PSD813F2, PSD833F2 PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Flash In-System Programmable (ISP) Peripherals for 8-bit MCUs, 5V PRELIMINARY DATA FEATURES SUMMARY ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ FLASH IN-SYSTEM PROGRAMMABLE (ISP) PERIPHERAL FOR 8-BIT MCUS DUAL BANK FLASH MEMORIES – UP TO 2 Mbit OF PRIMARY FLASH MEMORY (8 Uniform Sectors, 32K x8) – UP TO 256 Kbit SECONDARY FLASH MEMORY (4 Uniform Sectors) – Concurrent operation: READ from one memory while erasing and writing the other UP TO 256 Kbit BATTERY-BACKED SRAM 27 RECONFIGURABLE I/O PORTS ENHANCED JTAG SERIAL PORT PLD WITH MACROCELLS – Over 3000 Gates of PLD: CPLD and DPLD – CPLD with 16 Output Macrocells (OMCs) and 24 Input Macrocells (IMCs) – DPLD - user defined internal chip select decoding 27 INDIVIDUALLY CONFIGURABLE I/O PORT PINS The can be used for the following functions: – MCU I/Os – PLD I/Os – Latched MCU address output – Special function I/Os. – 16 of the I/O ports may be configured as open-drain outputs. IN-SYSTEM PROGRAMMING (ISP) WITH JTAG – Built-in JTAG compliant serial port allows full-chip In-System Programmability – Efficient manufacturing allow easy product testing and programming – Use low cost FlashLINK cable with PC PAGE REGISTER – Internal page register that can be used to expand the microcontroller address space by a factor of 256 PROGRAMMABLE POWER MANAGEMENT June 2004 Figure 1. Packages PQFP52 (M) PLCC52 (J) TQFP64 (U) ■ ■ ■ HIGH ENDURANCE: – 100,000 Erase/WRITE Cycles of Flash Memory – 1,000 Erase/WRITE Cycles of PLD – 15 Year Data Retention 5V±10% SINGLE SUPPLY VOLTAGE STANDBY CURRENT AS LOW AS 50µA 1/110 This is preliminary information on a new product now in development or undergoing evaluation. Details are subject to change without notice. PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 TABLE OF CONTENTS FEATURES SUMMARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 SUMMARY DESCRIPTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 PIN DESCRIPTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 PSD ARCHITECTURAL OVERVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Memory. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Page Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 PLDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 I/O Ports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 MCU Bus Interface. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 JTAG Port. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 In-System Programming (ISP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Power Management Unit (PMU) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 PSD Register Description and Address Offset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 DETAILED OPERATION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Memory Blocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Primary Flash Memory and Secondary Flash memory Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Memory Block Select Signals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 INSTRUCTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Power-up Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 READ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Read Memory Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Read Primary Flash Identifier. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Read Memory Sector Protection Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Reading the Erase/Program Status Bits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Data Polling Flag (DQ7). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Toggle Flag (DQ6) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Error Flag (DQ5). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Erase Time-out Flag (DQ3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 PROGRAMMING FLASH MEMORY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Data Polling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Data Toggle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Unlock Bypass (PSD833F2x, PSD834F2x, PSD853F2x, PSD854F2x) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 ERASING FLASH MEMORY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Flash Bulk Erase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 2/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Flash Sector Erase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Suspend Sector Erase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Resume Sector Erase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 SPECIFIC FEATURES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Flash Memory Sector Protect. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Reset Flash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Reset (RESET) Signal (on the PSD83xF2 and PSD85xF2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 SRAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 SECTOR SELECT AND SRAM SELECT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Memory Select Configuration for MCUs with Separate Program and Data Spaces . . . . . . . . 30 Configuration Modes for MCUs with Separate Program and Data Spaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 PAGE REGISTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 PLDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 The Turbo Bit in PSD. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Decode PLD (DPLD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Complex PLD (CPLD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Output Macrocell (OMC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Product Term Allocator. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Loading and Reading the Output Macrocells (OMC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 The OMC Mask Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 The Output Enable of the OMC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Input Macrocells (IMC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 MCU BUS INTERFACE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 PSD Interface to a Multiplexed 8-Bit Bus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 PSD Interface to a Non-Multiplexed 8-Bit Bus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Data Byte Enable Reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 MCU Bus Interface Examples. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 80C31 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 80C251 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 80C51XA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 68HC11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 I/O PORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 General Port Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Port Operating Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MCU I/O Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PLD I/O Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Address Out Mode. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Address In Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 . . . . 51 . . . . 53 . . . . 53 . . . . 53 . . . . 55 3/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Data Port Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Peripheral I/O Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 JTAG In-System Programming (ISP) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Port Configuration Registers (PCR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Control Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Direction Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Drive Select Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Port Data Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Data In. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Data Out Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 OMC Mask Register. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Input Macrocells (IMC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Enable Out . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Ports A and B – Functionality and Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Port C – Functionality and Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Port D – Functionality and Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 External Chip Select . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 POWER MANAGEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Automatic Power-down (APD) Unit and Power-down Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 For Users of the HC11 (or compatible) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Other Power Saving Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 PLD Power Management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Input Clock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Input Control Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 RESET TIMING AND DEVICE STATUS AT RESET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Power-Up Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Warm Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I/O Pin, Register and PLD Status at Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reset of Flash Memory Erase and Program Cycles (on the PSD834Fx) . ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... . . . . 67 . . . . 67 . . . . 67 . . . . 67 PROGRAMMING IN-CIRCUIT USING THE JTAG SERIAL INTERFACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 Standard JTAG Signals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 JTAG Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Security and Flash memory Protection. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 INITIAL DELIVERY STATE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 AC/DC PARAMETERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 MAXIMUM RATING. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 DC AND AC PARAMETERS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 PACKAGE MECHANICAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 4/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PART NUMBERING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 APPENDIX A.PQFP52 PIN ASSIGNMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 APPENDIX B.PLCC52 PIN ASSIGNMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 APPENDIX C.TQFP64 PIN ASSIGNMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 REVISION HISTORY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 5/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 SUMMARY DESCRIPTION The PSD8XXFX family of memory systems for microcontrollers (MCUs) brings In-System-Programmability (ISP) to Flash memory and programmable logic. The result is a simple and flexible solution for embedded designs. PSD devices combine many of the peripheral functions found in MCU based applications. Table 1 summarizes all the devices in the PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2. The CPLD in the PSD devices features an optimized macrocell logic architecture. The PSD macrocell was created to address the unique requirements of embedded system designs. It allows direct connection between the system address/data bus, and the internal PSD registers, to simplify communication between the MCU and other supporting devices. The PSD device includes a JTAG Serial Programming interface, to allow In-System Programming (ISP) of the entire device. This feature reduces development time, simplifies the manufacturing flow, and dramatically lowers the cost of field upgrades. Using ST’s special Fast-JTAG programming, a design can be rapidly programmed into the PSD in as little as seven seconds. The innovative PSD8XXFX family solves key problems faced by designers when managing discrete Flash memory devices, such as: – First-time In-System Programming (ISP) – Complex address decoding – Simultaneous read and write to the device. The JTAG Serial Interface block allows In-System Programming (ISP), and eliminates the need for an external Boot EPROM, or an external programmer. To simplify Flash memory updates, program execution is performed from a secondary Flash memory while the primary Flash memory is being updated. This solution avoids the complicated hardware and software overhead necessary to implement IAP. ST makes available a software development tool, PSDsoft Express, that generates ANSI-C compliant code for use with your target MCU. This code allows you to manipulate the non-volatile memory (NVM) within the PSD. Code examples are also provided for: – Flash memory IAP via the UART of the host MCU – Memory paging to execute code across several PSD memory pages – Loading, reading, and manipulation of PSD macrocells by the MCU. Table 1. Product Range Input Output Serial ISP JTAG/ ISC Port 27 24 16 yes yes 16 Kbit 27 24 16 yes yes 256 Kbit none 27 24 16 yes yes 1 Mbit none none 27 24 16 yes yes PSD833F2 1 Mbit 256 Kbit 64 Kbit 27 24 16 yes yes PSD834F2 2 Mbit 256 Kbit 64 Kbit 27 24 16 yes yes PSD853F2 1 Mbit 256 Kbit 256 Kbit 27 24 16 yes yes PSD854F2 2 Mbit 256 Kbit 256 Kbit 27 24 16 yes yes Primary Flash Memory (8 Sectors) Secondary Flash Memory 4 Sectors) PSD813F2 1 Mbit 256 Kbit 16 Kbit PSD813F3 1 Mbit none PSD813F4 1 Mbit PSD813F5 (1) Part Number SRAM (2) I/O Ports Number of Macrocells Turbo Mode Note: 1. All products support: JTAG serial ISP, MCU parallel ISP, ISP Flash memory, ISP CPLD, Security features, Power Management Unit (PMU), Automatic Power-down (APD) 2. SRAM may be backed up using an external battery. 6/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 40 CNTLO 41 RESET 42 CNTL2 43 CNTL1 44 PB7 45 PB6 46 GND 47 PB5 48 PB4 49 PB3 50 PB2 51 PB1 52 PB0 Figure 2. PQFP52 Connections 27 AD4 AD3 26 28 AD5 PC0 13 AD2 25 29 AD6 PC1 12 AD1 24 30 AD7 PC2 11 AD0 23 31 VCC PC3 10 PA0 22 32 AD8 GND 9 PA1 21 33 AD9 VCC 8 PA2 20 34 AD10 PC4 7 GND 19 35 AD11 PC5 6 PA3 18 36 AD12 PC6 5 PA4 17 37 AD13 PC7 4 PA5 16 38 AD14 PD0 3 PA6 15 39 AD15 PD1 2 PA7 14 PD2 1 AI02858 7/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PB7 CNTL1 CNTL2 RESET CNTL0 PB5 PB6 PB4 GND PB3 47 PB2 48 PB1 49 2 50 3 51 4 52 5 1 PD1 6 8 7 8/110 PD2 PB0 Figure 3. PLCC52 Connections 38 VCC PC3 17 37 AD7 PC2 18 36 AD6 PC1 19 35 AD5 PC0 20 34 AD4 33 GND AD2 AD8 AD3 39 16 32 VCC 31 AD9 AD1 40 15 30 14 AD0 PC4 29 AD10 PA0 41 28 13 PA1 PC5 27 AD11 PA2 42 GND AD12 12 26 43 PC6 25 PC7 PA3 AD13 24 44 11 PA4 10 23 PD0 PA5 AD14 PA6 45 22 9 21 AD15 PA7 46 AI02857 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 49 NC 50 RESET 51 CNTL2 52 CNTL1 53 PB7 54 PB6 55 GND 56 GND 57 PB5 58 PB4 59 PB3 60 PB2 61 PB1 62 PB0 63 NC 64 NC Figure 4. TQFP64 Connections PC0 15 34 AD4 16 33 AD3 NC AD2 32 35 AD5 ND 31 36 AD6 PC1 14 AD1 30 37 AD7 PC2 13 AD0 29 38 VCC PC3 12 PA0 28 39 VCC GND 11 PA1 27 40 AD8 GND 10 PA2 26 41 AD9 VCC 9 GND 25 42 AD10 VCC 8 GND 24 43 AD11 VCC 7 PA3 23 44 AD12 PC5 6 PA4 22 45 AD13 PC6 5 PA5 21 46 AD14 PC7 4 PA6 20 47 AD15 PD0 3 PA7 19 PD1 2 NC 18 48 CNTL0 NC 17 PD2 1 AI09645 9/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PIN DESCRIPTION Table 2. Pin Description (for the PLCC52 package - Note 1) Pin Name Pin Type Description This is the lower Address/Data port. Connect your MCU address or address/data bus according to the following rules: If your MCU has a multiplexed address/data bus where the data is multiplexed with the lower address bits, connect AD0-AD7 to this port. ADIO0-7 30-37 I/O If your MCU does not have a multiplexed address/data bus, or you are using an 80C251 in page mode, connect A0-A7 to this port. If you are using an 80C51XA in burst mode, connect A4/D0 through A11/D7 to this port. ALE or AS latches the address. The PSD drives data out only if the READ signal is active and one of the PSD functional blocks was selected. The addresses on this port are passed to the PLDs. This is the upper Address/Data port. Connect your MCU address or address/data bus according to the following rules: If your MCU has a multiplexed address/data bus where the data is multiplexed with the lower address bits, connect A8-A15 to this port. If your MCU does not have a multiplexed address/data bus, connect A8-A15 to this port. ADIO8-15 39-46 I/O If you are using an 80C251 in page mode, connect AD8-AD15 to this port. If you are using an 80C51XA in burst mode, connect A12/D8 through A19/D15 to this port. ALE or AS latches the address. The PSD drives data out only if the READ signal is active and one of the PSD functional blocks was selected. The addresses on this port are passed to the PLDs. The following control signals can be connected to this port, based on your MCU: WR – active Low Write Strobe input. CNTL0 47 I R_W – active High READ/active Low write input. This port is connected to the PLDs. Therefore, these signals can be used in decode and other logic equations. The following control signals can be connected to this port, based on your MCU: RD – active Low Read Strobe input. E – E clock input. DS – active Low Data Strobe input. CNTL1 50 I PSEN – connect PSEN to this port when it is being used as an active Low READ signal. For example, when the 80C251 outputs more than 16 address bits, PSEN is actually the READ signal. This port is connected to the PLDs. Therefore, these signals can be used in decode and other logic equations. CNTL2 10/110 49 I This port can be used to input the PSEN (Program Select Enable) signal from any MCU that uses this signal for code exclusively. If your MCU does not output a Program Select Enable signal, this port can be used as a generic input. This port is connected to the PLDs. PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Pin Name Pin Type Description Reset 48 I Resets I/O Ports, PLD macrocells and some of the Configuration Registers. Must be Low at Power-up. These pins make up Port A. These port pins are configurable and can have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellAB0-7) outputs. PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 Inputs to the PLDs. Latched address outputs (see Table 6). I/O Address inputs. For example, PA0-3 could be used for A0-A3 when using an 80C51XA in burst mode. As the data bus inputs D0-D7 for non-multiplexed address/data bus MCUs. D0/A16-D3/A19 in M37702M2 mode. Peripheral I/O mode. Note: PA0-PA3 can only output CMOS signals with an option for high slew rate. However, PA4-PA7 can be configured as CMOS or Open Drain Outputs. PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 7 6 5 4 3 2 52 51 These pins make up Port B. These port pins are configurable and can have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellAB0-7 or McellBC0-7) outputs. I/O Inputs to the PLDs. Latched address outputs (see Table 6). Note: PB0-PB3 can only output CMOS signals with an option for high slew rate. However, PB4-PB7 can be configured as CMOS or Open Drain Outputs. PC0 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC0) output. PC0 20 I/O Input to the PLDs. TMS Input2 for the JTAG Serial Interface. This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. PC1 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC1) output. PC1 19 I/O Input to the PLDs. TCK Input2 for the JTAG Serial Interface. This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. 11/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Pin Name Pin Type Description PC2 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC2) output. PC2 18 I/O Input to the PLDs. VSTBY – SRAM stand-by voltage input for SRAM battery backup. This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. PC3 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC3) output. PC3 17 I/O Input to the PLDs. TSTAT output2 for the JTAG Serial Interface. Ready/Busy output for parallel In-System Programming (ISP). This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. PC4 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC4) output. Input to the PLDs. PC4 14 I/O TERR output2 for the JTAG Serial Interface. Battery-on Indicator (VBATON). Goes High when power is being drawn from the external battery. This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. PC5 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC5) output. PC5 13 I/O Input to the PLDs. TDI input2 for the JTAG Serial Interface. This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. PC6 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC6) output. PC6 12 I/O Input to the PLDs. TDO output2 for the JTAG Serial Interface. This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. 12/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Pin Name Pin Type Description PC7 pin of Port C. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. CPLD macrocell (McellBC7) output. PC7 11 I/O Input to the PLDs. DBE – active Low Data Byte Enable input from 68HC912 type MCUs. This pin can be configured as a CMOS or Open Drain output. PD0 pin of Port D. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: ALE/AS input latches address output from the MCU. PD0 10 I/O MCU I/O – write or read from a standard output or input port. Input to the PLDs. CPLD output (External Chip Select). PD1 pin of Port D. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O – write to or read from a standard output or input port. Input to the PLDs. PD1 9 I/O CPLD output (External Chip Select). CLKIN – clock input to the CPLD macrocells, the APD Unit’s Power-down counter, and the CPLD AND Array. PD2 pin of Port D. This port pin can be configured to have the following functions: MCU I/O - write to or read from a standard output or input port. Input to the PLDs. PD2 8 I/O CPLD output (External Chip Select). PSD Chip Select Input (CSI). When Low, the MCU can access the PSD memory and I/O. When High, the PSD memory blocks are disabled to conserve power. VCC 15, 38 Supply Voltage GND 1, 16, 26 Ground pins Note: 1. The pin numbers in this table are for the PLCC package only. See the package information from Table 74., page 102 onwards, for pin numbers on other package types. 2. These functions can be multiplexed with other functions. 13/110 14/110 AD0 – AD15 CNTL0, CNTL1, CNTL2 CLKIN (PD1) GLOBAL CONFIG. & SECURITY ADIO PORT PROG. MCU BUS INTRF. PLD INPUT BUS CLKIN 73 8 CSIOP CLKIN 256 KBIT BATTERY BACKUP SRAM 256 KBIT SECONDARY NON-VOLATILE MEMORY (BOOT OR DATA) 4 SECTORS 3 EXT CS TO PORT D JTAG SERIAL CHANNEL PORT A ,B & C 24 INPUT MACROCELLS PORT A ,B & C 16 OUTPUT MACROCELLS PLD, CONFIGURATION & FLASH MEMORY LOADER 8 SECTORS 1 OR 2 MBIT PRIMARY FLASH MEMORY RUNTIME CONTROL AND I/O REGISTERS PERIP I/O MODE SELECTS SRAM SELECT SECTOR SELECTS FLASH ISP CPLD (CPLD) FLASH DECODE PLD (DPLD) SECTOR SELECTS EMBEDDED ALGORITHM MACROCELL FEEDBACK OR PORT INPUT 73 PAGE REGISTER ADDRESS/DATA/CONTROL BUS PORT D PROG. PORT PORT C PROG. PORT PORT B PROG. PORT PORT A PROG. PORT POWER MANGMT UNIT PD0 – PD2 PC0 – PC7 PB0 – PB7 PA0 – PA7 VSTDBY (PC2) PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 5. PSD Block Diagram AI02861E PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PSD ARCHITECTURAL OVERVIEW PSD devices contain several major functional blocks. Figure 5 shows the architecture of the PSD device family. The functions of each block are described briefly in the following sections. Many of the blocks perform multiple functions and are user configurable. Memory Each of the memory blocks is briefly discussed in the following paragraphs. A more detailed discussion can be found in the section entitled Memory Blocks, page 19. The 1 Mbit or 2 Mbit (128K x 8, or 256K x 8) Flash memory is the primary memory of the PSD. It is divided into 8 equally-sized sectors that are individually selectable. The optional 256 Kbit (32K x 8) secondary Flash memory is divided into 4 equally-sized sectors. Each sector is individually selectable. The optional SRAM is intended for use as a scratch-pad memory or as an extension to the MCU SRAM. If an external battery is connected to Voltage Stand-by (VSTBY, PC2), data is retained in the event of power failure. Each sector of memory can be located in a different address space as defined by the user. The access times for all memory types includes the address latching and DPLD decoding time. Page Register The 8-bit Page Register expands the address range of the MCU by up to 256 times. The paged address can be used as part of the address space to access external memory and peripherals, or internal memory and I/O. The Page Register can also be used to change the address mapping of sectors of the Flash memories into different memory spaces for IAP. PLDs The device contains two PLDs, the Decode PLD (DPLD) and the Complex PLD (CPLD), as shown in Table 3, each optimized for a different function. The functional partitioning of the PLDs reduces power consumption, optimizes cost/performance, and eases design entry. The DPLD is used to decode addresses and to generate Sector Select signals for the PSD internal memory and registers. The DPLD has combinatorial outputs. The CPLD has 16 Output Macrocells (OMC) and 3 combinatorial outputs. The PSD also has 24 Input Macrocells (IMC) that can be configured as inputs to the PLDs. The PLDs receive their inputs from the PLD Input Bus and are differentiated by their output destinations, number of product terms, and macrocells. The PLDs consume minimal power. The speed and power consumption of the PLD is controlled by the Turbo Bit in PMMR0 and other bits in the PMMR2. These registers are set by the MCU at run-time. There is a slight penalty to PLD propagation time when invoking the power management features. I/O Ports The PSD has 27 individually configurable I/O pins distributed over the four ports (Port A, B, C, and D). Each I/O pin can be individually configured for different functions. Ports can be configured as standard MCU I/O ports, PLD I/O, or latched address outputs for MCUs using multiplexed address/data buses. The JTAG pins can be enabled on Port C for InSystem Programming (ISP). Ports A and B can also be configured as a data port for a non-multiplexed bus. MCU Bus Interface PSD interfaces easily with most 8-bit MCUs that have either multiplexed or non-multiplexed address/data buses. The device is configured to respond to the MCU’s control signals, which are also used as inputs to the PLDs. For examples, please see the section entitled MCU Bus Interface Examples, page 45. Table 3. PLD I/O Name Inputs Outputs Product Terms Decode PLD (DPLD) 73 17 42 Complex PLD (CPLD) 73 19 140 15/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 JTAG Port In-System Programming (ISP) can be performed through the JTAG signals on Port C. This serial interface allows complete programming of the entire PSD device. A blank device can be completely programmed. The JTAG signals (TMS, TCK, TSTAT, TERR, TDI, TDO) can be multiplexed with other functions on Port C. Table 4 indicates the JTAG pin assignments. In-System Programming (ISP) Using the JTAG signals on Port C, the entire PSD device can be programmed or erased without the use of the MCU. The primary Flash memory can also be programmed in-system by the MCU executing the programming algorithms out of the secondary memory, or SRAM. The secondary memory can be programmed the same way by executing out of the primary Flash memory. The PLD or other PSD Configuration blocks can be programmed through the JTAG port or a device programmer. Table 5 indicates which programming methods can program different functional blocks of the PSD. Power Management Unit (PMU) The Power Management Unit (PMU) gives the user control of the power consumption on selected functional blocks based on system requirements. The PMU includes an Automatic Power-down (APD) Unit that turns off device functions during MCU inactivity. The APD Unit has a Power-down mode that helps reduce power consumption. The PSD also has some bits that are configured at run-time by the MCU to reduce power consumption of the CPLD. The Turbo Bit in PMMR0 can be reset to '0' and the CPLD latches its outputs and goes to sleep until the next transition on its inputs. Additionally, bits in PMMR2 can be set by the MCU to block signals from entering the CPLD to reduce power consumption. Please see the section entitled POWER MANAGEMENT, page 62 for more details. Table 4. JTAG SIgnals on Port C Port C Pins JTAG Signal PC0 TMS PC1 TCK PC3 TSTAT PC4 TERR PC5 TDI PC6 TDO Table 5. Methods of Programming Different Functional Blocks of the PSD Functional Block JTAG Programming Device Programmer Primary Flash Memory Yes Yes Yes Secondary Flash Memory Yes Yes Yes PLD Array (DPLD and CPLD) Yes Yes No PSD Configuration Yes Yes No 16/110 IAP PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM The PSD8XXFX family is supported by PSDsoft Express, a Windows-based software development tool. A PSD design is quickly and easily produced in a point and click environment. The designer does not need to enter Hardware Description Language (HDL) equations, unless desired, to define PSD pin functions and memory map information. The general design flow is shown in Figure 6. PSDsoft Express is available from our web site (the address is given on the back page of this data sheet) or other distribution channels. PSDsoft Express directly supports two low cost device programmers form ST: PSDpro and FlashLINK (JTAG). Both of these programmers may be purchased through your local distributor/ representative, or directly from our web site using a credit card. The PSD is also supported by third party device programmers. See our web site for the current list. Figure 6. PSDsoft Express Development Tool PSDabel PLD DESCRIPTION MODIFY ABEL TEMPLATE FILE OR GENERATE NEW FILE PSD Configuration PSD TOOLS CONFIGURE MCU BUS INTERFACE AND OTHER PSD ATTRIBUTES GENERATE C CODE SPECIFIC TO PSD FUNCTIONS PSD Fitter LOGIC SYNTHESIS AND FITTING ADDRESS TRANSLATION AND MEMORY MAPPING FIRMWARE HEX OR S-RECORD FORMAT USER'S CHOICE OF MICROCONTROLLER COMPILER/LINKER *.OBJ FILE PSD Simulator PSD Programmer PSDsilos III DEVICE SIMULATION (OPTIONAL) PSDPro, or FlashLINK (JTAG) *.OBJ AND *.SVF FILES AVAILABLE FOR 3rd PARTY PROGRAMMERS (CONVENTIONAL or JTAG-ISC) AI04918 17/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PSD REGISTER DESCRIPTION AND ADDRESS OFFSET Table 6 shows the offset addresses to the PSD registers relative to the CSIOP base address. The CSIOP space is the 256 bytes of address that is allocated by the user to the internal PSD registers. Table 7 provides brief descriptions of the registers in CSIOP space. The following section gives a more detailed description. Table 6. I/O Port Latched Address Output Assignments (Note1) Port A MCU Port A (3:0) Port B Port A (7:4) Port B (3:0) Port B (7:4) 8051XA (8-bit) N/A Address a7-a4 Address a11-a8 N/A 80C251 (page mode) N/A N/A Address a11-a8 Address a15-a12 All other 8-bit multiplexed Address a3-a0 Address a7-a4 Address a3-a0 Address a7-a4 8-bit non-multiplexed bus N/A N/A Address a3-a0 Address a7-a4 Note: 1. See the section entitled I/O PORTS, page 51, on how to enable the Latched Address Output function. 2. N/A = Not Applicable Table 7. Register Address Offset Register Name Other1 Description Port A Port B Port C Port D Data In 00 01 10 11 Reads Port pin as input, MCU I/O input mode Control 02 03 Selects mode between MCU I/O or Address Out Data Out 04 05 12 13 Stores data for output to Port pins, MCU I/O output mode Direction 06 07 14 15 Configures Port pin as input or output Drive Select 08 09 16 17 Configures Port pins as either CMOS or Open Drain on some pins, while selecting high slew rate on other pins. Input Macrocell 0A 0B 18 Enable Out 0C 0D 1A Output Macrocells AB 20 20 Output Macrocells BC Mask Macrocells AB Mask Macrocells BC 21 22 Reads Input Macrocells Reads the status of the output enable to the I/O Port driver 1B READ – reads output of macrocells AB WRITE – loads macrocell flip-flops READ – reads output of macrocells BC WRITE – loads macrocell flip-flops 21 22 23 Blocks writing to the Output Macrocells AB 23 Blocks writing to the Output Macrocells BC Primary Flash Protection C0 Read only – Primary Flash Sector Protection Secondary Flash memory Protection C2 Read only – PSD Security and Secondary Flash memory Sector Protection JTAG Enable C7 Enables JTAG Port PMMR0 B0 Power Management Register 0 PMMR2 B4 Power Management Register 2 Page E0 Page Register VM E2 Places PSD memory areas in Program and/or Data space on an individual basis. Note: 1. Other registers that are not part of the I/O ports. 18/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 DETAILED OPERATION As shown in Figure 5., page 14, the PSD consists of six major types of functional blocks: ■ Memory Blocks ■ PLD Blocks ■ MCU Bus Interface ■ I/O Ports ■ Power Management Unit (PMU) ■ JTAG Interface The functions of each block are described in the following sections. Many of the blocks perform multiple functions, and are user configurable. Memory Blocks The PSD has the following memory blocks: – Primary Flash memory – Optional Secondary Flash memory – Optional SRAM The Memory Select signals for these blocks originate from the Decode PLD (DPLD) and are userdefined in PSDsoft Express. Table 8. Memory Block Size and Organization Primary Flash Memory Secondary Flash Memory SRAM Sector Number Sector Size (Bytes) Sector Select Signal Sector Size (Bytes) Sector Select Signal SRAM Size (Bytes) SRAM Select Signal 0 32K FS0 16K CSBOOT0 256K RS0 1 32K FS1 16K CSBOOT1 2 32K FS2 16K CSBOOT2 3 32K FS3 16K CSBOOT3 4 32K FS4 5 32K FS5 6 32K FS6 7 32K FS7 Total 512K 8 Sectors 64K 4 Sectors 256K 19/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Primary Flash Memory and Secondary Flash memory Description The primary Flash memory is divided evenly into eight equal sectors. The secondary Flash memory is divided into four equal sectors. Each sector of either memory block can be separately protected from Program and Erase cycles. Flash memory may be erased on a sector-by-sector basis. Flash sector erasure may be suspended while data is read from other sectors of the block and then resumed after reading. During a Program or Erase cycle in Flash memory, the status can be output on Ready/Busy (PC3). This pin is set up using PSDsoft Express Configuration. Memory Block Select Signals The DPLD generates the Select signals for all the internal memory blocks (see the section entitled PLDS, page 33). Each of the eight sectors of the primary Flash memory has a Select signal (FS0FS7) which can contain up to three product terms. Each of the four sectors of the secondary Flash memory has a Select signal (CSBOOT0CSBOOT3) which can contain up to three product terms. Having three product terms for each Select signal allows a given sector to be mapped in different areas of system memory. When using a MCU with separate Program and Data space, these flexible Select signals allow dynamic re-mapping of sectors from one memory space to the other. Ready/Busy (PC3). This signal can be used to output the Ready/Busy status of the PSD. The output on Ready/Busy (PC3) is a 0 (Busy) when Flash memory is being written to, or when Flash memory is being erased. The output is a 1 (Ready) when no WRITE or Erase cycle is in progress. 20/110 Memory Operation. The primary Flash memory and secondary Flash memory are addressed through the MCU Bus Interface. The MCU can access these memories in one of two ways: – The MCU can execute a typical bus WRITE or READ operation just as it would if accessing a RAM or ROM device using standard bus cycles. – The MCU can execute a specific instruction that consists of several WRITE and READ operations. This involves writing specific data patterns to special addresses within the Flash memory to invoke an embedded algorithm. These instructions are summarized in Table 9., page 21. Typically, the MCU can read Flash memory using READ operations, just as it would read a ROM device. However, Flash memory can only be altered using specific Erase and Program instructions. For example, the MCU cannot write a single byte directly to Flash memory as it would write a byte to RAM. To program a byte into Flash memory, the MCU must execute a Program instruction, then test the status of the Program cycle. This status test is achieved by a READ operation or polling Ready/Busy (PC3). Flash memory can also be read by using special instructions to retrieve particular Flash device information (sector protect status and ID). PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 9. Instructions FS0-FS7 or CSBOOT0CSBOOT3 Cycle 1 READ5 1 “READ” RD @ RA Read Main Flash ID6 1 Read Sector Protection6,8,13 Instruction Cycle 2 Cycle 3 Cycle 4 Cycle 5 Cycle 6 Cycle 7 AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh 90h@ X555h Read identifier (A6,A1,A0 = 0,0,1) 1 AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh 90h@ X555h Read identifier (A6,A1,A0 = 0,1,0) Program a Flash Byte13 1 AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh A0h@ X555h PD@ PA Flash Sector Erase7,13 1 AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh 80h@ X555h AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh 30h@ SA 30h7@ next SA Flash Bulk Erase13 1 AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh 80h@ X555h AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh 10h@ X555h Suspend Sector Erase11 1 B0h@ XXXXh Resume Sector Erase12 1 30h@ XXXXh Reset6 1 F0h@ XXXXh Unlock Bypass 1 AAh@ X555h 55h@ XAAAh 20h@ X555h Unlock Bypass Program9 1 A0h@ XXXXh PD@ PA Unlock Bypass Reset10 1 90h@ XXXXh 00h@ XXXXh Note: 1. All bus cycles are WRITE bus cycles, except the ones with the “READ” label 2. All values are in hexadecimal: X = Don’t Care. Addresses of the form XXXXh, in this table, must be even addresses RA = Address of the memory location to be read RD = Data read from location RA during the READ cycle PA = Address of the memory location to be programmed. Addresses are latched on the falling edge of Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0). PA is an even address for PSD in word programming mode. PD = Data word to be programmed at location PA. Data is latched on the rising edge of Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0) SA = Address of the sector to be erased or verified. The Sector Select (FS0-FS7 or CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) of the sector to be erased, or verified, must be Active (High). 3. Sector Select (FS0 to FS7 or CSBOOT0 to CSBOOT3) signals are active High, and are defined in PSDsoft Express. 4. Only address bits A11-A0 are used in instruction decoding. 5. No Unlock or instruction cycles are required when the device is in the READ Mode 6. The Reset instruction is required to return to the READ Mode after reading the Flash ID, or after reading the Sector Protection Status, or if the Error Flag Bit (DQ5/DQ13) goes High. 7. Additional sectors to be erased must be written at the end of the Sector Erase instruction within 80µs. 8. The data is 00h for an unprotected sector, and 01h for a protected sector. In the fourth cycle, the Sector Select is active, and (A1,A0)=(1,0) 9. The Unlock Bypass instruction is required prior to the Unlock Bypass Program instruction. 10. The Unlock Bypass Reset Flash instruction is required to return to reading memory data when the device is in the Unlock Bypass mode. 11. The system may perform READ and Program cycles in non-erasing sectors, read the Flash ID or read the Sector Protection Status when in the Suspend Sector Erase mode. The Suspend Sector Erase instruction is valid only during a Sector Erase cycle. 12. The Resume Sector Erase instruction is valid only during the Suspend Sector Erase mode. 13. The MCU cannot invoke these instructions while executing code from the same Flash memory as that for which the instruction is intended. The MCU must fetch, for example, the code from the secondary Flash memory when reading the Sector Protection Status of the primary Flash memory. 21/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 INSTRUCTIONS An instruction consists of a sequence of specific operations. Each received byte is sequentially decoded by the PSD and not executed as a standard WRITE operation. The instruction is executed when the correct number of bytes are properly received and the time between two consecutive bytes is shorter than the time-out period. Some instructions are structured to include READ operations after the initial WRITE operations. The instruction must be followed exactly. Any invalid combination of instruction bytes or time-out between two consecutive bytes while addressing Flash memory resets the device logic into READ Mode (Flash memory is read like a ROM device). The PSD supports the instructions summarized in Table 9., page 21: Flash memory: ■ Erase memory by chip or sector ■ Suspend or resume sector erase ■ Program a Byte ■ Reset to READ Mode ■ Read primary Flash Identifier value ■ Read Sector Protection Status ■ Bypass (on the PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2 and PSD854F2) These instructions are detailed in Table 9., page 21. For efficient decoding of the instructions, the first two bytes of an instruction are the coded cycles and are followed by an instruction byte or confirmation byte. The coded cycles consist of writing the data AAh to address X555h during the first cycle and data 55h to address XAAAh during the second cycle. Address signals A15-A12 are Don’t Care during the instruction WRITE cycles. However, the appropriate Sector Select (FS0-FS7 or CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) must be selected. The primary and secondary Flash memories have the same instruction set (except for Read Primary Flash Identifier). The Sector Select signals determine which Flash memory is to receive and execute the instruction. The primary Flash memory is selected if any one of Sector Select (FS0-FS7) is High, and the secondary Flash memory is selected if any one of Sector Select (CSBOOT0CSBOOT3) is High. Power-up Mode The PSD internal logic is reset upon Power-up to the READ Mode. Sector Select (FS0-FS7 and CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) must be held Low, and Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0) High, during Power-up 22/110 for maximum security of the data contents and to remove the possibility of a byte being written on the first edge of Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0). Any WRITE cycle initiation is locked when VCC is below VLKO. READ Under typical conditions, the MCU may read the primary Flash memory or the secondary Flash memory using READ operations just as it would a ROM or RAM device. Alternately, the MCU may use READ operations to obtain status information about a Program or Erase cycle that is currently in progress. Lastly, the MCU may use instructions to read special data from these memory blocks. The following sections describe these READ functions. Read Memory Contents Primary Flash memory and secondary Flash memory are placed in the READ Mode after Power-up, chip reset, or a Reset Flash instruction (see Table 9., page 21). The MCU can read the memory contents of the primary Flash memory or the secondary Flash memory by using READ operations any time the READ operation is not part of an instruction. Read Primary Flash Identifier The primary Flash memory identifier is read with an instruction composed of 4 operations: 3 specific WRITE operations and a READ operation (see Table 9., page 21). During the READ operation, address bits A6, A1, and A0 must be '0,0,1,' respectively, and the appropriate Sector Select (FS0-FS7) must be High. The identifier for the PSD813F2/3/4/5 is E4h, and for the PSD83xF2 or PSD85xF2 it is E7h. Read Memory Sector Protection Status The primary Flash memory Sector Protection Status is read with an instruction composed of 4 operations: 3 specific WRITE operations and a READ operation (see Table 9., page 21). During the READ operation, address Bits A6, A1, and A0 must be '0,1,0,' respectively, while Sector Select (FS0-FS7 or CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) designates the Flash memory sector whose protection has to be verified. The READ operation produces 01h if the Flash memory sector is protected, or 00h if the sector is not protected. The sector protection status for all NVM blocks (primary Flash memory or secondary Flash memory) can also be read by the MCU accessing the Flash Protection registers in PSD I/O space. See the section entitled Flash Memory Sector Protect, page 28 for register definitions. PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Reading the Erase/Program Status Bits The PSD provides several status bits to be used by the MCU to confirm the completion of an Erase or Program cycle of Flash memory. These status bits minimize the time that the MCU spends performing these tasks and are defined in Table 10. The status bits can be read as many times as needed. For Flash memory, the MCU can perform a READ operation to obtain these status bits while an Erase or Program instruction is being executed by the embedded algorithm. See the section entitled PROGRAMMING FLASH MEMORY, page 25 for details. Table 10. Status Bit Functional Block Flash Memory FS0-FS7/CSBOOT0CSBOOT3 VIH DQ7 DQ6 Data Polling Toggle Flag DQ5 Error Flag DQ4 X DQ3 Erase Timeout DQ2 X DQ1 X DQ0 X Note: 1. X = Not guaranteed value, can be read either '1' or ’0.’ 2. DQ7-DQ0 represent the Data Bus bits, D7-D0. 3. FS0-FS7 and CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3 are active High. 23/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Data Polling Flag (DQ7) When erasing or programming in Flash memory, the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) outputs the complement of the bit being entered for programming/ writing on the DQ7 Bit. Once the Program instruction or the WRITE operation is completed, the true logic value is read on the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7, in a READ operation). – Data Polling is effective after the fourth WRITE pulse (for a Program instruction) or after the sixth WRITE pulse (for an Erase instruction). It must be performed at the address being programmed or at an address within the Flash memory sector being erased. – During an Erase cycle, the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) outputs a ’0.’ After completion of the cycle, the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) outputs the last bit programmed (it is a '1' after erasing). – If the byte to be programmed is in a protected Flash memory sector, the instruction is ignored. – If all the Flash memory sectors to be erased are protected, the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) is reset to '0' for about 100µs, and then returns to the previous addressed byte. No erasure is performed. Toggle Flag (DQ6) The PSD offers another way for determining when the Flash memory Program cycle is completed. During the internal WRITE operation and when either the FS0-FS7 or CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3 is true, the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) toggles from '0' to '1' and '1' to '0' on subsequent attempts to read any byte of the memory. When the internal cycle is complete, the toggling stops and the data read on the Data Bus D0-D7 is the addressed memory byte. The device is now accessible for a new READ or WRITE operation. The cycle is finished when two successive READs yield the same output data. 24/110 – The Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) is effective after the fourth WRITE pulse (for a Program instruction) or after the sixth WRITE pulse (for an Erase instruction). – If the byte to be programmed belongs to a protected Flash memory sector, the instruction is ignored. – If all the Flash memory sectors selected for erasure are protected, the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) toggles to '0' for about 100µs and then returns to the previous addressed byte. Error Flag (DQ5) During a normal Program or Erase cycle, the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) is to ’0.’ This bit is set to '1' when there is a failure during Flash memory Byte Program, Sector Erase, or Bulk Erase cycle. In the case of Flash memory programming, the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) indicates the attempt to program a Flash memory bit from the programmed state, ’0,’ to the erased state, '1,' which is not valid. The Error Flag Bit (DQ5) may also indicate a Time-out condition while attempting to program a byte. In case of an error in a Flash memory Sector Erase or Byte Program cycle, the Flash memory sector in which the error occurred or to which the programmed byte belongs must no longer be used. Other Flash memory sectors may still be used. The Error Flag Bit (DQ5) is reset after a Reset Flash instruction. Erase Time-out Flag (DQ3) The Erase Time-out Flag Bit (DQ3) reflects the time-out period allowed between two consecutive Sector Erase instructions. The Erase Time-out Flag Bit (DQ3) is reset to '0' after a Sector Erase cycle for a time period of 100µs + 20% unless an additional Sector Erase instruction is decoded. After this time period, or when the additional Sector Erase instruction is decoded, the Erase Time-out Flag Bit (DQ3) is set to '1.' PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PROGRAMMING FLASH MEMORY Flash memory must be erased prior to being programmed. A byte of Flash memory is erased to all 1s (FFh), and is programmed by setting selected bits to ’0.’ The MCU may erase Flash memory all at once or by-sector, but not byte-by-byte. However, the MCU may program Flash memory byte-bybyte. The primary and secondary Flash memories require the MCU to send an instruction to program a byte or to erase sectors (see Table 9., page 21). Once the MCU issues a Flash memory Program or Erase instruction, it must check for the status bits for completion. The embedded algorithms that are invoked inside the PSD support several means to provide status to the MCU. Status may be checked using any of three methods: Data Polling, Data Toggle, or Ready/Busy (PC3). Data Polling Polling on the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) is a method of checking whether a Program or Erase cycle is in progress or has completed. Figure 7 shows the Data Polling algorithm. When the MCU issues a Program instruction, the embedded algorithm within the PSD begins. The MCU then reads the location of the byte to be programmed in Flash memory to check status. The Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) of this location becomes the complement of b7 of the original data byte to be programmed. The MCU continues to poll this location, comparing the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) and monitoring the Error Flag Bit (DQ5). When the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) matches b7 of the original data, and the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) remains ’0,’ the embedded algorithm is complete. If the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) is '1,' the MCU should test the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) again since the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) may have changed simultaneously with the Error Flag Bit (DQ5, see Figure 7). The Error Flag Bit (DQ5) is set if either an internal time-out occurred while the embedded algorithm attempted to program the byte or if the MCU attempted to program a '1' to a bit that was not erased (not erased is logic '0'). It is suggested (as with all Flash memories) to read the location again after the embedded program- ming algorithm has completed, to compare the byte that was written to the Flash memory with the byte that was intended to be written. When using the Data Polling method during an Erase cycle, Figure 7 still applies. However, the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) is '0' until the Erase cycle is complete. A 1 on the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) indicates a time-out condition on the Erase cycle; a 0 indicates no error. The MCU can read any location within the sector being erased to get the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7) and the Error Flag Bit (DQ5). PSDsoft Express generates ANSI C code functions which implement these Data Polling algorithms. Figure 7. Data Polling Flowchart START READ DQ5 & DQ7 at VALID ADDRESS DQ7 = DATA YES NO NO DQ5 =1 YES READ DQ7 DQ7 = DATA YES NO FAIL PASS AI01369B 25/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Data Toggle Checking the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) is a method of determining whether a Program or Erase cycle is in progress or has completed. Figure 8 shows the Data Toggle algorithm. When the MCU issues a Program instruction, the embedded algorithm within the PSD begins. The MCU then reads the location of the byte to be programmed in Flash memory to check status. The Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) of this location toggles each time the MCU reads this location until the embedded algorithm is complete. The MCU continues to read this location, checking the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) and monitoring the Error Flag Bit (DQ5). When the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) stops toggling (two consecutive reads yield the same value), and the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) remains ’0,’ the embedded algorithm is complete. If the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) is '1,' the MCU should test the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) again, since the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) may have changed simultaneously with the Error Flag Bit (DQ5, see Figure 8). The Error Flag Bit (DQ5) is set if either an internal time-out occurred while the embedded algorithm attempted to program the byte, or if the MCU attempted to program a '1' to a bit that was not erased (not erased is logic '0'). It is suggested (as with all Flash memories) to read the location again after the embedded programming algorithm has completed, to compare the byte that was written to Flash memory with the byte that was intended to be written. When using the Data Toggle method after an Erase cycle, Figure 8 still applies. the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) toggles until the Erase cycle is complete. A '1' on the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) indicates a timeout condition on the Erase cycle; a '0' indicates no error. The MCU can read any location within the sector being erased to get the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) and the Error Flag Bit (DQ5). PSDsoft Express generates ANSI C code functions which implement these Data Toggling algorithms. Unlock Bypass (PSD833F2x, PSD834F2x, PSD853F2x, PSD854F2x) The Unlock Bypass instructions allow the system to program bytes to the Flash memories faster than using the standard Program instruction. The Unlock Bypass mode is entered by first initiating two Unlock cycles. This is followed by a third WRITE cycle containing the Unlock Bypass code, 20h (as shown in Table 9., page 21). 26/110 The Flash memory then enters the Unlock Bypass mode. A two-cycle Unlock Bypass Program instruction is all that is required to program in this mode. The first cycle in this instruction contains the Unlock Bypass Program code, A0h. The second cycle contains the program address and data. Additional data is programmed in the same manner. These instructions dispense with the initial two Unlock cycles required in the standard Program instruction, resulting in faster total Flash memory programming. During the Unlock Bypass mode, only the Unlock Bypass Program and Unlock Bypass Reset Flash instructions are valid. To exit the Unlock Bypass mode, the system must issue the two-cycle Unlock Bypass Reset Flash instruction. The first cycle must contain the data 90h; the second cycle the data 00h. Addresses are Don’t Care for both cycles. The Flash memory then returns to READ Mode. Figure 8. Data Toggle Flowchart START READ DQ5 & DQ6 DQ6 = TOGGLE NO YES NO DQ5 =1 YES READ DQ6 DQ6 = TOGGLE NO YES FAIL PASS AI01370B PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 ERASING FLASH MEMORY Flash Bulk Erase The Flash Bulk Erase instruction uses six WRITE operations followed by a READ operation of the status register, as described in Table 9., page 21. If any byte of the Bulk Erase instruction is wrong, the Bulk Erase instruction aborts and the device is reset to the Read Flash memory status. During a Bulk Erase, the memory status may be checked by reading the Error Flag Bit (DQ5), the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6), and the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7), as detailed in the section entitled PROGRAMMING FLASH MEMORY, page 25. The Error Flag Bit (DQ5) returns a '1' if there has been an Erase Failure (maximum number of Erase cycles have been executed). It is not necessary to program the memory with 00h because the PSD automatically does this before erasing to 0FFh. During execution of the Bulk Erase instruction, the Flash memory does not accept any instructions. Flash Sector Erase The Sector Erase instruction uses six WRITE operations, as described in Table 9., page 21. Additional Flash Sector Erase codes and Flash memory sector addresses can be written subsequently to erase other Flash memory sectors in parallel, without further coded cycles, if the additional bytes are transmitted in a shorter time than the time-out period of about 100µs. The input of a new Sector Erase code restarts the time-out period. The status of the internal timer can be monitored through the level of the Erase Time-out Flag Bit (DQ3). If the Erase Time-out Flag Bit (DQ3) is ’0,’ the Sector Erase instruction has been received and the time-out period is counting. If the Erase Time-out Flag Bit (DQ3) is '1,' the time-out period has expired and the PSD is busy erasing the Flash memory sector(s). Before and during Erase timeout, any instruction other than Suspend Sector Erase and Resume Sector Erase instructions abort the cycle that is currently in progress, and reset the device to READ Mode. It is not necessary to program the Flash memory sector with 00h as the PSD does this automatically before erasing (byte = FFh). During a Sector Erase, the memory status may be checked by reading the Error Flag Bit (DQ5), the Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6), and the Data Polling Flag Bit (DQ7), as detailed in the section entitled PROGRAMMING FLASH MEMORY, page 25. During execution of the Erase cycle, the Flash memory accepts only Reset and Suspend Sector Erase instructions. Erasure of one Flash memory sector may be suspended, in order to read data from another Flash memory sector, and then resumed. Suspend Sector Erase When a Sector Erase cycle is in progress, the Suspend Sector Erase instruction can be used to suspend the cycle by writing 0B0h to any address when an appropriate Sector Select (FS0-FS7 or CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) is High. (See Table 9., page 21). This allows reading of data from another Flash memory sector after the Erase cycle has been suspended. Suspend Sector Erase is accepted only during an Erase cycle and defaults to READ Mode. A Suspend Sector Erase instruction executed during an Erase time-out period, in addition to suspending the Erase cycle, terminates the time out period. The Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) stops toggling when the PSD internal logic is suspended. The status of this bit must be monitored at an address within the Flash memory sector being erased. The Toggle Flag Bit (DQ6) stops toggling between 0.1µs and 15µs after the Suspend Sector Erase instruction has been executed. The PSD is then automatically set to READ Mode. If an Suspend Sector Erase instruction was executed, the following rules apply: – Attempting to read from a Flash memory sector that was being erased outputs invalid data. – Reading from a Flash sector that was not being erased is valid. – The Flash memory cannot be programmed, and only responds to Resume Sector Erase and Reset Flash instructions (READ is an operation and is allowed). – If a Reset Flash instruction is received, data in the Flash memory sector that was being erased is invalid. Resume Sector Erase If a Suspend Sector Erase instruction was previously executed, the erase cycle may be resumed with this instruction. The Resume Sector Erase instruction consists of writing 030h to any address while an appropriate Sector Select (FS0-FS7 or CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) is High. (See Table 9., page 21.) 27/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 SPECIFIC FEATURES Flash Memory Sector Protect Each primary and secondary Flash memory sector can be separately protected against Program and Erase cycles. Sector Protection provides additional data security because it disables all Program or Erase cycles. This mode can be activated through the JTAG Port or a Device Programmer. Sector protection can be selected for each sector using the PSDsoft Express Configuration program. This automatically protects selected sectors when the device is programmed through the JTAG Port or a Device Programmer. Flash memory sectors can be unprotected to allow updating of their contents using the JTAG Port or a Device Programmer. The MCU can read (but cannot change) the sector protection bits. Any attempt to program or erase a protected Flash memory sector is ignored by the device. The Verify operation results in a READ of the protected data. This allows a guarantee of the retention of the Protection status. The sector protection status can be read by the MCU through the Flash memory protection and PSD/EE protection registers (in the CSIOP block). See Tables 11 and 12. Reset Flash The Reset Flash instruction consists of one WRITE cycle (see Table 9., page 21). It can also be optionally preceded by the standard two WRITE decoding cycles (writing AAh to 555h and 55h to AAAh). It must be executed after: – Reading the Flash Protection Status or Flash ID – An Error condition has occurred (and the device has set the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) to '1') during a Flash memory Program or Erase cycle. On the PSD813F2/3/4/5, the Reset Flash instruction puts the Flash memory back into normal READ Mode. It may take the Flash memory up to a few milliseconds to complete the Reset cycle. The Reset Flash instruction is ignored when it is issued during a Program or Bulk Erase cycle of the Flash memory. The Reset Flash instruction aborts any on-going Sector Erase cycle, and returns the Flash memory to the normal READ Mode within a few milliseconds. On the PSD83xF2 or PSD85xF2, the Reset Flash instruction puts the Flash memory back into normal READ Mode. If an Error condition has occurred (and the device has set the Error Flag Bit (DQ5) to '1') the Flash memory is put back into normal READ Mode within 25µs of the Reset Flash instruction having been issued. The Reset Flash instruction is ignored when it is issued during a Program or Bulk Erase cycle of the Flash memory. The Reset Flash instruction aborts any on-going Sector Erase cycle, and returns the Flash memory to the normal READ Mode within 25µs. Reset (RESET) Signal (on the PSD83xF2 and PSD85xF2) A pulse on Reset (RESET) aborts any cycle that is in progress, and resets the Flash memory to the READ Mode. When the reset occurs during a Program or Erase cycle, the Flash memory takes up to 25µs to return to the READ Mode. It is recommended that the Reset (RESET) pulse (except for Power On Reset, as described on RESET TIMING AND DEVICE STATUS AT RESET, page 67) be at least 25µs so that the Flash memory is always ready for the MCU to fetch the bootstrap instructions after the Reset cycle is complete. Table 11. Sector Protection/Security Bit Definition – Flash Protection Register Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Sec7_Prot Sec6_Prot Sec5_Prot Sec4_Prot Sec3_Prot Sec2_Prot Sec1_Prot Sec0_Prot Note: 1. Bit Definitions: Sec<i>_Prot 1 = Primary Flash memory or secondary Flash memory Sector <i> is write protected. Sec<i>_Prot 0 = Primary Flash memory or secondary Flash memory Sector <i> is not write protected. Table 12. Sector Protection/Security Bit Definition – PSD/EE Protection Register Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Security_Bit not used not used not used Sec3_Prot Sec2_Prot Sec1_Prot Sec0_Prot Note: 1. Bit Definitions: Sec<i>_Prot 1 = Secondary Flash memory Sector <i> is write protected. Sec<i>_Prot 0 = Secondary Flash memory Sector <i> is not write protected. Security_Bit 0 = Security Bit in device has not been set. 1 = Security Bit in device has been set. 28/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 SRAM The SRAM is enabled when SRAM Select (RS0) from the DPLD is High. SRAM Select (RS0) can contain up to two product terms, allowing flexible memory mapping. The SRAM can be backed up using an external battery. The external battery should be connected to Voltage Stand-by (VSTBY, PC2). If you have an external battery connected to the PSD, the contents of the SRAM are retained in the event of a power loss. The contents of the SRAM are retained so long as the battery voltage remains at 2 V or greater. If the supply voltage falls below the battery voltage, an internal power switch-over to the battery occurs. PC4 can be configured as an output that indicates when power is being drawn from the external battery. Battery-on Indicator (VBATON, PC4) is High with the supply voltage falls below the battery voltage and the battery on Voltage Stand-by (VSTBY, PC2) is supplying power to the internal SRAM. SRAM Select (RS0), Voltage Stand-by (VSTBY, PC2) and Battery-on Indicator (VBATON, PC4) are all configured using PSDsoft Express Configuration. 29/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 SECTOR SELECT AND SRAM SELECT Sector Select (FS0-FS7, CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) and SRAM Select (RS0) are all outputs of the DPLD. They are setup by writing equations for them in PSDabel. The following rules apply to the equations for these signals: 1. Primary Flash memory and secondary Flash memory Sector Select signals must not be larger than the physical sector size. 2. Any primary Flash memory sector must not be mapped in the same memory space as another Flash memory sector. 3. A secondary Flash memory sector must not be mapped in the same memory space as another secondary Flash memory sector. 4. SRAM, I/O, and Peripheral I/O spaces must not overlap. 5. A secondary Flash memory sector may overlap a primary Flash memory sector. In case of overlap, priority is given to the secondary Flash memory sector. 6. SRAM, I/O, and Peripheral I/O spaces may overlap any other memory sector. Priority is given to the SRAM, I/O, or Peripheral I/O. Example FS0 is valid when the address is in the range of 8000h to BFFFh, CSBOOT0 is valid from 8000h to 9FFFh, and RS0 is valid from 8000h to 87FFh. Any address in the range of RS0 always accesses the SRAM. Any address in the range of CSBOOT0 greater than 87FFh (and less than 9FFFh) automatically addresses secondary Flash memory segment 0. Any address greater than 9FFFh accesses the primary Flash memory segment 0. You can see that half of the primary Flash memory segment 0 and one-fourth of secondary Flash memory segment 0 cannot be accessed in this example. Also note that an equation that defined FS1 to anywhere in the range of 8000h to BFFFh would not be valid. Figure 9 shows the priority levels for all memory components. Any component on a higher level can overlap and has priority over any component on a lower level. Components on the same level must not overlap. Level one has the highest priority and level 3 has the lowest. Memory Select Configuration for MCUs with Separate Program and Data Spaces The 8031 and compatible family of MCUs, which includes the 80C51, 80C151, 80C251, and 80C51XA, have separate address spaces for Program memory (selected using Program Select Enable (PSEN, CNTL2)) and Data memory (selected using Read Strobe (RD, CNTL1)). Any of the memories within the PSD can reside in either space or both spaces. 30/110 This is controlled through manipulation of the VM register that resides in the CSIOP space. The VM register is set using PSDsoft Express to have an initial value. It can subsequently be changed by the MCU so that memory mapping can be changed on-the-fly. For example, you may wish to have SRAM and primary Flash memory in the Data space at Boot-up, and secondary Flash memory in the Program space at Boot-up, and later swap the primary and secondary Flash memories. This is easily done with the VM register by using PSDsoft Express Configuration to configure it for Boot-up and having the MCU change it when desired. Table 13., page 31 describes the VM Register. Figure 9. Priority Level of Memory and I/O Components Highest Priority Level 1 SRAM, I /O, or Peripheral I /O Level 2 Secondary Non-Volatile Memory Level 3 Primary Flash Memory Lowest Priority AI02867D Configuration Modes for MCUs with Separate Program and Data Spaces Separate Space Modes. Program space is separated from Data space. For example, Program Select Enable (PSEN, CNTL2) is used to access the program code from the primary Flash memory, while Read Strobe (RD, CNTL1) is used to access data from the secondary Flash memory, SRAM and I/O Port blocks. This configuration requires the VM register to be set to 0Ch (see Figure 10., page 31). Combined Space Modes. The Program and Data spaces are combined into one memory space that allows the primary Flash memory, secondary Flash memory, and SRAM to be accessed by either Program Select Enable (PSEN, CNTL2) or Read Strobe (RD, CNTL1). For example, to configure the primary Flash memory in Combined space, Bits b2 and b4 of the VM register are set to '1' (see Figure 11., page 31). PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 10. 8031 Memory Modules – Separate Space DPLD Primary Flash Memory RS0 Secondary Flash Memory SRAM CSBOOT0-3 FS0-FS7 CS CS OE CS OE OE PSEN RD AI02869C Figure 11. 8031 Memory Modules – Combined Space DPLD RD RS0 Primary Flash Memory Secondary Flash Memory SRAM CSBOOT0-3 FS0-FS7 CS CS OE CS OE OE VM REG BIT 3 VM REG BIT 4 PSEN VM REG BIT 1 RD VM REG BIT 2 VM REG BIT 0 AI02870C Table 13. VM Register Bit 7 PIO_EN Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Primary FL_Data Bit 3 Secondary EE_Data Bit 2 Primary FL_Code Bit 1 Secondary EE_Code Bit 0 SRAM_Code 0 = disable PIO mode not used not used 0 = RD can’t access Flash memory 0 = RD can’t access Secondary Flash memory 0 = PSEN can’t access Flash memory 0 = PSEN can’t access Secondary Flash memory 0 = PSEN can’t access SRAM 1= enable PIO mode not used not used 1 = RD access Flash memory 1 = RD access Secondary Flash memory 1 = PSEN access Flash memory 1 = PSEN access Secondary Flash memory 1 = PSEN access SRAM 31/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PAGE REGISTER The 8-bit Page Register increases the addressing capability of the MCU by a factor of up to 256. The contents of the register can also be read by the MCU. The outputs of the Page Register (PGR0PGR7) are inputs to the DPLD decoder and can be included in the Sector Select (FS0-FS7, CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3), and SRAM Select (RS0) equations. If memory paging is not needed, or if not all 8 page register bits are needed for memory paging, then these bits may be used in the CPLD for general logic. See Application Note AN1154. Figure 12 shows the Page Register. The eight flipflops in the register are connected to the internal data bus D0-D7. The MCU can write to or read from the Page Register. The Page Register can be accessed at address location CSIOP + E0h. Figure 12. Page Register RESET D0 D0 - D7 Q0 D1 Q1 D2 Q2 D3 Q3 D4 Q4 D5 Q5 D6 Q6 D7 Q7 PGR0 INTERNAL SELECTS AND LOGIC PGR1 PGR2 PGR3 PGR4 DPLD AND CPLD PGR5 PGR6 PGR7 R/W PAGE REGISTER 32/110 PLD AI02871B PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PLDS The PLDs bring programmable logic functionality to the PSD. After specifying the logic for the PLDs using the PSDabel tool in PSDsoft Express, the logic is programmed into the device and available upon Power-up. The PSD contains two PLDs: the Decode PLD (DPLD), and the Complex PLD (CPLD). The PLDs are briefly discussed in the next few paragraphs, and in more detail in the section entitled Decode PLD (DPLD), page 35 and the section entitled Complex PLD (CPLD), page 36. Figure 13., page 34 shows the configuration of the PLDs. The DPLD performs address decoding for Select signals for internal components, such as memory, registers, and I/O ports. The CPLD can be used for logic functions, such as loadable counters and shift registers, state machines, and encoding and decoding logic. These logic functions can be constructed using the 16 Output Macrocells (OMC), 24 Input Macrocells (IMC), and the AND Array. The CPLD can also be used to generate External Chip Select (ECS0ECS2) signals. The AND Array is used to form product terms. These product terms are specified using PSDabel. An Input Bus consisting of 73 signals is connected to the PLDs. The signals are shown in Table 14. The Turbo Bit in PSD The PLDs in the PSD can minimize power consumption by switching off when inputs remain unchanged for an extended time of about 70ns. Resetting the Turbo Bit to '0' (Bit 3 of PMMR0) automatically places the PLDs into standby if no inputs are changing. Turning the Turbo mode off increases propagation delays while reducing power consumption. See the section entitled POWER MANAGEMENT, page 62 on how to set the Turbo Bit. Additionally, five bits are available in PMMR2 to block MCU control signals from entering the PLDs. This reduces power consumption and can be used only when these MCU control signals are not used in PLD logic equations. Each of the two PLDs has unique characteristics suited for its applications. They are described in the following sections. Table 14. DPLD and CPLD Inputs Input Name Number of Signals A15-A0 16 CNTL2-CNTL0 3 Reset RST 1 Power-down PDN 1 Port A Input Macrocells PA7-PA0 8 Port B Input Macrocells PB7-PB0 8 Port C Input Macrocells PC7-PC0 8 Port D Inputs PD2-PD0 3 Page Register PGR7-PGR0 8 Macrocell AB Feedback MCELLAB.FB7FB0 8 Macrocell BC Feedback MCELLBC.FB7FB0 8 Ready/Busy 1 Input Source MCU Address Bus1 MCU Control Signals Secondary Flash memory Program Status Bit Note: 1. The address inputs are A19-A4 in 80C51XA mode. 33/110 34/110 16 1 2 1 1 4 8 CPLD PT ALLOC. OUTPUT MACROCELL FEEDBACK DECODE PLD PAGE REGISTER 24 INPUT MACROCELL (PORT A,B,C) INPUT MACROCELL & INPUT PORTS PORT D INPUTS 24 3 MACROCELL ALLOC. AI02872C 3 8 MCELLBC TO PORT B OR C EXTERNAL CHIP SELECTS TO PORT D 8 MCELLAB TO PORT A OR B DIRECT MACROCELL ACCESS FROM MCU DATA BUS JTAG SELECT PERIPHERAL SELECTS CSIOP SELECT SRAM SELECT SECONDARY NON-VOLATILE MEMORY SELECTS PRIMARY FLASH MEMORY SELECTS 16 OUTPUT MACROCELL DIRECT MACROCELL INPUT TO MCU DATA BUS 73 73 8 I/O PORTS DATA BUS PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 13. PLD Diagram PLD INPUT BUS PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Decode PLD (DPLD) The DPLD, shown in Figure 14, is used for decoding the address for internal and external components. The DPLD can be used to generate the following decode signals: ■ 8 Sector Select (FS0-FS7) signals for the primary Flash memory (three product terms each) ■ 4 Sector Select (CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) signals for the secondary Flash memory (three product terms each) ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 internal SRAM Select (RS0) signal (two product terms) 1 internal CSIOP Select (PSD Configuration Register) signal 1 JTAG Select signal (enables JTAG on Port C) 2 internal Peripheral Select signals (Peripheral I/O mode). Figure 14. DPLD Logic Array (INPUTS) I /O PORTS (PORT A,B,C) 3 CSBOOT 0 3 CSBOOT 1 3 CSBOOT 2 3 CSBOOT 3 3 FS0 (24) 3 MCELLAB.FB [7:0] (FEEDBACKS) FS1 (8) 3 MCELLBC.FB [7:0] (FEEDBACKS) FS2 (8) 3 PGR0 - PGR7 FS3 (8) 3 A[15:0] * PD[2:0] (ALE,CLKIN,CSI) (16) 3 FS5 (3) 3 PDN (APD OUTPUT) FS6 (1) 3 CNTRL[2:0] (READ/WRITE CONTROL SIGNALS) (3) RESET (1) RD_BSY (1) 8 PRIMARY FLASH MEMORY SECTOR SELECTS FS4 FS7 2 RS0 1 CSIOP 1 PSEL0 1 PSEL1 1 JTAGSEL SRAM SELECT I/O DECODER SELECT PERIPHERAL I/O MODE SELECT AI02873D 35/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Complex PLD (CPLD) The CPLD can be used to implement system logic functions, such as loadable counters and shift registers, system mailboxes, handshaking protocols, state machines, and random logic. The CPLD can also be used to generate three External Chip Select (ECS0-ECS2), routed to Port D. Although External Chip Select (ECS0-ECS2) can be produced by any Output Macrocell (OMC), these three External Chip Select (ECS0-ECS2) on Port D do not consume any Output Macrocells (OMC). As shown in Figure 13., page 34, the CPLD has the following blocks: ■ 24 Input Macrocells (IMC) ■ 16 Output Macrocells (OMC) ■ Macrocell Allocator Product Term Allocator AND Array capable of generating up to 137 product terms ■ Four I/O Ports. Each of the blocks are described in the sections that follow. The Input Macrocells (IMC) and Output Macrocells (OMC) are connected to the PSD internal data bus and can be directly accessed by the MCU. This enables the MCU software to load data into the Output Macrocells (OMC) or read data from both the Input and Output Macrocells (IMC and OMC). This feature allows efficient implementation of system logic and eliminates the need to connect the data bus to the AND Array as required in most standard PLD macrocell architectures. ■ ■ Figure 15. Macrocell and I/O Port PLD INPUT BUS PRODUCT TERMS FROM OTHER MACROCELLS MCU ADDRESS / DATA BUS TO OTHER I/O PORTS CPLD MACROCELLS I/O PORTS DATA LOAD CONTROL PT PRESET MCU DATA IN PRODUCT TERM ALLOCATOR LATCHED ADDRESS OUT DATA MCU LOAD I/O PIN D Q MUX POLARITY SELECT MUX AND ARRAY WR UP TO 10 PRODUCT TERMS CPLD OUTPUT PR DI LD D/T MUX PT CLOCK PLD INPUT BUS MACROCELL OUT TO MCU GLOBAL CLOCK CK CL CLOCK SELECT SELECT Q D/T/JK FF SELECT COMB. /REG SELECT CPLD OUTPUT PDR MACROCELL TO I/O PORT ALLOC. INPUT Q DIR REG. D WR PT CLEAR PT OUTPUT ENABLE (OE) MACROCELL FEEDBACK INPUT MACROCELLS MUX I/O PORT INPUT ALE/AS MUX PT INPUT LATCH GATE/CLOCK Q D Q D G AI02874 36/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Output Macrocell (OMC) Eight of the Output Macrocells (OMC) are connected to Ports A and B pins and are named as McellAB0-McellAB7. The other eight macrocells are connected to Ports B and C pins and are named as McellBC0-McellBC7. If an McellAB output is not assigned to a specific pin in PSDabel, the Macrocell Allocator block assigns it to either Port A or B. The same is true for a McellBC output on Port B or C. Table 15 shows the macrocells and port assignment. The Output Macrocell (OMC) architecture is shown in Figure 16., page 39. As shown in the figure, there are native product terms available from the AND Array, and borrowed product terms available (if unused) from other Output Macrocells (OMC). The polarity of the product term is con- trolled by the XOR gate. The Output Macrocell (OMC) can implement either sequential logic, using the flip-flop element, or combinatorial logic. The multiplexer selects between the sequential or combinatorial logic outputs. The multiplexer output can drive a port pin and has a feedback path to the AND Array inputs. The flip-flop in the Output Macrocell (OMC) block can be configured as a D, T, JK, or SR type in the PSDabel program. The flip-flop’s clock, preset, and clear inputs may be driven from a product term of the AND Array. Alternatively, CLKIN (PD1) can be used for the clock input to the flip-flop. The flip-flop is clocked on the rising edge of CLKIN (PD1). The preset and clear are active High inputs. Each clear input can use up to two product terms. Table 15. Output Macrocell Port and Data Bit Assignments Output Macrocell Port Assignment Native Product Terms Maximum Borrowed Product Terms Data Bit for Loading or Reading McellAB0 Port A0, B0 3 6 D0 McellAB1 Port A1, B1 3 6 D1 McellAB2 Port A2, B2 3 6 D2 McellAB3 Port A3, B3 3 6 D3 McellAB4 Port A4, B4 3 6 D4 McellAB5 Port A5, B5 3 6 D5 McellAB6 Port A6, B6 3 6 D6 McellAB7 Port A7, B7 3 6 D7 McellBC0 Port B0, C0 4 5 D0 McellBC1 Port B1, C1 4 5 D1 McellBC2 Port B2, C2 4 5 D2 McellBC3 Port B3, C3 4 5 D3 McellBC4 Port B4, C4 4 6 D4 McellBC5 Port B5, C5 4 6 D5 McellBC6 Port B6, C6 4 6 D6 McellBC7 Port B7, C7 4 6 D7 37/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Product Term Allocator The CPLD has a Product Term Allocator. The PSDabel compiler uses the Product Term Allocator to borrow and place product terms from one macrocell to another. The following list summarizes how product terms are allocated: ■ McellAB0-McellAB7 all have three native product terms and may borrow up to six more ■ McellBC0-McellBC3 all have four native product terms and may borrow up to five more ■ McellBC4-McellBC7 all have four native product terms and may borrow up to six more. Each macrocell may only borrow product terms from certain other macrocells. Product terms already in use by one macrocell are not available for another macrocell. If an equation requires more product terms than are available to it, then “external” product terms are required, which consume other Output Macrocells (OMC). If external product terms are used, extra delay is added for the equation that required the extra product terms. This is called product term expansion. PSDsoft Express performs this expansion as needed. Loading and Reading the Output Macrocells (OMC) The Output Macrocells (OMC) block occupies a memory location in the MCU address space, as defined by the CSIOP block (see the section entitled I/O PORTS, page 51). The flip-flops in each of the 16 Output Macrocells (OMC) can be loaded from the data bus by a MCU. Loading the Output Macrocells (OMC) with data from the MCU takes priority over internal functions. As such, the preset, clear, and clock inputs to the flip-flop can be overridden by the MCU. The ability to load the flip-flops and read them back is useful in such applications as loadable counters and shift registers, mailboxes, and handshaking protocols. 38/110 Data can be loaded to the Output Macrocells (OMC) on the trailing edge of Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0) (edge loading) or during the time that Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0) is active (level loading). The method of loading is specified in PSDsoft Express Configuration. The OMC Mask Register There is one Mask Register for each of the two groups of eight Output Macrocells (OMC). The Mask Registers can be used to block the loading of data to individual Output Macrocells (OMC). The default value for the Mask Registers is 00h, which allows loading of the Output Macrocells (OMC). When a given bit in a Mask Register is set to a 1, the MCU is blocked from writing to the associated Output Macrocells (OMC). For example, suppose McellAB0-McellAB3 are being used for a state machine. You would not want a MCU write to McellAB to overwrite the state machine registers. Therefore, you would want to load the Mask Register for McellAB (Mask Macrocell AB) with the value 0Fh. The Output Enable of the OMC The Output Macrocells (OMC) block can be connected to an I/O port pin as a PLD output. The output enable of each port pin driver is controlled by a single product term from the AND Array, ORed with the Direction Register output. The pin is enabled upon Power-up if no output enable equation is defined and if the pin is declared as a PLD output in PSDsoft Express. If the Output Macrocell (OMC) output is declared as an internal node and not as a port pin output in the PSDabel file, the port pin can be used for other I/O functions. The internal node feedback can be routed as an input to the AND Array. AND ARRAY PLD INPUT BUS CLKIN PT CLK PT PT PT PT ALLOCATOR PRESET(.PR) ENABLE (.OE) PORT INPUT FEEDBACK (.FB) MUX CLEAR (.RE) POLARITY SELECT WR RD MACROCELL CS MASK REG. Q MUX PROGRAMMABLE FF (D/T/JK /SR) CLR IN LD DIN PR COMB/REG SELECT DIRECTION REGISTER D [ 7:0] MACROCELL ALLOCATOR INTERNAL DATA BUS INPUT MACROCELL PORT DRIVER AI02875B I/O PIN PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 16. CPLD Output Macrocell 39/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Input Macrocells (IMC) The CPLD has 24 Input Macrocells (IMC), one for each pin on Ports A, B, and C. The architecture of the Input Macrocells (IMC) is shown in Figure 17., page 41. The Input Macrocells (IMC) are individually configurable, and can be used as a latch, register, or to pass incoming Port signals prior to driving them onto the PLD input bus. The outputs of the Input Macrocells (IMC) can be read by the MCU through the internal data bus. The enable for the latch and clock for the register are driven by a multiplexer whose inputs are a product term from the CPLD AND Array or the MCU Address Strobe (ALE/AS). Each product term output is used to latch or clock four Input Macrocells (IMC). Port inputs 3-0 can be controlled by one product term and 7-4 by another. Configurations for the Input Macrocells (IMC) are specified by equations written in PSDabel (see Application Note AN1171). Outputs of the Input Macrocells (IMC) can be read by the MCU via the IMC buffer. See the section entitled I/O PORTS, page 51. 40/110 Input Macrocells (IMC) can use Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) to latch address bits higher than A15. Any latched addresses are routed to the PLDs as inputs. Input Macrocells (IMC) are particularly useful with handshaking communication applications where two processors pass data back and forth through a common mailbox. Figure 18., page 42 shows a typical configuration where the Master MCU writes to the Port A Data Out Register. This, in turn, can be read by the Slave MCU via the activation of the “Slave-Read” output enable product term. The Slave can also write to the Port A Input Macrocells (IMC) and the Master can then read the Input Macrocells (IMC) directly. Note that the “Slave-Read” and “Slave-Wr” signals are product terms that are derived from the Slave MCU inputs Read Strobe (RD, CNTL1), Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0), and Slave_CS. AND ARRAY PLD INPUT BUS FEEDBACK PT PT ENABLE ( .OE ) MUX OUTPUT MACROCELLS BC AND MACROCELL AB G D D LATCH Q D FF Q INPUT MACROCELL _ RD ALE/AS DIRECTION REGISTER D [ 7:0] INPUT MACROCELL MUX PT INTERNAL DATA BUS PORT DRIVER AI02876B I/O PIN PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 17. Input Macrocell 41/110 MASTER MCU 42/110 D [ 7:0] MCU- WR MCU- RD PSD MCU-RD CPLD D Q Q D PORT A INPUT MACROCELL SLAVE–WR MCU-WR PORT A DATA OUT REGISTER SLAVE–READ WR RD SLAVE– CS PORT A D [ 7:0] AI02877C SLAVE MCU PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 18. Handshaking Communication Using Input Macrocells PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 MCU BUS INTERFACE The “no-glue logic” MCU Bus Interface block can be directly connected to most popular MCUs and their control signals. Key 8-bit MCUs, with their bus types and control signals, are shown in Table 16. The interface type is specified using the PSDsoft Express Configuration. Table 16. MCUs and their Control Signals Data Bus Width CNTL0 CNTL1 CNTL2 8031 8 WR RD PSEN 80C51XA 8 WR RD PSEN 80C251 8 WR 80C251 8 80198 MCU PC7 PD02 ADIO0 PA3-PA0 PA7-PA3 (Note 1) ALE A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) (Note 1) ALE A4 A3-A0 (Note 1) PSEN (Note 1) (Note 1) ALE A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) WR RD PSEN (Note 1) ALE A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) 8 WR RD (Note 1) (Note 1) ALE A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) 68HC11 8 R/W E (Note 1) (Note 1) AS A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) 68HC912 8 R/W E (Note 1) DBE A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) Z80 8 WR RD (Note 1) (Note 1) (Note 1) A0 D3-D0 D7-D4 Z8 8 R/W DS (Note 1) (Note 1) AS A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) 68330 8 R/W DS (Note 1) (Note 1) AS A0 (Note 1) (Note 1) M37702M2 8 R/W E (Note 1) (Note 1) ALE A0 D3-D0 D7-D4 AS Note: 1. Unused CNTL2 pin can be configured as CPLD input. Other unused pins (PC7, PD0, PA3-0) can be configured for other I/O functions. 2. ALE/AS input is optional for MCUs with a non-multiplexed bus 43/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PSD Interface to a Multiplexed 8-Bit Bus Figure 19 shows an example of a system using a MCU with an 8-bit multiplexed bus and a PSD. The ADIO port on the PSD is connected directly to the MCU address/data bus. Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) latches the address signals internally. Latched addresses can be brought out to Port A or B. The PSD drives the ADIO data bus only when one of its internal resources is accessed and Read Strobe (RD, CNTL1) is active. Should the system address bus exceed sixteen bits, Ports A, B, C, or D may be used as additional address inputs. Figure 19. An Example of a Typical 8-bit Multiplexed Bus Interface PSD MCU AD [ 7:0] A[ 15:8] ADIO PORT WR WR (CNTRL0) RD RD (CNTRL1) BHE (CNTRL2) BHE RST ALE A [ 7: 0] PORT A (OPTIONAL) PORT B (OPTIONAL) A [ 15: 8] PORT C ALE (PD0) PORT D RESET 44/110 AI02878C PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PSD Interface to a Non-Multiplexed 8-Bit Bus Figure 20 shows an example of a system using a MCU with an 8-bit non-multiplexed bus and a PSD. The address bus is connected to the ADIO Port, and the data bus is connected to Port A. Port A is in tri-state mode when the PSD is not accessed by the MCU. Should the system address bus exceed sixteen bits, Ports B, C, or D may be used for additional address inputs. Data Byte Enable Reference MCUs have different data byte orientations. Table 17 shows how the PSD interprets byte/word operations in different bus WRITE configurations. Even-byte refers to locations with address A0 equal to '0' and odd byte as locations with A0 equal to ’1.’ MCU Bus Interface Examples Figure 21 through 25 show examples of the basic connections between the PSD and some popular MCUs. The PSD Control input pins are labeled as to the MCU function for which they are configured. The MCU bus interface is specified using the PSDsoft Express Configuration. Table 17. Eight-Bit Data Bus BHE A0 D7-D0 X 0 Even Byte X 1 Odd Byte Figure 20. An Example of a Typical 8-bit Non-Multiplexed Bus Interface PSD MCU D [ 7:0] ADIO PORT PORT A D [ 7:0] A [ 15:0] PORT B WR RD BHE WR (CNTRL0) (OPTIONAL) RD (CNTRL1) BHE (CNTRL2) RST ALE A[ 23:16] PORT C ALE (PD0) PORT D RESET AI02879C 45/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 80C31 Figure 21 shows the bus interface for the 80C31, which has an 8-bit multiplexed address/data bus. The lower address byte is multiplexed with the data bus. The MCU control signals Program Select Enable (PSEN, CNTL2), Read Strobe (RD, CNTL1), and Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0) may be used for accessing the internal memory and I/O Ports blocks. Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) latches the address. Figure 21. Interfacing the PSD with an 80C31 AD7-AD0 PSD 80C31 31 19 18 9 RESET 12 13 14 15 EA/VP X1 X2 RESET INT0 INT1 T0 T1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 P1.0 P1.1 P1.2 P1.3 P1.4 P1.5 P1.6 P1.7 P0.0 P0.1 P0.2 P0.3 P0.4 P0.5 P0.6 P0.7 P2.0 P2.1 P2.2 P2.3 P2.4 P2.5 P2.6 P2.7 RD WR PSEN ALE/P TXD RXD AD0 AD1 AD2 AD3 AD4 AD5 AD6 AD7 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 AD0 AD1 AD2 AD3 AD4 AD5 AD6 AD7 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 A8 A9 A10 A11 A12 A13 A14 A15 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 17 RD WR 47 16 29 30 11 10 RESET RESET AD[ 7:0 ] PSEN ALE 50 49 10 9 8 48 ADIO0 ADIO1 ADIO2 ADIO3 ADIO4 ADIO5 ADIO6 ADIO7 PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 ADIO8 ADIO9 ADIO10 ADIO11 ADIO12 ADIO13 ADIO14 ADIO15 PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 CNTL0 (WR) PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 CNTL1(RD) CNTL2 (PSEN) PD0-ALE PD1 PD2 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 7 6 5 4 3 2 52 51 20 19 18 17 14 13 12 11 RESET AI02880C 46/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 80C251 The Intel 80C251 MCU features a user-configurable bus interface with four possible bus configurations, as shown in Table 18., page 48. The first configuration is 80C31-compatible, and the bus interface to the PSD is identical to that shown in Figure 21., page 46. The second and third configurations have the same bus connection as shown in Figure 22. There is only one Read Strobe (PSEN) connected to CNTL1 on the PSD. The A16 connection to PA0 allows for a larger address input to the PSD. The fourth configuration is shown in Figure 23., page 48. Read Strobe (RD) is connected to CNTL1 and Program Select Enable (PSEN) is connected to CNTL2. The 80C251 has two major operating modes: Page mode and Non-page mode. In Non-page mode, the data is multiplexed with the lower address byte, and Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) is active in every bus cycle. In Page mode, data (D7D0) is multiplexed with address (A15-A8). In a bus cycle where there is a Page hit, Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) is not active and only addresses (A7-A0) are changing. The PSD supports both modes. In Page Mode, the PSD bus timing is identical to Non-Page Mode except the address hold time and setup time with respect to Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) is not required. The PSD access time is measured from address (A7-A0) valid to data in valid. Figure 22. Interfacing the PSD with the 80C251, with One READ Input PSD 80C251SB 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 21 20 11 13 14 15 16 17 RESET 10 35 P1.0 P1.1 P1.2 P1.3 P1.4 P1.5 P1.6 P1.7 P0.0 P0.1 P0.2 P0.3 P0.4 P0.5 P0.6 P0.7 X1 P2.0 P2.1 P2.2 P2.3 P2.4 P2.5 P2.6 P2.7 X2 P3.0/RXD P3.1/TXD P3.2/INT0 P3.3/INT1 P3.4/T0 P3.5/T1 RST EA ALE PSEN WR RD/A16 A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 AD8 AD9 AD10 AD11 AD12 AD13 AD14 AD15 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 AD8 AD9 AD10 AD11 AD12 AD13 AD14 AD15 33 ALE 47 32 RD 50 18 WR 19 A16 49 10 9 8 RESET RESET 48 ADIO0 ADIO1 ADIO2 ADIO3 ADIO4 ADIO5 ADIO6 ADIO7 ADIO8 ADIO9 ADIO10 ADIO11 ADIO12 ADIO13 ADIO14 ADIO15 CNTL0 ( WR) CNTL1( RD) CNTL 2(PSEN) PD0-ALE PD1 PD2 PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 A161 A171 7 6 5 4 3 2 52 51 20 19 18 17 14 13 12 11 RESET AI02881C Note: 1. The A16 and A17 connections are optional. 2. In non-Page-Mode, AD7-AD0 connects to ADIO7-ADIO0. 47/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 23. Interfacing the PSD with the 80C251, with RD and PSEN Inputs 80C251SB 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 21 20 11 13 14 15 16 17 RESET 10 35 PSD P1.0 P1.1 P1.2 P1.3 P1.4 P1.5 P1.6 P1.7 P0.0 P0.1 P0.2 P0.3 P0.4 P0.5 P0.6 P0.7 X1 P2.0 P2.1 P2.2 P2.3 P2.4 P2.5 P2.6 P2.7 X2 P3.0/RXD P3.1/TXD P3.2/INT0 P3.3/INT1 P3.4/T0 P3.5/T1 RST ALE PSEN WR RD/A16 EA 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 AD8 AD9 AD10 AD11 AD12 AD13 AD14 AD15 A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 AD8 AD9 AD10 AD11 AD12 AD13 AD14 AD15 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 33 ALE 47 32 RD 50 18 WR 19 PSEN 49 10 9 8 RESET RESET 48 ADIO0 ADIO1 ADIO2 ADIO3 ADIO4 ADIO5 ADIO6 ADIO7 PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 ADIO8 ADIO9 ADIO10 ADIO11 ADIO12 ADIO13 ADIO14 ADIO15 PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 CNTL0 ( WR) CNTL1( RD) CNTL 2(PSEN) PD0-ALE PD1 PD2 PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 7 6 5 4 3 2 52 51 20 19 18 17 14 13 12 11 RESET AI02882C Table 18. 80C251 Configurations Configuration 80C251 READ/WRITE Pins Connecting to PSD Pins Page Mode 1 WR RD PSEN CNTL0 CNTL1 CNTL2 Non-Page Mode, 80C31 compatible A7A0 multiplex with D7-D0 2 WR PSEN only CNTL0 CNTL1 Non-Page Mode A7-A0 multiplex with D7-D0 3 WR PSEN only CNTL0 CNTL1 Page Mode A15-A8 multiplex with D7-D0 4 WR RD PSEN CNTL0 CNTL1 CNTL2 Page Mode A15-A8 multiplex with D7-D0 48/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 80C51XA The Philips 80C51XA MCU family supports an 8or 16-bit multiplexed bus that can have burst cycles. Address bits (A3-A0) are not multiplexed, while (A19-A4) are multiplexed with data bits (D15-D0) in 16-bit mode. In 8-bit mode, (A11-A4) are multiplexed with data bits (D7-D0). The 80C51XA can be configured to operate in eight-bit data mode (as shown in Figure 24). The 80C51XA improves bus throughput and performance by executing burst cycles for code fetch- es. In Burst Mode, address A19-A4 are latched internally by the PSD, while the 80C51XA changes the A3-A0 signals to fetch up to 16 bytes of code. The PSD access time is then measured from address A3-A0 valid to data in valid. The PSD bus timing requirement in Burst Mode is identical to the normal bus cycle, except the address setup and hold time with respect to Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) does not apply. Figure 24. Interfacing the PSD with the 80C51X, 8-bit Data Bus PSD 80C51XA 21 20 11 13 6 7 9 8 16 RESET 10 14 15 XTAL1 XTAL2 RXD0 TXD0 RXD1 TXD1 T2EX T2 T0 RST INT0 INT1 A0/WRH A1 A2 A3 A4D0 A5D1 A6D2 A7D3 A8D4 A9D5 A10D6 A11D7 A12D8 A13D9 A14D10 A15D11 A16D12 A17D13 A18D14 A19D15 2 3 4 5 43 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 A0 A1 A2 A3 A4D0 A5D1 A6D2 A7D3 A8D4 A9D5 A10D6 A11D7 A12 A13 A14 A15 A16 A17 A18 A19 A4D0 A5D1 A6D2 A7D3 A8D4 A9D5 A10D6 A11D7 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 A12 A13 A14 A15 A16 A17 A18 A19 39 ADIO8 40 ADIO9 41 ADIO10 42 ADIO11 43 AD1012 44 AD1013 45 ADIO14 46 ADIO15 47 50 35 17 EA/WAIT BUSW PSEN RD WRL ALE 32 PSEN 49 19 RD WR ALE 10 8 9 18 33 48 ADIO0 ADIO1 ADIO2 ADIO3 AD104 AD105 ADIO6 ADIO7 CNTL0 (WR) CNTL1(RD) CNTL 2(PSEN) PD0-ALE PD1 PD2 PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 A0 A1 A2 A3 7 6 5 4 3 2 52 51 20 19 18 17 14 13 12 11 RESET RESET AI02883C 49/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 68HC11 Figure 25 shows a bus interface to a 68HC11 where the PSD is configured in 8-bit multiplexed mode with E and R/W settings. The DPLD can be used to generate the READ and WR signals for external devices. Figure 25. Interfacing the PSD with a 68HC11 AD7-AD0 AD7-AD0 PSD 31 30 29 28 27 AD0 AD1 AD2 AD3 AD4 AD5 AD6 AD7 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 42 41 40 39 38 37 36 35 A8 A9 A10 A11 A12 A13 A14 A15 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 68HC11 8 7 RESET 17 19 18 2 34 33 32 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 52 51 XT EX RESET IRQ XIRQ MODB PA0 PA1 PA2 PE0 PE1 PE2 PE3 PE4 PE5 PE6 PE7 VRH VRL PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 PD0 PD1 PD2 PD3 PD4 PD5 MODA E AS R/W 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 AD0 AD1 AD2 AD3 AD4 AD5 AD6 AD7 20 21 22 23 24 25 47 50 49 10 9 8 48 ADIO0 ADIO1 ADIO2 ADIO3 AD104 AD105 ADIO6 ADIO7 PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 ADIO8 ADIO9 ADIO10 ADIO11 AD1012 AD1013 ADIO14 ADIO15 PB0 PB1 PB2 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB6 PB7 CNTL0 (R _W) CNTL1(E) CNTL 2 PD0 – AS PD1 PD2 PC0 PC1 PC2 PC3 PC4 PC5 PC6 PC7 29 28 27 25 24 23 22 21 7 6 5 4 3 2 52 51 20 19 18 17 14 13 12 11 RESET 3 5 E 4 AS 6 R/W RESET AI02884C 50/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 I/O PORTS There are four programmable I/O ports: Ports A, B, C, and D. Each of the ports is eight bits except Port D, which is 3 bits. Each port pin is individually user configurable, thus allowing multiple functions per port. The ports are configured using PSDsoft Express Configuration or by the MCU writing to onchip registers in the CSIOP space. The topics discussed in this section are: ■ General Port architecture ■ Port operating modes ■ Port Configuration Registers (PCR) ■ Port Data Registers ■ Individual Port functionality. General Port Architecture The general architecture of the I/O Port block is shown in Figure 26., page 52. Individual Port architectures are shown in Figure 28., page 58 to Figure 31., page 61. In general, once the purpose for a port pin has been defined, that pin is no longer available for other purposes. Exceptions are noted. As shown in Figure 26., page 52, the ports contain an output multiplexer whose select signals are driven by the configuration bits in the Control Registers (Ports A and B only) and PSDsoft Express Configuration. Inputs to the multiplexer include the following: ■ Output data from the Data Out register ■ Latched address outputs ■ CPLD macrocell output ■ External Chip Select (ECS0-ECS2) from the CPLD. The Port Data Buffer (PDB) is a tri-state buffer that allows only one source at a time to be read. The Port Data Buffer (PDB) is connected to the Internal Data Bus for feedback and can be read by the MCU. The Data Out and macrocell outputs, Direction and Control Registers, and port pin input are all connected to the Port Data Buffer (PDB). The Port pin’s tri-state output driver enable is controlled by a two input OR gate whose inputs come from the CPLD AND Array enable product term and the Direction Register. If the enable product term of any of the Array outputs are not defined and that port pin is not defined as a CPLD output in the PSDabel file, then the Direction Register has sole control of the buffer that drives the port pin. The contents of these registers can be altered by the MCU. The Port Data Buffer (PDB) feedback path allows the MCU to check the contents of the registers. Ports A, B, and C have embedded Input Macrocells (IMC). The Input Macrocells (IMC) can be configured as latches, registers, or direct inputs to the PLDs. The latches and registers are clocked by Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) or a product term from the PLD AND Array. The outputs from the Input Macrocells (IMC) drive the PLD input bus and can be read by the MCU. See the section entitled Input Macrocell, page 41. Port Operating Modes The I/O Ports have several modes of operation. Some modes can be defined using PSDabel, some by the MCU writing to the Control Registers in CSIOP space, and some by both. The modes that can only be defined using PSDsoft Express must be programmed into the device and cannot be changed unless the device is reprogrammed. The modes that can be changed by the MCU can be done so dynamically at run-time. The PLD I/O, Data Port, Address Input, and Peripheral I/O modes are the only modes that must be defined before programming the device. All other modes can be changed by the MCU at run-time. See Application Note AN1171 for more detail. Table 19., page 53 summarizes which modes are available on each port. Table 22., page 56 shows how and where the different modes are configured. Each of the port operating modes are described in the following sections. 51/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 26. General I/O Port Architecture DATA OUT REG. D Q D Q DATA OUT WR ADDRESS ALE ADDRESS PORT PIN OUTPUT MUX G MACROCELL OUTPUTS EXT CS INTERNAL DATA BUS READ MUX P OUTPUT SELECT D DATA IN B CONTROL REG. D Q ENABLE OUT WR DIR REG. D Q WR ENABLE PRODUCT TERM (.OE) INPUT MACROCELL CPLD- INPUT AI02885 52/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 MCU I/O Mode In the MCU I/O mode, the MCU uses the I/O Ports block to expand its own I/O ports. By setting up the CSIOP space, the ports on the PSD are mapped into the MCU address space. The addresses of the ports are listed in Table 7., page 18. A port pin can be put into MCU I/O mode by writing a 0 to the corresponding bit in the Control Register. The MCU I/O direction may be changed by writing to the corresponding bit in the Direction Register, or by the output enable product term. See the section entitled Peripheral I/O Mode, page 55. When the pin is configured as an output, the content of the Data Out Register drives the pin. When configured as an input, the MCU can read the port input through the Data In buffer. See Figure 26., page 52. Ports C and D do not have Control Registers, and are in MCU I/O mode by default. They can be used for PLD I/O if equations are written for them in PSDabel. PLD I/O Mode The PLD I/O Mode uses a port as an input to the CPLD’s Input Macrocells (IMC), and/or as an output from the CPLD’s Output Macrocells (OMC). The output can be tri-stated with a control signal. This output enable control signal can be defined by a product term from the PLD, or by resetting the corresponding bit in the Direction Register to ’0.’ The corresponding bit in the Direction Register must not be set to '1' if the pin is defined for a PLD input signal in PSDabel. The PLD I/O mode is specified in PSDabel by declaring the port pins, and then writing an equation assigning the PLD I/ O to a port. Address Out Mode For MCUs with a multiplexed address/data bus, Address Out Mode can be used to drive latched addresses on to the port pins. These port pins can, in turn, drive external devices. Either the output enable or the corresponding bits of both the Direction Register and Control Register must be set to a 1 for pins to use Address Out Mode. This must be done by the MCU at run-time. See Table 21 for the address output pin assignments on Ports A and B for various MCUs. For non-multiplexed 8-bit bus mode, address signals (A7-A0) are available to Port B in Address Out Mode. Note: Do not drive address signals with Address Out Mode to an external memory device if it is intended for the MCU to Boot from the external device. The MCU must first Boot from PSD memory so the Direction and Control register bits can be set. Table 19. Port Operating Modes Port Mode Port A Port B Port C Port D MCU I/O Yes Yes Yes Yes PLD I/O McellAB Outputs McellBC Outputs Additional Ext. CS Outputs PLD Inputs Yes No No Yes Yes Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No No Yes Yes Address Out Yes (A7 – 0) Yes (A7 – 0) or (A15 – 8) No No Address In Yes Yes Yes Yes Data Port Yes (D7 – 0) No No No Peripheral I/O Yes No No No JTAG ISP No No Yes1 No Note: 1. Can be multiplexed with other I/O functions. 53/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 20. Port Operating Mode Settings Defined in PSDabel Mode Defined in PSD Configuration Control Register Setting Direction Register Setting VM Register Setting JTAG Enable MCU I/O Declare pins only N/A1 0 1 = output, 0 = input N/A (Note 2) N/A PLD I/O Logic equations N/A N/A (Note 2) N/A N/A Data Port (Port A) N/A Specify bus type N/A N/A N/A N/A Address Out (Port A,B) Declare pins only N/A 1 1 (Note 2) N/A N/A Address In (Port A,B,C,D) Logic for equation Input Macrocells N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Peripheral I/O (Port A) Logic equations (PSEL0 & 1) N/A N/A N/A PIO bit = 1 N/A JTAG ISP (Note 3) JTAGSEL JTAG Configuration N/A N/A N/A JTAG_Enable Note: 1. N/A = Not Applicable 2. The direction of the Port A,B,C, and D pins are controlled by the Direction Register ORed with the individual output enable product term (.oe) from the CPLD AND Array. 3. Any of these three methods enables the JTAG pins on Port C. Table 21. I/O Port Latched Address Output Assignments MCU Port A (PA3-PA0) Port A (PA7-PA4) Port B (PB3-PB0) Port B (PB7-PB4) 8051XA (8-Bit) N/A1 Address a7-a4 Address a11-a8 N/A 80C251 (Page Mode) N/A N/A Address a11-a8 Address a15-a12 All Other 8-Bit Multiplexed Address a3-a0 Address a7-a4 Address a3-a0 Address a7-a4 8-Bit Non-Multiplexed Bus N/A N/A Address a3-a0 Address a7-a4 Note: 1. N/A = Not Applicable. 54/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Address In Mode For MCUs that have more than 16 address signals, the higher addresses can be connected to Port A, B, C, and D. The address input can be latched in the Input Macrocell (IMC) by Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0). Any input that is included in the DPLD equations for the SRAM, or primary or secondary Flash memory is considered to be an address input. Data Port Mode Port A can be used as a data bus port for a MCU with a non-multiplexed address/data bus. The Data Port is connected to the data bus of the MCU. The general I/O functions are disabled in Port A if the port is configured as a Data Port. Peripheral I/O Mode Peripheral I/O mode can be used to interface with external peripherals. In this mode, all of Port A serves as a tri-state, bi-directional data buffer for the MCU. Peripheral I/O Mode is enabled by setting Bit 7 of the VM Register to a ’1.’ Figure 27 shows how Port A acts as a bi-directional buffer for the MCU data bus if Peripheral I/O Mode is enabled. An equation for PSEL0 and/or PSEL1 must be written in PSDabel. The buffer is tri-stated when PSEL0 or PSEL1 is not active. Figure 27. Peripheral I/O Mode RD PSEL0 PSEL PSEL1 VM REGISTER BIT 7 D0 - D7 DATA BUS PA0 - PA7 WR AI02886 55/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 JTAG In-System Programming (ISP) Port C is JTAG compliant, and can be used for InSystem Programming (ISP). You can multiplex JTAG operations with other functions on Port C because In-System Programming (ISP) is not performed in normal Operating mode. For more information on the JTAG Port, see the section entitled PROGRAMMING IN-CIRCUIT USING THE JTAG SERIAL INTERFACE, page 69. Port Configuration Registers (PCR) Each Port has a set of Port Configuration Registers (PCR) used for configuration. The contents of the registers can be accessed by the MCU through normal READ/WRITE bus cycles at the addresses given in Table 7., page 18. The addresses in Table 7 are the offsets in hexadecimal from the base of the CSIOP register. The pins of a port are individually configurable and each bit in the register controls its respective pin. For example, Bit 0 in a register refers to Bit 0 of its port. The three Port Configuration Registers (PCR), shown in Table 22, are used for setting the Port configurations. The default Power-up state for each register in Table 22 is 00h. Control Register Any bit reset to '0' in the Control Register sets the corresponding port pin to MCU I/O Mode, and a '1' sets it to Address Out Mode. The default mode is MCU I/O. Only Ports A and B have an associated Control Register. Direction Register The Direction Register, in conjunction with the output enable (except for Port D), controls the direction of data flow in the I/O Ports. Any bit set to '1' in the Direction Register causes the corresponding pin to be an output, and any bit set to '0' causes it to be an input. The default mode for all port pins is input. Figure 28., page 58 and Figure 29., page 59 show the Port Architecture diagrams for Ports A/B and C, respectively. The direction of data flow for Ports A, B, and C are controlled not only by the direction register, but also by the output enable product term from the PLD AND Array. If the output enable product term is not active, the Direction Register has sole control of a given pin’s direction. An example of a configuration for a Port with the three least significant bits set to output and the remainder set to input is shown in Table 25. Since Port D only contains three pins (shown in Figure 31., page 61), the Direction Register for Port D has only the three least significant bits active. 56/110 Drive Select Register The Drive Select Register configures the pin driver as Open Drain or CMOS for some port pins, and controls the slew rate for the other port pins. An external pull-up resistor should be used for pins configured as Open Drain. A pin can be configured as Open Drain if its corresponding bit in the Drive Select Register is set to a ’1.’ The default pin drive is CMOS. Note that the slew rate is a measurement of the rise and fall times of an output. A higher slew rate means a faster output response and may create more electrical noise. A pin operates in a high slew rate when the corresponding bit in the Drive Register is set to ’1.’ The default rate is slow slew. Table 26., page 57 shows the Drive Register for Ports A, B, C, and D. It summarizes which pins can be configured as Open Drain outputs and which pins the slew rate can be set for. Table 22. Port Configuration Registers (PCR) Register Name Port MCU Access Control A,B WRITE/READ Direction A,B,C,D WRITE/READ Drive Select1 A,B,C,D WRITE/READ Note: 1. See Table 26., page 57 for Drive Register bit definition. Table 23. Port Pin Direction Control, Output Enable P.T. Not Defined Direction Register Bit Port Pin Mode 0 Input 1 Output Table 24. Port Pin Direction Control, Output Enable P.T. Defined Direction Register Bit Output Enable P.T. Port Pin Mode 0 0 Input 0 1 Output 1 0 Output 1 1 Output Table 25. Port Direction Assignment Example Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 26. Drive Register Pin Assignment Drive Register Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Port A Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Slew Rate Slew Rate Slew Rate Slew Rate Port B Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Slew Rate Slew Rate Slew Rate Slew Rate Port C Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Open Drain Port D NA1 NA1 NA1 NA1 NA1 Slew Rate Slew Rate Slew Rate Note: 1. NA = Not Applicable. Port Data Registers The Port Data Registers, shown in Table 27, are used by the MCU to write data to or read data from the ports. Table 27 shows the register name, the ports having each register type, and MCU access for each register type. The registers are described below. Data In Port pins are connected directly to the Data In buffer. In MCU I/O input mode, the pin input is read through the Data In buffer. Data Out Register Stores output data written by the MCU in the MCU I/O output mode. The contents of the Register are driven out to the pins if the Direction Register or the output enable product term is set to ’1.’ The contents of the register can also be read back by the MCU. Output Macrocells (OMC). The CPLD Output Macrocells (OMC) occupy a location in the MCU’s address space. The MCU can read the output of the Output Macrocells (OMC). If the OMC Mask Register bits are not set, writing to the macrocell loads data to the macrocell flip-flops. See the section entitled PLDS, page 33. OMC Mask Register Each OMC Mask Register bit corresponds to an Output Macrocell (OMC) flip-flop. When the OMC Mask Register bit is set to a 1, loading data into the Output Macrocell (OMC) flip-flop is blocked. The default value is 0 or unblocked. Table 27. Port Data Registers Register Name Port MCU Access Data In A,B,C,D READ – input on pin Data Out A,B,C,D WRITE/READ Output Macrocell A,B,C READ – outputs of macrocells WRITE – loading macrocells flip-flop Mask Macrocell A,B,C WRITE/READ – prevents loading into a given macrocell Input Macrocell A,B,C READ – outputs of the Input Macrocells Enable Out A,B,C READ – the output enable control of the port driver 57/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Input Macrocells (IMC) The Input Macrocells (IMC) can be used to latch or store external inputs. The outputs of the Input Macrocells (IMC) are routed to the PLD input bus, and can be read by the MCU. See the section entitled PLDS, page 33. Enable Out The Enable Out register can be read by the MCU. It contains the output enable values for a given port. A 1 indicates the driver is in output mode. A 0 indicates the driver is in tri-state and the pin is in input mode. Ports A and B – Functionality and Structure Ports A and B have similar functionality and structure, as shown in Figure 28. The two ports can be configured to perform one or more of the following functions: ■ MCU I/O Mode ■ CPLD Output – Macrocells McellAB7McellAB0 can be connected to Port A or Port B. McellBC7-McellBC0 can be connected to Port B or Port C. ■ CPLD Input – Via the Input Macrocells (IMC). ■ Latched Address output – Provide latched address output as per Table 21., page 54. ■ Address In – Additional high address inputs using the Input Macrocells (IMC). ■ Open Drain/Slew Rate – pins PA3-PA0 and PB3-PB0 can be configured to fast slew rate, pins PA7-PA4 and PB7-PB4 can be configured to Open Drain Mode. ■ Data Port – Port A to D7-D0 for 8 bit nonmultiplexed bus ■ Multiplexed Address/Data port for certain types of MCU bus interfaces. ■ Peripheral Mode – Port A only Figure 28. Port A and Port B Structure DATA OUT REG. D Q D Q DATA OUT WR ADDRESS ALE PORT A OR B PIN ADDRESS A[ 7:0] OR A[15:8] G OUTPUT MUX MACROCELL OUTPUTS INTERNAL DATA BUS READ MUX P OUTPUT SELECT D DATA IN B CONTROL REG. D Q ENABLE OUT WR DIR REG. D Q WR ENABLE PRODUCT TERM (.OE) INPUT MACROCELL CPLD - INPUT AI02887 58/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Port C – Functionality and Structure Port C can be configured to perform one or more of the following functions (see Figure 29): ■ MCU I/O Mode ■ CPLD Output – McellBC7-McellBC0 outputs can be connected to Port B or Port C. ■ CPLD Input – via the Input Macrocells (IMC) ■ Address In – Additional high address inputs using the Input Macrocells (IMC). ■ In-System Programming (ISP) – JTAG port can be enabled for programming/erase of the PSD device. (See the section entitled PROGRAMMING IN-CIRCUIT USING THE JTAG SERIAL INTERFACE, page 69 for more information on JTAG programming.) Open Drain – Port C pins can be configured in Open Drain Mode ■ Battery Backup features – PC2 can be configured for a battery input supply, Voltage Stand-by (VSTBY). PC4 can be configured as a Battery-on Indicator (VBATON), indicating when VCC is less than VBAT. Port C does not support Address Out mode, and therefore no Control Register is required. Pin PC7 may be configured as the DBE input in certain MCU bus interfaces. ■ Figure 29. Port C Structure DATA OUT REG. D DATA OUT Q WR 1 SPECIAL FUNCTION PORT C PIN OUTPUT MUX MCELLBC[ 7:0] INTERNAL DATA BUS READ MUX P OUTPUT SELECT D DATA IN B ENABLE OUT DIR REG. D Q WR ENABLE PRODUCT TERM (.OE) INPUT MACROCELL CPLD - INPUT 1 SPECIAL FUNCTION CONFIGURATION AI02888B BIT 59/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Port D – Functionality and Structure Port D has three I/O pins. See Figure 30 and Figure 31., page 61. This port does not support Address Out mode, and therefore no Control Register is required. Port D can be configured to perform one or more of the following functions: ■ MCU I/O Mode ■ CPLD Output – External Chip Select (ECS0ECS2) ■ CPLD Input – direct input to the CPLD, no Input Macrocells (IMC) Slew rate – pins can be set up for fast slew rate Port D pins can be configured in PSDsoft Express as input pins for other dedicated functions: ■ Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) ■ CLKIN (PD1) as input to the macrocells flipflops and APD counter ■ PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2). Driving this signal High disables the Flash memory, SRAM and CSIOP. ■ Figure 30. Port D Structure DATA OUT REG. DATA OUT D Q WR PORT D PIN OUTPUT MUX ECS[ 2:0] INTERNAL DATA BUS READ MUX OUTPUT SELECT P D DATA IN B ENABLE PRODUCT TERM (.OE) DIR REG. D WR 60/110 Q CPLD-INPUT AI02889 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 External Chip Select The CPLD also provides three External Chip Select (ECS0-ECS2) outputs on Port D pins that can be used to select external devices. Each External Chip Select (ECS0-ECS2) consists of one product term that can be configured active High or Low. The output enable of the pin is controlled by either the output enable product term or the Direction Register. (See Figure 31.) Figure 31. Port D External Chip Select Signals ENABLE (.OE) CPLD AND ARRAY PLD INPUT BUS PT0 DIRECTION REGISTER PD0 PIN ECS0 POLARITY BIT ENABLE (.OE) PT1 DIRECTION REGISTER PD1 PIN ECS1 POLARITY BIT ENABLE (.OE) PT2 DIRECTION REGISTER ECS2 POLARITY BIT PD2 PIN AI02890 61/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 POWER MANAGEMENT All PSD devices offer configurable power saving options. These options may be used individually or in combinations, as follows: ■ All memory blocks in a PSD (primary and secondary Flash memory, and SRAM) are built with power management technology. In addition to using special silicon design methodology, power management technology puts the memories into standby mode when address/data inputs are not changing (zero DC current). As soon as a transition occurs on an input, the affected memory “wakes up”, changes and latches its outputs, then goes back to standby. The designer does not have to do anything special to achieve memory standby mode when no inputs are changing— it happens automatically. The PLD sections can also achieve Stand-by mode when its inputs are not changing, as described in the sections on the Power Management Mode Registers (PMMR). ■ As with the Power Management mode, the Automatic Power Down (APD) block allows the PSD to reduce to stand-by current automatically. The APD Unit can also block MCU address/data signals from reaching the memories and PLDs. This feature is available on all the devices of the PSD family. The APD Unit is described in more detail in the sections entitled Automatic Power-down (APD) Unit and Power-down Mode, page 63. Built in logic monitors the Address Strobe of the MCU for activity. If there is no activity for a certain time period (MCU is asleep), the APD Unit initiates Power-down mode (if enabled). Once in Power-down mode, all address/data signals are blocked from reaching PSD memory and PLDs, and the memories are deselected internally. This allows the memory and PLDs to 62/110 ■ ■ remain in standby mode even if the address/ data signals are changing state externally (noise, other devices on the MCU bus, etc.). Keep in mind that any unblocked PLD input signals that are changing states keeps the PLD out of Stand-by mode, but not the memories. PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) can be used to disable the internal memories, placing them in standby mode even if inputs are changing. This feature does not block any internal signals or disable the PLDs. This is a good alternative to using the APD Unit. There is a slight penalty in memory access time when PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) makes its initial transition from deselected to selected. The PMMRs can be written by the MCU at runtime to manage power. All PSD supports “blocking bits” in these registers that are set to block designated signals from reaching both PLDs. Current consumption of the PLDs is directly related to the composite frequency of the changes on their inputs (see Figure 35 and Figure 36., page 72). Significant power savings can be achieved by blocking signals that are not used in DPLD or CPLD logic equations. PSD devices have a Turbo Bit in PMMR0. This bit can be set to turn the Turbo mode off (the default is with Turbo mode turned on). While Turbo mode is off, the PLDs can achieve standby current when no PLD inputs are changing (zero DC current). Even when inputs do change, significant power can be saved at lower frequencies (AC current), compared to when Turbo mode is on. When the Turbo mode is on, there is a significant DC current component and the AC component is higher. PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Automatic Power-down (APD) Unit and Power-down Mode The APD Unit, shown in Figure 32, puts the PSD registers. The blocked signals include MCU into Power-down mode by monitoring the activity control signals and the common CLKIN (PD1). of Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0). If the APD Unit Note that blocking CLKIN (PD1) from the is enabled, as soon as activity on Address Strobe PLDs does not block CLKIN (PD1) from the (ALE/AS, PD0) stops, a four bit counter starts APD Unit. counting. If Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) re– All PSD memories enter Standby mode and mains inactive for fifteen clock periods of CLKIN are drawing standby current. However, the (PD1), Power-down (PDN) goes High, and the PLD and I/O ports blocks do not go into PSD enters Power-down mode, as discussed Standby Mode because you don’t want to next. have to wait for the logic and I/O to “wake-up” Power-down Mode. By default, if you enable the before their outputs can change. See Table 28 APD Unit, Power-down mode is automatically enfor Power-down mode effects on PSD ports. abled. The device enters Power-down mode if Ad– Typical standby current is of the order of dress Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) remains inactive for microamperes. These standby current values fifteen periods of CLKIN (PD1). assume that there are no transitions on any PLD input. The following should be kept in mind when the PSD is in Power-down mode: – If Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) starts Table 28. Power-down Mode’s Effect on Ports pulsing again, the PSD returns to normal Port Function Pin Level Operating mode. The PSD also returns to normal Operating mode if either PSD Chip MCU I/O No Change Select Input (CSI, PD2) is Low or the Reset PLD Out No Change (RESET) input is High. – The MCU address/data bus is blocked from all Address Out Undefined memory and PLDs. Data Port Tri-State – Various signals can be blocked (prior to Power-down mode) from entering the PLDs by Peripheral I/O Tri-State setting the appropriate bits in the PMMR Figure 32. APD Unit APD EN PMMR0 BIT 1=1 TRANSITION DETECTION DISABLE BUS INTERFACE ALE CLR RESET CSI PD EEPROM SELECT APD COUNTER FLASH SELECT EDGE DETECT PD PLD CLKIN SRAM SELECT POWER DOWN (PDN) SELECT DISABLE FLASH/EEPROM/SRAM AI02891 Table 29. PSD Timing and Stand-by Current during Power-down Mode Mode PLD Propagation Delay Memory Access Time Access Recovery Time to Normal Access Power-down Normal tPD (Note 1) No Access tLVDV Typical Stand-by Current 5V VCC 3V VCC 75µA (Note 2) 25µA (Note 2) Note: 1. Power-down does not affect the operation of the PLD. The PLD operation in this mode is based only on the Turbo Bit. 2. Typical current consumption assuming no PLD inputs are changing state and the PLD Turbo Bit is ’0.’ 63/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 For Users of the HC11 (or compatible) The HC11 turns off its E clock when it sleeps. Therefore, if you are using an HC11 (or compatible) in your design, and you wish to use the Power-down mode, you must not connect the E clock to CLKIN (PD1). You should instead connect a crystal oscillator to CLKIN (PD1). The crystal oscillator frequency must be less than 15 times the frequency of AS. The reason for this is that if the frequency is greater than 15 times the frequency of AS, the PSD keeps going into Power-down mode. Other Power Saving Options The PSD offers other reduced power saving options that are independent of the Power-down mode. Except for the SRAM Stand-by and PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) features, they are enabled by setting bits in PMMR0 and PMMR2. Figure 33. Enable Power-down Flow Chart RESET Enable APD Set PMMR0 Bit 1 = 1 OPTIONAL Disable desired inputs to PLD by setting PMMR0 bits 4 and 5 and PMMR2 bits 2 through 6. No ALE/AS idle for 15 CLKIN clocks? Yes PSD in Power Down Mode 64/110 AI02892 PLD Power Management The power and speed of the PLDs are controlled by the Turbo Bit (Bit 3) in PMMR0. By setting the bit to '1,' the Turbo mode is off and the PLDs consume the specified stand-by current when the inputs are not switching for an extended time of 70ns. The propagation delay time is increased by 10ns after the Turbo Bit is set to '1' (turned off) when the inputs change at a composite frequency of less than 15 MHz. When the Turbo Bit is reset to '0' (turned on), the PLDs run at full power and speed. The Turbo Bit affects the PLD’s DC power, AC power, and propagation delay. Blocking MCU control signals with the bits of PMMR2 can further reduce PLD AC power consumption. SRAM Standby Mode (Battery Backup). The PSD supports a battery backup mode in which the contents of the SRAM are retained in the event of a power loss. The SRAM has Voltage Stand-by (VSTBY, PC2) that can be connected to an external battery. When VCC becomes lower than VSTBY then the PSD automatically connects to Voltage Stand-by (VSTBY, PC2) as a power source to the SRAM. The SRAM Standby Current (ISTBY) is typically 0.5µA. The SRAM data retention voltage is 2V minimum. The Battery-on Indicator (VBATON) can be routed to PC4. This signal indicates when the VCC has dropped below VSTBY. PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 30. Power Management Mode Registers PMMR0 (Note 1) Bit 0 X Bit 1 APD Enable 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. 0 = off Automatic Power-down (APD) is disabled. 1 = on Automatic Power-down (APD) is enabled. Bit 2 X Bit 3 PLD Turbo 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. 0 = on PLD Turbo mode is on 1 = off PLD Turbo mode is off, saving power. 0 = on Bit 4 PLD Array clk CLKIN (PD1) input to the PLD AND Array is connected. Every change of CLKIN (PD1) Powers-up the PLD when Turbo Bit is ’0.’ 1 = off CLKIN (PD1) input to PLD AND Array is disconnected, saving power. 0 = on CLKIN (PD1) input to the PLD macrocells is connected. Bit 5 PLD MCell clk 1 = off CLKIN (PD1) input to PLD macrocells is disconnected, saving power. Bit 6 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 7 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Note: 1. The bits of this register are cleared to zero following Power-up. Subsequent Reset (RESET) pulses do not clear the registers. Table 31. Power Management Mode Registers PMMR2 (Note 1) Bit 0 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 1 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. PLD Array CNTL0 0 = on Cntl0 input to the PLD AND Array is connected. Bit 2 PLD Array CNTL1 0 = on Cntl1 input to the PLD AND Array is connected. PLD Array CNTL2 0 = on Cntl2 input to the PLD AND Array is connected. PLD Array ALE 0 = on ALE input to the PLD AND Array is connected. PLD Array DBE 0 = on DBE input to the PLD AND Array is connected. X 0 Bit 3 Bit 4 Bit 5 Bit 6 Bit 7 1 = off Cntl0 input to PLD AND Array is disconnected, saving power. 1 = off Cntl1 input to PLD AND Array is disconnected, saving power. 1 = off Cntl2 input to PLD AND Array is disconnected, saving power. 1 = off ALE input to PLD AND Array is disconnected, saving power. 1 = off DBE input to PLD AND Array is disconnected, saving power. Not used, and should be set to zero. Note: 1. The bits of this register are cleared to zero following Power-up. Subsequent Reset (RESET) pulses do not clear the registers. 65/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) PD2 of Port D can be configured in PSDsoft Express as PSD Chip Select Input (CSI). When Low, the signal selects and enables the internal Flash memory, EEPROM, SRAM, and I/O blocks for READ or WRITE operations involving the PSD. A High on PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) disables the Flash memory, EEPROM, and SRAM, and reduces the PSD power consumption. However, the PLD and I/O signals remain operational when PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) is High. There may be a timing penalty when using PSD Chip Select Input (CSI, PD2) depending on the speed grade of the PSD that you are using. See the timing parameter tSLQV in Table 61., page 94 or Table 62., page 95. Input Clock The PSD provides the option to turn off CLKIN (PD1) to the PLD to save AC power consumption. CLKIN (PD1) is an input to the PLD AND Array and the Output Macrocells (OMC). During Power-down mode, or, if CLKIN (PD1) is not being used as part of the PLD logic equation, the clock should be disabled to save AC power. CLKIN (PD1) is disconnected from the PLD AND Array or the Macrocells block by setting Bits 4 or 5 to a 1 in PMMR0. Input Control Signals The PSD provides the option to turn off the input control signals (CNTL0, CNTL1, CNTL2, Address Strobe (ALE/AS, PD0) and DBE) to the PLD to save AC power consumption. These control signals are inputs to the PLD AND Array. During Power-down mode, or, if any of them are not being used as part of the PLD logic equation, these control signals should be disabled to save AC power. They are disconnected from the PLD AND Array by setting Bits 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 to a 1 in PMMR2. Table 32. APD Counter Operation APD Enable Bit ALE PD Polarity ALE Level 0 X X Not Counting 1 X Pulsing Not Counting 1 1 1 Counting (Generates PDN after 15 Clocks) 1 0 0 Counting (Generates PDN after 15 Clocks) 66/110 APD Counter PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 RESET TIMING AND DEVICE STATUS AT RESET Power-Up Reset Upon Power-up, the PSD requires a Reset (RESET) pulse of duration tNLNH-PO after VCC is steady. During this period, the device loads internal configurations, clears some of the registers and sets the Flash memory into Operating mode. After the rising edge of Reset (RESET), the PSD remains in the Reset mode for an additional period, tOPR, before the first memory access is allowed. The Flash memory is reset to the READ Mode upon Power-up. Sector Select (FS0-FS7 and CSBOOT0-CSBOOT3) must all be Low, Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0) High, during Power On Reset for maximum security of the data contents and to remove the possibility of a byte being written on the first edge of Write Strobe (WR, CNTL0). Any Flash memory WRITE cycle initiation is prevented automatically when VCC is below VLKO. Warm Reset Once the device is up and running, the device can be reset with a pulse of a much shorter duration, tNLNH. The same tOPR period is needed before the device is operational after warm reset. Figure 34 shows the timing of the Power-up and warm reset. I/O Pin, Register and PLD Status at Reset Table 33., page 68 shows the I/O pin, register and PLD status during Power On Reset, warm reset and Power-down mode. PLD outputs are always valid during warm reset, and they are valid in Power On Reset once the internal PSD Configuration bits are loaded. This loading of PSD is completed typically long before the VCC ramps up to operating level. Once the PLD is active, the state of the outputs are determined by the PSDabel equations. Reset of Flash Memory Erase and Program Cycles (on the PSD834Fx) A Reset (RESET) also resets the internal Flash memory state machine. During a Flash memory Program or Erase cycle, Reset (RESET) terminates the cycle and returns the Flash memory to the Read Mode within a period of tNLNH-A. Figure 34. Reset (RESET) Timing VCC VCC(min) tNLNH-PO Power-On Reset tOPR tNLNH tNLNH-A Warm Reset tOPR RESET AI02866b 67/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 33. Status During Power-On Reset, Warm Reset and Power-down Mode Port Configuration Power-On Reset Warm Reset Power-down Mode MCU I/O Input mode Input mode Unchanged PLD Output Valid after internal PSD configuration bits are loaded Valid Depends on inputs to PLD (addresses are blocked in PD mode) Address Out Tri-stated Tri-stated Not defined Data Port Tri-stated Tri-stated Tri-stated Peripheral I/O Tri-stated Tri-stated Tri-stated Register Power-On Reset Warm Reset Power-down Mode PMMR0 and PMMR2 Cleared to '0' Unchanged Unchanged Macrocells flip-flop status Cleared to '0' by internal Power-On Reset Depends on .re and .pr equations Depends on .re and .pr equations VM Register1 Initialized, based on the selection in PSDsoft Configuration menu Initialized, based on the selection in PSDsoft Configuration menu Unchanged All other registers Cleared to '0' Cleared to '0' Unchanged Note: 1. The SR_cod and PeriphMode bits in the VM Register are always cleared to '0' on Power-On Reset or Warm Reset. 68/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PROGRAMMING IN-CIRCUIT USING THE JTAG SERIAL INTERFACE The JTAG Serial Interface block can be enabled on Port C (see Table 34., page 70). All memory blocks (primary and secondary Flash memory), PLD logic, and PSD Configuration Register bits may be programmed through the JTAG Serial Interface block. A blank device can be mounted on a printed circuit board and programmed using JTAG. The standard JTAG signals (IEEE 1149.1) are TMS, TCK, TDI, and TDO. Two additional signals, TSTAT and TERR, are optional JTAG extensions used to speed up Program and Erase cycles. By default, on a blank PSD (as shipped from the factory or after erasure), four pins on Port C are enabled for the basic JTAG signals TMS, TCK, TDI, and TDO. See Application Note AN1153 for more details on JTAG In-System Programming (ISP). Standard JTAG Signals The standard JTAG signals (TMS, TCK, TDI, and TDO) can be enabled by any of three different conditions that are logically ORed. When enabled, TDI, TDO, TCK, and TMS are inputs, waiting for a JTAG serial command from an external JTAG controller device (such as FlashLINK or Automated Test Equipment). When the enabling command is received, TDO becomes an output and the JTAG channel is fully functional inside the PSD. The same command that enables the JTAG channel may optionally enable the two additional JTAG signals, TSTAT and TERR. The following symbolic logic equation specifies the conditions enabling the four basic JTAG signals (TMS, TCK, TDI, and TDO) on their respective Port C pins. For purposes of discussion, the logic label JTAG_ON is used. When JTAG_ON is true, the four pins are enabled for JTAG. When JTAG_ON is false, the four pins can be used for general PSD I/O. JTAG_ON = PSDsoft_enabled + /* An NVM configuration bit inside the PSD is set by the designer in the PSDsoft Express Configuration utility. This dedicates the pins for JTAG at all times (compliant with IEEE 1149.1 */ Microcontroller_enabled + /* The microcontroller can set a bit at run-time by writing to the PSD register, JTAG Enable. This register is located at address CSIOP + offset C7h. Setting the JTAG_ENABLE bit in this register will enable the pins for JTAG use. This bit is cleared by a PSD reset or the microcontroller. See Table 35., page 71 for bit definition. */ PSD_product_term_enabled; /* A dedicated product term (PT) inside the PSD can be used to enable the JTAG pins. This PT has the reserved name JTAGSEL. Once defined as a node in PSDabel, the designer can write an equation for JTAGSEL. This method is used when the Port C JTAG pins are multiplexed with other I/O signals. It is recommended to logically tie the node JTAGSEL to the JEN\ signal on the Flashlink cable when multiplexing JTAG signals. See Application Note 1153 for details. */ The state of the PSD Reset (RESET) signal does not interrupt (or prevent) JTAG operations if the JTAG pins are dedicated by an NVM configuration bit (via PSDsoft Express). However, Reset (RESET) will prevent or interrupt JTAG operations if the JTAG enable register is used to enable the JTAG pins. The PSD supports JTAG In-System-Configuration (ISC) commands, but not Boundary Scan. The PSDsoft Express software tool and FlashLINK JTAG programming cable implement the JTAG In-System-Configuration (ISC) commands. A definition of these JTAG In-System-Configuration (ISC) commands and sequences is defined in a supplemental document available from ST. This document is needed only as a reference for designers who use a FlashLINK to program their PSD. 69/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 JTAG Extensions TSTAT and TERR are two JTAG extension signals enabled by an “ISC_ENABLE” command received over the four standard JTAG signals (TMS, TCK, TDI, and TDO). They are used to speed Program and Erase cycles by indicating status on PSD signals instead of having to scan the status out serially using the standard JTAG channel. See Application Note AN1153. TERR indicates if an error has occurred when erasing a sector or programming a byte in Flash memory. This signal goes Low (active) when an Error condition occurs, and stays Low until an “ISC_CLEAR” command is executed or a chip Reset (RESET) pulse is received after an “ISC_DISABLE” command. TSTAT behaves the same as Ready/Busy described in the section entitled Ready/Busy (PC3), page 20. TSTAT is High when the PSD device is in READ Mode (primary and secondary Flash memory contents can be read). TSTAT is Low when Flash memory Program or Erase cycles are in progress, and also when data is being written to the secondary Flash memory. TSTAT and TERR can be configured as opendrain type signals during an “ISC_ENABLE” command. This facilitates a wired-OR connection of TSTAT signals from multiple PSD devices and a wired-OR connection of TERR signals from those same devices. This is useful when several PSD devices are “chained” together in a JTAG environment. 70/110 Security and Flash memory Protection When the security bit is set, the device cannot be read on a Device Programmer or through the JTAG Port. When using the JTAG Port, only a Full Chip Erase command is allowed. All other Program, Erase and Verify commands are blocked. Full Chip Erase returns the part to a non-secured blank state. The Security Bit can be set in PSDsoft Express Configuration. All primary and secondary Flash memory sectors can individually be sector protected against erasures. The sector protect bits can be set in PSDsoft Express Configuration. Table 34. JTAG Port Signals Port C Pin JTAG Signals Description PC0 TMS Mode Select PC1 TCK Clock PC3 TSTAT Status PC4 TERR Error Flag PC5 TDI Serial Data In PC6 TDO Serial Data Out PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 INITIAL DELIVERY STATE When delivered from ST, the PSD device has all bits in the memory and PLDs set to ’1.’ The PSD Configuration Register bits are set to ’0.’ The code, configuration, and PLD logic are loaded using the programming procedure. Information for programming the device is available directly from ST. Please contact your local sales representative. Table 35. JTAG Enable Register 0 = off JTAG port is disabled. Bit 0 JTAG_Enable 1 = on JTAG port is enabled. Bit 1 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 2 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 3 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 4 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 5 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 6 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Bit 7 X 0 Not used, and should be set to zero. Note: 1. The state of Reset (RESET) does not interrupt (or prevent) JTAG operations if the JTAG signals are dedicated by an NVM Configuration bit (via PSDsoft Express). However, Reset (RESET) prevents or interrupts JTAG operations if the JTAG enable register is used to enable the JTAG signals. 71/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 AC/DC PARAMETERS These tables describe the AD and DC parameters of the PSD: ❏ DC Electrical Specification ❏ AC Timing Specification ■ PLD Timing – Combinatorial Timing – Synchronous Clock Mode – Asynchronous Clock Mode – Input Macrocell Timing ■ MCU Timing – READ Timing – WRITE Timing – Peripheral Mode Timing – Power-down and Reset Timing The following are issues concerning the parameters presented: – In the DC specification the supply current is given for different modes of operation. Before calculating the total power consumption, determine the percentage of time that the PSD is in each mode. Also, the supply power is considerably different if the Turbo Bit is ’0.’ – The AC power component gives the PLD, Flash memory, and SRAM mA/MHz specification. Figures 35 and 36 show the PLD mA/MHz as a function of the number of Product Terms (PT) used. – In the PLD timing parameters, add the required delay when Turbo Bit is ’0.’ Figure 35. PLD ICC /Frequency Consumption (5V range) 110 100 VCC = 5V ) 00% N (1 O BO TUR 90 FF 70 O 60 O T RB 50 O URB ON (25% ) TU ICC – (mA) 80 40 30 20 O RB TU 10 F OF PT 100% PT 25% 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 HIGHEST COMPOSITE FREQUENCY AT PLD INPUTS (MHz) AI02894 Figure 36. PLD ICC /Frequency Consumption (3V range) 60 VCC = 3V O URB ) 100% ON ( T 40 O FF 30 TU RB O ICC – (mA) 50 20 TU R B 10 O RB TU (25 O ON %) PT 100% PT 25% F OF 0 0 5 10 15 20 HIGHEST COMPOSITE FREQUENCY AT PLD INPUTS (MHz) 72/110 25 AI03100 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 36. Example of PSD Typical Power Calculation at VCC = 5.0V (Turbo Mode On) Conditions Highest Composite PLD input frequency (Freq PLD) MCU ALE frequency (Freq ALE) = 8 MHz = 4 MHz % Flash memory Access = 80% % SRAM access = 15% % I/O access = 5% (no additional power above base) Operational Modes % Normal = 10% % Power-down Mode = 90% Number of product terms used (from fitter report) = 45 PT % of total product terms = 45/182 = 24.7% Turbo Mode = ON Calculation (using typical values) ICC total = Ipwrdown x %pwrdown + %normal x (ICC (ac) + ICC (dc)) = Ipwrdown x %pwrdown + % normal x (%flash x 2.5mA/MHz x Freq ALE + %SRAM x 1.5mA/MHz x Freq ALE + % PLD x 2mA/MHz x Freq PLD + #PT x 400µA/PT) = 50µA x 0.90 + 0.1 x (0.8 x 2.5mA/MHz x 4 MHz + 0.15 x 1.5mA/MHz x 4 MHz + 2mA/MHz x 8 MHz + 45 x 0.4mA/PT) = 45µA + 0.1 x (8 + 0.9 + 16 + 18mA) = 45µA + 0.1 x 42.9 = 45µA + 4.29mA = 4.34mA This is the operating power with no EEPROM WRITE or Flash memory Erase cycles in progress. Calculation is based on IOUT = 0mA. 73/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 37. Example of PSD Typical Power Calculation at VCC = 5.0V (Turbo Mode Off) Conditions Highest Composite PLD input frequency (Freq PLD) MCU ALE frequency (Freq ALE) = 8 MHz = 4 MHz % Flash memory Access = 80% % SRAM access = 15% % I/O access = 5% (no additional power above base) Operational Modes % Normal = 10% % Power-down Mode = 90% Number of product terms used (from fitter report) = 45 PT % of total product terms = 45/182 = 24.7% Turbo Mode = Off Calculation (using typical values) ICC total = Ipwrdown x %pwrdown + %normal x (ICC (ac) + ICC (dc)) = Ipwrdown x %pwrdown + % normal x (%flash x 2.5mA/MHz x Freq ALE + %SRAM x 1.5mA/MHz x Freq ALE + % PLD x (from graph using Freq PLD)) = 50µA x 0.90 + 0.1 x (0.8 x 2.5mA/MHz x 4 MHz + 0.15 x 1.5mA/MHz x 4 MHz + 24mA) = 45µA + 0.1 x (8 + 0.9 + 24) = 45µA + 0.1 x 32.9 = 45µA + 3.29mA = 3.34mA This is the operating power with no EEPROM WRITE or Flash memory Erase cycles in progress. Calculation is based on IOUT = 0mA. 74/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 MAXIMUM RATING Stressing the device above the rating listed in the Absolute Maximum Ratings” table may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only and operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the Operating sections of this specification is not im- plied. Exposure to Absolute Maximum Rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. Refer also to the STMicroelectronics SURE Program and other relevant quality documents. Table 38. Absolute Maximum Ratings Symbol Parameter TSTG Storage Temperature TLEAD Lead Temperature during Soldering (20 seconds max.)1 Min. Max. Unit –65 125 °C 235 °C VIO Input and Output Voltage (Q = VOH or Hi-Z) –0.6 7.0 V VCC Supply Voltage –0.6 7.0 V VPP Device Programmer Supply Voltage –0.6 14.0 V –2000 2000 V VESD Electrostatic Discharge Voltage (Human Body model) 2 Note: 1. IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020A 2. JEDEC Std JESD22-A114A (C1=100 pF, R1=1500 Ω, R2=500 Ω) 75/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 DC AND AC PARAMETERS This section summarizes the operating and measurement conditions, and the DC and AC characteristics of the device. The parameters in the DC and AC Characteristic tables that follow are derived from tests performed under the Measure- ment Conditions summarized in the relevant tables. Designers should check that the operating conditions in their circuit match the measurement conditions when relying on the quoted parameters. Table 39. Operating Conditions (5V devices) Symbol VCC Parameter Min. Max. Unit Supply Voltage 4.5 5.5 V Ambient Operating Temperature (industrial) –40 85 °C 0 70 °C Min. Max. Unit Supply Voltage 3.0 3.6 V Ambient Operating Temperature (industrial) –40 85 °C 0 70 °C TA Ambient Operating Temperature (commercial) Table 40. Operating Conditions (3V devices) Symbol VCC Parameter TA Ambient Operating Temperature (commercial) Table 41. AC Signal Letters for PLD Timing A Address Input C CEout Output D Input Data E E Input G Internal WDOG_ON signal I Interrupt Input L ALE Input N RESET Input or Output P Port Signal Output Q Output Data R WR, UDS, LDS, DS, IORD, PSEN Inputs S Chip Select Input T R/W Input W Internal PDN Signal B VSTBY Output M Output Macrocell Table 42. AC Signal Behavior Symbols for PLD Timing t Time L Logic Level Low or ALE H Logic Level High V Valid X No Longer a Valid Logic Level Z Float PW Pulse Width Note: Example: tAVLX = Time from Address Valid to ALE Invalid. Note: Example: tAVLX = Time from Address Valid to ALE Invalid. Table 43. AC Measurement Conditions Symbol CL Parameter Load Capacitance Note: 1. Output Hi-Z is defined as the point where data out is no longer driven. 76/110 Min. Max. 30 Unit pF PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 44. Capacitance Symbol Parameter Test Condition Typ.2 Max. Unit CIN Input Capacitance (for input pins) VIN = 0V 4 6 pF COUT Output Capacitance (for input/ output pins) VOUT = 0V 8 12 CVPP Capacitance (for CNTL2/VPP) VPP = 0V 18 25 pF pF Note: 1. Sampled only, not 100% tested. 2. Typical values are for TA = 25°C and nominal supply voltages. Figure 37. AC Measurement I/O Waveform Figure 38. AC Measurement Load Circuit 2.01 V 195 Ω 3.0V Test Point 1.5V Device Under Test 0V CL = 30 pF (Including Scope and Jig Capacitance) AI03103b AI03104b Figure 39. Switching Waveforms – Key WAVEFORMS INPUTS OUTPUTS STEADY INPUT STEADY OUTPUT MAY CHANGE FROM HI TO LO WILL BE CHANGING FROM HI TO LO MAY CHANGE FROM LO TO HI WILL BE CHANGING LO TO HI DON'T CARE CHANGING, STATE UNKNOWN OUTPUTS ONLY CENTER LINE IS TRI-STATE AI03102 77/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 45. DC Characteristics (5V devices) Symbol Parameter Test Condition (in addition to those in Table 39., page 76) Min. Typ. Max. Unit VIH Input High Voltage 4.5 V < VCC < 5.5 V 2 VCC +0.5 V VIL Input Low Voltage 4.5 V < VCC < 5.5 V –0.5 0.8 V VIH1 Reset High Level Input Voltage (Note 1) 0.8VCC VCC +0.5 V VIL1 Reset Low Level Input Voltage (Note 1) –0.5 0.2VCC –0.1 V VHYS Reset Pin Hysteresis 0.3 VLKO VCC (min) for Flash Erase and Program 2.5 VOL V IOL = 20µA, VCC = 4.5 V 0.01 0.1 V IOL = 8mA, VCC = 4.5 V 0.25 0.45 V Output High Voltage Except VSTBY On IOH = –20µA, VCC = 4.5 V 4.4 4.49 V IOH = –2mA, VCC = 4.5 V 2.4 3.9 V IOH1 = 1µA VSTBY – 0.8 VOH1 Output High Voltage VSTBY On VSTBY SRAM Stand-by Voltage ISTBY SRAM Stand-by Current IIDLE Idle Current (VSTBY input) VDF SRAM Data Retention Voltage ISB Stand-by Supply Current for Power-down Mode CSI >VCC –0.3 V (Notes 2,3) ILI Input Leakage Current VSS < VIN < VCC ILO Output Leakage Current 0.45 < VOUT < VCC PLD Only ICC (DC) (Note 5) Operating Supply Current Flash memory SRAM V 2.0 VCC = 0 V 0.5 VCC > VSTBY –0.1 Only on VSTBY 2 ICC (AC) (Note 5) VCC V 1 µA 0.1 µA V 50 200 µA –1 ±0.1 1 µA –10 ±5 10 µA PLD_TURBO = Off, f = 0 MHz (Note 5) 0 PLD_TURBO = On, f = 0 MHz 400 700 µA/PT During Flash memory WRITE/Erase Only 15 30 mA Read only, f = 0 MHz 0 0 mA f = 0 MHz 0 0 mA µA/PT note 4 PLD AC Adder 78/110 V Output Low Voltage VOH Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 4.2 Flash memory AC Adder 2.5 3.5 mA/ MHz SRAM AC Adder 1.5 3.0 mA/ MHz Reset (RESET) has hysteresis. VIL1 is valid at or below 0.2VCC –0.1. VIH1 is valid at or above 0.8VCC. CSI deselected or internal Power-down mode is active. PLD is in non-Turbo mode, and none of the inputs are switching. Please see Figure 35., page 72 for the PLD current calculation. IOUT = 0mA PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 46. DC Characteristics (3V devices) Symbol Parameter Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit VIH High Level Input Voltage 3.0 V < VCC < 3.6 V 0.7VCC VCC +0.5 V VIL Low Level Input Voltage 3.0 V < VCC < 3.6 V –0.5 0.8 V VIH1 Reset High Level Input Voltage (Note 1) 0.8VCC VCC +0.5 V VIL1 Reset Low Level Input Voltage (Note 1) –0.5 0.2VCC –0.1 V VHYS Reset Pin Hysteresis 0.3 VLKO VCC (min) for Flash Erase and Program 1.5 VOL Output Low Voltage Output High Voltage Except VSTBY On VOH 0.1 V IOL = 4mA, VCC = 3.0 V 0.15 0.45 V IOH = –20µA, VCC = 3.0 V 2.9 2.99 V IOH = –1mA, VCC = 3.0 V 2.7 2.8 V IOH1 = 1µA VSTBY – 0.8 VSTBY SRAM Stand-by Voltage ISTBY SRAM Stand-by Current IIDLE Idle Current (VSTBY input) VDF SRAM Data Retention Voltage ISB Stand-by Supply Current for Power-down Mode ILI Input Leakage Current VSS < VIN < VCC ILO Output Leakage Current 0.45 < VIN < VCC ICC (DC) (Note 5) Flash memory SRAM PLD AC Adder ICC (AC) (Note 5) Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. V 0.01 Output High Voltage VSTBY On Operating Supply Current 2.2 IOL = 20µA, VCC = 3.0 V VOH1 PLD Only V V 2.0 VCC = 0 V 0.5 VCC > VSTBY –0.1 Only on VSTBY 2 CSI >VCC –0.3 V (Notes 2,3) VCC V 1 µA 0.1 µA V 25 100 µA –1 ±0.1 1 µA –10 ±5 10 µA PLD_TURBO = Off, f = 0 MHz (Note 3) 0 PLD_TURBO = On, f = 0 MHz 200 400 µA/PT During Flash memory WRITE/Erase Only 10 25 mA Read only, f = 0 MHz 0 0 mA f = 0 MHz 0 0 mA µA/PT note 4 Flash memory AC Adder 1.5 2.0 mA/ MHz SRAM AC Adder 0.8 1.5 mA/ MHz Reset (RESET) has hysteresis. VIL1 is valid at or below 0.2VCC –0.1. VIH1 is valid at or above 0.8VCC. CSI deselected or internal PD is active. PLD is in non-Turbo mode, and none of the inputs are switching. Please see Figure 36., page 72 for the PLD current calculation. IOUT = 0mA 79/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 40. Input to Output Disable / Enable INPUT tER tEA INPUT TO OUTPUT ENABLE/DISABLE AI02863 Table 47. CPLD Combinatorial Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter -90 -15 Conditions Min Max Min Max Min Max tPD CPLD Input Pin/ Feedback to CPLD Combinatorial Output 20 25 32 tEA CPLD Input to CPLD Output Enable 21 26 tER CPLD Input to CPLD Output Disable 21 tARP CPLD Register Clear or Preset Delay 21 tARPW CPLD Register Clear or Preset Pulse Width tARD CPLD Array Delay 10 +2 –2 ns 32 + 10 –2 ns 26 32 + 10 –2 ns 26 33 + 10 –2 ns 29 11 Unit + 10 20 Any macrocell Fast Turbo Slew PT Off rate1 Aloc + 10 16 22 ns +2 ns Note: 1. Fast Slew Rate output available on PA3-PA0, PB3-PB0, and PD2-PD0. Decrement times by given amount. Table 48. CPLD Combinatorial Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter -15 -20 Conditions Min Max Min Max Min Max tPD CPLD Input Pin/ Feedback to CPLD Combinatorial Output 40 45 50 tEA CPLD Input to CPLD Output Enable 43 45 tER CPLD Input to CPLD Output Disable 43 tARP CPLD Register Clear or Preset Delay 40 tARPW CPLD Register Clear or Preset Pulse Width tARD CPLD Array Delay 25 Any macrocell +4 –6 ns 50 + 20 –6 ns 45 50 + 20 –6 ns 43 48 + 20 –6 ns 35 29 + 20 33 +4 Note: 1. Fast Slew Rate output available on PA3-PA0, PB3-PB0, and PD2-PD0. Decrement times by given amount. 80/110 Unit + 20 30 25 PT Turbo Slew Aloc Off rate1 ns ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 41. Synchronous Clock Mode Timing – PLD tCH tCL CLKIN tS tH INPUT tCO REGISTERED OUTPUT AI02860 Table 49. CPLD Macrocell Synchronous Clock Mode Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter Min fMAX -90 -15 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max Fast Turbo Slew PT Off rate1 Aloc Unit Maximum Frequency External Feedback 1/(tS+tCO) 40.0 30.30 25.00 MHz Maximum Frequency Internal Feedback (fCNT) 1/(tS+tCO–10) 66.6 43.48 31.25 MHz 1/(tCH+tCL) 83.3 50.00 35.71 MHz Maximum Frequency Pipelined Data tS Input Setup Time tH Input Hold Time tCH Clock High Time tCL 12 15 20 0 0 0 ns Clock Input 6 10 15 ns Clock Low Time Clock Input 6 10 15 ns tCO Clock to Output Delay Clock Input 13 18 22 tARD CPLD Array Delay Any macrocell 11 16 22 tMIN Minimum Clock Period 2 tCH+tCL 12 20 +2 + 10 ns –2 +2 30 ns ns ns Note: 1. Fast Slew Rate output available on PA3-PA0, PB3-PB0, and PD2-PD0. Decrement times by given amount. 2. CLKIN (PD1) tCLCL = tCH + tCL. 81/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 50. CPLD Macrocell Synchronous Clock Mode Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter Min fMAX -15 -20 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max PT Aloc Turbo Slew Off rate1 Unit Maximum Frequency External Feedback 1/(tS+tCO) 22.2 18.8 15.8 MHz Maximum Frequency Internal Feedback (fCNT) 1/(tS+tCO–10) 28.5 23.2 18.8 MHz 1/(tCH+tCL) 40.0 33.3 31.2 MHz Maximum Frequency Pipelined Data tS Input Setup Time 20 25 30 tH Input Hold Time 0 0 0 ns tCH Clock High Time Clock Input 15 15 16 ns tCL Clock Low Time Clock Input 10 15 16 ns tCO Clock to Output Delay Clock Input 25 28 33 tARD CPLD Array Delay Any macrocell 25 29 33 tMIN Minimum Clock Period2 tCH+tCL 25 29 +4 + 20 –6 +4 32 Note: 1. Fast Slew Rate output available on PA3-PA0, PB3-PB0, and PD2-PD0. Decrement times by given amount. 2. CLKIN (PD1) tCLCL = tCH + tCL. 82/110 ns ns ns ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 42. Asynchronous Reset / Preset tARPW RESET/PRESET INPUT tARP REGISTER OUTPUT AI02864 Figure 43. Asynchronous Clock Mode Timing (product term clock) tCHA tCLA CLOCK tSA tHA INPUT tCOA REGISTERED OUTPUT AI02859 83/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 51. CPLD Macrocell Asynchronous Clock Mode Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter Min fMAXA -90 -15 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max PT Turbo Slew Aloc Off Rate Unit Maximum Frequency External Feedback 1/(tSA+tCOA) 38.4 26.32 21.27 MHz Maximum Frequency Internal Feedback (fCNTA) 1/(tSA+tCOA–10) 62.5 35.71 27.78 MHz Maximum Frequency Pipelined Data 1/(tCHA+tCLA) 71.4 41.67 35.71 MHz tSA Input Setup Time 7 8 12 tHA Input Hold Time 8 12 14 tCHA Clock Input High Time 9 12 15 + 10 ns tCLA Clock Input Low Time 9 12 15 + 10 ns tCOA Clock to Output Delay tARDA CPLD Array Delay Any macrocell tMINA Minimum Clock Period 1/fCNTA 84/110 16 +2 30 37 11 16 22 39 ns ns 21 28 + 10 + 10 +2 –2 ns ns ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 52. CPLD Macrocell Asynchronous Clock Mode Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter Min fMAXA -15 -20 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max PT Turbo Slew Aloc Off Rate Unit Maximum Frequency External Feedback 1/(tSA+tCOA) 21.7 19.2 16.9 MHz Maximum Frequency Internal Feedback (fCNTA) 1/(tSA+tCOA–10) 27.8 23.8 20.4 MHz 1/(tCHA+tCLA) 33.3 27 24.4 MHz Maximum Frequency Pipelined Data tSA Input Setup Time 10 12 13 tHA Input Hold Time 12 15 17 tCHA Clock High Time 17 22 25 + 20 ns tCLA Clock Low Time 13 15 16 + 20 ns tCOA Clock to Output Delay tARD CPLD Array Delay tMINA Minimum Clock Period Any macrocell 1/fCNTA 36 +4 40 46 25 29 33 49 ns ns 36 42 + 20 + 20 +4 –6 ns ns ns 85/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 44. Input Macrocell Timing (product term clock) t INH t INL PT CLOCK t IS t IH INPUT OUTPUT t INO AI03101 Table 53. Input Macrocell Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter -90 -15 Conditions Min Max Min Max Min Max PT Aloc Turbo Off Unit tIS Input Setup Time (Note 1) 0 0 0 tIH Input Hold Time (Note 1) 15 20 26 tINH NIB Input High Time (Note 1) 9 12 18 ns tINL NIB Input Low Time (Note 1) 9 12 18 ns tINO NIB Input to Combinatorial Delay (Note 1) 34 ns + 10 46 59 +2 + 10 ns ns Note: 1. Inputs from Port A, B, and C relative to register/ latch clock from the PLD. ALE/AS latch timings refer to tAVLX and tLXAX. Table 54. Input Macrocell Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter -15 -20 Conditions Min Max Min Max Min Max PT Aloc Turbo Off Unit tIS Input Setup Time (Note 1) 0 0 0 tIH Input Hold Time (Note 1) 25 25 30 tINH NIB Input High Time (Note 1) 12 13 15 ns tINL NIB Input Low Time (Note 1) 12 13 15 ns tINO NIB Input to Combinatorial Delay (Note 1) 46 62 ns + 20 70 +4 + 20 Note: 1. Inputs from Port A, B, and C relative to register/latch clock from the PLD. ALE latch timings refer to tAVLX and tLXAX. 86/110 ns ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 45. READ Timing tAVLX 1 tLXAX ALE /AS tLVLX A /D MULTIPLEXED BUS DATA VALID ADDRESS VALID tAVQV ADDRESS NON-MULTIPLEXED BUS ADDRESS VALID DATA NON-MULTIPLEXED BUS DATA VALID tSLQV CSI tRLQV tRHQX tRLRH RD (PSEN, DS) tRHQZ tEHEL E tTHEH tELTL R/W tAVPV ADDRESS OUT AI02895 Note: 1. tAVLX and tLXAX are not required for 80C251 in Page Mode or 80C51XA in Burst Mode. 87/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 55. READ Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter Min tLVLX ALE or AS Pulse Width tAVLX Address Setup Time tLXAX -90 -15 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max Turbo Off Unit 15 20 28 ns (Note 3) 4 6 10 ns Address Hold Time (Note 3) 7 8 11 ns tAVQV Address Valid to Data Valid (Note 3) tSLQV CS Valid to Data Valid 70 90 150 + 10 ns 75 100 150 ns RD to Data Valid 8-Bit Bus (Note 5) 24 32 40 ns RD or PSEN to Data Valid 8-Bit Bus, 8031, 80251 (Note 2) 31 38 45 ns tRHQX RD Data Hold Time (Note 1) 0 0 0 ns tRLRH RD Pulse Width (Note 1) 27 32 38 ns tRHQZ RD to Data High-Z (Note 1) tEHEL E Pulse Width 27 32 38 ns tTHEH R/W Setup Time to Enable 6 10 18 ns tELTL R/W Hold Time After Enable 0 0 0 ns tAVPV Address Input Valid to Address Output Delay tRLQV Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 88/110 (Note 4) 20 20 25 30 25 RD timing has the same timing as DS, LDS, UDS, and PSEN signals. RD and PSEN have the same timing. Any input used to select an internal PSD function. In multiplexed mode, latched addresses generated from ADIO delay to address output on any Port. RD timing has the same timing as DS, LDS, and UDS signals. 30 ns ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 56. READ Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter Min tLVLX ALE or AS Pulse Width tAVLX Address Setup Time tLXAX -15 -20 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max Turbo Off Unit 26 26 30 ns (Note 3) 9 10 12 ns Address Hold Time (Note 3) 9 12 14 ns tAVQV Address Valid to Data Valid (Note 3) tSLQV CS Valid to Data Valid 120 150 200 + 20 ns 120 150 200 ns RD to Data Valid 8-Bit Bus (Note 5) 35 35 40 ns RD or PSEN to Data Valid 8-Bit Bus, 8031, 80251 (Note 2) 45 50 55 ns tRHQX RD Data Hold Time (Note 1) tRLRH RD Pulse Width tRHQZ RD to Data High-Z tEHEL E Pulse Width 40 45 52 ns tTHEH R/W Setup Time to Enable 15 18 20 ns tELTL R/W Hold Time After Enable 0 0 0 ns tAVPV Address Input Valid to Address Output Delay tRLQV Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 0 0 0 ns 38 40 45 ns (Note 1) (Note 4) 38 33 40 35 45 40 ns ns RD timing has the same timing as DS, LDS, UDS, and PSEN signals. RD and PSEN have the same timing for 8031. Any input used to select an internal PSD function. In multiplexed mode latched address generated from ADIO delay to address output on any Port. RD timing has the same timing as DS, LDS, and UDS signals. 89/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 46. WRITE Timing tAVLX t LXAX ALE/AS t LVLX A/D MULTIPLEXED BUS ADDRESS VALID DATA VALID tAVWL ADDRESS NON-MULTIPLEXED BUS ADDRESS VALID DATA NON-MULTIPLEXED BUS DATA VALID tSLWL CSI tDVWH t WLWH WR (DS) t WHDX t WHAX t EHEL E t THEH t ELTL R/ W t WLMV tAVPV t WHPV ADDRESS OUT STANDARD MCU I/O OUT AI02896 90/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 57. WRITE Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter ALE or AS Pulse Width tAVLX Address Setup Time tLXAX Address Hold Time tAVWL Address Valid to Leading Edge of WR tSLWL -15 Unit Min tLVLX -90 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max 15 20 28 ns (Note 1) 4 6 10 ns (Note 1) 7 8 11 ns (Notes 1,3) 8 15 20 ns CS Valid to Leading Edge of WR (Note 3) 12 15 20 ns tDVWH WR Data Setup Time (Note 3) 25 35 45 ns tWHDX WR Data Hold Time (Note 3) 4 5 5 ns tWLWH WR Pulse Width (Note 3) 31 35 45 ns tWHAX1 Trailing Edge of WR to Address Invalid (Note 3) 6 8 10 ns tWHAX2 Trailing Edge of WR to DPLD Address Invalid (Note 3,6) 0 0 0 ns tWHPV Trailing Edge of WR to Port Output Valid Using I/O Port Data Register tDVMV (Note 3) 27 30 38 ns Data Valid to Port Output Valid Using Macrocell Register Preset/Clear (Notes 3,5) 42 55 65 ns tAVPV Address Input Valid to Address Output Delay (Note 2) 20 25 30 ns tWLMV WR Valid to Port Output Valid Using Macrocell Register Preset/Clear (Notes 3,4) 48 55 65 ns Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Any input used to select an internal PSD function. In multiplexed mode, latched address generated from ADIO delay to address output on any port. WR has the same timing as E, LDS, UDS, WRL, and WRH signals. Assuming data is stable before active WRITE signal. Assuming WRITE is active before data becomes valid. TWHAX2 is the address hold time for DPLD inputs that are used to generate Sector Select signals for internal PSD memory. 91/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 58. WRITE Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter ALE or AS Pulse Width tAVLX Address Setup Time tLXAX Address Hold Time tAVWL Address Valid to Leading Edge of WR tSLWL -20 Unit Min tLVLX -15 Conditions Max Min Max Min Max 26 26 30 (Note 1) 9 10 12 ns (Note 1) 9 12 14 ns (Notes 1,3) 17 20 25 ns CS Valid to Leading Edge of WR (Note 3) 17 20 25 ns tDVWH WR Data Setup Time (Note 3) 45 45 50 ns tWHDX WR Data Hold Time (Note 3) 7 8 10 ns tWLWH WR Pulse Width (Note 3) 46 48 53 ns tWHAX1 Trailing Edge of WR to Address Invalid (Note 3) 10 12 17 ns tWHAX2 Trailing Edge of WR to DPLD Address Invalid (Note 3,6) 0 0 0 ns tWHPV Trailing Edge of WR to Port Output Valid Using I/O Port Data Register tDVMV Data Valid to Port Output Valid Using Macrocell Register Preset/Clear tAVPV Address Input Valid to Address Output Delay tWLMV WR Valid to Port Output Valid Using Macrocell Register Preset/Clear Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. (Note 3) 33 35 40 ns (Notes 3,5) 70 70 80 ns (Note 2) 33 35 40 ns (Notes 3,4) 70 70 80 ns Any input used to select an internal PSD function. In multiplexed mode, latched address generated from ADIO delay to address output on any port. WR has the same timing as E, LDS, UDS, WRL, and WRH signals. Assuming data is stable before active WRITE signal. Assuming WRITE is active before data becomes valid. TWHAX2 is the address hold time for DPLD inputs that are used to generate Sector Select signals for internal PSD memory. Table 59. Program, WRITE and Erase Times (5V devices) Symbol Parameter Min. Flash Program Typ. 8.5 1 Flash Bulk Erase (pre-programmed) 3 Flash Bulk Erase (not pre-programmed) 5 tWHQV3 Sector Erase (pre-programmed) 1 tWHQV2 Sector Erase (not pre-programmed) 2.2 tWHQV1 Byte Program 14 Program / Erase Cycles (per Sector) tWHWLO Sector Erase Time-Out tQ7VQV DQ7 Valid to Output (DQ7-DQ0) Valid (Data Polling)2 Unit s 30 s s 30 s s 1200 100,000 µs cycles 100 Note: 1. Programmed to all zero before erase. 2. The polling status, DQ7, is valid tQ7VQV time units before the data byte, DQ0-DQ7, is valid for reading. 92/110 Max. µs 30 ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 60. Program, WRITE and Erase Times (3V devices) Symbol Parameter Min. Flash Program Typ. 8.5 Flash Bulk Erase1 (pre-programmed) 3 Flash Bulk Erase (not pre-programmed) 5 tWHQV3 Sector Erase (pre-programmed) 1 tWHQV2 Sector Erase (not pre-programmed) 2.2 tWHQV1 Byte Program 14 Program / Erase Cycles (per Sector) tWHWLO tQ7VQV Max. s 30 s s 30 s s 1200 100,000 Sector Erase Time-Out Unit µs cycles 100 2 DQ7 Valid to Output (DQ7-DQ0) Valid (Data Polling) µs 30 ns Note: 1. Programmed to all zero before erase. 2. The polling status, DQ7, is valid tQ7VQV time units before the data byte, DQ0-DQ7, is valid for reading. 93/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 47. Peripheral I/O READ Timing ALE/AS ADDRESS A/D BUS DATA VALID tAVQV (PA) tSLQV (PA) CSI tRLQV (PA) tQXRH (PA) tRHQZ (PA) tRLRH (PA) RD tDVQV (PA) DATA ON PORT A AI02897 Table 61. Port A Peripheral Data Mode READ Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter Min tAVQV–PA Address Valid to Data Valid tSLQV–PA CSI Valid to Data Valid -90 -15 Turbo Off Unit Max Conditions (Note 3) Max Min Max Min 37 39 45 + 10 ns 27 35 45 + 10 ns 21 32 40 ns RD to Data Valid 8031 Mode 32 38 45 ns tDVQV–PA Data In to Data Out Valid 22 30 38 ns tQXRH–PA RD Data Hold Time tRLRH–PA RD Pulse Width (Note 1) tRHQZ–PA RD to Data High-Z (Note 1) RD to Data Valid tRLQV–PA 94/110 (Notes 1,4) 0 0 0 ns 27 32 38 ns 23 25 30 ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 62. Port A Peripheral Data Mode READ Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter -15 -20 Turbo Off Unit Max Conditions Min tAVQV–PA Address Valid to Data Valid tSLQV–PA CSI Valid to Data Valid (Note 3) Max Min Max Min 50 50 50 + 20 ns 37 45 50 + 20 ns 37 40 45 ns RD to Data Valid 8031 Mode 45 45 50 ns tDVQV–PA Data In to Data Out Valid 38 40 45 ns tQXRH–PA RD Data Hold Time tRLRH–PA RD Pulse Width (Note 1) tRHQZ–PA RD to Data High-Z (Note 1) (Notes 1,4) RD to Data Valid tRLQV–PA 0 0 0 ns 36 36 46 ns 36 40 45 ns Figure 48. Peripheral I/O WRITE Timing ALE/AS A / D BUS ADDRESS DATA OUT tWLQV tWHQZ (PA) (PA) WR tDVQV (PA) PORT A DATA OUT AI02898 Table 63. Port A Peripheral Data Mode WRITE Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter -90 -15 Conditions Unit Min Max Min Max Min Max tWLQV–PA WR to Data Propagation Delay (Note 2) 25 35 40 ns tDVQV–PA Data to Port A Data Propagation Delay (Note 5) 22 30 38 ns tWHQZ–PA WR Invalid to Port A Tri-state (Note 2) 20 25 33 ns Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. RD has the same timing as DS, LDS, UDS, and PSEN (in 8031 combined mode). WR has the same timing as the E, LDS, UDS, WRL, and WRH signals. Any input used to select Port A Data Peripheral mode. Data is already stable on Port A. Data stable on ADIO pins to data on Port A. 95/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 64. Port A Peripheral Data Mode WRITE Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter -15 -20 Conditions Unit Min Max Min Max Min Max tWLQV–PA WR to Data Propagation Delay (Note 2) 42 45 55 ns tDVQV–PA Data to Port A Data Propagation Delay (Note 5) 38 40 45 ns tWHQZ–PA WR Invalid to Port A Tri-state (Note 2) 33 33 35 ns Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. RD has the same timing as DS, LDS, UDS, and PSEN (in 8031 combined mode). WR has the same timing as the E, LDS, UDS, WRL, and WRH signals. Any input used to select Port A Data Peripheral mode. Data is already stable on Port A. Data stable on ADIO pins to data on Port A. Figure 49. Reset (RESET) Timing VCC VCC(min) tNLNH-PO tNLNH tNLNH-A Warm Reset tOPR Power-On Reset tOPR RESET AI02866b Table 65. Reset (RESET) Timing (5V devices) Symbol Parameter tNLNH RESET Active Low Time 1 tNLNH–PO Conditions Min Max Unit 150 ns Power On Reset Active Low Time 1 ms tNLNH–A Warm Reset (on the PSD834Fx) 2 25 µs tOPR RESET High to Operational Device 120 ns Max Unit Note: 1. Reset (RESET) does not reset Flash memory Program or Erase cycles. 2. Warm reset aborts Flash memory Program or Erase cycles, and puts the device in READ Mode. Table 66. Reset (RESET) Timing (3V devices) Symbol Parameter tNLNH RESET Active Low Time 1 tNLNH–PO Conditions Min 300 ns Power On Reset Active Low Time 1 ms tNLNH–A Warm Reset (on the PSD834Fx) 2 25 µs tOPR RESET High to Operational Device Note: 1. Reset (RESET) does not reset Flash memory Program or Erase cycles. 2. Warm reset aborts Flash memory Program or Erase cycles, and puts the device in READ Mode. 96/110 300 ns PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 67. VSTBYON Timing (5V devices) Symbol Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Unit tBVBH VSTBY Detection to VSTBYON Output High (Note 1) 20 µs tBXBL VSTBY Off Detection to VSTBYON Output Low (Note 1) 20 µs Note: 1. VSTBYON timing is measured at VCC ramp rate of 2 ms. Table 68. VSTBYON Timing (3V devices) Symbol Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Unit tBVBH VSTBY Detection to VSTBYON Output High (Note 1) 20 µs tBXBL VSTBY Off Detection to VSTBYON Output Low (Note 1) 20 µs Note: 1. VSTBYON timing is measured at VCC ramp rate of 2 ms. 97/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 50. ISC Timing t ISCCH TCK t ISCCL t ISCPSU t ISCPH TDI/TMS t ISCPZV t ISCPCO ISC OUTPUTS/TDO t ISCPVZ ISC OUTPUTS/TDO AI02865 Table 69. ISC Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter -90 -15 Conditions Unit Min Max Min Max Min Max tISCCF Clock (TCK, PC1) Frequency (except for PLD) (Note 1) tISCCH Clock (TCK, PC1) High Time (except for PLD) (Note 1) 23 26 31 ns tISCCL Clock (TCK, PC1) Low Time (except for PLD) (Note 1) 23 26 31 ns tISCCFP Clock (TCK, PC1) Frequency (PLD only) (Note 2) tISCCHP Clock (TCK, PC1) High Time (PLD only) (Note 2) 240 240 240 ns tISCCLP Clock (TCK, PC1) Low Time (PLD only) (Note 2) 240 240 240 ns tISCPSU ISC Port Set Up Time 7 8 10 ns tISCPH ISC Port Hold Up Time 5 5 5 ns tISCPCO ISC Port Clock to Output 21 23 25 ns tISCPZV ISC Port High-Impedance to Valid Output 21 23 25 ns tISCPVZ ISC Port Valid Output to High-Impedance 21 23 25 ns Note: 1. For non-PLD Programming, Erase or in ISC by-pass mode. 2. For Program or Erase PLD only. 98/110 20 18 2 14 2 2 MHz MHz PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 70. ISC Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter -15 -20 Conditions Unit Min Max Min Max Min Max tISCCF Clock (TCK, PC1) Frequency (except for PLD) (Note 1) tISCCH Clock (TCK, PC1) High Time (except for PLD) (Note 1) 40 45 51 ns tISCCL Clock (TCK, PC1) Low Time (except for PLD) (Note 1) 40 45 51 ns tISCCFP Clock (TCK, PC1) Frequency (PLD only) (Note 2) tISCCHP Clock (TCK, PC1) High Time (PLD only) (Note 2) 240 240 240 ns tISCCLP Clock (TCK, PC1) Low Time (PLD only) (Note 2) 240 240 240 ns tISCPSU ISC Port Set Up Time 12 13 15 ns tISCPH ISC Port Hold Up Time 5 5 5 ns tISCPCO ISC Port Clock to Output 30 36 40 ns tISCPZV ISC Port High-Impedance to Valid Output 30 36 40 ns tISCPVZ ISC Port Valid Output to High-Impedance 30 36 40 ns 12 10 2 9 2 2 MHz MHz Note: 1. For non-PLD Programming, Erase or in ISC by-pass mode. 2. For Program or Erase PLD only. Table 71. Power-down Timing (5V devices) -70 Symbol Parameter ALE Access Time from Power-down tCLWH Maximum Delay from APD Enable to Internal PDN Valid Signal -15 Unit Min tLVDV -90 Conditions Max Min Max 80 Using CLKIN (PD1) Min 90 Max 150 15 * tCLCL1 ns µs Note: 1. tCLCL is the period of CLKIN (PD1). Table 72. Power-down Timing (3V devices) -12 Symbol Parameter ALE Access Time from Power-down tCLWH Maximum Delay from APD Enable to Internal PDN Valid Signal -20 Unit Min tLVDV -15 Conditions Using CLKIN (PD1) Max Min Max 145 150 15 * tCLCL1 Min Max 200 ns µs Note: 1. tCLCL is the period of CLKIN (PD1). 99/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PACKAGE MECHANICAL Figure 51. PQFP52 - 52-pin Plastic, Quad, Flat Package Mechanical Drawing D D1 D2 A2 e E2 E1 E Ne b N 1 A Nd CP L1 c QFP-A Note: Drawing is not to scale. 100/110 A1 α L PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 73. PQFP52 - 52-pin Plastic, Quad, Flat Package Mechanical Dimensions mm inches Symb. Typ. Min. Max. Typ. Min. Max. A 2.35 0.093 A1 0.25 0.010 A2 2.00 1.80 2.10 b 0.22 c 0.079 0.077 0.083 0.38 0.009 0.015 0.11 0.23 0.004 0.009 D 13.20 13.15 13.25 0.520 0.518 0.522 D1 10.00 9.95 10.05 0.394 0.392 0.396 D2 7.80 – – 0.307 – – E 13.20 13.15 13.25 0.520 0.518 0.522 E1 10.00 9.95 10.05 0.394 0.392 0.396 E2 7.80 – – 0.307 – – e 0.65 – – 0.026 L 0.88 0.73 1.03 0.035 0.029 0.041 L1 1.60 – – 0.063 α 0° 7° 0° 7° N 52 52 Nd 13 13 Ne 13 13 CP 0.10 0.004 101/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 52. PLCC52 - 52-lead Plastic Lead, Chip Carrier Package Mechanical Drawing D D1 A1 A2 M M1 1 N b1 e D2/E2 D3/E3 E1 E b L1 L C A CP PLCC-B Note: Drawing is not to scale. Table 74. PLCC52 - 52-lead Plastic Lead, Chip Carrier Package Mechanical Dimensions mm inches Symbol Typ. Min. Max. A 4.19 A1 Typ. Min. Max. 4.57 0.165 0.180 2.54 2.79 0.100 0.110 A2 – 0.91 – 0.036 B 0.33 0.53 0.013 0.021 B1 0.66 0.81 0.026 0.032 C 0.246 0.261 0.0097 0.0103 D 19.94 20.19 0.785 0.795 D1 19.05 19.15 0.750 0.754 D2 17.53 18.54 0.690 0.730 E 19.94 20.19 0.785 0.795 E1 19.05 19.15 0.750 0.754 E2 17.53 18.54 0.690 0.730 e 1.27 – – 0.050 – – R 0.89 – – 0.035 – – N 52 52 Nd 13 13 Ne 13 13 102/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Figure 53. TQFP64 - 64-lead Thin Quad Flatpack, Package Outline D D1 D2 A2 e E2 E1 E Ne b N 1 A Nd CP L1 c QFP-A A1 α L Note: Drawing is not to scale. 103/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Table 75. TQFP64 - 64-lead Thin Quad Flatpack, Package Mechanical Data mm inches Symb. Typ. A Min. Max. 1.42 1.54 Min. Max. 0.056 0.061 A1 0.10 0.07 0.14 0.004 0.003 0.005 A2 1.40 1.36 1.44 0.055 0.054 0.057 α 3.5° 0.0° 7.0° 3.5° 0.0° 7.0° b 0.35 0.33 0.38 0.014 0.013 0.015 c 104/110 Typ. 0.17 0.006 D 16.00 15.90 16.10 0.630 0.626 0.634 D1 14.00 13.98 14.03 0.551 0.550 0.552 D2 12.00 11.95 12.05 0.472 0.470 0.474 E 16.00 15.90 16.10 0.630 0.626 0.634 E1 14.00 13.98 14.03 0.551 0.550 0.552 E2 12.00 11.95 12.05 0.472 0.470 0.474 e 0.80 0.75 0.85 0.031 0.030 0.033 L 0.60 0.45 0.75 0.024 0.018 0.030 L1 1.00 0.94 1.06 0.039 0.037 0.042 CP 0.10 0.004 N 64 64 Nd 16 16 Ne 16 16 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 PART NUMBERING Table 76. Ordering Information Scheme Example: PSD8 1 3 F 2 V – 15 J 1 T Device Type PSD8 = 8-bit PSD with Register Logic PSD9 = 8-bit PSD with Combinatorial Logic SRAM Capacity 1 = 16 Kbit 3 = 64 Kbit 5 = 256 Kbit Flash Memory Capacity 3 = 1 Mbit (128K x 8) 4 = 2 Mbit (256K x 8) 2nd Flash Memory 2 = 256 Kbit Flash memory + SRAM 3 = SRAM but no Flash memory 4 = 256 Kbit Flash memory but no SRAM 5 = no Flash memory + no SRAM Operating Voltage blank = VCC = 4.5 to 5.5V V = VCC = 3.0 to 3.6V Speed 70 = 70ns 90 = 90ns 12 = 120ns 15 = 150ns 20 = 200ns Package J = PLCC52 M = PQFP52 U = TQFP64 Temperature Range blank = 0 to 70°C (commercial) I = –40 to 85°C (industrial) Option T = Tape & Reel Packing For a list of available options (e.g., speed, package) or for further information on any aspect of this device, please contact your nearest ST Sales Office. 105/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 APPENDIX A. PQFP52 PIN ASSIGNMENTS Table 77. PQFP52 Connections (Figure 2) Pin Number Pin Assignments Pin Number Pin Assignments 1 PD2 27 AD4 2 PD1 28 AD5 3 PD0 29 AD6 4 PC7 30 AD7 5 PC6 31 VCC 6 PC5 32 AD8 7 PC4 33 AD9 8 VCC 34 AD10 9 GND 35 AD11 10 PC3 36 AD12 11 PC2 37 AD13 12 PC1 38 AD14 13 PC0 39 AD15 14 PA7 40 CNTL0 15 PA6 41 RESET 16 PA5 42 CNTL2 17 PA4 43 CNTL1 18 PA3 44 PB7 19 GND 45 PB6 20 PA2 46 GND 21 PA1 47 PB5 22 PA0 48 PB4 23 AD0 49 PB3 24 AD1 50 PB2 25 AD2 51 PB1 26 AD3 52 PB0 106/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 APPENDIX B. PLCC52 PIN ASSIGNMENTS Table 78. PLCC52 Connections (Figure 3) Pin Number Pin Assignments Pin Number Pin Assignments 1 GND 27 PA2 2 PB5 28 PA1 3 PB4 29 PA0 4 PB3 30 AD0 5 PB2 31 AD1 6 PB1 32 AD2 7 PB0 33 AD3 8 PD2 34 AD4 9 PD1 35 AD5 10 PD0 36 AD6 11 PC7 37 AD7 12 PC6 38 VCC 13 PC5 39 AD8 14 PC4 40 AD9 15 VCC 41 AD10 16 GND 42 AD11 17 PC3 43 AD12 18 PC2 (VSTBY) 44 AD13 19 PC1 45 AD14 20 PC0 46 AD15 21 PA7 47 CNTL0 22 PA6 48 RESET 23 PA5 49 CNTL2 24 PA4 50 CNTL1 25 PA3 51 PB7 26 GND 52 PB6 107/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 APPENDIX C. TQFP64 PIN ASSIGNMENTS Table 79. TQFP64 Connections (Figure 4) Pin Number Pin Assignments Pin Number Pin Assignments 1 PD2 33 AD3 2 PD1 34 AD4 3 PD0 35 AD5 4 PC7 36 AD6 5 PC6 37 AD7 6 PC5 38 VCC 7 VCC 39 VCC 8 VCC 40 AD8 9 VCC 41 AD9 10 GND 42 AD10 11 GND 43 AD11 12 PC3 44 AD12 13 PC2 45 AD13 14 PC1 46 AD14 15 PC0 47 AD15 16 NC 48 CNTL0 17 NC 49 NC 18 NC 50 RESET 19 PA7 51 CNTL2 20 PA6 52 CNTL1 21 PA5 53 PB7 22 PA4 54 PB6 23 PA3 55 GND 24 GND 56 GND 25 GND 57 PB5 26 PA2 58 PB4 27 PA1 59 PB3 28 PA0 60 PB2 29 AD0 61 PB1 30 AD1 62 PB0 31 N/D 63 NC 32 AD2 64 NC 108/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 REVISION HISTORY Table 80. Document Revision History Date Rev. Description of Revision 15-Oct-99 1.0 Initial release as a WSI document 27-Oct-00 1.1 Port A Peripheral Data Mode Read Timing, changed to 50 30-Nov-00 1.2 PSD85xF2 added 23-Oct-01 2.0 Document rewritten using the ST template 07-Apr-03 3.0 v2.2 Template applied; voltage correction (Table 76) 12-Jun-03 3.1 Fix errors in PQFQ52 Connections (Table 77) 02-Oct-03 3.2 Correct Instructions (Table 9); update disclaimer, Title for EDOCS application 17-Nov-03 3.3 Correct package references (Figure 1) 04-Jun-04 4.0 Reformatted (adjust RPN list); added Table 8; added ‘U’ package (64-pin) (Figure 1, 4, 53; Table 75, 76, 79); 5V split from original 109/110 PSD813F2, PSD833F2, PSD834F2, PSD853F2, PSD854F2 Information furnished is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, STMicroelectronics assumes no responsibility for the consequ of use of such information nor for any infringement of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is g by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of STMicroelectronics. Specifications mentioned in this publication are s to change without notice. This publication supersedes and replaces all information previously supplied. STMicroelectronics products a authorized for use as critical components in life support devices or systems without express written approval of STMicroelectron The ST logo is a registered trademark of STMicroelectronics. All other names are the property of their respective owners. © 2004 STMicroelectronics - All rights reserved STMicroelectronics GROUP OF COMPANIES Australia - Belgium - Brazil - Canada - China - Czech Republic - Finland - France - Germany Hong Kong - India - Israel - Italy - Japan - Malaysia - Malta - Morocco - Singapore Spain - Sweden - Switzerland - United Kingdom - United States www.st.com 110/110