PC87382 LPC-to-LPC Switch for Docking Stations, with Fast Infrared Port, Serial Port and GPIOs General Description Outstanding Features The PC87382, a member of the National Semiconductor LPC SuperI/O family, is targeted for a wide range of portable applications. The PC87382 is PC2001 and ACPI compliant, and features an LPC-to-LPC Switch with hot plugability, Fast Infrared port (FIR, IrDA 1.1 compliant), Serial Port, and General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) support for a total of eight ports. ● LPC-to-LPC Switch with hot plugability, enables LPC devices in the Docking Station to be connected to the Main LPC Bus, thus reducing the number of signals required through the Docking Station connector ● LPC bus interface, based on Intel’s LPC Interface Specification Revision 1.1, August 2002 (supports CLKRUN signal) The PC87382 enables glueless implementation of an LPCto-LPC Switch between the motherboard LPC bus and the Docking Station, and supports hot insertion and hot removal. ● Fast Infrared port ● PC2001 and ACPI Revision 2.0 compliant ● Serial IRQ support (15 options) ● Protection features, including GPIO lock and pin configuration lock ● Eight GPIO ports, including with “assert IRQ” capability ● XOR Tree and TRI-STATE device pins (or ICT) testability modes. ● 5V tolerant and back-drive protected pins (except LPC bus pins) ● 48-pin LQFP package System Block Diagram I/O Ports Docking Station Portable Platform South Bridge LPC Bus Docking LPC Bus PC87382 DCLKOUT TPM Embedded Controller Serial Interface Docking SIO Infrared Interface National Semiconductor and TRI-STATE are registered trademarks of National Semiconductor Corporation. All other brand or product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. ©2003 National Semiconductor Corporation www.national.com PC87382 LPC-to-LPC Switch for Docking Stations, with Fast Infrared Port, Serial Port and GPIOs December 2003 Revision 1.2 PC87382 Features • • LPC System Interface — 8-bit I/O cycles — CLKRUN support — Implements PCI mobile design guide recommendation (PCI Mobile Design Guide 1.1, Dec. 18, 1998) • • — Support assert IRQ — Programmable drive type for each output pin (opendrain, push-pull or output disable) — Programmable option for internal pull-up resistor on each input pin — Output lock option — Input debounce mechanism LPC-to-LPC Switch — — — — — Hot plugability CLKRUN support The connection is controlled by software Low switch resistance and propagation delay Programmable Clock to Reset Delay • PC2001 and ACPI Compliant • Fast Infrared Port (FIR) — — — — — — — Software compatible with the 16550A and the 16450 Shadow register support for write-only bit monitoring FIR IrDA 1.1 compliant HP-SIR 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 — DMA support: 1 or 2 channels ❏ 15 IRQ routing options ❏ Two optional 8-bit DMA channels (where applicable) selected from four possible DMA channels Clock Sources — 14.318 MHz or 48 MHz clock input — LPC clock, up to 33 MHz — 14.318 MHz or 48 MHz clock output to the docking station • Serial Port (SP1) — Software compatible with the 16550A and the 16450 — Shadow register support for write-only bit monitoring — UART data rates up to 1.5 Mbaud — PnP Configuration Register structure — Flexible resource allocation for all logical devices ❏ Relocatable base address • Eight General-Purpose I/O (GPIO) Ports • Strap Configuration — Base Address (BADDR) strap to determine the base address of the Index-Data register pair — Strap Inputs to select testability mode Power Supply — 3.3V supply operation — All pins are 5V tolerant, except LPC bus pins — All pins are back-drive protected, except LPC bus pins • Testability — XOR Tree — TRI-STATE device pins Internal Block Diagram LPC Interface 14.31818 MHz Clock Generator Bus Interface Docking LPC Switch 48 MHz www.national.com GPIO Ports Serial Port 1 FIR Ports I/O Serial Interface Infrared Interface 2 Docking LPC Interface Revision 1.2 PC87382 Revision Record Revision Date Comments February 2003 Draft 0.1 Specification subject to change without notice. March 2003 Draft 0.5 Specification subject to change without notice. March 2003 Preliminary 0.9 Specification subject to change without notice. April 2003 Preliminary 1.0 Specification subject to change without notice. November 2003 1.1 Specification subject to change without notice. December 2003 Revision 1.2 Status 1.2 ● Added IDD and IDDLP current numbersTechnical writing edits and typos. ● Added tCOR and tCOF for output from Clock Generator. ● Technical writing edits and typos. 3 www.national.com PC87382 Table of Contents 1.0 2.0 3.0 Signal/Pin Connection and Description 1.1 CONNECTION DIAGRAM ........................................................................................................... 8 1.2 BUFFER TYPES AND SIGNAL/PIN DIRECTORY ...................................................................... 9 1.3 DETAILED SIGNAL/PIN DESCRIPTIONS ................................................................................ 10 1.3.1 LPC Bus Interface ....................................................................................................... 10 1.3.2 Docking LPC Bus ........................................................................................................ 10 1.3.3 Clocks .......................................................................................................................... 10 1.3.4 Infrared (IR) ................................................................................................................ 11 1.3.5 Serial Port (SP1) .......................................................................................................... 11 1.3.6 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Ports ............................................................... 11 1.3.7 Power and Ground ..................................................................................................... 12 1.3.8 Strap Configuration ...................................................................................................... 12 1.3.9 Test and Miscellaneous ............................................................................................... 12 1.4 INTERNAL PULL-UP AND PULL-DOWN RESISTORS ............................................................ 13 Power, Reset and Clocks 2.1 POWER ..................................................................................................................................... 14 2.1.1 Power Planes .............................................................................................................. 14 2.1.2 Power States ............................................................................................................... 14 2.1.3 Power Connection and Layout Guidelines .................................................................. 14 2.2 RESET SOURCES AND TYPES ............................................................................................... 15 2.2.1 VDD Power-Up Reset .................................................................................................. 15 2.2.2 Hardware Reset ........................................................................................................... 15 2.3 CLOCK DOMAINS ..................................................................................................................... 15 2.3.1 LPC Domain ................................................................................................................ 15 2.3.2 48 MHz Domain ........................................................................................................... 15 2.3.3 Chip Power-Up ............................................................................................................ 16 2.3.4 Specifications .............................................................................................................. 16 2.4 TESTABILITY SUPPORT .......................................................................................................... 16 2.4.1 ICT ............................................................................................................................... 16 2.4.2 XOR Tree Testing ........................................................................................................ 16 2.4.3 Test Mode Entry Sequence ......................................................................................... 17 Device Architecture and Configuration 3.1 OVERVIEW ............................................................................................................................... 18 3.2 CONFIGURATION STRUCTURE AND ACCESS ..................................................................... 18 3.2.1 The Index-Data Register Pair ...................................................................................... 18 3.2.2 Banked Logical Device Registers Structure ................................................................ 19 3.2.3 Standard Configuration Register Definitions ............................................................... 20 3.2.4 Standard Configuration Registers ............................................................................... 22 3.2.5 Default Configuration Setup ........................................................................................ 23 3.3 MODULE CONTROL ................................................................................................................. 24 3.3.1 Module Enable/Disable ................................................................................................ 24 www.national.com 4 Revision1.2 3.3.2 4.0 5.0 (Continued) Floating Module Output ............................................................................................... 24 3.4 INTERNAL ADDRESS DECODING .......................................................................................... 25 3.5 PROTECTION ........................................................................................................................... 25 3.5.1 Configuration Lock ....................................................................................................... 25 3.5.2 GPIO Ports Configuration Lock ................................................................................... 25 3.5.3 Fast Disable Configuration Lock .................................................................................. 25 3.5.4 Clock Control Lock ...................................................................................................... 25 3.5.5 GPIO Ports Lock .......................................................................................................... 25 3.6 REGISTER TYPE ABBREVIATIONS ........................................................................................ 26 3.7 SUPERI/O CONFIGURATION REGISTERS ............................................................................. 26 3.7.1 SuperI/O ID Register (SID) .......................................................................................... 26 3.7.2 SuperI/O Configuration 1 Register (SIOCF1) .............................................................. 27 3.7.3 SuperI/O Configuration 2 Register (SIOCF2) .............................................................. 27 3.7.4 SuperI/O Configuration 6 Register (SIOCF6) .............................................................. 28 3.7.5 SuperI/O Revision ID Register (SRID) ........................................................................ 28 3.7.6 Clock Generator Control Register (CLOCKCF) ........................................................... 29 3.8 INFRARED CONFIGURATION ................................................................................................. 30 3.8.1 Logical Device 2 (IR) Configuration ............................................................................. 30 3.8.2 Infrared Configuration Register ................................................................................... 30 3.9 SERIAL PORT 1 CONFIGURATION ......................................................................................... 31 3.9.1 Logical Device 3 (SP1) Configuration .......................................................................... 31 3.9.2 Serial Port 1 Configuration Register ............................................................................ 31 3.10 GENERAL-PURPOSE INPUT/OUTPUT (GPIO) PORTS CONFIGURATION .......................... 32 3.10.1 General Description ..................................................................................................... 32 3.10.2 Implementation ............................................................................................................ 32 3.10.3 Logical Device 7 (GPIO) Configuration ....................................................................... 33 3.10.4 GPIO Pin Select Register (GPSEL) ............................................................................. 34 3.10.5 GPIO Pin Configuration Register (GPCFG) ................................................................ 34 3.10.6 GPIO Event Routing Register (GPEVR) ...................................................................... 35 3.11 DOCKING LPC SWITCH CONFIGURATION ............................................................................ 36 3.11.1 Logical Device 19 (DLPC) Configuration ..................................................................... 36 LPC Bus Interface 4.1 OVERVIEW ............................................................................................................................... 37 4.2 LPC TRANSACTIONS ............................................................................................................... 37 4.3 CLKRUN FUNCTIONALITY ...................................................................................................... 37 4.4 INTERRUPT SERIALIZER ........................................................................................................ 37 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Port 5.1 OVERVIEW ............................................................................................................................... 38 5.2 BASIC FUNCTIONALITY .......................................................................................................... 39 5.2.1 Configuration Options .................................................................................................. 39 5.2.2 Operation ..................................................................................................................... 39 Revision 1.2 5 www.national.com PC87382 Table of Contents PC87382 Table of Contents 6.0 7.0 8.0 (Continued) 5.3 EVENT HANDLING AND SYSTEM NOTIFICATION ................................................................ 40 5.3.1 Event Configuration ..................................................................................................... 40 5.3.2 System Notification ...................................................................................................... 40 5.4 GPIO PORT REGISTERS ......................................................................................................... 41 5.4.1 GPIO Pin Configuration Registers Structure ............................................................... 42 5.4.2 GPIO Port Runtime Register Map ............................................................................... 42 5.4.3 GPIO Data Out Register (GPDO) ................................................................................ 42 5.4.4 GPIO Data In Register (GPDI) .................................................................................... 43 5.4.5 GPIO Event Enable Register (GPEVEN) .................................................................... 43 5.4.6 GPIO Event Status Register (GPEVST) ...................................................................... 43 Docking LPC Switch 6.1 OVERVIEW ............................................................................................................................... 44 6.2 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION .................................................................................................. 44 6.2.1 Basic Functionality ....................................................................................................... 44 6.2.2 LDRQ Sharing Mechanism .......................................................................................... 44 6.3 DOCKING LPC SWITCH REGISTERS ..................................................................................... 45 6.3.1 Docking LPC Switch Register Map .............................................................................. 45 6.3.2 Docking LPC Control (DLCTL) .................................................................................... 45 Legacy Functional Blocks 7.1 SERIAL PORT 1 (SP1) .............................................................................................................. 47 7.1.1 General Description ..................................................................................................... 47 7.1.2 Register Bank Overview .............................................................................................. 47 7.1.3 SP1 Register Maps ...................................................................................................... 48 7.1.4 SP1 Bitmap Summary ................................................................................................. 49 7.2 IR FUNCTIONALITY (IR) ........................................................................................................... 51 7.2.1 General Description ..................................................................................................... 51 7.2.2 Register Bank Overview .............................................................................................. 51 7.2.3 IR Register Map for IR Functionality ............................................................................ 52 7.2.4 IR Bitmap Summary for IR Functionality ................................................................. 55 Device Characteristics 8.1 GENERAL DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS ................................................................. 58 8.1.1 Recommended Operating Conditions ......................................................................... 58 8.1.2 Absolute Maximum Ratings ......................................................................................... 58 8.1.3 Capacitance ................................................................................................................ 59 8.1.4 Power Consumption under Recommended Operating Conditions .............................. 59 8.1.5 Voltage Thresholds ...................................................................................................... 59 8.2 DC CHARACTERISTICS OF PINS, BY I/O BUFFER TYPES .................................................. 59 8.2.1 Input, PCI 3.3V ............................................................................................................ 59 8.2.2 Input, TTL Compatible ................................................................................................. 60 8.2.3 Input, TTL Compatible with Schmitt Trigger ................................................................ 60 8.2.4 Output, PCI 3.3V ......................................................................................................... 60 www.national.com 6 Revision 1.2 8.2.5 8.2.6 8.2.7 8.2.8 8.2.9 (Continued) Output, Push-Pull Buffer .............................................................................................. 60 Output, Open-Drain Buffer ........................................................................................... 61 Quick Switch ................................................................................................................ 61 Exceptions ................................................................................................................... 61 Terminology ................................................................................................................. 61 8.3 INTERNAL RESISTORS ........................................................................................................... 62 8.3.1 Pull-Up Resistor ........................................................................................................... 62 8.3.2 Pull-Down Resistor ...................................................................................................... 63 8.4 AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS .................................................................................... 63 8.4.1 AC Test Conditions ...................................................................................................... 63 8.4.2 Clock Input Timing ....................................................................................................... 64 8.4.3 Clock Output Timing .................................................................................................... 64 8.4.4 LCLK and LRESET ...................................................................................................... 65 8.4.5 VDD Power-Up Reset .................................................................................................. 66 8.4.6 LPC and SERIRQ Signals ........................................................................................... 67 8.4.7 Serial Port, Sharp-IR, SIR and Consumer Remote Control Timing ............................. 68 8.4.8 MIR and FIR Timing .................................................................................................... 69 8.4.9 Modem Control Timing ................................................................................................ 70 8.4.10 Docking LPC Switch Timing ........................................................................................ 71 Revision 1.2 7 www.national.com PC87382 Table of Contents DLAD1 LAD2 DLAD2 LAD3 DLAD3 CLKIN DCLKOUT DCD1 DSR1 SIN1 CONNECTION DIAGRAM RTS1/TRIS 1.1 SOUT1/TEST Signal/Pin Connection and Description 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 CTS1 1 36 LAD1 DTR1_BOUT1/BADDR 2 35 VDD RI1 3 34 VSS DLDRQ 4 33 DLAD0 IRRX1 5 32 LAD0 IRTX 6 31 DLFRAME IRRX2_IRSL0 7 30 LFRAME VDD 8 29 DSERIRQ VSS 9 28 SERIRQ VCORF 10 27 LRESET GPIO00 11 26 DLCLK GPIO01 12 25 LCLK PC87382 48-Pin LQFP (Top View) VDD VSS GPIO21 GPIO23 DCLKRUN CLKRUN DLRESET GPIO20 LDRQ/XOR_OUT GPIO04 GPIO03 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 GPIO02 PC87382 1.0 48-Pin Low Profile Plastic Quad Flatpack (LQFP) NS Package Number VBH48A Order Number PC87382-VBH www.national.com 8 Revision 1.2 1.2 PC87382 1.0 Signal/Pin Connection and Description (Continued) BUFFER TYPES AND SIGNAL/PIN DIRECTORY This section describes all signals. Signals are organized in functional groups. Buffer Types The signal DC characteristics are denoted by a buffer type symbol, described briefly in Table 1 and in further detail in Chapter 8 on page 58. Table 1. Buffer Types Symbol Revision 1.2 Description INPCI Input, PCI 3.3V INT Input, TTL compatible INTS Input, TTL compatible, with Schmidt Trigger OPCI Output, PCI 3.3V Op/n Output, push-pull buffer that is capable of sourcing p mA and sinking n mA ODn Output, open-drain output buffer that is capable of sinking n mA QS Quick Switch pin PWR Power pin GND Ground pin 9 www.national.com PC87382 1.0 Signal/Pin Connection and Description 1.3 (Continued) DETAILED SIGNAL/PIN DESCRIPTIONS This section describes all signals of the PC87382. 1.3.1 LPC Bus Interface Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type I/O INPCI/OPCI Description LAD3-0 40, 38, 36, 32 LCLK 25 I INPCI LPC Clock. Same as PCI clock (up to 33 MHz). LDRQ 16 O OPCI LPC DMA Request. Encoded DMA request for LPC interface. LFRAME 30 I INPCI LPC Frame. Low pulse indicates the beginning of a new LPC cycle or termination of a broken cycle. LRESET 27 I INPCI LPC Reset. Same as PCI system reset. SERIRQ 28 I/O INPCI/OPCI Serial IRQ. The interrupt requests are serialized over a single pin, where each IRQ level is delivered during a designated time slot. CLKRUN 19 I/OD INPCI/OD6 Clock Run. Same as PCI CLKRUN. 1.3.2 LPC Address-Data. Multiplexed command, address bidirectional data and cycle status. Docking LPC Bus Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type Description DLAD3-0 41, 39, 37, 33 I/O QS Dock LPC Address-Data. Multiplexed command, address bidirectional data and cycle status. DLCLK 26 I/O QS Dock LPC Clock. Same as PCI clock (up to 33 MHz). DLFRAME 31 I/O QS Dock LPC Frame. Low pulse indicates the beginning of a new LPC cycle or termination of a broken cycle. DSERIRQ 29 I/O QS Dock Serial IRQ. The interrupt requests are serialized over a single pin, where each IRQ level is delivered during a designated time slot. DCLKRUN 20 I/O QS Dock Clock Run. Same as PCI CLKRUN. DLRESET 18 O O4/4 Dock LPC Reset. Main LPC Reset combined with Dock LPC enable. DLDRQ 4 I INT Dock LPC DMA Request. Encoded DMA request for LPC interface. 1.3.3 Clocks Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type CLKIN 43 I INT DCLKOUT 42 O O14/14 www.national.com Description Clock In. 14.318 MHz or 48 MHz clock input. Dock Clock Output. Buffered clock for the Docking device. Enabled together with DLCLK; otherwise in TRI-STATE. 10 Revision1.2 1.3.4 PC87382 1.0 Signal/Pin Connection and Description (Continued) Infrared (IR) Signal I/O Buffer Type Description I INTS IR Receive 1. Primary input to receive serial data from the IR transceiver. IRRX2_IRSL0 7 I/O INTS/O3/6 IRTX O O6/12 IRRX1 1.3.5 Pin(s) 5 6 IRRX2 - IR Receive 2. Auxiliary IR receiver input to support a second transceiver. IRSL0 - IR Select. Output used to control the IR transceiver. IR Transmit. IR serial output data. Serial Port (SP1) Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type Description CTS1 1 I INTS Clear to Send. When low, indicates that the modem or other data transfer device is ready to exchange data. DCD1 44 I INTS Data Carrier Detected. When low, indicates that the modem or other data transfer device has detected the data carrier. DSR1 45 I INTS Data Set Ready. When low, indicates that the data transfer device, e.g., modem, is ready to establish a communications link. DTR1_BOUT1 2 O O3/6 Data Terminal Ready. When low, indicates to the modem or other data transfer device that the UART is ready to establish a communications link. Baud Output. Provides the associated serial channel baud rate generator output signal if Test Mode is selected, i.e., if bit 7 of the EXCR1 register is set. RI1 3 I INTS Ring Indicator. When low, indicates that a telephone ring signal was received by the modem. It is monitored during power-off for wake-up event detection. RTS1 47 O O3/6 Request to Send. When low, indicates to the modem or other data transfer device that the corresponding UART is ready to exchange data. A system reset sets this signal to inactive high; a loopback operation holds it inactive. SIN1 46 I INTS Serial Input. Receives composite serial data from the communications link (peripheral device, modem or other data transfer device). SOUT1 48 O O3/6 Serial Output. Sends composite serial data to the communications link (peripheral device, modem or other data transfer device). These signals are set active high after a system reset. 1.3.6 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Ports Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type Description GPIO00-04 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 I/O INTS/ OD6, O3/6 General-Purpose I/O Port 0, bits 0-4. Each pin is configured independently as input or I/O, with or without static pull-up, and with either open-drain or push-pull output type. The port supports interrupt assertion, and each pin can be enabled or masked as an interrupt source. GPIO20-21, GPIO23 17, 21 22 I/O INTS/ OD6, O3/6 General-Purpose I/O Port 2, bits 0,1,3. Same as Port 0, without interrupt support. Revision 1.2 11 www.national.com PC87382 1.0 Signal/Pin Connection and Description 1.3.7 (Continued) Power and Ground Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type VDD 35, 24, 8 I PWR Main 3.3V Power Supply. VSS 34, 23, 9 I GND Ground. 1.3.8 Description Strap Configuration Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type Description BADDR 2 I INTS Base Address. Sampled at VDD Power-Up reset to determine the base address of the configuration Index-Data register pair. – No pull-down resistor (default) - the Index-Data pair at 164Eh-164Fh. – 10 KΩ1 external pull-down resistor - the Index-Data pair at 2Eh-2Fh1. The external pull-down resistor must be connected to VSS. TRIS 47 I INTS TRI-STATE Device. Sampled at VDD Power-Up to force the device to float all its output and I/O pins. – No pull-down resistor (default) - normal pin operation – 10 KΩ1 external pull-down resistor - floating device pins The external pull-down resistor must be connected to VSS. When TRIS is set to 0 (by an external pull-down resistor), TEST must be 1 (i.e., left unconnected). TEST 48 I INTS XOR Tree Test Mode. Sampled at VDD Power-Up to force the device pins into a XOR tree configuration. – No pull-down resistor (default) - normal device operation 1 – 10 KΩ external pull-down resistor - pins configured as XOR tree. The external pull-down resistor must be connected to VSS. When TEST is set to 0 (by an external pull-down resistor), TRIS must be 1 (i.e., left unconnected). 1. Because the strap function is multiplexed with the Serial Port pins, a CMOS transceiver device is recommended for Serial Port functionality; in this case, the value of the external pull-down resistor is 10 KΩ. If, however, a TTL transceiver device is used, the value of the external pull-down resistor must be 470Ω, and since the Serial Port pins are not able to drive this load, the external pull-down resistor must disconnect tEPLV after VDD power-up (see Section 8.4.5 on page 66). 1.3.9 Test and Miscellaneous Signal Pin(s) I/O Buffer Type Description XOR_OUT 16 O O3/6 XOR Tree Output. All the device pins (except ground and power pins) are internally connected in a XOR tree structure. VCORF 10 I/O - On-Chip Core Power Converter Filter. Powers the core logic of all the device modules. An external 0.1 µF ceramic filter capacitor must be connected between this pin and VSS. www.national.com 12 Revision1.2 1.4 PC87382 1.0 Signal/Pin Connection and Description (Continued) INTERNAL PULL-UP AND PULL-DOWN RESISTORS The signals listed in Table 2 can optionally support internal pull-up (PU) and/or pull-down (PD) resistors. See Section 8.3 on page 62 for the values of each resistor type. Table 2. Internal Pull-Up and Pull-Down Resistors Signal Pin(s) Type Comments General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Ports GPIO00-04 11, 12,13, 14, 15 PU30 Programmable GPIO21 21 PU80 Programmable GPIO20, GPIO23 17, 22 PU30 Programmable Strap Configuration and Testability BADDR 2 PU30 Strap1 TEST 48 PU30 Strap1 TRIS 47 PU30 Strap1 Docking LPC DLAD3-0 33, 37, 39, 41 PU30 Active when the switch is off2 DLCLK 26 PU30 Active when the switch is off2 DCLKOUT 42 PU80 Active when the switch is off2 DLFRAME 31 PU30 Active when the switch is off2 DLRESET 18 PD120 Active when the switch is off2 DSERIRQ 29 PU30 Active when the switch is off2 DCLKRUN 20 PU30 Active when the switch is off2 DLDRQ 4 PU30 1. Active only during VDD Power-Up reset. 2. The Docking LPC signal resistors are active when the corresponding switch is off. Revision 1.2 13 www.national.com PC87382 2.0 Power, Reset and Clocks 2.1 POWER 2.1.1 Power Planes The PC87382 has a single 3.3V power source, VDD. Internally, an additional power plane (VCORF) is generated using an onchip voltage converter. This power plane feeds all the core logic. 2.1.2 Power States The following terminology is used in this document to describe the power states: • • Power On - VDD is active. Power Off - VDD is inactive. 2.1.3 Power Connection and Layout Guidelines The PC87382 requires a power supply voltage of 3.3V ± 10% for the VDD supply. The on-chip Core voltage converter generates a voltage below 3V for the internal logic. VDD and VCORF use a common ground return marked VSS. To obtain the best performance, bear in mind the following recommendations. Ground Connection. The following items must be connected to the ground layer (VSS) as close to the device as possible: • • • The ground return (VSS) pins The decoupling capacitors of the Main power supply (VDD) pins The decoupling capacitor of the on-chip Core power converter (VCORF) pin Note that a low-impedance ground layer also improves noise isolation. Decoupling Capacitors. The following decoupling capacitors must be used in order to reduce EMI and ground bounce: • Main power supply (VDD): Place one 0.1 µF capacitor on each VDD-VSS pin pair, as close to the pin as possible. In addition, place one 10−47 µF tantalum capacitor on the common net as close to the device as possible. • On-Chip Core power converter (VCORF): Place one 0.1 µF ceramic capacitor on the VCORF-VSS pin pair as close to the pin as possible. Main 3.3V 8 10-47 µF + 0.1 µF 9 0.1 µF 10 VDD PC87382 VSS VDD VSS 24 23 0.1 µF VCORF VDD VSS 35 34 0.1 µF Figure 1. Decoupling Capacitors Connection www.national.com 14 Revision 1.2 2.2 PC87382 2.0 Power, Reset and Clocks (Continued) RESET SOURCES AND TYPES The PC87382 has the following reset sources: • • VDD Power-Up Reset - activated when VDD is powered up Hardware Reset - activated when the LRESET input is asserted (low) 2.2.1 VDD Power-Up Reset VDD Power-Up reset is generated by an internal circuit when VDD power is turned on. VDD Power-Up reset time (tIRST) lasts until the LRESET signal is de-asserted. The Hardware reset (LRESET) must be asserted for a minimum of 10 ms to ensure that the PC87382 operates correctly. External devices must wait at least tIRST before accessing the PC87382. If the host processor accesses the PC87382 during this time, the PC87382 LPC interface ignores the transaction (that is, it does not return a SYNC handshake). VDD Power-Up reset performs the following actions: • • • Puts pins with strap options into TRI-STATE and enables their internal pull-up resistors Samples the logic levels of the strap pins Executes all the actions performed by the Hardware reset; see Section 2.2.2 2.2.2 Hardware Reset Hardware reset is activated by assertion of LRESET input while VDD is “good”. When VDD power is off, the PC87382 ignores the level of the LRESET input. Hardware reset performs the following actions: • • • • Resets all lock bits in configuration registers Loads default values to all the bits in the Configuration Control Resets all the logical devices Loads default values to all the module registers 2.3 CLOCK DOMAINS The PC87382 has two clock domains, as shown in Table 3. Table 3. Clock Domains of the PC87382 Clock Domain Frequency Source Usage LPC Up to 33 MHz LPC clock input (LCLK) LPC bus interface and Configuration registers, Docking LPC Switch logic 48 MHz 48 MHz On-chip Clock Generator or directly from Clock Input (CLKIN) Legacy functions (Serial Port, Infrared) and DCLKOUT output pin 2.3.1 LPC Domain The LPC clock signal at the LCLK pin must become valid before the end of the Hardware reset (LRESET); see Section 2.2.2. This clock can be slowed down or stopped using the CLKRUN protocol. 2.3.2 48 MHz Domain The 48 MHz clock domain is sourced either by the on-chip Clock Generator or directly by the CLKIN input pin. The Clock Generator is fed by applying a clock source at a frequency of 14.31818 MHz. The Clock Generator generates two internal clocks, 24 MHz and 48 MHz. After power-up or Hardware reset, the clock (Clock Generator or external clock) is disabled. Clock Generator Functional Description The on-chip Clock Generator starts working when it is enabled by bit 7 of the CLOCKCF register, Index 29h, i.e., when the bit value changes from 0 to 1 (only for 14.31818 MHz clock source). Once enabled, the output clock is frozen to a steady logic level until the clock generator provides a stable output clock that meets all requirements. Then the clock starts toggling. On Hardware reset, the chip wakes up with the on-chip Clock Generator disabled. The input clock of the Clock Generator may toggle regardless of the state of the LRESET pin. The Clock Generator waits for a toggling input clock. Revision 1.2 15 www.national.com PC87382 2.0 Power, Reset and Clocks (Continued) Bit 4 (read only) of the CLOCKCF register is the Valid Clock Generator status bit. While stabilizing, the output clock is frozen to a steady logic level, and the status bit is cleared to 0 to indicate a frozen clock. When the clock generator is stable, the output clock starts toggling and the status bit is set to 1. The status bit tells the software when the Clock Generator is ready. The software should poll this status bit until it is set (1), and only then activate the UART, the Infrared interface and the DCLKOUT pin. The clock generator and its output clock do not consume power when they are disabled. 2.3.3 Chip Power-Up To ensure proper operation, proceed as follows after power-up: 1. Set bits 5 and 6 of the Clock Generator Control register (CLOCKCF) at Index 29h according to the clock source used and the desired output frequency on DCLKOUT; see Table 4. 2. Enable the clock. If the clock source is 14.31818 MHz: — Poll bit 4 of the CLOCKCF register while the clock generator is stabilizing. — When bit 4 of CLOCKCF is set to 1, go to step 3. 3. Enable any module in the chip, as needed. Table 4. Clock Generator Encoding Options 2.3.4 CLKIN Pin Frequency Desired DCLKOUT Frequency CLOCKCF Bits 6, 5 48 MHz 48 MHz 00 14.31818 MHz 14.31818 MHz 01 48 MHz 11 Specifications Wake-up time is 33 msec (maximum). This is measured from the time the Clock Generator is enabled until the clock is stable. Note: The reference clock must be stable at the time the Clock Generator is enabled. Tolerance (long term deviation) of the generator output clock, relative to the input clock, is ±110 ppm. Total tolerance is therefore ± (input clock tolerance + 110 ppm). 2.4 TESTABILITY SUPPORT The PC87382 supports two testability modes: • • In-Circuit Testing (ICT) XOR Tree Testing 2.4.1 ICT The In-Circuit Testing (ICT) technique, also known as “bed-of-nails”, injects logic patterns to the input pins of the devices mounted on the tested board. It then checks their outputs for the correct logic levels. The PC87382 supports this testing technique by floating (putting in TRI-STATE) all the device pins. This prevents “backdriving” the PC87382 pins by the ICT tester when a device normally controlled by PC87382 is tested (device inputs are driven by the ICT tester). 2.4.2 XOR Tree Testing When the PC87382 is mounted on a board, it can be tested using the XOR Tree technique. This test also checks the correct connection of the device pins to the board. In XOR Tree mode, all PC87382 pins are configured as inputs, except the last pin in the tree, which is the XOR_OUT output. The buffer type of the input pins participating in the XOR tree is INT (Input, TTL compatible), regardless of the buffer type of these pins in normal device operation mode (see Section 1.3 on page 10). The input pins are chained through XOR gates, as shown in Figure 2. The power and ground pins (VDD, VSS, VCORF) are excluded from the XOR tree. www.national.com 16 Revision1.2 PC87382 2.0 Power, Reset and Clocks (Continued) VDD XOR_OUT Pin 17 Pin 18 Pin 48 Pin 1 Pin 15 Pin 16 Figure 2. XOR Tree (Simplified Diagram) The maximum propagation delay through the XOR tree, from the first pin in the chain to XOR_OUT is 200 ns. 2.4.3 Test Mode Entry Sequence Table 5 shows the decoding values required to enter each test mode. The test modes are decoded from the TEST and TRIS strap pins and are latched into PC87382 on power up. Table 5. Test Mode Selection Revision 1.2 Test Mode TEST TRIS No Test Mode Selected 1 1 ICT 1 0 XOR Tree 0 1 Reserved exclusively for NSC use 0 0 17 www.national.com Device Architecture and Configuration The PC87382 comprises a collection of legacy and proprietary functional blocks. Each functional block is described in a separate chapter. This chapter describes the PC87382 structure and provides all logical device specific information, including special implementation of generic blocks, system interface and device configuration. 3.1 OVERVIEW The PC87382 consists of four logical devices, the host interface, and a central set of configuration registers, all built around a central internal bus. Figure 3 illustrates the blocks and related logic. The system interface serves as a bridge between the external LPC interface and the internal bus. It supports 8-bit read and write transactions for I/O and DMA, as defined in Intel’s LPC Interface Specification, Revision 1.1. The central configuration register set is ACPI compliant and supports a PnP configuration. The configuration registers are structured as a subset of the Plug and Play Standard registers, defined in Appendix A of the Plug and Play ISA Specification, Revision 1.0a by Intel and Microsoft. All system resources assigned to the functional blocks (I/O address space, DMA channels and IRQ lines) are configured in, and managed by, the central configuration register set. In addition, some functionspecific parameters are configurable through the configuration registers and distributed to the functional blocks through special control signals. GPIO20,21,23 Serial Port 1 GPIO Ports GPIO00-04 IRRX1,IRRX2 IRTX Bus Interface IR Control Signals IRSL0 Internal Bus PC87382 3.0 LPC Bus Switch BADDR TEST TRIS Strap Config SIN1 SOUT1 RTS1 DTR1_BOUT1 CTS1 DSR1 DCD1 RI1 CLKIN LRESET LCLK SERIRQ LDRQ LFRAME LAD3-0 CLKRUN DLRESET DLCLK DSERIRQ DLDRQ DLFRAME DLAD3-0 DCLKRUN Config & Control Registers Figure 3. PC87382 Detailed Block Diagram 3.2 CONFIGURATION STRUCTURE AND ACCESS The configuration structure is comprised of a set of banked registers which are accessed via a pair of specialized registers. 3.2.1 The Index-Data Register Pair Access to the PC87382 configuration registers is via an Index-Data register pair, using only two system I/O byte locations. The base address of this register pair is determined during VDD Power-Up reset, according to the state of the hardware strapping option on the BADDR pin. Table 6 shows the selected base addresses as a function of BADDR. www.national.com 18 Revision 1.2 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) Table 6. BADDR Strapping Options I/O Address BADDR Index Register Data Register 0 2Eh 2Fh 1 (default) 164Eh 164Fh The Index register is an 8-bit read/write register located at the selected base address (Base+0). It is used as a pointer to the configuration register file, and holds the index of the configuration register that is currently accessible via the Data register. Reading the Index register returns the last value written to it (or the default of 00h after reset). The Data register is an 8-bit register (Base+1) used as a data path to any configuration register. Accessing the Data register actually accesses the configuration register that is currently pointed to by the Index register. 3.2.2 Banked Logical Device Registers Structure Each functional block is associated with a Logical Device Number (LDN). The configuration registers are grouped into banks, where each bank holds the standard configuration registers of the corresponding logical device. Table 7 shows the LDN values of the PC87382 functional blocks. Any value not listed is reserved. Figure 4 shows the structure of the standard configuration register file. The LDN and PC87382 configuration registers are not banked and are accessed by the Index-Data register pair only, as described in Section 3.2.1. However, the device control and device configuration registers are duplicated over four banks for four logical devices. Therefore, accessing a specific register in a specific bank is performed by two-dimensional indexing, where the LDN register selects the bank (or logical device) and the Index register selects the register within the bank. Accessing the Data register while the Index register holds a value of 30h or higher physically accesses the logical device configuration registers currently pointed to by the Index register, within the logical device currently selected by the LDN register. 07h Logical Device Number Register 20h 2Fh SuperI/O Configuration Registers 30h Logical Device Control Register 60h 63h 70h 71h 74h 75h F0h FFh Standard Logical Device Configuration Registers Special (Vendor-defined) Logical Device Configuration Registers Bank Select Banks (One per Logical Device) Figure 4. Structure of Standard Configuration Register File Table 7. Logical Device Number (LDN) Assignments LDN Revision 1.2 Functional Block 02h Infrared (IR) 03h Serial Port 1 (SP1) 07h General-Purpose I/O (GPIO) Ports 19h Docking LPC Switch 19 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) Write accesses to unimplemented registers (i.e., accessing the Data register while the Index register points to a non-existing register) are ignored; reads return 00h on all addresses, except 74h and 75h (DMA configuration registers), which return 04h (indicating no DMA channel is active). The configuration registers are accessible immediately after reset. 3.2.3 Standard Configuration Register Definitions In the registers below, any undefined bit is reserved. Unless otherwise noted, the following definitions also hold true: ● All registers are read/write. ● All reserved bits return 0 on reads, except where noted otherwise. To prevent unpredictable results, do not modify these bits. Use read-modify-write to prevent the values of reserved bits from being changed during write. ● Write-only registers must not use read-modify-write during updates. Table 8. Standard General Configuration Registers Index Register Name 07h Logical Device Number 20h-2Fh PC87382 Configuration Description This register selects the current logical device. See Table 7 for valid numbers. All other values are reserved. PC87382 configuration registers and ID registers. Table 9. Logical Device Activate Register Index Register Name 30h Activate Description Bits 7-1: Reserved. Bit 0: Logical device activation control; see Section 3.3 on page 24. 0: Disabled 1: Enabled Table 10. I/O Space Configuration Registers Index Register Name Description 60h I/O Port Base Indicates selected I/O lower limit address bits 15−8 for I/O Descriptor 0. Address Bits 15−8 Descriptor 0 61h I/O Port Base Address Bits 7−0 Descriptor 0 www.national.com Indicates selected I/O lower limit address bits 7−0 for I/O Descriptor 0. 20 Revision1.2 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) Table 11. Interrupt Configuration Registers Index Register Name Description 70h Interrupt Number Indicates selected interrupt number. Bits 7-4: Reserved. Bits 3-0: These bits select the interrupt number. A value of 1 selects IRQ1. A value of 15 selects IRQ15. IRQ0 is not a valid interrupt selection and represents no interrupt selection. Note: Avoid selecting the same interrupt number (except 0) for different logical devices, as it causes the PC87382 to behave unpredictably. 71h Interrupt Request Indicates the type and polarity of the interrupt request number selected in the Type Select previous register. If a logical device supports only one type of interrupt, the corresponding bit is read only. Bits 7-2: Reserved. Bit 1: Polarity of interrupt request selected in previous register. 0: Low polarity. 1: High polarity. Bit 0: Type of interrupt request selected in previous register. 0: Edge. 1: Level. Table 12. DMA Configuration Registers Index Register Name Description 74h DMA Channel Select 0 Indicates selected DMA channel for DMA 0 of the logical device (0 is the first DMA channel if more than one DMA channel is used). Bits 7-3: Reserved. Bits 2-0: These select the DMA channel for DMA 0, where: - A value of 0, 1, 2, or 3 selects DMA channel 0, 1, 2, or 3, respectively. - A value of 4 indicates that no DMA channel is active. - The values 5-7 are reserved. Note: Avoid selecting the same DMA channel (except 4) for different logical devices, as it causes the PC87382 to behave unpredictably. 75h DMA Channel Select 1 Indicates selected DMA channel for DMA 1 of the logical device (1 is the second DMA channel if more than one DMA channel is used). Bits 7-3: Reserved. Bits 2-0: These select the DMA channel for DMA 1, where: - A value of 0, 1, 2, or 3 selects DMA channel 0, 1, 2, or 3, respectively. - A value of 4 indicates that no DMA channel is active. - The values 5−7 are reserved. Note: Avoid selecting the same DMA channel (except 4) for different logical devices, as it causes the PC87382 to behave unpredictably. Table 13. Special Logical Device Configuration Registers Index Register Name F0h-FFh Logical Device Configuration Revision 1.2 Description Special (vendor-defined) configuration options. 21 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration 3.2.4 (Continued) Standard Configuration Registers Index 07h Logical Device Number 20h SuperI/O ID 21h SuperI/O Configuration 1 22h SuperI/O Configuration 2 23h-25h SuperI/O Control and Configuration Registers Reserved 26h SuperI/O Configuration 6 27h SuperI/O Revision ID 28h Reserved 29h Clock Generator Control 2Ah - 2Fh Logical Device Control and Configuration Registers one per Logical Device (some are optional) Register Name Reserved exclusively for National use 30h Logical Device Control (Activate) 60h I/O Base Address Descriptor 0 Bits 15-8 61h I/O Base Address Descriptor 0 Bits 7-0 70h Interrupt Number and Wake-Up on IRQ Enable 71h IRQ Type Select 74h DMA Channel Select 0 75h DMA Channel Select 1 F0h - FFh Device Specific Logical Device Configuration 1 to 15 Figure 5. Configuration Register Map SuperI/O Configuration Registers The PC87382 configuration registers at Indexes 20h and 27h are used for part identification. The other configuration registers are used for global power management and the selection of pin multiplexing options. For details, see Section 3.7 on page 26. Logical Device Control and Configuration Registers A subset of these registers is implemented for each logical device. See the functional block descriptions in the following sections. Control The only implemented control register for each logical device is the Activate register at Index 30h. Bit 0 of the Activate register controls the activation of the associated functional block. Activation enables access to the functional block’s registers, and attaches its system resources, which are unassigned as long as it is not activated. Other effects may apply on a functionspecific basis (such as clock enable and active pinout signaling). Access to the configuration register of the logical device is enabled even when the logical device is not activated. Standard Configuration The standard configuration registers manage the PnP resource allocation to the functional blocks. The I/O port base address descriptor 0 is a pair of registers at Index 60-61h, holding the first 16-bit base address for the register set of the functional block. An optional 16-bit second base-address (descriptor 1) at Index 62-63h is used for logical devices with more than one continuous register set. Interrupt Number (Index 70h) and IRQ Type Select (Index 71h) allocate an IRQ line to the block and control its type. DMA Channel Select 0 (Index 74h) allocates a DMA channel to the block, where applicable. DMA Channel Select 1 (Index 75h) allocates a second DMA channel, where applicable. www.national.com 22 Revision1.2 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) Special Configuration The vendor-defined registers, starting at Index F0h, control function-specific parameters such as operation modes, power saving modes, pin TRI-STATE, and non-standard extensions to generic functions. 3.2.5 Default Configuration Setup In the event of a VDD Power-Up or Hardware reset, the PC87382 wakes up with the following default configuration setup: — The configuration base address is 2Eh or 164Eh, according to the BADDR strap pin value, as shown in Table 6 on page 19. — All logical devices are disabled. — All multiplexed GPIO pins are configured to their respective default function. When configured as GPIO, they have an internal static pull-up (default direction is input). — The legacy devices (Serial Port and IR) are assigned with their legacy system resource allocation. — National Semiconductor proprietary functions are not assigned with any default resources, and the default values of their base addresses are all 00h. See Section 2.2 on page 15 for more details on PC87382 reset sources and types. Revision 1.2 23 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration 3.3 3.3.1 (Continued) MODULE CONTROL Module Enable/Disable Module control is performed primarily through the Activation bit (bit 0 of Index 30h) of each logical device. The operation of each module can be controlled by the host through the LPC bus. Module enable/disable by the host through the LPC bus is controlled by the following bits: ● Activation bit (bit 0) in Index 30h of the Standard configuration registers; see Section 3.2.3 on page 20. ● Fast Disable bit in SIOCF6 register; for the Serial Port 1 and IR modules only; see Section 3.7.4 on page 28. ● Global Enable bit (GLOBEN) in SIOCF1 register; see Section 3.7.2 on page 27. A module is enabled only if all of these bits are set to their “enable” value. When a legacy (SP1 or IR) module is disabled, the following takes place: ● The host system resources of the logical device (IRQ, DMA and runtime address range) are unassigned. ● Access to the standard- and device-specific Logical Device configuration registers through the LPC bus remains enabled. ● Access to the module’s runtime registers through the LPC bus is disabled (transactions are ignored; SYNC cycle is not generated). ● The module’s internal clock is disabled (the module is not functional) to lower the power consumption. When the GPIO or DLPC module is disabled, the following takes place: ● The host system resources of the logical device (IRQ and runtime address range) are unassigned. ● Access to the standard- and device-specific Logical Device configuration registers through the LPC bus remains enabled. ● Access to the module’s runtime registers through the LPC bus is disabled (transactions are ignored; SYNC cycle is not generated). ● The module is functional. 3.3.2 Floating Module Output The pins of the Legacy modules (Serial Port, Infrared) can be floated. When the TRI-STATE Control bit (bit 0) is set in the specific module configuration register (at Index F0h of the specific logical device in the configuration space) and the module is disabled (see Section 3.3.1), the module output signals are floated and the I/O signals are configured as inputs (note that the logic level at the inputs is ignored by the module, which is disabled). Figure 6 shows the control mechanism for floating the pins of a Legacy module. Device Configuration Index 30h Register Activation Bit (bit 0) SIOCF1 Register Global Enable GLOBEN SIOCF6 Register Fast Disable xxxDIS1 Module Enable Legacy Module Legacy Module Configuration Register (Index F0h) Enable TRISTATE Control Output Buffer 1. Wherever the bit is implemented Figure 6. Control of Floating Legacy Module Pins www.national.com 24 Revision1.2 3.4 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) INTERNAL ADDRESS DECODING A full 16-bit address decoding is applied when accessing the configuration I/O space as well as the registers of the functional blocks. However, the number of configurable bits in the base address registers varies for each logical device. The lower 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 address bits are decoded within the functional block to determine the offset of the accessed register within the logical device’s I/O range of 2, 4, 8, 16 or 32 bytes, respectively. The remaining bits are matched with the base address register to decode the entire I/O range allocated to the logical device. Therefore the lower bits of the base address register are forced to 0 (read only), and the base address is forced to be 2, 4, 8, 16 or 32 byte-aligned, according to the size of the I/O range. The base addresses of the Serial Port 1 and FIR modules are limited to the I/O address range of 00h to 7FXh only (bits 1115 are forced to 0). The addresses of the non-legacy logical devices are configurable within the full 16-bit address range (up to FFFXh). 3.5 PROTECTION The PC87382 provides features to protect the hardware configuration from changes made by application software running on the host. The protection is activated by the software setting a “sticky” lock bit. Each lock bit protects a group of configuration bits located either in the same register or in different registers. When the lock bit is set, the lock bit and all the protected bits become read only and cannot be further modified by the host through the LPC bus. All the lock bits are reset by Hardware reset, thus unlocking the protected configuration bits. The bit locking protection mechanism is optional. The protected groups of configuration bits are described below. 3.5.1 Lock bit: Configuration Lock LOCKMCF in SIOCF1 register (Device Configuration). Protected bits: LOCKMCF and IOWAIT (in SIOCF1 register) and all bits in SIOCF2 register (Device Configuration). 3.5.2 GPIO Ports Configuration Lock Protects the configuration (but not the data) of all the GPIO Ports. Lock bit: LOCKGCF in SIOCF1 register (Device Configuration). Protected bits for each GPIO Port: LOCKGCF in SIOCF1 register, and all bits in GPCFG register (except LOCKCFP bit) and GPEVR register (Device Configuration). 3.5.3 Fast Disable Configuration Lock Protects the Fast Disable bits for all the Legacy modules. Lock bit: LOCKFDS in SIOCF6 register (Device Configuration). Protected bits: All bits in SIOCF6 register (except General-Purpose Scratch bits) and GLOBEN bit in SIOCF1 register (Device Configuration). 3.5.4 Clock Control Lock Protects the Clock Generator control bits. Lock bit: LOCKCCF in CLOCKCF register (Device Configuration). Protected bits: All bits in CLOCKCF register (Device Configuration). 3.5.5 GPIO Ports Lock Protects the configuration and data of all the GPIO Ports. Lock bit: LOCKCFP in GPCFG register, for each GPIO Port (Device Configuration). Protected bits for each GPIO Port: PUPCTL, OUTTYPE and OUTENA in GPCFG register; the corresponding bit (to the port pin) in GPDO register (GPIO Ports). Revision 1.2 25 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration 3.6 (Continued) REGISTER TYPE ABBREVIATIONS The following abbreviations are used to indicate the Register Type: ● 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. ● W = Write. ● RO = Read Only. ● R/W1C = Read/Write 1 to Clear. Writing 1 to a bit clears it to 0. Writing 0 has no effect. ● R/W1S = Read/Write 1 to Set. Writing 1 to a bit sets its value to 1. Writing 0 has no effect. 3.7 SUPERI/O CONFIGURATION REGISTERS This section describes the SuperI/O configuration and ID registers (those registers with first level indexes in the range of 20h-2Eh). See Table 14 for a summary and directory of these registers. Note: Set the configuration registers to enable functions or signals that are relevant to the specific device. The values of fields that select functions, or signals, that are excluded from a specific device are treated as reserved and should not be selected. Table 14. SuperI/O Configuration Registers Index Register Name Type Section 20h SID SuperI/O ID RO 3.7.1 21h SIOCF1 SuperI/O Configuration 1 R/W 3.7.2 22h SIOCF2 SuperI/O Configuration 2 R/W 3.7.3 23h-25h Reserved for National use 26h SIOCF6 SuperI/O Configuration 6 R/W 3.7.4 27h SRID SuperI/O Revision ID RO 3.7.5 29h CLOCKCF Clock Generator Control Register R/W 3.7.6 2Ah - 2Fh 3.7.1 Mnemonic Reserved exclusively for National use SuperI/O ID Register (SID) This register contains the identity number of the chip. The PC87382 family is identified by the value F4h. Location: Index 20h Type: RO Bit 7 6 5 4 3 Name Chip ID Reset F4h www.national.com 26 2 1 0 Revision1.2 3.7.2 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) SuperI/O Configuration 1 Register (SIOCF1) Location: Index 21h Type: Varies per bit Bit 7 6 Name LOCKMCF LOCKGCF Reset 0 0 Bit 5 4 3 1 0 Reserved 0 2 IOWAIT Type 0 1 0 Reserved GLOBEN 0 1 Description 7 R/W1S LOCKMCF (Lock Multiplexing Configuration). When set to 1, this bit locks the configuration of registers SIOCF1 and SIOCF2 by disabling writing to all bits in these registers (including the LOCKMCF bit itself), except for the LOCKGCF and GLOBEN bits in SIOCF1. Once set, this bit can only be cleared by Hardware reset. 0: R/W bits are enabled for write (default). 1: All bits are RO. 6 R/W1S LOCKGCF (Lock GPIO Pins Configuration). When set to 1, this bit locks the configuration registers of all GPIO pins (see Section 3.10.3 on page 33) by disabling writes to all their bits (including the LOCKGCF bit itself). The locked registers include the GPCFG (except LOCKCFP bit) and GPEVR registers of all GPIO pins. Once set, this bit can only be cleared by Hardware reset. 0: R/W bits are enabled for write (default). 1: All bits are RO. 5-4 3-2 1 0 3.7.3 Reserved. These bits must be ‘01’. R/W or IOWAIT (Number of I/O Wait States). These bits set the number of wait states for I/O transactions RO through the LPC bus. Bits 3 2 Number of Wait States 0 0 1 1 0 (default) 2 6 12 0: 1: 0: 1: Reserved. This bit must be 0. R/W or GLOBEN (Global Device Enable). This bit makes it possible to disable all logical devices by setting a RO single bit (to 0). In addition, when the bit is set to 1, it enables the operation of all the logical devices of the PC87382, as long as the logical device is itself enabled (see Table 7 on page 19). The behavior of the different devices is explained in Section 3.3 on page 24. 0: All logical devices in the PC87382 are disabled and their resources are released. 1: Enables each PC87382 logical device that is itself enabled (default); see Section 3.3.1 on page 24. SuperI/O Configuration 2 Register (SIOCF2) This register is reset by hardware to 63h. Location: Index 22h Type: R/W or RO This register is reserved. It must be written with 63h Revision 1.2 27 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration 3.7.4 (Continued) SuperI/O Configuration 6 Register (SIOCF6) This register provides a fast way to disable one or more modules without having to access the Activate register of each; see Section 3.3.1 on page 24. Location: Index 26h Type: Varies per bit Bit 7 Name LOCKFDS Reset Bit 7 6-5 0 6 5 General-Purpose Scratch 0 4 3 2 Reserved SER1DIS IRDIS 0 0 0 0 Type 0 Reserved 0 0 Description R/W1 LOCKFDS (Lock Fast Disable Configuration). When set to 1, this bit locks itself, SER1DIS and IRDIS S bits in this register and GLOBEN bit in SIOCF1 register by disabling writing to all of these bits. Once set, this bit can only be cleared by Hardware reset. 0: R/W bits are enabled for write (default). 1: All bits are RO. R/W 4 General-Purpose Scratch. Reserved. 3 R/W SER1DIS (Serial Port 1 Disable). or RO 0: Enabled or Disabled, according to Activation bit (default). 1: Disabled. 2 R/W IRDIS (Infrared Disable). or RO 0: Enabled or Disabled, according to Activation bit (default). 1: Disabled. 1-0 3.7.5 1 Reserved. SuperI/O Revision ID Register (SRID) This register contains the ID number of the specific family member (Chip ID) and the chip revision number (Chip Rev). Location: Index 27h Type: RO Bit 7 Name 6 5 4 3 Chip ID Reset 0 Bit 0 2 1 0 X X Chip Rev 0 X X X Description 7-5 Chip ID. 4-0 Chip Rev. These bits identify the device revision. www.national.com 28 Revision1.2 3.7.6 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) Clock Generator Control Register (CLOCKCF) Location: Index 29h Type: Varies per bit Bit 7 Name CKEN Reset 0 Bit 6 5 CKOUTSEL CK48SEL 0 0 4 3 CKVALID LOCKCCF 0 0 Type 2 1 0 Reserved 0 0 0 Description 7 R/W or CKEN (Clock Enable). This bit enables the internal clock of the PC87382. If the clock source selected RO by CK48SEL bit is the Clock Generator, CKEN enables the Clock Generator; otherwise it enables the path from the CLKIN input pin. 0: Clock disabled (default). 1: Clock enabled. 6 R/W or CKOUTSEL (Clock Output Select). Selects the clock source to output on DCLKOUT pin. RO 0: Select Clock Source from CLKIN pin (default). 1: Select Clock Generator Output. Valid only if CK48SEL field is set. 5 R/W or CK48SEL (48 MHz Clock Select). Selects the source of the internal 48 MHz clock. RO 0: The source of the internal 48 MHz clock is CLKIN pin (default). Use when CLKIN pin is connected to a 48 MHz clock source. 1: The source of the internal 48 MHz clock is the Clock Generator. Use when CLKIN pin is connected to a 14.31818 MHz clock source. 4 3 2-0 Revision 1.2 RO CKVALID (Valid Clock Generator, Clock Status). This bit indicates the status of the on-chip, 48 MHz Clock Generator and controls the generator output clock signal. The PC87382 modules using this clock may be enabled (see Section 3.3.1 on page 24) only after this bit is read high (generator clock is valid). 0: Generator output clock frozen (default). 1: Generator output clock active (stable and toggling). R/W1S LOCKCCF (Lock Clock Configuration). When set to 1, this bit locks the CLOCKCF register by disabling writing to all its bits (including to the LOCKCCF bit itself). Once set, this bit can only be cleared by Hardware reset. 0: The R/W bits are enabled for write (default). 1: All the bits are Read-Only. Reserved. 29 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration 3.8 3.8.1 (Continued) INFRARED CONFIGURATION Logical Device 2 (IR) Configuration Table 15 lists the configuration registers that affect the Infrared. Only the last register (F0h) is described here. See Sections 3.2.3 and 3.2.4 for descriptions of the other registers. Table 15. Infrared Configuration Registers Index 3.8.2 Configuration Register or Action Type Reset 30h Activate. See also bit 0 of the SIOCF1 register and bit 2 of the SIOCF6 register. R/W 00h 60h Base Address MSB register. Bits 7-3 (for A15-11) are read only, 00000b. R/W 02h 61h Base Address LSB register. Bit 2-0 (for A2-0) are read only, 000b. R/W F8h 70h Interrupt Number and Wake-Up on IRQ Enable register. R/W 03h 71h Interrupt Type. Bit 1 is R/W; other bits are read only. R/W 03h 74h DMA Channel Select 0 (RX_DMA). R/W 04h 75h DMA Channel Select 1 (TX_DMA). R/W 04h F0h Infrared Configuration register. R/W 02h Infrared Configuration Register This register is reset by hardware to 02h. Location: Index F0h Type: R/W Bit 7 Name 0 Bit 6-3 5 Bank Select Enable Reset 7 6 4 3 Reserved 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 Busy Indicator Power Mode Control TRI-STATE Control 0 1 0 Description Bank Select Enable. Enables bank switching for Infrared. 0: All attempts to access the extended registers in Infrared are ignored (default). 1: Enables bank switching for Infrared. Reserved. 2 Busy Indicator. This read-only bit can be used by power management software to decide when to power down the Infrared logical device. 0: No transfer in progress (default). 1: Transfer in progress. 1 Power Mode Control. When the logical device is active in: 0: Low power mode Infrared clock disabled. The output signals are set to their default states. Registers are maintained (unlike Active bit in Index 30, which also prevents access to Infrared registers). 1: Normal power mode Infrared clock enabled. Infrared is functional when the logical device is active (default). 0 TRI-STATE Control. When enabled and the device is inactive, the logical device output pins are in TRI-STATE. One exception is the IRTX pin, which is driven to 0 when Infrared is inactive and is not affected by this bit. 0: TRI-STATE disabled (default). 1: TRI-STATE enabled. www.national.com 30 Revision1.2 3.9 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) SERIAL PORT 1 CONFIGURATION 3.9.1 Logical Device 3 (SP1) Configuration Table 16 lists the configuration registers that affect the Serial Port 1. Only the last register (F0h) is described here. See Sections 3.2.3 and 3.2.4 for descriptions of the other registers. Table 16. Serial Port 1 Configuration Registers Index 3.9.2 Configuration Register or Action Type Reset 30h Activate. See also bit 0 of the SIOCF1 register and bit 3 of the SIOCF6 register. R/W 00h 60h Base Address MSB register. Bits 7-3 (for A15-11) are read only, 00000b. R/W 03h 61h Base Address LSB register. Bit 2-0 (for A2-0) are read only, 000b. R/W F8h 70h Interrupt Number and Wake-Up on IRQ Enable register. R/W 04h 71h Interrupt Type. Bit 1 is R/W; other bits are read only. R/W 03h 74h Report no DMA Assignment. RO 04h 75h Report no DMA Assignment. RO 04h F0h Serial Port 1 Configuration register. R/W 02h Serial Port 1 Configuration Register This register is reset by hardware to 02h. Location: Index F0h Type: R/W Bit 7 Name 0 Bit 6-3 5 Bank Select Enable Reset 7 6 4 3 Reserved 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 Busy Indicator Power Mode Control TRI-STATE Control 0 1 0 Description Bank Select Enable. Enables bank switching for Serial Port 1. 0: Disabled (default). 1: Enabled. Reserved. 2 Busy Indicator. This read-only bit can be used by power management software to decide when to power down the Serial Port 1 logical device. 0: No transfer in progress (default). 1: Transfer in progress. 1 Power Mode Control. When the logical device is active in: 0: Low power mode Serial Port 1 clock disabled. The output signals are set to their default states. The RI input signal can be programmed to generate an interrupt. Register values are maintained (unlike Active bit in Index 30, which also prevents access to Serial Port 1 registers). 1: Normal power mode Serial Port 1 clock enabled. Serial Port 1 is functional when the logical device is active (default). 0 TRI-STATE Control. When enabled and the device is inactive, the logical device output pins are in TRI-STATE. 0: Disabled (default). 1: Enabled. Revision 1.2 31 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) 3.10 GENERAL-PURPOSE INPUT/OUTPUT (GPIO) PORTS CONFIGURATION 3.10.1 General Description The GPIO functional block includes eight pins arranged in two 8-bit ports: ● Port 0 contains five GPIOE pins (i.e., GPIO pins with event detection). ● Port 2 contains three GPIO pins (i.e., GPIO pins without event detection). All pins in port 0 have full event detection capability, enabling them to trigger the assertion of IRQ signals. Pins in port 2 do not have event detection capability. The runtime registers associated with the two ports are arranged in the GPIO address space as shown in Table 17. The GPIO base address is 16-byte aligned. Address bits 3-0 are used to indicate the register offset. Table 17. Runtime Registers in GPIO Address Space Offset Mnemonic Register Name 00h GPDO0 GPIO Data Out 0 01h GPDI0 GPIO Data In 0 Port Type 0 R/W RO 02h GPEVEN0 GPIO Event Enable 0 R/W 03h GPEVST0 GPIO Event Status 0 R/W1C 04h-07h Reserved 08h GPDO2 Data Out 2 09h GPDI2 Data In 2 2 R/W RO 3.10.2 Implementation The standard GPIO port with event detection capability (such as port 0) has four runtime registers. Each pin is associated with a GPIO Pin Configuration register that includes seven configuration bits. Port 2 is a non-standard port that does not support event detection, and therefore differs from the generic model as follows: ● It has two runtime registers for basic functionality: GPDO2 and GPDI2. Event detection registers GPEVEN2 and GPEVST2 are not available. ● Only bits 3-0 are implemented in the GPIO Pin Configuration register of port 2. Bits 6-4, associated with the event detection functionality, are reserved. www.national.com 32 Revision1.2 PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) 3.10.3 Logical Device 7 (GPIO) Configuration Table 18 lists the configuration registers that affect the GPIO. Only the last three registers (F0h - F2h) are described here. See Sections 3.2.3 and 3.2.4 for a detailed description of the other registers. Table 18. GPIO Configuration Register Index Configuration Register or Action Type Reset 30h Activate. See also bit 7 of the SIOCF1 register. R/W 00h 60h Base Address MSB register. R/W 00h 61h Base Address LSB register. Bits 3-0 (for A3-0) are read only, 0000b. R/W 00h 70h Interrupt Number register. R/W 00h 71h Interrupt Type. Bit 1 is read/write. Other bits are read only. R/W 03h 74h Report no DMA assignment. RO 04h 75h Report no DMA assignment. RO 04h F0h GPIO Pin Select register (GPSEL). R/W 00h F1h GPIO Pin Configuration register (GPCFG). F2h GPIO Pin Event Routing register (GPEVR). Varies per bit 04h or 44h1 R/W or RO 01h 1. Depending on port number Figure 7 shows the organization of these registers. GPIO Pin Select Register (Index F0h) Port Select Pin Select Pin 0 Port 2, Pin 0 Port 0, Pin 0 Port 0 GPIO Pin Configuration Register (Index F1h) Configuration Registers Port 0, Pin 7 Port 2 Pin 7 Pin 0 Port 0, Pin 0 GPIO Pin Event Routing Register (Index F2h) Event Routing Registers Port 0, Pin 7 Pin 7 Figure 7. Organization of GPIO Pin Registers Revision 1.2 33 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) 3.10.4 GPIO Pin Select Register (GPSEL) This register selects the GPIO pin (port number and bit number) to be configured (i.e., which register is accessed via the GPIO Pin Configuration register). It is reset by hardware to 00h. Location: Index F0h Type: R/W Bit 7 Name 6 5 0 0 Reserved Reset 0 4 3 PORTSEL Reserved 0 Bit 0 Reserved. 5-4 PORTSEL (Port Select). These bits select the GPIO port to be configured: 2-0 1 0 PINSEL 0 0 0 Description 7-6 3 2 Bits 5 4 GPIO Port 0 0: Port 0 (default) 0 1: Reserved 1 0: Port 2 1 1: Reserved Reserved. PINSEL (Pin Select). These bits select the GPIO pin to be configured in the selected port: 000, 001,... 111: Binary value of the pin number, 0, 1,... 7 respectively (default=0). For port 2 only values 000,001,011 are legal. 3.10.5 GPIO Pin Configuration Register (GPCFG) This register reflects, for both read and write, the register currently selected by the GPIO Pin Select register (GPSEL). All the GPIO Pin registers that are accessed via this register have a common bit structure, as shown below. This register is reset by hardware to 44h for port 0, and to 04h for port 2. Location: Index F1h Type: Varies per bit Port 0, bits 0-4 (with event detection capability) Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name Reserved EVDBNC EVPOL EVTYPE LOCKCFP PUPCTL OUTTYPE OUTENA Reset 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 Port 2, bits 0,1,3 (without event detection capability) Bit 7 6 Name Reset Bit 0 4 0 0 0 Type 7 6 5 Reserved 3 2 1 0 LOCKCFP PUPCTL OUTTYPE OUTENA 0 1 0 0 Description Reserved. R/W or EVDBNC (Event Debounce Enable). (Ports 0 and 1 with event detection capability). Enables RO transferring the signal only after a predetermined debounce period. 0: Disabled. 1: Enabled (default). Reserved. (Port 2). Always 0. www.national.com 34 Revision1.2 Bit PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) Type Description 5 R/W or EVPOL (Event Polarity). (Ports 0 and 1 with event detection capability). This bit defines the polarity of RO the signal that issues an interrupt from the corresponding GPIO pin (falling/low or rising/high). 0: Falling edge or low level input (default). 1: Rising edge or high level input. Reserved. (Port 2). Always 0. 4 R/W or EVTYPE (Event Type). (Ports 0 and 1 with event detection capability). This bit defines the type of the RO signal that issues an interrupt from the corresponding GPIO pin (edge or level). 0: Edge input (default). 1: Level input. Reserved. (Port 2). Always 0. 3 R/W1S LOCKCFP (Lock Configuration of Pin). When set to 1, this bit locks the GPIO pin configuration and data (see also Section 5.4 on page 41) by disabling writing to itself, to GPCFG register bits PUPCTL, OUTTYPE and OUTENA, and to the corresponding bit in GPDO register. Once set, this bit can only be cleared by Hardware reset. 0: R/W bits are enabled for write (default). 1: All bits are RO. 2 R/W or PUPCTL (Pull-Up Control). This bit is used to enable/disable the internal pull-up capability of the RO corresponding GPIO pin. It supports open-drain output signals with internal pull-ups and TTL input signals. 0: Disabled. 1: Enabled (default). 1 R/W or OUTTYPE (Output Type). This bit controls the output buffer type (open-drain or push-pull) of the RO corresponding GPIO pin. 0: Open-drain (default). 1: Push-pull. 0 R/W or OUTENA (Output Enable). This bit indicates the GPIO pin output state. It has no effect on the input RO path. 0: TRI-STATE (default). 1: Output enabled. 3.10.6 GPIO Event Routing Register (GPEVR) This register enables the routing of the GPIO event to IRQ signals. It is implemented only for ports 0,1 which have event detection capability. This register is reset by hardware to 00h. Location: Index F2h Type: R/W Bit 7 6 5 Name 0 Bit 0 Revision 1.2 3 2 1 Reserved Reset 7-1 4 0 0 0 0 EV2IRQ 0 0 0 0 Description Reserved. EV2IRQ (Event to IRQ Routing). Controls the routing of the event from the selected GPIO pin to IRQ; see Section 5.3.2 on page 40. 0: Disabled (default). 1: Enabled. 35 www.national.com PC87382 3.0 Device Architecture and Configuration (Continued) 3.11 DOCKING LPC SWITCH CONFIGURATION 3.11.1 Logical Device 19 (DLPC) Configuration Table 19 lists the configuration registers that affect the DLPC. See Sections 3.2.3 and 3.2.4 for descriptions of the registers summarized below. Table 19. DLPC Configuration Registers Index Type Reset 30h Activate. See also bit 0 of the SIOCF1 register. R/W 00h 60h Base Address MSB register. R/W 00h 61h Base Address LSB register. Bit 0 (for A0) is read only, 0b. R/W 00h 70h Interrupt Number register. No Interrupt assignment. RO 00h 71h Interrupt Type. No Interrupt assignment. RO 00h 74h Report no DMA assignment. RO 04h 75h Report no DMA assignment. RO 04h www.national.com Configuration Register or Action 36 Revision1.2 LPC Bus Interface 4.1 OVERVIEW PC87382 4.0 The LPC host Interface supports 8-bit I/O Read and Write and 8-bit DMA transactions, as defined in Intel’s LPC Interface Specification, Revision 1.1. 4.2 LPC TRANSACTIONS The LPC Interface of the PC87382 can respond to the following LPC transactions: ● 8-bit I/O read and write cycles ● 8-bit DMA read and write cycles ● DMA request cycles 4.3 CLKRUN FUNCTIONALITY The PC87382 supports the CLKRUN signal, which is implemented according to the specification in PCI Mobile Design Guide, Revision 1.1, December 18, 1998. The PC87382 supports operation with both a slow and stopped clock in ACPI state S0 (when the system is active but is not being accessed). In the following cases, the PC87382 drives the CLKRUN signal low to force the LPC bus clock into full speed operation: ● An IRQ is pending internally, waiting to be sent through the serial IRQ. ● A DMA request is pending internally, waiting to be sent through the serial DMA. Note: When the CLKRUN signal is not in use, the PC87382 assumes a valid clock on the LCLK pin. 4.4 INTERRUPT SERIALIZER The Interrupt Serializer translates parallel interrupt request signals received from internal IRQ sources, into serial interrupt request data transmitted over the SERIRQ bus. The internal IRQs are fed into a Mapping, Enable and Polarity Control block, which maps them to their associated IRQ slots. The IRQs are then fed into the Interrupt Serializer, where they are translated into serial data and transmitted over the SERIRQ bus. The same slot cannot be shared among different interrupt sources in the device. Revision 1.2 37 www.national.com PC87382 5.0 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Port This chapter describes one 8-bit port. A device may include a combination of several ports with different implementations. For the device specific implementation, see Section 3.10 on page 32. 5.1 OVERVIEW The GPIO port is an 8-bit port, which is based on eight pins. It features: ● Software capability to manipulate and read pin levels ● Controllable system notification by several means based on the pin level or level transition ● Ability to capture and manipulate events and their associated status ● Back-drive protected pins. GPIO port operation is associated with two sets of registers: ● Pin Configuration registers, mapped in the Device Configuration space. These registers are used to set up the logical behavior of each pin. There are two 8-bit registers for each GPIO pin. ● Four 8-bit runtime registers: GPIO Data Out (GPDO), GPIO Data In (GPDI), GPIO Event Enable (GPEVEN) and GPIO Event Status (GPEVST). These registers are mapped in the GPIO device I/O space (which is determined by the base address registers in the GPIO Device Configuration). They are used to manipulate and/or read the pin values, and to control and handle system notification. Each runtime register corresponds to the 8-pin port, such that bit n in each one of the four registers is associated with GPIOXn pin, where X is the port number. Each GPIO pin is associated with ten configuration bits and the corresponding bit slice of the four runtime registers, as shown in Figure 8. The functionality of the GPIO port is divided into basic functionality, which includes the manipulation and reading of the GPIO pins, and enhanced functionality. Basic functionality is described in Section 5.2. Enhanced functionality, which includes event detection and system notification, is described in Section 5.3. Bit n GPDOX GPIOX Base Address GPDIX 8 GPCFG Registers X = port number n = pin number, 0 to 7 GPIO Pin Configuration (GPCFG) Register GPEVENX Runtime Registers GPEVSTX GPIOXn Pin GPIOXn CNFG GPIOXn Port Logic x8 GPIO Pin Select (GPSEL) Register Port and Pin Select x8 8 GPEVR Registers Event Pending Indicator x8 GPIO Pin Event Routing (GPEVR) Register Event Routing Control Interrupt Request GPIOXn ROUTE Figure 8. GPIO Port Architecture www.national.com 38 Revision 1.2 5.2 PC87382 5.0 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Port (Continued) BASIC FUNCTIONALITY The basic functionality of each GPIO pin is based on four configuration bits and a bit slice of runtime registers GPDO and GPDI. The configuration and operation of a single GPIOXn pin (pin n in port X) is shown in Figure 9. GPIO Device Enable Read Only Data In Static Pull-Up Push-Pull =1 Pin Read/Write Data Out Internal Bus Pull-Up Enable Lock Pull-Up Control Output Type Output Enable Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 GPIO Pin Configuration (GPCFG) Register Figure 9. GPIO Basic Functionality 5.2.1 Configuration Options The GPCFG register controls the following basic configuration options: • • Port Direction - Controlled by the Output Enable bit (bit 0). • Weak Static Pull-Up - May be added to any type of port (input, open-drain or push-pull). It is controlled by Pull-Up Control (bit 2). • Pin Lock - GPIO pin may be locked to prevent any changes in the output value and/or the output characteristics. The lock is controlled by Lock (bit 3). It disables writes to the GPDO register bits, and to bits 0-3 of the GPCFG register (Including the Lock bit itself). Once locked, it can be released by Hardware reset only. Output Type - Push-pull vs. open-drain. It is controlled by Output Buffer Type (bit 1) by enabling/disabling the pull-up portion of the output buffer. 5.2.2 Operation The value that is written to the GPDO register is driven to the pin if the output is enabled. Reading from the GPDO register returns its contents, regardless of the pin value or the port configuration. The GPDI register is a read-only register. Reading from the GPDI register returns the pin value, regardless of what is driving it (the port itself, configured as an output port, or the external device when the port is configured as an input port). Writing to this register is ignored. Activation of the GPIO port is controlled by an external device-specific configuration bit (or a combination of bits). When the port is inactive, access to GPDI and GPDO registers is disabled. However, there is no change in the port configuration and in the GPDO value, and hence there is no effect on the outputs of the pins. Revision 1.2 39 www.national.com PC87382 5.0 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Port 5.3 (Continued) EVENT HANDLING AND SYSTEM NOTIFICATION The enhanced GPIO port supports system notification based on event detection. This functionality is based on six configuration bits and a bit slice of runtime registers GPEVEN and GPEVST. The configuration and operation of the event detection capability is shown in Figure 10. System notification is shown in Figure 11. 1 Set 0 GPIO Event Pending Indication GPIO Status Read Reset R/W Write 1 to Clear Event Enable 0 Input Debouncer Rising Edge Detector 1 Pin Rising Edge or High Level =1 Level =1 Event Debounce Enable Event Polarity Event Type Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Internal Bus GPIO Pin Configuration Register (GPCFG) Figure 10. Event Detection 5.3.1 Event Configuration Each pin in the GPIO port is a potential input event source. The event detection can trigger a system notification on predetermined behavior of the source pin. The GPCFG register determines the event detection trigger type for the system notification. Event Type and Polarity Two trigger types of event detection are supported: edge and level. An edge event can be detected on a source pin transition either from high to low or low to high. A level event may be detected when the source pin is at active level. The trigger type is determined by Event Type (bit 4 of the GPCFG register). The direction of the transition (for edge) or the polarity of the active level (for level) is determined by Event Polarity (bit 5 of the GPCFG register). Active edge refers to a change in a GPIO pin level that matches the Event Polarity bit (1 for rising edge and 0 for falling edge). Active level refers to the GPIO pin level that matches the Event Polarity bit (1 for high level and 0 for low level). The corresponding bit in GPEVST register is set by hardware whenever an active edge or an active level is detected, regardless of the GPEVEN register setting. Writing 1 to the Status bit clears it to 0. Writing 0 is ignored. Event Debounce Enable The input signal can be debounced for at least 16 msec before entering the Rising Edge detector. The signal state is transferred to the detector only after a debouncing period during which the signal has no transitions, to ensure that the signal is stable. The debouncer adds 16 msec delay to both assertion and de-assertion of the event pending indicator. Therefore, when working with a level event and system notification by IRQ, it is recommended to disable the debounce if the delay in the IRQ de-assertion is not acceptable. The debounce is controlled by Event Debounce Enable (bit 6 of the GPCFG register). 5.3.2 System Notification System notification on GPIO-triggered events is done by asserting an Interrupt Request (via the device’s Bus Interface). The system notification for each GPIO pin is controlled by the corresponding bits in the GPEVEN and GPEVR registers. System notification by a GPIO pin is enabled if the corresponding bit of the GPEVEN register is set to 1. The event routing mechanism is shown in Figure 11. www.national.com 40 Revision1.2 PC87382 5.0 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Port (Continued) GPIO Event Pending Indication GPIO Event to IRQ Event Routing Logic Routed Events from other GPIO Pins Enable IRQ Routing GPIO Pin Event Routing Register (GPEVR) Bit 0 Figure 11. GPIO Event Routing Mechanism The GPEVST register reflects the event source pending status. Active edge refers to a change in a GPIO pin level that matches the Event Polarity bit (1 for rising edge and 0 for falling edge). Active level refers to the GPIO pin level that matches the Event Polarity bit (1 for high level and 0 for low level). The corresponding bit of the GPEVST register is set by hardware whenever an active edge is detected, regardless of any other bit settings. Writing 1 to the Status bit clears it to 0. Writing 0 is ignored. A GPIO pin is in event pending state if the corresponding bit of the GPEVEN register is set and one of the following is true: ● The Event Type is level and the pin is at active level. ● The Event Type is edge and the corresponding bit of the GPEVST register is set. The target means of system notification is asserted if at least one GPIO pin is in event pending state. The selection of the target means of system notification is determined by the GPEVR register. If IRQ is selected as one of the means for the system notification, the specific IRQ line is determined by the IRQ selection procedure of the device configuration. The assertion of any means of system notification is blocked when the GPIO functional block is deactivated. System event notification functionality is provided even when the GPIO pin is enabled as output. A pending edge event may be cleared by clearing the corresponding GPEVST bit. However, a level event source must not be released by software (except for disabling the source) as long as the pin is at active level. When a level event is used, it is recommended to disable the input debouncer. On de-activation of the GPIO port, the GPEVST register is cleared, and access to both the GPEVST and GPEVEN registers is disabled. The target IRQ line is detached from the GPIO and de-asserted. Before enabling any system notification, it is recommended to first set the desired event configuration and then verify that the status registers are cleared. 5.4 GPIO PORT REGISTERS The register maps in this chapter use the following abbreviations for Type: ● 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. ● W = Write. ● RO = Read Only. ● R/W1C = Read/Write 1 to Clear. Writing 1 to a bit clears it to 0. Writing 0 has no effect. Revision 1.2 41 www.national.com PC87382 5.0 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Port 5.4.1 (Continued) GPIO Pin Configuration Registers Structure For each GPIO Port, there is a group of eight identical sets of configuration registers. Each set is associated with one GPIO pin. The entire group is mapped to the PnP configuration space. The mapping scheme is based on the GPSEL register (see Section 3.10.4 on page 34), which functions as an index register for the pin, and the selected GPCFG and GPEVR registers, which reflect the configuration of the currently selected pin (see Table 20). Table 20. GPIO Configuration Registers Index Configuration Register or Action F0h GPIO Pin Select register (GPSEL) F1h GPIO Pin Configuration register 1 (GPCFG) F2h GPIO Pin Event Routing register (GPEVR) Type Reset R/W 00h Varies per bit 04h or 44h1 R/W or RO 01h 1. Depending on port number 5.4.2 GPIO Port Runtime Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name Type Section Device specific 1 GPDO GPIO Data Out R/W 5.4.3 Device specific 1 GPDI GPIO Data In RO 5.4.4 Device specific 1 GPEVEN GPIO Event Enable R/W 5.4.5 Device specific 1 GPEVST GPIO Event Status R/W1C 5.4.6 1. The location of this register is defined in Section 3.10.3 on page 33. 5.4.3 GPIO Data Out Register (GPDO) Location: Device specific Type: R/W Bit 7 6 5 4 Name 3 2 1 0 1 1 1 1 DATAOUT Reset 1 1 1 1 Bit Description 7-0 DATAOUT (Data Out). Bits 7-0 correspond to pins 7-0 of the specific Port. The value of each bit determines the value driven on the corresponding GPIO pin when its output buffer is enabled. Writing to the bit latches the written data, unless the bit is locked by the GPCFG register Lock bit. Reading the bit returns its value regardless of the pin value and configuration. 0: Corresponding pin driven to low. 1: Corresponding pin driven or released (according to buffer type selection) to high (default). www.national.com 42 Revision1.2 5.4.4 PC87382 5.0 General-Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) Port (Continued) GPIO Data In Register (GPDI) Location: Device specific Type: RO Bit 7 6 5 4 Name 3 2 1 0 X X X X DATAIN Reset X X X X Bit Description 7-0 DATAIN (Data In). Bits 7-0 correspond to pins 7-0 of the specific Port. Reading each bit returns the value of the corresponding GPIO pin. Pin configuration and the GPDO register value may influence the pin value. Writes are ignored. 0: Corresponding pin level low. 1: Corresponding pin level high. 5.4.5 GPIO Event Enable Register (GPEVEN) Location: Device specific Type: R/W Bit 7 6 5 4 Name 0 0 0 Bit 5.4.6 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 EVTENA Reset 7-0 3 0 Description EVTENA (Event Enable). Bits 7-0 correspond to pins 7-0 of the specific Port. Each bit enables system notification by the corresponding GPIO pin. The bit has no effect on the corresponding Status bit in GPEVST register. 0: Event pending by corresponding GPIO pin masked. 1: Event pending by corresponding GPIO pin enabled. GPIO Event Status Register (GPEVST) Location: Device specific Type: Bit R/W1C 7 6 5 4 Name Reset Bit 7−0 Revision 1.2 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 EVTSTAT 0 0 0 0 Description EVTSTAT (Event Status). Bits 7-0 correspond to pins 7-0 of the specific Port. The setting of each bit is independent of the Event Enable bit in GPEVEN register. An active event sets the Status bit, which may be cleared only by software writing 1 to the bit. 0: No active edge or level detected since last cleared. 1: Active edge or level detected. 43 www.national.com PC87382 6.0 Docking LPC Switch 6.1 OVERVIEW The Docking LPC Switch connects between the main platform LPC bus and the Docking Station LPC bus. Features: • • • • • Low switch resistance LDRQ output sharing between local and Docking DMA requests Docking LPC Device Reset control Programmable Clock to Reset Delay Prevents signal bouncing when the Docking Station is switched on 6.2 6.2.1 FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION Basic Functionality The Docking LPC Bus signals are divided into the following groups: ● Immediate connection signals (DLCLK, DSERIRQ, DCLKRUN): These signals are connected via a low-resistance switch to the main LPC bus. ● Delayed connection signals (DLAD3-0, DLFRAME): These signals are connected via a low-resistance switch to the main LPC bus. When enabled, the connection is established on LPC Idle detection following CLK2RST Timer expiration. ● DLRESET: Driven low starting from the time the switch is enabled until CLK2RST Timer expiration. After CLK2RST Timer expiration, DLRESET reflects the LRESET pin value. ● DCLKOUT: When the switch is enabled, DCLKOUT drives the Clock Generator output or clock from CLKIN input (depending on bit 6 of CLOCKCF register; see Section 3.7.6 on page 29) to the Docking device. Otherwise, this pin is not driven and is held high by an internal pull-up resistor. ● DLDRQ: Combined with an internal DMA request on LDRQ output; see Section 6.2.2 on page 44. The switch connection procedure is triggered by the following condition: ● Bit 0 of DLCTL register is written with 1. Following the switch trigger detection, the following sequence is performed as follows: 1. DLCLK, DSERIRQ, DCLKRUN signals are connected to LCLK, SERIRQ, CLKRUN signals, respectively. DCLKOUT output driver is enabled. DLRESET output is held low (active). CLK2RST timer starts counting. 2. EXP bit of DLCTL register is set on CLK2RST counter reaching the value defined by CLK2RSTVAL field of DLCTL register. 3. Host software must poll for the EXP bit. The switch connection is performed when the EXP bit is read with 1. In addition, the Serial IRQ must be configured to Continuous mode during the switch activation. 4. DLRESET output is deactivated. DLFRAME and DLAD3-0 signals are connected to LFRAME and LAD3-0 signals, respectively. LDRQ sharing mechanism is enabled; see Section 6.2.2. All Docking LPC signals are held high by internal pull-up resistors while the corresponding switch is in open (disconnected) state, except DLRESET, which is held low by pull-down resistor. At VDD Power-up the switch is in disconnected state. Note that the switch state is not affected by the warm reset. 6.2.2 LDRQ Sharing Mechanism The Docking Station DMA Request DLDRQ and the PC87382 internal DMA Request are combined on LDRQ output using the LDRQ sharing mechanism. The mechanism performs arbitration between the two DMA Requests. www.national.com 44 Revision 1.2 6.3 PC87382 6.0 Docking LPC Switch (Continued) DOCKING LPC SWITCH REGISTERS The register maps in this chapter use the following abbreviations for Type: ● R/W = Read/Write. ● RO = Read Only. 6.3.1 Docking LPC Switch Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name Type Section Device specific 1 DLCTL Docking LPC Control R/W 6.3.2 Device specific 1 Reserved Reserved RO - 1. The location of this register is defined in the Section 3.11.1 on page 36. 6.3.2 Docking LPC Control (DLCTL) This register is reset by VDD Power-Up reset. Location: Device specific Type: R/W Bit 7 6 Name 4 Reserved Reset Bit 5 0 0 EXP 0 0 Type 7-4 3 0 2 1 CLK2RSTVAL 0 0 0 DLCON 0 Description Reserved. 3 RO EXP (Timer Expired). When set, this bit indicates that the CLK2RST timer expired. The bit is cleared on the switch disconnection. 2-1 R/W CLK2RSTVAL (CLK2RST Timer Value). Defines the minimum time interval from the connection of DLCLK until DLRESET de-assertion. The interval is measured in LCLK clock cycles. 0 Revision 1.2 R/W Bits 2 1 Minimum Time Interval 0 0: 0 - the Timer is disabled (default) 0 1: 33*tCYC 1 0: 330*tCYC 1 1: 3300*tCYC DLCON (Docking LPC Connect). Setting this bit triggers the Docking LPC Connection procedure. Clearing this bit disables the switch. 45 www.national.com PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks This chapter briefly describes the following blocks, which provide legacy device functions: ● Serial Port 1 (SP1) ● Infrared (IR) The description of each Legacy block includes the sections listed below. For details on the general implementation of each legacy block, see the SuperI/O Legacy Functional Blocks Datasheet. ● General Description ● Register Map table(s) ● Bitmap table(s) The register maps in this chapter use the following abbreviations for Type: ● 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. ● W = Write. ● RO = Read Only. ● R/W1C= Read/Write 1 to Clear. Writing 1 to a bit clears it to 0. Writing 0 has no effect. www.national.com 46 Revision 1.2 7.1 PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) SERIAL PORT 1 (SP1) 7.1.1 General Description The Serial Port functional block supports serial data communication with a remote peripheral device or modem using a wired interface. The Serial Port can function in one of three modes: ● 16450-Compatible mode (Standard 16450) ● 16550-Compatible mode (Standard 16550) ● Extended mode Extended mode provides advanced functionality for the UART. The Serial Port provides receive and transmit channels that can operate concurrently in full-duplex mode. It performs all functions required to conduct parallel data interchange with the system and composite serial data exchange with the external data channel, including: ● Format conversion between the internal parallel data format and the external programmable composite serial format ● Serial data timing generation and recognition ● Parallel data interchange with the system using a choice of bidirectional data transfer mechanisms ● Status monitoring for all phases of communication activity ● Complete MODEM-control capability. Existing 16550-based legacy software is completely and transparently supported. Module organization and specific fallback mechanisms switch the module to 16550-Compatible mode on reset or when initialized by 16550 software. 7.1.2 Register Bank Overview Four register banks, each containing eight registers, control Serial Port operation. All registers use the same 8-byte address space to indicate offsets 00h through 07h. The active bank must be selected by the software. 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. The Bank Selection register (BSR) selects the active bank and is common to all banks as shown in Figure 12. Therefore, each bank defines seven new registers. The default bank selection after system reset is 0. BANK 3 BANK 2 BANK 1 BANK 0 Offset 07h Offset 06h Offset 05h Offset 04h Common Register Throughout All Banks LCR/BSR Offset 02h Offset 01h Offset 00h 16550 Banks Figure 12. Register Bank Architecture Revision 1.2 47 www.national.com PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks 7.1.3 (Continued) SP1 Register Maps Table 21. Bank 0 Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name Type RXD Receiver Data RO TXD Transmitter Data W IER Interrupt Enable R/W EIR Event Identification R FCR FIFO Control W LCR Link Control W BSR Bank Select R/W 04h MCR Modem/Mode Control R/W 05h LSR Link Status R/W 06h MSR Modem Status SPR Scratch Pad R/W Auxiliary Status and Control RO 00h 01h 02h 03h R 07h ASCR Table 22. Bank 1 Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name 00h LBGD(L) Legacy Baud Generator Divisor (Low Byte) R/W 01h LBGD(H) Legacy Baud Generator Divisor (High Byte) R/W 02h 03h Type Reserved LCR/BSR Link Control/ Bank Select 04h-07h R/W Reserved Table 23. Bank 2 Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name 00h BGD(L) Baud Generator Divisor (Low Byte) R/W 01h BGD(H) Baud Generator Divisor (High Byte) R/W 02h EXCR1 Extended Control 1 R/W 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h EXCR2 Extended Control 2 R/W 05h www.national.com Type Reserved 06h TXFLV TX_FIFO Level RO 07h RXFLV RX_FIFO Level RO 48 Revision1.2 PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) Table 24. Bank 3 Register Map Offset Mnemonic 00h MRID 01h Register Name Module Identification and Revision ID RO SH_LCR Shadow of LCR RO 02h SH_FCR Shadow of FIFO Control RO 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h-07h 7.1.4 Type Reserved SP1 Bitmap Summary Table 25. Bank 0 Bitmap Register Offset Mnemonic Bits 7 6 5 4 3 2 MS_IE LS_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE MS_IE LS_IE TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE 00h RXD RXD7-0 00h TXD TXD7-0 IER1 Reserved 1 0 01h IER2 Reserved EIR1 FEN1-0 Reserved RXFT EIR2 Reserved TXEMP_EV Reserved MS_EV FCR1 RXFTH1-0 Reserved FCR2 RXFTH1-0 TXEMP_IE Reserved IPR1-0 LS_EV IPF TXLDL_EV RXHDL_EV 02h LCR BKSE BSR BKSE TXFTH1-0 SBRK STKP EPS TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN Reserved TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN PEN STB WLS1-0 03h MCR1 BSR6-0 Reserved LOOP 04h MCR2 Reserved ISEN/ DCDLP RILP RTS DTR TX_DFR Reserved RTS DTR 05h LSR ER_INF TXEMP TXRDY BRK FE PE OE RXDA 06h MSR DCD RI DSR CTS DDCD TERI DDSR DCTS SPR1 Scratch Data 07h ASCR2 Reserved RXF_TOUT 1. Non-Extended mode 2. Extended mode Revision 1.2 49 www.national.com PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) Table 26. Bank 1 Bitmap Register Bits Offset Mnemonic 7 6 5 4 00h LBGD(L) LBGD7-0 01h LBGD(H) LBGD15-8 02h 3 2 1 PEN STB 0 Reserved LCR BKSE BSR BKSE SBRK STKP EPS WLS1-0 03h BSR6-0 04h-07h Reserved Table 27. Bank 2 Bitmap Register Bits Offset Mnemonic 7 6 5 00h BGD(L) BGD7-0 01h BGD(H) BGD15-8 02h EXCR1 BTEST 03h BSR BKSE 04h EXCR2 LOCK Reserved 4 ETDLBK 3 LOOP 2 1 0 Reserved EXT_SL BSR6-0 Reserved PRESL1-0 Reserved 05h Reserved 06h TXFLV Reserved TFL4-0 07h RXFLV Reserved RFL4-0 Table 28. Bank 3 Bitmap Register Offset Mnemonic 00h MRID 01h SH_LCR 02h SH_FCR 03h BSR Bits 7 6 5 4 2 MID3-0 BKSE SBRK RXFTH1-0 1 0 RID3-0 STKP EPS TXFTH1-0 BKSE PEN STB Reserved TXSR WLS1-0 RXSR FIFO_EN BSR6-0 04-07h www.national.com 3 Reserved 50 Revision1.2 7.2 PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) IR FUNCTIONALITY (IR) 7.2.1 General Description This functional block provides advanced, versatile serial communications features with IR capabilities. It supports six modes of operation: UART, Sharp-IR, IrDA 1.0 SIR (hereafter SIR), Consumer Electronic IR (also called TV Remote or Consumer remote control, hereafter CEIR), IrDA 1.1 MIR, and FIR. In UART mode, the Serial Port can function in 16450-Compatible mode, 16550-Compatible mode, or Extended mode. This chapter describes general implementation of the Enhanced Serial Port with Fast IR. For device specific implementation, see Device Architecture and Configuration in the datasheet of the relevant device. Note: UART operation of IR module is not supported in PC87382. Existing 16550-based legacy software is completely and transparently supported. Organization and specific fallback mechanisms switch the Serial Port to 16550-Compatible mode on reset or when initialized by 16550 software. This module has two DMA channels; the device can use either one or both of them. One channel is required for IR-based applications, since IR communication works in half-duplex fashion. Two channels would normally be needed to handle highspeed, full-duplex, UART-based applications. 7.2.2 Register Bank Overview Eight register banks, each containing eight registers, control the module operation. All registers use the same 8-byte address space to indicate offsets 00h-07h. The active bank must be selected by the software. 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. The Bank Selection register (BSR) selects the active bank and is common to all banks; see Figure 13. Therefore, each bank defines seven new registers. The default bank selection after system reset is 0. BANK 7 BANK 6 BANK 5 BANK 4 BANK 3 BANK 2 BANK 1 Common Register Throughout All Banks BANK 0 Offset 07h Offset 06h Offset 05h Offset 04h LCR / BSR IR Special Banks (Banks 4-7) Offset 02h Offset 01h Offset 00h Figure 13. IR Register Bank Architecture Table 29 shows the main functions of the registers in each bank. Banks 0-3 control both UART and IR modes of operation; banks 4-7 control and configure the IR modes only. Revision 1.2 51 www.national.com PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) Table 29. Register Bank Summary Bank UART Mode 0 1 2 3 IR Mode ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ 4 5 6 7 Main Functions Global Control and Status Legacy Bank Alternative Baud Generator Divisor, Extended Control and Status Module Revision ID and Shadow registers IR mode setup IR Control and Status FIFO IR Physical Layer Configuration CEIR and Optical Transceiver Configuration The register maps in this chapter use the following abbreviations for Type: ● 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. ● W = Write. ● RO = Read Only. ● R/W1C = Read/Write 1 to Clear. Writing 1 to a bit clears it to 0. Writing 0 has no effect. 7.2.3 IR Register Map for IR Functionality Table 30. Bank 0 Register Map Offset Mnemonic 00h RXD Receiver Data RO TXD Transmitter Data W IER Interrupt Enable R/W 01h 02h 03h Register Name Type EIR Event Identification R FCR FIFO Control W LCR Link Control W BSR Bank Select R/W 04h MCR Modem / Mode Control R/W 05h LSR Link Status R/W 06h MSR Modem Status 07h SPR Scratch Pad ASCR R R/W Auxiliary Status and Control Varies per bit Table 31. Bank 1 Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name 00h LBGD(L) Legacy Baud Generator Divisor (Low Byte) R/W 01h LBGD(H) Legacy Baud Generator Divisor (High Byte) R/W 02h 03h Reserved LCR/BSR 04h - 07h www.national.com Type Link Control / Bank Select R/W Reserved 52 Revision1.2 PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) Table 32. Bank 2 Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name 00h BGD(L) Baud Generator Divisor (Low Byte) R/W 01h BGD(H) Baud Generator Divisor (High Byte) R/W 02h EXCR1 Extended Control1 R/W 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h EXCR2 Extended Control 2 R/W 05h Type Reserved 06h TXFLV TX_FIFO Level RO 07h RXFLV RX_FIFO Level RO Table 33. Bank 3 Register Map Offset Mnemonic 00h MRID 01h Register Name Type Module Identification and Revision ID RO SH_LCR Shadow of LCR RO 02h SH_FCR Shadow of FIFO Control RO 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h-07h Reserved Table 34. Bank 4 Register Map Revision 1.2 Offset Mnemonic Register Name 00h TMR(L) Timer (Low Byte) R/W 01h TMR(H) Timer (High Byte) R/W 02h IRCR1 IR Control 1 R/W 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h TFRL(L)/ TFRCC(L) Transmitter Frame Length (Low Byte) / Transmitter Frame Current Count (Low Byte) R/W 05h TFRL(H)/ TFRCC(H) Transmitter Frame Length (High Byte) / Transmitter Frame Current Count (High Byte) R/W 06h RFRML(L)/ RFRCC(L) Receiver Frame Maximum Length (Low Byte) / Receiver Frame Current Count (Low Byte) R/W 07h RFRML(H)/ RFRCC(H) Receiver Frame Maximum Length (High Byte) / Receiver Frame Current Count (High Byte) R/W 53 Type www.national.com PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) Table 35. Bank 5 Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name 00h SPR2 Scratch Pad 2 R/W 01h SPR3 Scratch Pad 3 R/W 02h Type Reserved 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h IRCR2 IR Control 2 R/W 05h FRM_ST Frame Status RO 06h RFRL(L)/LSTFRC Received Frame Length (Low Byte) / Lost Frame Count 07h RFRL(H) Received Frame Length (High Byte) RO RO Table 36. Bank 6 Register Map Offset Mnemonic 00h IRCR3 01h Register Name Type IR Control 3 R/W MIR_PW MIR Pulse Width Control R/W 02h SIR_PW SIR Pulse Width Control R/W 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h BFPL Beginning Flags / Preamble Length R/W 05h-07h Reserved Table 37. Bank 7 Register Map Offset Mnemonic Register Name Type 00h IRRXDC IR Receiver Demodulator Control R/W 01h IRTXMC IR Transmitter Modulator Control R/W 02h RCCFG CEIR Configuration R/W 03h BSR Bank Select R/W 04h IRCFG1 Varies per bit 05h Reserved 06h Reserved 07h www.national.com IR Interface Configuration 1 IRCFG4 IR Interface Configuration 4 54 R/W Revision1.2 PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) IR Bitmap Summary for IR Functionality 7.2.4 Table 38. Bank 0 Bitmap Register Bits Offset Mnemonic 00h RXD RXD7-0 00h TXD TXD7-0 01h IER1 IER2 02h 7 03h 04h 5 4 Reserved TMR_IE SFIF_IE FEN1-0 EIR1 EIR2 6 TMR_EV FCR2 RXFTH1-0 BSR BKSE MS_IE LS_IE MS_IE MS_EV Reserved TXFTH1-0 SBRK STKP 1 0 TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE LS_IE/ TXLDL_IE RXHDL_IE TXHLT_IE RXFT SFIF_EV TXEMP_EV DMA_EV RXFTH1-0 BKSE DMA_IE 2 Reserved FCR1 LCR TXEMP_IE 3 IPR1-0 IPF LS_EV/ TXLDL_EV RXHDL_EV TXHLT_EV TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN Reserved TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN PEN STB EPS WLS1-0 BSR6-0 MCR1 Reserved LOOP ISEN/ DCDLP RILP RTS DTR MCR2 MDSL2-0 IR_PLS TX_DFR DMA_EN RTS DTR OE RXDA DDSR DCTS 05h LSR ER_INF/ FR_END TXEMP TXRDY 06h MSR DCD RI DSR 07h SPR1 ASCR2 BRK/ FE/ PE/ MAX_LEN PHY_ERR BAD_CRC CTS DDCD TERI Scratch Data CTE TXUR RXACT/ RXBSY RXWDG/ LOST_FR TXHFE S_EOT FEND_INF RXF_TOUT 1. Non-Extended mode 2. Extended mode Table 39. Bank 1 Bitmap Register Bits Offset Mnemonic 7 6 5 4 00h LBGD(L) LBGD7-0 01h LBGD(H) LBGD15-8 02h 03h 2 PEN STB 1 0 Reserved LCR BKSE BSR BKSE SBRK STKP EPS WLS1-0 BSR6-0 04-07h Revision 1.2 3 Reserved 55 www.national.com PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) Table 40. Bank 2 Bitmap Register Bits Offset Mnemonic 7 6 5 00h BGD(L) BGD7-0 01h BGD(H) BGD15-8 02h EXCR1 BTEST 03h BSR BKSE 04h EXCR2 LOCK Reserved 4 ETDLBK LOOP 3 2 1 0 DMASWP DMATH DMANF EXT_SL BSR6-0 Reserved PRESL1-0 RF_SIZ1-0 05h TF_SIZ1-0 Reserved 06h TXFLV Reserved TFL5-0 07h RXFLV Reserved RFL5-0 Table 41. Bank 3 Bitmap Register Offset Mnemonic 00h MRID 01h SH_LCR 02h SH_FCR 03h BSR Bits 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 MID3-0 BKSE SBRK 0 RID3-0 STKP RXFTH1-0 EPS TXFTH1-0 PEN STB Reserved TXSR RXSR FIFO_EN 2 1 0 CTEST TMR_EN BKSE WLS1-0 BSR6-0 04h-07h Reserved Table 42. Bank 4 Bitmap Register Bits Offset Mnemonic 00h TMR(L) 01h TMR(H) Reserved 02h IRCR1 Reserved 03h BSR 04h TFRL(L)/ TFRCC(L) 05h TFRL(H)/ TFRCC(H) 06h RFRML(L)/ RFRCC(L) 07h RFRML(H)/ RFRCC(H) www.national.com 7 6 5 4 3 TMR7-0 TMR11-8 IR_SL1-0 BKSE BSR6-0 TFRL7-0 /TFRCC7-0 Reserved TFRL12-8 / TFRCC12-8 RFRML7-0 / RFRCC7-0 Reserved RFRML12-8 / RFRCC12-8 56 Revision1.2 PC87382 7.0 Legacy Functional Blocks (Continued) Table 43. Bank 5 Bitmap Register Offset Mnemonic Bits 7 6 5 4 3 00h SPR2 Scratch Pad 2 01h SPR3 Scratch Pad 3 02h 2 1 0 MDRS IRMSSL IR_FDPLX OVR1 OVR2 1 0 Reserved 03h BSR BKSE BSR6-0 04h IRCR2 Reserved SFTSL 05h FRM_ST VLD LOST_FR 06h RFRL(L)/ LSTFRC 07h RFRL(H) FEND_MD AUX_IRRX Reserved TX_MS MAX_LEN PHY_ERR BAD_CRC RFRL7-0 / LSTFRC7-0 Reserved RFRL12-8 Table 44. Bank 6 Bitmap Register Offset Mnemonic Bits 7 6 5 4 SHDM_DS SHDM_DS FIR_CRC 3 2 00h IRCR3 MIR_CRC Reserved TXCRC_INV TXCRC_DS Reserved 01h MIR_PW Reserved MPW3-0 02h SIR_PW Reserved SPW3-0 03h BSR 04h BFPL BKSE BSR6-0 MBF7-4 FPL3-0 05h-07h Reserved Table 45. Bank 7 Bitmap Register Bits Offset Mnemonic 7 6 00h IRRXDC DBW2-0 DFR4-0 01h IRTXMC MCPW2-0 MCFR4-0 02h RCCFG R_LEN 03h BSR BKSE 04h IRCFG1 T_OV 5 RXHSC 4 3 RCDM_DS Reserved STRV_MS Reserved SIRTX IRRX1 Level IRID3 Reserved 06h Reserved Revision 1.2 IRCFG4 Reserved TXHSC 1 0 RC_MMD1-0 BSR6-0 05h 07h 2 IRRX_MD IRSL0_DS RXINV 57 IRSL21_DS IRIC2-0 Reserved www.national.com PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics 8.1 GENERAL DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS 8.1.1 Recommended Operating Conditions Symbol VDD TA 8.1.2 Parameter Min Typ Max Unit 3.0 3.3 3.6 V +70 °C Supply Voltage Operating Temperature 0 Absolute Maximum Ratings Absolute maximum ratings are values beyond which damage to the device may occur. Unless otherwise specified, all voltages are relative to ground. Symbol VDD VI Parameter Conditions Min Max Unit Supply Voltage −0.5 +4.1 V Input Voltage −0.5 VDD + 0.5 V All other pins −0.5 5.5 V LPC and DLPC pins1 −0.5 VDD + 0.5 V Output Voltage −0.5 VDD + 0.5 V Storage Temperature −65 +165 °C Input Voltage VI VO TSTG PD Power Dissipation 500 mW TL Lead Temperature Soldering (10 s) +260 °C ESD Tolerance CZAP = 100 pF RZAP = 1.5 KΩ2 2000 V 1. LCLK, LAD3-0, LFRAME, LRESET, SERIRQ, LDRQ, CLKRUN, DLCLK, DLAD3-0, DLFRAME, DSERIRQ, DCLKRUN 2. Value based on test complying with RAI-5-048-RA human body model ESD testing. www.national.com 58 Revision 1.2 8.1.3 PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics (Continued) Capacitance Symbol Parameter CLCLK LCLK Pin Capacitance CPIN Other Pins Capacitance Min2 Typ1 Max2 Unit 5 8 12 pF 8 10 pF 1. TA = 25°C, f = 1 MHz 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by design 8.1.4 Power Consumption under Recommended Operating Conditions Symbol IDD IDDLP 8.1.5 Parameter VDD Average Main Supply Current VDD Quiescent Main Supply Current in Low Power Mode Conditions Typ Max Unit VIL = 0.5 V, VIH = 2.4 V No Load 8 10 mA VIL = VSS, VIH = VDD No Load 1.5 2 mA Voltage Thresholds Parameter1 Symbol Min2 Typ Max2 Unit VDDON VDD Detected as Power-on 2.2 2.6 2.9 V VDDOFF VDD Detected as Power-off 2.1 2.5 2.8 V 1. All parameters specified for 0°C ≤ TA ≤ 70°C. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 8.2 DC CHARACTERISTICS OF PINS, BY I/O BUFFER TYPES The following tables summarize the DC characteristics of all device pins described in the Chapter 1.2 on page 9. The characteristics describe the general I/O buffer types defined in Table 1. For exceptions, refer to Section 8.2.8. The DC characteristics of the system interface meet the PCI2.2 3.3V DC signaling. 8.2.1 Input, PCI 3.3V Symbol: INPCI Symbol Parameter Conditions Min Max Unit VIH Input High Voltage 0.5VDD VDD + 0.51 V VIL Input Low Voltage −0.51 0.3VDD V lIL2 Input Leakage Current ±1 µA 0 < Vin < VDD 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. 2. Input leakage currents include hi-Z output leakage for all bidirectional buffers with TRI-STATE outputs. Revision 1.2 59 www.national.com PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics 8.2.2 (Continued) Input, TTL Compatible Symbol: INT Symbol Parameter Conditions Min Max Unit VIH Input High Voltage 2.0 5.51 V VIL Input Low Voltage −0.51 0.8 V VIN = VDD 1 µA VIN = VSS −1 µA Min Max Unit Input Leakage Current IIL 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. 8.2.3 Input, TTL Compatible with Schmitt Trigger Symbol: INTS Symbol Parameter Conditions VIH Input High Voltage 2.0 5.51 V VIL Input Low Voltage −0.5 1 0.8 V VIN = VDD 1 µA VIN = VSS −1 µA Input Leakage Current IIL VH Input Hysteresis mV 2502 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 8.2.4 Output, PCI 3.3V Symbol: OPCI Symbol 8.2.5 Parameter Conditions Min 0.9VDD VOH Output High Voltage lout = −500 µA VOL Output Low Voltage lout =1500 µA Max Unit V 0.1 VDD V Max Unit Output, Push-Pull Buffer Symbol: Op/n Output, push-pull buffer that is capable of sourcing p mA and sinking n mA. Symbol Parameter Conditions Min 2.4 VOH Output High Voltage IOH = −p mA VOL Output Low Voltage IOL = n mA www.national.com 60 V 0.4 V Revision1.2 8.2.6 PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics (Continued) Output, Open-Drain Buffer Symbol: ODn Output, Open-Drain output buffer, capable of sinking n mA. Output from these signals is open-drain and cannot be forced high. Symbol VOL 8.2.7 Parameter Conditions Output Low Voltage Min IOL = n mA Max Unit 0.4 V Quick Switch Symbol: QS. Symbol RON IIL Parameter Switch On Resistance1 Input Leakage Current Conditions Typ Max Unit VIN = 0V 5 10 Ω VIN = VDD 5 10 Ω ±10 µA Switch is on 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 8.2.8 Exceptions 1. All pins are 5V tolerant except for the pins with PCI (INPCI, OPCI) and Quick Switch (QS) buffer types. 2. All pins are back-drive protected, except for the pins with PCI (INPCI, OPCI) buffer types. 3. The following pins have an internal static pull-up resistor (when enabled) and therefore may have leakage current from VDD (when VIN = 0): GPIO00-04, GPIO20-21, GPIO23, DLCLK, DLAD3-0, DLFRAME, DSERIRQ, DLDRQ, DCLKRUN, DCLKOUT. 4. The following pins have an internal static pull-down resistor (when enabled) and therefore may have leakage current to VSS (when VIN = VDD): DLRESET. 5. The following strap pins have an internal static pull-up resistor enabled during VDD Power-Up reset and therefore may have leakage current to VDD (when VIN = 0): BADDR, TRIS, TEST. 6. IOH is valid for a GPIO pin only when it is not configured as open-drain. 7. In XOR Tree mode, the buffer type of the input pins participating in the XOR Tree (see Section 2.4.2 on page 16) is INT (Input, TTL compatible), regardless of the buffer type of these pins in normal device operation mode; see Section 1.3 on page 10. 8.2.9 Terminology Back-Drive Protection. A pin that is back-drive protected does not sink current into the supply when an input voltage higher than the supply, but below the pin’s maximum input voltage, is applied to the pin. This is true even when the supply is inactive. Note that active pull-up resistors and active output buffers are typically not back-drive protected. 5-Volt Tolerance. An input signal that is 5V tolerant can operate with input voltage of up to 5V even though the supply to the device is only 3.3V. The actual maximum input voltage allowed to be supplied to the pin is indicated by the maximum high voltage allowed for the input buffer. Note that some pins have multiple buffers, not all of which are 5V tolerant. In such cases, there is a note that indicates at what conditions a 5V input may be applied to the pin; if there is no note, the low maximum voltage among the buffers is the maximum voltage allowed for the pin. Revision 1.2 61 www.national.com PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics 8.3 (Continued) INTERNAL RESISTORS DC Test Conditions Pull-Up Resistor Test Circuit Pull-Down Resistor Test Circuit VSUP VSUP Device Under Test RPU VSUP Device Under Test IPU Pin IPD Pin A A VPIN RPD V V VPIN Figure 14. Internal Resistor Test Conditions, TA = 0°C to 70°C, VSUP = 3.3V VSUP Device Under Test VSUP VPIN > VIH Device Under Test IPU RPU Pin RPU V 10 µA IPU Pin A VPIN VSUP VPIN < VIL A 10 µA VPIN V 10 KΩ Figure 15. Internal Pull-Down Resistor for Straps, TA = 0°C to 70°C, VSUP = 3.3V Notes for Figures 14 and 15: 1. The equivalent resistance of the pull-up resistor is calculated by RPU = (VSUP − VPIN) / IPU. 2. The equivalent resistance of the pull-down resistor is calculated by RPD = VPIN / IPD. 8.3.1 Pull-Up Resistor Symbol: PUnn Symbol RPU Parameter Pull-up equivalent resistance Conditions1 Min2 Typical Max2 Unit VPIN = 0V nn − 30% nn nn + 30% KΩ nn − 38% KΩ VPIN = 0.8 VSUP3 VPIN = 0.17 VSUP3 nn − 35% KΩ 1. TA = 0°C to 70°C, VSUP = 3.3V. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 3. For strap pins only. www.national.com 62 Revision1.2 8.3.2 PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics (Continued) Pull-Down Resistor Symbol: PDnn Symbol RPD Parameter Pull-down equivalent resistance Conditions1 Min2 Typical Max2 Unit VPIN = VSUP nn − 30% nn nn + 30% KΩ 1. TA = 0°C to 70°C, VSUP = 3.3V. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 8.4 AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS 8.4.1 AC Test Conditions Load Circuit (Notes 1, 2) AC Testing Input, Output Waveform VDD S1 2.4 0.1 µF 0.4 2.0 0.8 Test Points 2.0 0.8 RL Input Device Under Test Output CL Figure 16. AC Test Conditions, TA = 0 °C to 70 °C, VDD = 3.3 V ±10% Notes: 1. CL = 50 pF for all output pins; this value includes both jig and oscilloscope capacitance. 2. S1 = Open for push-pull output pins. S1 = VDD for high impedance to active low and active low to high impedance measurements. S1 = GND for high impedance to active high and active high to high impedance measurements. RL = 1.0 KΩ for all the pins. Revision 1.2 63 www.national.com PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics 8.4.2 (Continued) Clock Input Timing 48 MHz Symbol 14.31818 MHz Parameter Min Max Min Max Unit tCH Clock High Pulse Width 1 6 29.5 ns tCL Clock Low Pulse Width1 6 29.5 ns tCP Clock Period 2 FCIN Clock Frequency tCR Clock Rise Time2 (0.8V-2.0V) 5 5 ns tCF Clock Fall Time2 (2.0V-0.8V) 5 5 ns 20 21.5 48 - 0.1% 48 + 0.1% 69.14 ns 70.54 14.31818 - 0.02% 14.31818 + 0.02% MHz 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. . tCP tCH VIH VIH VIH CLKIN VIL 8.4.3 VIL VIL tCL tCR tCF Clock Output Timing From Clock Generator Symbol From CLKIN Parameter Min Max Min Max Unit tCOH Clock High Pulse Width1 6 tCH - 1 ns tCOL Clock Low Pulse Width1 6 tCL - 1 ns tCOP Clock Period2 20 21.5 tCP - 0.5 tCP + 0.5 ns FCOUT Clock Frequency 48 - 0.1% 48 + 0.1% FCIN FCIN MHz tCOR Clock Rise Time1 (0.4V-2.4V) 5 5 ns tCOF Clock Fall Time1 (2.4V-0.4V) 5 5 ns 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. . tCOH tCOP VOH DCLKOUT VOH VOL VOL VIL tCOL www.national.com VOH VOH tCOF 64 tCOR Revision1.2 8.4.4 PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics (Continued) LCLK and LRESET Symbol Parameter Min Max Units tCYC1 LCLK Cycle Time 30 ns tHIGH LCLK High Time2 11 ns tLOW LCLK Low Time2 11 ns - LCLK Slew Rate3,4 1 - LRESET Slew Rate3,5 50 mV/ns LRESET pulse width 100 ns tWRST 4 V/ns 1. The PCI may have any clock frequency between nominal DC and 33 MHz. Device operational parameters at frequencies under 16 MHz can be guaranteed by design rather than by testing. The clock frequency can be changed at any time during the operation of the system as long as the clock edges remain “clean” (monotonic) and the minimum cycle and high and low times are not violated. The clock may only be stopped in a low state. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 3. Not tested. Guaranteed by design 4. Rise and fall times are specified in terms of the edge rate measured in V/ns. This slew rate must be met across the minimum peak-to-peak portion of the clock wavering as shown below. 5. The minimum LRESET slew rate applies only to the rising (de-assertion) edge of the reset signal, and ensures that system noise cannot render an otherwise monotonic signal to appear to bounce in the switching range. 3.3V Clock tHIGH 0.5 VDD tLOW 0.6 VDD 0.4 VDD p-to-p (minimum) 0.4 VDD 0.3 VDD 0.2 VDD tCYC Revision 1.2 65 www.national.com PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics 8.4.5 (Continued) VDD Power-Up Reset Symbol Description Reference Conditions tIRST Internal Power-Up reset time VDD power-up to end of internal reset tLRST LRESET active time VDD power-up to end of PCI_RESET tIPLV Internal strap pull-up resistor, valid time2 Before end of internal reset tEPLV External strap pull-up resistor, Before end of internal reset valid time Min1 Max1 tLRST 10 ms tIRST tIRST 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. 2. Active only during VDD Power-Up reset. VDD (Power) VDDONmin VDD Power-Up Reset (Internal) tIRST tLRST LRESET tIPLV Internal Straps (Pull-up) tEPLV External Straps (Pull-Down) www.national.com 66 Revision1.2 8.4.6 PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics (Continued) LPC and SERIRQ Signals Symbol Description Reference Conditions Min Max Unit 11 ns tVAL Output Valid Delay After RE LCLK 2 tON Float to Active Delay After RE LCLK 2 tOFF Active to Float Delay After RE LCLK tSU Input Setup Time Before RE LCLK 7 ns tHI Input Hold Time After RE LCLK 0 ns ns 28 ns Output LCLK tVAL tON LPC Signals/ SERIRQ tOFF Input LCLK tSU LPC Signals/ SERIRQ Revision 1.2 tHI Input Valid 67 www.national.com PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics 8.4.7 (Continued) Serial Port, Sharp-IR, SIR and Consumer Remote Control Timing Symbol Parameter Single Bit Time in Serial Port and Sharp-IR tBT tCMW tCMP tSPW SDRT tSJT Modulation Signal Pulse Width in Sharp-IR and Consumer Remote Control Modulation Signal Period in Sharp-IR and Consumer Remote Control SIR Signal Pulse Width Conditions Min1 Max1 Unit Transmitter tBTN − 25 2 tBTN + 25 ns Receiver tBTN − 2% tBTN + 2% ns Transmitter tCWN − 25 3 tCWN + 25 ns Receiver 500 Transmitter tCPN − 25 4 tCPN + 25 ns Receiver tMMIN 5 tMMAX 5 ns ns 2 3 Transmitter, (3/ ) x t ( /16) x tBTN + 15 2 16 BTN − 15 Variable ns Transmitter, Fixed 1.48 µs Receiver 1 1.78 µs SIR Data Rate Tolerance. % of Nominal Data Rate. Transmitter ± 0.87% Receiver ± 2.0% SIR Leading Edge Jitter. % of Nominal Bit Duration. Transmitter ± 2.5% Receiver ± 6.5% 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. 2. tBTN is the nominal bit time in Serial Port, Sharp-IR, SIR and Consumer Remote Control modes. It is determined by the setting of the Baud Generator Divisor registers. 3. tCWN is the nominal pulse width of the modulation signal for Sharp-IR and Consumer Remote Control modes. It is determined by the MCPW field (bits 7-5) of the IRTXMC register and the TXHSC bit (bit 2) of the RCCFG register. 4. tCPN is the nominal period of the modulation signal for Sharp-IR and Consumer Remote Control modes. It is determined by the MCFR field (bits 4-0) of the IRTXMC register and the TXHSC bit (bit 2) of the RCCFG register. 5. tMMIN and tMMAX define the time range within which the period of the in-coming subcarrier signal must fall for the signal to be accepted by the receiver. These time values are determined by the contents of the IRRXDC register and the setting of the RXHSC bit (bit 5) of the RCCFG register. tBT Serial Port tCMW tCMP Sharp-IR Consumer Remote Control tSPW SIR www.national.com 68 Revision1.2 8.4.8 (Continued) MIR and FIR Timing Symbol tMPW PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics Parameter MIR Signal Pulse Width Min1 Max1 Unit tMWN − 25 2 tMWN + 25 nsec Conditions Transmitter Receiver 60 nsec MDRT MIR Transmitter Data Rate Tolerance ± 0.1% tMJT MIR Receiver Edge Jitter, % of Nominal Bit Duration ± 2.9% tFPW FIR Signal Pulse Width tFDPW FIR Signal Double Pulse Width Transmitter 120 130 nsec Receiver 90 160 nsec Transmitter 245 255 nsec Receiver 215 285 nsec FDRT FIR Transmitter Data Rate Tolerance ± 0.01% tFJT FIR Receiver Edge Jitter, % of Nominal Bit Duration ± 4.0% 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. 2. tMWN is the nominal pulse width for MIR mode. It is determined by the M_PWID field (bits 4-0) in the MIR_PW register at offset 01h in bank 6. tMPW MIR Data Symbol tFPW tFDPW FIR Chips Figure 17. MIR and FIR Timing Revision 1.2 69 www.national.com PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics 8.4.9 (Continued) Modem Control Timing Symbol Parameter Min Max Unit tL RI1 Low Time1 10 ns tH RI1 High Time1 10 ns tSIM Delay to Set IRQ from Modem Input2 40 ns 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. CTS, DSR, DCD tSIM tSIM INTERRUPT (Read MSR) (Read MSR) tSIM tL tH RI www.national.com 70 Revision1.2 PC87382 8.0 Device Characteristics (Continued) 8.4.10 Docking LPC Switch Timing Symbol Parameter Min Max Unit tON Switch On after RE LCLK1 0 14 ns tOFF Switch Off after RE LCLK1 0 28 ns tSW Delay from Switch Enable Command to Switch On2,3 4*tCYC4 - tCLK2RST Delay from Switch Enable Command to DLRESET de-assertion and DLFRAME, DLAD connection2 tSU CLK2RSTVAL5 - DLDRQ setup time before RE LCLK 7 ns tH DLDRQ hold time after RE LCLK 0 ns tSWPD Switch Propagation Delay1 300 ps 1. Not tested. Guaranteed by characterization. 2. Not tested. Guaranteed by design. 3. The time is measured from the end of the corresponding LPC transaction. 4. tCYC is LCLK cycle time. 5. Defined by CLK2RSTVAL field of the DLCTL register; see Section 6.3.2 on page 45. Switch On/Off Command tSW tCLK2RST tSW LCLK tON tON DLCLK, DCLKOUT, DCLKRUN, DSERIRQ DLFRAME, DLAD DLRESET Revision 1.2 Connected Held by Pull-ups Held by Pull-ups Held by Pull-down tOFF Connected Driven 71 www.national.com PC87382 LPC-to-LPC Switch for Docking Stations, with Fast Infrared Port, Serial Port and GPIOs Physical Dimensions All dimensions are in millimeters. 48-Pin Low Profile Plastic Quad Flatpack (LQFP) NS Package Number VBH48A Order Number PC87382-VBH LIFE SUPPORT POLICY NATIONAL’S PRODUCTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR USE AS CRITICAL COMPONENTS IN LIFE SUPPORT DEVICES OR SYSTEMS WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN APPROVAL OF THE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL OF NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION. As used herein: 1. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems which, (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body, or (b) support or sustain life, and whose failure to perform, when properly used in accordance with instructions for use provided in the labeling, can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. National Semiconductor Corporation Americas Email: [email protected] 2. A critical component is any component of a life support device or system whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to cause the failure of the life support device or system, or to affect its safety or effectiveness. National Semiconductor Europe Fax: +49 (0) 180-530 85 86 Email: [email protected] Deutsch Tel: +49 (0) 69 9508 6208 English Tel: +44 (0) 870 24 0 2171 Français Tel: +33 (0) 1 41 91 87 90 National Semiconductor Asia Pacific Customer Response Group Tel: 65-2544466 Fax: 65-2504466 Email: [email protected] National Semiconductor Japan Ltd. Tel: 81-3-5639-7560 Fax: 81-3-5639-7507 Email: [email protected] www.national.com National does not assume any responsibility for use of any circuitry described, no circuit patent licenses are implied and National reserves the right at any time without notice to change said circuitry and specifications.