TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 Fixed-Point Digital Signal Processors Data Manual Literature Number: SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Products conform to specifications per the terms of Texas Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters. IMPORTANT NOTICE Texas Instruments Incorporated and its subsidiaries (TI) reserve the right to make corrections, modifications, enhancements, improvements, and other changes to its products and services at any time and to discontinue any product or service without notice. Customers should obtain the latest relevant information before placing orders and should verify that such information is current and complete. All products are sold subject to TI’s terms and conditions of sale supplied at the time of order acknowledgment. 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Following are URLs where you can obtain information on other Texas Instruments products and application solutions: Products Applications Amplifiers amplifier.ti.com Audio www.ti.com/audio Data Converters dataconverter.ti.com Automotive www.ti.com/automotive DSP dsp.ti.com Broadband www.ti.com/broadband Interface interface.ti.com Digital Control www.ti.com/digitalcontrol Logic logic.ti.com Military www.ti.com/military Power Mgmt power.ti.com Optical Networking www.ti.com/opticalnetwork Microcontrollers microcontroller.ti.com Security www.ti.com/security Telephony www.ti.com/telephony Video & Imaging www.ti.com/video Wireless www.ti.com/wireless Mailing Address: Texas Instruments Post Office Box 655303 Dallas, Texas 75265 Copyright 2004, Texas Instruments Incorporated Revision History REVISION HISTORY This data sheet revision history highlights the technical changes made to the SPRS007C device-specific data sheet to make it an SPRS007D revision. Scope: This document has been reviewed for technical accuracy; the technical content is up-to-date as of the specified release date with the following changes. PAGE(S) NO. ADDITIONS/CHANGES/DELETIONS 21 Added “This pin must be tied directly to DVDD to enable HPI.” to the HPIENA description and “This pin must be tied directly to DVDD to enable HPI16 mode.” to the HPI16 description in Table 2−2. Also deleted “Internally pulled low.” from the HPI16 description. 38 Added the following to Section 3.9: “Since the Timer1 output is multiplexed externally with the HINT output, the HPI must be disabled (HPIENA input pin = 0) if the Timer1 output is to be used. The Timer1 output also has a dedicated enable bit in the General Purpose I/O Control Register (GPIOCR) located at data memory address 003Ch. If the external Timer1 output is to be used, in addition to disabling the HPI, the TOUT1 bit in the GPIOCR must also be set to 1.” 42 Changed the parenthetical statement “(such as the McBSPs)” in Section 3.12. to read “(such as the McBSPs, but not the UART)” 48 Added the following footnote to Table 3−12: “Note that the UART DMA synchronization event is usable as a synchronization event only, and is not usable for transferring data to or from the UART. The DMA cannot be used to transfer data to or from the UART.” 59 Changed Figure 3−23, bit 15 from “Reserved” to “TOUT1”. 60 Added the following paragraph to Section 3.14.2: “Bit 15 of the GPIOCR is also used as the Timer1 output enable bit, TOUT1. The TOUT1 bit enables or disables the Timer1 output on the HINT/TOUT1 pin. If TOUT1 = 0, the Timer1 output is not available externally; if TOUT1 = 1, the Timer1 output is driven on the HINT/TOUT1 pin. Note also that the Timer1 output is only available when the HPI is disabled (HPIENA input pin = 0).” 71 Changed the IDDC parameter from “60” to “42” in the Electrical Characteristics Over Recommended Operating Case Temperature Range table. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 3 Revision History 4 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Contents Contents Section Page 1 TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 2 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1 Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2 Pin Assignments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.1 Terminal Assignments for the GGU Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2.2 Pin Assignments for the PGE Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3 Signal Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 14 14 15 17 18 3 Functional Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1 Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.1 Data Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.2 Program Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1.3 Extended Program Memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2 On-Chip ROM With Bootloader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3 On-Chip RAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.4 On-Chip Memory Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5 Memory Maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5.1 5407 Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5.2 5404 Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.5.3 Relocatable Interrupt Vector Table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6 On-Chip Peripherals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6.1 Software-Programmable Wait-State Generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6.2 Programmable Bank-Switching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6.3 Bus Holders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7 Parallel I/O Ports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7.1 Enhanced 8-/16-Bit Host-Port Interface (HPI8/16) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7.2 HPI Nonmultiplexed Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.8 Multichannel Buffered Serial Ports (McBSPs) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.9 Hardware Timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.10 Clock Generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.11 Enhanced External Parallel Interface (XIO2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12 DMA Controller . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.1 Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.2 DMA External Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.3 DMA Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.4 DMA Priority Level . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.5 DMA Source/Destination Address Modification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.6 DMA in Autoinitialization Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.7 DMA Transfer Counting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.8 DMA Transfer in Doubleword Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.9 DMA Channel Index Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.10 DMA Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.12.11 DMA Controller Synchronization Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 23 23 24 24 24 25 25 26 26 27 28 30 30 32 33 33 33 35 36 38 39 40 42 43 43 44 46 46 46 47 47 47 48 48 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 5 Contents Section 3.13 Page Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter (UART) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.1 UART Accessible Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.2 FIFO Control Register (FCR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.3 FIFO Interrupt Mode Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.4 FIFO Polled Mode Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.5 Interrupt Enable Register (IER) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.6 Interrupt Identification Register (IIR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.7 Line Control Register (LCR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.8 Line Status Register (LSR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.9 Modem Control Register (MCR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.13.10 Programmable Baud Generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . General-Purpose I/O Pins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.14.1 McBSP Pins as General-Purpose I/O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.14.2 HPI Data Pins as General-Purpose I/O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Device ID Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Memory-Mapped Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Control Registers and Subaddresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMA Subbank Addressed Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.19.1 IFR and IMR Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 52 53 53 54 54 54 55 56 57 57 59 59 59 60 61 63 64 66 67 4 Documentation Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.1 Device and Development-Support Tool Nomenclature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 69 5 Electrical Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.2 Recommended Operating Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.3 Electrical Characteristics Over Recommended Operating Case Temperature Range (Unless Otherwise Noted) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.4 Package Thermal Resistance Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.5 Timing Parameter Symbology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.6 Internal Oscillator With External Crystal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.7 Clock Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.7.1 Divide-By-Two and Divide-By-Four Clock Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.7.2 Multiply-By-N Clock Option (PLL Enabled) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.8 Memory and Parallel I/O Interface Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.8.1 Memory Read . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.8.2 Memory Write . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.8.3 I/O Read . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.8.4 I/O Write . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.9 Ready Timing for Externally Generated Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.10 HOLD and HOLDA Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.11 Reset, BIO, Interrupt, and MP/MC Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.12 Instruction Acquisition (IAQ) and Interrupt Acknowledge (IACK) Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.13 External Flag (XF) and TOUT Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 70 70 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 6 SPRS007D 71 72 72 72 73 73 75 76 76 79 81 83 84 87 88 90 91 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Contents Section 5.14 Multichannel Buffered Serial Port (McBSP) Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.14.1 McBSP Transmit and Receive Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.14.2 McBSP General-Purpose I/O Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.14.3 McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Host-Port Interface Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.15.1 HPI8 Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.15.2 HPI16 Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UART Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 92 95 96 100 100 104 107 Mechanical Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.1 Ball Grid Array Mechanical Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.2 Low-Profile Quad Flatpack Mechanical Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 108 109 5.15 5.16 6 Page November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 7 Figures List of Figures Figure Page 2−1 2−2 144-Ball GGU MicroStar BGA (Bottom View) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144-Pin PGE Low-Profile Quad Flatpack (Top View) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 17 3−1 3−2 3−3 3−4 3−5 3−6 3−7 3−8 3−9 3−10 3−11 3−12 3−13 3−14 3−15 3−16 3−17 3−18 3−19 3−20 3−21 3−22 3−23 3−24 3−25 3−26 TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 Functional Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5407 Program and Data Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5407 Extended Program Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5404 Program and Data Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5404 Extended Program Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Processor Mode Status (PMST) Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Software Wait-State Register (SWWSR) [Memory-Mapped Register (MMR) Address 0028h] . . . Software Wait-State Control Register (SWCR) [MMR Address 002Bh] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bank-Switching Control Register (BSCR) [MMR Address 0029h] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Host-Port Interface — Nonmultiplexed Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HPI Memory Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multichannel Control Register (MCR1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multichannel Control Register (MCR2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pin Control Register (PCR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nonconsecutive Memory Read and I/O Read Bus Sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Consecutive Memory Read Bus Sequence (n = 3 reads) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Memory Write and I/O Write Bus Sequence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMA Transfer Mode Control Register (DMMCRn) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . On-Chip DMA Memory Map for Program Space (DLAXS = 0 and SLAXS = 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . On-Chip DMA Memory Map for Data and IO Space (DLAXS = 0 and SLAXS = 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMPREC Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UART Functional Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . General-Purpose I/O Control Register (GPIOCR) [MMR Address 003Ch] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . General-Purpose I/O Status Register (GPIOSR) [MMR Address 003Dh] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Device ID Register (CSIDR) [MMR Address 003Eh] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IFR and IMR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 26 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 35 35 37 37 38 40 41 42 43 45 46 47 50 59 60 60 67 5−1 5−2 5−3 5−4 5−5 5−6 5−7 5−8 5−9 3.3-V Test Load Circuit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Internal Divide-by-Two Clock Option With External Crystal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . External Divide-by-Two Clock Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multiply-by-One Clock Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nonconsecutive Mode Memory Reads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Consecutive Mode Memory Reads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Memory Write (MSTRB = 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Parallel I/O Port Read (IOSTRB = 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Parallel I/O Port Write (IOSTRB = 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 73 74 75 77 78 80 82 83 8 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Figures Figure Page 5−10 5−11 5−12 5−13 5−14 5−15 5−16 5−17 5−18 5−19 5−20 5−21 5−22 5−23 5−24 5−25 5−26 5−27 5−28 5−29 5−30 5−31 5−32 5−33 5−34 5−35 Memory Read With Externally Generated Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Memory Write With Externally Generated Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I/O Read With Externally Generated Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I/O Write With Externally Generated Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HOLD and HOLDA Timings (HM = 1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reset and BIO Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Interrupt Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MP/MC Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Instruction Acquisition (IAQ) and Interrupt Acknowledge (IACK) Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . External Flag (XF) Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TOUT Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Receive Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Transmit Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP General-Purpose I/O Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Using HDS to Control Accesses (HCS Always Low) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Using HCS to Control Accesses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HINT Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GPIOx Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nonmultiplexed Read Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Nonmultiplexed Write Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HRDY Relative to CLKOUT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UART Timings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 85 86 86 87 88 89 89 90 91 91 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 102 103 103 103 105 106 106 107 6−1 6−2 TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 144-Ball MicroStar BGA Plastic Ball Grid Array Package . . . . TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 144-Pin Low-Profile Quad Flatpack (PGE) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 109 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 9 Tables List of Tables Table Page 2−1 2−2 Terminal Assignments for the 144-Pin BGA Package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Signal Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 18 3−1 3−2 3−3 3−4 3−5 3−6 3−7 3−8 3−9 3−10 3−11 3−12 3−13 3−14 3−15 3−16 3−17 3−18 3−19 3−20 3−21 3−22 3−23 3−24 3−25 3−26 3−27 Standard On-Chip ROM Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Processor Mode Status (PMST) Register Bit Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Software Wait-State Register (SWWSR) Bit Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Software Wait-State Control Register (SWCR) Bit Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bank-Switching Control Register (BSCR) Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bus Holder Control Bits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sample Rate Input Clock Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clock Mode Settings at Reset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMD Section of the DMMCRn Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMA Reload Register Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMA Interrupts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMA Synchronization Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMA/CPU Channel Interrupt Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UART Reset Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Summary of Accessible Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Receiver FIFO Trigger Level . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Interrupt Control Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Serial Character Word Length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Number of Stop Bits Generated . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Baud Rates Using a 1.8432-MHz Clock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Baud Rates Using a 3.072-MHz Clock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Device ID Register (CSIDR) Bit Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CPU Memory-Mapped Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Peripheral Memory-Mapped Registers for Each DSP Subsystem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Control Registers and Subaddresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DMA Subbank Addressed Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Interrupt Locations and Priorities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 29 31 31 32 33 38 39 44 47 48 48 49 51 52 53 55 55 56 58 58 60 61 62 63 64 66 5−1 5−2 5−3 5−4 5−5 5−6 5−7 5−8 5−9 5−10 5−11 5−12 5−13 Thermal Resistance Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Input Clock Frequency Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Clock Mode Pin Settings for the Divide-By-2 and By Divide-by-4 Clock Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Divide-By-2 and Divide-by-4 Clock Options Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Divide-By-2 and Divide-by-4 Clock Options Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multiply-By-N Clock Option Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multiply-By-N Clock Option Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Memory Read Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Memory Read Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Memory Write Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I/O Read Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I/O Read Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I/O Write Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 72 73 74 74 75 75 76 76 79 81 81 83 10 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Tables Table 5−14 5−15 5−16 5−17 5−18 5−19 5−20 5−21 5−22 5−23 5−24 5−25 5−26 5−27 5−28 5−29 5−30 5−31 5−32 5−33 5−34 5−35 5−36 5−37 5−38 Page Ready Timing Requirements for Externally Generated Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ready Switching Characteristics for Externally Generated Wait States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HOLD and HOLDA Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HOLD and HOLDA Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reset, BIO, Interrupt, and MP/MC Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Instruction Acquisition (IAQ) and Interrupt Acknowledge (IACK) Switching Characteristics . . . . . External Flag (XF) and TOUT Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Transmit and Receive Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP Transmit and Receive Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP General-Purpose I/O Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP General-Purpose I/O Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 0) . . . . . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 0) . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 0) . . . . . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 0) . . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 1) . . . . . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 1) . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 1) . . . . . . . . . . McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 1) . . . . . . . HPI8 Mode Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HPI8 Mode Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HPI16 Mode Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HPI16 Mode Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UART Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . UART Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 84 84 87 87 88 90 91 92 93 95 95 96 96 97 97 98 98 99 99 100 101 104 105 107 107 11 Tables 12 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Features 1 TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 Features D Advanced Multibus Architecture With Three D D D D D D D D D D D D Separate 16-Bit Data Memory Buses and One Program Memory Bus 40-Bit Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU) Including a 40-Bit Barrel Shifter and Two Independent 40-Bit Accumulators 17- × 17-Bit Parallel Multiplier Coupled to a 40-Bit Dedicated Adder for Non-Pipelined Single-Cycle Multiply/Accumulate (MAC) Operation Compare, Select, and Store Unit (CSSU) for the Add/Compare Selection of the Viterbi Operator Exponent Encoder to Compute an Exponent Value of a 40-Bit Accumulator Value in a Single Cycle Two Address Generators With Eight Auxiliary Registers and Two Auxiliary Register Arithmetic Units (ARAUs) Data Bus With a Bus Holder Feature Extended Addressing Mode for 8M × 16-Bit Maximum Addressable External Program Space On-Chip ROM − 128K × 16-Bit (5407) Configured for Program Memory − 64K × 16-Bit (5404) Configured for Program Memory On-Chip RAM − 40K x 16-Bit (5407) Composed of Five Blocks of 8K × 16-Bit On-Chip Dual-Access Program/Data RAM − 16K x 16-Bit (5404) Composed of Two Blocks of 8K × 16-Bit On-Chip Dual-Access Program/Data RAM Enhanced External Parallel Interface (XIO2) Single-Instruction-Repeat and Block-Repeat Operations for Program Code Block-Memory-Move Instructions for Better Program and Data Management D Instructions With a 32-Bit Long Word D D D D D D D D D D D D D Operand Instructions With Two- or Three-Operand Reads Arithmetic Instructions With Parallel Store and Parallel Load Conditional Store Instructions Fast Return From Interrupt On-Chip Peripherals − Software-Programmable Wait-State Generator and Programmable Bank-Switching − On-Chip Programmable Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) Clock Generator With External Clock Source − Two 16-Bit Timers − Six-Channel Direct Memory Access (DMA) Controller − Three Multichannel Buffered Serial Ports (McBSPs) − 8/16-Bit Enhanced Parallel Host-Port Interface (HPI8/16) − Universal Asynchronous Receiver/ Transmitter (UART) With Integrated Baud Rate Generator Power Consumption Control With IDLE1, IDLE2, and IDLE3 Instructions With Power-Down Modes CLKOUT Off Control to Disable CLKOUT On-Chip Scan-Based Emulation Logic, IEEE Std 1149.1† (JTAG) Boundary Scan Logic 144-Pin Ball Grid Array (BGA) (GGU Suffix) 144-Pin Low-Profile Quad Flatpack (LQFP) (PGE Suffix) 8.33-ns Single-Cycle Fixed-Point Instruction Execution Time (120 MIPS) 3.3-V I/O Supply Voltage 1.5-V Core Supply Voltage † IEEE Standard 1149.1-1990 Standard-Test-Access Port and Boundary Scan Architecture. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 13 Introduction 2 Introduction This data manual discusses features and specifications of the TMS320VC5407 and TMS320VC5404 (hereafter referred to as the 5407/5404 unless otherwise specified) digital signal processors (DSPs). The 5407 and 5404 are essentially the same device except for differences in their memory maps. This section lists the pin assignments and describes the function of each pin. This data manual also provides a detailed description section, electrical specifications, parameter measurement information, and mechanical data about the available packaging. NOTE: This data manual is designed to be used in conjunction with the TMS320C54x DSP Functional Overview (literature number SPRU307). 2.1 Description The 5407/5404 are based on an advanced modified Harvard architecture that has one program memory bus and three data memory buses. These processors provide an arithmetic logic unit (ALU) with a high degree of parallelism, application-specific hardware logic, on-chip memory, and additional on-chip peripherals. The basis of the operational flexibility and speed of these DSPs is a highly specialized instruction set. Separate program and data spaces allow simultaneous access to program instructions and data, providing a high degree of parallelism. Two read operations and one write operation can be performed in a single cycle. Instructions with parallel store and application-specific instructions can fully utilize this architecture. In addition, data can be transferred between data and program spaces. Such parallelism supports a powerful set of arithmetic, logic, and bit-manipulation operations that can all be performed in a single machine cycle. These DSPs also include the control mechanisms to manage interrupts, repeated operations, and function calls. 2.2 Pin Assignments Figure 2−1 illustrates the ball locations for the 144-pin ball grid array (BGA) package and is used in conjunction with Table 2−1 to locate signal names and ball grid numbers. Figure 2−2 provides the pin assignments for the 144-pin low-profile quad flatpack (LQFP) package. TMS320C54x is a trademark of Texas Instruments. 14 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Introduction 2.2.1 Terminal Assignments for the GGU Package 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 A B C D E F G H J K L M N Figure 2−1. 144-Ball GGU MicroStar BGA (Bottom View) Table 2−1 lists each signal name and BGA ball number for the 144-pin TMS320VC5407/ TMS320VC5404GGU package. Table 2−2 lists each terminal name, terminal function, and operating modes for the TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404. MicroStar BGA is a trademark of Texas Instruments. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 15 Introduction Table 2−1. Terminal Assignments for the 144-Pin BGA Package† † SIGNAL QUADRANT 1 BGA BALL # SIGNAL QUADRANT 2 BGA BALL # SIGNAL QUADRANT 3 BGA BALL # SIGNAL QUADRANT 4 BGA BALL # VSS A1 BCLKRX2 N13 VSS N1 A19 A13 A22 B1 BDX2 M13 TX N2 A20 A12 VSS C2 DVDD L12 HCNTL0 M3 VSS B11 DVDD C1 VSS L13 VSS N3 DVDD A11 A10 D4 CLKMD1 K10 BCLKR0 K4 D6 D10 HD7 D3 CLKMD2 K11 BCLKR1 L4 D7 C10 A11 D2 CLKMD3 K12 BFSR0 M4 D8 B10 A12 D1 HPI16 K13 BFSR1 N4 D9 A10 A13 E4 HD2 J10 BDR0 K5 D10 D9 A14 E3 TOUT J11 HCNTL1 L5 D11 C9 A15 E2 EMU0 J12 BDR1 M5 D12 B9 CVDD E1 EMU1/OFF J13 BCLKX0 N5 HD4 A9 HAS F4 TDO H10 BCLKX1 K6 D13 D8 VSS F3 TDI H11 VSS L6 D14 C8 VSS F2 TRST H12 HINT/TOUT1 M6 D15 B8 CVDD F1 TCK H13 CVDD N6 HD5 A8 HCS G2 TMS G12 BFSX0 M7 CVDD B7 HR/W G1 VSS G13 BFSX1 N7 VSS A7 READY G3 CVDD G11 HRDY L7 HDS1 C7 PS G4 HPIENA G10 DVDD K7 VSS D7 DS H1 VSS F13 VSS N8 HDS2 A6 IS H2 CLKOUT F12 HD0 M8 DVDD B6 R/W H3 HD3 F11 BDX0 L8 A0 C6 MSTRB H4 X1 F10 BDX1 K8 A1 D6 IOSTRB J1 X2/CLKIN E13 IACK N9 A2 A5 MSC J2 RS E12 HBIL M9 A3 B5 XF J3 D0 E11 NMI L9 HD6 C5 HOLDA J4 D1 E10 INT0 K9 A4 D5 IAQ K1 D2 D13 INT1 N10 A5 A4 HOLD K2 D3 D12 INT2 M10 A6 B4 BIO K3 D4 D11 INT3 L10 A7 C4 MP/MC L1 D5 C13 CVDD N11 A8 A3 DVDD L2 A16 C12 HD1 M11 A9 B3 VSS L3 VSS C11 VSS L11 CVDD C3 BDR2 M1 A17 B13 RX N12 A21 A2 BFSRX2 M2 A18 B12 VSS M12 VSS B2 DVDD is the power supply for the I/O pins while CVDD is the power supply for the core CPU. VSS is the ground for both the I/O pins and the core CPU. 16 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Introduction 2.2.2 Pin Assignments for the PGE Package 109 111 110 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 75 35 74 36 73 A18 A17 VSS A16 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 RS X2/CLKIN X1 HD3 CLKOUT VSS HPIENA CVDD VSS TMS TCK TRST TDI TDO EMU1/OFF EMU0 TOUT HD2 HPI16 CLKMD3 CLKMD2 CLKMD1 VSS DVDD BDX2 BCLKRX2 VSS TX HCNTL0 VSS BCLKR0 BCLKR1 BFSR0 BFSR1 BDR0 HCNTL1 BDR1 BCLKX0 BCLKX1 VSS HINT/TOUT1 CVDD BFSX0 BFSX1 HRDY DV DD V SS HD0 BDX0 BDX1 IACK HBIL NMI INT0 INT1 INT2 INT3 CVDD HD1 VSS RX VSS 72 76 34 71 77 33 70 78 32 69 79 31 68 80 30 67 81 29 66 82 28 65 83 27 64 84 26 63 85 25 62 86 24 61 87 23 60 88 22 59 89 21 58 90 20 57 91 19 56 92 18 55 93 17 54 94 16 53 95 15 52 96 14 51 97 13 50 98 12 49 99 11 48 100 10 47 101 9 46 102 8 45 103 7 44 104 6 43 105 5 42 106 4 41 3 40 107 39 108 2 38 1 37 VSS A22 VSS DVDD A10 HD7 A11 A12 A13 A14 A15 CVDD HAS VSS VSS CVDD HCS HR/W READY PS DS IS R/W MSTRB IOSTRB MSC XF HOLDA IAQ HOLD BIO MP/MC DVDD VSS BDR2 BFSRX2 143 144 VSS A21 CV DD A9 A8 A7 A6 A5 A4 HD6 A3 A2 A1 A0 DVDD HDS2 VSS HDS1 VSS CVDD HD5 D15 D14 D13 HD4 D12 D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 DV DD VSS A20 A19 The TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404PGE 144-pin low-profile quad flatpack (LQFP) pin assignments are shown in Figure 2−2. NOTE A: DVDD is the power supply for the I/O pins while CVDD is the power supply for the core CPU. VSS is the ground for both the I/O pins and the core CPU. Figure 2−2. 144-Pin PGE Low-Profile Quad Flatpack (Top View) November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 17 Introduction 2.3 Signal Descriptions Table 2−2 lists each signal, function, and operating mode(s) grouped by function. See Section 2.2 for exact pin locations based on package type. Table 2−2. Signal Descriptions TERMINAL NAME I/O† DESCRIPTION EXTERNAL MEMORY INTERFACE PINS A22 A21 A20 A19 A18 A17 A16 A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10 A9 A8 A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 (MSB) O/Z (LSB) (MSB) I/O/Z (LSB) Parallel address bus A22 (MSB) through A0 (LSB). The lower sixteen address pins—A0 to A15—are multiplexed to address all external memory (program, data) or I/O, while the upper seven address pins—A22 to A16—are only used to address external program space. These pins are placed in the high-impedance state when the hold mode is enabled, or when OFF is low. A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10 A9 A8 A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 (MSB) D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 (MSB) I These pins can be used to address internal memory via the HPI when the HPI16 pin is high. (LSB) I/O Parallel data bus D15 (MSB) through D0 (LSB). The sixteen data pins, D0 to D15, are multiplexed to transfer data between the core CPU and external data/program memory, I/O devices, or HPI in 16-bit mode. The data bus is placed in the high-impedance state when not outputting or when RS or HOLD is asserted. The data bus also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. The data bus includes bus holders to reduce the static power dissipation caused by floating, unused pins. The bus holders also eliminate the need for external bias resistors on unused pins. When the data bus is not being driven by the DSP, the bus holders keep the pins at the logic level that was most recently driven. The data bus holders of the DSP are disabled at reset, and can be enabled/disabled via the BH bit of the BSCR. (LSB) INITIALIZATION, INTERRUPT, AND RESET PINS † IACK O/Z Interrupt acknowledge signal. IACK Indicates receipt of an interrupt and that the program counter is fetching the interrupt vector location designated by A15–0. IACK also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. INT0 INT1 INT2 INT3 I External user interrupt inputs. INT0−3 are prioritized and maskable via the interrupt mask register and interrupt mode bit. The status of these pins can be polled by way of the interrupt flag register. NMI I Nonmaskable interrupt. NMI is an external interrupt that cannot be masked by way of the INTM or the IMR. When NMI is activated, the processor traps to the appropriate vector location. I = Input, O = Output, Z = High-impedance, S = Supply 18 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Introduction Table 2−2. Signal Descriptions (Continued) TERMINAL NAME I/O† DESCRIPTION RS I Reset input. RS causes the DSP to terminate execution and causes a re-initialization of the CPU and peripherals. When RS is brought to a high level, execution begins at location 0FF80h of program memory. RS affects various registers and status bits. MP/MC I Microprocessor/microcomputer mode select pin. If active low at reset, microcomputer mode is selected, and the internal program ROM is mapped into the upper 16K words of program memory space. If the pin is driven high during reset, microprocessor mode is selected, and the on-chip ROM is removed from program space. This pin is only sampled at reset, and the MP/MC bit of the PMST register can override the mode that is selected at reset. INITIALIZATION, INTERRUPT, AND RESET PINS (CONTINUED) MULTIPROCESSING AND GENERAL PURPOSE PINS BIO I Branch control input. A branch can be conditionally executed when BIO is active. If low, the processor executes the conditional instruction. The BIO condition is sampled during the decode phase of the pipeline for XC instruction, and all other instructions sample BIO during the read phase of the pipeline. XF O/Z External flag output (latched software-programmable signal). XF is set high by the SSBX XF instruction, set low by RSBX XF instruction or by loading ST1. XF is used for signaling other processors in multiprocessor configurations or as a general-purpose output pin. XF goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low, and is set high at reset. DS PS IS O/Z Data, program, and I/O space select signals. DS, PS, and IS are always high unless driven low for accessing a particular external memory space. Active period corresponds to valid address information. Placed into a high-impedance state in hold mode. DS, PS, and IS also go into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. MSTRB O/Z Memory strobe signal. MSTRB is always high unless low-level asserted to indicate an external bus access to data or program memory. Placed in high-impedance state in hold mode. MSTRB also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. READY I MEMORY CONTROL PINS R/W O/Z Read/write signal. R/W indicates transfer direction during communication to an external device. Normally in read mode (high), unless asserted low when the DSP performs a write operation. Placed in high-impedance state in hold mode. R/W also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. IOSTRB O/Z I/O strobe signal. IOSTRB is always high unless low level asserted to indicate an external bus access to an I/O device. Placed in high-impedance state in hold mode. IOSTRB also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. HOLD † Data ready input. READY indicates that an external device is prepared for a bus transaction to be completed. If the device is not ready (READY is low), the processor waits one cycle and checks READY again. Note that the processor performs ready detection if at least two software wait states are programmed. The READY signal is not sampled until the completion of the software wait states. I Hold input. HOLD is asserted to request control of the address, data, and control lines. When acknowledged by the C54x DSP, these lines go into high-impedance state. HOLDA O/Z Hold acknowledge signal. HOLDA indicates that the DSP is in a hold state and that the address, data, and control lines are in a high-impedance state, allowing the external memory interface to be accessed by other devices. HOLDA also goes into the high-impedance state when is OFF low. MSC O/Z Microstate complete. MSC indicates completion of all software wait states. When two or more software wait states are enabled, the MSC pin goes active at the beginning of the first software wait state, and goes inactive (high) at the beginning of the last software wait state. If connected to the ready input, MSC forces one external wait state after the last internal wait state is completed. MSC also goes into the high impedance state when OFF is low. IAQ O/Z Instruction acquisition signal. IAQ is asserted (active low) when there is an instruction address on the address bus and goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. I = Input, O = Output, Z = High-impedance, S = Supply C54x is a trademark of Texas Instruments. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 19 Introduction Table 2−2. Signal Descriptions (Continued) TERMINAL NAME I/O† DESCRIPTION CLKOUT O/Z Master clock output signal. CLKOUT cycles at the machine-cycle rate of the CPU. The internal machine cycle is bounded by the rising edges of this signal. CLKOUT also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. CLKMD1 CLKMD2 CLKMD3 I Clock mode external/internal input signals. CLKMD1−CLKMD3 allows you to select and configure different clock modes such as crystal, external clock, various PLL factors. X2/CLKIN I Input pin to internal oscillator from the crystal. If the internal oscillator is not being used, an external clock source can be applied to this pin. The internal machine cycle time is determined by the clock operating mode pins (CLKMD1, CLKMD2 and CLKMD3). X1 O Output pin from the internal oscillator for the crystal. If the internal oscillator is not used, X1 should be left unconnected. X1 does not go into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. (This is revision depended, see Section 3.10 for additional information.) TOUT O Timer output. TOUT signals a pulse when the on-chip timer counts down past zero. The pulse is a CLKOUT cycle wide. TOUT also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. TOUT1 I/O/Z Timer1 output. TOUT1 signals a pulse when the on-chip timer1 counts down past zero. The pulse is a CLKOUT cycle wide. The TOUT1 output is multiplexed with the HINT pin of the HPI, and TOUT1 is only available when the HPI is disabled. BCLKR0 BCLKR1 BCLKRX2 I/O/Z Receive clock input. BCLKR serves as the serial shift clock for the buffered serial port receiver. BCLKRX2 is McBSP2 transmit AND receive clock. OSCILLATOR/TIMER PINS MULTICHANNEL BUFFERED SERIAL PORT PINS BDR0 BDR1 BDR2 I Serial data receive input. BFSR0 BFSR1 BFSRX2 I/O/Z Frame synchronization pulse for receive input. The BFSR pulse initiates the receive data process over BDR. BFSRX2 is McBSP2 transmit AND receive frame sync. BCLKX0 BCLKX1 I/O/Z Transmit clock. BCLKX serves as the serial shift clock for the buffered serial port transmitter. The BCLKX pins are configured as inputs after reset. BCLKX goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. BDX0 BDX1 BDX2 O/Z Serial data transmit output. BDX is placed in the high-impedance state when not transmitting, when RS is asserted or when OFF is low. BFSX0 BFSX1 I/O/Z Frame synchronization pulse for transmit output. The BFSX pulse initiates the transmit data process over BDX. The BFSX pins are configured as inputs after reset. BFSX goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. UART † TX O UART asynchronous serial transmit data output. RX I UART asynchronous serial receive data input. I = Input, O = Output, Z = High-impedance, S = Supply 20 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Introduction Table 2−2. Signal Descriptions (Continued) TERMINAL NAME I/O† DESCRIPTION HOST PORT INTERFACE PINS A0−A15 I D0−D15 I/O These pins can be used to address internal memory via the HPI when the HPI16 pin is HIGH. These pins can be used to read/write internal memory via the HPI when the HPI16 pin is high. The sixteen data pins, D0 to D15, are multiplexed to transfer data between the core CPU and external data/program memory, I/O devices, or HPI in 16-bit mode. The data bus is placed in the high-impedance state when not outputting or when RS or HOLD is asserted. The data bus also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. The data bus includes bus holders to reduce the static power dissipation caused by floating, unused pins. The bus holders also eliminate the need for external bias resistors on unused pins. When the data bus is not being driven by the DSP, the bus holders keep the pins at the logic level that was most recently driven. The data bus holders of the DSP are disabled at reset, and can be enabled/disabled via the BH bit of the BSCR. HD0−HD7 † I/O/Z Parallel bi-directional data bus. These pins can also be used as general-purpose I/O pins when the HPI16 pin is high. HD0−HD7 is placed in the high-impedance state when not outputting data or when OFF is low. The HPI data bus includes bus holders to reduce the static power dissipation caused by floating, unused pins. When the HPI data bus is not being driven by the DSP, the bus holders keep the pins at the logic level that was most recently driven. The HPI data bus holders are disabled at reset, and can be enabled/disabled via the HBH bit of the BSCR. HCNTL0 HCNTL1 I Control inputs. These inputs select a host access to one of the three HPI registers. (Pullup only enabled when HPIENA=0, HPI16=1) HBIL I Byte identification input. Identifies first or second byte of transfer. (Pullup only enabled when HPIENA=0, invalid when HPI16=1) HCS I Chip select input. This pin is the select input for the HPI, and must be driven low during accesses. (Pullup only enabled when HPIENA=0, or HPI16=1) HDS1 HDS2 I Data strobe inputs. These pins are driven by the host read and write strobes to control transfers. (Pullup only enabled when HPIENA=0) HAS I Address strobe input. Address strobe input. Hosts with multiplexed address and data pins require this input, to latch the address in the HPIA register. (Pull-up only enabled when HPIENA=0) HR/W I Read/write input. This input controls the direction of an HPI transfer. (Pullup only enabled when HPIENA=0) HRDY O/Z Ready output. The ready output informs the host when the HPI is ready for the next transfer. HRDY goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. HINT O/Z Interrupt output. This output is used to interrupt the host. When the DSP is in reset, this signal is driven high. HINT can also be used for timer 1 output (TOUT1), when the HPI is disabled. The signal goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. (invalid when HPI16=1) HPIENA I HPI enable input. This pin must be tied directly to DVDD to enable the HPI. An internal pulldown resistor is always active and the HPIENA pin is sampled on the rising edge of RS. If HPIENA is left open or driven low during reset, the HPI module is disabled. Once the HPI is disabled, the HPIENA pin has no effect until the DSP is reset. HPI16 I HPI 16-bit Select Pin. This pin must be tied directly to DVDD to enable HPI16 mode. This input pin has an internal pulldown resistor which is always active. If HPI16 is left open or driven low, HPI16 mode is disabled. The non-multiplexed mode allows hosts with separate address/data buses to access the HPI address range via the 16 address pins A0−A15. 16-bit Data is also accessible through pins D0−D15. HOST-to-DSP and DSP-to-HOST interrupts are not supported. There are no HPIC and HPIA registers in the non-multiplexed mode since there are HCNTRL0,1 signals available. I = Input, O = Output, Z = High-impedance, S = Supply November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 21 Introduction Table 2−2. Signal Descriptions (Continued) TERMINAL NAME I/O† DESCRIPTION SUPPLY PINS † CVDD S +VDD. Dedicated 1.5V power supply for the core CPU. DVDD S +VDD. Dedicated 3.3V power supply for I/O pins. VSS S Ground. TCK I IEEE standard 1149.1 test clock. TCK is normally a free-running clock signal with a 50% duty cycle. The changes on test access port (TAP) of input signals TMS and TDI are clocked into the TAP controller, instruction register, or selected test data register on the rising edge of TCK. Changes at the TAP output signal (TDO) occur on the falling edge of TCK. TDI I IEEE standard 1149.1 test data input, pin with internal pullup device. TDI is clocked into the selected register (instruction or data) on a rising edge of TCK. TDO O/Z IEEE standard 1149.1 test data output. The contents of the selected register (instruction or data) are shifted out of TDO on the falling edge of TCK. TDO is in the high-impedance state except when scanning of data is in progress. TDO also goes into the high-impedance state when OFF is low. TMS I IEEE standard 1149.1 test mode select. Pin with internal pullup device. This serial control input is clocked into the test access port (TAP) controller on the rising edge of TCK. TRST I IEEE standard 1149.1 test reset. TRST, when high, gives the IEEE standard 1149.1 scan system control of the operations of the device. If TRST is not connected or driven low, the device operates in its functional mode, and the IEEE standard 1149.1 signals are ignored. Pin with internal pulldown device. EMU0 I/O/Z Emulator 0 pin. When TRST is driven low, EMU0 must be high for activation of the OFF condition. When TRST is driven high, EMU0 is used as an interrupt to or from the emulator system and is defined as input/output by way of IEEE standard 1149.1 scan system. Should be pulled up to DVDD with a separate 4.7-kΩ resistor. EMU1/OFF I/O/Z Emulator 1 pin/disable all outputs. When TRST is driven high, EMU1/OFF is used as an interrupt to or from the emulator system and is defined as input/output via IEEE standard 1149.1 scan system. When TRST is driven low, EMU1/OFF is configured as OFF. The EMU1/OFF signal, when active low, puts all output drivers into the high-impedance state. Note that OFF is used exclusively for testing and emulation purposes (not for multiprocessing applications). Thus, for the OFF feature, the following conditions apply: TRST=low, EMU0=high, EMU1/OFF = low. Should be pulled up to DVDD with a separate 4.7-kΩ resistor. I = Input, O = Output, Z = High-impedance, S = Supply 22 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3 Functional Overview The following functional overview is based on the block diagram in Figure 3−1. Pbus Ebus Dbus Cbus Pbus Ebus Dbus Cbus Pbus P, C, D, E Buses and Control Signals 40K RAM Dual Access Program/Data† 54X cLEAD 128K Program ROM‡ MBus GPIO TI BUS RHEA Bus McBSP0 Enhanced XIO 16 HPI xDMA logic RHEAbus MBus 16HPI McBSP2 MBus McBSP1 RHEA bus XIO RHEA Bridge UART TIMER APLL Clocks † ‡ JTAG 16K for 5404 64K for 5404 Figure 3−1. TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 Functional Block Diagram 3.1 Memory The 5407/5404 device provides both on-chip ROM and RAM memories to aid in system performance and integration. 3.1.1 Data Memory The data memory space addresses up to 64K of 16-bit words. The device automatically accesses the on-chip RAM when addressing within its bounds. When an address is generated outside the RAM bounds, the device automatically generates an external access. The advantages of operating from on-chip memory are as follows: • • • • Higher performance because no wait states are required Higher performance because of better flow within the pipeline of the central arithmetic logic unit (CALU) Lower cost than external memory Lower power than external memory The advantage of operating from off-chip memory is the ability to access a larger address space. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 23 Functional Overview 3.1.2 Program Memory Software can configure their memory cells to reside inside or outside of the program address map. When the cells are mapped into program space, the device automatically accesses them when their addresses are within bounds. When the program-address generation (PAGEN) logic generates an address outside its bounds, the device automatically generates an external access. The advantages of operating from on-chip memory are as follows: • • • Higher performance because no wait states are required Lower cost than external memory Lower power than external memory The advantage of operating from off-chip memory is the ability to access a larger address space. 3.1.3 Extended Program Memory The 5407/5404 uses a paged extended memory scheme in program space to allow access of up to 8192K of program memory. In order to implement this scheme, the 5407/5404 includes several features which are also present on C548/549/5410: • • • Twenty-three address lines, instead of sixteen An extra memory-mapped register, the XPC Six extra instructions for addressing extended program space Program memory in the 5407/5404 is organized into 128 pages that are each 64K in length. The value of the XPC register defines the page selection. This register is memory-mapped into data space to address 001Eh. At a hardware reset, the XPC is initialized to 0. 3.2 On-Chip ROM With Bootloader The 5407 features a 128K-word × 16-bit on-chip maskable ROM that is mapped into program memory space, but 16K words of which can also optionally be mapped into data memory. The 5404 features a 64K-word × 16-bit on-chip maskable ROM that is mapped into program memory space. Customers can also arrange to have the ROM of the 5407/5404 programmed with contents unique to any particular application. A bootloader is available in the standard 5407/5404 on-chip ROM. This bootloader can be used to automatically transfer user code from an external source to anywhere in the program memory at power up. If MP/MC of the device is sampled low during a hardware reset, execution begins at location FF80h of the on-chip ROM. This location contains a branch instruction to the start of the bootloader program. The standard 5407/5404 devices provide different ways to download the code to accommodate various system requirements: • • • • • • 24 Parallel from 8-bit or 16-bit-wide EPROM Parallel from I/O space, 8-bit or 16-bit mode Serial boot from serial ports, 8-bit or 16-bit mode UART boot mode Host-port interface boot Warm boot SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview The standard on-chip ROM layout is shown in Table 3−1. Table 3−1. Standard On-Chip ROM Layout† ADDRESS RANGE † 3.3 DESCRIPTION C000h−D4FFh ROM tables for the GSM EFR speech codec D500h−F7FFh Reserved F800h−FBFFh Bootloader FC00h−FCFFh µ-Law expansion table FD00h−FDFFh A-Law expansion table FE00h−FEFFh Sine look-up table FF00h−FF7Fh Reserved† FF80h−FFFFh Interrupt vector table In the 5407/5404 ROM, 128 words are reserved for factory device-testing purposes. Application code to be implemented in on-chip ROM must reserve these 128 words at addresses FF00h−FF7Fh in program space. On-Chip RAM The 5407 device contains 40K-words × 16-bit of on-chip dual-access RAM (DARAM), while the 5404 device contains 16K-words x 16-bit of DARAM. The DARAM is composed of five blocks of 8K words each. Each block in the DARAM can support two reads in one cycle, or a read and a write in one cycle. The five blocks of DARAM on the 5407 are located in the address range 0080h−9FFFh in data space, and can be mapped into program/data space by setting the OVLY bit to one. On the 5404, the two blocks of DARAM are located at 0080h−3FFFh in data space and can also be mapped into data space by setting OVLY to one. 3.4 On-Chip Memory Security The 5407/5404 device provides maskable options to protect the contents of on-chip memories. When the ROM protect option is selected, no externally originating instruction can access the on-chip ROM; when the RAM protect option is selected, HPI RAM is protected; HPI writes are not restricted, but HPI reads are restricted to 2000h − 3FFFh. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 25 Functional Overview 3.5 Memory Maps 3.5.1 5407 Memory Map Hex Page 0 Program 0000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 007F Hex Page 0 Program 0000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 007F On-Chip 0080 DARAM0−4 (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 9FFF A000 0080 5FFF 6000 On-Chip ROM (40K x 16-bit) External FF7F FF80 On-Chip DARAM0−2 (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) FEFF FF00 FF7F FF80 FFFF Interrupts (External) FFFF Hex 0000 005F 0060 007F 0080 9FFF A000 BFFF C000 Reserved Interrupts (On-Chip) MP/MC= 0 (Microcomputer Mode) MP/MC= 1 (Microprocessor Mode) FFFF Data Memory-Mapped Registers Scratch-Pad RAM On-Chip DARAM0−4 (40K x 16-bit) External On-Chip PDROM0−1 (DROM=1) or External (DROM=0) Figure 3−2. 5407 Program and Data Memory Map Hex 010000 Program Hex 020000 External† Program Hex 030000 External† Program Hex 040000 External† External† 017FFF 027FFF 037FFF 047FFF 018000 028000 038000 048000 01FFFF Page 1 XPC=1 On-Chip ROM On-Chip ROM On-Chip ROM 02FFFF 03DFFF 03E000 03FFFF External Hex 7F0000 Program Program External† ...... 7F7FFF 7F8000 External External 7FFFFF 04FFFF Page 127 Page 3 Page 4 XPC=7Fh XPC=3 XPC=4 † The lower 32K words of pages 1 through 127 are only available when the OVLY bit is cleared to 0. If the OVLY bit is set to 1, the on-chip memory is mapped to the lower 32K words of all program space pages. Page 2 XPC=2 Figure 3−3. 5407 Extended Program Memory Map 26 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.5.2 5404 Memory Map Hex Page 0 Program 0000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 007F 0080 On-Chip DARAM0−1 (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 3FFF 4000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) FF7F Interrupts (External) MP/MC= 1 (Microprocessor Mode) 0060 007F 0080 Memory-Mapped Registers Scratch-Pad RAM On-Chip DARAM0−1 (32K x 16-bit) 3FFF 4000 Reserved FEFF FF00 FF7F FF80 9FFF A000 BFFF C000 Reserved Interrupts (On-Chip) FFFF FFFF 005F Data Reserved On-Chip ROM (32K x 16-bit) External Hex 0000 5FFF 6000 7FFF 8000 9FFF A000 FF80 Hex Page 0 Program 0000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 007F 0080 On-Chip DARAM0−1 (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 3FFF 4000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) External PDROM0−1 (DROM = 1) or External (DROM = 0) FFFF MP/MC= 0 (Microcomputer Mode) Figure 3−4. 5404 Program and Data Memory Map November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 27 Functional Overview Hex 010000 Program Hex 020000 External† Program Hex 030000 External† Program Hex 040000 External† External† 013FFF 023FFF 033FFF 043FFF 014000 024000 034000 044000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 017FFF 018000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 027FFF 028000 On-Chip ROM 01FFFF 03DFFF 03E000 03FFFF ...... 7F3FFF 7F4000 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 047FFF 048000 External Program External† Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) Reserved Reserved 02FFFF Page 1 XPC=1 Reserved (OVLY = 1) External (OVLY = 0) 037FFF 038000 Hex 7F0000 Program 7F7FFF 7F8000 External External 7FFFFF 04FFFF Page 127 Page 3 Page 4 XPC=7Fh XPC=3 XPC=4 † The lower 16K words of pages 1 through 127 are only available when the OVLY bit is cleared to 0. If the OVLY bit is set to 1, the on-chip memory is mapped to the lower 16K words of all program space pages. Page 2 XPC=2 Figure 3−5. 5404 Extended Program Memory Map 3.5.3 Relocatable Interrupt Vector Table The reset, interrupt, and trap vectors are addressed in program space. These vectors are soft — meaning that the processor, when taking the trap, loads the program counter (PC) with the trap address and executes the code at the vector location. Four words, either two 1-word instructions or one 2-word instruction, are reserved at each vector location to accommodate a delayed branch instruction which allows branching to the appropriate interrupt service routine without the overhead. At device reset, the reset, interrupt, and trap vectors are mapped to address FF80h in program space. However, these vectors can be remapped to the beginning of any 128-word page in program space after device reset. This is done by loading the interrupt vector pointer (IPTR) bits in the PMST register with the appropriate 128-word page boundary address. After loading IPTR, any user interrupt or trap vector is mapped to the new 128-word page. NOTE: The hardware reset (RS) vector cannot be remapped because the hardware reset loads the IPTR with 1s. Therefore, the reset vector is always fetched at location FF80h in program space. 28 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 15 IPTR R/W-1FF 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 IPTR MP/MC OVLY AVIS DROM CLKOFF SMUL SST MP/MC Pin R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write, n = value after reset Figure 3−6. Processor Mode Status (PMST) Register Table 3−2. Processor Mode Status (PMST) Register Bit Fields BIT NO. 15−7 NAME IPTR RESET VALUE FUNCTION 1FFh Interrupt vector pointer. The 9-bit IPTR field points to the 128-word program page where the interrupt vectors reside. The interrupt vectors can be remapped to RAM for boot-loaded operations. At reset, these bits are all set to 1; the reset vector always resides at address FF80h in program memory space. The RESET instruction does not affect this field. Microprocessor/microcomputer mode. MP/MC enables/disables the on-chip ROM to be addressable in program memory space. 6 MP/MC MP/MC pin - MP/MC = 0: The on-chip ROM is enabled and addressable. - MP/MC = 1: The on-chip ROM is not available. MP/MC is set to the value corresponding to the logic level on the MP/MC pin when sampled at reset. This pin is not sampled again until the next reset. The RESET instruction does not affect this bit. This bit can also be set or cleared by software. RAM overlay. OVLY enables on-chip dual-access data RAM blocks to be mapped into program space. The values for the OVLY bit are: 5 OVLY 0 - OVLY = 0: The on-chip RAM is addressable in data space but not in program space. - OVLY = 1: The on-chip RAM is mapped into program space and data space. Data page 0 (addresses 0h to 7Fh), however, is not mapped into program space. Address visibility mode. AVIS enables/disables the internal program address to be visible at the address pins. 4 AVIS - AVIS = 0: The external address lines do not change with the internal program address. Control and data lines are not affected and the address bus is driven with the last address on the bus. - AVIS = 1: This mode allows the internal program address to appear at the pins of the 5407/5404 so that the internal program address can be traced. Also, it allows the interrupt vector to be decoded in conjunction with IACK when the interrupt vectors reside on on-chip memory. 0 Data ROM. DROM enables on-chip ROM to be mapped into data space. The DROM bit values are: 3 DROM 0 - DROM = 0: The on-chip ROM is not mapped into data space. - DROM = 1: A portion of the on-chip ROM is not mapped into data space. The SWSM bit of the SWCR defines a multiplication factor of 1 or 2 for the base number of wait states. 2 CLKOFF 0 CLOCKOUT off. When the CLKOFF bit is 1, the output of CLKOUT is disabled and remains at a high level. 1 SMUL N/A Saturation on multiplication. When SMUL = 1, saturation of a multiplication result occurs before performing the accumulation in a MAC of MAS instruction. The SMUL bit applies only when OVM = 1 and FRCT = 1. 0 SST N/A Saturation on store. When SST = 1, saturation of the data from the accumulator is enabled before storing in memory. The saturation is performed after the shift operation. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 29 Functional Overview 3.6 On-Chip Peripherals The 5407/5404 device has the following peripherals: • • • • • • • • • Software-programmable wait-state generator Programmable bank-switching A host-port interface (HPI8/16) Three multichannel buffered serial ports (McBSPs) Two hardware timers A clock generator with a multiple phase-locked loop (PLL) Enhanced external parallel interface (XIO2) A DMA controller (DMA) A UART with an integrated baud rate generator 3.6.1 Software-Programmable Wait-State Generator The software wait-state generator of the 5407/5404 can extend external bus cycles by up to fourteen machine cycles. Devices that require more than fourteen wait states can be interfaced using the hardware READY line. When all external accesses are configured for zero wait states, the internal clocks to the wait-state generator are automatically disabled. Disabling the wait-state generator clocks reduces the power consumption of the 5407/5404. The software wait-state register (SWWSR) controls the operation of the wait-state generator. The 14 LSBs of the SWWSR specify the number of wait states (0 to 7) to be inserted for external memory accesses to five separate address ranges. This allows a different number of wait states for each of the five address ranges. Additionally, the software wait-state multiplier (SWSM) bit of the software wait-state control register (SWCR) defines a multiplication factor of 1 or 2 for the number of wait states. At reset, the wait-state generator is initialized to provide seven wait states on all external memory accesses. The SWWSR bit fields are shown in Figure 3−7 and described in Table 3−3. 15 14 12 11 9 XPA I/O DATA R/W-0 R/W-111 R/W-111 6 5 3 8 DATA 2 0 DATA PROGRAM PROGRAM R/W-111 R/W-111 R/W-111 LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write, n = value after reset Figure 3−7. Software Wait-State Register (SWWSR) [Memory-Mapped Register (MMR) Address 0028h] 30 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview Table 3−3. Software Wait-State Register (SWWSR) Bit Fields BIT NO. NAME RESET VALUE 15 XPA 0 14−12 I/O 111 I/O space. The field value (0−7) corresponds to the base number of wait states for I/O space accesses within addresses 0000−FFFFh. The SWSM bit of the SWCR defines a multiplication factor of 1 or 2 for the base number of wait states. 11−9 Data 111 Upper data space. The field value (0−7) corresponds to the base number of wait states for external data space accesses within addresses 8000−FFFFh. The SWSM bit of the SWCR defines a multiplication factor of 1 or 2 for the base number of wait states. 8−6 Data 111 Lower data space. The field value (0−7) corresponds to the base number of wait states for external data space accesses within addresses 0000−7FFFh. The SWSM bit of the SWCR defines a multiplication factor of 1 or 2 for the base number of wait states. FUNCTION Extended program address control bit. XPA is used in conjunction with the program space fields (bits 0 through 5) to select the address range for program space wait states. Upper program space. The field value (0−7) corresponds to the base number of wait states for external program space accesses within the following addresses: 5−3 Program 111 - XPA = 0: xx8000 − xxFFFFh - XPA = 1: 400000h − 7FFFFFh The SWSM bit of the SWCR defines a multiplication factor of 1 or 2 for the base number of wait states. Lower program space. The field value (0−7) corresponds to the base number of wait states for external program space accesses within the following addresses: 2−0 Program 111 - XPA = 0: xx0000 − xx7FFFh - XPA = 1: 000000 − 3FFFFFh The SWSM bit of the SWCR defines a multiplication factor of 1 or 2 for the base number of wait states. The software wait-state multiplier bit of the software wait-state control register (SWCR) is used to extend the base number of wait states selected by the SWWSR. The SWCR bit fields are shown in Figure 3−8 and described in Table 3−4. 15 Reserved R/W-0 1 0 Reserved SWSM R/W-0 R/W-0 LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write, n = value after reset Figure 3−8. Software Wait-State Control Register (SWCR) [MMR Address 002Bh] Table 3−4. Software Wait-State Control Register (SWCR) Bit Fields PIN NO. NAME RESET VALUE 15−1 Reserved 0 FUNCTION These bits are reserved and are unaffected by writes. Software wait-state multiplier. Used to multiply the number of wait states defined in the SWWSR by a factor of 1 or 2. 0 SWSM 0 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 - SWSM = 0: wait-state base values are unchanged (multiplied by 1). - SWSM = 1: wait-state base values are multiplied by 2 for a maximum of 14 wait states. SPRS007D 31 Functional Overview 3.6.2 Programmable Bank-Switching Programmable bank-switching logic allows the 5407/5404 to switch between external memory banks without requiring external wait states for memories that need additional time to turn off. The bank-switching logic automatically inserts one cycle when accesses cross a 32K-word memory-bank boundary inside program or data space. Bank-switching is defined by the bank-switching control register (BSCR), which is memory-mapped at address 0029h. The bit fields of the BSCR are shown in Figure 3−9 and are described in Table 3−5. 15 14 13 12 11 CONSEC DIVFCT IACKOFF Reserved R/W-1 R/W-11 R/W-1 R 3 Reserved 2 1 0 HBH BH Reserved R R/W-0 R LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write, n = value after reset Figure 3−9. Bank-Switching Control Register (BSCR) [MMR Address 0029h] Table 3−5. Bank-Switching Control Register (BSCR) Fields BIT NAME RESET VALUE FUNCTION Consecutive bank-switching. Specifies the bank-switching mode. CONSEC† 15 CONSEC = 0: Bank-switching on 32K bank boundaries only. This bit is cleared if fast access is desired for continuous memory reads (i.e., no starting and trailing cycles between read cycles). CONSEC = 1: Consecutive bank switches on external memory reads. Each read cycle consists of 3 cycles: starting cycle, read cycle, and trailing cycle. 1 CLKOUT output divide factor. The CLKOUT output is driven by an on-chip source having a frequency equal to 1/(DIVFCT+1) of the DSP clock. 13 14 13−14 DIVFCT 11 DIVFCT = 00: CLKOUT is not divided. DIVFCT = 01: CLKOUT is divided by 2 from the DSP clock. DIVFCT = 10: CLKOUT is divided by 3 from the DSP clock. DIVFCT = 11: CLKOUT is divided by 4 from the DSP clock (default value following reset). IACK signal output off. Controls the output of the IACK signal. IACKOFF is set to 1 at reset. 12 IACKOFF 1 11−3 Reserved − IACKOFF = 0: The IACK signal output off function is disabled. IACKOFF = 1: The IACK signal output off function is enabled. Reserved HPI bus holder. Controls the HPI bus holder. HBH is cleared to 0 at reset. 2 HBH 0 HBH = 0: The bus holder is disabled except when HPI16=1. HBH = 1: The bus holder is enabled. When not driven, the HPI data bus, HD[7:0] is held in the previous logic level. Bus holder. Controls the bus holder. BH is cleared to 0 at reset. † 1 BH 0 0 Reserved − BH = 0: The bus holder is disabled. BH = 1: The bus holder is enabled. When not driven, the data bus, D[15:0] is held in the previous logic level. Reserved For additional information, see Section 3.11 of this document. 32 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview The 5407/5404 has an internal register that holds the MSB of the last address used for a read or write operation in program or data space. In the non-consecutive bank switches (CONSEC = 0), if the MSB of the address used for the current read does not match that contained in this internal register, the MSTRB (memory strobe) signal is not asserted for one CLKOUT cycle. During this extra cycle, the address bus switches to the new address. The contents of the internal register are replaced with the MSB for the read of the current address. If the MSB of the address used for the current read matches the bits in the register, a normal read cycle occurs. In non-consecutive bank switches (CONSEC = 0), if repeated reads are performed from the same memory bank, no extra cycles are inserted. When a read is performed from a different memory bank, memory conflicts are avoided by inserting an extra cycle. For more information, see Section 3.11 of this document. The bank-switching mechanism automatically inserts one extra cycle in the following cases: A memory read followed by another memory read from a different memory bank. A program-memory read followed by a data-memory read. A data-memory read followed by a program-memory read. A program-memory read followed by another program-memory read from a different page. • • • • 3.6.3 Bus Holders The 5407/5404 has two bus holder control bits, BH (BSCR[1]) and HBH (BSCR[2]), to control the bus keepers of the address bus (A[17−0]), data bus (D[15−0]), and the HPI data bus (HD[7−0]). Bus keeper enabling/disabling is described in Table 3−5. Table 3−6. Bus Holder Control Bits 3.7 HPI16 PIN BH HBH D[15−0] A[17−0] HD[7−0] 0 0 0 OFF OFF OFF 0 0 1 OFF OFF ON 0 1 0 ON OFF OFF 0 1 1 ON OFF ON 1 0 0 OFF OFF ON 1 0 1 OFF ON ON 1 1 0 ON OFF ON 1 1 1 ON ON ON Parallel I/O Ports The 5407/5404 has a total of 64K I/O ports. These ports can be addressed by the PORTR instruction or the PORTW instruction. The IS signal indicates a read/write operation through an I/O port. The 5407/5404 can interface easily with external devices through the I/O ports while requiring minimal off-chip address-decoding circuits. 3.7.1 Enhanced 8-/16-Bit Host-Port Interface (HPI8/16) The 5407/5404 host-port interface, also referred to as the HPI8/16, is an enhanced version of the standard 8-bit HPI found on earlier TMS320C54x DSPs (542, 545, 548, and 549). The 5407/5404 HPI can be used to interface to an 8-bit or 16-bit host. When the address and data buses for external I/O is not used (to interface to external devices in program/data/IO spaces), the 5407/5404 HPI can be configured as an HPI16 to interface to a 16-bit host. This configuration can be accomplished by connecting the HPI16 pin to logic “1”. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 33 Functional Overview When the HPI16 pin is connected to a logic “0”, the 5407/5404 HPI is configured as an HPI8. The HPI8 is an 8-bit parallel port for interprocessor communication. The features of the HPI8 include: Standard features: • • • Sequential transfers (with autoincrement) or random-access transfers Host interrupt and C54x interrupt capability Multiple data strobes and control pins for interface flexibility The HPI8 interface consists of an 8-bit bidirectional data bus and various control signals. Sixteen-bit transfers are accomplished in two parts with the HBIL input designating high or low byte. The host communicates with the HPI8 through three dedicated registers — the HPI address register (HPIA), the HPI data register (HPID), and the HPI control register (HPIC). The HPIA and HPID registers are only accessible by the host, and the HPIC register is accessible by both the host and the 5407/5404. Enhanced features: • • Access to entire on-chip RAM through DMA bus Capability to continue transferring during emulation stop The HPI16 is an enhanced 16-bit version of the TMS320C54x DSP 8-bit host-port interface (HPI8). The HPI16 is designed to allow a 16-bit host to access the DSP on-chip memory, with the host acting as the master of the interface. Some of the features of the HPI16 include: • • • • • • 16-bit bidirectional data bus Multiple data strobes and control signals to allow glueless interfacing to a variety of hosts Only nonmultiplexed address/data modes are supported 18-bit address bus used in nonmultiplexed mode to allow access to all internal memory (including internal extended address pages) HRDY signal to hold off host accesses due to DMA latency The HPI16 acts as a slave to a 16-bit host processor and allows access to the on-chip memory of the DSP. NOTE: Only the nonmultiplexed mode is supported when the 5407/5404 HPI is configured as a HPI16 (see Figure 3−10). The 5407/5404 HPI functions as a slave and enables the host processor to access the on-chip memory. A major enhancement to the 5407/5404 HPI over previous versions is that it allows host access to the entire on-chip memory range of the DSP. The host and the DSP both have access to the on-chip RAM at all times and host accesses are always synchronized to the DSP clock. If the host and the DSP contend for access to the same location, the host has priority, and the DSP waits for one cycle. Note that since host accesses are always synchronized to the 5407/5404 clock, an active input clock (CLKIN) is required for HPI accesses during IDLE states, and host accesses are not allowed while the 5407/5404 reset pin is asserted. 34 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.7.2 HPI Nonmultiplexed Mode In nonmultiplexed mode, a host with separate address/data buses can access the HPI16 data register (HPID) via the HD 16-bit bidirectional data bus, and the address register (HPIA) via the 23-bit HA address bus. The host initiates the access with the strobe signals (HDS1, HDS2, HCS) and controls the direction of the access with the HR/W signal. The HPI16 can stall host accesses via the HRDY signal. Note that the HPIC register is not available in nonmultiplexed mode since there are no HCNTL signals available. All host accesses initiate a DMA read or write access. Figure 3−10 shows a block diagram of the HPI16 in nonmultiplexed mode. DATA[15:0] HPI16 PPD[15:0] HPID[15:0] HINT DMA Address[22:0] Internal Memory HOST HCNTL0 VCC HCNTL1 HBIL HAS R/W Data Strobes READY HR/W HRDY 54xx CPU HDS1, HDS2, HCS Figure 3−10. Host-Port Interface — Nonmultiplexed Mode Address (Hex) 0000 Reserved 005F 0060 DARAM0 1FFF 2000 DARAM1 3FFF 4000 DARAM2† 5FFF 6000 DARAM3† 7FFF 8000 DARAM4† 9FFF A000 Reserved FFFF † Reserved on 5404 devices Figure 3−11. HPI Memory Map November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 35 Functional Overview 3.8 Multichannel Buffered Serial Ports (McBSPs) The 5407/5404 device provides three high-speed, full-duplex, multichannel buffered serial ports that allow direct interface to other C54x/LC54x devices, codecs, and other devices in a system. The McBSPs are based on the standard serial-port interface found on other 54x devices. Like their predecessors, the McBSPs provide: • • • Full-duplex communication Double-buffer data registers, which allow a continuous data stream Independent framing and clocking for receive and transmit In addition, the McBSPs have the following capabilities: • • • • • • Direct interface to: − T1/E1 framers − MVIP switching compatible and ST-BUS compliant devices − IOM-2 compliant devices − AC97-compliant devices − IIS-compliant devices − Serial peripheral interface Multichannel transmit and receive of up to 128 channels A wide selection of data sizes, including 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, or 32 bits µ-law and A-law companding Programmable polarity for both frame synchronization and data clocks Programmable internal clock and frame generation The McBSP consists of a data path and control path. The six pins, BDX, BDR, BFSX, BFSR, BCLKX, and BCLKR, connect the control and data paths to external devices. The implemented pins can be programmed as general-purpose I/O pins if they are not used for serial communication. Note that on McBSP2, the transmit and receive clocks and the transmit and receive frame sync have been combined. The data is communicated to devices interfacing to the McBSP by way of the data transmit (BDX) pin for transmit and the data receive (BDR) pin for receive. The CPU or DMA reads the received data from the data receive register (DRR) and writes the data to be transmitted to the data transmit register (DXR). Data written to the DXR is shifted out to BDX by way of the transmit shift register (XSR). Similarly, receive data on the BDR pin is shifted into the receive shift register (RSR) and copied into the receive buffer register (RBR). RBR is then copied to DRR, which can be read by the CPU or DMA. This allows internal data movement and external data communications simultaneously. Control information in the form of clocking and frame synchronization is communicated by way of BCLKX, BCLKR, BFSX, and BFSR. The device communicates to the McBSP by way of 16-bit-wide control registers accessible via the internal peripheral bus. The control block consists of internal clock generation, frame synchronization signal generation, and their control, and multichannel selection. This control block sends notification of important events to the CPU and DMA by way of two interrupt signals, XINT and RINT, and two event signals, XEVT and REVT. The on-chip companding hardware allows compression and expansion of data in either µ-law or A-law format. When companding is used, transmitted data is encoded according to the specified companding law and received data is decoded to 2s complement format. The sample rate generator provides the McBSP with several means of selecting clocking and framing for both the receiver and transmitter. Both the receiver and transmitter can select clocking and framing independently. 36 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview The McBSP allows the multiple channels to be independently selected for the transmitter and receiver. When multiple channels are selected, each frame represents a time-division multiplexed (TDM) data stream. In using time-division multiplexed data streams, the CPU may only need to process a few of them. Thus, to save memory and bus bandwidth, multichannel selection allows independent enabling of particular channels for transmission and reception. All 128 channels in a bit stream consisting of a maximum of 128 channels can be enabled. 15 7 10 6 9 8 Reserved XMCME XPBBLK R R/W R/W 1 0 5 4 2 XPBBLK XPABLK XCBLK XMCM R/W R/W R R/W LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write Figure 3−12. Multichannel Control Register (MCR1) 15 7 10 6 5 9 8 Reserved RMCME RPBBLK R R/W R/W 1 0 4 2 RPBBLK RPABLK RCBLK Reserved RMCM R/W R/W R R R/W LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write Figure 3−13. Multichannel Control Register (MCR2) The 5407/5404 McBSP has two working modes: • • In the first mode, when (R/X)MCME = 0, it is comparable with the McBSPs used in the 5410 where the normal 32-channel selection is enabled (default). In the second mode, when (R/X)MCME = 1, it has 128-channel selection capability. Multichannel control register Bit 9, (R/X)MCME, is used as the 128-channel selection enable bit. Once (R/X)MCME = 1, twelve new registers ((R/X)CERC − (R/X)CERH) are used to enable the 128-channel selection. The clock stop mode (CLKSTP) in the McBSP provides compatibility with the serial port interface protocol. Clock stop mode works with only single-phase frames and one word per frame. The word sizes supported by the McBSP are programmable for 8-, 12-, 16-, 20-, 24-, or 32-bit operation. When the McBSP is configured to operate in SPI mode, both the transmitter and the receiver operate together as a master or as a slave. Although the BCLKS pin is not available on the 5407/5404 PGE and GGU packages, the 5407/5404 is capable of synchronization to external clock sources. BCLKX or BCLKR can be used by the sample rate generator for external synchronization. The sample rate clock mode extended (SCLKME) bit field is located in the PCR to accommodate this option. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 37 Functional Overview 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 Reserved XIOEN RIOEN FSXM FSRM CLKXM CLKRM R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SCLKME CLKS STAT DX STAT DR STAT FSXP FSRP CLKXP CLKRP R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write Figure 3−14. Pin Control Register (PCR) The selection of sample rate input clock is made by the combination of the CLKSM (bit 13 in SRGR2) bit value and the SCLKME bit value as shown in Table 3−7. Table 3−7. Sample Rate Input Clock Selection SCLKME CLKSM SAMPLE RATE CLOCK MODE 0 0 Reserved (CLKS pin unavailable) 0 1 CPU clock 1 0 BCLKR 1 1 BCLKX When the SCLKME bit is cleared to 0, the CLKSM bit is used, as before, to select either the CPU clock or the CLKS pin (not bonded out on the 5407/5404 device package) as the sample rate input clock. Setting the SCLKME bit to 1 enables the CLKSM bit to select between the BCLKR pin or BCLKX pin for the sample rate input clock. When either the BCLKR or CLKX is configured this way, the output buffer for the selected pin is automatically disabled. For example, with SCLKME = 1 and CLKSM = 0, the BCLKR pin is configured as the input of the sample rate generator. Both the transmitter and receiver circuits can be synchronized to the sample rate generator output by setting the CLKXM and CLKRM bits of the pin configuration register (PCR) to 1. Note that the sample rate generator output will only be driven on the BCLKX pin since the BCLKR output buffer is automatically disabled. The McBSP is fully static and operates at arbitrary low clock frequencies. For maximum operating frequency, see Section 5.14. 3.9 Hardware Timers The 5407/5404 device features two 16-bit timing circuits with 4-bit prescalers. The timer counters are decremented by one every CPU clock cycle. Each time the counter decrements to 0, a timer interrupt is generated. The timer can be stopped, restarted, reset, or disabled by specific status bits. Both timers can be use to generate interrupts to the CPU, however, the second timer (Timer1) has its interrupt combined with external interrupt 3 (INT3) in the interrupt flag register. Therefore, to use the Timer1 interrupt, the INT3 input should be disabled (tied high), and to use the INT3 input, the timer should be disabled (placed in reset). Since the Timer1 output is multiplexed externally with the HINT output, the HPI must be disabled (HPIENA input pin = 0) if the Timer1 output is to be used. The Timer1 output also has a dedicated enable bit in the General Purpose I/O Control Register (GPIOCR) located at data memory address 003Ch. If the external Timer1 output is to be used, in addition to disabling the HPI, the TOUT1 bit in the GPIOCR must also be set to 1. 38 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.10 Clock Generator The clock generator provides clocks to the 5407/5404 device, and consists of a phase-locked loop (PLL) circuit. The clock generator requires a reference clock input, which can be provided from an external clock source. The reference clock input is then divided by two (DIV mode) to generate clocks for the 5407/5404 device, or the PLL circuit can be used (PLL mode) to generate the device clock by multiplying the reference clock frequency by a scale factor, allowing use of a clock source with a lower frequency than that of the CPU. The PLL is an adaptive circuit that, once synchronized, locks onto and tracks an input clock signal. When the PLL is initially started, it enters a transitional mode during which the PLL acquires lock with the input signal. Once the PLL is locked, it continues to track and maintain synchronization with the input signal. Then, other internal clock circuitry allows the synthesis of new clock frequencies for use as master clock for the 5407/5404 device. This clock generator allows system designers to select the clock source. The sources that drive the clock generator are: • A crystal resonator circuit. The crystal resonator circuit is connected across the X1 and X2/CLKIN pins of the 5407/5404 to enable the internal oscillator. • An external clock. The external clock source is directly connected to the X2/CLKIN pin, and X1 is left unconnected. The software-programmable PLL features a high level of flexibility, and includes a clock scaler that provides various clock multiplier ratios, capability to directly enable and disable the PLL, and a PLL lock timer that can be used to delay switching to PLL clocking mode of the device until lock is achieved. Devices that have a built-in software-programmable PLL can be configured in one of two clock modes: • PLL mode. The input clock (X2/CLKIN) is multiplied by 1 of 31 possible ratios. • DIV (divider) mode. The input clock is divided by 2 or 4. Note that when DIV mode is used, the PLL can be completely disabled in order to minimize power dissipation. The software-programmable PLL is controlled using the 16-bit memory-mapped (address 0058h) clock mode register (CLKMD). The CLKMD register is used to define the clock configuration of the PLL clock module. Note that upon reset, the CLKMD register is initialized with a predetermined value dependent only upon the state of the CLKMD1 − CLKMD3 pins. For more programming information, see the TMS320C54x DSP Reference Set, Volume 1: CPU and Peripherals (literature number SPRU131). The CLKMD pin configured clock options are shown in Table 3−8. Table 3−8. Clock Mode Settings at Reset † CLKMD1 CLKMD2 CLKMD3 CLKMD RESET VALUE 0 0 0 0000h 1/2 (PLL and oscillator disabled) 0 0 1 9007h PLL x 10 0 1 0 4007h PLL x 5 1 0 0 1007h PLL x 2 1 1 0 F007h PLL x 1 1 0 1 F000h 1/4 (PLL disabled) 1 1 1 0000h 1/2 (PLL disabled) 0 1 1 — CLOCK MODE† Reserved The external CLKMD1−CLKMD3 pins are sampled to determine the desired clock generation mode while RS is low. Following reset, the clock generation mode can be reconfigured by writing to the internal clock mode register in software. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 39 Functional Overview 3.11 Enhanced External Parallel Interface (XIO2) The 5407/5404 external interface has been redesigned to include several improvements, including: simplification of the bus sequence, more immunity to bus contention when transitioning between read and write operations, the ability for external memory access to the DMA controller, and optimization of the power-down modes. The bus sequence on the 5407/5404 still maintains all of the same interface signals as on previous 54x devices, but the signal sequence has been simplified. Most external accesses now require 3 cycles composed of a leading cycle, an active (read or write) cycle, and a trailing cycle. The leading and trailing cycles provide additional immunity against bus contention when switching between read operations and write operations. To maintain high-speed read access, a consecutive read mode that performs single-cycle reads as on previous 54x devices is available. Figure 3−15 shows the bus sequence for three cases: all I/O reads, memory reads in nonconsecutive mode, or single memory reads in consecutive mode. The accesses shown in Figure 3−15 always require 3 CLKOUT cycles to complete. CLKOUT A[22:0] D[15:0] READ R/W MSTRB or IOSTRB PS/DS/IS Leading Cycle Read Cycle Trailing Cycle Figure 3−15. Nonconsecutive Memory Read and I/O Read Bus Sequence 40 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview Figure 3−16 shows the bus sequence for repeated memory reads in consecutive mode. The accesses shown in Figure 3−16 require (2+n) CLKOUT cycles to complete, where n is the number of consecutive reads performed. CLKOUT A[22:0] READ D[15:0] READ READ R/W MSTRB PS/DS Leading Cycle Read Cycle Read Cycle Read Cycle Trailing Cycle Figure 3−16. Consecutive Memory Read Bus Sequence (n = 3 reads) November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 41 Functional Overview Figure 3−17 shows the bus sequence for all memory writes and I/O writes. The accesses shown in Figure 3−17 always require 3 CLKOUT cycles to complete. CLKOUT A[22:0] WRITE D[15:0] R/W MSTRB or IOSTRB PS/DS/IS Leading Cycle Write Cycle Trailing Cycle Figure 3−17. Memory Write and I/O Write Bus Sequence The enhanced interface also provides the ability for DMA transfers to extend to external memory. For more information on DMA capability, see the DMA sections that follow. The enhanced interface improves the low-power performance already present on the TMS320C5000 DSP platform by switching off the internal clocks to the interface when it is not being used. This power-saving feature is automatic, requires no software setup, and causes no latency in the operation of the interface. Additional features integrated in the enhanced interface are the ability to automatically insert bank-switching cycles when crossing 32K memory boundaries (see Section 3.6.2), the ability to program up to 14 wait states through software (see Section 3.6.1), and the ability to divide down CLKOUT by a factor of 1, 2, 3, or 4. Dividing down CLKOUT provides an alternative to wait states when interfacing to slower external memory or peripheral devices. While inserting wait states extends the bus sequence during read or write accesses, it does not slow down the bus signal sequences at the beginning and the end of the access. Dividing down CLKOUT provides a method of slowing the entire bus sequence when necessary. The CLKOUT divide-down factor is controlled through the DIVFCT field in the bank-switching control register (BSCR) (see Table 3−5). 3.12 DMA Controller The 5407/5404 direct memory access (DMA) controller transfers data between points in the memory map without intervention by the CPU. The DMA allows movements of data to and from internal program/data memory, internal peripherals (such as the McBSPs, but not the UART), or external memory devices to occur in the background of CPU operation. The DMA has six independent programmable channels, allowing six different contexts for DMA operation. TMS320C5000 is a trademark of Texas Instruments. 42 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.12.1 Features The DMA has the following features: The DMA operates independently of the CPU. The DMA has six channels. The DMA can keep track of the contexts of six independent block transfers. The DMA has higher priority than the CPU for both internal and external accesses. Each channel has independently programmable priorities. Each channel’s source and destination address registers can have configurable indexes through memory on each read and write transfer, respectively. The address may remain constant, be post-incremented, be post-decremented, or be adjusted by a programmable value. Each read or write internal transfer may be initialized by selected events. On completion of a half- or entire-block transfer, each DMA channel may send an interrupt to the CPU. The DMA can perform double-word internal transfers (a 32-bit transfer of two 16-bit words). • • • • • • • • 3.12.2 DMA External Access The 5407/5404 DMA supports external accesses to extended program, extended data, and extended I/O memory. These overlay pages are only visible to the DMA controller. A maximum of two DMA channels can be used for external memory accesses. The DMA external accesses require a minimum of 8 cycles for external writes and a minimum of 11 cycles for external reads assuming the XIO02 is in consecutive mode (CONSEC = 1), wait state is set to two, and CLKOUT is not divided (DIVFCT = 00). The control of the bus is arbitrated between the CPU and the DMA. While the DMA or CPU is in control of the external bus, the other will be held-off via wait states until the current transfer is complete. The DMA takes precedence over XIO requests. Only two channels are available for external accesses. (One for external reads and one for external writes.) Single-word (16-bit) transfers are supported for external accesses. The DMA does not support transfers from the peripherals to external memory. The DMA does not support transfers from external memory to the peripherals. The DMA does not support external-to-external transfers. The DMA does not support synchronized external transfers. • • • • • • 15 14 13 12 11 AUTOINIT DINM IMOD CTMOD SLAXS 7 6 5 4 DLAXS DMS 10 8 SIND 2 DIND 1 0 DMD Figure 3−18. DMA Transfer Mode Control Register (DMMCRn) These new bit fields were created to allow the user to define the space-select for the DMA (internal/external). Also, a new extended destination data page (XDSTDP[6:0], subaddress 029h) and extended source data page (XSRCDP[6:0], subaddress 028h) have been created. The functions of the DLAXS and SLAXS bits are as follows: DLAXS(DMMCRn[5]) Destination 0 = No external access (default internal) 1 = External access SLAXS(DMMCRn[11]) Source 0 = No external access (default internal) 1 = External access November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 43 Functional Overview Table 3−9 lists the DMD bit values and their corresponding destination space. Table 3−9. DMD Section of the DMMCRn Register DMD DESTINATION SPACE 00 PS 01 DS 10 I/O 11 Reserved For the CPU external access, software can configure the memory cells to reside inside or outside the program address map. When the cells are mapped into program space, the device automatically accesses them when their addresses are within bounds. When the address generation logic generates an address outside its bounds, the device automatically generates an external access. Two new registers are added to the 5407/5404 DMA to support DMA accesses to/from DMA extended data memory, page 1 to page 127. • • 3.12.3 The DMA extended source data page register (XSRCDP[6:0]) is located at subbank address 028h. The DMA extended destination data page register (XDSTDP[6:0]) is located at subbank address 029h. DMA Memory Map The DMA memory map, shown in Figure 3−19, allows the DMA transfer to be unaffected by the status of the MP/MC, DROM, and OVLY bits. 44 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview Hex 0000 005F 0060 DLAXS = 0 SLAXS = 0 1FFF 2000 3FFF 4000 5FFF 6000 7FFF 8000 9FFF A000 Program Reserved Hex xx0000 Program On-Chip DARAM0 8K Words On-Chip DARAM1 8K Words On-Chip DARAM2† 8K Words On-Chip DARAM3† 8K Words Reserved On-Chip DARAM4† 8K Words Reserved xxFFFF FFFF Page 0 † Page 1 − 127 Reserved on the 5404 Figure 3−19. On-Chip DMA Memory Map for Program Space (DLAXS = 0 and SLAXS = 0) November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 45 Functional Overview Data Space (0000 − 005F) Hex 0000 Reserved 001F 0020 DRR20 0021 DRR10 DXR20 0022 0023 DXR10 0024 Reserved 002F DRR22 0030 DRR12 0031 DXR22 0032 0033 DXR12 0034 Data Space 0000 005F 0060 007F 0080 1FFF 2000 Reserved 5FFF 6000 DRR21 DRR11 DXR21 DXR11 I/O Space Data Space (See Breakout) 3FFF 4000 003F 0040 0041 0042 0043 0044 Hex 0000 7FFF 8000 9FFF A000 Reserved Scratch-Pad RAM On-Chip DARAM0 8K Words On-Chip DARAM1 8K Words On-Chip DARAM2† 8K Words Reserved On-Chip DARAM3† 8K Words On-Chip DARAM4† 8K Words Reserved 005F † FFFF FFFF Reserved on the 5404 Figure 3−20. On-Chip DMA Memory Map for Data and IO Space (DLAXS = 0 and SLAXS = 0) 3.12.4 DMA Priority Level Each DMA channel can be independently assigned high- or low-priority relative to each other. Multiple DMA channels that are assigned to the same priority level are handled in a round-robin manner. 3.12.5 DMA Source/Destination Address Modification The DMA provides flexible address-indexing modes for easy implementation of data management schemes such as autobuffering and circular buffers. Source and destination addresses can be indexed separately and can be post-incremented, post-decremented, or post-incremented with a specified index offset. 3.12.6 DMA in Autoinitialization Mode The DMA can automatically reinitialize itself after completion of a block transfer. Some of the DMA registers can be preloaded for the next block transfer through the DMA reload registers (DMGSA, DMGDA, DMGCR, and DMGFR). Autoinitialization allows: 46 • Continuous operation: Normally, the CPU would have to reinitialize the DMA immediately after the completion of the current block transfers, but with the reload registers, it can reinitialize these values for the next block transfer any time after the current block transfer begins. • Repetitive operation: The CPU does not preload the reload register with new values for each block transfer but only loads them on the first block transfer. SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview The 5407/5404 DMA has been enhanced to expand the DMA reload register sets. Each DMA channel now has its own DMA reload register set. For example, the DMA reload register set for channel 0 has DMGSA0, DMGDA0, DMGCR0, and DMGFR0 while DMA channel 1 has DMGSA1, DMGDA1, DMGCR1, and DMGFR1, etc. To utilize the additional DMA reload registers, the AUTOIX bit is added to the DMPREC register as shown in Figure 3−21. 15 14 FREE AUTOIX 7 6 13 8 DPRC[5:0] 5 0 DE[5:0] INT0SEL Figure 3−21. DMPREC Register Table 3−10. DMA Reload Register Selection AUTOIX 0 (default) 1 3.12.7 DMA RELOAD REGISTER USAGE IN AUTO INIT MODE All DMA channels use DMGSA0, DMGDA0, DMGCR0 and DMGFR0 Each DMA channel uses its own set of reload registers DMA Transfer Counting The DMA channel element count register (DMCTRx) and the frame count register (DMFRCx) contain bit fields that represent the number of frames and the number of elements per frame to be transferred. • • 3.12.8 Frame count. This 8-bit value defines the total number of frames in the block transfer. The maximum number of frames per block transfer is 128 (FRAME COUNT= 0FFh). The counter is decremented upon the last read transfer in a frame transfer. Once the last frame is transferred, the selected 8-bit counter is reloaded with the DMA global frame reload register (DMGFR) if the AUTOINIT bit is set to 1. A frame count of 0 (default value) means the block transfer contains a single frame. Element count. This 16-bit value defines the number of elements per frame. This counter is decremented after the read transfer of each element. The maximum number of elements per frame is 65536 (DMCTRn = 0FFFFh). In autoinitialization mode, once the last frame is transferred, the counter is reloaded with the DMA global count reload register (DMGCR). DMA Transfer in Doubleword Mode Doubleword mode allows the DMA to transfer 32-bit words in any index mode. In doubleword mode, two consecutive 16-bit transfers are initiated and the source and destination addresses are automatically updated following each transfer. In this mode, each 32-bit word is considered to be one element. 3.12.9 DMA Channel Index Registers The particular DMA channel index register is selected by way of the SIND and DIND fields in the DMA transfer mode control register (DMMCRn). Unlike basic address adjustment, in conjunction with the frame index DMFRI0 and DMFRI1, the DMA allows different adjustment amounts depending on whether or not the element transfer is the last in the current frame. The normal adjustment value (element index) is contained in the element index registers DMIDX0 and DMIDX1. The adjustment value (frame index) for the end of the frame, is determined by the selected DMA frame index register, either DMFRI0 or DMFRI1. The element index and the frame index affect address adjustment as follows: • • Element index: For all except the last transfer in the frame, the element index determines the amount to be added to the DMA channel for the source/destination address register (DMSRCx/DMDSTx) as selected by the SIND/DIND bits. Frame index: If the transfer is the last in a frame, frame index is used for address adjustment as selected by the SIND/DIND bits. This occurs in both single-frame and multi-frame transfers. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 47 Functional Overview 3.12.10 DMA Interrupts The ability of the DMA to interrupt the CPU based on the status of the data transfer is configurable and is determined by the IMOD and DINM bits in the DMA transfer mode control register (DMMCRn). The available modes are shown in Table 3−11. Table 3−11. DMA Interrupts MODE DINM IMOD INTERRUPT ABU (non-decrement) 1 0 At full buffer only ABU (non-decrement) 1 1 At half buffer and full buffer Multi frame 1 0 At block transfer complete (DMCTRn = DMSEFCn[7:0] = 0) Multi frame 1 1 At end of frame and end of block (DMCTRn = 0) Either 0 X No interrupt generated Either 0 X No interrupt generated 3.12.11 DMA Controller Synchronization Events The transfers associated with each DMA channel can be synchronized to one of several events. The DSYN bit field of the DMSEFCn register selects the synchronization event for a channel. The list of possible events and the DSYN values are shown in Table 3−12. Table 3−12. DMA Synchronization Events DSYN VALUE † DMA SYNCHRONIZATION EVENT 0000b No synchronization used 0001b McBSP0 receive event 0010b McBSP0 transmit event 0011b McBSP2 receive event 0100b McBSP2 transmit event 0101b McBSP1 receive event 0110b McBSP1 transmit event 0111b UART† 1000b Reserved 1001b Reserved 1010b Reserved 1011b Reserved 1100b Reserved 1101b Timer 0 interrupt event 1110b External interrupt 3 1111b Timer 1 interrupt event Note that the UART DMA synchronization event is usable as a synchronization event only, and is not usable for transferring data to or from the UART. The DMA cannot be used to transfer data to or from the UART. The DMA controller can generate a CPU interrupt for each of the six channels. However, due to a limit on the number of internal CPU interrupt inputs, channels 0, 1, 2, and 3 are multiplexed with other interrupt sources. DMA channels 0, 1, 2, and 3 share an interrupt line with the receive and transmit portions of the McBSP. When the 5407/5404 is reset, the interrupts from these three DMA channels are deselected. The INT0SEL bit field in the DMPREC register can be used to select these interrupts, as shown in Table 3−13. 48 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview Table 3−13. DMA/CPU Channel Interrupt Selection INT0SEL VALUE IMR/IFR[6] IMR/IFR[7] IMR/IFR[10] IMR/IFR[11] 00b (reset) BRINT2 BXINT2 BRINT1 BXINT1 01b BRINT2 BXINT2 DMAC2 DMAC3 10b DMAC0 DMAC1 DMAC2 DMAC3 11b Reserved 3.13 Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter (UART) The UART peripheral is based on the industry-standard TL16C550B asynchronous communications element, which in turn is a functional upgrade of the TL16C450. Functionally similar to the TL16C450 on power up (character or TL16C450 mode), the UART can be placed in an alternate FIFO (TL16C550) mode. This relieves the CPU of excessive software overhead by buffering received and transmitted characters. The receiver and transmitter FIFOs store up to 16 bytes including three additional bits of error status per byte for the receiver FIFO. The UART performs serial-to-parallel conversions on data received from a peripheral device or modem and parallel-to-serial conversion on data received from the CPU. The CPU can read the UART status at any time. The UART includes control capability and a processor interrupt system that can be tailored to minimize software management of the communications link. The UART includes a programmable baud rate generator capable of dividing the CPU clock by divisors from 1 to 65535 and producing a 16× reference clock for the internal transmitter and receiver logic. See Section 5.16 for detailed timing specifications for the UART. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 49 Functional Overview S e l e c t Peripheral Bus Receiver FIFO 8 Receiver Shift Register Receiver Buffer Register Data Bus Buffer RX 8 Receiver Timing and Control Line Control Register Divisor Latch (LS) Baud Generator Divisor Latch (MS) Transmitter Timing and Control Line Status Register Transmitter FIFO Transmitter Holding Register 8 S e l e c t 8 Transmitter Shift Register TX Modem Control Register Interrupt Enable Register Interrupt Identification Register 8 Interrupt Control Logic Control Logic 8 FIFO Control Register INTRPT (To CPU) Figure 3−22. UART Functional Block Diagram 50 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview Table 3−14. UART Reset Functions REGISTER/SIGNAL RESET CONTROL RESET STATE Interrupt enable register Master reset All bits cleared (0 −3 forced and 4 −7 permanent) Interrupt identification register Master reset Bit 0 is set, bits 1, 2, 3, 6, and 7 are cleared, and bits 4 −5 are permanently cleared FIFO control register Master reset All bits cleared Line control register Master reset All bits cleared Modem control register Master reset All bits cleared (6 −7 permanent) Line status register Master reset Bits 5 and 6 are set; all other bits are cleared Reserved register Master reset Indeterminate SOUT Master reset High INTRPT (receiver error flag) Read LSR/MR Low INTRPT (received data available) Read RBR/MR Low Read IR/write THR/MR Low INTRPT (transmitter holding register empty) Scratch register Master reset No effect Divisor latch (LSB and MSB) registers Master reset No effect Receiver buffer register Master reset No effect Transmitter holding register Master reset No effect RCVR FIFO MR/FCR1 −FCR0/∆FCR0 All bits cleared XMIT FIFO MR/FCR2 −FCR0/∆FCR0 All bits cleared November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 51 Functional Overview 3.13.1 UART Accessible Registers The system programmer has access to and control over any of the UART registers that are summarized in Table 3−14. These registers control UART operations, receive data, and transmit data. Descriptions of these registers follow Table 3−15. See Table 3−24 for more information on peripheral memory mapped registers. Table 3−15. Summary of Accessible Registers UART SUBBANK ADDRESS BIT NO. 0 1 0 (DLAB = 0) 0 (DLAB = 0) Receiver Buffer Register (Read Only) Transmitter Holding Register (Write Only) Divisor Latch (LSB) RBR THR Data Bit 0† Data Bit 1 Data Bit 0 Data Bit 1 0 (DLAB = 1) or 8 1 (DLAB = 0) 1 (DLAB = 1) or 9 2 2 3 4 5 6 7 Interrupt Enable Register Divisor Latch (MSB) Interrupt Ident. Register (Read Only) FIFO Control Register (Write Only) Line Control Register Modem Control Register Line Status Register Reserved Register Scratch Register DLL IER DLM IIR FCR LCR MCR LSR RSV SCR Bit 0 Enable Received Data Available Interrupt (ERBI) Bit 8 0 if Interrupt Pending FIFO Enable Word Length Select Bit 0 (WLS0) X Data Ready (DR) X Bit 0 Bit 1 Enable Transmitter Holding Register Empty Interrupt (ETBEI) Bit 9 Interrupt ID Bit 1 Receiver FIFO Reset Word Length Select Bit 1 (WLS1) X Overrun Error (OE) X Bit 1 Bit 10 Interrupt ID Bit 2 Transmitter FIFO Reset Number of Stop Bits (STB) X Parity Error (PE) X Bit 2 2 Data Bit 2 Data Bit 2 Bit 2 Enable Receiver Line Status Interrupt (ELSI) 3 Data Bit 3 Data Bit 3 Bit 3 0‡ Bit 11 Interrupt ID 0‡ Parity Enable (PEN) X Framing Error (FE) X Bit 3 4 Data Bit 4 Data Bit 4 Bit 4 0 Bit 12 0 Reserved Even Parity Select (EPS) Loop Break Interrupt (BI) X Bit 4 5 Data Bit 5 Data Bit 5 Bit 5 0 Bit 13 0 Reserved Stick Parity 0‡ Transmitter Holding Register (THRE) X Bit 5 6 Data Bit 6 Data Bit 6 Bit 6 0 Bit 14 Enabled§ FIFOs Receiver Trigger (LSB) Break Control 0 Transmitter Empty (TEMT) X Bit 6 FIFOs Divisor Latch Access Bit (DLAB) 0 Error in RCVR X Bit 7 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 3§ 7 Data Bit 7 Data Bit 7 Bit 7 0 Bit 15 Enabled§ Receiver Trigger (MSB) 8 − 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 FIFO§ † Bit 0 is the least significant bit. It is the first bit serially transmitted or received. ‡ Must always be written as zero. § These bits are always 0 in the TL16C450 mode. NOTE: X = Don’t care for write, indeterminate on read. 52 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.13.2 FIFO Control Register (FCR) The FCR is a write-only register at the same location as the IIR, which is a read-only register. The FCR enables and clears the FIFOs, sets the receiver FIFO trigger level, and selects the type of DMA signalling. • Bit 0: This bit, when set, enables the transmitter and receiver FIFOs. Bit 0 must be set when other FCR bits are written to or they are not programmed. Changing this bit clears the FIFOs. • Bit 1: This bit, when set, clears all bytes in the receiver FIFO and clears its counter. The shift register is not cleared. The 1 that is written to this bit position is self clearing. • Bit 2: This bit, when set, clears all bytes in the transmit FIFO and clears its counter. The shift register is not cleared. The 1 that is written to this bit position is self clearing. • Bits 3, 4, and 5: These three bits are reserved for future use. • Bits 6 and 7: These two bits set the trigger level for the receiver FIFO interrupt (see Table 3−16). Table 3−16. Receiver FIFO Trigger Level 3.13.3 BIT 7 BIT 6 RECEIVER FIFO TRIGGER LEVEL (BYTES) 0 0 01 0 1 04 1 0 08 1 1 14 FIFO Interrupt Mode Operation When the receiver FIFO and receiver interrupts are enabled (FCR0 = 1, IER0 = 1, IER2 = 1), a receiver interrupt occurs as follows: 1. The received data available interrupt is issued to the microprocessor when the FIFO has reached its programmed trigger level. It is cleared when the FIFO drops below its programmed trigger level. 2. The IIR receive data available indication also occurs when the FIFO trigger level is reached, and like the interrupt, it is cleared when the FIFO drops below the trigger level. 3. The receiver line status interrupt (IIR = 06) has higher priority than the received data available (IIR = 04) interrupt. 4. The data ready bit (LSR0) is set when a character is transferred from the shift register to the receiver FIFO. It is cleared when the FIFO is empty. When the receiver FIFO and receiver interrupts are enabled: 1. FIFO time-out interrupt occurs if the following conditions exist: a. At least one character is in the FIFO. b. The most recent serial character was received more than four continuous character times ago (if two stop bits are programmed, the second one is included in this time delay). c. The most recent microprocessor read of the FIFO has occurred more than four continuous character times before. This causes a maximum character received command to interrupt an issued delay of 160 ms at a 300 baud rate with a 12-bit character. 2. Character times are calculated by using the RCLK input for a clock signal (makes the delay proportional to the baud rate). November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 53 Functional Overview 3. When a time-out interrupt has occurred, it is cleared and the timer is cleared when the microprocessor reads one character from the receiver FIFO. 4. When a time-out interrupt has not occurred, the time-out timer is cleared after a new character is received or after the microprocessor reads the receiver FIFO. When the transmitter FIFO and THRE interrupt are enabled (FCR0 = 1, IER1 = 1), transmit interrupts occur as follows: 1. The transmitter holding register empty interrupt [IIR (3−0) = 2] occurs when the transmit FIFO is empty. It is cleared [IIR (3−0) = 1] when the THR is written to (1 to 16 characters may be written to the transmit FIFO while servicing this interrupt) or the IIR is read. 2. The transmitter holding register empty interrupt is delayed one character time minus the last stop bit time when there have not been at least two bytes in the transmitter FIFO at the same time since the last time that the FIFO was empty. The first transmitter interrupt after changing FCR0 is immediate if it is enabled. 3.13.4 FIFO Polled Mode Operation With FCR0 = 1 (transmitter and receiver FIFOs enabled), clearing IER0, IER1, IER2, IER3, or all four to 0 puts the UART in the FIFO polled mode of operation. Since the receiver and transmitter are controlled separately, either one or both can be in the polled mode of operation. In this mode, the user program checks receiver and transmitter status using the LSR. As stated previously: • LSR0 is set as long as there is one byte in the receiver FIFO. • LSR1 − LSR 4 specify which error(s) have occurred. Character error status is handled the same way as when in the interrupt mode; the IIR is not affected since IER2 = 0. • LSR5 indicates when the THR is empty. • LSR6 indicates that both the THR and TSR are empty. • LSR7 indicates whether there are any errors in the receiver FIFO. There is no trigger level reached or time-out condition indicated in the FIFO polled mode. However, the receiver and transmitter FIFOs are still fully capable of holding characters. 3.13.5 Interrupt Enable Register (IER) The IER enables each of the five types of interrupts (refer to Table 3−17) and enables INTRPT in response to an interrupt generation. The IER can also disable the interrupt system by clearing bits 0 through 3. The contents of this register are summarized in Table 3−15 and are described in the following bullets. • Bit 0: When set, this bit enables the received data available interrupt. • Bit 1: When set, this bit enables the THRE interrupt. • Bit 2: When set, this bit enables the receiver line status interrupt. • Bits 3 through 7: These bits are not used 3.13.6 Interrupt Identification Register (IIR) The UART has an on-chip interrupt generation and prioritization capability that permits flexible communication with the CPU. The UART provides three prioritized levels of interrupts: 54 • Priority 1 − Receiver line status (highest priority) • Priority 2 − Receiver data ready or receiver character time-out • Priority 3 − Transmitter holding register empty SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview When an interrupt is generated, the IIR indicates that an interrupt is pending and encodes the type of interrupt in its three least significant bits (bits 0, 1, and 2). The contents of this register are summarized in Table 3−15 and described in Table 3−17. Detail on each bit is as follows: • Bit 0: This bit is used either in a hardwire prioritized or polled interrupt system. When bit 0 is cleared, an interrupt is pending If bit 0 is set, no interrupt is pending. • Bits 1 and 2: These two bits identify the highest priority interrupt pending as indicated in Table 3−15 • Bit 3: This bit is always cleared in TL16C450 mode. In FIFO mode, bit 3 is set with bit 2 to indicate that a time-out interrupt is pending. • Bits 4 and 5: These two bits are not used (always cleared). • Bits 6 and 7: These bits are always cleared in TL16C450 mode. They are set when bit 0 of the FIFO control register is set. Table 3−17. Interrupt Control Functions INTERRUPT IDENTIFICATION REGISTER BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 0 0 0 1 PRIORITY LEVEL INTERRUPT TYPE None None INTERRUPT SOURCE INTERRUPT RESET METHOD None None 0 1 1 0 1 Receiver line status Overrun error, parity error, Read the line status register framing error, or break interrupt 0 1 0 0 2 Received data available Receiver data available in the TL16C450 mode or trigger level Read the receiver buffer register reached in the FIFO mode 2 Character time-out indication No characters have been removed from or input to the receiver FIFO during the last four Read the receiver buffer register character times, and there is at least one character in it during this time 3 Transmitter holding register empty Transmitter empty 1 1 0 0 3.13.7 0 1 0 0 holding Read the interrupt identification register register (if source of interrupt) or writing into the transmitter holding register Line Control Register (LCR) The system programmer controls the format of the asynchronous data communication exchange through the LCR. In addition, the programmer is able to retrieve, inspect, and modify the contents of the LCR; this eliminates the need for separate storage of the line characteristics in system memory. The contents of this register are summarized in Table 3−15 and described in the following bulleted list. • Bits 0 and 1: These two bits specify the number of bits in each transmitted or received serial character. These bits are encoded as shown in Table 3−18. Table 3−18. Serial Character Word Length • BIT 1 BIT 0 WORD LENGTH 0 0 5 bits 0 1 6 bits 1 0 7 bits 1 1 8 bits Bit 2: This bit specifies either one, one and one-half, or two stop bits in each transmitted character. When bit 2 is cleared, one stop bit is generated in the data. When bit 2 is set, the number of stop bits generated is dependent on the word length selected with bits 0 and 1. The receiver clocks only the first stop bit regardless of the number of stop bits selected. The number of stop bits generated in relation to word length and bit 2 are shown in Table 3−19. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 55 Functional Overview Table 3−19. Number of Stop Bits Generated BIT 2 WORD LENGTH SELECTED BY BITS 1 AND 2 NUMBER OF STOP BITS GENERATED 0 Any word length 1 1 5 bits 1 1/2 1 6 bits 2 1 7 bits 2 1 8 bits 2 • Bit 3: This bit is the parity enable bit. When bit 3 is set, a parity bit is generated in transmitted data between the last data word bit and the first stop bit. In received data, if bit 3 is set, parity is checked. When bit 3 is cleared, no parity is generated or checked. • Bit 4: This bit is the even parity select bit. When parity is enabled (bit 3 is set) and bit 4 is set even parity (an even number of logic 1s in the data and parity bits) is selected. When parity is enabled and bit 4 is cleared, odd parity (an odd number of logic 1s) is selected. • Bit 5: This bit is the stick parity bit. When bits 3, 4, and 5 are set, the parity bit is transmitted and checked as cleared. When bits 3 and 5 are set and bit 4 is cleared, the parity bit is transmitted and checked as set. If bit 5 is cleared, stick parity is disabled. • Bit 6: This bit is the break control bit. Bit 6 is set to force a break condition; i.e., a condition where SOUT is forced to the spacing (cleared) state. When bit 6 is cleared, the break condition is disabled and has no affect on the transmitter logic; it only effects SOUT. • Bit 7: This bit is the divisor latch access bit (DLAB). Bit 7 must be set to access the divisor latches of the baud generator during a read or write. Bit 7 must be cleared during a read or write to access the receiver buffer, the THR, or the IER. 3.13.8 Line Status Register (LSR) † The LSR provides information to the CPU concerning the status of data transfers. The contents of this register are summarized in Table 3−15 and described in the following bulleted list. † ‡ • Bit 0: This bit is the data ready (DR) indicator for the receiver. DR is set whenever a complete incoming character has been received and transferred into the RBR or the FIFO. DR is cleared by reading all of the data in the RBR or the FIFO. • Bit 1‡: This bit is the overrun error (OE) indicator. When OE is set, it indicates that before the character in the RBR was read, it was overwritten by the next character transferred into the register. OE is cleared every time the CPU reads the contents of the LSR. If the FIFO mode data continues to fill the FIFO beyond the trigger level, an overrun error occurs only after the FIFO is full and the next character has been completely received in the shift register. An overrun error is indicated to the CPU as soon as it happens. The character in the shift register is overwritten, but it is not transferred to the FIFO. • Bit 2‡: This bit is the parity error (PE) indicator. When PE is set, it indicates that the parity of the received data character does not match the parity selected in the LCR (bit 4). PE is cleared every time the CPU reads the contents of the LSR. In the FIFO mode, this error is associated with the particular character in the FIFO to which it applies. This error is revealed to the CPU when its associated character is at the top of the FIFO. • Bit 3‡: This bit is the framing error (FE) indicator. When FE is set, it indicates that the received character did not have a valid (set) stop bit. FE is cleared every time the CPU reads the contents of the LSR. In the FIFO mode, this error is associated with the particular character in the FIFO to which it applies. This error is revealed to the CPU when its associated character is at the top of the FIFO. The UART tries to resynchronize after a framing error. To accomplish this, it is assumed that the framing error is due to the next start bit. The UART samples this start bit twice and then accepts the input data. The line status register is intended for read operations only; writing to this register is not recommended. Bits 1 through 4 are the error conditions that produce a receiver line status interrupt. 56 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview • Bit 4‡: This bit is the break interrupt (BI) indicator. When BI is set, it indicates that the received data input was held low for longer than a full-word transmission time. A full-word transmission time is defined as the total time to transmit the start, data, parity, and stop bits. BI is cleared every time the CPU reads the contents of the LSR. In the FIFO mode, this error is associated with the particular character in the FIFO to which it applies. This error is revealed to the CPU when its associated character is at the top of the FIFO. When a break occurs, only one 0 character is loaded into the FIFO. The next character transfer is enabled after SIN goes to the marking state for at least two RCLK samples and then receives the next valid start bit. • Bit 5: This bit is the THRE indicator. THRE is set when the THR is empty, indicating that the UART is ready to accept a new character. If the THRE interrupt is enabled when THRE is set, an interrupt is generated. THRE is set when the contents of the THR are transferred to the TSR. THRE is cleared concurrent with the loading of the THR by the CPU. In the FIFO mode, THRE is set when the transmit FIFO is empty; it is cleared when at least one byte is written to the transmit FIFO. • Bit 6: This bit is the transmitter empty (TEMT) indicator. TEMT bit is set when the THR and the TSR are both empty. When either the THR or the TSR contains a data character, TEMT is cleared. In the FIFO mode, TEMT is set when the transmitter FIFO and shift register are both empty. • Bit 7: In the TL16C550C mode, this bit is always cleared. In the TL16C450 mode, this bit is always cleared. In the FIFO mode, LSR7 is set when there is at least one parity, framing, or break error in the FIFO. It is cleared when the microprocessor reads the LSR and there are no subsequent errors in the FIFO. 3.13.9 Modem Control Register (MCR) The MCR is an 8-bit register that controls an interface with a modem, data set, or peripheral device. On the UART peripheral, only one bit is active in this register • Bit 4: This bit (LOOP) provides a local loop back feature for diagnostic testing of the UART. When LOOP is set, the following occurs: − The transmitter SOUT is set high. − The receiver SIN is disconnected. − The output of the TSR is looped back into the receiver shift register input. 3.13.10 Programmable Baud Generator The UART contains a programmable baud generator that takes a clock input in the range between DC and 16 MHz and divides it by a divisor in the range between 1 and (216 −1). The output frequency of the baud generator is sixteen times (16 ×) the baud rate. The formula for the divisor is: divisor = XIN frequency input ÷ (desired baud rate × 16) Two 8-bit registers, called divisor latches, store the divisor in a 16-bit binary format. These divisor latches must be loaded during initialization of the UART in order to ensure desired operation of the baud generator. When either of the divisor latches is loaded, a 16-bit baud counter is also loaded to prevent long counts on initial load. Table 3−20 and Table 3−21 illustrate the use of the baud generator with clock frequencies of 1.8432 MHz and 3.072 MHz respectively. For baud rates of 38.4 kbits/s and below, the error obtained is very small. The accuracy of the selected baud rate is dependent on the selected clock frequency. ‡ Bits 1 through 4 are the error conditions that produce a receiver line status interrupt. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 57 Functional Overview NOTE: The clock rates in Table 3−20 and Table 3−21 are shown, for example only, to illustrate the relationship of clock rate and divisor value, to baud rate and baud rate error. Typically, higher clock rates will normally be used, and error values will differ accordingly. Table 3−20. Baud Rates Using a 1.8432-MHz Clock DESIRED BAUD RATE DIVISOR USED TO GENERATE 16 × CLOCK 50 2304 75 1536 PERCENT ERROR DIFFERENCE BETWEEN DESIRED AND ACTUAL 110 1047 0.026 134.5 857 0.058 150 768 300 384 600 192 1200 96 1800 64 2000 58 2400 48 3600 32 4800 24 7200 16 9600 12 19200 6 38400 3 56000 2 0.69 2.86 Table 3−21. Baud Rates Using a 3.072-MHz Clock DESIRED BAUD RATE 58 SPRS007D DIVISOR USED TO GENERATE 16 × CLOCK 50 3840 PERCENT ERROR DIFFERENCE BETWEEN DESIRED AND ACTUAL 75 2560 110 1745 0.026 134.5 1428 0.034 150 1280 300 640 600 320 1200 160 1800 107 2000 96 2400 80 3600 53 4800 40 7200 27 9600 20 19200 10 38400 5 0.312 0.628 1.23 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.13.10.1 Receiver Buffer Register (RBR) The UART receiver section consists of a receiver shift register (RSR) and a RBR. The RBR is actually a 16-byte FIFO. Timing is supplied by the 16× receiver clock. Receiver section control is a function of the UART line control register. The UART RSR receives serial data from SIN. The RSR then concatenates the data and moves it into the RBR FIFO. In the TL16C450 mode, when a character is placed in the RBR and the received data available interrupt is enabled (IER0 = 1), an interrupt is generated. This interrupt is cleared when the data is read out of the RBR. In the FIFO mode, the interrupts are generated based on the control setup in the FIFO control register. 3.13.10.2 Scratch Register The scratch register is an 8-bit register that is intended for the programmer’s use as a scratchpad in the sense that it temporarily holds the programmer’s data without affecting any other UART operation. 3.13.10.3 Transmitter Holding Register (THR) The UART transmitter section consists of a THR and a transmitter shift register (TSR). The THR is actually a 16-byte FIFO. Transmitter section control is a function of the UART line control register. The UART THR receives data off the internal data bus and when the shift register is idle, moves it into the TSR. The TSR serializes the data and outputs it at SOUT. In the TL16C450 mode, if the THR is empty and the transmitter holding register empty (THRE) interrupt is enabled (IER1 = 1), an interrupt is generated. This interrupt is cleared when a character is loaded into the register. In the FIFO mode, the interrupts are generated based on the control setup in the FIFO control register. 3.14 General-Purpose I/O Pins In addition to the standard BIO and XF pins, the 5407/5404 has pins that can be configured for general-purpose I/O. These pins are: • 16 McBSP pins — BCLKX0/1, BCLKR0/1, BDR0/1/2, BFSX0/1, BFSR0/1, BDX0/1/2, BCLKRX2, BFSRX2 • 8 HPI data pins — HD0−HD7 The general-purpose I/O function of these pins is only available when the primary pin function is not required. 3.14.1 McBSP Pins as General-Purpose I/O When the receive or transmit portion of a McBSP is in reset, its pins can be configured as general-purpose inputs or outputs. For more details on this feature, see Section 3.8. 3.14.2 HPI Data Pins as General-Purpose I/O The 8-bit bidirectional data bus of the HPI can be used as general-purpose input/output (GPIO) pins when the HPI is disabled (HPIENA = 0) or when the HPI is used in HPI16 mode (HPI16 = 1). Two memory-mapped registers are used to control the GPIO function of the HPI data pins — the general-purpose I/O control register (GPIOCR) and the general-purpose I/O status register (GPIOSR). The GPIOCR is shown in Figure 3−23. 15 14 8 TOUT1 Reserved R/W-0 0 7 4 3 0 DIR7 DIR6 DIR5 DIR4 DIR3 DIR2 DIR1 DIR0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write, n = value after reset Figure 3−23. General-Purpose I/O Control Register (GPIOCR) [MMR Address 003Ch] November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 59 Functional Overview The direction bits (DIRx) are used to configure HD0−HD7 as inputs or outputs (0 = input, 1 = output). Bit 15 of the GPIOCR is also used as the Timer1 output enable bit, TOUT1. The TOUT1 bit enables or disables the Timer1 output on the HINT/TOUT1 pin. If TOUT1 = 0, the Timer1 output is not available externally; if TOUT1 = 1, the Timer1 output is driven on the HINT/TOUT1 pin. Note also that the Timer1 output is only available when the HPI is disabled (HPIENA input pin = 0). The status of the GPIO pins can be monitored using the bits of the GPIOSR. The GPIOSR is shown in Figure 3−24. When read, these bits reflect the state of the input pins, and when written, determine the state of outputs. 15 8 Reserved 0 7 4 3 0 IO7 IO6 IO5 IO4 IO3 IO2 IO1 IO0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 R/W-0 LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write, n = value after reset Figure 3−24. General-Purpose I/O Status Register (GPIOSR) [MMR Address 003Dh] 3.15 Device ID Register A read-only memory-mapped register has been added to the 5407/5404 to allow user application software to identify on which device the program is being executed. 15 8 Chip ID R 7 4 3 0 Chip Revision SUBSYSID R R LEGEND: R = Read, W = Write Figure 3−25. Device ID Register (CSIDR) [MMR Address 003Eh] Table 3−22. Device ID Register (CSIDR) Bit Functions BIT NO. 60 BIT NAME FUNCTION 15−8 Chip ID Chip identification (hex code of 06 for 5407 and 03 for 5404) 7−4 Chip Revision 3−0 SUBSYSID SPRS007D Chip revision identification Subsystem identification (0000b for single core devices) November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.16 Memory-Mapped Registers The 5407/5404 has 27 memory-mapped CPU registers, which are mapped in data memory space address 0h to 1Fh. Each 5407/5404 device also has a set of memory-mapped registers associated with peripherals. Table 3−23 gives a list of CPU memory-mapped registers (MMRs) available on 5407/5404. Table 3−24 shows additional peripheral MMRs associated with the 5407/5404. Table 3−23. CPU Memory-Mapped Registers NAME ADDRESS DESCRIPTION DEC HEX IMR 0 0 Interrupt mask register IFR 1 1 Interrupt flag register 2−5 2−5 Reserved for testing ST0 6 6 Status register 0 ST1 7 7 Status register 1 AL 8 8 Accumulator A low word (15−0) AH 9 9 Accumulator A high word (31−16) AG 10 A Accumulator A guard bits (39−32) — BL 11 B Accumulator B low word (15−0) BH 12 C Accumulator B high word (31−16) BG 13 D Accumulator B guard bits (39−32) TREG 14 E Temporary register TRN 15 F Transition register AR0 16 10 Auxiliary register 0 AR1 17 11 Auxiliary register 1 AR2 18 12 Auxiliary register 2 AR3 19 13 Auxiliary register 3 AR4 20 14 Auxiliary register 4 AR5 21 15 Auxiliary register 5 AR6 22 16 Auxiliary register 6 AR7 23 17 Auxiliary register 7 SP 24 18 Stack pointer register BK 25 19 Circular buffer size register BRC 26 1A Block repeat counter RSA 27 1B Block repeat start address REA 28 1C Block repeat end address PMST 29 1D Processor mode status (PMST) register XPC 30 1E Extended program page register — 31 1F Reserved November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 61 Functional Overview Table 3−24. Peripheral Memory-Mapped Registers for Each DSP Subsystem NAME DRR20 DRR10 DXR20 DXR10 TIM PRD TCR — SWWSR BSCR — SWCR HPIC — DRR22 DRR12 DXR22 DXR12 SPSA2 SPSD2 — SPSA0 SPSD0 — GPIOCR GPIOSR CSIDR — DRR21 DRR11 DXR21 DXR11 USAR USDR — SPSA1 SPSD1 — TIM1 PRD1 TCR1 — DMPREC DMSA DMSDI DMSDN CLKMD — † ‡ 62 ADDRESS DEC HEX 32 20 33 21 34 22 35 23 36 24 37 25 38 26 39 27 40 28 41 29 42 2A 43 2B 44 2C 45−47 2D−2F 48 30 49 31 50 32 51 33 52 34 53 35 54−55 36−37 56 38 57 39 58−59 3A−3B 60 3C 61 3D 62 3E 63 3F 64 40 65 41 66 42 67 43 68 44 69 45 70−71 46−47 72 48 73 49 74−75 4A−4B 76 4C 77 4D 78 4E 79−83 4F−53 84 54 85 55 86 56 87 57 88 58 89−95 59−5F DESCRIPTION McBSP 0 Data Receive Register 2 McBSP 0 Data Receive Register 1 McBSP 0 Data Transmit Register 2 McBSP 0 Data Transmit Register 1 Timer 0 Register Timer 0 Period Register Timer 0 Control Register Reserved Software Wait-State Register Bank-Switching Control Register Reserved Software Wait-State Control Register HPI Control Register (HMODE = 0 only) Reserved McBSP 2 Data Receive Register 2 McBSP 2 Data Receive Register 1 McBSP 2 Data Transmit Register 2 McBSP 2 Data Transmit Register 1 McBSP 2 Subbank Address Register† McBSP 2 Subbank Data Register† Reserved McBSP 0 Subbank Address Register† McBSP 0 Subbank Data Register† Reserved General-Purpose I/O Control Register General-Purpose I/O Status Register Device ID Register Reserved McBSP 1 Data Receive Register 2 McBSP 1 Data Receive Register 1 McBSP 1 Data Transmit Register 2 McBSP 1 Data Transmit Register 1 UART Subbank Address Register UART Subbank Data Register Reserved McBSP 1 Subbank Address Register† McBSP 1 Subbank Data Register† Reserved Timer 1 Register Timer 1 Period Register Timer 1 Control Register Reserved DMA Priority and Enable Control Register DMA Subbank Address Register‡ DMA Subbank Data Register with Autoincrement‡ DMA Subbank Data Register‡ Clock Mode Register (CLKMD) Reserved See Table 3−25 for a detailed description of the McBSP control registers and their subaddresses. See Table 3−26 for a detailed description of the DMA subbank addressed registers. SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.17 McBSP Control Registers and Subaddresses The control registers for the multichannel buffered serial port (McBSP) are accessed using the subbank addressing scheme. This allows a set or subbank of registers to be accessed through a single memory location. The McBSP subbank address register (SPSA) is used as a pointer to select a particular register within the subbank. The McBSP data register (SPSDx) is used to access (read or write) the selected register. Table 3−25 shows the McBSP control registers and their corresponding subaddresses. Table 3−25. McBSP Control Registers and Subaddresses McBSP0 McBSP1 McBSP2 ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ NAME ADDRESS NAME ADDRESS SUBADDRESS 39h SPCR11 49h SPCR12 35h 00h Serial port control register 1 39h SPCR21 49h SPCR22 35h 01h Serial port control register 2 RCR10 39h RCR11 49h RCR12 35h 02h Receive control register 1 RCR20 39h RCR21 49h RCR22 35h 03h Receive control register 2 XCR10 39h XCR11 49h XCR12 35h 04h Transmit control register 1 XCR20 39h XCR21 49h XCR22 35h 05h Transmit control register 2 SRGR10 39h SRGR11 49h SRGR12 35h 06h Sample rate generator register 1 SRGR20 39h SRGR21 49h SRGR22 35h 07h Sample rate generator register 2 MCR10 39h MCR11 49h MCR12 35h 08h Multichannel register 1 MCR20 39h MCR21 49h MCR22 35h 09h Multichannel register 2 RCERA0 39h RCERA1 49h RCERA2 35h 0Ah Receive channel enable register partition A RCERB0 39h RCERB1 49h RCERA2 35h 0Bh Receive channel enable register partition B XCERA0 39h XCERA1 49h XCERA2 35h 0Ch Transmit channel enable register partition A XCERB0 39h XCERB1 49h XCERA2 35h 0Dh Transmit channel enable register partition B PCR0 39h PCR1 49h PCR2 35h 0Eh Pin control register RCERC0 39h RCERC1 49h RCERC2 35h 010h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection RCERD0 39h RCERD1 49h RCERD2 35h 011h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection XCERC0 39h XCERC1 49h XCERC2 35h 012h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection XCERD0 39h XCERD1 49h XCERD2 35h 013h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection RCERE0 39h RCERE1 49h RCERE2 35h 014h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection RCERF0 39h RCERF1 49h RCERF2 35h 015h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection XCERE0 39h XCERE1 49h XCERE2 35h 016h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection XCERF0 39h XCERF1 49h XCERF2 35h 017h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection RCERG0 39h RCERG1 49h RCERG2 35h 018h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection RCERH0 39h RCERH1 49h RCERH2 35h 019h Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection XCERG0 39h XCERG1 49h XCERG2 35h 01Ah Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection XCERH0 39h XCERH1 49h XCERH2 35h 01Bh Additional channel enable register for 128-channel selection NAME ADDRESS SPCR10 SPCR20 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 DESCRIPTION SPRS007D 63 Functional Overview 3.18 DMA Subbank Addressed Registers The direct memory access (DMA) controller has several control registers associated with it. The main control register (DMPREC) is a standard memory-mapped register. However, the other registers are accessed using the subbank addressing scheme. This allows a set or subbank of registers to be accessed through a single memory location. The DMA subbank address (DMSA) register is used as a pointer to select a particular register within the subbank, while the DMA subbank data (DMSD) register or the DMA subbank data register with autoincrement (DMSDI) is used to access (read or write) the selected register. When the DMSDI register is used to access the subbank, the subbank address is automatically postincremented so that a subsequent access affects the next register within the subbank. This autoincrement feature is intended for efficient, successive accesses to several control registers. If the autoincrement feature is not required, the DMSDN register should be used to access the subbank. Table 3−26 shows the DMA controller subbank addressed registers and their corresponding subaddresses. Table 3−26. DMA Subbank Addressed Registers ADDRESS SUBADDRESS DMSRC0 56h/57h 00h DMA channel 0 source address register DMDST0 56h/57h 01h DMA channel 0 destination address register DMCTR0 56h/57h 02h DMA channel 0 element count register DMSFC0 56h/57h 03h DMA channel 0 sync select and frame count register DMMCR0 56h/57h 04h DMA channel 0 transfer mode control register DMSRC1 56h/57h 05h DMA channel 1 source address register DMDST1 56h/57h 06h DMA channel 1 destination address register DMCTR1 56h/57h 07h DMA channel 1 element count register DMSFC1 56h/57h 08h DMA channel 1 sync select and frame count register DMMCR1 56h/57h 09h DMA channel 1 transfer mode control register DMSRC2 56h/57h 0Ah DMA channel 2 source address register DMDST2 56h/57h 0Bh DMA channel 2 destination address register DMCTR2 56h/57h 0Ch DMA channel 2 element count register DMSFC2 56h/57h 0Dh DMA channel 2 sync select and frame count register DMMCR2 56h/57h 0Eh DMA channel 2 transfer mode control register DMSRC3 56h/57h 0Fh DMA channel 3 source address register DMDST3 56h/57h 10h DMA channel 3 destination address register DMCTR3 56h/57h 11h DMA channel 3 element count register DMSFC3 56h/57h 12h DMA channel 3 sync select and frame count register DMMCR3 56h/57h 13h DMA channel 3 transfer mode control register DMSRC4 56h/57h 14h DMA channel 4 source address register DMDST4 56h/57h 15h DMA channel 4 destination address register DMCTR4 56h/57h 16h DMA channel 4 element count register DMSFC4 56h/57h 17h DMA channel 4 sync select and frame count register DMMCR4 56h/57h 18h DMA channel 4 transfer mode control register DMSRC5 56h/57h 19h DMA channel 5 source address register DMDST5 56h/57h 1Ah DMA channel 5 destination address register DMCTR5 56h/57h 1Bh DMA channel 5 element count register DMSFC5 56h/57h 1Ch DMA channel 5 sync select and frame count register DMMCR5 56h/57h 1Dh DMA channel 5 transfer mode control register DMSRCP 56h/57h 1Eh DMA source program page address (common channel) DMDSTP 56h/57h 1Fh DMA destination program page address (common channel) DMIDX0 56h/57h 20h DMA element index address register 0 ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ NAME 64 SPRS007D DESCRIPTION November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview Table 3−26. DMA Subbank Addressed Registers (Continued) ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁÁ ADDRESS SUBADDRESS DMIDX1 56h/57h 21h DMA element index address register 1 DMFRI0 56h/57h 22h DMA frame index register 0 DMFRI1 56h/57h 23h DMA frame index register 1 DMGSA0 56h/57h 24h DMA global source address reload register, channel 0 DMGDA0 56h/57h 25h DMA global destination address reload register, channel 0 DMGCR0 56h/57h 26h DMA global count reload register, channel 0 DMGFR0 56h/57h 27h DMA global frame count reload register, channel 0 XSRCDP 56h/57h 28h DMA extended source data page XDSTDP 56h/57h 29h DMA extended destination data page DMGSA1 56h/57h 2Ah DMA global source address reload register, channel 1 DMGDA1 56h/57h 2Bh DMA global destination address reload register, channel 1 DMGCR1 56h/57h 2Ch DMA global count reload register, channel 1 DMGFR1 56h/57h 2Dh DMA global frame count reload register, channel 1 DMGSA2 56h/57h 2Eh DMA global source address reload register, channel 2 DMGDA2 56h/57h 2Fh DMA global destination address reload register, channel 2 DMGCR2 56h/57h 30h DMA global count reload register, channel 2 DMGFR2 56h/57h 31h DMA global frame count reload register, channel 2 DMGSA3 56h/57h 32h DMA global source address reload register, channel 3 DMGDA3 56h/57h 33h DMA global destination address reload register, channel 3 DMGCR3 56h/57h 34h DMA global count reload register, channel 3 DMGFR3 56h/57h 35h DMA global frame count reload register, channel 3 DMGSA4 56h/57h 36h DMA global source address reload register, channel 4 DMGDA4 56h/57h 37h DMA global destination address reload register, channel 4 DMGCR4 56h/57h 38h DMA global count reload register, channel 4 DMGFR4 56h/57h 39h DMA global frame count reload register, channel 4 DMGSA5 56h/57h 3Ah DMA global source address reload register, channel 5 DMGDA5 56h/57h 3Bh DMA global destination address reload register, channel 5 DMGCR5 56h/57h 3Ch DMA global count reload register, channel 5 DMGFR5 56h/57h 3Dh DMA global frame count reload register, channel 5 NAME November 2001 − Revised April 2004 DESCRIPTION SPRS007D 65 Functional Overview 3.19 Interrupts Vector-relative locations and priorities for all internal and external interrupts are shown in Table 3−27. Table 3−27. Interrupt Locations and Priorities NAME RS, SINTR 0 00 NMI, SINT16 4 SINT17 8 SINT18 ‡ PRIORITY FUNCTION 1 Reset (hardware and software reset) 04 2 Nonmaskable interrupt 08 — Software interrupt #17 12 0C — Software interrupt #18 SINT19 16 10 — Software interrupt #19 SINT20 20 14 — Software interrupt #20 SINT21 24 18 — Software interrupt #21 SINT22 28 1C — Software interrupt #22 SINT23 32 20 — Software interrupt #23 SINT24 36 24 — Software interrupt #24 SINT25 40 28 — Software interrupt #25 SINT26 44 2C — Software interrupt #26 SINT27 48 30 — Software interrupt #27 SINT28 52 34 — Software interrupt #28 SINT29 56 38 — Software interrupt #29 SINT30 60 3C — Software interrupt #30 INT0, SINT0 64 40 3 External user interrupt #0 INT1, SINT1 68 44 4 External user interrupt #1 INT2, SINT2 72 48 5 External user interrupt #2 TINT0, SINT3 76 4C 6 Timer 0 interrupt BRINT0, SINT4 80 50 7 McBSP #0 receive interrupt BXINT0, SINT5 84 54 8 McBSP #0 transmit interrupt BRINT2, SINT6 88 58 9 McBSP #2 receive interrupt (default)† BXINT2, SINT7 92 5C 10 McBSP #2 transmit interrupt (default)† INT3, TINT1, SINT8 96 60 11 External user interrupt #3/Timer 1 interrupt‡ HINT, SINT9 100 64 12 HPI interrupt BRINT1, SINT10 104 68 13 McBSP #1 receive interrupt (default)† BXINT1, SINT11 108 6C 14 McBSP #1 transmit interrupt (default)† DMAC4,SINT12 112 70 15 DMA channel 4 DMAC5,SINT13 116 74 16 DMA channel 5 UART, SINT14 120 78 — UART interrupt 124−127 7C−7F — Reserved Reserved † LOCATION DECIMAL HEX See Table 3−13 for other interrupt selections. The INT3 and TINT1 interrupts are ORed together. To distinguish one from the other, one of these two interrupt sources must be inhibited. 66 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Functional Overview 3.19.1 IFR and IMR Registers The bit layout of the interrupt flag register (IFR) and the interrupt mask register (IMR) is shown in Figure 3−26. † 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 Reserved UART DMAC5 DMAC4 BXINT1 BRINT1 HINT INT3† 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 BXINT2 BRINT2 BXINT0 BRINT0 TINT0 INT2 INT1 INT0 Bit 8 reflects the status of either INT3 or TINT1: these two interrupts are ORed together. To distinguish one from the other, one of these two interrupt sources must be inhibited. Figure 3−26. IFR and IMR November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 67 Documentation Support 4 Documentation Support Extensive documentation supports all TMS320 DSP family of devices from product announcement through applications development. The following types of documentation are available to support the design and use of the C5000 platform of DSPs: • • • • • TMS320C54x DSP Functional Overview (literature number SPRU307) Device-specific data sheets Complete user’s guides Development support tools Hardware and software application reports The five-volume TMS320C54x DSP Reference Set (literature number SPRU210) consists of: • • • • • Volume 1: CPU and Peripherals (literature number SPRU131) Volume 2: Mnemonic Instruction Set (literature number SPRU172) Volume 3: Algebraic Instruction Set (literature number SPRU179) Volume 4: Applications Guide (literature number SPRU173) Volume 5: Enhanced Peripherals (literature number SPRU302) The reference set describes in detail the TMS320C54x DSP products currently available and the hardware and software applications, including algorithms, for fixed-point TMS320 DSP family of devices. A series of DSP textbooks is published by Prentice-Hall and John Wiley & Sons to support digital signal processing research and education. The TMS320 DSP newsletter, Details on Signal Processing, is published quarterly and distributed to update TMS320 DSP customers on product information. Information regarding TI DSP products is also available on the Worldwide Web at http://www.ti.com uniform resource locator (URL). TMS320 and C5000 are trademarks of Texas Instruments. 68 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Documentation Support 4.1 Device and Development-Support Tool Nomenclature To designate the stages in the product development cycle, TI assigns prefixes to the part numbers of all TMS320 DSP devices and support tools. Each TMS320 DSP commercial family member has one of three prefixes: TMX, TMP, or TMS (e.g., TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404). Texas Instruments recommends two of three possible prefix designators for support tools: TMDX and TMDS. These prefixes represent evolutionary stages of product development from engineering prototypes (TMX/ TMDX) through fully qualified production devices/tools (TMS / TMDS). Device development evolutionary flow: TMX Experimental device that is not necessarily representative of the final device’s electrical specifications TMP Final silicon die that conforms to the device’s electrical specifications but has not completed quality and reliability verification TMS Fully qualified production device Support tool development evolutionary flow: TMDX Development-support product that has not yet completed Texas Instruments internal qualification testing. TMDS Fully qualified development-support product TMX and TMP devices and TMDX development-support tools are shipped against the following disclaimer: “Developmental product is intended for internal evaluation purposes.” TMS devices and TMDS development-support tools have been characterized fully, and the quality and reliability of the device have been demonstrated fully. TI’s standard warranty applies. Predictions show that prototype devices ( TMX or TMP) have a greater failure rate than the standard production devices. Texas Instruments recommends that these devices not be used in any production system because their expected end-use failure rate still is undefined. Only qualified production devices are to be used. TMS320 is a trademark of Texas Instruments. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 69 Electrical Specifications 5 Electrical Specifications This section provides the absolute maximum ratings and the recommended operating conditions for the TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 DSP. 5.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings The list of absolute maximum ratings are specified over operating case temperature. Stresses beyond those listed under “absolute maximum ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated under Section 5.2 is not implied. Exposure to absolute-maximum-rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. All voltage values are with respect to DVSS. Figure 5−1 provides the test load circuit values for a 3.3-V device. Supply voltage I/O range, DVDD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . −0.3 V to 4.0 V Supply voltage core range, CVDD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . −0.3 V to 2.0 V Input voltage range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . −0.3 V to 4.5 V Output voltage range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . −0.3 V to 4.5 V Operating case temperature range, TC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0°C to 100°C Storage temperature range, Tstg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . −55°C to 150°C 5.2 Recommended Operating Conditions DVDD Device supply voltage, I/O CVDD Device supply voltage, core DVSS, CVSS Supply voltage, GND VIH High-level input voltage, I/O Low-level input voltage IOH IOL TC Operating case temperature 70 NOM MAX 2.7 3.3 3.6 V 1.42 1.5 1.65 V 0 RS, INTn, NMI, X2/CLKIN, BIO, TRST, Dn, An, HDn, CLKMDn, BCLKRn, BCLKXn, HCS, HDS1, HDS2, HAS, RX, TCK All other inputs VIL MIN V 2.4 DVDD + 0.3 2 DVDD + 0.3 V 0.8 V High-level output current −2 mA Low-level output current 2 mA 100 °C SPRS007D −0.3 UNIT 0 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.3 Electrical Characteristics Over Recommended Operating Case Temperature Range (Unless Otherwise Noted) PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS MIN DVDD = 3 V to 3.6 V, IOH = MAX 2.4 DVDD = 2.7 V to 3 V, IOH = MAX 2.2 VOH High level output voltage‡ High-level VOL Low-level output voltage‡ IOL = MAX IIZ Input current in high impedance DVDD = MAX, MAX VO = DVSS to DVDD A[22:0] Input current (VI = DVSS to DVDD) IDDP V 275 µA −40 40 µA −10 800 −10 400 With internal pulldown HPIENA With internal pulldown, RS = 0 TMS, TCK, TDI, HPI§ With internal pullups −400 10 D[15:0], HD[7:0] Bus holders enabled, DVDD = MAXk −275 275 −5 CVDD = 1.5 V, fx = 120 MHz,¶ TC = 25°C Supply current, core CPU Supply current, pins DVDD = 3.0 V, fx = 120 MHz,¶ TC = 25°C IDLE2 PLL × 1 mode, IDLE3 Divide-by-two mode, CLKIN stopped UNIT 0.4 TRST All other input-only pins IDDC MAX V −275 275 X2/CLKIN II TYP† 20 MHz input µA 5 42# mA 20|| mA 2 mA 1h mA IDD Supply current, standby Ci Input capacitance 5 pF Co Output capacitance 5 pF † All values are typical unless otherwise specified. ‡ All input and output voltage levels except RS, INT0 −INT3, NMI, X2/CLKIN, CLKMD1 −CLKMD3 are LVTTL-compatible. § HPI input signals except for HPIENA. ¶ Clock mode: PLL × 1 with external source # This value was obtained with 50% usage of MAC and 50% usage of NOP instructions. Actual operating current varies with program being executed. || This value was obtained with single-cycle external writes, CLKOFF = 0 and load = 15 pF. For more details on how this calculation is performed, refer to the Calculation of TMS320LC54x Power Dissipation application report (literature number SPRA164). k VIL(MIN) ≤ VI ≤ VIL(MAX) or VIH(MIN) ≤ VI ≤ VIH(MAX) h Material with high IDD has been observed with an IDD as high as 7 mA during high temperature testing. IOL Tester Pin Electronics 50 Ω VLoad CT Output Under Test IOH Where: IOL IOH VLoad CT = = = = 1.5 mA (all outputs) 300 µA (all outputs) 1.5 V 20-pF typical load circuit capacitance Figure 5−1. 3.3-V Test Load Circuit November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 71 Electrical Specifications 5.4 Package Thermal Resistance Characteristics Table 5−1 provides the estimated thermal resistance characteristics for the recommended package types used on the TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 DSP. Table 5−1. Thermal Resistance Characteristics 5.5 PARAMETER GGU PACKAGE PGE PACKAGE UNIT RΘJA 38 56 °C / W RΘJC 5 5 °C / W Timing Parameter Symbology Timing parameter symbols used in the timing requirements and switching characteristics tables are created in accordance with JEDEC Standard 100. To shorten the symbols, some of the pin names and other related terminology have been abbreviated as follows: 5.6 Lowercase subscripts and their meanings: Letters and symbols and their meanings: a access time H High c cycle time (period) L Low d delay time V Valid dis disable time Z High impedance en enable time f fall time h hold time r rise time su setup time t transition time v valid time w pulse duration (width) X Unknown, changing, or don’t care level Internal Oscillator With External Crystal The internal oscillator is enabled by selecting the appropriate clock mode at reset (this is device-dependent; see Section 3.10) and connecting a crystal or ceramic resonator across X1 and X2/CLKIN. The CPU clock frequency is one-half, one-fourth, or a multiple of the oscillator frequency. The multiply ratio is determined by the bit settings in the CLKMD register. The crystal should be in fundamental-mode operation, and parallel resonant, with an effective series resistance of 30 Ω maximum and power dissipation of 1 mW. The connection of the required circuit, consisting of the crystal and two load capacitors, is shown in Figure 5−2. The load capacitors, C1 and C2, should be chosen such that the equation below is satisfied. CL (recommended value of 10 pF) in the equation is the load specified for the crystal. CL + C 1C 2 (C 1 ) C 2) Table 5−2. Input Clock Frequency Characteristics fx Input clock frequency MIN MAX UNIT 10† 20‡ MHz † This device utilizes a fully static design and therefore can operate with tc(CI) approaching ∞. The device is characterized at frequencies approaching 0 Hz ‡ It is recommended that the PLL multiply by N clocking option be used for maximum frequency operation. 72 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications X1 X2/CLKIN Crystal C1 C2 Figure 5−2. Internal Divide-by-Two Clock Option With External Crystal 5.7 Clock Options The frequency of the reference clock provided at the CLKIN pin can be divided by a factor of two or four or multiplied by one of several values to generate the internal machine cycle. 5.7.1 Divide-By-Two and Divide-By-Four Clock Options The frequency of the reference clock provided at the X2/CLKIN pin can be divided by a factor of two or four to generate the internal machine cycle. The selection of the clock mode is described in Section 3.10. When an external clock source is used, the frequency injected must conform to specifications listed in Table 5−4. An external frequency source can be used by applying an input clock to X2/CLKIN with X1 left unconnected. Table 5−3 shows the configuration options for the CLKMD pins that generate the external divide-by-2 or divide-by-4 clock option. Table 5−3. Clock Mode Pin Settings for the Divide-By-2 and By Divide-by-4 Clock Options CLKMD1 CLKMD2 CLKMD3 0 0 0 1/2, PLL and oscillator disabled 1 0 1 1/4, PLL and oscillator disabled 1 1 1 1/2, PLL and oscillator disabled November 2001 − Revised April 2004 CLOCK MODE SPRS007D 73 Electrical Specifications Table 5−4 and Table 5−5 assume testing over recommended operating conditions and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−3). Table 5−4. Divide-By-2 and Divide-by-4 Clock Options Timing Requirements MIN MAX 20 UNIT tc(CI) Cycle time, X2/CLKIN ns tf(CI) Fall time, X2/CLKIN 4 ns tr(CI) Rise time, X2/CLKIN 4 ns tw(CIL) Pulse duration, X2/CLKIN low 4 ns tw(CIH) Pulse duration, X2/CLKIN high 4 ns Table 5−5. Divide-By-2 and Divide-by-4 Clock Options Switching Characteristics PARAMETER MIN TYP MAX 8.33† UNIT ‡ ns 11 ns tc(CO) Cycle time, CLKOUT td(CIH-CO) Delay time, X2/CLKIN high to CLKOUT high/low tf(CO) Fall time, CLKOUT 1 ns tr(CO) Rise time, CLKOUT 1 ns tw(COL) Pulse duration, CLKOUT low H−3 H H+3 ns tw(COH) Pulse duration, CLKOUT high H−3 H H+3 ns 4 7 † It is recommended that the PLL clocking option be used for maximum frequency operation. ‡ This device utilizes a fully static design and therefore can operate with t c(CI) approaching ∞. The device is characterized at frequencies approaching 0 Hz. tw(CIH) tw(CIL) tc(CI) tr(CI) tf(CI) X2/CLKIN tc(CO) td(CIH-CO) tw(COH) tf(CO) tr(CO) tw(COL) CLKOUT NOTE A: The CLKOUT timing in this diagram assumes the CLKOUT divide factor (DIVFCT field in the BSCR) is configured as 00 (CLKOUT not divided). DIVFCT is configured as CLKOUT divided-by-4 mode following reset. Figure 5−3. External Divide-by-Two Clock Timing 74 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.7.2 Multiply-By-N Clock Option (PLL Enabled) The frequency of the reference clock provided at the X2/CLKIN pin can be multiplied by a factor of N to generate the internal machine cycle. The selection of the clock mode and the value of N is described in Section 3.10. Following reset, the software PLL can be programmed for the desired multiplication factor. Refer to the TMS320C54x DSP Reference Set, Volume 1: CPU and Peripherals (literature number SPRU131) for detailed information on programming the PLL. When an external clock source is used, the external frequency injected must conform to specifications listed in Table 5−6. Table 5−6 and Table 5−7 assume testing over recommended operating conditions and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−4). Table 5−6. Multiply-By-N Clock Option Timing Requirements Integer PLL multiplier N (N = tc(CI) † Cycle time, X2/CLKIN MIN MAX 1−15)† 20 200 PLL multiplier N = x.5† 20 100 PLL multiplier N = x.25, x.75† 20 50 UNIT ns tf(CI) Fall time, X2/CLKIN 4 ns tr(CI) Rise time, X2/CLKIN tw(CIL) Pulse duration, X2/CLKIN low 4 4 ns ns tw(CIH) Pulse duration, X2/CLKIN high 4 ns N is the multiplication factor. Table 5−7. Multiply-By-N Clock Option Switching Characteristics PARAMETER tc(CO) Cycle time, CLKOUT td(CI-CO) Delay time, X2/CLKIN high/low to CLKOUT high/low tf(CO) Fall time, CLKOUT tr(CO) tw(COL) MIN TYP MAX 7 11 8.33 UNIT ns 4 ns 2 ns Rise time, CLKOUT 2 ns Pulse duration, CLKOUT low H ns tw(COH) Pulse duration, CLKOUT high H ns tp Transitory phase, PLL lock-up time 30 tw(CIH) tc(CI) tw(CIL) ms tf(CI) tr(CI) X2/CLKIN td(CI-CO) tc(CO) tw(COH) tp CLKOUT tf(CO) tw(COL) tr(CO) Unstable NOTE A: The CLKOUT timing in this diagram assumes the CLKOUT divide factor (DIVFCT field in the BSCR) is configured as 00 (CLKOUT not divided). DIVFCT is configured as CLKOUT divided-by-4 mode following reset. Figure 5−4. Multiply-by-One Clock Timing November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 75 Electrical Specifications 5.8 Memory and Parallel I/O Interface Timing 5.8.1 Memory Read External memory reads can be performed in consecutive or nonconsecutive mode under control of the CONSEC bit in the BSCR. Table 5−8 and Table 5−9 assume testing over recommended operating conditions with MSTRB = 0 and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−5 and Figure 5−6). Table 5−8. Memory Read Timing Requirements MIN ta(A)M1 † Access time, read data access from address valid, first read access† For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation MAX UNIT 4H−9 ns 4H−11 ns 2H−9 ns ta(A)M2 Access time, read data access from address valid, consecutive read accesses† tsu(D)R Setup time, read data valid before CLKOUT low 7 ns th(D)R Hold time, read data valid after CLKOUT low 0 ns Address,R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. Table 5−9. Memory Read Switching Characteristics PARAMETER td(CLKL-A) † Delay time time, CLKOUT low to address valid† td(CLKL-MSL) Delay time, CLKOUT low to MSTRB low td(CLKL-MSH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to MSTRB high MIN MAX UNIT For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation −1 4 ns For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation −1 6 ns −1 4 ns 0 4 ns Address,R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. 76 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications CLKOUT td(CLKL-A) A[22:0]† td(CLKL-MSL) td(CLKL-MSH) ta(A)M1 D[15:0] tsu(D)R th(D)R MSTRB R/W† PS/DS† † Address,R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. Figure 5−5. Nonconsecutive Mode Memory Reads November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 77 Electrical Specifications CLKOUT td(CLKL-A) td(CLKL-MSL) td(CLKL-MSH) A[22:0]† ta(A)M1 ta(A)M2 D[15:0] tsu(D)R tsu(D)R th(D)R th(D)R MSTRB R/W† PS/DS† † Address,R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. Figure 5−6. Consecutive Mode Memory Reads 78 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.8.2 Memory Write Table 5−10 assumes testing over recommended operating conditions with MSTRB = 0 and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−7). Table 5−10. Memory Write Switching Characteristics PARAMETER td(CLKL-A) tsu(A)MSL † Delay time, CLKOUT low to address valid† Setup time, address valid before MSTRB low† MIN MAX UNIT For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation −1 4 ns For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation −1 6 ns For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation 2H − 3 ns For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation 2H − 5 ns td(CLKL-D)W Delay time, CLKOUT low to data valid −1 5 ns tsu(D)MSH Setup time, data valid before MSTRB high 2H − 5 2H + 6 ns th(D)MSH Hold time, data valid after MSTRB high 2H − 5 2H + 6 ns td(CLKL-MSL) Delay time, CLKOUT low to MSTRB low −1 4 ns tw(SL)MS Pulse duration, MSTRB low td(CLKL-MSH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to MSTRB high 2H − 2 0 ns 4 ns Address, R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 79 Electrical Specifications CLKOUT td(CLKL-A) td(CLKL-D)W tsu(A)MSL A[22:0]† tsu(D)MSH th(D)MSH D[15:0] td(CLKL-MSL) td(CLKL-MSH) tw(SL)MS MSTRB R/W† PS/DS† † Address, R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. Figure 5−7. Memory Write (MSTRB = 0) 80 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.8.3 I/O Read Table 5−11 and Table 5−12 assume testing over recommended operating conditions, IOSTRB = 0, and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−8). Table 5−11. I/O Read Timing Requirements MIN ta(A)M1 † Access time, read data access from address valid, first read access† For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation MAX UNIT 4H − 9 ns 4H − 11 ns tsu(D)R Setup time, read data valid before CLKOUT low 7 ns th(D)R Hold time, read data valid after CLKOUT low 0 ns Address R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are included in timings referenced as address. Table 5−12. I/O Read Switching Characteristics PARAMETER td(CLKL-A) † Delay time time, CLKOUT low to address valid† td(CLKL-IOSL) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IOSTRB low td(CLKL-IOSH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IOSTRB high MIN MAX UNIT For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation −1 4 ns For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation −1 6 ns −1 4 ns 0 4 ns Address R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are included in timings referenced as address. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 81 Electrical Specifications CLKOUT td(CLKL-A) td(CLKL-IOSL) td(CLKL-IOSH) A[22:0]† ta(A)M1 tsu(D)R th(D)R D[15:0] IOSTRB R/W† IS† † Address, R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. Figure 5−8. Parallel I/O Port Read (IOSTRB = 0) 82 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.8.4 I/O Write Table 5−13 assumes testing over recommended operating conditions, IOSTRB = 0, and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−9). Table 5−13. I/O Write Switching Characteristics PARAMETER td(CLKL-A) tsu(A)IOSL † Delay time, CLKOUT low to address valid† Setup time, address valid before IOSTRB low† td(CLKL-D)W Delay time, CLKOUT low to write data valid tsu(D)IOSH th(D)IOSH td(CLKL-IOSL) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IOSTRB low tw(SL)IOS Pulse duration, IOSTRB low td(CLKL-IOSH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IOSTRB high MIN MAX UNIT For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation −1 4 ns For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation −1 6 ns For accesses not immediately following a HOLD operation 2H − 3 ns For read accesses immediately following a HOLD operation 2H − 5 ns −1 4 ns Setup time, data valid before IOSTRB high 2H − 5 2H + 6 ns Hold time, data valid after IOSTRB high 2H − 5 2H + 6 ns −1 4 ns 2H − 2 ns 0 4 ns Address R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are included in timings referenced as address. CLKOUT td(CLKL-A) A[22:0]† td(CLKL-D)W td(CLKL-D)W tsu(A)IOSL D[15:0] tsu(D)IOSH td(CLKL-IOSL) td(CLKL-IOSH) th(D)IOSH IOSTRB R/W† tw(SL)IOS IS† † Address, R/W, PS, DS, and IS timings are all included in timings referenced as address. Figure 5−9. Parallel I/O Port Write (IOSTRB = 0) November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 83 Electrical Specifications 5.9 Ready Timing for Externally Generated Wait States Table 5−14 and Table 5−15 assume testing over recommended operating conditions and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−10, Figure 5−11, Figure 5−12, and Figure 5−13). Table 5−14. Ready Timing Requirements for Externally Generated Wait States† MIN tsu(RDY) Setup time, READY before CLKOUT low 7 th(RDY) Hold time, READY after CLKOUT low 0 tv(RDY)MSTRB Valid time, READY after MSTRB low‡ th(RDY)MSTRB Hold time, READY after MSTRB low‡ tv(RDY)IOSTRB Valid time, READY after IOSTRB low‡ th(RDY)IOSTRB low‡ Hold time, READY after IOSTRB MAX UNIT ns ns 4H − 4 4H ns ns 4H − 4 4H ns ns † The hardware wait states can be used only in conjunction with the software wait states to extend the bus cycles. To generate wait states by READY, at least two software wait states must be programmed. READY is not sampled until the completion of the internal software wait states. ‡ These timings are included for reference only. The critical timings for READY are those referenced to CLKOUT. Table 5−15. Ready Switching Characteristics for Externally Generated Wait States† PARAMETER † MIN MAX UNIT td(MSCL) Delay time, MSC low to CLKOUT low −1 4 ns td(MSCH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to MSC high −1 4 ns The hardware wait states can be used only in conjunction with the software wait states to extend the bus cycles. To generate wait states by READY, at least two software wait states must be programmed. READY is not sampled until the completion of the internal software wait states. 84 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications CLKOUT A[22:0] tsu(RDY) th(RDY) READY tv(RDY)MSTRB th(RDY)MSTRB MSTRB td(MCSL) td(MCSH) MSC Leading Cycle Wait States Generated Internally Wait States Generated by READY Trailing Cycle Figure 5−10. Memory Read With Externally Generated Wait States CLKOUT A[22:0] D[15:0] tsu(RDY) th(RDY) READY tv(RDY)MSTRB th(RDY)MSTRB MSTRB td(MSCL) td(MSCH) MSC Leading Cycle Wait States Generated Internally Wait States Generated by READY Trailing Cycle Figure 5−11. Memory Write With Externally Generated Wait States November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 85 Electrical Specifications CLKOUT A[22:0] tsu(RDY) th(RDY) READY tv(RDY)IOSTRB th(RDY)IOSTRB IOSTRB td(MSCL) td(MSCH) MSC Leading Cycle Wait States Generated Internally Wait States Generated by READY Trailing Cycle Figure 5−12. I/O Read With Externally Generated Wait States CLKOUT A[22:0] D[15:0] tsu(RDY) th(RDY) READY tv(RDY)IOSTRB th(RDY)IOSTRB IOSTRB td(MSCL) td(MSCH) MSC Leading Cycle Wait States Generated Internally Wait States Generated by READY Trailing Cycle Figure 5−13. I/O Write With Externally Generated Wait States 86 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.10 HOLD and HOLDA Timings Table 5−16 and Table 5−17 assume testing over recommended operating conditions and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−14). Table 5−16. HOLD and HOLDA Timing Requirements MIN tw(HOLD) Pulse duration, HOLD low duration tsu(HOLD) Setup time, HOLD before CLKOUT low MAX UNIT 4H+8 ns 7 ns Table 5−17. HOLD and HOLDA Switching Characteristics MAX UNIT tdis(CLKL-A) Disable time, Address, PS, DS, IS high impedance from CLKOUT low PARAMETER MIN 3 ns tdis(CLKL-RW) Disable time, R/W high impedance from CLKOUT low 3 ns tdis(CLKL-S) Disable time, MSTRB, IOSTRB high impedance from CLKOUT low 3 ns ten(CLKL-A) Enable time, Address, PS, DS, IS valid from CLKOUT low 2H+4 ns ten(CLKL-RW) Enable time, R/W enabled from CLKOUT low 2H+3 ns ten(CLKL-S) Enable time, MSTRB, IOSTRB enabled from CLKOUT low 2 2H+3 ns −1 4 ns −1 4 ns Valid time, HOLDA low after CLKOUT low tv(HOLDA) Valid time, HOLDA high after CLKOUT low tw(HOLDA) Pulse duration, HOLDA low duration 2H−3 ns CLKOUT tsu(HOLD) tw(HOLD) tsu(HOLD) HOLD tv(HOLDA) HOLDA tv(HOLDA) tw(HOLDA) tdis(CLKL−A) ten(CLKL−A) tdis(CLKL−RW) ten(CLKL−RW) tdis(CLKL−S) ten(CLKL−S) tdis(CLKL−S) ten(CLKL−S) A[22:0] PS, DS, IS D[15:0] R/W MSTRB IOSTRB Figure 5−14. HOLD and HOLDA Timings (HM = 1) November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 87 Electrical Specifications 5.11 Reset, BIO, Interrupt, and MP/MC Timings Table 5−18 assumes testing over recommended operating conditions and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−15, Figure 5−16, and Figure 5−17). Table 5−18. Reset, BIO, Interrupt, and MP/MC Timing Requirements MIN MAX UNIT th(RS) Hold time, RS after CLKOUT low 3 ns th(BIO) Hold time, BIO after CLKOUT low 4 ns th(INT) Hold time, INTn, NMI, after CLKOUT low† 1 ns th(MPMC) Hold time, MP/MC after CLKOUT low 4 ns low‡§ tw(RSL) Pulse duration, RS 4H+3 ns tw(BIO)S Pulse duration, BIO low, synchronous 2H+3 ns tw(BIO)A Pulse duration, BIO low, asynchronous 4H ns tw(INTH)S Pulse duration, INTn, NMI high (synchronous) 2H+2 ns tw(INTH)A Pulse duration, INTn, NMI high (asynchronous) 4H ns tw(INTL)S Pulse duration, INTn, NMI low (synchronous) 2H+2 ns tw(INTL)A Pulse duration, INTn, NMI low (asynchronous) 4H ns tw(INTL)WKP Pulse duration, INTn, NMI low for IDLE2/IDLE3 wakeup 8 ns low¶ tsu(RS) Setup time, RS before X2/CLKIN 3 ns tsu(BIO) Setup time, BIO before CLKOUT low 7 ns tsu(INT) Setup time, INTn, NMI, RS before CLKOUT low 7 ns tsu(MPMC) Setup time, MP/MC before CLKOUT low 5 ns † The external interrupts (INT0 −INT3, NMI) are synchronized to the core CPU by way of a two-flip-flop synchronizer that samples these inputs with consecutive falling edges of CLKOUT. The input to the interrupt pins is required to represent a 1−0−0 sequence at the timing that is corresponding to three CLKOUTs sampling sequence. ‡ If the PLL mode is selected, then at power-on sequence, or at wakeup from IDLE3, RS must be held low for at least 50 µs to ensure synchronization and lock-in of the PLL. § Note that RS may cause a change in clock frequency, therefore changing the value of H. ¶ The diagram assumes clock mode is divide-by-2 and the CLKOUT divide factor is set to no-divide mode (DIVFCT=00 field in the BSCR). X2/CLKIN tsu(RS) tw(RSL) RS, INTn, NMI tsu(INT) th(RS) CLKOUT tsu(BIO) th(BIO) BIO tw(BIO)S Figure 5−15. Reset and BIO Timings 88 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications CLKOUT tsu(INT) tsu(INT) th(INT) INTn, NMI tw(INTH)A tw(INTL)A Figure 5−16. Interrupt Timing CLKOUT RS th(MPMC) tsu(MPMC) MP/MC Figure 5−17. MP/MC Timing November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 89 Electrical Specifications 5.12 Instruction Acquisition (IAQ) and Interrupt Acknowledge (IACK) Timings Table 5−19 assumes testing over recommended operating conditions and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−18). Table 5−19. Instruction Acquisition (IAQ) and Interrupt Acknowledge (IACK) Switching Characteristics PARAMETER MIN MAX UNIT td(CLKL-IAQL) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IAQ low −1 4 ns td(CLKL-IAQH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IAQ high −1 4 ns td(A)IAQ Delay time, IAQ low to address valid 2 ns td(CLKL-IACKL) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IACK low −1 4 ns td(CLKL-IACKH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to IACK high −1 4 ns td(A)IACK Delay time, IACK low to address valid 2 ns th(A)IAQ Hold time, address valid after IAQ high −2 ns th(A)IACK Hold time, address valid after IACK high −2 ns tw(IAQL) Pulse duration, IAQ low 2H − 2 ns tw(IACKL) Pulse duration, IACK low 2H − 2 ns CLKOUT A[22:0] td(CLKL − IAQH) td(CLKL − IAQL) th(A)IAQ td(A)IAQ tw(IAQL) IAQ td(CLKL − IACKL) td(CLKL − IACKH) th(A)IACK td(A)IACK IACK tw(IACKL) Figure 5−18. Instruction Acquisition (IAQ) and Interrupt Acknowledge (IACK) Timings 90 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.13 External Flag (XF) and TOUT Timings Table 5−20 assumes testing over recommended operating conditions and H = 0.5tc(CO) (see Figure 5−19 and Figure 5−20). Table 5−20. External Flag (XF) and TOUT Switching Characteristics PARAMETER MIN MAX UNIT Delay time, CLKOUT low to XF high −1 4 Delay time, CLKOUT low to XF low −1 4 td(TOUTH) Delay time, CLKOUT low to TOUT high −1 4 ns td(TOUTL) Delay time, CLKOUT low to TOUT low −1 4 ns tw(TOUT) Pulse duration, TOUT td(XF) 2H − 4 ns ns CLKOUT td(XF) XF Figure 5−19. External Flag (XF) Timing CLKOUT td(TOUTH) td(TOUTL) TOUT tw(TOUT) Figure 5−20. TOUT Timing November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 91 Electrical Specifications 5.14 Multichannel Buffered Serial Port (McBSP) Timing 5.14.1 McBSP Transmit and Receive Timings Table 5−21 and Table 5−22 assume testing over recommended operating conditions (see Figure 5−21 and Figure 5−22). Table 5−21. McBSP Transmit and Receive Timing Requirements† MIN tc(BCKRX) tw(BCKRX) Cycle time, BCLKR/X Pulse duration, BCLKR/X high or BCLKR/X low MAX UNIT BCLKR/X ext 4P‡ ns BCLKR/X ext 2P−1‡ ns BCLKR int 8 BCLKR ext 1 tsu(BFRH-BCKRL) Setup time, time external BFSR high before BCLKR low th(BCKRL-BFRH) time external BFSR high after BCLKR low Hold time, tsu(BDRV-BCKRL) Setup time, time BDR valid before BCLKR low th(BCKRL-BDRV) Hold time, time BDR valid after BCLKR low tsu(BFXH-BCKXL) Setup time, time external BFSX high before BCLKX low th(BCKXL-BFXH) Hold time, time external BFSX high after BCLKX low tr(BCKRX) Rise time, BCKR/X BCLKR/X ext 6 ns tf(BCKRX) Fall time, BCKR/X BCLKR/X ext 6 ns BCLKR int 1 BCLKR ext 2 BCLKR int 7 BCLKR ext 1 BCLKR int 2 BCLKR ext 3 BCLKX int 10 BCLKX ext 1 BCLKX int 0 BCLKX ext 2 ns ns ns ns ns ns † CLKRP = CLKXP = FSRP = FSXP = 0. If the polarity of any of the signals is inverted, then the timing references of that signal are also inverted. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock 92 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications Table 5−22. McBSP Transmit and Receive Switching Characteristics† MIN PARAMETER tc(BCKRX) Cycle time, BCLKR/X tw(BCKRXH) Pulse duration, BCLKR/X high tw(BCKRXL) Pulse duration, BCLKR/X low td(BCKRH-BFRV) BCLKR/X int 4P‡ BCLKR/X int D− 1§ C− 1§ BCLKR/X int BCLKR int Delay time, time BCLKR high to internal BFSR valid BCLKR ext td(BCKXH-BFXV) Delay time, time BCLKX high to internal BFSX valid tdis(BCKXH-BDXHZ) Disable time, BCLKX high to BDX high impedance following last data bit of transfer td(BCKXH-BDXV) Delay time, time BCLKX high to BDX valid td(BFXH-BDXV) Delay time, BFSX high to BDX valid ONLY applies when in data delay 0 (XDATDLY = 00b) mode DXENA = 0# MAX UNIT ns D+ 1§ ns C+ 1§ ns −3 3 ns ns 0 12 BCLKX int −1 5 BCLKX ext 2 10 BCLKX int 6 BCLKX ext 10 BCLKX int − 1¶ 10 BCLKX ext 2 20 BFSX int −1¶ 7 BFSX ext 2 11 ns ns ns ns † CLKRP = CLKXP = FSRP = FSXP = 0. If the polarity of any of the signals is inverted, then the timing references of that signal are also inverted. P = 0.5 * processor clock § T = BCLKRX period = (1 + CLKGDV) * 2P C = BCLKRX low pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2) * 2P when CLKGDV is even D = BCLKRX high pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2 + 1) * 2P when CLKGDV is even ¶ Minimum delay times also represent minimum output hold times. # The transmit delay enable (DXENA) feature of the McBSP is not implemented on the TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404. ‡ tc(BCKRX) tw(BCKRXH) tw(BCKRXL) tr(BCKRX) tf(BCKRX) BCLKR td(BCKRH-BFRV) td(BCKRH-BFRV) BFSR (int) tsu(BFRH-BCKRL) th(BCKRL-BFRH) BFSR (ext) tsu(BDRV-BCKRL) BDR th(BCKRL-BDRV) Bit(n-1) (n-2) (n-3) Figure 5−21. McBSP Receive Timings November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 93 Electrical Specifications tc(BCKRX) tw(BCKRXH) tw(BCKRXL) tr(BCKRX) tf(BCKRX) BCLKX td(BCKXH-BFXV) BFSX (int) th(BCKXL-BFXH) tsu(BFXH-BCKXL) BFSX (ext) BFSX (XDATDLY=00b) tdis(BCKXH-BDXHZ) BDX td(BCKXH-BDXV) td(BFXH-BDXV) Bit 0 td(BCKXH-BDXV) Bit(n-1) (n-2) (n-3) Figure 5−22. McBSP Transmit Timings 94 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.14.2 McBSP General-Purpose I/O Timing Table 5−23 and Table 5−24 assume testing over recommended operating conditions (see Figure 5−23). Table 5−23. McBSP General-Purpose I/O Timing Requirements MIN † high† tsu(BGPIO-COH) Setup time, BGPIOx input mode before CLKOUT th(COH-BGPIO) Hold time, BGPIOx input mode after CLKOUT high† MAX UNIT 7 ns 0 ns BGPIOx refers to BCLKRx, BFSRx, BDRx, BCLKXx, or BFSXx when configured as a general-purpose input. Table 5−24. McBSP General-Purpose I/O Switching Characteristics PARAMETER td(COH-BGPIO) ‡ Delay time, CLKOUT high to BGPIOx output mode‡ MIN MAX −2 4 UNIT ns BGPIOx refers to BCLKRx, BFSRx, BCLKXx, BFSXx, or BDXx when configured as a general-purpose output. tsu(BGPIO-COH) td(COH-BGPIO) CLKOUT th(COH-BGPIO) BGPIOx Input Mode† BGPIOx Output Mode‡ † ‡ BGPIOx refers to BCLKRx, BFSRx, BDRx, BCLKXx, or BFSXx when configured as a general-purpose input. BGPIOx refers to BCLKRx, BFSRx, BCLKXx, BFSXx, or BDXx when configured as a general-purpose output. Figure 5−23. McBSP General-Purpose I/O Timings November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 95 Electrical Specifications 5.14.3 McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Table 5−25 to Table 5−32 assume testing over recommended operating conditions (see Figure 5−24, Figure 5−25, Figure 5−26, and Figure 5−27). Table 5−25. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 0)† tsu(BDRV-BCKXL) MASTER SLAVE MIN MIN Setup time, BDR valid before BCLKX low th(BCKXL-BDRV) Hold time, BDR valid after BCLKX low MAX MAX UNIT 12 2 − 6P‡ ns 4 12P‡ ns 5+ † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock Table 5−26. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 0)† MASTER§ PARAMETER SLAVE MIN MAX MIN MAX UNIT th(BCKXL-BFXL) Hold time, BFSX low after BCLKX low¶ T−3 T+4 td(BFXL-BCKXH) Delay time, BFSX low to BCLKX high# C−4 C+3 td(BCKXH-BDXV) Delay time, BCLKX high to BDX valid −4 5 tdis(BCKXL-BDXHZ) Disable time, BDX high impedance following last data bit from BCLKX low C−2 C+3 tdis(BFXH-BDXHZ) Disable time, BDX high impedance following last data bit from BFSX high 2P− 4‡ 6P + 17‡ ns td(BFXL-BDXV) Delay time, BFSX low to BDX valid 4P+ 2‡ 8P + 17‡ ns ns ns 6P + 2‡ 10P + 17‡ ns ns † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. P = 0.5 * processor clock § T = BCLKX period = (1 + CLKGDV) * 2P C = BCLKX low pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2) * 2P when CLKGDV is even ¶ FSRP = FSXP = 1. As a SPI master, BFSX is inverted to provide active-low slave-enable output. As a slave, the active-low signal input on BFSX and BFSR is inverted before being used internally. CLKXM = FSXM = 1, CLKRM = FSRM = 0 for master McBSP CLKXM = CLKRM = FSXM = FSRM = 0 for slave McBSP # BFSX should be low before the rising edge of clock to enable slave devices and then begin a SPI transfer at the rising edge of the master clock (BCLKX). ‡ MSB LSB BCLKX th(BCKXL-BFXL) td(BFXL-BCKXH) BFSX tdis(BFXH-BDXHZ) td(BFXL-BDXV) tdis(BCKXL-BDXHZ) BDX Bit 0 Bit(n-1) tsu(BDRV-BCLXL) BDR Bit 0 td(BCKXH-BDXV) (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) th(BCKXL-BDRV) Bit(n-1) (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) Figure 5−24. McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 0 96 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications Table 5−27. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 0)† tsu(BDRV-BCKXL) th(BCKXH-BDRV) MASTER SLAVE MIN MIN Setup time, BDR valid before BCLKX low Hold time, BDR valid after BCLKX high MAX MAX UNIT 12 2 − 6P‡ ns 4 12P‡ ns 5+ † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock Table 5−28. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 0)† MASTER§ PARAMETER SLAVE MIN MAX MIN MAX UNIT th(BCKXL-BFXL) Hold time, BFSX low after BCLKX low¶ C −3 C+4 td(BFXL-BCKXH) Delay time, BFSX low to BCLKX high# T−4 T+3 td(BCKXL-BDXV) Delay time, BCLKX low to BDX valid −4 5 6P + 2‡ 10P + 17‡ ns tdis(BCKXL-BDXHZ) Disable time, BDX high impedance following last data bit from BCLKX low −2 4 6P − 4‡ 10P + 17‡ ns td(BFXL-BDXV) Delay time, BFSX low to BDX valid D−2 D+4 4P + 2‡ 8P + 17‡ ns ns ns † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock § T = BCLKX period = (1 + CLKGDV) * 2P C = BCLKX low pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2) * 2P when CLKGDV is even D = BCLKX high pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2 + 1) * 2P when CLKGDV is even ¶ FSRP = FSXP = 1. As a SPI master, BFSX is inverted to provide active-low slave-enable output. As a slave, the active-low signal input on BFSX and BFSR is inverted before being used internally. CLKXM = FSXM = 1, CLKRM = FSRM = 0 for master McBSP CLKXM = CLKRM = FSXM = FSRM = 0 for slave McBSP # BFSX should be low before the rising edge of clock to enable slave devices and then begin a SPI transfer at the rising edge of the master clock (BCLKX). MSB LSB BCLKX th(BCKXL-BFXL) td(BFXL-BCKXH) BFSX tdis(BCKXL-BDXHZ) BDX td(BCKXL-BDXV) td(BFXL-BDXV) Bit 0 Bit(n-1) tsu(BDRV-BCKXL) BDR Bit 0 (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) th(BCKXH-BDRV) Bit(n-1) (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) Figure 5−25. McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 0 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 97 Electrical Specifications Table 5−29. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 1)† tsu(BDRV-BCKXH) MASTER SLAVE MIN MIN Setup time, BDR valid before BCLKX high th(BCKXH-BDRV) Hold time, BDR valid after BCLKX high MAX MAX UNIT 12 2 − 6P‡ ns 4 12P‡ ns 5+ † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock Table 5−30. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 1)† MASTER§ PARAMETER MIN SLAVE MAX MIN MAX UNIT th(BCKXH-BFXL) Hold time, BFSX low after BCLKX high¶ T−3 T+4 td(BFXL-BCKXL) Delay time, BFSX low to BCLKX low# D−4 D+3 td(BCKXL-BDXV) Delay time, BCLKX low to BDX valid −4 5 tdis(BCKXH-BDXHZ) Disable time, BDX high impedance following last data bit from BCLKX high D−2 D+3 tdis(BFXH-BDXHZ) Disable time, BDX high impedance following last data bit from BFSX high 2P − 4‡ 6P + 17‡ ns td(BFXL-BDXV) Delay time, BFSX low to BDX valid 4P + 2‡ 8P + 17‡ ns ns ns 6P + 2‡ 10P + 17‡ ns ns † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock § T = BCLKX period = (1 + CLKGDV) * 2P D = BCLKX high pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2 + 1) * 2P when CLKGDV is even ¶ FSRP = FSXP = 1. As a SPI master, BFSX is inverted to provide active-low slave-enable output. As a slave, the active-low signal input on BFSX and BFSR is inverted before being used internally. CLKXM = FSXM = 1, CLKRM = FSRM = 0 for master McBSP CLKXM = CLKRM = FSXM = FSRM = 0 for slave McBSP # BFSX should be low before the rising edge of clock to enable slave devices and then begin a SPI transfer at the rising edge of the master clock (BCLKX). LSB MSB BCLKX th(BCKXH-BFXL) td(BFXL-BCKXL) BFSX td(BFXL-BDXV) tdis(BFXH-BDXHZ) td(BCKXL-BDXV) tdis(BCKXH-BDXHZ) BDX Bit 0 Bit(n-1) tsu(BDRV-BCKXH) BDR Bit 0 (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) th(BCKXH-BDRV) Bit(n-1) (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) Figure 5−26. McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 10b, CLKXP = 1 98 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications Table 5−31. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Timing Requirements (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 1)† tsu(BDRV-BCKXL) MASTER SLAVE MIN MIN Setup time, BDR valid before BCLKX low th(BCKXL-BDRV) Hold time, BDR valid after BCLKX low MAX MAX UNIT 12 2 − 6P‡ ns 4 12P‡ ns 5+ † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock Table 5−32. McBSP as SPI Master or Slave Switching Characteristics (CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 1)† MASTER§ PARAMETER SLAVE MIN MAX MIN MAX UNIT th(BCKXH-BFXL) Hold time, BFSX low after BCLKX high¶ D−3 D+4 td(BFXL-BCKXL) Delay time, BFSX low to BCLKX low# T−4 T+3 td(BCKXH-BDXV) Delay time, BCLKX high to BDX valid −4 5 6P + 2‡ 10P + 17‡ ns tdis(BCKXH-BDXHZ) Disable time, BDX high impedance following last data bit from BCLKX high −2 4 6P − 4‡ 10P + 17‡ ns td(BFXL-BDXV) Delay time, BFSX low to BDX valid C−2 C+4 4P + 2‡ 8P + 17‡ ns ns ns † For all SPI slave modes, CLKG is programmed as 1/2 of the CPU clock by setting CLKSM = CLKGDV = 1. ‡ P = 0.5 * processor clock § T = BCLKX period = (1 + CLKGDV) * 2P C = BCLKX low pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2) * 2P when CLKGDV is even D = BCLKX high pulse width = T/2 when CLKGDV is odd or zero and = (CLKGDV/2 + 1) * 2P when CLKGDV is even ¶ FSRP = FSXP = 1. As a SPI master, BFSX is inverted to provide active-low slave-enable output. As a slave, the active-low signal input on BFSX and BFSR is inverted before being used internally. CLKXM = FSXM = 1, CLKRM = FSRM = 0 for master McBSP CLKXM = CLKRM = FSXM = FSRM = 0 for slave McBSP # BFSX should be low before the rising edge of clock to enable slave devices and then begin a SPI transfer at the rising edge of the master clock (BCLKX). MSB LSB BCLKX th(BCKXH-BFXL) td(BFXL-BCKXL) BFSX tdis(BCKXH-BDXHZ) BDX td(BCKXH-BDXV) td(BFXL-BDXV) Bit 0 Bit(n-1) tsu(BDRV-BCKXL) BDR Bit 0 (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) th(BCKXL-BDRV) Bit(n-1) (n-2) (n-3) (n-4) Figure 5−27. McBSP Timing as SPI Master or Slave: CLKSTP = 11b, CLKXP = 1 November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 99 Electrical Specifications 5.15 Host-Port Interface Timing 5.15.1 HPI8 Mode Table 5−33 and Table 5−34 assume testing over recommended operating conditions and P = 0.5 * processor clock (see Figure 5−28 through Figure 5−31). In the following tables, DS refers to the logical OR of HCS, HDS1, and HDS2. HD refers to any of the HPI data bus pins (HD0, HD1, HD2, etc.). HAD stands for HCNTL0, HCNTL1, and HR/W. Table 5−33. HPI8 Mode Timing Requirements MIN MAX UNIT tsu(HBV-DSL) Setup time, HBIL valid before DS low (when HAS is not used), or HBIL valid before HAS low 6 ns th(DSL-HBV) Hold time, HBIL valid after DS low (when HAS is not used), or HBIL valid after HAS low 3 ns tsu(HSL-DSL) Setup time, HAS low before DS low 8 ns tw(DSL) Pulse duration, DS low 13 ns tw(DSH) Pulse duration, DS high 7 ns tsu(HDV-DSH) Setup time, HD valid before DS high, HPI write 3 ns th(DSH-HDV)W Hold time, HD valid after DS high, HPI write 2 ns tsu(GPIO-COH) Setup time, HDx input valid before CLKOUT high, HDx configured as general-purpose input 3 ns th(GPIO-COH) Hold time, HDx input valid before CLKOUT high, HDx configured as general-purpose input 0 ns 100 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications Table 5−34. HPI8 Mode Switching Characteristics PARAMETER ten(DSL-HD) td(DSL-HDV1) MIN Enable time, HD driven from DS low Delay time, DS low to HD valid for first byte of an HPI read 0 MAX UNIT 10 ns Case 1a: Memory accesses when DMAC is active in 16-bit mode and tw(DSH) < I8H† 18P+10−tw(DSH) Case 1b: Memory accesses when DMAC is active in 32-bit mode and tw(DSH) ≥ I8H† 36P+10−tw(DSH) Case 1c: Memory accesses when DMAC is active in 16-bit mode and tw(DSH) ≥ I8H† 10 Case 1d: Memory accesses when DMAC is active in 32-bit mode and tw(DSH) ≥ I8H† 10 Case 2a: Memory accesses when DMAC is inactive and tw(DSH) < 10H† 10P+15−tw(DSH) Case 2b: Memory accesses when DMAC is inactive and tw(DSH) ≥ 10H† 10 Case 3: Register accesses 10 td(DSL-HDV2) Delay time, DS low to HD valid for second byte of an HPI read th(DSH-HDV)R Hold time, HD valid after DS high, for a HPI read tv(HYH-HDV) Valid time, HD valid after HRDY high 2 ns td(DSH-HYL) Delay time, DS high to HRDY low‡ 8 ns td(DSH-HYH) Delay time, DS high to HRDY high‡ 10 ns 2 ns Case 1a: Memory accesses when DMAC is active in 16-bit mode† 18P+6 Case 1b: Memory accesses when DMAC is active in 32-bit mode† 36P+6 Case 2: Memory accesses when DMAC is inactive† 10P+6 Case 3: Write accesses to HPIC register§ ns ns 6P+6 td(HCS-HRDY) Delay time, HCS low/high to HRDY low/high 6 ns td(COH-HYH) Delay time, CLKOUT high to HRDY high 9 ns td(COH-HTX) Delay time, CLKOUT high to HINT change 6 ns td(COH-GPIO) Delay time, CLKOUT high to HDx output change. HDx is configured as a general-purpose output 5 ns † DMAC stands for direct memory access controller (DMAC). The HPI8 shares the internal DMA bus with the DMAC, thus HPI8 access times are affected by DMAC activity. ‡ The HRDY output is always high when the HCS input is high, regardless of DS timings. § This timing applies when writing a one to the DSPINT bit or HINT bit of the HPIC register. All other writes to the HPIC occur asynchronously, and do not cause HRDY to be deasserted. November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 101 Electrical Specifications Second Byte First Byte Second Byte HAS tsu(HBV-DSL) tsu(HSL-DSL) th(DSL-HBV) HAD† Valid Valid tsu(HBV-DSL)‡ th(DSL-HBV)‡ HBIL HCS tw(DSH) tw(DSL) HDS td(DSH-HYH) td(DSH-HYL) HRDY ten(DSL-HD) td(DSL-HDV2) th(DSH-HDV)R HD READ Valid Valid tsu(HDV-DSH) th(DSH-HDV)W HD WRITE td(DSL-HDV1) Valid tv(HYH-HDV) Valid Valid Valid td(COH-HYH) Processor CLK † ‡ HAD refers to HCNTL0, HCNTL1, and HR/W. When HAS is not used (HAS always high) Figure 5−28. Using HDS to Control Accesses (HCS Always Low) 102 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications Second Byte First Byte Second Byte HCS HDS td(HCS-HRDY) HRDY Figure 5−29. Using HCS to Control Accesses CLKOUT td(COH-HTX) HINT Figure 5−30. HINT Timing CLKOUT tsu(GPIO-COH) th(GPIO-COH) GPIOx Input Mode† td(COH-GPIO) GPIOx Output Mode† † GPIOx refers to HD0, HD1, HD2, ...HD7, when the HD bus is configured for general-purpose input/output (I/O). Figure 5−31. GPIOx† Timings November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 103 Electrical Specifications 5.15.2 HPI16 Mode Table 5−35 and Table 5−36 assume testing over recommended operating conditions and P = 0.5 * processor clock (see Figure 5−32 through Figure 5−34). In the following tables, DS refers to the logical OR of HCS, HDS1, and HDS2, and HD refers to any of the HPI data bus pins (HD0, HD1, HD2, etc.). These timings are shown assuming that HDS is the signal controlling the transfer. See the TMS320C54x DSP Reference Set, Volume 5: Enhanced Peripherals (literature number SPRU302) for additional information. Table 5−35. HPI16 Mode Timing Requirements MIN MAX UNIT tsu(HBV-DSL) Setup time, HR/W valid before DS falling edge 6 ns th(DSL-HBV) Hold time, HR/W valid after DS falling edge 5 ns tsu(HAV-DSH) Setup time, address valid before DS rising edge (write) 5 ns tsu(HAV-DSL) Setup time, address valid before DS falling edge (read) −(4P − 6) ns th(DSH-HAV) Hold time, address valid after DS rising edge 1 ns tw(DSL) Pulse duration, DS low 30 ns tw(DSH) Pulse duration, DS high 10 ns activity Memory accesses with no DMA activity. tc(DSH-DSH) Cycle time, DS rising edge to Memory accesses with 16-bit 16 bit DMA activity. activity next DS rising edge Memory accesses with 32-bit 32 bit DMA activity. activity Reads 10P + 30 Writes 10P + 10 Reads 16P + 30 Writes 16P + 10 Reads 24P + 30 Writes 24P + 10 ns tsu(HDV-DSH)W Setup time, HD valid before DS rising edge 8 ns th(DSH-HDV)W Hold time, HD valid after DS rising edge, write 2 ns 104 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications Table 5−36. HPI16 Mode Switching Characteristics PARAMETER td(DSL-HDD) Delay time, DS low to HD driven MIN MAX UNIT 0 10 ns Case 1a: Memory accesses initiated immediately following a write when DMAC is active in 16-bit mode and tw(DSH) was < 18H 32P + 20 − tw(DSH) Case 1b: Memory accesses not immediately following a write when DMAC is active in 16-bit mode td(DSL-HDV1) Delay time, DS low to HD valid for first word of an HPI read Delay time time, DS high to HRDY high td(DSH d(DSH-HYH) HYH) 16P + 20 Case 1c: Memory accesses initiated immediately following a write when DMAC is active in 32-bit mode and tw(DSH) was < 26H 48P + 20 − tw(DSH) Case 1d: Memory access not immediately following a write when DMAC is active in 32-bit mode 24P + 20 Case 2a: Memory accesses initiated immediately following a write when DMAC is inactive and tw(DSH) was < 10H 20P + 20 − tw(DSH) ns Case 2b: Memory accesses not immediately following a write when DMAC is inactive 10P + 20 Memory writes when no DMA is active 10P + 5 Memory writes with one or more 16-bit DMA channels active 16P + 5 Memory writes with one or more 32-bit DMA channels active 24P + 5 ns 7 ns 6 ns Delay time, CLKOUT rising edge to HRDY high 5 ns Delay time, DS low to HRDY low 12 ns Delay time, DS high to HRDY low 12 ns tv(HYH-HDV) Valid time, HD valid after HRDY high th(DSH-HDV)R Hold time, HD valid after DS rising edge, read td(COH-HYH) td(DSL-HYL) td(DSH−HYL) 1 HCS tw(DSH) tc(DSH−DSH) HDS tsu(HBV−DSL) tw(DSL) tsu(HBV−DSL) th(DSL−HBV) th(DSL−HBV) HR/W tsu(HAV−DSL) HA[17:0] th(DSH−HAV) Valid Address Valid Address th(DSH−HDV)R td(DSL−HDV1) td(DSL−HDV1) Data HD[15:0] td(DSL−HDD) tv(HYH−HDV) th(DSH−HDV)R Data td(DSL−HDD) tv(HYH−HDV) HRDY td(DSL−HYL) td(DSL−HYL) Figure 5−32. Nonmultiplexed Read Timings November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 105 Electrical Specifications HCS tw(DSH) tc(DSH−DSH) HDS tsu(HBV−DSL) tsu(HBV−DSL) th(DSL−HBV) th(DSL−HBV) HR/W tsu(HAV−DSH) tw(DSL) th(DSH−HAV) Valid Address HA[15:0] Valid Address tsu(HDV−DSH)W tsu(HDV−DSH)W th(DSH−HDV)W th(DSH−HDV)W HD[15:0] Data Valid Data Valid td(DSH−HYH) HRDY td(DSH−HYL) Figure 5−33. Nonmultiplexed Write Timings HRDY td(COH−HYH) CLKOUT Figure 5−34. HRDY Relative to CLKOUT 106 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Electrical Specifications 5.16 UART Timing Table 5−37 to Table 5−38 assume testing over recommended operating conditions (see Figure 5−35). Table 5−37. UART Timing Requirements † MIN MAX 1.01U† UNIT ns ns tw(UDB)R Pulse width, receive data bit 0.99U† tw(USB)R Pulse width, receive start bit 0.99U† 1.01U† MIN MAX UNIT 5 MHz 2† ns U + 2† ns U = UART baud time = 1/programmed baud rate Table 5−38. UART Switching Characteristics PARAMETER fbaud † Maximum programmable baud rate 2† tw(UDB)X Pulse width, transmit data bit U− tw(USB)X Pulse width, transmit start bit U − 2† U+ U = UART baud time = 1/programmed baud rate tw(USB)X Data Bits TX Start Bit tw(UDB)X Data Bits RX Start Bit tw(UDB)R tw(USB)R Figure 5−35. UART Timings November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 107 Mechanical Data 6 Mechanical Data 6.1 Ball Grid Array Mechanical Data GGU (S-PBGA-N144) PLASTIC BALL GRID ARRAY 12,10 SQ 11,90 9,60 TYP 0,80 A1 Corner 0,80 N M L K J H G F E D C B A 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Bottom View 0,95 0,85 1,40 MAX Seating Plane 0,55 0,45 0,08 0,45 0,35 0,10 4073221-2/C 12/01 NOTES: A. All linear dimensions are in millimeters. B. This drawing is subject to change without notice C. MicroStar BGAt configuration Figure 6−1. TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 144-Ball MicroStar BGA Plastic Ball Grid Array Package MicroStar BGA is a trademark of Texas Instruments. 108 SPRS007D November 2001 − Revised April 2004 Mechanical Data 6.2 Low-Profile Quad Flatpack Mechanical Data PGE (S-PQFP-G144) PLASTIC QUAD FLATPACK 108 73 109 72 0,27 0,17 0,08 M 0,50 144 0,13 NOM 37 1 36 Gage Plane 17,50 TYP 20,20 SQ 19,80 22,20 SQ 21,80 0,25 0,05 MIN 0°− 7° 0,75 0,45 1,45 1,35 Seating Plane 1,60 MAX 0,08 4040147 / C 10/96 NOTES: A. All linear dimensions are in millimeters. B. This drawing is subject to change without notice. C. Falls within JEDEC MO-136 Figure 6−2. TMS320VC5407/TMS320VC5404 144-Pin Low-Profile Quad Flatpack (PGE) November 2001 − Revised April 2004 SPRS007D 109 PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM www.ti.com 30-Mar-2005 PACKAGING INFORMATION Orderable Device Status (1) TMS320VC5404GGU TMS320VC5404PGE TMS320VC5407GGU TMS320VC5407PGE Pins Package Eco Plan (2) Qty Lead/Ball Finish MSL Peak Temp (3) Package Type Package Drawing ACTIVE BGA GGU 144 160 TBD SNPB Level-3-220C-168HR ACTIVE LQFP PGE 144 60 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU NIPDAU Level-1-260C-UNLIM ACTIVE BGA GGU 144 160 TBD SNPB Level-3-220C-168HR ACTIVE LQFP PGE 144 60 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU NIPDAU Level-1-260C-UNLIM (1) The marketing status values are defined as follows: ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs. LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect. NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design. PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available. OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device. (2) Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS) or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability information and additional product content details. TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined. Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous material) (3) MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature. Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals. TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release. In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis. Addendum-Page 1