ Register Map RSVD IO_MASK RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD LBAR_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 9 BASE_ADDR 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_MSR_LBAR_IRQ Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:49 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 48 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 47:44 IO_MASK I/O Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97. 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 32 0: Disable address detection by this LBAR. 1: Enable address detection by this LBAR. 31:20 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 16 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. Revision 0.8 307 www.national.com DIVIL_MSR_LBAR_IRQ Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 15:5 BASE_ADDR Base Address in I/O Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97. 4:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 5.6.2.2 Local BAR - KEL from USB Host Controller 1 (DIVIL_LBAR_KEL1) MSR Address 51400009h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The KEL registers take 4 kB of memory space. However, only offsets 100h, 104h, 108h, and 10Ch contain registers. All other writes are “don’t care” and reads return 0. This is one of two KEL LBARs. Each LBAR “hits” to the same KEL. This allows USB Host Controllers at different addresses to be used, if desired. Both LBARs do NOT have to be used. DIVIL_LBAR_KEL1 Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 MEM_MASK LBAR_EN Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 BASE_ADDR 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_LBAR_KEL1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:44 MEM_MASK Memory Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 32 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:12 BASE_ADDR Base Address in Memory Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 11:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 5.6.2.3 Local BAR - KEL from USB Host Controller 2 (DIVIL_LBAR_KEL2) MSR Address 5140000Ah Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The KEL registers take 4 kB of memory space. However, only offsets 100h, 104h, 108h, and 10Ch contain registers. All other writes are “don’t care” and reads return 0. This is one of two KEL LBARs. Each LBAR "hits" to the same KEL. This allows USB Host Controllers at different addresses to be used if desired. Both LBARs do NOT have to be used. www.national.com 308 Revision 0.8 DIVIL_LBAR_KEL2 Register Map MEM_MASK LBAR_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 BASE_ADDR 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_LBAR_KEL2 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:44 MEM_MASK Memory Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 32 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:12 BASE_ADDR Base Address in Memory Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 11:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 5.6.2.4 Local BAR - SMB (DIVIL_LBAR_SMB) MSR Address 5140000Bh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The SMB Controller takes 8 bytes of I/O space. DIVIL_LBAR_SMB Register Map RSVD IO_MASK RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD LBAR_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 9 8 BASE_ADDR 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_LBAR_SMB Bit Name Description 63:49 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 48 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 47:44 IO_MASK I/O Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. Revision 0.8 309 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_LBAR_SMB Bit Name Description 32 LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:17 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 16 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 15:3 BASE_ADDR Base Address in I/O Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 2:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 5.6.2.5 Local BAR - GPIO and ICFs (DIVIL_LBAR_GPIO) MSR Address 5140000Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The GPIOs and ICFs take 256 bytes of I/O space. DIVIL_LBAR_GPIO Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD IO_MASK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD BASE_ADDR LBAR_EN Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_LBAR_GPIO Bit Description Bit Name Description 63:49 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 48 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 47:44 IO_MASK I/O Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 32 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:17 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 16 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 15:8 BASE_ADDR Base Address in I/O Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 7:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. www.national.com 310 Revision 0.8 5.6.2.6 Local BAR - MFGPTs (DIVIL_LBAR_MFGPT) MSR Address 5140000Dh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The MFGPTs take 64 bytes of I/O space. DIVIL_LBAR_MFGPT Register Map RSVD IO_MASK RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD LBAR_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 9 BASE_ADDR 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_LBAR_MFGPT Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:49 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 47:44 48 IO_MASK I/O Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 32 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:17 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 16 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. BASE_ADDR Base Address in I/O Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 5 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Default value is 0. Note that this bit is reserved and performs no function. 4:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 15:6 5.6.2.7 Local BAR - ACPI (DIVIL_LBAR_ACPI) MSR Address 5140000Eh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The ACPI registers take 32 bytes of I/O space. Offsets are as follows: 00h PM1_STS 02h PM1_EN 08h PM1_CNT 0Ch PM2_CNT 10h PM_TMR 14h Reserved 18h GPE0_STS 1Ch GPE0_EN Revision 0.8 311 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_LBAR_ACPI Register Map RSVD IO_MASK RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD LBAR_EN 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 BASE_ADDR 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_LBAR_ACPI Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:49 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 48 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 47:44 IO_MASK I/O Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 32 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:17 16 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 15:5 BASE_ADDR Base Address in I/O Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 4:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 5.6.2.8 Local BAR - Power Management Support (DIVIL_LBAR_PMS) MSR Address 5140000Fh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 for operational details. The Power Management Support registers take 128 bytes of I/O space. DIVIL_LBAR_PMS Register Map 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 RSVD IO_MASK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD BASE_ADDR LBAR_EN Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD DIVIL_LBAR_PMS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 63:49 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 48 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. www.national.com 312 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_LBAR_PMS Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 47:44 IO_MASK I/O Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:33 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 32 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:17 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 16 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 15:7 BASE_ADDR Base Address in I/O Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 6:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 5.6.2.9 Local BAR - Flash Chip Select (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH[x]) See Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 1 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH1) for operational details. MSR Address 51400011h Type R/W The NAND Flash control registers take 16 bytes of I/O Reset Value 00000000_00000000h space. NOR Flash maps into some multiple of 4k bytes. Uses FLASH_CS1# and FLASH_CE1#. There are two forms of this LBAR depending on the space, memory or I/O, Flash Device 0 is mapped into. Space is determined by bit 34 of the LBAR. Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 2 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH2) MSR Address 51400012h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 0 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH0) MSR Address 51400010h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Uses FLASH_CS2# and FLASH_CE2#. Local BAR - Flash Chip Select 3 (DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH3) MSR Address 51400013h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000_00000000h Uses FLASH_CS0# and FLASH_CE0#. Uses FLASH_CS3# and FLASH_CE3#. DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH[x] Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD BASE_ADDR Revision 0.8 9 8 7 6 5 BASE_ADDR 4 3 2 1 LBAR_EN LBAR_EN RSVD 1 MEM_MASK 0 IO_MASK RSVD RSVD NOR_NAND NOR_NAND 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 0 RSVD RSVD 313 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) DIVIL_LBAR_FLSH[x] Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description If bit 34 = 0; I/O Mapped 63:49 48 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. IO_MASK I/O Address Mask Value. For standard NAND Flash, bits [48:36] should be set to all 1s. Add 0s from the LSBs as needed for OEM specific devices that take more than 16 bytes.See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 35 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0. 34 MEM_IO Memory or I/O Mapped. 47:36 0: LBAR is I/O mapped). 1: LBAR is memory mapped. 33 NOR_NAND NOR or NAND. 0: Use NOR chip select (FLASH_CS[x]#). 1: Use NAND chip select (FLASH_CE[x]#). 32 LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:17 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0. 16 RSVD Reserved. Always write 0. 15:4 BASE_ADDR Base Address in I/O Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 3:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0. If bit 34 = 1; Memory Mapped 63:44 MEM_MASK Memory Address Mask Value. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 43:35 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0. MEM_IO Memory or I/O Mapped. 34 0: LBAR is I/O mapped. 1: LBAR is memory mapped. 33 NOR_NAND NOR or NAND. 0: Use NOR chip select (FLASH_CS[x]#). 1: Use NAND chip select (FLASH_CE[x]#). 32 LBAR_EN LBAR Enable. 0: Disable LBAR. 1: Enable LBAR. 31:12 BASE_ADDR Base Address in Memory Space. See discussion in Section 4.6.1 "LBARs and Comparators" on page 97 11:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0. www.national.com 314 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.6.2.10 Legacy I/O Space Controls (DIVIL_LEG_IO) MSR Address 51400014h Type R/W Reset Value 04000003h 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RTC_ENABLE0 UART1_ENABLE[2:0] RSVD UART2_ENABLE[2:0] RSVD LPC_DISABLE_IO 0x000F_XXXX LPC_DISABLE_MEM 0x000E_XXXX SPEC_CYC_MD RSVD RESET_BAD_EN RESET_SHUT_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RTC_ENABLE1 DIVIL_LEG_IO Register Map RSVD DIVIL_LEG_IO Bit Description Bit Name Description 31 RESET_SHUT_ EN Shutdown Reset Enable If set, this bit will enable the issuance of the RESET_OUT# signal upon the detection of a PCI Shutdown cycle from the GX2 (or any other PCI master). The reason for the reset is recorded in the PM_SSC register (PMS I/O Offset 54h[9], see Section 5.18.3.19 on page 499 for bit details). 0: Do not issue RESET_OUT# upon detection of Shutdown cycle. 1: Issue RESET_OUT# upon detection of Shutdown cycle. 30 RESET_BAD_EN Bad Transaction Reset Enable If set, this bit will enable a system wide reset via the RESET_OUT# signal, if the GeodeLink Adapter detects a ‘bad’ GeodeLink transaction. The reason for the reset is recorded in the PM_SSC register (PMS I/O Offset 54h[12], see Section 5.18.3.19 on page 499 for bit details). 0: Do not issue RESET_OUT# upon detection of a “bad” transaction. 1: Issue RESET_OUT# upon detection of a “bad” transaction 29 RSVD Reserved: This bit should always be written to 0. 28 SPEC_CYC_MD Special Cycle Mode. Allows selection of how the DIVIL decodes Local bus address for GeodeLink special cycles. (Defaults 0.) 0: Decode is per the PCI spec: 00h: Shutdown. 01h: Halt. All other values ignored. 1: Decode is per the x86 standard: 00h: Shutdown. 02h: Halt. All other values ignored. 27 0X000E_XXXX 000Exxxxh Remap. If high, memory addresses in the range of 000Exxxxh are remapped to FFFExxxxh. Applies to addresses except the LBAR comparators and other address decode functions. (Defaults 0.) 26 0X000F_XXXX 000Fxxxxh Remap. If high, memory addresses in the range of 000Fxxxxh are remapped to FFFFxxxxh. Applies to addresses except the LBAR comparators and other address decode functions. (Defaults 1.) 25 LPC_DISABLE_ MEM LPC Disable Memory. If high, discard all memory writes which would otherwise go to the LPC by default. For reads, return all 1s. “Default” means any address not explicitly mapped into on-chip memory space or claimed by an LBAR hit. Revision 0.8 315 www.national.com DIVIL_LEG_IO Bit Description (Continued) Bit Name Description 24 LPC_DISABLE_ IO LPC Disable I/O. If high, discard all I/O writes which would otherwise go to the LPC by default. For reads, return all 1s. “Default” means any address not explicitly mapped into on-chip legacy I/O space or claimed by an LBAR hit. 23 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0. UART2_ENABLE [2:0] UART2 Enable. 22:20 0xx: UART1 not enabled into DIVIL I/O space; use LPC. 100: UART1 enabled into I/O base 02E8h (COM4). 101: UART1 enabled into I/O base 02F8h (COM3). 110: UART1 enabled into I/O base 03E8h (COM2). 111: UART1 enabled into I/O base 03F8h (COM1). If UART1 and UART2 are set to the same I/O base, a decode error is generated on access. 19 18:16 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0 UART1_ENABLE [2:0] UART1 Enable. 0xx: UART1 not enabled into DIVIL I/O space; use LPC. 100: UART1 enabled into I/O base 02E8h (COM4). 101: UART1 enabled into I/O base 02F8h (COM3). 110: UART1 enabled into I/O base 03E8h (COM2). 111: UART1 enabled into I/O base 03F8h (COM1). If UART1 and UART2 are set to the same I/O base, a decode error is generated on access. 15:2 1 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. Defaults to 0 RTC_ENABLE1 Real-Time Clock Map 1. Routes I/O port locations 072h and 073h to the internal RTC high RAM or LPC. 0: RTC high RAM routed to LPC bus. 1: RTC high RAM routed to internal RTC. (Default) 0 RTC_ENABLE0 Real-Time Clock Map 0. Routes I/O port locations 070h and 071h internal RTC or LPC. Writes to port 070h (Index) are always routed internal. The MSB is used to establish the NMI enable state. 0: RTC routed to LPC bus. 1: RTC routed to internal RTC. (Default) 5.6.2.11 Ball Options Control (DIVIL_BALL_OPTS) MSR Address 51400015h Type R/W Reset Value 00000x7xh www.national.com 316 4 PIN_OPT_LDRQ 3 2 1 0 RSVD 5 PIN_OPT_IDE 6 PRI_BOOT_LOC[1:0] 7 PIN_OPT_LIRQ 8 PIN_OPT_LALL RSVD 9 BOOT_OP_LATCHED 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD DIVIL_BALL_OPTS Register Map SEC_BOOT_LOC Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) Revision 0.8 DIVIL_BALL_OPTS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:12 RSVD Reserved. Reads always return 0. Writes have no effect; by convention, always write 0. 11:10 SEC_BOOT_LOC Secondary Boot Location. Determines which chip select asserts for addresses in the range F00F0000h to F00F3FFFh. Defaults to the same value as boot option: 00: LPC ROM. 01: Reserved . 10: Flash. 11: FirmWare Hub. 9:8 BOOT_OP_ LATCHED (RO) Latched Value of Boot Option (Read Only). For values, see Table 2-5 "Boot Options Selection" on page 29. 7 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. By convention, always write 0. Defaults low. 6 PIN_OPT_LALL All LPC Pin Option Selection. 0: All LPC pins become GPIOs including LPC_DRQ# and LPC_SERIRQ. Ball H3 functions as GPIO22 Ball H2 functions as GPIO16 Ball J2 functions as GPIO17 Ball J1 functions as GPIO18 Ball K1 functions as GPIO19 Ball G1 functions as GPIO20 Ball G2 functions as GPIO21 1: All LPC pins are controlled by the LPC controller except LPC_DRQ# and LPC_SERIRQ use are determined by bits [5:4]. (Default) Ball H3 functions as LPC_FRAME# Ball H2 functions as LPC_AD0 Ball J2 functions as LPC_AD1 Ball J1 functions as LPC_AD2 Ball K1 functions as LPC_AD3 When this bit is low, there is an implied high for LPC_DISABLE_IO and LPC_DISABLE_MEM in MSR_LEG_IO (MSR 51400014h). 5 PIN_OPT_LIRQ LPC_SERIRQ or GPIO21 Pin Option Selection. 0: Ball G2 is GPIO21. 1: Ball G2 functions as LPC_SERIRQ. (Default) 4 PIN_OPT_LDRQ LPC_DRQ# or GPIO20 Pin Option Selection. 0: Ball G1 is GPIO20. 1: Ball G2 functions as LPC_DRQ#. (Default) 3:2 PRI_BOOT_LOC [1:0] Primary Boot Location. Determines which chip select asserts for addresses at or above F0000000h, except those in the range specified by SEC_BOOT_LOC (bits [11:10]). Defaults to the same value as boot option. 00: LPC ROM. 01: Reserved . 10: Flash. 11: FirmWare Hub. 1 RSVD Reserved. Reads return value written. By convention, always write 0. Defaults low. 0 PIN_OPT_IDE IDE or Flash Controller Pin Function Selection. 0: All IDE pins associated with Flash Controller. Default if BOS[1:0] = 10. 1: All IDE pins associated with IDE Controller. Default if BOS[1:0] = 00 or 11. IDE_IRQ0 is multiplexed with GPIO2; therefore, this bit has no affect with regards to programming IDE_IRQ0. Revision 0.8 317 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.6.2.12 Soft IRQ (DIVIL_SOFT_IRQ) MSR Address 51400016h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h DIVIL_SOFT_IRQ Register Map 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SOFT_IRQ 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD DIVIL_SOFT_IRQ Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:1 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. SOFT_IRQ Soft IRQ. This bit can be written high or low. and is connected to the soft IRQ input of the IRQ Mapper. Hence, writing high causes an interrupt while writing low clears it. Reads return the value written. 0 5.6.2.13 Soft Reset (DIVIL_SOFT_RESET) MSR Address 51400017h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h DIVIL_SOFT_RESET Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SOFT_RESET Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) RSVD DIVIL_SOFT_RESET Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:1 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. SOFT_RESET Soft Reset. A bit that when written to a 1 causes the system to hard reset. Reads return 0. 0 5.6.2.14 Access Control DMA Request (DIVIL_AC_DMA) MSR Address 5140001Eh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h The controls below only affect memory and I/O accesses to the target slaves. MSR accesses are not affected. However, MSR writes during DMA may have unintended side effects. Note that when in demand or block mode, the UART reads and writes are disallowed; no corresponding mechanism exists to allow UART controller reads or writes during UART activity. If attempted, CPU writes have no effect and the CPU reads return all 1s. www.national.com 318 Revision 0.8 The enables default to 0. If 0, reads or writes to the indicated device are blocked during activity. This may cause an SSMI or ERROR if enabled by the associated MSR. Thus, writes are discarded and reads return all Fs. If an enable is 0, a chip select for the indicated device is not asserted. If an enable is 1, the indicated device is available for access during activity. AC_DMA_R AC_DMA_W 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 AC_DMA_LPC_MR RSVD RSVD 8 AC_DMA_LPC_MW 9 AC_DMA_LPC_IR 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 AC_DMA_LPC_IW DIVIL_AC_DMA Register Map DIVIL_AC_DMA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:18 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 17 AC_DMA_W Allow DMA Writes during DMA Activity. If set, this bit allows writes to the DMA controller during DMA activity (data transfers). This mechanism may be used, among other things, to abort a hung DMA transfer. If clear, DMA controller writes are locked out during DMA activity. 16 AC_DMA_R Allow DMA Reads during DMA Activity. If set, this bit allows reads from the DMA controller during DMA activity (data transfers). If clear, DMA controller reads are locked out during DMA activity. RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 3 AC_DMA_LPC_ IW LPC I/O Writes during LPC DMA If set, this bit allows I/O writes to the LPC bus during LPC DMA transfer. If clear, I/O writes are locked out during LPC DMA transfers. 2 AC_DMA_LPC_IR LPC I/O Reads during LPC DMA. If set, this bit allows I/O reads to the LPC bus during LPC DMA transfer. If clear, I/O reads are locked out during LPC DMA transfers. 1 AC_DMA_LPC_ MW LPC Memory Writes during LPC DMA. If set, this bit allows memory writes to the LPC bus during LPC DMA transfer. If clear, memory writes are locked out during LPC DMA transfers. 0 AC_DMA_LPC_ MR LPC Memory Reads during LPC DMA. If set, this bit allows memory reads to the LPC bus during LPC DMA transfer. If clear, memory reads are locked out during LPC DMA transfers. 15:4 Revision 0.8 319 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DIVIL Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 5.7 FLOPPY PORT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The registers for the Floppy Port are divided into two sets: MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 "Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs" on page 299.) All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the Floppy Port Specific MSRs are called out as 8 bits. The Floppy Port treats writes to the upper 56 bits (i.e., bits [63:8]) of the 8-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. Table 5-19 summarizes the Floppy Port Specific MSRs. • Floppy Port Specific MSRs The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 The reference column in the tables point to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. Table 5-19. Floppy Port Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type 51400030h RO 51400031h Reset Value Reference Floppy Port 3F2h Shadow (FLPY_3F2_SHDW) xxh Page 321 RO Floppy Port 3F7h Shadow (FLPY_3F7_SHDW) xxh Page 321 51400032h RO Floppy Port 372h Shadow (FLPY_3F2_SHDW) xxh Page 322 51400033h RO Floppy Port 377h Shadow (FLPY_377_SHDW) xxh Page 322 www.national.com Register Name 320 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 Floppy Port Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.7.1 Floppy Port Specific MSRs 5.7.1.1 Floppy Port 3F2h Shadow (FLPY_3F2_SHDW) MSR Address 51400030h Type RO Reset Value xxh FLPY_3F2_SHDW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FLPY_PORT_3F2_VAL FLPY_3F2_SHDW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 FLPY_PORT_3F2 _VAL Floppy Port Shadow Register Value Last Written to I/O Port 3F2h. Required for support of FDC power ON/OFF and Zero Volt Suspend/Resume coherency. This register is a copy of an I/O register that cannot safely be directly read. Value in register is not deterministic of when the register is being read. It is provided here to assist in a Save-to-Disk operation. 5.7.1.2 Floppy Port 3F7h Shadow (FLPY_3F7_SHDW) MSR Address 51400031h Type RO Reset Value xxh FLPY_3F7_SHDW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FLPY_PORT_3F7_VAL FLPY_3F7_SHDW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 FLPY_PORT_3F7 _VAL Floppy Port Shadow Register Value Last Written to I/O Port 3F7h. Required for support of FDC power ON/OFF and Zero Volt Suspend/Resume coherency. This register is a copy of an I/O register that cannot safely be directly read. Value in register is not deterministic of when the register is being read. It is provided here to assist in a Save-to-Disk operation. Revision 0.8 321 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 Floppy Port Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.7.1.3 Floppy Port 372h Shadow (FLPY_3F2_SHDW) MSR Address 51400032h Type RO Reset Value xxh FLPY_3F2_SHDW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FLPY_PORT_372_VAL FLPY_3F2_SHDW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 FLPY_PORT_372 _VAL Floppy Port Shadow Register Value Last Written to I/O Port 372h. Required for support of FDC power ON/OFF and Zero Volt Suspend/Resume coherency. This register is a copy of an I/O register that cannot safely be directly read. Value in register is not deterministic of when the register is being read. It is provided here to assist in a Save-to-Disk operation. 5.7.1.4 Floppy Port 377h Shadow (FLPY_377_SHDW) MSR Address 51400033h Type RO Reset Value xxh FLPY_377_SHDW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 FLPY_PORT_377_VAL FLPY_377_SHDW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 FLPY_PORT_377 _VAL Floppy Port Shadow Register Value Last Written to I/O Port 377h. Required for support of FDC power ON/OFF and Zero Volt Suspend/Resume coherency. This register is a copy of an I/O register that cannot safely be directly read. Value in register is not deterministic of when the register is being read. It is provided here to assist in a Save-to-Disk operation. www.national.com 322 Revision 0.8 PROGRAMMABLE INTERVAL TIMER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The registers for the Programmable Interval Timer (PIT) are divided into three sets: All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the PIT Specific MSRs are called out as 8 bits. The PIT treats writes to the upper 56 bits (i.e., bits [63:8]) of the 64-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. The PIT Specific MSRs are summarized in Table 5-20. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) • PIT Specific MSRs The Native registers associated with the PIT are summarized in Table 5-21 and are accessed as I/O Addresses. • PIT Native Registers The reference column in the tables point to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. Table 5-20. PIT Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type 51400036h RO 51400037h R/W Register Name Reset Value Reference PIT Shadow (PIT_SHDW) 00h Page 324 PIT Count Enable (PIT_CNTRL) 03h Page 324 Reset Value Reference Table 5-21. PIT Native Registers Summary I/O Address Type Width (Bits) 40h W 8 PIT Timer 0 Counter - System (PIT_TMR0_CNTR_SYS) 00h Page 325 R 8 PIT Timer 0 Status - System (PIT_TMR0_STS_SYS) 00h Page 325 W 8 PIT Timer 1 Counter - Refresh (PIT_TMR1_CNTR_RFSH) 00h Page 326 R 8 PIT Timer 1 Status - Refresh (PIT_TMR1_STS_RFSH) 00h Page 327 W 8 PIT Timer 2 Counter - Speaker (PIT_TMR2_CNTR_SPKR) 00h Page 327 R 8 PIT Timer 2 Status - Speaker (PIT_TMR2_STS_SPKR) 00h Page 328 43h R/W 8 PIT Mode Control Word (PIT_MODECTL_WORD) 00h Page 329 61h R/W 8 Port B Control (PIT_PORTBCTL) 00h Page 330 41h 42h Revision 0.8 Register Name 323 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIT Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.8.1 PIT Specific MSRs 5.8.1.1 PIT Shadow (PIT_SHDW) MSR Address 51400036h Type RO Reset Value 00h PIT_SHDW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PIT_SHDW PIT_SHDW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 PIT_SHDW (RO) PIT Shadow (Read Only). This 8-bit port sequences through the following list of shadowed Programmable Interval Timer registers. At power on, a pointer starts at the first register in the list and consecutively reads to increment through it. A write to this register resets the read sequence to the first register. Each shadow register in the sequence contains the last data written to that location. The read sequence for this register is: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Counter 0 LSB (least significant byte) Counter 0 MSB Counter 1 LSB Counter 1 MSB Counter 2 LSB Counter 2 MSB Counter 0 Command Word Counter 1 Command Word Counter 2 Command Word Note: The LSB / MSB of the count is the Counter base value, not the current value. In the case of counter mode 3, the LSB of the count is the Counter base value - 1 (even count value). Bits [7:6] of the command words are not used. 5.8.1.2 PIT Count Enable (PIT_CNTRL) MSR Address 51400037h Type R/W Reset Value 03h PIT_CNTRL Register Map 7 6 5 4 RSVD 3 PIT_CNTR_ ACC_DLY_EN 2 RSVD 1 0 PIT_CNTR1_ EN PIT_CNTR0_ EN PIT_CNTRL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 RSVD Reserved. Read zero. Write “don’t care”. www.national.com 324 Revision 0.8 PIT_CNTRL Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 4 Name Description PIT_CNTR_ACC_ DLY_EN PIT Counter Access Delay Enable. Used as an access delay enable for the read and write operations of the PIT counters. This bit introduces a 1 µs delay between successive reads and/or writes of the PIT counters. This bit is intended to ensure that older, DOS-based programs that rely on the PIT timing access to be 1 µs still function properly. 0: Disable access delay. 1: Enable access delay. 3:2 1 RSVD Reserved. Read zero. Write “don’t care”. PIT_CNTR1_EN PIT Counter 1 Enable. 0: Sets GATE1 input low. 1: Sets GATE1 input high. 0 PIT_CNTR0_EN PIT Counter 0 Enable. 0: Sets GATE0 input low. 1: Sets GATE0 input high. Note: 5.8.2 PIT_CNTR2_EN (PIT Counter 2 Enable) bit is located at I/O Address 61h[0] (see Section 5.8.2.8 "Port B Control (PIT_PORTBCTL)" on page 330). PIT Native Registers 5.8.2.1 PIT Timer 0 Counter - System (PIT_TMR0_CNTR_SYS) I/O Address 40h Type W Reset Value 00h PIT_TMR0_CNTR_SYS_ Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 0 CNTR0 PIT_TMR0_CNTR_SYS Bit Description Bit Name Description 7:0 CNTR0 Counter 0 Value. Provides the base counter value. 5.8.2.2 PIT Timer 0 Status - System (PIT_TMR0_STS_SYS) I/O Address 40h Type R Reset Value 00h PIT_TMR0_STS_SYS Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 1101xx10 or 0010xxxx CNTR0_CUR_COUNT I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 11110xx10 CNTR0_OUT Revision 0.8 CNTR0_LOAD CNTR0_RW CNTR0_MODE 325 BCD www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIT Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 PIT Register Descriptions (Continued) PIT_TMR0_STS_SYS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 1101xx10 or 0010xxxx 7:0 CNTR0_CUR_ COUNT Counter 0 Current Count. Reports the current count value in Counter 0. I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 11110xx10 7 CNTR0_OUT Counter 0 Output. Returns current state of counter output signal. 6 CNTR0_LOAD Counter 0 Loaded. Last count written is loaded? 0: Yes. 1: No. 5:4 CNTR0_RW Counter 0 Read /Write Mode. 00: Counter latch command. 01: R/W LSB only. 10: R/W MSB only. 11: R/W LSB, followed by MSB. 3:1 CNTR0_MODE Counter 0 Current Mode. 000: Interrupt on terminal count. 001: Programmable one-shot. 010, 110: Rate generator. 011, 111: Square wave generator. 100: Software triggered pulse generator. 101: Hardware triggered pulse generator. 0 BCD BCD Mode. 0: Binary. 1: BCD (binary coded decimal). 5.8.2.3 PIT Timer 1 Counter - Refresh (PIT_TMR1_CNTR_RFSH) I/O Address 41h Type W Reset Value 00h PIT_TMR1_CNTR_RFSH Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CNTR1 PIT_TMR1_CNTR_RFSH Bit Description Bit Name Description 7:0 CNTR1 Counter 1 Value. Provides the base counter value. www.national.com 326 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIT Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.8.2.4 PIT Timer 1 Status - Refresh (PIT_TMR1_STS_RFSH) I/O Address 41h Type R Reset Value 00h PIT_TMR1_STS_RFSH Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 1101x1x0 or 0110xxxx CNTR1_CUR_COUNT I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 1110x1x0 CNTR1_OUT CNTR1_LOAD CNTR1_RW CNTR1_MODE BCD PIT_TMR1_STS_RFSH Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 1101x1x0 or 0110xxxx 7:0 CNTR1_CUR_ COUNT Counter 1 Current Count. Reports the current count value in Counter 1. I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 1110x1x0 7 CNTR1_OUT Counter 1 Output. Returns current state of counter output signal. 6 CNTR1_LOAD Counter 1 Loaded. Last count written is loaded? 0: Yes. 1: No. 5:4 CNTR1_RW Counter 1 Read /Write Mode. 00: Counter latch command. 01: R/W LSB only. 10: R/W MSB only. 11: R/W LSB, followed by MSB. 3:1 CNTR1_MODE Counter 1 Current Mode. 000: Interrupt on terminal count. 001: Programmable one-shot. 010, 110: Rate generator. 011, 111: Square wave generator. 100: Software triggered pulse generator. 101: Hardware triggered pulse generator. 0 BCD BCD Mode. 0: Binary. 1: BCD (binary coded decimal). 5.8.2.5 PIT Timer 2 Counter - Speaker (PIT_TMR2_CNTR_SPKR) I/O Address 42h Type W Reset Value 00h PIT_TMR2_CNTR_SPKR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CNTR2 Revision 0.8 327 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIT Register Descriptions (Continued) PIT_TMR2_CNTR_SPKR Bit Description Bit Name Description 7:0 CNTR2 Counter 2 Value. Provides the base counter value. 5.8.2.6 PIT Timer 2 Status - Speaker (PIT_TMR2_STS_SPKR) I/O Address 42h Type R Reset Value 00h PIT_TMR2_STS_SPKR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 11011xx0 or 1000xxxx CNTR2_CUR_COUNT I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 11101xx0 CNTR2_OUT CNTR2_LOAD CNTR2_RW CNTR2_MODE BCD PIT_TMR2_STS_SPKR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 11011xx0 or 1000xxxx 7:0 CNTR2_CUR_ COUNT Counter 2 Current Count. Reports the current count value in Counter 2. I/O Address 43h[7:0] = 11101xx0 7 CNTR2_OUT Counter 2 Output. Returns current state of counter output signal. 6 CNTR2_LOAD Counter 2 Loaded. Last count written is loaded? 0: Yes. 1: No. 5:4 CNTR2_RW Counter 2 Read /Write Mode. 00: Counter latch command. 01: R/W LSB only. 10: R/W MSB only. 11: R/W LSB, followed by MSB. 3:1 CNTR2_MODE Counter 2 Current Mode. 000: Interrupt on terminal count. 001: Programmable one-shot. 010, 110: Rate generator. 011, 111: Square wave generator. 100: Software triggered pulse generator. 101: Hardware triggered pulse generator. 0 BCD BCD Mode. 0: Binary. 1: BCD (binary coded decimal). www.national.com 328 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIT Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.8.2.7 PIT Mode Control Word (PIT_MODECTL_WORD) I/O Address 43h Type R/W Reset Value 00h PIT_MODECTL_WORD Register Map 7 6 CNTR_SEL 5 4 3 R/W_MODE 2 CNTR_MODE 1 0 BCD PIT_MODECTL_WORD Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 CNTR_SEL Counter Select. 00: Counter 0. 01: Counter 1. 10: Counter 2. 11: Read-back Command (Note 1). 5:4 RW_MODE Current Read/Write Mode. 00: Counter latch command (Note 2). 01: R/W LSB only. 10: R/W MSB only. 11: R/W LSB, followed by MSB. 3:1 CNTR_MODE Current Counter Mode. 000: Interrupt on terminal count. 001: Programmable one-shot. 010, 110: Rate generator. 011, 111: Square wave generator. 100: Software triggered pulse generator. 101: Hardware triggered pulse generator. 0 BCD BCD Mode. 0: Binary. 1: BCD (binary coded decimal). Note 1. If bits [7:6] = 11: Register functions as Read Status Command Bit 5 = Latch Count, Bit 4 = Latch Status, Bit 3 = Select Counter 2, Bit 2 = Select Counter 1, Bit 1 = Select Counter 0, and Bit 0 = Reserved. Note 2. If bits [5:4] = 00: Register functions as Counter Latch Command Bits [7:6] = Selects Counter, and [3:0] = Don’t care. Revision 0.8 329 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIT Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.8.2.8 Port B Control (PIT_PORTBCTL) I/O Address 61h Type R/W Reset Value 00h PIT_PORTBCTL Register Map 7 6 RSVD 5 4 OUT2_STS TOGGLE 3 2 RSVD 1 0 PIT_CNTR2_ SPKR PIT_CNTR2_ EN PIT_PORTBCTL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Read 0. Write “don’t care”. 5 OUT2_STS (RO) PIT Counter 2 Out State (Read Only). This bit reflects the current status of the PIT Counter 2 output (OUT2). Write “don’t care”. 4 TOGGLE (RO) Toggle (Read Only). This bit toggles on every falling edge of Counter 1 output (OUT1). Write “don’t care”. RSVD Reserved. Read 0. Write “don’t care”. PIT_CNTR2_ SPKR PIT Counter 2 (Speaker). 3:2 1 0: Forces speaker output to 0. 1: Allows Counter 2 output (OUT2) to pass to the speaker (i.e., the AC_BEEP signal; a mux option on GPIO1). 0 PIT_CNTR2_EN PIT Counter 2 Enable. 0: Sets GATE2 input low. 1: Sets GATE2 input high. www.national.com 330 Revision 0.8 PROGRAMMABLE INTERRUPT CONTROLLER REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The registers for the Programmable Interrupt Controller (PIC) are divided into three sets: upper 32/56 bits (i.e., bits [63:32/63:8]) of the 64-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) The PIC Specific MSRs are also accessible in I/O space via MSR_LBAR_IRQ (MSR 51400008h), except for MSR_PIC_SHDW (MSR 51400034h). See Section 5.6.2.1 "Local BAR - IRQ Mapper (DIVIL_LBAR_IRQ)" on page 307. • PIC Specific MSRs • PIC Native Registers The Native registers associated with the PIC are summarized in Table 5-23 on page 332 and are accessed as I/O Addresses. The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. The reference column in the summary tables point to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the PIC Specific MSRs are called out as 32 and 8 bits. The PIC treats writes to the Table 5-22. PIC Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address PIC I/O Offset Type Register Name 51400020h 00h R/W 51400021h 04h 51400022h Reset Value Reference IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y Select Low (PIC_YSEL_LOW) 00000000h Page 333 R/W IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y Select High (PIC_YSEL_HIGH) 00000000h Page 334 08h R/W IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Z Select Low (PIC_ZSEL_LOW) 00000000h Page 333 51400023h 0Ch R/W IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Z Select High (PIC_ZSEL_HIGH) 00000000h Page 334 51400024h 10h R/W IRQ Mapper Primary Mask (PIC_IRQM_PRIM) 0000FFFFh Page 334 51400025h 14h R/W IRQ Mapper LPC Mask (PIC_IRQM_LPC) 00000000h Page 335 51400026h 18h RO IRQ Mapper Extended Interrupt Request Status Low (PIC_XIRR_STS_LOW) xxxxxxxxh Page 335 51400027h 1Ch RO IRQ Mapper Extended Interrupt Request Status High (PIC_XIRR_STS_HIGH) xxxxxxxxh Page 337 51400034h --- RO PIC Shadow (PIC_SHDW) xxh Page 338 Revision 0.8 331 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.9 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-23. PIC Native Registers Summary I/O Address Type Width (Bits) 020h WO 8 0A0h WO 021h Reset Value Reference Initialization Command Word 1 (PIC_ICW1) - Master 00h Page 340 8 Initialization Command Word 1 (PIC_ICW1) - Slave 00h Page 340 WO 8 Initialization Command Word 2 (PIC_ICW2) - Master 00h Page 341 0A1h WO 8 Initialization Command Word 2 (PIC_ICW2) - Slave 00h Page 341 021h WO 8 Initialization Command Word 3 (PIC_ICW3) - Master 00h Page 341 0A1h WO 8 Initialization Command Word 3 (PIC_ICW3) - Slave 00h Page 341 021h WO 8 Initialization Command Word 4 (PIC_ICW4) - Master 00h Page 341 0A1h WO 8 Initialization Command Word 4 (PIC_ICW4) - Slave 00h Page 341 021h R/W 8 Operation Command Word 1 / Interrupt Mask (PIC_OCW1/IMR) - Master 00h Page 342 0A1h R/W 8 Operation Command Word 1 / Interrupt Mask (PIC_OCW1/IMR) - Slave 00h Page 342 020h WO 8 Operation Command Word 2 (PIC_OCW2) - Master 00h Page 342 0A0h WO 8 Operation Command Word 2 (PIC_OCW2) - Slave 00h Page 342 020h WO 8 Operation Command Word 3 (PIC_OCW3) - Master 00h Page 343 0A0h WO 8 Operation Command Word 3 (PIC_OCW3) - Slave 00h Page 343 020h RO 8 Interrupt Request Register (PIC_IRR) - Master 00h Page 344 0A0h RO 8 Interrupt Request Register (PIC_IRR) - Slave 00h Page 344 020h RO 8 In-Service Register (PIC_ISR) - Master 00h Page 344 0A0h RO 8 In-Service Register (PIC_ISR) - Slave 00h Page 344 4D0h R/W 8 Interrupt Edge/Level Select 1 (PIC_INT_SEL1) 00h Page 345 4D1h R/W 8 Interrupt Edge/Level Select 2 (PIC_INT_SEL2) 00h Page 346 www.national.com Register Name 332 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.9.1 PIC Specific MSRs 5.9.1.1 IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y and Z Select Low (PIC_[Y/Z]SEL_LOW) IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y Select Low (PIC_YSEL_LOW) MSR Address 51400020h PIC I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Z Select Low (PIC_ZSEL_LOW) MSR Address 51400022h PIC I/O Offset 08h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h PIC_[Y/Z]SEL_LOW Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 MAP_[Y/Z]7 MAP_[Y/Z]6 MAP_[Y/Z]5 MAP_[Y/Z]4 MAP_[Y/Z]3 9 8 MAP_[Y/Z]2 7 6 5 4 MAP_[Y/Z]1 3 2 1 0 MAP_[Y/Z]0 PIC_[Y/Z]SEL_LOW Bit Descriptions Bit 31:28 Name Description MAP_[Y/Z]7 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 7. 0000: Disable 0001: IG1 0010: IG2 0011: IG3 0100: IG4 0101: IG5 0110: IG6 0111: IG7 1000: IG8 1001: IG9 1010: IG10 1011: IG11 1100: IG12 1101: IG13 1110: IG14 1111: IG15 For Unrestricted Y and Z Inputs [7:0] sources, see Table 4-13 and Table 4-14 on page 105. 27:24 MAP_[Y/Z]6 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 6. See bits [31:28] for decode. 23:20 MAP_[Y/Z]5 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 5. See bits [31:28] for decode. 19:16 MAP_[Y/Z]4 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 4. See bits [31:28] for decode. 15:12 MAP_[Y/Z]3 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 3. See bits [31:28] for decode. 11:8 MAP_[Y/Z]2 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 2. See bits [31:28] for decode. 7:4 MAP_[Y/Z]1 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 1. See bits [31:28] for decode. 3:0 MAP_[Y/Z]0 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 0. See bits [31:28] for decode. Revision 0.8 333 www.national.com 5.9.1.2 IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y and Z Select High (PIC_[Y/Z]SEL_HIGH) IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Y Select High (PIC_YSEL_HIGH) MSR Address 51400021h PIC I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h IRQ Mapper Unrestricted Z Select High (PIC_ZSEL_HIGH) MSR Address 51400023h PIC I/O Offset 0Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h PIC_[Y/Z]SEL_HIGH Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 MAP_[Y/Z]15 MAP_[Y/Z]14 MAP_[Y/Z]13 MAP_[Y/Z]12 MAP_[Y/Z]11 9 8 MAP_[Y/Z]10 7 6 5 4 MAP_[Y/Z]9 3 2 1 0 MAP_[Y/Z]8 PIC_[Y/Z]SEL_HIGH Bit Descriptions Bit 31:28 Name Description MAP_[Y/Z]_15 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 15. 0000: Disable 0001: IG1 0010: IG2 0011: IG3 0100: IG4 0101: IG5 0110: IG6 0111: IG7 1000: IG8 1001: IG9 1010: IG10 1011: IG11 1100: IG12 1101: IG13 1110: IG14 1111: IG15 For Unrestricted Y and Z Inputs [7:0] sources, see Table 4-13 and Table 4-14 on page 105. 27:24 MAP_[Y/Z]_14 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 14. See bits [31:28] for decode. 23:20 MAP_[Y/Z]_13 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 13. See bits [31:28] for decode. 19:16 MAP_[Y/Z]_12 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 12. See bits [31:28] for decode. 15:12 MAP_[Y/Z]_11 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 11. See bits [31:28] for decode. 11:8 MAP_[Y/Z]_10 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 10. See bits [31:28] for decode. 7:4 MAP_[Y/Z]_9 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 9. See bits [31:28] for decode. 3:0 MAP_[Y/Z]_8 Map Unrestricted [Y/Z] Input 8. See bits [31:28] for decode. 5.9.1.3 IRQ Mapper Primary Mask (PIC_IRQM_PRIM) MSR Address 51400024h PIC I/O Offset 10h Type R/W Reset Value 0000FFFFh 7 6 5 4 3 2 PRIM7_MSK PRIM6_MSK PRIM5_MSK PRIM4_MSK PRIM3_MSK RSVD 1 0 PRIM0_MSK 8 PRIM1_MSK 9 PRIM8_MSK PRIM10_MSK PRIM11_MSK PRIM12_MSK PRIM13_MSK RSVD PRIM14_MSK 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PRIM9_MSK PIC_IRQM_PRIM Register Map PRIM15_MSK Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_IRQM_PRIM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:16 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. www.national.com 334 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_IRQM_PRIM Bit Descriptions Bit 15:0 Name Description PRIM[15:0]_MSK Primary Inputs [15:0] Mask. Bits [15:0] correspond to Primary Inputs [15:0], bit 2 is reserved (i.e., no IRQ2). 0: Mask the interrupt source. 1: Do not mask the interrupt source. For Primary Inputs [15:0] sources, see Table 4-12 on page 104. 5.9.1.4 IRQ Mapper LPC Mask (PIC_IRQM_LPC) MSR Address 51400025h PIC I/O Offset 14h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 LPC8_EN LPC7_EN LPC6_EN LPC5_EN LPC4_EN LPC3_EN RSVD LPC1_EN LPC0_EN LPC10_EN LPC11_EN LPC12_EN LPC13_EN RSVD LPC14_EN LPC15_EN 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 LPC9_EN PIC_IRQM_LPC Register Map PIC_IRQM_LPC Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:16 RSVD Reserved. Set to 0. 15:0 LPC[15:0]_EN LPC Inputs [15:0] Enable. Bits [15:0] correspond to LPC Inputs [15:0], bit 2 is don’t care (i.e., no IRQ2). 0: Disable interrupt source. 1: Enable interrupt source. For LPC Inputs [15:0] sources, see Table 4-12 on page 104. 5.9.1.5 IRQ Mapper Extended Interrupt Request Status Low (PIC_XIRR_STS_LOW) MSR Address 51400026h PIC I/O Offset 18h Type RO Reset Value xxxxxxxxh PIC_XIRR_STS_LOW Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 IG7_STS Revision 0.8 IG6_STS IG5_STS IG4_STS IG3_STS 335 IG2_ STS 9 8 RSVD 7 6 5 IG1_STS 4 3 2 RSVD 1 0 IG0_ STS www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_XIRR_STS_LOW Bit Descriptions Bit 31:28 Name Description IG7_STS Interrupt Group 7 Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 28: Primary Input 7. bit 29: LPC Input 7. bit 30: Unrestricted Y Input 7. bit 31: Unrestricted Source Z Input 7. 27:24 IG6_STS Interrupt Group 6 Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 24: Primary Input 6. bit 25: LPC Input 6. bit 26: Unrestricted Y Input 6. bit 27: Unrestricted Z Input 6. 23:20 IG5_STS Interrupt Group 5 Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 20: Primary Input 5. bit 21: LPC Input 5. bit 22: Unrestricted Y Input 5. bit 23: Unrestricted Z IInput 5. 19:16 IG4_STS Interrupt Group 4 Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 16: Primary Input 4. bit 17: LPC Input 4. bit 18: Unrestricted Y Input 4. bit 19: Unrestricted Z Input 4. 15:12 IG3_STS Interrupt Group 3 Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 12: Primary Input 3. bit 13: LPC Input 3. bit 14: Unrestricted Y Input 3. bit 15: Unrestricted Z Input 3. 11:10 IG2_STS Interrupt Group 2 Status. Reports the status of the two interrupts in this group. bit10: IUnrestricted Y Input 2. bit 11: Unrestricted Z Input 2. 9:8 RSVD Reserved. Always reads 0; no connection to any interrupts. 7:4 IG1_STS Interrupt Group 1 Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 4: Primary Input 1. bit 5: LPC Input 1. bit 6: Unrestricted Y Input 1. bit 7: Unrestricted Z Input 1. 3:2 RSVD Reserved. Always reads 0; no connection to any interrupts. 1:0 IG0_STS Interrupt Group 0 Status. Reports the status of the two interrupts in this group. bit 0: Primary Input 0. bit 1: LPC Input 0. www.national.com 336 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.9.1.6 IRQ Mapper Extended Interrupt Request Status High (PIC_XIRR_STS_HIGH) MSR Address 51400027h PIC I/O Offset 1Ch Type RO Reset Value xxxxxxxxh PIC_XIRR_STS_HIGH Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 IG15_STS IG14_STS IG13_STS IG12_STS IG11_STS 9 IG10_STS 8 7 6 5 IG9_STS 4 3 2 1 0 IG8_STS PIC_XIRR_STS_HIGH Bit Descriptions Bit 31:28 Name Description IG15_STS Group 15 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 28: Primary Input 15. bit 29: LPC Input 15. bit 30: Unrestricted Y Input 15. bit 31: Unrestricted Z Input 15. 27:24 IG14_STS Group 14 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 24: Primary Input 14. bit 25: LPC Input 14. bit 26: Unrestricted Y Input 14. bit 27: Unrestricted Z Input 14. 23:20 IG13_STS Group 13 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 20: Primary Input 13. bit 21: LPC Input 13. bit 22: Unrestricted Y Input 13. bit 23: Unrestricted Z Input 13. 19:16 IG12_STS Group 12 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 16: Primary Input 12. bit 17: LPC Input 12. bit 18: Unrestricted Y Input 12. bit 19: Unrestricted Z Input 12. 15:12 IG11_STS Group 11 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 12: Primary Input 11. bit 13: LPC Input 11. bit 14: Unrestricted Y Input 11. bit 15: Unrestricted Z Input 11. 11:8 IG10_STS Group 10 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 08: Primary Input 10. bit 09: LPC Input 10. bit 10: Unrestricted Y Input 10. bit 11: Unrestricted Z Input 10. 7:4 IG9_STS Group 9 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 4: Primary Input 9. bit 5: LPC Input 9. bit 6: Unrestricted Y Input 9. bit 7: Unrestricted Z Input 9. Revision 0.8 337 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_XIRR_STS_HIGH Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 3:0 IG8_STS Group 8 Interrupt Status. Reports the status of the four interrupts in this group. bit 0: Primary Input 8. bit 1: LPC Input 8. bit 2: Unrestricted Y Input 8. bit 3: Unrestricted Z Input8. 5.9.1.7 PIC Shadow (PIC_SHDW) MSR Address 51400034h Type RO Reset Value xxh PIC_SHDW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PIC_SHDW PIC_SHDW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 PIT_SHDW (RO) PIC Shadow (Read Only). This 8-bit port sequences through the following list of shadowed Programmable Interrupt Controller registers. At power on, a pointer starts at the first register in the list and consecutively reads incrementally through it. A write to this register resets the read sequence to the first register. Each shadow register in the sequence contains the last data written to that location. The read sequence for this register is: 1. PIC1 ICW1. 2. PIC1 ICW2. 3. PIC1 ICW3. 4. PIC1 ICW4 - Bits [7:5] of ICW4 are always 0. 5. PIC1 OCW2 - Bits [6:3] of OCW2 are always 0 (Note 1). 6. PIC1 OCW3 - Bits [7, 4] are 0 and bit [6, 3] are 1. 7. PIC2 ICW1. 8. PIC2 ICW2. 9. PIC2 ICW3. 10. PIC2 ICW4 - Bits [7:5] of ICW4 are always 0. 11. PIC2 OCW2 - Bits [6:3] of OCW2 are always 0 (Note 1). 12. PIC2 OCW3 - Bits [7, 4] are 0 and bit [6, 3] are 1. Note 1. To restore OCW2 to shadow register value, write the appropriate address twice. First with the shadow register value, then with the shadow register value ORed with C0h. www.national.com 338 Revision 0.8 5.9.2 PIC Native Registers There are two separate PIC sub-blocks in the CS5535, connected in a cascaded arrangement, as is required for a PC-compatible system. Each PIC has its own native register set, apart from the MSR registers (unique to the CS5535 architecture), which are common. The master PIC occupies I/O Addresses 020h and 021h, and manages IRQ signals IRQ0 through IRQ7, with IRQ2 claimed as the cascade input for the slave PIC. The slave PIC occupies I/O Addresses 0A0h and 0A1h, and manages IRQ signals IRQ8 through IRQ15. In this description, the two addresses of a PIC are called the Even address (A[0] = 0) and the Odd address (A[0] = 1). The PIC register set addressing is often confusing due to some very severe constraints the PIC had in its earliest history. When it was a separate chip, the package pinout limited it to only one address line. To make up for this, two bits of the data written (bits 3 and 4) sometimes serve an addressing function to select registers. The chip functions in two fundamental modes with respect to register accesses: it is either in Operation Mode (normal operation), or it is in Initialization Mode (being initialized). Different sets of registers are selected in each mode. Operation Mode When the PIC is in Operation Mode, a set of registers may be accessed, called the Operation Command Words (OCWs). These are: • OCW1: The Interrupt Mask register (IMR), may be read or written at any time except during Initialization. • OCW2: A write-only register that is given commands from software. For example, the End of Interrupt command is written here at the end of interrupt service to terminate the blocking of interrupts on the basis of priority. • OCW3: A write-only register that is given a different set of commands from software. For example, it is through this register that software can request images of two internal registers: — IRR: Interrupt Request Register -- shows those IRQs with pending interrupts that have not yet received an Interrupt Acknowledge from the CPU. — ISR: In-Service Register -- shows those IRQs that have received Interrupt Acknowledge, but whose interrupt service routines have not yet completed. Initialization Mode The PIC is placed into its Initialization Mode by a write of a reserved value (xxx1xxxx) to the even-numbered address (master 0020h / slave 00A0h). This is the first of a sequence of writes to a special set of Initialization Control Word registers (ICW1, ICW2, ICW3 and ICW4) that hold permanent settings and are normally touched only while the operating system is booting. 5.9.2.1 Register Addressing Scheme Writing to the Even Address Data Bit 4 Data Bit 3 Access Performed 0 0 In Operation Mode, writes to OCW2, asserting a routine command. 0 1 In Operation Mode, writes to OCW3, asserting a special or diagnostic command. Commands written to OCW3 may request to examine an internal PIC register; if so, this (even) address must be immediately read to retrieve the requested value and terminate the command. See "Reading from the Even Address" below. 1 0 or 1 Triggers Initialization Mode and writes to ICW1. Bit 3 is used as a data bit in this case. Other write and read accesses do not depend directly on this form of addressing. Writing to the Odd Address Operation Mode: Writes to the Interrupt Mask Register: OCW1. Initialization Mode: Three successive writes to this address must immediately follow the write to ICW1 (above), before any other accesses are performed to the PIC. These writes load ICW2, ICW3 and ICW4 in succession, after which the PIC automatically transitions to Operation Mode. Revision 0.8 339 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) Reading from the Even Address (Operation Mode only: the initialization sequence does not involve reading.) Reads from this address are generally for special or diagnostic purposes. The read must be preceded by writing a command to OCW3 (above), to select an internal register to read. This will be one of: • Register IRR: Interrupt Request Register • Register ISR: In-Service Register (Another register, "POLL", historically part of the PIC architecture, is not provided in the CS5535.) Following that command, the read here will return the requested value. Reading from the Odd Address (Operation Mode only: the Initialization sequence does not involve reading.) Always reads from the Interrupt Mask Register: OCW1. Associated External Registers Two additional registers, outside the addresses of the PICs themselves, have been added in South Bridge products to allow individual control of which IRQs are level sensitive vs. edge sensitive. These registers are: Name I/O Address IRQs Controlled INT_SEL1 04D0h IRQ1, IRQ3-7 INT_SEL2 04D1h IRQ8-15 These are directly addressable for read or write at any time. 5.9.2.2 I/O Port Initialization Command Word 1 (PIC_ICW1) Master: 020h Slave: 0A0h Type WO Reset Value 00h PIC_ICW1 Register Map 7 6 5 RSVD 4 3 2 1 0 1 TRIGGER RSVD RSVD RSVD PIC_ICW1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 4 1 Write to 1. Write to 1 to write ICW1 and enter Initialization Mode. (See Section 5.9.2 "PIC Native Registers" on page 339.) 3 TRIGGER Trigger Mode. 0: Edge. 1: Level. 2 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 1 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 0 RSVD Reserved. Write to 1. www.national.com 340 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.9.2.3 I/O Port Initialization Command Word 2 (PIC_ICW2) Master: 021h Slave: 0A1h Type WO Reset Value 00h PIC_ICW2 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 A[7:3] 1 0 RSVD PIC_ICW2 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:3 A[7:3] Address Lines [7:3]. For base vector of interrupt controller. 2:0 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 5.9.2.4 I/O Port Initialization Command Word 3 (PIC_ICW3) Master: 021h Slave: 0A1h Type WO Reset Value 00h PIC_ICW3 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 2 1 0 AUTO_EOI RSVD Master = CASCADE_IRQ; Slave = SLAVE_ID PIC_ICW3 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description CASCADE_IRQ Cascade IRQ. Must be written to 04h. SLAVE_ID Slave ID. Must be written to 02h. Master 7:0 Slave 7:0 5.9.2.5 I/O Port Initialization Command Word 4 (PIC_ICW4) Master: 021h Slave: 0A1h Type WO Reset Value 00h PIC_ICW4 Register Map 7 6 RSVD Revision 0.8 5 4 3 SPEC_NST RSVD 341 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_ICW4 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. SPEC_NST Reserved (Special Fully Nested Mode). Write to 0. RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. AUTO_EOI Auto End of Interrupt. This feature is present, but is not recommended for use. When set to 1, this bit causes the PIC to automatically issue an End of Interrupt internally, immediately after each Interrupt Acknowledge from the CPU. When cleared to 0 (the default), it requires software action (writing to the OCW2 register) to signal End of Interrupt. 4 3:2 1 0: Normal EOI. 1: Auto EOI (not recommended). 0 RSVD Reserved. Write to 1 (8086/8088 mode). 5.9.2.6 I/O Port Operation Command Word 1 / Interrupt Mask (PIC_OCW1/IMR) Master: 021h Slave: 0A1h Type R/W Reset Value 00h PIC_OCW1/IMR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IRQ7_15M IRQ6_14M IRQ5_13M IRQ4_12M IRQ3_11M IRQ2_10M IRQ1_9M IRQ0_8M 1 0 PIC_OCW1/IMR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 IRQ7_15M IRQ7 / IRQ15 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 6 IRQ6_14M IRQ6 / IRQ14 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 5 IRQ5_13M IRQ5 / IRQ13 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 4 IRQ4_12M IRQ4 / IRQ12 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 3 IRQ3_11M IRQ3 / IRQ11 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 2 IRQ2_10M IRQ2 / IRQ10 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 1 IRQ1_9M IRQ1 / IRQ9 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 0 IRQ0_8M IRQ0 / IRQ8 Mask. 0: Not Masked; 1: Masked. 5.9.2.7 I/O Port Operation Command Word 2 (PIC_OCW2) Master: 020h Slave: 0A0h Type WO Reset Value 00h PIC_OCW2 Register Map 7 6 ROT_EOI www.national.com 5 4 3 00 342 2 IRQ Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_OCW2 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 ROT_EOI Rotate/EOI Codes. 000: Clear rotate in Auto EOI mode. 100: Set rotate in Auto EOI mode. 001: Non-specific EOI. 101: Rotate on non-specific EOI command. 010: No operation. 110: Set priority command (bits [2:0] must be valid). 011: Specific EOI (bits [2:0] must be valid. 111: Rotate on specific EOI command (bits [2:0] must be valid) 4:3 00 Write to 0. Write to 00 to write OCW2 (rather than OCW3 or ICW1). (See Section 5.9.2 "PIC Native Registers" on page 339.) 2:0 IRQ IRQ Number (000-111). 5.9.2.8 I/O Port Operation Command Word 3 (PIC_OCW3) Master: 020h Slave: 0A0h Type WO Reset Value 00h PIC_OCW3 Register Map 7 6 RSVD 5 4 SP_MASK 3 01 2 RSVD 1 0 REG_READ PIC_OCW3 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. SP_MASK Special Mask Mode. The internal SMM Mode bit can be set or cleared using this 2-bit field. 6:5 0x: No change to the internal SMM Mode bit. 10: Clears the internal SMM Mode bit (i.e., value of SMM Mode bit = 0). (Default after initialization.) 11: Sets the internal SMM Mode bit (i.e., value of SMM Mode bit = 1). While the internal SMM Mode bit is 1, interrupt blocking by priority is disabled, and only the Interrupt Mask Register (OCW1) is used to block interrupt requests to the CPU. While the internal SMM Mode bit is 0 (the default), an unmasked IRQ must also be of higher priority than the IRQ of the currently running interrupt service routine. Regardless of the setting of this bit, the IRQ priority is still used to arbitrate among multiple allowed IRQ requests at the time of an Interrupt Acknowledge access from the CPU. 4:3 2 Revision 0.8 01 Write to 01. Write to 01 to write OCW3 (rather than OCW2 or ICW1). (See Section 5.9.2 "PIC Native Registers" on page 339.) RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. (Poll Command at this address is not supported.) 343 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_OCW3 Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 1:0 REG_READ Register Read Mode. 00: No operation. 10: Read interrupt request register on next read of I/O Port 020h (master) or 0A0h (slave). 01: No operation. 11: Read interrupt service register on next read of I/O Port 020h (master) or 0A0h (slave). 5.9.2.9 I/O Port Interrupt Request Register (PIC_IRR) Master: 020h Slave: 0A0h Type RO Reset Value 00h This register is accessible only after the appropriate command is written to OCW3. PIC_IRR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IRQ7_15STS IRQ6_14STS IRQ5_13STS IRQ4_12STS IRQ3_11STS IRQ2_10STS IRQ1_9STS IRQ0_8STS PIC_IRR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 IRQ7_15STS IRQ7 / IRQ15 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 6 IRQ6_14STS IRQ6 / IRQ14 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 5 IRQ5_13STS IRQ5 / IRQ13 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 4 IRQ4_12STS IRQ4 / IRQ12 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 3 IRQ3_11STS IRQ3 / IRQ11 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 2 IRQ2_10STS IRQ2 / IRQ10 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 1 IRQ1_9STS IRQ1 / IRQ9 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 0 IRQ0_8STS IRQ0 / IRQ8 Status (Pending). 0: Yes; 1: No. 5.9.2.10 I/O Port In-Service Register (PIC_ISR) Master: 020h Slave: 0A0h Type RO Reset Value 00h This register is accessible only after the appropriate command is written to OCW3. PIC_ISR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IRQ7_15IS IRQ6_14IS IRQ5_13IS IRQ4_12IS IRQ3_11IS IRQ2_10IS IRQ1_9IS IRQ0_8IS www.national.com 344 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) PIC_ISR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 IRQ7_15IS IRQ7 / IRQ15 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 6 IRQ6_14IS IRQ6 / IRQ14 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 5 IRQ5_13IS IRQ5 / IRQ13 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 4 IRQ4_12IS IRQ4 / IRQ12 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 3 IRQ3_11IS IRQ3 / IRQ11 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 2 IRQ2_10IS IRQ2 / IRQ10 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 1 IRQ1_9IS IRQ1 / IRQ9 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 0 IRQ0_8IS IRQ0 / IRQ8 In-Service. 0: No; 1: Yes. 5.9.2.11 Interrupt Edge/Level Select 1 (PIC_INT_SEL1) I/O Port 4D0h Type R/W Reset Value 00h PIC_INT_SEL1 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IRQ7_SEL IRQ6_SEL IRQ5_SEL IRQ4_SEL IRQ3_SEL RSVD IRQ1_SEL RSVD PIC_INT_SEL1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 IRQ7_SEL IRQ7 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ7 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 6 IRQ6_SEL IRQ6 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ6 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 5 IRQ5_SEL IRQ5 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ5 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 4 IRQ4_SEL IRQ4 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ4 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 3 IRQ3_SEL IRQ3 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ7 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 2 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 1 IRQ1_SEL IRQ1 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ1 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 0 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. Note 1. If ICW1 bit 3 in the PIC is set as level, it overrides the settings of this bit. This bit is provided to configure a PCI interrupt mapped to IRQ[x] on the PIC as level-sensitive (shared). Revision 0.8 345 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 PIC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.9.2.12 Interrupt Edge/Level Select 2 (PIC_INT_SEL2) I/O Port 4D1h Type R/W Reset Value 00h PIC_INT_SEL2 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IRQ7_SEL IRQ6_SEL IRQ5_SEL IRQ4_SEL IRQ3_SEL RSVD IRQ1_SEL RSVD PIC_INT_SEL2 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 IRQ15_SEL IRQ15 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ15 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 6 IRQ14_SEL IRQ14 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ14 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 5 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 4 IRQ12_SEL IRQ12 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ12 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 3 IRQ11_SEL IRQ11 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ11 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 2 IRQ10_SEL IRQ10 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ10 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 1 IRQ9_SEL IRQ9 Edge or Level Select. Selects PIC IRQ9 sensitivity configuration. 0: Edge; 1: Level. (Note 1) 0 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. Note 1. If ICW1 bit 3 in the PIC is set as level, it overrides the settings of this bit. This bit is provided to configure a PCI interrupt mapped to IRQ[x] on the PIC as level-sensitive (shared). www.national.com 346 Revision 0.8 The registers for the Keyboard Emulation Logic (KEL) are divided into three sets: • KEL HCE Input Register: Emulation side of the legacy 8048 Controller Input Buffer register. Writes to I/O Port 060h and 064h are read here. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) • KEL HCE Output Register: Emulation side of the legacy 8048 Controller Output Buffer register where keyboard and mouse data is to be written by software. Reads from I/O Port 060h are setup here. • KEL Specific MSRs • KEL Native Registers • KEL HCE Status Register: Emulation side of the legacy 8048 Controller Status register. Reads from I/O Port 60h are setup here. The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. Each of the Native registers is located on a 32-bit boundary. The Offset of these registers is relative to the base address. (See Section 5.6.2.2 "Local BAR - KEL from USB Host Controller 1 (DIVIL_LBAR_KEL1)" on page 308 and Section 5.6.2.3 "Local BAR - KEL from USB Host Controller 2 (DIVIL_LBAR_KEL2)" on page 308.) Any writes to locations outside these offsets are a “don’t care”. Any reads to locations outside these offsets return zero. All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the KEL Specific MSRs are called out as 32 bits. The KEL treats writes to the upper 32 bits (i.e., bits [63:32]) of the 64-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. The KEL Specific MSRs are summarized in Table 5-24. Four Native registers are used to provide the keyboard emulation support, summarized in Table 5-25: Three of the operational registers (HCE_Status, HCE_Input, HCE_Output), summarized in Table 5-25, are accessible at I/O Port 060h and 064h when emulation is enabled. Port A is at I/O Port 092h. Reads and writes to the registers using I/O addresses have side effects as outlined in Table 5-26. • KEL HCE Control Register: Used to enable and control the emulation hardware and report various status information. Table 5-24. KEL Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name 5140001Fh R/W Keyboard Emulation Logic Control Register (KELX_CTL) Reset Value Reference 00000010h Page 348 Reset Value Reference Table 5-25. KEL Native Registers Summary KEL Memory Offset Type Width (Bits) 100h R/W 32 KEL HCE Control Register (KEL_HCE_CTRL) 00000000h Page 349 104h R/W 32 KEL HCE Input (KEL_HCE_IN) 000000xxh Page 350 108h R/W 32 KEL HCE Output (KEL_HCE_OUT) 000000xxh Page 350 10Ch R/W 32 KEL HCE Status (KEL_HCE_STS) 00000000h Page 351 092h R/W 8 Port A (KEL_PORTA) 00h Page 352 Register Name Table 5-26. KEL Legacy Registers Emulated Summary I/O Port I/O Cycle 060h Read HCE_Output 060h Write HCE_Input 064h Read HCE_Status 064h Write HCE_Input Revision 0.8 Register Contents Accessed/Modified Side Effects in Emulation Mode Read from Port 060h clears OutputFull in HCE_Status to 0. Write to Port 060h sets InputFull to 1 and CmdData to 0 in HCE_Status. Read from Port 064h returns current value of HCE_Status with no side effects. Write to Port 064h will set InputFull to 0 and CmdData in HCE_Status to 1. 347 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.10 KEYBOARD EMULATION LOGIC REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS 5.10.1 KEL Specific MSRs 5.10.1.1 Keyboard Emulation Logic Control Register (KELX_CTL) MSR Address 5140001Fh Type R/W Reset Value 00000010h Port A operation is not effected by Snoop or EmulationEnable settings in KELX_CTL. Bits [31:5] are Reserved. Writes are “don’t care” and reads always return zero. 8 7 6 5 RSVD 4 3 2 1 0 EER 9 SOFEVENT 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 SNOOP KELX_CTL Register Map PRTA_EN Geode™ CS5535 KEL Register Descriptions (Continued) KELX_CTL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:5 RSVD Reserved. Writes have no effect; reads return 0. PRTA_EN Port A Enable. Defaults high. If high, Port A is enabled and accesses to I/O Port 092h are processed by the CS5535. If low, accesses to I/O Port 092h are passed on to the LPC bus (where Port A may exist inside a SuperI/O). SOFEVENT Start-Of-Frame (SOF) Event (SOFEVENT) Selection. 4 3:2 00: Test Mode (No delays). 01: USB1 (Default). 10: USB2. 11: 1 ms from PIT. 1 EER Emulation Event (EE) Routing. 0: Emulation Interrupt and ASMI. 1: ASMI only. The EER bit controls keyboard emulation interrupt generation associated with EEs: • Character Pending - Clear EE by setting the Outputfull bit in the HCE_Status register or clearing the CharacterPending bit in HCE_Control. • Input Full - Clear EE by clearing the InputFull bit in HCE_Status. • External IRQ - Clear EE by clearing IRQ1Active or IRQ12Active as appropriate in HCE_Control. 0 SNOOP Snoop. Only applies when EmulationEnable in HCE_Control is low. When high, indicates A20 and Init keyboard sequences are to be detected on I/O Port 060h/064h transactions to the LPC keyboard. KEL must generate ASMI upon detection of A20 and Init even though EmulationEnable in HCE_Control is low. Emulation Enable Snoop www.national.com 0 1 PORTA_A20_ASMI or KEL_INIT_ASMI is generated when sequence is detected. Status of ASMI Flag and Enable bits are in DIVIL MSR 51400002h. 1 x PORTA_A20_ASMI or KEL_INIT_ASMI is generated when sequence is detected. KEL_ASMI is generated on InputFull, External IQ, or Character Pending. Status of ASMI Flag and Enable bits are in DIVIL MSR 51400002h For the A20 keyboard sequence, both KEL_ASMI and PORTA_A20_ASMI are signaled. 0 0 OFF. 348 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 KEL Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.10.2 KEL Native Registers 5.10.2.1 KEL HCE Control Register (KEL_HCE_CTRL) KEL Memory Offset 100h Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ExternalIRQEn IRQEn CharacterPending EmulationInterrupt EmulationEnable 7 IRQ1Active 8 A20Sequence 9 IRQ12Active 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 A20State KEL_HCE_CTRL Register Map RSVD KEL_HCE_CTRL Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:9 RSVD Reserved. Writes have no effect; reads return 0. 8 A20State A20 State. Indicates current state of A20 on the LPC keyboard controller. Used to compare against value written to I/O Port 060h when A20Sequence is active. A20State is set and cleared only by software. 7 IRQ12Active IRQ12 Active. Indicates that a positive transition on IRQ12 from the LPC keyboard controller has occurred. Software may write 1 to this bit to clear (0) it. A software write of 0 to this bit has no effect. 6 IRQ1Active IRQ1 Active. Indicates that a positive transition on IRQ1 from the LPC keyboard controller has occurred. Software may write 1 to this bit to clear (0) it. A software write of a 0 to this bit has no effect. 5 A20Sequence A20 Sequence. Set by KEL when a data value of D1h is written to I/O Port 064h. Cleared by KEL on write to I/O Port 064h of any value other than D1h. 4 ExternalIRQEn External Interrupt Request Enable. When set to 1, IRQ1 and IRQ12 from the LPC keyboard controller causes an Emulation Event. The function controlled by this bit is independent of the setting of the EmulationEnable bit (bit 0). 3 IRQEn Interrupt Request Enable. When set, the KEL generates IRQ1 or IRQ12 as long as the OutputFull bit in HCE_Status is set to 1. If the AuxOutputFull bit of HceStatus is 0, then IRQ1 is generated; if it is 1, then an IRQ12 is generated. 2 CharacterPending Character Pending, When set, an EE is generated when the OutputFull bit of the HCE_Status register is cleared to 0. 1 Emulation Interrupt (RO) Emulation Interrupt (Read Only). This bit is a static decode of the EE state. Returns 1 if: CharacterPending = 1 OR InputFull = 1 OR ExternalIRQEn = 1 AND (IRQ1Active OR IRQ12Active = 1). 0 EmulationEnable Emulation Enable. When set to 1, the KEL is enabled for legacy emulation. The KEL decodes accesses to I/O Port 060h and 064h and generates IRQ1 and/or IRQ12 when appropriate. Additionally, the KEL generates an ASMI at appropriate times to invoke the emulation software. Revision 0.8 349 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 KEL Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.10.2.2 KEL HCE Input (KEL_HCE_IN) KEL Memory Offset 104h Type R/W Reset Value 000000xxh I/O data that is written to I/O Port 060h and 064h is captured in the HCE_Input register when emulation is enabled. This register may be read or written directly by accessing it with its memory address in the KEL’s operational register space. When accessed directly via the KEL’s operational address space, reads and writes of this register have no side effects. KEL_HCE_IN Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 RSVD 4 3 2 1 0 Input_Data KEL_HCE_IN Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:8 RSVD Reserved. Writes have no effect; reads return 0. 7:0 Input_Data Input Data. This register holds data normally read by SSM software. The register value is normally established by a write to I/O Port 060h or 064h. However, the value can also be established by a direct write. Such direct writes have no side effects. 5.10.2.3 KEL HCE Output (KEL_HCE_OUT) KEL Memory Offset 108h Type R/W Reset Value 000000xxh The data placed in the HCE_Output register by the emulation software is returned when I/O Port 060h is read and emulation is enabled. On a read of this location, the OutputFull bit in HCE_Status is cleared to 0. KEL_HCE_OUT Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Output_Data KEL_HCE_OUT Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:8 RSVD Reserved. Writes have no effect; reads return 0. 7:0 Output_Data Output Data. This register holds data normally written by SSM software. It is returned when an I/O read of I/O Port 060h is performed. Writes to this register have no side effects. After writing this register, SSM software normally sets OutputFull in HCE_Status. www.national.com 350 Revision 0.8 5.10.2.4 KEL HCE Status (KEL_HCE_STS) KEL Memory Offset 10Ch Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h The contents of the HCE_Status register are returned on an I/O read of I/O Port 064h when emulation is enabled. Reads and writes of I/O Port 060h and writes to I/O Port 064h can cause changes in this register. Emulation software can directly access this register through its memory address in the KEL’s operational register space. Accessing this register through its memory address produces no side effects. 4 3 2 Parity RSVD 1 0 InputFull 5 OutputFull 6 Flag 7 CmdData 8 InhibitSwitch 9 Timeout 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 AuxOutputFull KEL_HCE_STS Register Map KEL_HCE_STS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:8 RSVD Reserved. Writes have no effect; reads return 0. 7 Parity Parity. Indicates parity error on keyboard/mouse data. The value of this bit is only changed by a direct write to this register. 6 Timeout Timeout. Used to indicate a timeout. The value of this bit is only changed by a direct write to this register. 5 AuxOutputFull Auxiliary Output Full. IRQ12 is asserted whenever this bit is set, OutputFull is set, and IRQEn is set. The value of this bit is only changed by a direct write to this register. 4 InhibitSwitch Inhibit Switch. This bit reflects the state of the keyboard inhibit switch and is set if the keyboard is NOT inhibited. 3 CmdData Command Data. The KEL clears this bit on an I/O write to I/O Port 60h and sets it on an I/O write to I/O Port 064h. 2 Flag Flag. Nominally used as a system flag by software to indicate a warm or cold boot. 1 InputFull Input Full. Except for the case of a A20 sequence, this bit is set on an I/O write to I/O Port 060h or 064h. While this bit is set and emulation is enabled, an emulation interrupt occurs. This bit can only be cleared by a direct write of 0. 0 OutputFull Output Full. The KEL clears this bit on a read of I/O Port 060h. If IRQEn is set and AuxOutputFull is clear, then an IRQ1 is generated as long as this bit is set. If IRQEn is set and AuxOutputFull is set, then an IRQ12 is generated as long as this bit is set. If this bit is clear and CharacterPending in HCE_Control is set, an emulation interrupt occurs. This bit can only be set by a direct write of this register. Revision 0.8 351 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 KEL Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 KEL Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.10.2.5 Port A (KEL_PORTA) I/O Port 092h Type R/W Reset Value 00h Bit 4 of KELX_CTL (MSR 5140001Fh[4]) is the Port A Enable bit. It must be set to 1 to enable access to this register; otherwise, Port A accesses are directed to the LPC bus where a Port A register may exist in a SuperI/O device. : KEL_PORTA Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 1 0 A20_MASK SYSR KEL_PORTA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:2 RSVD Reserved. Writes have no effect; reads return 0. A20_MASK A20 Mask. This bit is necessary for older programs that require Port A Address bit 20 emulation. It requires ASMIs to be enabled in order for software to recognize the changing of this bit, and subsequent proper emulation of the A20 address bit (see PORTA_A20_ASMI_EN bit in DIVIL GLD_MSR_SMI, MSR 51400002h[6], for ASMI enabling details). Anytime this bit is changed an ASMI is generated. 1 If this bit is 1 and a 0 is written, and ASMI generation is enabled, then proper VSA operation causes a rollover of address from A[19:0] = all 1s, to A[19:0] = all 0s. Address bit A20 is 0. If this bit is 0 and a 1 is written, and ASMI generation is enabled, then no legacy rollover occurs from address [19:0] = all 1s. The next incremental address is A20 = 1 and A[19:0] = all 0. 0 SYSR www.national.com Legacy System Reset. Writing a 1 to this bit causes a system soft reset (INIT) that will only happen if ASMIs are enabled (see PORTA_INIT_ASMI_EN bit in DIVIL GLD_MSR_SMI, MSR 51400002h[7], for ASMI enabling details). Writing a 0 to this bit has no effect. This bit always reads as 0. 352 Revision 0.8 The registers for the System Management Bus (SMB) are divided into two sets: The Native registers (summarized in Table 5-27) are accessed via Base Address Register MSR_LBAR_SMB (MSR 5140000Bh) as I/O Offsets. (See Section 5.6.2.4 on page 309 for bit descriptions of the Base Address Register.) The reference column in the summary table points to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) • SMB Native Registers The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. Table 5-27. SMB Native Registers Summary SMB I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) 00h R/W 8 01h R/W 02h Reset Value Reference SMB Serial Data (SMB_SDA) 00h Page 354 8 SMB Status (SMB_STS) 00h Page 354 R/W 8 SMB Control Status (SMB_CTRL_STS) 10h Page 356 03h R/W 8 SMB Control 1 (SMB_CTRL1) 00h Page 357 04h R/W 8 SMB Address (SMB_ADDR) 00h Page 358 05h R/W 8 SMB Control 2 (SMB_CTRL2) 00h Page 359 06h R/W 8 SMB Control 3 (SMB_CTRL3) 00h Page 359 07h R/W 8 SMB Reserved Register (SMBRSVD). Writes are “don't care” and reads return undefined value. xxh --- Revision 0.8 Register Name 353 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.11 SYSTEM MANAGEMENT BUS REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.11.1 SMB Native Registers 5.11.1.1 SMB Serial Data (SMB_SDA) SMB I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value 00h SMB_SDA Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SMBSDA SMB_SDA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 SMBSDA SMB Serial Data. This shift register is used to transmit and receive data. The most significant bit is transmitted (received) first, and the least significant bit is transmitted last. Reading or writing to the SMBSDA register is allowed only when the SDAST bit (SMB I/O Offset 01h[6]) is set, or for repeated starts after setting the START bit (SMB I/O Offset 03h[0]). Any attempt to access the register in other cases may produce unpredictable results. 5.11.1.2 SMB Status (SMB_STS) SMB I/O Offset 01h Type R/W Reset Value 00h This is a read/write register with a special clear. Some of its bits may be cleared by software, as described in the table below. This register maintains the current SMB status. On reset, and when the SMB is disabled, SMBST is cleared (00h). SMB_STS Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SLVSTP SDAST BER NEGACK STASTR NMATCH MASTER XMIT SMB_STS Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description SLVSTP (R/W1C) Slave Stop (Read/Write 1 to Clear). Writing 0 to SLVSTP is ignored. 0: Writing 1 or SMB disabled. 1: Stop condition detected after a slave transfer in which MATCH (SMB I/O Offset 02h[2]) or GCMATCH (SMB I/O Offset 02h[3]) was set. 6 SDAST (RO) SMB_DATA Status (Read Only). 0: Reading from SMBSDA (SMB I/O Offset 00h) during a receive, or when writing to it during a transmit. When START (SMB I/O Offset 03h[0]) is set, reading SMBSDA does not clear SDAST; enabling the SMB to send a repeated start in master receive mode. 1: SMBSDA awaiting data (transmit - master or slave) or holds data that should be read (receive - master or slave). www.national.com 354 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) SMB_STS Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 5 Name Description BER (R/W1C) Bus Error (Read/Write 1 to Clear). Writing 0 to BER is ignored. 0: Writing 1 or SMB disabled. 1: Invalid Start or Stop condition detected during data transfer (i.e., Start or Stop condition during the transfer of bits [8:2] and acknowledge cycle), or when an arbitration problem detected. If the SMBus loses an arbitration this bit is set. 4 NEGACK (R/W1C) Neg Acknowledge (Read/Write 1 to Clear). Writing 0 to NEGACK is ignored. 0: Writing 1 or SMB disabled. 1: Transmission not acknowledged on the ninth clock. (In this case, SDAST (bit 6) is not set.) 3 STASTR (R/W1C) Stall After Start (Read/Write 1 to Clear). Writing 0 to STASTR is ignored. When STASTR is set, it stalls the SMBus by pulling down the SMB_CLK line, and suspends any further action on the bus (e.g., receive of first byte in master receive mode). 0: Writing 1 or SMB disabled. 1: This bit is not set in the slave mode and is only set in the master transmit mode. When set, this bit indicates that the address was sent successfully and the bus is now stalled. Note that this mode of operation must be enabled with the STASTRE bit (SMB I/O Offset 03h[7]) in order for this bit to function this way. Also, if enabled with INTEN (SMB I/O Offset 03h[2]), an interrupt is sent when this bit is set. This bit is cleared by writing a 1 to it; writing a 0 has no effect. 2 NMATCH (R/W1C) New Match (Read/Write 1 to Clear). Writing 0 to NMATCH is ignored. If INTEN (SMB I/O Offset 03h[2]) is set, an interrupt is sent when this bit is set. 0: Software writes 1 to this bit. 1: Address byte follows a Start condition or a Repeated Start, causing a match or a global-call match. 1 MASTER (RO) Master (Read Only). 0: Arbitration loss (BER, bit 5, is set) or recognition of a Stop condition. 1: Bus master request succeeded and master mode active. 0 XMIT (RO) Transmit (Read Only). Direction bit. 0: Master/slave transmit mode not active. 1: Master/slave transmit mode active. Revision 0.8 355 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.11.1.3 SMB Control Status (SMB_CTRL_STS) SMB I/O Offset 02h Type R/W Reset Value 10h This register configures and controls the SMB functional block. It maintains the current SMB status and controls several SMB functions. On reset and when the SMB is disabled, the non-reserved bits of SMBCST are cleared. SMB_CTRL_STS Register Map 7 6 RSVD 5 4 3 2 1 0 TGSCL TSDA GCMTCH MATCH BB BUSY SMB_CTRL_STS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 5 TGSCL Toggle SMB_CLK Line. Enables toggling the SMB_CLK line during error recovery. 0: Clock toggle completed. 1: When the SMB_DATA line is low, writing 1 to this bit toggles the SMB_CLK line for one cycle. Writing 1 to TGSCL while SMB_DATA is high is ignored. 4 TSDA (RO) Test SMB_DATA Line (Read Only). This bit reads the current value of the SMB_DATA line. It can be used while recovering from an error condition in which the SMB_DATA line is constantly pulled low by an out-of-sync slave. Data written to this bit is ignored. 3 GCMTCH (RO) Global Call Match (Read Only). 0: Start condition or Repeated Start and a Stop condition (including Illegal Start or Stop condition). 1: In slave mode, GCMEN (SMB I/O Offset 03h[5]) is set and the address byte (the first byte transferred after a Start condition) is 00h. 2 MATCH (RO) Address Match (Read Only). 0: Start condition or Repeated Start and a Stop condition (including Illegal Start or Stop condition). 1: SAEN (SMB I/O Offset 04h[7]) is set and the first 7 bits of the address byte (the first byte transferred after a Start condition) match the 7-bit address in the SMBADR (SMB I/O Offset 04h[6:0]). 1 BB (R/W1C) Bus Busy (Read/Write 1 to Clear). 0: Writing 1, SMB disabled, or Stop condition detected. 1: Bus active (a low level on either SMB_DATA or SMB_CLK), or Start condition. 0 BUSY (RO) Busy (Read Only). This bit indicates the SMB is either in slave transmit/receive or master transmit/receive mode, or if there is an arbitration going on the bus. 0: SMB disabled or SMbus in Idle mode 1: SMB is in one of the following states: -Generating a Start condition. -Detects a Start condition. -Master mode (MASTER (SMB I/O Offset 01h[1]) is set). -Slave mode (MATCH (bit 2) or GCMTCH (bit 3) are set). www.national.com 356 Revision 0.8 5.11.1.4 SMB Control 1 (SMB_CTRL1) SMB I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register configures and controls the SMB functional block. It maintains the current SMB status and controls several SMB functions. On reset and when the SMB is disabled, the non-reserved bits of SMB_CTRL1 are cleared. SMB_CTRL1 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 STASTRE NMINTE GCMEN ACK RSVD INTEN STOP START SMB_CTRL1 Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description STASTRE Stall After Start Enable. 0: When cleared, STASTR (SMB I/O Offset 01h[3]) can not be set. However, if STASTR is set, clearing STASTRE will not clear STASTR. 1: Stall after start mechanism enabled, and SMB stalls the bus after the address byte. 6 NMINTE New Match Interrupt Enable. 0: No interrupt issued on a new match. 1: Interrupt issued on a new match only if INTEN (bit 2) is set. 5 GCMEN Global Call Match Enable. 0: SMB not responding to global call. 1: Global call match enabled. 4 ACK Receive Acknowledge. This bit is ignored in transmit mode. When the device acts as a receiver (slave or master), this bit holds the transmitting instruction that is transmitted during the next acknowledge cycle. 0: Cleared after acknowledge cycle. 1: Negative acknowledge issued on next received byte. 3 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 2 INTEN Interrupt Enable. 0: SMB interrupt disabled. 1: SMB interrupt enabled. An interrupt is generated in response to one of the following events: -Detection of an address match (NMATCH, SMB I/O Offset 01h[2] = 1) and NMINTE (bit 6) = 1. -Receipt of bus error (BER, SMB I/O Offset 01h[5] = 1). -Receipt of Negative Acknowledge after sending a byte (NEGACK, SMB I/O Offset 01h[4] = 1). -Acknowledge of each transaction (same as the hardware set of the SDAST bit, SMB I/O Offset 01h[6]) when DMA not enabled. -In master mode if STASTRE = 1 (SMB I/O Offset 03h[7]), after a successful start (STASTR = 1, SMB I/O Offset 01h[3]). -Detection of a Stop condition while in slave mode (SLVSTP = 1, SMB I/O Offset 01h[7]). Revision 0.8 357 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) SMB_CTRL1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 1 STOP Stop. 0: Automatically cleared after Stop issued. 1: Setting this bit in master mode generates a Stop condition to complete or abort current message transfer. 0 START Start. Set this bit only when in master mode or when requesting master mode. 0: Cleared after Start condition sent or Bus Error (BER (SMB I/O Offset 01h[5]) = 1) detected. 1: Single or repeated Start condition generated on the SMB. If the device is not the active master of the bus (MASTER (SMB I/O Offset 01h[1]) = 0), setting START generates a Start condition when the SMB becomes free (BB (SMB I/O Offset 02h[1]) = 0). An address transmission sequence should then be performed. If the device is the active master of the bus (MASTER = 1), setting START and then writing to SMBSDA generates a Start condition. If a transmission is already in progress, a repeated Start condition is generated. This condition can be used to switch the direction of the data flow between the master and the slave, or to choose another slave device without separating them with a Stop condition. 5.11.1.5 SMB Address (SMB_ADDR) SMB I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value 00h SMB_ADDR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 SAEN 2 1 0 SMBADDR SMB_ADDR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 SAEN Slave Enable. 0: SMB does not check for an address match with address field. 1: Address field holds a valid address and enables the match of ADDR to an incoming address byte. 6:0 SMBADDR www.national.com Device address (SMB Own Address). These bits hold the 7-bit device address. When in slave mode, the first 7 bits received after a Start condition are compared with this field (first bit received is compared with bit 6, and the last bit with bit 0). If the address field matches the received data and SAEN (bit 7) is 1, a match is declared. 358 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 SMB Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.11.1.6 SMB Control 2 (SMB_CTRL2) SMB I/O Offset 05h Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register enables/disables the functional block and determines the SMB clock rate. SMB_CTRL2 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 SCLFRQ 2 1 0 EN SMB_CTRL2 Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description SCLFRQ SMB_CLK Frequency. This field along with SMBCTL3 defines the SMB_CLK period (low and high time) when the device serves as a bus master. The clock low and high times are defined as follows: tSCLl = tSCLh = 2*SCLFRQ*tCLK where tCLK is the module input clock cycle. SCLFRQ can be programmed to values in the range of 00010002 (810) through 11111112 (12710). Using any other value has unpredictable results. The low and high time are generally equal unless two or more devices are driving the SCL line. 6:0 EN Enable. 0: SMB is disabled, all registers are cleared, and clocks are halted. In the SMBCST register all bits are cleared except the TSDA bit, it reflects the value of SMB_DATA. 1: SMB is enabled. 5.11.1.7 SMB Control 3 (SMB_CTRL3) SMB I/O Offset 06h Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register enables/disables the functional block and determines the SMB clock rate. SMB_CTRL3 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 SCLFRQ 2 1 0 EN SMB_CTRL3 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 SCLFRQ SMB_CLK Frequency. This field along with SMBCTL2.SCLFRQ defines the SMB_CLK period (low and high time) when the device serves as a bus master. The clock low and high times are defined as follows: tSCLl = tSCLh = 2*SCLFRQ*tCLK where tCLK is the module input clock cycle. The highest value that can be programmed into these two registers for lowest frequency is FFFFh and the lowest value is 0008h. Revision 0.8 359 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.12 UART AND IR PORT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The registers for the UART/IR Controller are divided into three sets: as 8 bits. The UART/IR Controller treats writes to the upper 56 bits (i.e., bits [63:8]) of the 64-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) The UART/IR Controller Native register set consists of eight register banks, each containing eight registers, to control UART operation. All registers use the same 8-byte address space to indicate I/O Offsets 00h-07h. The Native registers are accessed via Banks 0 through 7 as I/O Offsets. See MSR_LEG_IO (MSR 51400014h) bits [22:20] and bits [18:16] for setting base address. Each bank and its offsets are summarized in Table 5-29. • UART/IR Controller Specific MSRs • UART/IR Controller Native Registers The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. The register summary tables include reset values and page references where the bit descriptions are provided. All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the UART/IR Controller Specific MSRs (summarized in Table 5-28) are called out Table 5-28. UART/IR Controller Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 51400038h R/W UART1 Primary Dongle and Modem Interface (UART[1]_MOD) 0xh Page 363 51400039h R/W UART1 Secondary Dongle and Status (UART[1]_DONG) xxh Page 364 5140003Ah R/W UART1 Interface Configuration (UART[1]_CONF) 42h Page 365 5140003Bh R/W UART1 Reserved MSR (UART[1]_RSVD_MSR) Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 00h --- 5140003Ch R/W UART2 Primary Dongle and Modem Interface (UART[2]_MOD) 0xh Page 363 5140003Dh R/W UART2 Secondary Dongle and Status (UART[2]_DONG) xxh Page 364 5140003Eh R/W UART2 Interface Configuration (UART[2]_CONF) 42h Page 365 5140003Fh R/W UART2 Reserved MSR (UART[2]_RSVD_MSR) Reads return 0; writes have no effect. 00h --- Table 5-29. UART/IR Controller Native Registers Summary I/O Offset Type Register Name Reset Value Reference Bank 0 00h RO Receive Data Port (RXD) xxh Page 367 WO Transmit Data Port (TXD) xxh Page 367 01h R/W Interrupt Enable Register (IER) 00h Page 368 02h RO Event Identification Register (EIR) Extended Mode: 22h Page 369 Non-Extended Mode: 01h Page 371 03h WO FIFO Control Register (FCR) 00h Page 372 WO Link Control Register (LCR) 00h Page 373 R/W Bank Select Register (BSR) 00h Page 375 04h R/W Modem/Mode Control Register (MCR) 00h Page 376 05h RO Link Status Register (LSR) 60h Page 377 06h RO Modem Status Register (MSR) x0h Page 379 www.national.com 360 Revision 0.8 Table 5-29. UART/IR Controller Native Registers Summary (Continued) I/O Offset Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 07h R/W Scratchpad Register (SPR) 00h Page 380 R/W Auxiliary Status and Control Register (ASCR) 00h Page 380 00h R/W Legacy Baud Generator Divisor Low Byte (LBGD_L) xxh Page 381 01h R/W Legacy Baud Generator Divisor High Byte (LBGD_H) xxh Page 381 02h --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- 03h RW Link Control Register (LCR) 00h Page 382 R/W Bank Selection Encoding Register (BSR) 00h Page 382 Reserved (RSVD) --- --- Bank 1 04h-07h --- Bank 2 00h R/W Baud Generator Divisor Low Byte (BGD_L) xxh Page 383 01h R/W Baud Generator Divisor High Byte (BGD_H) xxh Page 383 02h R/W Extended Control Register 1 (EXCR1) 00h Page 383 03h R/W Bank Select Register (BSR) 00h Page 385 04h R/W Extended Control Register 2 (EXCR2) 00h Page 385 05h --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- 06h RO TX_FIFO Current Level Register (TXFLV) 00h Page 386 07h RO RX_FIFO Current Level Register (RXFLV) 00h Page 387 00h RO Module Identification and Revision ID Register (MRID) 0xh Page 387 01h RO Shadow of Link Control Register (SH_LCR) 00h Page 388 Bank 3 02h RO Shadow of FIFO Control Register (SH_FCR) 00h Page 388 03h R/W Bank Select Register (BSR) 00h Page 388 04h-07h --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- Bank 4 00h-01h 02h R/W IR Control Register 1 (IRCR1) 00h Page 389 03h R/W Bank Select Register (BSR) 00h Page 389 04h-07h --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- 00h-02h --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- 03h R/W Bank Select Register (BSR) 00h Page 390 04h R/W IR Control Register 2 (IRCR2) 02h Page 390 05h-07h --- --- --- 20h Page 391 Bank 5 Reserved Register (RSVD) Bank 6 00h Revision 0.8 R/W IR Control Register 3 (IRCR3) 361 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-29. UART/IR Controller Native Registers Summary (Continued) I/O Offset Type 01h --- 02h R/W 03h 04h-07h Register Name Reset Value Reference --- --- SIR Pulse Width Register (SIR_PW) 00h Page 392 R/W Bank Select Register (BSR) 00h Page 392 --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- Reserved Register (RSVD) Bank 7 00h R/W IR Receiver Demodulator Control Register (IRRXDC) 29h Page 393 01h R/W IR Transmitter Modulator Control Register (IRTXMC) 69h Page 395 02h R/W CEIR Configuration Register (RCCFG) 00h Page 396 03h R/W Bank Select Register (BSR) 00h Page 397 04h R/W IR Interface Configuration Register 1 (IRCFG1) xxh Page 398 05h-06h --- Reserved Register (RSVD) --- --- 07h R/W 00h Page 399 www.national.com IR Interface Configuration 4 Register (IRCFG4) 362 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.1 UART/IR Controller Specific MSRs 5.12.1.1 UART[x] Primary Dongle and Modem Interface (UART[x]_MOD) UART1 Primary Dongle and Modem Interface (UART[1]_MOD) MSR Address 51400038h Type R/W Reset Value 0xh UART2 Primary Dongle and Modem Interface (UART[2]_MOD) MSR Address 5140003Ch Type R/W Reset Value 0xh MSR_UART[x]_MOD is used for primary identification of the dongle interface and also provides the device with a virtual modem interface. To run legacy software, the modem control bits are set such that the software sees the modem always ready for data transfer. UART[x]_MOD Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MOD7 MOD6 MOD5 MOD4 ID0 ID1 ID2 ID3 UART[x]_MOD Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 MOD7 Modem 7. This bit directly sets the value of the Ring Indicator (RI) bit of the Modem Status Register (Bank 0, I/O Offset 06h[6]). 6 MOD6 Modem 6. This bit directly sets the value of the Data Set Ready (DSR) bit of the Modem Status Register (Bank 0, I/O Offset 06h[5]). 5 MOD5 Modem 5. This bit directly sets the value of the Data Carrier Detect (DCD) bit of the Modem Status Register (Bank 0, I/O Offset 06h[7]). 4 MOD4 Modem 4. This bit directly sets the value of the Clear to Send (CTS) bit of the Modem Status Register (Bank 0, I/O Offset 06h[4]). 3:0 ID0-ID3 Primary Dongle Control Signals. This field selects the type of IR Dongle allowing software to imitate the functionality of a real dongle. These bits are unused in UART mode. x000: Infrared transceiver with serial interface and differential signalling. x100: Reserved. 0010: IrDA-data transceiver is: Sharp RY5HD01 or Sharp RY5KD01. 1010: Reserved. 0110: Infrared transceiver with serial interface and single-ended signalling. 1110: Infrared transceiver supports consumer IR modes only. 0001: IrDA-data transceiver is: HP HSDL-2300 or HP HSDL-3600 1001: IrDA-data transceiver is: IBM 31T1100, Vishay-Telefunken TFDS6000 or Siemens IRMS/T6400. 0101: Reserved. 1101: IrDA-data transceiver is: Vishay-Telefunken TFDS6500. x011: IrDA-data transceiver is: HP HSDL-1100, HP HSDL-2100, TI TSML 1100 or Sharp RY6FD11E. 0111: IrDA-data transceiver supports SIR mode only. 1111: No dongle connected. Revision 0.8 363 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.1.2 UART[x] Secondary Dongle and Status (UART[x]_DONG) UART1 Secondary Dongle and Status (UART[1]_DONG) MSR Address 51400039h Type R/W Reset Value xxh UART2 Secondary Dongle and Status (UART[2]_DONG) MSR Address 5140003Dh Type R/W Reset Value xxh UART[x]_DONG is used for secondary identification of the dongle interface, and along with UART[x]_MOD, constitutes a VDI (virtual dongle interface). The transceivers can also be configured for available mode by driving IRSL[2:0]. This support is not provided in the current design, but the values of these signals are written in VDI UART[x]_MOD in case there is a need to know what legacy software writes on IRSL[2:0] bits (via IRCFG1 at I/O Offset 04h in Bank 7). The MSR is readable by the software so the status of IRSL[2:0] can be known. UART[x]_DONG Register Map 7 6 5 RSVD 4 3 2 1 0 IRSL2 IRSL1 IRSL0 ID3_SEC ID0_SEC UART[x]_DONG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 4:2 IRSL2-IRSL0 (RO) IRSL[2:0] (Read Only). These bits are reflections of settings in the Transceiver Identification and Control (IRIC) bits (Bank 7, I/O Offset 04h[2:0]). Software may read this field to determine the settings of the virtual IR interface (dongle). See Section 5.12.10.5 "IR Interface Configuration Register 1 (IRCFG1)" on page 398 for decode. 1 ID3_SEC Secondary Dongle Control Signal. Secondary virtual dongle configuration bit. See Table 5-30. Refer to Section 4.11.3 "Dongle Interface" on page 131 for additional information. 0 ID0_SEC Secondary Dongle Control Signal. Secondary virtual dongle configuration bit. See Table 5-30. Refer to Section 4.11.3 "Dongle Interface" on page 131 for additional information. Table 5-30. Secondary ID Encoding IRSL2 IRSL1 ID3 ID0 NCH INV NCH: No support Reserved INV: 36 kHz demodulation support (RC-5 and RC-6 protocols) INV NCH INV INV NCH: No support NCH: No support INV: 38 kHz demodulation support INV: 40 kHz demodulation support (NEC protocol) (JVC, Panasonic protocols) NCH: No support Reserved INV: 56.9 kHz demodulation support (RCA protocol) Note: NCH: No Change; INV: Invert. www.national.com 364 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.1.3 UART[x] Interface Configuration (UART[x]_CONF) UART1 Interface Configuration (UART[1]_CONF) MSR Address 5140003Ah Type R/W Reset Value 42h UART2 Interface Configuration (UART[2]_CONF) MSR Address 5140003Eh Type R/W Reset Value 42h UART[x]_CONF derives the control signals for mode and reset control. UART[x]_CONF Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD BUSY RESET2SIR EN_ BANKS TEST PWDN DEVEN MSR_SOFT_ RESET UART[x]_CONF Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 6 BUSY (RO) Busy (Read Only). When high, this bit indicates that the UART busy signal is active. 5 RESET2SIR IR Transmitter and Receiver Reset. Set to 1 to enable reset to the IR transmitter and receiver. (Default = 0.) Write 0 to bring it out of reset. 4 EN_BANKS Banks Enable. When set to 1, enables access to upper banks (i.e., Banks 2 through 7). (Default = 0; that is, the UART boots in basic mode [16550 mode where access to upper banks is not needed]). 3 TEST Test. When set to 1, the UART goes into test mode and generates a baud clock on the serial output pin UART[x]_TX (Default = 0.) 2 PWDN Power-down. When set to 1, the UART clocks (24 MHz clock) are frozen, but interrupt remains enabled. (Default = 0.) 1 DEVEN Device Enable. Set to 1 to enable the UART. Resetting this bit disables UART functionality and masks the interrupt. (Default = 1.) 0 MSR_SOFT_ RESET MSR Software Reset. Writing a 1 resets the UART. (Default = 0.) Revision 0.8 365 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.2 UART/IR Controller Native Registers Eight register banks, each containing eight registers, control UART/IR operation. All registers use the same 8-byte address space to indicate I/O Offsets 00h-07h. The active bank must be selected by the software. Bank 7 Bank 6 The register bank organization enables access to the banks, as required for activation of all module modes, while maintaining transparent compatibility with 16450 or 16550 software. This activates only the registers and specific bits used in those devices. Bank 5 Bank 4 Bank 3 Bank 2 Bank 1 The Bank Select Register (BSR) selects the active bank and is common to all banks. Therefore, each bank defines seven new registers. See Figure 5-1. Bank 0 I/O Offset 07h The default bank selection after the system reset is 0, placing the module in UART 16550 mode. Additionally, setting the baud in Bank 1 (as required to initialize the 16550 UART) switches the module to non-extended UART mode. This ensures that running existing 16550 software switches the system to the 16550 configuration without software modification. I/O Offset 06h I/O Offset 05h I/O Offset 04h Common Register Throughout All Banks LCR/BSR Table 5-31 shows the main functions of the registers in each bank. Banks 0 to 3 control UART and IR modes of operation; Banks 4 to 7 control and configure the IR modes only. Banks 4 to 7 are reserved in UART2. I/O Offset 02h I/O Offset 01h I/O Offset 00h 16550 Banks Figure 5-1. UART Register Bank Architecture Table 5-31. Register Bank Summary Bank UART IR Mode 0 x x Global control and status 1 x x Legacy bank 2 x x Alternative baud generator divisor, extended control, and status 3 x x Module revision ID and shadow registers 4 x IR mode setup 5 x IR control 6 x IR physical layer configuration 7 x CEIR and optical transceiver configuration www.national.com Main Functions 366 Revision 0.8 5.12.3 Bank 0 Register Descriptions In non-extended modes of operation, Bank 0 is compatible with both the 16450 and 16550. Upon reset, this functional block defaults to the 16450 mode. In extended mode, all the registers (except RXD and TXD) offer additional features. The bit formats for the registers in Bank 0 are summarized in Table 5-32. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-32. Bank 0 Register Bit Map I/O Offset Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RXD0 00h RXD RXD7 RXD6 RXD5 RXD4 RXD3 RXD2 RXD1 00h TXD TXD7 TXD6 TXD5 TXD4 TXD3 TXD2 TXD1 TXD0 01h IER (Note 1) MS_IE LS_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE MS_IE LS_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE 02h RSVD IER (Note 2) RSVD EIR (Note 1) FEN[1:0] EIR (Note 2) RSVD FCR TXEMP_IE DMA_IE RSVD TXEMP_EV RXFTH[1:0] RXFT DMA_EV TXFTH[1:0] SBRK STKP EPS IPR[1:0] IPF MS_EV LS_EV/ TXHLT_EV TXLDL_EV RXHDL_IE RSVD TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN PEN STB 03h LCR BKSE WLS[1:0] BSR BKSE 04h MCR (Note 1) RSVD LOOP ISEN or DCDLP RILP RTS DTR MCR (Note 2) MDSL[2:0] IR_PLS TX_DFR DMA_EN RTS DTR BSR[6:0] 05h LSR ER_INF TXEMP TXRDY BRK FE PE OE RXDA 06h MSR DCD RI DSR CTS DDCD TERI DDSR DCTS 07h SPR (Note 1) S_OET RSVD RXF_TOUT ASCR (Note 2) Scratch Data CTE TXUR RXACT RXWDG RSVD Note 1. Non-Extended Mode. Note 2. Extended Mode. 5.12.3.1 Receive/Transmit Data Ports Receive Data Port (RXD) I/O Offset 00h Type RO Reset Value xxh Transmit Data Port (TXD) I/O Offset 00h Type WO Reset Value xxh The RXD (RO) and TXD (WO) ports share the same address. RXD is accessed during CPU read cycles. It is used to receive incoming data when the FIFOs are disabled, or from the bottom of the RX_FIFO when the FIFOs are enabled. TXD is accessed during CPU write cycles. It is used to write data directly to the transmitter when the FIFOs are disabled, or to the TX_FIFO when the FIFOs are enabled. DMA cycles always access the TXD and RXD ports, regardless of the selected bank. Revision 0.8 367 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.3.2 Interrupt Enable Register (IER) I/O Offset 01h Type R/W Reset Value 00h IER controls the enabling of various interrupts. Some interrupts are common to all operating modes of the functional block, while others are mode-specific. Bits [7:4] can be set in extended mode only. They are cleared in non-extended mode. When a bit is set to 1, an interrupt is generated when the corresponding event occurs. In non-extended mode, most events can be identified by reading the LSR and MSR. The receiver high-data-level event can only be identified by reading the EIR register after the corresponding interrupt has been generated. In extended mode, events are identified by event flags in the EIR register. The bitmap of the IER varies depending on the operating mode of the functional block. The modes can be divided into the two groups and is selected via the EXT_SL bit in the EXCR1 register (Bank 2, I/O Offset 02h[0]): • UART, Sharp-IR, SIR and CEIR in extended mode (EXT_SL = 1) • UART, Sharp-IR and SIR in non-extended mode (EXT_SL = 0) IER, Extended Mode: UART, SIR, Sharp-IR and CEIR (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 1) IER Extended Mode Register Map 7 6 RSVD 5 4 3 2 1 0 TXEMP_IE DMA_IE MS_IE LS_IE/ TXHLT_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE IER Extended Mode Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 5 TXEMP_IE Transmitter Empty Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables transmitter empty interrupts (in all modes). 4 DMA_IE DMA Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables the interrupt on terminal count when the DMA is enabled. 3 MS_IE Modem Status Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables the interrupts on modem status events. 2 LS_IE/TXHLT_IE Link Status Interrupt Enable/Transmitter Halted Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit enables link status interrupts and transmitter halted interrupts in CEIR. 1 TXLDL_IE Transmitter Low-Data-Level Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables interrupts when the TX_FIFO is below the threshold level or the transmitter holding register is empty. 0 RXHDL_IE Receiver High-Data-Level Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables interrupts when the RXD is full, or the RX_FIFO is equal to or above the RX_FIFO threshold level, or an RX_FIFO timeout occurs. Notes (Extended Mode Only): 1) If the interrupt signal drives an edge-sensitive interrupt controller input, it is advisable to disable all interrupts by clearing all the IER bits upon entering the interrupt routine, and re-enable them just before exiting it. This guarantees proper interrupt triggering in the interrupt controller should one or more interrupt events occur during execution of the interrupt routine. 2) If an interrupt source must be disabled, the CPU can do so by clearing the corresponding bit of the IER register. However, if an interrupt event occurs just before the corresponding enable bit of the IER register is cleared, a spurious interrupt may be generated. To avoid this problem, clearing of any IER bit should be done during execution of the interrupt service routine. If the interrupt controller is programmed for level-sensitive interrupts, clearing IER bits can be performed outside the interrupt service routine, but with the CPU interrupt disabled. 3) If the LSR, MSR, or EIR registers are to be polled, the interrupt sources (identified via self-clearing bits) should have their corresponding IER bits set to 0. This prevents spurious pulses on the interrupt output pin. www.national.com 368 Revision 0.8 IER, Non-Extended Mode: UART, SIR or Sharp-IR (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 0) Upon reset, the IER supports UART, SIR and Sharp-IR in non-extended modes. IER Non-Extended Mode Register Map 7 6 5 4 RSVD 3 2 1 0 MS_IE LS_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE IER Non-Extended Mode Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 3 MS_IE Modem Status Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables the interrupts on modem status events. (EIR bits [3:0] are 0000.) 2 LS_IE Link Status Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables interrupts on Link Status events. (EIR bits [3:0] are 0110) 1 TXLDL_IE Transmitter Low Data Level Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables interrupts on transmitter low data level events. (EIR bits [3:0] are 0010.) 0 RXHDL_IE Receiver High Data Level Interrupt Enable. Setting this bit to 1 enables interrupts on receiver high data level, or RX_FIFO timeout events. (EIR bits [3:0] are 0100 or 1100.) 5.12.3.3 Event Identification (EIR)/FIFO Control Registers (FCR) The Event Identification Register (EIR) is a read-only register and shares the same address as the write-only FIFO Control Register (FCR). Event Identification Register (EIR) I/O Offset 02h Type RO Reset Value Extended Mode: 22h Non-Extended Mode: 01h The EIR indicates the interrupt source, and operates in two modes, non-extended mode (EXT_SL of the EXCR1 register = 0), and extended mode (EXT_SL of the EXCR1 register = 1) (Bank 2, I/O Offset 02h[0]). In non-extended mode (default), this register functions the same as in the 16550 mode. EIR, Extended Mode (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 1) In extended mode, each of the previously prioritized and encoded interrupt sources is broken down into individual bits. Each bit in this register acts as an interrupt pending flag, and is set to 1 when the corresponding event has occurred or is pending, regardless of the IER register bit setting. When this register is read, the DMA event (bit 4) is cleared if an 8237 type DMA is used. All other bits are cleared when the corresponding interrupts are acknowledged, by reading the relevant register (e.g., reading the MSR register clears MS_EV). EIR Extended Mode Register Map 7 6 RSVD Revision 0.8 5 4 3 2 1 0 TXEMP_EV DMA_EV MS_EV LS_EV/TXHLT_ EV TXLDL_EV RXHDL_EV 369 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) EIR Extended Mode Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Read as 0. 5 TXEMP_EV Transmitter Empty Event. This bit is the same as bit 6 of the LSR (Length Status Register). It is set to 1 when the transmitter is empty. (Default = 1.) 4 DMA_EV DMA Event. This bit is set to 1 when a DMA terminal count (TC) is activated. It is cleared upon read. 3 MS_EV Modem Status Event. • In UART mode: — This bit is set to 1 when any of the 0 to 3 bits in the MSR is set to 1. • In any IR mode: — The function of this bit depends on the setting of IRMSSL of the IRCR2 register (see Section 5.12.8.2 "IR Control Register 2 (IRCR2)" on page 390). When IRMSSL is 0, the bit functions as a modem status interrupt event; when IRMSSL is set to 1, the bit is forced to 0. 2 LS_EV/TXHLT_EV Link Status Event • In UART, Sharp-IR and SIR: — This bit is set to 1 when a receiver error or break condition is reported. When FIFOs are enabled, the parity error, frame error and break conditions are reported only when the associated character reaches the bottom of the RX_FIFO. An overrun error is reported as soon as it occurs. Link Status Event or Transmitter Halted Event • In CEIR: — Set to 1 when the receiver is overrun or the transmitter underrun. Note: 1 TXLDL_EV A high-speed CPU can service the interrupt generated by the last frame byte reaching the RX_FIFO bottom before that byte is transferred to memory by the DMA controller. This can happen when the CPU interrupt latency is shorter than the RX_FIFO timeout. A DMA request is generated only when the RX_FIFO level reaches the DMA threshold or when a FIFO timeout occurs, in order to minimize the performance degradation due to DMA signal handshake sequences. If the DMA controller must be set up before receiving each frame, the software in the interrupt routine should make sure that the last byte of the frame received has been transferred to memory before reinitializing the DMA controller, otherwise that byte could appear as the first byte of the next frame received. Transmitter Low-Data-Level Event. (Default = 1.) • FIFOs disabled: — Set to 1 when the transmitter holding register is empty. • FIFOs enabled: — Set to 1 when the TX_FIFO level is below the threshold level. 0 RXHDL_EV Receiver High-Data-Level Event. • FIFOs disabled: — Set to 1 when a character is in the receiver holding register. • FIFOs enabled: — Set to 1 when the RX_FIFO is equal to or above threshold or an RX_FIFO timeout has occurred. www.national.com 370 Revision 0.8 EIR, Non-Extended Mode (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 0) In non-extended UART mode, the functional block prioritizes interrupts into four levels. The EIR indicates the highest level of interrupt that is pending. See Table 5-33 for the encoding of these interrupts. EIR Non-Extended Mode Register Map 7 6 FEN1 FEN0 5 4 RSVD 3 2 1 0 RXFT IPR1 IPR0 IPF EIR Non-Extended Mode Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 FEN[1:0] FIFOs Enabled. 00: No FIFO enabled (Default). 11: FIFOs enabled (bit 0 of FCR = 1). 01, 10: Reserved. 5:4 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 3 RXFT RX_FIFO Timeout. In the 16450 mode, this bit is always 0. In the 16550 mode (FIFOs enabled), this bit is set to 1 when an RX_FIFO read timeout has occurred and the associated interrupt is currently the highest priority pending interrupt. IPR[1:0] Interrupt Priority. When bit 0 (IPF) is 0, these bits indicate the pending interrupt with the highest priority. (Default = 00). See Table 5-33. IPF Interrupt Pending Flag. 2:1 0 0: Interrupt pending. 1: No interrupt pending (Default). Table 5-33. EIR Non-Extended Mode Interrupt Priorities EIR Bits[3:0] Priority Level Interrupt Type Interrupt Source Interrupt Reset Control 0001 N/A None None N/A 0110 Highest Link Status Parity error, framing error, data overrun or break event. Read Link Status Register (LSR). 0100 Second Receiver High Data Level Event Receiver Holding Register (RXD) is full, or RX_FIFO level is equal to or above the threshold. Reading the RXD or RX_FIFO level drops below threshold. 1100 Second RX_FIFO Timeout At least one character is in the RX_FIFO, and no character has been input to or read from the RX_FIFO for four character times. Reading the RXD port. 0010 Third Transmitter Low Data Level Event Transmitter Holding Register or TX_FIFO empty. Reading the Event Identification Register (EIR) if this interrupt is currently the highest priority pending interrupt, or writing into the TXD port. 0000 Fourth Modem Status Any transition on CTS, DSR or DCD or a high-to-low transition on RI. Reading the Modem Status Register (MSR). Revision 0.8 371 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) FIFO Control Register (FCR) I/O Offset 02h Type WO Reset Value 00h The FIFO Control Register (FCR) is used to enable the FIFOs, clear the FIFOs and set the interrupt threshold levels for the RX_FIFO and TX_FIFO. FCR can be read through SH_FCR in Bank 3, I/O Offset 02h (see Section 5.12.6.3 on page 388). FCR Register Map 7 6 5 RXFTH 4 TXFTH 3 2 1 0 RSVD TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN FCR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RXFTH RX_FIFO Interrupt Threshold Level. These bits select the RX_FIFO interrupt threshold level. An interrupt is generated when the level of data in the RX_FIFO is equal to or above the encoded threshold. RX_FIFO Interrupt Threshold Level (16-Level FIFO) (32-Level FIFO) 00: 01: 10: 11: 5:4 TXFTH[1:0] 1 (Default) 4 8 14 1 (Default) 8 16 26 TX_FIFO Interrupt Threshold Level. In non-extended modes, these bits have no effect. In extended modes, these bits select the TX_FIFO interrupt threshold level. An interrupt is generated when the level of data in the TX_FIFO drops below the encoded threshold. TX_FIFO Interrupt Threshold Level (16-Level FIFO) (32-Level FIFO) 00: 01: 10: 11: 1 (Default) 3 9 13 1 (Default) 7 17 25 3 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 2 TXSR Transmitter Soft Reset. Writing a 1 to this bit generates a transmitter soft reset that clears the TX_FIFO and the transmitter logic. This bit is automatically cleared by the hardware. 1 RXSR Receiver Soft Reset. Writing a 1 to this bit generates a receiver soft reset that clears the RX_FIFO and the receiver logic. This bit is automatically cleared by the hardware. 0 FIFO_EN FIFO_EN (FIFO Enable). When set to 1, this bit enables both the TX_FIFO and RX_FIFOs. Resetting this bit clears both FIFOs. In CEIR mode, the FIFOs are always enabled and the setting of this bit is ignored. www.national.com 372 Revision 0.8 5.12.3.4 Link Control/Bank Select Registers These registers share the same address. The Link Control Register (LCR) selects the communication format for data transfers in UART, SIR and Sharp-IR modes. The Bank Select Register (BSR) is used to select the register bank to be accessed next. Reading the register at this address location returns the content of the BSR. The content of LCR can be read from the Shadow of Link Control register (SH_LCR) in Bank 3, I/O Offset 01h (see Section 5.12.6.2 on page 388). During a write operation to this register at this address location, setting of Bank Select Enable (BKSE, bit 7) determines the register to be accessed, as follows: • If bit 7 is 0, both LCR and BSR are written into. • If bit 7 is 1, only BSR is written into and LCR remains unchanged. This prevents the communication format from being spuriously affected when a bank other than Bank 0 or 1 is accessed. Link Control Register (LCR) I/O Offset 03h Type WO Reset Value 00h Bits 6 to 0 are only effective in UART, Sharp-IR and SIR modes. They are ignored in CEIR mode. LCR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 BKSE SBRK STKP EPS PEN STB 1 0 WLS[1:0] LCR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 BKSE Bank Select Enable. 0: Register functions as the Link Control register (LCR). 1: Register functions as the Bank Select register (BSR). 6 SBRK Set Break. Enables or disables a break. During the break, the transmitter can be used as a character timer to accurately establish the break duration. This bit acts only on the transmitter front end and has no effect on the rest of the transmitter logic. When set to 1, the following occurs: — If UART mode is selected, the UART[x]_TX pin is forced to a logic 0 state. — If SIR mode is selected, pulses are issued continuously on the UART[x]_IR_TX pin. — If Sharp-IR mode is selected and internal modulation is enabled, pulses are issued continuously on the UART[x]_IR_TX pin. — If Sharp-IR mode is selected and internal modulation is disabled, the UART[x]_IR_TX pin is forced to a logic 1 state. To avoid transmission of erroneous characters as a result of the break, use the following procedure: — Wait for the transmitter to be empty (TXEMP = 1). — Set SBRK to 1. — Wait for the transmitter to be empty, and clear SBRK to restore normal transmission. 5 STKP Stick Parity. When parity is enabled (PEN is 1), this bit and EPS (bit 4) control the parity bit (see Table 5-59). This bit has no effect when parity is not enabled. 4 EPS Even Parity Select. When parity is enabled (PEN is 1), this bit and STKP (bit 5) control the parity bit (see Table 5-59). This bit has no effect when parity is not enabled. 3 PEN Parity Enable. This bit enables the parity bit. The parity enable bit is used to produce an even or odd number of 1s when the data bits and parity bit are summed, as an error detection device. 0: No parity bit is used (Default). 1: A parity bit is generated by the transmitter and checked by the receiver. Revision 0.8 373 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) LCR Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 2 Name Description STB Stop Bits. This bit specifies the number of stop bits transmitted with each serial character. 0: One stop is bit generated (Default). 1: If the data length is set to 5 bits via bits [1:0] (WLS[1:0]), 1.5 stop bits are generated. For 6-, 7- or 8-bit word lengths, 2 stop bits are transmitted. The receiver checks for 1 stop bit only, regardless of the number of stop bits selected. 1:0 WLS[1:0] Character Length Select [1:0]. These bits specify the number of data bits in each transmitted or received serial character. 00: 5 (Default) 01: 6 10: 7 11: 8 Table 5-34. Bit Settings for Parity Control PEN EPS STKP Selected Parity Bit 0 x x None 1 0 0 Odd 1 1 0 Even 1 0 1 Logic 1 1 1 1 Logic 0 www.national.com 374 Revision 0.8 Bank Select Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h BSR selects the next register bank to be accessed. For details on how to access this register, see the description of BKSE (bit 7) of LCR (Section 5.12.3.4 on page 373). The register map and bit descriptions are applicable for all banks. BSR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 BKSE 2 1 0 BSR[6:0] BSR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 BKSE Bank Select Enable 0: Bank 0 selected. 1: Bits 6 to 0 specify the selected bank (see Table 5-35). 6:0 BSR[6:0] Bank Select [6:0]. When BKSE (bit 7) is set to 1, these bits select the bank (see Table 535). Table 5-35. Bank Select Encoding BSR Bits 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Bank Selected 0 x x x x x x x 0 1 0 x x x x x x 1 1 1 x x x x 1 x 1 1 1 x x x x x 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 3 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 5 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 6 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 7 1 1 1 1 1 x 0 0 Reserved 1 1 0 x x x 0 0 Reserved Revision 0.8 375 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.3.5 Modem/Mode Control Register (MCR) I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value 00h MCR controls the virtual interface with the modem or data communications set in loopback mode, and the device operational mode when the device is in the extended mode. This register function differs for extended and non-extended modes. Modem control pins are not available and are replaced with the virtual interface (except RTS and DTR signals) controlled by software only through MSR_UART[x]_MOD (see Section 5.12.1.1 on page 363). MCR, Extended Mode (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 1) In extended mode, this register is used to select the operation mode (IrDA, Sharp, etc.) of the device and enable the DMA interface. In these modes, the interrupt output signal is always enabled, and loopback can be enabled by setting bit 4 of EXCR1. Bits 2 to 7 should always be initialized when the operation mode is changed from non-extended to extended. MCR Extended Mode Register Map 7 6 5 MDSL[2:0] 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD TX_DFR DMA_EN RTS DTR MCR Extended Mode Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 MDSL[2:0] Mode Select [2:0]. These bits select the operation mode of the functional block when in extended mode. When the mode is changed, the TX_FIFO and RX_FIFOs are flushed, Link Status and Modem Status Interrupts are cleared, and all of the bits in the Auxiliary Status and Control register are cleared. 000: UART (Default) 001: Reserved 010: Sharp-IR 011: SIR 100: Reserved 101: Reserved 110: CEIR 111: Reserved 4 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 3 TX_DFR Transmit Deferral. For a detailed description of the transmit deferral see Section 4.11.1.6 "Transmit Deferral" on page 130. This bit is effective only if the TX_FIFO is enabled (FCR bit 0 = 1). 0: No transmit deferral enabled. (Default.) 1: Transmit deferral enabled. 2 DMA_EN DMA Enable. When set to1, DMA mode of operation is enabled. When DMA is selected, transmit and/or receive interrupts should be disabled to avoid spurious interrupts. DMA cycles always address the Data Holding registers or FIFOs, regardless of the selected bank. 0: DMA mode disabled. (Default.) 1: DMA mode enabled. 1 RTS Request To Send. When loopback is enabled (bit 4 of EXCR1 = 1, Bank 2, I/O Offset 02h), this bit internally drives both CTS and DCD. Otherwise it is unused. 0 DTR Data Terminal Ready. When loopback is enabled (bit 4 of EXCR1 = 1, Bank 2, I/O Offset 02h), this bit internally drives both DSR and RI. Otherwise it is unused. www.national.com 376 Revision 0.8 MCR, Non-Extended Mode (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 0) MCR Non-Extended Mode Register Map 7 6 5 RSVD 4 3 2 1 0 LOOP ISEN or DCDLP RILP RTS DTR MCR Non-Extended Mode Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 RSVD Reserved. Must written as 0. 4 LOOP Loopback Enable. This bit accesses the same internal register as LOOP (bit 4) of the EXCR1 register. (See Section 5.12.5.2 on page 383 for more information on Loopback mode). 0: Loopback disabled. (Default.) 1: Loopback enabled. 3 ISEN or DCDLP Interrupt Signal Enable or DCD Loopback. In normal operation (standard 16450 or 16550) mode, this bit controls the interrupt signal and must be set to 1 in order to enable the interrupt request signal. In loopback mode, this bit internally drives DCD, and the interrupt signal is always enabled. 2 RILP Ring Indicator in Loopback. When loopback is enabled, this bit internally drives RI. Otherwise, it is unused. 1 RTS Request To Send. When loopback is enabled, this bit drives CTS internally. Otherwise, it is unused. 0 DTR Data Terminal Ready.When loopback is enabled, this bit internally drives DSR. Otherwise, it is unused. 5.12.3.6 Link Status Register (LSR) I/O Offset 05h Type RO Reset Value 60h LSR provides status information concerning data transfer. Upon reset, this register assumes the value of 60h. The bit definitions change depending upon the operation mode of the functional block. Bits 1 to 4 of the LSR indicate link status events. These bits are sticky (accumulate any conditions occurred since the last time the register was read). They are cleared when one of the following events occur: • Hardware reset • Receiver soft reset (via the FIFO Control register) • LSR register read The LSR is intended for read operations only. Writing to the LSR is not permitted. LSR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 ER_INF TXEMP TXRDY BRK FE PE OE RXDA Revision 0.8 377 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) LSR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 ER_INF Error in RX_FIFO. In UART, Sharp-IR, and SIR modes, this bit is set to 1 if there is at least one framing error, parity error, or break indication in the RX_FIFO. This bit is always 0 in 16450 mode. It is cleared upon read or upon reset if there is no faulted byte in RX_FIFO. 6 TXEMP Transmitter Empty. This bit is set to 1 when the transmitter holding register or the TX_FIFO is empty, and the transmitter front end is idle. 5 TXRDY Transmitter Ready. This bit is set to 1 when the transmitter holding register or the TX_FIFO is empty. It is cleared when a data character is written to the TXD register. 4 BRK Break Event Detected. In UART, Sharp-IR, and SIR modes, this bit is set to 1 when a break event is detected (i.e., when a sequence of logic 0 bits, equal or longer than a full character transmission, is received). If the FIFOs are enabled, the break condition is associated with the particular character in the RX_FIFO to which it applies. In this case, the BRK bit is set when the character reaches the bottom of the RX_FIFO. When a break event occurs, only one 0 character is transferred to the receiver holding register or the RX_FIFO. The next character transfer takes place after at least one logic 1 bit is received, followed by a valid start bit. This bit is cleared upon read. 3 FE Framing Error. In UART, Sharp-IR and SIR modes, this bit is set to 1 when the received data character does not have a valid stop bit (i.e., the stop bit following the last data bit or parity bit is a 0). If the FIFOs are enabled, this Framing Error is associated with the particular character in the FIFO it applies to. This error is revealed to the CPU when its associated character is at the bottom of the RX_FIFO. After a framing error is detected, the receiver will try to resynchronize. The receiver assumes that framing error (the erroneous stop bit) is the next start bit (the erroneous stop bit) and shifts in the new character. This bit is cleared upon a read. 2 PE Parity Error. In UART, Sharp-IR, and SIR modes, this bit is set to 1 if the received data character does not have the correct parity, even or odd, as selected by the parity control bits of the LCR. If the FIFOs are enabled, this error is associated with the particular character in the FIFO that it applies to. This error is revealed to the CPU when its associated character is at the bottom of the RX_FIFO. This bit is cleared upon read. 1 OE Overrun Error. In UART, Sharp-IR, and SIR modes, this bit is set to 1 as soon as an overrun condition is detected by the receiver. It is cleared upon read. FIFOs Disabled: An overrun occurs when a new character is completely received into the receiver front end section and the CPU has not yet read the previous character in the receiver holding register. The new character overwrites the previous character in the receiver holding register. FIFOs Enabled: An overrun occurs when a new character is completely received into the receiver front end section and the RX_FIFO is full. The new character is discarded, and the RX_FIFO is not affected. 0 RXDA www.national.com Receiver Data Available. This bit is set to 1 when the receiver holding register is full. If the FIFOs are enabled, this bit is set when at least one character is in the RX_FIFO. It is cleared when the CPU reads all the data in the holding register or the RX_FIFO. 378 Revision 0.8 5.12.3.7 Modem Status Register (MSR) I/O Offset 06h Type RO Reset Value x0h The function of this register depends on the selected operational mode. When a UART mode is selected, this register provides the current state as well as state-change information of the status lines from the modem or data transmission module. When any of the IR modes is selected, the register function is controlled by the setting of the IRMSSL bit of the IRCR2 (see Section 5.12.8.2 on page 390). If IRMSSL is 0, the MSR register works as in UART mode. If IRMSSL is 1, the MSR returns the value 30h, regardless of the state of the modem input lines. When loopback is enabled, the MSR works similarly except that its status input signals are internally driven by appropriate bits in the MCR since the modem input lines are internally disconnected. Refer to bits 1 to 0 in MCR extended mode or bits 3 to 0 in MCR non-extended mode (see Section 5.12.3.5 on page 376) and to the LOOP and ETDLBK bits at the EXCR1 (see Section 5.12.5.2 on page 383). A Modem Status Event (MS_EV) is generated if the MS_IE bit in IER is enabled and any of bits 0, 1, 2, or 3 in this register are set to 1. Bits 0 to 3 are cleared to 0 as a result of any of the following events: • A hardware reset occurs. • The operational mode is changed and the IRMSSL bit is 0. • The MSR register is read. In the reset state, bits 4 to 7 are indeterminate as they reflect their corresponding signal levels at MSR_UART[x]_MOD. MSR (Modem Status Register) Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DCD RI DSR CTS DDCD TERI DDSR DCTS MSR (Modem Status Register) Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 DCD Data Carrier Detect. This is the status of the MOD5 bit in MSR_UART[x]_MOD (see Section 5.12.1.1 on page 363). 6 RI Ring Indicator. This is the status of the MOD7 bit in MSR_UART[x]_MOD (see Section 5.12.1.1 on page 363). 5 DSR Data Set Ready. This is the status of the MOD6 bit in MSR_UART[x]_MOD (see Section 5.12.1.1 on page 363). 4 CTS Clear To Send. This is the status of the MOD4 bit in MSR_UART[x]_MOD (see Section 5.12.1.1 on page 363). 3 DDCD Delta Data Carrier Detect. This bit is the Delta Data Carrier Detect (DDCD) indicator. When high, this bit indicates that the DCD input has changed state. Reading this register causes this bit to be cleared. 2 TERI Trailing Edge Ring Indicator. This bit is the Trailing Edge Ring Indicator (TERI) detector. When high, this bit indicates that the RI input has changed from a high to low state. Reading this register causes this bit to be cleared. 1 DDSR Delta Data Set Ready. This bit is the Delta Data Set Ready (DDSR) indicator. When high, this bit indicates that the DSR input has changed state since the last time it was read by the CPU. Reading this register causes this bit to be cleared. 0 DCTS Delta Clear To Send. This bit is the Delta Clear To Send (DCTS) indicator. When high, this bit indicates that the CTS input has changed state since the last time it was read by the CPU. Reading this register causes this bit to be cleared. Revision 0.8 379 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.3.8 Scratchpad/Auxiliary Status and Control Registers The Scratchpad Register (SPR) and Auxiliary Status and Control Register (ASCR) share the same address. Scratchpad Register (SPR) I/O Offset 07h Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register is accessed when the device is in non-extended mode (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 0). This is a scratchpad register for temporary data storage. Auxiliary Status and Control Register (ASCR) I/O Offset 07h Type R/W Reset Value 00h ASCR is accessed when the extended mode (EXCR1.EXT_SL = 1) of operation is selected. The definition of the bits in this case is dependent upon the mode selected in the MCR, bits 7 to 5. This register is cleared upon hardware reset. Bit 2 is also cleared when the transmitter is “soft reset” (via the FIFO Control register) or after the S_EOT byte is transmitted. Bit 6 is also cleared when the transmitter is “soft reset” or by writing 1 into it. Bits 0, 1, 4, and 5 are also cleared when the receiver is “soft reset” (via the FIFO Control register). ASCR Extended Mode Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD TXUR RXACT RXWDG RSVD S_EOT RSVD RXF_TOUT ASCR Extended Mode Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 6 TXUR IR Transmitter Underrun. For CEIR mode only. This bit is set to 1 when a transmitter underrun occurs. It is always cleared when a mode other than CEIR is selected. This bit must be cleared, by writing a 1 into it to re-enable transmission. 5 RXACT Receiver Active. For CEIR mode only. This bit is set to 1 when an IR pulse or pulse-train is received. If a 1 is written into this bit position, the bit is cleared and the receiver deactivated. When this bit is set, the receiver samples the IR input continuously at the programmed baud and transfers the data to the RX_FIFO. 4 RXWDG Reception WATCHDOG. For CEIR mode only. This bit is set to 1 each time a pulse or pulse-train (modulated pulse) is detected by the receiver. It can be used by the software to detect a receiver idle condition. It is cleared upon read. 3 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 2 S_EOT Set End of Transmission. For CEIR mode only. When a 1 is written into this bit position before writing the last character into the TX_FIFO, data transmission is properly completed. If the CPU simply stops writing data into the TX_FIFO at the end of the data stream, a transmitter underrun is generated and the transmitter stops. In this case this is not an error, but the software must clear the underrun before the next transmission can occur. This bit is automatically cleared by hardware when a character is written to the TX_FIFO. 1 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 0 RXF_TOUT (RO) RX_FIFO Timeout (Read Only). This bit is set to 1 if the RX_FIFO is below threshold and an RX_FIFO timeout occurs. It is cleared when a character is read from the RX_FIFO. www.national.com 380 Revision 0.8 5.12.4 Bank 1 Register Descriptions The bit formats of the registers in Bank 1 are summarized in Table 5-36. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-36. Bank 1 Bit Map Register I/O Offset Bits Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PEN STB WLS1 WLS0 00h LBGD_L LBGD[7:0] 01h LBGD_H LBGD[15:8] 02h RSVD 03h LCR BKSE BSR BKSE 04-07h 5.12.4.1 RSVD SBRK STKP EPS BSR[6:0] RSVD RSVD Legacy Baud Generator Divisor Port Legacy Baud Generator Divisor Low Byte (LBGD_L) I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Legacy Baud Generator Divisor High Byte (LBGD_H) I/O Offset 01h Type R/W Reset Value xxh The Legacy Baud Generator Divisor (LBGD) port provides an alternate data path to the Baud Divisor Generator register. LBGD is a 16-bit wide port split into two bytes, LBGD_L an LBGD_H, occupying consecutive address locations. This port is implemented to maintain compatibility with 16550 standard and to support existing legacy software packages. New software should use the BGD port in Bank 2 to access the baud generator divisor register. The programmable baud rates in the non-extended mode are achieved by dividing a 24 MHz clock by a prescale value of 13, 1.625 or 1. This prescale value is selected by the PRESL field of EXCR2 (Section 5.12.5.4 on page 385). Divisor values between 1 and 216-1 can be used (0 cannot be used, see Table 5-38 "Baud Generator Divisor Settings" on page 382). The baud generator divisor must be loaded during initialization to ensure proper operation of the baud generator. Upon loading either part of it, the baud generator counter is immediately loaded. Table 5-38 shows typical baud divisors. After reset, the divisor register contents are indeterminate. If the UART is in extended mode, any access to the LBGD_L or LBGD_H causes a reset to the default non-extended mode (i.e., 16550 mode). To access a baud generator divisor when in extended mode, use the port pair in Bank 2 (see Section 5.12.5.1 "Baud Generator Divisor Port" on page 383). Table 5-37 shows the bits that are cleared when fallback occurs during extended or non-extended modes. If the UART is in non-extended mode and the LOCK bit is 1, the content of the divisor (BGD) port is not be effected and no other action is taken. Table 5-37. Bits Cleared on Fallback UART Mode and LOCK Bit before Fallback Register Name Extended Mode LOCK = x Non-Extended Mode LOCK = 0 Non-Extended Mode LOCK = 1 MCR 2 to 7 None None EXCR1 0, 5 and 7 5 and 7 None EXCR2 0 to 5 0 to 5 None IRCR1 2 and 3 None None Revision 0.8 381 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-38. Baud Generator Divisor Settings Prescaler Value 13 1.625 1 Baud Divisor % Error Divisor % Error Divisor % Error 50 2304 0.16% 18461 0.00% 30000 0.00% 75 1536 0.16% 12307 0.01% 20000 0.00% 110 1047 0.19% 8391 0.01% 13636 0.00% 134.5 857 0.10% 6863 0.00% 11150 0.02% 150 768 0.16% 6153 0.01% 10000 0.00% 300 384 0.16% 3076 0.03% 5000 0.00% 600 192 0.16% 1538 0.03% 2500 0.00% 1200 96 0.16% 769 0.03% 1250 0.00% 1800 64 0.16% 512 0.16% 833 0.04% 2000 58 0.53% 461 0.12% 750 0.00% 2400 48 0.16% 384 0.16% 625 0.00% 3600 32 0.16% 256 0.16% 416 0.16% 4800 24 0.16% 192 0.16% 312 0.16% 7200 16 0.16% 128 0.16% 208 0.16% 9600 12 0.16% 96 0.16% 156 0.16% 14400 8 0.16% 64 0.16% 104 0.16% 19200 6 0.16% 48 0.16% 78 0.16% 28800 4 0.16% 32 0.16% 52 0.16% 38400 3 0.16% 24 0.16% 39 0.16% 57600 2 0.16% 16 0.16% 26 0.16% 115200 1 0.16% 8 0.16% 13 0.16% 230400 --- --- 4 0.16% --- --- 460800 --- --- 2 0.16% --- --- 750000 --- --- --- --- 2 0.00% 921600 --- --- 1 0.16% --- --- 1500000 --- --- --- --- 1 0.00% 5.12.4.2 Link Control/Bank Select Register (LCR/BSR) These registers share the same address and are the same as the registers at I/O Offset 03h in Bank 0. Link Control Register (LCR) I/O Offset 03h Type RW Reset Value 00h See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. Bank Selection Encoding Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. www.national.com 382 Revision 0.8 5.12.5 Bank 2 Register Descriptions The bit formats for the registers in Bank 2 are summarized in Table 5-39. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-39. Bank 2 Bit Map Register I/O Offset Bits Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMASWP DMATH DMANF EXT_SL 00h BGD_L 01h BGD_H 02h EXCR1 03h BSR BKSE 04h EXCR2 LOCK 05h RSVD 06h TXFLV RSVD TFL[5:0] 07h RXFLV RSVD RFL[5:0] 5.12.5.1 BGD[7:0] BGD[15:8] RSVD EDTLBK LOOP BSR[6:0] RSVD PRESL[1:0] RF_SIZ[1:0] TF_SIZ1[1:0] RSVD Baud Generator Divisor Port Baud Generator Divisor Low Byte (BGD_L) I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Baud Generator Divisor High Byte (BGD_H) I/O Offset 01h Type R/W Reset Value xxh This port performs the same function as the Legacy Baud Divisor port in Bank 1 and is accessed identically, but does not change the operation mode of the functional block when accessed. See Section 5.12.4.1 "Legacy Baud Generator Divisor Port" on page 381 for more details. Use this port to set the baud when operating in extended mode to avoid fallback to a non-extended operation mode (i.e., 16550 compatible). When programming the baud, writing to BGD_H causes the baud to change immediately. 5.12.5.2 Extended Control Register 1 (EXCR1) I/O Offset 02h Type R/W Reset Value 00h Use this register to control operation in the extended mode. Upon reset, all bits are set to 0. EXCR1 Register Map 7 6 RSVD 5 4 3 2 1 0 EDTLBK LOOP DMASWP DMATH DMANF EXT_SL EXCR1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. EDTLBK Enable Transmitter During Loopback. When this bit is set to 1, the transmitter serial output is enabled and functions normally when loopback is enabled. 5 Revision 0.8 383 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) EXCR1 Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 4 LOOP Loopback Enable. During loopback, the transmitter output is connected internally to the receiver input, to enable system self-test of serial communication. In addition to the data signal, all additional signals within the UART are interconnected to enable real transmission and reception using the UART mechanisms. When this bit is set to 1, loopback is selected. This bit accesses the same internal register as bit 4 in the MCR, when the UART is in a non-extended mode. Loopback behaves similarly in both non-extended and extended modes. When extended mode is selected, the DTR bit of the MCR internally drives both DSR and RI, and the RTS bit drives CTS and DCD. During loopback, the following occurs: • The transmitter and receiver interrupts are fully operational. The modem status interrupts are also fully operational, but the interrupt sources are now the lower bits of the MCR. Modem interrupts in IR modes are disabled unless the IRMSSL bit of the IRCR2 is 0. Individual interrupts are still controlled by the IER bits. • The DMA control signals are fully operational. • UART and IR receiver serial input signals are disconnected. The internal receiver input signals are connected to the corresponding internal transmitter output signals. • The UART transmitter serial output is forced high and the IR transmitter serial output is forced low, unless the ETDLBK bit is set to 1, in which case they function normally. • The virtual modem signals of MSR_UART[x]_MOD register (DSR, CTS, RI and DCD) are disconnected. The internal modem status signals are driven by the lower bits of the MCR. 3 DMASWP DMA Swap. This bit selects the routing of the DMA control signals between the internal DMA logic and configuration module of the chip. When this bit is 0, the transmitter and receiver DMA control signals are not swapped. When it is 1, they are swapped. A block diagram illustrating the control signals routing is shown in Figure 5-2 "DMA Control Signals Routing" on page 385. The swap feature is particularly useful when only one 8237 DMA channel is used to serve both transmitter and receiver. In this case, only one external DMA Request/DMA Acknowledge pair is interconnected to the swap logic by the configuration module. Routing the external DMA channel to either the transmitter or receiver DMA logic is then controlled by the DMASWP bit. This way, the IR device drivers do not need to know the details of the configuration module. 2 DMATH DMA FIFO Threshold. This bit selects the TX_FIFO and RX_FIFO threshold levels used by the DMA request logic to support demand transfer mode. A transmission DMA request is generated when the TX_FIFO level is below the threshold. A reception DMA request is generated when the RX_FIFO level reaches the threshold or when an RX_FIFO timeout occurs. Table 5-40 lists the threshold levels for each FIFO. 1 DMANF DMA Fairness Control. This bit controls the maximum duration of DMA burst transfers. 0: DMA requests forced inactive after approximately 10.5 µs of continuous transmitter and/or receiver DMA operation (default). 1: TX-DMA request is deactivated when the TX_FIFO is full. An RX DMA request is deactivated when the RX_FIFO is empty. 0 EXT_SL www.national.com Extended Mode Select. When set to 1, extended mode is selected. 384 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-40. DMA Threshold Levels DMA Threshold for FIFO Type TX_FIFO Bit Value RX_FIFO 16 Levels 32 Levels 0 4 13 29 1 10 7 23 . DMA Swap Logic RX-Channel DMA Logic Configuration Module RX_DMA DMA Handshake Signals Routing Logic Logic Routing TX-Channel DMA Logic TX_DMA DMASWP Figure 5-2. DMA Control Signals Routing 5.12.5.3 Bank Select Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h BSR is the same as the BSR register at I/O Offset 03h in Bank 0. See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. 5.12.5.4 Extended Control Register 2 (EXCR2) I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value 00h EXCR2 configures the RX_FIFO and TX_FIFO sizes and the value of the prescaler, and controls the baud divisor register lock. Upon reset, all bits are set to 0. EXCR2 Register Map 7 6 LOCK RSVD 5 4 3 PRESL[1:0] 2 RF_SIZ[1:0] 1 0 TF_SIZ[1:0] EXCR2 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 LOCK Baud Divisor Register Lock. When set to 1, any access to the baud generator divisor register through LBGD_L and LBGD_H, as well as fallback are disabled from nonextended mode. In this case, two scratchpad registers overlaid with LBGD_L and LBGD_H are enabled, and any attempted CPU access of the baud generator divisor register through LBGD_L and LBGD_H access the scratchpad registers instead. This bit must be set to 0 when extended mode is selected. 6 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. Revision 0.8 385 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) EXCR2 Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit Name Description 5:4 PRESL[1:0] Prescaler Select. The prescaler divides the 24 MHz input clock frequency to provide the clock for the baud generator. 00: 13 (Default) 01: 1.625 10: Reserved 11: 1.0 3:2 RF_SIZ[1:0] RX_FIFO Levels Select. These bits select the number of levels for the RX_FIFO. They are effective only when the FIFOs are enabled. (FCR bit 0 = 1.) 00: 16 (Default) 01: 32 1x: Reserved 1:0 TF_SIZ[1:0] TX_FIFO Levels Select. These bits select the number of levels for the TX_FIFO. They are effective only when the FIFOs are enabled. (FCR bit 0 = 1.) 00: 16 (Default) 01: 32 1x: Reserved 5.12.5.5 TX_FIFO Current Level Register (TXFLV) I/O Offset 06h Type RO Reset Value 00h TXFLV returns the number of bytes in the TX_FIFO. TXFLV Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 1 0 TFL[5:0] TXFLV Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Returns 0. 5:0 TFL[5:0] Number of Bytes in TX_FIFO. These bits specify the number of bytes in the TX_FIFO. Note: www.national.com The contents of TXFLV and RXFLV are not frozen during CPU reads. Therefore, invalid data could be returned if the CPU reads these registers during normal transmitter and receiver operation. To obtain correct data, the software should perform three consecutive reads and then take the data from the second read if the first and second reads yield the same result. It can also be taken from the third read if the first and second reads yield different results. 386 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.5.6 RX_FIFO Current Level Register (RXFLV) I/O Offset 07h Type RO Reset Value 00h RXFLV returns the number of bytes in the RX_FIFO. It can be used for software debugging. RXFLV Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 1 0 RFL[5:0] RXFLV Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 RSVD Reserved. Return 0s. 5:0 RFL[5:0] Number of Bytes in RX_FIFO. These bits specify the number of bytes in the RX_FIFO. Note: The contents of TXFLV and RXFLV are not frozen during CPU reads. Therefore, invalid data could be returned if the CPU reads these registers during normal transmitter and receiver operation. To obtain correct data, the software should perform three consecutive reads and then take the data from the second read if the first and second reads yield the same result. It can also be taken from the third read if the first and second reads yield different results. 5.12.6 Bank 3 Register Descriptions The bit formats for the registers in Bank 3 are summarized in Table 5-41. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-41. Bank 3 Bit Map Register I/O Offset Name 00h MRID 01h SH_LCR 02h SH_FCR 03h BSR 04h-07h Bits 7 6 RSVD SBRK 5 4 3 2 1 0 STKP EPS PEN STB WLS1 WLS0 RSVD TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN MID[3:0] RXFTH[1:0] RID[3:0] TXFTH[1:0] BKSE BSR[6:0] RSVD RSVD 5.12.6.1 Module Identification and Revision ID Register (MRID) I/O Offset 00h Type RO Reset Value 0xh MRID identifies the revision of the module. When read, it returns the module ID and revision level in the format 0xh, where x indicates the revision number. MRID Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 MID[3:0] Revision 0.8 2 1 0 RID[3:0] 387 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) MRID Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 MID[3:0] Module ID. Identifies the module type. 3:0 RID[3:0] Revision ID. Identifies the module revision level. For example, 0h = revision 0, 1h = revision 1, etc. 5.12.6.2 Shadow of Link Control Register (SH_LCR) I/O Offset 01h Type RO Reset Value 00h SH_LCR returns the value of the LCR. The LCR is written into when a byte value, with bit 7 set to 0, is written to the LCR/BSR registers location (at I/O Offset 03h) from any bank. SH_LCR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD SBRK STKP EPS PEN STB WLS1 WLS0 5.12.6.3 Shadow of FIFO Control Register (SH_FCR) I/O Offset 02h Type RO Reset Value 00h This register returns the contents of the FCR in Bank 0. FCR Register Map 7 6 RXFTH[1:0] 5 4 TXFTH[1:0] 3 2 1 0 RSVD TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN 5.12.6.4 Bank Select Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h BSR is the same as the BSR register at I/O Offset 03h in Bank 0. See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. www.national.com 388 Revision 0.8 5.12.7 Bank 4 Register Descriptions The bit formats for the registers in Bank 4 are summarized in Table 5-42. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-42. Bank 4 Bit Map Register I/O Offset Name 00h-01h RSVD 02h IRCR1 03h BSR 04h-07h Bits 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD RSVD IR_SL[1:0] BKSE RSVD BSR[6:0] RSVD RSVD 5.12.7.1 IR Control Register 1 (IRCR1) I/O Offset 02h Type R/W Reset Value 00h IRCR1 enables the Sharp-IR or SIR IR mode in non-extended mode of operation. Upon reset, all bits are set to 0. IRCR1 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 IR_SL[1:0] 1 0 RSVD IRCR1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 3:2 IR_SL[1:0] Sharp-IR or SIR Mode Select. These bits enable Sharp-IR and SIR modes in nonextended mode. They allow selection of the appropriate IR interface when extended mode is not selected. These bits are ignored when extended mode is selected. 00: UART (Default). 01: Reserved. 10: Sharp-IR. 11: SIR. 1:0 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 5.12.7.2 Bank Select Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h BSR is the same as the BSR register at I/O Offset 03h in Bank 0. See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. Revision 0.8 389 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.8 Bank 5 Register Descriptions The bit formats for the registers in Bank 5 are summarized in Table 5-43. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-43. Bank 5 Bit Map Register I/O Offset Name 00h-02h RSVD Bits 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD IRMSSL IR_FDPLX RSVD 03h BSR BKSE 04h IRCR2 RSVD 05h-07h RSVD BSR[6:0] RSVD RSVD AUX_IRRX RSVD RSVD 5.12.8.1 Bank Select Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h BSR is the same as the BSR register at I/O Offset 03h in Bank 0. See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. 5.12.8.2 IR Control Register 2 (IRCR2) I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value 02h IRCR2 controls the basic settings of the IR modes. Upon reset, the content of this register is 02h. IRCR2 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD RSVD RSVD AUX_IRRX RSVD RSVD IRMSSL IR_FDPLX IRCR2 Bit Descriptions Bit 7:5 4 3:2 1 Name Description RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. AUX_IRRX Auxiliary IR Input Select. When set to 1, the IR signal is received from the auxiliary input. See Table 5-51 "IR Receive Input Selection" on page 399. RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. IRMSSL MSR Register Function Select in IR Mode. This bit selects the behavior of the MSR and Modem Status Interrupt (MS_EV) when an IR mode is selected. When a UART mode is selected, the MSR and the MS_EV function normally and this bit is ignored. 0: MSR and MS_EV work in the IR modes as in the UART mode. 1: MSR returns 30h, and MS_EV is disabled (Default). 0 IR_FDPLX www.national.com Enable IR Full Duplex Mode. When set to 1, the IR receiver is not masked during transmission. 390 Revision 0.8 5.12.9 Bank 6 Register Descriptions The bit formats for the registers in Bank 6 are summarized in Table 5-44. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-44. Bank 6 Bit Map Register Bits I/O Offset Name 7 6 00h IRCR3 SHDM_DS SHMD_DS 01h RSVD 02h SIR_PW 03h BSR 04h-07h 5 4 3 2 1 0 SPW2 SPW1 SPW0 RSVD RSVD RSVD SPW3 BKSE BSR[6:0] RSVD RSVD 5.12.9.1 IR Control Register 3 (IRCR3) I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value 20h IRCR3 is used to select the operating mode of the Sharp-IR interface. IRCR3 Register Map 7 6 SHDM_DS SHMD_DS 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD IRCR3 Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description SHDM_DS Sharp-IR Demodulation Disable. 0: Internal 500 kHz receiver demodulation enabled (Default). 1: Internal demodulation disabled. 6 SHMD_DS Sharp-IR Modulation Disable. 0: Internal 500 kHz transmitter modulation enabled (Default). 1: Internal modulation disabled. 5:0 Revision 0.8 RSVD Reserved. Read as written. 391 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.9.2 SIR Pulse Width Register (SIR_PW) I/O Offset 02h Type R/W Reset Value 00h SIR_PW sets the pulse width for transmitted pulses in SIR operation mode. These settings do not affect the receiver. Upon reset, the content of this register is 00h, which defaults to a pulse width of 3/16 of the baud rate. SIR_PW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 1 0 SPW[3:0] SIR_PW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 RSVD Reserved. Write to 0. 3:0 SPW[3:0] SIR Pulse Width. Two codes for setting the pulse width are available. All other values for this field are reserved. 0000: Pulse width = 3/16 of bit period (Default). 1101: Pulse width = 1.6 µs. 5.12.9.3 Bank Select Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h BSR is the same as the BSR register at I/O Offset 03h in Bank 0. See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. www.national.com 392 Revision 0.8 5.12.10 Bank 7 Register Descriptions The bit formats for the registers in Bank 7 are summarized in Table 5-44. Detailed descriptions of each register follow. Table 5-45. Bank 7 Bit Map Register I/O Offset Bits Name 7 6 00h IRRXDC 01h IRTXMC 02h RCCFG R_LEN 03h BSR BKSE 04h IRCFG1 5 4 3 MCPW[2:0] T_OV 1 0 DFR[4:0] MCFR[4:0] RXHSC RCDM_DS RSVD TXHSC RC_MMD[1:0] BSR[6:0] STRV_MS RSVD SET_IRTX IRRX1_LV IRSL0_DS RXINV 05h-06h RSVD 07h 2 DBW[2:0] RSVD IRIC[2:0] IRSL21_DS RSVD RSVD IRCFG4 RSVD The CEIR utilizes two carrier frequency ranges (See Table 5-50 on page 395): • Low range - spans from 30 kHz to 56 kHz, in 1 kHz increments. • High range - includes three frequencies: 400 kHz, 450 kHz or 480 kHz. High and low frequencies are specified independently to allow separate transmission and reception modulation settings. The transmitter uses the carrier frequency settings in Table 5-50 "CEIR Carrier Frequency Encoding" on page 395. The two registers at I/O Offsets 04h and 07h (IR transceiver configuration registers) are provided to configure the virtual IR dongle interface via IRSL[2:0] bits (to allow legacy software writes on these bits). 5.12.10.1 IR Receiver Demodulator Control Register (IRRXDC) I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value 29h IRRXDC controls settings for Sharp-IR and CEIR reception. After reset, the content of this register is 29h. This setting selects a subcarrier frequency in a range between 34.61 kHz and 38.26 kHz for the CEIR mode, and from 480.0 kHz to 533.3 kHz for the Sharp-IR mode. The value of this register is ignored if the receiver demodulation for both modes is disabled (see bit 7 (SHDM_DS) in Section 5.12.9.1 "IR Control Register 3 (IRCR3)" on page 391 and bit 4 (RCDM_DS) in Section 5.12.10.3 "CEIR Configuration Register (RCCFG)" on page 396). The available frequency ranges for CEIR and Sharp-IR modes are given in Tables 5-46 through 5-48. IRRXDC Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 DBW[2:0] 2 1 0 DFR[4:0] IRRXDC Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 DBW[2:0] Demodulator Bandwidth. These bits set the demodulator bandwidth for the selected frequency range. The subcarrier signal frequency must fall within the specified frequency range in order to be accepted. Used for both Sharp-IR and CEIR modes. (Default = 001.) 4:0 DFR[4:0] Demodulator Frequency. These bits select the subcarrier’s center frequency for the CEIR mode. (Default = 01001.) Revision 0.8 393 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-46. CEIR, Low Speed Demodulator (RXHSC = 0) (Frequency Ranges in kHz) DBW[2:0] Bits (Bits [7:5] of IRRXDC) 001 010 011 100 101 110 DFR[4:0] Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max 00011 28.6 31.6 27.3 33.3 26.1 35.3 25.0 37.5 24.0 40.0 23.1 42.9 00100 29.3 32.4 28.0 34.2 26.7 36.2 25.6 38.4 24.6 41.0 23.7 43.9 00101 30.1 33.2 28.7 35.1 27.4 37.1 26.3 39.4 25.2 42.1 24.3 45.1 00110 31.7 35.1 30.3 37.0 29.0 39.2 27.8 41.7 26.7 44.4 25.6 47.6 00111 32.6 36.0 31.1 38.1 29.8 40.3 28.5 42.8 27.4 45.7 26.3 48.9 01000 33.6 37.1 32.0 39.2 30.7 41.5 29.4 44.1 28.2 47.0 27.1 50.4 01001 34.6 38.3 33.0 40.4 31.6 42.8 30.3 45.4 29.1 48.5 28.0 51.9 01011 35.7 39.5 34.1 41.7 32.6 44.1 31.3 46.9 30.0 50.0 28.8 53.6 01100 36.9 40.7 35.2 43.0 33.7 45.5 32.3 48.4 31.0 51.6 29.8 55.3 01101 38.1 42.1 36.4 44.4 34.8 47.1 33.3 50.0 32.0 53.3 30.8 57.1 01111 39.4 43.6 37.6 45.9 36.0 48.6 34.5 51.7 33.1 55.1 31.8 59.1 10000 40.8 45.1 39.0 47.6 37.3 50.4 35.7 53.6 34.3 57.1 33.0 61.2 10010 42.3 46.8 40.4 49.4 38.6 52.3 37.0 55.6 35.6 59.3 34.2 63.5 10011 44.0 48.6 42.0 51.3 40.1 54.3 38.5 57.7 36.9 61.5 35.5 65.9 10101 45.7 50.5 43.6 53.3 41.7 56.5 40.0 60.0 38.4 64.0 36.9 68.6 10111 47.6 52.6 45.5 55.6 43.5 58.8 41.7 62.5 40.0 66.7 38.5 71.4 11010 49.7 54.9 47.4 57.9 45.3 61.4 43.5 65.2 41.7 69.5 40.1 74.5 11011 51.9 57.4 49.5 60.6 47.4 64.1 45.4 68.1 43.6 72.7 41.9 77.9 11101 54.4 60.1 51.9 63.4 49.7 67.2 47.6 71.4 45.7 76.1 43.9 81.6 Table 5-47. Consumer IR High Speed Demodulator (RXHSC = 1) (Frequency Ranges in kHz) DBW[2:0] Bits (Bits [7:5] of IRRXDC) 001 DFR[4:0] Min 010 Max Min 011 Max Min 100 Max Min 101 Max Min 110 Max Min Max 00011 381.0 421.1 363.6 444.4 347.8 470.6 333.3 500.0 320.0 533.3 307.7 571.4 01000 436.4 480.0 417.4 505.3 400.0 533.3 384.0 564.7 369.2 600.0 355.6 640.0 01011 457.7 505.3 436.4 533.3 417.4 564.7 400.0 600.0 384.0 640.0 369.9 685.6 Table 5-48. Sharp-IR Demodulator (Frequency Ranges in kHz) DBW[2:0] Bits (Bits [7:5] of IRRXDC) 001 010 011 100 101 110 DFR[4:0] Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min Max xxxxx 480.0 533.3 457.1 564.7 436.4 600.0 417.4 640.0 400.0 685.6 384.0 738.5 www.national.com 394 Revision 0.8 5.12.10.2 IR Transmitter Modulator Control Register (IRTXMC) I/O Offset 01h Type R/W Reset Value 69h IRTXMC selects the modulation subcarrier parameters for CEIR and Sharp-IR mode transmission. For Sharp-IR, only the subcarrier pulse width is controlled by this register; the subcarrier frequency is fixed at 500 kHz. After reset, the value of this register is 69h, selecting a carrier frequency of 36 kHz and an IR pulse width of 7 µs for CEIR, or a pulse width of 0.8 µs for Sharp-IR. IRTXMC Bit Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 MCPW[2:0] 1 0 MCFR[4:0] IRTXMC Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:5 MCPW[2:0] Modulation Subcarrier Pulse Width. Specifies the pulse width of the subcarrier clock, as shown in Table 5-49. (Default = 011.) 4:0 MCFR[4:0] Modulation Subcarrier Frequency. These bits set the frequency for the CEIR modulation subcarrier. The encoding is defined in Table 5-50. (Default = 01001.) Table 5-49. Modulation Carrier Pulse Width MCPW[2:0] Low Frequency (TXHSC = 0) (CEIR only) High Frequency (TXHSC = 1) (CEIR or Sharp-IR) 000 Reserved Reserved 001 Reserved Reserved 010 6.0 µs 0.7 µs 011 7.0 µs 0.8 µs 100 9.0 µs 0.9 µs 101 10.6 µs Reserved 110 Reserved Reserved 111 Reserved Reserved Table 5-50. CEIR Carrier Frequency Encoding MCFR[4:0] Low Frequency (TXHSC = 0) High Frequency (TXHSC = 1) 00000 Reserved Reserved 00001 Reserved Reserved 00010 Reserved Reserved 00011 30 kHz 400 kHz 00100 31 kHz Reserved 00101 32 kHz Reserved 00110 33 kHz Reserved 00111 34 kHz Reserved 01000 35 kHz 450 kHz 01001 36 kHz Reserved 01010 37 kHz Reserved 01011 38 kHz 480 kHz 01100 39 kHz Reserved Revision 0.8 395 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-50. CEIR Carrier Frequency Encoding (Continued) MCFR[4:0] Low Frequency (TXHSC = 0) High Frequency (TXHSC = 1) 01101 40 kHz Reserved 01110 41 kHz Reserved 01111 42 kHz Reserved 10000 43 kHz Reserved 10001 44 kHz Reserved 10010 45 kHz Reserved 10011 46 kHz Reserved 10100 47 kHz Reserved 10101 48 kHz Reserved 10110 49 kHz Reserved 10111 50 kHz Reserved 11000 51 kHz Reserved 11001 52 kHz Reserved 11010 53 kHz Reserved 11011 54 kHz Reserved 11100 55 kHz Reserved 11101 56 kHz Reserved 11110 56.9 kHz Reserved 11111 Reserved Reserved 5.12.10.3 CEIR Configuration Register (RCCFG) I/O Offset 02h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RCCFG controls the basic operation of the CEIR mode. RCCFG Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 R_LEN T_OV RXHSC RCDM_DS RSVD TXHSC 1 0 RC_MMD[1:0] RCCFG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 R_LEN Run Length Control. When set to 1, this bit enables run length encoding/decoding. The format of a run length code is: Yxxxxxxx, where Y is the bit value and xxxxxxx is the number of bits minus 1 (selects from 1 to 128 bits). 6 T_OV Receiver Sampling Mode. 0: Programmed T period sampling. 1: Oversampling mode. 5 RXHSC Receiver Carrier Frequency Select. This bit selects the receiver demodulator frequency range. 0: Low frequency: 30.0-56.9 kHz. 1: High frequency: 400-480 kHz. www.national.com 396 Revision 0.8 RCCFG Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 4 RCDM_DS Receiver Demodulation Disable. When this bit is 1, the internal demodulator is disabled. The internal demodulator, when enabled, performs carrier frequency checking and envelope generation. This bit must be set to 1 (disabled) when the demodulation is performed externally, or when oversampling mode is selected to determine the carrier frequency. 3 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 2 TXHSC Transmitter Subcarrier Frequency Select. This bit selects the modulation carrier frequency range. 0: Low frequency: 30.0-56.9 kHz. 1: High frequency: 400-480 kHz. 1:0 RC_MMD[1:0] Transmitter Modulator Mode. Determines how IR pulses are generated from the transmitted bit string. 00: C_PLS modulation mode. Pulses are generated continuously for the entire logic 0 bit time. 01: 8_PLS modulation mode. 8 pulses are generated each time one or more logic 0 bits are transmitted following a logic 1 bit. 10: 6_PLS Modulation Mode. 6 pulses are generated each time one or more logic 0 bits are transmitted following a logic 1 bit. 11: Reserved. Result is indeterminate. 5.12.10.4 Bank Select Register (BSR) I/O Offset 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h BSR is the same as the BSR register at I/O Offset 03h in Bank 0. See Section 5.12.3.4 "Link Control/Bank Select Registers" on page 373 for bit descriptions. Revision 0.8 397 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.10.5 IR Interface Configuration Register 1 (IRCFG1) I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value xxh IRCFG1 holds the transceiver configuration data for Sharp_IR and SIR modes. It is also used to directly control the transceiver operation mode when automatic configuration is not enabled. The two next-to-least significant bits are used to read the identification data of a plug-and-play IR interface adapter. IRCFG1 Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 STRV_MS RSVD SET_RTX IRRX1_LV RSVD 2 1 0 IRIC[2:0] IRCFG1 Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 STRV_MS Special Transceiver Mode Selection. When this R/W bit is set to 1, the UART[x]_IR_TX output signal is forced to active high and a timer is started. The timer times out after 64 micro-seconds, at which time the bit is reset and the UART[x]_IR_TX output signal becomes low again. The timer is restarted every time a 1 is written to this bit. Although it is possible to extend the period during which UART[x]_IR_TX remains high beyond 64 micro-seconds, this should be avoided to prevent damage to the transmitter LED. Writing a 0 to this bit has no effect. 6 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 5 SET_IRTX Set IRTX. When this bit is set to 1, it forces the UART[x]_IR_TX signal high. Caution: Indefinite HIGH output should be avoided as this condition can damage the transmitter LED. 4 IRRX1_LV IRRX1 Level (Read Only). This bit reflects the value of the UART[x]_IR_RX input signal. 3 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. IRIC[2:0] Transceiver Identification and Control Bits 2 through 0. The function of IRIC0 depends on whether the UART[x]_IRSL0/IRRX2 signal is programmed as an input or an output. If programmed as an input (IRSL0_DS = 0, bit 5 of IRCFG4) then upon a read, this bit returns the logic level of the signal. Data written to this bit position is ignored. The other two signals (IRSL1, IRSL2) must be programmed as outputs only (IRSL21_DS = 1, bit 3 of IRCFG4). 2:0 If the UART[x]_IRSL0/IRRX2 signal is programmed as an output, IRIC[2:0] drives the IRSL[2:0] signals to select the operation mode of an infrared dongle. (These bits are reflected in bits [4:2] of MSR_UART[x]_DONG). When read, these bits return the values previously written. Below is the operation mode encoding for non-serial transceivers. 00x: IrDA-data modes. 010: Reserved. 011: 36 kHz consumer IR. 100: 40 kHz consumer IR. 101: 38 kHz consumer IR 110: Reserved. 111: 56.9 kHz consumer IR. www.national.com 398 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 UART/IR Controller Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.12.10.6 IR Interface Configuration 4 Register (IRCFG4) I/O Offset 07h Type R/W Reset Value 00h IRCFG4 configures the receiver data path. IRCFG4 Register Map 7 6 RSVD 5 4 3 IRSL0_DS RXINV IRSL21_DS 2 1 0 RSVD IRCFG4 Bit Descriptions Bit 7:6 5 Name Description RSVD Reserved. Must be written 0. IRSL0_DS IRSL0/IRRX2 Pin Direction Select. This bit determines the direction of the UART[x]_IRSL0/IRRX2 pin. See Table 5-51. 0: Pin direction is input (UART[x]_IRRX2). 1: Pin direction is output (UART[x]_IRSL0). 4 RXINV IRRX Signal Invert. This bit supports optical transceivers with receive signals of opposite polarity (active high instead of active low). When set to 1, an inverter is placed in the receiver input signal path. 3 IRSL21_DS Reserved. Must be written 1. RSVD Reserved. Must be written 0. 2:0 Table 5-51. IR Receive Input Selection IRSL0_DS (IRCFG4, bit 5) AUX_IRRX (IRCR2, bit 4) Selected IRRX 0 0 IRRX1 0 1 IRRX2 1 0 IRRX1 1 1 None Selected Revision 0.8 399 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.13 DIRECT MEMORY ACCESS REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The registers for the Direct Memory Access (DMA) are divided into three sets: All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the DMA Specific MSRs (summarized in Table 5-52) are called out as 16 bits. The DMA module treats writes to the upper 48 bits (i.e., bits [63:16]) of the 64-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) • DMA Specific MSRs The Native registers associated with the DMA module are summarized in Table 5-53 and accessed as I/O Addresses. • DMA Native Registers The reference column in the summary tables point to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. Table 5-52. DMA Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 51400040h R/W DMA Mapper (DMA_MAP) 0000h Page 403 51400041h RO DMA Shadow Channel 0 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH0) 00xxh Page 404 51400042 RO DMA Shadow Channel 1 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH1) 00xxh Page 404 51400043 RO DMA Shadow Channel 2 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH2) 00xxh Page 404 51400044 RO DMA Shadow Channel 3 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH3) 00xxh Page 404 51400045h RO DMA Shadow Channel 4 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH4] 00xxh Page 404 51400046h RO DMA Shadow Channel 5 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH5) 00xxh Page 404 51400047h RO DMA Shadow Channel 6 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH6) 00xxh Page 404 51400048h RO DMA Shadow Channel 7 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH7) 00xxh Page 404 51400049h RO DMA Shadow Mask (DMA_MSK_SHDW) 00FFh Page 405 Table 5-53. DMA Native Registers Summary I/O Address Type Width (Bits) 000h R/W 8 001h R/W 002h Reset Value Reference Slave DMA Channel 0 Memory Address (DMA_CH0_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 405 8 Slave DMA Channel 0 Transfer Count (DMA_CH0_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 406 R/W 8 Slave DMA Channel 1 Memory Address (DMA_CH1_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 405 003h R/W 8 Slave DMA Channel 1 Transfer Count (DMA_CH1_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 406 004h R/W 8 Slave DMA Channel 2 Memory Address (DMA_CH2_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 405 005h R/W 8 Slave DMA Channel 2 Transfer Count (DMA_CH2_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 406 www.national.com Register Name 400 Revision 0.8 Table 5-53. DMA Native Registers Summary (Continued) I/O Address Type Width (Bits) 006h R/W 8 007h R/W 008h Reset Value Reference Slave DMA Channel 3 Memory Address (DMA_CH3_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 405 8 Slave DMA Channel 3 Transfer Count (DMA_CH3_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 406 R 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Status (DMA_CH3:0_STS) 00h Page 406 W 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Command (DMA_CH3:0_CMD) xxh Page 407 009h WO 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Software Request (DMA_CH3:0_SFT_REQ) xxh Page 407 00Ah WO 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Channel Mask (DMA_CH3:0_CHMSK) xxh Page 407 00Bh WO 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Mode (DMA_CH3:0_MODE) xxh Page 408 00Ch WO 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Clear Byte Pointer (DMA_CH3:0_CLR_PNTR) xxh Page 408 00Dh WO 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Master Clear (DMA_CH3:0_MSTR_CLR) xxh Page 409 00Eh WO 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Clear Mask Register (DMA_CH3:0_CLR_MSK) xxh Page 409 00Fh WO 8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Write Mask Register (DMA_CH3:0_WR_MSK) 0Fh Page 409 0C0h R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 4 Memory Address (DMA_CH4_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0C2h R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 4 Transfer Count (DMA_CH4_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0C4h R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 5 Memory Address (DMA_CH5_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0C6h R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 5 Transfer Count (DMA_CH5_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0C8h R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 6 Memory Address (DMA_CH6_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0CAh R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 6 Transfer Count (DMA_CH6_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0CCh R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 7 Memory Address (DMA_CH7_ADDR_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0CEh R/W 8 Master DMA Channel 7 Transfer Count (DMA_CH7_CNT_BYTE) xxh Page 410 0D0h R 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Status (DMA_CH7:4_STS) 00h Page 411 W 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Command (DMA_CH7:4_CMD) xxh Page 411 0D2h WO 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Software Request (DMA_CH7:4_SFT_REQ) xxh Page 412 0D4h WO 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Channel Mask (DMA_CH7:4_CHMSK) xxh Page 412 Revision 0.8 Register Name 401 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-53. DMA Native Registers Summary (Continued) I/O Address Type Width (Bits) 0D6h WO 8 0D8h WO 0DAh Reset Value Reference Master DMA Channel [7:4] Mode (DMA_CH7:4_MODE) xxh Page 413 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Clear Byte Pointer (DMA_CH7:4_CLR_PNTR) xxh Page 413 WO 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Master Clear (DMA_CH7:4_MSTR_CLR) xxh Page 414 0DCh WO 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Clear Mask (DMA_CH7:4_CLR_MSK) xxh Page 414 0DEh WO 8 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Write Mask (DMA_CH7:4_WR_MSK) 0Fh Page 414 080h R/W 8 Post Code Display Register (POST_DISPLAY) 00h Page 415 081h R/W 8 DMA Channel 2 Low Page (DMA_CH2_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 415 082h R/W 8 DMA Channel 3 Low Page (DMA_CH3_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 415 083h R/W 8 DMA Channel 1 Low Page (DMA_CH1_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 415 087h R/W 8 DMA Channel 0 Low Page (DMA_CH0_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 415 089h R/W 8 DMA Channel 6 Low Page (DMA_CH6_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 416 08Ah R/W 8 DMA Channel 7 Low Page (DMA_CH7_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 416 08Bh R/W 8 DMA Channel 5 Low Page (DMA_CH5_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 416 08Fh R/W 8 DMA Channel 4 Low Page (DMA_CH4_LO_PAGE) 00h Page 416 481h R/W 8 DMA Channel 2 High Page (DMA_CH2_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 482h R/W 8 DMA Channel 3 High Page (DMA_CH3_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 483h R/W 8 DMA Channel 1 High Page (DMA_CH1_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 487h R/W 8 DMA Channel 0 High Page (DMA_CH0_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 489h R/W 8 DMA Channel 6 High Page (DMA_CH6_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 48Ah R/W 8 DMA Channel 7 High Page (DMA_CH7_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 48Bh R/W 8 DMA Channel 5 High Page (DMA_CH5_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 48Fh R/W 8 DMA Channel 4 High Page (DMA_CH4_HI_PAGE) 00h Page 417 www.national.com Register Name 402 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.1 DMA Specific MSRs 5.13.1.1 DMA Mapper (DMA_MAP) MSR Address 51400040h Type R/W Reset Value 0000h DMA_MAP Register Map 15 RSVD 14 13 12 DMA_CH3_MAP 11 RSVD 10 9 8 DMA_CH2_MAP 7 RSVD 6 5 4 DMA_CH1_MAP 3 RSVD 2 1 0 DMA_CH0_MAP DMA_MAP Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 15 RSVD Reserved. No effect on DMA Mapper functionality; reads return value written. DMA_CH3_MAP DMA Channel 3 Source Select. 14:12 000: DMA Channel 3 off. 001: UART1 transmit. 010: UART1 receive. 011: UART2 transmit. 11 10:8 100: UART2 receive. 101: Reserved; not active. 110: Reserved; not active. 111: LPC DMA Channel 3. RSVD Reserved. No effect on DMA Mapper functionality; reads return value written. DMA_CH2_MAP DMA Channel 2 Source Select. 000: DMA Channel 2 off. 001: UART1 transmit. 010: UART1 receive. 011: UART2 transmit. 7 6:4 100: UART2 receive. 101: Reserved; not active. 110: Reserved; not active. 111: LPC DMA Channel 2. RSVD Reserved. No effect on DMA Mapper functionality; reads return value written. DMA_CH1_MAP DMA Channel 1 Source Select. 000: DMA Channel 1 off. 001: UART1 transmit. 010: UART1 receive. 011: UART2 transmit. 3 2:0 100: UART2 receive. 101: Reserved; not active. 110: Reserved; not active. 111: LPC DMA Channel 1. RSVD Reserved. No effect on DMA Mapper functionality; reads return value written. DMA_CH0_MAP DMA Channel 0 Source Select. 000: DMA Channel 0 off. 001: UART1 transmit. 010: UART1 receive. 011: UART2 transmit. Revision 0.8 100: UART2 receive. 101: Reserved; not active. 110: Reserved; not active. 111: LPC DMA Channel 0. 403 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.1.2 DMA Shadow Channel [7:0] Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH[x]) DMA Shadow Channel 0 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH0) MSR Address 51400041h Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA Shadow Channel 4 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH4] MSR Address 51400045h Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA Shadow Channel 1 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH1) MSR Address 51400042 Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA Shadow Channel 5 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH5) MSR Address 51400046h Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA Shadow Channel 2 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH2) MSR Address 51400043 Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA Shadow Channel 6 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH6) MSR Address 51400047h Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA Shadow Channel 3 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH3) MSR Address 51400044 Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA Shadow Channel 7 Mode (DMA_SHDW_CH7) MSR Address 51400048h Type RO Reset Value 00xxh DMA_SHDW_CH[x] Register Map 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 RSVD 7 6 5 4 3 2 TRANS_MODE ADDR_ AUTO_ TRANS_TYPE DIR INIT 1 0 CH_NUM DMA_SHDW_CH[x] Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 15:8 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 00h. 7:6 TRANS_MODE Data Transfer Mode. 00: Demand. 01: Single. 10: Block. 11: Cascade 5 ADDR_DIR Address Direction. 0: Increment; 1: Decrement. 4 AUTO_INIT Auto-Initialization Enable. 0: Disabled; 1: Enabled. TRANS_TYPE Transfer Type. 3:2 00: Verify. 01: Memory write. 1:0 CH_NUM 10: Memory read. 11: Reserved. Channel Number [3:0]. 00: Channel 0. 01: Channel 1. 10: Channel 2. 11: Channel 3. Channel Number [7:4]. 00: Channel 4. 01: Channel 5. www.national.com 10: Channel 6. 11: Channel 7. 404 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.1.3 DMA Shadow Mask (DMA_MSK_SHDW) MSR Address 51400049h Type RO Reset Value 00FFh DMA__MSK_SHDW Register Map 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 RSVD 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CH7 CH6 CH5 CH4 CH3 CH2 CH1 CH0 MASK MASK MASK MASK MASK MASK MASK MASK DMA__MSK_SHDW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 15:8 Reserved Reserved. Reads as 00h. 7 CH7MASK Channel 7 Mask Reflects value of Channel 7 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 6 CH6MASK Channel 6 Mask. Reflects value of Channel 6 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 5 CH5MASK Channel 5 Mask. Reflects value of Channel 5 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 4 CH4MASK Channel 4 Mask. Reflects value of Channel 4 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 3 CH3MASK Channel 3 Mask. Reflects value of Channel 3 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 2 CH2MASK Channel 2 Mask. Reflects value of Channel 2 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 1 CH1MASK Channel 1 Mask. Reflects value of Channel 1 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 0 CH0MASK Channel 0 Mask. Reflects value of Channel 0 Mask bit. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 5.13.2 DMA Native Registers 5.13.2.1 These registers reside in the I/O address space.Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Memory Address (DMA_CH[x]_ADDR_BYTE) Slave DMA Channel 0 Memory Address (DMA_CH0_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 000h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Slave DMA Channel 2 Memory Address (DMA_CH2_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 004h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Slave DMA Channel 1 Memory Address (DMA_CH1_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 002h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Slave DMA Channel 3 Memory Address (DMA_CH3_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 006h Type R/W Reset Value xxh DMA_CH[x]_ADDR_BYTE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH_ADDR_BYTE DMA_CH[x]_ADDR_BYTE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DMA_CH_ADDR_BYTE DMA Channel Address. Read/write in two successive bus cycles, low byte first. Revision 0.8 405 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.2.2 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Transfer Count (DMA_CH[x]_CNT_BYTE) Slave DMA Channel 0 Transfer Count (DMA_CH0_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 001h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Slave DMA Channel 2 Transfer Count (DMA_CH2_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 005h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Slave DMA Channel 1 Transfer Count (DMA_CH1_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 003h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Slave DMA Channel 3 Transfer Count (DMA_CH3_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 007h Type R/W Reset Value xxh DMA_CH[x]_CNT_BYTE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH_CNT_BYTE DMA_CH[x]_CNT_BYTE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DMA_CH_CNT_BYTE DMA Channel Transfer Count. Read/write in two successive bus cycles, low byte first. 5.13.2.3 DMA Channel [3:0] Status / Command Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Status (DMA_CH3:0_STS) I/O Address 008h Type R Reset Value 00h DMA_CH3:0_STS Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH3_RQ DMA_CH2_RQ DMA_CH1_RQ DMA_CH0_RQ DMA_CH3_TC DMA_CH2_TC DMA_CH1_TC DMA_CH0_TC DMA_CH3:0_STATUS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 DMA_CH3_RQ Channel 3 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 6 DMA_CH2_RQ Channel 2 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 5 DMA_CH1_RQ Channel 1 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 4 DMA_CH0_RQ Channel 0 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 3 DMA_CH3_TC Channel 3 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. 2 DMA_CH2_TC Channel 2 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. 1 DMA_CH1_TC Channel 1 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. 0 DMA_CH0_TC Channel 0 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. www.national.com 406 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Command (DMA_CH3:0_CMD) I/O Address 008h Type W Reset Value xxh DMA_CH3:0_CMD Register Map 7 6 DACK_SENSE DREQ_SENSE 5 4 3 2 WR_TIMING PR_MODE TM_MODE DMA_DIS 1 0 RSVD DMA_CH3:0_CMD Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 DACK_SENSE DACK Sense. 0: Active low; 1: Active high. 6 DREQ_SENSE DREQ Sense. 0: Active high; 1: Active low. 5 WR_TIMING Write Timing. 0: Late write; 1: Extended write. 4 PR_MODE Priority Mode. 0: Fixed priority; 1: Rotating priority. 3 TM_MODE Timing Mode. 0: Normal timing; 1: Compressed timing. 2 DMA_DIS DMA Disable. 0: DMA enable for Channels [3:0]; 1: DMA disable for Channels [3:0]. RSVD Reserved. Bit 0 must be written with value 0; bit 1 value is don’t care. 1:0 5.13.2.4 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Software Request (DMA_CH3:0_SFT_REQ) I/O Address 009h Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH3:0_SFT_REQ Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 RSVD 1 DMA_RQ 0 DMA_CH_SEL DMA_CH3:0_SFT_REQ Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:3 RSVD Reserved. Write value is don’t care. DMA_RQ DMA Request. Set to 1 to enable DMA request. DMA_CH_SEL DMA Channel Select. 2 1:0 00: Channel 0. 01: Channel 1. 10: Channel 2. 11: Channel 3. 5.13.2.5 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Channel Mask (DMA_CH3:0_CHMSK) I/O Address 00Ah Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH3:0_CHMSK Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD Revision 0.8 2 CH_MASK 407 1 0 DMA_CH_SEL www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) DMA_CH3:0_CHMSK Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:3 RSVD Reserved. Write value is don’t care. CH_MASK Channel Mask. Set to 1 to mask out DMA for selected channel. DMA_CH_SEL DMA Channel Select. 2 1:0 00: Channel 0. 01: Channel 1. 10: Channel 2. 11: Channel 3. 5.13.2.6 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Mode (DMA_CH3:0_MODE) I/O Address 00Bh Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH3:0_MODE Register Map 7 6 TRANS_MODE 5 4 ADDR_DIR AUTO_INIT 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH_SEL TRANS_TYPE DMA_CH3:0_MODE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 TRANS_MODE Data Transfer Mode. 00: Demand. 01: Single. 10: Block. 11: Cascade. 5 ADDR_DIR Address Direction. 0: Increment; 1: Decrement. 5 AUTO_INIT Auto-Initialization Enable. 0: Disabled; 1: Enabled. TRANS_TYPE Transfer Type. 3:2 00: Verify. 01: Memory write. 1:0 DMA_CH_SEL 10: Memory read. 11: Reserved DMA Channel Select. 00: Channel 0. 01: Channel 1. 10: Channel 2. 11: Channel 3. 5.13.2.7 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Clear Byte Pointer (DMA_CH3:0_CLR_PNTR) I/O Address Offset 00Ch Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH3:0_CLR_PNTR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CLR_PNTR (DUMMY_VAL) www.national.com 408 Revision 0.8 DMA_CH3:0_CLR_PNTR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 CLR_PNTR Clear Pointer. A write with any data (dummy value) resets high/low byte pointer for Channels 3:0 memory address and terminal count registers. 5.13.2.8 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Master Clear (DMA_CH3:0_MSTR_CLR) I/O Address 00Dh Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH3:0_MSTR_CLR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MSTR_CLR (DUMMY_VAL) DMA_CH3:0_MSTR_CLR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MSTR_CLR Master Clear. A write with any data (dummy value) resets the 8237 DMA controller for Channels [3:0]. 5.13.2.9 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Clear Mask Register (DMA_CH3:0_CLR_MSK) I/O Address 00Eh Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH3:0_CLR_MSK Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CLR_MSK (DUMMY_VAL) DMA_CH3:0_CLR_MSK Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 CLR_MSK Clear Mask. A write with any data (dummy value) clears the mask bits for Channels [3:0]. 5.13.2.10 Slave DMA Channel [3:0] Write Mask Register (DMA_CH3:0_WR_MSK) I/O Address 00Fh Type WO Reset Value 0Fh DMA_CH3:0_WR_MSK Register Map 7 6 5 4 RSVD Revision 0.8 409 3 2 1 0 CH3_MASK CH2_MASK CH1_MASK CH0_MASK www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) DMA_CH3:0_WR_MSK Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 Reserved Reserved. Write value is don’t care. 3 CH3_MASK Channel 3 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 2 CH2_MASK Channel 2 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 1 CH1_MASK Channel 1 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 0 CH0_MASK Channel 0 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 5.13.2.11 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Memory Address (DMA_CH[x]_ADDR_BYTE) Master DMA Channel 4 Memory Address (DMA_CH4_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 0C0h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Master DMA Channel 6 Memory Address (DMA_CH6_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 0C8h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Master DMA Channel 5 Memory Address (DMA_CH5_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 0C4h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Master DMA Channel 7 Memory Address (DMA_CH7_ADDR_BYTE) I/O Address 0CCh Type R/W Reset Value xxh DMA_CH[x]_ADDR_BYTE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH_ADDR_BYTE DMA_CH[x]_ADDR_BYTE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DMA_CH_ADDR_BYTE DMA Channel Address. Read/write in two successive bus cycles, low byte first. 5.13.2.12 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Transfer Count (DMA_CH[x]_CNT_BYTE) Master DMA Channel 4 Transfer Count (DMA_CH4_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 0C2h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Master DMA Channel 6 Transfer Count (DMA_CH6_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 0CAh Type R/W Reset Value xxh Master DMA Channel 5 Transfer Count (DMA_CH5_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 0C6h Type R/W Reset Value xxh Master DMA Channel 7 Transfer Count (DMA_CH7_CNT_BYTE) I/O Address 0CEh Type R/W Reset Value xxh DMA_CH[x]_CNT_BYTE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH_CNT_BYTE www.national.com 410 Revision 0.8 DMA_CH[x]_CNT_BYTE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DMA_CH_CNT_BYTE DMA Channel Transfer Count. Read/write in two successive bus cycles, low byte first. 5.13.2.13 DMA Channel [7:4] Status / Command Master DMA Channel [7:4] Status (DMA_CH7:4_STS) I/O Address 0D0h Type R Reset Value 00h DMA_CH7:4_STS Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH7_RQ DMA_CH6_RQ DMA_CH5_RQ DMA_CH4_RQ DMA_CH7_TC DMA_CH6_TC DMA_CH5_TC DMA_CH4_TC DMA_CH7:4_STS Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 DMA_CH7_RQ Channel 7 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 6 DMA_CH6_RQ Channel 6 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 5 DMA_CH5_RQ Channel 5 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 4 DMA_CH4_RQ Channel 4 DMA Request. 0: Not pending; 1: Pending. 3 DMA_CH7_TC Channel 7 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. 2 DMA_CH6_TC Channel 6 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. 1 DMA_CH5_TC Channel 5 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. 0 DMA_CH4_TC Channel 4 Terminal Count. 0: Count not reached; 1: Count reached. Master DMA Channel [7:4] Command (DMA_CH7:4_CMD) I/O Address 0D0h Type W Reset Value xxh DMA_CH7:4_CMD Register Map 7 6 DACK_SENSE DREQ_SENSE 5 4 3 2 WR_TIMING PR_MODE TM_MODE DMA_DIS 1 0 RSVD DMA_CH7:4_CMD Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 DACK_SENSE DACK Sense. 0: Active low; 1: Active high. 6 DREQ_SENSE DREQ Sense. 0: Active high; 1: Active low. 5 WR_TIMING Write Timing. 0: Late write; 1: Extended write. 4 PR_MODE Priority Mode. 0: Fixed priority; 1: Rotating priority. 3 TM_MODE Timing Mode. 0: Normal timing; 1: Compressed timing. Revision 0.8 411 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) DMA_CH7:4_CMD Bit Descriptions (Continued) Bit 2 1:0 Name Description DMA_DIS DMA Disable. 0: DMA enable for Channels [7:4]; 1: DMA disable for Channels [7:4]. RSVD Reserved. Bit 0 must be written with value 0; bit 1 value is don’t care. 5.13.2.14 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Software Request (DMA_CH7:4_SFT_REQ) I/O Address 0D2h Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH7:4_SFT_REQ Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 1 DMA_RQ 0 DMA_CH_SEL DMA_CH7:4_SFT_REQ Bit Descriptions Bit Name 7:3 2 1:0 Description RSVD Reserved. Write value is don’t care. DMA_RQ DMA Request. Set to 1 to enable DMA request. DMA_CH_SEL DMA Channel Select. 00: Channel 4. 01: Channel 5. 10: Channel 6. 11: Channel 7. 5.13.2.15 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Channel Mask (DMA_CH7:4_CHMSK) I/O Address 0D4h Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH7:4_CHMSK Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 CH_MASK 1 0 DMA_CH_SEL DMA_CH7:4_CHMSK Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:3 RSVD Reserved. Write value is don’t care. CH_MASK Channel Mask. Set to 1 to mask out DMA for selected channel. DMA_CH_SEL DMA Channel Select. 2 1:0 00: Channel 4. 01: Channel 5. www.national.com 10: Channel 6. 11: Channel 7. 412 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.2.16 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Mode (DMA_CH7:4_MODE) I/O Address 0D6h Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH7:4_MODE Register Map 7 6 TRANS_MODE 5 4 ADDR_DIR AUTO_INIT 3 2 1 TRANS_TYPE 0 DMA_CH_SEL DMA_CH7:4_MODE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:6 TRANS_MODE Data Transfer Mode. 00: Demand. 01: Single. 10: Block. 11: Cascade. 5 ADDR_DIR Address Direction. 0: Increment; 1: Decrement. 5 AUTO_INIT Auto-Initialization Enable. 0: Disabled; 1: Enabled. TRANS_TYPE Transfer Type. 3:2 00: Verify. 01: Memory write. 1:0 DMA_CH_SEL 10: Memory read. 11: Reserved DMA Channel Select. 00: Channel 4. 01: Channel 5. 10: Channel 6. 11: Channel 7. 5.13.2.17 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Clear Byte Pointer (DMA_CH7:4_CLR_PNTR) I/O Address 0D8h Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH7:4_CLR_PNTR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CLR_PNTR (DUMMY_VAL) DMA_CH7:4_CLR_PNTR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 CLR_PNTR Clear Pointer. A write with any data (dummy value) resets high/low byte pointer for Channels [7:4] memory address and terminal count registers. Revision 0.8 413 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.2.18 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Master Clear (DMA_CH7:4_MSTR_CLR) I/O Address Offset 0DAh Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA_CH7:4_MSTR_CLR Register Descriptions 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MSTR_CLR (DUMMY_VAL) DMA_CH7:4_MSTR_CLR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MSTR_CLR Master Clear. A write with any data (dummy value) resets the 8237 DMA controller for Channels [7:4]. 5.13.2.19 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Clear Mask (DMA_CH7:4_CLR_MSK) I/O Address Offset 0DCh Type WO Reset Value xxh DMA Clear Mask Register for Channels 7:4 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CLR_MSK (DUMMY_VAL) DMA_CH7:4_CLR_MSK Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 CLR_MSK Clear Mask. A write with any data (dummy value) clears the mask bits for Channels [7:4]. 5.13.2.20 Master DMA Channel [7:4] Write Mask (DMA_CH7:4_WR_MSK) I/O Address 0DEh Type WO Reset Value 0Fh DMA_CH7:4_WR_MSK Register Map 7 6 5 4 RSVD 3 2 1 0 CH7_MASK CH6_MASK CH5_MASK CH4_MASK DMA_CH7:4_WR_MSK Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:4 RSVD Reserved. Write value is don’t care. 3 CH7_MASK Channel 7 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 2 CH6_MASK Channel 6 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 1 CH5_MASK Channel 5 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. 0 CH4_MASK Channel 4 Mask Value. 0: Not masked; 1: Masked. www.national.com 414 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.2.21 Post Code Display Register (POST_DISPLAY) I/O Address 080h Type R/W Reset Value 00h . POST_DISPLAY Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 POST_CODE POST_DISPLAY Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 POST_CODE Post Code Display Value. This register is the historical Port 80 that receives the POST (Power-On Self-Test) codes reported during initialization. Typically used by the BIOS, Port 80 may also be written to by any piece of executing software to provide status or other information. The most recent value written to Port 80 is recorded in this register. 5.13.2.22 DMA Channel [3:0] Low Page (DMA_CH[x]_LO_PAGE) DMA Channel 2 Low Page (DMA_CH2_LO_PAGE) I/O Address 081h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 1 Low Page (DMA_CH1_LO_PAGE) I/O Address 083h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 3 Low Page (DMA_CH3_LO_PAGE) I/O Address 082h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 0 Low Page (DMA_CH0_LO_PAGE) I/O Address Offset 087h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA_CH[x]_LO_PAGE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH_LO_PAGE DMA_CH[x]_LO_PAGE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DMA_CH_LO_PAGE DMA Channel Low Page Value. Address bits [23:16]. Revision 0.8 415 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.13.2.23 DMA Channel [7:4] Low Page (DMA_CH[x]_LO_PAGE) DMA Channel 6 Low Page (DMA_CH6_LO_PAGE) I/O Address 089h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 5 Low Page (DMA_CH5_LO_PAGE) I/O Address 08Bh Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 7 Low Page (DMA_CH7_LO_PAGE) I/O Address 08Ah Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 4 Low Page (DMA_CH4_LO_PAGE) I/O Address 08Fh Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA_CH[x]_LO_PAGE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 DMA_CH_LO_PAGE 1 0 RSVD DMA_CH[x]_LO_PAGE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:1 DMA_CH_LO_PAGE DMA Channel Low Page Value. Address bits [23:17]. RSVD Reserved. Not used to generate DMA address. Write value is don’t care; reads return value written. 0 www.national.com 416 Revision 0.8 5.13.2.24 DMA Channel [7:0] High Page (DMA_CH[x]_HI_PAGE) DMA Channel 2 High Page (DMA_CH2_HI_PAGE) I/O Address 481h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 6 High Page (DMA_CH6_HI_PAGE) I/O Address 489h Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 81h. This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 89h. DMA Channel 3 High Page (DMA_CH3_HI_PAGE) I/O Address 482h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 7 High Page (DMA_CH7_HI_PAGE) I/O Address Offset 48Ah Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 82h. This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 8Ah. DMA Channel 1 High Page (DMA_CH1_HI_PAGE) I/O Address 483h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 5 High Page (DMA_CH5_HI_PAGE) I/O Address 48Bh Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 83h. This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 8Bh. DMA Channel 0 High Page (DMA_CH0_HI_PAGE) I/O Address 487h Type R/W Reset Value 00h DMA Channel 4 High Page (DMA_CH4_HI_PAGE) I/O Address 48Fh Type R/W Reset Value 00h This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 87h. This register is also cleared on any access to I/O Port 8Fh. DMA_CH[x]_HI_PAGE Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DMA_CH_HI_PAGE DMA_CH[x]_HI_PAGE Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DMA_CH_HI_PAGE DMA Channel High Page Value. Address bits [31:24]. Revision 0.8 417 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 DMA Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 5.14 LOW PIN COUNT REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The registers for the Low Pin Count (LPC) port are divided into two sets: All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the LPC Specific MSRs are called out as 32 bits. The LPC module treats writes to the upper 32 bits (i.e., bits [63:32]) of the 64-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) The LPC Specific MSRs are summarized in Table 5-54. The reference column in the summary table points to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. • LPC Specific MSRs The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. Table 5-54. LPC Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 5140004Ch RO LPC Address Error (LPC_EADDR) 00000000h Page 419 5140004Dh RO LPC Error Status (LPC_ESTAT) 00000000h Page 419 5140004Eh R/W LPC Serial IRQ Control (LPC_SIRQ) 00000000h Page 419 5140004Fh R/W LPC Reserved (LPC_RSVD) 00000000h Page 419 www.national.com 418 Revision 0.8 5.14.1 LPC Specific MSRs The LPC Controller uses the MSR_LPC_EADDR and MSR_LPC_ESTAT to record the indicated information associated with any given LPC bus error. The recorded information can not be cleared or modified. Simultaneous with this recording, an error event is sent to the DIVIL GLD_MSR_ERROR (MSR 51400003h). If enabled at the DIVIL GLD_MSR_ERROR, any LPC error event is recorded with a flag. This flag can be cleared. The status of this flag should be used to determine if there is an outstanding error associated with the two MSRs below. 5.14.1.1 LPC Address Error (LPC_EADDR) MSR Address 5140004Ch Type RO Reset Value 00000000h LPC_EADDR Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 LPC_ERR_ADDR LPC_EADDR Bit Descriptions Bit 31:0 Name Description LPC_ERR_ADDR LPC Error Address. When an error occurs, this register captures the associated 32-bit address. 5.14.1.2 LPC Error Status (LPC_ESTAT) MSR Address 5140004Dh Type RO Reset Value 00000000h 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 WRITE 8 MEMORY 9 RSVD DMA 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 TIMEOUT LPC_ESTAT Register Map ESTAT Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:4 RSVD Reserved. Reads as 0. 3 TIMEOUT Timeout. If set, indicates an LPC error was caused by a timeout. 2 DMA DMA. If set, indicates an LPC error occurred during a DMA transaction. 1 WRITE Write. If set, indicates an LPC error occurred during an LPC write transaction. 0 MEMORY Memory. If set, indicates an LPC error occurred during an LPC memory transaction. Revision 0.8 419 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.14.1.3 LPC Serial IRQ Control (LPC_SIRQ) MSR Address 5140004Eh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 INVERT[15:0] 9 8 RSVD 7 6 5 SIRQ_MODE LPC_SIRQ Register Map SIRQ_EN Geode™ CS5535 LPC Port Register Descriptions (Continued) IRQ_FRAME 4 3 2 1 0 START _FPW LPC_SIRQ Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:16 INVERT[15:0] Invert bits 15 through 0. Each invert[x] bit corresponds to an irq[x] bit. When a given x bit is 1, the corresponding serial IRQ input is assumed active low. Active low inputs are inverted and presented internally as active high inputs. 15:8 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 7 SIRQ_EN Serial IRQ Enable. 0: Disable; 1: Enable 6 SIRQ_MODE Serial IRQ Interface Mode. 0: Continuous (Idle); 1: Quiet (Active) 5:2 IRQ_FRAME IRQ Data Frames. Number of frames. 0000: 17. 0001: 18. 0010: 19. 0011: 20. 1:0 START_FPW 0100: 21. 0101: 22. 0110: 23. 0111: 24. 1000: 25. 1001: 26 . 1010: 27. 1011: 28. 1100: 29. 1101: 30. 1110: 31. 1111: 32. Start Frame Pulse Width. Sets the start frame pulse width, specified by the number of clocks. 00: 4 clocks. 01: 6 clocks. 10: 8 clocks. 11: Reserved. 5.14.1.4 LPC Reserved (LPC_RSVD) MSR Address 5140004Fh Type R/W Reset Value 00000000h LPC_RSVD Register Map 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 RSVD LPC_RSVD Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 31:0 RSVD Reserved. Reads return 0. Writes have no effect. www.national.com 420 Revision 0.8 The registers for the Real-Time Clock (RTC) are divided into three sets: All MSRs are 64 bits, however, the RTC Specific MSRs (summarized in Table 5-55) are called out as 8 bits. The RTC module treats writes to the upper 56 bits (i.e., bits [63:8]) of the 64-bit MSRs as don’t cares and always returns 0 on these bits. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) • RTC Specific MSRs The Native registers associated with the RTC module are summarized in Table 5-56 and are accessed as I/O Addresses. • RTC Native Registers The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. The reference column in the summary tables point to the page where the register maps and bit descriptions are listed. Table 5-55. RTC Specific MSRs Summary MSR Address Type Register Name Reset Value Reference 51400054h R/W RTC RAM Lock (RTC_RAM_LOCK) 00h Page 422 51400055h R/W RTC Date of Month Alarm Offset (RTC_DOMA_OFFSET) 00h Page 422 51400056h R/W RTC Month Alarm Offset (RTC_MONA_OFFSET) 00h Page 423 51400057h R/W RTC Century Offset (RTC_CEN_OFFSET) 00h Page 423 Reset Value Reference Table 5-56. RTC Native Registers Summary I/O Address Type Width (Bits) 00h R/W 8 Seconds (RTC_SEC) 00h Page 424 01h R/W 8 Seconds Alarm (RTC_SECA) 00h Page 424 02h R/W 8 Minutes (RTC_MIN) 00h Page 424 03h R/W 8 Minutes Alarm (RTC_MINA) 00h Page 425 04h R/W 8 Hours (RTC_HR) 00h Page 425 05h R/W 8 Hours Alarm 00h Page 425 06h R/W 8 Day of Week (RTC_DOW) 00h Page 426 07h R/W 8 Day of Month (RTC_DOM) 00h Page 426 08h R/W 8 Month (RTC_MONTH) 00h Page 426 09h R/W 8 Year (RTC_YEAR) 00h Page 427 0Ah R/W 8 RTC Control Register A (RTC_CRA) 20h Page 427 0Bh R/W 8 RTC Control Register B (RTC_CRB) 00h Page 428 0Ch RO 8 RTC Control Register C (RTC_CRC) 00h Page 429 0Dh RO 8 RTC Control Register D (RTC_CRD) 00h Page 429 Programmable (Note 1) R/W 8 Date of Month Alarm (RTC_DOMA) 00h Page 430 Programmable (Note 1) R/W 8 Month Alarm (RTC_MONA) 00h Page 430 Programmable (Note 1) R/W 8 Century (RTC_CEN) 00h Page 431 Register Name Note 1. Register location is programmable (through the MSR registers) and overlay onto the lower RAM space. Revision 0.8 421 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.15 REAL-TIME CLOCK REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.1 RTC Specific MSRs 5.15.1.1 RTC RAM Lock (RTC_RAM_LOCK) MSR Address 51400054h Type R/W Reset Value 00h When a non-reserved bit is set to 1, it can only be cleared by hardware reset. RTC_RAM_LOCK Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 BLK_STDRAM BLK_RAM_WR BLK_XRAM_WR BLK_XRAM_RD 2 BLK_XRAM 1 0 RSVD RTC_RAM_LOCK Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description BLK_STDRAM Block Standard RAM. 0: No effect on Standard RAM access (default). 1: Read and write to locations 38h-3Fh of the Standard RAM are blocked, writes ignored, and reads return FFh. 6 BLK_RAM_WR Block RAM Write. 0: No effect on RAM access (default). 1: Write to RAM (Standard and Extended) are ignored. 5 BLK_XRAM_WR Block Extended RAM Write. This bit controls write to bytes 00h-1Fh of the Extended RAM. 0: No effect on Extended RAM access (default). 1: Writes to byte 00h-1Fh of the Extended RAM are ignored. 4 BLK_XRAM_RD Block Extended RAM Read. This bit controls read from bytes 00h-1Fh of the Extended RAM. 0: No effect on Extended RAM access (default). 1: Reads from byte 00h-1Fh of the Extended RAM are ignored. 3 BLK_XRAM Block Extended RAM. This bit controls access to the Extended RAM 128 bytes. 0: No effect on Extended RAM access (default). 1: Read and write to the Extended RAM are blocked; writes are ignored and reads return FFh. 2:0 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. 5.15.1.2 RTC Date of Month Alarm Offset (RTC_DOMA_OFFSET) MSR Address 51400055h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_DOMA_OFFSET Register Map 7 RSVD www.national.com 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DOMA_OFST 422 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) RTC_DOMA_OFFSET Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. DOMA_OFST Date of Month Alarm Register Offset Value. This register sets the location in RAM space of the Date Of Month Alarm register. This register must be programmed after a hardware reset, otherwise the Day Of Month Alarm register will be on top of other RAM data. It is programmed as an offset from 0. Reset to 00h by hardware reset. 6:0 5.15.1.3 RTC Month Alarm Offset (RTC_MONA_OFFSET) MSR Address 51400056h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_MONA_OFFSET Register Map 7 6 5 4 RSVD 3 2 1 0 MONA_OFST RTC_MONA_OFFSET Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. MONA_OFST Month Alarm Register Offset Value. This register sets the location in RAM space of the Month Alarm register. This register must be programmed after a hardware reset, otherwise the Month Alarm register will be on top of other RAM data. It is programmed as an offset from 0. Reset to 00h by hardware reset. 6:0 5.15.1.4 RTC Century Offset (RTC_CEN_OFFSET) MSR Address 51400057h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_CEN_OFFSET Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 RSVD 2 1 0 CEN_OFST RTC_CEN_OFFSET Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7 RSVD Reserved. Write as 0. CEN_OSFT Century Register Offset Value. This register sets the location in RAM space of the Century register. This register must be programmed after a hardware reset, otherwise the Century register will be on top of other RAM data. It is programmed as an offset from 0. Reset to 00h by hardware reset. 6:0 Revision 0.8 423 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.2 RTC Native Registers 5.15.2.1 Seconds (RTC_SEC) I/O Address 00h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_SEC Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SEC_DATA RTC_SEC Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 SEC_DATA Seconds Data. Values may be 00 to 59 in BCD format or 00 to 3B in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.2 Seconds Alarm (RTC_SECA) I/O Address 01h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_SECA Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SECA_DATA RTC_SECA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 SECA_DATA Seconds Alarm Data. Values may be 00 to 59 in BCD format or 00 to 3B in binary format. When bits 7 and 6 are both set to one, an unconditional match is selected. Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.3 Minutes (RTC_MIN) I/O Address 02h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_MIN Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MIN_DATA RTC_MIN Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MIN_DATA Minutes Data. Values may be 00 to 59 in BCD format or 00 to 3B in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. www.national.com 424 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.2.4 Minutes Alarm (RTC_MINA) I/O Address 03h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_MINA Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MINA_DATA RTC_MINA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MINA_DATA Minutes Alarm Data. Values may be 00 to 59 in BCD format or 00 to 3B in binary format. When bits 7 and 6 are both set to one, an unconditional match is selected. Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.5 Hours (RTC_HR) I/O Address 04h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_HR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 HR_DATA RTC_HR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 HR_DATA Hours Data. For 12-hour mode, values can be 01 to 12 (AM) and 81 to 92 (PM) in BCD format, or 01 to 0C (AM) and 81 to 8C (PM) in binary format. For 24-hour mode, values can be 0 to 23 in BCD format or 00 to 17 in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.6 Hours Alarm I/O Address 05h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_HRA Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 HRA_DATA RTC_HRA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 HRA_DATA Hours Alarm Data. For 12-hour mode, values can be 01 to 12 (AM) and 81 to 92 (PM) in BCD format, or 01 to 0C (AM) and 81 to 8C (PM) in binary format. For 24-hour mode, values can be 0 to 23 in BCD format or 00 to 17 in binary format. When bits 7 and 6 are both set to one, unconditional match is selected. Reset by VPP power-up. Revision 0.8 425 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.2.7 Day of Week (RTC_DOW) I/O Address 06h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_DOW Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DOW_DATA RTC_DOW Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DOW_DATA Day of Week Data. Values may be 01 to 07 in BCD format or 01 to 07 in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.8 Day of Month (RTC_DOM) I/O Address 07h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_DOM Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DOM_DATA RTC_DOM Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DOW_DATA Day of Month Data. Values may be 01 to 31 in BCD format or 01 to 0F in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.9 Month (RTC_MONTH) I/O Address 08h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_MON Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MON_DATA RTC_MON Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MON_DATA Month Data. Values may be 01 to 12 in BCD format or 01 to 0C in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. www.national.com 426 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.2.10 Year (RTC_YEAR) I/O Address 09h Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_YR Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 YR_DATA RTC_YR Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 YR_DATA Year Data. This register holds the two least significant digits of a four-digit year. For example, if the year is 2007, this register would contain the equivalent of ‘07’. Values may be 00 to 99 in BCD format or 00 to 63 in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.11 RTC Control Register A (RTC_CRA) I/O Address 0Ah Type R/W Reset Value 20h This register controls test selection among other functions. This register cannot be written before reading bit 7 of RTC_CRD (VRT bit). RTC_CRA Register Map 7 6 UIP 5 4 3 2 DIV_CHN_CTL 1 0 PIR_SEL RTC_CRA Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description UIP (RO) Update in Progress (Read Only). This RO bit is not affected by reset. This bit reads 0 when bit 7 of RTC_CRB is 1. 0: Timing registers not updated within 244 µs. 1: Timing registers updated within 244 µs. 6:4 DIV_CHN_CTL Divider Chain Control. These R/W bits control the configuration of the divider chain for timing generation and register bank selection. They are cleared to 010 as long as bit 7 of RTC_CRD (VRT bit) is 0. 00x: Oscillator Disabled. 010: Normal Operation. 011: Test. 3:0 PIR_SEL Periodic Interrupt Rate Select: These R/W bits select one of fifteen output taps from the clock divider chain to control the rate of the periodic interrupt. They are cleared to 000 as long as bit 7 of RTC_CRD (VRT bit) is 0. 0000: 0001: 0010: 0011: 0100: 0101: 0110: 0111: Revision 0.8 10x: Test. 11x: Divider Chain Reset. No interrupts 3.906250 ms 7.812500 ms 0.122070 ms 0.244141 ms 0.488281 ms 0.976562 ms 1.953125 ms 1000: 1001: 1010: 1011: 1100: 1101: 1110: 1111: 427 3.906250 ms 7.812500 ms 15.625000 ms 31.250000 ms 62.500000 ms 125.000000 ms 250.000000 ms 500.000000 ms www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.2.12 RTC Control Register B (RTC_CRB) I/O Address 0Bh Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_CRB Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SET_MODE PI_EN AI_EN UEI_EN RSVD DATA_MODE HR_MODE DAY_SAVE RTC_CRB Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description SET_MODE Set Mode. This bit is reset at VPP power-up reset only. 0: Timing updates occur normally 1: User copy of time is “frozen”, allowing the time registers to be accessed whether or not an update occurs. 6 PI_EN Periodic Interrupts Enable. Bits [3:0] of RTC_CRA (PIR_SEL) determine the rate at which this interrupt is generated. It is cleared to 0 on an RTC reset (i.e., hardware reset) or when the RTC is disable. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 5 AI_EN Alarm Interrupt Enable. This interrupt is generated immediately after a time update in which the seconds, minutes, hours, date and month time equal their respective alarm counterparts. It is cleared to 0 as long as bit 7 of RTC_CRD (VRT bit) reads 0. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 4 UEI_EN Update Ended Interrupts Enable. This interrupt is generated when an update occurs. It is cleared to 0 on an RTC reset (i.e., hardware reset) or when the RTC is disabled. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. 3 RSVD Reserved. This bit is defined as “Square Wave Enable” by the MC146818 and is not supported by the RTC. This bit is always read as 0. 2 DATA_MODE Data Mode. Selects data mode. This bit is reset at VPP power-up reset only. 0: BCD format. 1: Binary format. 1 HR_MODE Hour Mode. Selects hour mode. This bit is reset at VPP power-up reset only. 0: 12-hour format. 1: 24-hour format. 0 DAY_SAVE Daylight Saving. Enables/disables daylight savings mode. This bit is reset at VPP power-up reset only. 0: Disable. 1: Enable. In the spring, time advances from 1:59:59 AM to 3:00:00 AM on the first Sunday in April. In the fall, time returns from 1:59:59 AM to 1:00:00 AM on the last Sunday in October. www.national.com 428 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.2.13 RTC Control Register C (RTC_CRC) I/O Address 0Ch Type RO Reset Value 00h RTC_CRC Register Map 7 6 5 4 IRQF PF AF UF 3 2 1 0 RSVD RTC_CRC Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description IRQF (RO) IRQ Flag (Read Only). This RO bit mirrors the value on the interrupt output signal. When interrupt is active, IRQF is 1. Reading this register clears this bit (and deactivates the interrupt pin) and clears the flag bits UF, AF, and PF. 0: IRQ inactive. 1: Logic equation is true: ((UIE and UF) or (AIE and AF) or (PIE and PF)). 6 PF (RO) Periodic Interrupts Flag (Read Only). This RO bit is cleared to 0 on an RTC reset (i.e., hardware reset) or when the RTC is disabled. In addition, this bit is cleared to 0 when this register is read. 0: No transition occurred on the selected tap since the last read. 1: Transition occurred on the selected tap of the divider chain. 5 AF (RO) Alarm Interrupt Flag (Read Only). This RO bit is cleared to 0 as long as bit 7 of RTC_CRD (VRT bit) is 0. In addition, this bit is cleared to 0 when this register is read. 0: No alarm detected since the last read. 1: Alarm condition detected. 4 UF (RO) Update Ended Interrupts Flag (Read Only). This RO bit is cleared to 0 on an RTC reset (i.e., hardware reset) or when the RTC is disabled. In addition, this bit is cleared to 0 when this register is read. 0: No update occurred since the last read. 1: Time registers updated. 3 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Reads as 0. 5.15.2.14 RTC Control Register D (RTC_CRD) I/O Address 0Dh Type RO Reset Value 00h RTC_CRD Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 VRT Revision 0.8 2 1 0 RSVD 429 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) RTC_CRD Bit Descriptions Bit 7 Name Description VRT (RO) Valid RAM and Time (Read Only). This bit senses the voltage that feeds the RTC (VSB or VBAT) and indicates whether or not it was too low since the last time this bit was read. If it was too low, the RTC contents (time/calendar registers and CMOS RAM) is not valid. It is clear on VPP power-up. 0: The voltage that feeds the RTC was too low. 1: RTC contents (time/calendar registers and CMOS RAM) valid. 6:0 RSVD (RO) Reserved (Read Only). Reads as 0. 5.15.2.15 Date of Month Alarm (RTC_DOMA) I/O Address Programmable Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_DOMA Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 DOMA_DATA RTC_DOMA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 DOMA_DATA Date of Month Alarm Data. Values may be 01 to 31 in BCD format or 01 to 1F in binary format. When bits 7 and 6 are both set to one, an unconditional match is selected (default). Reset by VPP power-up. 5.15.2.16 Month Alarm (RTC_MONA) I/O Address Programmable Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_MONA Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MONA_DATA RTC_MONA Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 MONA_DATA Month Alarm Data. Values may be 01 to 12 in BCD format or 01 to 0C in binary format. When bits 7 and 6 are both set to one, an unconditional match is selected (default). Reset by VPP power-up. www.national.com 430 Revision 0.8 Geode™ CS5535 RTC Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.15.2.17 Century (RTC_CEN) I/O Address Programmable Type R/W Reset Value 00h RTC_CEN Register Map 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 CEN_DATA RTC_CEN Bit Descriptions Bit Name Description 7:0 CEN_DATA Century Data. This register holds the two most significant digits of a four-digit year. For example, if the year is 2008, this register would contain the equivalent of ‘20’. Values may be 00 to 99 in BCD format or 00 to 63 in binary format. Reset by VPP power-up. Revision 0.8 431 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 5.16 GPIO SUBSYSTEM REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS The registers for the General Purpose Input Output (GPIO) are divided into two sets: atomic programming model except where noted. See Section 5.16.1 "Atomic Bit Programming Model" on page 436 for details. • Standard GeodeLink Device MSRs (Shared with DIVIL, see Section 5.6.1 on page 299.) 2) Input Conditioning Function Registers. These registers (summarized in Table 5-58 on page 434) are associated with the eight digital filter/event counter pairs that can be shared with the 32 GPIOs. These registers are not based on the atomic bit programming model. 3) GPIO Interrupt and PME Mapper Registers. These registers (summarized in Table 5-59 on page 435) are used for mapping any GPIO to one of the eight PIC-level interrupts or to one of the eight PME (Power Management Event) inputs. • GPIO Native Registers The MSRs are accessed via the RDMSR and WRMSR processor instructions. The MSR address is derived from the perspective of the CPU Core. See Section 3.2 "CS5535 MSR Addressing" on page 53 for more details on MSR addressing. The GPIO Native registers are accessed via a Base Address Register, MSR_LBAR_GPIO (MSR 5140000Ch), as I/O Offsets. (See Section 5.6.2.5 on page 310 for bit descriptions of the Base Address Register.) The reference column in the summary tables point to the page where the detailed register maps and bit descriptions are listed. The Low Bank refers to GPIO[15:0] while the High Bank refers to GPIO[31:16]. The Native registers associated with GPIO configuration are broadly divided into three categories: 1) GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers. These registers (summarized in Table 5-57) control basic GPIO features. The Feature Bit registers use the Note: All register bits dealing with GPIO31, GPIO30, GPIO29 and GPIO23 are reserved. Table 5-57. GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers Summary GPIO I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) Register Name Reset Value Reference GPIO Low Bank Feature Bit Registers 00h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Output Value (GPIOL_OUT_VAL) FFFF0000h Page 438 04h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Output Enable (GPIOL_OUT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 438 08h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Output Open-Drain Enable (GPIOL_OUT_OD_EN) FFFF0000h Page 439 0Ch R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Output Invert Enable (GPIOL_OUT_INVRT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 439 10h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Output Auxiliary 1 Select (GPIOL_OUT_AUX1_SEL) FFFF0000h Page 440 14h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Output Auxiliary 2 Select (GPIOL_OUT_AUX2_SEL) FFFF0000h Page 441 18h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Pull-Up Enable (GPIOL_PU_EN) 1000EFFFh Page 442 1Ch R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Pull-Down Enable (GPIOL_PD_EN) EFFF1000h Page 442 20h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Enable (GPIOL_IN_EN) FFFF0000h Page 443 24h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Invert Enable (GPIOL_IN_INVRT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 443 28h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Filter Enable (GPIOL_IN_FLTR_EN) FFFF0000h Page 444 2Ch R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Event Count Enable (GPIOL_IN_EVNTCNT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 445 30h (Note 1) RO 32 GPIO Low Bank Read Back (GPIOL_READ_BACK) 00000000h Page 450 34h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Auxiliary 1 Select (GPIOL_IN_AUX1_SEL) FFFF0000h Page 446 38h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Events Enable (GPIOL_EVNT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 446 www.national.com 432 Revision 0.8 Table 5-57. GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers Summary (Continued) GPIO I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) Reset Value Reference 3Ch (Note 1) R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Lock Enable (GPIOL_LOCK_EN) 00000000h Page 452 40h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Positive Edge Enable (GPIOL_IN_POSEDGE_EN) FFFF0000h Page 447 44h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Negative Edge Enable (GPIOL_IN_NEGEDGE_EN) FFFF0000h Page 447 48h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Positive Edge Status (GPIOL_IN_POSEDGE_STS) FFFF0000h Page 448 4Ch R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Input Negative Edge Status (GPIOL_IN_NEGEDGE_STS) FFFF0000h Page 449 Register Name GPIO High Bank Feature Bit Registers 80h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Output Value (GPIOH_OUT_VAL) FFFF0000h Page 438 84h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Output Enable (GPIOH_OUT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 438 88h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Output Open-Drain Enable (GPIOH_OUT_OD_EN) FFFF0000h Page 439 8Ch R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Output Invert Enable (GPIOH_OUT_INVRT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 439 90h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Output Auxiliary 1 Select (GPIOH_OUT_AUX1_SEL) FFFF0000h Page 440 94h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Output Auxiliary 2 Select (GPIOH_OUT_AUX2_SEL) FFFF0000h Page 441 98h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Pull-Up Enable (GPIOH_PU_EN) 0000FFFFh Page 442 9Ch R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Pull-Down Enable (GPIOH_PD_EN) FFFF0000h Page 442 A0h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Enable (GPIOH_IN_EN) EFFF1000h Page 443 A4h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Invert Enable (GPIOH_IN_INV_EN) FFFF0000h Page 443 A8h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Filter Enable (GPIOH_IN_FLTER_EN) FFFF0000h Page 444 ACh R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Event Count Enable (GPIOH_IN_EVNTCNT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 445 B0h (Note 1) RO 32 GPIO High Bank Read Back (GPIOH_READ_BACK) 00000000h Page 451 B4h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Auxiliary 1 Select (GPIOH_IN_AUX1_SEL) EFFF1000h Page 446 B8h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Events Enable (GPIOH_EVNT_EN) FFFF0000h Page 446 BCh (Note 1) R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Lock Enable (GPIOH_LOCK_EN) 00000000h Page 453 C0h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Positive Edge Enable (GPIOH_IN_POSEDGE_EN) FFFF0000h Page 447 C4h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Negative Edge Enable (GPIOH_IN_NEGEDGE_EN) FFFF0000h Page 447 C8h R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Input Positive Edge Status (GPIOH_IN_POSEDGE_STS) FFFF0000h Page 448 Revision 0.8 433 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-57. GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers Summary (Continued) GPIO I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) CCh R/W 32 Register Name GPIO High Bank Input Negative Edge Status (GPIOH_IN_NEGEDGE_STS) Reset Value Reference FFFF0000h Page 449 Note 1. The GPIO[x]_READ_BACK and GPIO[x]_LOCK_EN registers are not based on the atomic programming model (i.e., only one bit for control as opposed to two bits). See Section 5.16.1 "Atomic Bit Programming Model" on page 436 for more information on atomic programming. Table 5-58. GPIO Input Conditioning Function Registers Summary GPIO I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) Reset Value Register Name Reference 50h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 0 Amount (GPIO_FLTR0_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 52h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 0 Count (GPIO_FLTR0_CNT) 0000h Page 455 54h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 0 (GPIO_EVNTCNT0) 0000h Page 456 56h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 0 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT0_COMP) 0000h Page 457 58h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 1 Amount (GPIO_FLTR1_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 5Ah R/W 16 GPIO Filter 1 Count (GPIO_FLTR1_CNT) 0000h Page 455 5Ch R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 1 (GPIO_EVNTCNT1) 0000h Page 456 5Eh R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 1 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT1_COMP) 0000h Page 457 60h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 2 Amount (GPIO_FLTR2_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 62h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 2 Count (GPIO_FLTR2_CNT) 0000h Page 455 64h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 2 (GPIO_EVNTCNT2) 0000h Page 456 66h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 2 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT2_COMP) 0000h Page 457 68h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 3 Amount (GPIO_FLTR3_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 6Ah R/W 16 GPIO Filter 3 Count (GPIO_FLTR3_CNT) 0000h Page 455 6Ch R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 3 (GPIO_EVNTCNT3) 0000h Page 456 6Eh R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 3 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT3_COMP) 0000h Page 457 70h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 4 Amount (GPIO_FLTR4_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 72h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 4 Count (GPIO_FLTR4_CNT) 0000h Page 455 74h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 4 (GPIO_EVNTCNT4) 0000h Page 456 76h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 4 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT4_COMP) 0000h Page 457 78h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 5 Amount (GPIO_FLTR5_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 7Ah R/W 16 GPIO Filter 5 Count (GPIO_FLTR5_CNT) 0000h Page 455 7Ch R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 5 (GPIO_EVNTCNT5) 0000h Page 456 7Eh R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 5 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT5_COMP) 0000h Page 457 D0h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 6 Amount (GPIO_FLTR6_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 D2h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 6 Count (GPIO_FLTR6_CNT) 0000h Page 455 www.national.com 434 Revision 0.8 Table 5-58. GPIO Input Conditioning Function Registers Summary (Continued) GPIO I/O Offset Type Width (Bits) Register Name Reset Value Reference D4h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 6 (GPIO_EVNTCNT6) 0000h Page 456 D6h R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 6 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT6_COMP) 0000h Page 457 D8h R/W 16 GPIO Filter 7 Amount (GPIO_FLTR7_AMNT) 0000h Page 454 DAh R/W 16 GPIO Filter 7 Count (GPIO_FLTR7_CNT) 0000h Page 455 DCh R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 7 (GPIO_EVNTCNT7) 0000h Page 456 DEh R/W 16 GPIO Event Counter 7 Compare Value (GPIO_EVNTCNT7_COMP) 0000h Page 457 F0h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 0 Selection (GPIO_FE0_SEL) 00h Page 458 F1h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 1 Selection (GPIO_FE1_SEL) 00h Page 458 F2h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 2 Selection (GPIO_FE2_SEL) 00h Page 458 F3h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 3 Selection (GPIO_FE3_SEL) 00h Page 458 F4h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 4 Selection (GPIO_FE4_SEL) 00h Page 458 F5h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 5 Selection (GPIO_FE5_SEL) 00h Page 458 F6h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 6 Selection (GPIO_FE6_SEL) 00h Page 458 F7h R/W 8 GPIO Filter/Event Pair 7 Selection (GPIO_FE7_SEL) 00h Page 458 F8h R/W 32 GPIO Low Bank Event Counter Decrement (GPIOL_EVNTCNT_DEC) 00000000h Page 460 FCh R/W 32 GPIO High Bank Event Counter Decrement (GPIOL_EVNTCNT_DEC) 00000000h Page 461 Table 5-59. GPIO Interrupt and PME Mapper Registers Summary GPIO Address Type Width (Bits) E0h R/W 32 E4h R/W E8h ECh Revision 0.8 Reset Value Reference GPIO Mapper X (GPIO_MAP_X) 00000000h Page 465 32 GPIO Mapper Y (GPIO_MAP_Y) 00000000h Page 464 R/W 32 GPIO Mapper Z (GPIO_MAP_Z) 00000000h Page 463 R/W 32 GPIO Mapper W (GPIO_MAP_W) 00000000h Page 462 Register Name 435 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.16.1 Atomic Bit Programming Model The registers in Section 5.16.2 "GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers", starting on page 438, that are referred to as “atomic” all follow the same programming model (i.e., work exactly the same way) but each controls a different GPIO feature. Two data bits are used to control each GPIO Feature bit, each pair of bits operate in an exclusive-OR pattern. Refer to Section 4.15.2 "Register Strategy" on page 148 for further details. The Low Bank registers control programming of GPIO15 through GPIO0 and the High Bank registers program GPIO31 through GPIO16. The tables that follow provide the register/bit formats for the Low and High Bank GPIO feature configuration registers. Note: All register bits dealing with GPIO31, GPIO30, GPIO29 and GPIO23 are Reserved . GPIO6 GPIO5 GPIO4 GPIO3 GPIO2 0 GPIO0 GPIO7 1 GPIO1 GPIO8 GPIO10 GPIO11 GPIO12 GPIO13 GPIO14 GPIO0 GPIO15 GPIO1 GPIO2 GPIO3 GPIO4 GPIO5 GPIO6 2 GPIO7 3 GPIO8 4 GPIO9 5 GPIO10 6 GPIO11 7 GPIO12 8 GPIO13 9 GPIO14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 GPIO9 Table 5-60. Low Bank Atomic Register Map GPIO15 Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) Table 5-61. Low Bank Atomic Bit Descriptions Bit 31,15 Name Description GPIO15 GPIO15 Feature. 00: No change. 01: Feature bit = 1. 10: Feature bit = 0. 11: No change. 30,14 GPIO14 GPIO14 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 29,13 GPIO13 GPIO13 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 28,12 GPIO12 GPIO12 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 27,11 GPIO11 GPIO11 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 26,10 GPIO10 GPIO10 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 25,9 GPIO9 GPIO9 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 24,8 GPIO8 GPIO8 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 23,7 GPIO7 GPIO7 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 22,6 GPIO6 GPIO6 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 21,5 GPIO5 GPIO5 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 20,4 GPIO4 GPIO4 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 19,3 GPIO3 GPIO3 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 18,2 GPIO2 GPIO2 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 17,1 GPIO1 GPIO1 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. 16,0 GPIO0 GPIO0 Feature. See bits [31,15] for decode. www.national.com 436 Revision 0.8 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 GPIO24 RSVD GPIO22 GPIO21 GPIO20 GPIO19 GPIO18 GPIO17 GPIO16 GPIO26 GPIO27 GPIO28 RSVD RSVD RSVD GPIO16 GPIO17 GPIO18 GPIO19 GPIO20 GPIO21 GPIO22 RSVD GPIO24 GPIO25 GPIO26 GPIO27 GPIO28 RSVD RSVD RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 GPIO25 Table 5-62. High Bank Atomic Register Map Format Table 5-63. High Bank Atomic Bit Descriptions Format Bit Name Description 31,15 RSVD Reserved. Write as 00. 30,14 RSVD Reserved. Write as 00. 29,13 RSVD Reserved. Write as 00. 28,12 GPIO28 GPIO28 Feature. 00: No change. 01: Feature bit = 1. 10: Feature bit = 0. 11: No change. 27,11 GPIO27 GPIO27 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 26,10 GPIO26 GPIO26 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 25,9 GPIO25 GPIO25 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 24,8 GPIO24 GPIO24 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 23,7 RSVD Reserved. Write as 00. 22,6 GPIO22 GPIO22 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 21,5 GPIO21 GPIO21 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 20,4 GPIO20 GPIO20 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 19,3 GPIO19 GPIO19 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 18,2 GPIO18 GPIO18 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 17,1 GPIO17 GPIO17 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. 16,0 GPIO16 GPIO16 Feature. See bits [28,12] for decode. Revision 0.8 437 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.16.2 GPIO Low/High Bank Feature Bit Registers 5.16.2.1 GPIO Output Value (GPIO[x]_OUT_VAL) These registers control the output value for the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. If the feature bit is high, the output value = 1. If the feature bit is low, the output value = 0. The reset value forces all the output values to be initially set to 0. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) If OUT_AUX1 (GPIO I/O Offset 10h/90h) and/or OUT_AUX2 (GPIO I/O Offset 14h/94h) are selected, then their value overrides the OUT_VAL settings. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 for AUX programming details. GPIO Low Bank Output Value (GPIOL_OUT_VAL) GPIO I/O Offset 00h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Output Value (GPIOH_OUT_VAL) GPIO I/O Offset 80h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h OUT_VAL_9 OUT_VAL_8 OUT_VAL_7 OUT_VAL_6 OUT_VAL_5 OUT_VAL_4 OUT_VAL_3 OUT_VAL_2 OUT_VAL_1 OUT_VAL_0 1 0 OUT_VAL_25 OUT_VAL_24 RSVD OUT_VAL_22 OUT_VAL_21 OUT_VAL_20 OUT_VAL_19 OUT_VAL_18 OUT_VAL_17 OUT_VAL_16 OUT_VAL_0 2 OUT_VAL_1 3 OUT_VAL_2 4 OUT_VAL_3 5 OUT_VAL_4 6 OUT_VAL_5 7 OUT_VAL_6 8 OUT_VAL_7 9 OUT_VAL_8 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_VAL_9 OUT_VAL_10 0 OUT_VAL_11 1 OUT_VAL_12 2 OUT_VAL_13 3 OUT_VAL_14 4 OUT_VAL_15 5 OUT_VAL_10 6 OUT_VAL_11 7 OUT_VAL_12 8 OUT_VAL_13 9 OUT_VAL_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_VAL_15 GPIOL_OUT_VAL Register Map OUT_VAL_26 OUT_VAL_27 OUT_VAL_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD OUT_VAL_16 OUT_VAL_17 OUT_VAL_18 OUT_VAL_19 OUT_VAL_20 OUT_VAL_21 OUT_VAL_22 RSVD OUT_VAL_24 OUT_VAL_25 OUT_VAL_26 OUT_VAL_27 OUT_VAL_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD GPIOH_OUT_VAL Register Map 5.16.2.2 GPIO Output Enable (GPIO[x]_OUT_EN) These registers control the output enable for the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. If the feature bit high, the output is enabled. If the feature bit is low, the output is disabled. The reset value forces all the outputs to be disabled. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) GPIO Low Bank Output Enable (GPIOL_OUT_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 04h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Output Enable (GPIOH_OUT_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 84h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h OUT_EN_4 OUT_EN_3 OUT_EN_20 OUT_EN_19 OUT_EN_18 OUT_EN_0 OUT_EN_5 OUT_EN_21 1 0 OUT_EN_16 OUT_EN_6 OUT_EN_22 OUT_EN_1 OUT_EN_7 RSVD OUT_EN_2 OUT_EN_8 OUT_EN_24 2 OUT_EN_17 OUT_EN_9 OUT_EN_25 OUT_EN_0 OUT_EN_1 3 OUT_EN_2 4 OUT_EN_3 5 OUT_EN_4 6 OUT_EN_5 7 OUT_EN_6 8 OUT_EN_7 9 OUT_EN_8 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_EN_9 OUT_EN_10 0 OUT_EN_11 1 OUT_EN_12 2 OUT_EN_13 3 OUT_EN_14 4 OUT_EN_15 5 OUT_EN_10 6 OUT_EN_11 7 OUT_EN_12 8 OUT_EN_13 9 OUT_EN_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_EN_15 GPIOL_OUT_EN Register Map www.national.com 438 OUT_EN_26 OUT_EN_27 OUT_EN_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD OUT_EN_16 OUT_EN_17 OUT_EN_18 OUT_EN_19 OUT_EN_20 OUT_EN_21 OUT_EN_22 RSVD OUT_EN_24 OUT_EN_25 OUT_EN_26 OUT_EN_27 OUT_EN_28 RSVD RSVD GPIOH_OUT_EN Register Map RSVD Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) Revision 0.8 5.16.2.3 GPIO Output Open-Drain Enable (GPIO[x]_OUT_OD_EN) These registers control the open-drain enable of the output for the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. The open-drain is enabled if the feature bit is high. The open-drain is disabled if the feature bit is low.The reset value forces all open-drains on the outputs to be disabled. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) GPIO Low Bank Output Open-Drain Enable (GPIOL_OUT_OD_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 08h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Output Open-Drain Enable (GPIOH_OUT_OD_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 88h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h OUT_OD_9 OUT_OD_8 OUT_OD_7 OUT_OD_6 OUT_OD_5 OUT_OD_4 OUT_OD_3 OUT_OD_2 OUT_OD_1 OUT_OD_0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 OUT_OD_25 OUT_OD_24 RSVD OUT_OD_22 OUT_OD_21 OUT_OD_20 OUT_OD_19 OUT_OD_18 OUT_OD_17 OUT_OD_16 OUT_OD_10 OUT_OD_11 OUT_OD_12 OUT_OD_13 OUT_OD_14 OUT_OD_0 OUT_OD_15 OUT_OD_1 OUT_OD_2 OUT_OD_3 OUT_OD_4 0 OUT_OD_5 1 OUT_OD_6 2 OUT_OD_7 3 OUT_OD_8 4 OUT_OD_9 5 OUT_OD_10 6 OUT_OD_11 7 OUT_OD_12 8 OUT_OD_13 9 OUT_OD_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_OD_15 GPIOL_OUT_OD_EN Register Map GPIOH_OUT_OD_EN Register Map OUT_OD_26 OUT_OD_27 OUT_OD_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD OUT_OD_16 OUT_OD_17 OUT_OD_18 OUT_OD_19 OUT_OD_20 OUT_OD_21 OUT_OD_22 RSVD OUT_OD_24 OUT_OD_25 OUT_OD_26 OUT_OD_27 OUT_OD_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 5.16.2.4 GPIO Output Invert Enable (GPIO[x]_OUT_INVRT_EN) These registers control the output invert enable for the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. The output is inverted if the feature bit is high. The output is not inverted if the feature bit is low. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) GPIO Low Bank Output Invert Enable (GPIOL_OUT_INVRT_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 0Ch Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Output Invert Enable (GPIOH_OUT_INVRT_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 8Ch Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h OUT_INVRT_9 OUT_INVRT_8 OUT_INVRT_7 OUT_INVRT_6 OUT_INVRT_5 OUT_INVRT_4 OUT_INVRT_3 OUT_INVRT_2 OUT_INVRT_1 OUT_INVRT_0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 OUT_INVRT_25 OUT_INVRT_24 RSVD OUT_INVRT_22 OUT_INVRT_21 OUT_INVRT_20 OUT_INVRT_19 OUT_INVRT_18 OUT_INVRT_17 OUT_INVRT_16 OUT_INVRT_10 OUT_INVRT_11 OUT_INVRT_12 OUT_INVRT_13 OUT_INVRT_14 OUT_INVRT_0 OUT_INVRT_15 OUT_INVRT_1 OUT_INVRT_2 OUT_INVRT_3 OUT_INVRT_4 0 OUT_INVRT_5 1 OUT_INVRT_6 2 OUT_INVRT_7 3 OUT_INVRT_8 4 OUT_INVRT_9 5 OUT_INVRT_10 6 OUT_INVRT_11 7 OUT_INVRT_12 8 OUT_INVRT_13 9 OUT_INVRT_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_INVRT_15 GPIOL_OUT_INVRT_EN Register Map GPIOH_OUT_INVRT_EN Register Map Revision 0.8 439 OUT_INVRT_26 OUT_INVRT_27 OUT_INVRT_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD OUT_INVRT_16 OUT_INVRT_17 OUT_INVRT_18 OUT_INVRT_19 OUT_INVRT_20 OUT_INVRT_21 OUT_INVRT_22 RSVD OUT_INVRT_24 OUT_INVRT_25 OUT_INVRT_26 OUT_INVRT_27 OUT_INVRT_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.16.2.5 GPIO Output Auxiliary 1 Select (GPIO[x]_OUT_AUX1_SEL) These registers select the Auxiliary 1 output of the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. Auxiliary 1 is selected as the output if the feature bit is high. Auxiliary 1 is not selected as the output if the feature bit is low. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) If OUT_AUX1 and/or OUT_AUX2 are selected, then their value overrides the OUT_VAL (GPIO I/O Offset 00h/80h) settings. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 for AUX programming details. GPIO Low Bank Output Auxiliary 1 Select (GPIOL_OUT_AUX1_SEL) GPIO I/O Offset 10h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Output Auxiliary 1 Select (GPIOH_OUT_AUX1_SEL) GPIO I/O Offset 90h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h OUT_AUX1_4 OUT_AUX1_3 4 3 OUT_AUX1_20 OUT_AUX1_19 OUT_AUX1_18 OUT_AUX1_0 OUT_AUX1_5 5 OUT_AUX1_21 1 0 OUT_AUX1_16 OUT_AUX1_6 6 OUT_AUX1_22 OUT_AUX1_1 OUT_AUX1_7 7 RSVD OUT_AUX1_2 OUT_AUX1_8 8 OUT_AUX1_24 2 OUT_AUX1_17 OUT_AUX1_9 9 OUT_AUX1_25 OUT_AUX1_10 OUT_AUX1_11 OUT_AUX1_12 OUT_AUX1_13 OUT_AUX1_14 OUT_AUX1_0 OUT_AUX1_15 OUT_AUX1_1 OUT_AUX1_2 OUT_AUX1_3 OUT_AUX1_4 0 OUT_AUX1_5 1 OUT_AUX1_6 2 OUT_AUX1_7 3 OUT_AUX1_8 4 OUT_AUX1_9 5 OUT_AUX1_10 6 OUT_AUX1_11 7 OUT_AUX1_12 8 OUT_AUX1_13 9 OUT_AUX1_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_AUX1_15 GPIOL_OUT_AUX1_SEL Register Map GPIOH_OUT_AUX1_SEL Register Map www.national.com 440 OUT_AUX1_26 OUT_AUX1_27 OUT_AUX1_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD OUT_AUX1_16 OUT_AUX1_17 OUT_AUX1_18 OUT_AUX1_19 OUT_AUX1_20 OUT_AUX1_21 OUT_AUX1_22 RSVD OUT_AUX1_24 OUT_AUX1_25 OUT_AUX1_26 OUT_AUX1_27 OUT_AUX1_28 RSVD RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 RSVD Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) Revision 0.8 5.16.2.6 GPIO Output Auxiliary 2 Select (GPIO[x]_OUT_AUX2_SEL) These registers select the Auxiliary 2 output of the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. Auxiliary 2 is selected as the output if the feature bit is high. Auxiliary 2 is not selected as the output if the feature bit is low. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) If OUT_AUX1 and/or OUT_AUX2 are selected, then their value overrides the OUT_VAL (GPIO I/O Offset 00h/80h) settings. See Table 2-8 "GPIO Options" on page 42 for AUX programming details. GPIO Low Bank Output Auxiliary 2 Select (GPIOL_OUT_AUX2_SEL) GPIO I/O Offset 14h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Output Auxiliary 2 Select (GPIOH_OUT_AUX2_SEL) GPIO I/O Offset 94h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h OUT_AUX2_9 OUT_AUX2_8 OUT_AUX2_7 OUT_AUX2_6 OUT_AUX2_5 OUT_AUX2_4 OUT_AUX2_3 OUT_AUX2_2 OUT_AUX2_1 OUT_AUX2_0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 OUT_AUX2_25 OUT_AUX2_24 RSVD OUT_AUX2_22 OUT_AUX2_21 OUT_AUX2_20 OUT_AUX2_19 OUT_AUX2_18 OUT_AUX2_17 OUT_AUX2_16 OUT_AUX2_10 OUT_AUX2_11 OUT_AUX2_12 OUT_AUX2_13 OUT_AUX2_14 OUT_AUX2_0 OUT_AUX2_15 OUT_AUX2_1 OUT_AUX2_2 OUT_AUX2_3 OUT_AUX2_4 0 OUT_AUX2_5 1 OUT_AUX2_6 2 OUT_AUX2_7 3 OUT_AUX2_8 4 OUT_AUX2_9 5 OUT_AUX2_10 6 OUT_AUX2_11 7 OUT_AUX2_12 8 OUT_AUX2_13 9 OUT_AUX2_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 OUT_AUX2_15 GPIOL_OUT_AUX2_SEL Register Map GPIOH_OUT_AUX2_SEL Register Map Revision 0.8 441 OUT_AUX2_26 OUT_AUX2_27 OUT_AUX2_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD OUT_AUX2_16 OUT_AUX2_17 OUT_AUX2_18 OUT_AUX2_19 OUT_AUX2_20 OUT_AUX2_21 OUT_AUX2_22 RSVD OUT_AUX2_24 OUT_AUX2_25 OUT_AUX2_26 OUT_AUX2_27 OUT_AUX2_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 www.national.com Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) 5.16.2.7 GPIO Pull-Up Enable (GPIO[x]_PU_EN) These registers control enabling of the pull-up on the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. If the feature bit is high, the pull-up is enabled. If the feature bit is low, the pull-up is disabled.The reset value forces all the pull-ups to be disabled. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) GPIO Low Bank Pull-Up Enable (GPIOL_PU_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 18h Type R/W Reset Value 1000EFFFh GPIO High Bank Pull-Up Enable (GPIOH_PU_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 98h Type R/W Reset Value 0000FFFFh PU_9 PU_8 PU_7 PU_6 PU_5 PU_4 PU_3 PU_2 PU_1 PU_0 1 0 PU_25 PU_24 RSVD PU_22 PU_21 PU_20 PU_19 PU_18 PU_17 PU_16 PU_0 2 PU_1 3 PU_2 4 PU_3 5 PU_4 6 PU_5 7 PU_6 8 PU_7 9 PU_8 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PU_9 PU_10 0 PU_11 1 PU_12 2 PU_13 3 PU_14 4 PU_15 5 PU_10 6 PU_11 7 PU_12 8 PU_13 9 PU_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PU_15 GPIOL_PU_EN Register Map PU_26 PU_27 PU_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD PU_16 PU_17 PU_18 PU_19 PU_20 PU_21 PU_22 RSVD PU_24 PU_25 PU_26 PU_27 PU_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD GPIOH_PU_EN Register Map 5.16.2.8 GPIO Pull-Down Enable (GPIO[x]_PD_EN) These registers control enabling of the pull-down on the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. If the feature bit is high, the pull-down is enabled. If the feature bit is low, the pull-down is disabled.The reset value forces all the pull-downs to be disabled. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) GPIO Low Bank Pull-Down Enable (GPIOL_PD_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 1Ch Type R/W Reset Value EFFF1000h GPIO High Bank Pull-Down Enable (GPIOH_PD_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 9Ch Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h PD_4 PD_3 PD_20 PD_19 PD_18 PD_0 PD_5 PD_21 1 0 PD_16 PD_6 PD_22 PD_1 PD_7 RSVD PD_2 PD_8 PD_24 2 PD_17 PD_9 PD_25 PD_0 PD_1 3 PD_2 4 PD_3 5 PD_4 6 PD_5 7 PD_6 8 PD_7 9 PD_8 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PD_9 PD_10 0 PD_11 1 PD_12 2 PD_13 3 PD_14 4 PD_15 5 PD_10 6 PD_11 7 PD_12 8 PD_13 9 PD_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 PD_15 GPIOL_PD_EN Register Map www.national.com 442 PD_26 PD_27 PD_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD PD_16 PD_17 PD_18 PD_19 PD_20 PD_21 PD_22 RSVD PD_24 PD_25 PD_26 PD_27 PD_28 RSVD RSVD GPIOH_PD_EN Register Map RSVD Geode™ CS5535 GPIO Subsystem Register Descriptions (Continued) Revision 0.8 5.16.2.9 GPIO Input Enable (GPIO[x]_IN_EN) These registers control the input enable for the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. If the feature bit is high, the input is enabled. If the feature bit is low, the input is disabled.The reset value forces all the inputs to be disabled. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) GPIO Low Bank Input Enable (GPIOL_IN_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 20h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Input Enable (GPIOH_IN_EN) GPIO I/O Offset A0h Type R/W Reset Value EFFF1000h IN_EN_9 IN_EN_8 IN_EN_7 IN_EN_6 IN_EN_5 IN_EN_4 IN_EN_3 IN_EN_2 IN_EN_1 IN_EN_0 1 0 IN_EN_25 IN_EN_24 RSVD IN_EN_22 IN_EN_21 IN_EN_20 IN_EN_19 IN_EN_18 IN_EN_17 IN_EN_16 IN_EN_0 2 IN_EN_1 3 IN_EN_2 4 IN_EN_3 5 IN_EN_4 6 IN_EN_5 7 IN_EN_6 8 IN_EN_7 9 IN_EN_8 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 IN_EN_9 IN_EN_10 0 IN_EN_11 1 IN_EN_12 2 IN_EN_13 3 IN_EN_14 4 IN_EN_15 5 IN_EN_10 6 IN_EN_11 7 IN_EN_12 8 IN_EN_13 9 IN_EN_14 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 IN_EN_15 GPIOL_IN_EN Register Map IN_EN_26 IN_EN_27 IN_EN_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD IN_EN_16 IN_EN_17 IN_EN_18 IN_EN_19 IN_EN_20 IN_EN_21 IN_EN_22 RSVD IN_EN_24 IN_EN_25 IN_EN_26 IN_EN_27 IN_EN_28 RSVD RSVD RSVD GPIOH_IN_EN Register Map 5.16.2.10 GPIO Input Invert Enable (GPIO[x]_IN_INVRT_EN) These registers control the input invert enable for the low (GPIO[15:0]) and high (GPIO[31:16]) banks of GPIOs. The input is inverted if the feature bit is high. The input is not inverted if the feature bit is low. (These registers use atomic programming, see Section 5.16.1 on page 436 for details.) GPIO Low Bank Input Invert Enable (GPIOL_IN_INVRT_EN) GPIO I/O Offset 24h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h GPIO High Bank Input Invert Enable (GPIOH_IN_INV_EN) GPIO I/O Offset A4h Type R/W Reset Value FFFF0000h IN_INVRT_9 IN_INVRT_8 IN_INVRT_7 IN_INVRT_6 IN_INVRT_5 IN_INVRT_4 IN_INVRT_3 IN_INVRT_2 IN_INVRT_1 IN_INVRT_0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IN_INVRT_25 IN_INVRT_24 RSVD IN_INVRT_22 IN_INVRT_21 IN_INVRT_20 IN_INVRT_19 IN_INVRT_18 IN_INVRT_17 IN_INVRT_16 IN_INVRT_10 IN_INVRT_11 IN_INVRT_12 IN_INVRT_13 IN_INVRT_14 IN_INVRT_0 IN_INVRT_15 IN_INVRT_1 IN_INVRT_2 IN_INVRT_3 IN_INVRT_4 0 IN_INVRT_5 1 IN_INVRT_6 2 IN_INVRT_7 3 IN_INVRT_8